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'

SPORIS: Sixers win Game 1 in Eastern finat 81

Page

•••• ,....,a

The Daily Sentinel

t'

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The San Francisco Giants aren't enccly prospering from all
the home runs Barry Bonds keeps hitting.
Bonds tied a nujor lea~e record with his eighth homer in
five g.ames and became the quickest player in history to 23
homers in a season. The Ariwna Dian10ndbad&lt;s shrugged it off,
thanks to homers from Greg Colbrunn and Reggie Sanden
along with Curt Schilling's six-hitter to beat the Giants 4-2
Monday night.
·
It was San Francisco's founh loss during Bonds' five-game
run.
The only victory came Saturday. when he homered three
times in a 6- 3 win over the Atlanta Braves.The next day, Bonds
had rwo homers, but the Braves combined for five and beat the
Giants 11 -6.
·
Bonds' surge has impressed everyone. but it hasn 't intimidated anyone.
" He's nvinging the bat a" well as 1\·e ewr seen him." Schilling
said of Bonds. " He was 1-for-4, but the two balls he hit when
he flc;w but just missed. They " ·ere real dose.··
Bonds' eighth homer in fiw days equaled the mark set by
Frank Howard, who did it twice in l&lt;JC.H with Washin[;ton . It
also broke the National League onmd held by Jim llmtomle\'
(1929), Johnny Bench (1972) ;Oild Mike Schomclt ( 1979). who
each had seven in a fivc-g;m1e stre.rrh .
The sevent h solo shot .of his home run .binge .olso gave Bonds
23 hont~rs in San frJ.ncisco·s -4-~ g:aJHl'S this se.1son. Mark MeGwire was the previous fastest, recording his 23rd in St. Louis'
47th game during his record-setting 70-homer season in 1998.
But Arizona won to take a half-game lead owr Los Angeles
in the NL West.
.
.
Colbrunn ho mered leading ofT the second . inning ft&gt;r a l ..{)
edge. Bonds tied it in the fourth, but the Diamondbacks took a
3-1 lead on Sanders' fifth - inning two~ run shoe
" It's always good to get off to a good start with our rivalry
team and put sonle runs on the scoreboard, especially for
Schilling," Sanders said.
Also, it was Colorado 6, Los Angeles 3: Atlanta 5, Florida 3:
San Diego 7, Houston 5: and New York 6, Montreal 3.

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Todd Walker hit a pair of two-run doubles. Walker's first double highlighted a three-run first inning. He doubled again in the
eighth after Larry Walker doubled and Todd Helton reached on
catcher Paul Lo Duca's interference.
On Saturday, Walker's wife Katie gave birth to their first child,
daughter Riley.
"There's really no correlation to having a baby on Saturday
and playing well tonight, but, yeah, it feels great," Walker said.
Adrian Beltre had three hits and scored all three Dodgen runs
·
at Coors Field

Braves 5, Marlins 3
Andruw Jones had two home runs and four RBis and To~
Glavine scattered five hits over seven innings at Miami.
Jo nes hit his 11th and 12th home run s, the I t th multichomer
game of his career, .and helped the Braves win for the fifth time
in seven games. He hit a solo shot in .the first inning off Matt

••

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I'!frastrncture damage
at 1250K so for

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SENTINB. NEWS STAFF

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4-2), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim (Schoeneweis 3-2) al Battimofe

Padres 7, Astros 6

i.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

••

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Golfers
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world and The New York Times
called us '' ... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
SENATOR course at our new Capitol
Hill location ·among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcom~rs. And wait until you
see THE JUDGE!
So, we hope you1l understand
when, like all good golfers, we
like to brag about our scores.
Call today t~ b'ook your golf
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips .in
the world.

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confirmed chat a tornado struck southwestern Meigs
County. Arnencan Electtic Power crews are still
waiting to get into the Dexter community to restore
power there, where 61 households have been without electricity since Monday night's storm.
Emergency Mamgement Agency Director Bob
Byer ·said this· morning that nine of the county's 12
townships sustained damage in Monday's storms.
" We're estimating a quarter-million dollars in
damages, just in infrastructure alone," Byer said.
" That includes damages to roads, bridges and infrastructure."
· Sheriff Ralph Trussell and the county commissioners, working with the Meigs EMA, made a county
state-of-emergency declaration in the early morning
. hours Thesday. and Taft's dednarion is designed to
help dejlloy the Ohio Department ofTransj&gt;Ortation
. · •a11!f other state~level agenci~ :
;, ~~i'~: asked ODOT to work directly. with Meigl
' Clq\lllti' qffic~, tq qc,t~IJ!in~ the .an.!.PI!i~t- !Jf ~tma~
•• · · ·
' ·, of road ·re'\iafr resow:Ces ·ru:!~!-::"&gt;il

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.
01\tb' 1 l!MA~ officials are

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in contact wlch lodl ·
'eme~ncy. rruuilp a"rld are monitoring the situa-

tion from tl).e state Emergency Operations Centc:r.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources,
. ODOT, Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and
American Red Cross have been working directly With local cSfficials in the field since storms began
'

Pi···· ..

Stu: .. AJ

'

.,

/

PAR'I'Y HONORS- Henry and Mary Hunter were honored Saturday for their years of service to the Meigs County Democr&amp;
tic Party by U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, far left, former State Senator Jan Michael Long and Party Chairman Sue Malson. (Contributed photo J

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!54 HOLES

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54 HOL.EI

154

Calendar
C!assifieds

Comics
Editorials ·
Obituaries

HOliES

AS

Details; A2

BY CHARLENE HoEfLICH

Lotteries
OHIO

'

.

82-4 Pick 5: 6-6-{1; Pick 4: 6-4-0-9
BS lud ~ 5: 15-23-24-26-34
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.

31 HOLES

311 HO•CI

MAGNOL7A GROVE

CA,.ITOL HILL

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1.800.949.4444

PIUH- CiviL Al

. .

Meigs High School.
Steve Ohlinger was hired as assistant
principal and athletic director at the middle school.
Superintendent William Buckley said
the new assisiant principal's position at
Meigs High will enhance the administrative program there, all owi~ Principal
Dennis Eichinger to devote more t1me to
concentrate on academic and vocational
improven;Ients .

Tony Deem, th e assistant principal, will
handl e atte ndance and special education,
while Gaul's role will be primarily with
discipline.
teachers list
. Added to the substitute
'
were John Barcus, Betheney Bay, lise
Burris, Abigail Cauthorn, Theresa Cooper Jennifer Cummins, Rebecca Evans,
Mary Hill, Lisa Hon aker, Kimberly

PI•••• IH Gaul, AJ

Holser Work Link

l'Nitrille

Al.abama'a Robert Trent Jonn Golf TraU 378 /roles of world-class golf on eigllt sites

.

.'

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'POMEROY - C hanges in admihis~
trativ~
· ositil)ns at M eigs Middle School
and ·. ·gs High School were made at
· Tues · ' Meig.t Local Board o f Education rotating. ·
Mary O'Brien, as~isrant principal at the
middle ~hool for several years, was hired
as principal there replacing David Gaul,
who was hired as assistant principal at

•
H7GHLAND OAKS

Southern Ohio Democratic Chairmen's .r\ssoc
POMEROY -- Henry and Mary Hunter of ciation, as well as a number of campaign comPomeroy were recognized Saturday for their mittees and the Democratic Action C lub of
contributions to the Meigs County Democra- the old I Oth Congressional distri ct.
tic Party during the party's annual spring din- · Hunter's sister, current Democratic Party
Chairman Sue Maison, was joined by former,
ner.
The Hunters have dedicated 30 years to the State Sen. Jan Michael Long and the party s
local political scene.
keynote speaker, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, in
Henry Hunter served as party vice chairman presenting the Hunters with a special plaque
from 1976 'to l980, and chairman from 1983 recognizing th eir con tributions to the Party's
to 1989. Mrs. Hunter is also a former chairrrlan growing success.
and •vice chairman.
Long, who serves as Pickaway County JoveIn addition to being acti~ely involved in the nile Court judge. recalled his first meeting
locat ~;mty, both have been members of the
PleiH Hunters, AJ

POMEROY -A Middleport couple has filed a
civil suit alleging breach of
contract, menacing conduct and illegal search and
seizure against rwo former
M eig.t County officials.
Roben D. Fife, and his
wife, Gbdys, who were the
subjects of a raid and forfeiture case in 1993, have
filed the lawsuit · against
former Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes and former Sheriff James M .
Soulsby, demanding compensatory and punitive
damages · in excess of
$25,000 on each of four
claims.
Fife was accused of racketeering, but was not
charged with the offense,
and of running an illegal
pawn shop.
He later admitted to a
charge of trafficking in
f9od stamps and two
counts of receiving stolen
property and was s_e ntenced to three consecutive
18-month terms which
were suspended.
In addition, Fife forfeited
hi s firearm collection,
S185,000 and $60,000
from bank accounts.
In 1997, four yean after
the raid, Fife told The
Daily Sentinel . he . was
· innocent of any wrongdoing, but agreed to the plea
agreement because he hac;i
to take care of his ailing
wife.
"The reason I had to ~o
what I did was I· had to
weigh ... are riches worth
more than my wife's health
. and my being there with
her," Fife said at that time.
The Fifes, who say in
their complaint that they
feared "great bodily harm"
if they filed the suit before
Lentes and Soulsby left
office, allege the defendants
deprived them of their
rights to freedom from ille-

MMS gets new principal; Gaul moves to MHS

Low:40s

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WJ.IleilathWle!iiJrL..____' _uA2,.. C 1001 Ohio Voilloy Publishing Co.

CAMBR7AN RIDGE
Gre1nrill#

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

brag
OXMOOR VALLEY

.

·Democrats laud Hunters'
lifetime achievements

Sentinel
S7LVER LAKES

YED -The Alva Clark home, pictured here, was heavily damaged in Monday evening's storm.
barJl was also destroyed In the storm. (David Harris photo)

•

about their
scores. I

Gov. Bob Taft has declared a state of emergency for
the county, and the National Weather Service has

'atdr(r

HAMPTON COVE

FROM STAFF REPORTS

the

h .e only ones

who

ANESVILLE - Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor is
expected to visit storm-ravaged areas of Meigs County
today. as emergency teams
continue to assess damage- ·from Monday
night's heavy rains and winds.

'

.

Fifes allege
constitutional
violations in
civil complaint

BvllluiiJ.RaD-

CJ,·m~nt (2·-l) . then added a two-run shut in the sixth. He also
Tony Batista hit a three-run homer as the Blu~ Jays sent t&amp;
had an RBI single in the third.
White Sox tQ their season-high seventh straight loss, 10-1,
Monday. Chicago is now 14- 28, its wont start since 1978 when
the Sox went 13-28 to begin the season.
.
j
"When our pitchers do well, our hitters ~re bad," Biddle sai4:
·
!
Ryan Klesko hit two three-run home 'runs and a tripk ~nd "When are hitters do good, our pitchers are bad."
Monday was originally an off day for the two teams, but sinct
drove in six runs. Klesko's six RBis e.qualed his career high.
it
was Victoria Day in Canada, the Blue Jays asked the Whit;t
Adam Eaton (b-2) got his founh straight victory, going 6 2.:
3 innings, striking out a season-high I0 to equal his career best, Sox to switch the off day to Tuesday. .
They
will
resume
their
series
on
Wednesday.
'
:':
while walking one.
It was the only American League ,g.&gt;me pb~d Monday.
:
Jeff Bagwell's fifth career grand sbm, his second of the season,
Bidclle
(1-4)
lost
his
fourth
straight
decision,
allowing
seve";
highlighted host Houston's five-run third.
•
runs on seven hits in three innings.
Ray Durham, Paul Konerlc.o and Jeff Liefer homered for the
White Sox, who have baseball's worst road record (5-16).
.~
"We're miserable," Konerko said.
~;
At Montreal, Tsuyoshi Shinjo won a game for the second
Toronto starter Steve Parris (3-3) allowed three runs on sit
straight day, hitting a tiebreaking three-run double. After a hits in seven innings.
•
game-winning RBI single with two outs in the bottom of the
He struck out a season-high six and walked one.
•
ninth on Sunday, Shinjo cleared the bases with a two-out douToronto's Jose Cruz Jr., activated off the disabled list befo~
ble off Britt Reames (2-6) in the sixth to break a 2-2 tle.
the game, went 3-for-4 with two RBls.
!
Reames, who hit his first career homer to tie the game in the
Mter Durham homered in the first, Biddle loaded the basel
fifth, lost his sixth straight start.
in the bottom of the inning by walking Alex Gonulez, hitting .
Carlos Delgado and giving up a single to Raul Mondesi.
Fullmer followed with a two-run double and Cruz had a two;
run single.
:. •
Konerko homered in the second. But Biddle gave up a dou~'
ble to Raul Mondesi and a walk to Fullmer before Baris~
homered, his 12th, in the third to make it 7-2 for Toronto.
'
TORONTO (AP) - When the Toronto Blue Jays celebratThe Blue Jays scored three more runs in the sixth on Home(
ed a Canadian holiday, the C hicago White -Sox showed up with
Bush's RBI single, right- fielder Magglio Ordonez's fieldin'g:
gifts.
error and Alex Gonzalez's run-scoring single.
. :
" It's my birthday. I was throwing presents up there, and they
Shannon Stewart hit a single to Ordonez, who let the ball:
kept hitting them," said Chicago starter Rocky Bidclle, who
rick off his glove and roll to the wall, scoring Bush, and allow
turned 25.
-;'!
ing Stewart to reach third.

· We love it when people say
nice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in.the world! .
And in its current Places to
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trail's 21 courses
4 stars-and some even got 4Y.,.
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And aU of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
.
semce.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

a ainst
......cia Is

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,
:

Mets6,Expos3

Rockies 6, Dodgers 3

www.mydailysenton('l corn

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112 . 5-3), 1:05p.m.
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Sundly'•T - Bay tO. 5lolmit 2

TOfonlo 10. Chicago -

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so (ents • May 23 . 1001 ·Vol Sl , No 2 !6

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~ 4-31. 7:05pm.

Wednesday

•

•

•••

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Bonds hot, Giants not

•

'

A Work Injury Management Service
1~,, of Holzer Medical Ceoter. ·

"'

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

.

11~11111. rtj~ll!fCOlli

For more inl'ormation,
call 446·57'33 or
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Discover thJ ·lf&gt;lzer Difference.

•I'

---

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.•

-~ ~.

�_. . ......... .
Pomeloy, lllddlapott, Ohio

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

. . . . . . .. ,• . . , 11, 1001

Finance Committee approves budget

Ohio weather
Thunay, ll8y Zl

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called it the wont budget he'd ~r seen.
"lt .will cause long-term dmuge lO the
sate of Ohio and it will cost us twice as
much to 6x the problems that -·re causing here than it would be to do it right in
the firsr iDSbnce;· he s:aid.
By late Tuesday, the Republ,ican-conaolled committee had approved several
GOP proposals,. including more funding
for Ohios Appaluhian counties and a
pbn to provide Sl million mnUalty for
n:ligious or:g:mizatioos providing services
to needy Ohio~ns.
The committee defeated several Democratic proposals along party lines, induding plans lO resto~ funding for higher
educ3tion and boost money for libraries.
"I believe this bill goes a long way to
address the needs of aU the schools and all

the children in the sare," Serure Education Chairman Robert Gardner, a Madison R.tpnblican, said of the funding for
educalion. • Am I happy what we had to
do with higher education and especially
the community schools? N o"
The education funding is necessary lO
meet ~ June 15 deadline set by the Ohio
Supreme Court. which has twice tuled
the St:lte's school-funding system unconstirutional.
~
The court says the system's overre~nce
on IOC3l property taXeS create. dispariti"'
between rich and poor districts.
The plan recommends spending S4,814
on each Ohio schoolchild next ~ar, compared with $4,490 if no change is made. h
would spend about $4,949 the following
year.

...

_

I

ee m Marietta.
He W2S a member ofTuppers Pbins VFW Post No. 9053, an
· Army veteran of World War II, and a member of the military
police. ·
He also 3ttended Silver Ridge United Brethten Church.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth Bailey M~; ~ daughter,
Shirley Myers; a grandson, James M~rs; a gnnddaugbter, Sherri
.. M~rs; two great-gr.mddaugbters,Theresa and Alyssa Baker, all of
Reedsville; three brothers, lloyd M~rs of Erie, Pa., Alvin M~rs
of Reedsville, Bruce M~rs of Chester; a sister, Mary Argabrite of
Maryland; a special nephew, Steve Cowdery of Semrook, Texas; a
special niece,Jenny Doe ofWinter Spring;, Fla.; several nieces and
nephews; and an ex-grandson-in-law, Rick Baker of Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be at I , p.m. Friday at White Funeral
Home in Coolville. The Rev. Robert Sanders 'vill officiate.
Burial will follow in the Myers Family Cemetery in Reedsville.
Friends may .visit on Thursday from -2-4 p.m . and 6-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
·

man, and the son ofTom Luken, a fonner council member and congressnun.

Robert •Mike• Newell

......

d

M•

..a.- fled

°

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F

7

unknown fint to fie

Woman on trial for munler
CLEVELANO (AP) - A jury will try fur the thin! time to
decide ifAngela Garcia set her house on fire, killing her two young
daughters in an insurance scam. .
Two other Cuyah~ County Common Pleas Court juries wen:
uruble to reach a verdict and mistrials were declared. The new jury
begins deliberating Wednesday.
·
Garcia, 24,is on ctial on aggravated murder md other'clurges but
is not facing the death penalty. She is accused of settil)g tire to her
house on Nov. 20, !999. The tire killed her children - N~emah
Garcia, 3, and Nijah Evans, 2.

Pou'Jel' plant in mine pis OK

CINCINNATI (AP) -A political novice is the first to 6le for
rna}')r of Cincinnati under a new system in which voters will directly elect a mayor for the first time in more than 75 ~Bill Brodberger, 37, has no party endoisem.ent and has never run
for public offic~u~ he has submitted the nec~ry number of signablres to the ~ton County Board ofEiecnons.
Ma}')r Chadie Luken, a Democrat, was elected under the old system in which the City Coun0J candidate who got the most votes
became mayor. He is expected to run in the fall, but has not 6led.
The Republican and Charter· parties have not announced a candidate to take on Luken, who is one of the beSt-known names in
Cincinnati politics. He is a former television anchor and congress-

.

.

Ill would end mandatoly oRer
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Senate on Tuesday passed a bill that
would eliminate the requirement that insurance companies offer
protection against uninsured motorists in vehicle policies.
The bill, which the Serute passed 25-7, now .goes lO the House.
Such offers would not be mandatory, but protection against uninsured motorists would still be available under the bill. It also seis
requirements, exclusions at!d other conditions of unin.sured
motorists protection.
Since the 1970s law has mandated the coverage be offered.

Pilot escapes serious injury

·

MONEY-SAVING DISCOUNTS

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Dem•an•u
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City 111oving on stadium

Muskingum locks ~ng touted

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a

The man is said to have grown
up in the same village.
"There is a real risk of nustaken identity, that one Ivan
Den'\ianjuk has been mistak~n
for another," Tigar wrote ,in
court d,ocuments.
A message requesting comment was left . Tuesday fot
Michael Arine Johnson, a Jus•'.....eoe, [lepartme:nt lawyer 1'n the.

Pomeroy
· JEFF WARNER
113W.lndStreet

!192-5479 .

Nationwide•
Insurance &amp;
Financial Services

.

s~~

UNIONTOWN (AP) - A pilot flying solo in a twin-engine
Navajo plane crash landed Tue.day in a field three miles fiom the
Akron-Canton Regional Airport, an airport official said. He was not
seriously injured.
Dennis Frame, 51, of M~dore, was flying a charter plane operated by Casde Aviation when it went down about 8:20 a.m. northeast of the airport, said Michael Grossnunn, president of the cowpany based in the Akron-Canton area. He did not know what caused
tlle plane to crash.

Judge
refuses
to
delay
tart f
• • k tri I

NORTON (AP)- Norton Energy Swrage LLC has moved one
step closer to building a compressed-air pO\ver plant.
·
!he Ohio Power Siting Board a~proved the proposal Monday.
We are ""ry pleased w1th OPSil s approval.! believe that if we get
the Ohio Environmental ProteC'.i on Agency permit, we can start
construction sometime this
said company vice president Joyce
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Miller.
federal judge Tuesday refused
The ColumJ:,us-based power siting board granted Norton Energy to delay trial for John Dema"certificate of environmental compatibility and public need" for the · janjuk, who is fighting gov. electric plant, to be located in this community 35 miles south of. ernment allegations that he
Cleveland.TheEPA's granting of a pernrit to install energy-genernt- covered up a past as a Nazi
guard at death and forced
ing turbines could come in 60 days.
labor camps .
Demjanjuk's
citizenship
revocation
trial
remains
EASTLAKE (AP) -This Cleveland suburb has taken two more scheduled to begin next Tuessteps tO\vard bringing in minor-league baseball. . .
day in U.S. District Court, said
City Council on Tuesday night approved paying Turner Con- a clerk for Judge Paul Maria.
struction of Cleveland about $800,000 to oversee construction of a · Demjanjuk's attorneys had
proposed IS million stadium. It also approved leasing the stadium to requested at least :i threeDiamond Dust LLC for 25 years.
month trial delay to review
Gates Mills businessman Kip Horsburgh plans to move the Mid- court documents. The attorwest League's Quad City River Bandits, who are based in Daven- neys argued that .Justice
port, Iowa, to Eastlake forthe 2003 season.The tearn will be a Class Department lawyers' overA affiliate of the Cleveland Indians.
·
whelmed them with lastCouncilman Stephen Kornaijansk:i opposed the measures. He has minute doCuments, some
been the lone dissenter on baseball legislation since Mayor Dan decades old and written in
Diliberto started aggressively pursuing a team more than a year ago. foreign languages.
Defense attorney Michael
Tigar said he needed more
time to look into information
MARIETIA (AP) - Some people who live along the Musk.
given by Ukrainian officials
ingum Ri""r think its hand-opernted lock system has the potential
who said they interviewed a
to become a national tourist attraction. ·
·
relative of a dead man named
The system opens for the season .Saturday along the 112-mile
Iva~ Demjanjuk last month.

POMEROY- Robert "Mike" Newell, 55, f'omeroy, died on
Monday; May 21 , 2001 at his home.
He was born on Oct. 3, 1945 in Clifion, WV~ .• son oftbe late
Clarence 0. and Alva Ste~rt Newell. He was a mechanic for
RSO/AEP. He \vas a ""tenn of the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, and was a member of the Stewart-Johnson Post 9926,
VeteDns of Foreign Wars of Mason, W.Va., the Fraternal Order of
Eagles No. 3692 of Pomeroy; and Disabled American Veterans
Chapter 53.
.
Surviving are his wife of23 yem, Rebecca J. Rothgeb Newell,
Pomeroy; a stepdaughter an~ her husband, Stacy L. and Britt
DodsonofMiddleport;astepson,TroyYankunsofPomeroy;three
granddaughters: Megan Tripp, Amber Tripp and Haley Tripp; a
stepgrandson, Brandon Dodson; a nephew and niece,Jeff Newell
and Lemn Spaulding; a sister, Wilma Scarberry ofVinton; a brother, Don Newell of Clifion, W.Va.; and several other nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by ~ sisters,
Sharon 'Jane" Newell and Nina Dailey; and his brother, Clarence
"Buck" Newell.
· · Services will be Thursday, May 24, 2001 at Fogelsong Funeral
Home in Mason, W.Va., with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will
follow at Graham Cemetety in New Haven.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 6 to

LIMA (AI') - A laundry room fire that caused an estimated
$300,000 danuge fmced the e~~:~cuation of pam of lima Memorial
Hospital on Tuesday.
No one was injured in the 6 p.m. fire, but one patient who was in
surgery had to be transferred to St. Rita's Medical Center.
Sixty patients fiom the second and third floors were moved tc
other, rooms or outside while the fire was put out, hospital presiden•
John White said.
The fire was caused by a malfunctioning air conditioner, the fin:
department said.

More rain ·on Thursday

G}

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NJ7 11..00
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;;;'";;'Columl:lul,
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.

Military graveside rites will be conducted by Stewart-Johnson
Post 9926,VFW; and Smith-Capehart American Legion Post 140.

. Mirabelle Shlapnack
.

.

COLUMBUS - Manbelle Sharpnack, 59, Columbus, died
Tuesday; May 22, 2001, at St. Angela's Nursing Center.
Born November 23,1941,inAppleGrove,she was the daugb• ter of the late Jack and Elizabeth Wolfe Sharpnack and was an
employee for the state of Ohio, Department of Jobs and Family
Services for more than 39 ~ars..
.
She was also a member of New Life Baptist Church and the
Triangle Chapter No. 592, OES.
Along with her parents, she.is preceded in death by a sister and
brother-in-law, Evelyn and Hank Baker.
She is survi""d by a sister, Kathryn (Gary) Spires of Columbus;
two brothers, Jack (Norma) Sharpnack Jr., of Coll)mbus, William
(Linda) Sharpnack of Peru, Ind.; several nieces, Cathy Sue '(Steve)
Chamberlain, Jennifer (Brian) · DeBlasio, Party (Don) Zasadny,
Beth (Darrell) Armstrong; a nephew, Jackie W Sharpnack; four
great-nieces, Laura and Melissa Chamberlain, Abby and Molly
Elizabeth Armstrong; two great-nephews, Cameron DeBlasio and
· Colin Zasadny.
Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday, May 25, 2001, at
Chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery in Letart Falls, where additional
visitation will be held one-half hour prior to the service. Officiating will be .the Rev. Ray Morgan.
Friends may also visit on Friday from 9-10 a.m. at RutherfordCorbin Funeral Home, Worthington Chapel, in Worthington.
Memorial contributions can be made in her memory to: Mt.
Carmel Hospice, 1144 Dublin Road, Columbus,. OH 43215.

The Daily Sentinel

silo

have more
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;nn,w·someone with REALm
.
:.J'II,DOW someone who is just not that-·
CHICKEN anymore?

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nnle changed
VISIT Sin - Christi Lynch of U.S. Rep, Ted Strickland's
office, Renee Young of the . Ohio Emergency Management
Agency, and Bob Byer of Meigs County EMA look at damage at
the Hall residence in Danville. It was one of several properties
which sustained heavy damage in Salem Township on Monday
night. (David Harris photo)
·

Stonn

&amp;om PapAl
belting Ohio communities
late last week, .said Taft's
spokesman, Kevin Kellems.
Ohio EMA has deployed
staff members to affected
counties to support local
response and recovery efforts.
AEP's Ronn Robinson said
this morning that crews with
the power company are just
. waiting for high water to subside before electricity. is
restored there.
The weather service in
Charleston, W.Va., confirmed
that an "FI" torna~o -. one
associated with wind speeds
of 73- to 112-mph winds damaged trees, homes, and
farm building; in the Danville
and Hanesville communities.
A house in Hanesville
(Salem
Township)
was
destroyed by a maple tree
with a three-foot trunk
· which was felled by the wind.

canlar seNice Is available.

MallsubsaiDIIon

lnolde Molgo eo'!;ftii,
13 wooko
$27.30
26 Weeks
$53.82
52 Weeks
$105.56
A - ouloldo Molgo Counly
13 Weeks
$29.25
26 Weeks
$56.86
52 weeks
$109.72

I

Gaul

Davidson
and
Michael
Hawkins as summer maintenance helpen to assist in
grounds keepins and other
fromPipA1
duties as assigned at a rate of
Householder, Kimberly Janey; $7.50 per hour effective June
Bethany Justis, Christopher 4 and continuing until no
Kennedy, Donna Clark-Kern, longer noeded.
Ramona Lewis, Christa MidThe resignation of Kent S.
cap, Mary Powell, Delmar Howell as instrumental music
Pullins, Nathan Robinette, . teacher and assistant band
Kimberly Roush, Wanda director was accepted, and
Shuler, c;:atherine Simpson, Stephanie Ash, Joe Bailey, .a nd
Bobby Stanley, Abbie Strat- Steven Wood were hired as
ton, Jacqueline Wolfe, and high school summer school
Steven Wood.
teachers with their salaries to
Hired as substitute employ- be paid from grant funds.
ees with a stipulation that
In other action, the board.
substitutes may be used in authorized an additional five
classifications other than· as days of extended service for
listed, were:
Mona Frecker at the end of
Aides, pending certifica- the current school year to
tion, Melissa Conde, Nancy provide for the transition
Freeman, Teresa Patterson, . from Salem Center ElemenConnie Soulsby, Leah Rose, tary to Rutland Elementary
Jeanie
Allen,
Charlene School.
Chaney, Karen Mullins.
Approval was given by the
Bus drivers, pending certifi- board to pay $3,500 to Sue
cation, Lou Hemsley, Linda Romuno for substance abuse
Morris, Rhett Milhoan, Don- intervention working oneald Richmond, Crystal Rich- on-one with students at
mond, ,.Earl Pickens, William MMS and MHS from the
Lavender, Stephen. Rife, Jack Drug Free Schools Grant. It
McDaniel, Joyce Jewell, and was also voted to accept a
S4,000 grant from the Ohio
Glen Kennedy.
Department of Education for
Mechanic: Dennis Tillis
Cooks: Tammy Jarvis, Ellora substance abuse prevention
Patterson, Donna Buffingtpn, assistance in the schools.
The board discussed at
Rebecca Frechette, Gina
Thoni~s, Beverly Allen, and length a possible contract for
electrical service through the
Diana Bowles.
Custodians: Marvin Roush, Ohio SchooiPool purchasing
Leland.
Parker,
Robert services with no action being
Moore, William Lavender, taken. A representative from
Eric White, Lawson Higgins, Strategic Energy will be invitPearlie
Jewell,
Michael . ed to speak on the program at
the next board meeting. ·
Hawkins.
During the meeting, the
Secretaries, .Cindy Shull,
boattl
voted to apply to the
Jayne Humphreys.
Contracts
non-renewed Ohio Department of Educadue to other employment or tion fot" approval of cala1nity
employment conflicts were days: all schools, Jan. 22, Feb.
Janet Hardey, bus driver; Ear- 22, and March 6, inclement
ley Hill, mechanic; Kelly Lee weather; Harrisonville, Oct.
Gayle Morris, cooks; Kyle 10, utility failure, Feb. 2,
Sinclair, BDd Knotts, James inclement we.a ther; Pomeroy,
Counts, Gerald Matthews, Oct. 31 and Nov. 22, utility
Geprge Schweickart, custodi- failore; Salem Center, Feb. 2,
inclement weather; Salisbury,
ans.
The board hired John M. Nov. 22, utility failure.

WASHER

Once again, we ask that the magazines be current year
(2001) and in good condition. Any mailing labels with
identifying names will be detached. For more infonnatlon
please call, (304) 675-7222.
'

liJ lick Cllllr

• 4 Temperal\Jre
·Heavy Duty

uusgg

• 7 cycles

$33

Hllh lick Chair
1111

Thank you for your assistance, generosity and time.
.,

•

..

A carport and barn were
completely destroyed at the
same residence,
"In
fact,"
a
NWS
.spokesman said, "the carport
trnveled some 75 yards before
landing across the road. The
same house also suffered
room damage."
In Danville, roofs were torn
ofT rwo locations and a corn
· crib was completely leveled.
Numerous trees were uprooted with branches scattered
throughout the area, and large
pieces
of wood
were
launched into the side of the
Edwin H . Davis &amp; Son bus
garage, causing significant
damage. The bus facility also
sustained a damaged roof.
·
The NWS said the tornado
was about :200 yards in width,
with intermittent touchdowns. The total length of
damage stretched roughly
four miles, beginning two
miles west of Danville and
extending northeast to two
miles
northwest
of
Hanesville.

..

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TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of Education's special board meet. ing will be at 7:30 p.m.,
instead of 6 :30 p.m. at the
administrative office in Tuppers Plains.

Barbecue
planned
RACINE - Racine Volunteer Fire Department ,.,;ill
· hold a chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream social
Sunday at the firehouse.
Serving begins at II a.m.

Date changed
SALEM CENTER
Salem Township Trustees will
hold their monthly meeting
May 29 at 6 p.m . at the
Salem Firehouse.

Plan reunion
POMEROY - A I 0-year
reunion of the Meig; High
School Class of 1991 will be
held Saturday at Salisbury
Elementary SChooL A gath- .
ering with children will take
place from 1 to 4 p.m. An
adult event will be held from
7 to 11 p.m. Cost is $10 single, $15 for couples. Those
attending are to take lawn
chairs, their own beverages,
finger foods. More informa-

.

'

~1ftllte

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Post will meet at 7 :30 p.m .
on Thursclay. The time was
incorrecdy reported m
Monday's edition.

Richard M~. 74, of M~rs Road in
Reedsville, died Monday, May 21, 2001, at his residence.
. BomApril!J,t927,he W2S the$011 of the late Alvin R2ymond
_and Leoru_Pooler M~rs and -.a mired Lekem Metals employ-

C 2001 Ao:uWeather. Inc.

river, which flows fiom Coshocron to Marietta -and is .the ~t
river wholly con!:lin~d in Ohio.
"This is on~ of th~ biggest attractions }')U 'w got in tllis whot~
area. I've """" people \\':lit for r.vo hours for these locks to open up,"
said Jack l'ratt, 56, of Camrichacls, Pa.
.
"All you need is more people to come·and see these locks operate. This is real history.You've really got something here," said PDtt,
who comes every three weeks fiom his home to 6sh at Devols Dam
. BY '!HE ASSOCIATED PRESS
help keep temperatures cool. along the ri-..:r.
The locks are operated by employees of the MuSkingum River
The National Weather Ser- Highs will be in the low to
Parkway,
which is part of the state park system.
vice says unsettled weather mid 60s from Thursday
will continue in the Ohio through the weekend. Lows
River valley and the · Great will be mostly in the 40s.
SUII UIVSS,. 110 ~-~
..
Lakes region for the rest of the
Sunset today will be at 8:48
MIAMISBURG (AP) -A mari wanted for questioning in the
week as a broad area of low p.m . Sunset Thursday will be
first homicide in 10 ~rs in this west-central Ohio community has
pressure that was over Min6 10
at = a.;··
t
surrendered but no charges have been 6led, police said.
nesota and Wisconsin on
'J{ da . p ~reca~ d High . Randall Wayne McDanie~38, of Moraine, was shot Monday night
Wednesday morning moves
Y· a Y c ou y.
on a downtown sidewalk and died at Miami Valley Hospibl, police
slowly east into the Great 68
. • 1ow 4 9 .
.d 1i esday.
531
Lakes.
· Thursday: Showers. High
D etectrve
u . ·Kirk Bell saJ'd the 50-~ar-o
·
ld man wh o surren....,
-'-red
Periods of showers are possi- 67 1 49
Sh
High 66 said he shot McDaniel in self-defense.
ble for the rest of the week as
r~ Y·
owers.
'
BeD said inveStigators were unsure exactly what happened other
troughs of low pressure rotate 1
owS ·d
p 1
than that a· shot was 6red after an altercation of some sort.
3tu~ ay:
arty cloudy.
around the low.
The clouds and showers will High 67,low 44.

Coaaectlon

REEI&gt;SVILLE -

•

\

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P~tge

A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Ricllanl Myers·

Aa:uW~ lorecasllor

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio schools
would receive an ~dditional S1.4 billion
ovrr two }'e2lS while the ~ s public colleges and UJliomsities would get much
smaller increases, ~ccording to the la~e~t
vemon of the st:u:e's $45 billion budget.
1be G0P-conaolled Seo;~te Finance
Committee ~pproved the two-~ar budget udy Wedne5day 8-4 along party lines
alirr about nine hours of debate.
Se.ure Finance Chairman Doug White,
a Manchester Republian, said the comrnirrre =de an honeSt efforr lO meer ~
courr-ordercd school-funding fix without
regard to the rest of the budget.
"Everything else became secondary to
K through 12," White said.
Sen. Eric Fingerhut of Cleveland, the
lOp-ranking Democrat on the committee,

The Dally Sentinel•

*119

tion can be 'tlbtained from
Amy Wagner, 992-1377.

Issued license
POMEROY -. A marriage license has been issued
in Meig; County Common
Pleas Court to Todd Owen
Moodispaugh, 32, and Debbie Lynn f'lutter, 25, both of
Reedsville.

.Divorce.
dinolution
filed
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common
Pleas
Court by Patricia A . Henderson, Pomeroy, and John A.
Henderson ; Portland.
A divorce action has been
filed by Macie Kathleen
Salser, Middleport, against
Michael Dwayne Salser, also
of Middleport.

To hold
services
RACINE - · Racine Post
602, American Legion, will
conduct Memorial Day services Monday at 10 a.m. at
the Post Memorial site with
a public steak dinner to follow.

To close
POMEROY -The Meig;
County Health Department
offices will be closed Monday in observance of Memorial Day. Normal business
operations will resume Tues.day, 8 a.m.

Civil

from unlawful arrest, detention and imprisonment.
They also allege the defenframPipA1
dants made personal use of
some items seized, and that
defendants deprived them of Lentes failed to return
their rights to freedom from unspecified sum of money as
illegal searches and seizures agreed to 10 a forfeiture
and their rights to freedom agreement.

an ·

Hunten
from PlgeAI
Juvenile
Court
judge,
recalled his first meeting
with Henry Hunter in
1974, when he first began
his political career as a
staffer in the Ohio Statehouse.
"Henry and Mary · have
always been there for me
and my family when we've
needed them," Long said,
recalling the Hunters' support of his 1986 victory
against long-time Senator
Oakley Collins. "Their
leadership has provided the
foundation of growth for
the Democratic Party in
Meig; County, and much of

f\ 11

.... , . . . ,

r. l l

l i M I ' o"'• ' " "

that success is due to the
Hunters."
Letters of tribute also
were received by former
Ohio and U.S. Treosurer
Mary Ellen Withrow and
Morgan County Democratic Party Chairman · Mary
Funk, and Strickland· presented special Congressional awards to the couple .
"As
Americans
and
Democrats, we have a
responsibility to all," Strickland said. "We are in this
together as human beings as
a national human family,
and the burden is ours ."
· "We should take inspiration from Henry and Mary,
who have never stopped
believing."

�_. . ......... .
Pomeloy, lllddlapott, Ohio

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

. . . . . . .. ,• . . , 11, 1001

Finance Committee approves budget

Ohio weather
Thunay, ll8y Zl

I o.,..... I*• I

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called it the wont budget he'd ~r seen.
"lt .will cause long-term dmuge lO the
sate of Ohio and it will cost us twice as
much to 6x the problems that -·re causing here than it would be to do it right in
the firsr iDSbnce;· he s:aid.
By late Tuesday, the Republ,ican-conaolled committee had approved several
GOP proposals,. including more funding
for Ohios Appaluhian counties and a
pbn to provide Sl million mnUalty for
n:ligious or:g:mizatioos providing services
to needy Ohio~ns.
The committee defeated several Democratic proposals along party lines, induding plans lO resto~ funding for higher
educ3tion and boost money for libraries.
"I believe this bill goes a long way to
address the needs of aU the schools and all

the children in the sare," Serure Education Chairman Robert Gardner, a Madison R.tpnblican, said of the funding for
educalion. • Am I happy what we had to
do with higher education and especially
the community schools? N o"
The education funding is necessary lO
meet ~ June 15 deadline set by the Ohio
Supreme Court. which has twice tuled
the St:lte's school-funding system unconstirutional.
~
The court says the system's overre~nce
on IOC3l property taXeS create. dispariti"'
between rich and poor districts.
The plan recommends spending S4,814
on each Ohio schoolchild next ~ar, compared with $4,490 if no change is made. h
would spend about $4,949 the following
year.

...

_

I

ee m Marietta.
He W2S a member ofTuppers Pbins VFW Post No. 9053, an
· Army veteran of World War II, and a member of the military
police. ·
He also 3ttended Silver Ridge United Brethten Church.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth Bailey M~; ~ daughter,
Shirley Myers; a grandson, James M~rs; a gnnddaugbter, Sherri
.. M~rs; two great-gr.mddaugbters,Theresa and Alyssa Baker, all of
Reedsville; three brothers, lloyd M~rs of Erie, Pa., Alvin M~rs
of Reedsville, Bruce M~rs of Chester; a sister, Mary Argabrite of
Maryland; a special nephew, Steve Cowdery of Semrook, Texas; a
special niece,Jenny Doe ofWinter Spring;, Fla.; several nieces and
nephews; and an ex-grandson-in-law, Rick Baker of Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be at I , p.m. Friday at White Funeral
Home in Coolville. The Rev. Robert Sanders 'vill officiate.
Burial will follow in the Myers Family Cemetery in Reedsville.
Friends may .visit on Thursday from -2-4 p.m . and 6-8 p.m. at
the funeral home.
·

man, and the son ofTom Luken, a fonner council member and congressnun.

Robert •Mike• Newell

......

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M•

..a.- fled

°

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F

7

unknown fint to fie

Woman on trial for munler
CLEVELANO (AP) - A jury will try fur the thin! time to
decide ifAngela Garcia set her house on fire, killing her two young
daughters in an insurance scam. .
Two other Cuyah~ County Common Pleas Court juries wen:
uruble to reach a verdict and mistrials were declared. The new jury
begins deliberating Wednesday.
·
Garcia, 24,is on ctial on aggravated murder md other'clurges but
is not facing the death penalty. She is accused of settil)g tire to her
house on Nov. 20, !999. The tire killed her children - N~emah
Garcia, 3, and Nijah Evans, 2.

Pou'Jel' plant in mine pis OK

CINCINNATI (AP) -A political novice is the first to 6le for
rna}')r of Cincinnati under a new system in which voters will directly elect a mayor for the first time in more than 75 ~Bill Brodberger, 37, has no party endoisem.ent and has never run
for public offic~u~ he has submitted the nec~ry number of signablres to the ~ton County Board ofEiecnons.
Ma}')r Chadie Luken, a Democrat, was elected under the old system in which the City Coun0J candidate who got the most votes
became mayor. He is expected to run in the fall, but has not 6led.
The Republican and Charter· parties have not announced a candidate to take on Luken, who is one of the beSt-known names in
Cincinnati politics. He is a former television anchor and congress-

.

.

Ill would end mandatoly oRer
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Senate on Tuesday passed a bill that
would eliminate the requirement that insurance companies offer
protection against uninsured motorists in vehicle policies.
The bill, which the Serute passed 25-7, now .goes lO the House.
Such offers would not be mandatory, but protection against uninsured motorists would still be available under the bill. It also seis
requirements, exclusions at!d other conditions of unin.sured
motorists protection.
Since the 1970s law has mandated the coverage be offered.

Pilot escapes serious injury

·

MONEY-SAVING DISCOUNTS

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Dem•an•u
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City 111oving on stadium

Muskingum locks ~ng touted

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a

The man is said to have grown
up in the same village.
"There is a real risk of nustaken identity, that one Ivan
Den'\ianjuk has been mistak~n
for another," Tigar wrote ,in
court d,ocuments.
A message requesting comment was left . Tuesday fot
Michael Arine Johnson, a Jus•'.....eoe, [lepartme:nt lawyer 1'n the.

Pomeroy
· JEFF WARNER
113W.lndStreet

!192-5479 .

Nationwide•
Insurance &amp;
Financial Services

.

s~~

UNIONTOWN (AP) - A pilot flying solo in a twin-engine
Navajo plane crash landed Tue.day in a field three miles fiom the
Akron-Canton Regional Airport, an airport official said. He was not
seriously injured.
Dennis Frame, 51, of M~dore, was flying a charter plane operated by Casde Aviation when it went down about 8:20 a.m. northeast of the airport, said Michael Grossnunn, president of the cowpany based in the Akron-Canton area. He did not know what caused
tlle plane to crash.

Judge
refuses
to
delay
tart f
• • k tri I

NORTON (AP)- Norton Energy Swrage LLC has moved one
step closer to building a compressed-air pO\ver plant.
·
!he Ohio Power Siting Board a~proved the proposal Monday.
We are ""ry pleased w1th OPSil s approval.! believe that if we get
the Ohio Environmental ProteC'.i on Agency permit, we can start
construction sometime this
said company vice president Joyce
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
Miller.
federal judge Tuesday refused
The ColumJ:,us-based power siting board granted Norton Energy to delay trial for John Dema"certificate of environmental compatibility and public need" for the · janjuk, who is fighting gov. electric plant, to be located in this community 35 miles south of. ernment allegations that he
Cleveland.TheEPA's granting of a pernrit to install energy-genernt- covered up a past as a Nazi
guard at death and forced
ing turbines could come in 60 days.
labor camps .
Demjanjuk's
citizenship
revocation
trial
remains
EASTLAKE (AP) -This Cleveland suburb has taken two more scheduled to begin next Tuessteps tO\vard bringing in minor-league baseball. . .
day in U.S. District Court, said
City Council on Tuesday night approved paying Turner Con- a clerk for Judge Paul Maria.
struction of Cleveland about $800,000 to oversee construction of a · Demjanjuk's attorneys had
proposed IS million stadium. It also approved leasing the stadium to requested at least :i threeDiamond Dust LLC for 25 years.
month trial delay to review
Gates Mills businessman Kip Horsburgh plans to move the Mid- court documents. The attorwest League's Quad City River Bandits, who are based in Daven- neys argued that .Justice
port, Iowa, to Eastlake forthe 2003 season.The tearn will be a Class Department lawyers' overA affiliate of the Cleveland Indians.
·
whelmed them with lastCouncilman Stephen Kornaijansk:i opposed the measures. He has minute doCuments, some
been the lone dissenter on baseball legislation since Mayor Dan decades old and written in
Diliberto started aggressively pursuing a team more than a year ago. foreign languages.
Defense attorney Michael
Tigar said he needed more
time to look into information
MARIETIA (AP) - Some people who live along the Musk.
given by Ukrainian officials
ingum Ri""r think its hand-opernted lock system has the potential
who said they interviewed a
to become a national tourist attraction. ·
·
relative of a dead man named
The system opens for the season .Saturday along the 112-mile
Iva~ Demjanjuk last month.

POMEROY- Robert "Mike" Newell, 55, f'omeroy, died on
Monday; May 21 , 2001 at his home.
He was born on Oct. 3, 1945 in Clifion, WV~ .• son oftbe late
Clarence 0. and Alva Ste~rt Newell. He was a mechanic for
RSO/AEP. He \vas a ""tenn of the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, and was a member of the Stewart-Johnson Post 9926,
VeteDns of Foreign Wars of Mason, W.Va., the Fraternal Order of
Eagles No. 3692 of Pomeroy; and Disabled American Veterans
Chapter 53.
.
Surviving are his wife of23 yem, Rebecca J. Rothgeb Newell,
Pomeroy; a stepdaughter an~ her husband, Stacy L. and Britt
DodsonofMiddleport;astepson,TroyYankunsofPomeroy;three
granddaughters: Megan Tripp, Amber Tripp and Haley Tripp; a
stepgrandson, Brandon Dodson; a nephew and niece,Jeff Newell
and Lemn Spaulding; a sister, Wilma Scarberry ofVinton; a brother, Don Newell of Clifion, W.Va.; and several other nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by ~ sisters,
Sharon 'Jane" Newell and Nina Dailey; and his brother, Clarence
"Buck" Newell.
· · Services will be Thursday, May 24, 2001 at Fogelsong Funeral
Home in Mason, W.Va., with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will
follow at Graham Cemetety in New Haven.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 6 to

LIMA (AI') - A laundry room fire that caused an estimated
$300,000 danuge fmced the e~~:~cuation of pam of lima Memorial
Hospital on Tuesday.
No one was injured in the 6 p.m. fire, but one patient who was in
surgery had to be transferred to St. Rita's Medical Center.
Sixty patients fiom the second and third floors were moved tc
other, rooms or outside while the fire was put out, hospital presiden•
John White said.
The fire was caused by a malfunctioning air conditioner, the fin:
department said.

More rain ·on Thursday

G}

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NJ7 11..00
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"'----"".-...;.;;;;;.MuNo;;;;'Homl
;;,;'"';;"'Olllct:
;;;'";;'Columl:lul,
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::.:".::;..::•:.::•".::'"::.'".:.:c::::'""':.'."~.·---....1

.

Military graveside rites will be conducted by Stewart-Johnson
Post 9926,VFW; and Smith-Capehart American Legion Post 140.

. Mirabelle Shlapnack
.

.

COLUMBUS - Manbelle Sharpnack, 59, Columbus, died
Tuesday; May 22, 2001, at St. Angela's Nursing Center.
Born November 23,1941,inAppleGrove,she was the daugb• ter of the late Jack and Elizabeth Wolfe Sharpnack and was an
employee for the state of Ohio, Department of Jobs and Family
Services for more than 39 ~ars..
.
She was also a member of New Life Baptist Church and the
Triangle Chapter No. 592, OES.
Along with her parents, she.is preceded in death by a sister and
brother-in-law, Evelyn and Hank Baker.
She is survi""d by a sister, Kathryn (Gary) Spires of Columbus;
two brothers, Jack (Norma) Sharpnack Jr., of Coll)mbus, William
(Linda) Sharpnack of Peru, Ind.; several nieces, Cathy Sue '(Steve)
Chamberlain, Jennifer (Brian) · DeBlasio, Party (Don) Zasadny,
Beth (Darrell) Armstrong; a nephew, Jackie W Sharpnack; four
great-nieces, Laura and Melissa Chamberlain, Abby and Molly
Elizabeth Armstrong; two great-nephews, Cameron DeBlasio and
· Colin Zasadny.
Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday, May 25, 2001, at
Chapel of Letart Falls Cemetery in Letart Falls, where additional
visitation will be held one-half hour prior to the service. Officiating will be .the Rev. Ray Morgan.
Friends may also visit on Friday from 9-10 a.m. at RutherfordCorbin Funeral Home, Worthington Chapel, in Worthington.
Memorial contributions can be made in her memory to: Mt.
Carmel Hospice, 1144 Dublin Road, Columbus,. OH 43215.

The Daily Sentinel

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have more
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:.J'II,DOW someone who is just not that-·
CHICKEN anymore?

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On the Web
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nnle changed
VISIT Sin - Christi Lynch of U.S. Rep, Ted Strickland's
office, Renee Young of the . Ohio Emergency Management
Agency, and Bob Byer of Meigs County EMA look at damage at
the Hall residence in Danville. It was one of several properties
which sustained heavy damage in Salem Township on Monday
night. (David Harris photo)
·

Stonn

&amp;om PapAl
belting Ohio communities
late last week, .said Taft's
spokesman, Kevin Kellems.
Ohio EMA has deployed
staff members to affected
counties to support local
response and recovery efforts.
AEP's Ronn Robinson said
this morning that crews with
the power company are just
. waiting for high water to subside before electricity. is
restored there.
The weather service in
Charleston, W.Va., confirmed
that an "FI" torna~o -. one
associated with wind speeds
of 73- to 112-mph winds damaged trees, homes, and
farm building; in the Danville
and Hanesville communities.
A house in Hanesville
(Salem
Township)
was
destroyed by a maple tree
with a three-foot trunk
· which was felled by the wind.

canlar seNice Is available.

MallsubsaiDIIon

lnolde Molgo eo'!;ftii,
13 wooko
$27.30
26 Weeks
$53.82
52 Weeks
$105.56
A - ouloldo Molgo Counly
13 Weeks
$29.25
26 Weeks
$56.86
52 weeks
$109.72

I

Gaul

Davidson
and
Michael
Hawkins as summer maintenance helpen to assist in
grounds keepins and other
fromPipA1
duties as assigned at a rate of
Householder, Kimberly Janey; $7.50 per hour effective June
Bethany Justis, Christopher 4 and continuing until no
Kennedy, Donna Clark-Kern, longer noeded.
Ramona Lewis, Christa MidThe resignation of Kent S.
cap, Mary Powell, Delmar Howell as instrumental music
Pullins, Nathan Robinette, . teacher and assistant band
Kimberly Roush, Wanda director was accepted, and
Shuler, c;:atherine Simpson, Stephanie Ash, Joe Bailey, .a nd
Bobby Stanley, Abbie Strat- Steven Wood were hired as
ton, Jacqueline Wolfe, and high school summer school
Steven Wood.
teachers with their salaries to
Hired as substitute employ- be paid from grant funds.
ees with a stipulation that
In other action, the board.
substitutes may be used in authorized an additional five
classifications other than· as days of extended service for
listed, were:
Mona Frecker at the end of
Aides, pending certifica- the current school year to
tion, Melissa Conde, Nancy provide for the transition
Freeman, Teresa Patterson, . from Salem Center ElemenConnie Soulsby, Leah Rose, tary to Rutland Elementary
Jeanie
Allen,
Charlene School.
Chaney, Karen Mullins.
Approval was given by the
Bus drivers, pending certifi- board to pay $3,500 to Sue
cation, Lou Hemsley, Linda Romuno for substance abuse
Morris, Rhett Milhoan, Don- intervention working oneald Richmond, Crystal Rich- on-one with students at
mond, ,.Earl Pickens, William MMS and MHS from the
Lavender, Stephen. Rife, Jack Drug Free Schools Grant. It
McDaniel, Joyce Jewell, and was also voted to accept a
S4,000 grant from the Ohio
Glen Kennedy.
Department of Education for
Mechanic: Dennis Tillis
Cooks: Tammy Jarvis, Ellora substance abuse prevention
Patterson, Donna Buffingtpn, assistance in the schools.
The board discussed at
Rebecca Frechette, Gina
Thoni~s, Beverly Allen, and length a possible contract for
electrical service through the
Diana Bowles.
Custodians: Marvin Roush, Ohio SchooiPool purchasing
Leland.
Parker,
Robert services with no action being
Moore, William Lavender, taken. A representative from
Eric White, Lawson Higgins, Strategic Energy will be invitPearlie
Jewell,
Michael . ed to speak on the program at
the next board meeting. ·
Hawkins.
During the meeting, the
Secretaries, .Cindy Shull,
boattl
voted to apply to the
Jayne Humphreys.
Contracts
non-renewed Ohio Department of Educadue to other employment or tion fot" approval of cala1nity
employment conflicts were days: all schools, Jan. 22, Feb.
Janet Hardey, bus driver; Ear- 22, and March 6, inclement
ley Hill, mechanic; Kelly Lee weather; Harrisonville, Oct.
Gayle Morris, cooks; Kyle 10, utility failure, Feb. 2,
Sinclair, BDd Knotts, James inclement we.a ther; Pomeroy,
Counts, Gerald Matthews, Oct. 31 and Nov. 22, utility
Geprge Schweickart, custodi- failore; Salem Center, Feb. 2,
inclement weather; Salisbury,
ans.
The board hired John M. Nov. 22, utility failure.

WASHER

Once again, we ask that the magazines be current year
(2001) and in good condition. Any mailing labels with
identifying names will be detached. For more infonnatlon
please call, (304) 675-7222.
'

liJ lick Cllllr

• 4 Temperal\Jre
·Heavy Duty

uusgg

• 7 cycles

$33

Hllh lick Chair
1111

Thank you for your assistance, generosity and time.
.,

•

..

A carport and barn were
completely destroyed at the
same residence,
"In
fact,"
a
NWS
.spokesman said, "the carport
trnveled some 75 yards before
landing across the road. The
same house also suffered
room damage."
In Danville, roofs were torn
ofT rwo locations and a corn
· crib was completely leveled.
Numerous trees were uprooted with branches scattered
throughout the area, and large
pieces
of wood
were
launched into the side of the
Edwin H . Davis &amp; Son bus
garage, causing significant
damage. The bus facility also
sustained a damaged roof.
·
The NWS said the tornado
was about :200 yards in width,
with intermittent touchdowns. The total length of
damage stretched roughly
four miles, beginning two
miles west of Danville and
extending northeast to two
miles
northwest
of
Hanesville.

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TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of Education's special board meet. ing will be at 7:30 p.m.,
instead of 6 :30 p.m. at the
administrative office in Tuppers Plains.

Barbecue
planned
RACINE - Racine Volunteer Fire Department ,.,;ill
· hold a chicken barbecue and
homemade ice cream social
Sunday at the firehouse.
Serving begins at II a.m.

Date changed
SALEM CENTER
Salem Township Trustees will
hold their monthly meeting
May 29 at 6 p.m . at the
Salem Firehouse.

Plan reunion
POMEROY - A I 0-year
reunion of the Meig; High
School Class of 1991 will be
held Saturday at Salisbury
Elementary SChooL A gath- .
ering with children will take
place from 1 to 4 p.m. An
adult event will be held from
7 to 11 p.m. Cost is $10 single, $15 for couples. Those
attending are to take lawn
chairs, their own beverages,
finger foods. More informa-

.

'

~1ftllte

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Post will meet at 7 :30 p.m .
on Thursclay. The time was
incorrecdy reported m
Monday's edition.

Richard M~. 74, of M~rs Road in
Reedsville, died Monday, May 21, 2001, at his residence.
. BomApril!J,t927,he W2S the$011 of the late Alvin R2ymond
_and Leoru_Pooler M~rs and -.a mired Lekem Metals employ-

C 2001 Ao:uWeather. Inc.

river, which flows fiom Coshocron to Marietta -and is .the ~t
river wholly con!:lin~d in Ohio.
"This is on~ of th~ biggest attractions }')U 'w got in tllis whot~
area. I've """" people \\':lit for r.vo hours for these locks to open up,"
said Jack l'ratt, 56, of Camrichacls, Pa.
.
"All you need is more people to come·and see these locks operate. This is real history.You've really got something here," said PDtt,
who comes every three weeks fiom his home to 6sh at Devols Dam
. BY '!HE ASSOCIATED PRESS
help keep temperatures cool. along the ri-..:r.
The locks are operated by employees of the MuSkingum River
The National Weather Ser- Highs will be in the low to
Parkway,
which is part of the state park system.
vice says unsettled weather mid 60s from Thursday
will continue in the Ohio through the weekend. Lows
River valley and the · Great will be mostly in the 40s.
SUII UIVSS,. 110 ~-~
..
Lakes region for the rest of the
Sunset today will be at 8:48
MIAMISBURG (AP) -A mari wanted for questioning in the
week as a broad area of low p.m . Sunset Thursday will be
first homicide in 10 ~rs in this west-central Ohio community has
pressure that was over Min6 10
at = a.;··
t
surrendered but no charges have been 6led, police said.
nesota and Wisconsin on
'J{ da . p ~reca~ d High . Randall Wayne McDanie~38, of Moraine, was shot Monday night
Wednesday morning moves
Y· a Y c ou y.
on a downtown sidewalk and died at Miami Valley Hospibl, police
slowly east into the Great 68
. • 1ow 4 9 .
.d 1i esday.
531
Lakes.
· Thursday: Showers. High
D etectrve
u . ·Kirk Bell saJ'd the 50-~ar-o
·
ld man wh o surren....,
-'-red
Periods of showers are possi- 67 1 49
Sh
High 66 said he shot McDaniel in self-defense.
ble for the rest of the week as
r~ Y·
owers.
'
BeD said inveStigators were unsure exactly what happened other
troughs of low pressure rotate 1
owS ·d
p 1
than that a· shot was 6red after an altercation of some sort.
3tu~ ay:
arty cloudy.
around the low.
The clouds and showers will High 67,low 44.

Coaaectlon

REEI&gt;SVILLE -

•

\

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P~tge

A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Ricllanl Myers·

Aa:uW~ lorecasllor

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio schools
would receive an ~dditional S1.4 billion
ovrr two }'e2lS while the ~ s public colleges and UJliomsities would get much
smaller increases, ~ccording to the la~e~t
vemon of the st:u:e's $45 billion budget.
1be G0P-conaolled Seo;~te Finance
Committee ~pproved the two-~ar budget udy Wedne5day 8-4 along party lines
alirr about nine hours of debate.
Se.ure Finance Chairman Doug White,
a Manchester Republian, said the comrnirrre =de an honeSt efforr lO meer ~
courr-ordercd school-funding fix without
regard to the rest of the budget.
"Everything else became secondary to
K through 12," White said.
Sen. Eric Fingerhut of Cleveland, the
lOp-ranking Democrat on the committee,

The Dally Sentinel•

*119

tion can be 'tlbtained from
Amy Wagner, 992-1377.

Issued license
POMEROY -. A marriage license has been issued
in Meig; County Common
Pleas Court to Todd Owen
Moodispaugh, 32, and Debbie Lynn f'lutter, 25, both of
Reedsville.

.Divorce.
dinolution
filed
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marriage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common
Pleas
Court by Patricia A . Henderson, Pomeroy, and John A.
Henderson ; Portland.
A divorce action has been
filed by Macie Kathleen
Salser, Middleport, against
Michael Dwayne Salser, also
of Middleport.

To hold
services
RACINE - · Racine Post
602, American Legion, will
conduct Memorial Day services Monday at 10 a.m. at
the Post Memorial site with
a public steak dinner to follow.

To close
POMEROY -The Meig;
County Health Department
offices will be closed Monday in observance of Memorial Day. Normal business
operations will resume Tues.day, 8 a.m.

Civil

from unlawful arrest, detention and imprisonment.
They also allege the defenframPipA1
dants made personal use of
some items seized, and that
defendants deprived them of Lentes failed to return
their rights to freedom from unspecified sum of money as
illegal searches and seizures agreed to 10 a forfeiture
and their rights to freedom agreement.

an ·

Hunten
from PlgeAI
Juvenile
Court
judge,
recalled his first meeting
with Henry Hunter in
1974, when he first began
his political career as a
staffer in the Ohio Statehouse.
"Henry and Mary · have
always been there for me
and my family when we've
needed them," Long said,
recalling the Hunters' support of his 1986 victory
against long-time Senator
Oakley Collins. "Their
leadership has provided the
foundation of growth for
the Democratic Party in
Meig; County, and much of

f\ 11

.... , . . . ,

r. l l

l i M I ' o"'• ' " "

that success is due to the
Hunters."
Letters of tribute also
were received by former
Ohio and U.S. Treosurer
Mary Ellen Withrow and
Morgan County Democratic Party Chairman · Mary
Funk, and Strickland· presented special Congressional awards to the couple .
"As
Americans
and
Democrats, we have a
responsibility to all," Strickland said. "We are in this
together as human beings as
a national human family,
and the burden is ours ."
· "We should take inspiration from Henry and Mary,
who have never stopped
believing."

�.. .

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The Daily Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Opinion

Wa' nd r.llllfD.:aee1

DEAR ABBY: -1 will be having
my second child in a few weeks. My
mother ts conung from her home in
Malaysia to help for the first month 1
am back from the hospital.
I am grateful for her help, but I am
also worried. She st10ngly believes in
spanking and slapping her children
and grandchildren. I was raised that
way. In Asia, spanking is a common
form of discipline in schools and
'fjomes. I .am against it.
.
Last rught, I was talking to my
mother on the phone. My 3-year-old
daughter was tired and began crying.
I told Mother I would call her back
after my daughter \vas asleep. My
mother told me to slap her. I was
horrified.
~ told her I do not spank or slap my
child. My husband and I believe in
"time-outs." My mother doesn't

Ohio Valley P.ubllshlng Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publllher

R. Shewn lewis
Managing EdHor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

LMifrr 161M,._,..-. wrko;...,._Th&lt;J tholl.ld bt 1111 IMII 306 wonb. AU ktun

.,. •rJiitd to t4i/iltf IUf4 •'"' ~ .•ifMd aNI inehiU aWn!• Glfll l~kplwtw 11~r.
No IUUipH l«&lt;tfl wUl IN publi.slred. L#tkn .slla.Jd. bt UJ r«NN-IM*,

.,un,..,.

.'

in••·Tlw'""FUIJMiiti,,
.
o,btiolll ~~,.rsal in tJre cuiMIIUI '-"'"'tiN lhe toiiUIIIlU of llw Oluo Vllllq
raJHisltU.. Co. '• edUorittl Mtud. lilllltll «MrwilriNJied,

NATIONAL VIEW

Botched

SAINTS AND SINNERS

• The Deseret News, Sdlt Lake City, 011 the McVeigh exe04·
tio11:
.

Church is in the mail this week, honey

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,.

er's head? I don't want her to spank
my 3-year~ld when she cries. DESPERATE MOTHER IN

TEXAS
DEAR MOTHER: A good talk-

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
think they are effective. I told her that
slapping a child could cause damage
to the eardrum and dearness. r even
told her that when she spanked me as
a child, I hated her for weeks. It made
me a more rebellious kid. Naturally,
she disagreed. She said she had
spanked my nephew with a cane a
few days earlier.
Abby, what c!o you suggest I do to
''knock" some sense into my moth-

. ing-to is a far mqre effective way to
discipline children than hitting them.
Corporal punishment not only
·destroys a child's self-esteem and
trust, but it also enforces the idea that
"might makes right."
Hitting a child when he or she
.misbehaves me)ns that the adult has
"reacted" instead of using the situation as an opporrunity to, teach more
appropriate behavior. Children learn
best in an atmosphere of cooperation, through teaching, discussion and
observing adults who display responSible, loving, self-disciplined behavior.
. When your mother arri~es, you
and your husband must make it clear

that you will not tolerate hitting or
slapping. Explain that you want your
daughter to love her grandmother,
not fear her and dread her arrival. If
the child should misbehave, make it
clear that you or your husband will
handle the discipline - and then .
show her how you do it.
Contrary to popular belief, you
CAN teach an old dog new tricks.
.Perhaps your mother will learn from
your example. If she doesn't, she must
not be left alone with her granddaughter.
DEAR ABBY: Your recent letters
about people during World War II
who betrayed themselves by customs
and mannerisms reminded me of a
joke that made the rounds during
that time: If military guards were on
duty and a stranger approached •. the
guards would ask him to prove he

was an American by singing the
SECOND verse of"The Sur-Spangled Banner." , If the stranger knew
the words, the guards knew he was a
1py. - KATHRYN WEEKLY,

LAKELAND, FLA.
DEAR KATHRYN: Funny!
Even if someone knows the lyrics of
the first verse, the melody is so difficult to sing that few true-blue Americans have mastered it.
DEAR ABBY: As a baby boomer
"coming of age," my hair has gone
from brown ro 60 percem gray. When
filling out forms and documents that
ask for color of hai~ Oike driver's
licenses), what should I write' PRE-SENIOR MAN IN ARIZONA
DEAR PRE-SENIOR: Since
you're more than 50 percent gray, I'd
say it's time to grin and declare it.

Coloring contest w.inners named

•
••

How did FBI overlook
3, 13 5 relevant documents?
In the wake ofTimothy McVeigh's suddenly delayed execution, the obvious question is, how was it possible to overlook
3,135 relevant documents? Most people, no matter how disorganized they may be, would have trouble missing 3, 135 of anything, let alone items that are .pertinent to one of the most
important cases ever handled by the FBI. ...
Louis Freeh picked a good time to retire as FBI directorsomething he announced two weeks ago and which will take
effect in June. Had he not done s~. this episode surely would
have forced him to leave. ...
On Friday, (McVeigh's) attorneys said they might need more
than a month to comb through all the new information. One
of them hinted McVeigh himself may abandon his decision to
accept death and begin actively challenging the sentence. He
had agreed to waive his appeals before the latest foul-up.
The maddening thing is that none of the new evidence is
expected to ha~e any bearing at all on the case. McVeigh
already has admitted to bombing the Alfred P Murrah Federal
Building, killing 168 people. ... Yet the government has an
obligation to be as thorough and fair as possible in capital cases,
and Attorney General John Ashcroft was correct to delay the
sentencing. .. .
.
These documents should have been turned over to
McVeigh's attorneys during the discovery phase of the t:I:ial,
which began in 1997.
That they weren't is i11excusable. It also is grossly unfair to
the victims and their relatives, who deserve justice.

4

Tradition-minded Grandma is unsparing with rod

..

111 Court St., Po~. Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: m-2157

w.- ":!!!!

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Sometimes people come to church.
Sometimes the church goes to them in the mail.
Most churches send ' out a weekly or
monthly newsletter to their members
and friend•. It is often eagerly awaited,
particularly by the elderly and shut-ins
who are unable to get to church and
don't get much mail.
Most us like to see our names in the
paper, and the church newsletter offers
COLUMNIST
us our best ·chance for a fleeting
moment of fame.
You might not get a birthday card, but berry dinner at the neighboring North
your church will remember you in the Branford Congregational Church. The
newsletter with happy birthday wishes. cost of $9 seemed a litde steep for a
If you are sick or in the hospital, your church dinner (we used to call them
church friends will know about it so church suppers), but as my mother used
they can call you or pray for you~
to' say. ''Everytbi g~1s ;so high · these
In the May issue of the Meetinghouse days." (She said that even wlien bre~d
News of the First Congregational was 1 cent per loaf)
·
Church of Madison, Conn., I counted
Cheryl Martone, editor of the Meetthe· names of 127 members who made inghouse News, writes a weekly colthe news in one way or another that umn titled "From the Heart .of the Edimonth.
tor." It is a thoughtful, helpful, wellAmong other things, readers learned · crafted bit of religious inspiration. In the
from the newsletter how to create a current issue, she; takes us through .a
May Day bouquet (small stems of pink mini-session of"touch therapy."
dogwood blossoms, lilacs and white
"It seems as though every magazine
. peony tulips) . They were encouraged to we pick up lately has a'! article on 'the
hang' one basket over their front door healing power of touch,"' she writes.
"You can start by taking the hand of
and one on their neighbor's doQr- a
lovely idea.
someone · who needs healing. Touch
On page 4 of the 25-page newsletter, exchanges energy. Through our touch·
we were all inviied to a ham-and-straw- ing someone else, we have begun· the

George
Plagenz

healing proceSs. We can hold their hand,
stroke their arm or give them a full
embrace.
"Much research has gone into the
study of premature babies and how the
infants with touch thrive over the
infants without:' She uses her own preemie as an example.
The Rev. Robert St. Clair publishes ·
another kind of newsletter. A retired ··
pastor who lives at the Methodist Camp
Grounds in Lancaster, Ohio, St. Clair
puts out a monthly, eight-page "Fireside
Chat," which is distributed free to about
100 people.
It comes complete with 'typos, dangling modifiers, Bible quizzes and puz- .
zles and St. Clair's own brand of whimsy: "Be careful of your tongue. It's in a '
wet place and it's easy ·to slip."
Sometimes the spell-checker on St.
Clair's computer can't spell, but it's usu- ,
ally possible to make out the words. .
Many readers' favorite part of the
"Fireside Chat" is the country parson's
down-home letter. '
·"
· "I walk daily to the mall, where I
often talk with folks who need prayer
and direction in their Jives. Last week I
took ~ne young man to get a haircut
and bought another a pair, of tennis .
shoes. I needed a pair for myself, and the
discount store where I go had a sal.e - '
buy one pair and get another for Sl."

Today is Wednesday, May 23, the 143rd day of2001. There
are 222 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History~
·.
On May '23, I ~60, Israel announced it had captured former
Nazi official Adolf Eichmann in Argentina. Eichmann was tried
in Israel, found guilty of crimes against humanity, and hanged
in 1962.
·
·
On this date:
In 1430, Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians, who
sold her to the English.
In 1533, the marriage of England's King Henry VIII to
Catherine of Aragon was declared null and void.
Star State from one of the most litigious to
If\ 170 I. Captain William Kidd was hanged in London after
I've got a programming suggestion for
one of the ·]east. Texas placed a cap on
he was convicted of piracy and murder.
•
Court TV: How about a weekly show
punitive damage awards, made its jointIn 1788, South Carolina became the eighth state to ratifY the
called "The F~fi1es?" It could feature two
U.S. Constitution.
·
. and-several liability law more equitable,
intrepid tort. reformers investigating fi:ivoIn t915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary in World War
and limited judge and court shopping.
lous legal claims.
I.
.
Caps on punitive· damages discourage
The beauty of th.e show is that it could
In 1934, bank robbers Bonnie' Parker and Clyde Barrow
litigants from trying to parlay . claims of
be based on the latest true-to-life lawsuits,
were shot to death in a police ambush in Bienville Parish, La.
negligible economic damages into multilike the whopping S1.5 million claim
In 1937, industrialist John D. Rockefeller died in Ormond
million-dollar courtrOom jackpots.
against the 'Escondido Public Library. It
Like the Escondido dog owner whose ·
Beach, Fla.
was.filed by a San Carlos man who alleges
40-page
In 1940, Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, the Pied Pipers
claim says he was out of pocket.·
that his dog, a 50-pound Labrador mix,
COLUMNIST
and featured soloist Frank Sinatra recorded "I'll N ever Smile
for $46.49 in veterinary treatment for his .
was attacked by the library's feline mascot,
pooch· and another $38 in chiropractic ,
Again" in New York for RCA.
L.C. (also known as Library Cat).
treatment for himself Yet he seeks more
In 1945, Nazi official Heinrich Himmler committed suicide
Or the $700,00(llawsuit that a Middle- one new lawsuit e¥ery two seconds.
while imprisoned in Luneburg, Germany.
town, Pa., teen-ager filed against her forMeanwhile, the litigation explosion than 30,000 times as much in punitive
Jn 1998, official returns showed two convincing "yes" votes
I;T~er softball coach. She claims that his costs American consumers and businesses &amp;mages:
Joint-an~-several liability laws in many
for the Northern Ireland peace accord in British-linked . . "incorrect" teaching style stunted her more than $150 'billion a year, according to
states
allaw a litigant suing multiple targets
Northern Ireland and the R epublic of.lreland.
development as an athlete, ruining her shot a study by the actuarial acco'!nting firm
Ten years ago: In a 5-4 vote, the tJ.S. Supreme Court upheld
at a college scholarship.
Tillinghast-Towers Perrin.· That is more !O seek any damages, regardless of a given
·
regulations barri11g federally subsidized family planning clinics
Then there's the Hatfield, Mass., man than twO-and-one-half titnes what the plaintiff's negligence.
Limits
on
judge
and
court
shopping
from discussing abortion with pregnant women, or from telling
who seeks $250,000 in restitution from nation spends each year on police and fire
prevent litigants from seeking out venues
the Massachusetts Electric Co., stenuning protection.
women where they could get abortions.
Five years ago: The House approved, by a vote of 281-144,
from the death of his ·"lucky" cat. The
The costs trickle down to conSUJ1lers in where they think they are most likely to
get favorable hearing;. Claims must be
man's wife, a security guard, took the feline the form of a hidden tax - a "tort tax."
election-year legislation to raise the minimum wage by 90
to work with her where it was eleccrocut- · It accounts, fur example, fur $8 of .an brought in venues with a substantial concent.s an hour. .
.
ed by an uninsulated wire near her securi- $11.50 diphtheria, pertussis and. tetanus nection to the injury.
One year ago: Two weeks before a U.S.-Russia arms summit,
What were the ·results of Texas' legal ,
ty trailer.
·
presidential ~andidate George W Bush said he would slash
(OPT) vaccine, $191 of a $578 tonsillectoreforms?
Personal il'\iury lawsuits (not · ·
The purpose of this show would not my, $170 of a $1,000 motorized wheelAmerica's nuclear arsenal ·as par~ of a broad national securitr
necessarily be to entertain (although view- chair and $3,000 of an $18,000 heart pace- related to motor vehicle accidents) have ,
review that would call for a missile-defense system.
decreased 30 percent since 1995. Texas
ers might find i~ amusing to see what maker.
· Today's Birthdays: Bandleader Artie Shaw is 91. Actress Betty '
businesses .and consumers saved nearly $3 .
absurd lengths some folks will go to in an
Garrett is 82. Pianist Alicia de Larrocha is 78. Bluegrass singer
So
.;"~~
c~
be
do~
(
~
staunch
the
billion
in insur.mce rate re&lt;fuctions alone.
.
effort to get rich through the legal system).
Mac Wiseman is 76. Singer Rosemary Clooney is 73. Actor
The Texas experience should be instrucRather, it would be to apprise the public nations lingauon exploSion· To reduce the
Nigel Davenport is 73. Actress Barbara Barrie is 70. Actress Joan
number
oflawsmts
added
to
state
and
lo~..
rive
to lawmakers in California, Pennsylvaof the rash of lawsuits clogging state and
Collins is 68. Actor Charles Kimbrough is 65. Rhythm-and.local court dockets throughout the coun- c.o urt dockets each year (from one every nia, Massachusetts, and other states whose
blues singer General' Johnson (Chairmen of the Board) is 58.
try, and to enlighten them about the eco- two seconds to maybe one every five sec- courts are inundated each year by a flood
Actress Lauren C hapin is '56. Cou ntry singer Judy Rodman is
nomic toll that lawsuit abuse imposes onds)? To lower the direct and indirect oflawsuits.
50. 'Boxer Marvelous Marvin Hagler is 49. Actor-comedian
costs oflitigation? ·
upon society.
Drew Carey is 43. Country si nger Shelley West is 43. Actor
joseph Perkins is. d columnist for The San ;
It so happens that, when he w.1.1 gover-Indeed, more than 15 million Uawsuits
Linden Ashby is 41. Actress- model Karen Duffy is 40. Rock
Diego
!..lnion· Thburk and can be ~£ached qt
nor
oiTexas,
George
W
Bush
signed
a
host
will be filed this year in state courts
musician Phil Selway (Raaiohead) is 34. Singer Lorenzo is 29.
throughout the land. That works out to oflegal reforms that trans(ormed the Lone joseph.Perkins@UnionTrib.com.
·Singer Maxwell is ?8. Singer Jewel is 27.

POMEROY -Winners of
the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation coloring
con test
were
recently
announced by contest officials.
Vicki
Morrow, · Meigs
SWCD education . coordinator, said Kassandra Mullins· of
Salem Center Elementary and
Olivia Cleek and Wesley Davis
of Pomeroy Elementary were
the three ·overall county cochampions in the contest.
Each winner received S I 0
for their effort.
A total of $180 was awarded
in the coloring contest. Firstplace winners in each class
received $5, with second- and
third-place · winners receiving
$3 and $2; respectively.
Winners in each class were:
LETART FALLS
(Mrs. Guinther) - Katelyn
Hill, Raquel Wolfe and Brady
DeLong; (Mrs. Norris) Teela Lemley, Miranda Holter
arid Chase Graham.
' :· SYRACUSE
(Mrs. Harris) - · Morgan
. McMillan, Alison Brown and
Faith Harkness. .
EASTERN
(Mrs. Hill)
Baylee
Collins, Marie Powell and
Kelsey Myers; (Mrs. Jones) Janae Boyles, Leslea Frank and

Brittany Bailey; (Mrs. White)
- DanieUe Cline, Christopher Bissell and Jacob Parker.
HARRISONVILLE
(Mrs. Harris) - Timmy
Parsons, Ashley King and Zach
Sayre.
MIDDLEPORT
(Mrs. Ashley) Kayla
Shane, McKenna Warner and
Stephanie LeMaster; (Mrs.
Brauer) - Carly Carpenter,
MicheUe Johnson and Marlee
Hoffman.
POMEROY
(Mrs. Deem) -Olivia
Cleek, Mac Sellers and

Heather Stewart; (Mr. Werry)
- Wesley Davis, Kaylee Terry
and Destiny Haning.
RUTLAND
(Mrs . Fetty) Chelsey
Eads, Chad Searles and Cassidy Tucker; (Mrs. Whan) Jacob Nitz, Steven Mahr and
Ashley Woodard.
SALEM CENTER
(Mrs. Gannaway) - Kassandra Mullins, Paige Barrett and
R. J. Scarbury.
SALISBURY
(Mrs. Kennedy) - Breanna
Gheen, Emalee Rebekah Glass
and !Utrina Shockey.

Kassandra Mullins

Wealay Davis

Olivia Cleek
'I

.

lngela Elactronlca

.

your., minutes and save!

106 N. Second Ave .
Middleport
740-992·2825

,

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PERKINS' VIEW

Uk all pqy when others fil~ frivolous suits ~:
Joseph
PerKins

.

'

I'

,.,

Sydnee Nicole Whaley

New arrival
I

MASON, W.Va . Neil
and Tara Whaley of Mason
announce the bitth o£ a
. daughter, Sydnee Nicole, on
April 12, at Holzer Medical
Center,
Gallipolis.
She
weighed seven pounds, 14
ouncf:iS.

Maternal grandparents ·are
Greg Erwin. and Sally Erwin,
both of Pomeroy, and paternal
grandparents are Dave . and
Ginny Barrett of Langsville.
Great-grandparents are the
Alice Globokar of Pomero~
and the , late Phil Globokar;
Dex and Sue Erwin of New
Haven, Doug and Norma
Grover of Rutland, and Jim
and Maria Barrett. of Gallipci-.
lis.
Mr: and Mrs. Whaley have a
son, Alex, 3.

The Daily
Sentinel
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The Daily Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Opinion

Wa' nd r.llllfD.:aee1

DEAR ABBY: -1 will be having
my second child in a few weeks. My
mother ts conung from her home in
Malaysia to help for the first month 1
am back from the hospital.
I am grateful for her help, but I am
also worried. She st10ngly believes in
spanking and slapping her children
and grandchildren. I was raised that
way. In Asia, spanking is a common
form of discipline in schools and
'fjomes. I .am against it.
.
Last rught, I was talking to my
mother on the phone. My 3-year-old
daughter was tired and began crying.
I told Mother I would call her back
after my daughter \vas asleep. My
mother told me to slap her. I was
horrified.
~ told her I do not spank or slap my
child. My husband and I believe in
"time-outs." My mother doesn't

Ohio Valley P.ubllshlng Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publllher

R. Shewn lewis
Managing EdHor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

LMifrr 161M,._,..-. wrko;...,._Th&lt;J tholl.ld bt 1111 IMII 306 wonb. AU ktun

.,. •rJiitd to t4i/iltf IUf4 •'"' ~ .•ifMd aNI inehiU aWn!• Glfll l~kplwtw 11~r.
No IUUipH l«&lt;tfl wUl IN publi.slred. L#tkn .slla.Jd. bt UJ r«NN-IM*,

.,un,..,.

.'

in••·Tlw'""FUIJMiiti,,
.
o,btiolll ~~,.rsal in tJre cuiMIIUI '-"'"'tiN lhe toiiUIIIlU of llw Oluo Vllllq
raJHisltU.. Co. '• edUorittl Mtud. lilllltll «MrwilriNJied,

NATIONAL VIEW

Botched

SAINTS AND SINNERS

• The Deseret News, Sdlt Lake City, 011 the McVeigh exe04·
tio11:
.

Church is in the mail this week, honey

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,.

er's head? I don't want her to spank
my 3-year~ld when she cries. DESPERATE MOTHER IN

TEXAS
DEAR MOTHER: A good talk-

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
think they are effective. I told her that
slapping a child could cause damage
to the eardrum and dearness. r even
told her that when she spanked me as
a child, I hated her for weeks. It made
me a more rebellious kid. Naturally,
she disagreed. She said she had
spanked my nephew with a cane a
few days earlier.
Abby, what c!o you suggest I do to
''knock" some sense into my moth-

. ing-to is a far mqre effective way to
discipline children than hitting them.
Corporal punishment not only
·destroys a child's self-esteem and
trust, but it also enforces the idea that
"might makes right."
Hitting a child when he or she
.misbehaves me)ns that the adult has
"reacted" instead of using the situation as an opporrunity to, teach more
appropriate behavior. Children learn
best in an atmosphere of cooperation, through teaching, discussion and
observing adults who display responSible, loving, self-disciplined behavior.
. When your mother arri~es, you
and your husband must make it clear

that you will not tolerate hitting or
slapping. Explain that you want your
daughter to love her grandmother,
not fear her and dread her arrival. If
the child should misbehave, make it
clear that you or your husband will
handle the discipline - and then .
show her how you do it.
Contrary to popular belief, you
CAN teach an old dog new tricks.
.Perhaps your mother will learn from
your example. If she doesn't, she must
not be left alone with her granddaughter.
DEAR ABBY: Your recent letters
about people during World War II
who betrayed themselves by customs
and mannerisms reminded me of a
joke that made the rounds during
that time: If military guards were on
duty and a stranger approached •. the
guards would ask him to prove he

was an American by singing the
SECOND verse of"The Sur-Spangled Banner." , If the stranger knew
the words, the guards knew he was a
1py. - KATHRYN WEEKLY,

LAKELAND, FLA.
DEAR KATHRYN: Funny!
Even if someone knows the lyrics of
the first verse, the melody is so difficult to sing that few true-blue Americans have mastered it.
DEAR ABBY: As a baby boomer
"coming of age," my hair has gone
from brown ro 60 percem gray. When
filling out forms and documents that
ask for color of hai~ Oike driver's
licenses), what should I write' PRE-SENIOR MAN IN ARIZONA
DEAR PRE-SENIOR: Since
you're more than 50 percent gray, I'd
say it's time to grin and declare it.

Coloring contest w.inners named

•
••

How did FBI overlook
3, 13 5 relevant documents?
In the wake ofTimothy McVeigh's suddenly delayed execution, the obvious question is, how was it possible to overlook
3,135 relevant documents? Most people, no matter how disorganized they may be, would have trouble missing 3, 135 of anything, let alone items that are .pertinent to one of the most
important cases ever handled by the FBI. ...
Louis Freeh picked a good time to retire as FBI directorsomething he announced two weeks ago and which will take
effect in June. Had he not done s~. this episode surely would
have forced him to leave. ...
On Friday, (McVeigh's) attorneys said they might need more
than a month to comb through all the new information. One
of them hinted McVeigh himself may abandon his decision to
accept death and begin actively challenging the sentence. He
had agreed to waive his appeals before the latest foul-up.
The maddening thing is that none of the new evidence is
expected to ha~e any bearing at all on the case. McVeigh
already has admitted to bombing the Alfred P Murrah Federal
Building, killing 168 people. ... Yet the government has an
obligation to be as thorough and fair as possible in capital cases,
and Attorney General John Ashcroft was correct to delay the
sentencing. .. .
.
These documents should have been turned over to
McVeigh's attorneys during the discovery phase of the t:I:ial,
which began in 1997.
That they weren't is i11excusable. It also is grossly unfair to
the victims and their relatives, who deserve justice.

4

Tradition-minded Grandma is unsparing with rod

..

111 Court St., Po~. Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: m-2157

w.- ":!!!!

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Sometimes people come to church.
Sometimes the church goes to them in the mail.
Most churches send ' out a weekly or
monthly newsletter to their members
and friend•. It is often eagerly awaited,
particularly by the elderly and shut-ins
who are unable to get to church and
don't get much mail.
Most us like to see our names in the
paper, and the church newsletter offers
COLUMNIST
us our best ·chance for a fleeting
moment of fame.
You might not get a birthday card, but berry dinner at the neighboring North
your church will remember you in the Branford Congregational Church. The
newsletter with happy birthday wishes. cost of $9 seemed a litde steep for a
If you are sick or in the hospital, your church dinner (we used to call them
church friends will know about it so church suppers), but as my mother used
they can call you or pray for you~
to' say. ''Everytbi g~1s ;so high · these
In the May issue of the Meetinghouse days." (She said that even wlien bre~d
News of the First Congregational was 1 cent per loaf)
·
Church of Madison, Conn., I counted
Cheryl Martone, editor of the Meetthe· names of 127 members who made inghouse News, writes a weekly colthe news in one way or another that umn titled "From the Heart .of the Edimonth.
tor." It is a thoughtful, helpful, wellAmong other things, readers learned · crafted bit of religious inspiration. In the
from the newsletter how to create a current issue, she; takes us through .a
May Day bouquet (small stems of pink mini-session of"touch therapy."
dogwood blossoms, lilacs and white
"It seems as though every magazine
. peony tulips) . They were encouraged to we pick up lately has a'! article on 'the
hang' one basket over their front door healing power of touch,"' she writes.
"You can start by taking the hand of
and one on their neighbor's doQr- a
lovely idea.
someone · who needs healing. Touch
On page 4 of the 25-page newsletter, exchanges energy. Through our touch·
we were all inviied to a ham-and-straw- ing someone else, we have begun· the

George
Plagenz

healing proceSs. We can hold their hand,
stroke their arm or give them a full
embrace.
"Much research has gone into the
study of premature babies and how the
infants with touch thrive over the
infants without:' She uses her own preemie as an example.
The Rev. Robert St. Clair publishes ·
another kind of newsletter. A retired ··
pastor who lives at the Methodist Camp
Grounds in Lancaster, Ohio, St. Clair
puts out a monthly, eight-page "Fireside
Chat," which is distributed free to about
100 people.
It comes complete with 'typos, dangling modifiers, Bible quizzes and puz- .
zles and St. Clair's own brand of whimsy: "Be careful of your tongue. It's in a '
wet place and it's easy ·to slip."
Sometimes the spell-checker on St.
Clair's computer can't spell, but it's usu- ,
ally possible to make out the words. .
Many readers' favorite part of the
"Fireside Chat" is the country parson's
down-home letter. '
·"
· "I walk daily to the mall, where I
often talk with folks who need prayer
and direction in their Jives. Last week I
took ~ne young man to get a haircut
and bought another a pair, of tennis .
shoes. I needed a pair for myself, and the
discount store where I go had a sal.e - '
buy one pair and get another for Sl."

Today is Wednesday, May 23, the 143rd day of2001. There
are 222 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History~
·.
On May '23, I ~60, Israel announced it had captured former
Nazi official Adolf Eichmann in Argentina. Eichmann was tried
in Israel, found guilty of crimes against humanity, and hanged
in 1962.
·
·
On this date:
In 1430, Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians, who
sold her to the English.
In 1533, the marriage of England's King Henry VIII to
Catherine of Aragon was declared null and void.
Star State from one of the most litigious to
If\ 170 I. Captain William Kidd was hanged in London after
I've got a programming suggestion for
one of the ·]east. Texas placed a cap on
he was convicted of piracy and murder.
•
Court TV: How about a weekly show
punitive damage awards, made its jointIn 1788, South Carolina became the eighth state to ratifY the
called "The F~fi1es?" It could feature two
U.S. Constitution.
·
. and-several liability law more equitable,
intrepid tort. reformers investigating fi:ivoIn t915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary in World War
and limited judge and court shopping.
lous legal claims.
I.
.
Caps on punitive· damages discourage
The beauty of th.e show is that it could
In 1934, bank robbers Bonnie' Parker and Clyde Barrow
litigants from trying to parlay . claims of
be based on the latest true-to-life lawsuits,
were shot to death in a police ambush in Bienville Parish, La.
negligible economic damages into multilike the whopping S1.5 million claim
In 1937, industrialist John D. Rockefeller died in Ormond
million-dollar courtrOom jackpots.
against the 'Escondido Public Library. It
Like the Escondido dog owner whose ·
Beach, Fla.
was.filed by a San Carlos man who alleges
40-page
In 1940, Tommy Dorsey and His Orchestra, the Pied Pipers
claim says he was out of pocket.·
that his dog, a 50-pound Labrador mix,
COLUMNIST
and featured soloist Frank Sinatra recorded "I'll N ever Smile
for $46.49 in veterinary treatment for his .
was attacked by the library's feline mascot,
pooch· and another $38 in chiropractic ,
Again" in New York for RCA.
L.C. (also known as Library Cat).
treatment for himself Yet he seeks more
In 1945, Nazi official Heinrich Himmler committed suicide
Or the $700,00(llawsuit that a Middle- one new lawsuit e¥ery two seconds.
while imprisoned in Luneburg, Germany.
town, Pa., teen-ager filed against her forMeanwhile, the litigation explosion than 30,000 times as much in punitive
Jn 1998, official returns showed two convincing "yes" votes
I;T~er softball coach. She claims that his costs American consumers and businesses &amp;mages:
Joint-an~-several liability laws in many
for the Northern Ireland peace accord in British-linked . . "incorrect" teaching style stunted her more than $150 'billion a year, according to
states
allaw a litigant suing multiple targets
Northern Ireland and the R epublic of.lreland.
development as an athlete, ruining her shot a study by the actuarial acco'!nting firm
Ten years ago: In a 5-4 vote, the tJ.S. Supreme Court upheld
at a college scholarship.
Tillinghast-Towers Perrin.· That is more !O seek any damages, regardless of a given
·
regulations barri11g federally subsidized family planning clinics
Then there's the Hatfield, Mass., man than twO-and-one-half titnes what the plaintiff's negligence.
Limits
on
judge
and
court
shopping
from discussing abortion with pregnant women, or from telling
who seeks $250,000 in restitution from nation spends each year on police and fire
prevent litigants from seeking out venues
the Massachusetts Electric Co., stenuning protection.
women where they could get abortions.
Five years ago: The House approved, by a vote of 281-144,
from the death of his ·"lucky" cat. The
The costs trickle down to conSUJ1lers in where they think they are most likely to
get favorable hearing;. Claims must be
man's wife, a security guard, took the feline the form of a hidden tax - a "tort tax."
election-year legislation to raise the minimum wage by 90
to work with her where it was eleccrocut- · It accounts, fur example, fur $8 of .an brought in venues with a substantial concent.s an hour. .
.
ed by an uninsulated wire near her securi- $11.50 diphtheria, pertussis and. tetanus nection to the injury.
One year ago: Two weeks before a U.S.-Russia arms summit,
What were the ·results of Texas' legal ,
ty trailer.
·
presidential ~andidate George W Bush said he would slash
(OPT) vaccine, $191 of a $578 tonsillectoreforms?
Personal il'\iury lawsuits (not · ·
The purpose of this show would not my, $170 of a $1,000 motorized wheelAmerica's nuclear arsenal ·as par~ of a broad national securitr
necessarily be to entertain (although view- chair and $3,000 of an $18,000 heart pace- related to motor vehicle accidents) have ,
review that would call for a missile-defense system.
decreased 30 percent since 1995. Texas
ers might find i~ amusing to see what maker.
· Today's Birthdays: Bandleader Artie Shaw is 91. Actress Betty '
businesses .and consumers saved nearly $3 .
absurd lengths some folks will go to in an
Garrett is 82. Pianist Alicia de Larrocha is 78. Bluegrass singer
So
.;"~~
c~
be
do~
(
~
staunch
the
billion
in insur.mce rate re&lt;fuctions alone.
.
effort to get rich through the legal system).
Mac Wiseman is 76. Singer Rosemary Clooney is 73. Actor
The Texas experience should be instrucRather, it would be to apprise the public nations lingauon exploSion· To reduce the
Nigel Davenport is 73. Actress Barbara Barrie is 70. Actress Joan
number
oflawsmts
added
to
state
and
lo~..
rive
to lawmakers in California, Pennsylvaof the rash of lawsuits clogging state and
Collins is 68. Actor Charles Kimbrough is 65. Rhythm-and.local court dockets throughout the coun- c.o urt dockets each year (from one every nia, Massachusetts, and other states whose
blues singer General' Johnson (Chairmen of the Board) is 58.
try, and to enlighten them about the eco- two seconds to maybe one every five sec- courts are inundated each year by a flood
Actress Lauren C hapin is '56. Cou ntry singer Judy Rodman is
nomic toll that lawsuit abuse imposes onds)? To lower the direct and indirect oflawsuits.
50. 'Boxer Marvelous Marvin Hagler is 49. Actor-comedian
costs oflitigation? ·
upon society.
Drew Carey is 43. Country si nger Shelley West is 43. Actor
joseph Perkins is. d columnist for The San ;
It so happens that, when he w.1.1 gover-Indeed, more than 15 million Uawsuits
Linden Ashby is 41. Actress- model Karen Duffy is 40. Rock
Diego
!..lnion· Thburk and can be ~£ached qt
nor
oiTexas,
George
W
Bush
signed
a
host
will be filed this year in state courts
musician Phil Selway (Raaiohead) is 34. Singer Lorenzo is 29.
throughout the land. That works out to oflegal reforms that trans(ormed the Lone joseph.Perkins@UnionTrib.com.
·Singer Maxwell is ?8. Singer Jewel is 27.

POMEROY -Winners of
the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation coloring
con test
were
recently
announced by contest officials.
Vicki
Morrow, · Meigs
SWCD education . coordinator, said Kassandra Mullins· of
Salem Center Elementary and
Olivia Cleek and Wesley Davis
of Pomeroy Elementary were
the three ·overall county cochampions in the contest.
Each winner received S I 0
for their effort.
A total of $180 was awarded
in the coloring contest. Firstplace winners in each class
received $5, with second- and
third-place · winners receiving
$3 and $2; respectively.
Winners in each class were:
LETART FALLS
(Mrs. Guinther) - Katelyn
Hill, Raquel Wolfe and Brady
DeLong; (Mrs. Norris) Teela Lemley, Miranda Holter
arid Chase Graham.
' :· SYRACUSE
(Mrs. Harris) - · Morgan
. McMillan, Alison Brown and
Faith Harkness. .
EASTERN
(Mrs. Hill)
Baylee
Collins, Marie Powell and
Kelsey Myers; (Mrs. Jones) Janae Boyles, Leslea Frank and

Brittany Bailey; (Mrs. White)
- DanieUe Cline, Christopher Bissell and Jacob Parker.
HARRISONVILLE
(Mrs. Harris) - Timmy
Parsons, Ashley King and Zach
Sayre.
MIDDLEPORT
(Mrs. Ashley) Kayla
Shane, McKenna Warner and
Stephanie LeMaster; (Mrs.
Brauer) - Carly Carpenter,
MicheUe Johnson and Marlee
Hoffman.
POMEROY
(Mrs. Deem) -Olivia
Cleek, Mac Sellers and

Heather Stewart; (Mr. Werry)
- Wesley Davis, Kaylee Terry
and Destiny Haning.
RUTLAND
(Mrs . Fetty) Chelsey
Eads, Chad Searles and Cassidy Tucker; (Mrs. Whan) Jacob Nitz, Steven Mahr and
Ashley Woodard.
SALEM CENTER
(Mrs. Gannaway) - Kassandra Mullins, Paige Barrett and
R. J. Scarbury.
SALISBURY
(Mrs. Kennedy) - Breanna
Gheen, Emalee Rebekah Glass
and !Utrina Shockey.

Kassandra Mullins

Wealay Davis

Olivia Cleek
'I

.

lngela Elactronlca

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PERKINS' VIEW

Uk all pqy when others fil~ frivolous suits ~:
Joseph
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Sydnee Nicole Whaley

New arrival
I

MASON, W.Va . Neil
and Tara Whaley of Mason
announce the bitth o£ a
. daughter, Sydnee Nicole, on
April 12, at Holzer Medical
Center,
Gallipolis.
She
weighed seven pounds, 14
ouncf:iS.

Maternal grandparents ·are
Greg Erwin. and Sally Erwin,
both of Pomeroy, and paternal
grandparents are Dave . and
Ginny Barrett of Langsville.
Great-grandparents are the
Alice Globokar of Pomero~
and the , late Phil Globokar;
Dex and Sue Erwin of New
Haven, Doug and Norma
Grover of Rutland, and Jim
and Maria Barrett. of Gallipci-.
lis.
Mr: and Mrs. Whaley have a
son, Alex, 3.

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Sentinel
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P8ge A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesd8y, May 23, 200'1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Senate tries aga to finish tax cut after slowdowll:~

Dionwnd Roundup, Pa$ B6

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Enduring numbing hours of votes on
dozens of Democr,atic amendments,
the Senate drew closer to passage of
an 11- year, SLJS trillion ra:X cut
package.
Majority Leader Trent Lou, R Mjss., said he hoped to reac h an
agree ment with Democrats to vote
on a limited number of remaining
amendments Wednesday and " find a
way to successfully complete t his'
legislation.''

Even as the Senate waded through
43 roll call votes Monday and Tuesday, negotiators were discussing
ways to bridge differences between
the H ouse and Senate in hopes of
getting the tax bill to President Bush
by week's. end.
" We're going to be able to get it
done in the tin1e frame" of M emorial Day, predicted H ouse Ways and
Means Committee C hairman Bill
T ho mas, R -Cali[
Fu rther co mpli cating the tax

debate was the speculation about
whether Sen. James Jeffords o fVermont would leave the R epublican
Party to become an independent or
a Democrat. Although most senators
say that wouldn't necessarily derail
the tax bill in the Senate, it could
disrupt progress on a H ouse-Senate
conference.
"
" It j ust raises a lot of questions,"
said Sen. M ax Baucus of Montana,
ranking Democrat on' the Fina nce
Committee and chief co-spo nsor of

the tax bill. " It put:s ever)'thing up in
t he air: '
Both the House and Senate bills
contain the core of Bush:s origi nat
I 0-year, S1.6 trillion tax cut: acrossthe-board income tax reductions,
relief from the marriage penalty on
many tWo-income couples, doubling of the S500 child tax credit
and gradual repeal of the estate tax.
They differ in how qu icldy the tax
cut:s are phased in, mainly because
the Senate bill had to offiet the costs

••

/

of including of tax breaks for edu~tio n, such as a $5 ,000 college tuiti'!!l
deduction, and provisions fo r lo~
income people, such as allowin}
them to claim a po rtion of the c hi!'J
credit fo r the first time.
•
•
The Senate also carves out a niiW
10 percent tax bracket for the fi!'t
po rtio n of every taxpayer's income,
re troactive to Jan. I, while tJlc
House creates an immediate 12 petcent rate that eventually drops to f.O
•
percent.
~

Wr 1 •••IIJ· MIIJ n. Hel

WEDNfiD\Y's

...

HIGHLIGHTS
Simpkins hits
am at Rlveuslcle

AG ·backs
individual
right to
own gun
WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney Gene ral John
Asl1croft reaffirmed his view
that an individual's right to
bear arms is guaranteed by
the Constitution in response
to an inquiry by the
National Rifle Association.
"While some have argued
that the Second Amendment _guarantees only a ' collective' right of the States to
. maintain militias,- I believe
the
amendment's
plain
meaning and original intent
prove Otherwise," he said.
Ashcroft reiterated his
position in a letter May 17
to NRA eicecutiv.e director
.James Jay Baker. The NRA
had written Ashcroft in
April, asking him whether
he believed rhat the S~c ond
Amendment guarantees an
individual right to keep and
'bear arms.
Gun rights advocates had
accused the Clinton administration of trying to undermine Second Amendment
rights, pointing to arguments government lawyers
'
''in a federal lawsuit
made
against Timothy Joe Emerson, a Texas man who had
been indicted for violating a
1994 law barring people
under restraining orders
from having guns.

MASON - Craig Simpkins, of Point Pleasant, aced
the 11 0-yard seventh hole at
Riverside Golf Course on
Sunday, May 20.
His shot occurred during
the 2001 Spring Moose #731
Scramble. He used a pitching
wedge to record his second
c~reet hole-in-one. Witl!es~­
ing . the sh_,!)t were Ernie
Saxon, Ronnie Jones, and
Cookie Krautter.

re you spending
too much money
on your groceries?

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. (AP) - Jason Arnott
scored twice as the defending
champion New Jersey Devils
earned t~e right to compete
for their third ride since 1995
by defeating Mario Lemieux
and . his Pittsburgh Penguins
4-2 to win the best-of-seven
Eastern Conference final in
five game~.
However, Super Mario and
NHL-leading scorer Jaromir
Jagr had very little to show in
this series, starting with no
goals. Jagr, who thinks he will
be traded in the offieason
because of his S10 million
salary, was held scoreless.
Lemieux has three assists, but
showed his frustration in the
final minute by taking a foolish penalty.
AJeksey Morozov and Martin Straka each scored their
~cond goal of the series in

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - ·
FedEx Corp. reduced its multimillion dollar role in efforts
to attract 'the NBA to Memphis when the league rejected
"Express" as a team name.
The Memphis-based company had discussed the possibility of Memphis Express as a
team name in its approximately Sl 00 million offer.
Fed.Ex withdrew its offer
to buy team naming rights,
but continued seeking rights
· to name a new arena if the
NBA grants permission for
the Vancouver Grizzlies to
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PHILADELPHIA (AP) Allen lvenon W:IS moving at
about one-thiid his usual
speed early in the first quarter
when Ray Allen blew past
him for a dunk..
I venon 's first nine shots
were all misses, including a
pair of layups and .an airball
from 18 feet. Yet when those
abysmal first 12 minutes were
finally over, the Philadelphia
76ers arid Milwaukee Bucks
were tied.
Bad sign for the Bucks.
A badly hobbled · Iverson
eventually got his adrenaline
flowing and regained his scoring touch, finishing with 34
point:s -including a huge 3pointer with 1:10 left - as
the Sixers defeated Milwaukee 93-85 Tuesday night in
Game I of the Eastern Conference finals . .
He also played all 48 minutes.
"That's what I think about
when I'm struggling through
the game, I think about the
last two minutes," Iverson
said. "Those are the shots that
count, and you don 't even
think about the ones you
missed. You think about that
one big one."
Iverson's 3-pointer gave
Philadelphia a 90-83 lead
after the Bucks had cut a 16poilu deficit to two. Milwaukee never recovered and
became the first team to lose
a Game I to the 76ers this
postseason.
Aaron McKie added .23
points
and
Dikembe
Mutombo had 15 points, 18
rebounds and four blocks,
giving the Sixers a "Big
Three" of their own that
could more than stand up to
Milwaukee's Ray · Allen,

PluMIMNBA..B:S

. . . .. .
'

••

;:~.

•••
••

......

___

,)"

.Moss to
try pro
·hoops

·

BY THE ASSOCIAlfD PIIESS

AU - Pro wide receiver
Randy Moss of the Minnesota Vikings is joining the
Pennsylvania ValleyDawg~ of
• the United States Basltetball
League and is expected to
play Thursday.
Moss, who will make about
S3.5 million with the Vikings
this year, was twice selected as
the high school basketball
player of the year in West Virginia and has been playing in ,
a Los Angeles summer league.
The 6-foot-4 Moss, who
will · play at guard and forward, is expected to practice
with the team for the first
time Wednesday night and
join rhe lineup Thursday
against the Long Island Surf.
The ValleyDawgs have
talked with Moss since last
year after one of Moss' workout partners began practicing
with the team, ValleyDawgs
spokesman Joe Heyer said.
"With his athleticism, he'll
be a good scorer, I would
think, and a •lam-dunker;'
Heyer said.
Moss scored a schoolrecord I, 713 points at
Dupont . High School in
Rand, W.Va., and was a teammate ofJason Williams, now a
starting guard for the NBA's ·
Sacramento Kings.
Moss apparently has wanted
to play pl't)fessional basketball
for years, dating back at least
to 1999 when the Minnesota
Timberwolves said they had
been contacted about Moss
moonlighting in the NBA.
Moss has 43 TO catches in
his three NFL seasons.

QUICK MOVES - Philadelphia's Allen Iverson drives around ·Milwaukee's Ray Allen in
game one of the Eastern Conference finals. (AP)

Cubs top Reds, 5-3
CHICAGO (AP) - Eric Young scratches
his cornea, Miguel Cairo leads off the first
inning with a home run. Sammy Sosa pulls
himself out of the game with tightness in his
back, and Todd D~nwoody responds with.
two RBis.
And with the game tied, the Chicago Cubs
get a gift with a balk.
\
.
The Cubs may not be the most fearsome
of ieams, but they're finding ways to get
things done.
"Look at the way we've been playing," Tom
Gordon said after the Cubs won anoth er
game by committee Tuesday night, beating
the Cincinnati Reds 5-3 in a game that was
delayed 41 minutes by rain. .
"You can never tell who's going to be the

hero," Gordon said. "It just seems like everyone is saying 'I'm going to go out and do
something.' That's what it's going to take."
With Sosa out of the lineup because of
tightness in his lower back - he's listed as
day to day - everybody chipped in against
the Reds . Besides Cairo's hom er and Dunwoody's two R:Bls, Ron Coomer hit a runscoring double. Gary Matthews Jr. went 3for-4 with two runs scored. Rondell White
stole a.t least one run from ·the R.eds with a
diving catch. with runn ers at first and second.
Courtney Duncan (2-1) allowed one hit
and struck out one in one inning, and Tom
Gordon struck out the side in the ninth for IN THERE- Cincinnati's Michael Tucker (34) scores past Chicago Cubs' catcher Todd Hundley on a Sean Casey double. _(AP).

PII8H • • Recls, BJ

NFL approves realignment Tigers shut
down Tribe bats
'

.

.

.

-.

.

[f.~me teants, new divisions .

•••••

I'

..

Sixers win game one

- ..

.

ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) When the NFL decided a
year and a half ago to realign
into four eight- team divi.
The NFL unanimdusly approved realignment for 2002, shifting Seattl
sions, one plan seemed the
from the AFC to the NFC but keeping most of the divisions In tact.
M.O NTREAL (AP) -· An
simplest.
,, NFC
' MRI reVealed Tim Raines'
That plan, enacted unani- .
SOUTH
WEST
NORTH
EAST
shoulder injury is worse than
mmisly by the owners on
D~lioa'
AUanta
Arizona
-"'- Chicago
originally thought and the
Thesday, little more than a
Carolina
St.
~ouls
Detron
fi.Y.
Giants
outfieldet's comeback . with
week before the June ! .dead.New Orleans
San Francisco
Green Bay
Philadelphia
the Montreal Expos may have
Tampa Bay
Seattle
Minnesota
Washington .
line, will begin in 2002, wh~n
come to an end.
, the expansion Houston TexA contrast MRI study conAFC
. ans become the league's 32nd
SOUTH
WEST
firmed that the 41-year-old
EASt
NORTH
team.
\
Raines had a tear in his left
Ba~lmore
Houston
Denver
Buffalo
Why did it take so long? A
biceps muscle and labrum as a
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Miami
Cincinnati
'
high-ranking
league
official
result of a headfirst dive into
Jacksonville
Oakland
Cleveland
New England
.who requested anonymity "
.Pittsburgh
San Diego
Tennessee
N.Y. Jets
iirst base while trying to avoid
•
took
that
long
to
noted
that
it
a tag on May 3.
'
convince the owners this plan
Raines hit .265 (9-for-34)
'
Sot.JRCE:
NFL
was best for them.
· with two doubles and eight
•
"We couldn't look at perSeattle from the AFC
walks in 22 games with the
Rooney, m fa ct, " cred1ted movmg
sonal choices," said Dan ·with coming up with this West to the NFC West.
Expos this season.
Rooney, president of the alignment, which contains
It also places two expansio n
Pittsburgh Steelers, who shift- · fewer geographic anomalies teams in th e same division
- · ed fiorri the NFL to the AFC than the current lineup. It also with teams th at abandoned
when the NFL and AFL keeps 22 of the teams. in their th eir cities - Cleveland with
Not seeing your team's
merged. in 1970. "A lot 1 of current divisions. Five of the Baltimore and Houston with
results in the Daily Sentinel?
people wanted a lot of things. eight divisions have four Tennessee.
Tell your coaches to send
I
I thiJJk this is best for every- teams from the old alignment,
game .and event reports by fax
'
one."
with the most drastic change
to 992-2157.
- PiuM1MNFLB3
•

prominent sc ienti sts and
other data to arr ~ve at this
conse nsus: Current re sea rch
doesn 't show th at the energy emitted by cell ph q? cs
has adverse health effects,
but "there 1S not yet
enough . information to
conclude that they pos e no
risk."
·
·

I

.

The talented Pengums had
just seven goals in" the series
against Martin Brodeur and
not many .more scoring
chances against the Devils'
tenacious neutral zone trap.
Bobby Holik and · John
Madden also scored for the
Devils, who will face the Colorado Avalanche in Game 1 of
the finals Saturday in Denver.

Report calls
for more ·
infonnation ·
on phones
WASHINGTON (AP) Unable to guarantee that
cell phones are risk-free,
congressional investigators
are urging the government
to provide more consumerfriendly and up-to·-date
information for the millions of Ameripns who use
the devices . •
A report Tuesday by the
General Accounting Office
found that federal agencies
dor't always provide the
most current information
on cell phone radiation and
"research, and often their
materials are too technical
for average consumers to
understand.
The number of ce ll
phone . subscribers, has
surged to 115 million, making qllfstions about their
safety more pressing .
"Wireless servic e is less
and less perce ived as an
an cillary, di sc re tion ary se rvice," said Rep. Ed Markey,
D- Mass.
The report pulled together rese arch by majo r h c~ lth

PageBl

,.

C LEVELAND (AP) threw strikes."
Wh en Jeff Weaver started
.Weaver stymied an Indimakii1g inside pitches, the ans offense that leads the
C leveland Indians didn't American League in bat.- ·
have an outside chance of ring, runs ·and RBis. The
hittin g him.
right-hander struck out a
Weaver turn ed a poten- season- high I 0, including
tially disastrous start into a Jacob C ruz three times. He
masterpiece for the Detroit allmyed six hits and walked
Tigers by pitching 7 2-3 three.
shutout innin gs in a 3-0
"Weaver was like two
win Tuesday night.
different pitchers out
"Once I started locating there," Tigers manager Phil
pitches, particularly inside, Garner said. "He struggled.
it was a different gam e," Then once he got the lead,
Weaver said. " Hitters don't h~ was masterful."
like those inside pitches."
Weaver's three walks
Indians manager Charlie
~ in the first two
Manuel
agreed
that
innings, when he twice got
Weaver's effective ness on
out of bases-loaded jams.
th e inn er half of th e plate
H e struck out Marty Corwas the k@y to Clevela nd
dova to end the first and
being shut out for the third
got Roberto Alomar to
tim.e thi s seaso n .
"Weaver's not afrai d to pop our to end .the second.
th row inside and is aggres- · Shortstop Deivi Cruz
sive," Manu el said. " He had made an over- the-shoulder
a tremendo us slider and
I

, ........ Tribe, IIJ

�.

P8ge A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesd8y, May 23, 200'1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Senate tries aga to finish tax cut after slowdowll:~

Dionwnd Roundup, Pa$ B6

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Enduring numbing hours of votes on
dozens of Democr,atic amendments,
the Senate drew closer to passage of
an 11- year, SLJS trillion ra:X cut
package.
Majority Leader Trent Lou, R Mjss., said he hoped to reac h an
agree ment with Democrats to vote
on a limited number of remaining
amendments Wednesday and " find a
way to successfully complete t his'
legislation.''

Even as the Senate waded through
43 roll call votes Monday and Tuesday, negotiators were discussing
ways to bridge differences between
the H ouse and Senate in hopes of
getting the tax bill to President Bush
by week's. end.
" We're going to be able to get it
done in the tin1e frame" of M emorial Day, predicted H ouse Ways and
Means Committee C hairman Bill
T ho mas, R -Cali[
Fu rther co mpli cating the tax

debate was the speculation about
whether Sen. James Jeffords o fVermont would leave the R epublican
Party to become an independent or
a Democrat. Although most senators
say that wouldn't necessarily derail
the tax bill in the Senate, it could
disrupt progress on a H ouse-Senate
conference.
"
" It j ust raises a lot of questions,"
said Sen. M ax Baucus of Montana,
ranking Democrat on' the Fina nce
Committee and chief co-spo nsor of

the tax bill. " It put:s ever)'thing up in
t he air: '
Both the House and Senate bills
contain the core of Bush:s origi nat
I 0-year, S1.6 trillion tax cut: acrossthe-board income tax reductions,
relief from the marriage penalty on
many tWo-income couples, doubling of the S500 child tax credit
and gradual repeal of the estate tax.
They differ in how qu icldy the tax
cut:s are phased in, mainly because
the Senate bill had to offiet the costs

••

/

of including of tax breaks for edu~tio n, such as a $5 ,000 college tuiti'!!l
deduction, and provisions fo r lo~
income people, such as allowin}
them to claim a po rtion of the c hi!'J
credit fo r the first time.
•
•
The Senate also carves out a niiW
10 percent tax bracket for the fi!'t
po rtio n of every taxpayer's income,
re troactive to Jan. I, while tJlc
House creates an immediate 12 petcent rate that eventually drops to f.O
•
percent.
~

Wr 1 •••IIJ· MIIJ n. Hel

WEDNfiD\Y's

...

HIGHLIGHTS
Simpkins hits
am at Rlveuslcle

AG ·backs
individual
right to
own gun
WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney Gene ral John
Asl1croft reaffirmed his view
that an individual's right to
bear arms is guaranteed by
the Constitution in response
to an inquiry by the
National Rifle Association.
"While some have argued
that the Second Amendment _guarantees only a ' collective' right of the States to
. maintain militias,- I believe
the
amendment's
plain
meaning and original intent
prove Otherwise," he said.
Ashcroft reiterated his
position in a letter May 17
to NRA eicecutiv.e director
.James Jay Baker. The NRA
had written Ashcroft in
April, asking him whether
he believed rhat the S~c ond
Amendment guarantees an
individual right to keep and
'bear arms.
Gun rights advocates had
accused the Clinton administration of trying to undermine Second Amendment
rights, pointing to arguments government lawyers
'
''in a federal lawsuit
made
against Timothy Joe Emerson, a Texas man who had
been indicted for violating a
1994 law barring people
under restraining orders
from having guns.

MASON - Craig Simpkins, of Point Pleasant, aced
the 11 0-yard seventh hole at
Riverside Golf Course on
Sunday, May 20.
His shot occurred during
the 2001 Spring Moose #731
Scramble. He used a pitching
wedge to record his second
c~reet hole-in-one. Witl!es~­
ing . the sh_,!)t were Ernie
Saxon, Ronnie Jones, and
Cookie Krautter.

re you spending
too much money
on your groceries?

EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ. (AP) - Jason Arnott
scored twice as the defending
champion New Jersey Devils
earned t~e right to compete
for their third ride since 1995
by defeating Mario Lemieux
and . his Pittsburgh Penguins
4-2 to win the best-of-seven
Eastern Conference final in
five game~.
However, Super Mario and
NHL-leading scorer Jaromir
Jagr had very little to show in
this series, starting with no
goals. Jagr, who thinks he will
be traded in the offieason
because of his S10 million
salary, was held scoreless.
Lemieux has three assists, but
showed his frustration in the
final minute by taking a foolish penalty.
AJeksey Morozov and Martin Straka each scored their
~cond goal of the series in

SAVE•A•LOT

~ame 5.

•

Check out our bottom-line prices~

..

age,n c ie s, intervi~\VS

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FedEx denied

NBA ~aming ·

Bar"S"

HotDogs

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - ·
FedEx Corp. reduced its multimillion dollar role in efforts
to attract 'the NBA to Memphis when the league rejected
"Express" as a team name.
The Memphis-based company had discussed the possibility of Memphis Express as a
team name in its approximately Sl 00 million offer.
Fed.Ex withdrew its offer
to buy team naming rights,
but continued seeking rights
· to name a new arena if the
NBA grants permission for
the Vancouver Grizzlies to
relocate to Memphis.

8 Pack Hot Dog &amp;

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120z.S

..

Raines' rebum
may.end

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WHh

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...

'

p

~-

..

••

..

"

••

..

..

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Allen lvenon W:IS moving at
about one-thiid his usual
speed early in the first quarter
when Ray Allen blew past
him for a dunk..
I venon 's first nine shots
were all misses, including a
pair of layups and .an airball
from 18 feet. Yet when those
abysmal first 12 minutes were
finally over, the Philadelphia
76ers arid Milwaukee Bucks
were tied.
Bad sign for the Bucks.
A badly hobbled · Iverson
eventually got his adrenaline
flowing and regained his scoring touch, finishing with 34
point:s -including a huge 3pointer with 1:10 left - as
the Sixers defeated Milwaukee 93-85 Tuesday night in
Game I of the Eastern Conference finals . .
He also played all 48 minutes.
"That's what I think about
when I'm struggling through
the game, I think about the
last two minutes," Iverson
said. "Those are the shots that
count, and you don 't even
think about the ones you
missed. You think about that
one big one."
Iverson's 3-pointer gave
Philadelphia a 90-83 lead
after the Bucks had cut a 16poilu deficit to two. Milwaukee never recovered and
became the first team to lose
a Game I to the 76ers this
postseason.
Aaron McKie added .23
points
and
Dikembe
Mutombo had 15 points, 18
rebounds and four blocks,
giving the Sixers a "Big
Three" of their own that
could more than stand up to
Milwaukee's Ray · Allen,

PluMIMNBA..B:S

. . . .. .
'

••

;:~.

•••
••

......

___

,)"

.Moss to
try pro
·hoops

·

BY THE ASSOCIAlfD PIIESS

AU - Pro wide receiver
Randy Moss of the Minnesota Vikings is joining the
Pennsylvania ValleyDawg~ of
• the United States Basltetball
League and is expected to
play Thursday.
Moss, who will make about
S3.5 million with the Vikings
this year, was twice selected as
the high school basketball
player of the year in West Virginia and has been playing in ,
a Los Angeles summer league.
The 6-foot-4 Moss, who
will · play at guard and forward, is expected to practice
with the team for the first
time Wednesday night and
join rhe lineup Thursday
against the Long Island Surf.
The ValleyDawgs have
talked with Moss since last
year after one of Moss' workout partners began practicing
with the team, ValleyDawgs
spokesman Joe Heyer said.
"With his athleticism, he'll
be a good scorer, I would
think, and a •lam-dunker;'
Heyer said.
Moss scored a schoolrecord I, 713 points at
Dupont . High School in
Rand, W.Va., and was a teammate ofJason Williams, now a
starting guard for the NBA's ·
Sacramento Kings.
Moss apparently has wanted
to play pl't)fessional basketball
for years, dating back at least
to 1999 when the Minnesota
Timberwolves said they had
been contacted about Moss
moonlighting in the NBA.
Moss has 43 TO catches in
his three NFL seasons.

QUICK MOVES - Philadelphia's Allen Iverson drives around ·Milwaukee's Ray Allen in
game one of the Eastern Conference finals. (AP)

Cubs top Reds, 5-3
CHICAGO (AP) - Eric Young scratches
his cornea, Miguel Cairo leads off the first
inning with a home run. Sammy Sosa pulls
himself out of the game with tightness in his
back, and Todd D~nwoody responds with.
two RBis.
And with the game tied, the Chicago Cubs
get a gift with a balk.
\
.
The Cubs may not be the most fearsome
of ieams, but they're finding ways to get
things done.
"Look at the way we've been playing," Tom
Gordon said after the Cubs won anoth er
game by committee Tuesday night, beating
the Cincinnati Reds 5-3 in a game that was
delayed 41 minutes by rain. .
"You can never tell who's going to be the

hero," Gordon said. "It just seems like everyone is saying 'I'm going to go out and do
something.' That's what it's going to take."
With Sosa out of the lineup because of
tightness in his lower back - he's listed as
day to day - everybody chipped in against
the Reds . Besides Cairo's hom er and Dunwoody's two R:Bls, Ron Coomer hit a runscoring double. Gary Matthews Jr. went 3for-4 with two runs scored. Rondell White
stole a.t least one run from ·the R.eds with a
diving catch. with runn ers at first and second.
Courtney Duncan (2-1) allowed one hit
and struck out one in one inning, and Tom
Gordon struck out the side in the ninth for IN THERE- Cincinnati's Michael Tucker (34) scores past Chicago Cubs' catcher Todd Hundley on a Sean Casey double. _(AP).

PII8H • • Recls, BJ

NFL approves realignment Tigers shut
down Tribe bats
'

.

.

.

-.

.

[f.~me teants, new divisions .

•••••

I'

..

Sixers win game one

- ..

.

ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) When the NFL decided a
year and a half ago to realign
into four eight- team divi.
The NFL unanimdusly approved realignment for 2002, shifting Seattl
sions, one plan seemed the
from the AFC to the NFC but keeping most of the divisions In tact.
M.O NTREAL (AP) -· An
simplest.
,, NFC
' MRI reVealed Tim Raines'
That plan, enacted unani- .
SOUTH
WEST
NORTH
EAST
shoulder injury is worse than
mmisly by the owners on
D~lioa'
AUanta
Arizona
-"'- Chicago
originally thought and the
Thesday, little more than a
Carolina
St.
~ouls
Detron
fi.Y.
Giants
outfieldet's comeback . with
week before the June ! .dead.New Orleans
San Francisco
Green Bay
Philadelphia
the Montreal Expos may have
Tampa Bay
Seattle
Minnesota
Washington .
line, will begin in 2002, wh~n
come to an end.
, the expansion Houston TexA contrast MRI study conAFC
. ans become the league's 32nd
SOUTH
WEST
firmed that the 41-year-old
EASt
NORTH
team.
\
Raines had a tear in his left
Ba~lmore
Houston
Denver
Buffalo
Why did it take so long? A
biceps muscle and labrum as a
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Miami
Cincinnati
'
high-ranking
league
official
result of a headfirst dive into
Jacksonville
Oakland
Cleveland
New England
.who requested anonymity "
.Pittsburgh
San Diego
Tennessee
N.Y. Jets
iirst base while trying to avoid
•
took
that
long
to
noted
that
it
a tag on May 3.
'
convince the owners this plan
Raines hit .265 (9-for-34)
'
Sot.JRCE:
NFL
was best for them.
· with two doubles and eight
•
"We couldn't look at perSeattle from the AFC
walks in 22 games with the
Rooney, m fa ct, " cred1ted movmg
sonal choices," said Dan ·with coming up with this West to the NFC West.
Expos this season.
Rooney, president of the alignment, which contains
It also places two expansio n
Pittsburgh Steelers, who shift- · fewer geographic anomalies teams in th e same division
- · ed fiorri the NFL to the AFC than the current lineup. It also with teams th at abandoned
when the NFL and AFL keeps 22 of the teams. in their th eir cities - Cleveland with
Not seeing your team's
merged. in 1970. "A lot 1 of current divisions. Five of the Baltimore and Houston with
results in the Daily Sentinel?
people wanted a lot of things. eight divisions have four Tennessee.
Tell your coaches to send
I
I thiJJk this is best for every- teams from the old alignment,
game .and event reports by fax
'
one."
with the most drastic change
to 992-2157.
- PiuM1MNFLB3
•

prominent sc ienti sts and
other data to arr ~ve at this
conse nsus: Current re sea rch
doesn 't show th at the energy emitted by cell ph q? cs
has adverse health effects,
but "there 1S not yet
enough . information to
conclude that they pos e no
risk."
·
·

I

.

The talented Pengums had
just seven goals in" the series
against Martin Brodeur and
not many .more scoring
chances against the Devils'
tenacious neutral zone trap.
Bobby Holik and · John
Madden also scored for the
Devils, who will face the Colorado Avalanche in Game 1 of
the finals Saturday in Denver.

Report calls
for more ·
infonnation ·
on phones
WASHINGTON (AP) Unable to guarantee that
cell phones are risk-free,
congressional investigators
are urging the government
to provide more consumerfriendly and up-to·-date
information for the millions of Ameripns who use
the devices . •
A report Tuesday by the
General Accounting Office
found that federal agencies
dor't always provide the
most current information
on cell phone radiation and
"research, and often their
materials are too technical
for average consumers to
understand.
The number of ce ll
phone . subscribers, has
surged to 115 million, making qllfstions about their
safety more pressing .
"Wireless servic e is less
and less perce ived as an
an cillary, di sc re tion ary se rvice," said Rep. Ed Markey,
D- Mass.
The report pulled together rese arch by majo r h c~ lth

PageBl

,.

C LEVELAND (AP) threw strikes."
Wh en Jeff Weaver started
.Weaver stymied an Indimakii1g inside pitches, the ans offense that leads the
C leveland Indians didn't American League in bat.- ·
have an outside chance of ring, runs ·and RBis. The
hittin g him.
right-hander struck out a
Weaver turn ed a poten- season- high I 0, including
tially disastrous start into a Jacob C ruz three times. He
masterpiece for the Detroit allmyed six hits and walked
Tigers by pitching 7 2-3 three.
shutout innin gs in a 3-0
"Weaver was like two
win Tuesday night.
different pitchers out
"Once I started locating there," Tigers manager Phil
pitches, particularly inside, Garner said. "He struggled.
it was a different gam e," Then once he got the lead,
Weaver said. " Hitters don't h~ was masterful."
like those inside pitches."
Weaver's three walks
Indians manager Charlie
~ in the first two
Manuel
agreed
that
innings, when he twice got
Weaver's effective ness on
out of bases-loaded jams.
th e inn er half of th e plate
H e struck out Marty Corwas the k@y to Clevela nd
dova to end the first and
being shut out for the third
got Roberto Alomar to
tim.e thi s seaso n .
"Weaver's not afrai d to pop our to end .the second.
th row inside and is aggres- · Shortstop Deivi Cruz
sive," Manu el said. " He had made an over- the-shoulder
a tremendo us slider and
I

, ........ Tribe, IIJ

�weclnMCIQ• ...., 23, 2001

..... 82. The Dilly .........

...Y 23, 2001

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train. C8ll for a FREE Bootdot:
1-eD0-276-7103

www.sertouaeashNow.com

May 23·24, Harry Holter resl·
clence, Pine Grove Rd .. Racine .
Perennials, Home lntenor, VCR

P1. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
ENORMOUS YARD SALE
Next To Flatrock Fire Departmwht
8 Miles From P.olnt Pleasant On
Route 2 North, MEMORIAL DAY

WEEKEND. Friday. Saturday
Sunday &amp; Monday, B OOam Until
777 Ram Or Shme Antiques, lots
01 Glassware, Wather &amp; Dryer,
Household llems &amp; Appliances,
Baskets , Crafts, Home Interior
Grill, Lawn &amp; Other Fvrniture ,
Wooden &amp; Oflrce Chairs, Word
Procenor, Books, Old Life
And Other Magazines, Records,
Bird Cage, Christmas Decora tions, Shoes, Purses Clothmg &amp;
Much More
Gun Couect1on &amp; Related Items,
Re loading Items. Safe, Knives ,
Watches, CB Radros &amp; Anten·
nas, Scanners, Truck Tool BOK,
Live Trap . Good Tues Sets Of
Wheel Covers, 4 Wheeler Tires
Bumper. Boat Trailer T1res &amp;
Alms , Microscope Sets &amp; lois
More Yamaha 4 Wheeler· wl
Power Take Oft- 1 Rough &amp; 1
Finish Mower BIG Assortment

Center-.

$7.00 per hour
Plus bonus and

overtime.
• Set schedule
• Weekly Bonus
• Every Friday
and Saturday off
• Paid holidays
• Paid vacations
• Health Insurance
• Disability Insurance

ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES to cnango your

Full-time Permanant
Positions Available

Anentlon• Work From Home, On·
tone Or Ofltlno &amp; Mall Ordof. $500$5000/mo. PTI FT. 1·800· 784·
8556 www.pcpays com

ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
up to
$25 00. S7S.OOilw PTIFT
MAIL 011DER (888)821-&lt;!686

l.SSS-237-5342
ext. 2331
InfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Earn Up to $500·$8000/MO
PTIFT
HI00·61().1)705
VfNW CashNowAndForowr oom

proceuing. Full training. HomePC required Call Physician &amp;
Heallhcare Developments loll~..

HIOO·n2·5933 ell!. 2070.

COL·A Driver&amp;. E•perlenced/lnexpanenced West coast Avail·
able *Great Pay"M i tes•Ben~tlts•
Transportatlan*Lodging Included

COL Training Available
CaM 1·800-348·1380

To Pick StrawIn Person, Taylor's

(740)388-8331 Laave Name &amp;
Number
Dental Hygienist, Part-time Andf
Or Full-time Dental Hygiene po·
sitlon Available Submit Resume
Or Call Ors Smith &amp; Jorgensen,
995 Jackson P1ke , Galhpohs, OhiO

45631 (740)44&amp;-2191

REEFI TODAYIIJ L.aarn To Drive

Tnt BIG Truck!, Making Tho BIG
Bucksll No Cost 1ra1ning It Ouatlfledl Call 1-1100·958-2353
EARN S25.000·$50,0001yr Madl·
cal Insurance Billing Needed lmmediatatyl Home Computer N8eded FREE Internet, 1-800·291-

4l!B3 Dept I 109
Easy Telephone
Work, No
Selling , No Expenance Nee·
essary, Full Or Part-Time, $7-

$12/hr. Call 1-8()1).572·3361
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! WOfk from home! Maii·Ot·

doriE·Commorce $522+/week PT
$1 000-$4000/wk FT. 800·921 •

www dream2bfree com

80

Auction
and Flea Market

773-5785 Or 304· n3·5447

90

Gold Rlnga. U.S. Currency·
M T S Coin Snap 151 Secon~
Avenue. GalllpOIII. 740-44ll·2B42

150

Schools
Instruction
GED

Get your HS equivalency diPloma
with our easy home study course.

t-1100·5611-2163 ext 310

180 Wanted To Do

Qonongroom. Kitd81. Bedroom. &amp;
Bath On 111 floor. Ful Baaameut,
Br-Level Deck, &lt;41x18 Pool, BlOCk
Worklhop,
$69.900
Firm ,

(304}675-1 145
2 Storr House On 2nd Avenue ,
Newly Remodeled lns1de, PriCed
ReasonaHe (740)416 31)64

3 Bedroom, 1· 1/2 Bath . All
Electric, 2200 Square Feet, 2
Apartments, Good Condition, At
2403 Mount Vernon Avenue
Pont Pleasan~ (304)895-382!i

3 Bedroom House. Bath &amp; 112,
Double Wrndowl &amp; Formal Oln1ng
Room + Patio- Ges Furnaeel AJC.
(304}675-8022

8&amp;8 ConstructiOn- Roofing, Sid·
mg. Concrete, lntanor &amp; Exterior
Pamlmg. Free Estimates. Call
(304}675-na&amp; After 5pm

any

1988

HVAC 1n1t111era, Residential &amp;
Commercial Wllh minimum Of 3
Years Experience, Paid Holidays.
Vacation i 401 K Send Resume
To P 0 Box 667 , Jackson , OH

,.. ,... -

....ertlllng ..
INa new 1PIIP8' IIIU;lllct to

Freelance English Riding Instruc-

tor. 1151 Hour Call Agnes 0
(740)44H1184

ortgln, or ony illorotlonlll

-lamlll-ornallonlf
nkl llrf IUCh PI•Ja•a.
11m1t111on or dlleilllilll.adan.•

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-675-1957.

Vory Clean $12.900 Matut OHor.
12x 12 st.._ Buiklong ""' Sale.
(740)441..0113

FINANCIAL

45640

time/ call-in for all shifts Base rate
$11 00/hr. Great E11perience Pay
S 25 Shltt Olfterential For Even·
lngs, S 50 For Midnights Allendance bonus availabta, lots of extras! Please call Scenic Hills at
1740)446-7150 lor
more lnlormatkln
Med1cal Billing Assistant needed

lmmodlatalyl FTIPT Woll Train Ex·
cellent income . PC required 1·

MEDICAL TI1ANSCRIPTIONIST
Work on your computer Guaranteed employment Tralninglcerhi1Ca110rt {lee), Tartan Pub. Inc 1·

1100-944·5595
POSTAL JOBS· Up to $18 .351
hour Hiring for 2001 Paid trainIng Full benefits Call toll free
7am-7pm 1· 888 ·726-9083 x

!70S.
Responsible Babysitter Needed
For 2 Month &amp; 19 Month Otds
Rolaling Shill Some Overnight

(740)446- 7198
Sales Person·
Full-Time, Benefits , Ralail ElCperlence Preferred.
Apply At Lifestyle Furniture, No
Phone Calls, Apply In Person

856 Tnlrd Avenue. Gallipolis.

on1o

210

Business
Opportunity

$2500 possible monthly growing
gourmet mushroom&amp; for us FREE
rnlormatron Spa~etime Enterpn&amp;e.

can troo1·B00.910·3086

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CQ
recommends that you do bu€i·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated

the oftorf"'l
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Estab·
l1shed Vending Route W1ll sell by
517/01 Under S9K minimum In·
vestment required Excellent Prof·
1t Potential Finance Avellablel

Good Credit Toll Free '""""(888)
270·2168"""""
Earn $90,000 YEARLY repairing,
NOT replacing , Long cracks in
Wtndsh1elds Free video 1· 800826·8523 US/Canada, www glas&amp;·
mechanix com

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlled In·
come potential No expenance
nedessa.ry Free Information &amp;
CD-ROM Investment from $2495
Financing avarlabl&amp; (800) 322·

!139 EXT050
www business-startup com
PEPSIICOKEIFRITO
LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
110UTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$ALL CASH BUSINESS II IN·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS t ·600· 731·7233
EXT 22.03
I
Start Your Business Today .
Prime Shopping Center Space
Avatlable At Affontabie Rate

Spring Valley Plaza. Call 740·446·
0101 .
State A Tr1ve1 Agency receive
training, bualnass support. your
own travel website and travel dll·

counVporks Earn big $1$. Noml·
nal startup coati 1·888·899·0901

WANTED 73 PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 lbo . In 30 dayal Program start·
lng under $30 All natural. Coctor
reoommtndtd Free counullng .

Call 1·800·308 · 7429 or VIII!
www 91 1btttirhaallh.com

WORK PAOM HOMII Earn
$500·$7 .000/month PTIFT. Ful l
Training Free lnlormation Oa ll

Full-time Permanent Positions Available
•

Nowl 1·212-8!2·5490
www.attainurdreama.com

230

Coli now to AChedule an Interview: 1·888·237·5342 ext. 2231
Or ttop by our Oolllpolls hx:atlon: InroClolon M1napment Corp.

l42 Third A..nu
G1lllpoll1, 0

Profetelon11
Servlc11

NEED AN EAI1LY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 lnatantly by phenol I·
877·EARLYPAY. Lie, 750005, tst
ADVANCE FREEl

1st Time Home Buyers Program,
Special Fi nancing Available,

Counlry Home, 1 1/2 Story, 3
Bedroom, 1 Bath, On Six Acres,
97% Completed Wilh Fireplace
And Sprral Starr Case On Pleas-

ant Aodga Ad $50.000 (304)576·
3156
•

COIS MW

Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
FlaWction! 1304)736-3409
Lim1t1d Or No Credit? Govern ment Bank Finance Only At oakwood In Barboursville, WV 304 Lol moctet clearance, save up to
$8,625 with any home, cheek us
oul were deatrng, Cole's Mobile

apartment&amp; at V1llage Manor and
Rrverside Apartments in Middle·
port From $278-$348 Cali 740·
992·5064. Equal Hous1ng Oppor·
!Unities.

Water. $100 Deposit. (740)4463617

Lot model clearance, one 2000
sectional save $9,625, for 2000
model singles , s pre owned singles musr go by May 3 1, no rea·
sonable offer refused, these
homes won, last lOng, so stop In
and cheek us out, we're dealing,
Cole's Mobile Homes Athens

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenrs, Includes Water
Sewage , Trash. $350/Mo , 740·

Ohio. Open M-W 9·7. Thurs·Frl .
9-6. Sat. 10.5.

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spaetous, 2 Bedrooms, 2

.

New 18 ft. w1da ~99. per mon
only 1270. per mon call now 1·

1100-691-sm.
New

2001

Fleetwood

only

Now 2001 Fleetwood . 3 br.• 2
bath, set up in The Country Mo·
bile Homo Part&lt;. road)' to move on.
$995 down , $199 98 par month,

740-992·2187.

EN I nl Service
" - F"*'Cing Avalabto
Homo ICcmmon:ial Unita
FIIEE Color catalog
Col~

1-801).71 1.0156
www.r1).ellan.com

Palio. Start $365 /Mo No Pet~ .
Lease Plus Sacunty Depos11 Re·
qUJreCI , Days 740-446 -3481 ;
Evenings· 740- 367 -0502, 740-

446.0101.
Tw1n Rtveffowers now accepting

apptlcatoons for 1 BR
and disabled EOH (304)6756879
Upstairs. 2 Bedroom.
Stova
&amp; Refrigerator Furnished No
Children. $300/mo. $1 50 Deposit.
(740)446-3870

Single Parent Program, Spacral

Financing Available. (304)755 ·
7191

Farm House, Beaullfully Remo-

deled. 2963 Square Feet. 17 Acr·

call740-992·5956 anytime

For Lease

Beautlful1600 Sq Feet, Restored
2nd Floor Apartment In Hl&amp;tor~c
Dtstnct Ideal For Professional
Couple All Modern Amenrties 3
Bedrooms, Spacious Llvrng, 1·1/2
Baths, Rear Deck HVAC $600/
mo Plus Utilities. Security And
Key Deposii. ,No Pels References
Required. (740)446-4425 Or

(740)446-3936

es, Pond, In-ground Pool. Several
Barns, Garage, Fruit Trees, Close

MERCHANDISE

$215.000 (740)446-

510

340 Business and

Household
Goods

Buildings
8us1ness with upstairs apartment
for sale, 241 Salem Street, Flu·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
VIew Sites $50,000 18 Acres

With Large Lake. Mobile Homo
With Add On $79.500 Gallla
County

On

Blacktop

Road.

(740)388-8678
15 acres on Lrncoln Hts . Pomer·
oy Will finance 8'1.· $200 down15yr. note· $150 per monlh· bal·

loon In 5 years. 74().992·2529
Camp
Sties For Rent On Kanawha River. 8 miles lrom Point

Pleasant. electric only. (304)675·
1722. (304)675-4 144 After 5pm

Point Pleasant· I I 12 Hogg Street.

2 Bedroom Home , Basement,
Priced $30,000 New Haven, 3

Looking To

Bedroom Ranch, Carport &amp; out·

Buy A New HOme?

Don"t Have Lan~? Wa Dolll Hurry
Ooiy 10 Lots Left. 304·738-7295.

buoldlng. priced $35.000 Call
(304)882·2221 Or (304)682·2405
Aoula 7 South, Newer, Larger
Home Very Nice, Consider

RENTALS

Trade-on, (7~0)446-9966

3 Piece Livtng Room Sel , Couch
wJMassagers &amp; Recliners. Loveseat, Rocker Reclmar In Teats ,
L1ke New, 4 Piece Bedroom Set ,
Black &amp; Gold Modern, Good
PriCe, 6 Ptece Dining Room Set·
Black &amp; Gold, Glass Top Modern
Chairs,
Good
Condition

3 Bedroom House, 11 B Park
Orivaj Point Pleasant, No Pets,
Reference &amp; Deposit, $450,
(304}675·2749

(304)67S· 1365
Two car garage/apartment In
Middleport two bedrooms, full
bath, LA kitchen with elecHic
range. central arr, 740 ·985· 3650

3 b8droom1 home Minersville
area, river view, references re·
qulred, deposit requrred, no pets,

or 740·992-2795

0% FLMMtek. On New John
O.ere Mower Conditioners And
Bate.rs With John Deere Credit
Approval. Cat! Ck Stop By -~~
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

7" Bar Cycle Massey. (710)256-

720 Trucks for Sale

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers , Dryers , Ranges , Fletrl grators, Up To 90 Days Guar·
anteed! We Sell New Maytag Ap·
pllancas. French Clty Maylag ,

740·446·7795.
China Cabonat. $300, Solid Maple
Table With 4 cna 1rs . $tOO,
11oll·a·way Bod. $25 (740)4463432
For Sale Reconditioned washers, dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407

so

Down For Good Customers
On Land
Home Packages-

BUV Foreclosed Homes From
$10.0001 Aopo•o &amp; Bankruptcy·s.
For Llotlnga 1·800·319·3323 e.t.
1709

14JC70 Southern Dream, fret De•
livery free Setup only $9995 1·

888-926·3426

condo For Rent, North Myrtia

16 Wide. Only $11S .OO Por

Baaoh , Staope 8, 2nd ~ow
(740)448-8857
•

Month, 8 99% Fixed lnttrelt Alit

Underpinning
Pilot Program, 11tnttra Nttaed.
304·738-729&amp;.

1965 10&lt;50 Now Moon. nu gu
furnace, new Wlllr htlttr, ?40•

•420 Mobile Hom11
for Rent

Washers , dryers, refrigerat ors
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Srreel , Call 740 -446 ·7398",

1-888·81 8·0128.
Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer $150
Kenmore Range, $1 00, Mi ·

crowave. $25: Sofa &amp; cnalr. $!25.
(740)256- 1156
Main Street Furniture
51 5 Main Street, Point Pleasant

New &amp; Used Furniture

'

houtlful Alvar VIew ldUI For t
Ot 2 Ptoplt, Atllrenctl, Ctpoolt.
No Pats. Foster Trolltr Park 740·
141·0181 .
•
•

a ltdroom , o.Uy
I3~MO Plr Montn 8.98% Flxtd
3 or

lntortot Rat~. 1•888•128•3426
AMAZING Llttll or No Cradlt

Mobile Homo For Rtnt In Alo
Gran~o. Walking Distance To
Colllgt. Avtlllble Mey i3rd
Some
Ulllltlts ,
$2eO/mo.
(740)24H100

N1eded, Spacial Government Fl·

nanctng . (304)7~5-S885

Nice

Clean

3

• Bt~room

Mobile Home Near Mercerville

(740!25B-ee74

,,

Call 60().755-7880
Grubb"o Plano- Toolng &amp; Repairs
Probtoms7 Need "Tuned? Call Thi
Poano Or. 7411-446-4525
HVLP Paint Sprayer New, Never
Been Used, $1000 Firm, Call

(740)245--.()810 EYOrlmgs
Independent Herballte Distributor,
Call For Producl Or Opportumty

(740)441- 1962

New And Used Fu rniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments
And

vases (74014411-4782
Solid Cnarry Btdroom Sulta. 9

JET

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinyl Skirting, Doors, Windows Anchors, Water Heaters ,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Furnaces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
Mobde Home Supply, 7 40-4469416 www OfVb comlbennen

NEW AND USED STEEL Sttol

Beams, Pipe Rebar For Concrete,
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways. New 55 Gallon Drums

Wltn Lid &amp; Rong. 17.00 Eacn L&amp;L .
SCrap Metals (740)446-7300
Recondilloned Washer &amp; Dryers,

$100 Each. NC. MOO To 23.000
BTU For Sale. Sta~lng At $75 00
Thomj:lson Appliance Repair,
3407 Jackson Avenue, (304)675·

7388
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNEAS
Tappan H1 Efflciltncy 90% Ga;s
Furnaces Oll Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Cond1t1onrng
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800·872·5967 www orvb com/ben-

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive, Buffalo, NY 14225
FREE Information 1· 800·578 ·

1363 EXT 200-U
See Paint Plus For All Your Pain·
lng Needs We Stock Pittsburgh
Paints , S1kkens Wood Finishes

And Mlnwax Stains. (304)675·
4084
Slanley Home Products And
Fuller Brush Available, To Order
"Products Or Request Catalogs

Ploasa Call (304)675·6903 Aoy·
BUILDINGS

Urgontll

69
Walerlme Spacial

314 200 PSI

RON EVANI ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio. I -600·537·9528
Yamaha Bass Guitar. $100. 200
Watt Bau Amp . $1SO: 4· Track
Recorder, 1100 OBO. VHS
Movies· Big Variety. $2 00 Eacn.
(740)446-1721

550

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows , lintels. etc. Claude Winlerl,

Rio Grandt. OH Call 740·245·
St21

560

AKC

Pets for Sale

Roglstarod

Champion

Labrador Retrl&amp;var

Pupploo. wormed &amp; snots. 1200
Each. Call (740)553-1803
Attention · Water Fowlers. Butch

&amp; Hank Lab Pupo Rog l s1oro~
Chocolata &amp; Black (740)44800110
French City Pat Grooming Haa
Moved To Point Pleasant , Now
Called Rosa's Pel Groommg Call

1538. Ru11 Moort, owner

For AppoiOimont (304)675·5010

540 Ml1cellsneou1

Jack Russell Terrier Puppies, 1
Male. 1 Female 6 Weeks Old,

40 gallon natural gas hOt water
tank , $80 , Col eman tra li ar fur-

nact. bottle~ gao. 7S.OOO BTU' ·
$100 . ~ all 740·742· 237 3 allar
4p")

992· 2529, 132 Bunernut,

evenings

-

(740)3116-8039
Registered Lab pups, 2 yellow,' 5
chocolate. ihOIS &amp; papers, $2150

each. 74().742-1116

Pomer-

t991 4x4 Nissan Plck· up. S.ol200

OBO Call After s·oopm (304)
675-2006

1999 Chevrolet S- 10 truck, burgundy with matching topper. all
options Sharp !I Excetlenl conc:li·
bon. $10.600. 740-992-6159.

740

Motorcycles

1988 Banshee , Runs , Needs
Mmor Repair. For Sale Or Trade ,

1850 OBO. (740)387..0239 After
5pm

Sale. Letart. WV (304)895·3319.

www savrefarms com
Horses For Sale (740)256-6439
Rogiatered Angus Springer Cows.
Excellent BlOOd Une (740)388-

8756

Hay &amp; Grain

1989 Kawasaki Ninja , 600cc,
Black! Red, Runs Good , 13,000

Moles. w!Ful Face Helmet. $1700
Caiii740)36B 9980 Afta&lt; 7pm
, 999 Harley Davidson Electra
Glide Classic, Fuel Injection. 2
Tone Parnt. Extra Clean (740)

1999 Honda VTR , 1000F Super-

12 Round Bales Of Hay For Sale

hawk , 2 Brothers Racing Types

(304}675·3030

Askrog S8000 (304)773·5885

150 Round Balas Hay, $12 00
each. (740)446-7787

2000 400EX 4· whHier, like new
over $1 ,200 1n extras $4,800
(304}675-7511 (304)67!1-7423

Someone To Round Bale 50+
Acres Of Hay On Shares, Square

Bales For Sale. (304)875-&lt;889

2001 Suzuko 11M 125. Must Sell .
HaYing A Baby. PayoH 060. Call
Aher 5pm (304)675-2006

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie Straw. Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count Available Heritage Farm

(304)875·5724.

Tobacco Plants· Order Now To
Guarantee Early Spring Plantings
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
Pl•nts. Thank You For Your Susl·
ness Call Danny Dewhurst·

Leave Moasaga (304)895·3740

Or (304)895-3789

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1989 Strata's Open Bow Wllh
trailer. Seats 8. Ewcellent Condi·

tlon OMC 3 0 180 HP ln·Board
W1th Cobra Out Drive Asking

$5495 Call Evenings (740)~460440

1996 21 Foot Bass Tracker
Pontoon Boat wJ60HP Tracker

TRANSPORTATION

Engine: 1987 F·150. ~Wheel
Onvo. (304)882·2715

710 Autos for Sale

91 Lowe. 20" Pontoon Boat &amp;

'93 L1nco1n Town car, $4500, ga~
rage kept, excellent condition,

EqulpQe~

Trailer, 40HP, John1on Outboard,

Wt)h
(304)882·2545

Llvt

wen .

740·992·0228

Jot Ski. 1999 Kawasaki 1100 ZXt,
1985 ALFA 11omoo Spider con· ' Like New, Low Hours, Aluminum
Trailer. 15800. (304)576-21190
verltble, excellent condition,
$6000. 740·992·2529. 132 Butter·
790
Campers &amp;
nut, Pomeroy
1986 Chrysler LeBaron, 4 Door.
Engine Doesn't Flun Everything

Elsa Good. $200. Call (740)4410199
t 986 Dodge Daylona Turbo.
Runs Good. $400. (740)441-1083
1987

Old~mobltt

Supremo. T·

Tops, 2 Door, V-8 Bucket Seats.

Motor Homes
1990 1e Skamper Trailer. t Own·
er. 4 Wheels , Fully Contained ,
Sltops s. Aoklng $3500
(304)895-3678 (304)895·3554

1995 Dutchmen Camper with expanda. $10.000 llrm. Call
992·7739

7~0·

4·Whooler. (740)245-9172

1997 Flagstaff pop.up. ale. stoops
6. $2250. 1973 Sprite. sloops 2·3.
$795. located at Gatharlng Wa·

1989 Honda Accord LX, 4 Door,

740·247-7401

4·Spaod. Automatic . Like Now
Tires, For Sale Or Trade For Nice

Loadad. S Speed. 37 mpg.
127.000 Milos. Groat Shape.
$3.295 (304)675-7256
1991

1992

ters Campgrounds, Apple Grove.

SERVICES

Dodge Stealth AT, Twin

Turbo. 300HP. 5 Speed. AWD.
AWS. Loadad. Sharp Car. $7500
OBO (Botow Book). (740)4410135
Firebird·

810

1992 Oldsmobile Cullass Su·
preme Convertible Fully Reeondi·
tloned Climate Control, Power

Everything Whole With Black
Top Really Nlca Car. Will Sell At
Nada Wholesale Price, $4500
(740)446-1155 Great GraduaiiOn

Glftt
1994 Ford Crown Vlclorla. S1.000
Milos. One Owner. SB.OOO. 1980
Chevy Malibu. 2 Door, Hard-top,
30.000 Milas, (740)37~2694
t 996 Oodga Intrepid ES. Can ·
dyappto Rod. Loaded . loathar.

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

EJCcellent

Condition. 14800 Or Bast Offer.
(740)446-7:;41

Uncondrlional lifetime guJJantee
Local references furnished . Es·

tabllsntd 1975. Call 24 Hra
446·0870 1·800·287·0576 Roco·ll
ers Waterproofing
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chel, 740·992·
Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repa~rs
done. free eattmates. lifetime
guarantee t 4yrs on job experi-

New Tires, Highway Miles, $62.00

ence (304)895-3887

840 Electrlcel and

Work . $550 Firm. Call (740)2450610 Ellllnl"'ll

THE

NFL

..........

"I'm glad it came out that ~" said Bud
Adams, who took his Oilrn out of Houston
after the 1996 season and ~tually nsmed
· them into the Tennessee Titans.
'
The lineup:
AFC East- Buffalo, Miami, New England,
New York Jets.
.
AFC Noi:tb Baltimore, Cmcmnan,
Cleveland,
Pittsburgh.
Jt :t,.
AFC South - Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Tennessee.
.
.
AFC
Wcit
Denver,!Uruas
City, Oakland,
Ill
San Diego.
NFC East - Dallas, New York Gwu:s,
Philadelphia, Washington.
•lka.
NFC North Chicago, Detroit, Green
Bay, Minnesota.
NFG South Adanta, Carolma, New
Orleans,
Tampa
Bay,
,.-' PI!SJ
NFC West - Anzona, St. Louis, San Frant'IJ cisco,
Seatde.
In addition to Seattle, the team most affectI .II
ed might be the Cardinab, who move out of a
111$111"divuion With Dallas, the only team to draw
h•ltles,
capacity crowds tn the desert. Arizona owner
pernnlllt, Bill Bidwill fought hard to stay 10 the same
divmon with the Cowboys, but said he was
llllces . . happy after the league agreed to a new scheduling format for exhibition games that will
retain
old rivalries.
-.eo..
B1dwill was even happier after Dallas owner
Jerry Jones said he would be glad to pbv the
Cardi!Uls m an exhtb111on game every· year
gour they aren't scheduled to play 10 the regular
season.
"I'm very happy that Jerry agreed to do

•WIIIIJ

, ....

....

.......
....

....
._.

Pkkup

cepg

that,'' Bidwill said. "The NFC West tits for us
geographically."
Seattle presiden! Bob Whitsitt. wd the same,
noting that the Seahawks will have preseason
games against the Broncos, Clurgers, Chic&amp;
and R2iden, whom they"ve met in the regular
season so often. "! think thu is good for the
league and good for the Seahawks," he said.
Another plus for most of the owners is the
new scheduling format, under which every
team will meet every other at least once m
four yean. There will be six home-and- home
divis101Ul games; four against teams in another
divisiou w1thtn a conference; and four more
against a diviSion in the other conference on a
rotaung basis.
The final two games will be against conference teams based on the previous year's standings: first aga&gt;nst first, second agamst second,
and so on . For the time being, there will be six
teams from each conference m the playoffS the division winners and two wild cards
In the end, the b1ggest surpnse in the plan
was the speed with which it was done.
''
Although various proposals had been under
study for I 8 months, no vote was expected
until Thursday. But there was only an hour's
debate and the consensus was to get ot "ver
With.
"I thmk everyone reahzed th at everythmg ·
that could be s;ud had been saod,'" comnusstoner Paul Tagliabue satd
There also were memones of the problems
of d1e last realignment 31 years ago, brought to
the fore by old-nmers Rooney, the Giants '
Wellington Mara and Balttmore's Art Modell.
"That old realignment was the toughest
thmg I've been through," said the 84-year-old
Mara, who has been mvolved with the NFL
since starting as a ball boy for the G1ants when
his father bought the team m 1925.

todq.
The
Dally
SeniLtel

c
l

H

s
I

s
•

I·

f
I

E
D

s

NBA

fawn P11p 11
, Glenn Robmson and Sam
Cassell.
Allen finished with 31
points for the Bucks and Cassell had 20, but Robinson
struggled through a I ~for-I 0
tint half and finished with 15.
The Sixers controlled the
boards, played more intense
defense and held Milwaukee
more than 14 points below its
playoff average.
"We_ didn't let it get mto
the hundreds, and that's
important the way they
shoot," Stxers coach Larry
Brown said.
•
The series resumes Thursday night with Game 2.
The 7 6ers scored 38 points
in the paint, including 22 in
the second quarter, when they
outscored Milwauke~ 32-16
to take charge. The Sixers also
grabbed
17
offenstve
rebounds and came up wtth
mne steals.
The Bucks had to have an
mklmg tt wasn't gomg to be
theu night when the first

quarter ended in a 19-19 lle
despite Iverson's 0-for-9
shooting.
"The worst thing we did
was when we stopped him
from scoring, theu other guys
made shots. That got thetr
confidence going and they
played well as a team,'' Allen
s:ud.
McKie had a steal and dunk
for a 34-29 lead, and Iverson
ripped some padding out
from under the back of hiS
waistband and tossed it aSJde
as the teams came out of a
nmeout early in the second
quarter
"I was just out there hurting,'' said Iverson, who was
slowed by a bruised nght 1\tp
and buttocks. "I told (coach
Larry Brown) that it was
worse than the last time when
I missed five games."
Iverson proceeded to hit his
next four shots as the 76ers
closed the first half with a 1610 run, mcludtng the final 10
pomts of the quarter, for a 5135 lead.
Milwaukee pulled w1thm
, I 0 early m the thtrd before
Iverson diScovered another
burst of energy, racing m for a

fast-break layup off a steal by
McKie. Cassell drew a technical foul for argwng that a foul
should have been called, and
Iverson made the free throw
and then hit a 3-pomter to
malce it 59-43 .
The Bucks responded with
a 12..0 run as Allen repeatedly
found enough space to get off
his JUmper, but they only
pulled to 59-55 before Iverson ended the run with a
nud-range jumper.
Philadelphia led 70-63
entermg the fourth, and the
lead grew to 12 before Allen
re-entered after mung out the
first four rmnutes of the quarter. Allen hit his first shot and
completed a three-pomt play,
and hiS 3-pmnter off an
offensive rebound made tt 8580 with 2·38 left
Enc Snow mmed and Cassell htt three free throws to
make It 85-83 wah 1·59 left,
but Iverson drove the lane
and was fouled He made
both free throws and Robmson nusse.ia shot over McKie
before Iverson htt h1s clutch
3-potnter

.

Reds
from

But the Reds managed only four hitS to
Ch1cago 's mne, and blew the few chances they
had to score.
Trailing 3-1 before the ram delay, Cmcinnato
PllpB1
rall1ed to tte It m the stxth on Tucker and
Rtvera's RBI smgles. They could have added a
his thtrd save.
few
more runs, but Wh1te made a d1vmg save
And James Brower (2- 3) gave the Cubs the
go-ahead run, comm11ting a balk with the on Alex Ochoa's liner to left with men at first
and second, anc:\ Donme Sadler struck out
bases loaded.
swmgmg
with runners on second and third
Sean Casey extended h11 season-high hitttng
And then Brower gave the Cubs the game
streak to II games with an RBI double m the
W1th the bases loaded and R1cky Gutierrez
first. Michael Tucker and Ruben Rivera added
RBI singles for the Reds, who have lost I 0 of at the plate, Brower was called for a balk, scormg Matthews and gtvmg the Cubs a 4-3 lead.
13.

6323.

OBO. (740)441..0135

92 Hyundal Elantra, Needs Some

--

446-1749 After 5pm Or Leave
Massage.

Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master ll·
cenaed electrician Ridenour

Electrical. WV000306 . 301-87S ·

1788

Building
Supplies

Buy or 1111 Riverine Anliquu,

Merch1ndlse

(7.tO).t46·4111 ,

1997 Ford Explorer, XLT, 4WO,

Bloodline

1124 Et1t Main on SR 12~ E f'o.
moray. 740·992·2528 or 740·992·

Four Charotaoo BuMs. Can daytime

43.000 Mlleo. E•collant CondoUon .
Asking $15.900 (740144&amp;--ot 16

Very Nlco Large Clnlng Roo m
Tobll With 6 Chairs Alao .
Elaotrlc Plano Wltn Bo ncn
(740)44H737

Antlque1

AOHA, 2 Year Old Gelding,
Beaut1ful Gray: APHA, 4 Year Old

$21 95 Per 100. t" 200 PSI

t AKC MilO Poklngo .. Puppy. 9
Weaks Old. 1 Toy Poodle Pup. 8
Montho Old. (740)446-3398

530

Livestock

2 oppaNiix yearM"'l gotdongs. Pa~
ammo. $2500 bay, Ukes to jump,
11500.740-943-5176

640

1990 JMp. I cylinder. automatic.
94.000 mites. axcollent condition.
Htlong at NADA Boolc retail. 740-

oy

$37 00 Per 100; All Bra&amp;&amp; Com pression Fillings In Stock

All, Call (304)36CJ.-0233

Pieces, Still In Boxes, $2,000 For

630

evoo•ooo-

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

AERATION MOTORS
11epalred. New &amp; Robuoll tn Stock
Call Ron Evans 1-801).537-9528

New 2 Piece Llvingroom Suites

wuner &amp; dryer. uoo. olactrllf
rtngt, S75, Ill gOOd condition. cell
740.992·3242

3 btdroom mobile home ror rtnt

no PI" 740•11112-585.!

Manufac1urer offers a two week
supply of colostomy or uroslomy
brand name products with one
simple pnone call No Obhgat10111

Must move nowtl 25x30 , 3DK40 ,
45x100, liquidation pricing, save
thousands !I 1·800-211 -9594 x·

$399 Buy. Sell. Trade.

Oakwood· Gallipolis (740)4483093

F11EE S40 worth ol GROCERIES!
Limited to first 100 calls Tell
friends and family! IIOCJ.426.4397

four Gas Hot Water Heaters, 30·
40 Gallon , In Good Cond lt1on

(3041675·1422

3 Bedroom House For Renl Or
Sala. Will Accept HUD. Call
(740)~4t-Oe72 Ask For Valeria
Or Leave Message

5np Titter. Gas Edger. 1 Shp.
(304}675-2365

""""'
STEEL

APPLIANCES

Btactos With Power IJnlt. EXCOitnt
Condition. (740)256-1874 S3200

Crattoman Chipper Slwoddar, 14"

Jackson Avenue. (304)675· 7388

USED

se·

Horse! Call Breakrng t Tra1ning.
Reglslered Quarter Horses For

Sawmill $3.895 New Super Lum·
bermate 2000, larger capacities,
more options Manufacturer of
sawmllts ; edgers and slcldders

(740)446-9066

Foley Btlsaw SawmiH, 45• &amp;

(740)245-0380

Cha1n Saw, 22• Hedge Trimmer,

92 Lincoln Town Car, Loaded.
Good Condlllon , New Tii'es,

$2800. (740)388-90S3 Days.
(700)388 &amp;158

COMPUTERS! Even with less
rnan perfect credit! 1·800-477 ·
9016 Code AC21 www.omcsolu·

bon com

(740}388 8532

(740)44ll-24121-eD0-584-1111

Paont Man! (740)388-0406

Computers: WE FINANCE DELL

Almond Admiral Refrrgerator, $75,
Almond GE Washer $60, 2
Kenmore Washers, $65 Each, 2
Whirlpool Dryers, $50 Ea ch

740.992·6n7 after 5pm.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

LiM Now. (740)245-5740

(740)339-2787

(740)446-9523

410 Houses for Rent

Sot. Cuoon Size. 5

Piece, Like New. Baasen. Rid1ng
Lawn Mower, .t2• Cut. Murray.

non

GOOD

Small 2 Bedroom, AfC, Has
Kitchen ~ppliances, Ga&amp; Fur·
nace, Good Roof, 2 Porches ,

Poloce 1,.......&amp; Repos•
Toyotas. Chavy's. Joopol
Plaasa Cal lor UsOOgs.
1-600-45Hl050 El&lt;l 09817

460 Space for Rent
Family type for small camping
trader hookup and one dock s1te,

8000K. Must Self . IIS.500 •
(304)875-8465

Runs Good NeedJ Brake Work .

Ford 2000 Tractor For Sale. Call

Bedroom Suite

2000 Loaded.
CMc
- ·
Totally
Power Elf..,
iotoOnroof.

saoo OBO. Call Before Spm.

8359

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Floors. CA. t 112 Bath. Fully Car·
peted. Adult Poo) &amp; Baby Pool ,

490

Pnvate Property And New Doublewld&lt;l. One Pay.,...nt (304)736·
7295

To Holzer
4230

446.01)()8

HUD subsidized apt for elderly

$148 48 par montn Call Nikki
740-3611-4387.

FORECLOSED GOV"T HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWNI TAX
REPO"S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING! CALL t·
BIJ0.501.11n olll. 98 t3

'

GracioUs hv1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
No Pets, $230/ Month , Includes

Homos. US 50 East. Athens. Oh

Work. As Is $45.000 (740)6885552 (740)446--6236

Confuud? Don't Bt· Call Oak ·
WOOd· GllllpOIII Beat PriCII,
IIIII Sorvlct. Beat Peoplt. If You
Sao And Ad You Like· Call Uol
(740)4&lt;1t'3b93

Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 Aoom Apart·
mants, Ctean, No Pet&amp;. No Smok·
. References &amp; Depos1t Ae·
Uh llti8S Furmshad

1999 Lumi na, 18,000 Mila•.
loaded. $14.000 (304)812·3331
CaiAI\or!lpm.

(740)2M-t021

610 Fann Equipment

(740)256--11663

Factory Goof 321180 $10.000 Dis·
count only $1000 00 Down, Delivery. and oetup paid br Factory
1-600-69Him

Leav•

83 Dodge Ants Slatlonwagon.

AIIAZINGLY LOW PRICEs
WOLFFTAfllfiG BEDS
Buy Faclory Direct

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PAICES AT JACKSOli ESTATES. 52 Westwood

{30~)675· 1118

2000 VOIIcswaoen Beede, Excellent
Condition ,
StS ,OOO.

$59.990. 1·1100-246-tlfl40

AUTOS F - NOO.OO

G - {74111"6-:1193

F111er Upper. 2 Bedroom New
Roof , Newer Furnace , Needs

28&lt;80

was $52,750 now $34.990.
80dOOx16 wa1 $87,450 now

OliO

Home &amp; We' ll Set II Up On A
Beautiful 5 Acre Tract, QakwDOO-

pointment (740)446-9546

1978 1~M70, 2•3 Se~room, Now
Slnoe 1&amp;17· AIC. Furnace. Wator
Htalll 16500 (30~)675•3008
Mornings, (740)385·4277 Evon·
lnga

FAR".l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

VHS movooa. 114.99 + S&amp;H. Cat!
toll tree 1•866·741·8245 (PIG·
TAIL) Prince Edward. canada

Appliances, Full Size Basement,
24x24 F1n1shed Garage, 8x10
Wood Storage Burldlng , CIA. &amp;
Gas Heal Excellenl Neighborhood Too Much To Menlion .
Ready To Move Into Call For Ap-

9&amp;11-3550 bllora 8pm

S t r - You Pictl . WO Pictl,
Taylor"o lltrry Patch. 2884 l&lt;tlrr
lload. Open o.epm May 24 a 25.
ll-1211ay 26. {740)245-9047

Chrtsly's Family Ltv1ng . 33 140
Now Uma Ad • Rulland. Olllo. 740742-7.t03 Aparlmenl , home and
tratler rentals Commercial store·
fronts available ror lease Vacan-

land. Ohio. $35.000. call 740-742·
1ncoma..:..:......:..._ _ __
Exeettent Location On Route 160 ... _25_7_2_Gootl_.:._
Between Galllpolls And Holzer
Office building in M!nersv1lle, 600
Hospital 3 Bedrooms. Bath. Llvl"'l
oq ft .• ale. covorod parking. cell·
Room, Family Floom, Kitchen W1lh
lng lan, $300/mo., 614·876-1681

With Air And
! ·888·928·3426

s~s. Plcl&lt; 'll&gt;llr Own. co~
(700~121

$27.450- $18.990 60x150&lt;14

1 Bedroom Fur ~lhed Apartment
In Point Plea sant, Very Nice &amp;
Clean. No Pats. (304}675-1 386

Drwe from $297 10 $383 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 7-t0- 446·

ca.-.

Counlry Uving- Pick Your Dream

$998 00 down only $295 por
mon caiiMW 1·81J0.691-6n7

With Flreplaca. 3· 112 Baths +

to 50% OFF! Pre·engineet'ed w/
plans. 30x5Dx10 was 112.500
now $89fO. 50x80x1.t was

-19500

1998 Tordl F~olllrd. T·laps.
AI Power. e cytindoo. CD ~.
PayoiJ $18.400. (740)116 334ol

Fruits&amp;
Vegelablee

Anne of Green Gab~et and The
Contlnumg Story Fae1ory sealed

kiiOWiiiJIY accept

-·lnvlolatlonoltlle

nishecl and unfurniShed, security
depoah required , no pe ts, 740·

ALL STEEL·BUILDINGS. Now up

510

2568 Equal ttousong Opportunity

New double wide 3 br 2 ba

law. 0 . . - ... hereby
lllluiii'ld that al dwiJIUngl
advertised In thll ne" IM't .,
are . - o n on equal

I and 2 bodf-' _....... fur·

(740)2M-1922

irn...............,__

(304)755-Sii&amp;&amp;

Tl* IWW Pll• wil not

--llllorreol-

Lawn Mowing , Weed Eallng,
Deck Cleaning,
Relmlshmg ,
Removal Of Unwanted Items

(740)441-0199 Or (740)441 4222

3 Bedroom, ShingleS

Roof, Vmyl Sidu'tQ, Remodeled.

691~

Grape Aobor (740)25&amp;-6837

Expenance
Noodod Call
HI00·652-6726 Elll2070. 24Hrs

1411170~

1 -

w-

Slide. 8 Foot llM1tl
Board. S!ai&gt;t. SOlar Btanl!al. COlt

992·2218.

New 14 ff wide $499. down only
$199. per mon call now 1· 600·

tho..- Fu Hauling fd
o l 1 8 8 8 - - lltlogal
t o - "any prw1ot01a,
lim... on ,..,., Clllor. Nlfglon.

Reparring Lawn MOWtfS And
Smail Engine
Pick-up And
Delivery Available For Quality

Can

bon. can Cheryl. 740-365-4387.

13 Yoara Experience. Located By

David's General Contractors ,

OBO

Must sen 1995 Snull 16x80, 3
bedroom. 2 bath. Excellent condl·

Chr1s1lan Mother Would Like To
BabysH Your Child In My Home,

Plumbing. Electric. Painting
Docks. Mise
Work. Call
1740)256-9373 Or Cell Phone 1·
304-633-6265

$5000

(7410)388-1 772 Serious Callers

738-3409

W1ll Repair Automobil es. Law.n
Mowers, and Farm Tractors,
Certtfied Mechanic Calt 9·5pm

No

AWeek of Paid Vacation Every Six Months!

I

Dnve , 4 Bedroom , 1 Bath, UpSiatrs &amp; Uvtngroom, TV Room &amp;

Walkout Basement W1lh Kitchen
&amp; Bath 2 Car Garage, Workshop
With Loft And Bath Fruit Trees &amp;

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

IJII. 1300 www projecuetund com

•

{Careers Close To Homo)
Colt Today! 740-446-4367.
1-eD0-214-0452.
Reg191HJS.12748

2 story House At 1165 Park

Will haul trash or junk away
S4ll 00 a load 30«175-8950

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

:. 1 HVILL S

$987 .85 WEEKLYI Procoaolng
HUDIFHA Mortgage Refund! No
Exporltnce Raqu fro~ For FREE
Information Call 1·800·501 ·8832

Training
o·•raM• c - COMige

consider land contract. 740·698·
6783

Homeworker• Needed $635
Weekly Proce~s l ng Mall Easy!

Every Friday and Saturday Off!

I Ml'l OYM f NT

$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE Pro·
ce111ng 400 Inquiry Envelopoa at
Home. Euy Work Coli 1·BOO·
755·2027 &lt;539 (24ntt)

Buslneu

140

100% remodeled house i n Po·

meroy, great pnce, must see. will

Tammy (304)675-5651

Seven Paid Holidays a Year!

Help Wanted

5039-Bam&amp;7pm

or
www EarnBucksFrom ·
Home com

Wanttd To Buy : U1ed Mobllt
Homo, Call 740·446·0175 Or 304·
875·5M5

11 0

Wanted· lingle person to liw 1n
and care lor 1-6 resrdenls In cludes room &amp; board and salary
Call for an Interview. 740-992·

GeiUpolos And Racine. Ohoo Call
David 0 1-800':l:IU9t0

7am, caii74Q-992·5023

Overtime

Absolute Top Dollar · U S Sliver,
Gold Colna, ProofHII, Olamonda,

(2) For Sale. 2 Bodtoom.
1 Balt1. S750 Down Payment. -

Brick Home On 2EI Acres. 8 Large
Rooms Solid Oak Cabinets,
Doors &amp; Trim. Large Famllyroom

And

Wanted to Buy

lng· great benefJIS, call 7 days
110(1.129-3660 .... J-365

W1ll Clean Houses. Banks. And
OU•ces Reasonable Rates Cat:

$7.00 Per Hour
Plus Weekly Bonus

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full lime auc tioneer complete
auction
servlc8 .
UceniJed
t66,0hio &amp; West VIrginia 304·

310 HotMs for Sale

3pm. 7am-5pm. 3pm·t 1pm. ttpm-

mmimum wage. new shifts 7am-

Tirtd of Larning "inimum \\agt'!

Sole

Postal Jobs $48.323 00 yr Now
hlnng· No npenence-paid train·

From Buildings Call (740)4467604 •

Help wanled caring lor the elderly,
Darst Group Home. now paymg

And Lots Of Stufflll Don't Mill

Thll Oneil llems S!artmg At 1o
Cents, Plenty 01 Parking 11t

Batno.

REAL ESTATE

opportunity ball.

888·4411-9n3 ext 222

Drivers
WHAT ARE YOU WAITING
FOR? START YOUI1 NEW CA·

8538

KorrRoad

LPN positions available ~ part -

Class A Or B COL Driver
Wanted. 2 Years Experience,

In
151

Senlfca Call (740)446-7604

AVONI Aft.Areasl To Buy or Sell
Shlrfay Spears. 304-675-1429 •
Ba Your Own boss!
Never 9-5 Agalf"l

1988 Clayton Trailer. 3 Or •
Bedrooms , Total Eleclnc, 2 Full

~com

Apartmen..

for Rent

pump &amp; ale. $7.500. 7.t0-591 ·
4043,. 7.0.992-ar.l8

l les! Se ttlements! Immediate
Ouote6tt' "Nobody
our pric·
es • National Conrraet Buyers
(800) •90-0731 eKI 101 www na·

Ad (740)441-()359

8400 www.AchoiwDreams.com

ATTENTION . MOTHEI1S AND
OTHERS Up to $500·$2500 pan
lime Full -trai ning 1-800· 8794608 . www qu1ckcashnow.com/
jambagan

19121~•70 Fairmorll Townhouse.
2 Wwn, 1 age bath ...,.. heal

Apartment For Rent
In Rio Grande, Walking Distance
To College , A ll Ulilitres Pa1d.
Avadable June t tth. (740)2455100

caih for remain.JnO payments on
Sold!~~ Amui-

Kelly Drive On Georges Creek

life??&gt; PT/FT al home. 920·924-

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
eJicellent Income Easy claims

Stand. Gallipolis Boat Club. 11 1

in our Political Call

Center State Tesled Nurs1ng
A•des and Cartlf1ed Nursing
Atdes po1itions available one
part·tlmo 2pm to ttJpm Two eatt·
in/ tilt-on positions lor &amp;am to 21m
and 10pm 10 6am 56 80 an hour
for state tested nursi ng assistant•. $5 80 an hour for certified
nursrng assi1tants •perfect attendance bonus every 3 months,
"Bonus'"' available lor worll.mg

Now To '!btl Thritt ~
9 West StimSOn Atheno
740-592·1842
items St 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday
9 tJ0-6:00

Immediate Openings

person tooiUng lor t11e porlecl job
wHh great pay? Then we're look·
ong for you at Scenic Hils Nonng

eldraslifta

440

IU NEED CASH?? WE pay

Position. Apply
Acquisitions_,_
Es Ml

592-t651.

bmo F - - Scheci&lt;Ao. Cal
you a caring, team- onented

p- -ll

320 Mobile HCHMS
for Sale

TUfiNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IS&amp;I?
No Foo Ur1loss wo Winf
1-582-XMS

UI1GENTLY NEEDED· plasma
- . earn $45 10 $80 1or 2 oc 3
houjs MOldy. Cal Sera Tac. 740-

..:.
"..:.
""..:..............._:...::.:._..:._not'-----

~re

SBCM College Graduate. 38yrs.

OfO Seeks Husband/ Wife Team
To
Learn
Auto
Hauling
{740)256-1021

Prof81B!onal
Services

Seoond~G

(740)446-9228 For tnta,_ Ap-

005

OH45640

f'art.timl! Sales

engs Throughout Tn-State Area.

poolmOIIts.

Houoing.
Send Pricing
a
nd experience
10 - Soulher
n
Homes, PO Box 6 29. Jacllson.

Penon.

,_..,

c,_ne- due to llolldaya"

Needed E•pariencad Crew tor
Setting and Fmi shing SecttOnal

Ful 1.-.e1'4-91500JCI.3234
· l'or more ir*Jrmation
cal

u...~"D=I=·~·~,~-~~·~t.tii;J~·~·~·~...~ll $200().~
Rift br4:30

230

Help wanted

pot hour potantlll. Paid Training!

p.m......., - -

2~-theldl810

ltO

a Foot

NOIIOD'I"S FATHER CD by Kevin Jonot Miry Clllpln Carpen·
ler &amp; Ace Smtih QUI&amp;I. On IIIC·

tlf7 SUblru OUII&gt;ack &amp;pori. 27
mpg. AJ(" AMIFM Cu..tta. All
Whoal Drive . 5 S_.t llenu81

1-H_ FIEDS

:Tribe
from Pllp 11
catch m short left to end
that threat.
Cleveland had hit .339 (92for-27 I) with runners in
scoring position over its previous 24 games.
Palmer hit his sixth homer,
a two-run shot off Bartolo

Colon (4-4) woth two outs m
the fourth .'
Palmer had struck out I 0
times tn 21 career at-bats
agamst Colon, but h11 the first
pitch mto the Cleveland
bullpen after Tony Clark had
walked
·
FICk made 1t 3-0 wtth his
fifth homer on a full-count
pitch 10 the SIXth
In h1s only other start
against Cleveland thiS season,

Weaver allowed SIX firsttuning runs in l 9-8 loss on
April 13.
Weaver rettred 13 straight
after Juan Gonzalez led off the
third with a smgle until Cabrera lined a two-out double
down the left-field line in the
seventh.
Colon allowed seven h1ts
and one walk over eight
mmngs. He struck out five.

110 Help Wanted

Card of Thanks

LOCAL COMPANY

The Ralph and Murl
Colburn Family w11h to
thank the Laurel Cliff
and Thoma• Fork
n•ishbor., Mildred
Ziesler of Camp 7230,
Modern Woodmen of

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center ManaQer. We are currently·
seeklnCJ to nu over 100 positions. No
exp. necessary. Eam upto$15/hr.
Very ftexlble schedullno. Both f/t and
p/t avail. MedlcaVDentaVPd
wcatlon/Momt. opps. awn for f/t.
Call today, start tomorrow•••
1-888-974-JOBS

WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU I
COO Management.

L~C

America members. the

Rev. Mark Plaugher,
Ewins and ~taff,
many other friend. of tho
family
for
their
Ban

expre,.ion of love durang

the lime of tho death of
my husband and our

daddy, 8randpa, and
greot·srandpo . May God
ble11 6ach and every one
of you .

FIND,··
WHAT.YOU·
NEED 1·N·
·~

the··

·oany · :·
nel
CALL

992-2155

�weclnMCIQ• ...., 23, 2001

..... 82. The Dilly .........

...Y 23, 2001

Wedneecley,

The o.lly Sentinel • . , . 8 3
710 Autos for ....

11,100 IIACK 2 Ton Ail COndl·
· 2 Ton Coil. 1 Ltno Sot. tn-

ataltea. $2.285. 11.000 Bacto
$1295 Net Pr1011 Free EatimoiH:
Cal For Ouotot On Other SizH.
If You Oon"l Call Ua, We

-~
l.osot1-740-446-6308
0..
1·1100291-oo&amp;e

......__
AI~

Help w.nt.d

110

~ .__. foufttt,

v.nl . . . . . . . . . . .
To Oo,....lllull . . l'8ltl

.. Adnnce.

DPPIE Df!QlltE;
2:110p.athecll¥ .....
. . Ill 1810 IIIII. Bl *J A
"1 allty 1tlllc112:CIOp.nL

F'*J

pmgp Df*N FE·

1:00p.m_ . . . , . _
tile Ill 1810 fUlL S•lllr A
•
lllonuv 1111111111:00 p.nL
Frldey.

l!f!HSlE!I Of@ 55"

112.-

WEEKLY! Melling 100

brochureal SJtJtfletton G uarPostage &amp; 5upptios proVidedt Rush Salt-Addr es sed
Stamped Enoetopel GICO. DEPT

. -!

5. BOX 1431. ANTtOCtj . TN
'y.

3701 1· 1.:JBStarUnwrw'

"""ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
p '" • to worlll S25fh&lt;·S7511V FTI
PT FREE Into. 100·87 1-8045
www.llhOmiiJil.COm
"SUMMEII WORK" "112 S.HI
Appl." Cotlego Studonlll "01 HS
Graduatn. Entry Levet Svcl
sates Cond1t10nt App ly Open-

Help W8ntild

110
FloOr
-

Su~ tVISO r

AN POilhOns
paot·timol day&amp; ... _ , .
Basa- al S14.00 on hcu

"'05

-diHerentiol
· - .,.,.
pay. $.25
lor ownongs.
S 50- to&lt;
m•dnlghts. .. Anendance bonus
available. many extras. Please
cal Scenic Hilt$ AI {740)446"ft!iO

Gow&lt;nmont .lolls $11 .0ti-S33_oo

• IIDtld&amp;y etllkwl· 4:30

!

l1llnUy.

ANNOUNCWErHS

Personals

(304)552-401~

ABSOLUTB.YFAEE INFO

Advancement Plans Salesman
Counselor, Part-trme And Full·

5' 11,

19Dib,

seek WF o r BF

compan•onship Wme 8 Scott·
0202145 (E· 1·3) CCt. Box 5500.
Chitlwtho. OH 45i0t
Why wa tt? Start meettng Oh•o
singles tonight 1-800-766-2623
ext 1621

30 Announcemerits
l.ongaberger
August
14th.

Bus

T....

For

More
lnformat•on
Contact Mane
W•seman At (304)675-5016 or
bandmOzoomnetnot

Qua lity ctoth1ng and household

The party havmg sweet potato
plants last year Wll not haw them
ll'us year For quesltons or for
mora •nformauon can 740-742·
2n3

40

Giveaway

4 Fuzzy Kinens L1t1er Trained,

(304}675·5801
Male, Long-ha•red, Blacl( &amp; Whtll
Cat, Appro)omately 8 Years old.
Daclawed And Neutered Call
(740)256-6909 Aher !lpm

60

Lost and Found

FOUND· Adorable B/ W Kitten
11o&amp;CUOd From Beneath Car Hood
In Vlcmlly South Park Drive, II
Unclatmed, Will Give Free To
Good Ho.,... With SIJI)ply Of Food/
liner And Reimbursed For Neu·
ten"'l. (304)675-1 045

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Garage Sale. 4265 Bulav1Ne P1ke,
Gallipolis, Saturday May 26th, 9·
5pm, Clothes, Furmture, House·

hold. Etc
Yard

Anl'lbuColoi8Cied?
fmomotUaer~W-!

Sale

And

Concea&amp;ion

VIne Street, Saturday May 26th
9am-Spm, Hand Made Ouih. Raffte

Orawmg5pm.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I

S3lltl- $2000/wk PTIFT

-

.kNmiiJIZ.com

..... 'lbu Eaming Wllet _ , .
--.? Pfr.Ftr $25-$65M11
-From Homo
No E-'""'" Necnsary. Wfl
train. C8ll for a FREE Bootdot:
1-eD0-276-7103

www.sertouaeashNow.com

May 23·24, Harry Holter resl·
clence, Pine Grove Rd .. Racine .
Perennials, Home lntenor, VCR

P1. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
ENORMOUS YARD SALE
Next To Flatrock Fire Departmwht
8 Miles From P.olnt Pleasant On
Route 2 North, MEMORIAL DAY

WEEKEND. Friday. Saturday
Sunday &amp; Monday, B OOam Until
777 Ram Or Shme Antiques, lots
01 Glassware, Wather &amp; Dryer,
Household llems &amp; Appliances,
Baskets , Crafts, Home Interior
Grill, Lawn &amp; Other Fvrniture ,
Wooden &amp; Oflrce Chairs, Word
Procenor, Books, Old Life
And Other Magazines, Records,
Bird Cage, Christmas Decora tions, Shoes, Purses Clothmg &amp;
Much More
Gun Couect1on &amp; Related Items,
Re loading Items. Safe, Knives ,
Watches, CB Radros &amp; Anten·
nas, Scanners, Truck Tool BOK,
Live Trap . Good Tues Sets Of
Wheel Covers, 4 Wheeler Tires
Bumper. Boat Trailer T1res &amp;
Alms , Microscope Sets &amp; lois
More Yamaha 4 Wheeler· wl
Power Take Oft- 1 Rough &amp; 1
Finish Mower BIG Assortment

Center-.

$7.00 per hour
Plus bonus and

overtime.
• Set schedule
• Weekly Bonus
• Every Friday
and Saturday off
• Paid holidays
• Paid vacations
• Health Insurance
• Disability Insurance

ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES to cnango your

Full-time Permanant
Positions Available

Anentlon• Work From Home, On·
tone Or Ofltlno &amp; Mall Ordof. $500$5000/mo. PTI FT. 1·800· 784·
8556 www.pcpays com

ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
up to
$25 00. S7S.OOilw PTIFT
MAIL 011DER (888)821-&lt;!686

l.SSS-237-5342
ext. 2331
InfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Earn Up to $500·$8000/MO
PTIFT
HI00·61().1)705
VfNW CashNowAndForowr oom

proceuing. Full training. HomePC required Call Physician &amp;
Heallhcare Developments loll~..

HIOO·n2·5933 ell!. 2070.

COL·A Driver&amp;. E•perlenced/lnexpanenced West coast Avail·
able *Great Pay"M i tes•Ben~tlts•
Transportatlan*Lodging Included

COL Training Available
CaM 1·800-348·1380

To Pick StrawIn Person, Taylor's

(740)388-8331 Laave Name &amp;
Number
Dental Hygienist, Part-time Andf
Or Full-time Dental Hygiene po·
sitlon Available Submit Resume
Or Call Ors Smith &amp; Jorgensen,
995 Jackson P1ke , Galhpohs, OhiO

45631 (740)44&amp;-2191

REEFI TODAYIIJ L.aarn To Drive

Tnt BIG Truck!, Making Tho BIG
Bucksll No Cost 1ra1ning It Ouatlfledl Call 1-1100·958-2353
EARN S25.000·$50,0001yr Madl·
cal Insurance Billing Needed lmmediatatyl Home Computer N8eded FREE Internet, 1-800·291-

4l!B3 Dept I 109
Easy Telephone
Work, No
Selling , No Expenance Nee·
essary, Full Or Part-Time, $7-

$12/hr. Call 1-8()1).572·3361
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! WOfk from home! Maii·Ot·

doriE·Commorce $522+/week PT
$1 000-$4000/wk FT. 800·921 •

www dream2bfree com

80

Auction
and Flea Market

773-5785 Or 304· n3·5447

90

Gold Rlnga. U.S. Currency·
M T S Coin Snap 151 Secon~
Avenue. GalllpOIII. 740-44ll·2B42

150

Schools
Instruction
GED

Get your HS equivalency diPloma
with our easy home study course.

t-1100·5611-2163 ext 310

180 Wanted To Do

Qonongroom. Kitd81. Bedroom. &amp;
Bath On 111 floor. Ful Baaameut,
Br-Level Deck, &lt;41x18 Pool, BlOCk
Worklhop,
$69.900
Firm ,

(304}675-1 145
2 Storr House On 2nd Avenue ,
Newly Remodeled lns1de, PriCed
ReasonaHe (740)416 31)64

3 Bedroom, 1· 1/2 Bath . All
Electric, 2200 Square Feet, 2
Apartments, Good Condition, At
2403 Mount Vernon Avenue
Pont Pleasan~ (304)895-382!i

3 Bedroom House. Bath &amp; 112,
Double Wrndowl &amp; Formal Oln1ng
Room + Patio- Ges Furnaeel AJC.
(304}675-8022

8&amp;8 ConstructiOn- Roofing, Sid·
mg. Concrete, lntanor &amp; Exterior
Pamlmg. Free Estimates. Call
(304}675-na&amp; After 5pm

any

1988

HVAC 1n1t111era, Residential &amp;
Commercial Wllh minimum Of 3
Years Experience, Paid Holidays.
Vacation i 401 K Send Resume
To P 0 Box 667 , Jackson , OH

,.. ,... -

....ertlllng ..
INa new 1PIIP8' IIIU;lllct to

Freelance English Riding Instruc-

tor. 1151 Hour Call Agnes 0
(740)44H1184

ortgln, or ony illorotlonlll

-lamlll-ornallonlf
nkl llrf IUCh PI•Ja•a.
11m1t111on or dlleilllilll.adan.•

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-675-1957.

Vory Clean $12.900 Matut OHor.
12x 12 st.._ Buiklong ""' Sale.
(740)441..0113

FINANCIAL

45640

time/ call-in for all shifts Base rate
$11 00/hr. Great E11perience Pay
S 25 Shltt Olfterential For Even·
lngs, S 50 For Midnights Allendance bonus availabta, lots of extras! Please call Scenic Hills at
1740)446-7150 lor
more lnlormatkln
Med1cal Billing Assistant needed

lmmodlatalyl FTIPT Woll Train Ex·
cellent income . PC required 1·

MEDICAL TI1ANSCRIPTIONIST
Work on your computer Guaranteed employment Tralninglcerhi1Ca110rt {lee), Tartan Pub. Inc 1·

1100-944·5595
POSTAL JOBS· Up to $18 .351
hour Hiring for 2001 Paid trainIng Full benefits Call toll free
7am-7pm 1· 888 ·726-9083 x

!70S.
Responsible Babysitter Needed
For 2 Month &amp; 19 Month Otds
Rolaling Shill Some Overnight

(740)446- 7198
Sales Person·
Full-Time, Benefits , Ralail ElCperlence Preferred.
Apply At Lifestyle Furniture, No
Phone Calls, Apply In Person

856 Tnlrd Avenue. Gallipolis.

on1o

210

Business
Opportunity

$2500 possible monthly growing
gourmet mushroom&amp; for us FREE
rnlormatron Spa~etime Enterpn&amp;e.

can troo1·B00.910·3086

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CQ
recommends that you do bu€i·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have investigated

the oftorf"'l
A+ M&amp;M MARS/NESTLE Estab·
l1shed Vending Route W1ll sell by
517/01 Under S9K minimum In·
vestment required Excellent Prof·
1t Potential Finance Avellablel

Good Credit Toll Free '""""(888)
270·2168"""""
Earn $90,000 YEARLY repairing,
NOT replacing , Long cracks in
Wtndsh1elds Free video 1· 800826·8523 US/Canada, www glas&amp;·
mechanix com

MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlled In·
come potential No expenance
nedessa.ry Free Information &amp;
CD-ROM Investment from $2495
Financing avarlabl&amp; (800) 322·

!139 EXT050
www business-startup com
PEPSIICOKEIFRITO
LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
110UTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$ALL CASH BUSINESS II IN·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS t ·600· 731·7233
EXT 22.03
I
Start Your Business Today .
Prime Shopping Center Space
Avatlable At Affontabie Rate

Spring Valley Plaza. Call 740·446·
0101 .
State A Tr1ve1 Agency receive
training, bualnass support. your
own travel website and travel dll·

counVporks Earn big $1$. Noml·
nal startup coati 1·888·899·0901

WANTED 73 PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 lbo . In 30 dayal Program start·
lng under $30 All natural. Coctor
reoommtndtd Free counullng .

Call 1·800·308 · 7429 or VIII!
www 91 1btttirhaallh.com

WORK PAOM HOMII Earn
$500·$7 .000/month PTIFT. Ful l
Training Free lnlormation Oa ll

Full-time Permanent Positions Available
•

Nowl 1·212-8!2·5490
www.attainurdreama.com

230

Coli now to AChedule an Interview: 1·888·237·5342 ext. 2231
Or ttop by our Oolllpolls hx:atlon: InroClolon M1napment Corp.

l42 Third A..nu
G1lllpoll1, 0

Profetelon11
Servlc11

NEED AN EAI1LY PAYDAY?? Up
to $500 lnatantly by phenol I·
877·EARLYPAY. Lie, 750005, tst
ADVANCE FREEl

1st Time Home Buyers Program,
Special Fi nancing Available,

Counlry Home, 1 1/2 Story, 3
Bedroom, 1 Bath, On Six Acres,
97% Completed Wilh Fireplace
And Sprral Starr Case On Pleas-

ant Aodga Ad $50.000 (304)576·
3156
•

COIS MW

Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
FlaWction! 1304)736-3409
Lim1t1d Or No Credit? Govern ment Bank Finance Only At oakwood In Barboursville, WV 304 Lol moctet clearance, save up to
$8,625 with any home, cheek us
oul were deatrng, Cole's Mobile

apartment&amp; at V1llage Manor and
Rrverside Apartments in Middle·
port From $278-$348 Cali 740·
992·5064. Equal Hous1ng Oppor·
!Unities.

Water. $100 Deposit. (740)4463617

Lot model clearance, one 2000
sectional save $9,625, for 2000
model singles , s pre owned singles musr go by May 3 1, no rea·
sonable offer refused, these
homes won, last lOng, so stop In
and cheek us out, we're dealing,
Cole's Mobile Homes Athens

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenrs, Includes Water
Sewage , Trash. $350/Mo , 740·

Ohio. Open M-W 9·7. Thurs·Frl .
9-6. Sat. 10.5.

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spaetous, 2 Bedrooms, 2

.

New 18 ft. w1da ~99. per mon
only 1270. per mon call now 1·

1100-691-sm.
New

2001

Fleetwood

only

Now 2001 Fleetwood . 3 br.• 2
bath, set up in The Country Mo·
bile Homo Part&lt;. road)' to move on.
$995 down , $199 98 par month,

740-992·2187.

EN I nl Service
" - F"*'Cing Avalabto
Homo ICcmmon:ial Unita
FIIEE Color catalog
Col~

1-801).71 1.0156
www.r1).ellan.com

Palio. Start $365 /Mo No Pet~ .
Lease Plus Sacunty Depos11 Re·
qUJreCI , Days 740-446 -3481 ;
Evenings· 740- 367 -0502, 740-

446.0101.
Tw1n Rtveffowers now accepting

apptlcatoons for 1 BR
and disabled EOH (304)6756879
Upstairs. 2 Bedroom.
Stova
&amp; Refrigerator Furnished No
Children. $300/mo. $1 50 Deposit.
(740)446-3870

Single Parent Program, Spacral

Financing Available. (304)755 ·
7191

Farm House, Beaullfully Remo-

deled. 2963 Square Feet. 17 Acr·

call740-992·5956 anytime

For Lease

Beautlful1600 Sq Feet, Restored
2nd Floor Apartment In Hl&amp;tor~c
Dtstnct Ideal For Professional
Couple All Modern Amenrties 3
Bedrooms, Spacious Llvrng, 1·1/2
Baths, Rear Deck HVAC $600/
mo Plus Utilities. Security And
Key Deposii. ,No Pels References
Required. (740)446-4425 Or

(740)446-3936

es, Pond, In-ground Pool. Several
Barns, Garage, Fruit Trees, Close

MERCHANDISE

$215.000 (740)446-

510

340 Business and

Household
Goods

Buildings
8us1ness with upstairs apartment
for sale, 241 Salem Street, Flu·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
VIew Sites $50,000 18 Acres

With Large Lake. Mobile Homo
With Add On $79.500 Gallla
County

On

Blacktop

Road.

(740)388-8678
15 acres on Lrncoln Hts . Pomer·
oy Will finance 8'1.· $200 down15yr. note· $150 per monlh· bal·

loon In 5 years. 74().992·2529
Camp
Sties For Rent On Kanawha River. 8 miles lrom Point

Pleasant. electric only. (304)675·
1722. (304)675-4 144 After 5pm

Point Pleasant· I I 12 Hogg Street.

2 Bedroom Home , Basement,
Priced $30,000 New Haven, 3

Looking To

Bedroom Ranch, Carport &amp; out·

Buy A New HOme?

Don"t Have Lan~? Wa Dolll Hurry
Ooiy 10 Lots Left. 304·738-7295.

buoldlng. priced $35.000 Call
(304)882·2221 Or (304)682·2405
Aoula 7 South, Newer, Larger
Home Very Nice, Consider

RENTALS

Trade-on, (7~0)446-9966

3 Piece Livtng Room Sel , Couch
wJMassagers &amp; Recliners. Loveseat, Rocker Reclmar In Teats ,
L1ke New, 4 Piece Bedroom Set ,
Black &amp; Gold Modern, Good
PriCe, 6 Ptece Dining Room Set·
Black &amp; Gold, Glass Top Modern
Chairs,
Good
Condition

3 Bedroom House, 11 B Park
Orivaj Point Pleasant, No Pets,
Reference &amp; Deposit, $450,
(304}675·2749

(304)67S· 1365
Two car garage/apartment In
Middleport two bedrooms, full
bath, LA kitchen with elecHic
range. central arr, 740 ·985· 3650

3 b8droom1 home Minersville
area, river view, references re·
qulred, deposit requrred, no pets,

or 740·992-2795

0% FLMMtek. On New John
O.ere Mower Conditioners And
Bate.rs With John Deere Credit
Approval. Cat! Ck Stop By -~~
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

7" Bar Cycle Massey. (710)256-

720 Trucks for Sale

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers , Dryers , Ranges , Fletrl grators, Up To 90 Days Guar·
anteed! We Sell New Maytag Ap·
pllancas. French Clty Maylag ,

740·446·7795.
China Cabonat. $300, Solid Maple
Table With 4 cna 1rs . $tOO,
11oll·a·way Bod. $25 (740)4463432
For Sale Reconditioned washers, dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407

so

Down For Good Customers
On Land
Home Packages-

BUV Foreclosed Homes From
$10.0001 Aopo•o &amp; Bankruptcy·s.
For Llotlnga 1·800·319·3323 e.t.
1709

14JC70 Southern Dream, fret De•
livery free Setup only $9995 1·

888-926·3426

condo For Rent, North Myrtia

16 Wide. Only $11S .OO Por

Baaoh , Staope 8, 2nd ~ow
(740)448-8857
•

Month, 8 99% Fixed lnttrelt Alit

Underpinning
Pilot Program, 11tnttra Nttaed.
304·738-729&amp;.

1965 10&lt;50 Now Moon. nu gu
furnace, new Wlllr htlttr, ?40•

•420 Mobile Hom11
for Rent

Washers , dryers, refrigerat ors
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Srreel , Call 740 -446 ·7398",

1-888·81 8·0128.
Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer $150
Kenmore Range, $1 00, Mi ·

crowave. $25: Sofa &amp; cnalr. $!25.
(740)256- 1156
Main Street Furniture
51 5 Main Street, Point Pleasant

New &amp; Used Furniture

'

houtlful Alvar VIew ldUI For t
Ot 2 Ptoplt, Atllrenctl, Ctpoolt.
No Pats. Foster Trolltr Park 740·
141·0181 .
•
•

a ltdroom , o.Uy
I3~MO Plr Montn 8.98% Flxtd
3 or

lntortot Rat~. 1•888•128•3426
AMAZING Llttll or No Cradlt

Mobile Homo For Rtnt In Alo
Gran~o. Walking Distance To
Colllgt. Avtlllble Mey i3rd
Some
Ulllltlts ,
$2eO/mo.
(740)24H100

N1eded, Spacial Government Fl·

nanctng . (304)7~5-S885

Nice

Clean

3

• Bt~room

Mobile Home Near Mercerville

(740!25B-ee74

,,

Call 60().755-7880
Grubb"o Plano- Toolng &amp; Repairs
Probtoms7 Need "Tuned? Call Thi
Poano Or. 7411-446-4525
HVLP Paint Sprayer New, Never
Been Used, $1000 Firm, Call

(740)245--.()810 EYOrlmgs
Independent Herballte Distributor,
Call For Producl Or Opportumty

(740)441- 1962

New And Used Fu rniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments
And

vases (74014411-4782
Solid Cnarry Btdroom Sulta. 9

JET

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinyl Skirting, Doors, Windows Anchors, Water Heaters ,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Furnaces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
Mobde Home Supply, 7 40-4469416 www OfVb comlbennen

NEW AND USED STEEL Sttol

Beams, Pipe Rebar For Concrete,
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways. New 55 Gallon Drums

Wltn Lid &amp; Rong. 17.00 Eacn L&amp;L .
SCrap Metals (740)446-7300
Recondilloned Washer &amp; Dryers,

$100 Each. NC. MOO To 23.000
BTU For Sale. Sta~lng At $75 00
Thomj:lson Appliance Repair,
3407 Jackson Avenue, (304)675·

7388
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNEAS
Tappan H1 Efflciltncy 90% Ga;s
Furnaces Oll Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Cond1t1onrng
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800·872·5967 www orvb com/ben-

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive, Buffalo, NY 14225
FREE Information 1· 800·578 ·

1363 EXT 200-U
See Paint Plus For All Your Pain·
lng Needs We Stock Pittsburgh
Paints , S1kkens Wood Finishes

And Mlnwax Stains. (304)675·
4084
Slanley Home Products And
Fuller Brush Available, To Order
"Products Or Request Catalogs

Ploasa Call (304)675·6903 Aoy·
BUILDINGS

Urgontll

69
Walerlme Spacial

314 200 PSI

RON EVANI ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio. I -600·537·9528
Yamaha Bass Guitar. $100. 200
Watt Bau Amp . $1SO: 4· Track
Recorder, 1100 OBO. VHS
Movies· Big Variety. $2 00 Eacn.
(740)446-1721

550

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows , lintels. etc. Claude Winlerl,

Rio Grandt. OH Call 740·245·
St21

560

AKC

Pets for Sale

Roglstarod

Champion

Labrador Retrl&amp;var

Pupploo. wormed &amp; snots. 1200
Each. Call (740)553-1803
Attention · Water Fowlers. Butch

&amp; Hank Lab Pupo Rog l s1oro~
Chocolata &amp; Black (740)44800110
French City Pat Grooming Haa
Moved To Point Pleasant , Now
Called Rosa's Pel Groommg Call

1538. Ru11 Moort, owner

For AppoiOimont (304)675·5010

540 Ml1cellsneou1

Jack Russell Terrier Puppies, 1
Male. 1 Female 6 Weeks Old,

40 gallon natural gas hOt water
tank , $80 , Col eman tra li ar fur-

nact. bottle~ gao. 7S.OOO BTU' ·
$100 . ~ all 740·742· 237 3 allar
4p")

992· 2529, 132 Bunernut,

evenings

-

(740)3116-8039
Registered Lab pups, 2 yellow,' 5
chocolate. ihOIS &amp; papers, $2150

each. 74().742-1116

Pomer-

t991 4x4 Nissan Plck· up. S.ol200

OBO Call After s·oopm (304)
675-2006

1999 Chevrolet S- 10 truck, burgundy with matching topper. all
options Sharp !I Excetlenl conc:li·
bon. $10.600. 740-992-6159.

740

Motorcycles

1988 Banshee , Runs , Needs
Mmor Repair. For Sale Or Trade ,

1850 OBO. (740)387..0239 After
5pm

Sale. Letart. WV (304)895·3319.

www savrefarms com
Horses For Sale (740)256-6439
Rogiatered Angus Springer Cows.
Excellent BlOOd Une (740)388-

8756

Hay &amp; Grain

1989 Kawasaki Ninja , 600cc,
Black! Red, Runs Good , 13,000

Moles. w!Ful Face Helmet. $1700
Caiii740)36B 9980 Afta&lt; 7pm
, 999 Harley Davidson Electra
Glide Classic, Fuel Injection. 2
Tone Parnt. Extra Clean (740)

1999 Honda VTR , 1000F Super-

12 Round Bales Of Hay For Sale

hawk , 2 Brothers Racing Types

(304}675·3030

Askrog S8000 (304)773·5885

150 Round Balas Hay, $12 00
each. (740)446-7787

2000 400EX 4· whHier, like new
over $1 ,200 1n extras $4,800
(304}675-7511 (304)67!1-7423

Someone To Round Bale 50+
Acres Of Hay On Shares, Square

Bales For Sale. (304)875-&lt;889

2001 Suzuko 11M 125. Must Sell .
HaYing A Baby. PayoH 060. Call
Aher 5pm (304)675-2006

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie Straw. Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count Available Heritage Farm

(304)875·5724.

Tobacco Plants· Order Now To
Guarantee Early Spring Plantings
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
Pl•nts. Thank You For Your Susl·
ness Call Danny Dewhurst·

Leave Moasaga (304)895·3740

Or (304)895-3789

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1989 Strata's Open Bow Wllh
trailer. Seats 8. Ewcellent Condi·

tlon OMC 3 0 180 HP ln·Board
W1th Cobra Out Drive Asking

$5495 Call Evenings (740)~460440

1996 21 Foot Bass Tracker
Pontoon Boat wJ60HP Tracker

TRANSPORTATION

Engine: 1987 F·150. ~Wheel
Onvo. (304)882·2715

710 Autos for Sale

91 Lowe. 20" Pontoon Boat &amp;

'93 L1nco1n Town car, $4500, ga~
rage kept, excellent condition,

EqulpQe~

Trailer, 40HP, John1on Outboard,

Wt)h
(304)882·2545

Llvt

wen .

740·992·0228

Jot Ski. 1999 Kawasaki 1100 ZXt,
1985 ALFA 11omoo Spider con· ' Like New, Low Hours, Aluminum
Trailer. 15800. (304)576-21190
verltble, excellent condition,
$6000. 740·992·2529. 132 Butter·
790
Campers &amp;
nut, Pomeroy
1986 Chrysler LeBaron, 4 Door.
Engine Doesn't Flun Everything

Elsa Good. $200. Call (740)4410199
t 986 Dodge Daylona Turbo.
Runs Good. $400. (740)441-1083
1987

Old~mobltt

Supremo. T·

Tops, 2 Door, V-8 Bucket Seats.

Motor Homes
1990 1e Skamper Trailer. t Own·
er. 4 Wheels , Fully Contained ,
Sltops s. Aoklng $3500
(304)895-3678 (304)895·3554

1995 Dutchmen Camper with expanda. $10.000 llrm. Call
992·7739

7~0·

4·Whooler. (740)245-9172

1997 Flagstaff pop.up. ale. stoops
6. $2250. 1973 Sprite. sloops 2·3.
$795. located at Gatharlng Wa·

1989 Honda Accord LX, 4 Door,

740·247-7401

4·Spaod. Automatic . Like Now
Tires, For Sale Or Trade For Nice

Loadad. S Speed. 37 mpg.
127.000 Milos. Groat Shape.
$3.295 (304)675-7256
1991

1992

ters Campgrounds, Apple Grove.

SERVICES

Dodge Stealth AT, Twin

Turbo. 300HP. 5 Speed. AWD.
AWS. Loadad. Sharp Car. $7500
OBO (Botow Book). (740)4410135
Firebird·

810

1992 Oldsmobile Cullass Su·
preme Convertible Fully Reeondi·
tloned Climate Control, Power

Everything Whole With Black
Top Really Nlca Car. Will Sell At
Nada Wholesale Price, $4500
(740)446-1155 Great GraduaiiOn

Glftt
1994 Ford Crown Vlclorla. S1.000
Milos. One Owner. SB.OOO. 1980
Chevy Malibu. 2 Door, Hard-top,
30.000 Milas, (740)37~2694
t 996 Oodga Intrepid ES. Can ·
dyappto Rod. Loaded . loathar.

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

EJCcellent

Condition. 14800 Or Bast Offer.
(740)446-7:;41

Uncondrlional lifetime guJJantee
Local references furnished . Es·

tabllsntd 1975. Call 24 Hra
446·0870 1·800·287·0576 Roco·ll
ers Waterproofing
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chel, 740·992·
Livingston's Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repa~rs
done. free eattmates. lifetime
guarantee t 4yrs on job experi-

New Tires, Highway Miles, $62.00

ence (304)895-3887

840 Electrlcel and

Work . $550 Firm. Call (740)2450610 Ellllnl"'ll

THE

NFL

..........

"I'm glad it came out that ~" said Bud
Adams, who took his Oilrn out of Houston
after the 1996 season and ~tually nsmed
· them into the Tennessee Titans.
'
The lineup:
AFC East- Buffalo, Miami, New England,
New York Jets.
.
AFC Noi:tb Baltimore, Cmcmnan,
Cleveland,
Pittsburgh.
Jt :t,.
AFC South - Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Tennessee.
.
.
AFC
Wcit
Denver,!Uruas
City, Oakland,
Ill
San Diego.
NFC East - Dallas, New York Gwu:s,
Philadelphia, Washington.
•lka.
NFC North Chicago, Detroit, Green
Bay, Minnesota.
NFG South Adanta, Carolma, New
Orleans,
Tampa
Bay,
,.-' PI!SJ
NFC West - Anzona, St. Louis, San Frant'IJ cisco,
Seatde.
In addition to Seattle, the team most affectI .II
ed might be the Cardinab, who move out of a
111$111"divuion With Dallas, the only team to draw
h•ltles,
capacity crowds tn the desert. Arizona owner
pernnlllt, Bill Bidwill fought hard to stay 10 the same
divmon with the Cowboys, but said he was
llllces . . happy after the league agreed to a new scheduling format for exhibition games that will
retain
old rivalries.
-.eo..
B1dwill was even happier after Dallas owner
Jerry Jones said he would be glad to pbv the
Cardi!Uls m an exhtb111on game every· year
gour they aren't scheduled to play 10 the regular
season.
"I'm very happy that Jerry agreed to do

•WIIIIJ

, ....

....

.......
....

....
._.

Pkkup

cepg

that,'' Bidwill said. "The NFC West tits for us
geographically."
Seattle presiden! Bob Whitsitt. wd the same,
noting that the Seahawks will have preseason
games against the Broncos, Clurgers, Chic&amp;
and R2iden, whom they"ve met in the regular
season so often. "! think thu is good for the
league and good for the Seahawks," he said.
Another plus for most of the owners is the
new scheduling format, under which every
team will meet every other at least once m
four yean. There will be six home-and- home
divis101Ul games; four against teams in another
divisiou w1thtn a conference; and four more
against a diviSion in the other conference on a
rotaung basis.
The final two games will be against conference teams based on the previous year's standings: first aga&gt;nst first, second agamst second,
and so on . For the time being, there will be six
teams from each conference m the playoffS the division winners and two wild cards
In the end, the b1ggest surpnse in the plan
was the speed with which it was done.
''
Although various proposals had been under
study for I 8 months, no vote was expected
until Thursday. But there was only an hour's
debate and the consensus was to get ot "ver
With.
"I thmk everyone reahzed th at everythmg ·
that could be s;ud had been saod,'" comnusstoner Paul Tagliabue satd
There also were memones of the problems
of d1e last realignment 31 years ago, brought to
the fore by old-nmers Rooney, the Giants '
Wellington Mara and Balttmore's Art Modell.
"That old realignment was the toughest
thmg I've been through," said the 84-year-old
Mara, who has been mvolved with the NFL
since starting as a ball boy for the G1ants when
his father bought the team m 1925.

todq.
The
Dally
SeniLtel

c
l

H

s
I

s
•

I·

f
I

E
D

s

NBA

fawn P11p 11
, Glenn Robmson and Sam
Cassell.
Allen finished with 31
points for the Bucks and Cassell had 20, but Robinson
struggled through a I ~for-I 0
tint half and finished with 15.
The Sixers controlled the
boards, played more intense
defense and held Milwaukee
more than 14 points below its
playoff average.
"We_ didn't let it get mto
the hundreds, and that's
important the way they
shoot," Stxers coach Larry
Brown said.
•
The series resumes Thursday night with Game 2.
The 7 6ers scored 38 points
in the paint, including 22 in
the second quarter, when they
outscored Milwauke~ 32-16
to take charge. The Sixers also
grabbed
17
offenstve
rebounds and came up wtth
mne steals.
The Bucks had to have an
mklmg tt wasn't gomg to be
theu night when the first

quarter ended in a 19-19 lle
despite Iverson's 0-for-9
shooting.
"The worst thing we did
was when we stopped him
from scoring, theu other guys
made shots. That got thetr
confidence going and they
played well as a team,'' Allen
s:ud.
McKie had a steal and dunk
for a 34-29 lead, and Iverson
ripped some padding out
from under the back of hiS
waistband and tossed it aSJde
as the teams came out of a
nmeout early in the second
quarter
"I was just out there hurting,'' said Iverson, who was
slowed by a bruised nght 1\tp
and buttocks. "I told (coach
Larry Brown) that it was
worse than the last time when
I missed five games."
Iverson proceeded to hit his
next four shots as the 76ers
closed the first half with a 1610 run, mcludtng the final 10
pomts of the quarter, for a 5135 lead.
Milwaukee pulled w1thm
, I 0 early m the thtrd before
Iverson diScovered another
burst of energy, racing m for a

fast-break layup off a steal by
McKie. Cassell drew a technical foul for argwng that a foul
should have been called, and
Iverson made the free throw
and then hit a 3-pomter to
malce it 59-43 .
The Bucks responded with
a 12..0 run as Allen repeatedly
found enough space to get off
his JUmper, but they only
pulled to 59-55 before Iverson ended the run with a
nud-range jumper.
Philadelphia led 70-63
entermg the fourth, and the
lead grew to 12 before Allen
re-entered after mung out the
first four rmnutes of the quarter. Allen hit his first shot and
completed a three-pomt play,
and hiS 3-pmnter off an
offensive rebound made tt 8580 with 2·38 left
Enc Snow mmed and Cassell htt three free throws to
make It 85-83 wah 1·59 left,
but Iverson drove the lane
and was fouled He made
both free throws and Robmson nusse.ia shot over McKie
before Iverson htt h1s clutch
3-potnter

.

Reds
from

But the Reds managed only four hitS to
Ch1cago 's mne, and blew the few chances they
had to score.
Trailing 3-1 before the ram delay, Cmcinnato
PllpB1
rall1ed to tte It m the stxth on Tucker and
Rtvera's RBI smgles. They could have added a
his thtrd save.
few
more runs, but Wh1te made a d1vmg save
And James Brower (2- 3) gave the Cubs the
go-ahead run, comm11ting a balk with the on Alex Ochoa's liner to left with men at first
and second, anc:\ Donme Sadler struck out
bases loaded.
swmgmg
with runners on second and third
Sean Casey extended h11 season-high hitttng
And then Brower gave the Cubs the game
streak to II games with an RBI double m the
W1th the bases loaded and R1cky Gutierrez
first. Michael Tucker and Ruben Rivera added
RBI singles for the Reds, who have lost I 0 of at the plate, Brower was called for a balk, scormg Matthews and gtvmg the Cubs a 4-3 lead.
13.

6323.

OBO. (740)441..0135

92 Hyundal Elantra, Needs Some

--

446-1749 After 5pm Or Leave
Massage.

Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master ll·
cenaed electrician Ridenour

Electrical. WV000306 . 301-87S ·

1788

Building
Supplies

Buy or 1111 Riverine Anliquu,

Merch1ndlse

(7.tO).t46·4111 ,

1997 Ford Explorer, XLT, 4WO,

Bloodline

1124 Et1t Main on SR 12~ E f'o.
moray. 740·992·2528 or 740·992·

Four Charotaoo BuMs. Can daytime

43.000 Mlleo. E•collant CondoUon .
Asking $15.900 (740144&amp;--ot 16

Very Nlco Large Clnlng Roo m
Tobll With 6 Chairs Alao .
Elaotrlc Plano Wltn Bo ncn
(740)44H737

Antlque1

AOHA, 2 Year Old Gelding,
Beaut1ful Gray: APHA, 4 Year Old

$21 95 Per 100. t" 200 PSI

t AKC MilO Poklngo .. Puppy. 9
Weaks Old. 1 Toy Poodle Pup. 8
Montho Old. (740)446-3398

530

Livestock

2 oppaNiix yearM"'l gotdongs. Pa~
ammo. $2500 bay, Ukes to jump,
11500.740-943-5176

640

1990 JMp. I cylinder. automatic.
94.000 mites. axcollent condition.
Htlong at NADA Boolc retail. 740-

oy

$37 00 Per 100; All Bra&amp;&amp; Com pression Fillings In Stock

All, Call (304)36CJ.-0233

Pieces, Still In Boxes, $2,000 For

630

evoo•ooo-

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

AERATION MOTORS
11epalred. New &amp; Robuoll tn Stock
Call Ron Evans 1-801).537-9528

New 2 Piece Llvingroom Suites

wuner &amp; dryer. uoo. olactrllf
rtngt, S75, Ill gOOd condition. cell
740.992·3242

3 btdroom mobile home ror rtnt

no PI" 740•11112-585.!

Manufac1urer offers a two week
supply of colostomy or uroslomy
brand name products with one
simple pnone call No Obhgat10111

Must move nowtl 25x30 , 3DK40 ,
45x100, liquidation pricing, save
thousands !I 1·800-211 -9594 x·

$399 Buy. Sell. Trade.

Oakwood· Gallipolis (740)4483093

F11EE S40 worth ol GROCERIES!
Limited to first 100 calls Tell
friends and family! IIOCJ.426.4397

four Gas Hot Water Heaters, 30·
40 Gallon , In Good Cond lt1on

(3041675·1422

3 Bedroom House For Renl Or
Sala. Will Accept HUD. Call
(740)~4t-Oe72 Ask For Valeria
Or Leave Message

5np Titter. Gas Edger. 1 Shp.
(304}675-2365

""""'
STEEL

APPLIANCES

Btactos With Power IJnlt. EXCOitnt
Condition. (740)256-1874 S3200

Crattoman Chipper Slwoddar, 14"

Jackson Avenue. (304)675· 7388

USED

se·

Horse! Call Breakrng t Tra1ning.
Reglslered Quarter Horses For

Sawmill $3.895 New Super Lum·
bermate 2000, larger capacities,
more options Manufacturer of
sawmllts ; edgers and slcldders

(740)446-9066

Foley Btlsaw SawmiH, 45• &amp;

(740)245-0380

Cha1n Saw, 22• Hedge Trimmer,

92 Lincoln Town Car, Loaded.
Good Condlllon , New Tii'es,

$2800. (740)388-90S3 Days.
(700)388 &amp;158

COMPUTERS! Even with less
rnan perfect credit! 1·800-477 ·
9016 Code AC21 www.omcsolu·

bon com

(740}388 8532

(740)44ll-24121-eD0-584-1111

Paont Man! (740)388-0406

Computers: WE FINANCE DELL

Almond Admiral Refrrgerator, $75,
Almond GE Washer $60, 2
Kenmore Washers, $65 Each, 2
Whirlpool Dryers, $50 Ea ch

740.992·6n7 after 5pm.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

LiM Now. (740)245-5740

(740)339-2787

(740)446-9523

410 Houses for Rent

Sot. Cuoon Size. 5

Piece, Like New. Baasen. Rid1ng
Lawn Mower, .t2• Cut. Murray.

non

GOOD

Small 2 Bedroom, AfC, Has
Kitchen ~ppliances, Ga&amp; Fur·
nace, Good Roof, 2 Porches ,

Poloce 1,.......&amp; Repos•
Toyotas. Chavy's. Joopol
Plaasa Cal lor UsOOgs.
1-600-45Hl050 El&lt;l 09817

460 Space for Rent
Family type for small camping
trader hookup and one dock s1te,

8000K. Must Self . IIS.500 •
(304)875-8465

Runs Good NeedJ Brake Work .

Ford 2000 Tractor For Sale. Call

Bedroom Suite

2000 Loaded.
CMc
- ·
Totally
Power Elf..,
iotoOnroof.

saoo OBO. Call Before Spm.

8359

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Floors. CA. t 112 Bath. Fully Car·
peted. Adult Poo) &amp; Baby Pool ,

490

Pnvate Property And New Doublewld&lt;l. One Pay.,...nt (304)736·
7295

To Holzer
4230

446.01)()8

HUD subsidized apt for elderly

$148 48 par montn Call Nikki
740-3611-4387.

FORECLOSED GOV"T HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWNI TAX
REPO"S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING! CALL t·
BIJ0.501.11n olll. 98 t3

'

GracioUs hv1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
No Pets, $230/ Month , Includes

Homos. US 50 East. Athens. Oh

Work. As Is $45.000 (740)6885552 (740)446--6236

Confuud? Don't Bt· Call Oak ·
WOOd· GllllpOIII Beat PriCII,
IIIII Sorvlct. Beat Peoplt. If You
Sao And Ad You Like· Call Uol
(740)4&lt;1t'3b93

Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 Aoom Apart·
mants, Ctean, No Pet&amp;. No Smok·
. References &amp; Depos1t Ae·
Uh llti8S Furmshad

1999 Lumi na, 18,000 Mila•.
loaded. $14.000 (304)812·3331
CaiAI\or!lpm.

(740)2M-t021

610 Fann Equipment

(740)256--11663

Factory Goof 321180 $10.000 Dis·
count only $1000 00 Down, Delivery. and oetup paid br Factory
1-600-69Him

Leav•

83 Dodge Ants Slatlonwagon.

AIIAZINGLY LOW PRICEs
WOLFFTAfllfiG BEDS
Buy Faclory Direct

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PAICES AT JACKSOli ESTATES. 52 Westwood

{30~)675· 1118

2000 VOIIcswaoen Beede, Excellent
Condition ,
StS ,OOO.

$59.990. 1·1100-246-tlfl40

AUTOS F - NOO.OO

G - {74111"6-:1193

F111er Upper. 2 Bedroom New
Roof , Newer Furnace , Needs

28&lt;80

was $52,750 now $34.990.
80dOOx16 wa1 $87,450 now

OliO

Home &amp; We' ll Set II Up On A
Beautiful 5 Acre Tract, QakwDOO-

pointment (740)446-9546

1978 1~M70, 2•3 Se~room, Now
Slnoe 1&amp;17· AIC. Furnace. Wator
Htalll 16500 (30~)675•3008
Mornings, (740)385·4277 Evon·
lnga

FAR".l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

VHS movooa. 114.99 + S&amp;H. Cat!
toll tree 1•866·741·8245 (PIG·
TAIL) Prince Edward. canada

Appliances, Full Size Basement,
24x24 F1n1shed Garage, 8x10
Wood Storage Burldlng , CIA. &amp;
Gas Heal Excellenl Neighborhood Too Much To Menlion .
Ready To Move Into Call For Ap-

9&amp;11-3550 bllora 8pm

S t r - You Pictl . WO Pictl,
Taylor"o lltrry Patch. 2884 l&lt;tlrr
lload. Open o.epm May 24 a 25.
ll-1211ay 26. {740)245-9047

Chrtsly's Family Ltv1ng . 33 140
Now Uma Ad • Rulland. Olllo. 740742-7.t03 Aparlmenl , home and
tratler rentals Commercial store·
fronts available ror lease Vacan-

land. Ohio. $35.000. call 740-742·
1ncoma..:..:......:..._ _ __
Exeettent Location On Route 160 ... _25_7_2_Gootl_.:._
Between Galllpolls And Holzer
Office building in M!nersv1lle, 600
Hospital 3 Bedrooms. Bath. Llvl"'l
oq ft .• ale. covorod parking. cell·
Room, Family Floom, Kitchen W1lh
lng lan, $300/mo., 614·876-1681

With Air And
! ·888·928·3426

s~s. Plcl&lt; 'll&gt;llr Own. co~
(700~121

$27.450- $18.990 60x150&lt;14

1 Bedroom Fur ~lhed Apartment
In Point Plea sant, Very Nice &amp;
Clean. No Pats. (304}675-1 386

Drwe from $297 10 $383 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 7-t0- 446·

ca.-.

Counlry Uving- Pick Your Dream

$998 00 down only $295 por
mon caiiMW 1·81J0.691-6n7

With Flreplaca. 3· 112 Baths +

to 50% OFF! Pre·engineet'ed w/
plans. 30x5Dx10 was 112.500
now $89fO. 50x80x1.t was

-19500

1998 Tordl F~olllrd. T·laps.
AI Power. e cytindoo. CD ~.
PayoiJ $18.400. (740)116 334ol

Fruits&amp;
Vegelablee

Anne of Green Gab~et and The
Contlnumg Story Fae1ory sealed

kiiOWiiiJIY accept

-·lnvlolatlonoltlle

nishecl and unfurniShed, security
depoah required , no pe ts, 740·

ALL STEEL·BUILDINGS. Now up

510

2568 Equal ttousong Opportunity

New double wide 3 br 2 ba

law. 0 . . - ... hereby
lllluiii'ld that al dwiJIUngl
advertised In thll ne" IM't .,
are . - o n on equal

I and 2 bodf-' _....... fur·

(740)2M-1922

irn...............,__

(304)755-Sii&amp;&amp;

Tl* IWW Pll• wil not

--llllorreol-

Lawn Mowing , Weed Eallng,
Deck Cleaning,
Relmlshmg ,
Removal Of Unwanted Items

(740)441-0199 Or (740)441 4222

3 Bedroom, ShingleS

Roof, Vmyl Sidu'tQ, Remodeled.

691~

Grape Aobor (740)25&amp;-6837

Expenance
Noodod Call
HI00·652-6726 Elll2070. 24Hrs

1411170~

1 -

w-

Slide. 8 Foot llM1tl
Board. S!ai&gt;t. SOlar Btanl!al. COlt

992·2218.

New 14 ff wide $499. down only
$199. per mon call now 1· 600·

tho..- Fu Hauling fd
o l 1 8 8 8 - - lltlogal
t o - "any prw1ot01a,
lim... on ,..,., Clllor. Nlfglon.

Reparring Lawn MOWtfS And
Smail Engine
Pick-up And
Delivery Available For Quality

Can

bon. can Cheryl. 740-365-4387.

13 Yoara Experience. Located By

David's General Contractors ,

OBO

Must sen 1995 Snull 16x80, 3
bedroom. 2 bath. Excellent condl·

Chr1s1lan Mother Would Like To
BabysH Your Child In My Home,

Plumbing. Electric. Painting
Docks. Mise
Work. Call
1740)256-9373 Or Cell Phone 1·
304-633-6265

$5000

(7410)388-1 772 Serious Callers

738-3409

W1ll Repair Automobil es. Law.n
Mowers, and Farm Tractors,
Certtfied Mechanic Calt 9·5pm

No

AWeek of Paid Vacation Every Six Months!

I

Dnve , 4 Bedroom , 1 Bath, UpSiatrs &amp; Uvtngroom, TV Room &amp;

Walkout Basement W1lh Kitchen
&amp; Bath 2 Car Garage, Workshop
With Loft And Bath Fruit Trees &amp;

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

IJII. 1300 www projecuetund com

•

{Careers Close To Homo)
Colt Today! 740-446-4367.
1-eD0-214-0452.
Reg191HJS.12748

2 story House At 1165 Park

Will haul trash or junk away
S4ll 00 a load 30«175-8950

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

:. 1 HVILL S

$987 .85 WEEKLYI Procoaolng
HUDIFHA Mortgage Refund! No
Exporltnce Raqu fro~ For FREE
Information Call 1·800·501 ·8832

Training
o·•raM• c - COMige

consider land contract. 740·698·
6783

Homeworker• Needed $635
Weekly Proce~s l ng Mall Easy!

Every Friday and Saturday Off!

I Ml'l OYM f NT

$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE Pro·
ce111ng 400 Inquiry Envelopoa at
Home. Euy Work Coli 1·BOO·
755·2027 &lt;539 (24ntt)

Buslneu

140

100% remodeled house i n Po·

meroy, great pnce, must see. will

Tammy (304)675-5651

Seven Paid Holidays a Year!

Help Wanted

5039-Bam&amp;7pm

or
www EarnBucksFrom ·
Home com

Wanttd To Buy : U1ed Mobllt
Homo, Call 740·446·0175 Or 304·
875·5M5

11 0

Wanted· lingle person to liw 1n
and care lor 1-6 resrdenls In cludes room &amp; board and salary
Call for an Interview. 740-992·

GeiUpolos And Racine. Ohoo Call
David 0 1-800':l:IU9t0

7am, caii74Q-992·5023

Overtime

Absolute Top Dollar · U S Sliver,
Gold Colna, ProofHII, Olamonda,

(2) For Sale. 2 Bodtoom.
1 Balt1. S750 Down Payment. -

Brick Home On 2EI Acres. 8 Large
Rooms Solid Oak Cabinets,
Doors &amp; Trim. Large Famllyroom

And

Wanted to Buy

lng· great benefJIS, call 7 days
110(1.129-3660 .... J-365

W1ll Clean Houses. Banks. And
OU•ces Reasonable Rates Cat:

$7.00 Per Hour
Plus Weekly Bonus

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full lime auc tioneer complete
auction
servlc8 .
UceniJed
t66,0hio &amp; West VIrginia 304·

310 HotMs for Sale

3pm. 7am-5pm. 3pm·t 1pm. ttpm-

mmimum wage. new shifts 7am-

Tirtd of Larning "inimum \\agt'!

Sole

Postal Jobs $48.323 00 yr Now
hlnng· No npenence-paid train·

From Buildings Call (740)4467604 •

Help wanled caring lor the elderly,
Darst Group Home. now paymg

And Lots Of Stufflll Don't Mill

Thll Oneil llems S!artmg At 1o
Cents, Plenty 01 Parking 11t

Batno.

REAL ESTATE

opportunity ball.

888·4411-9n3 ext 222

Drivers
WHAT ARE YOU WAITING
FOR? START YOUI1 NEW CA·

8538

KorrRoad

LPN positions available ~ part -

Class A Or B COL Driver
Wanted. 2 Years Experience,

In
151

Senlfca Call (740)446-7604

AVONI Aft.Areasl To Buy or Sell
Shlrfay Spears. 304-675-1429 •
Ba Your Own boss!
Never 9-5 Agalf"l

1988 Clayton Trailer. 3 Or •
Bedrooms , Total Eleclnc, 2 Full

~com

Apartmen..

for Rent

pump &amp; ale. $7.500. 7.t0-591 ·
4043,. 7.0.992-ar.l8

l les! Se ttlements! Immediate
Ouote6tt' "Nobody
our pric·
es • National Conrraet Buyers
(800) •90-0731 eKI 101 www na·

Ad (740)441-()359

8400 www.AchoiwDreams.com

ATTENTION . MOTHEI1S AND
OTHERS Up to $500·$2500 pan
lime Full -trai ning 1-800· 8794608 . www qu1ckcashnow.com/
jambagan

19121~•70 Fairmorll Townhouse.
2 Wwn, 1 age bath ...,.. heal

Apartment For Rent
In Rio Grande, Walking Distance
To College , A ll Ulilitres Pa1d.
Avadable June t tth. (740)2455100

caih for remain.JnO payments on
Sold!~~ Amui-

Kelly Drive On Georges Creek

life??&gt; PT/FT al home. 920·924-

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
eJicellent Income Easy claims

Stand. Gallipolis Boat Club. 11 1

in our Political Call

Center State Tesled Nurs1ng
A•des and Cartlf1ed Nursing
Atdes po1itions available one
part·tlmo 2pm to ttJpm Two eatt·
in/ tilt-on positions lor &amp;am to 21m
and 10pm 10 6am 56 80 an hour
for state tested nursi ng assistant•. $5 80 an hour for certified
nursrng assi1tants •perfect attendance bonus every 3 months,
"Bonus'"' available lor worll.mg

Now To '!btl Thritt ~
9 West StimSOn Atheno
740-592·1842
items St 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday
9 tJ0-6:00

Immediate Openings

person tooiUng lor t11e porlecl job
wHh great pay? Then we're look·
ong for you at Scenic Hils Nonng

eldraslifta

440

IU NEED CASH?? WE pay

Position. Apply
Acquisitions_,_
Es Ml

592-t651.

bmo F - - Scheci&lt;Ao. Cal
you a caring, team- onented

p- -ll

320 Mobile HCHMS
for Sale

TUfiNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IS&amp;I?
No Foo Ur1loss wo Winf
1-582-XMS

UI1GENTLY NEEDED· plasma
- . earn $45 10 $80 1or 2 oc 3
houjs MOldy. Cal Sera Tac. 740-

..:.
"..:.
""..:..............._:...::.:._..:._not'-----

~re

SBCM College Graduate. 38yrs.

OfO Seeks Husband/ Wife Team
To
Learn
Auto
Hauling
{740)256-1021

Prof81B!onal
Services

Seoond~G

(740)446-9228 For tnta,_ Ap-

005

OH45640

f'art.timl! Sales

engs Throughout Tn-State Area.

poolmOIIts.

Houoing.
Send Pricing
a
nd experience
10 - Soulher
n
Homes, PO Box 6 29. Jacllson.

Penon.

,_..,

c,_ne- due to llolldaya"

Needed E•pariencad Crew tor
Setting and Fmi shing SecttOnal

Ful 1.-.e1'4-91500JCI.3234
· l'or more ir*Jrmation
cal

u...~"D=I=·~·~,~-~~·~t.tii;J~·~·~·~...~ll $200().~
Rift br4:30

230

Help wanted

pot hour potantlll. Paid Training!

p.m......., - -

2~-theldl810

ltO

a Foot

NOIIOD'I"S FATHER CD by Kevin Jonot Miry Clllpln Carpen·
ler &amp; Ace Smtih QUI&amp;I. On IIIC·

tlf7 SUblru OUII&gt;ack &amp;pori. 27
mpg. AJ(" AMIFM Cu..tta. All
Whoal Drive . 5 S_.t llenu81

1-H_ FIEDS

:Tribe
from Pllp 11
catch m short left to end
that threat.
Cleveland had hit .339 (92for-27 I) with runners in
scoring position over its previous 24 games.
Palmer hit his sixth homer,
a two-run shot off Bartolo

Colon (4-4) woth two outs m
the fourth .'
Palmer had struck out I 0
times tn 21 career at-bats
agamst Colon, but h11 the first
pitch mto the Cleveland
bullpen after Tony Clark had
walked
·
FICk made 1t 3-0 wtth his
fifth homer on a full-count
pitch 10 the SIXth
In h1s only other start
against Cleveland thiS season,

Weaver allowed SIX firsttuning runs in l 9-8 loss on
April 13.
Weaver rettred 13 straight
after Juan Gonzalez led off the
third with a smgle until Cabrera lined a two-out double
down the left-field line in the
seventh.
Colon allowed seven h1ts
and one walk over eight
mmngs. He struck out five.

110 Help Wanted

Card of Thanks

LOCAL COMPANY

The Ralph and Murl
Colburn Family w11h to
thank the Laurel Cliff
and Thoma• Fork
n•ishbor., Mildred
Ziesler of Camp 7230,
Modern Woodmen of

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center ManaQer. We are currently·
seeklnCJ to nu over 100 positions. No
exp. necessary. Eam upto$15/hr.
Very ftexlble schedullno. Both f/t and
p/t avail. MedlcaVDentaVPd
wcatlon/Momt. opps. awn for f/t.
Call today, start tomorrow•••
1-888-974-JOBS

WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU I
COO Management.

L~C

America members. the

Rev. Mark Plaugher,
Ewins and ~taff,
many other friend. of tho
family
for
their
Ban

expre,.ion of love durang

the lime of tho death of
my husband and our

daddy, 8randpa, and
greot·srandpo . May God
ble11 6ach and every one
of you .

FIND,··
WHAT.YOU·
NEED 1·N·
·~

the··

·oany · :·
nel
CALL

992-2155

�'Jt~clnnlllt,

u.y23, 2001

~Of.lrllddleport,

Ohio

The Dally Sritlnel• Plli!_B_!j

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Pu:nle

=:r

PHILLIP

ALDER

SMITH'S
' • ...,TRIJrJr,CJ •,

A&amp;D Alit U,' 1l1ttry- Pill, lie.

'~

Rutland, Ohio
Truck sealS, car sealS, beMiinm, tnd tarps,
convertible .t vinyl tops, Four wheeler sealS,
IIIO!O!cycle sealS, boll COYell, carpets, etc.

w:::z.r:.t..:..
r!fs,

...........

hblk Naelcella Nn,.,.tperl.
Your Rl&amp;bt to Kaaw, DdiYered RJpl to Y1111r

LEGAL

ADIIEPT18EIIENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
(Ceea No. 00 CV 14t)

~

r; ' IIi c.l..
5etlt'o Allar 5:1111'11.1

contempt of court.
Appralaed at :
$22,500.00.

Term a

&amp;~

~1u•

r.1idclll·pdr! UtiiO l

of tale:

....,.

CRAIG V. EIIAHISER,

DIPOYIAI

Sheriff

lllchwwl J. Linden,
Attornooy

FKtoey Allthoriad

Gutter&amp;- Down

·Public Nolle.

Racine Pizza Express

Dalen
1000 St. Rt. 710u111
CooMIIe, OH 46723

301 Vine Street Racine,

Ohio

Apply in Jierson
Mon- Fri 10 am- 10 pm

'

llllntenanc»Spout

,....,.....
YOUNG'S

3-0
OONSniJC1ION

·---·
·-and---R-ng

.

SUNNY DAZE lAWN &amp;
WDEIISERVICE
Mowlat. Weed
Eaflat. Tlllln..

tn.arad
Spodalboi•HW

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

• VInyl Siding.-...

Free Estimates

Owner
Charles R. DIH

992-6215

......2-7445
c.l
591-9254

Prunln., Praaure
Wuhln•
Sllkhctlell Guwl::•
Hourly rates

ltJill I

II! ..... I~

- ,\

l'ttlll \ ]II\

I'JI,l

..

Replllr Hydreullc Haul • Cyllndera
Allo Sell Dln-nt ~or Olle .
Chiller, Ohio .
(former Wimer Heitlng
• COOling building)

992-3470

F-WWIIIIIIIIWW,

......... udripalr
porcbn, .. doW.

(

• Mulch
Bulldoler Senka

11111

re-.Hna.plamlllq.
eleclricol,--

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'lllpeoU • Fill Dirt

949-1405
591-5011 . •

·-ow.• Electtkal &amp; PlunMit

•R-.a•o.-

74.0-992·1671

I.\. ll I h draulit' ,'\. llil

•Gnn!SUd*

-

Ft~t ElliNfn

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Stop. Compile
FREE ESTIMATES

p
· e

44114

c--mPuU

••

AdVertise I I
•
'
In thle 8Pitcel
SERVICE
MowiiiCJ&amp; · .
. for $25 r
TrlmmiiiCJ
month
740-992-5015

Howarcll.
WrHesel

1400

Driver Wanted Immediately

"

~

THE
BORN
LU~t.u .
'
',

740 949-2810

FP"

&amp;IV€. N-l Of&gt;Tif.\l~T 1'\ (:).j.S')""~
Of Wf\.TE:~ 1'\ND 1-\E.'lL Y..i

Buelneu
74C);M1-G3110 cell

If'~ Klll.f
FULl.. .. .

11- ~a.,
.'

.SeiC-Storqe
BLli'E MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

1-3IU75-1824
..... , . . ,
Rllld1 till Co wdll New Coell!lluctlaa
Salet Smlce INtellallon
I slalibtttMelallluetwock
."'''nM" Salet a Soc vkll ror
. Glllla, ..._,.. . Melli Coed11
II tM 1811 t.nd
WV 105176

... I'

291711 llnhln Road
Recine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
SIDeS' X 10'
JAMES BAULSBY, ,
to 10' x30'
Bherlll
~oure ·
lllchnl J. Undan
7:00AM· 8:00 PM
Allornev lor PIWintlll
1111 Choler Avenue

Sulte400
Cleve11nd,

Mlllon,WY

304-773-553
• No Carry Outs
• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Other Speciale
Available
'
Whlie Suppll• utt

L-------~------------------~

-

Come In And See
Connie Or A,uf,-IW

Ohio

44114
(5) 9, 16,23
MIIIROII

KEIP8 THE

Public Notice
Til• 1nnua1 report
Form 1190 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Barnard V. Fultz,
Tl'u- le IYIIIIIblt for
public .lnapaotlon 1€ ·
Bernard V. Pultz Llw
Olllca, 111 112 Walt
Saqond
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 457811,
during
rwgu11r
bueln••• hour• for •
period of 110 d•v•
aubetquent
to
publlcltlon of thlt
notice.
(5) 16, 17, 1a, 20, 21,
22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 211,
30 12 tc

..

.---------------------------~ ;,
1115R12
111-80f113
1ea-eDR13.
17i-IOR13.
181180A13

SU!IM!PTIIIE HEAT

HARTWELL
STORAGE

PEANUTS
. ,

TOLD ME
TMAT 't'Oll LIKE ME ONL'f'

. St. Rt. 7
lOxl0$40
10x20$60

8EcAli5E I FEED

992-1717

••••

OP DAMAGING
ULTPAVIOLIT. IIAYI

PACTOIIY DIRICT

·CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771
7~&amp;&amp;5-384&amp;

PRK:INQ

·QUALITY
WIND.OW

1-800-291-5600
• Pomere&gt;¥1 .2~
PIIUIIHOIII-·-·-·
•'

Syr~CUH,

WVI0317U

Oh

tunilies in the year ahead to

'

Advert!.. . '
In thltspace

Flol Work, ·
Replo&lt;emenle1 • Wallet
ond Drl•u • Sleacll

advance your knowledge or
education. Take advon1Uge of
what's alTered, because what
you learn can be Jumed inlo
. profitable ventures. .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
.. You might have to deal wiJh
someone who holds opposing
views Joday. Should an impor·
Jant relationship be involved,
remember logic and tact will
win Ihis person over. not afTOo
ganee. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it.1be
ASiro·Oraph
Matchmaker
instanlly reveals which sl1ni
are romantically perfecl for
you. Mail $2.7~ to MaiChmak·
er, c/o Jhia newspaper, P.O. Bo•
17,8, Murray Hill SJatlon,
New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-July l2)
•• There's a chance you could
feel imposed upon tnday when
asked to do something for
another. Think abouJ what olh·
ers have done for you, and
you'll quickly recant your
view A.
[.EO (July 23-Aua. 22l ••
Pre&lt;sure comiril from friends
today pertain ina Jo someJhins
which you're ' not In accord
wilh could 1e1 your fire up.

•

••

•

for$25 p.;

.,

'

'I

month-

''

.

AdvertIs'
In this spacet;
for$25 per
month

BISSELL
IU,LDIRIINC.
New Hom• • VlaJI
Siding• New ·G irrqa

•'

C.U U. flnt Or We Both l.olel

'
••

Ask For Mike Hindle

••
••

I .

Every Spring Tun•Up
gat a FREE Blade Sharpening.
N•w fiiUipm•nt 1rrlvln11 dilly
Set Venning, Wayne or Jim

or 1 RIAL DIAL on • new lawn !rector,
· lewn mover or WHd trimmer.

GRAV~LY TRACTOR
Saln &amp; hrvlce
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992·2975.
'"

'
~

I

·

•Rqrl~&lt;tnoenl

Window• • Room
Addlllono • Rooftn1
COMMIICIALIFIII IE51111111W.
FREE ESTIMATES

=Ill.)

group

paymarrl

23 'Soctumty 44 Andlnt
Ill mel"
Pwalan'a

I ~:.- 24 ~7 -loaiiW 25 Finger and
aMap
21 Ferrclng
I Pedro"a
sword
,...
21 HoC llhOit
Ninth mo.
a Actor
10 llcngt
Kruger
.
.
.
,
_
30
8lmpll
11 8lngtr
31 Tlma
• ~IN
parlocla
12 Naulnl
37 - Cratd
lllwdN
38 RR dapot
11 12131, e.g.
41 ' - -

33
34 Ia too _,.
31 E•
••
31 llilwiwl

45

-parl
·
40 T....
(Z wdL)

42 "- Ll

Douolr"
41 - Tacll
47
e.g. 2t T - ' c

r.r-

fnrm ...
47 Bell un

lot.

41 blalrlclln

• =t~
•., ,
•
,

Gar•••'

4t Endlna lar
· duck"
50 Gnrfltd
(~)

52 t

alttlng

I

lfFOI7

54 CD--

Lucy"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by LUll Cilmpoa
CJIIboty Cipher crCI)&gt;"''fiiDOIIDarromo.,. CFNt.d fnlm quolollona by lomouo
people. Pal and _ . . Eacll-ln the ciplllr
anolho&lt;.
Todll)l'f clue: D equals G

·-for

'HAO. IC

VPOR

IRDNE,

IRU

FICO
ETL

ETL
ETL

IPO

VIIKK

GOHB

VMKK

INO

HAOOZP

OYON

NODNOB.'

IFGNTHO
GIIONZO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A book Ia a p~rt of life, a
manllal11!11on or life, juat u mueh 11 a tr• or a horse or a
atar."- Henry Miller

.

Thur!&lt;day, May 24, 2001
There may be many oppor-

'

COHCIEIFIBLOC(i)RICK

ServiDI Oblo IDd W.V,

4 D pawed
1 ~-

'~~:~:~'

S©l'-4{11A-L&amp;t.trse ••••

WOlD

14H.4 ., CLAY I. POlLAN __;_,_______

Roorrange leH.ro . of
0 four
ocrombled wordo
low to form four

~mple

the
be-

words .

TADCUB

III

13

M0 A G E

I

II 12
14

Is I I I

I 17 I ,I I~
GAJEDG
I IaI I 19 I e
I'
I
II I II
YACUS

I acted as umpire for my sons
baseball team. "Do you think I was
fair to both teams?" I asked my
son . "Sure,' he replied, 'both '
reams hated you ••••• the • • ••

16

·

•

'

Complere rho Chuckle quoted
bv filling In the missing words
you dev•lap lrom llep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED

tEIIfRS

[RAMBLE
TllAS

the

I I II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIU
Fickle • Chafe • Acule • Lotion - OFFICE
"Get. your priorities straight," the old timer said . 'I have
never heard anyone say as their last wofds, 'I wish I
had spent more time at t.he OFFICE."

SYSTEMS

; Foottn, Wallo, SJep, •

Crete Free Ettl.,.lel

j,

ti~V/.

. ''

•ocuOUTII.R

/

·

~

•
' .•

TIMI! HIAT IN

r----------.
PB

Oi'#i

Z2 11ngu1ge
lndlln

TALK 5140¥1,
'¥114Y PO Tt4f:Y

•

OUT AND WINT!R

'

=1:'...

Tw

an1nra1

t

'"

•

IMPERIAL TIRE.

.•

"'

42 W'adlng
43 TWIUII1l'a
blrcl
.

-

S't4liT

'r';;.;r.;M;ii~~~~~~
.t
.•

740-992-5232
,,.,.

.....

OTt4tiC TO

24 Houq,/7 Dlys Per Week .

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

32

Books with tons of
infonnalion in a small
space are good for the
aspiring
. expert
because ( s)he gai!JS
lots of knowledge
quickly.
"Bridge
Card play·· Attack and
Defence" (Finesse) by
Marc Smith contains
I 0 chapters. five on
declarer-play and five
on defense. in 152 text
pages. On the whole,
the book is good. My
main complaint is that
he prefers count over
attitude in signaling,
and slants the text in
IT'S A
his favor. Along with
most Americans, I
ICI:'P
think this is the wrong
TI:L,.IN&lt;i I:ACI4
approach to defense.
This deal contains
points for both sides .
UP1
Against four spades,
West Cashes the heart
ace . . How should
South plan the play?
North's two-heart
cue-bid showed at
~
~""'
least' a limit raise in
~IV€. fo,. P€.~~1¥\I~T ~
~
spades . Perhaps South
Of N~Ta N-ID KE.'lL 5I'\ ·
should have continued
IT'~ 1-'.N..j.
with two no-trump,
EMPTY ·I',
since the no-trump
· f·
game is impregnable.
At trick one, South
must drop a smooth
•
tr---Tf::..l f
heart queen. He knows
......_-f"""-J.-'--11:.-+~ •
that East has a single~,.---'---+'-:-:1
ton heart and that a
t:~::.::L.:.:I3.:=:::!:==:J ruff is threatened: If
South plays the queen,
West might well
assume that this is a
singleton and switch to
a minor. Then declarer
quickly continues with
the ace and another
spade to get home .
If South incorrectly
plays low at trick one,
West will know his
partner started with
"'z::.J either the singleton
two or the doubleton
queen-two. (Or perI TMINK 11LL
haps queen-third. With
CIIOOSE ANOTI&gt;IER
a low doubleton, East
CATE60R'f.. '
would.drop his higher
spo t-card at trick one.)
~ So. West should continue with a low heart
al trick two: East ruffs,
and later West gets
both major-suit kings
for one down.
The book is $17.99
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 2742221 to order.

IF

(740)985 4194
· or (740) 985 4384

Hip&amp;: Dry

Ster•t•

.,

BY PIIILLIP ALDEK

I

__......____ -R&amp;Hiiiii"LiWin

Roofing • Home

Clevelwnd,

i

Remodeling

Burial and Fmal Expenses; College,
Retirement,

.._

1 Ollloe

1 z NtiiM tor

!,.,

..... . ....

_
Snippets

I

• Coonpl1l1

Q ' .

. . . . . . . . . . &amp;.-

,..

DOWN

Ocrii..:::..C.
Fool,..,.

11
20
21 -In

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vI IWe. Balll
19

*

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•••

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Medicare Supplement; Ufe Insurance;

-....
.. ,.
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• t
"l·-·
6
t l.l2 •

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'f)(\

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All Mallet Tnctor .t
Equlp-l PaJ1I

1111 Cheater Avenue,

(5) II, 16, 23

I

.,

6 AQ U I5

·ROIEIT 115511
CONSTRUCIIOII

1( r,

S1 1r I r
11 ecntnuad
_,
hcl
1t 8lnlng
II
I
••It
lrlllto
.
17Go
II

9 I

... If
11

r=:-::;:::1 .

l~·Jf•Jd

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4 lit I .

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or 992·2753

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==·

13-111.....
M '•
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Ill
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•

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over 40 yra experience
(740) 742-8888

~

I

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. 1 Cllleplala A
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.,, ..

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ACROSS

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992•5479

'

'•
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'
.,

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However, in!itead of overreact·
ing, fineSse your way out of it.

, VIRGO (Aug . 2J-Sept. 22)
-- Because your produclivity
and industriousness will be
very pronounced IO&lt;.Iuy, your

abilily lo do lhings !hal you seJ
ou1 to do is qui1e good. But
don't expect the same from

everybody else.
LIBRA (Sept 23.Qcc. 23) •
- MosJ of the day you'll be
your old channina self, easy Jo
sol along wiJh and willing Jo
coopel'ale. However, be careful
·not Jo switch Into be ina a
arouch.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. .
22) •• In a llnanclal arran1e·
menJtod•r· alllratalan~ you
mlaht fee you're aenlna Jhe
rhol1end of the rUck. 1ike the
lime 10 reUM!I Jhe rllllation,
and make •ure Jhl• iln'Jio.
· SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) .. Bxpreoalna your
Independence by dolna your
own thlna hu 111 time and
place, but Joday Ia not that
moment. Thlnar will tum out
more pteuantlf you Jry 10 be
a cooperatl ve Jeom pl1yer.
.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •• Do wh11 needs dolna In
your own quiel way and as far

away from Olhers as possible.
The more visible you are
. loday, the more pressured and
overwhelmed you could be.by
. ollrers.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. Even though you might
hot be in the mood today Jo ~
told by others what to do and
when to do it, friends and family won' t appreciate it either if

you appoint yourself their
director.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2d)
-- For the sake of hannon)' on

the homefrontloduy, don '1foi!l
problem~

or element.li on your

kinfolk that don 'i concern
Jhem. Handle your privale
· affairs ouJ•ide the family
abode.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprill9)
.. ·That creative mind of yours
could be worklns overtime
rod1y with ideo• poppin&amp;· out
all over the place. However,
challena•• can be forthcoming,
bul u11e Jhem to uplore and
valldaJe your views.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20) .. Know Jhal if your finan·
cial situation is a trifle s1ralned
Joday. in matters where you
have eonlrol, you'll be fine.
11' II be when others are
involved that you could have
problems.

\

�'Jt~clnnlllt,

u.y23, 2001

~Of.lrllddleport,

Ohio

The Dally Sritlnel• Plli!_B_!j

ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Pu:nle

=:r

PHILLIP

ALDER

SMITH'S
' • ...,TRIJrJr,CJ •,

A&amp;D Alit U,' 1l1ttry- Pill, lie.

'~

Rutland, Ohio
Truck sealS, car sealS, beMiinm, tnd tarps,
convertible .t vinyl tops, Four wheeler sealS,
IIIO!O!cycle sealS, boll COYell, carpets, etc.

w:::z.r:.t..:..
r!fs,

...........

hblk Naelcella Nn,.,.tperl.
Your Rl&amp;bt to Kaaw, DdiYered RJpl to Y1111r

LEGAL

ADIIEPT18EIIENT
SHERIFF'S SALE
(Ceea No. 00 CV 14t)

~

r; ' IIi c.l..
5etlt'o Allar 5:1111'11.1

contempt of court.
Appralaed at :
$22,500.00.

Term a

&amp;~

~1u•

r.1idclll·pdr! UtiiO l

of tale:

....,.

CRAIG V. EIIAHISER,

DIPOYIAI

Sheriff

lllchwwl J. Linden,
Attornooy

FKtoey Allthoriad

Gutter&amp;- Down

·Public Nolle.

Racine Pizza Express

Dalen
1000 St. Rt. 710u111
CooMIIe, OH 46723

301 Vine Street Racine,

Ohio

Apply in Jierson
Mon- Fri 10 am- 10 pm

'

llllntenanc»Spout

,....,.....
YOUNG'S

3-0
OONSniJC1ION

·---·
·-and---R-ng

.

SUNNY DAZE lAWN &amp;
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Mowlat. Weed
Eaflat. Tlllln..

tn.arad
Spodalboi•HW

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

• VInyl Siding.-...

Free Estimates

Owner
Charles R. DIH

992-6215

......2-7445
c.l
591-9254

Prunln., Praaure
Wuhln•
Sllkhctlell Guwl::•
Hourly rates

ltJill I

II! ..... I~

- ,\

l'ttlll \ ]II\

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..

Replllr Hydreullc Haul • Cyllndera
Allo Sell Dln-nt ~or Olle .
Chiller, Ohio .
(former Wimer Heitlng
• COOling building)

992-3470

F-WWIIIIIIIIWW,

......... udripalr
porcbn, .. doW.

(

• Mulch
Bulldoler Senka

11111

re-.Hna.plamlllq.
eleclricol,--

V. C. YOUNG Ill

'lllpeoU • Fill Dirt

949-1405
591-5011 . •

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•R-.a•o.-

74.0-992·1671

I.\. ll I h draulit' ,'\. llil

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CARPENTER
SERVICE

Stop. Compile
FREE ESTIMATES

p
· e

44114

c--mPuU

••

AdVertise I I
•
'
In thle 8Pitcel
SERVICE
MowiiiCJ&amp; · .
. for $25 r
TrlmmiiiCJ
month
740-992-5015

Howarcll.
WrHesel

1400

Driver Wanted Immediately

"

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THE
BORN
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'
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FP"

&amp;IV€. N-l Of&gt;Tif.\l~T 1'\ (:).j.S')""~
Of Wf\.TE:~ 1'\ND 1-\E.'lL Y..i

Buelneu
74C);M1-G3110 cell

If'~ Klll.f
FULl.. .. .

11- ~a.,
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.SeiC-Storqe
BLli'E MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

1-3IU75-1824
..... , . . ,
Rllld1 till Co wdll New Coell!lluctlaa
Salet Smlce INtellallon
I slalibtttMelallluetwock
."'''nM" Salet a Soc vkll ror
. Glllla, ..._,.. . Melli Coed11
II tM 1811 t.nd
WV 105176

... I'

291711 llnhln Road
Recine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
SIDeS' X 10'
JAMES BAULSBY, ,
to 10' x30'
Bherlll
~oure ·
lllchnl J. Undan
7:00AM· 8:00 PM
Allornev lor PIWintlll
1111 Choler Avenue

Sulte400
Cleve11nd,

Mlllon,WY

304-773-553
• No Carry Outs
• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Other Speciale
Available
'
Whlie Suppll• utt

L-------~------------------~

-

Come In And See
Connie Or A,uf,-IW

Ohio

44114
(5) 9, 16,23
MIIIROII

KEIP8 THE

Public Notice
Til• 1nnua1 report
Form 1190 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Barnard V. Fultz,
Tl'u- le IYIIIIIblt for
public .lnapaotlon 1€ ·
Bernard V. Pultz Llw
Olllca, 111 112 Walt
Saqond
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 457811,
during
rwgu11r
bueln••• hour• for •
period of 110 d•v•
aubetquent
to
publlcltlon of thlt
notice.
(5) 16, 17, 1a, 20, 21,
22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 211,
30 12 tc

..

.---------------------------~ ;,
1115R12
111-80f113
1ea-eDR13.
17i-IOR13.
181180A13

SU!IM!PTIIIE HEAT

HARTWELL
STORAGE

PEANUTS
. ,

TOLD ME
TMAT 't'Oll LIKE ME ONL'f'

. St. Rt. 7
lOxl0$40
10x20$60

8EcAli5E I FEED

992-1717

••••

OP DAMAGING
ULTPAVIOLIT. IIAYI

PACTOIIY DIRICT

·CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771
7~&amp;&amp;5-384&amp;

PRK:INQ

·QUALITY
WIND.OW

1-800-291-5600
• Pomere&gt;¥1 .2~
PIIUIIHOIII-·-·-·
•'

Syr~CUH,

WVI0317U

Oh

tunilies in the year ahead to

'

Advert!.. . '
In thltspace

Flol Work, ·
Replo&lt;emenle1 • Wallet
ond Drl•u • Sleacll

advance your knowledge or
education. Take advon1Uge of
what's alTered, because what
you learn can be Jumed inlo
. profitable ventures. .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
.. You might have to deal wiJh
someone who holds opposing
views Joday. Should an impor·
Jant relationship be involved,
remember logic and tact will
win Ihis person over. not afTOo
ganee. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it.1be
ASiro·Oraph
Matchmaker
instanlly reveals which sl1ni
are romantically perfecl for
you. Mail $2.7~ to MaiChmak·
er, c/o Jhia newspaper, P.O. Bo•
17,8, Murray Hill SJatlon,
New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-July l2)
•• There's a chance you could
feel imposed upon tnday when
asked to do something for
another. Think abouJ what olh·
ers have done for you, and
you'll quickly recant your
view A.
[.EO (July 23-Aua. 22l ••
Pre&lt;sure comiril from friends
today pertain ina Jo someJhins
which you're ' not In accord
wilh could 1e1 your fire up.

•

••

•

for$25 p.;

.,

'

'I

month-

''

.

AdvertIs'
In this spacet;
for$25 per
month

BISSELL
IU,LDIRIINC.
New Hom• • VlaJI
Siding• New ·G irrqa

•'

C.U U. flnt Or We Both l.olel

'
••

Ask For Mike Hindle

••
••

I .

Every Spring Tun•Up
gat a FREE Blade Sharpening.
N•w fiiUipm•nt 1rrlvln11 dilly
Set Venning, Wayne or Jim

or 1 RIAL DIAL on • new lawn !rector,
· lewn mover or WHd trimmer.

GRAV~LY TRACTOR
Saln &amp; hrvlce
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992·2975.
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Window• • Room
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COMMIICIALIFIII IE51111111W.
FREE ESTIMATES

=Ill.)

group

paymarrl

23 'Soctumty 44 Andlnt
Ill mel"
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21 Ferrclng
I Pedro"a
sword
,...
21 HoC llhOit
Ninth mo.
a Actor
10 llcngt
Kruger
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30
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11 8lngtr
31 Tlma
• ~IN
parlocla
12 Naulnl
37 - Cratd
lllwdN
38 RR dapot
11 12131, e.g.
41 ' - -

33
34 Ia too _,.
31 E•
••
31 llilwiwl

45

-parl
·
40 T....
(Z wdL)

42 "- Ll

Douolr"
41 - Tacll
47
e.g. 2t T - ' c

r.r-

fnrm ...
47 Bell un

lot.

41 blalrlclln

• =t~
•., ,
•
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Gar•••'

4t Endlna lar
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50 Gnrfltd
(~)

52 t

alttlng

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Lucy"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by LUll Cilmpoa
CJIIboty Cipher crCI)&gt;"''fiiDOIIDarromo.,. CFNt.d fnlm quolollona by lomouo
people. Pal and _ . . Eacll-ln the ciplllr
anolho&lt;.
Todll)l'f clue: D equals G

·-for

'HAO. IC

VPOR

IRDNE,

IRU

FICO
ETL

ETL
ETL

IPO

VIIKK

GOHB

VMKK

INO

HAOOZP

OYON

NODNOB.'

IFGNTHO
GIIONZO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A book Ia a p~rt of life, a
manllal11!11on or life, juat u mueh 11 a tr• or a horse or a
atar."- Henry Miller

.

Thur!&lt;day, May 24, 2001
There may be many oppor-

'

COHCIEIFIBLOC(i)RICK

ServiDI Oblo IDd W.V,

4 D pawed
1 ~-

'~~:~:~'

S©l'-4{11A-L&amp;t.trse ••••

WOlD

14H.4 ., CLAY I. POlLAN __;_,_______

Roorrange leH.ro . of
0 four
ocrombled wordo
low to form four

~mple

the
be-

words .

TADCUB

III

13

M0 A G E

I

II 12
14

Is I I I

I 17 I ,I I~
GAJEDG
I IaI I 19 I e
I'
I
II I II
YACUS

I acted as umpire for my sons
baseball team. "Do you think I was
fair to both teams?" I asked my
son . "Sure,' he replied, 'both '
reams hated you ••••• the • • ••

16

·

•

'

Complere rho Chuckle quoted
bv filling In the missing words
you dev•lap lrom llep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED

tEIIfRS

[RAMBLE
TllAS

the

I I II

SCRAM-LETS ANSWIU
Fickle • Chafe • Acule • Lotion - OFFICE
"Get. your priorities straight," the old timer said . 'I have
never heard anyone say as their last wofds, 'I wish I
had spent more time at t.he OFFICE."

SYSTEMS

; Foottn, Wallo, SJep, •

Crete Free Ettl.,.lel

j,

ti~V/.

. ''

•ocuOUTII.R

/

·

~

•
' .•

TIMI! HIAT IN

r----------.
PB

Oi'#i

Z2 11ngu1ge
lndlln

TALK 5140¥1,
'¥114Y PO Tt4f:Y

•

OUT AND WINT!R

'

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Tw

an1nra1

t

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IMPERIAL TIRE.

.•

"'

42 W'adlng
43 TWIUII1l'a
blrcl
.

-

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.t
.•

740-992-5232
,,.,.

.....

OTt4tiC TO

24 Houq,/7 Dlys Per Week .

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

32

Books with tons of
infonnalion in a small
space are good for the
aspiring
. expert
because ( s)he gai!JS
lots of knowledge
quickly.
"Bridge
Card play·· Attack and
Defence" (Finesse) by
Marc Smith contains
I 0 chapters. five on
declarer-play and five
on defense. in 152 text
pages. On the whole,
the book is good. My
main complaint is that
he prefers count over
attitude in signaling,
and slants the text in
IT'S A
his favor. Along with
most Americans, I
ICI:'P
think this is the wrong
TI:L,.IN&lt;i I:ACI4
approach to defense.
This deal contains
points for both sides .
UP1
Against four spades,
West Cashes the heart
ace . . How should
South plan the play?
North's two-heart
cue-bid showed at
~
~""'
least' a limit raise in
~IV€. fo,. P€.~~1¥\I~T ~
~
spades . Perhaps South
Of N~Ta N-ID KE.'lL 5I'\ ·
should have continued
IT'~ 1-'.N..j.
with two no-trump,
EMPTY ·I',
since the no-trump
· f·
game is impregnable.
At trick one, South
must drop a smooth
•
tr---Tf::..l f
heart queen. He knows
......_-f"""-J.-'--11:.-+~ •
that East has a single~,.---'---+'-:-:1
ton heart and that a
t:~::.::L.:.:I3.:=:::!:==:J ruff is threatened: If
South plays the queen,
West might well
assume that this is a
singleton and switch to
a minor. Then declarer
quickly continues with
the ace and another
spade to get home .
If South incorrectly
plays low at trick one,
West will know his
partner started with
"'z::.J either the singleton
two or the doubleton
queen-two. (Or perI TMINK 11LL
haps queen-third. With
CIIOOSE ANOTI&gt;IER
a low doubleton, East
CATE60R'f.. '
would.drop his higher
spo t-card at trick one.)
~ So. West should continue with a low heart
al trick two: East ruffs,
and later West gets
both major-suit kings
for one down.
The book is $17.99
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 2742221 to order.

IF

(740)985 4194
· or (740) 985 4384

Hip&amp;: Dry

Ster•t•

.,

BY PIIILLIP ALDEK

I

__......____ -R&amp;Hiiiii"LiWin

Roofing • Home

Clevelwnd,

i

Remodeling

Burial and Fmal Expenses; College,
Retirement,

.._

1 Ollloe

1 z NtiiM tor

!,.,

..... . ....

_
Snippets

I

• Coonpl1l1

Q ' .

. . . . . . . . . . &amp;.-

,..

DOWN

Ocrii..:::..C.
Fool,..,.

11
20
21 -In

Dlller:We.t
vI IWe. Balll
19

*

Ji&gt;Gt.llr

•••

•

• Geilgll

Medicare Supplement; Ufe Insurance;

-....
.. ,.
............
--··

• t
"l·-·
6
t l.l2 •

•

•Newllomle

'f)(\

Locei84H214

All Mallet Tnctor .t
Equlp-l PaJ1I

1111 Cheater Avenue,

(5) II, 16, 23

I

.,

6 AQ U I5

·ROIEIT 115511
CONSTRUCIIOII

1( r,

S1 1r I r
11 ecntnuad
_,
hcl
1t 8lnlng
II
I
••It
lrlllto
.
17Go
II

9 I

... If
11

r=:-::;:::1 .

l~·Jf•Jd

fl Hupd

F&lt; I
4 lit I .

.. 0 J

740 992 1101
or 992·2753

"'C:J C:::: • Emergency Funds; Mortgage; ri'fl .l:~==~J
lltluoa*'
tt2-3G02
11M...... [M=aj:or~M=e:d:ica=I~·=N~u=rs=in=g~IJ=o~m~e=~lfl~~
,...............
.............

callh.

•
•

F I (• ( [:_,,II" I d t c s

lirK ~',

-.

••••

• DI 9 I

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

==·

13-111.....
M '•
&gt;' II
Ill
14 oiOI1n
NewYOJtc

JltJ

•• Q

•HoMeR f ••

1 a&amp;-52'1~16

•• ~-tl •JI Pm *"

•

:;:;a!~

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
over 40 yra experience
(740) 742-8888

~

I

1111-a

. 1 Cllleplala A
1 HI audllg 11 , _

.,, ..

••••
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ACROSS

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·Cellular

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eff Warner Ins.

992•5479

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However, in!itead of overreact·
ing, fineSse your way out of it.

, VIRGO (Aug . 2J-Sept. 22)
-- Because your produclivity
and industriousness will be
very pronounced IO&lt;.Iuy, your

abilily lo do lhings !hal you seJ
ou1 to do is qui1e good. But
don't expect the same from

everybody else.
LIBRA (Sept 23.Qcc. 23) •
- MosJ of the day you'll be
your old channina self, easy Jo
sol along wiJh and willing Jo
coopel'ale. However, be careful
·not Jo switch Into be ina a
arouch.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. .
22) •• In a llnanclal arran1e·
menJtod•r· alllratalan~ you
mlaht fee you're aenlna Jhe
rhol1end of the rUck. 1ike the
lime 10 reUM!I Jhe rllllation,
and make •ure Jhl• iln'Jio.
· SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) .. Bxpreoalna your
Independence by dolna your
own thlna hu 111 time and
place, but Joday Ia not that
moment. Thlnar will tum out
more pteuantlf you Jry 10 be
a cooperatl ve Jeom pl1yer.
.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •• Do wh11 needs dolna In
your own quiel way and as far

away from Olhers as possible.
The more visible you are
. loday, the more pressured and
overwhelmed you could be.by
. ollrers.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) .. Even though you might
hot be in the mood today Jo ~
told by others what to do and
when to do it, friends and family won' t appreciate it either if

you appoint yourself their
director.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2d)
-- For the sake of hannon)' on

the homefrontloduy, don '1foi!l
problem~

or element.li on your

kinfolk that don 'i concern
Jhem. Handle your privale
· affairs ouJ•ide the family
abode.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprill9)
.. ·That creative mind of yours
could be worklns overtime
rod1y with ideo• poppin&amp;· out
all over the place. However,
challena•• can be forthcoming,
bul u11e Jhem to uplore and
valldaJe your views.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20) .. Know Jhal if your finan·
cial situation is a trifle s1ralned
Joday. in matters where you
have eonlrol, you'll be fine.
11' II be when others are
involved that you could have
problems.

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Page

.The Daily Sentinel

SPORIS: Eagles claim soggy district crown, a~

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Bonds sets NL
homer record, but
Giants.lose- again

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PNiadolploa

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Florida
Monlleal
New York

Eat

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25
22
21
19
18

L
17
24
23
27
27

Control

Smith (3-0) helped the Marlins beat Jo hn Smaltz for just
the third time in 16 games. He
allowed one run, six " hits,
struck out seven and walked
two in 7 2- 3 innin gs.
Sinoltz (0-2), making his
second start since October,
1999 because of elbow
surgery, gave up three runs,
nine hits and struck out five in
5 1-3 innings.

The · San Fran.cisco Giants
are wasting Barry Bonds'
power surge.
Bonds homered in his last
at-bat Tuesday night to set a
National League record with
nine home runs in six ga_91es.
But Mark Grace had' four
RJlls to help lead the Arizona
Diamondbacks to a 12-8 victory over the Giants - · their
fifth loss during Bonds' streak.
" It's not really worth r;,lking
about;' Bonds said. ''It would
be nice if it could help our

Chicago Cube S. Cll all _, 3
COion!do 11 , Los~ 8
Allzona 12, San F11ncisoo 8

Hotlonoii.Nguo

w
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

5I. Louis
Chicago
Houston
Milwauk6e

Cincinnati
Pil1sburgh

25
24
24
24
19
15

G8

Pet.
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.478

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"400

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5
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1 1/2
6112
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20
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20
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Arizona
25 20
San~
24 " 21
24 22
Los Angeles
23 22
Colorado
san Francisco 23 22

Pet
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.533
.522
.51 1
.511

" GB
1
1 112
2
2

Mo~·o o-

N.Y. Mets 6. Montreal 3
Atlanta 5. Florida 3
san Diego 7, Houston 6

ColoradO 6, l os Angeles 3
Arizona 4, San Francisco 2

Expos 3, Mets 0
Tony Armas Jr. pitched
seven shutout innings , and

team win gan1es.".

-•-.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Tuead•y'e Gamet
Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, ppd., rain
M ontreal3, N .Y. M ets 0
FlOrida 3. A11a nta 2

. w...

±y'a O......

ClnciMell (lol 0-2) II~ CUIIo
(3-2), 2:20 p.m.
LOS Angeles (Brown 5-2) a1 Cooado

---·
Ent

NewYOitt

Ton&gt;niO

T8(!'4)8 Bay
{As1aci0 .._.), 3:05 p.m.
San Diego (JaMs 2-4) 81 Hooston (Bot·
!enfield 2-3), 4:tl5 p.m.
Pillsburgh (Schnldt 1-1 and Olivares 2-4)
at Philadelphia (Woii:H and Ooal s-ot. 2 , MinnesCia
5:05p.m.
Cleveland
N.Y. Meta (Leiter 1·3) at Montreal (Thur- · Oetroi1
Kansas City
man 3--t)C' 7:05 p.m.
Chicago
Atlanta (Ma-x H) at Florida (Burnett
2·1), 7:05p .m.
St. Lools (Moots 6-2) at Milwaukee (RigliOn 2·1). 8 :05 p"m"
Seattle
San Franclsco (Gardner Q-3) at Arizona
(Jotvlsoo 5-3), 10:05 p.m.
·
OOktond

n.-.,.·· o-

25
24
23
20
12

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30
28
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21 .523 2 112
24 .455 5112
32 · .273 13 112

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(Estes 3·2). 10:15 p m"

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Wedne&amp;dly'e Games

Seattle (Garcia 4.0) at Minnesota {M ilton

5·3). 1:05 p.m.

!:

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Columbus firm
low bidder on
connector phase .

POMEROY - "Governor
Taft is very concerned with the
situation in Meigs County and
wants to make sure that a5sist;~nce is made available to all
those affected by the storms.
"We are here to help."
With those words, Lt. Gov.
Maureen O'Connor reassured
Meigs
County
officials
Wednesd;ly . afternoon that
assistance by the state will be
provided to help clean-up and
rebuild storm-ravaged areas hit
by a massive storm Monday.
O'Connor and Ohio Emergency Management Agency
officials arrived in Meigs
County Wednesday to tour
areas damaged by flooding and
tornadoes that n;cently swept
through several portions of
Ohio and West Virginia.
The tour revealed what
O'Connor had expected:
downed trees and J&gt;9Wer !IDes, :

Farmers Bank
We're Your Bank for Cife

Alam,~c;!::_J12!Jles

For More Information Call (740) 992-2136

POMEROY

~~d. :cQIUN

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Comics ·
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

lotteries

BY TONY M.

LEAcH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF .

POMEROY - A commemorative
saluting the nation's veterans has
leased l?y ~hr . Unitei;t States Postal
Se
, ; jim in
.for M~orial D ay. ·

82-4
85
M

ti!n7'

th~c : c;~~ s:!e h~.Sbe:s~leS~~~ct~

A3
81. 3
Q

help ~force the importance of Memorial D~; a day to celebrate the achieve ments 'i,r our nation's veterans.
·

·lOOI Ohio Volley Publishing c:o.

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R acine, and Mitch's Greenhouse at Middleport.
Luncheons will be available at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center
between I 1:30 and I p.m. on
Saturday at $4.50. Sunday,
the Pomeroy Fire Department will · have a chicken
barbecue.
During a recent meeting
of the· merchants, a vote of
thanks was · extended to
George and Nellie Wright,
Alic e Wamsley. Dale Riftle,
and village workers for
planting and taking ·care of
flowers in the parking lot
area . Thanks also were
extended to Bob's Market
for a donation of 50 Bats of
flowers, and to Tim Simpson
and Meigs students for
growing plants.
To improve the village's

PlnH -

Tour, AS

.Y.·)

.

"The Honoring Veterans stamp pays . aid to veterans and their families, includtribllte to the patriotic dedication of all ing assistance with benefit applications,
the men and women who have served in transporution to Veterans Affairs medical
the U. S. armed forces," said John F. Walsh, fac ilities and burial and memorial ser-·
preside ntially appointed m ember of the . vic es.
Postal Service Board of Gove rnors.
Local communities also · benefit from
"The su mp will also serve as a 'thank the work of veterans service organiza-"
you' to those veterans who continue to
ti o ns, through scholarship programs,
serve as members of veterans . service
youth sports activities and other programs
organizations."
Veterans service organizations · provide
......... Stnlp, AJ

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

Woody Williams (5-3) won
his fourth straight decisibn,
and Jay Witasic k picked up his
first· major league save.

Services

Marlins 3,

Providing advanced orthopedic services ·
from the region's most experienced
orthopedic surgeons.

Braves 2
C huck Smith gave Flo rida
ano ther soli d o uting. and Derrek Lee drove in two ru ns as
the M arli ns bea t visitmg
Atlanta.

'

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BY CHARLENE HOI!FUCH

.

tc ,rv.

'

.t

,stamp hQMors American's vetera.ns

A5

A2

~

·carden, grHnhoule
tour slated June l-3
POMEROY - Tickets
are on sale for a garden and
greenhouse tour slated June
2-3 by the ·Pomeroy M erchants Association.
The tickets may be purchased for $8 each at Fariners Bank, Always and. Forever, H artwell House, and
C lark's Jewelry.
Location s, which can be
visited anytime on Satu rday
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and
Sunday from 1 to 4 p.m ., ~ re
the homes of Gordon and
Linda Fisher, Shirley Huston
and Dorothy Amberger in
Syracuse; C indy Rhonemus
in Minersville, Linda and
Gary Bates at Flatwoods,
Bobbi Karr on Wipple Road
near Five Points. Greenhouses included on the tour are
Bob's Market at Mason,
Karen 's Greenhouse near

Wednesday was opening day for ttie new veterans Adinlnistration
Reid Center In Pomeroy, and local veteilms were waiting to be seen
when the doors opened. The ntNi bente'l-;-o~rated as a field outreach of the V.A. Medical Center in Chillicothe, ·offers routine rnsdical services to veterans In Meigs County and the surrounding
areas. It Is designed to eliminate some of the visits to Athens and
Chillicothe which veterans previously had to make In order to
access V.A. medical services. Donald rY1aurer of POmeroy, pictured
here with the field center's prlmll')i care physician H. Jay Rothe""
berg, M.D., a retired U.S. Nll'IY cilptal.n tlimself, aild R.N. Jenny
Burke Is a Purple Heart recipient ·whQ fQ\Agtlt If\ the Battle of the
Bulge. Routine examLnatlons, basi(\·. IabQI'!ltofy st!r\.ices, preserlptlon dispensing and other dlnlc&gt;typjl seiVIces will be available to.
those lllrterans enrolled In the V.A. inedical system. Veterans may
enroll In the system by providing the V.A. with their dischll'ge Information, medical insurance and Med~ lnfurmatlon, and Social
Security numbers and other vital statistics for theniselves ana their
dependents. The center is now dpsn on We&lt;filBsdiiYs only, and
appointments may be llrJ8r1led by calling the office at 992-9558.
Wsik~n visits are discouraged, and local veterans officials hOpe
that veterans will support the center and that hours will eventually
Increase to other days as need requires. (Brian J. Reed photo)

•

i

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

VETERANS FIELD CENTER OPENS

Calendar
Classifieds

Ryan Klesko hit two home
runs for the second straight
game and drove in three runs
to lead visiting San Diego.
Klesko led off the third with
a solo homer off Scott Elarton
(4-4) for a 4- 0 lead, and hit a
rwo-run homer in the fifth in
the Padres' fourth straight vic-

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Astros 2

~~~~~irll\:t::rJ~

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Sentinel

Padres 6,

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At the Pomeroy Location.

PleliH- .... AS

\

roads
anp highways.
Following
her extensive tour , ·'
CO(Jnty 0
of areas affect~ by the storm,
O'Connor was briefed on the . estimated · to be around her assessment of the damaged members were pulling together
.•, area$, she was :'quite impressed
current status of the county's , '~5o~OOOinfras~cfure damage, which is , O 'Connor said that during with the . way . community

APPRECIATION DAY!

Mariners 11

Kyr''1li~35 . 50; Com-

empt'., and ·1'11111Dt0us B~ed'

.

plete Geno;ral Construction
Co.,
CoIumbus,
$15,978,923.94;· Smith &amp;
Johnson C onstruction Co.,
c o 1umbus, $16, 188, 594 .95;
1\i\.arshal c. Rardin &amp; Sons,
1nc., Akro n, ·s17,075 ,303.52;
Kan awha Stone Co., Inc.,

RAC IN E Ko kosing
Co nstruction Co., Inc.,
Columbus,
" is the apparent
Iow b idder o n the second "o f
three
phases
of
th e
R avenswood
C onnec tor
project.
Nitro,
W.Va.,
d Oh
B .ds
at
io $ 17,393,189.17; and Gary A.
D 1 were opene
f
epartment 0 11ransporb- Rubel, Inc. , LewisviUe,
· tion headquarters in ColumE' h
b $1 9,645,932.31.
b
Ground on the $77 mil" us. tg t contractors su mitred bids.
Ko kosing's
bid
of lion project, which will be
$1 5, 422,856.41 is consider- completed in three phases,
ably lower than ODOT's was broken last week. Beaver
estimate of $21.3 million.
Excavating Co. has already
B eaver Excavating Co., begun construction on the
C anton , th e firm which first seven- mile phase.·
re ceived the $22 million
A third construction phase
contract for the project's first will complete the 15.5-mile
phase, from the William S.- connector, which will evenRitchie Bridge to the inter- tually link U.S. 33 near
section of Ohio 124 and Pomeroy with the Ritchie
C ounty Road 35, also bid on Bridge and Interstate 77 at
the
project, submitting Ravenswood. Bids for this
$17,388,568.76.
third phase will be opened in
The second phase involves September, said Nancy Pediseven miles of highway from go of ODOT D1strtct 10.
Five Points to Morningsr;,r. • ''T~ Ollie!! of Contract
Other bidders were Elmo Sal.,(will now put the bids
Greer &amp; Sons, Inc., London, t~rough a review "process to_

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Cardinals 0

TWins 11,

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

BY TOllY M. LEAcH

· Rangers s,
DevirRays 2

•

WWVil rn~c t dl 1\'".i.t'lttuu· 1 (ulll

---

O'Connor
tours
flooded
•
regtons

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teams herel

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

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Follow all your:
favorite prep

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.500

Bonds hir a 404-foor shot Vbd~~rGuerremhitahon~ . ~--------------~--~~~~--~~~------~-~~~~~~~~~~~~
into the ri ght-center fi eld
grandstand off Russ Springer. ru n as Montreal beat New win, 4-1 over the Kansas Ci ty staked to an 8-0 lead after homer and Kenny R ogers (3three innings, failed in his bid 3) pitched six shutout innings
W ith th e ho me r, Bo nds stayed York before the smallest crowd R oyals on Tuesday night.
Afte r starting the season 8· to become ' baseball 's first as visiting Texas beat Tampa
ahead of Mark M cGwire's at O lympic Stadium in II
18, the AL West champion A's eight-gam e winner. H e gave Bay to win consecutive games
record-setting -pace in 1998, years.
Just 4, 186 were o n han d as have won 14 of 18 to even up seve n runs-· six earned - · for the first time in more than
when the St. Lo uis slu gger fin:z
Armas (4- 5) extended hi s their record, 22-22.
and nine h its in 4 1-3 innings, a month.
ished with 70 ho mers.
Kapler's sixth ho m e"r , off
" It's been a batde to reach finis hing two ouis short of
Bonds has 24 homers in San scoreless-i nnings strea k to a
Brya n R ekar (0-6), snapped a
Francisco's first 45 games, caree r-best 19 2-3 before leav- .sao;· G iambi said. " It's nice, q ualifying for the wi n .
scoreless
ing
with
a
blister
on
his
pitchtie iri "the seventh
T he Twins (30-13) won
but hopefully we'll sta rt playthree games faster than McGing hand.
ing at a bette r level. We strug- their 12th consecutive gam e innin g. It was his third in .five
wtre.
O
rlando
Cabrera's
run-scorgled at the begi nning of the fo llowing a loss and match ed games and gave the R angers at
"Barry's been doing it every
off
Dicky
Gonzalez
ing
single
the franchise's best sbrt since least o ne in 15 straight gam es,
year. We didn't panic."
night;' manager Dusty Baker
D espite · the recent streak, 1970. The Mariners (32- 12) a team record.
said after San Francisco's sixth (1-2) opened the scoring in
the
fifth
,
and
the
E
added
The R angers, who have lost
O akland still trails Seattle by lost for the fifth tim e in 22
l~ss in ·seven games. "Sooner
two ino re in the si
18
of 24, won back-co-back
10
games
in
the
AL
West.
road
games.
·!
or later, the score will be such
G uerrero's solo ho mer a
•
"
H
o
pefully
Seattl
e
w
ill
gam
es
for
the
first
time
"
s
ince
that we'll get a win.
•
Andy Tracy's RBI single.
winning three straight at Oakstruggle a little bit and give us
Bonds fell one homer short
a· chance to get back in the
land o n April 13-1 5.
of Frank Howard's major
race." Giambi said.
league mark of 10 homers in
Brewers~
In other /U_ games, it was
six games set May 12- 18,
Minnesota 12, Seattle 11;
Gabe Kapler hit a solo
1968, for the Washington SenCleveland
0;
and
D
etroit
3,
ators.
Jimmy H aynes (5-4) allowed Texas S,Tampa Bay 2. "
In other NL games, it was
Boston at N ew York and
San Diego 6, Houston 2; six hits in 7" 2-3 scoreless
innings,
and
Raul
C
asanova
Anaheim
at Baltimore were
Florida 3, Adanta 2; Montreal
3, New York 0 ; Chicago 5, and Jose He rnandez drove in rained out.
Jo hnny Damon , ma~ng his
Cincinnati 3; Milwaukee 3, St. two runs apiece as Milwaukee
beat
visiting
St.
Louis.
first
appearance in Ka sas C ity
Louis 0; and Colorado I 1 1, Los
H aynes hasn't given up a since the Royals trade im to
Angeles 8.
run
in his last 17 innings, and Oakland in January, •singled
Pittsburgh's
game
at
Philadelphia was rained out struck out five, w alked one with one o ut in the eighth
inning against R oyals starter
and will be made up as part of and hit two.
811
Darryl
Kile
(6c3)
took
the
Sup pan (2-4).
Jeff
a twinight
doubleheader·
loss.
Frank Menechino foUowed
Wednesday.
with
a single to knock out
Arizona
starter
Brian
Suppm, and Giambi greeted
Anderson (2-3) walked Bonds
Grimsley by hitting his 1Oth
twice and ·gave up an oppohomer to brea k a 1-1 tie.
site- field single to him in the
"i was trying to get a .pitc h a
fifth . Reliever Byung- Hyun
little
up in the strike zone to
N
eifi
Perez's
RBI
triple
Kim got out of a Jam by retiring the Giants just befo re keyed a fo ur-run seve nth elevate it," Gian1bi said. "He
Bonds came up in the sixth, inning,•rallying Colo rado over left that o ne ove r th e plate, and
I ended up hittin g a home
then got hi1n to pop up to left visiting Los An geles.
The Rockies, trailing 7-6 r un .
field to start the seventh.
after
C had Kreuter's solo
Barry Zito scattered six hits
Grace led Arizona's 15-hit
attack, with a pair of doubles homer in the top of the sev- and allowed one unearned run
Come out to the FARMERS BANK
and a two-run single. Steve enth , scored aU four of their in &lt;'&gt; 2-3 innings filt Oa kl and.
Finley hit a two-run ,double runs with two outs·off reliev- Jim M eci r (1-4) got four outs
Pomeroy location on May 25th ·
that made it 5- 1 in the fifth , ers Matt H erges (1-4) and for the win and Jason lsringhause n pitched the ninth fo r
and hit a solo homer in eighth. Terry Adams.
from 11:00 • 1:30 and let us
Despite yieldin g Kreuter's his eighth save.
Jay B e ~ had rwo RJlls, Regthank you for choosing FARMERS
" Z ito pitched a tremendo us
gie Sanders drove in a run on ho mer, Gabe White (1 -3) got
a sacrifice fly, Anderson singled the win. Jose Jimenez pitched game for us," A's manage r Art
BANK. We'll have hotdogs,
in a run and Tony Womack two innings fo r his ninth save. Howe said. " H e deserved to
refreshments, an employee
win. T hat's the only downside
had the other run-scoring
of the game."
groundout for the DiamondA1k about our
COStume COntest that you WOn'~
backs, who are 6-2 in their last
Low APR on tbe SEED MONEY
want to miss, drawings for
eight games.
"Home Adv.nlage" Equity Line of Credit.
"We've been really strug·
FREE home improvement gifts
gling to score some runs," FinA 's get back to .500
and much, much more! We value your patronage and hope that you
The Oakland Athletics have ·
ley said. "And today, we were
Doug Mientkiewicz went
finally banging the ball around gone from I 0 ga mes under to
will join us for a day of fun.
a litde bit and getting some .500 in just three weeks.
4-for- 5 with four RBis as host
Jason Giambi hit a three- run Minnesota outslugged Seattle
runs across the plate with hits
instead of home runs."
homer in the eighth innin g off in a meeting of th e teams with
IMOiiiiiOi Fete I
Russ Ortiz (6-3) gave up Jason Grimsley to lead O ak- the best records in baseball.
Minnesota's Brad Radke,
eight hits and five runs, and land to its seventh straight
struggled with his control
throughout, walking four."

Rockies 11,
Dodgers 8

Middlr-port • Pomeroy , Oh1'o

111

•
'&gt;

._h-

(Robens 4·3). 3:05p.m.

M ilwaukee S. St Louis 0

'&gt;o '"n" · IVI&lt;~y ~~ !lJOI • Vol '• 1 Nu

HOftletowll Newspaper

son 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
~
- ( - 1 . o } ota..otond
( 8 - f.2), 7:05 p.m.
ctic:ago Wlll18 Sox (K.Wela Q-1 ) at T~
to (carpenter 4-1 ), 7:tl5 p.m.
&lt;
Texas (Holling HI) ot Tlfl1)ll Bay (
1·3), 7:15 p.m.
·

Anaheim (Schoenewels 3-2) at Bahimore

San Diego 6, Houston 2

.

:

Booton (MartineZ~) at N.Y. VI(Musslna 4-4), 1:05 p.m.
•
Anaheim (Ortiz 3-3) II BaliMnl (JaM- "

16
Texas
St. Lools (Benes 3·3) at Milwlukee
Monday'o s (Sheets 4-3), 1:tl5 p"m.
Toronto 10, Chicago While Sox 3
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