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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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19
18

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17
24
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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
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San~
24 " 21
24 22
Los Angeles
23 22
Colorado
san Francisco 23 22

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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

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ClnciMell (lol 0-2) II~ CUIIo
(3-2), 2:20 p.m.
LOS Angeles (Brown 5-2) a1 Cooado

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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
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20
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28
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24 .455 5112
32 · .273 13 112

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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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"'1'
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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

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tc ,rv.

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,stamp hQMors American's vetera.ns

A5

A2

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·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)

•

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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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:ahctlo••-11 .....

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

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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
ClnclnMII (Femondoz 5-2) ot l:hlcoga
- y 'o Gomn
Cubs (Ueber 3-3), 2:20 p.m.
Anzona (Baflsta 1·3) at San l)lego (Serra· Ananeim al Baltimore, ppd., nlin
Boston al N.Y. Yankees. ppcl., rain
no H ), 5:05 p .m.
0otro1t 3, Clontond 0
PittSburgh ( Ritchie 0·5) a1 Philadelphia
Texas 5. Ta~a Bay 2
'
(Person 4-4), 7:05p.m.
Minnesota 12, Seattte 11
Ftorida"j'enny 4·0) a1 N.Y. Mots (Appier
oakland 4, Kansas City 1
2·5). 7. 0 p .m.
· Colorado {Thomson 0·2) at san Francisco

M1lp County"s

ctic:ago Whill SOx (O.Wolo 3-4) at
•
(Harnltoo 1·2), 7;05 p.lll
reus (Gtym 1-3) otT- Bay (Roee
2), 7:15p.m.
.
OOtclolll (U&lt;io 11-2) 11 Kansao Cly

ThuNdoy'o-

WHI

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20

Anot1elm

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18

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-(Cone II-G) II N.Y. Y - ("-'". .,
!Mio 1-3), 7:tl5 p.m.
....
Dotrall (SIIMia Nl il a..otond

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

•

�(,

The o.Jiy Senllnll• PlgiA3

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
Rap to be

...

Democrats doubt school fun·ding fixed

Ohio weather
Th....... May24

-

BY .lcHI McCMnf\'
ASSOCIAlED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Republican leaders
in the Senate say ~e two-year, $45 billion
budget it passed will take care of an Ohio
Supreme Court finding that the way the
state funds itS schools is unconstitutional,
Minority Democraa are sure that ir
won't end the public schools' tO-year
fight with the sratc:. They predicted the
court would rule against the state after
hearing arguments from both sides next
month and . order that lawmakers try
agai~ - and fast.
"We're going to be back here righr
about Labor Day when the court says,
'Do ir right and do it quickly;" said Sen.
Michael Shoemaker, a Bourneville
Democrat and the . Senare Education

"'
i llo:wloM iw• l •

Yes, tri..;county, more rain
Friday with the temperature
More rain is in the forecast reaching the 60s.
for the tri-county region.
Forecast
Forecasters say showers . are
Today: Thunderstorms poslikely with a chance of thunderstorms today. The high sible. High 67, low 51.
Friday: Showers. High 66,
temperature will be in the 60s.
More rain is possible tonight low 50.
Saturday: Showers. High 66,
with the lows in the upper 40s
low 50.
and low 50s.
Sunday: Showers. High 65,
It will be mosdy cloudy
with another chance of rain low 49.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) -The ·second concert of the season .at
Riverbend Music Center near Cincinnati has been cimceled
b~cause of high water from the Ohio River.
The appearance by The Black Crowes and Oasis on Thursday
night was called off and will not be rescheduled, officials said
The season-opening concert last Sunday featuring the Charlie Daniels Band was postponed because the Riverbend pavilion was inundated. That concert has been rescheduled for May
31.
~
!._ I

J.

January. .

Dr. Leslie Wolf, 41, of Waynesville, filled prescriptions for
painkillen and sleep medications for herself by using other doctors' federal licenses ro prescribe medicine, prosecutors said.
· 'Wolf pleaded guilty to the charges on Wednesday and could
be: sentenced ro up to a year in prison and fined $2,500 when
sile re!Urns to Warren County Common Pleas Court for sen. rencing.
Wolf and her lawyer declined comment.
· Wolf was arrested Jan. 27 at a Bellbrook pharmacy after. a
plurmacist became suspicious of repetitive calls for a prescription, Warren CountY Prosecutor Tim Oliver said.

Tuesday and was charged with drug trafficlcing and possession
9f crimil ai. ~~-troopers said he drew attention to himself by .,
~s
followm~ anotlie~ veh1cle too dosely:
.
.
Herpandez •WaS easrbound on 1-70 about 10 ririles from the
PORTSMOU''ffl((:\P} - Srudents and faculty at Shawnee
State University f1ie "urging trustees to try to keep President Indi~na stat~ line when he was stopped, ttoop'ers said. After a
James Chapman, who announced plans last week. to leave after drug-sniffing dog reacted to Hernandez's truck, the cocaine was
found in a false compartment in the pickup's bed, troopers said.
his contract expires June 30.
The Ohio Highway Patrol's drug enforcement teams generChapman and trustees have declined to say whether he -was
offered a contract to continue as president. He will stay through ally work on the. "ports" or where people enter the state on
November as ·a consultant and help the university during the intersrates, said Sgt. Mark Gooding, who works at the patrol's
transition to another president, they said.
Eaton post.
"We have an agreement that we won't talk about thia thing,"
said George Clayton, chairman of the board of rrustees.
Mark Landes, a Columbus lawyer who represents the university, said an agreement berween the board and Chapman bars
DAYTON (AP) -John Glenn, former astronaut and U.S.
them from commenting.
J~! l'\~'

· StudeiitS ..pport president-

• REEBOK· ASICS
.EASnAND- DEXTER· KEDS
·HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS
•

n. Shoe .Place

Glenn chosen for UD IWird

992•5627

211 N. leoo.'UI

Middleport

Troopers find 134 pounds of coke -TRIVIA
LEWISBURG (AP) -:- State troopers made a routine traffic
stop on Interstate 70 in west-central Ohio and then found 'nl• llr'llkllw, boll of Pearl
Hdrbor: Lepcy of Attack, wu .
drugs hidden in the back of the pickup truck -~ 134 pounds of the only inchor on the scene te·
cocaine worth an estimated $6 million dollan.
portina tbe collapse of the
Leobardo Hernandez, 41, of Silver Spring, Md., was arrested Berlin Will in 1989.

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Designed by Carl Herman
of Carlsbad, the stamp features a photograph of the
United States fbg. The phrase
"Honoring Veterans" appears
on the top of the stamp while
the phrase "Continuing to
Serve" appears on the bottom.
"The issuance of a stamp
that honors our nation's veterans so close to Memorial
Day is very appropriate," said
John Blaettnar, Pomeroy
mayor and U.S. Air Force veteran.

The stamp can be purchased during regular working hours at the post office.

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"Memorial Day is a very
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women who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our country.

Tour

. chants' fund. The schedule for
the upcoming Pomeroy Blues .
and Jazz Festival also \vas dis'
cussed.
It was decided to use red
tl~gs to mark stores which
will remain open before or
during the performances .
The Sternwheel Festival
dates will be the last weekend
of · September.
it
was
announced. ·

Bids

befo~ a~tually awarding the
contract. That process usually
takes at least two weeks. If
problems are found with the
low bid, the next lowest bid .is
reviewed, and so on, as long as
the next · bids are under the
estimate," Pedigo said.

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POMEROY - Members
of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, will place
flags on veterans' graves at
Beech Grove Cemetery at 6
p.m. today.

e-mail: .news@mydailysentinel.com

Hearing Aid Center

''

Audrey Etltel Mullins

i

drUg charges.

servkes

BURLINGHAM ~ The
ttl th celebration of Memorial Day at the Burlingham
Cemetery will be: at 1:t5 p.m.
Monday with the FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, honor guard conducting services in the ceme. G~IPOLIS - Audrey Ethel Mullins, 89, Crown City,,
tery.
died Wednesday, May 23, 200t, at Holzer Senior Care Cenrer,
SYRACUSE - April J.
A program will foUow ~t
Gallipolis.
McGrath Counts of Syracuse the church with the Rev. Tad
She W2l born Nov. 9, 1911 in Guyan Township, Gallia is nor the April McGrath
Cuclder speaking. Denver
Cpunty, the daughrer of the !are Eura E. Wallace and Verba
charged
with
arson
In
Meigs
Rice and a barbershop quarS~unders Wallace.
·
County Common
Pleas ret, Coleen Brickles, and
, :·~ homemaker, she was a member of Chapel Hill ChuJCh of Court.
Junior White, Joe Colburn
Chrisr, Gallipolis and attended Elizabeth Chapel Church.
and the Bungtown Band wiD
Surviving are five sons, Ralph Eddie (Katie) Mullins of Galpresent music.
lipolis, Howard D. (Nancy) Mullins, of Crown City, Lyndall V.
Dinner for a donation will
(Barbara) Mullins ofWest Jeffenon, Randall R. (Kathy) Mullins ·
SYRACUSE Annual be served by the Burlingham
o~ Middleport, and Kendall L. (Debbie) Mullins of GaUipolis;
memorial services will be Modern Woodmen at the haD
stepsons, Leon MuUins ofTexas and Harold Mullins of Aorida·
held ~t Syracuse Nazarene to raise money for the Meigs
sisters, Thelma (Studie) Puckett of Mercerville, and Vivian
Church at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. County Emergency Medical
Moore of Gallipolis; and a brother, Dillard Wallace of Logan; 19
Service.
grandchildren; and 35 great-grandchildren.
.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Mark E. Mullins; a ·son, Norval Dewey Mullins; a sister,
It is a fitting tribute to all
Delma King; and brothen,Russell and Oral Wallace.
American patriots."
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Willis Funeral Home. Pastor Jim Lusher will offici~te and burial· will be in
Diana Wood, clerk at the
Pllge
A1
Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
Pomeroy Post Office, said sevFriday, 5 to 8 p.m.
eul inquiries have been made
geared toward promoting
about
the stamp's availability.
civic pride.
POMEROY - Horace: ~Bud" Abliott, Pomeroy, died unexpc~y on Wednesday. May 23, 2001:ar Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. Arrangements are being completed by FisherAcree Funeral Home and will be: anqounced.

ARLINGTON, Texas- Otis,Franklin Simpson, 85, Arlingron, Texas, died September 10, 1994, after a long illness.
PHOENIX,Ariz. - Word has been received of the death of
A memorial service was held for Mr. Bruce H . Tubbs, 44, of Pl!oenix, Ariz., who died from injuries
Simpson on September 18, 1994, at -- susrained in an automobile accident.
Shannon Rose Hill Chapel, Ft. Worth, 't He was born May 17,} 956 in Phoenix, son of Bill and Sue
"rexas.
·
~Tubbs of Syracuse and Margaret and Allen Sala of Chino, Ariz.
,,
Born June 3, 1909, in Shreve'p ort, He was a development test technician ·for Allied Signai/HonLa., he was the son of Robert Edward 1 eywell _C_otp. .
..
.
. .
and Bessie Adelia Laure'nce Simpson. i SurVJvmg, m addinon to hJS parents, are his Wife, Tammy, and
He was a retired vice-president and 1 rwo daughters, HoUy and Samantha, a grandson, a sister and
general manager of Liuon Industries in !,!' brother-10-law, Mary and Dean KeUer, a brother and sister-inAthens and was a member of the law, William and Michelle Tubbs, and several nieces and
Trustee Ac~demy of Ohio University, . nephews.
the Masomc Lodge, the Rotary Club, '
and the Lion's Oub.
--------------------Sidney Irene Douglas Simpson, 82,Arlington,Texas, died July
keeping in constant contact
13, 2000, after a short illness.
·
with local emergency man, A memorial service was held for Mrs. Simpson on July t9, •
agers and are monitoring the
2000, at Shannon Rose Hill Chapel, Ft. Worth, Texas.
.
situation from the state Emer- · Born October 4, 19t7, in Burlingham, she was the daughter
gency Operations Center.
of Jesse ,H . and Roma E. Stanley Douglas. ·She was a home- in a time of crisis" and that
' maker who dedicated her life to her husband, Otis, and soh, crews dispatched to the scenes
:Mark, daughter-in-law, Donna, and granddaughter,Janean. ~
foUowing the storm had perIn 1971, the Simpson familt moved to E~nis, Texas, wh&lt;Je formed "a wonderful job
Mr. Simpson rook the p~sitiQn Q~ ;Vice-pre~di:nt for E!'s assisting victims."
. !&lt;Business &lt;For.rtu: ~ ~ff b~. fl~liecune pre'Sii!erit of
Gov. Bob· Taft declared a
·Business Forms in Miami, Aa. Upon retirement, Mr. and M . ·' state of emergency Thesday for
:Simpson moved to Arlington, Texas. ·
' ·
J Meigs County following a
: They had many friends in both Athens and Arlington, Tex~ . series of torrential rains and . appearance, it was . suggested
· Mr. Simpson was the oldest child in his family of two sisters high winds, which resulted in vacant buildings be "spruced
and a half-sister. Mrs. Simpson · was 'the youngest child in her heavy Oood and wind damage up," with cleaning of the
family of one sister and three brothers.
throughout much . of the fronts including windows, and
decorating the inside.
Relatives in the Athens area include sisters~in-law, Pat · county.
The treasurer reported a
Buechler and Barb pouglas; brother-in-law, Mickey Buechler;
Taft's declaration is designed
balance
of $3,000 in the mernieces and nephews, Wilbur Joe Van Dyke, Bill Val'\ Dyke, Willis · to help deploy the Ohio
]antes Van Dyke, Willa Jean Van Dyke Hawk, Wand~ Jane Van Department ofTransportation
Dyke Dorr, Jacie Van Dyke, Milton (Butch) Douglas, Melissa . and other state-level agencies
Douglas Willard, Lana Do~glas Carney, Terri Douglas McClure, , to determine the amount of
Lori Douglas Keenan, Johnny Douglas, Ta1,n ea Douglas, Jill damage and the types of road
Douglas; several great nieces and nephews.
repair resources needed.
faomPipA1
Both Otis and Sidney were members of the Presbyterian
The National Weather SerChurch in Athens.
...vice confirmed that an "F 1"
f A graveside service will be held at I 0 a.m. on Saturday, May tornado-a tornado with speeds determine if documenration
: 26, 2001, at Burlingham Cemetery in Burlingham. Officiating of73- to 1 12-mph winds had, from the apparent low bidder
t will be Pastor David Felty.
\!1 fact, struck southwestern is complete and correct,
l Arrangements are being handled by Fisher-Acree Funeral IJeigs County, damaging
1 Home in Pomeroy.
lrees, homes and farm build•
ings in the Danville and
Hanesville communities.
•
The NWS said the tornado
~
was 200 yards in width, with
'
sporadic touchdowns. The
USS-22~
total length of · damage
Grn~a-m
stretched
over a- four-mile
Glnlllll Ellctrlc - 51~
GKNLY-11
radi~s, beginning two miles
Harley Davldlcn- 471.
we'st
of Danville and extendKnwt-11~
ing, northeast to · rwo miles
Krogar-Zilo
LJrdl End- 38~
nonhwest of Hanesville.
L.ld.-17
, Ohio · EMA officials are
Oek HI Fnn:ial-15
OVB-25\
BBT-38\

LEBANON (AP) -A former emergency room physician at
Kettering Memorial Hospital and teacher at the Wright Srate
University medical school has been convicted on seven felony

24-26 as POW,f Days, a time when American Legion Auxiliary membel's and wlunteers take to local stnlets, grocery stores and shoppi~ centers Ill distribute the ~ paper memorial flower, made by
hospitalized Y8lenln&amp;, in exchange for a contribution. All proceeds
collected will go toward helpl~ locai~~Qterans and their families.
Pictured with Blaettnar is, left, Marjorie Fetty, Poppy chairmlll, and
Giadys Cummi~. president of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit
No. 39. (Tony M. leach photo)
•

placed

fnNn

otis Franklin Simpson and
Sidney Irene Douglas Simpson

ER doctor, teldaet convicted

Pornerc7t MII)OI' John Blaettnar signs a proclamation declarlf1 May
,

ct:

senator, has been chosen to receive the University of Dayton's
200t Leadership withVirtue Award.
The university's alumni association selected Glenn for the
award, which will be presented during a special dinner on campus in September.
"He's a bona fide., hero," said Jack Proud, CEO of Monarch
Marking and past president of the University of Dayton
National AlullUli Association, which presents the award.
" He's devoted much of his life to public service. He's a modern-day model for other leaders ro emulate."
Glenn, the first man to orbit Earth, also is the oldest astronaut
to fly into space and the only Ohioan to win four six-year
terms in the U.S. Senate.
·

Proclamation

t•

POMEROY - Robert "Mike" Newdl, 55, Pome , died
on Monday, May 2t, 2001 at his home. ·
roy,
was born on Oct. 3, 1945 in Clifton, W.Va., son of the !are
nee 0. and Alva Stewart N~II. He was a mechanic for
RSO I AEP. He was a veteran of the: U.S. Arr1ry during tht Viet
Nam Conllic:t, and was a member of the S~rt-Johnson Post
9926, Veterans of Foreign Wars of Mason, W.Va., the Fr.orernal
Order of Eagles 3692 of Pomeroy, and Disabled American Veterans Chapter 53:
Surviving are his wife of 23 years, Rebecca
Rothgeb
Nc:well, Pomeroy; a stepdaughter and her husband, Sracy L. and
Bnu Dodson of Middleport; a stepson, Troy Yanlwns · of
Pomeroy; three granddaughrers: Megan Tripp,Ambc:rTripp and
Haley Tnpp; a stepgrandson, Brandon Dodson; a nephew and
ruece, Jeff Newell and Leann Spaulding; a sister, Wilma Scarberry ofVmton; a brother, Don Newell of Clifton, W.Va.; a
brother and sister-in-bw, Dean and Martha Newell of Mason·
and several ?ther nieces and nephews.
'
Bes1des hu parents, he was preceded in death by his sisten
Sharon ''jane" Newell and Nina Dailey; and his brother:
Clarence "Buck" Newell.
Services will be held on Thursday, May 24, 2001 at I p.m . at
Fogelsong Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va., with AI Hartson
officiating. Burial will f9Uow at Graham Cemerery in New
Haven.
Milirary graveside rites \Vill be conducted by Stewart-Johnson. Post 9926, VFw, and Smith-Capeharr American Legion
, Post 140.

The school-funding solution, agreed to
by both the: House and ·Scnare, and Taft,
addressed the concerns of the court, said
Sen. Jeffjacobson, a Pbillipsburg Republican who took the lead in the Senate in
working out the plan.
KThe Supreme Court deserves credit
for undencanding the issue, knowing
cxac:dy what is wrong;• Jacobson said
·''This process has proven them correct:'
The plan retommends spending
S4,8t4 on each Ohio schoolchild next
year, compared with $4,490 if no change
is made. It would spend about $4,949 the
following year. ·
Lawmakers said they had to scramble
to fill an $800 million shon&amp;U · that
emerged after Taft propo~ his budget jn

Committee's rmking Democrat.
That was shortly before the Senate
passed the budget biD 2t-t2, strictly
along party lines with majority Republicans prevailing.
The House, which also approwd the
budget on a party-line mte, was to be:
uked Thursday to agree ro Senate
changes in the bill.
That request was expected to fail, sa'ring up a House-Senate committee: to
work out· dilferences between the two
plans. Lawmakers hope to have the budget ready to send to Gov. Bob Taft for his
consideration next week.
The court has ruled twice: that the
school funding system's overreliance on
local property taxes creates disparities
between rich and poor districts.

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Robe: l'MIIre' Nwiel

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The o.Jiy Senllnll• PlgiA3

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
Rap to be

...

Democrats doubt school fun·ding fixed

Ohio weather
Th....... May24

-

BY .lcHI McCMnf\'
ASSOCIAlED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Republican leaders
in the Senate say ~e two-year, $45 billion
budget it passed will take care of an Ohio
Supreme Court finding that the way the
state funds itS schools is unconstitutional,
Minority Democraa are sure that ir
won't end the public schools' tO-year
fight with the sratc:. They predicted the
court would rule against the state after
hearing arguments from both sides next
month and . order that lawmakers try
agai~ - and fast.
"We're going to be back here righr
about Labor Day when the court says,
'Do ir right and do it quickly;" said Sen.
Michael Shoemaker, a Bourneville
Democrat and the . Senare Education

"'
i llo:wloM iw• l •

Yes, tri..;county, more rain
Friday with the temperature
More rain is in the forecast reaching the 60s.
for the tri-county region.
Forecast
Forecasters say showers . are
Today: Thunderstorms poslikely with a chance of thunderstorms today. The high sible. High 67, low 51.
Friday: Showers. High 66,
temperature will be in the 60s.
More rain is possible tonight low 50.
Saturday: Showers. High 66,
with the lows in the upper 40s
low 50.
and low 50s.
Sunday: Showers. High 65,
It will be mosdy cloudy
with another chance of rain low 49.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) -The ·second concert of the season .at
Riverbend Music Center near Cincinnati has been cimceled
b~cause of high water from the Ohio River.
The appearance by The Black Crowes and Oasis on Thursday
night was called off and will not be rescheduled, officials said
The season-opening concert last Sunday featuring the Charlie Daniels Band was postponed because the Riverbend pavilion was inundated. That concert has been rescheduled for May
31.
~
!._ I

J.

January. .

Dr. Leslie Wolf, 41, of Waynesville, filled prescriptions for
painkillen and sleep medications for herself by using other doctors' federal licenses ro prescribe medicine, prosecutors said.
· 'Wolf pleaded guilty to the charges on Wednesday and could
be: sentenced ro up to a year in prison and fined $2,500 when
sile re!Urns to Warren County Common Pleas Court for sen. rencing.
Wolf and her lawyer declined comment.
· Wolf was arrested Jan. 27 at a Bellbrook pharmacy after. a
plurmacist became suspicious of repetitive calls for a prescription, Warren CountY Prosecutor Tim Oliver said.

Tuesday and was charged with drug trafficlcing and possession
9f crimil ai. ~~-troopers said he drew attention to himself by .,
~s
followm~ anotlie~ veh1cle too dosely:
.
.
Herpandez •WaS easrbound on 1-70 about 10 ririles from the
PORTSMOU''ffl((:\P} - Srudents and faculty at Shawnee
State University f1ie "urging trustees to try to keep President Indi~na stat~ line when he was stopped, ttoop'ers said. After a
James Chapman, who announced plans last week. to leave after drug-sniffing dog reacted to Hernandez's truck, the cocaine was
found in a false compartment in the pickup's bed, troopers said.
his contract expires June 30.
The Ohio Highway Patrol's drug enforcement teams generChapman and trustees have declined to say whether he -was
offered a contract to continue as president. He will stay through ally work on the. "ports" or where people enter the state on
November as ·a consultant and help the university during the intersrates, said Sgt. Mark Gooding, who works at the patrol's
transition to another president, they said.
Eaton post.
"We have an agreement that we won't talk about thia thing,"
said George Clayton, chairman of the board of rrustees.
Mark Landes, a Columbus lawyer who represents the university, said an agreement berween the board and Chapman bars
DAYTON (AP) -John Glenn, former astronaut and U.S.
them from commenting.
J~! l'\~'

· StudeiitS ..pport president-

• REEBOK· ASICS
.EASnAND- DEXTER· KEDS
·HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS
•

n. Shoe .Place

Glenn chosen for UD IWird

992•5627

211 N. leoo.'UI

Middleport

Troopers find 134 pounds of coke -TRIVIA
LEWISBURG (AP) -:- State troopers made a routine traffic
stop on Interstate 70 in west-central Ohio and then found 'nl• llr'llkllw, boll of Pearl
Hdrbor: Lepcy of Attack, wu .
drugs hidden in the back of the pickup truck -~ 134 pounds of the only inchor on the scene te·
cocaine worth an estimated $6 million dollan.
portina tbe collapse of the
Leobardo Hernandez, 41, of Silver Spring, Md., was arrested Berlin Will in 1989.

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United States fbg. The phrase
"Honoring Veterans" appears
on the top of the stamp while
the phrase "Continuing to
Serve" appears on the bottom.
"The issuance of a stamp
that honors our nation's veterans so close to Memorial
Day is very appropriate," said
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mayor and U.S. Air Force veteran.

The stamp can be purchased during regular working hours at the post office.

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Tour

. chants' fund. The schedule for
the upcoming Pomeroy Blues .
and Jazz Festival also \vas dis'
cussed.
It was decided to use red
tl~gs to mark stores which
will remain open before or
during the performances .
The Sternwheel Festival
dates will be the last weekend
of · September.
it
was
announced. ·

Bids

befo~ a~tually awarding the
contract. That process usually
takes at least two weeks. If
problems are found with the
low bid, the next lowest bid .is
reviewed, and so on, as long as
the next · bids are under the
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POMEROY - Members
of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, will place
flags on veterans' graves at
Beech Grove Cemetery at 6
p.m. today.

e-mail: .news@mydailysentinel.com

Hearing Aid Center

''

Audrey Etltel Mullins

i

drUg charges.

servkes

BURLINGHAM ~ The
ttl th celebration of Memorial Day at the Burlingham
Cemetery will be: at 1:t5 p.m.
Monday with the FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, honor guard conducting services in the ceme. G~IPOLIS - Audrey Ethel Mullins, 89, Crown City,,
tery.
died Wednesday, May 23, 200t, at Holzer Senior Care Cenrer,
SYRACUSE - April J.
A program will foUow ~t
Gallipolis.
McGrath Counts of Syracuse the church with the Rev. Tad
She W2l born Nov. 9, 1911 in Guyan Township, Gallia is nor the April McGrath
Cuclder speaking. Denver
Cpunty, the daughrer of the !are Eura E. Wallace and Verba
charged
with
arson
In
Meigs
Rice and a barbershop quarS~unders Wallace.
·
County Common
Pleas ret, Coleen Brickles, and
, :·~ homemaker, she was a member of Chapel Hill ChuJCh of Court.
Junior White, Joe Colburn
Chrisr, Gallipolis and attended Elizabeth Chapel Church.
and the Bungtown Band wiD
Surviving are five sons, Ralph Eddie (Katie) Mullins of Galpresent music.
lipolis, Howard D. (Nancy) Mullins, of Crown City, Lyndall V.
Dinner for a donation will
(Barbara) Mullins ofWest Jeffenon, Randall R. (Kathy) Mullins ·
SYRACUSE Annual be served by the Burlingham
o~ Middleport, and Kendall L. (Debbie) Mullins of GaUipolis;
memorial services will be Modern Woodmen at the haD
stepsons, Leon MuUins ofTexas and Harold Mullins of Aorida·
held ~t Syracuse Nazarene to raise money for the Meigs
sisters, Thelma (Studie) Puckett of Mercerville, and Vivian
Church at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. County Emergency Medical
Moore of Gallipolis; and a brother, Dillard Wallace of Logan; 19
Service.
grandchildren; and 35 great-grandchildren.
.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Mark E. Mullins; a ·son, Norval Dewey Mullins; a sister,
It is a fitting tribute to all
Delma King; and brothen,Russell and Oral Wallace.
American patriots."
Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Willis Funeral Home. Pastor Jim Lusher will offici~te and burial· will be in
Diana Wood, clerk at the
Pllge
A1
Ridgelawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
Pomeroy Post Office, said sevFriday, 5 to 8 p.m.
eul inquiries have been made
geared toward promoting
about
the stamp's availability.
civic pride.
POMEROY - Horace: ~Bud" Abliott, Pomeroy, died unexpc~y on Wednesday. May 23, 2001:ar Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis. Arrangements are being completed by FisherAcree Funeral Home and will be: anqounced.

ARLINGTON, Texas- Otis,Franklin Simpson, 85, Arlingron, Texas, died September 10, 1994, after a long illness.
PHOENIX,Ariz. - Word has been received of the death of
A memorial service was held for Mr. Bruce H . Tubbs, 44, of Pl!oenix, Ariz., who died from injuries
Simpson on September 18, 1994, at -- susrained in an automobile accident.
Shannon Rose Hill Chapel, Ft. Worth, 't He was born May 17,} 956 in Phoenix, son of Bill and Sue
"rexas.
·
~Tubbs of Syracuse and Margaret and Allen Sala of Chino, Ariz.
,,
Born June 3, 1909, in Shreve'p ort, He was a development test technician ·for Allied Signai/HonLa., he was the son of Robert Edward 1 eywell _C_otp. .
..
.
. .
and Bessie Adelia Laure'nce Simpson. i SurVJvmg, m addinon to hJS parents, are his Wife, Tammy, and
He was a retired vice-president and 1 rwo daughters, HoUy and Samantha, a grandson, a sister and
general manager of Liuon Industries in !,!' brother-10-law, Mary and Dean KeUer, a brother and sister-inAthens and was a member of the law, William and Michelle Tubbs, and several nieces and
Trustee Ac~demy of Ohio University, . nephews.
the Masomc Lodge, the Rotary Club, '
and the Lion's Oub.
--------------------Sidney Irene Douglas Simpson, 82,Arlington,Texas, died July
keeping in constant contact
13, 2000, after a short illness.
·
with local emergency man, A memorial service was held for Mrs. Simpson on July t9, •
agers and are monitoring the
2000, at Shannon Rose Hill Chapel, Ft. Worth, Texas.
.
situation from the state Emer- · Born October 4, 19t7, in Burlingham, she was the daughter
gency Operations Center.
of Jesse ,H . and Roma E. Stanley Douglas. ·She was a home- in a time of crisis" and that
' maker who dedicated her life to her husband, Otis, and soh, crews dispatched to the scenes
:Mark, daughter-in-law, Donna, and granddaughter,Janean. ~
foUowing the storm had perIn 1971, the Simpson familt moved to E~nis, Texas, wh&lt;Je formed "a wonderful job
Mr. Simpson rook the p~sitiQn Q~ ;Vice-pre~di:nt for E!'s assisting victims."
. !&lt;Business &lt;For.rtu: ~ ~ff b~. fl~liecune pre'Sii!erit of
Gov. Bob· Taft declared a
·Business Forms in Miami, Aa. Upon retirement, Mr. and M . ·' state of emergency Thesday for
:Simpson moved to Arlington, Texas. ·
' ·
J Meigs County following a
: They had many friends in both Athens and Arlington, Tex~ . series of torrential rains and . appearance, it was . suggested
· Mr. Simpson was the oldest child in his family of two sisters high winds, which resulted in vacant buildings be "spruced
and a half-sister. Mrs. Simpson · was 'the youngest child in her heavy Oood and wind damage up," with cleaning of the
family of one sister and three brothers.
throughout much . of the fronts including windows, and
decorating the inside.
Relatives in the Athens area include sisters~in-law, Pat · county.
The treasurer reported a
Buechler and Barb pouglas; brother-in-law, Mickey Buechler;
Taft's declaration is designed
balance
of $3,000 in the mernieces and nephews, Wilbur Joe Van Dyke, Bill Val'\ Dyke, Willis · to help deploy the Ohio
]antes Van Dyke, Willa Jean Van Dyke Hawk, Wand~ Jane Van Department ofTransportation
Dyke Dorr, Jacie Van Dyke, Milton (Butch) Douglas, Melissa . and other state-level agencies
Douglas Willard, Lana Do~glas Carney, Terri Douglas McClure, , to determine the amount of
Lori Douglas Keenan, Johnny Douglas, Ta1,n ea Douglas, Jill damage and the types of road
Douglas; several great nieces and nephews.
repair resources needed.
faomPipA1
Both Otis and Sidney were members of the Presbyterian
The National Weather SerChurch in Athens.
...vice confirmed that an "F 1"
f A graveside service will be held at I 0 a.m. on Saturday, May tornado-a tornado with speeds determine if documenration
: 26, 2001, at Burlingham Cemetery in Burlingham. Officiating of73- to 1 12-mph winds had, from the apparent low bidder
t will be Pastor David Felty.
\!1 fact, struck southwestern is complete and correct,
l Arrangements are being handled by Fisher-Acree Funeral IJeigs County, damaging
1 Home in Pomeroy.
lrees, homes and farm build•
ings in the Danville and
Hanesville communities.
•
The NWS said the tornado
~
was 200 yards in width, with
'
sporadic touchdowns. The
USS-22~
total length of · damage
Grn~a-m
stretched
over a- four-mile
Glnlllll Ellctrlc - 51~
GKNLY-11
radi~s, beginning two miles
Harley Davldlcn- 471.
we'st
of Danville and extendKnwt-11~
ing, northeast to · rwo miles
Krogar-Zilo
LJrdl End- 38~
nonhwest of Hanesville.
L.ld.-17
, Ohio · EMA officials are
Oek HI Fnn:ial-15
OVB-25\
BBT-38\

LEBANON (AP) -A former emergency room physician at
Kettering Memorial Hospital and teacher at the Wright Srate
University medical school has been convicted on seven felony

24-26 as POW,f Days, a time when American Legion Auxiliary membel's and wlunteers take to local stnlets, grocery stores and shoppi~ centers Ill distribute the ~ paper memorial flower, made by
hospitalized Y8lenln&amp;, in exchange for a contribution. All proceeds
collected will go toward helpl~ locai~~Qterans and their families.
Pictured with Blaettnar is, left, Marjorie Fetty, Poppy chairmlll, and
Giadys Cummi~. president of the American Legion Auxiliary Unit
No. 39. (Tony M. leach photo)
•

placed

fnNn

otis Franklin Simpson and
Sidney Irene Douglas Simpson

ER doctor, teldaet convicted

Pornerc7t MII)OI' John Blaettnar signs a proclamation declarlf1 May
,

ct:

senator, has been chosen to receive the University of Dayton's
200t Leadership withVirtue Award.
The university's alumni association selected Glenn for the
award, which will be presented during a special dinner on campus in September.
"He's a bona fide., hero," said Jack Proud, CEO of Monarch
Marking and past president of the University of Dayton
National AlullUli Association, which presents the award.
" He's devoted much of his life to public service. He's a modern-day model for other leaders ro emulate."
Glenn, the first man to orbit Earth, also is the oldest astronaut
to fly into space and the only Ohioan to win four six-year
terms in the U.S. Senate.
·

Proclamation

t•

POMEROY - Robert "Mike" Newdl, 55, Pome , died
on Monday, May 2t, 2001 at his home. ·
roy,
was born on Oct. 3, 1945 in Clifton, W.Va., son of the !are
nee 0. and Alva Stewart N~II. He was a mechanic for
RSO I AEP. He was a veteran of the: U.S. Arr1ry during tht Viet
Nam Conllic:t, and was a member of the S~rt-Johnson Post
9926, Veterans of Foreign Wars of Mason, W.Va., the Fr.orernal
Order of Eagles 3692 of Pomeroy, and Disabled American Veterans Chapter 53:
Surviving are his wife of 23 years, Rebecca
Rothgeb
Nc:well, Pomeroy; a stepdaughter and her husband, Sracy L. and
Bnu Dodson of Middleport; a stepson, Troy Yanlwns · of
Pomeroy; three granddaughrers: Megan Tripp,Ambc:rTripp and
Haley Tnpp; a stepgrandson, Brandon Dodson; a nephew and
ruece, Jeff Newell and Leann Spaulding; a sister, Wilma Scarberry ofVmton; a brother, Don Newell of Clifton, W.Va.; a
brother and sister-in-bw, Dean and Martha Newell of Mason·
and several ?ther nieces and nephews.
'
Bes1des hu parents, he was preceded in death by his sisten
Sharon ''jane" Newell and Nina Dailey; and his brother:
Clarence "Buck" Newell.
Services will be held on Thursday, May 24, 2001 at I p.m . at
Fogelsong Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va., with AI Hartson
officiating. Burial will f9Uow at Graham Cemerery in New
Haven.
Milirary graveside rites \Vill be conducted by Stewart-Johnson. Post 9926, VFw, and Smith-Capeharr American Legion
, Post 140.

The school-funding solution, agreed to
by both the: House and ·Scnare, and Taft,
addressed the concerns of the court, said
Sen. Jeffjacobson, a Pbillipsburg Republican who took the lead in the Senate in
working out the plan.
KThe Supreme Court deserves credit
for undencanding the issue, knowing
cxac:dy what is wrong;• Jacobson said
·''This process has proven them correct:'
The plan retommends spending
S4,8t4 on each Ohio schoolchild next
year, compared with $4,490 if no change
is made. It would spend about $4,949 the
following year. ·
Lawmakers said they had to scramble
to fill an $800 million shon&amp;U · that
emerged after Taft propo~ his budget jn

Committee's rmking Democrat.
That was shortly before the Senate
passed the budget biD 2t-t2, strictly
along party lines with majority Republicans prevailing.
The House, which also approwd the
budget on a party-line mte, was to be:
uked Thursday to agree ro Senate
changes in the bill.
That request was expected to fail, sa'ring up a House-Senate committee: to
work out· dilferences between the two
plans. Lawmakers hope to have the budget ready to send to Gov. Bob Taft for his
consideration next week.
The court has ruled twice: that the
school funding system's overreliance on
local property taxes creates disparities
between rich and poor districts.

•

Robe: l'MIIre' Nwiel

.

.•

.

'

�e

· DEAR ABBY: I would like to
address this letter to the American
he~s ofWorld War II. I am a Dutch
lawyer, 63 years old, and retired. At
the time of that terrible war I ~ a
little boy between 4 and 8 yean old.
We lived in Balikpapan (Borneo,
I11donesia) until the day that women
and children had to quickly leave by
plane for Java, trying to escape the
ADVICE
onrushing Japanese army. My mother, sister a11d I arrived in Java with in a concentration camp. My mothnothing but the clothes and shoes er, sister and. I were also in a concenwe were wearing.
tration camp for . four years. It's a
My father, whom I loved dearly, miracle I survived. .
had to stay behind with the other
I owe my life to the American solemployees .of the Shell group in die... who served at that time in the
order to destroy the oil installations Pacific ,.and Europe. Because of
and plants so they couldn't be used rhem, the war ended much sooner. I
by the Japanese. I never . saw my want to thank them all for giving
far her again. After the war, I learned everything .they had and lived for, to
that he and the other men had died s.erve America and to rescue so many

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740·182·2156 • Fu: 9t2·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dear
Abby

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
OlaMKayHIU
Controllw

Cl•l•n• Hollllk:tl
Generll Mllrlllg8r

NATIONAL VIEWS

•

Senous
•

FBI needs to realize
damage in Me veigh boo-boo
j
•

•

• The (Youngstown, Ohio) Vindicator, May 20:
.
If a teacher taught a million kids, and three failed, he wouldn't start looking for other work. In most endeavors, three out
of a million would win accolades. And then there are the
exceptions.
·
A little over a week ago, it was announced that the FBI had
withheld fiom Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh's
defense team and prosecutors 3,135 documents- out of near1}' a billion documents generated.
That works out to an ermr rate of about three in a million.
Which doesn't make it right - even if, as it seems l'robable,
none of those particular documents changes the case against
McVeigh a whit.
It's not the overlooking, however, that is most rroublesome.
It's the timing, and the fact that even now, the FBI hasn't been
able to agree on who knew there was a problem, when they
knew it and what they did about it.
An honest oversight is defensible in most cases. Not recognizing the potential for damage when an oversight is discovered is far more serious.
• The (Toledo, Ohio) Blade, May 2l:
The experiment wasn't very scientific, but state Rep. Rex
Damschroder's carefully planned and supervised "cocktail
party" definitely made his point: Lowering the legal bloodalcohol limit from .10 percent to .08 percent won't mean an
end to social drinkiAg.
,
The Fremont Republican invit~d 11 guests of varying
heights and weights to his party. Each was served rh~e _alcoholic beverages by State Highway Patrol ·officers w1thin an
hour. The officers then administered breathalyzer test\ to the
.
guests to determine their blood alcohol levels.
None reached the legal limit. But all of the guests realized
that after three drinks that they were not in any condition to
operate a motor vehicle.
Damschroder has been trying for four years to lower .the
state's legal limit. He promised last fall that if re-elected, he
would try again, and this •week he will reintroduce his bill.
Maybe this time his colleagues will agree.

TODAY

IN ~

HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

••

:

_Today is Thursday, May 24, the I 44th day of 2001. There are
221 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 24, 1844, Samuel F.B. Morse transmitted the message, "What hath God wrought!" fiom Washington to Baltimore as he formally opened America's first telegraph line.
On this date:
·
In 1819, Queen Victoria was born in London.
In 1830, the first passenger railroad iQ the United States
begin service between Baltimore and Elliott's Mills, Md.
In 1881, some 200 people died when .the Canadian ferr:y
Princess Victoria sank near London, Ontario.
In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, was opened to traffic.
·.
·
· In 1941, the German batdeship Bismarck sank the British
dreadnought Hood in the North Adantic. ,
In 1962, astronaut Scott · Carpenter became the second
American to orbit the Earth as he flew aboard Aurora 7.
In 1976, Britain ancl France opened transadanric Concorde
serVice to Washington.
In 1977, in a surprise move, the Kremlin ousted Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny . fiom the Communist· Party's ruling
Politburo.
·
,
In 1980, Iran rejected a call by the World Court in The
Hague to release the American hostages.
In 1995, former British Prime ·Minister Harold Wilson died
in London at age 79.
.
Ten years ago: Israel began airlifting 15,000 Ethiopian Jews to
safety as · Ethiopian . rebels continued ro advance on Addis
Ababa. The U.N. Security Council voted' unanimously to
deplore Israel's deportation of four Palestinians liom the occupied territories. The remains of former Indian Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi, assassinated by a suicide bomber, were cremated.
Five years ago: President Clinton underwent his annual physical at Bethesda Naval Medical Center, where he had a precancerous lesion removed fiom his nose. On the plus side, his
weight was the same as the year before - 216 .- and his cholesterol count had improved from 203 to 191. .
One year ago: The state of Maryland dismissed its wiretapping _case a~inst ~indaTripp after a judie disallowed most of
Momca Lewmsky s testm10ny. . ·
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Tomrny ~hong is 63. Singer
Bob Dylan is 60. Actor Gary Burghoff ,is 58. Singer Patti
LaBelle is 57. Actress Priscilla Presley is 56. Country singer
Mike R eid is 54. Actor Alfred Molin a is 48. Singer Rosanne
Cash is 46. Actress Kristin Scott Thomas is 41. Actor- dan cer
Gene Anthony Ray is 38. Rock musician Vivian Trimble is·38. ·

Page AS

•

lhunuy, ~ 24, 2001

Child of war remembers brave soldiers who saved his life

The Daily Sentinel

Chilies W. Govey
Publisher

By the·Bend

The Daily Sentinel'

nations in distress and agony. I am sacrifices.
always happy to see ·that ~hen othGod bless the American veterans!
ers are too afraid, the Americans step -ERIK P. BOERS, HOUAND
into the breach for a world in rrouDEAR ERIK: You may feel that
ble.
words are inadequate to express your
I want to acknowledge the brave feelings, but I'm sure the people they
efforts of the American military who ·are intended -for will get the mesfought gallantly in World War II, in sage.
the Army, Niry, Marines, Air Foree
As the citizens of our great counand Coast Guarll. I want to thank try weU know, wearing a uniform
them with my whole heart for giv- and serving in the armed forces is
ing their youth, their limbs and ·dangerous work even in the best of
sometimes their lives in order to save times - so I would like to extend
the lives of defenseless children and your message: God bless our veterans
adults. It was a heroic fight against and. the men and women currently
satanic dictators and tyrants.
in our armed forces, wherever they
I realize that words may be inade- are. They deserve to know how
quate to express my deep gratitude. grateful we are. And bless the spirits
But I want them to rest assured that of those who .sacrificed their lives
they have not been forgotten, and that }Ve might live in freedom on
that rtty life and the lives of so many this Memorial Day.
others were saved by their heroic
DEAR ABBY: I was the "cupid"

who inrroduced two friends - a
widow and a widower. They have
now been married more than 10
years. Today when I see them, they
act like they're doing me a big favor
by saying hello. I don't undeBtand it.
I have the feeling they're sore at me.
What do you think is the.i r problem?

-

CUPID IN PARK. RIDGE,

ll.L.
DEAR CUPID: Rather than
speculate, call them and make a date
to get together. It will give you an
opporrunity to find our the reason
for their change in attitude, and the
mystery will be solved. (Perhaps
there is a statute of limitations on
being nice to little naked people
shooting arrows.)

Dear Abby i; writtm ·by Pauline
Plliilips and dauxhrcrjcmmr Phillips.

p
~

COLLEGE NEWS &amp; NOTES

~

•
'•

•"

Named in
Who's Who"

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

CONSERVATIVE ADVOCATE

Impasse in the Middle East
The roots of the current turmoil in
Israel can be traced to the last months of
the Clinton administration, when Presi- .
dent Clinton made a final, desperate
effort to broker a peace agreement
between Yasir Arafat and Israel's thenPremier, Ehud Barak.
It may well be true, as many have
alleged, that Clinton's principal motive in
seeking that agreement was to improve
his own chances of winning the Nobel
COLUMNIST
Peace Prize and adding· that accomplish- ,
ment to his "legacy." But, whatever his
motive, _there _is" no question that he never )aid eyes on "Israel, to be repatriatthrew h1mself mto the effort, heart and . ed to their former homeland. The grantsoul: He had both leaders up to Camp ing of such a right, with the resulting
DaVId last summer, an~ leaned on them influx of millions of Arabs, would quite
. ferociously. He sweetened his proposals simply put an end to the ·state of Israel.
' wtth huge offers of Amen can _money for Barak refused, and the negotiations colthe Isr;aeli and Palestinian ~aus~s _that we lapsed.
weren t told about, but wh1ch, m the case
There followed what has been ·called
of Arafat alone, are rumored to have "the second intifada": attacks by Palestintotaled in the neighborhood tJf $40 M - ian terrorists on the civilian population
lion.
.
of Israel - attacks spurred, it must be
Premier Barak, who was facmg almost admitted, by an arrogant and poorly
certain defeat in the upco~ng ls~eli timed visit by Israeli stiongman Ariel
elections, had the m'?st to gam by a nun- Sharon to a site in Jerusalem sacred to
ning breakthrough m the ne~onanons. Arabs. Israeli voters, seeing no alternative
Under pressure fiom Mr. S:hnton! he but force, otisted Barak and replaced him
went further than any Israeli negottator with Sharon.
·
in hi~tory had ever g?ne. In addition to
Since then, Sharon's policy has had at
offermg land concessions amounnng to least the virtue of clarity: There will be
90 perce~t _ofArafat's demands, he ag~ed no more peace negotiations until all acts
to Palesnman sovereignty over poraons of violence stop. Meanwhile, as the
of Jerusalem that ever:y Israeli leader attacks go on, each' is being met with
before him ~ad sworn were non-nego- Israeli military retaliation carefuUy calitiable parts of Israel.
. . .
.
. brated to c;xceed in savagery the attack
. Yet Arafat demurred, 1ns1stmg, m..addi- that provoked it.
non, that,,srael must concede the ns?t
The response of the Bush administra'?f return -_the supposed nght of mil- . cion, thus far, has been to pull back from
lions ofPalestlruan refugees, both former Mr. Clinton's policy of deep involvement
restdems and rhe1r progeny who have in the crisis and to call for both sides to

William
Rusher

'
stop their attacks. Secretary of State Pow- ~
ell has condemned certain of the Israeli ;:
military assaults as excessive, while the :'
United States vetoed a U.N. resolution :.
(backed by our Western allies) blaming ~­
Israel for the impasse.
It is hard to . see what else President ,
Bush can do, ullless he wants to duplicat€
Clinton's who(ehearted- and spectacu- •
larly unsuccessful - involvement in this ;
mess. We are seeing here the futility of the notion (so popular after Bosnia and
Kosovo) that the United States can throw
its weight around the world and invari- ,:
ably make smaller nations behave. We can
denounce; we can deplore; we can dangle billions before foreign leaders and , ·
elites that are willing to do our bidding; ' ·
we can even, now and then, drop bombs •!
(fiom a safe height) on recalcitrant foes. \
But we cannot force the Israelis and the ·
Palestinians to make peace, and it is good ·; ·
to know that the Bush administration •. ·
realizes this limitation.
··•
The more one. studies the situation ''
there, th~ more it seems that the ball is
now in Sharon's court. Israeli voters ·•
elected him because the road to peace :
seemed blocked, and force was all that J •
was left. But they are bound to tire of the
current deadly two-step of Palestinian
violence and Israeli retaliation. Sharon
may well not be the man to lead them
back to the peace table, but that is where
. they must head. And it is only there that
the United States can hope to play, sooner or later, a useful role in helping them
build a secure future in the Middle Ea5t.

f.

(William Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow
of the Claremont Institute for the Study of
Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.)

..•.

WASHINGTON MERRY.;,GO-ROUND

PearlHar~or: What was

really to

.

blame? - ~

. REPRESENTING MEIGS- Anna Cleland, second from left, a member of Return Jonathan Meigs
·Chapter, DAR, attended the Ohio DAR Cameo Society meeting in Columbus. With her here are
:trom the left, Wini Cloran, president; Karen Harman, and Linda Wetzel, national vice president
general.
· .

Ohio DAR Cameo Society
meets at Columbus Marriott
POMEROY - Anna Circle
Cleland
represented
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
Americaq Revolution, at,,the
sixth annual Victorian ~ea and
meeting of the Ohio Ca111eo
Society held at the Columbus
Marriott.
Organized in 1994, the
Society's objectives are to
promote understanding and
feUowship between generations and to encourage the
·passage of genealogical information, family histories and
patriotism in subsequent gen,

LOCAL
EVENTS

erations.
state regent and other state
I.n the organization are sev- officers .
era! four generations of Jennie Clevenger gave a
women. Cleland is a three- · presentation on her coUecgeneratioo member with her tio'n of antique spoons.
daughter, Linda
Cleland' ' Cameo members shared the
Bohner, and granddaughter, _history of some antique
Amy Lynn Bohner. Member- . spoons they have collected.
ship in the group is open to · The new slate of officers
any DAR member who. can · for 2001-04 were installed by
show current active member- . Marilyn Vaglia, state regent.
ship in conjunction with a Anyone wishing to join
mother and daughter.
Return Jonathan Meigs
Wini Cloran, president, Chapter or the Ohio Cameo
introduced guests, Linda Wet- should contact Mary Rose,
zcl, national vice president regent or any other member
general, and Marilyn Vaglia, of the local chapter.

operators.
2. The Japanese diplomatic code was
1
• broken by American cryptographers.
However, when the key message fiom
.
'tokyo "'\is received at the Japanese
Embassy in Wolshington, D.C., and inter-

surprised at Pearl Harbor: At West Point, .
cadets are taught the principles of war, one · .
of which is Unity of Command. It is sirn- :
ple enough. For every operation and •
every organization, there shoul.d be one •
individual in command. At Pearl Harbor ''
there were two - Kimmel and Short - . ,
OU .
and no matter how much they cooperat- .-,
ed with each other, it was a violation of .::.
the Unity of Command principle. Had ·
- - - - - · just one of them been in. command, there ·:!.
COWMNISTS would have been no question about aeri- .:; .
al reconnaissance by a combined Army- }•
cepted by U:S. intelligence activities, it was Navy effort. There would have been no ..-,:
decoded, liut not given the urgent priori- question about interservice coordination Z' .
ty it de!erved. U.S. l'nilitary authorities and cooperation. But when one com- .,
assumed that the message obliquely mander" assumes another .c ommander is :1
covering a certain responsibility, it is just as :~
referred to an attack in Southeast Asia. ·
3. The top-ranking ' Navy and Army easy for the opposite assumption to pre- r
commanders at Pearl Harbor, Admiral vail. Meeting&lt;i, discussions and joint staff ";
Husband E. Kimmel and Lt. Gen. Walter conferences cannot take the place of a sin- ' ·
I!
C. Short, were surprised b'y the attack and gle commandeN
Interestingly, America learned its Jesson, ;;
were relieved and rebuked as a result.
There are two camps: one that beli~ which is why Admiral Chester Nimitz the two men to.be the responsible parties, commanded in the Central Pacific and . h
an~ one that believes them to be scape- Gen. Douglas MacArthur commanded in
the Southwest Pacific. Each of them com- ·· !
goats.
.
manded Army; Navy, M;~rine and Army ,, ,
Short's planes were sitting ducks
Air c:;:orps personnel, and each was sue- ,
because, fearing sabotage, he •had ordered
cessfill. Had they instead commanded .,;
them to be grouped together rather than
dispersed so they could be guarded 1\lOre joindy, the duo of Nimitiz and .. ,
Kimm l' · ft
·
MacArthur might have gone the way of
easily. All of
e s aJrcra earners
Kimmel and Short.
were out on maneuvers, which simultane"
·•' '
ously saved them and deprived Pearl Harpk Ander.son and Douglas Cohn are dis- :. ;
bar of Navy air reconnaissance.
And now, the real reasoh America was tributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
1:

Jack '
Anderson ·
&amp;

D glas.
Cohn

?

'

..'

..

I

•

Named to list
RUTLAND
Tina
Mayle of Rutland was among
the students named to the
dean's list at the University of

Miami · University in · Oxford
during ceremonies on May 6 .
He received a bachelor's
degree in systems analysis.
He is . the grandson of Hazel
·McKelvey of Pordand and the
late William McKelvey, and
POMEROY Jessica the late Genevieve and
Grueser of Pomeroy was George Schneider.
named to the dean's list at
Hocking CoUege in Nelsonville for the winter quarter.
RACINE Samantha
Lavender ef Racine, a medical
assisting srudent at Mountain
State College in Parkersburg,
.
WVa., was named to the presSYRACUSE - Jay Patrick ident's list for the winter term,
McKelvey, son of Marvin and ' having achieved a grade point .
Eleanor McEivey of Syracuse, average of 3.5 or better.
graduated cum laude from
{".c {".c
. {% {".c
{".c {l {!
{! {".c

· Hocking list

MSC honors

Graduates
Miami

*"' {!

{!-{! '

{!

THURSDAY
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Joan Corder. .Mem· ·
bers not on the social committee
to take a covered dish .

•

11

Sunday, May 27

*

4-1 0

Everyone Welcome!

*

Featuring Gold Star Sound

:

at Old Lock 24 CamPQround, Racine, Ohio

u~{!{".c{".c ' :~~~!49-~J!{!

FRIDAY .
POMEROY- Alumni to meet at
6:30 irllhe cafeteria at Meigs ·
High Schoollo decorate lor
Pomeroy Alumni Association.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Southern High
sChool Alumni Banquet, Saltlr·
day, 6:30p.m Cha~es w, ·11ayman, gymnasium. Tteketa at ·
Racine f,lome National Bank,
Cross Grocery, Southern High
School.

{!{!Ji

Heart
G.lider

s·

·s·

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary UnH 602 to meet
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the legion

POMEROY- Ewings Chapter,
Sons ollhe American Revolu·
tion, awards·ceramony, Thurs·
· clay, wlth dinner al 6:30 p.m.
West Virginia Society Color
Guard to present and post the
colora.

!
*

Rollback

Subscribe today.
992-2156

·your
Graduate
Js Special!

TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plaine VFW Post 9053, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the hall.

II

s·

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE. ·

POMEROY- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, 1:30 p.m Thursday,
Zion Church ol Christ. Bradford
Church to have devotions; program on Bible trivia.

*

! Memorial Day Celebration *

I

hall.

WASHINGTON - The Japanese
attack on Pearl Hamor, Dec. 7, 1941, is
being revisited in a new 61m, a fact that is
causing renewed interest in the facts and
myths surrounding the event that propelled the United States into World War
II. The real reason for the debacle is rooted in an often overlooked fact.
But first the myths: '
1. The most persistent tall tale of the
attack is that President Franklin D. Roosevelt knew about it in advance, but did
nothing because he believed it was the
necessary event to get us into the 'war.
There has never been any evidence to
support this farfetched claim.
2. Chief of Staff of the Army Gen.
George C. Marshall went riding at 'fort
Meyer, adjacent to Arlington Cemetery;
and could not be reached concerning the
critical Japanese diplomatic message
because he did nor want ro know. Indeed,
he did go riding, but reaching him on the .
small Army post was not a difficult matter.
Marshall, like Rooseielt, was a great pattiot. Neither of them deserves such attacks.
Now, the facts:·
1. Radar technology was new to American forces, and it was not operating· fuJItime, nor was it fully understood by its

Hillery Mae Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Harris of Portland, has been
selected to appear in the 2001
edition of "Who's Who
Among Srudents in Ameircan
Universi~es and Colleges."
A 2001 graduate of Bob
Jones University in Greenville,
S.C., Harris was one of 63 srudents there to be selected, chosen on the basis of academic
achievement, service to the
community, leadership in
extracurricular activities, and
potential for continued success.
She graduated with a bach. elor's degree in composite
social srudies education. She
was served as president, vice
president, chaplain and athletic director of . Zetha Tau
Omega society.

R.io Grande for the winter
quarter. Her name was not
included in information provided by the university.

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PORTLAND- Lebanon Township Trustees, Saturday, 7 a.m.
iownship building.
TUESDAY
. RUTLAND - Leading Creek.
Conserliancy Oialricl's monthly
bosrd meeting has been
rescheduled for Tuesday, ·5 p.m.
due to the holiday.

.

'

I

I

.,

�e

· DEAR ABBY: I would like to
address this letter to the American
he~s ofWorld War II. I am a Dutch
lawyer, 63 years old, and retired. At
the time of that terrible war I ~ a
little boy between 4 and 8 yean old.
We lived in Balikpapan (Borneo,
I11donesia) until the day that women
and children had to quickly leave by
plane for Java, trying to escape the
ADVICE
onrushing Japanese army. My mother, sister a11d I arrived in Java with in a concentration camp. My mothnothing but the clothes and shoes er, sister and. I were also in a concenwe were wearing.
tration camp for . four years. It's a
My father, whom I loved dearly, miracle I survived. .
had to stay behind with the other
I owe my life to the American solemployees .of the Shell group in die... who served at that time in the
order to destroy the oil installations Pacific ,.and Europe. Because of
and plants so they couldn't be used rhem, the war ended much sooner. I
by the Japanese. I never . saw my want to thank them all for giving
far her again. After the war, I learned everything .they had and lived for, to
that he and the other men had died s.erve America and to rescue so many

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740·182·2156 • Fu: 9t2·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Dear
Abby

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
OlaMKayHIU
Controllw

Cl•l•n• Hollllk:tl
Generll Mllrlllg8r

NATIONAL VIEWS

•

Senous
•

FBI needs to realize
damage in Me veigh boo-boo
j
•

•

• The (Youngstown, Ohio) Vindicator, May 20:
.
If a teacher taught a million kids, and three failed, he wouldn't start looking for other work. In most endeavors, three out
of a million would win accolades. And then there are the
exceptions.
·
A little over a week ago, it was announced that the FBI had
withheld fiom Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh's
defense team and prosecutors 3,135 documents- out of near1}' a billion documents generated.
That works out to an ermr rate of about three in a million.
Which doesn't make it right - even if, as it seems l'robable,
none of those particular documents changes the case against
McVeigh a whit.
It's not the overlooking, however, that is most rroublesome.
It's the timing, and the fact that even now, the FBI hasn't been
able to agree on who knew there was a problem, when they
knew it and what they did about it.
An honest oversight is defensible in most cases. Not recognizing the potential for damage when an oversight is discovered is far more serious.
• The (Toledo, Ohio) Blade, May 2l:
The experiment wasn't very scientific, but state Rep. Rex
Damschroder's carefully planned and supervised "cocktail
party" definitely made his point: Lowering the legal bloodalcohol limit from .10 percent to .08 percent won't mean an
end to social drinkiAg.
,
The Fremont Republican invit~d 11 guests of varying
heights and weights to his party. Each was served rh~e _alcoholic beverages by State Highway Patrol ·officers w1thin an
hour. The officers then administered breathalyzer test\ to the
.
guests to determine their blood alcohol levels.
None reached the legal limit. But all of the guests realized
that after three drinks that they were not in any condition to
operate a motor vehicle.
Damschroder has been trying for four years to lower .the
state's legal limit. He promised last fall that if re-elected, he
would try again, and this •week he will reintroduce his bill.
Maybe this time his colleagues will agree.

TODAY

IN ~

HISTORY

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

••

:

_Today is Thursday, May 24, the I 44th day of 2001. There are
221 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 24, 1844, Samuel F.B. Morse transmitted the message, "What hath God wrought!" fiom Washington to Baltimore as he formally opened America's first telegraph line.
On this date:
·
In 1819, Queen Victoria was born in London.
In 1830, the first passenger railroad iQ the United States
begin service between Baltimore and Elliott's Mills, Md.
In 1881, some 200 people died when .the Canadian ferr:y
Princess Victoria sank near London, Ontario.
In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking Brooklyn and Manhattan, was opened to traffic.
·.
·
· In 1941, the German batdeship Bismarck sank the British
dreadnought Hood in the North Adantic. ,
In 1962, astronaut Scott · Carpenter became the second
American to orbit the Earth as he flew aboard Aurora 7.
In 1976, Britain ancl France opened transadanric Concorde
serVice to Washington.
In 1977, in a surprise move, the Kremlin ousted Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny . fiom the Communist· Party's ruling
Politburo.
·
,
In 1980, Iran rejected a call by the World Court in The
Hague to release the American hostages.
In 1995, former British Prime ·Minister Harold Wilson died
in London at age 79.
.
Ten years ago: Israel began airlifting 15,000 Ethiopian Jews to
safety as · Ethiopian . rebels continued ro advance on Addis
Ababa. The U.N. Security Council voted' unanimously to
deplore Israel's deportation of four Palestinians liom the occupied territories. The remains of former Indian Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi, assassinated by a suicide bomber, were cremated.
Five years ago: President Clinton underwent his annual physical at Bethesda Naval Medical Center, where he had a precancerous lesion removed fiom his nose. On the plus side, his
weight was the same as the year before - 216 .- and his cholesterol count had improved from 203 to 191. .
One year ago: The state of Maryland dismissed its wiretapping _case a~inst ~indaTripp after a judie disallowed most of
Momca Lewmsky s testm10ny. . ·
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Tomrny ~hong is 63. Singer
Bob Dylan is 60. Actor Gary Burghoff ,is 58. Singer Patti
LaBelle is 57. Actress Priscilla Presley is 56. Country singer
Mike R eid is 54. Actor Alfred Molin a is 48. Singer Rosanne
Cash is 46. Actress Kristin Scott Thomas is 41. Actor- dan cer
Gene Anthony Ray is 38. Rock musician Vivian Trimble is·38. ·

Page AS

•

lhunuy, ~ 24, 2001

Child of war remembers brave soldiers who saved his life

The Daily Sentinel

Chilies W. Govey
Publisher

By the·Bend

The Daily Sentinel'

nations in distress and agony. I am sacrifices.
always happy to see ·that ~hen othGod bless the American veterans!
ers are too afraid, the Americans step -ERIK P. BOERS, HOUAND
into the breach for a world in rrouDEAR ERIK: You may feel that
ble.
words are inadequate to express your
I want to acknowledge the brave feelings, but I'm sure the people they
efforts of the American military who ·are intended -for will get the mesfought gallantly in World War II, in sage.
the Army, Niry, Marines, Air Foree
As the citizens of our great counand Coast Guarll. I want to thank try weU know, wearing a uniform
them with my whole heart for giv- and serving in the armed forces is
ing their youth, their limbs and ·dangerous work even in the best of
sometimes their lives in order to save times - so I would like to extend
the lives of defenseless children and your message: God bless our veterans
adults. It was a heroic fight against and. the men and women currently
satanic dictators and tyrants.
in our armed forces, wherever they
I realize that words may be inade- are. They deserve to know how
quate to express my deep gratitude. grateful we are. And bless the spirits
But I want them to rest assured that of those who .sacrificed their lives
they have not been forgotten, and that }Ve might live in freedom on
that rtty life and the lives of so many this Memorial Day.
others were saved by their heroic
DEAR ABBY: I was the "cupid"

who inrroduced two friends - a
widow and a widower. They have
now been married more than 10
years. Today when I see them, they
act like they're doing me a big favor
by saying hello. I don't undeBtand it.
I have the feeling they're sore at me.
What do you think is the.i r problem?

-

CUPID IN PARK. RIDGE,

ll.L.
DEAR CUPID: Rather than
speculate, call them and make a date
to get together. It will give you an
opporrunity to find our the reason
for their change in attitude, and the
mystery will be solved. (Perhaps
there is a statute of limitations on
being nice to little naked people
shooting arrows.)

Dear Abby i; writtm ·by Pauline
Plliilips and dauxhrcrjcmmr Phillips.

p
~

COLLEGE NEWS &amp; NOTES

~

•
'•

•"

Named in
Who's Who"

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

CONSERVATIVE ADVOCATE

Impasse in the Middle East
The roots of the current turmoil in
Israel can be traced to the last months of
the Clinton administration, when Presi- .
dent Clinton made a final, desperate
effort to broker a peace agreement
between Yasir Arafat and Israel's thenPremier, Ehud Barak.
It may well be true, as many have
alleged, that Clinton's principal motive in
seeking that agreement was to improve
his own chances of winning the Nobel
COLUMNIST
Peace Prize and adding· that accomplish- ,
ment to his "legacy." But, whatever his
motive, _there _is" no question that he never )aid eyes on "Israel, to be repatriatthrew h1mself mto the effort, heart and . ed to their former homeland. The grantsoul: He had both leaders up to Camp ing of such a right, with the resulting
DaVId last summer, an~ leaned on them influx of millions of Arabs, would quite
. ferociously. He sweetened his proposals simply put an end to the ·state of Israel.
' wtth huge offers of Amen can _money for Barak refused, and the negotiations colthe Isr;aeli and Palestinian ~aus~s _that we lapsed.
weren t told about, but wh1ch, m the case
There followed what has been ·called
of Arafat alone, are rumored to have "the second intifada": attacks by Palestintotaled in the neighborhood tJf $40 M - ian terrorists on the civilian population
lion.
.
of Israel - attacks spurred, it must be
Premier Barak, who was facmg almost admitted, by an arrogant and poorly
certain defeat in the upco~ng ls~eli timed visit by Israeli stiongman Ariel
elections, had the m'?st to gam by a nun- Sharon to a site in Jerusalem sacred to
ning breakthrough m the ne~onanons. Arabs. Israeli voters, seeing no alternative
Under pressure fiom Mr. S:hnton! he but force, otisted Barak and replaced him
went further than any Israeli negottator with Sharon.
·
in hi~tory had ever g?ne. In addition to
Since then, Sharon's policy has had at
offermg land concessions amounnng to least the virtue of clarity: There will be
90 perce~t _ofArafat's demands, he ag~ed no more peace negotiations until all acts
to Palesnman sovereignty over poraons of violence stop. Meanwhile, as the
of Jerusalem that ever:y Israeli leader attacks go on, each' is being met with
before him ~ad sworn were non-nego- Israeli military retaliation carefuUy calitiable parts of Israel.
. . .
.
. brated to c;xceed in savagery the attack
. Yet Arafat demurred, 1ns1stmg, m..addi- that provoked it.
non, that,,srael must concede the ns?t
The response of the Bush administra'?f return -_the supposed nght of mil- . cion, thus far, has been to pull back from
lions ofPalestlruan refugees, both former Mr. Clinton's policy of deep involvement
restdems and rhe1r progeny who have in the crisis and to call for both sides to

William
Rusher

'
stop their attacks. Secretary of State Pow- ~
ell has condemned certain of the Israeli ;:
military assaults as excessive, while the :'
United States vetoed a U.N. resolution :.
(backed by our Western allies) blaming ~­
Israel for the impasse.
It is hard to . see what else President ,
Bush can do, ullless he wants to duplicat€
Clinton's who(ehearted- and spectacu- •
larly unsuccessful - involvement in this ;
mess. We are seeing here the futility of the notion (so popular after Bosnia and
Kosovo) that the United States can throw
its weight around the world and invari- ,:
ably make smaller nations behave. We can
denounce; we can deplore; we can dangle billions before foreign leaders and , ·
elites that are willing to do our bidding; ' ·
we can even, now and then, drop bombs •!
(fiom a safe height) on recalcitrant foes. \
But we cannot force the Israelis and the ·
Palestinians to make peace, and it is good ·; ·
to know that the Bush administration •. ·
realizes this limitation.
··•
The more one. studies the situation ''
there, th~ more it seems that the ball is
now in Sharon's court. Israeli voters ·•
elected him because the road to peace :
seemed blocked, and force was all that J •
was left. But they are bound to tire of the
current deadly two-step of Palestinian
violence and Israeli retaliation. Sharon
may well not be the man to lead them
back to the peace table, but that is where
. they must head. And it is only there that
the United States can hope to play, sooner or later, a useful role in helping them
build a secure future in the Middle Ea5t.

f.

(William Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow
of the Claremont Institute for the Study of
Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.)

..•.

WASHINGTON MERRY.;,GO-ROUND

PearlHar~or: What was

really to

.

blame? - ~

. REPRESENTING MEIGS- Anna Cleland, second from left, a member of Return Jonathan Meigs
·Chapter, DAR, attended the Ohio DAR Cameo Society meeting in Columbus. With her here are
:trom the left, Wini Cloran, president; Karen Harman, and Linda Wetzel, national vice president
general.
· .

Ohio DAR Cameo Society
meets at Columbus Marriott
POMEROY - Anna Circle
Cleland
represented
Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
Americaq Revolution, at,,the
sixth annual Victorian ~ea and
meeting of the Ohio Ca111eo
Society held at the Columbus
Marriott.
Organized in 1994, the
Society's objectives are to
promote understanding and
feUowship between generations and to encourage the
·passage of genealogical information, family histories and
patriotism in subsequent gen,

LOCAL
EVENTS

erations.
state regent and other state
I.n the organization are sev- officers .
era! four generations of Jennie Clevenger gave a
women. Cleland is a three- · presentation on her coUecgeneratioo member with her tio'n of antique spoons.
daughter, Linda
Cleland' ' Cameo members shared the
Bohner, and granddaughter, _history of some antique
Amy Lynn Bohner. Member- . spoons they have collected.
ship in the group is open to · The new slate of officers
any DAR member who. can · for 2001-04 were installed by
show current active member- . Marilyn Vaglia, state regent.
ship in conjunction with a Anyone wishing to join
mother and daughter.
Return Jonathan Meigs
Wini Cloran, president, Chapter or the Ohio Cameo
introduced guests, Linda Wet- should contact Mary Rose,
zcl, national vice president regent or any other member
general, and Marilyn Vaglia, of the local chapter.

operators.
2. The Japanese diplomatic code was
1
• broken by American cryptographers.
However, when the key message fiom
.
'tokyo "'\is received at the Japanese
Embassy in Wolshington, D.C., and inter-

surprised at Pearl Harbor: At West Point, .
cadets are taught the principles of war, one · .
of which is Unity of Command. It is sirn- :
ple enough. For every operation and •
every organization, there shoul.d be one •
individual in command. At Pearl Harbor ''
there were two - Kimmel and Short - . ,
OU .
and no matter how much they cooperat- .-,
ed with each other, it was a violation of .::.
the Unity of Command principle. Had ·
- - - - - · just one of them been in. command, there ·:!.
COWMNISTS would have been no question about aeri- .:; .
al reconnaissance by a combined Army- }•
cepted by U:S. intelligence activities, it was Navy effort. There would have been no ..-,:
decoded, liut not given the urgent priori- question about interservice coordination Z' .
ty it de!erved. U.S. l'nilitary authorities and cooperation. But when one com- .,
assumed that the message obliquely mander" assumes another .c ommander is :1
covering a certain responsibility, it is just as :~
referred to an attack in Southeast Asia. ·
3. The top-ranking ' Navy and Army easy for the opposite assumption to pre- r
commanders at Pearl Harbor, Admiral vail. Meeting&lt;i, discussions and joint staff ";
Husband E. Kimmel and Lt. Gen. Walter conferences cannot take the place of a sin- ' ·
I!
C. Short, were surprised b'y the attack and gle commandeN
Interestingly, America learned its Jesson, ;;
were relieved and rebuked as a result.
There are two camps: one that beli~ which is why Admiral Chester Nimitz the two men to.be the responsible parties, commanded in the Central Pacific and . h
an~ one that believes them to be scape- Gen. Douglas MacArthur commanded in
the Southwest Pacific. Each of them com- ·· !
goats.
.
manded Army; Navy, M;~rine and Army ,, ,
Short's planes were sitting ducks
Air c:;:orps personnel, and each was sue- ,
because, fearing sabotage, he •had ordered
cessfill. Had they instead commanded .,;
them to be grouped together rather than
dispersed so they could be guarded 1\lOre joindy, the duo of Nimitiz and .. ,
Kimm l' · ft
·
MacArthur might have gone the way of
easily. All of
e s aJrcra earners
Kimmel and Short.
were out on maneuvers, which simultane"
·•' '
ously saved them and deprived Pearl Harpk Ander.son and Douglas Cohn are dis- :. ;
bar of Navy air reconnaissance.
And now, the real reasoh America was tributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
1:

Jack '
Anderson ·
&amp;

D glas.
Cohn

?

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•

Named to list
RUTLAND
Tina
Mayle of Rutland was among
the students named to the
dean's list at the University of

Miami · University in · Oxford
during ceremonies on May 6 .
He received a bachelor's
degree in systems analysis.
He is . the grandson of Hazel
·McKelvey of Pordand and the
late William McKelvey, and
POMEROY Jessica the late Genevieve and
Grueser of Pomeroy was George Schneider.
named to the dean's list at
Hocking CoUege in Nelsonville for the winter quarter.
RACINE Samantha
Lavender ef Racine, a medical
assisting srudent at Mountain
State College in Parkersburg,
.
WVa., was named to the presSYRACUSE - Jay Patrick ident's list for the winter term,
McKelvey, son of Marvin and ' having achieved a grade point .
Eleanor McEivey of Syracuse, average of 3.5 or better.
graduated cum laude from
{".c {".c
. {% {".c
{".c {l {!
{! {".c

· Hocking list

MSC honors

Graduates
Miami

*"' {!

{!-{! '

{!

THURSDAY
POMEROY- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
the home of Joan Corder. .Mem· ·
bers not on the social committee
to take a covered dish .

•

11

Sunday, May 27

*

4-1 0

Everyone Welcome!

*

Featuring Gold Star Sound

:

at Old Lock 24 CamPQround, Racine, Ohio

u~{!{".c{".c ' :~~~!49-~J!{!

FRIDAY .
POMEROY- Alumni to meet at
6:30 irllhe cafeteria at Meigs ·
High Schoollo decorate lor
Pomeroy Alumni Association.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Southern High
sChool Alumni Banquet, Saltlr·
day, 6:30p.m Cha~es w, ·11ayman, gymnasium. Tteketa at ·
Racine f,lome National Bank,
Cross Grocery, Southern High
School.

{!{!Ji

Heart
G.lider

s·

·s·

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary UnH 602 to meet
Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the legion

POMEROY- Ewings Chapter,
Sons ollhe American Revolu·
tion, awards·ceramony, Thurs·
· clay, wlth dinner al 6:30 p.m.
West Virginia Society Color
Guard to present and post the
colora.

!
*

Rollback

Subscribe today.
992-2156

·your
Graduate
Js Special!

TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plaine VFW Post 9053, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the hall.

II

s·

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE. ·

POMEROY- Meigs County
Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, 1:30 p.m Thursday,
Zion Church ol Christ. Bradford
Church to have devotions; program on Bible trivia.

*

! Memorial Day Celebration *

I

hall.

WASHINGTON - The Japanese
attack on Pearl Hamor, Dec. 7, 1941, is
being revisited in a new 61m, a fact that is
causing renewed interest in the facts and
myths surrounding the event that propelled the United States into World War
II. The real reason for the debacle is rooted in an often overlooked fact.
But first the myths: '
1. The most persistent tall tale of the
attack is that President Franklin D. Roosevelt knew about it in advance, but did
nothing because he believed it was the
necessary event to get us into the 'war.
There has never been any evidence to
support this farfetched claim.
2. Chief of Staff of the Army Gen.
George C. Marshall went riding at 'fort
Meyer, adjacent to Arlington Cemetery;
and could not be reached concerning the
critical Japanese diplomatic message
because he did nor want ro know. Indeed,
he did go riding, but reaching him on the .
small Army post was not a difficult matter.
Marshall, like Rooseielt, was a great pattiot. Neither of them deserves such attacks.
Now, the facts:·
1. Radar technology was new to American forces, and it was not operating· fuJItime, nor was it fully understood by its

Hillery Mae Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Harris of Portland, has been
selected to appear in the 2001
edition of "Who's Who
Among Srudents in Ameircan
Universi~es and Colleges."
A 2001 graduate of Bob
Jones University in Greenville,
S.C., Harris was one of 63 srudents there to be selected, chosen on the basis of academic
achievement, service to the
community, leadership in
extracurricular activities, and
potential for continued success.
She graduated with a bach. elor's degree in composite
social srudies education. She
was served as president, vice
president, chaplain and athletic director of . Zetha Tau
Omega society.

R.io Grande for the winter
quarter. Her name was not
included in information provided by the university.

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PORTLAND- Lebanon Township Trustees, Saturday, 7 a.m.
iownship building.
TUESDAY
. RUTLAND - Leading Creek.
Conserliancy Oialricl's monthly
bosrd meeting has been
rescheduled for Tuesday, ·5 p.m.
due to the holiday.

.

'

I

I

.,

�(

Stntlnel

Ohio

-

J

lbu...ctey, May 24, 2001 :

-.

Sacred Heart picnic set June .2~

lnsldei
MLB Standings, scores, Page B3
'

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- j

· POMEROY - Plans for
_,1
Members presented a pro- and "0 . Beautiful Mothei'
the Sacred Heart Catholic gram of reading5 and music Heinz noted the last s.d n$
Women's Club annual picnic led by Bernie Anderson and hadn't been in the .hyml!·alf
June 20 at 6 p.m. were made several choir members for the for several years, ~u~ sqb~
at a recent meeting of the program. Among the songs .scribers had asked for th~
group.
were "Come Holy Spirit;' song to be put in the ne\'t
........ i
Those attending ~re to reg- Ava Maria", "Sing of Mary" .hymnals ..
ister indicating how many are
coming and what food items
they will bring.
· The group also discussed
having bake sales after church
as a way to raising funds for
the group. T,he dates were set
for June 3,July 8 and Aug. 5:
A gift of $300 was given to
help pay for new draperies
for the rectory. Armounced
was the annual CCW con- .
PVH Wei/ness
vention to be held on June
Thursday, Afay 24, 2001
13 in Steubenville. Members
planning to attend are to
Noon to 6 p.m.
advise the Rev. Fr. Walter
Heinz $0 that he can make

'
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' .
'

'

•'

·- ··Blood Drive -

•

Center

THE WINNERS ,.... These Rutland students were winners in the OhioReads and Writing Fair
held at Rutland Elementary School recently.

\

. ·Local Ohio Reads winners lauded
.

RUTLAND -Winners in
the OhioReads and Writing
Fair. were presented awards at
the recent family t)ight observance at Rutlai1d Elementary.
Winners · .were selected
from classroom displays by
·judges; Cathy Lentes and
Carol Mahr. The exhibits
showed the work of the students in· developing their
. writing skills and their ability
at ·putting their stories into
books.
first, second third, and participation ribbons made by
the PTO teacher apprecia-

ed. to students at each grade
leveL Prize money for first,
second and third place was
provided by Peoples Bank.
Rutland Elementary is partncr in education .

First places went to Hannah King, . Chelsey Eads,
Jacob Nitz, Lindsey Hysell,
Shellie Bailey,Jeffery Mullins,
Candy Lambert, Kayula Graham , Lilly Jacks, Emily Davis.
Receiving second-place
awards were Shane Engle,
Cassidy
Tucker, · Holly
McGrath, Leann Tyree,
Pamela Kessinger, Kori PridtioQ comnllttee, were award- dy, Justin Nitz, Josh Miller,

Tiffany McDonald, Morgan
Lentz. ·
Third-place awards went. to .
Sharon Wright, Tanisha
McKinney, Steven· Mahr,
Brittany Green, Joey Morgan,
Brittany
Varian,
Cameron Bolin,AustinSayre,
Larry Hess, and Clayton
Bolin.

reservations.

Heinz said Cindy N im has
completed her courses for
the People of God ministry
and will graduate on June 4.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

• FREE Gift To All Donors
• Door Prizes

· Sponsore~ By:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary
&amp;
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.

•

The Daily Sentinel

Page I I

..

''

1hunday• . . , 2t. 2011

'

TiruRsnAY's

District Champslfl

HIGHLIGHTS

•

s1n
MASON- Racine's Jamie
Anderson joined David
Reed, Jr. of Mason as &lt;me of
rwo local golfers tu sink a
hole-in-one at Riverside Golf
Club. jamieis masterpiece
came during the ·Wednesday
Men League's play on May 2
on the 14th hole of the
Riverside Course. Using a
pitching wedge, Anderson's
shot traveled 122 yards ro the
hole. The shot, the second of
his career, was witnessed by
Red Tuck;er of Mason, Tom
Woods of Syracuse and Jay
Bostick of Racine. ,
Reed's shot came on the
14th hole on May 15 and was
a 115 yard shot. Using a sand
wedge, he sank the second
.hole-in-one of his career. ·
Witnessing the feat was David
Reed, Sr. of Mason.

Eaale Hoops
~lilp

announced
E.A ST

MEIGS

_

The

CLUTCH PITCHING - Eastern's Jull Bailey fires to the plate in Wednesday's district title game against Portsmouth Clay.
Belley pitched a 2.() shutout to give the Lady Eagles their first trip to the regionals since 1992. (Dave Harris)

third annual ~agle Basketball
·
•
·
camp will take place June 4-8
for players entering grades 3
•through ~ : For playf:rs entering grades 7-9. the camp will
run June 11-,5.
Botli camps are to take
.
.
·
1
.
place from 9 a.m. to noon.
·
~
·
·
·
.
·
The camp is open fo~ 'both ,
·
BY ScoTT Wo!
uled to begin Wednesday, but was fie~d this Monday, the sixth day after the
·
· OVP COfi~ESPON ,
moved back a day to accommodate ongmally scheduled date. Eastern put
boys . and girls ~d will be
conducted by DiStrict Coa,ch ·, , W.A\'f:RLY - !he!IEtern :. Eagles ., teams w·h. o .ha.d .n ot.. yet p_layed be.cause Sandy. Powell on base with a single.
;..$. t h"
·
' • ' 1~,.;
-"atawe
~ '11 '' , il:lvercame
!o w.rlv~~~
· ,,-.,.
· th e b attorn half th e
-~·
~ );ear:
HOWle
.
, several
: ...,~..:mm..
~•"'·-"
._..,,, ,,.,_ .. Qf th, .O, J;Y~il!th
.. e5- :~·-•··,·. !\·'·•• -~ , :~.;•&lt;;_,.1:;.,~
....y_,h ad a threat m
anp his ,p,Iayeis and .staff.
·
rams, week-long C:lelays_ . lirea , ,. 1 • , ~ij!4i,tei'n ~t went to ·~R.egtOJWS'm "''nmng when lead off batter Edgerton
The canip , will emphasize
the. Portsmou!h Clay Pa thers (l6-7y 1992; but also mac:le trips ·ih 1985 when ' walked, but was left stranded on a coofundamentals essential to,pro- . e~ ~ut to cl:u~mg ~ ha~~fo~ght 2-~ it diJ,imed the Regional Championship pie great defensive plays and an inning
duce winning basketball...
Dtstnct Champ~onshtp w;I.P that ~arns · on its state . bound excu~sion, th~n ending strikeout b~ Bailey..
Th
t 0 fth
· $30
~he Eagles their fourth lf'berth m a returned agam the ·followmg year m As Monday's action contmued Eastregional tournament.
1986.
ern threatened and left the bases ioaded
e. cos . • e $c 4amOphlsfi
pdarereg~fsthtratlon or Camt
e ~t
The
Eagles
(21-1)
wo
thei·t
·
21st
.
"It feels good, really good to be in the second frame when the rains
Y. 0 . e c~p. M p pJreOstraight game after a first gafue loss early where we are at right now," said East- came. Kass Lodwick had led off when
ay
.
· h
Eas
1 d·1. ·
h
regtstratiOn Is
.
d
d
·
h
f
h
·
m
t
e
season.
tern
a
vi!nces
to
t
e ern Coach Pam Douthitt. ·"We have she was hit with a pitch, Bailey singled,
1 1
0
nc u ~ ,Ill t e co~t S~ e
Regional tournament at Pickerington · accomplish~d a lot since our first game and both advanced on a 1-3 ground out
~mp ~s ~ ~:;fP /tw_;·~·
, tonight (Thursday) at 4:30 \Vhere they ' of the season.
by Amanda Yeager. Tammy Bissell
1
- ·
amp as et ·• an n
meet the Crooksville Ceramics (17-6).
"Our defense was very good tonight. walked to load the bases as Clay's pitchPlaying on an adjacent field at the same We made the big plays when we had to er H_arris became visibly shaken. Then
ual awards.
Preregistration forms and
·
· B
U ·
d s b
time IS erne mon an
checks should' be made out to
kli
· tras urg- and Juli again pitched a great game. A.t the rains came. That set the stage for· Ia.st
.
Fran ·n. The two winners· would play this stage of the game, y·ou have to play night's play.
Howie Caldwell; 40878 Old •
Saturday at 1 p.m. in the Regional every game like we played tonight."
As play resumed Wednesday with the
Seven Road; Reedsville, Ohio
Ch amptons
· h'1p at ·p·ICk enngton.
·
,
After several trips to Waverly only to
45772. Registration
should
Th e reg10n
· al was ongma
· · 11v sc h ed - watch it rain, both clubs finally hit the
.
PI~H He Dlstrtct. BJ
·
;&amp;;'·
,
include Name, Age, Grade
entering, and T-Shirt size.
'lll

Receives doll

.

CHICAGO (AP) - Julio: ·.
Zuleta swears he's not into.
voodoo.
That little shrine he created:
the other day to fire up the:
Chicago Cubs' bats? It's made:
of fruit and the bones used to:
bone bats. Using a stetho-:
scope to check some of his·
teammates' bats for hits befoti
the game Wednesday? Just:
some goofiness to loosen:
everyone up.
Whatever Zuleta's doing, it: ·
seems to be working. ·
• .
Matt Stairs, assured by.
Zuleta and his stethoscope:
that there was "at least one·
hit" in his bat, drove; in the:
. go-ahead .r un as the Cubs
beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-2
in a game delayed by rain.
"He said . I had one hit in
it," Stairs said. "It was a big
hit."
Try huge. Trailing 2-1 after
a rain delay in the top of.the
third and with Sammy Sosa
missing his second game
because of tightness in his
lower back, Stairs and Ron
Coomer hit back-to-back
RBI singles off Rob Bell (03).
Zuleta got a big hit of his
own, hitting a solo homer in
the second inning on the first
·pitch he saw. Zuleta was using
Rondell White's bat, hoping
to "make it warm" and snap
White's 1-for-27 slump.
As for White, he got an
infield single in :the seventh
inning after coming in as a
defensive replacement.
"I've got to keep doing it
because the last four games,
we've won," Zuleta: said.
"Whatever it takes to win,
we're going to do it."
Ruben Rivera gave the
Reds their only offense with a
rwo-rurt homer in the second
inning. Rivera was a late addition to the lineup after Pokey
Reese scratched with a sore
right thumb.
While _}uleta's antics keep
his teammates entertained, th~
Cubs' bullpen deserves some

,.........ec~.. a:s

.

'

Johnson·· places fifth, once·
'

The winner of a Lloyd MiddiElton doll donated by Carolyn Darst
·~ to ·raise money for medical expenses for Chrissy Walker was
Glririy Barrett. The benefit project rais~d $1,243.01.

.Drop us a line in cy~rspace.
_news@mydailysentinel.com

*'

INC 0 L

l

BARLOW - Local racer
.. Kevin Layne recorded a big
'feature win in the Briggs
Stock Medium Karting division over perennial winner
Mike Dickerson this past
weekend at 339 Speedway.
Layne started on the pole
and beat both Dickerson and
the rain in a rain-shortened
feature event. ·
. Layne defeated Dickerson,
Jamie Wheeler, Eric Sheppard; Bobby · Sandy, John
Church,
Brad
Hesson,
Mitchel Shaffer, Bill Fortney,
Matt Holcomb, Mike Mosh. older, Rick Northcraft, .and
Nick Cotbitt..
Another Racine driver,
Danny Gheen, claimed first
place in the Stock Light Divi- ·
sian over Mike . Dickerson,
iyte·r Wallace, Derek Ransom,
Terry , Roberts, and Corey
Holbrook.
In the Junior Division, . it
was winner 'JYier Heddleston
over Ryan Weaver, Chase
Grimm, and Michael Umstot.
In the Rookie Division it was
J. D. Smith, over Greg
Streight, 'JYior Cottrille, and
Coty Streight. ·

•••••

j

Not · seeing your team's
·results in the Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to send
game and event repotts by fax
to 992-2157.
:

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again, in f.egionallong jump
'

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ZANESVILLE - At Wednesday's Region
Seven, Division II track championships,
Meigs long jumper Derrick Johnson missed a
trip to the state meet by a matter. of inches.
Again.
·
Johnson's . bound of 20 . feet, five inches
· placed him fifth in the event, just ,3.5 inches
· from fourth place and a berth With the top
jumpers in Ohio.
· Jo~nson also placed fifth in the 2000 long
jump.
Meigs' other competitors didn't fare so well
however.
Brook Bolin competed in both girls hurdle
events, but did not place, running ~ 52.30 to
place 13th ih' the 300-meter hurdl~and ruh-

nig a 17.30 in the 100-meter hurdles, ';Vhich
did not qualify for Friday's finals.
'l;he Meigs 4x800 meter team of Ashley
Thomas, Bea Morgan, Shannon Soulsby, and
Emily Story did not place in an race which
s'aw fourth place Circleville run a 9:55.09.
When the meet resumes on Friday, Story
will compete in the finals of the girls' BOOmeter run. Thomas will compete in the girls'
1600- meter' run.
·
John Diddle will compete in .the finals of
the boys' 3200-meter run on Friday.
After one day of competition, the Meigs
boys stand in 14th place with four. points.
Logan Elm leads the boys meet with 19
points~

FLYER - Derrick Johnson of Meigs takes off in the Region 7
long jump finals. (Dan Polcyn)

·

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.J,.

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Juan Gone's homer lifts Tribe over Rangers
'\} ;

" CLEVELAND (AP) There was the disputed home
run. The one by .Eddie
Taubensee in the clutch, and
another by Juan Gonzalez,
who seems to hit one every
time he swings inside Jacobs
Field.
r, •
Gonzalez .homered with
one out in the 1Oth inning
Wednesday. night to beat his
former team · and end an
intense g:IIIlC as the Cleveland
Indians rallied Jar' a 4-3 ,win
ave~ the Detroit Tigers.
II

Gonzalez's walk-off homer
·was his '12th overall this season, his eighth at home and
gave ' him 20 in 52 career
games ,at the Jake.
. "I expect Juan to hit ·one
every ,time he's up/' Indians
manager Charlie Manuel said.
"I kno~ he can't do it, but he
makes it look so easy."
.Cleveland had a homer
taken away in the sixth inning
:ind lost Manuel, who was
ejected for arguing.
Taubensee, sent up to

pinch-hit by Manuel who .was
calling the shots from the
runway behind the dugout,
tied it at 3 with a rwo-out
homer in the bottom of the
ninth.
"I didn't even expect to
pinch-hit," Taubensee said.
"But Charlie said to get
ready. I just came up with the
big hit"
So did Gonzalez, who drove
a 1-1 pitch from 1 Dave
Borkowski (0-1) over the wall
in left. When he finished cir-

ding the bases, Gonzalez was · to win it with one swing.
"Yeah," he said. "Absc;~lutegreeted by his Indians teammates, who had stormed onto ly."
the field along with
It was a painfiulloss for the
Ma,nuel - an inning earlier Tigers, who blew a chance to
for a brief shoving match go over .500 for the first time
.
with the Tigers.
since April 9. ·
"I don't thiijk• I deserve a
"This is a tough one to
suspension," Manuel said. take;· Tigers manager Phil
"I've just got to go out there, Garner said. "We lnade some
that's a must. That's our team. real stupid pitches. We let a
I'm not going to sit in the really, nice game slip away."
clubhouse with my team out
Botb
Wickman
(2-0)
there."
Gonzalez said he was trying
PleiM ... 11:1h,IS

�(

Stntlnel

Ohio

-

J

lbu...ctey, May 24, 2001 :

-.

Sacred Heart picnic set June .2~

lnsldei
MLB Standings, scores, Page B3
'

..

- j

· POMEROY - Plans for
_,1
Members presented a pro- and "0 . Beautiful Mothei'
the Sacred Heart Catholic gram of reading5 and music Heinz noted the last s.d n$
Women's Club annual picnic led by Bernie Anderson and hadn't been in the .hyml!·alf
June 20 at 6 p.m. were made several choir members for the for several years, ~u~ sqb~
at a recent meeting of the program. Among the songs .scribers had asked for th~
group.
were "Come Holy Spirit;' song to be put in the ne\'t
........ i
Those attending ~re to reg- Ava Maria", "Sing of Mary" .hymnals ..
ister indicating how many are
coming and what food items
they will bring.
· The group also discussed
having bake sales after church
as a way to raising funds for
the group. T,he dates were set
for June 3,July 8 and Aug. 5:
A gift of $300 was given to
help pay for new draperies
for the rectory. Armounced
was the annual CCW con- .
PVH Wei/ness
vention to be held on June
Thursday, Afay 24, 2001
13 in Steubenville. Members
planning to attend are to
Noon to 6 p.m.
advise the Rev. Fr. Walter
Heinz $0 that he can make

'
'.
' .
'

'

•'

·- ··Blood Drive -

•

Center

THE WINNERS ,.... These Rutland students were winners in the OhioReads and Writing Fair
held at Rutland Elementary School recently.

\

. ·Local Ohio Reads winners lauded
.

RUTLAND -Winners in
the OhioReads and Writing
Fair. were presented awards at
the recent family t)ight observance at Rutlai1d Elementary.
Winners · .were selected
from classroom displays by
·judges; Cathy Lentes and
Carol Mahr. The exhibits
showed the work of the students in· developing their
. writing skills and their ability
at ·putting their stories into
books.
first, second third, and participation ribbons made by
the PTO teacher apprecia-

ed. to students at each grade
leveL Prize money for first,
second and third place was
provided by Peoples Bank.
Rutland Elementary is partncr in education .

First places went to Hannah King, . Chelsey Eads,
Jacob Nitz, Lindsey Hysell,
Shellie Bailey,Jeffery Mullins,
Candy Lambert, Kayula Graham , Lilly Jacks, Emily Davis.
Receiving second-place
awards were Shane Engle,
Cassidy
Tucker, · Holly
McGrath, Leann Tyree,
Pamela Kessinger, Kori PridtioQ comnllttee, were award- dy, Justin Nitz, Josh Miller,

Tiffany McDonald, Morgan
Lentz. ·
Third-place awards went. to .
Sharon Wright, Tanisha
McKinney, Steven· Mahr,
Brittany Green, Joey Morgan,
Brittany
Varian,
Cameron Bolin,AustinSayre,
Larry Hess, and Clayton
Bolin.

reservations.

Heinz said Cindy N im has
completed her courses for
the People of God ministry
and will graduate on June 4.

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•

The Daily Sentinel

Page I I

..

''

1hunday• . . , 2t. 2011

'

TiruRsnAY's

District Champslfl

HIGHLIGHTS

•

s1n
MASON- Racine's Jamie
Anderson joined David
Reed, Jr. of Mason as &lt;me of
rwo local golfers tu sink a
hole-in-one at Riverside Golf
Club. jamieis masterpiece
came during the ·Wednesday
Men League's play on May 2
on the 14th hole of the
Riverside Course. Using a
pitching wedge, Anderson's
shot traveled 122 yards ro the
hole. The shot, the second of
his career, was witnessed by
Red Tuck;er of Mason, Tom
Woods of Syracuse and Jay
Bostick of Racine. ,
Reed's shot came on the
14th hole on May 15 and was
a 115 yard shot. Using a sand
wedge, he sank the second
.hole-in-one of his career. ·
Witnessing the feat was David
Reed, Sr. of Mason.

Eaale Hoops
~lilp

announced
E.A ST

MEIGS

_

The

CLUTCH PITCHING - Eastern's Jull Bailey fires to the plate in Wednesday's district title game against Portsmouth Clay.
Belley pitched a 2.() shutout to give the Lady Eagles their first trip to the regionals since 1992. (Dave Harris)

third annual ~agle Basketball
·
•
·
camp will take place June 4-8
for players entering grades 3
•through ~ : For playf:rs entering grades 7-9. the camp will
run June 11-,5.
Botli camps are to take
.
.
·
1
.
place from 9 a.m. to noon.
·
~
·
·
·
.
·
The camp is open fo~ 'both ,
·
BY ScoTT Wo!
uled to begin Wednesday, but was fie~d this Monday, the sixth day after the
·
· OVP COfi~ESPON ,
moved back a day to accommodate ongmally scheduled date. Eastern put
boys . and girls ~d will be
conducted by DiStrict Coa,ch ·, , W.A\'f:RLY - !he!IEtern :. Eagles ., teams w·h. o .ha.d .n ot.. yet p_layed be.cause Sandy. Powell on base with a single.
;..$. t h"
·
' • ' 1~,.;
-"atawe
~ '11 '' , il:lvercame
!o w.rlv~~~
· ,,-.,.
· th e b attorn half th e
-~·
~ );ear:
HOWle
.
, several
: ...,~..:mm..
~•"'·-"
._..,,, ,,.,_ .. Qf th, .O, J;Y~il!th
.. e5- :~·-•··,·. !\·'·•• -~ , :~.;•&lt;;_,.1:;.,~
....y_,h ad a threat m
anp his ,p,Iayeis and .staff.
·
rams, week-long C:lelays_ . lirea , ,. 1 • , ~ij!4i,tei'n ~t went to ·~R.egtOJWS'm "''nmng when lead off batter Edgerton
The canip , will emphasize
the. Portsmou!h Clay Pa thers (l6-7y 1992; but also mac:le trips ·ih 1985 when ' walked, but was left stranded on a coofundamentals essential to,pro- . e~ ~ut to cl:u~mg ~ ha~~fo~ght 2-~ it diJ,imed the Regional Championship pie great defensive plays and an inning
duce winning basketball...
Dtstnct Champ~onshtp w;I.P that ~arns · on its state . bound excu~sion, th~n ending strikeout b~ Bailey..
Th
t 0 fth
· $30
~he Eagles their fourth lf'berth m a returned agam the ·followmg year m As Monday's action contmued Eastregional tournament.
1986.
ern threatened and left the bases ioaded
e. cos . • e $c 4amOphlsfi
pdarereg~fsthtratlon or Camt
e ~t
The
Eagles
(21-1)
wo
thei·t
·
21st
.
"It feels good, really good to be in the second frame when the rains
Y. 0 . e c~p. M p pJreOstraight game after a first gafue loss early where we are at right now," said East- came. Kass Lodwick had led off when
ay
.
· h
Eas
1 d·1. ·
h
regtstratiOn Is
.
d
d
·
h
f
h
·
m
t
e
season.
tern
a
vi!nces
to
t
e ern Coach Pam Douthitt. ·"We have she was hit with a pitch, Bailey singled,
1 1
0
nc u ~ ,Ill t e co~t S~ e
Regional tournament at Pickerington · accomplish~d a lot since our first game and both advanced on a 1-3 ground out
~mp ~s ~ ~:;fP /tw_;·~·
, tonight (Thursday) at 4:30 \Vhere they ' of the season.
by Amanda Yeager. Tammy Bissell
1
- ·
amp as et ·• an n
meet the Crooksville Ceramics (17-6).
"Our defense was very good tonight. walked to load the bases as Clay's pitchPlaying on an adjacent field at the same We made the big plays when we had to er H_arris became visibly shaken. Then
ual awards.
Preregistration forms and
·
· B
U ·
d s b
time IS erne mon an
checks should' be made out to
kli
· tras urg- and Juli again pitched a great game. A.t the rains came. That set the stage for· Ia.st
.
Fran ·n. The two winners· would play this stage of the game, y·ou have to play night's play.
Howie Caldwell; 40878 Old •
Saturday at 1 p.m. in the Regional every game like we played tonight."
As play resumed Wednesday with the
Seven Road; Reedsville, Ohio
Ch amptons
· h'1p at ·p·ICk enngton.
·
,
After several trips to Waverly only to
45772. Registration
should
Th e reg10n
· al was ongma
· · 11v sc h ed - watch it rain, both clubs finally hit the
.
PI~H He Dlstrtct. BJ
·
;&amp;;'·
,
include Name, Age, Grade
entering, and T-Shirt size.
'lll

Receives doll

.

CHICAGO (AP) - Julio: ·.
Zuleta swears he's not into.
voodoo.
That little shrine he created:
the other day to fire up the:
Chicago Cubs' bats? It's made:
of fruit and the bones used to:
bone bats. Using a stetho-:
scope to check some of his·
teammates' bats for hits befoti
the game Wednesday? Just:
some goofiness to loosen:
everyone up.
Whatever Zuleta's doing, it: ·
seems to be working. ·
• .
Matt Stairs, assured by.
Zuleta and his stethoscope:
that there was "at least one·
hit" in his bat, drove; in the:
. go-ahead .r un as the Cubs
beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-2
in a game delayed by rain.
"He said . I had one hit in
it," Stairs said. "It was a big
hit."
Try huge. Trailing 2-1 after
a rain delay in the top of.the
third and with Sammy Sosa
missing his second game
because of tightness in his
lower back, Stairs and Ron
Coomer hit back-to-back
RBI singles off Rob Bell (03).
Zuleta got a big hit of his
own, hitting a solo homer in
the second inning on the first
·pitch he saw. Zuleta was using
Rondell White's bat, hoping
to "make it warm" and snap
White's 1-for-27 slump.
As for White, he got an
infield single in :the seventh
inning after coming in as a
defensive replacement.
"I've got to keep doing it
because the last four games,
we've won," Zuleta: said.
"Whatever it takes to win,
we're going to do it."
Ruben Rivera gave the
Reds their only offense with a
rwo-rurt homer in the second
inning. Rivera was a late addition to the lineup after Pokey
Reese scratched with a sore
right thumb.
While _}uleta's antics keep
his teammates entertained, th~
Cubs' bullpen deserves some

,.........ec~.. a:s

.

'

Johnson·· places fifth, once·
'

The winner of a Lloyd MiddiElton doll donated by Carolyn Darst
·~ to ·raise money for medical expenses for Chrissy Walker was
Glririy Barrett. The benefit project rais~d $1,243.01.

.Drop us a line in cy~rspace.
_news@mydailysentinel.com

*'

INC 0 L

l

BARLOW - Local racer
.. Kevin Layne recorded a big
'feature win in the Briggs
Stock Medium Karting division over perennial winner
Mike Dickerson this past
weekend at 339 Speedway.
Layne started on the pole
and beat both Dickerson and
the rain in a rain-shortened
feature event. ·
. Layne defeated Dickerson,
Jamie Wheeler, Eric Sheppard; Bobby · Sandy, John
Church,
Brad
Hesson,
Mitchel Shaffer, Bill Fortney,
Matt Holcomb, Mike Mosh. older, Rick Northcraft, .and
Nick Cotbitt..
Another Racine driver,
Danny Gheen, claimed first
place in the Stock Light Divi- ·
sian over Mike . Dickerson,
iyte·r Wallace, Derek Ransom,
Terry , Roberts, and Corey
Holbrook.
In the Junior Division, . it
was winner 'JYier Heddleston
over Ryan Weaver, Chase
Grimm, and Michael Umstot.
In the Rookie Division it was
J. D. Smith, over Greg
Streight, 'JYior Cottrille, and
Coty Streight. ·

•••••

j

Not · seeing your team's
·results in the Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to send
game and event repotts by fax
to 992-2157.
:

.

..

. ,.. ,,. .
,

again, in f.egionallong jump
'

""'
ZANESVILLE - At Wednesday's Region
Seven, Division II track championships,
Meigs long jumper Derrick Johnson missed a
trip to the state meet by a matter. of inches.
Again.
·
Johnson's . bound of 20 . feet, five inches
· placed him fifth in the event, just ,3.5 inches
· from fourth place and a berth With the top
jumpers in Ohio.
· Jo~nson also placed fifth in the 2000 long
jump.
Meigs' other competitors didn't fare so well
however.
Brook Bolin competed in both girls hurdle
events, but did not place, running ~ 52.30 to
place 13th ih' the 300-meter hurdl~and ruh-

nig a 17.30 in the 100-meter hurdles, ';Vhich
did not qualify for Friday's finals.
'l;he Meigs 4x800 meter team of Ashley
Thomas, Bea Morgan, Shannon Soulsby, and
Emily Story did not place in an race which
s'aw fourth place Circleville run a 9:55.09.
When the meet resumes on Friday, Story
will compete in the finals of the girls' BOOmeter run. Thomas will compete in the girls'
1600- meter' run.
·
John Diddle will compete in .the finals of
the boys' 3200-meter run on Friday.
After one day of competition, the Meigs
boys stand in 14th place with four. points.
Logan Elm leads the boys meet with 19
points~

FLYER - Derrick Johnson of Meigs takes off in the Region 7
long jump finals. (Dan Polcyn)

·

'l!ii
.J,.

. . 1.,

.

Juan Gone's homer lifts Tribe over Rangers
'\} ;

" CLEVELAND (AP) There was the disputed home
run. The one by .Eddie
Taubensee in the clutch, and
another by Juan Gonzalez,
who seems to hit one every
time he swings inside Jacobs
Field.
r, •
Gonzalez .homered with
one out in the 1Oth inning
Wednesday. night to beat his
former team · and end an
intense g:IIIlC as the Cleveland
Indians rallied Jar' a 4-3 ,win
ave~ the Detroit Tigers.
II

Gonzalez's walk-off homer
·was his '12th overall this season, his eighth at home and
gave ' him 20 in 52 career
games ,at the Jake.
. "I expect Juan to hit ·one
every ,time he's up/' Indians
manager Charlie Manuel said.
"I kno~ he can't do it, but he
makes it look so easy."
.Cleveland had a homer
taken away in the sixth inning
:ind lost Manuel, who was
ejected for arguing.
Taubensee, sent up to

pinch-hit by Manuel who .was
calling the shots from the
runway behind the dugout,
tied it at 3 with a rwo-out
homer in the bottom of the
ninth.
"I didn't even expect to
pinch-hit," Taubensee said.
"But Charlie said to get
ready. I just came up with the
big hit"
So did Gonzalez, who drove
a 1-1 pitch from 1 Dave
Borkowski (0-1) over the wall
in left. When he finished cir-

ding the bases, Gonzalez was · to win it with one swing.
"Yeah," he said. "Absc;~lutegreeted by his Indians teammates, who had stormed onto ly."
the field along with
It was a painfiulloss for the
Ma,nuel - an inning earlier Tigers, who blew a chance to
for a brief shoving match go over .500 for the first time
.
with the Tigers.
since April 9. ·
"I don't thiijk• I deserve a
"This is a tough one to
suspension," Manuel said. take;· Tigers manager Phil
"I've just got to go out there, Garner said. "We lnade some
that's a must. That's our team. real stupid pitches. We let a
I'm not going to sit in the really, nice game slip away."
clubhouse with my team out
Botb
Wickman
(2-0)
there."
Gonzalez said he was trying
PleiM ... 11:1h,IS

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Parson, Acquisitions Jewelry, 1!51
SooonO Avonuo, Gslllpol~
Postal Jobs $48,323 oo yr Now
hinng· No experience-paid train·
lng- great benefits, call 7 days
800-429-3860 ... J-365

Floor Supervisor AN Positions
available part-time/ daya or evenIngs Base rate of $14 00 an hour
wltn axportenca pay $ 25 ontH
dlflorenllal for evenings S 50 for
midnights .. Attendance bonus
available, many extras Please
call Scenic Hills At 1740)4467150
FOREMAN POSITION
lmmedla1e Hire For The Right
Person Permanent Full-time
Position, Requires Exceptional
Skills With All Phases Of
Aosldonllal Remodeling Work
Siding Windows, Carpentry,
Decks, Car Ports Finish Work.
Framing Etc The Person We
Are looking For Should Work
Well Wllh Olhera Be Able
To
Tnlnk On Your
Feet
&amp; Mako Good Job Declslona.
E•perlenctd Appllcanll Shou!G
Have Good Rererencea Tools,
AnG Aollabla Tranoporlallon We
Art An Eatabllohod Company,
Work Is Local, Pay 11 Band On
Experience Incentive Bonu&amp;IS &amp;
vacation Tlmo If You Aro Looking
For A Long Term Stobla Work,
Ploaoo Apply At Chrlallon 1
Conatrucllon, tnc , 1403 Eoolern
Avonuo, thlllpollo OH Olllat
Houri· Mondly· Friday 1·1,
(740)448-45t4
Govornmtnt Jobo t II 00•$33 00
por hour potonllol Paid Trolnlngl
FUll llnoflll For lnort lnlormotton
cal •--e74-81&amp;0 at 3234
CIAOWING BUSINESS NEEDS
H!L~I Work lrom home! Mol~or•
Glr/E•Oomrnorct 1822+/'NHk PT
t•ooo-uooo/wk FT IOO· t21·

lUI WWWG!Iom2-.oom
Holp

N -. To

Pk&gt;k IIIIW•

btrrlto, Apply In Peraon, Tloylor'o

....,. f'alch, 2184 Kerr Aold

$2500 possiblo monthly growing
gourmet musluooms lor us FREE
lnlormatlon Spa'olime EnterpriH
Col troo 1-800-910.3086

I NOTICE!
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do buSI·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to sonG money through tho
mall until you have •nveetlgated

lheoflering
A+ M&amp;U MARS/NESTLE Estab
llsl1t0 VonG1ng Route Wll sell by
10 I Under $9K minimum invaatment required Excett.nt ProfIt Potential Finance Available(
Goocl CroGII Toll Froo •••"'(888)

sn

270-2168.....

Earn $90 000 YEARLY ropalrlng,
NOT ropfoclng, Long cracko fn
Wlndohlelds Froo vldoo 1-800·
828-8523 USIConaGI, www gla&amp;l•
mecllon!Lcom
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmllld In·
com1 potential No exp•rlence
nocauary Frto lnformotlon &amp;
CO-ROM lnvostmont from $2495
Financing available 1800) 322·
1138 EXT 050
wwwbuilnoao-starlup.com

Start Your Buslnlla Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available AI Allordable Rata
Spring Valley Plaza, Call rto-4480101
State A Travel Agency receive
training. buslnoos support, your
own lravel weballt and 1111'181 discounVperks Earn big SSS Nominal startup cosll 1-888·899·0901
or
www EarnBucksFrom·
Homo.com
WANTED 73 PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 lbs In 30 days! Program start
ing under $30 All natural Doctor
recommended Free counseling
Call 1·800-308-7429 or viSit
www 911batterheatth com

POSTAL JOBS- Up to $18 35/
hour Hiring lor 2001. Paid trainIng Full benollla Call toll tree
7am-7pm 1-888-7'28-9083, ..,., WORK ~ROM HOME! Earn
1705
•'!}J 1 ~ lfl."') .. ~ • ~ $500-$7,000/monlh PT/FT Full
Training Free lnlormatlon Call
At&amp;ponslbla Babysitter Needed
Nowt 1-212·812·5490
For 2 Month &amp; 19 Month Oldo
www ahalnurdreams com
Rotating Shift Some Overnight
(7401448-'7198
230 Profeealonal

'

Salas Person Experience With
Rotalf Sales And Knowledge Of
Bulldlng
Material a Apply In
ParJon At Thomas Do-ll Center
Gallpolls
'

E•cellent Opportunity For A
Reglslorad Nurso In Gallla And
Meigs Counties Wllh Growing
Homo Hoalth Agency Good
Benefits, waoot Hours Call
Today AI (740)448 3808 Or
Villi 762 Second Avenue
ClllllpoHB, OH 45831

Opportunity

PEPSIICOKE/FRITO
LAY
_ _vtf11ty..;..;..::..:::(=EEWD=::.'--· 1 SNACK AND SODA VENDING
Naodtd Exporlonctd Crow lor ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
SOiling and Flntahtng Sectional SSALL CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
Houolng Band Pricing Information CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
anG oxporlonco to Southern SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
Hom11, PO Box 829, Jackson, LENT PROFITS 1·800·731-7233
OH 45840
EXT 2203

CDL·A Drivers Experienced/In·
experienced West Coast Avail·
able •Great Pay*MIIaa•Banallt~·
Tranoportallon'Lodglng Included.
COL Training Available
Call 1·800-348-1380

EARN $25,000·$50 000/yr, Modi·
cal Insurance Billing Nteded lm·
modiallllyl Homo Computer Needed FREE tntornot, 1-800·291·
4883 Oopl "09

Buelneu

"Enoour~Worl&lt;ploce ~

SaOta PersonFull-Time, Banefits Retail Elq)erlence Pr•ferred
Apply AI Lllallyle Furniture No
Phone Calls Appty In Person
858 ThlrG Avenue, Golllpollo
Ohio
'

and Flea Market
Countt:y Corner- Flea Markef,
Torch. Ohio Friday Saturday &amp;
Sundey Open Mondey, Memorial
Day 740 887-3091

210

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent Income Easy claims
proceuing Full training Home·
PC requlfld Call PhySICian &amp;
Healthcara Development• toll
~se 1-800.712·5933 ... 2070

ENORIIOUS YARD SALE
Next To Flatrock Fire Department Church pianist or organta1 need·
8 Mite&amp; From Point Pteasanr On fld tor Hope Baptist Church. Grant
Routt 2 North, MEMORIAL DAY Street, Middleport Sunday only
WEEKEND, Friday, Saturday am &amp; pm services. 740 774-9433
Sunday &amp; Monday, 8 OOam Until
??? Rain Or Shine Antiques, !;ots Claaa A Or B COL Driver
Of Glassware Washer &amp; Dryer Wanted 2 Yeare Experience,
(740)388-8331 Loave Name &amp;
Household llama &amp; Appliances
Baskets Crafts Home Interior Number
Grlll, Lawn &amp; Other Furniture
Wooden &amp; Ofllce Chairs, Word Dental Hygienist Part-time Andl
Processor, Books, Old Lifo Or Full-limo Dental Hygiene poAnd Other Magazines, Recorda, sition Available Submit Ruumo
Bird Cage, Christmas Decor&amp;· Or Call Drs Smith &amp; Jorgansen,
lions, Shoeo Puraos, Clothing &amp; 995 Jackoon Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
45831 (740)446-2191
MucttMore
Gun Collection &amp; Related ltema,
Reloading Items Safe Knives,
Watchea, CB Radios &amp; Anten·
nas Scannera, Truck Tool Box,
Live Trap, Good Tires, Sell 01
Wheel Covera 4 Wheeler Tiraa
Bumpor, Boat Trallor Tlros &amp;
Alms, Microscope Set1 a Lota
More Yamaha 4 Wheeler- wl
Powor Take Of!· 1 Rough &amp; 1
Finish Mower BIG Auortment
And Lots Of Stufflll Don't Mlao
Thla Oneil Items Starting At 10
Cents, Plenty Of Parking , 111

FINArKIAL

soleo Conditions Apply Open-

---.oom/np

Form Nouso. BOiuUfutty Aomoflolocf 2M3 Squllrt Fool 17 Acf·

t.orvo

Bric1c . _ On 26 I
Roomo. Solid Ook Coblnoll,
OoMa &amp; Trlfn Urge Fomltyroom
Wrlh Firoploco 3· 112 Balhl •
Woti«KKI BIHmonl With Kitchin
&amp; Botl1 2 Cor Gorago, Worbhop
With loll And Bath Fruit Trool I
Gllpe Adlor (740)25H831

Somaone To Run Local Trash
Route, To Drive &amp; Load Mull
Have Class A COL &amp; 2 Yoaro
Driving E&gt;parlonco For Nlghtahlft
(740)388 9888 8-Spm

10

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma

Servlcee
US NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash for remaining payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annul
ties! Settlements! Immediate
Quotesm 'Nobody beats our prlces • National Contract Buyers
(800)490 07~1 ext 101 wwwnatklnaloonlractbuyars com
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to S~OO Instantly by phone! 1877-EAALYPAY Lief 750005, 1st
ADVANCE FREEl
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18511
No FH Unllls We Wlnl
1·888-582-3345

IJ•-------..-

donorawoekly
• .., $45
$80 for 2 740or 3 1.1
Ilours
Call Sera-Toe
592-8851
Wanted· alngla person to live In
and care for 1·8 residents In·
eludes room &amp; board and salary
Call for on Interview, 740 9925039 botwoon eam &amp; 7pm
Work From Home, Part-lime/ Fulllimo $25- $15/hr Paid vacatlono
1-888-87H042

140

BuelnHI
Training

Ollllpolto CIIMt Coltoge
(CIIHII Close To Heino)
Call Toelayl740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
Reg 190·05-12748

160

lmllallon orcllcrlminltlon
biH&lt;f on fiCO, color, reiiQion,
oex lamlllllllaluo o r origin, or any Intention ID
moko any ouch jnlwlonco,

School•
Instruction

' k""""W ICCOfJI

Wanted To Do

Thbl neunpsper wll no1:

IIIMrllsemenllforrufwhlclllo In violation of the
law Our rudeno 11rt henoby
lnlormoO tholaii-Hngo
adverliled ' " " " - " " a - on on equal
_.Willy boolt.

B&amp;B Construction- Rooting, Sid·
lng Concrete Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting Free Esllmates Call
(30ol)675-1738 Alter 5pm
Christian Mother Would Like To
Babysit Your Child In My Home,
13 Years Experience Located By
Kelly Drive On Georges Creek
Rd (740)44 I-Q3!i9
Davia's General Contractors
Plumbing. Electric, Painting
Decks,
Mise
Work, Call
(740)256-9373 Or Cell Phone 130ol·833·8265
Froolonca English Aiding Instructor, $151 Hour Call Agnes 0
(740)441-Q184
Gaorg11 Portable Sawmill don't
haul your logo to !he mill jull coil
3Qol-675-195'
Lawn Mowing, Wood Eottng
Dock Ctoonlng,
Rollnllh)pg
Removal Of Unwonted llomo
From !ulldlngo Coli 1740144'·

1eo-l

- n g In

Nm-..- ·

OED
Get your HS equivalency diploma
with our easy horne study course,
1-IOQ-589-2183 ••• 310

180

Aft,..,_

•

REAL ES1AfE

310

Homee for Sal a

(2) Houses For Sale 2 Bodroom,
1 Bath $750 Down Payment, Noar
Gallipolis And Racine Ohio Call
David 0 I ·500-333-691 0
100% remodeled house In Po·
meroy, great price musr see, wtll
conskter land contract. 740-898·
6783
2 atory House AI II 65 Park
Drive ._ Bedroom. 1 Bath, Up·
staira &amp; Llvlngroom, TV Room &amp;
Olnlngroom Kitchen, Bedroom. &amp;
, Bath On 1Sl Floor Full Ba81mont
BI·Lavol Dock, 4&gt;18 Pool, ~lock
Workahop
$89,900
Firm
(304)875-1145
3 8odroom l -Ila Both, All
ElectriC, 2200 Square F11t, 2
Ap1rtm1nta Good CMcHtton, At
2403 Mount Vernon Av1nu1
l'!;nt PHIInl, (304)185-3825

Maturo Chrlotlon Lody to Cart
For \'our LIHio On01 You Aro
Tho loot For Them, Dut 1
Am Tilt Sooond 801t1 3 V.oro
Old Or Older, In t.w Home Call
(740)448•045 I NilghborhooG
AoiCI, Glh~ll&lt; CIOH
To
Le Grlndll 0111 HloN 5 00

3 BtGroom Houoo, Bath &amp; 112,
Doubla Wlndowo &amp; Formot Dining
Room + Polio· Goo Furnsael AJC,
(3Qol)6711-8022

Aepolrtng Lawn Mowero AnG
Smell lnglne. Plck· up And
DIIIVIry Avalleble ~or O"ollty
Service Call (740)44&amp;-7504

Ftm Uppor, 2 Bodroom Now
Roof, Newer Furnace, Noodo
Work, Ao lo. 145,000 1740)1115182 (740)44H238
•

3 112 Mllto Out Sandhill AooG
(304)1711-2507
'

2512 Good ......
Offlco lluilding In Mlnlrollillo, 800
Ing .... $30MnO' 814-8711-18111.

350 Lots &amp; Ac...age
I 3 Acroo With Booullful Lake
Vlow Slloa $50,000 18 Acreo
With Lorge Lake, Moblto Home
With Add On $79, 500 Gollla
County On Blacktop Road,
(740,_yl
15 acm on Lincoln Hll , Pomor·
Will linsnco I%- $200 down15yr note- 1150 per month· botloon In 5 740-992-2829

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES!
SO OR LOW OOWNI TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREOITI FOR USTINGI CALL I1100'501·1mi&gt;CI 9813

ov

ca,...
Shoo For Rent On Ka·
nawha River, 8 mllll from Point
Pleuant, t1ec1r1c only (3Qol)6751722, (304)815-4144 After epm

Point Ploolllll· 1I 12 Hogg Slrtll,
2 Bedroom Home. BIHment,
Priced $30.000 New Hoven, 3
Bedroom Ranch Carport I outbull~~~· prlcad $35,000 Call
(304
·2221 Or 130ol)882-2405

Two car g~rage/apartmtnt In
Middleport, two boGroomo, full
both, LA . kllchon ,uh electric
range, centro! air, 740-985-34150
or 7o40-992-2791

320

Mobile

Homee

for Sale
SO Down For Good Cuatomoro
On Land- Homa Packagtl·
Oakwood· Gallipolis, (740)4483093
14x70 Southern Dream free o ..
livery free Satup only $9995 1·
88&amp;-828-3428
I 8 Wide Only $ 19~ 00 Por
Mont11, 8 99% Fbcad lntartll Rill
With Air And
UnGorplnnlng
1-888-B28-342t
\
1965 10x50 Now Moon, has gas
lurnace, new water heater. 740965-3550 bllort lpm
1976 14x70, 2·3 Bodroom, Now
Since 1997· AJC, Furnace. Water
Heater $6500 (304)875·3008
Mornings 17401385 ' 4217 Even·
lngs

Looking To Buy A Now Homo?
Oon1 H... LonG! W. Oont Hurry
Only 10 loll 1..111. 304-138-7295
fi~NTAI
'

I 082 Sunoot Drive, Very Good
Condition Oopoall I Ralerencos
Required. No l'oll Call (740)441tlll
3 Bedroom Hou81, Ill Part&lt;
Drive, Point Ptoount, No Poll,
Roferenct &amp; oapoolt, $450
(304)118-214D
3 btdroom home Minersville
lrta, river vltw. reterenc11 rt·
qulrt&lt;f, dapoolt roqutroG, no pots,

740-992-ern oflar epm

1st Time Homo Buyora Program,
Special Financing .lwallablo,
130ol)755-5686
28x80 3 Or 4 Bedrpom, Only
$345 00 Por Month 8 99% Fixed
lntonoot Rate, 1-8811--3426
AMAZING Little or No Credit
Needed, Special Govornmont Flnsnctng, 130ol)755-5885
Confused? Don't Bo- Cali Oak·
wooG· Galllpona Bill Prlcoo.
Bost Service, Bost Poople If \bu
See And Ad You Like- Call Usl
(740)4411--3093

Factory Goof 32x80 S1 o ooo Dileount only $1000 00 Down, Dt•
livery, and ootup paid by Factory
1-IIOQ-891-8777
Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
AICiucllonll304)736-3409
Limited Or No Orodil? Government Bank Finance Only AI Oak·
wood In Barbouravllle WV 304738-3-'09
Lot model clearance, save up to
$8 625 with any home, cl1tck ua
out were dealing, Cole's Mobill
Homes, US 50 Eall, Al11tno, on
Lot model clearance, one 2000
oacllonal save 19,825, for 2000
model alnglas, 5 pre owned sin·
gl01 must go by May 31, no reasonable offer refuaed thtll
homes won't last long, ao atop In
and check us out, wa'ra dealing,
Cole's Mobile Homta Alhen1
Ohio Open M·W 9·7 Thuro-Frl ,
9 6, Sat 10-5
'
Must aell I 995 Shull 18x80, 3
bedroom. 2 bath Excellent condl·
lion Call Choryl 740-385-4387.
New 14 It wldo $499 down only
$199 per mon calf now 1-800691-6777
New 1 8 ft wide $499 per mon
only $270 por mon call now t500-891-8717
New 2001 Fleetwood only
$146 ta por month Coli Nikki
740.385--1387
Now 2001 Flattwood , 3 br , 2
bath, sot up In Tho Country Mo·
bile Pork, rooctr "' in,
1995 down, $1119 81 par month,
74G-9e2-21e7
New doublo wldo 3 br 2 bo
tlllll oo Gown OI\IY lat5 per
mon eotll now l·loo-llil-8777
Prlvlll Property And Now DOU•
bltwtde, Ono Payment (»1)731•
72118
Slngll l'aronl Program, IPIC)II
Fl~lnotng Av.llablt, (804)185·
7191

GoodI
1 Pecan Wood Dining Room
Cornor Cupboard $100 1 New
Ouaan Size Funon. $225, I Maple Dlmng room Cubbard, $85 1
New Amish Made Porch Swing
$100 (740)387-7401
3 POICO LIVing Room Sol, Couch

w/Managers &amp; f'echners. Love·

seat, Rocker Recliner In Teals.
Like New, 4 PIICI Bedroom Sit,
Black &amp; Gold Modern. Good
Price 6 Ploce Dining Room SatBlack &amp; Gold. Glass Top Modlm
Chairs.
Good
Condition
(740~787

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers, Ranges. Refrlgrators. Up To 90 Days Guaranteed! We Soli New Maytag Appllancll. French City Maytag,
740-448-7795

For Sale Aecondltlonad washera , dryera and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jacl&lt;oon Avonuo. (3Qol)675-7388
Four Gas Hot Water Heaters, 30·
40 Gallon , In Good Condition.
(740)44&amp;-8823
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers, relrlgeratore,
rangea Skaggs Appllanc81, 71
Vine Stroot, Coll740·448·7.398,
1-888-818-0126

3 Bedroom Hou11 For Rent Or
Salt, Will Accept HUD, Call
1740)441-Q572 Ask For Valerio

Main Stroot Fumi1ura
(3Qol)675-1422
515 Main Slrtat Point Plea-t

Or LMit Mosaaga
3 8oOtoom HouH On Route 160,
Near Wilkesville, Stove, Aefrlg·
111tor Water/ Trash Paid, Very
Nlct
$425 Ptua Daposlt
(740)318-8371
BUY Forocloaod Homos From
S1 0,0001 Atpo'o I Bankruptcy's
For Lllllngs 1·800·319·3323 Ext
1109
Pitot Program, Renters Needed,

:lQol-738-729!1

-=-------.----

1988 14&gt;70, 3 BICiroom, shingles
Roof. Vinyl Siding, Romodelod,
Very Clean $12.900 Make Olftr,
12&gt;12 Storage Building For Sale
(740)441-QI13

HOUIBholcl

3432

410 HouHI for Rent

Throe bedroom, 1841 Lincoln
1 Heights, Pomeroy Nice yard ga1982 14x70 Fairmont TownhouM, rogo, basement, ltaH, Glposll &amp;
2 bedroom. 1 large blth wllh hut reference• required, 740-887·
pump &amp; ale, $1,500, 740-591- 3886
4043 or 740-992-0938
"
420 Mobile Home1

1988
Clayton Trallor, 3 Or 4
Bedrooms, Total Electric, 2 Full
Bath&amp;.
15000 OBO
Call
(740)388-1772 Serious Callers
Only

51 0

China Cabinet, $300 Solid Maple
Tabla With 4 Chairs, $100,
Roll-a·way Bed $25 1740)4~8-

S

2 BICimorn, 2 Bath, CIA, Stove,
Relrlgerator, Water/ Trash Paid,
Very Nice, $350 Plus Oopooll,
71
(740)388-a3
3 bedroom mobile home lor rent
no poll, 740-992-6858
All Elactrtc Uobllt Home, Complttaly RamaGelad Ready June
111, No Poll. (740)387-oBII
Buulllul Rlvar View IGeal For 1
Or 2 Pooplt, Rolerencos, Oopo~t.
No Poll Folltr Trailer Park, 740·
441-Q181
Nice Ctoan 2 BaGroom Mobile
Home
No Poll, Dapoall
(740)3711-2254 Polrlot

440

Apartmentl
for Rent

I Room FurnlshiCI Efflcloncy, All
Ulllllloo PaiG, ShareG Both, 919
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
$125/mo (740)448-0945
2 BICimorn FurnlohiCI Apartment,
Utilities Included $400/mo No
Poll (740)387-oBII
B!AUTIFU~ APARTMENTS AT

IUDGET PAICEI AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Weolwood
Drive from $297 to $383 Walk to
ohop &amp; movloa Coil 740·4462588 Equal Houolng Opportunity
Chrloly's Family Living, 33140
Now Limo Rd RUIItnG, on~. 7401t2•1t03 Apartment, homo anG
trailer rantell Commtrcill atore·
fronta available for lease vacan·
des now
Furnlohod 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments, Clean, No Poll No SmokIng, References &amp; Deposit Ae·
Utllltlu Furnished
qulred
(740)448-1519
Gracious living 1 onG 2 boGroom
apartment• at VIllage Manor and
Alveroldo Aparlniants In MldGiepart From $278-$348 Call 740&amp;82·5084. Equal Housing Oppor-

tunltlll

Now Taking APPIIaatlona- 35
Waat 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. Includes Water
Sowaga, Trash $350/Mo 740-

'

Tara Townhoute Apartments
Very Spaclouo 2 BoGroomo
FIOOII, CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Car
poled, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo, Start $315/Mo No Plio'
Loaao Plus Stcu~ty Oapoalt Ro:
qulrtd, Dayo ?40-441·3481
Evonlngo 740·387·0502 74 o:
-0101
•

:i

'\Win Rivtf'lbwtrt now ICOIP!Ing
lppi!Qitlonllor 1 lA.
HUD IIUOilcllzad apt lor lldttty
and .--.IOH (304)t71-

te71

oWO

Spaoe

Ntw 2 Piece Llvmgroom Suites
$399 Buy, Sell, Trade
New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And
vases (740)446-4782
Solid Charry Bedroom Suite 9
Piocos Stll In Boxes $2,000 For
AI Call (304)35(Hl233

tor Rent

'emily trPt lor 1111111 oamplnO
lr"fll hoOkup and ono dock 1111
oetl 740-lfi.lltee anvumo
'

Dd-.

lndopo-nt Horbotilt
Coli For ProGuct Or Opponunlty
(740)4-11 - 1982

Mlecellanaoua
Merchandlaa

$1,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Cond l·
tloner, 2 Ton Coil, 1 line Set In·
stalled $2.295, $1,000 Back
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes
II You Don't Call Us We
Both Lose! Mobl~ Homes Our
Speciality 1-740 446 6308 1 aoo29Hl098
40 gallon natural gas hot wa1er
tank, $60, Coteman tra1ier fur
naco bottled gas 75,000 BTU's
$100. call 740 742 2373 alter
8 Foot Water Slide 8 Foot Diving
Boarct Steps, Solar Blanket Call
(740)258-1922
ALL STEEL-BUILDINGS New up
to 50% OFFI Pra-englneeroG w/
plans 30•50&gt;10 was $12,500
now $8990 50•80X14 was
$21450 now $18 990 80"50"4
was SS2,750 now $34 .990
80&gt;200x18 was $87,450 now
$59,990 1·800-24&amp;-9840.
Anne of Green Gables and The
Continuing Story Factory sealed
VHS movies $I 4 99 + S&amp;H Call
tolllrse 1-866-744-8245 (PIG TAIL) Pnnce Edward Canada
AUTDI FROII $100 oo
Pollco ln-c&gt;ounds &amp; Ropool
Toyotas, Chovy's, Jeepol
Pleaso Coli lor USIIngs
1-800-451 -0050 E•t C9817
BICiroom Suite Set. Queen Size 6
Place, Like Now Bassell, Aiding
Lawn Mower 42" Cut Murray
Like New, (740)248-5740
Compac;:t Desk Top Computer,
Pentium 3 Procenor, 17 Inch
Monitor. CDRW Drive &amp; Printer,
(304)675-26 I 1
Compularo WE FINANCE DELl
COMPUTERS! Evan with laos
lhiln ptrlect credit! 1·800-471 ·
9018 Coela AC21 www omeaolution com
Craftsman Chipper Shredder, 14•
Chain Saw, 22' Hedge Trimmer,
5hp Tiller, Gas Edger, 1 Shp,
(304)875-2365
FREE $40 wort11 of GROCERIES!
Limited to first 100 calls Tell
f - anG ilmltyl800-4211-4397
Sowmlll $3 895 New Super Lum·
btrmatt 2000, larger capaclti11 1
more options Manufacturer of
uwm1111, edgers and lklddtrl
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
8onwllf Drive, Buffalo NY 14225
"lEE lnlormollon t-800-578 ·
13831l&lt;T 200·U

=

Bto Point PIUI For All Your Pain·
lng NetGo WI StOCk Pitlsburgh
Polnto, Sikkono Wood Flnlshu
Mlhwu Stolno, (304)878•

STEEL IUILDINQS I Urgonlll
Mull move nown 28•30 3~•40,
tlx100, liquidation pricing oovt
lhouundoll 1-I00·211·tSt4 x· 1

88

IIOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Olacount Prien
On Vinyl Skirting, Doors, WinG:
OWl , Anchors Water Heaters ,
Plumbing &amp; Eloclrical Porta, Furnaces &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobile Homa Supply, 740-4489418 ...... orvb.comlllOnnoll
NEW AND U8ED STEIL Stool
Sooms, Pipe Rober For ConcNII
Angle, Channel Flat Bar, Stooi
Graung For Oralno. Dtlvewoyo 1
Walkways. Now 55 Gallon Drums
Whh Lid &amp; Ring, $1 00 EIOh. L&amp;L
Scrip Molaill740)446-7300
ReconGIIIoneG Waohor &amp; Oryora,
1100 EliCh A/C, 5,000 To 23,000
BTU For Sale, Sllrling AI $75 00
Thompson Appliance Ropolr,
3407 Jackson Avonua, (3Qol)t757388

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNER&amp;
Tappan HI Efflclancy 90% Goo
Furnac11, 011 Furnaces 12 SHr
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
System&amp; Fret 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating 6 Cooling, 1·
80Q-872·5867 www orvb con1111ennott
Waterline Special 3/t 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, I' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Bra11 Compreslllon FillingS In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISE&amp;
Jackson, OhiO, 1-800-537-9528
Yamaha Bass Guitar, $100, 200
Watt Bass Amp, $150 4·Track
Recorder, $100 080 VHS
Movies- Big Variety, 12 00 Each,
1740)446-1721

550

Building
Suppllee

Block. brick, sewer pipes, windows, llntots. etc Claude Winters.
Rio Grande OH Call 740.-2455121

560

Pete for Sale

I AKC Mate Pekingese Puppy 9
WHks OIG, I TO)' PooGie Pup, 8
Months Old (740)448-3398

ao,ooo

Natloull.elple

"''ott
' "'

(740)4oi1 ·J~ 16

~.,....,-

790

Ask ing

$3500

710 AutOI for Sale

1995 Dutchmen Ca~r w1th II·
panoo, $10,000 firm , Call 740-

'93 Uncoln Town car. $4500, go-

992-1739

Jack Russell Terrier Puppies 1
Male 1 Female 8 Weeks Old,
(740)383-8039
Raglstered Lab pups, 2 yellow, 5
chOcolate shols &amp; papers, $250
each 740.742-1118

570

Muelcel
Instrument•

NOBODY'$ FATHER CO by Kevin Jones Mary c;:hapln Carpenter &amp; Ace Smith guest On t8Jx•
1m com,cdunlversa,amaaon etc

580

Fruita

&amp;

Vegetablee
Strawberries Pick Your Own Call
Claude Wlnteno 1740)245-5121
Strawbernes- You Pick • Wt Pick,
Tavlor's Berry Patch, 286• Kerr
Rood, Open 4-Bpm May 24 &amp; 25,
8·12 May 26, (740)24l!-9047

590

For Sale

or Trade
For Sale Or Trade Antique
Botlleo &amp; Jars And Old Items
For Authentic Arrowheads In
Gallla And Mason Counllas Call
For Appointment It No Answer
Loava Massage (740)441-1238

810

IASIIIIENT
Uncondidonll lltltlme guarant..
Local referencll furnfahed El·
1115 Cll 24 Hll (140)
t48-oe70. t-aoo-287-0578. Roa·
... Wltefpfooflng

s

6323

1992 O!Gsmoblle Cutlass SuRocond~

840

uoned Climate Control Power
Everything While With Black
Top Roalty Nice Car Will Sell At
Nada Wholesale Price, $4500
(740)448- 11 55 Groat GraduaUon

EleQtlical and
Refflgeratlon

Residential or commercial wiring
new serVIce or repa1rs Master U·
cenaed electrician Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304-875·

Glfll

...

jewllq,

·~~­
MiliCi!

Foley Beloaw Sawmill, 48" &amp; 58"
Blades Wllh Power Unit, Excoltonl
condition. (740)258-1614 $3200
OBO

.....
ea•1111tneat•

....-

'

tunnieS,

1999 Lu'1'1na, 18,000 Mlloa,
LoadoG, $14,000 (304)882-3339
Call Alter epm

92 Hyundal Elanlra, NeoGa SOme
Work $550 Firm, Call (740)2450810 Evenings

UCKING IIURAL ELECTIIIC
NA'IIdtw. liAS

92 Lincoln Town Car, loaded,
Good Condition, New Tires,
$2800, 1740)388-9053 Days,
(740)388--8958 Evenings.

NllO DEVELOPMENT
NllO PROPANE
I

Truckl for Sale

lltfaro JGU brNit graund lllftY

COIIIIIUGIIon ........ -you

1985 Chovrolet Suburban Silverado, 52K Miles Loaded With Exlrto (740)446-4191

hlwlllbn1ha jxapar10 IICitiM thllilglti8IIMI ol
uflty pall''•

1988 Clltvy 112 Ton, Long Whotl
Bast Cold Air, Must See To
Appractata, (740)258-11574
1990 Jeep, 6 cylloder, automallc,
94,000 miles, excellent cond1Uon,
selling at NAOA Book rolall, 740·
992·2529, 132 Butternut, Pomer1999 Chevrolll 5·10 truck burgundy with malchlng topper, ell
options Sharpll Excellent condl·
lion $10,1100 740-992 8159

MotOI'cyclee

AOHA. 2 Ytor Old Golding,
~eoutllul Groy APHA, 4 Yoor 01~
Pelnt Mort (740)388-04Qe

Boatl

&amp; Motore

te Foot Boo I, Motor, Troller, I
Foot. Flborgtau Pop· UP Camper,
$2100 For Soth (304)871-3238

Reglotertd AngUI Springer powo,
EXCiillnl Blood Lint (740)3188758
Hay &amp; Grein

1818 Stroto'o Open Bow With
trollor Boat&amp; 8, !&gt;collont Oondl·
Ucln OMC 3 0 160 HP ln·Boord
With Cobra Out Orlvo Aoklng
~~5 can Evantngo (740)446·

640

~~304~)8::7:_:5:::·30::::30~-:-:--:::-:: 1
t!O Round Botos Hay, $12 00
tech, 1740~-7787

fOI' Sale

1888 21 Foot Bill Trockar
Pontoon Boot w/IOHP Trockar
Engine , 1987 F-150, 4 Wheel
Drive (304)882-2715
'

•,

down .

18
20
21
24

Pet.
-5118
558
.533

W

L

14
14

1/2

.,21. 7:01-

1 112

Pet

01

882
112

874

Powell looked the

Eastern threatened agam m

prepared

the seventh, but left two run-

to throw on to first, took a

ners on followmg a one out

second

caught

fly out and a 6-3 ground out.

a run

Fttch had Clay's lone htt,

glance

and

m

down.

whtle

"That really turned thmgs
around for us, I

Wtth

runs scored, whtl.c Chevaher
had an RBI single, and Car-

a btg turn-around play

It

ne Wtggms, Sandy Powell,

an

, and Janet Calaway each sm-

brmg

left a runner at first wtth one

home Lodwick with the run.

out, mstead of one in scormg

A fielder's chotec ended the

ponoon etther at second or

infield single

the score

to

1-0

East-

ern.
when

Calaway

and

Batley

was

the

wmntng

third with one out. That was

pttcher, the 21st wm of her

a huge dtfference. "

season,

fannmg

four

walking

four

hurling a

Eastern threatened in the
thud

gled .

Bailey struck out the next

m

one-httter.

end the innmg.

just two batters and struck

Bailey each singled but were

Harm

and

batter and got a fly out to

walked

Clay threat-

"Our defense was a key at

out four m suffenng the loss.

ened in the thud when the

this pomt tn the game, and

Coach Douthitt md, "We

eight and mne batters both

Juli made some good pttch-

did the thmgs we needed to

walked to bring up the top

es," wd Douthitt.

wm.

the

order.

a~

Eastern's

Clay got one more runner
m

damped down

scormg posttton

Wlth three great plays to stall

sixth

when wtth

the rally.

Fttch

walked

m

the

outs .

two out,

and

We htt well and ht t u

hard even

when we made

One of the guls said,

"It's too bad Don Oackson)

reached

tSn't here to see tt.' I told her

I -2-3

second only to be left strand-

that I felt Don has been with

in the fourth, but Cay had a

ed on a Chevaher to Wtggms

us

rally

ground out.

m

the making when

season

We dedicated

thts season to htm and hts

ball to Sandy Powell at third,

field fence for a solo home

Fitch was caught in a run

run, the score

Fttch stole second,

all

presence

pitch

hammered

over

the

left

felt

at

every

game."

2- I

a

ts

Eastern

center

4

30

plays

tomght

at

m Ptckenngton

2-0.
the ball"

Reds

And the fresh arm5 ma!le

1 hour, 15 mmutes late, and more

game started

fromPIIpBI

'adifference. The

ram m the third stopped the game for another
I hour,

of the credit for the four-game wmmng
streak. The relievers have pitched

10 2-3 score-

33 mmutes

Reds manager Bob Boone

left Bell, hts starter, m the game, and the effects
of all that stttlng around showed

less mrungs the last two games, and they hnut-

Wtth one out m the third, Bell gave up a

ed the Reds to just three htts after the ram

smgle to Van Poppel Two batters later, Bell
walked Guiterrez. Coomer then smgled to

delay.
Todd Van Poppel (2- I) allowed only one htt
and three walks in

3 2-3

innings, smkmg out

five Three other relievers combmed for three
htts 10 two mmngs before Tom Gordon came

deep left to dnve m Van Poppel, and Stam followed wtth another RBI smgle.
Belt gave up three runs and five htts m

as many

2 2-

3 mnmgs
Bell also ga~ up a homer m

m and pttched the moth for his fourth save
It was the fourth appearance m

mrung to Zuleta

the second

Reds pttchers have now

I3

days, and the first consecuttve saves for Gor-

allowed at least one

don, who m1ssed all of last season after recon-

games, matchmg the mark set June 29-July

structive&gt; elbow surgery

1955

"Every guy I've gone to out there the last

we

Cubs m anager Don Baylor satd "They want
1

wtth them"

I Oth

just

homer

moments

benches

when Tigers

ptece

agamst

Dean Palmer hit a two-run

Cleveland, got Cruz to htt a

homer and Roger Cedeno an
RBI smgle for Detrott.

nghtthe

Ttgers starter Steve Sparks,

As he approached the bag,

shutout ag.unst the Indians on

mound and first
Jones decided to tag

who
Cruz,

April

p11ched

I 4,

a

four-hit

allowed mne hits m

both

who shoved the rehever away

stx mnmgs The knuckleballer

empned

wtth both arms The two went

walked none, struck out four

face-to-face as players

and caught

after

bnefly

came

10,

htgh hopper that the

for the wm

Taubensee's

ERA

hander fielded between

worked out of a pm 10 the

top of the

straight

(wm)," Coomer satd "So keep messmg

cle, Jones, who entered wtth
an 8.68 career

homer m

"(Zuleta) started messmg wtth the bats and

few games has been able to bnng tt home,"

I
f
Tribe
I fromPipBI
E·i'

reliever Todd

from

a break m

the

Jones and Jacob Cruz collided

both dugouts sprmted onto

stxth when Cordero had an

at first.

the field.

apparent,

m

the

game,"

go-ahead

homer

nullified

"I thought he was trymg to

"I guess tt put a little more
drama

Cordero's shot was tmn:illy

get me Wtth hts elbow," Jones

Taubensee satd. "It's one of

satd. "We were two guys try-

ruled

those thmgs that you want to

mg to do our JOb and JUSt got

umptre Marvm Hudson, but

happen."

tangled."

then reversed ~y plate ump

We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Ma,.aaer. We are currently
IMklna to fill over 100 po11t1on1. No
exp. nece..arv. Eam up to $15/hr.
Very flexible tchedullnQ. Both fit and
p/t avail. MedlcaVDentaVPd
vacatlon/Momt. opps. avail for f/t.
Call today, start tomorrow...
1-888-974-JCfBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOUI
C_pG Managem~nt, LL.C

Eastern

had a home run and both

then on Summers' bard hit

s

led

stngles, Lodwtck

play JUSt

copy

D

Batley
two

felt," md

"That

Lodwtck

'

IK--

C!Dgo- Boo
G-Il 11 TOIOnkl (Corpontor 4-1), 7:05p.m
To-~ 1-8) II 'Ill,... 8lfY l s 1· 3), 715 p.m.

t87 • 112
289 12 1/2

32

30
29

01

sort of gave us a 1tft and was

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Horae/ Coil Broeklng/ Training,
Aoglottrtd Quarter Horsoe Fot
Slit, Letart, WV (304)188·331 &amp;,
www seyrafarlltl OPm
Hor818 For Solo (740)258-&amp;13!1

---

TOIVf'fiO

L

25
25
24
21
13

that Chevalter beat out for

L
r r--====~~==;:i~=======-"""1
•-

(304)t78-7511130ol)~75-7423

....

W

a hard-hit ball to shorntop

110 Help Wanted

2000 400EX 4· wnoeler, llka now
over tt ,200 In l&gt;lrtl 14,800

750

Till Cllllllfort You Dig
Plogt•tt. 11'1 wtit1lt digging
Into.

lllundar'•-

-(Mo-&amp;-o)MNY(UtaWII•-4), 1:05 p m.
Anllltin(Orllz3-3)ot8 l l t o e ( 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
-~ 1-GJ•Cic••llll(-

stngle.

'

1999 Harley Davidson Electra
Glldo Clalllc Fuol ln)ocllon, 2

(EMil 3-2). 10:15 p.m

in the sixth when freshman

1-800482-2784

1989 Kawaoakl Ninja, 800ac,
Black/ Red. Runs Good, I 3 ooo
Mlloo, w/Full Face Htlmot $1100
Calll740)3911-9980 Alter 7pm

2-5~ 7 10 p.m.
eoa.do (1-.on Q-2) II s.n Fnonclooo

htt, led off the frame with a

24 Hourt Alily, 7 Diyl AWttlt

ceo,

Llveetock

lllmlnltld by Pllaclpattng In

Ohio UUIIIIOI Ptilllcllun Bt,.lco I

1 985 Honda SaDie, V$, EC
$1800 OBO, 1983 Kaw 440 LTD
$550
(7401446-9355

1998 .Hondo VTR 1OOOF Super·
howk , 2 Brotboro Racing Plpoo,
Asking $8000 (3Qoi)173-8BU

""" oonllructlon she.
ltiVIct Cllll ... vlrltlllly

1994 Ford Aerostar Extended
Cab Minivan XLT 93,000 mllas
loaded. V·6 automallc $6500
740-247-1100
•

Troy Buill Tillar, 6HP (740)4418227

roouH In I Nprtl8fiiiiiYI
lOcating our bilrltd flcllllltlll

'1111 rlalt of dillupllng . .lily

&amp; 4·WDI

Tono
Paint,After
Extra5pm
Clean
(740)
446-1749
Or Leave
MOIHOI

Aatmplt phone colt~ worltlng
dayl btlort lllrUng ...
tttCIInllon woift 10 1111 Ohio
UUitlla Proltcllon llllvlct or
lht Energy Coopnllvl, wll

17

~ 4-4), 7:05p.m.
(Bttt.- 2·1) II NY ..... IAAJII&lt;

your

s

11
AM
12112

-...(-3-3)11~

Fitch, who had Clay's only

s

.388

18

Eastern plated a huge run

H

83 Dodge Aries Statlonwagon,
Runa Good Needs Brake Work
$300 OBO can Belore 5pm,
(740)388-8532

.733

23
2o1
21

.328 15 112

L

22
20

~~WI•CIIIooto
Coal llJollor N). :l::lt ......
Arlanl ~HI) II Son ~*go (Sana·
no 1-1), 5:05 p m.

runner back. then

out,

12

- .....

Tlllnllatl-

........ ~1-o)ll1-- ~. 1:dl p.m.

the Panther runner

two

W
33

•••

• ..-.pptl....,

struck

Eastern went down

L.

2000 Cavalier, 2 Door, AM/FM
Cassone. CO Power Sunroof,
Cruise, Till, 21.000 Mites. $8,500
(740)441-0337

up

Now, wtth

defense

c

2000 Hon&lt;1a Civic EX, RIG,
Totally Loaded, Power Moonroof,
8000K, Mual Sell , $15.500
(3Qol)l75-6485

Grovoly Walk So hind With Mow·
or, 1740)448-9227

2

22 - - 1112
21 .311
IS

Douthttr .

of

today.

1997 Ford Explorer, XLT, 4WD,
43 000 MilOS, Exoolllnt ConGI~on,
AsldnQ SIUOO (740)448-0118

batter

left stranded.

l I ass

Pickup

I 998 DoGge Intrepid ES, Candyappla Red, Loaded, Leather
Now Tlrto, Highway Molea, $8200
080 (740)4oi1.-Q135

Ford 2000 Tractor For Salo, Call
(740)258-6883

500

-

18

21

Kristen Chevalier hammered

1111 esttlle, 1 inntng,

.
IIIIIL

1994 Ford Crown VIctoria, 51 000
Miles, Ono Owner $8,000, J980
Chovy Malibu, 2 Door, Hard-top,
30,000 MIIU, (140)319-2694

next

out.

17te

1893
Codllloc
Flatlwood
Broughman 50K Mllea, Compleltly Loaded. Black With Leath·
er Interior Mint Condition,
$13000 (740)446-4191

1020 Massey Ferguson, 4 WD,
7811 Hours, 3 CytlnGtr Dlesol, E•·
coltont $7500 (740)448-9227

1/2
1

bases loaded and one out,
the

trauel

Livingston s Basement Water
Proofing. all basement repairs
done. free aatlmatee. llfttlmt
guarantH 14yrs on job exparl
"""" (304)885-3887

1892
Flrablrd ·
Exctllonl
ConGIIon $4800 Or Boll Ollar,
(740)448-754 I

740

.532
522

..• ,... •.

llalblllllll,l
C&amp;C Glntral Home Maintonenco- Painting. vinyl aiding.
carpentry doors. ~lndOws . bathe
mobile home repair and men For
fru estimate call Chtt, 740·992·

1891 Dodge Stoallh RT. Twin
Turbo, 300HP, 5 Speed, AWO,
AWS, Loodod, Sharp Car, $7500
OBO (Bolow Book). (140)4410135

V1n1

01

Disbid

Home

WATEIIPROOFINO

HonGo Accord LX, 4 Door.
Loodod,
SpeoG 37 mpg,
127,000 Mlloo. Oreal Shopa,
$3.29' (304)175-7258

0% Financing On Now John
Otere Mower Conditioners And
Balers With John Deere CraGII
Approval Call Or Slop By Nowll
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
(740)446-2412 1-800-594-1111

d'

23

Pet
543
543

NY. IIIIa4. ........ 2

. . . . _1. 1!11. """'3
Bin'- 5, Mlooa I ,

'lllnlla BltY

Improvement~ •

1987 Otdomoblle Supremo, TTops, 2 Ooor, V-8, Bucko! Saoll,
4-SpooG , Automatic, Lika Now
Tim, For Sole Or 'lhtdo For Nk:t
4 - - . 1740)2tHI12

730

112
1112
1112
10

22

24

SERVICFS

1988 DoGga Ooytona Turbo,
RuM Good. $400, (740)4-11-1083

Farm Equipment

630

20

21

23

75 Apache Moll Now Goer Box01, Roady 10 Go- NiCO $1395, OlfY
(740)245- 521 1,
Even1ngo
(140)448-7753

0)'

610

112

20

It&amp;t 24' tnnobruck Travel
Trailer, like New CondUion , Lots
Of Extras Will Deal, 1740)4488788

1988 ChryoleJ' LoBoron, 4 Door,
Engine Ooun'l Run Everything
Else GooG, $200, Call (740)44101119

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

•

740-241-7401

nut.-.,

720

11/2

11

W L
:15 2t
:15 21
:15 22

IOCIIId II Garhtrlng We ·
l8ra Campgrounds, Apple Grove,

0080
French City Pet Grooming Haa
Moved To Point Pleasanl, Now
Coiled Rose's Pet Grooming Call
For Appointment (304)675-5010

All

"IS ae
21

179~

1815 ALFA Romoo Spldor converUtllt, excellent condlllon,
$1000, 740-8112-2!1211, 132 Bullor

premo Convertible FuMy

rr

24

1304)895-38781304)895-~

' 99 Graftd Am, one owner. feft\llnder olloctory wamonty, lady
driven, very good gas mileage,
19,000 mllto, loaded. very ctoan.
Con bo - . at 809 Pea~ Slrtll,
Ulddlaport or call 740-982-2351
aflor4pm or~ "'"'*'&lt;l~

.404

••
•

W L

1990 18 Sk.,..._r T . -, 1 Owner, 4 wnaels, Fully Contained
5,

21

21
11
••

:15
:15
:15

MotOI'Homal

Sloops

.411

22 24 A111 •

flollda

• lncfl SUiptriSIOn Lift For 111110-

-.$300

a

•

Pet.

L
11

--- ::~·

IM Ford F- 150. 4•4. E-ythmg

Early Spring ""'"*'V"IncreiiO Alfolmonta ~an Extra
Pllnta Tl1tnk You For Your Busintll Call Donny DowhursiLoavo Uo11ago (30&lt;4)895-3740
Or (304)885-3188

.114

W

~

Tobacco Planta- Ofder Now To

....
rr

The
Dally

12 Round Balaa Of Hoy Far Sale

Uniroyal Tlgorpow nru, ~201•
75Ate, (41 area, only
mloo
Ulld, tXCIIIont COnditiOn fiOO
'
'
74G-It2-2084

Llvo

19e7 Flagstaff pop-up, ale lloepl
Craftaman.~~~~~ex=c=•=ll•=n=t~c=o=nG~II=Io=n. e.
12250 1973 spr~~e. lleePI 2-3,

Lawn Mower, sears
Roar EnQine, 13 5 HP, 30' Cui
Uled One Sea&amp;on Excellent
Condition $500, 1740)379-211 I

&amp;
Chocolate &amp; Black

540

a

Auto Parts

780

AEAAllON MOTORS
Ropoired, &amp; _,.In-_
Col Ron Evons, t-800-537-9528

Washer &amp; dryer $200, electric
range, $75, all gooo conGI!Ion, call
740.992-3242

Buy or sen A1ver1ne AntiQues
1124 East Main on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740-992-2526 or 740 992 1539 Russ Moore owner

count Av...lb111. Horilogo Farm
(304)815-5124

T kA', S PORTAT ,U I&lt;

AKC Registered Champion
Bloodline Labrador Retriever
Pupptaa Wormed &amp; ShoiS, $200
Each, Call (740)553-1803

Antiques

.
. . llflltil· -Oil ·
"RounG
DoiiVory ITlo
VoiUIM

JET

Very Nice Large D~n~ng Room
Table With .8 Chairs Also
Electric Plano With Bench
1740)44H737

4pm

I anG 2 bodroom apllrlmonls, lurnlahed and unturnlahld 11curlty
doposll required, no peto, 740992-2218

448-oooe

New &amp; Used Furniture

530

for Rent

HVLP Pamt Sprayer Now, N Boen Uood, $1000 Firm. Call
(740)245-o610 E**'GI

r.1ERC rl ArWIO:&gt;E

sq ft., ale, cowriCI porl&lt;lng. coil-

Aoom, Family Aoom, KiiChiA Willi
Appliances, full Size Baatment,
24&gt;24 Flnlohod Gorogo, 8x1 o
WooG Storage Building. CIA &amp;
Goa Hell. Excellent Nolghbor·
hood Too Much To Mention
Ready To Movo Into Call For Appoiitbu•ll (740)4 tB 9S&amp;8

Small 2 Bedroom, A/C, H11
Kitchen Appllancu, Gu Fur·
naco. Good Roof, 2 Porches
(304)875-I 385

BoouliiUI- 11100 Sq Foot. 2nd Floor Apartment tn Histone
Onstrlct Ideal For Profesalonal
coupll All Uodlrn Amonllles 3
aoorooms. SpeciOUS Uv~ng, 1-112
Roths, Roar Dod&lt; HVAC $8001
mo Plus Utilities Secunty And
Kor 0opo111. No Pols ReltraiiCOI
Required. 1740)448-4425 Or
(740)H8 3936

Buslnou with upotalno opertmonl
for aale, 241 Salem Strtet, Au·
.....,, Ollio. $35.000, col 740-742-

3 lloctooml. Balh, Living

Roull 1 South, NtWir, Lorgor
Home Very Nice, Conalder
,.._In, (740)4~5 9Ht

$215.000 (740)446-

340 Bullnell811d
Bulldlnge

Excotlonl Locsilon On Aoull 110
Between Gllllpolil And Holzer

Country Living- Pk:k Your Drtam
Home &amp; We'll Sot It Up On A
Beautiful 5 Aero Traat, OakwoodGallipolis· (740)446-~3

lhil nowo-lloubjeet to
lhl F - Fair Houolng Act
of 11188 which mokll .IIIOgll
to ICMHttle •any peaNtence,

Borns,

tn-tround
Pool. Frull TreH, aooo

To . _
4230

Country Homo, I 112 Story, 3
a.droom, 1 Bath, On Sh1 Acraa,
97% Comp!IIICI With Flraplaco
AnG Spiral Stair CIH On Pilllanl Ridge Ad $50,000 (3Qol)5713158

~-

01-.

" · Fund.

FOI'Lal18

EqutppoG With
(304)81N545
-

PiOno- Tuning &amp; Aopoirs.

P - . .? Tunod1 Col Tho
Pionoll&lt; 740 446 1~

490

310 HOIMI for S.le

No oNiglllona.

•• Lowo, 20' Pontoon llflt

T -. 40HP, Johnson Dulotonl,

Publlo NotiOI
Th• Vlllllll Ol
Pomtroy I• ••lllng
lOr IHIICI llld• lor
g..olln• procluote
unl••ded plu• (II
oeti!M) lnd ft Dltlll
Pu•l tor on 1 ytlr
p•rlod. All tllltd
lllil• lhlll bt riOIIVICI
In thl Cl•rk'• Offtot,
uo .._. Mlln ltrlll.
POR*OY, Ohio on or

Public NOIIce

1111or111 :oo a.m. ~IT
JUM4,1001.

Tht
Pomeroy
Counoll rltlt'VM tilt
rlllhl to IOOIPI or
NINIIIIY or 111 bldl,
Kllhy Hyttll

~,.,

vm... ot Pom.roy

sao lui Meln liMit
Pomeroy, OH 48181
(II ... ~1, 1001

fatr

by

thtrd-base

Public Notice
by lhl Bo1rd ol
lllll1111 ol Pom•roy ol
Mtlll• County, Oh!o.
A Re•olutlon ol
Approv11 to realign
th• r!:"m1n1nt
appro Ilion
ruo ullon
by
modllylng
the
following
1pproprl1tlon• !rom
one 10oount to
anolhtr within lh1
lund:
2031·240-420

C.lllllllry, e2,000.00.

PAIII!D: Mey

21,

2001.

-------1
Public Notice

RI!IOLUTION NO.
•

81! IT

7.01

AI!80LVI!O,

John W. Blaettnar
Mayor
John F. Mua•r
(5) 24, 31, lOOt
210
J

�.-

•- -

_

____ 4

_

_

_

,.

Pomeroy,

aa

Ohio

AROUND THE DIAMOND
FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!
Manufacturer otter• 1 two week
lupply ol cotoiiOfny Of URIIIOIII)r
brand name prot1uct1 wUh one

~100-~~
Clr\tlb'o

110

Help w.m.cl

$187 85 WEEKLY! Proceulng
HUDIFHA Mortgogo Rofuncls No
Experilnco RoqulriCI For FREE
lnlormotlon Coil 1-80Q-501-6832
lXI. 1300 """ projoclrofunc! com

...
llllorun.
Monday edlllon 2:00 p.m.
Frldly
' ' ! " ! " L rwew M;

1:00 p.m. ... d8V .........

llw 811 IIIIo run.lolnol.y
Monday ICIIIIon 1:00 p.m.
Frldly.
AfP"D! P'!QlMWj
2claya ..... llw8diii1D

n1n lily 4:30p.m. 111tun:111v
&amp; Monday 8dlllon - 4:30
Tltunclly.
"DMciiiMe IUIIJicl to
........... lo hollclllp"
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personal•

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
s1ngtes tonight 1 800 766 2823
""' 1621

30

Announcement.

Longaberger

Bus

TotJ',

August
14th,
For
Moro
Information
Contact Marie
Wlooman AI 1304)875-5018 or
bandmOzoomnat nat

Now To You TMft Shoppo
9 Wosl Stimson, Atllens
740-592· 1842
Quality clothing and household
Items Sl 00 bag oalo ovory
Thursday Monday thru Saturday
9 oo-e oo

40

Giveaway

4 Fuzzy Kltltnl, Litter Trained.
(3Qol)675-5801
Giveaway To Good
Adorable Puppies Must
(30ol)675-eo55
Malo, Long-halriCI, Black &amp; White
Cat. Appro&gt;lmaloly 8 Years old
Declawed And Neutered Call
(740)2-909 After epm

60

Loet and Found

FOUND- Adorable BIW Killen
RoocuoO From Bonoath Car Hoocl
In VIcinity South Park Drive II
Unclaimed Will Give Free To
Goocl Homo With Supply Of Foodl
Utter And Raimburaad For Neutering 1304)675-1045

70

Yard

Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Salo 4285 Bulavllle Pike,
Galllpollo, Saturday May 28th, 95pm, Clothes, Furn'Rure: .Houuhold, Etc
Southwestern Elementary PTO
Community Yard Sale Saturday,
May 26th 9·5pm In Caleterla, All
Proceeds Go To Purchase Play·
ground Equ1pment
Yard Sale And Concession
Stand. Gallipolis Boat Club, 111
Vine Street Saturday May 26th
9am-5pm, Hand Made Oulh Rallllo
Drawing 5pm

Pt. Plea~ant
&amp; VIcinity

•

... ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put H to wor1tl S25/hr-S151hr FT/
PT FREE into 800-871 -8045

www.- c o m
"IUIIIIER WORK• ••112 BoHI
Appl." Cottoge Sludanll/ '01 HS

Gr•duatll. Entry Level Svel
ings Throughout Tri-State Area.
(304)S52-4014

ABSOLUTELY FREE IHFO
Internet Uoero W.ntld
12000-$5000/mo
www~net

Advancement Plans Sal11man
Counselor, ParHime And Full·
timo.
Worll Scl1oclulo Call
(740)448-9228 For lntorvllw Appolutments

Flo-

Are you a caring, team- oriented
porson looking for tho perfect job
with great pay? Thin were lOOk·
lng lor you at Soonic Hills NUlling
Center State Te1t1d Nurs1ng
Aide&amp; and Cerlllt.d Nursing
Aldll POIItiOftl IVIillblt one
part-time 2pm to 1Opm TWo cell·
In/ lll~ln pOOitionl lor 8om IO 2pm
anG 1Opm
8om $880 on hour
lor 11111 tilted nursing 11118·
rants, $5 80 an hour for certiUed
nursing aulatanta •Perfect attendance bonu1 tvery 3 monthe,
·eonus available for working
t&gt;Ctra shlftl

10

Art \bu ConnoctiO?
tntomot Ullll Wonllclt

S300- S2000iwk PTIFT

www tuvmyblz com

Ate You Earning What \bu'rt
Worltl? P/f.Ffr $25-$85/HR
Willie From t1o1re
No Exportonce N - r y Wll
oaln Call lor a FREE Booklet
1-100-278-7103
WNW SlriouoCuhNow com
ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES to chango your
lift??&gt; PT/FT at home 920·924·
&amp;400 www AcheM!IOru.ma com
Attel'ltlon- Work From Home, On·
line Or Offllno &amp; Mal Order 1500$5000/mo, PT/FT, 1·800·784·
8558 www pcpoys com
ATTENTION MOTHERS AND
OTHERS Up to $500-$2500 part
time Full·tralnlng 1·800·879·
4808 www qulckca,shnow com/
Jorrbogan
ATTENTION
WORK FROM HOME
up to
125 oo- $75 oolhr PTIFT
MAIL ORDER (888)621-()686
AVON! All Areaol To Buy or Sail
5nirtey Spoors, ~75-1429
Bo Your Own boll!
NoYor 9-5 Again
Earn Up $50Q-$8IJOOn,IO
PTIFT
1·80Q-61G-0705
www cashNowAndForewr com

10

-

Garago Sale- tal Tlmo, Rain Or
Shine, Good Variety 4451 Mill·
stone Road, 1-112 MIOts Off Route
2 AI Apple Grove, Watch For
Signs, May 24,25 &amp; 26th 9 to?

80

Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auclloneer complett~~
auction
service
L l ~,;ensed
o66,0nlo &amp; wast Virginia, 304173-5785 Or 304-773 5447

90

Wanted to Buy

Abaolute Top Dollar U,S Silver,
Gold Coins Proolsall Diamonds,
Gold Ringo, U S Currency,M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
AI09nuo, Galllpollo, 740-&lt;14f-2842

f MPI ClYMf NT

:;r
11 IJ

fiVICf ~.

Help W1ntld

11200 WEEKLY POS818LE Pro·
cuolng 400 InqUiry Envolopoa ot
Homo Euy Work Coli 1·100·
755-2027ll538 (24hrt),

la,OOO WIIIKLYI Milling tOO

DrOllhuroll Sollofocllon Guar•
lntaldl Po111g1 &amp; IUPPIIH pro•
viGeGt Rulh loff-AGdrouad
Sternpocf E!Weiopot QICO, Dlf'T
8, lOX 1~31, ANTIOCH , TN
31011·1t316tln tmflltGiotoly.

LPN po'aitlons •••liable- par1 ·
timo1 CIHIIor II - - B1H roto

S11 00/llr Groot Experience PlfY
S 25 Shih Olherontiol For Evon·

lngs, $ 50 For Mldntghll AllonOsnce bonus ova~. lola ol ••trasl Pleaae can Seenlc Hills at
(740)446-7150 lor
mor• lnlormatiOii
MICiocal Billing Assiatant nHded
IIIIIIIOdiall!lyl FT/PT WIU Train Excellent Income PC required. 1888-449-9773 e&gt;CI 222
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST.
Work on your computer GuaranteiCI ompiO)'mont Tralnlnglcorliflcotion lfH). Tarton Pub, tnc 1·
800-944-~95

NofldaJOB?
Wont a COrtOrln NURSING?
Nursing Allis- CIIIHo ono
baing on...ct on June 11, 2001 K
you . . . coring,....,.,._
porson you could bo I put of
OUR Holllhcare Tooml Contact
Judy Hart. LPN, lnotructor at7401192-810t or 740-742·2370
OR
otop by Aoclllprlngl
RonabilllliOn Clntor tocalltf at
38759 Aockoprlngo Road, Pomor0)', onto anG 111 out a c1u1 appl·
cation! Equal Opportunity E~-

010 Stoko Husband/ Wife Team
To
L11rn
Auto
(740)258-1021

•

Hauling

Own A Computel7 Put !I
To Work?
www w&lt;rtoutotyourhome com

Part-lime Sal" PosHion Apply In
Parson, Acquisitions Jewelry, 1!51
SooonO Avonuo, Gslllpol~
Postal Jobs $48,323 oo yr Now
hinng· No experience-paid train·
lng- great benefits, call 7 days
800-429-3860 ... J-365

Floor Supervisor AN Positions
available part-time/ daya or evenIngs Base rate of $14 00 an hour
wltn axportenca pay $ 25 ontH
dlflorenllal for evenings S 50 for
midnights .. Attendance bonus
available, many extras Please
call Scenic Hills At 1740)4467150
FOREMAN POSITION
lmmedla1e Hire For The Right
Person Permanent Full-time
Position, Requires Exceptional
Skills With All Phases Of
Aosldonllal Remodeling Work
Siding Windows, Carpentry,
Decks, Car Ports Finish Work.
Framing Etc The Person We
Are looking For Should Work
Well Wllh Olhera Be Able
To
Tnlnk On Your
Feet
&amp; Mako Good Job Declslona.
E•perlenctd Appllcanll Shou!G
Have Good Rererencea Tools,
AnG Aollabla Tranoporlallon We
Art An Eatabllohod Company,
Work Is Local, Pay 11 Band On
Experience Incentive Bonu&amp;IS &amp;
vacation Tlmo If You Aro Looking
For A Long Term Stobla Work,
Ploaoo Apply At Chrlallon 1
Conatrucllon, tnc , 1403 Eoolern
Avonuo, thlllpollo OH Olllat
Houri· Mondly· Friday 1·1,
(740)448-45t4
Govornmtnt Jobo t II 00•$33 00
por hour potonllol Paid Trolnlngl
FUll llnoflll For lnort lnlormotton
cal •--e74-81&amp;0 at 3234
CIAOWING BUSINESS NEEDS
H!L~I Work lrom home! Mol~or•
Glr/E•Oomrnorct 1822+/'NHk PT
t•ooo-uooo/wk FT IOO· t21·

lUI WWWG!Iom2-.oom
Holp

N -. To

Pk&gt;k IIIIW•

btrrlto, Apply In Peraon, Tloylor'o

....,. f'alch, 2184 Kerr Aold

$2500 possiblo monthly growing
gourmet musluooms lor us FREE
lnlormatlon Spa'olime EnterpriH
Col troo 1-800-910.3086

I NOTICE!
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do buSI·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to sonG money through tho
mall until you have •nveetlgated

lheoflering
A+ M&amp;U MARS/NESTLE Estab
llsl1t0 VonG1ng Route Wll sell by
10 I Under $9K minimum invaatment required Excett.nt ProfIt Potential Finance Available(
Goocl CroGII Toll Froo •••"'(888)

sn

270-2168.....

Earn $90 000 YEARLY ropalrlng,
NOT ropfoclng, Long cracko fn
Wlndohlelds Froo vldoo 1-800·
828-8523 USIConaGI, www gla&amp;l•
mecllon!Lcom
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmllld In·
com1 potential No exp•rlence
nocauary Frto lnformotlon &amp;
CO-ROM lnvostmont from $2495
Financing available 1800) 322·
1138 EXT 050
wwwbuilnoao-starlup.com

Start Your Buslnlla Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available AI Allordable Rata
Spring Valley Plaza, Call rto-4480101
State A Travel Agency receive
training. buslnoos support, your
own lravel weballt and 1111'181 discounVperks Earn big SSS Nominal startup cosll 1-888·899·0901
or
www EarnBucksFrom·
Homo.com
WANTED 73 PEOPLE TO LOSE
30 lbs In 30 days! Program start
ing under $30 All natural Doctor
recommended Free counseling
Call 1·800-308-7429 or viSit
www 911batterheatth com

POSTAL JOBS- Up to $18 35/
hour Hiring lor 2001. Paid trainIng Full benollla Call toll tree
7am-7pm 1-888-7'28-9083, ..,., WORK ~ROM HOME! Earn
1705
•'!}J 1 ~ lfl."') .. ~ • ~ $500-$7,000/monlh PT/FT Full
Training Free lnlormatlon Call
At&amp;ponslbla Babysitter Needed
Nowt 1-212·812·5490
For 2 Month &amp; 19 Month Oldo
www ahalnurdreams com
Rotating Shift Some Overnight
(7401448-'7198
230 Profeealonal

'

Salas Person Experience With
Rotalf Sales And Knowledge Of
Bulldlng
Material a Apply In
ParJon At Thomas Do-ll Center
Gallpolls
'

E•cellent Opportunity For A
Reglslorad Nurso In Gallla And
Meigs Counties Wllh Growing
Homo Hoalth Agency Good
Benefits, waoot Hours Call
Today AI (740)448 3808 Or
Villi 762 Second Avenue
ClllllpoHB, OH 45831

Opportunity

PEPSIICOKE/FRITO
LAY
_ _vtf11ty..;..;..::..:::(=EEWD=::.'--· 1 SNACK AND SODA VENDING
Naodtd Exporlonctd Crow lor ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
SOiling and Flntahtng Sectional SSALL CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
Houolng Band Pricing Information CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
anG oxporlonco to Southern SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
Hom11, PO Box 829, Jackson, LENT PROFITS 1·800·731-7233
OH 45840
EXT 2203

CDL·A Drivers Experienced/In·
experienced West Coast Avail·
able •Great Pay*MIIaa•Banallt~·
Tranoportallon'Lodglng Included.
COL Training Available
Call 1·800-348-1380

EARN $25,000·$50 000/yr, Modi·
cal Insurance Billing Nteded lm·
modiallllyl Homo Computer Needed FREE tntornot, 1-800·291·
4883 Oopl "09

Buelneu

"Enoour~Worl&lt;ploce ~

SaOta PersonFull-Time, Banefits Retail Elq)erlence Pr•ferred
Apply AI Lllallyle Furniture No
Phone Calls Appty In Person
858 ThlrG Avenue, Golllpollo
Ohio
'

and Flea Market
Countt:y Corner- Flea Markef,
Torch. Ohio Friday Saturday &amp;
Sundey Open Mondey, Memorial
Day 740 887-3091

210

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent Income Easy claims
proceuing Full training Home·
PC requlfld Call PhySICian &amp;
Healthcara Development• toll
~se 1-800.712·5933 ... 2070

ENORIIOUS YARD SALE
Next To Flatrock Fire Department Church pianist or organta1 need·
8 Mite&amp; From Point Pteasanr On fld tor Hope Baptist Church. Grant
Routt 2 North, MEMORIAL DAY Street, Middleport Sunday only
WEEKEND, Friday, Saturday am &amp; pm services. 740 774-9433
Sunday &amp; Monday, 8 OOam Until
??? Rain Or Shine Antiques, !;ots Claaa A Or B COL Driver
Of Glassware Washer &amp; Dryer Wanted 2 Yeare Experience,
(740)388-8331 Loave Name &amp;
Household llama &amp; Appliances
Baskets Crafts Home Interior Number
Grlll, Lawn &amp; Other Furniture
Wooden &amp; Ofllce Chairs, Word Dental Hygienist Part-time Andl
Processor, Books, Old Lifo Or Full-limo Dental Hygiene poAnd Other Magazines, Recorda, sition Available Submit Ruumo
Bird Cage, Christmas Decor&amp;· Or Call Drs Smith &amp; Jorgansen,
lions, Shoeo Puraos, Clothing &amp; 995 Jackoon Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
45831 (740)446-2191
MucttMore
Gun Collection &amp; Related ltema,
Reloading Items Safe Knives,
Watchea, CB Radios &amp; Anten·
nas Scannera, Truck Tool Box,
Live Trap, Good Tires, Sell 01
Wheel Covera 4 Wheeler Tiraa
Bumpor, Boat Trallor Tlros &amp;
Alms, Microscope Set1 a Lota
More Yamaha 4 Wheeler- wl
Powor Take Of!· 1 Rough &amp; 1
Finish Mower BIG Auortment
And Lots Of Stufflll Don't Mlao
Thla Oneil Items Starting At 10
Cents, Plenty Of Parking , 111

FINArKIAL

soleo Conditions Apply Open-

---.oom/np

Form Nouso. BOiuUfutty Aomoflolocf 2M3 Squllrt Fool 17 Acf·

t.orvo

Bric1c . _ On 26 I
Roomo. Solid Ook Coblnoll,
OoMa &amp; Trlfn Urge Fomltyroom
Wrlh Firoploco 3· 112 Balhl •
Woti«KKI BIHmonl With Kitchin
&amp; Botl1 2 Cor Gorago, Worbhop
With loll And Bath Fruit Trool I
Gllpe Adlor (740)25H831

Somaone To Run Local Trash
Route, To Drive &amp; Load Mull
Have Class A COL &amp; 2 Yoaro
Driving E&gt;parlonco For Nlghtahlft
(740)388 9888 8-Spm

10

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma

Servlcee
US NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash for remaining payments on
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annul
ties! Settlements! Immediate
Quotesm 'Nobody beats our prlces • National Contract Buyers
(800)490 07~1 ext 101 wwwnatklnaloonlractbuyars com
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to S~OO Instantly by phone! 1877-EAALYPAY Lief 750005, 1st
ADVANCE FREEl
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18511
No FH Unllls We Wlnl
1·888-582-3345

IJ•-------..-

donorawoekly
• .., $45
$80 for 2 740or 3 1.1
Ilours
Call Sera-Toe
592-8851
Wanted· alngla person to live In
and care for 1·8 residents In·
eludes room &amp; board and salary
Call for on Interview, 740 9925039 botwoon eam &amp; 7pm
Work From Home, Part-lime/ Fulllimo $25- $15/hr Paid vacatlono
1-888-87H042

140

BuelnHI
Training

Ollllpolto CIIMt Coltoge
(CIIHII Close To Heino)
Call Toelayl740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
Reg 190·05-12748

160

lmllallon orcllcrlminltlon
biH&lt;f on fiCO, color, reiiQion,
oex lamlllllllaluo o r origin, or any Intention ID
moko any ouch jnlwlonco,

School•
Instruction

' k""""W ICCOfJI

Wanted To Do

Thbl neunpsper wll no1:

IIIMrllsemenllforrufwhlclllo In violation of the
law Our rudeno 11rt henoby
lnlormoO tholaii-Hngo
adverliled ' " " " - " " a - on on equal
_.Willy boolt.

B&amp;B Construction- Rooting, Sid·
lng Concrete Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting Free Esllmates Call
(30ol)675-1738 Alter 5pm
Christian Mother Would Like To
Babysit Your Child In My Home,
13 Years Experience Located By
Kelly Drive On Georges Creek
Rd (740)44 I-Q3!i9
Davia's General Contractors
Plumbing. Electric, Painting
Decks,
Mise
Work, Call
(740)256-9373 Or Cell Phone 130ol·833·8265
Froolonca English Aiding Instructor, $151 Hour Call Agnes 0
(740)441-Q184
Gaorg11 Portable Sawmill don't
haul your logo to !he mill jull coil
3Qol-675-195'
Lawn Mowing, Wood Eottng
Dock Ctoonlng,
Rollnllh)pg
Removal Of Unwonted llomo
From !ulldlngo Coli 1740144'·

1eo-l

- n g In

Nm-..- ·

OED
Get your HS equivalency diploma
with our easy horne study course,
1-IOQ-589-2183 ••• 310

180

Aft,..,_

•

REAL ES1AfE

310

Homee for Sal a

(2) Houses For Sale 2 Bodroom,
1 Bath $750 Down Payment, Noar
Gallipolis And Racine Ohio Call
David 0 I ·500-333-691 0
100% remodeled house In Po·
meroy, great price musr see, wtll
conskter land contract. 740-898·
6783
2 atory House AI II 65 Park
Drive ._ Bedroom. 1 Bath, Up·
staira &amp; Llvlngroom, TV Room &amp;
Olnlngroom Kitchen, Bedroom. &amp;
, Bath On 1Sl Floor Full Ba81mont
BI·Lavol Dock, 4&gt;18 Pool, ~lock
Workahop
$89,900
Firm
(304)875-1145
3 8odroom l -Ila Both, All
ElectriC, 2200 Square F11t, 2
Ap1rtm1nta Good CMcHtton, At
2403 Mount Vernon Av1nu1
l'!;nt PHIInl, (304)185-3825

Maturo Chrlotlon Lody to Cart
For \'our LIHio On01 You Aro
Tho loot For Them, Dut 1
Am Tilt Sooond 801t1 3 V.oro
Old Or Older, In t.w Home Call
(740)448•045 I NilghborhooG
AoiCI, Glh~ll&lt; CIOH
To
Le Grlndll 0111 HloN 5 00

3 BtGroom Houoo, Bath &amp; 112,
Doubla Wlndowo &amp; Formot Dining
Room + Polio· Goo Furnsael AJC,
(3Qol)6711-8022

Aepolrtng Lawn Mowero AnG
Smell lnglne. Plck· up And
DIIIVIry Avalleble ~or O"ollty
Service Call (740)44&amp;-7504

Ftm Uppor, 2 Bodroom Now
Roof, Newer Furnace, Noodo
Work, Ao lo. 145,000 1740)1115182 (740)44H238
•

3 112 Mllto Out Sandhill AooG
(304)1711-2507
'

2512 Good ......
Offlco lluilding In Mlnlrollillo, 800
Ing .... $30MnO' 814-8711-18111.

350 Lots &amp; Ac...age
I 3 Acroo With Booullful Lake
Vlow Slloa $50,000 18 Acreo
With Lorge Lake, Moblto Home
With Add On $79, 500 Gollla
County On Blacktop Road,
(740,_yl
15 acm on Lincoln Hll , Pomor·
Will linsnco I%- $200 down15yr note- 1150 per month· botloon In 5 740-992-2829

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES!
SO OR LOW OOWNI TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREOITI FOR USTINGI CALL I1100'501·1mi&gt;CI 9813

ov

ca,...
Shoo For Rent On Ka·
nawha River, 8 mllll from Point
Pleuant, t1ec1r1c only (3Qol)6751722, (304)815-4144 After epm

Point Ploolllll· 1I 12 Hogg Slrtll,
2 Bedroom Home. BIHment,
Priced $30.000 New Hoven, 3
Bedroom Ranch Carport I outbull~~~· prlcad $35,000 Call
(304
·2221 Or 130ol)882-2405

Two car g~rage/apartmtnt In
Middleport, two boGroomo, full
both, LA . kllchon ,uh electric
range, centro! air, 740-985-34150
or 7o40-992-2791

320

Mobile

Homee

for Sale
SO Down For Good Cuatomoro
On Land- Homa Packagtl·
Oakwood· Gallipolis, (740)4483093
14x70 Southern Dream free o ..
livery free Satup only $9995 1·
88&amp;-828-3428
I 8 Wide Only $ 19~ 00 Por
Mont11, 8 99% Fbcad lntartll Rill
With Air And
UnGorplnnlng
1-888-B28-342t
\
1965 10x50 Now Moon, has gas
lurnace, new water heater. 740965-3550 bllort lpm
1976 14x70, 2·3 Bodroom, Now
Since 1997· AJC, Furnace. Water
Heater $6500 (304)875·3008
Mornings 17401385 ' 4217 Even·
lngs

Looking To Buy A Now Homo?
Oon1 H... LonG! W. Oont Hurry
Only 10 loll 1..111. 304-138-7295
fi~NTAI
'

I 082 Sunoot Drive, Very Good
Condition Oopoall I Ralerencos
Required. No l'oll Call (740)441tlll
3 Bedroom Hou81, Ill Part&lt;
Drive, Point Ptoount, No Poll,
Roferenct &amp; oapoolt, $450
(304)118-214D
3 btdroom home Minersville
lrta, river vltw. reterenc11 rt·
qulrt&lt;f, dapoolt roqutroG, no pots,

740-992-ern oflar epm

1st Time Homo Buyora Program,
Special Financing .lwallablo,
130ol)755-5686
28x80 3 Or 4 Bedrpom, Only
$345 00 Por Month 8 99% Fixed
lntonoot Rate, 1-8811--3426
AMAZING Little or No Credit
Needed, Special Govornmont Flnsnctng, 130ol)755-5885
Confused? Don't Bo- Cali Oak·
wooG· Galllpona Bill Prlcoo.
Bost Service, Bost Poople If \bu
See And Ad You Like- Call Usl
(740)4411--3093

Factory Goof 32x80 S1 o ooo Dileount only $1000 00 Down, Dt•
livery, and ootup paid by Factory
1-IIOQ-891-8777
Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
AICiucllonll304)736-3409
Limited Or No Orodil? Government Bank Finance Only AI Oak·
wood In Barbouravllle WV 304738-3-'09
Lot model clearance, save up to
$8 625 with any home, cl1tck ua
out were dealing, Cole's Mobill
Homes, US 50 Eall, Al11tno, on
Lot model clearance, one 2000
oacllonal save 19,825, for 2000
model alnglas, 5 pre owned sin·
gl01 must go by May 31, no reasonable offer refuaed thtll
homes won't last long, ao atop In
and check us out, wa'ra dealing,
Cole's Mobile Homta Alhen1
Ohio Open M·W 9·7 Thuro-Frl ,
9 6, Sat 10-5
'
Must aell I 995 Shull 18x80, 3
bedroom. 2 bath Excellent condl·
lion Call Choryl 740-385-4387.
New 14 It wldo $499 down only
$199 per mon calf now 1-800691-6777
New 1 8 ft wide $499 per mon
only $270 por mon call now t500-891-8717
New 2001 Fleetwood only
$146 ta por month Coli Nikki
740.385--1387
Now 2001 Flattwood , 3 br , 2
bath, sot up In Tho Country Mo·
bile Pork, rooctr "' in,
1995 down, $1119 81 par month,
74G-9e2-21e7
New doublo wldo 3 br 2 bo
tlllll oo Gown OI\IY lat5 per
mon eotll now l·loo-llil-8777
Prlvlll Property And Now DOU•
bltwtde, Ono Payment (»1)731•
72118
Slngll l'aronl Program, IPIC)II
Fl~lnotng Av.llablt, (804)185·
7191

GoodI
1 Pecan Wood Dining Room
Cornor Cupboard $100 1 New
Ouaan Size Funon. $225, I Maple Dlmng room Cubbard, $85 1
New Amish Made Porch Swing
$100 (740)387-7401
3 POICO LIVing Room Sol, Couch

w/Managers &amp; f'echners. Love·

seat, Rocker Recliner In Teals.
Like New, 4 PIICI Bedroom Sit,
Black &amp; Gold Modern. Good
Price 6 Ploce Dining Room SatBlack &amp; Gold. Glass Top Modlm
Chairs.
Good
Condition
(740~787

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers, Ranges. Refrlgrators. Up To 90 Days Guaranteed! We Soli New Maytag Appllancll. French City Maytag,
740-448-7795

For Sale Aecondltlonad washera , dryera and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jacl&lt;oon Avonuo. (3Qol)675-7388
Four Gas Hot Water Heaters, 30·
40 Gallon , In Good Condition.
(740)44&amp;-8823
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers, relrlgeratore,
rangea Skaggs Appllanc81, 71
Vine Stroot, Coll740·448·7.398,
1-888-818-0126

3 Bedroom Hou11 For Rent Or
Salt, Will Accept HUD, Call
1740)441-Q572 Ask For Valerio

Main Stroot Fumi1ura
(3Qol)675-1422
515 Main Slrtat Point Plea-t

Or LMit Mosaaga
3 8oOtoom HouH On Route 160,
Near Wilkesville, Stove, Aefrlg·
111tor Water/ Trash Paid, Very
Nlct
$425 Ptua Daposlt
(740)318-8371
BUY Forocloaod Homos From
S1 0,0001 Atpo'o I Bankruptcy's
For Lllllngs 1·800·319·3323 Ext
1109
Pitot Program, Renters Needed,

:lQol-738-729!1

-=-------.----

1988 14&gt;70, 3 BICiroom, shingles
Roof. Vinyl Siding, Romodelod,
Very Clean $12.900 Make Olftr,
12&gt;12 Storage Building For Sale
(740)441-QI13

HOUIBholcl

3432

410 HouHI for Rent

Throe bedroom, 1841 Lincoln
1 Heights, Pomeroy Nice yard ga1982 14x70 Fairmont TownhouM, rogo, basement, ltaH, Glposll &amp;
2 bedroom. 1 large blth wllh hut reference• required, 740-887·
pump &amp; ale, $1,500, 740-591- 3886
4043 or 740-992-0938
"
420 Mobile Home1

1988
Clayton Trallor, 3 Or 4
Bedrooms, Total Electric, 2 Full
Bath&amp;.
15000 OBO
Call
(740)388-1772 Serious Callers
Only

51 0

China Cabinet, $300 Solid Maple
Tabla With 4 Chairs, $100,
Roll-a·way Bed $25 1740)4~8-

S

2 BICimorn, 2 Bath, CIA, Stove,
Relrlgerator, Water/ Trash Paid,
Very Nice, $350 Plus Oopooll,
71
(740)388-a3
3 bedroom mobile home lor rent
no poll, 740-992-6858
All Elactrtc Uobllt Home, Complttaly RamaGelad Ready June
111, No Poll. (740)387-oBII
Buulllul Rlvar View IGeal For 1
Or 2 Pooplt, Rolerencos, Oopo~t.
No Poll Folltr Trailer Park, 740·
441-Q181
Nice Ctoan 2 BaGroom Mobile
Home
No Poll, Dapoall
(740)3711-2254 Polrlot

440

Apartmentl
for Rent

I Room FurnlshiCI Efflcloncy, All
Ulllllloo PaiG, ShareG Both, 919
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
$125/mo (740)448-0945
2 BICimorn FurnlohiCI Apartment,
Utilities Included $400/mo No
Poll (740)387-oBII
B!AUTIFU~ APARTMENTS AT

IUDGET PAICEI AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Weolwood
Drive from $297 to $383 Walk to
ohop &amp; movloa Coil 740·4462588 Equal Houolng Opportunity
Chrloly's Family Living, 33140
Now Limo Rd RUIItnG, on~. 7401t2•1t03 Apartment, homo anG
trailer rantell Commtrcill atore·
fronta available for lease vacan·
des now
Furnlohod 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments, Clean, No Poll No SmokIng, References &amp; Deposit Ae·
Utllltlu Furnished
qulred
(740)448-1519
Gracious living 1 onG 2 boGroom
apartment• at VIllage Manor and
Alveroldo Aparlniants In MldGiepart From $278-$348 Call 740&amp;82·5084. Equal Housing Oppor-

tunltlll

Now Taking APPIIaatlona- 35
Waat 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. Includes Water
Sowaga, Trash $350/Mo 740-

'

Tara Townhoute Apartments
Very Spaclouo 2 BoGroomo
FIOOII, CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Car
poled, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo, Start $315/Mo No Plio'
Loaao Plus Stcu~ty Oapoalt Ro:
qulrtd, Dayo ?40-441·3481
Evonlngo 740·387·0502 74 o:
-0101
•

:i

'\Win Rivtf'lbwtrt now ICOIP!Ing
lppi!Qitlonllor 1 lA.
HUD IIUOilcllzad apt lor lldttty
and .--.IOH (304)t71-

te71

oWO

Spaoe

Ntw 2 Piece Llvmgroom Suites
$399 Buy, Sell, Trade
New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And
vases (740)446-4782
Solid Charry Bedroom Suite 9
Piocos Stll In Boxes $2,000 For
AI Call (304)35(Hl233

tor Rent

'emily trPt lor 1111111 oamplnO
lr"fll hoOkup and ono dock 1111
oetl 740-lfi.lltee anvumo
'

Dd-.

lndopo-nt Horbotilt
Coli For ProGuct Or Opponunlty
(740)4-11 - 1982

Mlecellanaoua
Merchandlaa

$1,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Cond l·
tloner, 2 Ton Coil, 1 line Set In·
stalled $2.295, $1,000 Back
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes
II You Don't Call Us We
Both Lose! Mobl~ Homes Our
Speciality 1-740 446 6308 1 aoo29Hl098
40 gallon natural gas hot wa1er
tank, $60, Coteman tra1ier fur
naco bottled gas 75,000 BTU's
$100. call 740 742 2373 alter
8 Foot Water Slide 8 Foot Diving
Boarct Steps, Solar Blanket Call
(740)258-1922
ALL STEEL-BUILDINGS New up
to 50% OFFI Pra-englneeroG w/
plans 30•50&gt;10 was $12,500
now $8990 50•80X14 was
$21450 now $18 990 80"50"4
was SS2,750 now $34 .990
80&gt;200x18 was $87,450 now
$59,990 1·800-24&amp;-9840.
Anne of Green Gables and The
Continuing Story Factory sealed
VHS movies $I 4 99 + S&amp;H Call
tolllrse 1-866-744-8245 (PIG TAIL) Pnnce Edward Canada
AUTDI FROII $100 oo
Pollco ln-c&gt;ounds &amp; Ropool
Toyotas, Chovy's, Jeepol
Pleaso Coli lor USIIngs
1-800-451 -0050 E•t C9817
BICiroom Suite Set. Queen Size 6
Place, Like Now Bassell, Aiding
Lawn Mower 42" Cut Murray
Like New, (740)248-5740
Compac;:t Desk Top Computer,
Pentium 3 Procenor, 17 Inch
Monitor. CDRW Drive &amp; Printer,
(304)675-26 I 1
Compularo WE FINANCE DELl
COMPUTERS! Evan with laos
lhiln ptrlect credit! 1·800-471 ·
9018 Coela AC21 www omeaolution com
Craftsman Chipper Shredder, 14•
Chain Saw, 22' Hedge Trimmer,
5hp Tiller, Gas Edger, 1 Shp,
(304)875-2365
FREE $40 wort11 of GROCERIES!
Limited to first 100 calls Tell
f - anG ilmltyl800-4211-4397
Sowmlll $3 895 New Super Lum·
btrmatt 2000, larger capaclti11 1
more options Manufacturer of
uwm1111, edgers and lklddtrl
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
8onwllf Drive, Buffalo NY 14225
"lEE lnlormollon t-800-578 ·
13831l&lt;T 200·U

=

Bto Point PIUI For All Your Pain·
lng NetGo WI StOCk Pitlsburgh
Polnto, Sikkono Wood Flnlshu
Mlhwu Stolno, (304)878•

STEEL IUILDINQS I Urgonlll
Mull move nown 28•30 3~•40,
tlx100, liquidation pricing oovt
lhouundoll 1-I00·211·tSt4 x· 1

88

IIOBILE HOllE OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Olacount Prien
On Vinyl Skirting, Doors, WinG:
OWl , Anchors Water Heaters ,
Plumbing &amp; Eloclrical Porta, Furnaces &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobile Homa Supply, 740-4489418 ...... orvb.comlllOnnoll
NEW AND U8ED STEIL Stool
Sooms, Pipe Rober For ConcNII
Angle, Channel Flat Bar, Stooi
Graung For Oralno. Dtlvewoyo 1
Walkways. Now 55 Gallon Drums
Whh Lid &amp; Ring, $1 00 EIOh. L&amp;L
Scrip Molaill740)446-7300
ReconGIIIoneG Waohor &amp; Oryora,
1100 EliCh A/C, 5,000 To 23,000
BTU For Sale, Sllrling AI $75 00
Thompson Appliance Ropolr,
3407 Jackson Avonua, (3Qol)t757388

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNER&amp;
Tappan HI Efflclancy 90% Goo
Furnac11, 011 Furnaces 12 SHr
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
System&amp; Fret 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating 6 Cooling, 1·
80Q-872·5867 www orvb con1111ennott
Waterline Special 3/t 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, I' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Bra11 Compreslllon FillingS In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISE&amp;
Jackson, OhiO, 1-800-537-9528
Yamaha Bass Guitar, $100, 200
Watt Bass Amp, $150 4·Track
Recorder, $100 080 VHS
Movies- Big Variety, 12 00 Each,
1740)446-1721

550

Building
Suppllee

Block. brick, sewer pipes, windows, llntots. etc Claude Winters.
Rio Grande OH Call 740.-2455121

560

Pete for Sale

I AKC Mate Pekingese Puppy 9
WHks OIG, I TO)' PooGie Pup, 8
Months Old (740)448-3398

ao,ooo

Natloull.elple

"''ott
' "'

(740)4oi1 ·J~ 16

~.,....,-

790

Ask ing

$3500

710 AutOI for Sale

1995 Dutchmen Ca~r w1th II·
panoo, $10,000 firm , Call 740-

'93 Uncoln Town car. $4500, go-

992-1739

Jack Russell Terrier Puppies 1
Male 1 Female 8 Weeks Old,
(740)383-8039
Raglstered Lab pups, 2 yellow, 5
chOcolate shols &amp; papers, $250
each 740.742-1118

570

Muelcel
Instrument•

NOBODY'$ FATHER CO by Kevin Jones Mary c;:hapln Carpenter &amp; Ace Smith guest On t8Jx•
1m com,cdunlversa,amaaon etc

580

Fruita

&amp;

Vegetablee
Strawberries Pick Your Own Call
Claude Wlnteno 1740)245-5121
Strawbernes- You Pick • Wt Pick,
Tavlor's Berry Patch, 286• Kerr
Rood, Open 4-Bpm May 24 &amp; 25,
8·12 May 26, (740)24l!-9047

590

For Sale

or Trade
For Sale Or Trade Antique
Botlleo &amp; Jars And Old Items
For Authentic Arrowheads In
Gallla And Mason Counllas Call
For Appointment It No Answer
Loava Massage (740)441-1238

810

IASIIIIENT
Uncondidonll lltltlme guarant..
Local referencll furnfahed El·
1115 Cll 24 Hll (140)
t48-oe70. t-aoo-287-0578. Roa·
... Wltefpfooflng

s

6323

1992 O!Gsmoblle Cutlass SuRocond~

840

uoned Climate Control Power
Everything While With Black
Top Roalty Nice Car Will Sell At
Nada Wholesale Price, $4500
(740)448- 11 55 Groat GraduaUon

EleQtlical and
Refflgeratlon

Residential or commercial wiring
new serVIce or repa1rs Master U·
cenaed electrician Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304-875·

Glfll

...

jewllq,

·~~­
MiliCi!

Foley Beloaw Sawmill, 48" &amp; 58"
Blades Wllh Power Unit, Excoltonl
condition. (740)258-1614 $3200
OBO

.....
ea•1111tneat•

....-

'

tunnieS,

1999 Lu'1'1na, 18,000 Mlloa,
LoadoG, $14,000 (304)882-3339
Call Alter epm

92 Hyundal Elanlra, NeoGa SOme
Work $550 Firm, Call (740)2450810 Evenings

UCKING IIURAL ELECTIIIC
NA'IIdtw. liAS

92 Lincoln Town Car, loaded,
Good Condition, New Tires,
$2800, 1740)388-9053 Days,
(740)388--8958 Evenings.

NllO DEVELOPMENT
NllO PROPANE
I

Truckl for Sale

lltfaro JGU brNit graund lllftY

COIIIIIUGIIon ........ -you

1985 Chovrolet Suburban Silverado, 52K Miles Loaded With Exlrto (740)446-4191

hlwlllbn1ha jxapar10 IICitiM thllilglti8IIMI ol
uflty pall''•

1988 Clltvy 112 Ton, Long Whotl
Bast Cold Air, Must See To
Appractata, (740)258-11574
1990 Jeep, 6 cylloder, automallc,
94,000 miles, excellent cond1Uon,
selling at NAOA Book rolall, 740·
992·2529, 132 Butternut, Pomer1999 Chevrolll 5·10 truck burgundy with malchlng topper, ell
options Sharpll Excellent condl·
lion $10,1100 740-992 8159

MotOI'cyclee

AOHA. 2 Ytor Old Golding,
~eoutllul Groy APHA, 4 Yoor 01~
Pelnt Mort (740)388-04Qe

Boatl

&amp; Motore

te Foot Boo I, Motor, Troller, I
Foot. Flborgtau Pop· UP Camper,
$2100 For Soth (304)871-3238

Reglotertd AngUI Springer powo,
EXCiillnl Blood Lint (740)3188758
Hay &amp; Grein

1818 Stroto'o Open Bow With
trollor Boat&amp; 8, !&gt;collont Oondl·
Ucln OMC 3 0 160 HP ln·Boord
With Cobra Out Orlvo Aoklng
~~5 can Evantngo (740)446·

640

~~304~)8::7:_:5:::·30::::30~-:-:--:::-:: 1
t!O Round Botos Hay, $12 00
tech, 1740~-7787

fOI' Sale

1888 21 Foot Bill Trockar
Pontoon Boot w/IOHP Trockar
Engine , 1987 F-150, 4 Wheel
Drive (304)882-2715
'

•,

down .

18
20
21
24

Pet.
-5118
558
.533

W

L

14
14

1/2

.,21. 7:01-

1 112

Pet

01

882
112

874

Powell looked the

Eastern threatened agam m

prepared

the seventh, but left two run-

to throw on to first, took a

ners on followmg a one out

second

caught

fly out and a 6-3 ground out.

a run

Fttch had Clay's lone htt,

glance

and

m

down.

whtle

"That really turned thmgs
around for us, I

Wtth

runs scored, whtl.c Chevaher
had an RBI single, and Car-

a btg turn-around play

It

ne Wtggms, Sandy Powell,

an

, and Janet Calaway each sm-

brmg

left a runner at first wtth one

home Lodwick with the run.

out, mstead of one in scormg

A fielder's chotec ended the

ponoon etther at second or

infield single

the score

to

1-0

East-

ern.
when

Calaway

and

Batley

was

the

wmntng

third with one out. That was

pttcher, the 21st wm of her

a huge dtfference. "

season,

fannmg

four

walking

four

hurling a

Eastern threatened in the
thud

gled .

Bailey struck out the next

m

one-httter.

end the innmg.

just two batters and struck

Bailey each singled but were

Harm

and

batter and got a fly out to

walked

Clay threat-

"Our defense was a key at

out four m suffenng the loss.

ened in the thud when the

this pomt tn the game, and

Coach Douthitt md, "We

eight and mne batters both

Juli made some good pttch-

did the thmgs we needed to

walked to bring up the top

es," wd Douthitt.

wm.

the

order.

a~

Eastern's

Clay got one more runner
m

damped down

scormg posttton

Wlth three great plays to stall

sixth

when wtth

the rally.

Fttch

walked

m

the

outs .

two out,

and

We htt well and ht t u

hard even

when we made

One of the guls said,

"It's too bad Don Oackson)

reached

tSn't here to see tt.' I told her

I -2-3

second only to be left strand-

that I felt Don has been with

in the fourth, but Cay had a

ed on a Chevaher to Wtggms

us

rally

ground out.

m

the making when

season

We dedicated

thts season to htm and hts

ball to Sandy Powell at third,

field fence for a solo home

Fitch was caught in a run

run, the score

Fttch stole second,

all

presence

pitch

hammered

over

the

left

felt

at

every

game."

2- I

a

ts

Eastern

center

4

30

plays

tomght

at

m Ptckenngton

2-0.
the ball"

Reds

And the fresh arm5 ma!le

1 hour, 15 mmutes late, and more

game started

fromPIIpBI

'adifference. The

ram m the third stopped the game for another
I hour,

of the credit for the four-game wmmng
streak. The relievers have pitched

10 2-3 score-

33 mmutes

Reds manager Bob Boone

left Bell, hts starter, m the game, and the effects
of all that stttlng around showed

less mrungs the last two games, and they hnut-

Wtth one out m the third, Bell gave up a

ed the Reds to just three htts after the ram

smgle to Van Poppel Two batters later, Bell
walked Guiterrez. Coomer then smgled to

delay.
Todd Van Poppel (2- I) allowed only one htt
and three walks in

3 2-3

innings, smkmg out

five Three other relievers combmed for three
htts 10 two mmngs before Tom Gordon came

deep left to dnve m Van Poppel, and Stam followed wtth another RBI smgle.
Belt gave up three runs and five htts m

as many

2 2-

3 mnmgs
Bell also ga~ up a homer m

m and pttched the moth for his fourth save
It was the fourth appearance m

mrung to Zuleta

the second

Reds pttchers have now

I3

days, and the first consecuttve saves for Gor-

allowed at least one

don, who m1ssed all of last season after recon-

games, matchmg the mark set June 29-July

structive&gt; elbow surgery

1955

"Every guy I've gone to out there the last

we

Cubs m anager Don Baylor satd "They want
1

wtth them"

I Oth

just

homer

moments

benches

when Tigers

ptece

agamst

Dean Palmer hit a two-run

Cleveland, got Cruz to htt a

homer and Roger Cedeno an
RBI smgle for Detrott.

nghtthe

Ttgers starter Steve Sparks,

As he approached the bag,

shutout ag.unst the Indians on

mound and first
Jones decided to tag

who
Cruz,

April

p11ched

I 4,

a

four-hit

allowed mne hits m

both

who shoved the rehever away

stx mnmgs The knuckleballer

empned

wtth both arms The two went

walked none, struck out four

face-to-face as players

and caught

after

bnefly

came

10,

htgh hopper that the

for the wm

Taubensee's

ERA

hander fielded between

worked out of a pm 10 the

top of the

straight

(wm)," Coomer satd "So keep messmg

cle, Jones, who entered wtth
an 8.68 career

homer m

"(Zuleta) started messmg wtth the bats and

few games has been able to bnng tt home,"

I
f
Tribe
I fromPipBI
E·i'

reliever Todd

from

a break m

the

Jones and Jacob Cruz collided

both dugouts sprmted onto

stxth when Cordero had an

at first.

the field.

apparent,

m

the

game,"

go-ahead

homer

nullified

"I thought he was trymg to

"I guess tt put a little more
drama

Cordero's shot was tmn:illy

get me Wtth hts elbow," Jones

Taubensee satd. "It's one of

satd. "We were two guys try-

ruled

those thmgs that you want to

mg to do our JOb and JUSt got

umptre Marvm Hudson, but

happen."

tangled."

then reversed ~y plate ump

We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Ma,.aaer. We are currently
IMklna to fill over 100 po11t1on1. No
exp. nece..arv. Eam up to $15/hr.
Very flexible tchedullnQ. Both fit and
p/t avail. MedlcaVDentaVPd
vacatlon/Momt. opps. avail for f/t.
Call today, start tomorrow...
1-888-974-JCfBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOUI
C_pG Managem~nt, LL.C

Eastern

had a home run and both

then on Summers' bard hit

s

led

stngles, Lodwtck

play JUSt

copy

D

Batley
two

felt," md

"That

Lodwtck

'

IK--

C!Dgo- Boo
G-Il 11 TOIOnkl (Corpontor 4-1), 7:05p.m
To-~ 1-8) II 'Ill,... 8lfY l s 1· 3), 715 p.m.

t87 • 112
289 12 1/2

32

30
29

01

sort of gave us a 1tft and was

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Horae/ Coil Broeklng/ Training,
Aoglottrtd Quarter Horsoe Fot
Slit, Letart, WV (304)188·331 &amp;,
www seyrafarlltl OPm
Hor818 For Solo (740)258-&amp;13!1

---

TOIVf'fiO

L

25
25
24
21
13

that Chevalter beat out for

L
r r--====~~==;:i~=======-"""1
•-

(304)t78-7511130ol)~75-7423

....

W

a hard-hit ball to shorntop

110 Help Wanted

2000 400EX 4· wnoeler, llka now
over tt ,200 In l&gt;lrtl 14,800

750

Till Cllllllfort You Dig
Plogt•tt. 11'1 wtit1lt digging
Into.

lllundar'•-

-(Mo-&amp;-o)MNY(UtaWII•-4), 1:05 p m.
Anllltin(Orllz3-3)ot8 l l t o e ( 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
-~ 1-GJ•Cic••llll(-

stngle.

'

1999 Harley Davidson Electra
Glldo Clalllc Fuol ln)ocllon, 2

(EMil 3-2). 10:15 p.m

in the sixth when freshman

1-800482-2784

1989 Kawaoakl Ninja, 800ac,
Black/ Red. Runs Good, I 3 ooo
Mlloo, w/Full Face Htlmot $1100
Calll740)3911-9980 Alter 7pm

2-5~ 7 10 p.m.
eoa.do (1-.on Q-2) II s.n Fnonclooo

htt, led off the frame with a

24 Hourt Alily, 7 Diyl AWttlt

ceo,

Llveetock

lllmlnltld by Pllaclpattng In

Ohio UUIIIIOI Ptilllcllun Bt,.lco I

1 985 Honda SaDie, V$, EC
$1800 OBO, 1983 Kaw 440 LTD
$550
(7401446-9355

1998 .Hondo VTR 1OOOF Super·
howk , 2 Brotboro Racing Plpoo,
Asking $8000 (3Qoi)173-8BU

""" oonllructlon she.
ltiVIct Cllll ... vlrltlllly

1994 Ford Aerostar Extended
Cab Minivan XLT 93,000 mllas
loaded. V·6 automallc $6500
740-247-1100
•

Troy Buill Tillar, 6HP (740)4418227

roouH In I Nprtl8fiiiiiYI
lOcating our bilrltd flcllllltlll

'1111 rlalt of dillupllng . .lily

&amp; 4·WDI

Tono
Paint,After
Extra5pm
Clean
(740)
446-1749
Or Leave
MOIHOI

Aatmplt phone colt~ worltlng
dayl btlort lllrUng ...
tttCIInllon woift 10 1111 Ohio
UUitlla Proltcllon llllvlct or
lht Energy Coopnllvl, wll

17

~ 4-4), 7:05p.m.
(Bttt.- 2·1) II NY ..... IAAJII&lt;

your

s

11
AM
12112

-...(-3-3)11~

Fitch, who had Clay's only

s

.388

18

Eastern plated a huge run

H

83 Dodge Aries Statlonwagon,
Runa Good Needs Brake Work
$300 OBO can Belore 5pm,
(740)388-8532

.733

23
2o1
21

.328 15 112

L

22
20

~~WI•CIIIooto
Coal llJollor N). :l::lt ......
Arlanl ~HI) II Son ~*go (Sana·
no 1-1), 5:05 p m.

runner back. then

out,

12

- .....

Tlllnllatl-

........ ~1-o)ll1-- ~. 1:dl p.m.

the Panther runner

two

W
33

•••

• ..-.pptl....,

struck

Eastern went down

L.

2000 Cavalier, 2 Door, AM/FM
Cassone. CO Power Sunroof,
Cruise, Till, 21.000 Mites. $8,500
(740)441-0337

up

Now, wtth

defense

c

2000 Hon&lt;1a Civic EX, RIG,
Totally Loaded, Power Moonroof,
8000K, Mual Sell , $15.500
(3Qol)l75-6485

Grovoly Walk So hind With Mow·
or, 1740)448-9227

2

22 - - 1112
21 .311
IS

Douthttr .

of

today.

1997 Ford Explorer, XLT, 4WD,
43 000 MilOS, Exoolllnt ConGI~on,
AsldnQ SIUOO (740)448-0118

batter

left stranded.

l I ass

Pickup

I 998 DoGge Intrepid ES, Candyappla Red, Loaded, Leather
Now Tlrto, Highway Molea, $8200
080 (740)4oi1.-Q135

Ford 2000 Tractor For Salo, Call
(740)258-6883

500

-

18

21

Kristen Chevalier hammered

1111 esttlle, 1 inntng,

.
IIIIIL

1994 Ford Crown VIctoria, 51 000
Miles, Ono Owner $8,000, J980
Chovy Malibu, 2 Door, Hard-top,
30,000 MIIU, (140)319-2694

next

out.

17te

1893
Codllloc
Flatlwood
Broughman 50K Mllea, Compleltly Loaded. Black With Leath·
er Interior Mint Condition,
$13000 (740)446-4191

1020 Massey Ferguson, 4 WD,
7811 Hours, 3 CytlnGtr Dlesol, E•·
coltont $7500 (740)448-9227

1/2
1

bases loaded and one out,
the

trauel

Livingston s Basement Water
Proofing. all basement repairs
done. free aatlmatee. llfttlmt
guarantH 14yrs on job exparl
"""" (304)885-3887

1892
Flrablrd ·
Exctllonl
ConGIIon $4800 Or Boll Ollar,
(740)448-754 I

740

.532
522

..• ,... •.

llalblllllll,l
C&amp;C Glntral Home Maintonenco- Painting. vinyl aiding.
carpentry doors. ~lndOws . bathe
mobile home repair and men For
fru estimate call Chtt, 740·992·

1891 Dodge Stoallh RT. Twin
Turbo, 300HP, 5 Speed, AWO,
AWS, Loodod, Sharp Car, $7500
OBO (Bolow Book). (140)4410135

V1n1

01

Disbid

Home

WATEIIPROOFINO

HonGo Accord LX, 4 Door.
Loodod,
SpeoG 37 mpg,
127,000 Mlloo. Oreal Shopa,
$3.29' (304)175-7258

0% Financing On Now John
Otere Mower Conditioners And
Balers With John Deere CraGII
Approval Call Or Slop By Nowll
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
(740)446-2412 1-800-594-1111

d'

23

Pet
543
543

NY. IIIIa4. ........ 2

. . . . _1. 1!11. """'3
Bin'- 5, Mlooa I ,

'lllnlla BltY

Improvement~ •

1987 Otdomoblle Supremo, TTops, 2 Ooor, V-8, Bucko! Saoll,
4-SpooG , Automatic, Lika Now
Tim, For Sole Or 'lhtdo For Nk:t
4 - - . 1740)2tHI12

730

112
1112
1112
10

22

24

SERVICFS

1988 DoGga Ooytona Turbo,
RuM Good. $400, (740)4-11-1083

Farm Equipment

630

20

21

23

75 Apache Moll Now Goer Box01, Roady 10 Go- NiCO $1395, OlfY
(740)245- 521 1,
Even1ngo
(140)448-7753

0)'

610

112

20

It&amp;t 24' tnnobruck Travel
Trailer, like New CondUion , Lots
Of Extras Will Deal, 1740)4488788

1988 ChryoleJ' LoBoron, 4 Door,
Engine Ooun'l Run Everything
Else GooG, $200, Call (740)44101119

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

•

740-241-7401

nut.-.,

720

11/2

11

W L
:15 2t
:15 21
:15 22

IOCIIId II Garhtrlng We ·
l8ra Campgrounds, Apple Grove,

0080
French City Pet Grooming Haa
Moved To Point Pleasanl, Now
Coiled Rose's Pet Grooming Call
For Appointment (304)675-5010

All

"IS ae
21

179~

1815 ALFA Romoo Spldor converUtllt, excellent condlllon,
$1000, 740-8112-2!1211, 132 Bullor

premo Convertible FuMy

rr

24

1304)895-38781304)895-~

' 99 Graftd Am, one owner. feft\llnder olloctory wamonty, lady
driven, very good gas mileage,
19,000 mllto, loaded. very ctoan.
Con bo - . at 809 Pea~ Slrtll,
Ulddlaport or call 740-982-2351
aflor4pm or~ "'"'*'&lt;l~

.404

••
•

W L

1990 18 Sk.,..._r T . -, 1 Owner, 4 wnaels, Fully Contained
5,

21

21
11
••

:15
:15
:15

MotOI'Homal

Sloops

.411

22 24 A111 •

flollda

• lncfl SUiptriSIOn Lift For 111110-

-.$300

a

•

Pet.

L
11

--- ::~·

IM Ford F- 150. 4•4. E-ythmg

Early Spring ""'"*'V"IncreiiO Alfolmonta ~an Extra
Pllnta Tl1tnk You For Your Busintll Call Donny DowhursiLoavo Uo11ago (30&lt;4)895-3740
Or (304)885-3188

.114

W

~

Tobacco Planta- Ofder Now To

....
rr

The
Dally

12 Round Balaa Of Hoy Far Sale

Uniroyal Tlgorpow nru, ~201•
75Ate, (41 area, only
mloo
Ulld, tXCIIIont COnditiOn fiOO
'
'
74G-It2-2084

Llvo

19e7 Flagstaff pop-up, ale lloepl
Craftaman.~~~~~ex=c=•=ll•=n=t~c=o=nG~II=Io=n. e.
12250 1973 spr~~e. lleePI 2-3,

Lawn Mower, sears
Roar EnQine, 13 5 HP, 30' Cui
Uled One Sea&amp;on Excellent
Condition $500, 1740)379-211 I

&amp;
Chocolate &amp; Black

540

a

Auto Parts

780

AEAAllON MOTORS
Ropoired, &amp; _,.In-_
Col Ron Evons, t-800-537-9528

Washer &amp; dryer $200, electric
range, $75, all gooo conGI!Ion, call
740.992-3242

Buy or sen A1ver1ne AntiQues
1124 East Main on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740-992-2526 or 740 992 1539 Russ Moore owner

count Av...lb111. Horilogo Farm
(304)815-5124

T kA', S PORTAT ,U I&lt;

AKC Registered Champion
Bloodline Labrador Retriever
Pupptaa Wormed &amp; ShoiS, $200
Each, Call (740)553-1803

Antiques

.
. . llflltil· -Oil ·
"RounG
DoiiVory ITlo
VoiUIM

JET

Very Nice Large D~n~ng Room
Table With .8 Chairs Also
Electric Plano With Bench
1740)44H737

4pm

I anG 2 bodroom apllrlmonls, lurnlahed and unturnlahld 11curlty
doposll required, no peto, 740992-2218

448-oooe

New &amp; Used Furniture

530

for Rent

HVLP Pamt Sprayer Now, N Boen Uood, $1000 Firm. Call
(740)245-o610 E**'GI

r.1ERC rl ArWIO:&gt;E

sq ft., ale, cowriCI porl&lt;lng. coil-

Aoom, Family Aoom, KiiChiA Willi
Appliances, full Size Baatment,
24&gt;24 Flnlohod Gorogo, 8x1 o
WooG Storage Building. CIA &amp;
Goa Hell. Excellent Nolghbor·
hood Too Much To Mention
Ready To Movo Into Call For Appoiitbu•ll (740)4 tB 9S&amp;8

Small 2 Bedroom, A/C, H11
Kitchen Appllancu, Gu Fur·
naco. Good Roof, 2 Porches
(304)875-I 385

BoouliiUI- 11100 Sq Foot. 2nd Floor Apartment tn Histone
Onstrlct Ideal For Profesalonal
coupll All Uodlrn Amonllles 3
aoorooms. SpeciOUS Uv~ng, 1-112
Roths, Roar Dod&lt; HVAC $8001
mo Plus Utilities Secunty And
Kor 0opo111. No Pols ReltraiiCOI
Required. 1740)448-4425 Or
(740)H8 3936

Buslnou with upotalno opertmonl
for aale, 241 Salem Strtet, Au·
.....,, Ollio. $35.000, col 740-742-

3 lloctooml. Balh, Living

Roull 1 South, NtWir, Lorgor
Home Very Nice, Conalder
,.._In, (740)4~5 9Ht

$215.000 (740)446-

340 Bullnell811d
Bulldlnge

Excotlonl Locsilon On Aoull 110
Between Gllllpolil And Holzer

Country Living- Pk:k Your Drtam
Home &amp; We'll Sot It Up On A
Beautiful 5 Aero Traat, OakwoodGallipolis· (740)446-~3

lhil nowo-lloubjeet to
lhl F - Fair Houolng Act
of 11188 which mokll .IIIOgll
to ICMHttle •any peaNtence,

Borns,

tn-tround
Pool. Frull TreH, aooo

To . _
4230

Country Homo, I 112 Story, 3
a.droom, 1 Bath, On Sh1 Acraa,
97% Comp!IIICI With Flraplaco
AnG Spiral Stair CIH On Pilllanl Ridge Ad $50,000 (3Qol)5713158

~-

01-.

" · Fund.

FOI'Lal18

EqutppoG With
(304)81N545
-

PiOno- Tuning &amp; Aopoirs.

P - . .? Tunod1 Col Tho
Pionoll&lt; 740 446 1~

490

310 HOIMI for S.le

No oNiglllona.

•• Lowo, 20' Pontoon llflt

T -. 40HP, Johnson Dulotonl,

Publlo NotiOI
Th• Vlllllll Ol
Pomtroy I• ••lllng
lOr IHIICI llld• lor
g..olln• procluote
unl••ded plu• (II
oeti!M) lnd ft Dltlll
Pu•l tor on 1 ytlr
p•rlod. All tllltd
lllil• lhlll bt riOIIVICI
In thl Cl•rk'• Offtot,
uo .._. Mlln ltrlll.
POR*OY, Ohio on or

Public NOIIce

1111or111 :oo a.m. ~IT
JUM4,1001.

Tht
Pomeroy
Counoll rltlt'VM tilt
rlllhl to IOOIPI or
NINIIIIY or 111 bldl,
Kllhy Hyttll

~,.,

vm... ot Pom.roy

sao lui Meln liMit
Pomeroy, OH 48181
(II ... ~1, 1001

fatr

by

thtrd-base

Public Notice
by lhl Bo1rd ol
lllll1111 ol Pom•roy ol
Mtlll• County, Oh!o.
A Re•olutlon ol
Approv11 to realign
th• r!:"m1n1nt
appro Ilion
ruo ullon
by
modllylng
the
following
1pproprl1tlon• !rom
one 10oount to
anolhtr within lh1
lund:
2031·240-420

C.lllllllry, e2,000.00.

PAIII!D: Mey

21,

2001.

-------1
Public Notice

RI!IOLUTION NO.
•

81! IT

7.01

AI!80LVI!O,

John W. Blaettnar
Mayor
John F. Mua•r
(5) 24, 31, lOOt
210
J

�'

•

Ps .. B 4 • The Dilly Ss

lliiw

Ohio

The O.lly Sentinel • Page B 5

lfiEA Cro .. word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDIR

ACROSS 41 Lon&amp; ....

1 u.~~ ..... 11
7 Gulllkto
....

&amp;.o•

A&amp;D Alii u,•alst.rt Pin, IlK.

7llill

Rutland, Ohio
Tnd seals, car seats, beadliDen, truck 1a1p1,
convertible It vinyl lOpS, Four wbeeler tealS,
IIIOIOiqclc ICIIS, boat covers, carpets, etc.

.......

11 Ole Sci •

Mon-Frt 8:30 • .5:00
Over 40 yraexperlence

I

e

&amp; 111

• Q , ••

Free t:-.trm.rtcs

{740) 742 8888
1-a.Q1.Q918

740 -992 -1101

r.~lddiCfJ!II

Ot11n

L)

......
Urt
JW

••

•!

. •NswHomll

~1843-1214

... -"lOng"

......

17oMcltiiO'•

s•
,_

a

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

wwwAift#I.Cw•-

TATER It lATH
TIME!!

•
KENSIHGION
WIPDDWI IIIAT
WILi4ll TICHIIOLOGY
PCDPinE
SUP

PIWIHIAT

OUT AND WLIEH
17E PilAT II

M OC:CS OUT 11ft

OP o•••QIIQ
ULTRAVPOLET RAYS
MCI'ORY DIIECT

• G111nl SeJid •
111..,0* FlU Dirt
*Muldl
Baldozer Senlcel

. .PRICIIG

" A
Cltlll

•-

33 F!

III

.::::···
.....
$

d aut

~~~~~

35~
.
IWid?"

ZndRtUilaor

-.... a

7o..t

·~­
end?

."&amp;It"

(2 .....)

""*
JTGiwe

31 lllnl

10 Wlncl....11on
IIHIICJI:J
11 Englllll

rnoPn

311,.....,.

.......
41 Typeof

-

7lrln

ecllo07
12 ,.._

c.n--

11 Pie--

uo...
45

~

21,....
.......
.
......... PlmPII

34-1-tdltl

you've read
either of David Silver's earlier books,
you will know what to
expect from "Bridge
the Silver Way" (Master Point Press, 2000).
This time, the deals are
more
advanced
because many were
supplied by Australian
Tim Bourke. Silver
parodies well-known
fiction and movies.
My guess is that Silver's humor will have
you either laughing
regularly or staring at
the page knowing the
author was trying to be.
funny but not succeeding with you.
In this deal, how
would you try to land
siK hearts against · a
club lead? Trumps are

NliiOW

41!1111111

3 "Miler"

32F...,.nt

ltMt
,._

If

t4J

I

21C.....b.
25 Singer

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Medican: Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expei)SCS; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home~

1 Sclellll

2

20CDiiiiJ

.... Heidler

·
- I
NMtl
,._
t
.....

DOWN

CePe

Tough deal

'

r'110

• Itt. J
.. I I I

II A I •

: t o 57 a-

-... ...
--·Q
y ..'

IOIUTIISSBl :
COIISIIUCIION ; .

18&lt;~

f3r))'

.. e

A A IS

I

Ruck 1 R H11pp A'Jl'l'l

-

• 01111

• A4 t

i

.. tar

1$ PuncluiP

. At IJ
• At T

or 992 2753

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANa CO.

111

... 'f. .......
•

.,. 11

a ... .., 51 P!loxlnfl

14

24c:r

...,..
c

25 ToW ,...,.

26,.,....
......

nh Rll

45"1Mft-Bih.,-

(2...._)
411 Won! IIIII
71 lloallr of
..,_.
c.. mel 111111\1 or
Po!lwl .
doWn
21 Tub ICtiYity tf7 y_. C&amp;p.)

30T-

48 .....-

--.
31 Unltl of

ttJSI(prel.)
50 tiling Into

~

S'ln111

mode

dlv

~=

41 Aclttrawtl
42 Ford or
I.PncGin
43 ......

52

k

'ST ;::;.~
31 Fllhtmp
53 -~vlv.

•

2-2.

BORN LOSER
K.NOW,CHIE.f, I AAVE.TO"""
'-Dt¥\.\1 r Wf'..!) FL"~liU~
mE~~:N~ ...

,_~~
Self-Storage

-

:."':

Pomeroy, Ohio

.~.;

n.,.·

II~Hotri"IIISt&lt;lpA-.

IMPERIAL TIRE
Mason,WV

304-773-

&lt;

'

t§.
·~~

••

' . '! !'!·~
'

~

"'~';i,n~~~~-t:

• No carry outs
.• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Othsr Specials
Available
While Suppllea Llat

(Itt f i l l

til....,){ . . . l\ l't

lilt I l l \

l'tl

Gallll, ~.PeP Melp C-'ea
WV005176
Lieenled llld '-red

___

t

..........._992...;1717

Repair Hydl'llullc Ha111 &amp; CyllncNra
Alao Sell Dl.,....,.l'iPH Of Olla
Cheltsr, Ohio
(fonMr Wlli'IW Heating
• eoounv building)

::~~e:~~~h!~~e~; '::~:~' S&lt;e'\\otllA-l&amp;£~s· · :::~

~•ror

'

P/B
COIITUCTOIS, INC.

IE rr RESOLVED

Racine, OhiO 41771

by the Council of the
Vlll•ll• cl Pomeroy,
111 membere thereto

740-985 3148

CONCI£TFIBLDa/BIKK

oonourr:na:

THAT. !hi
Clerlc/Tfeleurer al
the
V11P1111 al
·Pomeroy, · tr1n1fer
th1
eum · al
$40,000.00 (Forty
thou .. nd doP!trl)
from th1 gentrll
lund to the otrttt
lund
lor
the
operlt!ng of current

•xpen-.
'
Thlt rtoolutlon 11
dtlm 1n emergiJICY
dill to lick of Iunde
lOr OUrnnt 1xp11n111
PASSED: M1y ·7,
2001.
. ·.

.Klt!ly Hytlll
Clerk,I'I'Ntleurer
John w. a1..ttn1r

• Foolon, Wolb, Slepa •
Fill Werle,
!leplacemtnll, • Wo!b
olldDri•a•Sielldl
Crete Free l!ll!molel
Sonlnc Ohio and W.V.
WVI03171l

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE
Mowlnv&amp;
Trlmmlnv

7..0-992-5085

·BISSELL
BUILDIRS INC~
New Homea • V:.JI

M1yor

-.

Sldlnc • New G•ral'l
• Replac:emeul
Wlndowa•Room
Additions • Rooftn1

COMM!liL\l and RlliDOOW.
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Adv,rtlae
In this
space
for ~oper
month.

I.,_,...1..,.,.I-r-1..,lr:-2....,,,.-1

.'

~

. ''

broaching
spades, '":~·~·~~·::~·=~·
declarer should take ,.
the club king and ruff
ARB E V
his cluq loser in the 1---rl";''-ri-1..-"TI"~
dummy. Then he cas~c L.--'-'--..1.-.1..-'-·--'·

I

('

&lt;
'

IF I FAll. TI-IAT TEST

'

l
.
~
__. ~

INGINI DOCTORS
, . . Cc!Pege f7d.

Ovtr 13 yra up.
All_,. • .,.,.,......

TOMORR.OW,IT'LL &amp;E VOOR ~AULT.
C~CK. BECAUSE WE TALKED
ON T~E PHONE TOO MUCH ..

1(0U1RE

TI.IE ONE WHO
KEEPS CALLIN6 ME!

"Dear," the husband cooed t9
his wife, "I can write my name in
'-·-'·'---'·-...·-'-·__.
'the dust on the coffee lable."The
wife smiled sweetly, 'That's why I
r.....,_H_U...,..T"T"A_G,....T.,....-11 married a college - -- • • -- -I"
Complete the chuckle quoted
.
.
.
.
.
by · filling In the milling words
L.....L.-L-...L......JI..-..L.-' you develop from step No. 3 below.

· · spade jack. If · East f-..,l""s_,I.,.6-.
TI-rl-l"
r-----.,...-----,
covers, South wins
'(OU S~OULDN T ANSWER
and drives out the
1

THE P~ONE, CHUCK ..

spade I 0, es.tablishing
a discard for dummy's
diamond loser on his
fourth spade. However, if West has the
queen. he will capture
the spade jack but be
endplayed, forced to
lead back into declarer's spade or diamond
tenace, or to concede a
ruff-and-discard.
The book is $17.95
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge
plies. Call (800) 2
2221 to or9er. ·

Friday, May 25,
2001
Your self.esleem
could undergo a

?trvlot&amp;porte
IVIIIIb!e.

Spedallhanlca 10
Gene Baker, Auto

.t all oor loyal
ouatomers frlendi.

'

1 I' 1 I 18

I' 12

e ~~~~fRMBLE

••

•
.

Every Spring Tune:-Up
get a FREE Blads Shai'J!Inlng.
New «,ulpm•nt lrrlvlng dally

Sea Menning, Weynt or Jim
or 1 REAL DIAL on e new lawn tractor,
lawn moyer or weed trimmer.

GRAVELYTRAClOR
Salas &amp; Service
2o4 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

Ua Flnt Or We Both l.oeel

·Ask For Mike Hindle
'19 or 446-9800
-,•
•

Cellular

;I

. I

r

•I

-·

eff Warner·Ins•.;.
992-5479'.- '1•.
!
•
••

14 I'. . I'. I'. I'. I.

II III II II

FOR

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Abduct · Omega · Saucy· Jagged ·· ABOUT the SAME
1 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 teams hated you ABOUT the
' _SAMEt"
.

'Your
'Birthday·

CANCER (June 21 July 22) -- Follow

fall prey 10 lbe same
debilitating blunders

your ' instincts today

others make today.

~cause

13
I

;:=;;;=;;:;=;:;;;:;.;;=~;=*==::=:=*=~=~=::~

they could put

you in the right spot at

in the year ahead
because almost any·
thing you take on
you'll handle with
skill and aplomb, gar·

the right time to take
advantage of some-

than ever before.
GEMINI (May 21·
June 20) -· Mak.e those
managerial changes
today which you feel
· nee.d siabiliiing. The
direction you'll take
will rrove to be beneficin to all Involved
and may even be
relained for years lo
come. Get a jump on
life by underslonding
the influences that'll
govern you In the year
ahead. Send for your
Astro·Graph predictions by mailing $2 to
Aslro·Oruph, c/o (his
newspaper, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY
10156. Buure to stnte
your .7.odiuc sign .

O

PRINT NUMBERED
·. .,.
'f::J LETTERS IN SQUARES .

marked improvement

nering more success

.

_,

I

' 740 182..0122 .
Mlllwt.IWW.rldaii

Bring II yeur repair work
we'll get gtu going for

•

~~~~~~~=dew~~~g ~~~ ~,....-N....,.A_P_G,....,A-.,1;..',

24 Hours/7 Dsye Per WMk

8.01

one down.
-~,..----- 14fle4 ~, CLAT 1. POllAN
Roorronge . letters of th!l
Silver was consoled
four
scrambled words bewhen he saw that the IOjW to form
lour llmple WOlds ..
spades weren't 3-3,
but North pointed out
I DA N N I
i
the correct line. Before

O

{740) 986 4194
or {740) 986-4384

John w. B!Httnlr

RESOLUTION NO.

YOU~ PO~~·!

'

J.aoe-:150-,.,-r
J-304-675-7824
Rooldentlal Cww•dal NewC~
Salea Stnice lltllallatlon
!ipuialilina 1ft Slleet Melli DuctWGtk
''
"Tnne" Salea II Stnla! J"or

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

18180R13

1,\ D II\ drat din,\ ( &gt;il

Public Notice

fYUJ(..f.F- ~.

--q

N:XON..L'&lt;(. WAA\ l S~\0 Wf&gt;.:)

.,

HARTWELL
STORAGE

15SR12
11SI80A13
18MOR13
17HOR13

Come In And See
Connie Or Andrew

24, 31' 2001

'Wf\c:N l ov~ '(CO l ""
~le.E fol\€.~ P.. POW~

.

,...

..,

· ELlTE• MECIIANICAL
CONTRACfOIIS
...................
ol'•
••
....
•

«J;J.~l'I:J HiJaruJ

21c

I

High&amp; Dry

In this

(8)

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Three diamonds
by Lule Campoa
was a transfer, showc-.y Cipher ayptOgl8ma are CINted from quotationS by l""""'a
ing at least five hearts.
people, put and ,...m. Elch Jetter In tho clphor otandl lor onothtr.
Today's Clue: B equals C
The jump to five
hearts invited · a slam
DYL
LMY
'DABEYLF
KID L
showing at least a siKRXLEDL
OXYY
LA
OAGGAS
card suit.
Professor Silver
E L
ZEDEAW
SMYXYZYX
MED
won with the club ace,
drew trumps. cashed
U AM W o.
LAJYD
M E K. '
the spade ac~. and
finessed
dummy's
J y wwYC F
spade jack. It lost to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •speak when you ere angry, and you
the queen, and a diawill make lhe best speech you will ever regret.• - AmbiOH
mond c~me ' back . ~--!B~Ie~roe!.~~----~-~·-~~
-- ~--~~~~·~~~~~

lhing exceptionally

· You'll keep your wiiS
about you.
SCORPIO (Oct.
24-Nov. 22) -- Explore
other

optiqns

good in a new area

adding

to

you've not eKplored.

re so u~ces

LEO (July 23-Aug.
22) .. The only thing
thai could hold you
back today is the limitations you put on
. your own lhinking. Be
·' optimistic, expectant
and by all means reach
high.
VIRGO (Aua. 23Sept. 22) •• Your
charisma is peaking
today, so if you'd like
lo Influence someone
in a high place who
can help .advance your
interest, now'a the
time to touch base
with this person.
LIBRA (Sept. 230ct. 23) •• Because
you've profiled from
some past mistakes,
you're not likely to

becnu~ 1hcr~

for

your
today,
seems

to be something out
(here that not only .is
perfect for you, but
can also make you
some real money.

SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.23·Dec. 21)··lt
might be wise today to
be open to lhe sugges·
lions of others. Onc;e
you've heard their reason ina, you miaht
agree tbat • what they
have to say is better
than your thinking on
an Important matter.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ·Having several goals
for which to aim won't
put you at a disadvantage today. In fact, it' II
be lhe other way
around. You'll have
.,

more chances at hit·

ting a mark.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. I9) --This is a
good day to put your
house in order, if not

literally, than figura· .
lively. If your affairs
haven "t been running
smoothly, reorganize
. them today lo function
. more effectively.
PISCES (Feb. 20March 20) ·· What you
do for your family
today will be long
remembered. It won't

be merely the acl itself
that endears tftem to

you, it'll be the wny
you go a~ut it us well.

ARIES (Muroh 21·
April19) ·· Wow' The
innovative ideus are
nowing from you

!!till

like a gusher n~uin
loday. What you con·
cei-,:~

will have

excel ~

lent chances for longterm success.
TAURUS (April
20-May 20) ·• Because
you take lif~ '"'riously,
you ' re particular in

what you cultivate.
Today, you might take
on a new project lhat
.shows sign• of long·
term dividends .
•'

�'

•

Ps .. B 4 • The Dilly Ss

lliiw

Ohio

The O.lly Sentinel • Page B 5

lfiEA Cro .. word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDIR

ACROSS 41 Lon&amp; ....

1 u.~~ ..... 11
7 Gulllkto
....

&amp;.o•

A&amp;D Alii u,•alst.rt Pin, IlK.

7llill

Rutland, Ohio
Tnd seals, car seats, beadliDen, truck 1a1p1,
convertible It vinyl lOpS, Four wbeeler tealS,
IIIOIOiqclc ICIIS, boat covers, carpets, etc.

.......

11 Ole Sci •

Mon-Frt 8:30 • .5:00
Over 40 yraexperlence

I

e

&amp; 111

• Q , ••

Free t:-.trm.rtcs

{740) 742 8888
1-a.Q1.Q918

740 -992 -1101

r.~lddiCfJ!II

Ot11n

L)

......
Urt
JW

••

•!

. •NswHomll

~1843-1214

... -"lOng"

......

17oMcltiiO'•

s•
,_

a

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

wwwAift#I.Cw•-

TATER It lATH
TIME!!

•
KENSIHGION
WIPDDWI IIIAT
WILi4ll TICHIIOLOGY
PCDPinE
SUP

PIWIHIAT

OUT AND WLIEH
17E PilAT II

M OC:CS OUT 11ft

OP o•••QIIQ
ULTRAVPOLET RAYS
MCI'ORY DIIECT

• G111nl SeJid •
111..,0* FlU Dirt
*Muldl
Baldozer Senlcel

. .PRICIIG

" A
Cltlll

•-

33 F!

III

.::::···
.....
$

d aut

~~~~~

35~
.
IWid?"

ZndRtUilaor

-.... a

7o..t

·~­
end?

."&amp;It"

(2 .....)

""*
JTGiwe

31 lllnl

10 Wlncl....11on
IIHIICJI:J
11 Englllll

rnoPn

311,.....,.

.......
41 Typeof

-

7lrln

ecllo07
12 ,.._

c.n--

11 Pie--

uo...
45

~

21,....
.......
.
......... PlmPII

34-1-tdltl

you've read
either of David Silver's earlier books,
you will know what to
expect from "Bridge
the Silver Way" (Master Point Press, 2000).
This time, the deals are
more
advanced
because many were
supplied by Australian
Tim Bourke. Silver
parodies well-known
fiction and movies.
My guess is that Silver's humor will have
you either laughing
regularly or staring at
the page knowing the
author was trying to be.
funny but not succeeding with you.
In this deal, how
would you try to land
siK hearts against · a
club lead? Trumps are

NliiOW

41!1111111

3 "Miler"

32F...,.nt

ltMt
,._

If

t4J

I

21C.....b.
25 Singer

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Medican: Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expei)SCS; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home~

1 Sclellll

2

20CDiiiiJ

.... Heidler

·
- I
NMtl
,._
t
.....

DOWN

CePe

Tough deal

'

r'110

• Itt. J
.. I I I

II A I •

: t o 57 a-

-... ...
--·Q
y ..'

IOIUTIISSBl :
COIISIIUCIION ; .

18&lt;~

f3r))'

.. e

A A IS

I

Ruck 1 R H11pp A'Jl'l'l

-

• 01111

• A4 t

i

.. tar

1$ PuncluiP

. At IJ
• At T

or 992 2753

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANa CO.

111

... 'f. .......
•

.,. 11

a ... .., 51 P!loxlnfl

14

24c:r

...,..
c

25 ToW ,...,.

26,.,....
......

nh Rll

45"1Mft-Bih.,-

(2...._)
411 Won! IIIII
71 lloallr of
..,_.
c.. mel 111111\1 or
Po!lwl .
doWn
21 Tub ICtiYity tf7 y_. C&amp;p.)

30T-

48 .....-

--.
31 Unltl of

ttJSI(prel.)
50 tiling Into

~

S'ln111

mode

dlv

~=

41 Aclttrawtl
42 Ford or
I.PncGin
43 ......

52

k

'ST ;::;.~
31 Fllhtmp
53 -~vlv.

•

2-2.

BORN LOSER
K.NOW,CHIE.f, I AAVE.TO"""
'-Dt¥\.\1 r Wf'..!) FL"~liU~
mE~~:N~ ...

,_~~
Self-Storage

-

:."':

Pomeroy, Ohio

.~.;

n.,.·

II~Hotri"IIISt&lt;lpA-.

IMPERIAL TIRE
Mason,WV

304-773-

&lt;

'

t§.
·~~

••

' . '! !'!·~
'

~

"'~';i,n~~~~-t:

• No carry outs
.• Mounting, Bal. Extra
Othsr Specials
Available
While Suppllea Llat

(Itt f i l l

til....,){ . . . l\ l't

lilt I l l \

l'tl

Gallll, ~.PeP Melp C-'ea
WV005176
Lieenled llld '-red

___

t

..........._992...;1717

Repair Hydl'llullc Ha111 &amp; CyllncNra
Alao Sell Dl.,....,.l'iPH Of Olla
Cheltsr, Ohio
(fonMr Wlli'IW Heating
• eoounv building)

::~~e:~~~h!~~e~; '::~:~' S&lt;e'\\otllA-l&amp;£~s· · :::~

~•ror

'

P/B
COIITUCTOIS, INC.

IE rr RESOLVED

Racine, OhiO 41771

by the Council of the
Vlll•ll• cl Pomeroy,
111 membere thereto

740-985 3148

CONCI£TFIBLDa/BIKK

oonourr:na:

THAT. !hi
Clerlc/Tfeleurer al
the
V11P1111 al
·Pomeroy, · tr1n1fer
th1
eum · al
$40,000.00 (Forty
thou .. nd doP!trl)
from th1 gentrll
lund to the otrttt
lund
lor
the
operlt!ng of current

•xpen-.
'
Thlt rtoolutlon 11
dtlm 1n emergiJICY
dill to lick of Iunde
lOr OUrnnt 1xp11n111
PASSED: M1y ·7,
2001.
. ·.

.Klt!ly Hytlll
Clerk,I'I'Ntleurer
John w. a1..ttn1r

• Foolon, Wolb, Slepa •
Fill Werle,
!leplacemtnll, • Wo!b
olldDri•a•Sielldl
Crete Free l!ll!molel
Sonlnc Ohio and W.V.
WVI03171l

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE
Mowlnv&amp;
Trlmmlnv

7..0-992-5085

·BISSELL
BUILDIRS INC~
New Homea • V:.JI

M1yor

-.

Sldlnc • New G•ral'l
• Replac:emeul
Wlndowa•Room
Additions • Rooftn1

COMM!liL\l and RlliDOOW.
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Adv,rtlae
In this
space
for ~oper
month.

I.,_,...1..,.,.I-r-1..,lr:-2....,,,.-1

.'

~

. ''

broaching
spades, '":~·~·~~·::~·=~·
declarer should take ,.
the club king and ruff
ARB E V
his cluq loser in the 1---rl";''-ri-1..-"TI"~
dummy. Then he cas~c L.--'-'--..1.-.1..-'-·--'·

I

('

&lt;
'

IF I FAll. TI-IAT TEST

'

l
.
~
__. ~

INGINI DOCTORS
, . . Cc!Pege f7d.

Ovtr 13 yra up.
All_,. • .,.,.,......

TOMORR.OW,IT'LL &amp;E VOOR ~AULT.
C~CK. BECAUSE WE TALKED
ON T~E PHONE TOO MUCH ..

1(0U1RE

TI.IE ONE WHO
KEEPS CALLIN6 ME!

"Dear," the husband cooed t9
his wife, "I can write my name in
'-·-'·'---'·-...·-'-·__.
'the dust on the coffee lable."The
wife smiled sweetly, 'That's why I
r.....,_H_U...,..T"T"A_G,....T.,....-11 married a college - -- • • -- -I"
Complete the chuckle quoted
.
.
.
.
.
by · filling In the milling words
L.....L.-L-...L......JI..-..L.-' you develop from step No. 3 below.

· · spade jack. If · East f-..,l""s_,I.,.6-.
TI-rl-l"
r-----.,...-----,
covers, South wins
'(OU S~OULDN T ANSWER
and drives out the
1

THE P~ONE, CHUCK ..

spade I 0, es.tablishing
a discard for dummy's
diamond loser on his
fourth spade. However, if West has the
queen. he will capture
the spade jack but be
endplayed, forced to
lead back into declarer's spade or diamond
tenace, or to concede a
ruff-and-discard.
The book is $17.95
postpaid from Baron
Barclay Bridge
plies. Call (800) 2
2221 to or9er. ·

Friday, May 25,
2001
Your self.esleem
could undergo a

?trvlot&amp;porte
IVIIIIb!e.

Spedallhanlca 10
Gene Baker, Auto

.t all oor loyal
ouatomers frlendi.

'

1 I' 1 I 18

I' 12

e ~~~~fRMBLE

••

•
.

Every Spring Tune:-Up
get a FREE Blads Shai'J!Inlng.
New «,ulpm•nt lrrlvlng dally

Sea Menning, Weynt or Jim
or 1 REAL DIAL on e new lawn tractor,
lawn moyer or weed trimmer.

GRAVELYTRAClOR
Salas &amp; Service
2o4 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

Ua Flnt Or We Both l.oeel

·Ask For Mike Hindle
'19 or 446-9800
-,•
•

Cellular

;I

. I

r

•I

-·

eff Warner·Ins•.;.
992-5479'.- '1•.
!
•
••

14 I'. . I'. I'. I'. I.

II III II II

FOR

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Abduct · Omega · Saucy· Jagged ·· ABOUT the SAME
1 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 teams hated you ABOUT the
' _SAMEt"
.

'Your
'Birthday·

CANCER (June 21 July 22) -- Follow

fall prey 10 lbe same
debilitating blunders

your ' instincts today

others make today.

~cause

13
I

;:=;;;=;;:;=;:;;;:;.;;=~;=*==::=:=*=~=~=::~

they could put

you in the right spot at

in the year ahead
because almost any·
thing you take on
you'll handle with
skill and aplomb, gar·

the right time to take
advantage of some-

than ever before.
GEMINI (May 21·
June 20) -· Mak.e those
managerial changes
today which you feel
· nee.d siabiliiing. The
direction you'll take
will rrove to be beneficin to all Involved
and may even be
relained for years lo
come. Get a jump on
life by underslonding
the influences that'll
govern you In the year
ahead. Send for your
Astro·Graph predictions by mailing $2 to
Aslro·Oruph, c/o (his
newspaper, P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY
10156. Buure to stnte
your .7.odiuc sign .

O

PRINT NUMBERED
·. .,.
'f::J LETTERS IN SQUARES .

marked improvement

nering more success

.

_,

I

' 740 182..0122 .
Mlllwt.IWW.rldaii

Bring II yeur repair work
we'll get gtu going for

•

~~~~~~~=dew~~~g ~~~ ~,....-N....,.A_P_G,....,A-.,1;..',

24 Hours/7 Dsye Per WMk

8.01

one down.
-~,..----- 14fle4 ~, CLAT 1. POllAN
Roorronge . letters of th!l
Silver was consoled
four
scrambled words bewhen he saw that the IOjW to form
lour llmple WOlds ..
spades weren't 3-3,
but North pointed out
I DA N N I
i
the correct line. Before

O

{740) 986 4194
or {740) 986-4384

John w. B!Httnlr

RESOLUTION NO.

YOU~ PO~~·!

'

J.aoe-:150-,.,-r
J-304-675-7824
Rooldentlal Cww•dal NewC~
Salea Stnice lltllallatlon
!ipuialilina 1ft Slleet Melli DuctWGtk
''
"Tnne" Salea II Stnla! J"or

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

18180R13

1,\ D II\ drat din,\ ( &gt;il

Public Notice

fYUJ(..f.F- ~.

--q

N:XON..L'&lt;(. WAA\ l S~\0 Wf&gt;.:)

.,

HARTWELL
STORAGE

15SR12
11SI80A13
18MOR13
17HOR13

Come In And See
Connie Or Andrew

24, 31' 2001

'Wf\c:N l ov~ '(CO l ""
~le.E fol\€.~ P.. POW~

.

,...

..,

· ELlTE• MECIIANICAL
CONTRACfOIIS
...................
ol'•
••
....
•

«J;J.~l'I:J HiJaruJ

21c

I

High&amp; Dry

In this

(8)

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Three diamonds
by Lule Campoa
was a transfer, showc-.y Cipher ayptOgl8ma are CINted from quotationS by l""""'a
ing at least five hearts.
people, put and ,...m. Elch Jetter In tho clphor otandl lor onothtr.
Today's Clue: B equals C
The jump to five
hearts invited · a slam
DYL
LMY
'DABEYLF
KID L
showing at least a siKRXLEDL
OXYY
LA
OAGGAS
card suit.
Professor Silver
E L
ZEDEAW
SMYXYZYX
MED
won with the club ace,
drew trumps. cashed
U AM W o.
LAJYD
M E K. '
the spade ac~. and
finessed
dummy's
J y wwYC F
spade jack. It lost to
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: •speak when you ere angry, and you
the queen, and a diawill make lhe best speech you will ever regret.• - AmbiOH
mond c~me ' back . ~--!B~Ie~roe!.~~----~-~·-~~
-- ~--~~~~·~~~~~

lhing exceptionally

· You'll keep your wiiS
about you.
SCORPIO (Oct.
24-Nov. 22) -- Explore
other

optiqns

good in a new area

adding

to

you've not eKplored.

re so u~ces

LEO (July 23-Aug.
22) .. The only thing
thai could hold you
back today is the limitations you put on
. your own lhinking. Be
·' optimistic, expectant
and by all means reach
high.
VIRGO (Aua. 23Sept. 22) •• Your
charisma is peaking
today, so if you'd like
lo Influence someone
in a high place who
can help .advance your
interest, now'a the
time to touch base
with this person.
LIBRA (Sept. 230ct. 23) •• Because
you've profiled from
some past mistakes,
you're not likely to

becnu~ 1hcr~

for

your
today,
seems

to be something out
(here that not only .is
perfect for you, but
can also make you
some real money.

SAGITTARIUS
(Nov.23·Dec. 21)··lt
might be wise today to
be open to lhe sugges·
lions of others. Onc;e
you've heard their reason ina, you miaht
agree tbat • what they
have to say is better
than your thinking on
an Important matter.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ·Having several goals
for which to aim won't
put you at a disadvantage today. In fact, it' II
be lhe other way
around. You'll have
.,

more chances at hit·

ting a mark.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. I9) --This is a
good day to put your
house in order, if not

literally, than figura· .
lively. If your affairs
haven "t been running
smoothly, reorganize
. them today lo function
. more effectively.
PISCES (Feb. 20March 20) ·· What you
do for your family
today will be long
remembered. It won't

be merely the acl itself
that endears tftem to

you, it'll be the wny
you go a~ut it us well.

ARIES (Muroh 21·
April19) ·· Wow' The
innovative ideus are
nowing from you

!!till

like a gusher n~uin
loday. What you con·
cei-,:~

will have

excel ~

lent chances for longterm success.
TAURUS (April
20-May 20) ·• Because
you take lif~ '"'riously,
you ' re particular in

what you cultivate.
Today, you might take
on a new project lhat
.shows sign• of long·
term dividends .
•'

�.- ..'••

POIMIOf,llhklleport, Ohio

·. INSIDE: Memorial Day tributes

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this p~ge possible.

~u &lt;&lt;&gt;nh • M&lt;~y 15, 2001 ·Vo l ~1 . No 118

SPO

nder soil survey

'

SEN11NEL NEWS STAFF

,
AJJr--

WINITDIICUP

• -..ell ................ ,

Willi: coca-cora 600
Wlltre: Lowe's Motor
Speedway, COnco«&lt;, N.C.,
(1.5&lt;nlle traok),400

c:-tAvto-310
1 p.m. • Saturday • Fox

• _..., c,..coc.eoe.5 p.m. • sunciay • Fo•
•

_

-

1. Dale .~Melt. 1,559
a. W1Gan1Dn,1.545
1. Rutty v.~~aa~ . t .497
&amp;. .lcMrt' linton, t ,4a)
I. Steflin&amp; MMiin, 1 •• 21
t. .......... 1,4U
7. [tie) 5tMe Pat!., 1.387
Ycq-~1.317
~

II'M200

Wllln: Green fla&amp; drops at
5:45p.m., Sund"'

Hamilton, l ,l®

-£8rnf~MlJL,1.302

LabOnio, Chevtoiet, 15U52
1 p.m .. Salllnll7
mph, May 28, 1995
Ott ZIC t
J' .Jeff
........_: Darrell W81trip
Burton
won the 600 a recotc:1 five
• Track .... ,. . reoor4l:
times, but Jeff Go&lt;don, with
MeiiHth, Clielln&gt;let,
three wtns, Is ti'Wt only active 178.956.mpll, oct. 6, 2000
driver wtth more than one.
--:Mort&lt; Marlin,

--

200

MBNA E-oommeree

....,.: 00\ler Downs

International~.

(1mlie tlo&lt;:k), 200 laps/mllea

.....

ford, 155,996 mph,....., 25.
8 p.m.. luna 1
1996
Dcr rae· ;h : Kurt
o•lldlnc ~•• r' n: Matt
" - - • · - - 300 1 Na' ,, MarkMtftln. now
l&lt;onaeth
---~m
-lromBGNcompetitloo,
Treok 1 ..... rMOnl: ~
u;IMC ....,..:
_, more rocea (8) on this
- : Lowo'IMolot'
8u1Ch, ford, 151,764 mph,
Dole Eamhorclt 1&lt;.. C...,olet, ~ COnconl, N.C.,
ttaCk Ulan ony other - r,
Sept, 21, 2000
186.034 rnpll, Me)&gt; 24, 2000 (Uknlle track), 200
, ,, Foolliotcls an 11-10 od(ji
--:8u1Ch,Ford,
lePI/~ mllel
·OYer Pontiac In rKel et LMS. 97,158 mph, Sept, 22. 2000

-

-IIIWIIIIATIOIIAL

l'NCil•

1001 POIHIS STANDINGS

_. .

••
.tl.

laps/ 600 miles

Ci~Truck,Mt!INAicll:

8 p.m. • June 1 • ESPN

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

--:Bobt&gt;y

Kellin Hanick. U68
Scott ~ . UQO
Jlft'GtMn,l,MI5
.......... t.ttft
area Bifl'le. t .82t
r.wr,. eo... t.ou
....,. ....._, Ul12
1.021
M... ~ln . U70 Trw!s~MpM , 1,02..

""'* ......._

Yow1Urn
.....,,_Ow..... .

•

rad .. die
._.,_CUp,....(Oid
'

lOP lEN

-----'
--'

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

_Wii_
.
__
............

"""
"" ~ dM:e.
HANS...
dr:wQ is prgWtJy die bela

n..

top 10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race . Last
week 's rankl,gs Is In parentheses.

3. (31

4. (41
5.(51

lluoly IR' 7
_,_

~

8,(8)

--

'llloll*t11101181111e-

2.(11

7, (7)

8, (8)

t,(t)

•~

Crow's
Family
Restaurant

Accessories

Ridenour

'

.f."'llb,.

'J'no,N,Y,
hvf, Hllrlkt M 1111 NlfllOrlll,

X

Thlo-

""'NASCAR
or all 1M people euw.lated a a
I'ICe cu: Muhanunld Alii Draft
dodpr! He ref'uled 10 ICM hit cxmtr)'. How about W1ltu P1yton, Joe
l...o.ail or 0eorp FORIIWL '~ben! • 1
lol o( AfliCNI·Aracricanl wbo are

IIAKIUI1Iilo ....... - - - - I l l

.
'

.......,, 'No ftnpr pOinunc ond n9·t111eots of •IOOd.
oid:folhloned flstll&amp;ht this - • , but lilt ~,., ""'ht 10

'

'

'

bo worth wotchlrc thls-k ot Lowe'a Motor Spoedw.,,

I'

Blffle:s In a Ford, Harvlck'l In 1 Chevy, end ell the
ln&amp;redlents are In place for a sea1on-1ona bettlt .. .
- n two brl&amp;ht. younc drivers."

I

I

mftdtoclkloMhrl.

I

•••••••••••

Fen Tips

•A Busch' Grand National

team hao been buln lllflely

on the foundation of fans'
contributions. Mark and Josh
Watkins, of Eaoley, S,C,,
launched 81&amp; Fan Raclnsand

a Wob ano,

...,_,,...ftl.oem, to

· put toaether a teem for drtver
Merd)' Lindley•

V.l&amp;ftHotWhnNot

•has*"'finished
Ruoty Wei lace ·
13th or
better In 10 of the 11

racea.

Thanka to ten contrlbutlana :
throuatt the ltte, the team
'
wm attempt to make Its
debut late thla summer at
Perk In
Indianapolis

:L Who are the three drivers whO Won Daytona
500 poles· three year&amp; In a row?
2. Who won the Winston Cup championShip j:trlvlnl&amp; for
owner Raymond Beadte?
1. Which af the Labonte brothers Is taMer?

A-

Clermont. lnd, II&amp; Fen Racine
hoi alre~ ,...!wd

•.(qqOQ Ul~l JO!IOl 104001 0101 II (OHOO!'!J) AllOi 'C

-·"".

For l'nore Information, fans

UO)( PUO 1101113 IIIB 'IQJI&gt;qO~ IJRqOJi~ "''

• ••• • • • ••• • •

AHOUND I HE GARAGI

8)' Monte DuttDn

NASCARThlaWeek

Joe Netn«hek .~ utTered 1 broken
right scapula lnd elbow in 1 hiPspeed during pncticc on the momina of May I !j: ll Dover Down a
(Del.) lnlcmat~al Speedway.
A tire fa\lure between tum a three
and four of the l· mite IriCk sent
Nemechek '• No. 33 Chevrolet into
the concre~e w1ll 11 the outside of
lhc track. He spent the nlaht in a
Dover holpital (or precaulipnlry
rea10111.
Ncmcthck did not particlp!lte In
Saturd1y'1 Winston Open. !n1tead,
the No. J3 Cllevrolet or Andy Petree
Racing was driven by the 110n of

Nation1l reaular, rook over for
Ncmechek 1nd will continue to
=~-"this week'• Coca.Cola 600
"We felt someone tilling in for
Joe: thi• weekend, e•pecially since
.it '• not 1 puintt r-.ce, it ju11 llmlft
thing to do," Pence said . .. We 're
concerned about hi a hclhh and hav·
ing him rudy to 10 nut week more
th1n anylhina else. 'Linle Bobb)"
has a little bit ofWinstoo Cup e•perience, &amp;Qithlt on1tnck that's close
10 Charlotte arid has dor.e prelty well
in the Busch rac:ea 11 pl11.ce~ like
Charl(t(le,Atlarltund·MiciUIJIIl. We
think he's s ifNI wllh our 1\1)'1,
and the people at (1pon110r) Oakwood Homes love him1lready."
Hamilton Jr. flni1hed 31&amp;1 in the

may &gt;Jiait the lite, or write to:
Bill Fan Rac:lna, 203 Uda

FITis Road, Easley, SC
29e40.

nt

Nemechck 's lhmmate. Bobby
Hamilton Jr., a Busch Gr~nd 2000CupfiMkltAlllntl.

'
I

·

X

,
NEW COLORS: With Amoco
•nd BP 111 stationa beinj "rt·
im~Ked'' nalionwklc, Dive Sliney's
Amoco-tponaoredOodacwill c•rry

',

x~·

~ .......

.._a..;:=

X
BP'1 lf'l!tTI Uld yellow in 1M CocaGE1TJNGMORIANDMOU Cola6Gb.ThtnewtookwiUII10be

COMM.ON: Kevin HlfViclr.eamect
• place in The Wintton field with
hi1 Winston Cup vic lOry earlier thi1,
lprinaat Allan\1 Motor Spoedw1y,
whi~h IJ1C..t 1h1t 1 rookie WN in
the field for lhc fourth year In a row.
Al~, 1ht rooldethavecom.
peted In The Win•lon, the otlwn
belna Davey All lion ( 1~8!'), Jeff
Bll1on(l994), Kenny ltw1n(l~8),
T~y Stewart ( 1999) and Dale Eam·
hlrdt Jr. (2000).

''

Conadli,

:aotntM !Jan~ 'Z :.oPIUII:lS

· • NDT: TOdd Bodine has
flnl&amp;had 28th or 'ltorse In
the last seven raCes.

$5o

membership contributions
from fan• In -47 statl8and

.
.
Broken shoulder has Nemechek out for Charlotte races
~--

_,..,

"-C........

••••••••••••
..on,

Ml ...
........

~~U~~~~ ~~ ~:
WinluJn 500 on Oe1. 21 and me Pop

.:..

. . . . ttf

Diill

' Socrec400 11 Rockiftlhnon Nov. 4.

X

'-

BACK TO TRUCK8 1 Wimton

Cup driver S!lcy Compton
ba~:k

.........

will 10

.......

10 tht Craftlman Tnack Serin
for lhat ICrict' raca that rw~ln coa·
jUnction with Cup evenltdurlfll the
n:ffilinder oflh• HIIOR,
~
Learn frame, 1 developer of "eL.amlb$infiutnactutetechnolosies
and Knowed1eE-commerce aolutiona," will spoaaor Compton'•
Dodae IRick. Conlplon •wlll debut
with the M8NA200 atOonr, bel.;
onJunel.

-

8

"'*' .. n. ..,....,

........ . _ IIIIo 1M
.............. te
1
M--. . . . . . , ; ; - et

Flllt tfl the

ffrlt-

r-..!..~=====:;::==11

..i

Place Your Business's Ad. here

I

•

Call .The Daily Se.ntinel for detail·s
Dave Harris or Debbie ·call·
.

.

.

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992-2155

.r .

co

&lt;&amp;) ·

'I \)
. I

N
m
·N
Cll

I

Ca!eodar
Classifieds
Comics
Edjtorjals

AS
84-6
87

Obituadcs

A3
'·aI .5.8

Sports

IJ I
•

•i

II

'

BY CHARI.ENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF ·

OMEROY The
annual Memorial Day
observance of Drew
Webster Post 39,
American Legion, will
feature visits to cemeteries, a
parade and commemorate services in downtown Pomeroy,
The morning cemetery services
will begin at 9 a.m, at Rock
Springs Cemetery, From ,\here the
honor guard will go to Beech
Grove Cemetery for a. 9:301 a,m,
service, and then. to Sacred Heart
Cemetery for a 10 a,m,· .,
The parade downtown,
tradi.
' . ,... . .
tion for many years Ill tribute to
thoSe who fought in wan anp lost
their lives, wiU be lield. at 10:30

a

.'

A wreath will be placed in
tlae Ohio River as part of
the ceremony to honor
those who were lost at sea .
·I

a,m, It wiU forni at the tennis
court on East Main Street in
Pomeroy at 10 a,~. While it is not
necessary to register, Howard B, .
Mullen, chairman, suggested
those wishing to participate call
him at 992-3782,
,
Entries are needed, he said, and
·everyone is invited to participate
in the parade which is the legion's
way pf saying "thank you" to the
men and women who have
served their'country,
The program at the speaker's
stand will begin immediately fol-

lowing the parade, Joe Struble,
adjutant of Post 39, will be the
speaker, There will l&gt;e remarks by
the officers of Drew Webster
Auxiliary and oth er invited
guests.
A wreath w,ill be placed in the
Ohio River as part of the cere.mony to honor those who were
lost at sea, The dowqtown Geremony will conclude with the firing of a salute and taps,
Following dinner at the legion
hall, the unit will proceed to
Meigs Memory Gardens for a service at 1 p.m, and from there will
go to Chester Cemetery. The final
observance will be at Hemlock
Grove c~metery,

Please 8M Memorllll, AJ

LAST DAY - Sev!lral schools ·in the Southern
Local School District closed their doors to students for the last time Thursday, This scene of
students and their parents leaving Syracuse Elementary School was also played out at Letart
Falls Elementary and Southern Junior High
School. The students will attend a new elemerJ:
tary school In August.

House approves proficiency test overhaul

A4
_

Lotteries

COLUMBUS (AP) -· Schoolchildren
·' .~ would no lo~ger face a week of profiOHIO
· .'r!,'.
ciency tests in the fourth grade and disPick
Pick 4
· '
tricts could punish chronically failing
1
: 4-&amp;.():S;r.'
J: 4-6: ;
schools, under a bill overhauling the way
••I ,. S:4: 1lr»31"34
·;
Ohio tests its children and reports the
,
results.
W.IMj ·
·
The GOP-controlled House on
DIIJ 3: 7-7:0 Dllllr 4: 1,0.9-!J"
•
Thursday approved the measure 70-28 -

fi.,epublican
lawmakers, · including
whether new academic standards are coo
subjective,
The bill "takes the Ohio public education system and· raises the bar to ensure
that all children, every child in the state of
Ohio, has access ~o a quality ·educaJiion,"
sain--Housc 'Eauc ation Chairmatl Jamie
Callender, a Willowick Republican.
"There will be no question whether a
'including 14 Democratic votes - after
, overcoming concerns ,qf some freshman third grader..lan read," he said, "We will
l

'

.

For more information,

no longer have seniors graduating who
can't read their diploma,"
Earlier Thursday, some freshman
Kepublicans threatened to vote against
the bill out of concern that the changes
could allow values to creep into what
should be p_bjeccive academic' standards,
A lesson on coal, for example, could
develop into an attack on the coal indus~ry as a polluter, said Rep. Jean Schmidt, a
Republican from Loveland,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

Call (740) 446-5161

'
..

'

Memorial Day observance set

The Holzer Medical Center Pre-Admissions Department,
Making life a little easier with pre-certification, education
. and assessment needs for our surgery patients.

J I
:z:

'

NlW
_;_ For the county's'
Legion
replacing old flags with new ones
on the' graves ,of veterans Is a~ much a part of the Memorial Day observance as patriotic programs and
gun salutes, Thursday afternoon from the left, Gerald Rought, commander, Bob Burton, and Leonard Jew-.
ell, Drew Webster Post 39, met at Beech Grove Cemetery to begin the process, (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

SYRACUSE - Perhaps the hardest job in the
Southern Local School District Thursday
belonged to the custodians: turning out lights and
closing doors to students for the last time at
·
beloved community schools.
Thursday was the final day for students at Letart
Falls and Syracuse elementary schools, as well as at
Southern Junior High School. in Racine. Come
August, the students will attend the new districtwide Southern Elementary School in Racine,
Elementary and junior high students, with the
excepti~· of .Portland Elementary. Scho,ol, pa~~i­
.e_at~ in end-of-ye~a,ssembli£s 1J!ursday '!l,llrDiJ\g'l&gt;ortland Elemelitary chool was closed due to
:I! lack of water,
Syracuse Elementary was the oldest school in
'
Please ... School•,
AJ

Pre·Admissions

0

I,

BY JIM FREEMAN

l~W~e=a~th~e~r::;:::::::~A2:,;,~~~~mo::l~Ohlo=~va=lloy:~Pu=bl=lsh=l=na~eo::.,.;.J

II

Surve,. AJ

•

2 lldlllil - 11 .....

1car

1e c 1 II
In .......... -

....... -

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Sentinel

..... ~ '

In other action, commissioners
opened bids fiom Myers Painting
and Gheen's Painting, both of Long
Bottom, for painting work to be performed on the Meigs County Courthouse.
Gh een 's bid was $34,000 and
Myers bid was $16,000,
The commissioners approved a
motion to address the matter at a
Iacer date, so teach bid can be exam-

Students,
facu bid
old sc ools
farewell

f

.,.-!.
,,

tile

''

I

to emergencies, including
industrial spills; planning for highways, public water and sewer and
other economic development investments,
The project would' cost $17,000;
$5,000 .down to help pay start-up
costs and $3,000 every six months for
two years,
The commissioners agreed · to
deliberate the matter furth er and to
investigate possible funding sources,

..._

tWCtlwt po/lttl Mly /fw 1M rocu 1,.
which M ~ dtt e.: bvt Rklwd
Clliltbul ~ tit• polm roi"'IH b)'
Dole &amp;ntlttlrrlt t~r~J Harvfck ;, t/,e
t"aM1Mi~JV pof11ts sllllllli"l'· lk4plle
folllrtg ro drlw 111 "'' .Da}'loml JOO.
by , 11-qJ/. Hflrllkj f«Jd.r the mob•
'lfllwr,..,~. '

www•

This - l c : t - k Clue! II In tilt 8ulch Sorlol, but tt'o
tho hott"t In tlit si&gt;OI'I rllht now. b.....,. lliflte'
fol cosurc him tlit race In Han&gt;Pihl,., ond ~tile
two ftnllhtd 1,2 ot Namioth, Po,, WIIOre -

985-3308

--

pohlll coWud die cllamplonshlp or
-ofillo,..,wP

IIRANDIIATIDIIAL
NAZARETH, Po,- Gre&amp;
Biffle dOminated the late
staaes of the Nazareth 200,
winning ~ 8.574 seconds
over Kevin Harvlck.
The rookie For.d'drlver also
won at the mue track while
competlna In the Craftsman
Truck 5erles, duplicating a
feat first accomplished by
Ron Hornaday. it "was BiMe's
second victory of the season.
The rece had only three
caution periods, and Biffle
averaged 103.~71 mph.
Finishing behind Biffle and
Harvlck were teammates
Jeff Green and Jason Keller.
Tim Fedewa was fifth.

. . . VI, ICMin llaM.Dk

-

St. At. 248
'

-H

FEUD OIIHE WEEK

Supply
Chester

ror 111m Cblldreu with Dale'•

,..... ... JCeo.;n'1 art)' ..ieee.? I
ruliu K.m. doeld't rccciw Dale'•
Dllytona;
bat i• be eamiq

1ntlcllmax, 11 track position
doomed Stewart to a third·
plact flnllh. GordOn's pit
crew outperformed rivals
Stewart and Dale Jarrett, and
11 a result, Gordon tied Dale
CRAn&amp;MAN TRUCK
EernharcSt'• record with his
third victory In The Winston.
FOUNT~IN, Colo, - Joe
"That's all that was:
Ruttman pre"served Dodge's
awesome, awe tome race
perfect record with his
team,· Gordon Mid.
second victory of Ule
In a rather remarkable set . season In the Jelly Bell)'
of circumstances, ·Gordon
200 at Pikas Peak
won the race In a Chevrolet
International Raceway.
he did not even plan to
Ruttman, 56, eave the
race ; Because of an
DOdge Ram Its seventh
abortive &amp;tart ruined il'; a
consecutive victory In
autlden rainstorm, Gordon
trucks.

Power Tools &amp;

.

TiUo-

llowdooolbo
.....
N!ISCAJl _ _ _

was allowed, alone wtth
three others, to race tus
backup car.

lO IIPI were eomewhat the

See us for Your Stihl"

drlwr'&amp; body

X

crashed his primlry car and

Alit t~Jrntd out, the·final

992-5432

Cfll7 , . , . ,

tlbloriJmt 10 tllal lite

FROM lAST WEEH

tilt • I&gt;Orl'l buddln&amp; rival&amp;,
Gordon ~lnd Tony Stewart.

Drive-Thru Window

...,.,.Is ............
lltod·

~111£1- Moot if""" iMpact.

CONCORD, N.C. - The

228Maln St.

ry J - •

ftottl ttflil of •

---tolllehnt

Jr,

statistics say that Jeff
GordOn has a 1·1n-3 chance
or winnln&amp; any runnln&amp; of The
Winston In Which he Is •
entered. Gordon's victory
Soturcley nl&amp;ht - llctUlllly
early SUndJII morning - was
hit third, and he has
competed In only nine.
When the annual race 's
aecond 30.1ap segment
ended, the 140,000 or so
fan a were anxiously awaiUna
a .10.1tP ahootout between

Pomeroy, Ohio

"-lJJm! cw IIWII)' ll.fp«tS Jo . . .

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COLUMBUS (AP) -A
civil rights group and a college professor intend to sue
the state Friday over a
requirement that bU)'\'fS of
five or more beer ke~ must
register their parties and
sigr a form permitting
.police ontO their property.
The hrnerican Civil Liberties Union of Ohio said it
plans to file a lawsuit in.U,S,
Oistrict Court on behalf of
Scott Hooper, arguing that
the rule is unconstitutional
b'ecawe it violates guarantees against unreasonable.
searches and seizures. , "11' ',
7
If ~«d' Lnf1 ;~ir redi"'
we dOn't want -,- o have
people who are.biljing legal
products signing ·away their
rights tQ do sO:' Hooper said
Thursday. "It's giving police
permission to enter the
property witl)out a warrant
and without probable cause,
and that is just wrong:·
In August, the Ohio
Liquor Control Commission began 'requiring people
who want to buy five or
more ke~ to register their
parties and wait five days to .
get the beer,
Buyers must give the
location of the party to beer
distributors and must sign·
an affidavit allowing liquor
agents and police to enter
the property to enforce state
liquor laws.
Chuck Sanfilippo, executive director of the Liquor
Control Commission, said
party organizers have, the
right to ask officers ta leave
'and obtain a search warrant,
He declined further comment,
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NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the

1. (21

, The project would assure digiul
soil survey information would be
available for downloading from a
web site by 2006 for a variety of
regional and sutewide applications
including: analyzing watersheds and
planning for watershed protection;
locining areas considered worthy of
protection, suc.h as areas of hydric
soils and prime farmland; considering suitability of soils for on-site
household sewage disposal systems;

'

'

Dill" NASCAR This Week,

~

District officials, met with commissioners
yesterday
to , discuss
SOILDI G, a soil digiti2ing project
used to achieve suteWide soil information without curtailing ongoing
field investigations needed to update
older soil ~urvey information,
Gerber informed commissioners
that 18 counties have already had the
digitizing completed, and 17 others
are schesluled to.have the survey performed'this year,

Professor
to sue ·
state over
keg rule

••••••••••••

t'WOHI~

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ti-.1.001 .
Tonr R.inel, 1,515
Ted Mu....,., 984
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Ren!:lv lollml, ~7
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PpMEROY - A project geared
~ward obtaining up-to-date soil
Information was discussed during
I'hunday's-Meigs County Commission meeting,
Stc:Ve Lewis, Geographic Information System specialist, and Tim Gerber, Ohio Department of Natural
Resources soil scientist, along with
!"ieigs Soil And Water Conservation

www,mydaily~entineLcom

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

(ommissionen
.
BY TONY M. LEACH

: Reds shut out, B1

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