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I

Page B 6 ·The Daily Sentinel

Schoenweis' th

•

ANAHEIM, Colif. (AI') - In his second major
league start , Scott Schoeneweis accomplished several
firsts .
The Anaheim left-hander, J reliever as a rookie
la.t year whose longest stint in the majors was six
innings·. threw a three-hitter at' Toronto in the
Angels' o-0 victory Monday night.
·' It wa s Schoeneweis' first complete game, his first
&gt;hutout, and the Angels· first co mplete-gam&lt;&gt; shutou t
since Chuck · fmley beat Tampa Bay 5-0 April 17,
199B.
"It's an honor fdr me to be in a category With
Chuck Finley." Schucne\WIS sa id. ''I've looked ' up to
him s in e~ I've been in this organization. To be mentiont:d in the ~:unc breath with hin1 ts an honor."
Finley. the lon gti me ace of the Angels' staff, signed
;1 frL'l' agent comracr with C levt•land over t h r wintl'f.

Do in g. :kp as~ablt· imitanon of Finley, Sc hot'newt•i s
&lt;tru ck out t(mr .md w.1 lked four as he baffled the
Blue j.l\·s .

double in the sixth and Alex Gonulez's leadoff single in rhe eighth.
Troy Glaus hit a t~ree-run homer off reliever Paul
Quantrill as the Angels gave Schoeneweis some
breathing room with a four-run seventh.
Garret Anderson drove in the other thr e runs ,
with a two-run double off Chris Carpenter (0-2) in
the third inning and a sacrifice fly in the seventh.
Carpenter ·gave. up two runs and three hilS in six
innings, but walked eight.
" I was str!J.ggling with my. mechanics .all night, but
l battled as long as l could.'' Carpenter said. "The
bottom line is getting outs and keeping t he team in
the game as long 35 you can 1 no niatter how you do
it."

..

The eight walks were o ne shy of the club record
shared by five pitchc". Carpe nter was the last Blue
Jays pitcher to walk nine - last Aug. 16 in a 7-5 loss
to Se.mk
In the nnly othn AL games, Kansas C ity beat
Minnemta 6-S and Clevchnd defeated Oakland 9-4.
Royals 6, Twins 5 - Johnny Damon homered

Details, A3

..

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"What most impressed m e was that he ~tllck to
his game plan," Anaheim manager Mike Scioscia
said. "He did what he· planned to do against a power{\) I right-handed hitting lineup.
"For him to shut them down is a tremendous
effort. His location was very good. and he made
good pitches when he had to." .
Schoeneweis said he nll'rely did what he always
tries to do.
" It's no secret what I do. I keep the ball down , and
I was able to do that . I even had a chai1geup for rhe
first time in my major leagu e career, although it wasn't muc h qf one and stiiJ needs work ," hl· ~J id , smilmg.
As a reliever last year, Schocneweis was 1- 1 with
a 5.49 ERA in 31 appearances spanning 39' ' inmngs.
In his major league starting dt•but last Wednesday.
he gave up fivt• ru ns on I 0 hits in six innin brs .1 g:~i n st
the New York Yankees. but sti ll was the winner in .1
1:!-6 victory.
Toronto's only hits off him Wt..'rl' Marry Cordm ·;l·~
l,·adotf single in the fifth , Homer llush's two-out

Dining guide inside today's edition
J_unior's grand night in D~nver, IJ1

·
. 1huncl~
HIJh: 101; Low: 401

creates firsts in Angels',_,&amp;-0 win over Jays

BY KEN PETERS

•

n..esdey, Aprll11, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

leading ·off the ninth inning, and Kansas . City bear
Minnesota after wasting a two-run lead 111 the top
half.
jacque Jones tied it at 5 with a two- run homer off
Ricky B9ttalico (1-0), who relieved, Dan ReiChert
starring the ninth. Corey Koskie was on base after
hitting the 1Oth double of the game.
Damon's home run off La Troy Hawkins (0- 1) was
his first of the season.
Indians 9, Athlerics 4 - At Oakland, Cali~.
Travis Fryman had four hits and four RB!s, apd
C hu ck Finley and three relieve" co mbmed to strike
out 16 batters for C leveland.
Finley struck out 10 for the 2Bth time in his
career, but couldn 't hold a 4-2 lead and left wi th his
second straight no-decision.
·
Ja cob Cruz broke a 4-4 tie by doubling home t'l o---.
runs in the seventh inning.
Scott Kamieniecki (1- 1) pitched 1'• mnings of
hitless relief, l'aul Shuey pitched a scoreless eighth
and Steve Karsay struck out two in the ninth. Jeff
Tam (0-1) took the loss.

April 12, 2000

•
Mel1s County's

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Hometown Newspaper

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so.

Volume

-

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 118

'&gt; 0 &lt;&lt;&gt;nl•

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Ready for spring

•

TODAY'$ SCOREBOARD
Tampa Bay .

I :PREP BAS.EBAU; I CLEVELAND ..
Meigs 9, Eastern 8
Eastern ......... .. ..........200

0 14

1 "'

8-8-3

Meigs
.. . 010 70 1 x "'
9·7·2
Baflenes
Meigs. John Slanley (W) , Josh Lynch (6)
arKI Matt Stewart
·
Eastern: Eric Smith (L). crms Lyons (4).
Jimmie Putman (5) anct Cacy Faulk
.... 100 002 0 =
.. 020 ooo 2 =
BaHeries
Southern: Boso (L) and Cumings
Wellston: Ewing (W) and Dunn

5

C.ntrel Dlvl1lon
.. ... ... 5 2
Kansas City ........... ... .5 3
Chicago..... .. .. . ... ..... . .. ..4 3
Minnesota .
..... 3 5
Oetroil.
.... 1 5

Seattle..
....... ............4
Anaheim...
... .......... ... ..4
Te)(as·.....
.... ...... ...·......... 4
Oakland ....
..... 3

286

.714
625

.571
.375

3',

'

4 .429

1 '•

4-6·1

Kansts City 6, Minnesota 5
Anaheim 6, Toronto 0

CLEVELAND 9, O~kland 4

1:05 p.m.
thlcago White Sox (Parque 0·0) at Tarilpa
Bay {Yan 0·0). 7:15p.m.
Baltimore (Ponson 0·0) at Kans as City
{Durbin 1·0), 8:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Nagy 0·1) al Oakland {Oii· .varas 1.()), 10:05 p.m..
Toronlo {Escobar 0-1) at Anaheim {Onlz 0.0).

O·ll,

Meigs 15, Eastern 3

liS"

Eastern: Juil Bailey (L) and Janet Calaway

10:05 p.m.

Wellston B, Southern 6

3ou thern ..
. .004 0 11 0 =
6·3·2
WEillston .................. ,.011 420 x ""
8·8·2
•
Batteries
Southern: Brauer (l) and Dailey
Wel lston: Robinette (W) and Cremeans

AL standings
.~

..

Jnm

· E11tern Dlvlalon

W L ekl.

lll

3 .500

2

5 .375
4 .333

3
3.

Ba1tlmore ...... .... .................. 5
New York ......................... 3
Toronto ... ............................ 3
Boston ................................ 2

1 .833

3
3
4

4
5·

571
.571
.500
.429
.375

Western Division
Arizona ......... ............ .......... 6 t .657
los Angeles .... ... ................ 3 3 .500
Colorado ........... .................3 4 .429
Sa n Otego ....... .... .............. 3 4 .429
San Franclsco ....................3 4 .429

Today's games

.. ....... ..... ...... 300 000 0 =
3·7·2
Meigs ........ .. ......... 104 404 2 = 15·11·5
Bat1eries
Meigs: Tangy laudermilt (W) and Abby Har·

L ekl.

·\

Texas at N.Y. Yankees. ppd., weather
Seatlle {Garcia Hl) al Dolroll {Moohlo r 0·1),
1:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Mays 0·0) at ~!!ton (A Martinez

Ea~t ern

w
. ... .4

Central Division
St. Louis
..... 6 1 .857
Milwaukee .... ......... ........4 3 .57 1
CINCINNATI . ............ ...... 3 4 .429
Hous1on ......... ....... .... ... .... 3 4 -429
Pi!!Sburgh. ....... .. .. .....2 4 .333
Chicago.. .... ............ ........ 3 6 .333

'
'

Monday's scores

3·8·2

·eastern Dlvlalon

Monlreal ...
... . ... 4
... ... .. ...4
Florida ...
Philadelphia .. .. .. .. .... 3
New York .. .... ........ ...... ..... 3

2',

.667
.571

3 .571

rum
Allanta ......

I

3',

2
3

NL standings

.•

.167

Western Dlvllkm

Wellston 4, Southern 3
Southern .
We llston

.... .. 2

m!

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2

3
3
3',
4

2',
3
3

3

Monday's scores
Milwaukee 4, Florida 3
Chicago Cubs 4, Atlanta 3
Colorado 7 , CINCINNATI 5
Arizona 8, San Diego 4
Philadelphia 9, N.Y. Mats 7
St. Louis 8, H0uston 7
Los Angeles (Park 1-Q) at San Francisco

Texas (Oliver 0·0) at N.Y. Yankees (Cone 0·

NBA standings
Atlantic DivisiOn
1): L

Boston .............................. 31 46 · .403

N.Y. Mets (Hampton 0·2) at Philadelphia
(Person 0.0), 7:05p.m.
·
Montreal (Pavano 1..0) at Pittsburgh (Cordo·

m1
.....l

2

:sa

Buffalo at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.

•

ll'!onday's scores

Saturday's games

Toronto 112, CLEVELAND 103
Charlotte 107, Washington 105

Washington at Plllsburgh , 2 p.m.
San Jose at St. LolliS, 2 p.m.
Phoeni• at COlorado, 2 p.m .
Los Angeles at Detroit. 2 p.m .
onawa at Toronto, 7 p.m.

Philadelphia 96. Miami 80

5

19
19
22

11

21

Minnesota at Seattle. 10 p.m.
Vancouver at Phoenix, 10 p.m .

7
8

37 .519
39 .494

13

Atlanta .. ................... ......... 26 ~ l .338
Chicago ..... ....................... 16 60 .211

Wednelday•a gamee
Orlando at Boston, 7 p.m.
·
Washington at Philadelphia, 7 p'.m.
New,Jereey at ~~w York, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at CL:EVELANO, 7:30p.m.
Miami at Detroit, 7:30p.m.

Atlanta at Char10tto. 7:30 p.m.
LA. Clippers at utah. 9 p.m.

33 . .571
34 .558

CLEVELAND ................ ,.. 30 47 .390

San Antonio at Sacramento, 8 p.m.
Portland at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Houston at Denver, 9 p.m.
Phoenix ~t L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Vancouver at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

11

Central Division

y-lndlana . . ............. ....... 51 26 .662

25

Toronto at Indiana , 8 p.m.

Mldweat Dlvitlon

rum
x-Uiah.............

w

x-Sa n Antonio . ............ .... 49
x·Minnesota ....
... ..48
Dallas.............
......35
Den~o~er
................:n

28

.636

3

29 .623

4

P~~&lt;lflc OMolon
y-LA Lakers ...................65 13 .833
x-Pontand ....................... ,56 21 .727
x·Ph0enlx ....................... ...49 27 .645

x-Sacramento ..................43 33 .568

x·Soattle ................. .......... 42 35 .M5
Golden State .................... 18 59 .234
L.A. Clippers .......... .......... 14 62 .184

arcina on the 1 5 -da~ disabled list, retraac tlve'to
April 9. Activated AHP Ramon Ortiz from !he 15·
day disabled list. Purchased tho contract of INF
Keith Johnson from Edmonton of the PacKk:
Coast League. OpUoned RHP Mike Fyhrle fo .
Edmonton."'Transferred OF Mike Colangelo !rom
tho 15·day to the 60-dar disabled 11s1.
·
Natlona League

CINCINNATI REDS: Aqreed tp terms with

LHP Norm Charlton on a mmor league c~mtrad
and asslgne~ him to Lo.ulsvllle of the lntema·
tiona! League .

COLORADO ROCKIES: Placed OF Jeffrey

Basketball
PORTLAND TAAIL BL-'ZERS: Activated C
Aovyda&amp; Sabonls !rom the Injured llsl. Placed C
N1tlon11 Bllktlblll AUoelltlon

~

41 .481
46 .403
Houston ........................... 31 46 .403
Vancouver ................... ..... 21 55 .276

.Basebal!
.
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Placed SS Gary DIS·

Hammonds on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive to April 4.

34!,

L

.. ..... 52 25 .675

Relationship would
benljit both sides

..

American League

,

WESTERN CONFERENCE

1).

.

ru

27 .649

NewJersey ..... .
.... 31 46 .403
Washlngton ......................28 49 .364

{Rueler 0.0). 4:05p.m.

Montreat (Va~quez 0·0) at Pittsburgh (Ben1:05 p.m.
p.m.
·
CLEVELAND {Wnght 1·0) at Oakland {Hero· sonSt.0·1).&lt;:05
Louis (Stephenson 1-0) at Houston (Holt
dla 0-Q), 3:35p.m.
0·1), 8:05p.m.
Minnesot~t {Santana 0.0) at Boston (Fassero
CINCINNATI (Villone 1·0) at Colorado
0.0), 6:05p.m.
0-Q), 9:05p.m.
Sea"l• {Sole 0-Q) at Delrolt {Miicki 0·1). 7:05 (Bohanon
Arizona (Reynoso 0·0) at San Diego
p.m.
.
{Ciemenl1·0), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago White SolC (Bald~n 1.()) at Tampa
Bay {Wheeler 0.0). 7:15p.m.
•
Wednesday's games
Baltimore (Rapp 1-0) at Kansas Clly (Suzuki
Atlanta (Mulholland (H) at Chicago Cubs
O·OI. 8:05p.m.
Toronto {Castillo 0·1) at Anaheim (Fyhrle O· {Farnsworth 0-1). 2:20p.m.
CINCINNA.TI (Harnisch 0-1) at Colorado
0), 10:06 p.m.
{Yoshll 0·'/· 3:05p.m.
'
Florida Sanchez 0..0) at Milwaukee (Navano
0-1), 7:05p.m.

·

• -New York ......................48 29 .623
•-Philadelphia ......... .. ..... .4 5 32 .584
Orlando ...... .. .... .......... ......39 38 .506

x-C harlolle .......... ,..... ,... ...44
Toron to ...... ............ .-... ....... 43
Detroil ..... ........ .... ... ....... 40
Milwaukee ............. ..... .....

•

Friday's games

.,

Tonight's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE

rum
•·Miami ... ...........,.............50

x-clinched pta ~ff berth
y·clinched dlv•slon

Boston 99, Atlanta 94
New York 83; Indiana 81
Minnesota 102, Detroit tOO
Milwaukee 104 , Orlando 87
Portland 90. Utah 86
L.A. Lakers 106, Seattle 103·0T

1
1',

Today's games

Wednesday's games

va 1·0). 7"05 p.m.
St Louis (Benes 0·1) at Houslon (Dotal 0·1),
8:05p.m.
Arizona (Anderson 0-0) at San Diego (Meadows 1-0), 10:05 p. m.
Los Angeles (Dreifort 0·1) at San Francisco
(Nalhan 0·0). 10:35 p.m.

lll
t6~

21

21

30'h

Antonio HaNey on the Injured list.

NHL playoff slate

Football
.
JACKSONVILLE JAGU.&amp;.RS: Re·slgned TE
Damon Jones.
~"
NEW ENGLA~O PATRIOTS: Signed Q1:
Nltlonal Footb1tl L.e1gue

Wednesdsy's games

Ottawa at Toronto, 7 p.m.
EdmontOn at Dallas, 7 p.m.
san Jose at St. Louis, 7:30 p.m.

Lance Scott. Terminated the contraC1 of C·TE
Mike Bal1rum."
,
.

Thuraday,'s gam•

8\t

15
21

22 \
46\1.

50

Buffalo a1 Phllacltilpl\ia, 7 p.nf ,.
PIH&amp;buogh al Waohlrlgton, 7:30p.m.
Florida at New Jeriey, 7:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at OBtmtr, 7:30 p.m.
Edmonton at Dallas, 9 p.m.
Phoenix at Colorado, 10 p.m.

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Fir~ O,an Kle[h·
·
_, NEW YORK GIANTS: , Signed CB Dave
Thomas. Ra·staned C·G Derek Engler.
~
· WASHINGlON REDSKINS: Agreed IQ
schmld.t, traiQer.

,

terms with QB JeH George

tract.

on 1

Arthur Strauss of SoWJ Thifd Avenue in Middleport, prepares to clean
ot.it-weeds from his garden to make room
tot · orne
roses that he 'plans
.,........
A.·

·

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lour-y"elr con·

-::-·-.~,~,·--1.'·

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. -"'.·.·. . t-:..~-',.,. . . . . . '."

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to grow. This week's warm weather motivated many people to venture
outside for some long overdue yard work. (Tony M, Leach photo)
.

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..... . It:

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..... ,.. ;,... .'\..... ....

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were teachers Scott Brinker, Julie
Rick Ash, girls volleyball; Ron
SENTINEL NEwS srm
Defelice, Pam Durst, Sharon Logan, girls varsity basketball;
POMEROY. - Teachers and Edmonds,' Sandra Holcomb, Bev- Darin Logan, girls reserve basket~
coaches were hired, supervisory erly Jones, Darin Logan, David ball, John Sharp, girls middle
positions filled, and non-certified Longsworth, Melanie Quillen, school basketball; Eleanor McKpetsorui.el were employed for the John Sharp and Donna Wolf.
elvey, yearbook; Becky Cotterill,
2000~1 school year at Tuesday
. Rick Ash,Joe Bailey, Ron Hill h,igh school newspaper; Linda
night's ; meeting of the Meigs and Darla Kennedy were given· Lear, middle school newspaper;
continuing contracts by the Mary Whan, middle school
Local :Soard of Education.
Hired as teachers for the new board.
cheerleaders; Celia McCoy, drama
Hired on supplemental con- and senior class advisor; Kelly
school year on one-year contracts
were Lisa Averion, Lorri Barnes, tracts were for the 2000-01 were Barnett, junior class advisor.
K~lly · Barnett, james Bennett, Mike Chancey, head. footb:ill and
· Kelly Barnett and Kathy Reed,
David Chadwell, Grace Chen, athletics facilities care; Rick co-high school student council
Jeremy . GrimtlJ., Janice Groggel, Blaettnar and Gregg Deel, assis- advisor; Toney Dingess, band
Jab.'"Haddox; Nathan Hansen, tant varsity football ·and reserve director; David and Ben Wright,
Robyn Hawk, Ami Holden, Kent football; Ron Hill, assistant varsi- assistant band directors; Cliff
Howell, jlm Huff, Jason Jackson, · ry football ; Don Dixon, James Kennedy and Mike Wilfong, high
Tiffany Jones, Shannon Korn, Bennett, Bryan· Zirkle, seventh school guidance; Nancy MorrisChristi Lisle, Lester M,anuel, and eighth grade football; Chris sey, middle school guidance; and
Nancy ~orrissey, Metar Pe~er- Stout, boys varsity basketball; Jim Huff, librarian and library
~on, D~vid Ramey, Kathy Sar- Rusty Bookman, boys assistant supervisor:
gent, Kelly Satterfield, Stacie varsity basketball; Donald Yost,
Also hired on supplemental
Scarberry, Kim Scharenberg, Tim boys ninth grade basketball; Jere- · contracts were John Krawsceyn,
Simpson, Mark SW;um, Fam Vogt, my Grimm and JeffWayland, boys assistant high school principal
DavidWilcoxen and niiddle school basketball; Mike (part-time); and head teachers
J.effWayland,
·
·
'
Sco't Gheen, · Bradbury,· Teresa
Ben Wright.
Kenqedy, cross country; John
. , 'Given thre.e -year contqct/ Krawsczyn, golf;
Pie•• Ill Adlon, Pip AJ

· ; lbdily's

Sentinel
• "UII:Ibils- ie .....

~00

•.

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tl)rough July 5 we're offering dollars off some of our most coveted models. So head tl'i ·
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Board eyes vocational program cuts
The ·possibility of eliminating certain programs
HoiFuCH
SENTINEL NEWS' STAFF
and creating others to replace them was discussed by
POMEROY - The possibility of eliminating the board, with Buckley suggesting that consideravocational programs next year due to a lack of tion be given to a construction trades area to include
enrollment to qualify for full funding was discussed carpentry, electricity, and plumbing.
at length at Tuesday night~' meeting of the Meigs
He discnssed the program in other schools, noting
· Local Board of Education.
that junior year is spent learning the trades, and
While no decision was
senior year studenis going
made at the meeting, it was
The possibility of eliminating out and actually building or
decided that the time . has
remodeling homes.
certain programs and creating
come for serious consideraJobs in that field a~ more
others to replace them was dis- . available in this area, Buckley
tion about what to do with
the programs which are not cussed by the board, with Buck- said. .
attracting adequate students.
Increll$ing the number of
ley s11ggesting that consideration
"Funding is based on
high tech programs was also
be given to a construction trades discussed.
enrollment," said SuperintenBuckley reviewed
area to include carpentry, elec- witll the board the success of
dent Bill Buckley, and in
those sections where there is
the Tec h Prep program,
tricity, and pl11mbing.
under-enrollinent, state supwltich works in conjunction
port decreases ana the differwith Washington County
ence has to come fiom the general fund.
Community College, and the high enrollment in
Buckley said that even considering the Carl that program.
perkins supplement of$111,000 this year designated
He suggested perhaps eliminating some o( the
for supplie~ and equipment, the programs have had current vocational programs and putting in their
to be supplemented through the general fund.
place some tech programs, like computer repair.
He said that for state funding, the absolute mini"If we keep the vocational programs we have to
mum in a class is 12 in the junior level and eight in fund them, and funding could get extremely tight,
the senior level.
particularly when the mines shut down and we lose
He noted that enrollment in auto mechanics and our equity," said Buckley.
•
cosmetology is down, and currendy, no students have
It was decided that Buckley will meet with the
signed up for the marketing program next year. He vocational instructors to talk about enrollment and .
.silid the electronics and OWE programs are both
PIHMSIICub.PIIpAJ
" maxed out." .
BY CHARLENE

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·Local bo8ril: appro'es
1 personnel actions ·
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FROM STAFF REPORTS
SYRACUSE - An improved
relationship between Oltio University and the counties surrounding it would be beneficial
to everyone involved, a university
publicist told the Meigs Coooty
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
afternoon.
Tim M.Van Alstine, the university's associate athl etics director
for external affairs, discussed the
importance
of
good
university I community relations,
and expressed his support; and
the university's support, of the
U.S. 33 Athens to Darwin project.
According to Van Alstine, OU
is in the midst of a campaign to
increase local awareness and
e1ithusia1m for its athletic events.
In other business, Chamber
President Steve Story presented
an update .~':' the U.S. 33 Ath ens

to Darwin pro)ect, and the
Ravenswood Connector, reportc
ing on testimony fTom Thu~&gt;day's
meeting of th e Transportation
Review and Advisory Council,
which considered the 33 project.
He also noted that the Lancaster bypa$s ·was · expetted to begin
' next year.
construction
Perry Varnadoe, ecopomic
development director, said . that
fundjng fiom the Ohio capital
budget would b~ used t6 make
improvements at the Tuppers
Plains industrial sjte.
Tourism Director Karin Johnson provided information about
the county being listed in a number of tourism brochures and
travel resources, noting that the
county had recently been highlighted in Ohio Pa.s for the Fur
Peace R anch, and 11 0hio, 11 for its
medicinal herb industry.
Dr. Clyde Evans of the University of Rio Grande encouraged
membe" to visit the ce nter, and
to continue consi&amp; r programs
that might be beneficial to potential employees.

-~-3 Dliily

4:0-5-4-7..

C 201,&gt;0 Ohio Valle-y Publi5hing Co.

Villages p[an cleanup weeks, recycling event
•

.
FROM STAFF REPOR,TS . .
· Middleport's cleanup week will be
POMEROY - Pomeroy and M1ddle- Apri117-21 and Pomeroy's'April
po~t have planned vill~ge-wide cleanup 24_28 Tl , '
ti
'll
'll
events for later this month, and an Earth
, • IC respec ve VI ages WI
Day Recycling Drive falls right in the
pay for all costs incurred in the
middle.
collection and disposal of
' The
Gallia-Jacko'bn-Meigs-Vin\on unwanted items,
placed 'at curbSolid Waste District will sponsor the recyside during the specified weeks.
cling event at the Meigs County Health
·
Department on Mulberry Heights in
'Both villages have begun discussing
Pomeroy April· 29. . ,.
Middleport's cleanup week . will be · ways to improve the appearance of neigh"
April 17-21, and Pomeroy's April 24-28. borhoods, and, have promised that cjtaThe respective villages will pay for all ·tions to court will be issued to those who
costs incurred in the collection and dis- fail t.o comply with the regulations relatposal of unwanted· itell)J, if placed at curb- ing to proper&lt;y conditions.
The Earth Day recycling event will be
side during the specified weeks .
Bo.th Middleport and Pomeroy have sponsored jointly by the Ohio Departpledged a crackdown on residents who. m e nt of Natural Resources, Division of
have not cleaned up their properties after Re cycling and Litter Preventio n, the
Meigs County Health Department, GaUia
the. cleanup weeks.

if

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County - Health Department and the tries in Albany.'' Scrap appliances w ill . be
GJMV Solid Waste Distric t.
•
recycled.
.
A similar ev t will be held at the old
" Many discarded appliances still have· a
ODbT gar e on Jackson Pike in Gal- lot of life. left in th em," ReUse Operalipolis.
tions Manager Jeff Simmons said. " We
Middle ort will accept appliances and hope to find them a new hom e, to keep
up to fo tires per household, while the the m out of the landfill ."
Pomeroy ill not pick up those items or
"We want to participate with local
wood dur g its cleanup week. Neither communities in efforts to keep reuseables
village wil accept paint, motor oil or old out of the landfill. Any way we can help is
batteI ics .
,.
a plus for us and the community." Sim.
At t e countywide event April 29, all -mons added.
appliances will be accepted, and tires will
Other items that will be accepted
be accepted with payment of a disposal include paper: newspapel"i, magazines, catalogs, cardboard .an d office paper; metal:
fee. ,
A $1 tire disposal fee is required for tires steel cans and aluminum cans; plastic: type
up to 15 inches, $2 for tires from 16-19 1 (pet) and type 2 (hdpe) and glass: unbroinch, and $4 for tires'larger than 19 inch- ken clear, brown and. green .bottles and
es: All tires mnst be removed from the rim. prs .
The Earth Day R ecycling Drive will
Appliances that are repairable or
reusab)e will be donated to ReUse Indus- be held trom 9 a.m. -3 p.m.

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BUCKEYE. BRIEFS
Mayor eumlnu violent d•••• .
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - ·MaYor George McKelvey is creating
a citizens group to examine causes of what appears to be a high
' rate of violent deaths of black wo,men.
The· six-penon group will exaniine the women's murders, how
the legal system handled their cases, whether' the women were victims of domestic abuse and how to prevent future killings, McKelvey said Thesday.
,
· The mayor's decision came a few days after several city people
' who attended an April 6 City Council meeting asked if officials
could have done more to protect the black women against violent
crime.
Seventy black women under age 65 ·were murdered in a 10-year
period through 1997, according to a recent published report.

Woman.leaves $350,000 to library
CLEVELAND (AP) - After the Great Depression, Helen M.
Brown knew the value of a dollar and appreciated those who
helped make her money grow.
.
.She spent hours at a time in the C leveland Public Library studying the stock market. It was time well spent, for Brown and the
library.
· Her charitable trust has bequeathed $350,000 to the library and
thousands more to local institutions that touched her life.
The bequest is the.third largest of its kind in the library's hist~

.

~

"It's a lot of money and it comes almost out of the blue," said
library spokesman David Williams.
Brown was 100 when she died in February 1999.
She had amassed several million dollars by then , even though she
had retired in the mid- I 960s as a secretary at the Navy Finance
Center in Cleveland. She complained that her pension was a pittance, said longtime friend Raymond Pianka, Cleveland Housing
Court judge.
She and her husband, who died in 1968, invested in the stock
market even as it collapsed in 1929, the beginning of the Great
Depression. "She took a hit;' Pianka said. "She didn't forget that the ·
rest of her life."
Her stock acumen paid off for others besides the library. Brown
left $25,000 to the Cleveland NAACP; $50,000 to the Eliza Jennings Home, where she spent the last years &lt;?f her life; $25,000 to
Catholic C harities; and $25,000 to WVI~hannel 25, whicb
broadcast nightly financial reports she enjofed watching.
·

Police probing frat party death
a

KENT (AP) - Police are trying to find out whether drug
overdose occurred and 1f*yed a part in the collapse and death of a
·19-year-old man during a party at a Kent State University fraternity.
Kent Police Chief] ames Peach said Thesday detectives are investigating .the death ofJared Chrzanowski ofWilloughby Hills, who
was a stu_dent at John Carroll University in University Heights.
· Peach has said an investigation is being conducted 'because of the
appearance that Chrzanowski's death could be related to a drug
overdose.
. He collapsed shortly after 2 a.m ..Sunday.while attending a party
a~ Kent State University's chapter of Delta Upsilon Fraternity and
d1ed about two hours later at Robinson Memorial Hospital in
Ravenna.
Kent State Dean of Students Greg Jarvie said Thesday that the
university has taken no disciplinary action against the fraternity.
An official at the international headquarters of the fraternity
decided Thesday to suspend activities of the chapter.
But Abe L Cross, Delta Upsilon's executive director from the
fraternity's international headquarters in Indianapolis said, "There
is _n o indica~on that. anybo~y (at the fraternity) is guilty of anythmg, but thu event 1s10 ser1ous that we are suspending operations
~t least until the lnvestiption is completed."
Cross said he .waa told Chrzanowakl Wll lilting down and talklnJI with othen at the parey when he collapsed.
"We btlleve WI know (Chrunowakl) didn't u11 drup In the
chapter house," Cro11 11ld oflnttrvltWI that hf1 111!!' had conduct·
ed with chapter members who acctndtd the parey.

Pl1n1 land1llflly In Colu111bu1
COLUMBUS, (AP) - A D~-9 carrying 45 pauensen landed
safely Tuelday night at Port Columbua International Airport ~fter
the pilot smelled smoke in the cockpit, authoriti.es said.
The airp_ort's fire department aays there was no fire and that
everyone on board was fine.
There was no immediate information on where the plane was
headed when the problem was reported or what airline was
involved.

Radio announcer sentenced
~NIA (AP) -A.Cincinnati radio announ1=er was put on probation for five years and fined $250 for soliciting sex through the
Internet from someone he thought was .a 14-year-old girl, police
said Tuesday.
·
Jim Fox, the morning personality at WUBE-FM, also was
ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation. A 30-day jail sentence was suspended.
J? hn Rohm, gener~nager ofWUBE-FM, said Fox and the
station reached a "separation agreement" and that the country
music station's afternoon drive time host would take over Fox's
morning shift.
Fox,
whose real name is Allen Pruett; pleaded no contest
Monday m Xema Municipal Court to importuning, the name for
the offense of soliciting a minor.
·
The person he solicited was a Xenia police detectiVe, p.olice Lt.
Dan Donahue said Tuesday.
Fox first co'ntacted the undercover officer on April 3'. He eventually arunged to meet the "girl" at a Xenia park in order to have
sex at a morel, but w.-s arrested when he arrived at the park Saturday, Donahue said.
Fox has been a Cincinnati radio personality since the 1970s,
when he was progtam director and morning announcer' at
WKRQ-FM. He later worked for WKRC-AM and has been at
~BE-FM since 1992, most recently as the; counuy music stations mormng announcer.
·
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·
·

5:,

ExamlnC\1' trying to Identify body
. HEBRON, Ky. (AP) ' - The Kentucky ~edical examiner is trymg to Identify a woman's skeletal remains found near the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Aitport.
A Boone County jail crew found the bones Monday morning
along Kentucky 20 near the airport, Sheriff's Deputy Daren Harris said Tuesday.
Ir wasn't known how long the remains had been on the .hillside,
Harris said.
Investigators are hoping the . woman's. identity can be ' determined later this week, he said.

Wedntldly, Aprll 12, aoOO

7

PolMI'Oy, Mldd'-port, Ohio

lly 1111111\11

'

"These are riRhtJ that we must
protect and rich traditions Wt can

COLUMBUS (AP) ..:_ Gov. Bob Taft
brought his support of safe firearms storage ro
the Statehouse on Tuesday and told a House
conirnittee that despite Claims by opponents
that his proposal is gun-control, he wants to
send a message. about child safety.
Taft spoke in support of a bill sponsored by
Rep. h1!n Womer !:ienjanlJQ, R-Aurora and
chairwoman of the House Criminal· justice
Committee. He liad a standing-room-only
audience of supportets and opponents in the
tiny House hearing room.
Taft's testimony marked the second time in
his 16 months in office that he has testified '
before a conunirtee. He also urged support
before the House Education Committee for
House Bill I, which became his "Ohio
Reads" tutoring program.
.,
. Womer Benjamin's bill would require

pass on from 1eneration to
ltne;atlon. But with every right
comes a respomibility. Today, I urge
you to make Ohioans, more aware
of their rtlponsibility if tluy
own afirearm." .·
,Gov. Bobt.lt

adults to keep firearms and ammunition away
from children while they are unsupervised. It
would create a new provision in existing child
endangerment laws for parents whose cbildren get access ro firearms.
Taft said rhe bill was about protecting chi!-

POMEROY- Helen Blackston went to be wirh her Lord Jesus on
April tO, 2000.
She w.u at Camden Clark Hospi~l. where she received excellent
care from her doctors and the compassionate nunies on third' floor
north.
Helen was born December 26, 1932 in Pomeroy, Ohio, to William
and Buena Grueser.
·
She leaves behind her husband, Harold, to whom she was married
for 49 years.
She was the kind of wife every man dreams of when he gets married. Helen was a loving wife, loving mother, loving grandmother, and
a loving friend to her friends . When trouble came, it was Helen who
responded with a kind word, a meal, a ride or whatever was needed .
Everyone who knew her loved her and will miss her.
She was an active member of the Rocksprings United Methodist ·
.Church and Rocksprings Grange all her life. She worked with the
Child Conservation League and was a member of the Rocksprings
Better Health Club. In her high school days, she was a prom queen and
she is still a queen.
, . .
Her passing leaves a grear void in our lives, but Heaven gains a true
Christian and will be a better place because she is there.
~he is sutvived by her husband, Harold; a daughter and son-in-law,
Sherrie L. and Jack Kane of Charleston, West Virginia; two sons and
dimghters-in-law, Robert M : and Brenda Blackston, and Bruce W. and
Pamela Blackston, of Pomeroy; a brother, Leo Smith of Berrien
Springs, Michigan; grandchildren, Heather Kane of Charlotte, N orth
Carolina, Emily (Chris) Reed , of ·Charleston, West Virginia, Jeremy,
Joey and Clayton Blackston of Rocksprings, and Amber Blackston of
Pomeroy; and great-grandchildren, Morgan and Caitlin R eed of
Charleston; West Virginia; and her stepfather-in-law, Francis E. Shaeffer.
The Rev. Keith Rader will officiate at the services which will be
held Thursday, April 13. 2000 at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Rocksprings Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday, April 12, 2000 fiom 6-9 p.m.

dren and not about infringing on the rights pf
gun owners. He said he supports me rights ·o f
everyone to hunt, collect weapons or shOQt at
targets.
"These are rights thar we must protect and
rich traditions we can pass on from generatio);l
to generation,"Taft said. "But with every right
comes a responsibility. Today, l urge you ,to
make Ohioans more aware of their, respon$ibillty if they own a firearm."
Taft said the bill would give prosecutors
definitive guidelines about when a crime was
committed involving improper storage.
"This is fundamentally an issue of child
safety. We need to ask ourselves as a state, 'Do
we want to see more children die or be seriously injured because of improperly srored
firearms?' If rhe answer is no, then we should
pass this bill:' Taft said.

Attorneys give .clo$ing arguments at Sheppard trial

------------------------''·..
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Police chief, deputy chi.ef~ ·, ·
detective placeCI on leave ·

LANCASTER (AP) - The
city's police chief, a deputy
chief and a detective have been
placed ·on administrative leave
pending an investigation into
the department's drug enforcement funds.
Chief Richard Schwader,
Deputy Cl)ief Jeff Gerken and .
Detective Ke.(.in Everhart were
put on leave Monday, the EagleGazette of Lancaster and The
Columbus Dispatch reported in
stories Wednesday.
Law director and city prosecutor Terre Vandetvoort said her
office II "conducting an adminlatrative review" of the pollclea
and procedure• aurroundina the
Furtherance of Juatlce account,
which Ia uaed for un~ercove'r
drua buy1.
Vandervoort would not provide specific• on why.ahe placed
!he three on leave, except to say
the action removes them from
that review proce11.
Schwader, Gerken and Everhart could 'not be reached for
comment late Tuesday night . .
The police department, about
25 miles southeast of Columbus, said it could not take messages· for the three. Their home
telephone numbers are either
not listed or could not be located.
State auditor's office spokeswoman Kim Norris said Vandervoort requested that the state
auditor look into the city's FOJ
funds.
·
Norris said the state auditor
1 reviewed documents, but nothing was found that showed an
audit was needed.
However, a representative
from the state auditor's office
was in La.ncaster on Tuesday to
provide advice on how to
improve inte rnal controls over
the funds, she said.
. Vandervoort did not put
time frame on the investigation.
The latest inquiry comes
after a special state audit recent,ly resulted in a criminal indictment of Fairfield County Sheriff Gary DeMastry, his wife and
three 'deputies for alleged
wrongdoing with the administration of rhe Furtherance of
Justice fund in that sheriff's
office.
'
Schwader and Gerken were
among .40 of Lancaster's 57
police officers' who•signed a letter in February to DeMastry,
asking him to step 'llown as the
result of the 351-count indictment returned against him ~nd
others in his department.
DeMastry, who has not
resigned, pleaded .innocent m

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a "powderkeg of emotion" an9
resulted in Mrs. Sheppard's killing.:
Mrs. Sheppard was found lyi101g
in a pool of blood on her bed eady
on July 4, 1954, at the couple~
home on Lake Erie.
Gilbert told jurors tha! Sheppard
never varied fiom his alibi: that he
was sleeping downstairs at the time
of\he,killing and awoke to his wife's
cries. He ran upstair.; to help her but
was !illocked out ..Upon waking up,
he chased the killer - whorp, he
identified as a bushy-halrecl man·down to the beach outside the
house bot \vas knocked · un corl~
.
SClOUS agam.

GUN SHOW
Next Show July 15-16

BUY • SELL •lRADE • EXHIBIT
'Collectors Show

&amp;MIUTARVAJM~ ....

February to · 323 charges,
including theft in office and
money laundering. He lost his
chance to run for re-election in
November when he wa1 defeated In the Republican primary
•lectlon March 7.

Jimmy Kimmel has had a long

career in radio. He is best
known as " Jimmy rhe Sports
Guy" ·on Los Angeles radio
station KROQ.

Bone Density
Testing
.....
.
}fvaiCa6Ce a.t
JfoCzer Cfinic

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zt3·MO)

o•1o Volley hblil.lq Co.

P11blished every aflcmoon, Monday through
Friday, lll Court St., P(lmei'O)', Oh6o, by lhe
Ohio V~Uey Publiahinf Company., Pomeroy,
Ohio ·~769, Ph. 992~2 56. Second Cilll post~
age piid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
'
Mt11ber: The Associated Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auoctltion.

A Bone O,nsltometry T•t is the most practical way to ac·curately measure the density of your bones. It's also a good
way for your doctor to diagnose osteoporosis. It can even
help your doctor track your rate of bone loss.

PosnwfAsriR: Send addreu eorrec:UonJ to
The Dally Senlinel, 111 Court S1., Pomeroy,
Oltlo 4S769.

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Bone Density Testing:
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Safe
Peinless
No11-invasive
Lasts only about 10 minutes

Subscribets n01 ckalriaa to pay the carrier may
remit In adnnce direct 10 Tile Dilly Sentinel
on a three, six or 12 month basiL Credit will be
sivt:ll' carrier each wctk .

No aubscription by mall permltled In areu
where'llome «:anler Mrvice i• available.

Women who hive gone through menopeuH ere Ill most rlllk.
Smoking
Too muellalcohol
Too little exerciH
Too little calcium (now or 11 1 chlid)
A prevloul broken bone thlll mulled from a minor Injury
Celteln medicationt, 1uch 111terokls (commonty ultd to treat asthma &amp; arthritis) and
thyroid honnone (If dON i1loo high)
·
Eerly menopeuH (before ege 4S) ·

Ifyou tliin(you. a~ at risN.for osteoporosis, asi,your aoctor w~tur
you s/Wuf4 fiaw a 6one tfmsity teSt, or call1foker Clinic's ~Diagnostic
'Tutino Center in -gallipolis at (740) 446-5289.
Holler Clinic Dllg-ac: Teetlng Center
•. 10 Jlelllon Pike
Odlplla, OH 41131

740 .., 5211·

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Risks for Osteoporosis
•
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COLUMBUS (AP) A
House co mmittee on Tuesday

Cool temps forecast tonight

National Guard A"'oo
April 15-16 ' !

LAw director and city
prosecutor Terre
Vandervoort said her office
is "conducting an
administrative review" of
the policies and procedures
surrounding the
Furtherance ofJustice
account, which is used for
undercover drug buys.

House committee
passes.capital bill

VALLEY WEATHER

CHARLESTON, WV

Publllherrcsc:rvea the rijht to adjust ratea dur·
Ina tbe aublc:rlpcion period. Sublcriplion rale
dMiftiCI may be Implemented by ehaiiJIIIJ the
duration of the aubacripdoil.
MAILSUBSCRIPriONS

,,

l•ldo ,..... c....,
13 WcekJ,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,S27.JO
26 Wceu ..................... ............................ ssl.K2
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~O.tsWt Mtlp Co111t)'

13 w..u ................................................. S29.2S
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26 W.cu ............. ,............. ...................... IS6.68

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Reader Services
o.r ••I• a.een .. 111 I1Win 11 to be.
~«•n... If )'H kHw Df aa enw .. • ....,,
can ... - - ot 17141) II:I·ZUS: We dl
cleclr. )'Oir laf•r••tlea ••• ••ke •
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EMS units answer 3 calls

.Cuts
from PapAl
then come back in May with recommendations.
Action taken at the board meeting included accepting a second
grant of$30,000 for the Tech Prep
program, and adopting language

Action
from Page AI

Carr, Middleport; Ann VanM atre,
Pomeroy; Marjorie Fetty, Rutland; and Rita Simmons, Salem
Center.
Non-cer.tified petsonnel hired
for nexr year on continuing conntacts were Roger Cotterill, bus
driver, and Carolyn Chapman,
three- hour cook; and on two-year
contracts, )oe Gilkey, mechanic;
Kevin Jewell and Carla Milhoan,
bus drivers; Tana Kennedy, 3-hour
cook; William Morris and Ronald
Mullins, custodians; •md Nancy
Carnahan, administrative secre tary.
In other personnel marrers, the
board:
• Created a 1niddle school golf
coaching position and hired Jan
Haddox as coach relf"active to
April 1.
• Renewed for 9ne year the
contract of Gary Walker as network and computer technician, at
the current rate of compensation.
• Hired on extended service
supplemental con,tracts, pending
funding and enrollm ent, Tim
Simpson , vocational· agriculture,
-30 days; David Ku csma: marketing; Ron Logan and Mark Swann,
OWA; all 20 days; Marjorie Blake,

Congressman .says workers
to be offered compensation
WASHINGTON (APJ' - The
Clinton administration will offer
compensation to Ohio urani4m
plant workers who were sickened
by radiation exposure, Rep. Ted
Strickland said Tuesday.
"There will be no difference
in the WilY the Piketon (Ohio)
and Paducah (Kentucky) workers'
are treated;' the bemocratic .con-

gressman said after a briefing
from the office ofVice President
AI Gore.
The Energy Department was
expected to make an announcement today on the findings of a
study of compensation issues.
They were raised by revelations
some workers were not irlformed
when exposed to radioactive substances and weren't given proper
protective gear.
That study, and t he initial, more
limited offer of compensation,
marked a dramatic change of official attitude toward the workers.
They had been complaining for
more than a decade that their
Cold War workplaces had caused
cancer pr other health problems.
Until this year, the Energy
Department had refused to
acknowledge that workers' health
problems were linked to work at
the weapons plants.
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said he was committed to
addressing the health and environmen~ concerns involving the

AEP-31~

Akzo - 43!1.

*Carp e l •

arpet

*

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The compensation proposal
before Congrc"Ss would provid~
medical benefits. lost-wage reimbursement, optional job retraining or a single $100,000 cash pay•
ment to workers suffering illness.
es caused by beryllium exposure,
In addition, the administration
has proposed compensation of
$100,000 apiece to workers at th~
Paducah plant exposed tQ
radioactive materials known tq
cause cancer.

Strickland already has proposed
a competing compensation plan·,
:ind he is working with Rep. Ed
Whirfield, R-Ky., on another,
larger proposal. That would give
medical care and $200,000 to
sickened workers at every nuclear
weapons plant
Sen. George Voinovich, R "
O hio. also has 9&amp; n working on a
comp ensation plan.
His press secretary, Mike Dawson, said Tuesday, " While rhe
administration's proposal is a step
in the right direction, it appears
to be inadequate based on the
nature of the problem that the
federal government crea ted at
these ·facilities."

AmTech/SBC- 4n•
Ashland Inc.- 31 '1.
AT&amp;T-55~.

Bank One- 32'·
Bob Evans -12 ~
BorgWarner - 40
Champion- 3Ya
Charming Shops - .5"/o
. City Holding - 12l.
Federal Mogul-16
Flrstar- 25

Gannett - 69),

•

school cheerleader advisor; Christine Kelley, middle school cheerleader advisor; Bob Buck, quiz
team advisor; Ron Logan and
Mark Swann, co-athletic directors;
and Ron Logan, athletic treasurer.
• Non- renewed the teaching
contracts of Suzanne Cammarata,
Janice Haynes and R oy Johnson,
at the end of the current school
year due to a need for certification
clarification.
• Non-renewed the long-te rm
substitute teaching contract for
Mary Ann N eal at the end of the
school year due to the return of
the original teacher from leave of
absence.
• Hired on one-year contracts
for the next school year, pending
availability ofTitle VI-R funding ,
Elizabeth Downie, Michelle
Gillilan and Mary Whan.

beryllium, a unique metal use¢ m
nuclear weapons.
,

General Electric- 161\
Harley Davidson- 43' ~..
K mart- 9'Kroger - 20 'l.
Lands End - saY
.
Ltd. - 51 i.
Oak Hill Financial - 14
OVB - 29
One Valley - 35 ~
Peoples - 16~
Premier ~ 7\
Rockwell - 44~

dle school students at no cost to the assistance ·to the board in matter'
arts textbooks.
Approval Was given for a group , district, and rhe payment of
to rhe
negotiatipns
witli.
OAPSE and
MLTA.
at the Meigs Middle School to go $2,716.89 as Meigs Local's match for relating
Board members held an executo. New York City, using $12,131 "Food Folks," a nutrition.'~! program
tive session to discuss personnel.
they have rai sed, and for an previously offered in the district
Attending the meeting were
Purchase
of
a
van
to
be
used
in
overnight field trip for VICA students to attend a skills competiti on the district for such purposes of board members John Hood, presitransporting small groups of stu- dent, Wayne Davis, Seott Walton,
in Columbus,April28 and 29.
Also approved was a contract dents to events was approved, along Norman Humphreys, and Roger
with Health R ecovery Services to with a contract with ·the Ohio Abbott, Buckley and Cindy J.
provide rrientoring services to mid- School Boards Associa tion for Rhonemus, treasurer.
nurse assistant, Kelly Barnett,
Kathy Reed, and Gloria VanR eeth, home economics, I 0 days
each ; Connie Gilkey, elementary
guidance, I 0 days , and Sharon
Birch, school nurse, five days.
• Accepted the resignation of
Sara H ar.ris as a life skills teac her at
Meigs Middle School, effe ctive at
the end of the school year.
• Non-renewed supplemental
contracts of coac hes due to
changes in the athletic department
of Rick ,Chancey, assistant varsity
football; Carson Crow, seventh and
eighth grade football ; Roy' Johnson, boys reserve baske tball ; Dan
Thomas, reserve baseball; Troy
Bauer, wresding; Dale Harrison,
girls assistant volleyball ; Kellie
Thomas, girls middle sc hool volleyball and girls oniddle school
basketball; C indy Schull, high

gaseous diffiosion plants in Ohio
and Kentucky, a forme·r uranium
processing plant in Tennessee, and
exposure of workers at several
facilities around the country to

LOCAL STOCKS

• Hired on one-year contracts
pending vocational certification ,
Donald Yost, welding.
• Employed Jack McDanielS as
a substitute bus driver, and
approved Nicole M. Kouivaras,
Mary Sullivan. Margaret Demko,
Jamie Fox and Shanon Daniels for
substitute teachers for the remainder of the school yeat.
• Accepted the resignations of
Vicki J Haley as head teacher at
Harrisonville at the 'end of the
school year, and Michele Starcher
as a ·substitute teacher effective
immediately.

'.

Rocky Boots - 6la
AD Shell - 57h

Sears-40~

Shoney's - 1
Wai·Mar1 - 63~
Wendy's Worthington - 13'1.

20'•

Daily stock repons are the
4 p.m . closing qu01es of
the previous day's trans-actions , provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

''~~,~~-~~~~

IJ!!!!~

ALL AGES . ALL TIMES S4 00

•

·w
Mit.....,

_I(Citl... ot homo Qf on lho n&gt;Od,
~- het loll al '!'flll'IID ttYO yQU monty. So coli
,.IDMy lo ftnd oul """" obcM our alotlog dltcoun~
c1acount. home PI car dlacount and ~.

Sale'"

INGELS CARPE

Nationwide Is Qn Your Sldtl'

Nlltlanwld.lnsu&lt;'ance &amp;
Flnanci1l SeNices

I ,

•

'

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --,

Peai'son Gibbs

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POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Services answered
three calls for assistance on Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:23 a.m., Maples Apartments, Gladys Barrett, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
11:17 a.m., Maples-Apartments, Gladys Barrctt.VMH .
POMEROY
8:36a .m., Overbrook Nursing Center, assisoed by Middleport, fire
alarm, false alar~.

DEATH NOTICE

,I

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POMEROY - The Coalition Against Superfluous Highways
(CASH) and the Buckeye Forest Cou ncil have filed a lawsuit toltry to
stop rhe construction of the U.S. 33 project from Darwin to Athens.
The action, flled in the U.S. District Court, names Ohio Department of Transportation Director Gordon Proctor, Kenneth 'Wykle of
the Federal Highway Administration, and members of the Transportation Review and Advisory CounciL
The suit was flled, according to CASH spokesman Todd Aeheson,
in response to TRAC's clccision last week to purchase property and repriortize the project
.
The suit alleges that enviro nmen tal impact reports are outdated, that
the project would be detrimental to the environment, and that that

.

internal records disclose an "attempted coveru p" by ODOT.
Local o(licials were unavailable this morning to comment on the
suit, which \vas filed Tuesday.
·

amendment offered by Sen. Eric
Fingerhut, D-Cleveland, that
unanimously recommended th e would have required that any docpassage of the state's $1.8 billion uments related to cleanup projects
construction budget, after com- be made public. The resolution
nlittee members tinkered with now goes to the full Senate.
The House and Senate also held
Gov. Bob Taft's proposal but lefi: it
floor sessions as rhey drew toward
largely intact.
The House was expected ro a two-week holiday break later rhis
vote on the proposal on Wednes- month.
day.
·
The House passed 96-0 a bill
The two-year proposal would that would make electronic signaspend $603 million on sc hool con- tures binding should both parties
struction over two years for school in a tmnsaction agree. The bill is
districts that can pe~ua de voters to needed for Ohio to catch up to
, raise money locally. O ther money other states taking full advantage of
in the bill would be used on com- In ternet com_merce, said sponsorNEW LEXINGTON - Peatson Gibbs, 85, New Lexington, for- munity construction projects.
ing R ep. George Terwilleger, RMajority Republicans on the Maineville.
merly of Meigs County, died Sunday,April9, 2000 at his residence, fol,uEiectroni c signatures are not to
lowing a lengthy illness.
House
Finance
Committee
He was the son of the late Ronald and Meda Gibbs of Bradbury.
be
denied simply because they are
allowed Democrats to shuffie some
Surviving are three children, Roland Gibbs, Paula Frazer and Diana money around for projects they in electronic form:· Terwilleger
Wright; and several grandchildren.
favored. Rep. Peter Lawson Jones, said.
·Services will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Roberts Funeral Home D-Cleveland, got approval for
The House passed another
ih New Lexington.
sandlot baseball fields, a wnununi- Internet-related bill that would
ty center ani;! other projects in require the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation and the Ohio
Cuyahoga County..
Another
Jones-sponsored Industrial Conunission to make
amendment that was passed would applications·, notices, evidence and
find more money for public voca- other documents available electional schools whose districts lose tronically.
.The bureau is Ohio's public-pristudents to charter schools.
However, R ep. Robert Corbin, vate workplace insurance system.
R - Dayton and the conunittee's The commission hears appeals
scattered frost. Lows in the lower chairman, drew rhe line at those from workers who lose their cases
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High pressure will sweep the and mid 30s. Light and variable projects, turning away other before the bureau.
alouds out of the tri-county area's wind.
The House also concurred in
Democratic proposals. '
Thursday.. :'Partly sunny and
skies, .allowing telt)peratures
"Since this would require a sub- Senate amendments to bills that
@yernight to plunge into the rnid- warmer. Highs in the mid 60s.
stantial Increase in funding, I'm deny a defendant the power to use
Thursday night...Pardy cloudy.
2Gs in some areas.
sorry, but we're not going to · voluntary drunkenness as a men.tal
~ But the clouds are expected to Lows in the upper 40s.
· accept it:' Corbin told Jones after condition in criminal proceedings
Extended forecast:
~turn on Thursday and a slow
and authorize a ch~rge up to 50
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs in · Jones offered another amendment.
· y;arrning trend will begin. Highs
The Senate Finance Committee cents per month on telephone bills
&lt;?.n Thursday will be in the 50s the mid 70~.
passed a mosdy unchanged version to fund countywide 911 emerSatutday... Partly cloudy with a
and 60s.
gency systems.
chance
of showers and thunder- of a resolution that would place on
: ' Temperatures will r~ach the
The Senate, meanwhile, passed
the
Nov.
7
ballot
a
$400
million
?Os in the area on Friday and over storms. Lows in the lower 50s and
bond ]ssue. It would split the 33-0 a bill that would allow townhighs in the mid 70s.
the entire region.by Saturday.
money
between cleaning up pol- ship employees to pick coverage
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a
. : Sunset will be at 8:08p.m. and
luted industriai sites and preserving from a range of health benefits, a
SJlnrise on Th4rsday at 6:57 a.m. chance of showers and thunderpower already held by other public
s!orms. Lows in the lower 50s and and acquiring green space.
Weather forecast:
The committee turned back an employees in cities and villages.
Tonight... Mostly dear with highs 70 to 75.

' '

CLEVELAND (AP) - An claiming his father was wrongfully died four years later. His case helped
attorney told jurors Tuesday that imprisoned for his mother Mari- inspire "The Fugitive"TV series.
DNA and other forensic evidence lyn's slaying. Cuyahoga County
Pro5ecutots described Sheppard
finally clears Dr. Sam Sheppan:l of prosecutors, who have been as a cheating husband who killed·
his wife's 1954 beating death and defending the state, told Common o his wife because he felt nrapped in
validates his son's long fight for jus- Pleas Court jurors Tuesday rhat his marriage. Sheppard first denied,
tice.
authorities had the right man all then later admitted to, having an
In closing arguments of a 2 1/2- along.
affair with a lab technician at his
month lawsuit trial that could ·be
"It may just be that you are being hospital in the yeats before Marilyn
the last act in the 4Q..year-old case, asked to reward. i:he killer's son for Sheppard's murder.
attorney Terry Gilbert foelised on , the killer bludgeoning hi~ 'f!i{e;'. " Mason, quoting ~ witness in the
expert testimony.
Prosecutor William Mason told · case, repeatedly referred to Shep"Jf you follow your common jurors.
pard as "the playboy of the Western
sense and follow your instincts and
Dr. Sheppard was convicted of world" and described the !foetor as
use your intell~ct,1 think that you murder and spent almost a decade self-centered and egotistical.
will come up with the oM' conclu- in prison before the U.S. S4preme
Dr. Sheppard was unhappy to
sion that is possible:· .Gilbert said. Court overturned the xerdict in a learn shortly before the murder that
"Sam did not commit .this crime:'
landmark ruling on the effects of · his wife was po;egnal\t for a second
Gilbert's client, Sam Reese pretrial publicity. Sheppard Was tiine, Mason said. The prosecutor
Sheppard, has sued the state of Ohio . acquitted at a J:'l'trial in 1966 and theorized that the news helped light

CASH files suit on 33 proj~ ' I

.Helen Bladlston

,t

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN 'BRIEF

OBITUARY

18ft to send message on safely storing firearms
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesdly, Aprll12, 2000

•

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•1111

BUCKEYE. BRIEFS
Mayor eumlnu violent d•••• .
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - ·MaYor George McKelvey is creating
a citizens group to examine causes of what appears to be a high
' rate of violent deaths of black wo,men.
The· six-penon group will exaniine the women's murders, how
the legal system handled their cases, whether' the women were victims of domestic abuse and how to prevent future killings, McKelvey said Thesday.
,
· The mayor's decision came a few days after several city people
' who attended an April 6 City Council meeting asked if officials
could have done more to protect the black women against violent
crime.
Seventy black women under age 65 ·were murdered in a 10-year
period through 1997, according to a recent published report.

Woman.leaves $350,000 to library
CLEVELAND (AP) - After the Great Depression, Helen M.
Brown knew the value of a dollar and appreciated those who
helped make her money grow.
.
.She spent hours at a time in the C leveland Public Library studying the stock market. It was time well spent, for Brown and the
library.
· Her charitable trust has bequeathed $350,000 to the library and
thousands more to local institutions that touched her life.
The bequest is the.third largest of its kind in the library's hist~

.

~

"It's a lot of money and it comes almost out of the blue," said
library spokesman David Williams.
Brown was 100 when she died in February 1999.
She had amassed several million dollars by then , even though she
had retired in the mid- I 960s as a secretary at the Navy Finance
Center in Cleveland. She complained that her pension was a pittance, said longtime friend Raymond Pianka, Cleveland Housing
Court judge.
She and her husband, who died in 1968, invested in the stock
market even as it collapsed in 1929, the beginning of the Great
Depression. "She took a hit;' Pianka said. "She didn't forget that the ·
rest of her life."
Her stock acumen paid off for others besides the library. Brown
left $25,000 to the Cleveland NAACP; $50,000 to the Eliza Jennings Home, where she spent the last years &lt;?f her life; $25,000 to
Catholic C harities; and $25,000 to WVI~hannel 25, whicb
broadcast nightly financial reports she enjofed watching.
·

Police probing frat party death
a

KENT (AP) - Police are trying to find out whether drug
overdose occurred and 1f*yed a part in the collapse and death of a
·19-year-old man during a party at a Kent State University fraternity.
Kent Police Chief] ames Peach said Thesday detectives are investigating .the death ofJared Chrzanowski ofWilloughby Hills, who
was a stu_dent at John Carroll University in University Heights.
· Peach has said an investigation is being conducted 'because of the
appearance that Chrzanowski's death could be related to a drug
overdose.
. He collapsed shortly after 2 a.m ..Sunday.while attending a party
a~ Kent State University's chapter of Delta Upsilon Fraternity and
d1ed about two hours later at Robinson Memorial Hospital in
Ravenna.
Kent State Dean of Students Greg Jarvie said Thesday that the
university has taken no disciplinary action against the fraternity.
An official at the international headquarters of the fraternity
decided Thesday to suspend activities of the chapter.
But Abe L Cross, Delta Upsilon's executive director from the
fraternity's international headquarters in Indianapolis said, "There
is _n o indica~on that. anybo~y (at the fraternity) is guilty of anythmg, but thu event 1s10 ser1ous that we are suspending operations
~t least until the lnvestiption is completed."
Cross said he .waa told Chrzanowakl Wll lilting down and talklnJI with othen at the parey when he collapsed.
"We btlleve WI know (Chrunowakl) didn't u11 drup In the
chapter house," Cro11 11ld oflnttrvltWI that hf1 111!!' had conduct·
ed with chapter members who acctndtd the parey.

Pl1n1 land1llflly In Colu111bu1
COLUMBUS, (AP) - A D~-9 carrying 45 pauensen landed
safely Tuelday night at Port Columbua International Airport ~fter
the pilot smelled smoke in the cockpit, authoriti.es said.
The airp_ort's fire department aays there was no fire and that
everyone on board was fine.
There was no immediate information on where the plane was
headed when the problem was reported or what airline was
involved.

Radio announcer sentenced
~NIA (AP) -A.Cincinnati radio announ1=er was put on probation for five years and fined $250 for soliciting sex through the
Internet from someone he thought was .a 14-year-old girl, police
said Tuesday.
·
Jim Fox, the morning personality at WUBE-FM, also was
ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation. A 30-day jail sentence was suspended.
J? hn Rohm, gener~nager ofWUBE-FM, said Fox and the
station reached a "separation agreement" and that the country
music station's afternoon drive time host would take over Fox's
morning shift.
Fox,
whose real name is Allen Pruett; pleaded no contest
Monday m Xema Municipal Court to importuning, the name for
the offense of soliciting a minor.
·
The person he solicited was a Xenia police detectiVe, p.olice Lt.
Dan Donahue said Tuesday.
Fox first co'ntacted the undercover officer on April 3'. He eventually arunged to meet the "girl" at a Xenia park in order to have
sex at a morel, but w.-s arrested when he arrived at the park Saturday, Donahue said.
Fox has been a Cincinnati radio personality since the 1970s,
when he was progtam director and morning announcer' at
WKRQ-FM. He later worked for WKRC-AM and has been at
~BE-FM since 1992, most recently as the; counuy music stations mormng announcer.
·
·
.
·
·

5:,

ExamlnC\1' trying to Identify body
. HEBRON, Ky. (AP) ' - The Kentucky ~edical examiner is trymg to Identify a woman's skeletal remains found near the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Aitport.
A Boone County jail crew found the bones Monday morning
along Kentucky 20 near the airport, Sheriff's Deputy Daren Harris said Tuesday.
Ir wasn't known how long the remains had been on the .hillside,
Harris said.
Investigators are hoping the . woman's. identity can be ' determined later this week, he said.

Wedntldly, Aprll 12, aoOO

7

PolMI'Oy, Mldd'-port, Ohio

lly 1111111\11

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"These are riRhtJ that we must
protect and rich traditions Wt can

COLUMBUS (AP) ..:_ Gov. Bob Taft
brought his support of safe firearms storage ro
the Statehouse on Tuesday and told a House
conirnittee that despite Claims by opponents
that his proposal is gun-control, he wants to
send a message. about child safety.
Taft spoke in support of a bill sponsored by
Rep. h1!n Womer !:ienjanlJQ, R-Aurora and
chairwoman of the House Criminal· justice
Committee. He liad a standing-room-only
audience of supportets and opponents in the
tiny House hearing room.
Taft's testimony marked the second time in
his 16 months in office that he has testified '
before a conunirtee. He also urged support
before the House Education Committee for
House Bill I, which became his "Ohio
Reads" tutoring program.
.,
. Womer Benjamin's bill would require

pass on from 1eneration to
ltne;atlon. But with every right
comes a respomibility. Today, I urge
you to make Ohioans, more aware
of their rtlponsibility if tluy
own afirearm." .·
,Gov. Bobt.lt

adults to keep firearms and ammunition away
from children while they are unsupervised. It
would create a new provision in existing child
endangerment laws for parents whose cbildren get access ro firearms.
Taft said rhe bill was about protecting chi!-

POMEROY- Helen Blackston went to be wirh her Lord Jesus on
April tO, 2000.
She w.u at Camden Clark Hospi~l. where she received excellent
care from her doctors and the compassionate nunies on third' floor
north.
Helen was born December 26, 1932 in Pomeroy, Ohio, to William
and Buena Grueser.
·
She leaves behind her husband, Harold, to whom she was married
for 49 years.
She was the kind of wife every man dreams of when he gets married. Helen was a loving wife, loving mother, loving grandmother, and
a loving friend to her friends . When trouble came, it was Helen who
responded with a kind word, a meal, a ride or whatever was needed .
Everyone who knew her loved her and will miss her.
She was an active member of the Rocksprings United Methodist ·
.Church and Rocksprings Grange all her life. She worked with the
Child Conservation League and was a member of the Rocksprings
Better Health Club. In her high school days, she was a prom queen and
she is still a queen.
, . .
Her passing leaves a grear void in our lives, but Heaven gains a true
Christian and will be a better place because she is there.
~he is sutvived by her husband, Harold; a daughter and son-in-law,
Sherrie L. and Jack Kane of Charleston, West Virginia; two sons and
dimghters-in-law, Robert M : and Brenda Blackston, and Bruce W. and
Pamela Blackston, of Pomeroy; a brother, Leo Smith of Berrien
Springs, Michigan; grandchildren, Heather Kane of Charlotte, N orth
Carolina, Emily (Chris) Reed , of ·Charleston, West Virginia, Jeremy,
Joey and Clayton Blackston of Rocksprings, and Amber Blackston of
Pomeroy; and great-grandchildren, Morgan and Caitlin R eed of
Charleston; West Virginia; and her stepfather-in-law, Francis E. Shaeffer.
The Rev. Keith Rader will officiate at the services which will be
held Thursday, April 13. 2000 at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home. Burial will be in the Rocksprings Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday, April 12, 2000 fiom 6-9 p.m.

dren and not about infringing on the rights pf
gun owners. He said he supports me rights ·o f
everyone to hunt, collect weapons or shOQt at
targets.
"These are rights thar we must protect and
rich traditions we can pass on from generatio);l
to generation,"Taft said. "But with every right
comes a responsibility. Today, l urge you ,to
make Ohioans more aware of their, respon$ibillty if they own a firearm."
Taft said the bill would give prosecutors
definitive guidelines about when a crime was
committed involving improper storage.
"This is fundamentally an issue of child
safety. We need to ask ourselves as a state, 'Do
we want to see more children die or be seriously injured because of improperly srored
firearms?' If rhe answer is no, then we should
pass this bill:' Taft said.

Attorneys give .clo$ing arguments at Sheppard trial

------------------------''·..
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Police chief, deputy chi.ef~ ·, ·
detective placeCI on leave ·

LANCASTER (AP) - The
city's police chief, a deputy
chief and a detective have been
placed ·on administrative leave
pending an investigation into
the department's drug enforcement funds.
Chief Richard Schwader,
Deputy Cl)ief Jeff Gerken and .
Detective Ke.(.in Everhart were
put on leave Monday, the EagleGazette of Lancaster and The
Columbus Dispatch reported in
stories Wednesday.
Law director and city prosecutor Terre Vandetvoort said her
office II "conducting an adminlatrative review" of the pollclea
and procedure• aurroundina the
Furtherance of Juatlce account,
which Ia uaed for un~ercove'r
drua buy1.
Vandervoort would not provide specific• on why.ahe placed
!he three on leave, except to say
the action removes them from
that review proce11.
Schwader, Gerken and Everhart could 'not be reached for
comment late Tuesday night . .
The police department, about
25 miles southeast of Columbus, said it could not take messages· for the three. Their home
telephone numbers are either
not listed or could not be located.
State auditor's office spokeswoman Kim Norris said Vandervoort requested that the state
auditor look into the city's FOJ
funds.
·
Norris said the state auditor
1 reviewed documents, but nothing was found that showed an
audit was needed.
However, a representative
from the state auditor's office
was in La.ncaster on Tuesday to
provide advice on how to
improve inte rnal controls over
the funds, she said.
. Vandervoort did not put
time frame on the investigation.
The latest inquiry comes
after a special state audit recent,ly resulted in a criminal indictment of Fairfield County Sheriff Gary DeMastry, his wife and
three 'deputies for alleged
wrongdoing with the administration of rhe Furtherance of
Justice fund in that sheriff's
office.
'
Schwader and Gerken were
among .40 of Lancaster's 57
police officers' who•signed a letter in February to DeMastry,
asking him to step 'llown as the
result of the 351-count indictment returned against him ~nd
others in his department.
DeMastry, who has not
resigned, pleaded .innocent m

a

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a "powderkeg of emotion" an9
resulted in Mrs. Sheppard's killing.:
Mrs. Sheppard was found lyi101g
in a pool of blood on her bed eady
on July 4, 1954, at the couple~
home on Lake Erie.
Gilbert told jurors tha! Sheppard
never varied fiom his alibi: that he
was sleeping downstairs at the time
of\he,killing and awoke to his wife's
cries. He ran upstair.; to help her but
was !illocked out ..Upon waking up,
he chased the killer - whorp, he
identified as a bushy-halrecl man·down to the beach outside the
house bot \vas knocked · un corl~
.
SClOUS agam.

GUN SHOW
Next Show July 15-16

BUY • SELL •lRADE • EXHIBIT
'Collectors Show

&amp;MIUTARVAJM~ ....

February to · 323 charges,
including theft in office and
money laundering. He lost his
chance to run for re-election in
November when he wa1 defeated In the Republican primary
•lectlon March 7.

Jimmy Kimmel has had a long

career in radio. He is best
known as " Jimmy rhe Sports
Guy" ·on Los Angeles radio
station KROQ.

Bone Density
Testing
.....
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}fvaiCa6Ce a.t
JfoCzer Cfinic

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Zt3·MO)

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A Bone O,nsltometry T•t is the most practical way to ac·curately measure the density of your bones. It's also a good
way for your doctor to diagnose osteoporosis. It can even
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PosnwfAsriR: Send addreu eorrec:UonJ to
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Women who hive gone through menopeuH ere Ill most rlllk.
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Risks for Osteoporosis
•
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,.

COLUMBUS (AP) A
House co mmittee on Tuesday

Cool temps forecast tonight

National Guard A"'oo
April 15-16 ' !

LAw director and city
prosecutor Terre
Vandervoort said her office
is "conducting an
administrative review" of
the policies and procedures
surrounding the
Furtherance ofJustice
account, which is used for
undercover drug buys.

House committee
passes.capital bill

VALLEY WEATHER

CHARLESTON, WV

Publllherrcsc:rvea the rijht to adjust ratea dur·
Ina tbe aublc:rlpcion period. Sublcriplion rale
dMiftiCI may be Implemented by ehaiiJIIIJ the
duration of the aubacripdoil.
MAILSUBSCRIPriONS

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EMS units answer 3 calls

.Cuts
from PapAl
then come back in May with recommendations.
Action taken at the board meeting included accepting a second
grant of$30,000 for the Tech Prep
program, and adopting language

Action
from Page AI

Carr, Middleport; Ann VanM atre,
Pomeroy; Marjorie Fetty, Rutland; and Rita Simmons, Salem
Center.
Non-cer.tified petsonnel hired
for nexr year on continuing conntacts were Roger Cotterill, bus
driver, and Carolyn Chapman,
three- hour cook; and on two-year
contracts, )oe Gilkey, mechanic;
Kevin Jewell and Carla Milhoan,
bus drivers; Tana Kennedy, 3-hour
cook; William Morris and Ronald
Mullins, custodians; •md Nancy
Carnahan, administrative secre tary.
In other personnel marrers, the
board:
• Created a 1niddle school golf
coaching position and hired Jan
Haddox as coach relf"active to
April 1.
• Renewed for 9ne year the
contract of Gary Walker as network and computer technician, at
the current rate of compensation.
• Hired on extended service
supplemental con,tracts, pending
funding and enrollm ent, Tim
Simpson , vocational· agriculture,
-30 days; David Ku csma: marketing; Ron Logan and Mark Swann,
OWA; all 20 days; Marjorie Blake,

Congressman .says workers
to be offered compensation
WASHINGTON (APJ' - The
Clinton administration will offer
compensation to Ohio urani4m
plant workers who were sickened
by radiation exposure, Rep. Ted
Strickland said Tuesday.
"There will be no difference
in the WilY the Piketon (Ohio)
and Paducah (Kentucky) workers'
are treated;' the bemocratic .con-

gressman said after a briefing
from the office ofVice President
AI Gore.
The Energy Department was
expected to make an announcement today on the findings of a
study of compensation issues.
They were raised by revelations
some workers were not irlformed
when exposed to radioactive substances and weren't given proper
protective gear.
That study, and t he initial, more
limited offer of compensation,
marked a dramatic change of official attitude toward the workers.
They had been complaining for
more than a decade that their
Cold War workplaces had caused
cancer pr other health problems.
Until this year, the Energy
Department had refused to
acknowledge that workers' health
problems were linked to work at
the weapons plants.
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said he was committed to
addressing the health and environmen~ concerns involving the

AEP-31~

Akzo - 43!1.

*Carp e l •

arpet

*

,.

\

The compensation proposal
before Congrc"Ss would provid~
medical benefits. lost-wage reimbursement, optional job retraining or a single $100,000 cash pay•
ment to workers suffering illness.
es caused by beryllium exposure,
In addition, the administration
has proposed compensation of
$100,000 apiece to workers at th~
Paducah plant exposed tQ
radioactive materials known tq
cause cancer.

Strickland already has proposed
a competing compensation plan·,
:ind he is working with Rep. Ed
Whirfield, R-Ky., on another,
larger proposal. That would give
medical care and $200,000 to
sickened workers at every nuclear
weapons plant
Sen. George Voinovich, R "
O hio. also has 9&amp; n working on a
comp ensation plan.
His press secretary, Mike Dawson, said Tuesday, " While rhe
administration's proposal is a step
in the right direction, it appears
to be inadequate based on the
nature of the problem that the
federal government crea ted at
these ·facilities."

AmTech/SBC- 4n•
Ashland Inc.- 31 '1.
AT&amp;T-55~.

Bank One- 32'·
Bob Evans -12 ~
BorgWarner - 40
Champion- 3Ya
Charming Shops - .5"/o
. City Holding - 12l.
Federal Mogul-16
Flrstar- 25

Gannett - 69),

•

school cheerleader advisor; Christine Kelley, middle school cheerleader advisor; Bob Buck, quiz
team advisor; Ron Logan and
Mark Swann, co-athletic directors;
and Ron Logan, athletic treasurer.
• Non- renewed the teaching
contracts of Suzanne Cammarata,
Janice Haynes and R oy Johnson,
at the end of the current school
year due to a need for certification
clarification.
• Non-renewed the long-te rm
substitute teaching contract for
Mary Ann N eal at the end of the
school year due to the return of
the original teacher from leave of
absence.
• Hired on one-year contracts
for the next school year, pending
availability ofTitle VI-R funding ,
Elizabeth Downie, Michelle
Gillilan and Mary Whan.

beryllium, a unique metal use¢ m
nuclear weapons.
,

General Electric- 161\
Harley Davidson- 43' ~..
K mart- 9'Kroger - 20 'l.
Lands End - saY
.
Ltd. - 51 i.
Oak Hill Financial - 14
OVB - 29
One Valley - 35 ~
Peoples - 16~
Premier ~ 7\
Rockwell - 44~

dle school students at no cost to the assistance ·to the board in matter'
arts textbooks.
Approval Was given for a group , district, and rhe payment of
to rhe
negotiatipns
witli.
OAPSE and
MLTA.
at the Meigs Middle School to go $2,716.89 as Meigs Local's match for relating
Board members held an executo. New York City, using $12,131 "Food Folks," a nutrition.'~! program
tive session to discuss personnel.
they have rai sed, and for an previously offered in the district
Attending the meeting were
Purchase
of
a
van
to
be
used
in
overnight field trip for VICA students to attend a skills competiti on the district for such purposes of board members John Hood, presitransporting small groups of stu- dent, Wayne Davis, Seott Walton,
in Columbus,April28 and 29.
Also approved was a contract dents to events was approved, along Norman Humphreys, and Roger
with Health R ecovery Services to with a contract with ·the Ohio Abbott, Buckley and Cindy J.
provide rrientoring services to mid- School Boards Associa tion for Rhonemus, treasurer.
nurse assistant, Kelly Barnett,
Kathy Reed, and Gloria VanR eeth, home economics, I 0 days
each ; Connie Gilkey, elementary
guidance, I 0 days , and Sharon
Birch, school nurse, five days.
• Accepted the resignation of
Sara H ar.ris as a life skills teac her at
Meigs Middle School, effe ctive at
the end of the school year.
• Non-renewed supplemental
contracts of coac hes due to
changes in the athletic department
of Rick ,Chancey, assistant varsity
football; Carson Crow, seventh and
eighth grade football ; Roy' Johnson, boys reserve baske tball ; Dan
Thomas, reserve baseball; Troy
Bauer, wresding; Dale Harrison,
girls assistant volleyball ; Kellie
Thomas, girls middle sc hool volleyball and girls oniddle school
basketball; C indy Schull, high

gaseous diffiosion plants in Ohio
and Kentucky, a forme·r uranium
processing plant in Tennessee, and
exposure of workers at several
facilities around the country to

LOCAL STOCKS

• Hired on one-year contracts
pending vocational certification ,
Donald Yost, welding.
• Employed Jack McDanielS as
a substitute bus driver, and
approved Nicole M. Kouivaras,
Mary Sullivan. Margaret Demko,
Jamie Fox and Shanon Daniels for
substitute teachers for the remainder of the school yeat.
• Accepted the resignations of
Vicki J Haley as head teacher at
Harrisonville at the 'end of the
school year, and Michele Starcher
as a ·substitute teacher effective
immediately.

'.

Rocky Boots - 6la
AD Shell - 57h

Sears-40~

Shoney's - 1
Wai·Mar1 - 63~
Wendy's Worthington - 13'1.

20'•

Daily stock repons are the
4 p.m . closing qu01es of
the previous day's trans-actions , provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

''~~,~~-~~~~

IJ!!!!~

ALL AGES . ALL TIMES S4 00

•

·w
Mit.....,

_I(Citl... ot homo Qf on lho n&gt;Od,
~- het loll al '!'flll'IID ttYO yQU monty. So coli
,.IDMy lo ftnd oul """" obcM our alotlog dltcoun~
c1acount. home PI car dlacount and ~.

Sale'"

INGELS CARPE

Nationwide Is Qn Your Sldtl'

Nlltlanwld.lnsu&lt;'ance &amp;
Flnanci1l SeNices

I ,

•

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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --,

Peai'son Gibbs

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POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Services answered
three calls for assistance on Tuesday. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:23 a.m., Maples Apartments, Gladys Barrett, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
11:17 a.m., Maples-Apartments, Gladys Barrctt.VMH .
POMEROY
8:36a .m., Overbrook Nursing Center, assisoed by Middleport, fire
alarm, false alar~.

DEATH NOTICE

,I

'

POMEROY - The Coalition Against Superfluous Highways
(CASH) and the Buckeye Forest Cou ncil have filed a lawsuit toltry to
stop rhe construction of the U.S. 33 project from Darwin to Athens.
The action, flled in the U.S. District Court, names Ohio Department of Transportation Director Gordon Proctor, Kenneth 'Wykle of
the Federal Highway Administration, and members of the Transportation Review and Advisory CounciL
The suit was flled, according to CASH spokesman Todd Aeheson,
in response to TRAC's clccision last week to purchase property and repriortize the project
.
The suit alleges that enviro nmen tal impact reports are outdated, that
the project would be detrimental to the environment, and that that

.

internal records disclose an "attempted coveru p" by ODOT.
Local o(licials were unavailable this morning to comment on the
suit, which \vas filed Tuesday.
·

amendment offered by Sen. Eric
Fingerhut, D-Cleveland, that
unanimously recommended th e would have required that any docpassage of the state's $1.8 billion uments related to cleanup projects
construction budget, after com- be made public. The resolution
nlittee members tinkered with now goes to the full Senate.
The House and Senate also held
Gov. Bob Taft's proposal but lefi: it
floor sessions as rhey drew toward
largely intact.
The House was expected ro a two-week holiday break later rhis
vote on the proposal on Wednes- month.
day.
·
The House passed 96-0 a bill
The two-year proposal would that would make electronic signaspend $603 million on sc hool con- tures binding should both parties
struction over two years for school in a tmnsaction agree. The bill is
districts that can pe~ua de voters to needed for Ohio to catch up to
, raise money locally. O ther money other states taking full advantage of
in the bill would be used on com- In ternet com_merce, said sponsorNEW LEXINGTON - Peatson Gibbs, 85, New Lexington, for- munity construction projects.
ing R ep. George Terwilleger, RMajority Republicans on the Maineville.
merly of Meigs County, died Sunday,April9, 2000 at his residence, fol,uEiectroni c signatures are not to
lowing a lengthy illness.
House
Finance
Committee
He was the son of the late Ronald and Meda Gibbs of Bradbury.
be
denied simply because they are
allowed Democrats to shuffie some
Surviving are three children, Roland Gibbs, Paula Frazer and Diana money around for projects they in electronic form:· Terwilleger
Wright; and several grandchildren.
favored. Rep. Peter Lawson Jones, said.
·Services will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Roberts Funeral Home D-Cleveland, got approval for
The House passed another
ih New Lexington.
sandlot baseball fields, a wnununi- Internet-related bill that would
ty center ani;! other projects in require the Bureau of Workers'
Compensation and the Ohio
Cuyahoga County..
Another
Jones-sponsored Industrial Conunission to make
amendment that was passed would applications·, notices, evidence and
find more money for public voca- other documents available electional schools whose districts lose tronically.
.The bureau is Ohio's public-pristudents to charter schools.
However, R ep. Robert Corbin, vate workplace insurance system.
R - Dayton and the conunittee's The commission hears appeals
scattered frost. Lows in the lower chairman, drew rhe line at those from workers who lose their cases
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High pressure will sweep the and mid 30s. Light and variable projects, turning away other before the bureau.
alouds out of the tri-county area's wind.
The House also concurred in
Democratic proposals. '
Thursday.. :'Partly sunny and
skies, .allowing telt)peratures
"Since this would require a sub- Senate amendments to bills that
@yernight to plunge into the rnid- warmer. Highs in the mid 60s.
stantial Increase in funding, I'm deny a defendant the power to use
Thursday night...Pardy cloudy.
2Gs in some areas.
sorry, but we're not going to · voluntary drunkenness as a men.tal
~ But the clouds are expected to Lows in the upper 40s.
· accept it:' Corbin told Jones after condition in criminal proceedings
Extended forecast:
~turn on Thursday and a slow
and authorize a ch~rge up to 50
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs in · Jones offered another amendment.
· y;arrning trend will begin. Highs
The Senate Finance Committee cents per month on telephone bills
&lt;?.n Thursday will be in the 50s the mid 70~.
passed a mosdy unchanged version to fund countywide 911 emerSatutday... Partly cloudy with a
and 60s.
gency systems.
chance
of showers and thunder- of a resolution that would place on
: ' Temperatures will r~ach the
The Senate, meanwhile, passed
the
Nov.
7
ballot
a
$400
million
?Os in the area on Friday and over storms. Lows in the lower 50s and
bond ]ssue. It would split the 33-0 a bill that would allow townhighs in the mid 70s.
the entire region.by Saturday.
money
between cleaning up pol- ship employees to pick coverage
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a
. : Sunset will be at 8:08p.m. and
luted industriai sites and preserving from a range of health benefits, a
SJlnrise on Th4rsday at 6:57 a.m. chance of showers and thunderpower already held by other public
s!orms. Lows in the lower 50s and and acquiring green space.
Weather forecast:
The committee turned back an employees in cities and villages.
Tonight... Mostly dear with highs 70 to 75.

' '

CLEVELAND (AP) - An claiming his father was wrongfully died four years later. His case helped
attorney told jurors Tuesday that imprisoned for his mother Mari- inspire "The Fugitive"TV series.
DNA and other forensic evidence lyn's slaying. Cuyahoga County
Pro5ecutots described Sheppard
finally clears Dr. Sam Sheppan:l of prosecutors, who have been as a cheating husband who killed·
his wife's 1954 beating death and defending the state, told Common o his wife because he felt nrapped in
validates his son's long fight for jus- Pleas Court jurors Tuesday rhat his marriage. Sheppard first denied,
tice.
authorities had the right man all then later admitted to, having an
In closing arguments of a 2 1/2- along.
affair with a lab technician at his
month lawsuit trial that could ·be
"It may just be that you are being hospital in the yeats before Marilyn
the last act in the 4Q..year-old case, asked to reward. i:he killer's son for Sheppard's murder.
attorney Terry Gilbert foelised on , the killer bludgeoning hi~ 'f!i{e;'. " Mason, quoting ~ witness in the
expert testimony.
Prosecutor William Mason told · case, repeatedly referred to Shep"Jf you follow your common jurors.
pard as "the playboy of the Western
sense and follow your instincts and
Dr. Sheppard was convicted of world" and described the !foetor as
use your intell~ct,1 think that you murder and spent almost a decade self-centered and egotistical.
will come up with the oM' conclu- in prison before the U.S. S4preme
Dr. Sheppard was unhappy to
sion that is possible:· .Gilbert said. Court overturned the xerdict in a learn shortly before the murder that
"Sam did not commit .this crime:'
landmark ruling on the effects of · his wife was po;egnal\t for a second
Gilbert's client, Sam Reese pretrial publicity. Sheppard Was tiine, Mason said. The prosecutor
Sheppard, has sued the state of Ohio . acquitted at a J:'l'trial in 1966 and theorized that the news helped light

CASH files suit on 33 proj~ ' I

.Helen Bladlston

,t

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN 'BRIEF

OBITUARY

18ft to send message on safely storing firearms
•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesdly, Aprll12, 2000

•

"

�'.

PageA4'
·.The

-

Sentinel

11.2000

'£sta6Cisfwf in 1948

'·-

R. Shewn Lewle
Maneglng Editor
Ollnl Kly Hill
Controller

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OUR VIEW:

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~

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• TODAY IN . HISTORY
"'~

.

~

day of2000.There are 263

Today's Highlight in History:

~ On April 12, 1861, the American Civil w..r began as Confederate

~ forces fired on Fort Sumter in South Carolina.
~ On this date:
·
·
~ . In 1606, England adopted as its flag the original version o( the
...: Union Jack.
~ In 1862, Union volunteen led by James J. Andrews stole a Confed' erate train near Marietta, Ga., but ·were later caught. (This episode
~ inspired the Buster Keaton comedy "The General:')
~ In 1934,"Tender Is the Night," by F. Scott Fiugerald, was first pub~ lished.
In 1945, President Franklin Delano Ro01evelt .died of 3 cerebral
~hemorrhage in Warm Spring~, Ga., at age 63; he Wo1S succeeded by Vice
' President Harry S. 1htman.
~
In 1955, the Salk vaccine against polio was declared safe and effeci. ttve.
'
~ In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri G3garin became the first man to Oy
• in space, orbiting the earth once before making a safe landing.
~ In 1981 , the space shuttle Columbia blasted off liom Cape Canaver~ al on its first test flight.
~ In 1989, radical activist Abbie Hoflinan was found dead at his home
~ in New Hope, Pa., at age 52.
·
·
• In 1989,formcr middleweight bOxing champion Sugar Ray Robin~ son died in Culver City, California, at age 67.
. ~ In 1992, Euro Disneyland opened in Ftance.
~ Ten year's ago: In its first meeting, East Germany's first democrati:· cally elected parliantent acknowledged responsibility for the Nazi
~ Holocaust, and asked the forgiveness ofJ~ an4 othen who h.id suf~ fered.
~ Today's Birthdays: Bandleader Lionel Hampton is 92.Actms-dancer
; Ann Miller is 77. Country singer Ned Miller is 75.Actress Jane With' ers is 74. Opera singer Montserrat Caballe is 67.Actor Charles Napi2er is 64. 'jazz musician Herbie Hancock i&amp; 60. Actor Frank Bank
0: ("Leave It to Beaver") is 58. Rock singer John Kay (Steppenwolt) is
i 56. Actor Ed O'Neill is 54. Actor Dan Lauria is 53. Talk show host
:: David Letterman is 53. Author Scott 'Throw is 51. Singer David Cassidy is 50. Actor Andy Garcia is 44. Country singer Vince Gill is 43.
~ ~ctress Suzzanne Douglas is 43.

'

!

The tt}4th about keeping Elian Gonzalez
The Clinton admini stration has done a
masterly job of concealing its true motivations
in the matter of Elian Gonzalez, the 6-yearold Cuban boy who survived (though his
mother did. not) a harrowing escape from
·Fidel Castro's paradise across the angry waters
of the Florida Strait.
·
It has been obvious for son\e time that Mr.
Clinton wants to loosen, if not eliminate, this
country's longstanding economic sanctions
against Cuba. This would please two influen- ·
tial pre;sure groups ·- lib~rals in general, and
major business interests - and irritate only
obsessive anti-Communists and the CubanAmerican community, neither of whom has
ever been famous for its admiration of the
president.
The liberals favor lifting sanctio11s for the
same reason that, over the last half-century,
they have favored almost every other proposal to go easy on Communist countries: They
have never really believed that Communism is
a genuinely evil system.
The business community may realize that in
pur~ th~ll.ry. but (as in ,tl:ie case of China) is
daz:tl~d by th~ prosp~t"o(julcy profits from ·
trading with the · enemy. This is an old story.
Pre-war Japan had no domestic sources of
iron or other metals vital to its military. All
through the 1930s, therefore, greedy American businessmen s.old scrap iron to Japan. In
due course it was all hurled back at us, in the
form of bombs and shells.
When Elian Gonzalez arrived in Miami, the
first reaction of the Immigration and Naturalization Service was to note, quite correctly,
that the question of who should have custody
of the boy- his father in Cuba or his Miami
relatives - was a matter for the Florida

William
A. Rusher
. NEA COLUMNIST
courts. Within, days, however, the State
Department, noting Castro's sharp demand
for his return, leaned on the Justice Department and . the INS to reverse this ruling and
rake jurisdiction of the issue thetnselves.
Justice ~rid INS agents in Havana thereupon
interviewed Juan Mi~el Gonzalez, the boy's
father, and allegedly satisfied themselves that
he wanted his son returned to him in Cuba. It
was so ordered, and a federal district court has
confirmed their pbwer to do so. That decision
is now on appeal.
Mr. Clinton thereupon gave Attorney General Reno's ruling his public blessing - for all
the world as ifhe hadn't engineered it himself.
He declared that the sacred claims of fatherhood must be honored, as well as "the rule of
Ia..;.." It is quite possible that he is sincere about
the first point; after . all, he .is a notoriously
proud father him'll!lf.
But it's a bit of a stretch to believe that Mr.
Clinton is all that devoted to the rule of law,
bearing in mind that he is the only president
ever impeached by the House of Represenratives for perjury and obstruction of justice, or
fined $90,000 by a federal district judge for

contempt of court.
Moreover, the rule of law would be served
just as admirably if Attorney General Reno
decided, as she has full power to do at her own
discretion , that Elian should remain with his
Miami relatives, or be turned over to his father
only on condition that both father and son
remain in the United States. But she, of course,
is (as usual) playing Mr. Clinton's'game.
At this writing, it appears that the father 111llY
agree to stay in the United Srates pending the
appeal of the federal court's decision (which
could take from six to eight months).lf so, the
plight of' little Elian may not be quite so desperate as it appears. The Cuban government
clearly believes that juan Miguel GotlZ;IIecwiU
stick to his insistence that he wants to take
Elian back to Cuba. just to make sure, they are
keeping him in a. Cuban safe house in Washington, under the control of Cuban intelligence agents.
But six months is a long time, and wol!ld
afford Juan Miguel Gonzalez many opportupities to reflect, long and privately, on his sitl!ation. Nor would it be easy to seal him offliom
all outside contacts and influences.
If he were to announce, a few months from
now, that he wants to remain in the United
StateS with his present \vife, their baby and
Elian, it would be politically impossible for
Mr. Clinton to refuse his request.
.
And there would then open, not only" for
Elian but for his father, prospects for a far happier life than either of them ·can hope for
under the drab and deadly regime that Elian's
mother died trying to escape.

(William A. Rusher is a Distit~guished Fellow of
the Claremont ltJStitutc for tire Study of StatesmmJSilip and Political Philosophy.)

normal.
Within 24 hours: Chance of heart
attack decreases.
Within 48 hours: Nerve ending start
to regroup. Ability to taste an smell
improves.
' Within three days: Breathing is easier.
Within two to three months: Circulation improves. Walking becomes easier.
Lung capaciry increases up to 30 percent.
Within one to nine months: Sinus
congestion and shortness of breath

How Clinton deals ·with curse·if Castro
WASHINGTON - At 73, Fidel Castro
has a 9-0 record against American presidents.
Under Dwight Eisenhower, the CIA tried
"dirty iricl(s" as a weapon against the Cuban
revolutionary. Our agents tried spraying him
with a drug similar to LS9 prior to a radio
broadcast The idea was to make him sound
nuts. The CIA also tried to poison Castro's
Cigars with a chemical agent meant to cause
his beard to fall out, a preview of later American efforts to defoliate the Vietnam jungle.
With John E Kennedy's transition to
power, the CIA escalated its campaign. Mobsters Johnny Roselli and Sam Giancana were
recruited to carry out a gangland-style assassination of Castro. A hit man was to shoot him
down in the street a Ia "The Godfather."
In April of 1.961, Kennedy landed a band of
Cuban exiles, recruited liom Miami's Little
Havana; at the Bay of Pigs, then refused to
give them the air cover their CIA trainers had
led them to expect.
Kennedy and his brother Robert, the U.S.
attorney general, decided to get even through
a campaign, code-named Operation Mongoose. "There can be. no long-term living
with Castro as a neighbor," RFK wrote in a
secret memo. "Get off your ass about Cuba!"
. he barked at one CIA official. placing no lim·
irarions on how the job got done.
In !9()2, President Kennedy, operating with

the powerful counsel of his brother, forced
Soviet leader NiHta Khplshchev td n:.move
nuclear missiles trohl' Cul&gt;:L But a year later,
the 46-year-old ,Ameritan president was still
railing against Castro. ·
"A small band of conspirators has stripped
the Cuban people of their freedom and handed over the sovereignty of the Cuban !}arion
to forces beyond the hemisphere. This, and
rhis alone, divides us. As long as it is true,
nothing is impossible. Once this barrier is '
removed, everything is possible."
A week later, Kennedy himself was assassinated by a pro-Castro fanatic nam ed Lee Harvey Oswald.
. ..
In 1971, President Richard Nixon hired a
CIA veteran of the Bay of Pigs operation, E.
Howard Hunt, to run his "plumbers" opera. tion aimed at ending national security leaks.
Hunt's selling point was his bitter outrage at
Kennedy for failing to give the Bay of Pi~
forces th~ CIA-promised air covet.
A year later, Hunt and a group of anti-Castro Cubans broke into the Democratic
National Committee headquarters at the
Watergate. A week later, Nixon told his staff to
tell the CIA to block the FBI investigation of
the break-in because it would expose
Kennedy's role in undermining the Bw of
Pig&gt; operation.
That June 23rd conversation would

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

125 Third A..., Oolllpolla, Ohio

7-2342

MIDDLEPORT - A discussion of "The Greatest
Generation" by Tom Brokaw WoiS led by Ida Diehl at a
recent meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held
at the home of Leah Ord in Syracuse.
Diehl described the book as stories of individual
men and women who lived through the depression
years, followed by the turbulent years ofWorld War II,
and emerged as the generation .which went on to build
modern America. '
She gave some background information on the
· . author, who had been a network news anchor and
became acquainted with a number of heroes of the
war. While Brokaw covered the events of the 50th
·anniversary ofD-Day on the beaches ofNormandy, he
was tduched by the stories ofbravery and sacrifice that
he had heard liom those who remembered this special
time in history. He then determined that he would
. · preserve these stories and similar one; in book form.
· · Various stories of ordinary people and public figures
·· were discussed liom inside the book. Member shared
personal reminiscences that they or older family members had of the hatdships of the depression and the
conditions that seemed to toughen the generation that
, would .contribute so much to the war effort.
.
Other topics of the discussion were the shortages of
., the war years, women's C!ntry into the workplace and
· the s6rrow oflocal families who lost loved ones.
Each member of the discussion group shared a personal experience of how they or family members were
· affected by World War II. Betsy Parsons told an espe, cially interesting story of how she, as a small child, spent
"the years of 1939-1945 in Scotland with her mother.
· ·They had gone there to be with her' ailing grandmother and were unable to return home because of
· · the war.
: ' · The next meeting of the Literary Club will be at
: ' !he hbme of Sara Owen Wednesday .with Gay Perrin
· 'to review several books on the topic, "The unsung
Heroines ofWorld War II".
· : · Ideas. were discussed for next year's progran1s. Phyl·lis Hackett of Pickerington invited the group to hold
' - ~IS last meeting in May at her residence.

Star Grange enjoys
Easter program
SALEM CENTER - An April and Easter theme
w.as ,carried out in a program presented by Lecturer

'HARDBALL':

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~ Today isWednesday,April12,the 103rd
~ days left in the year.

ADVICE

Brokaw's book reviewed
at Uterary dub
RUSHER'S VIEW:

become the "smoking gun " ofWatergate, the
notorious tape that would force his resignation in 1974.
Fidel Castro hel.ped topple another American president in 1980 by dumping 125,000
refugees on U.S. beaches. The Arkansas governor and future president Bill Clinton was also
defeated for re-election that year when thousands of these "Marie! boatlift" Cubans rioted
at a resettlement camp.
· The Elian CJonzalez episode could either
continue this presidential curse or end it.
Watch how the man in the White House
has let Attorney General Janet Reno take the
blame for this situation, especially from antiCastro Cubans here in tlte United . States,
while allowing his 2000 presidential candidate
AI Gore to position himself as a critic. The;:.,•,
a strong' chance that President Clinton's cr:tfty
backroom handling of the crisis wiU free him
for a far grander deal with Fidel Castro than
this troubling reunification of a 6-year-old
with his father.
•
· If any U.S. leader can do it, it's our Bill, the
6rst president in five decades who can match
Fidel in both craftiness and luck. ·
•

Vicki Smith at·the recent meeting of Star Grange 778
held at the hall.
Readings were given by Opal Dyer, Tom lllitley,
and Janis Macomb&lt;;r. Games ' were played. It was
announced that a tuberculosis clinic will be held Tuesday at the Grange Hall, 4:30 to 6:30 p,m.
Eldon Barrows, legislative agent, reported on
financing ·for education and gun control. Macomber,
deaf actiVitie; chairman, noted that she will have a representative liom Belltone present at the May 20 meet. ing. She also noted that the grange ladies have been
· working on the ABC quilts. A junior sleep over is being
·planned for April 14 and 15.
Members were reminded to take items for the local
food bank to the June meeting. At the April 15 meeti~g there will be practice. for the first degree, and a fun
night beginning with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.OL

zoo M••• st, Point........., w.va.l
304-4175-1333

'

Wednesday, April 1.2.

decrea se . ·C ilia that sweep debr is fro~
your lun~ grow bac k. Energy increases.
Within one year : Ex cess risk of coronary he art d isease is half that of a per'
son who smokes.
Within two years: H eart attac k risk
drops to near normal.
Witl!in five years: Lung cancer death
rate for an ave.rage former pac k-a- day
smoker decreases by almost half Stroke
risk is reduced. Risk of mouth, throat
and esophageal cancer is half that of a
smoker.
Within 10 years: Lung cancer death
rate is similar to that of a person who
does not smoke. The pre-cancerous
fl
cells are replaced.
Within 15 years: Risk of coronary
heart disease is the same as a person
who has never smoked .
Dear Ann Landers: I just finished
reading the letter from "Deaf ir
Chatsworth, Calif.," and would like to
say something to that )llan's family

Charle• Wesley Simon!' Ill

- .. ,.

I

;.

2000

1 ,

1

•WHAT lN T H E WO R LD IS T HL she is som e how at fau lt. Tell t hem, Ann .
MATT ER WIT H YO U PEO PL E'
PROUD O F ,MO M IN CEN This ma n has a hearing problem and TRAL ILLIN O IS
his wife and children yell at him and
DEAR ILLINOIS: I'll be t she will
igno re him as if the hear ing los is his be pro ud of you when she read1 your
'fault. Wh en my mother began to lose
letter in the paper. And well she should
her heari11g seve ral years ago I also
became impat ient wi th her, and lost my be. Those w ho have a hea rin g defi cientemper, bu t o nly fo r a sho rt while. ·tt cy need com passio n and unde rstanding.
didn't take lo ng for me to rea lize that I Th ank you for extending both.
Do you have q uestions abo ut sex, but
should trea t her as wo uld like to be
treated , becaus eventuall y, I will proba- no one to tal k to? Ann Landers' boo kbly b e in her shoes.
let, " Sex and the Tee nage r," is frank and
For th e last I 0 years, I have practiced . to th e poi nt. Send a self-addressed.
patience and gentleness. It ha s not been lon g, bu si ness-s ize envelope and a
easy, bu t it w orks. I now speak louder check or m oney o rd er for $3.75 (this
and enu nc iate my words more clearly. I
in cl ude s pos tage ana handling) to:
would not dream of becoming angry
Teens, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
with her wh en she asks m e to repe at
11 562, C hicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
myself.
Those who live with a parent who is Ca nada, send $4.55.) To find out more
hard of h earing should show respect. about Ann Landers and read her past
My moth er cannot help her co ndition, columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
and it would be cruel to treat her as if web page ta www. creators. com .

BIRTHDAY

meeting. held
POMEROY - Ritualistic work, installation of new
officers, and recognition for service highlighted the
73rd annual meeting of District 13, Daughters of
America, held recendy at the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
Attended by 69 members, the meeting opened
with seating of the district office~, the entry ofJoAnn
Ritchie, district deputy, escorted by color bearers,
Everett and Charlotte Grant, and introduction by
Esther Smith, district captain.
Presentations were made to Ritchie following the
invocation by Erma Cleland and a welcome by Mary
Jo Barringer, both of Chester Council. Response was given by Norma Farris, state vice councilor, District
15, Dayton. Ritchie then introduced the National
Board. officers and committees and the State Board of
Officers, who were escorted in by the color bearers
and escorts. Each was presented a gift.
Escorted into the room and recognized· were
national officers, Carolyn Wise, junior past councilor;
Ruth Shannon,judiciary committee; Beverly Cefoldo,
deputy councilor; Lynda Walton, inside sentinel; Irene
Hinton, finance committee; Marge Sillanpa, ways and
means committee.
State officials. presented were Viola Young. councilor; Norma Farris, vice councilor; Bertha Stapleton,
council secretary; Barbara Pelc, council treasurer.
Ritchie introduced the state officers and committees liom District 13 and presented each one a gift.
Included were Esther Smith, past state councilor; jean
Welsh, state credential committee; Helen Wolf, state
legislative committee; Esther Harden, past five· year ,
district deputy; Bette Biggs, past five year district
deputy.
Bette l!iggs, district councilor and general chairman
for the meeting, was presented a gift by Guiding Star
124. Ritchie introduced Helen Wolf, district pianist;
Everett and Charlotte Grant, district olor bearers and
.
Esther Smith, district captain.
Charlotte VanMeter was initiated and welcomed as
a new member by the initiatory team with Esther
Smith as team captain.
·
·
· Following·a luncheon, the Roach Brothers of Rutland presenting a program. A memorial service was
held by District 13 in memory of a deceased member,
Ethel Arbaugh.
A flag drill, reading about the flag, and, the pledge
were given, a silver shower WoiS held with Delores
Wolfe,Jean Welsh, Doris Grueser and Thelma White in
bunny costumes. Addendas were held for Viola Young,
state councilor, and Ritchie, district deputy. Esther
Smith dressed Ritchie in an apron and chef's hat and
each member of District 13 presented her with items
for her new bakery shop.
Thirty-two natio~ai and state vtsttlllg members
were receivro officially and. each presented a gift.
The state council gave her evaluation of the district's
work. Ritcllie installed new district officers including
Bette Biggs, junior past councilor; Nathan Biggs, aw&gt;ciate junior past councilor; Jean Welsh; councilor;
Delores Wolfe, associate councilor; Mary Jo Barringer,
vice councilor, Julie CurtiS, associate vice councilor;
Opal Eichinger, conductor; Mary Moose, warden;
Doris Grueser, inside sentinel, Laura Mae Nice, outside
sehtinell]anice Zwilling, sectetary; Opal Hollon, treasure; and Betty Young, trustee.

POMEROY - T. Sgt. Charles
Wesley Simons Ill · will be
inducted into the National Law
Enforcement Officers Memorial
in Washington, D.C. The memorial is located on E Street,
betweelf"' Fourth and- Fifth
Streets NW, near . Judiciary
Square.
'
A candlelight vigil, which is
open to the public, which will
take placl' on May 13 at 8 p.m.
The 37 year-old TSgt.
Simons, known as Wes to family
and friends , was a former residents o( Middleport. His mother and sister reside in Indianapolis, Ind. He served in the
U.S. Air force for 18 years.

-

I

D of A distrid

MILLTARY NEWS

(Cirris Mattlrews, chief of tire San Franifsco
Examiner~ Washingron · Br&lt;reau, is host of "H4rdball"·on CNBC atrd MSNBC cable channels. :(;he
1999 edition of "Hardball" has been recently [l&gt;(blis/ted by,1imchstotie Books. )
" .~

111 Court St, Pomeroy, OhiO
740oti2-21H

Page AS

Reader asks Ann to point out the,b.'ehtjits of not smoking

SOCIETY NEWS

p

J
~
oint Pkasant's State Theater is up for sale. Perhaps it's
~
another sign of tlte times as smaller movie showcases
~
yield to the multi-scre~n concept, guaranteed to pro, . ducc a quick return when a blockbuster film is released.
~ •
But the State stands as a symbol of
~
how people with a commitment to
communiry have giveh the theater a
~ COtntnUnfty
new life. As the home of the Point
Pleasant Artists Series, its srage has
become an oudet for cultural presenta:• orutn or
tions.
cultural
The State has followed an example
'
seen with older theaters and movie
•
palaces throughout the Ohio Valley.
Huntington's Keith-Albee, the Paramount i11 Ashland, Ky., and the Ariel in Gallipolis have all been
.- refurbished to bring music, theater and other examples of the
' arts to the public.
That's why we urge the Stare's future owner to allow it to
continue as the Artists Series' home.
·, Every community ne~ds a forum for cultural expression. A
' concert or play produced live -carries an immediacy and
excitement that television, video or COs don't always capture.
As with the Ariel,lo~:al thespians get an opportuniry to show
their talent by using the srage for their own productions. Local
· bands with contemporary sound share the facility with a symphony and the classics.
•
The tastes may be different, but a cultural center in a small
community is vital to exptcssion and learning.
The educational value has been proved time and again as the
~ Ariel has played host to numerous lectures, plays and presen~ rations for students.
Showing kids that a theater has another purpose thah just
: showing movies has a place· in the learning eJCP.erience. It also
exposes them, as it docs their parents, to a creativity they don't
.see and hear regularly.
: Don't rake our word for it. Discover it for yourself. Both the
!Srate and Ariel have a regular slate of presenrations each sea: son. Be it a lecture, concert or play, take the time to experience a live performance at either facility.
: Your support of activities at the Srate and Ariel are critical
' to their continuation. Th~ presence of these showcases is a sign
of a progressive community. Without them, We&lt;" will be all the
poorer.

•

OPEN

.Cu~tural centers have a place
in our communities .

Eve

Daily Sentinel

Dear Ann Landers: My ni ece is
t~ying to quit smoking, and is having a
terrible time. I told her you once printed a lette r describing wh at happens to
the body after someone stops smoking.
It made a strong impression on me, and
I'm sure it did on many others, too.Will
you please print .it again to encourage
my niece to keep trying? She is discouraged, and ready to give up. - DEE
DEE IN DETROIT
'DEAR DEE DEE: With pleasure I
was told after reading this column many
people did quit smoking. Here it is:
According to the American Cancer
Society, as soon· as you snuff out the last
cigarette, your body will begin a series
of physiological changes.
. Within 20 minutes: Blood pressure
body temperature and pulse rate wil
drop to normal.
Wi.thin eight hours: Smoker's breath
disappears. Carbon monoxid level in
blood drops , and oxygen leve rises to

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

L.erry Boyer
Advertlelng Director

IJ'the

•

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2158 • Fex: 892·21117

Charlene Hoeflich
GeMI'II Meneger

~ Jhe

.·

The Daily Sentinel

Charlee W. Govey
Publleher

'

•

While stationed at Nellis AFB in Las Vegas, Nev., he as a member of the 99th Security Forces
Squadron . On Nov. 17, 1000,
while trying to elevate panic
and traffic congestion during · a
bomb scare on base, he was
struck by a vehicle causing brain
death on Nov. 19.
The Mem~rlal in Washington, D.C. was dedicated in 1991
by President George Bush. It
honors America's federal, state
and local law enforcement officers who los~ their lives in the
line of duty.
This year, 275 individuals will
be so honored.

· Jordan Chadwell
REEDSVILLE - Jordan
Chadwell, son of Bryan and
Patsy Chadwell of Reedsville,
observed his first birthday on
Jan . 22 with a party at the
Masonic Lodge in Chester.
The theme of the party
was "Tigger 11 and ice-crearn
and cake were served. In
addition to his parents, others
attending were his sister,
Brooke; his grandparents ,
Cindy Aeiker, Vic Laughery,
Pat Aeiker and Jim and Cindy
Chadwell . His great-grandmother, Mary Chadwell, and
his aunts and uncles, Patrick

FLASHBACK
(AP) Spoken five years
ago:
"I had to gain 25 pounds
for the role. Thar' was th e
prerequisite; they didn't want
to give me the part straight
off because of that. I campaigned for a year before I
actually got cast." - Actress
Minnie Driver, on her role
in "Circle of Friends."

BIRTH

and Alici a Aeiker, .Penny
Aeiker, Pat, Roger,Jenifer and
R ebecca Chadwell. ,
Also attending the party
were Terri and Colton Sigman, Roy, Crystal and Sabrina
Bailey, Regina and Andrew
Theiman, Daphne Young,
Bob and Dove White, Shelly,
Jacob and Emily Combs,
Mindy
Sampson,
Maria
Frecker, Jimmy Tracy, Wyatt
Carter and Savannah and
Christian Speelman.
Sending gifts were his
grandparents Patty Harris and
Bob H oce. His great-grandparents Mae Jordo n and Betty
Harns.
Also sending gifts Were
Doris Jackso n, Tammy Capehart, Kelly and Ryan Tripp.
Keitha Whitlat ch, Bob Hunt,
Lisa and Corbett Catlett ,
Clint ~nd Louis Pitzer, Sharon
and Susie Swain, Jeanie and
Casey Ridenour and Kattie
and Zack Stentz.

Sailor Warden
RACINE - Brian and !Jolly
Warden of Racine announce the'
birth of a daughter, Sailor, born
Feb. 16, at Holzer Medical Center. He weighed seven pounds,
four ounces .
Grandparents are Bob and Kay
Warden and f11ike and Mindy
Hill. all of Raci~&gt;e .
Mr. and Mrs. Warden have
another child, a son, Crew.

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�'.

PageA4'
·.The

-

Sentinel

11.2000

'£sta6Cisfwf in 1948

'·-

R. Shewn Lewle
Maneglng Editor
Ollnl Kly Hill
Controller

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'

OUR VIEW:

alive
~

§

OPEN THIS

GUN LOCK
AND MAKE
IT SNAPPY~

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needs a

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expresston.

• TODAY IN . HISTORY
"'~

.

~

day of2000.There are 263

Today's Highlight in History:

~ On April 12, 1861, the American Civil w..r began as Confederate

~ forces fired on Fort Sumter in South Carolina.
~ On this date:
·
·
~ . In 1606, England adopted as its flag the original version o( the
...: Union Jack.
~ In 1862, Union volunteen led by James J. Andrews stole a Confed' erate train near Marietta, Ga., but ·were later caught. (This episode
~ inspired the Buster Keaton comedy "The General:')
~ In 1934,"Tender Is the Night," by F. Scott Fiugerald, was first pub~ lished.
In 1945, President Franklin Delano Ro01evelt .died of 3 cerebral
~hemorrhage in Warm Spring~, Ga., at age 63; he Wo1S succeeded by Vice
' President Harry S. 1htman.
~
In 1955, the Salk vaccine against polio was declared safe and effeci. ttve.
'
~ In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri G3garin became the first man to Oy
• in space, orbiting the earth once before making a safe landing.
~ In 1981 , the space shuttle Columbia blasted off liom Cape Canaver~ al on its first test flight.
~ In 1989, radical activist Abbie Hoflinan was found dead at his home
~ in New Hope, Pa., at age 52.
·
·
• In 1989,formcr middleweight bOxing champion Sugar Ray Robin~ son died in Culver City, California, at age 67.
. ~ In 1992, Euro Disneyland opened in Ftance.
~ Ten year's ago: In its first meeting, East Germany's first democrati:· cally elected parliantent acknowledged responsibility for the Nazi
~ Holocaust, and asked the forgiveness ofJ~ an4 othen who h.id suf~ fered.
~ Today's Birthdays: Bandleader Lionel Hampton is 92.Actms-dancer
; Ann Miller is 77. Country singer Ned Miller is 75.Actress Jane With' ers is 74. Opera singer Montserrat Caballe is 67.Actor Charles Napi2er is 64. 'jazz musician Herbie Hancock i&amp; 60. Actor Frank Bank
0: ("Leave It to Beaver") is 58. Rock singer John Kay (Steppenwolt) is
i 56. Actor Ed O'Neill is 54. Actor Dan Lauria is 53. Talk show host
:: David Letterman is 53. Author Scott 'Throw is 51. Singer David Cassidy is 50. Actor Andy Garcia is 44. Country singer Vince Gill is 43.
~ ~ctress Suzzanne Douglas is 43.

'

!

The tt}4th about keeping Elian Gonzalez
The Clinton admini stration has done a
masterly job of concealing its true motivations
in the matter of Elian Gonzalez, the 6-yearold Cuban boy who survived (though his
mother did. not) a harrowing escape from
·Fidel Castro's paradise across the angry waters
of the Florida Strait.
·
It has been obvious for son\e time that Mr.
Clinton wants to loosen, if not eliminate, this
country's longstanding economic sanctions
against Cuba. This would please two influen- ·
tial pre;sure groups ·- lib~rals in general, and
major business interests - and irritate only
obsessive anti-Communists and the CubanAmerican community, neither of whom has
ever been famous for its admiration of the
president.
The liberals favor lifting sanctio11s for the
same reason that, over the last half-century,
they have favored almost every other proposal to go easy on Communist countries: They
have never really believed that Communism is
a genuinely evil system.
The business community may realize that in
pur~ th~ll.ry. but (as in ,tl:ie case of China) is
daz:tl~d by th~ prosp~t"o(julcy profits from ·
trading with the · enemy. This is an old story.
Pre-war Japan had no domestic sources of
iron or other metals vital to its military. All
through the 1930s, therefore, greedy American businessmen s.old scrap iron to Japan. In
due course it was all hurled back at us, in the
form of bombs and shells.
When Elian Gonzalez arrived in Miami, the
first reaction of the Immigration and Naturalization Service was to note, quite correctly,
that the question of who should have custody
of the boy- his father in Cuba or his Miami
relatives - was a matter for the Florida

William
A. Rusher
. NEA COLUMNIST
courts. Within, days, however, the State
Department, noting Castro's sharp demand
for his return, leaned on the Justice Department and . the INS to reverse this ruling and
rake jurisdiction of the issue thetnselves.
Justice ~rid INS agents in Havana thereupon
interviewed Juan Mi~el Gonzalez, the boy's
father, and allegedly satisfied themselves that
he wanted his son returned to him in Cuba. It
was so ordered, and a federal district court has
confirmed their pbwer to do so. That decision
is now on appeal.
Mr. Clinton thereupon gave Attorney General Reno's ruling his public blessing - for all
the world as ifhe hadn't engineered it himself.
He declared that the sacred claims of fatherhood must be honored, as well as "the rule of
Ia..;.." It is quite possible that he is sincere about
the first point; after . all, he .is a notoriously
proud father him'll!lf.
But it's a bit of a stretch to believe that Mr.
Clinton is all that devoted to the rule of law,
bearing in mind that he is the only president
ever impeached by the House of Represenratives for perjury and obstruction of justice, or
fined $90,000 by a federal district judge for

contempt of court.
Moreover, the rule of law would be served
just as admirably if Attorney General Reno
decided, as she has full power to do at her own
discretion , that Elian should remain with his
Miami relatives, or be turned over to his father
only on condition that both father and son
remain in the United States. But she, of course,
is (as usual) playing Mr. Clinton's'game.
At this writing, it appears that the father 111llY
agree to stay in the United Srates pending the
appeal of the federal court's decision (which
could take from six to eight months).lf so, the
plight of' little Elian may not be quite so desperate as it appears. The Cuban government
clearly believes that juan Miguel GotlZ;IIecwiU
stick to his insistence that he wants to take
Elian back to Cuba. just to make sure, they are
keeping him in a. Cuban safe house in Washington, under the control of Cuban intelligence agents.
But six months is a long time, and wol!ld
afford Juan Miguel Gonzalez many opportupities to reflect, long and privately, on his sitl!ation. Nor would it be easy to seal him offliom
all outside contacts and influences.
If he were to announce, a few months from
now, that he wants to remain in the United
StateS with his present \vife, their baby and
Elian, it would be politically impossible for
Mr. Clinton to refuse his request.
.
And there would then open, not only" for
Elian but for his father, prospects for a far happier life than either of them ·can hope for
under the drab and deadly regime that Elian's
mother died trying to escape.

(William A. Rusher is a Distit~guished Fellow of
the Claremont ltJStitutc for tire Study of StatesmmJSilip and Political Philosophy.)

normal.
Within 24 hours: Chance of heart
attack decreases.
Within 48 hours: Nerve ending start
to regroup. Ability to taste an smell
improves.
' Within three days: Breathing is easier.
Within two to three months: Circulation improves. Walking becomes easier.
Lung capaciry increases up to 30 percent.
Within one to nine months: Sinus
congestion and shortness of breath

How Clinton deals ·with curse·if Castro
WASHINGTON - At 73, Fidel Castro
has a 9-0 record against American presidents.
Under Dwight Eisenhower, the CIA tried
"dirty iricl(s" as a weapon against the Cuban
revolutionary. Our agents tried spraying him
with a drug similar to LS9 prior to a radio
broadcast The idea was to make him sound
nuts. The CIA also tried to poison Castro's
Cigars with a chemical agent meant to cause
his beard to fall out, a preview of later American efforts to defoliate the Vietnam jungle.
With John E Kennedy's transition to
power, the CIA escalated its campaign. Mobsters Johnny Roselli and Sam Giancana were
recruited to carry out a gangland-style assassination of Castro. A hit man was to shoot him
down in the street a Ia "The Godfather."
In April of 1.961, Kennedy landed a band of
Cuban exiles, recruited liom Miami's Little
Havana; at the Bay of Pigs, then refused to
give them the air cover their CIA trainers had
led them to expect.
Kennedy and his brother Robert, the U.S.
attorney general, decided to get even through
a campaign, code-named Operation Mongoose. "There can be. no long-term living
with Castro as a neighbor," RFK wrote in a
secret memo. "Get off your ass about Cuba!"
. he barked at one CIA official. placing no lim·
irarions on how the job got done.
In !9()2, President Kennedy, operating with

the powerful counsel of his brother, forced
Soviet leader NiHta Khplshchev td n:.move
nuclear missiles trohl' Cul&gt;:L But a year later,
the 46-year-old ,Ameritan president was still
railing against Castro. ·
"A small band of conspirators has stripped
the Cuban people of their freedom and handed over the sovereignty of the Cuban !}arion
to forces beyond the hemisphere. This, and
rhis alone, divides us. As long as it is true,
nothing is impossible. Once this barrier is '
removed, everything is possible."
A week later, Kennedy himself was assassinated by a pro-Castro fanatic nam ed Lee Harvey Oswald.
. ..
In 1971, President Richard Nixon hired a
CIA veteran of the Bay of Pigs operation, E.
Howard Hunt, to run his "plumbers" opera. tion aimed at ending national security leaks.
Hunt's selling point was his bitter outrage at
Kennedy for failing to give the Bay of Pi~
forces th~ CIA-promised air covet.
A year later, Hunt and a group of anti-Castro Cubans broke into the Democratic
National Committee headquarters at the
Watergate. A week later, Nixon told his staff to
tell the CIA to block the FBI investigation of
the break-in because it would expose
Kennedy's role in undermining the Bw of
Pig&gt; operation.
That June 23rd conversation would

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

125 Third A..., Oolllpolla, Ohio

7-2342

MIDDLEPORT - A discussion of "The Greatest
Generation" by Tom Brokaw WoiS led by Ida Diehl at a
recent meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held
at the home of Leah Ord in Syracuse.
Diehl described the book as stories of individual
men and women who lived through the depression
years, followed by the turbulent years ofWorld War II,
and emerged as the generation .which went on to build
modern America. '
She gave some background information on the
· . author, who had been a network news anchor and
became acquainted with a number of heroes of the
war. While Brokaw covered the events of the 50th
·anniversary ofD-Day on the beaches ofNormandy, he
was tduched by the stories ofbravery and sacrifice that
he had heard liom those who remembered this special
time in history. He then determined that he would
. · preserve these stories and similar one; in book form.
· · Various stories of ordinary people and public figures
·· were discussed liom inside the book. Member shared
personal reminiscences that they or older family members had of the hatdships of the depression and the
conditions that seemed to toughen the generation that
, would .contribute so much to the war effort.
.
Other topics of the discussion were the shortages of
., the war years, women's C!ntry into the workplace and
· the s6rrow oflocal families who lost loved ones.
Each member of the discussion group shared a personal experience of how they or family members were
· affected by World War II. Betsy Parsons told an espe, cially interesting story of how she, as a small child, spent
"the years of 1939-1945 in Scotland with her mother.
· ·They had gone there to be with her' ailing grandmother and were unable to return home because of
· · the war.
: ' · The next meeting of the Literary Club will be at
: ' !he hbme of Sara Owen Wednesday .with Gay Perrin
· 'to review several books on the topic, "The unsung
Heroines ofWorld War II".
· : · Ideas. were discussed for next year's progran1s. Phyl·lis Hackett of Pickerington invited the group to hold
' - ~IS last meeting in May at her residence.

Star Grange enjoys
Easter program
SALEM CENTER - An April and Easter theme
w.as ,carried out in a program presented by Lecturer

'HARDBALL':

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~ Today isWednesday,April12,the 103rd
~ days left in the year.

ADVICE

Brokaw's book reviewed
at Uterary dub
RUSHER'S VIEW:

become the "smoking gun " ofWatergate, the
notorious tape that would force his resignation in 1974.
Fidel Castro hel.ped topple another American president in 1980 by dumping 125,000
refugees on U.S. beaches. The Arkansas governor and future president Bill Clinton was also
defeated for re-election that year when thousands of these "Marie! boatlift" Cubans rioted
at a resettlement camp.
· The Elian CJonzalez episode could either
continue this presidential curse or end it.
Watch how the man in the White House
has let Attorney General Janet Reno take the
blame for this situation, especially from antiCastro Cubans here in tlte United . States,
while allowing his 2000 presidential candidate
AI Gore to position himself as a critic. The;:.,•,
a strong' chance that President Clinton's cr:tfty
backroom handling of the crisis wiU free him
for a far grander deal with Fidel Castro than
this troubling reunification of a 6-year-old
with his father.
•
· If any U.S. leader can do it, it's our Bill, the
6rst president in five decades who can match
Fidel in both craftiness and luck. ·
•

Vicki Smith at·the recent meeting of Star Grange 778
held at the hall.
Readings were given by Opal Dyer, Tom lllitley,
and Janis Macomb&lt;;r. Games ' were played. It was
announced that a tuberculosis clinic will be held Tuesday at the Grange Hall, 4:30 to 6:30 p,m.
Eldon Barrows, legislative agent, reported on
financing ·for education and gun control. Macomber,
deaf actiVitie; chairman, noted that she will have a representative liom Belltone present at the May 20 meet. ing. She also noted that the grange ladies have been
· working on the ABC quilts. A junior sleep over is being
·planned for April 14 and 15.
Members were reminded to take items for the local
food bank to the June meeting. At the April 15 meeti~g there will be practice. for the first degree, and a fun
night beginning with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.OL

zoo M••• st, Point........., w.va.l
304-4175-1333

'

Wednesday, April 1.2.

decrea se . ·C ilia that sweep debr is fro~
your lun~ grow bac k. Energy increases.
Within one year : Ex cess risk of coronary he art d isease is half that of a per'
son who smokes.
Within two years: H eart attac k risk
drops to near normal.
Witl!in five years: Lung cancer death
rate for an ave.rage former pac k-a- day
smoker decreases by almost half Stroke
risk is reduced. Risk of mouth, throat
and esophageal cancer is half that of a
smoker.
Within 10 years: Lung cancer death
rate is similar to that of a person who
does not smoke. The pre-cancerous
fl
cells are replaced.
Within 15 years: Risk of coronary
heart disease is the same as a person
who has never smoked .
Dear Ann Landers: I just finished
reading the letter from "Deaf ir
Chatsworth, Calif.," and would like to
say something to that )llan's family

Charle• Wesley Simon!' Ill

- .. ,.

I

;.

2000

1 ,

1

•WHAT lN T H E WO R LD IS T HL she is som e how at fau lt. Tell t hem, Ann .
MATT ER WIT H YO U PEO PL E'
PROUD O F ,MO M IN CEN This ma n has a hearing problem and TRAL ILLIN O IS
his wife and children yell at him and
DEAR ILLINOIS: I'll be t she will
igno re him as if the hear ing los is his be pro ud of you when she read1 your
'fault. Wh en my mother began to lose
letter in the paper. And well she should
her heari11g seve ral years ago I also
became impat ient wi th her, and lost my be. Those w ho have a hea rin g defi cientemper, bu t o nly fo r a sho rt while. ·tt cy need com passio n and unde rstanding.
didn't take lo ng for me to rea lize that I Th ank you for extending both.
Do you have q uestions abo ut sex, but
should trea t her as wo uld like to be
treated , becaus eventuall y, I will proba- no one to tal k to? Ann Landers' boo kbly b e in her shoes.
let, " Sex and the Tee nage r," is frank and
For th e last I 0 years, I have practiced . to th e poi nt. Send a self-addressed.
patience and gentleness. It ha s not been lon g, bu si ness-s ize envelope and a
easy, bu t it w orks. I now speak louder check or m oney o rd er for $3.75 (this
and enu nc iate my words more clearly. I
in cl ude s pos tage ana handling) to:
would not dream of becoming angry
Teens, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
with her wh en she asks m e to repe at
11 562, C hicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
myself.
Those who live with a parent who is Ca nada, send $4.55.) To find out more
hard of h earing should show respect. about Ann Landers and read her past
My moth er cannot help her co ndition, columns, visit the Creators Syndicate
and it would be cruel to treat her as if web page ta www. creators. com .

BIRTHDAY

meeting. held
POMEROY - Ritualistic work, installation of new
officers, and recognition for service highlighted the
73rd annual meeting of District 13, Daughters of
America, held recendy at the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
Attended by 69 members, the meeting opened
with seating of the district office~, the entry ofJoAnn
Ritchie, district deputy, escorted by color bearers,
Everett and Charlotte Grant, and introduction by
Esther Smith, district captain.
Presentations were made to Ritchie following the
invocation by Erma Cleland and a welcome by Mary
Jo Barringer, both of Chester Council. Response was given by Norma Farris, state vice councilor, District
15, Dayton. Ritchie then introduced the National
Board. officers and committees and the State Board of
Officers, who were escorted in by the color bearers
and escorts. Each was presented a gift.
Escorted into the room and recognized· were
national officers, Carolyn Wise, junior past councilor;
Ruth Shannon,judiciary committee; Beverly Cefoldo,
deputy councilor; Lynda Walton, inside sentinel; Irene
Hinton, finance committee; Marge Sillanpa, ways and
means committee.
State officials. presented were Viola Young. councilor; Norma Farris, vice councilor; Bertha Stapleton,
council secretary; Barbara Pelc, council treasurer.
Ritchie introduced the state officers and committees liom District 13 and presented each one a gift.
Included were Esther Smith, past state councilor; jean
Welsh, state credential committee; Helen Wolf, state
legislative committee; Esther Harden, past five· year ,
district deputy; Bette Biggs, past five year district
deputy.
Bette l!iggs, district councilor and general chairman
for the meeting, was presented a gift by Guiding Star
124. Ritchie introduced Helen Wolf, district pianist;
Everett and Charlotte Grant, district olor bearers and
.
Esther Smith, district captain.
Charlotte VanMeter was initiated and welcomed as
a new member by the initiatory team with Esther
Smith as team captain.
·
·
· Following·a luncheon, the Roach Brothers of Rutland presenting a program. A memorial service was
held by District 13 in memory of a deceased member,
Ethel Arbaugh.
A flag drill, reading about the flag, and, the pledge
were given, a silver shower WoiS held with Delores
Wolfe,Jean Welsh, Doris Grueser and Thelma White in
bunny costumes. Addendas were held for Viola Young,
state councilor, and Ritchie, district deputy. Esther
Smith dressed Ritchie in an apron and chef's hat and
each member of District 13 presented her with items
for her new bakery shop.
Thirty-two natio~ai and state vtsttlllg members
were receivro officially and. each presented a gift.
The state council gave her evaluation of the district's
work. Ritcllie installed new district officers including
Bette Biggs, junior past councilor; Nathan Biggs, aw&gt;ciate junior past councilor; Jean Welsh; councilor;
Delores Wolfe, associate councilor; Mary Jo Barringer,
vice councilor, Julie CurtiS, associate vice councilor;
Opal Eichinger, conductor; Mary Moose, warden;
Doris Grueser, inside sentinel, Laura Mae Nice, outside
sehtinell]anice Zwilling, sectetary; Opal Hollon, treasure; and Betty Young, trustee.

POMEROY - T. Sgt. Charles
Wesley Simons Ill · will be
inducted into the National Law
Enforcement Officers Memorial
in Washington, D.C. The memorial is located on E Street,
betweelf"' Fourth and- Fifth
Streets NW, near . Judiciary
Square.
'
A candlelight vigil, which is
open to the public, which will
take placl' on May 13 at 8 p.m.
The 37 year-old TSgt.
Simons, known as Wes to family
and friends , was a former residents o( Middleport. His mother and sister reside in Indianapolis, Ind. He served in the
U.S. Air force for 18 years.

-

I

D of A distrid

MILLTARY NEWS

(Cirris Mattlrews, chief of tire San Franifsco
Examiner~ Washingron · Br&lt;reau, is host of "H4rdball"·on CNBC atrd MSNBC cable channels. :(;he
1999 edition of "Hardball" has been recently [l&gt;(blis/ted by,1imchstotie Books. )
" .~

111 Court St, Pomeroy, OhiO
740oti2-21H

Page AS

Reader asks Ann to point out the,b.'ehtjits of not smoking

SOCIETY NEWS

p

J
~
oint Pkasant's State Theater is up for sale. Perhaps it's
~
another sign of tlte times as smaller movie showcases
~
yield to the multi-scre~n concept, guaranteed to pro, . ducc a quick return when a blockbuster film is released.
~ •
But the State stands as a symbol of
~
how people with a commitment to
communiry have giveh the theater a
~ COtntnUnfty
new life. As the home of the Point
Pleasant Artists Series, its srage has
become an oudet for cultural presenta:• orutn or
tions.
cultural
The State has followed an example
'
seen with older theaters and movie
•
palaces throughout the Ohio Valley.
Huntington's Keith-Albee, the Paramount i11 Ashland, Ky., and the Ariel in Gallipolis have all been
.- refurbished to bring music, theater and other examples of the
' arts to the public.
That's why we urge the Stare's future owner to allow it to
continue as the Artists Series' home.
·, Every community ne~ds a forum for cultural expression. A
' concert or play produced live -carries an immediacy and
excitement that television, video or COs don't always capture.
As with the Ariel,lo~:al thespians get an opportuniry to show
their talent by using the srage for their own productions. Local
· bands with contemporary sound share the facility with a symphony and the classics.
•
The tastes may be different, but a cultural center in a small
community is vital to exptcssion and learning.
The educational value has been proved time and again as the
~ Ariel has played host to numerous lectures, plays and presen~ rations for students.
Showing kids that a theater has another purpose thah just
: showing movies has a place· in the learning eJCP.erience. It also
exposes them, as it docs their parents, to a creativity they don't
.see and hear regularly.
: Don't rake our word for it. Discover it for yourself. Both the
!Srate and Ariel have a regular slate of presenrations each sea: son. Be it a lecture, concert or play, take the time to experience a live performance at either facility.
: Your support of activities at the Srate and Ariel are critical
' to their continuation. Th~ presence of these showcases is a sign
of a progressive community. Without them, We&lt;" will be all the
poorer.

•

OPEN

.Cu~tural centers have a place
in our communities .

Eve

Daily Sentinel

Dear Ann Landers: My ni ece is
t~ying to quit smoking, and is having a
terrible time. I told her you once printed a lette r describing wh at happens to
the body after someone stops smoking.
It made a strong impression on me, and
I'm sure it did on many others, too.Will
you please print .it again to encourage
my niece to keep trying? She is discouraged, and ready to give up. - DEE
DEE IN DETROIT
'DEAR DEE DEE: With pleasure I
was told after reading this column many
people did quit smoking. Here it is:
According to the American Cancer
Society, as soon· as you snuff out the last
cigarette, your body will begin a series
of physiological changes.
. Within 20 minutes: Blood pressure
body temperature and pulse rate wil
drop to normal.
Wi.thin eight hours: Smoker's breath
disappears. Carbon monoxid level in
blood drops , and oxygen leve rises to

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

L.erry Boyer
Advertlelng Director

IJ'the

•

'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2158 • Fex: 892·21117

Charlene Hoeflich
GeMI'II Meneger

~ Jhe

.·

The Daily Sentinel

Charlee W. Govey
Publleher

'

•

While stationed at Nellis AFB in Las Vegas, Nev., he as a member of the 99th Security Forces
Squadron . On Nov. 17, 1000,
while trying to elevate panic
and traffic congestion during · a
bomb scare on base, he was
struck by a vehicle causing brain
death on Nov. 19.
The Mem~rlal in Washington, D.C. was dedicated in 1991
by President George Bush. It
honors America's federal, state
and local law enforcement officers who los~ their lives in the
line of duty.
This year, 275 individuals will
be so honored.

· Jordan Chadwell
REEDSVILLE - Jordan
Chadwell, son of Bryan and
Patsy Chadwell of Reedsville,
observed his first birthday on
Jan . 22 with a party at the
Masonic Lodge in Chester.
The theme of the party
was "Tigger 11 and ice-crearn
and cake were served. In
addition to his parents, others
attending were his sister,
Brooke; his grandparents ,
Cindy Aeiker, Vic Laughery,
Pat Aeiker and Jim and Cindy
Chadwell . His great-grandmother, Mary Chadwell, and
his aunts and uncles, Patrick

FLASHBACK
(AP) Spoken five years
ago:
"I had to gain 25 pounds
for the role. Thar' was th e
prerequisite; they didn't want
to give me the part straight
off because of that. I campaigned for a year before I
actually got cast." - Actress
Minnie Driver, on her role
in "Circle of Friends."

BIRTH

and Alici a Aeiker, .Penny
Aeiker, Pat, Roger,Jenifer and
R ebecca Chadwell. ,
Also attending the party
were Terri and Colton Sigman, Roy, Crystal and Sabrina
Bailey, Regina and Andrew
Theiman, Daphne Young,
Bob and Dove White, Shelly,
Jacob and Emily Combs,
Mindy
Sampson,
Maria
Frecker, Jimmy Tracy, Wyatt
Carter and Savannah and
Christian Speelman.
Sending gifts were his
grandparents Patty Harris and
Bob H oce. His great-grandparents Mae Jordo n and Betty
Harns.
Also sending gifts Were
Doris Jackso n, Tammy Capehart, Kelly and Ryan Tripp.
Keitha Whitlat ch, Bob Hunt,
Lisa and Corbett Catlett ,
Clint ~nd Louis Pitzer, Sharon
and Susie Swain, Jeanie and
Casey Ridenour and Kattie
and Zack Stentz.

Sailor Warden
RACINE - Brian and !Jolly
Warden of Racine announce the'
birth of a daughter, Sailor, born
Feb. 16, at Holzer Medical Center. He weighed seven pounds,
four ounces .
Grandparents are Bob and Kay
Warden and f11ike and Mindy
Hill. all of Raci~&gt;e .
Mr. and Mrs. Warden have
another child, a son, Crew.

Car fti.,leJIII.I!

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Engine Diagnosis, Tune-ups, 011 Changes
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1/4 mile down river from Pomeroy Bridge
992-4484 or 992-3011

�•

P~~ge A 6 ~

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12, 2000

•

•

Meigs LOcal School Distrid announces honor.rolls
'

'

POMEROY- Meigs Local School District honor rolls for the third
nine-weeks grading period were announced today.
Students making a grade ofB or above in all of their subjects to be listed on the honor roll were as follow.;:

J

!

Poole, Brittany Powers,Arnanda Priddy. Joshua Ray. Jessica Rosier, Pamela
Rupe,Jessica Smith, Kindra Snouffer,Leann Stewart, Miranda Stewart, Ryan
Stobart,Abrnnda Storms, Brandi Thoams, Holley Williams,Jotdan Williasfl\,
Bry.an Wilson, Angela Wilson.
·

Rutland Elementary

Meigs High School

Bradbury Elenaeutary ·

.Grade 4: Alexa Venoy, all As; Austin Dunfee, Robert Foreman, Tyler lit- · Kindergarten: Brooke Buckley, Cody Hysell, Steven Mahr, Holly
McGrath, Tanisha McKinney, Ashley Woodard, Miranda Tanner, all As;
tie_, lesley Preece, Casey Smith and lacey Stobart.
' Grade 5: Valerie Carpenter, Btittany Haning, Chalsie Manley. Christy Chelsey Earls, Karl Gueltig,Jacob Nitz, Sharaya White, Jesse Wiseman.
Grade 1 (Fetty): Austin Adkins, Shellie Bailey, Whitney Hicks, TYson
Miller, David Poole, Amanda Schartiger, Alex Si,&lt;;On, Whitney Smith, Greg
Thy)or and Michelle Weaver.
'
Morris, Braden Prater, Austin Sayre, all As; LindSay Hysell, Josh Miller, Justin
Nitz, Colton Stewart.
.
· Grade 1 (Whan): Cameron Bolin, Carlee Smith, all As; Suretta Cade,
Adam Elliott, Michelle Ha)ey, Aaron Maxson, Amanda Meadows, Josh
Kindergarten: Ashley King, Zach Sayre and Torin Tindongan, all As; Stone.
Grade 2: Micki Barnes, Benjamin Hood, Bradley Hood, all As; Dusty
Chase Payne, Michelle Satterfield and Brittany Wheeler.
, . Grade 1: Markita Bottitta,Austin Clarida and Morgan HoWard, all As; Eads, Corey Elliott, Kayla Graham, Pamela Kessinger, Samuel McCall,Jessi' ·
r::e'ah Barley, James Black, Ashley Edwards, Zack Jeffers, Julia Lantz, Tiffany ca Shelton.
~e and Sieanna Ohlinger.
Grade 3 (Snowden): Clayton Bolin, lilly Jacks, all As; Morgan Lentes.
: Grade 2: Dawn Bissell, !an Bullington, Justin Cotterill, Michael King,
Grade 3 (Gillilan): Wyatt Ball, Maria Meadows,Jason Morris, Eugen~
: Christy lewis and Hailey Williams, all As; Becca Donohue,Alysha Gerlaugh, Patterson.
Grade 4: Jacob Barnes, Emily Davis, K~ri Priddy, all As; JUtie Doczi,
: Cody Hill, Dean Hivley. Summer King, Justin Savage and Zach Young.
:
Grade 3: Elsa Gardner, Mason Metts and JoannahTindongan, all As; Bethany Gibbs, Brittany Varian, Cassady Willford.
Grade 5: Keilab Jacks, all As; Bethany King, Joshua Taylor.
: Christopher Bishop, Travis Hicks, Bethany Lee and Joshua Price.
LD/DH Primary: Terry Jewell, all As;TJ. Conlin.
•
Grade 4: Talisha Beha, Doug Herdman, Chelsey Noel, Brittany Preast,
· Daniel Runyon, and Kaylene Slater.
LD/DH Intermediate: John Landaker,Josh Partlow, Bobbi Smith.
· Grade 5: Daniel Bookman, all As; Cory Dill, AJ. Haning, Sarah Lantz
. and Josh Williams.
·
CC Class: Joseph Foley, Gabrielle Lester and Aaron Roberts.
Kindergarten: Shauna Bare, Paige Barrett, Austin Kini- Kassandra
Mullins, AU As; Stephany Durham, Benton McCloud, Mickayla Notting'
•
ham, Russell Scarbury.
Grade 1: Samantha Goble,Jessica Rowley, Nichole Wise, AU As; Shan'• Kindergarten: Iaynee Herman, JR. Jewell, Kris Wilson, Justin Hodge,
:1\shley Lane, Clint McHenry, DiJuan Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb, Stephen non Bare, Shawn Bare.
Grade 2: Joshua Glover, Annisha Kopec, AU As; Jordan Myers, David
; Ban:us, Colten Bell, Zach Fink, Shelby Fitchpattick, Marlee Hotlinan,
: Stephanie LeMaste r, Catherine Gleason, Anita Warth, Cady Carpenter, Grim, Gabriel Hayes, Todd Johnson, Dustin McDaniel, Karen Nottingham,
; Kimberly Curl, Michael Davis, Ben Reed,Travis Tackett, Tiffany McKinney, Craig Saxton.
Grade 3: Chelsea Carpenter, All As; April Oiler.
•l&lt;t'athan Mohler, Kayla Shane, Cassidy Thcker, Charlie Barrett, Suzy Cox,
' McKenna Warner,Jefliey Kimes, Kir.;ten McGuire, Travis Mitchell.
Grade 4: Natane Adams,Joshtla Burnem, Corinna Cross.
' · Grade 1: Valerie Conde, Tyler Cundiff, Nikki Davis, Taylor Dowler, Kyle
Grade 5: R y.m Barnett, Samantha Shontz, Niki Stitt.
' Jobnson,Jonathan McCartbv,Shannon McLaughlin, Misty Morrison, Ryan
Paync,Joseph Powell, Dan Stewart,Jose'Wbidatch, Brandon Bachner, Olivia
Bevan, Britta Rowers, Colt Kerr,!Uyla Lemaster, Dustin Nash, Kyle Rus; sell, Tanner Tackett.
,
Kindergarten: Couft!ley Baker, Desirae Cundiff, Emily Davis, Taylor
· Grade 2: Tyler Andrews, Andrew Blankenship, Megan Dunfee, Jacob Gilkey. Emalee Glass, Kaitlin Russell, Katrina Shockey, Hillary Stone, Justin
. bunn,Aurumn Ebenbach,Ashley Good, Meg.mn Halley,Justin Kimes,Jes- Young. ·
. sica Might, Jennifer Payne, Nicki Smith, Tricia Smith, Cayla Taylor, Bubby
Grade 1: Alaine Arnold, Stevie Bunce, Alex Day, Heath Dettwiller,
Wills, Kristine Davis, Brittany Frazier, Tyler Fry, Amanda Goode, Michael Racbael Eakins, Justin Ellis, William Folmer, Miranda Grueser, Nicholas
Gomez, Cody St;nith, Kelsey Wilson.
Ingels. Danielle King, Samantha King, Marissa McAngus, Charlie N(!land,
Grade 3: Wil)ie 'Barcus, Adnan Bolin, Chelsea Davis, Jennifer Fife, Stephanie Smith, Connor Swartz.
.
Robert Grover, Nicole Haley, Christopher Kimes, Zach Schwab, Chassidy
Grade 2: Jeremy Ash, Darby Gilmore, Scott Kerlnedy. Breana Hemsley,
Wills, Jaime Simpson,Caleb Bevan, Chad Bonnett, Tara Capehart, Hailey Amber Ohlinger.
· Ebersbach, laura Gheen, Amber Hockman, Lian Hoflinan, Cara Lawless, ·
Grade 3: Jamie Bailey. Crockett Crow,J.T Evans, Amanda Gilkey, Mor· Nikki Lawson, Caitlin Leslie, Courtney M~, Ashley McHenry. Jared gan Kennedy, Andrew O'Bryant, Caitlin Swartz.
. McKinney. Seth Perry,Tori Sullivan, Tess Thomas.
Grade 4: Amy Barr, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy. Kirk legar,
• ID/DH: Chaney - Charles Fitchpatrick, Mariah Hill, Sidney little, Joseph Scheimann, Aaron Story. Eric Wood.
,
: Ashley Smith,JeremyTiemeyer,Josh Tiemeyer, Jessica Wagner, Shawn HudGrade 5: Clayton Blackston, Shauna Clark, Andy Garnes, Andy MeAn. nail.
gus, Bradley Ramsburg, Dru Reed, Jennifer Smith, and Caitlin. Williamson.
ID/DH: ~rry Brandon Clark, Patricia Clark, Joyel Grady, Josh
: Fetty, Nate sw.m, Carrie-White.
.

ltanisQnville Eleii&amp;eldary

Salem Elementary

Middleport Elementary

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c ·.o MMUNITY
·c 'ALENDAR
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• WEDNESDAY,
~~ v
•
MIDDLEPORT - Middle:; por.t l:iterary Club, 2 p.m.Wednes-- ·
: day, home of Sarah oWen. Gay
• ~rijl to present "The Unsung
; Heroines ofWodd War II."

AFil.

EAST MEIGS _;_Eastern Local
:· Band BOosters, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
: in the band room.
POMEROY- Planning meet. ing for Pomeroy High School's
. 50th reunion class, Wednesday, 7
; p.m at Carleton School, Syracuse.
f

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' LONG BOTTOM - Thpper.;
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thunday,
7:30 p.m. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Marajean
Butcher, ·coordinator of Main
Street program in Gallia County,
will speak to the Middleport
Community
Development
Authority Thursday, 7:30 p.m in
council chamben.
FRIDAY, April 14

EAST MEIGS Return
:· · POMEROY ....:._ Preceptor Beta Jo~than Meigs Chapter, DAR,
Friday, 1 p:m. at the Eastern Ele:: Beta &lt;!:'hapter, Beta Sigma Phi,
mentary Library. Eastern choir to
~ Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Lutherhave a musical program.
: an Church, Carol Adams and
·: Ruth Rif!le, hostesses.
.
POMEROY - V A Medical
Center, Chillicothe, at Veterans
:' CARPENTER - ' Special
Services Office, Pomeroy, Friday
: meeting, Columbia· township
10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 2 p.m. to
: Trustees, Thursday, · 1:30 p.m.
enroll vet~rans for health care. Tal&lt;e
~ Columbia Volunteer Fire Depart'
.
. proof of military servic~.

The
Oardell.
Seed Is
Here·An·d
So-ls
SPRINCI
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

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SPECIAL • SPECIAL
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APY*

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(rate of 6.25%) accurate as of March 31,2000. A penalty will be imposed for early withdrawal.

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Your Bank#'-t~···
.,Fo
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Member FDIC

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1 211 Wilt Sfi:Ond St.
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P.O. Box 626
•· Pomerpy, OH 45769
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740-992·2136

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Fanners Bank

&amp; Savings Company

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12 PK.

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(REG.OR .:
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Hot Dogs •••·••••••••

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porne roy 0 hio 457 69
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The Dai'Iy.Senti•n·el

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Subscril¥ tod&lt;ly.
992-21$6
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· THyRSDAY, AprD 13

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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IFROM:
I
L---------------------------~
Mai'} Of Brmg
· J'll VJ.OUf Ell t ry Form T0 The .

~

STORE HOURS
.• POMEROY - The Meigs
, County Jury Conunission recentMonday thru
ly selected prospective jurors for
Sunday
. the May 2000 grand jury term.
8AM·IO PM
· Those selected for the venire
298 SECOND ST.
,were; James Richard Acree,
Accepts Credit Cards
· Pomeroy; Mary . L. Whaley, Middleport; Flossie G. Bush, Racine;
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
.Marjorie Viola Knotts, Langsville;
PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 15, 2000 .
,Phyllis N. May, Pomeroy; Cathy
Jane Rowe, Pomeroy; Marvin
Keith Wisecup, Middleport;
• SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
Shannon Lee Scott, Middleport; . DOUBLE COUPONS
Richard Le.e Fetty, Rutland;
Patricia L. Leach, Pomeroy; Jason
;R, Baldwin,, Albany; Donna J.
:Oassylva, Rutland; Linda Lou
•
iAcree, Middleport; Daniel F.
;Short, ·Pomeroy; Amanda Rae
:Wassel, Long Bottom; Clin~on
:Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Matthew
,:Scott Ridenour, Long Bottom .
: linda
louise
Wilson,
Reedsville; Amb~r D. Thomas,·
~yracuse; Jenn!fu:-K-,_Carman, ·
Middleport; Robert Allen Tripp,
iJteedsville ; Roy E. Miller,
fomeroy; DeUa Jane Milliron,
fomeroy; Patrick V~nce Johnson,
1tacine; Jessie J. Hoffman,
'Langsville; Carl Edward Kennedy,
,Rutland; Blaine E. · Qualls,
Pomeroy; Renee D. Barton,
·~omeroy; . Carl . Edward Klaiber,
l ong Bottom; Sharon Kay Baker,
R acine;"Malane Bladc,'Pomeroy;
' .
~Ioria J. Starcher,
Long Bottom;
\Edward T. Baer, Pomeroy;Wilmer
:E. Halfhill, Racine; Gregory K.
FRESH PORK BONELESS
Lee, Middleport; Pansy Mae
LB.
jones, Racine; Katheleen A. Pey~on, Rutland; Ramona E.Roush,
ftacine; Kevin P. Holter, Racine;'
'(l.my Michelle Wagner, Pomeroy;
Ll.
Reba 0. Roush, Racine: Leah
·:Mae Dixon; Albany.
; : Samuel Bruce May, Rutland;
~lc Y, Bonnaud, Albany: Robert
12
J\ozeU Johnaon, Pomeroy; ]tmea .
~ward Lucaa, R.aclnt;.Donna R.
L•dbetter, Racine; Debra Sue
Jkadf'ord, Racine; Charles B.
$i.vatzel, Pomeroy: Donnla R.
12 OZ. PI
~otton, Middleport; Wilma Lou·
parker, Long Bo~tom: Golda.Faye
Radcliffe, Syracuse; Deborah
McKnight, Middleport; Charles
A. Kitchen, Middleport; Mary
Margate Weaver, Racine: Margaret M. Guinther, Racine; DarieU Ryan Norris, Racine; Randall
M. Jackson, Coolville; Earl C .
Kauff Jr., Racine; Charles R .
Cozart, Portland; John Alfred
Anderson: Pomeroy; MitcheU D.
Allen, Syracuse; Curtis I;&gt;. Swick,
Langsville; Raymond. L. Oliver,
Racine.
Shawn Louis Bush, Racine;
Sherman Buskirk Jr., Middleport;
Dorothy Mae Davis, Langsville;
Michael Lee Will, Pomeroy;
Karen J. Phalin, Pomeroy; Joann
Newsome,. Pomeroy; Brian Keith
Bailey, Long Bottom; Eddie M.
Turley, Racine; Richard J. Davis,
Syracuse; Mark David Porter,
Racine; Ronald · Dale mith,
Pomeroy; Ruth M. Underwood,
Po~roy; Stev~n W. Hudson,
Middleport; Shirley J. P'riddy,
Pomeroy; Jeffrey M. Kimes,
Reedsville; Mildred K. Arnold,
Racine; Ali,ce M. Wolfe, Racine;
Howard L. Flinn Jr., Portland;
Brian Keith Bailey, Long Bottom;
Rhontla Jean Frank, Pomeroy;
Betty Lou Gilky, Middleport;
Myrtle Quillen, Middleport; Lisa
Vi111inia Lewis, Pomerqy; Cynthia
Jo Sandy, L~ngsville; Susan Lynn
Jones, Pomeroy; Tammy L. Hysell,
Pomeroy; Shai:on M. Hatcher,
Portland; . Robert . C. Salser,
Racine; Tennis Junior Edmiston,
Langsville;·
Mary · Eleanor
Osborne, Pomeroy; Gregory L.
Vining, Middleport; Kevin C.
Lewis, Albariy; Perry Allen Smith,
Racine; Steven K. Call, Middleport; Phyllis J. Clark, Pomeroy;
__
Robert Allen Lemaster, Albany.

· CENTER CUT BONELESS

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ment. Discussion about grants.

LONG BOTTOM - Hytnn
; SYAACUSE - Open bouse at
sing, F'aith Full Gospel Church,
~ Syracuse Elementary School, 4 to
Long Bottom, Friday, 7 p.m.
·: 6 p.m. Wedn~y for viewing fifth .
Siqgers, Jim Blair and the
t_ graden research projecis.
t• ...
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Gospelaires. Fellowship to follow.
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Deadline Is
Friday, April21, 2000:

!GREETING:

DEW
PRODUCTS, 7 UP,.
DR. PEPPER,
MUG ROOTBEER,
ORANGE SLICE,
LIPTON BRISK

PO· WE ll 'S

Center Cut Roast ••• ~

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•TO·
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nethCarsey,Benjamin Collins,JessicaCudinan,JaroeeDavis,MaeganDodO
son,Jennifer Dunn, Andrea Fetty, Jesse Gates, Heidi Gi!mo..,,Ashley Halley,
Nichole Harper,William Hawk, Raymond Hess, Darin Horn,Jessica Howell, Randall Hudson, Michele Imboden, Aubrie Kopec, Jonathan Larkins,
Sarah Lee, SteVen Maj&lt;;&gt;r, Rachel McDaniel, Jonathan McDonald, Christina
Miller, Gary Moore,
Sheena M,orris, Bobbi Napper, Dallielle Nyt;, Erica ·
, .......

&amp;

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ABC Widgets

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To Annie Gray:

10 Main Street
Avondale

A.West, Pomeroy, $83, expired registration; Teresa G. Dressler, Columbus, $83',
public intoxication; Rodney A. King,
Shade, $63, prohibited left turn ; An gel
A. Ervin, New Straitsville, S83, window
tint; Charles C. Ord , New Hav en
W.Va., $63 , assured clear distanc;;
Thomas Petit, Barboursville, W Va.,,
$63, assured clear distance; Joseph S.
Crispen, New Haven , W.Va ., $83, red
light ; Vonda S. Herman, Middlep ort,
S66, speeding; Joshua K . Tolliver,
Pomeroy, $83 ; traffic light.

.WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Show Your Thanks To Your
Secretary With A Thank You Ad .
In The April26 Edition OfThe
Daily Sentinel!

Keep up the good work!
Your Bos5; AI Jenkins

j·ury

.venire · isted

to our Secretaries for aJob Well·Done!

Grade 6: Wesley Ault, Joshua Bolin,Tra~ Bu,tcher, Samantha Cole,
Bryce Davis, Michael Durst, James Ellis, Ashley Engle, Carita Gardner,
Rachael Gardner, Anna Hartenbach, Cody Hysell, Brittney Jacks, Joshua
Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy. Taryn lentes, Kayla McCarthy, Autumn
Mclaughlin, Brooke O'Bryant, Timothy Shane,Jordan Shank, Abby Stewart, Whitney ,Thoene, Scott Tobin, Leonard Vann1eter, ChristopberVanreeth,
Joshua Venoy.Jacob Venoy, Melia Whan.
.
Grade 7: Grant Arnold, Emily Ashley, Renee Bailey,Jefliey Baugbrnan,
Jerri Bentley.Jeremy Blackston, Eric Bumem,Anna Butcher, Cliflon Chandler, April Coppick, Chatles Davis, Justin Demoss, Jason Demoss, Trevor
Depoy, Rosanna Dillan:l, Jodi Donohue, Patrick Dowell, Justine Dowler,
Peggy Duff, Jereriliab E!lgers, Eddie Fife, William Frazier, William Garnes,
Megan Garnes, Zachary Gibbs, AsWey Graham, Brandon Grover, Annber .
Handley. Randy Hart,Kayla lcenhower,l\aron Ihle,Asbliegll Kimes, Madison King, Amanda King, Matthew Krawsczyn, Cassie Lee, Megan Mayes,
Carrie Michael, Heath Nelson, Carl Noel, Samantha Pierce, Amber Pien:e,
Katie Reed, Kin1berly Reynolds, Anna Sayre, Adam Snowden, Eric Sydenstticker, Robert Varjan, Dustin Vaughan, Brooke Venoy, Cassie Watson,
Chesrer Wigal, Sarah Wilkes, Jenna Wilt, Cassandra ~ndsor, Jennianne
Young,Jillianne Young.
Grade 8: Jeremy Banks, Tyler Barnes, David Boyd,Jaclyn Bradbury,
Nathan Brickles, Karn Buffington, Nicole Burman, Nicole Butcher, Ken-

.

Gr~nd

•

A bouquet' to say thank you.

speeding; Joseph M. Wilson, Middleport, $63 and com, open c·ontainer in
motor vehicle.
Joseph S. Vinning, Pomeroy, $200
and $20, 10 days in jail, fine and jail
suspended if valid operators license
obtained within 90 days,. ALii suspension, $75. and costs, fictitious' tags; Gary
Fitzwater, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
resisting arrest, $113 and costs, public
intoxication; Teresa L. Farr, Leon,
W.Va., $20 and costs, expired registration.
Thomas D. Hodge, Mt. Alto, W.Va.,

l100. and com and 180 days in jail, 150 Arthur, Athens, $66, speeding; Jennifer
days suspended and 30 days house K.Johnso.n, Racine, $74, speeding, S83,
arrest and 2 years probation, failure to traffic light violation; Pamela K. Neece,
comply with police officer, $63 and Middleport, $71, speeding; Joseph E.
costs, fictitious tags, $100 and costs, 180 Ohlinger, Mason, W.Va., $133, public
days in jail, 150 days suspended and 30 intoxication; Tabitha Watson, Pomeroy,
days house arrest concurrent with fail- $83, failure to . comply; Tessa R. Vanure to comply with officer, driving meter, West Columbia, W.Va ., $83, no
under court suspension; Bonita Conley, operators license, $83, fictitious tags ;
Pomeroy, $100 and com, fine suspend- Ke ith Day, Pomeroy, $83, failure to
ed, S225 restitution, driving over fire- comply; Cbr~tine P. Palmer, $69,
hose; Jerry A. Walker, Letart, W.Va., speeding; Hannah J. Ungaro, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, drug abuse.
$83 , failt1re to comply; Tammera K.
Forfeiting bonds were William R. Arnold, Pomeroy, $66, speeding; Debra

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·ongratulatmns ~~~
.

Meigs NUddle Sdtool

&gt;I

POMEROY - Pomeroy J'lagistrate
L. Scott Powell fined 12, while 19 others forfeited bonds in court on Monday.
Fined were Joshua David, Racine,
com only, expired registration; Stephen
Clark, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, disor~erly by intoxication; Roger Partlow,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs,10 days jail
suspended if valid operaton license
withi_n 90 days and 2 years probation,
F.R A suspension; David Park, Syracuse,
$43 and costs, squealing tires: Homer
D. Klingenberg, Athens, $46 and costs,

Scar-

.

Kindergarten: Cheyenne Beaver, Darienne Bet2ing, Bryan Burt, Olivia
Cleek, Christina Colburn,Wesley Davis, David Dillard,Andy Fairchild, Bre. anna Gheen. Raymond Granat, Jessica Grant, Ronnie Haning, Morgan
,· Johnson, Taylor Jones, Meranda King, Summer Knight, Samuel Levacy,
· ~randon Marcinko, Cody Matto.;,Jeffiey ROush, Zachary Sheets, Cayelynn
Smith, Heather Stewart, Kaylee Terry, Da id Wittig, Tori Wolfe, Harley
Young,Vic;toria Zeigler.
Grade 1: Zachary Barton, Brianna Buffington, Hannah Cleek, Brett
· Curtis, Seleena Dowell, Nathaniel . Gilltey, Westoo Hickman, Lee-Anna
: Hudson, Brandon. King, Billy McAdams, James McDonald, Johnathan
: Michael, Melinda Miller, Jeremiah Myers, Chelsea Patterson, Ravenne
, Reed, Whitney Reitmire, Garrett Riffle, Kasey Roush, Mackenzie Sellers,
: Hayley Spradling, Kiatelyn Stacy. Bradley Stone, Sarah Thomas. Cody
·
. Weaver, 'JYler Will, Christian Woods,Victoria Zahran.
. Grade 2: Chelsey Arms, K:lyla Bachtel, KriStin Ballard, Ashley B:uber,
James Cunningham, Caleb Davis, Taylor Deem, Kristen Eblin, Veronica
Grimm, Ryan Jeffers, Dakota la~jdermilt, Adam Lavender, Jessica
McAdams,Ariel Nitz, Shelby Ohlinger, Erin Patterson, Molly Priddy,Jacob
Ri111e, TJ. Smith, Ryan VanMatte, Meri VanMeter, Coty Will.
Grad 3:JamieAsn,Dee Cundiff,Kindra Hammons,Lucreshia Howard,
·. Jessica Jewell, Clinton Kennedy. Aaron Oliphant, Alex Patterson, Erin
, Perkins, Calee Reees. KelseY Saut'ers,JosiVanMeter.
·
: ·Grade 4: Jonathan Allbaugll. Cornelius English. Kelsey Fife, C,helsea
: Hicks. Brittany jeffm, Bradley Jones, Lindsay McKinney. Cassandra Patter.: son, Joseph Rosier A.fnorette Salser, Molly Smith, Kaylyn Spllldling, Steven
'.1
· - ~rt.DitiynThomas. ,
· r, '.(}
·..•
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;~t\~

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. Grade 9: Bridget Balseer, Brook Bolin, lindsay Bolin, Jassiline Carte~,
Melinda Chancey, Ashley Colwell, Kaytc Davis, Candice Fetty, Jennifer
Foreman, Meghan Haynes, Krista! Johnson, Kelly Johnston , Matth..y
O'Brien, Brandon RalllSburg, Michele Runyon, Shannon Soulsby. Arnbe~
Spradling, Emily Story, Jennifer Walker, Elizabeth Wilfong,J~nnifer Zielins~
ki.
.
Grade 10: Joeline Allen, Bobbie Burson, Amber Ellis, Heather FettiJoshua Glaze, Nickolas McLaughlin, Monica Moon, Beth Plhillips, Misti
Puckett, Kristy Puckett, Jeremy Ridunond, leslie Runyon, Michael
bury, Amber Snowden, Scott Taylor, Clayton Taylor, Shauna White, Tara
Wyatt.
Grade 11: Jennifer Allen, Cam Ash, Whitney AsWey, Derrick Bolin.
Thaddeus Bumgardner, Kelly Canan, Marianne CarscyChristopoher Dodson, Chasity Fowler,AmtFrecker,Autunm Goode, Matthew Grubb, Holly
Hannan, Abby Harris, Erin Harris, Alison Hays, Julia Kennedy, Gra&lt;:e
Kitchen, Brian Kelin,Aaron Krautter,Andrea Krawsczyn, Carrie Lightfoot,
Bethany McMillin, Beatrice Morgan, Trina Noland, Christopher Pickens,
Shannon Price;Jusrin Robson, Amber Roush,Jeffrey Shank, Brooke Smith,
Brandi· Smith, Elizabeth Smith, Katherine Taylor, Cassandra Thorn, Robert
Tobin Ill, Heather Whaley, Stephanie Wigal, Melissa Young.
Grade 12: Amanda Appel, Meghan Avis,Tif!imy Barnes, Steve Beha, Lisa
Bias, Guy Bing, Robert Birchfield, Melarrie Blevins, Stephen Bobb, Bethany
Bolyles, Stacey Brewer, Beverly Burdette, Ashley Burton, John Cleland,
Amanda Coates, Keith Collins, Scott Colwell , Brant Dixon, Billie Joelle
Dye, Sean Fahner, Heather Ferrell, Stacy Gihnore, Tara Gray, Adam Grim,
Lori Harris, lanzoe Herman, Jan Hindy,Anita Holter, Amy Hysell, Sara !hie,
Ann Kauff, Stephanie Kopec, Christopher Krawsczyn, Tandy Laudennilr,
Crystal Leach, Shan on Michael, Jennifer Nease, Kimberly Peavley. Amber
Perkins, Christy Phalin, Ry.an Pratt, Erin'Roush,Jennifer Shain, Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah Smith, Joshua Sorden, Juilie Spaun, James Stanley. Brandy
Stevens,Wesley Thoene, Hollie Welch, Brooke Williams, Gillian Wilt, Tammy
Wolfe.

SaPchuryEiementary

Poll&amp;eiOJ' Eleu:euataty

Pomeroy Court cases pr~cesssed

I

Grade 5: Dakota Arms, Randy Collins, Cecilia Core, Mark Cozart,Asbley DeM~. Heather Eagle, Heather Elam, Scott Musser, Casey Richardson,
Britnee Sauters. Jerod )Yyatt, Christeena Young, Ashley Zielinski LD: Roy
Lauderm'i!t, MH: Kim Deaver, Michael Laudermilr, Scott Ramsey.

Tht Deily ltntlntl• Peg• A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· weclnHdey, Aprll12,1000

&gt;

$ 69
480Z.

ND
. REG. OR
W/BLEACH
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
LIS.

Bananas .................~ ••

5

2/$
Cheese Singles ''•k••.. ,.., .
MINUTE MAID .
.•
. $1'99
KRAFT AMERICAN

18 oz.

•
840Z.
J
0
· fange .UIC~··•••••d•••••••
PEl . .

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Ice Crea111
COOL

CIQI.

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2/$

r.J~_: C. 89

'LIBBY r
VEGETABLES,
(ASST. VAR.)

HUDSON
·cREAM

FLOUR

(PLAIN OR SILF·RISING)

----·1-4.

-------•5•LB•S•.c_9iil l il l i i ---

5-.15•0•Z•
.

2/$ .
93 OZ. POWDER
12.8 OZ. LIQUID

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CLOROX
REGULA··
BLEACH

PLAY BANKROLL
.&amp;·STOP IN TO
ENTER TO WIN ~
AWEI;lER GENISIS:.,
. SILVERGAS
GRILL TO BE ·
DRAWN SATURDAY,'.
APRIL 2000
•

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P~~ge A 6 ~

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12, 2000

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Meigs LOcal School Distrid announces honor.rolls
'

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POMEROY- Meigs Local School District honor rolls for the third
nine-weeks grading period were announced today.
Students making a grade ofB or above in all of their subjects to be listed on the honor roll were as follow.;:

J

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Poole, Brittany Powers,Arnanda Priddy. Joshua Ray. Jessica Rosier, Pamela
Rupe,Jessica Smith, Kindra Snouffer,Leann Stewart, Miranda Stewart, Ryan
Stobart,Abrnnda Storms, Brandi Thoams, Holley Williams,Jotdan Williasfl\,
Bry.an Wilson, Angela Wilson.
·

Rutland Elementary

Meigs High School

Bradbury Elenaeutary ·

.Grade 4: Alexa Venoy, all As; Austin Dunfee, Robert Foreman, Tyler lit- · Kindergarten: Brooke Buckley, Cody Hysell, Steven Mahr, Holly
McGrath, Tanisha McKinney, Ashley Woodard, Miranda Tanner, all As;
tie_, lesley Preece, Casey Smith and lacey Stobart.
' Grade 5: Valerie Carpenter, Btittany Haning, Chalsie Manley. Christy Chelsey Earls, Karl Gueltig,Jacob Nitz, Sharaya White, Jesse Wiseman.
Grade 1 (Fetty): Austin Adkins, Shellie Bailey, Whitney Hicks, TYson
Miller, David Poole, Amanda Schartiger, Alex Si,&lt;;On, Whitney Smith, Greg
Thy)or and Michelle Weaver.
'
Morris, Braden Prater, Austin Sayre, all As; LindSay Hysell, Josh Miller, Justin
Nitz, Colton Stewart.
.
· Grade 1 (Whan): Cameron Bolin, Carlee Smith, all As; Suretta Cade,
Adam Elliott, Michelle Ha)ey, Aaron Maxson, Amanda Meadows, Josh
Kindergarten: Ashley King, Zach Sayre and Torin Tindongan, all As; Stone.
Grade 2: Micki Barnes, Benjamin Hood, Bradley Hood, all As; Dusty
Chase Payne, Michelle Satterfield and Brittany Wheeler.
, . Grade 1: Markita Bottitta,Austin Clarida and Morgan HoWard, all As; Eads, Corey Elliott, Kayla Graham, Pamela Kessinger, Samuel McCall,Jessi' ·
r::e'ah Barley, James Black, Ashley Edwards, Zack Jeffers, Julia Lantz, Tiffany ca Shelton.
~e and Sieanna Ohlinger.
Grade 3 (Snowden): Clayton Bolin, lilly Jacks, all As; Morgan Lentes.
: Grade 2: Dawn Bissell, !an Bullington, Justin Cotterill, Michael King,
Grade 3 (Gillilan): Wyatt Ball, Maria Meadows,Jason Morris, Eugen~
: Christy lewis and Hailey Williams, all As; Becca Donohue,Alysha Gerlaugh, Patterson.
Grade 4: Jacob Barnes, Emily Davis, K~ri Priddy, all As; JUtie Doczi,
: Cody Hill, Dean Hivley. Summer King, Justin Savage and Zach Young.
:
Grade 3: Elsa Gardner, Mason Metts and JoannahTindongan, all As; Bethany Gibbs, Brittany Varian, Cassady Willford.
Grade 5: Keilab Jacks, all As; Bethany King, Joshua Taylor.
: Christopher Bishop, Travis Hicks, Bethany Lee and Joshua Price.
LD/DH Primary: Terry Jewell, all As;TJ. Conlin.
•
Grade 4: Talisha Beha, Doug Herdman, Chelsey Noel, Brittany Preast,
· Daniel Runyon, and Kaylene Slater.
LD/DH Intermediate: John Landaker,Josh Partlow, Bobbi Smith.
· Grade 5: Daniel Bookman, all As; Cory Dill, AJ. Haning, Sarah Lantz
. and Josh Williams.
·
CC Class: Joseph Foley, Gabrielle Lester and Aaron Roberts.
Kindergarten: Shauna Bare, Paige Barrett, Austin Kini- Kassandra
Mullins, AU As; Stephany Durham, Benton McCloud, Mickayla Notting'
•
ham, Russell Scarbury.
Grade 1: Samantha Goble,Jessica Rowley, Nichole Wise, AU As; Shan'• Kindergarten: Iaynee Herman, JR. Jewell, Kris Wilson, Justin Hodge,
:1\shley Lane, Clint McHenry, DiJuan Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb, Stephen non Bare, Shawn Bare.
Grade 2: Joshua Glover, Annisha Kopec, AU As; Jordan Myers, David
; Ban:us, Colten Bell, Zach Fink, Shelby Fitchpattick, Marlee Hotlinan,
: Stephanie LeMaste r, Catherine Gleason, Anita Warth, Cady Carpenter, Grim, Gabriel Hayes, Todd Johnson, Dustin McDaniel, Karen Nottingham,
; Kimberly Curl, Michael Davis, Ben Reed,Travis Tackett, Tiffany McKinney, Craig Saxton.
Grade 3: Chelsea Carpenter, All As; April Oiler.
•l&lt;t'athan Mohler, Kayla Shane, Cassidy Thcker, Charlie Barrett, Suzy Cox,
' McKenna Warner,Jefliey Kimes, Kir.;ten McGuire, Travis Mitchell.
Grade 4: Natane Adams,Joshtla Burnem, Corinna Cross.
' · Grade 1: Valerie Conde, Tyler Cundiff, Nikki Davis, Taylor Dowler, Kyle
Grade 5: R y.m Barnett, Samantha Shontz, Niki Stitt.
' Jobnson,Jonathan McCartbv,Shannon McLaughlin, Misty Morrison, Ryan
Paync,Joseph Powell, Dan Stewart,Jose'Wbidatch, Brandon Bachner, Olivia
Bevan, Britta Rowers, Colt Kerr,!Uyla Lemaster, Dustin Nash, Kyle Rus; sell, Tanner Tackett.
,
Kindergarten: Couft!ley Baker, Desirae Cundiff, Emily Davis, Taylor
· Grade 2: Tyler Andrews, Andrew Blankenship, Megan Dunfee, Jacob Gilkey. Emalee Glass, Kaitlin Russell, Katrina Shockey, Hillary Stone, Justin
. bunn,Aurumn Ebenbach,Ashley Good, Meg.mn Halley,Justin Kimes,Jes- Young. ·
. sica Might, Jennifer Payne, Nicki Smith, Tricia Smith, Cayla Taylor, Bubby
Grade 1: Alaine Arnold, Stevie Bunce, Alex Day, Heath Dettwiller,
Wills, Kristine Davis, Brittany Frazier, Tyler Fry, Amanda Goode, Michael Racbael Eakins, Justin Ellis, William Folmer, Miranda Grueser, Nicholas
Gomez, Cody St;nith, Kelsey Wilson.
Ingels. Danielle King, Samantha King, Marissa McAngus, Charlie N(!land,
Grade 3: Wil)ie 'Barcus, Adnan Bolin, Chelsea Davis, Jennifer Fife, Stephanie Smith, Connor Swartz.
.
Robert Grover, Nicole Haley, Christopher Kimes, Zach Schwab, Chassidy
Grade 2: Jeremy Ash, Darby Gilmore, Scott Kerlnedy. Breana Hemsley,
Wills, Jaime Simpson,Caleb Bevan, Chad Bonnett, Tara Capehart, Hailey Amber Ohlinger.
· Ebersbach, laura Gheen, Amber Hockman, Lian Hoflinan, Cara Lawless, ·
Grade 3: Jamie Bailey. Crockett Crow,J.T Evans, Amanda Gilkey, Mor· Nikki Lawson, Caitlin Leslie, Courtney M~, Ashley McHenry. Jared gan Kennedy, Andrew O'Bryant, Caitlin Swartz.
. McKinney. Seth Perry,Tori Sullivan, Tess Thomas.
Grade 4: Amy Barr, Rebecca Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy. Kirk legar,
• ID/DH: Chaney - Charles Fitchpatrick, Mariah Hill, Sidney little, Joseph Scheimann, Aaron Story. Eric Wood.
,
: Ashley Smith,JeremyTiemeyer,Josh Tiemeyer, Jessica Wagner, Shawn HudGrade 5: Clayton Blackston, Shauna Clark, Andy Garnes, Andy MeAn. nail.
gus, Bradley Ramsburg, Dru Reed, Jennifer Smith, and Caitlin. Williamson.
ID/DH: ~rry Brandon Clark, Patricia Clark, Joyel Grady, Josh
: Fetty, Nate sw.m, Carrie-White.
.

ltanisQnville Eleii&amp;eldary

Salem Elementary

Middleport Elementary

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c ·.o MMUNITY
·c 'ALENDAR
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• WEDNESDAY,
~~ v
•
MIDDLEPORT - Middle:; por.t l:iterary Club, 2 p.m.Wednes-- ·
: day, home of Sarah oWen. Gay
• ~rijl to present "The Unsung
; Heroines ofWodd War II."

AFil.

EAST MEIGS _;_Eastern Local
:· Band BOosters, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
: in the band room.
POMEROY- Planning meet. ing for Pomeroy High School's
. 50th reunion class, Wednesday, 7
; p.m at Carleton School, Syracuse.
f

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' LONG BOTTOM - Thpper.;
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thunday,
7:30 p.m. Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Marajean
Butcher, ·coordinator of Main
Street program in Gallia County,
will speak to the Middleport
Community
Development
Authority Thursday, 7:30 p.m in
council chamben.
FRIDAY, April 14

EAST MEIGS Return
:· · POMEROY ....:._ Preceptor Beta Jo~than Meigs Chapter, DAR,
Friday, 1 p:m. at the Eastern Ele:: Beta &lt;!:'hapter, Beta Sigma Phi,
mentary Library. Eastern choir to
~ Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Lutherhave a musical program.
: an Church, Carol Adams and
·: Ruth Rif!le, hostesses.
.
POMEROY - V A Medical
Center, Chillicothe, at Veterans
:' CARPENTER - ' Special
Services Office, Pomeroy, Friday
: meeting, Columbia· township
10 a.m. to noon and 1 to 2 p.m. to
: Trustees, Thursday, · 1:30 p.m.
enroll vet~rans for health care. Tal&lt;e
~ Columbia Volunteer Fire Depart'
.
. proof of military servic~.

The
Oardell.
Seed Is
Here·An·d
So-ls
SPRINCI
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

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SPECIAL • SPECIAL
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· 9Month
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CD RATE

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APY*

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• CO requires's minimum deposit of $1,000 to open and obtain the 6.45% Annual Percentage Yield
(rate of 6.25%) accurate as of March 31,2000. A penalty will be imposed for early withdrawal.

I

Your Bank#'-t~···
.,Fo
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42120 Stite Route 7

P.O. B!JX 339'
Tuppere Plaint, OH 45783

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Member FDIC

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BANK

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USDA BEEF BONELESS BOnOM

Round Steak...~....~~:..

$

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$2l9
Cubed Steak•.••.•.••~~·•.
SUGARDALE SLI~ED

1oz. Pl.$ 1 ·79

Pepperon•·······~············ ,
Ll.
$
$269 MILD COLBY

2
Pork Chop••••••••••••
$ 39
Ham Patties................ 1·

Cheese csnced s1.99 LB.)•••••

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$ 99

HORMIL'I ,CAN .. ID

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POSll8 OZ. SUPER
GOLDEN CRISP, 13.5 ·
OZ. BLUEBERRY
MORNING, 15.5 OZ. .
NUT CRUNCH
CEREAL

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FOLGERS
SPECIAL
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$ 49

oz. ca1

TREET .·

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Galllpolll; OH 45831

814-667-3181

.. __ ..,.,.

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1 211 Wilt Sfi:Ond St.
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P.O. Box 626
•· Pomerpy, OH 45769
I
740-992·2136

."

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Fanners Bank

&amp; Savings Company

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12 PK.

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WESSON Oil
(REG.OR .:
CAIOLA) ·

Hot Dogs •••·••••••••

'·

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porne roy 0 hio 457 69
...:...;1

$2''

AIMOURSTAR

__ ___ ___________.

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The Dai'Iy.Senti•n·el

•

Subscril¥ tod&lt;ly.
992-21$6
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· THyRSDAY, AprD 13

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

·•

IFROM:
I
L---------------------------~
Mai'} Of Brmg
· J'll VJ.OUf Ell t ry Form T0 The .

~

STORE HOURS
.• POMEROY - The Meigs
, County Jury Conunission recentMonday thru
ly selected prospective jurors for
Sunday
. the May 2000 grand jury term.
8AM·IO PM
· Those selected for the venire
298 SECOND ST.
,were; James Richard Acree,
Accepts Credit Cards
· Pomeroy; Mary . L. Whaley, Middleport; Flossie G. Bush, Racine;
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
.Marjorie Viola Knotts, Langsville;
PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 15, 2000 .
,Phyllis N. May, Pomeroy; Cathy
Jane Rowe, Pomeroy; Marvin
Keith Wisecup, Middleport;
• SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
Shannon Lee Scott, Middleport; . DOUBLE COUPONS
Richard Le.e Fetty, Rutland;
Patricia L. Leach, Pomeroy; Jason
;R, Baldwin,, Albany; Donna J.
:Oassylva, Rutland; Linda Lou
•
iAcree, Middleport; Daniel F.
;Short, ·Pomeroy; Amanda Rae
:Wassel, Long Bottom; Clin~on
:Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Matthew
,:Scott Ridenour, Long Bottom .
: linda
louise
Wilson,
Reedsville; Amb~r D. Thomas,·
~yracuse; Jenn!fu:-K-,_Carman, ·
Middleport; Robert Allen Tripp,
iJteedsville ; Roy E. Miller,
fomeroy; DeUa Jane Milliron,
fomeroy; Patrick V~nce Johnson,
1tacine; Jessie J. Hoffman,
'Langsville; Carl Edward Kennedy,
,Rutland; Blaine E. · Qualls,
Pomeroy; Renee D. Barton,
·~omeroy; . Carl . Edward Klaiber,
l ong Bottom; Sharon Kay Baker,
R acine;"Malane Bladc,'Pomeroy;
' .
~Ioria J. Starcher,
Long Bottom;
\Edward T. Baer, Pomeroy;Wilmer
:E. Halfhill, Racine; Gregory K.
FRESH PORK BONELESS
Lee, Middleport; Pansy Mae
LB.
jones, Racine; Katheleen A. Pey~on, Rutland; Ramona E.Roush,
ftacine; Kevin P. Holter, Racine;'
'(l.my Michelle Wagner, Pomeroy;
Ll.
Reba 0. Roush, Racine: Leah
·:Mae Dixon; Albany.
; : Samuel Bruce May, Rutland;
~lc Y, Bonnaud, Albany: Robert
12
J\ozeU Johnaon, Pomeroy; ]tmea .
~ward Lucaa, R.aclnt;.Donna R.
L•dbetter, Racine; Debra Sue
Jkadf'ord, Racine; Charles B.
$i.vatzel, Pomeroy: Donnla R.
12 OZ. PI
~otton, Middleport; Wilma Lou·
parker, Long Bo~tom: Golda.Faye
Radcliffe, Syracuse; Deborah
McKnight, Middleport; Charles
A. Kitchen, Middleport; Mary
Margate Weaver, Racine: Margaret M. Guinther, Racine; DarieU Ryan Norris, Racine; Randall
M. Jackson, Coolville; Earl C .
Kauff Jr., Racine; Charles R .
Cozart, Portland; John Alfred
Anderson: Pomeroy; MitcheU D.
Allen, Syracuse; Curtis I;&gt;. Swick,
Langsville; Raymond. L. Oliver,
Racine.
Shawn Louis Bush, Racine;
Sherman Buskirk Jr., Middleport;
Dorothy Mae Davis, Langsville;
Michael Lee Will, Pomeroy;
Karen J. Phalin, Pomeroy; Joann
Newsome,. Pomeroy; Brian Keith
Bailey, Long Bottom; Eddie M.
Turley, Racine; Richard J. Davis,
Syracuse; Mark David Porter,
Racine; Ronald · Dale mith,
Pomeroy; Ruth M. Underwood,
Po~roy; Stev~n W. Hudson,
Middleport; Shirley J. P'riddy,
Pomeroy; Jeffrey M. Kimes,
Reedsville; Mildred K. Arnold,
Racine; Ali,ce M. Wolfe, Racine;
Howard L. Flinn Jr., Portland;
Brian Keith Bailey, Long Bottom;
Rhontla Jean Frank, Pomeroy;
Betty Lou Gilky, Middleport;
Myrtle Quillen, Middleport; Lisa
Vi111inia Lewis, Pomerqy; Cynthia
Jo Sandy, L~ngsville; Susan Lynn
Jones, Pomeroy; Tammy L. Hysell,
Pomeroy; Shai:on M. Hatcher,
Portland; . Robert . C. Salser,
Racine; Tennis Junior Edmiston,
Langsville;·
Mary · Eleanor
Osborne, Pomeroy; Gregory L.
Vining, Middleport; Kevin C.
Lewis, Albariy; Perry Allen Smith,
Racine; Steven K. Call, Middleport; Phyllis J. Clark, Pomeroy;
__
Robert Allen Lemaster, Albany.

· CENTER CUT BONELESS

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ment. Discussion about grants.

LONG BOTTOM - Hytnn
; SYAACUSE - Open bouse at
sing, F'aith Full Gospel Church,
~ Syracuse Elementary School, 4 to
Long Bottom, Friday, 7 p.m.
·: 6 p.m. Wedn~y for viewing fifth .
Siqgers, Jim Blair and the
t_ graden research projecis.
t• ...
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Gospelaires. Fellowship to follow.
•

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Deadline Is
Friday, April21, 2000:

!GREETING:

DEW
PRODUCTS, 7 UP,.
DR. PEPPER,
MUG ROOTBEER,
ORANGE SLICE,
LIPTON BRISK

PO· WE ll 'S

Center Cut Roast ••• ~

r---------------~------------~
•TO·
'·
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nethCarsey,Benjamin Collins,JessicaCudinan,JaroeeDavis,MaeganDodO
son,Jennifer Dunn, Andrea Fetty, Jesse Gates, Heidi Gi!mo..,,Ashley Halley,
Nichole Harper,William Hawk, Raymond Hess, Darin Horn,Jessica Howell, Randall Hudson, Michele Imboden, Aubrie Kopec, Jonathan Larkins,
Sarah Lee, SteVen Maj&lt;;&gt;r, Rachel McDaniel, Jonathan McDonald, Christina
Miller, Gary Moore,
Sheena M,orris, Bobbi Napper, Dallielle Nyt;, Erica ·
, .......

&amp;

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ABC Widgets

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To Annie Gray:

10 Main Street
Avondale

A.West, Pomeroy, $83, expired registration; Teresa G. Dressler, Columbus, $83',
public intoxication; Rodney A. King,
Shade, $63, prohibited left turn ; An gel
A. Ervin, New Straitsville, S83, window
tint; Charles C. Ord , New Hav en
W.Va., $63 , assured clear distanc;;
Thomas Petit, Barboursville, W Va.,,
$63, assured clear distance; Joseph S.
Crispen, New Haven , W.Va ., $83, red
light ; Vonda S. Herman, Middlep ort,
S66, speeding; Joshua K . Tolliver,
Pomeroy, $83 ; traffic light.

.WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Show Your Thanks To Your
Secretary With A Thank You Ad .
In The April26 Edition OfThe
Daily Sentinel!

Keep up the good work!
Your Bos5; AI Jenkins

j·ury

.venire · isted

to our Secretaries for aJob Well·Done!

Grade 6: Wesley Ault, Joshua Bolin,Tra~ Bu,tcher, Samantha Cole,
Bryce Davis, Michael Durst, James Ellis, Ashley Engle, Carita Gardner,
Rachael Gardner, Anna Hartenbach, Cody Hysell, Brittney Jacks, Joshua
Kennedy, Jacob Kennedy. Taryn lentes, Kayla McCarthy, Autumn
Mclaughlin, Brooke O'Bryant, Timothy Shane,Jordan Shank, Abby Stewart, Whitney ,Thoene, Scott Tobin, Leonard Vann1eter, ChristopberVanreeth,
Joshua Venoy.Jacob Venoy, Melia Whan.
.
Grade 7: Grant Arnold, Emily Ashley, Renee Bailey,Jefliey Baugbrnan,
Jerri Bentley.Jeremy Blackston, Eric Bumem,Anna Butcher, Cliflon Chandler, April Coppick, Chatles Davis, Justin Demoss, Jason Demoss, Trevor
Depoy, Rosanna Dillan:l, Jodi Donohue, Patrick Dowell, Justine Dowler,
Peggy Duff, Jereriliab E!lgers, Eddie Fife, William Frazier, William Garnes,
Megan Garnes, Zachary Gibbs, AsWey Graham, Brandon Grover, Annber .
Handley. Randy Hart,Kayla lcenhower,l\aron Ihle,Asbliegll Kimes, Madison King, Amanda King, Matthew Krawsczyn, Cassie Lee, Megan Mayes,
Carrie Michael, Heath Nelson, Carl Noel, Samantha Pierce, Amber Pien:e,
Katie Reed, Kin1berly Reynolds, Anna Sayre, Adam Snowden, Eric Sydenstticker, Robert Varjan, Dustin Vaughan, Brooke Venoy, Cassie Watson,
Chesrer Wigal, Sarah Wilkes, Jenna Wilt, Cassandra ~ndsor, Jennianne
Young,Jillianne Young.
Grade 8: Jeremy Banks, Tyler Barnes, David Boyd,Jaclyn Bradbury,
Nathan Brickles, Karn Buffington, Nicole Burman, Nicole Butcher, Ken-

.

Gr~nd

•

A bouquet' to say thank you.

speeding; Joseph M. Wilson, Middleport, $63 and com, open c·ontainer in
motor vehicle.
Joseph S. Vinning, Pomeroy, $200
and $20, 10 days in jail, fine and jail
suspended if valid operators license
obtained within 90 days,. ALii suspension, $75. and costs, fictitious' tags; Gary
Fitzwater, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
resisting arrest, $113 and costs, public
intoxication; Teresa L. Farr, Leon,
W.Va., $20 and costs, expired registration.
Thomas D. Hodge, Mt. Alto, W.Va.,

l100. and com and 180 days in jail, 150 Arthur, Athens, $66, speeding; Jennifer
days suspended and 30 days house K.Johnso.n, Racine, $74, speeding, S83,
arrest and 2 years probation, failure to traffic light violation; Pamela K. Neece,
comply with police officer, $63 and Middleport, $71, speeding; Joseph E.
costs, fictitious tags, $100 and costs, 180 Ohlinger, Mason, W.Va., $133, public
days in jail, 150 days suspended and 30 intoxication; Tabitha Watson, Pomeroy,
days house arrest concurrent with fail- $83, failure to . comply; Tessa R. Vanure to comply with officer, driving meter, West Columbia, W.Va ., $83, no
under court suspension; Bonita Conley, operators license, $83, fictitious tags ;
Pomeroy, $100 and com, fine suspend- Ke ith Day, Pomeroy, $83, failure to
ed, S225 restitution, driving over fire- comply; Cbr~tine P. Palmer, $69,
hose; Jerry A. Walker, Letart, W.Va., speeding; Hannah J. Ungaro, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, drug abuse.
$83 , failt1re to comply; Tammera K.
Forfeiting bonds were William R. Arnold, Pomeroy, $66, speeding; Debra

•

·ongratulatmns ~~~
.

Meigs NUddle Sdtool

&gt;I

POMEROY - Pomeroy J'lagistrate
L. Scott Powell fined 12, while 19 others forfeited bonds in court on Monday.
Fined were Joshua David, Racine,
com only, expired registration; Stephen
Clark, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, disor~erly by intoxication; Roger Partlow,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs,10 days jail
suspended if valid operaton license
withi_n 90 days and 2 years probation,
F.R A suspension; David Park, Syracuse,
$43 and costs, squealing tires: Homer
D. Klingenberg, Athens, $46 and costs,

Scar-

.

Kindergarten: Cheyenne Beaver, Darienne Bet2ing, Bryan Burt, Olivia
Cleek, Christina Colburn,Wesley Davis, David Dillard,Andy Fairchild, Bre. anna Gheen. Raymond Granat, Jessica Grant, Ronnie Haning, Morgan
,· Johnson, Taylor Jones, Meranda King, Summer Knight, Samuel Levacy,
· ~randon Marcinko, Cody Matto.;,Jeffiey ROush, Zachary Sheets, Cayelynn
Smith, Heather Stewart, Kaylee Terry, Da id Wittig, Tori Wolfe, Harley
Young,Vic;toria Zeigler.
Grade 1: Zachary Barton, Brianna Buffington, Hannah Cleek, Brett
· Curtis, Seleena Dowell, Nathaniel . Gilltey, Westoo Hickman, Lee-Anna
: Hudson, Brandon. King, Billy McAdams, James McDonald, Johnathan
: Michael, Melinda Miller, Jeremiah Myers, Chelsea Patterson, Ravenne
, Reed, Whitney Reitmire, Garrett Riffle, Kasey Roush, Mackenzie Sellers,
: Hayley Spradling, Kiatelyn Stacy. Bradley Stone, Sarah Thomas. Cody
·
. Weaver, 'JYler Will, Christian Woods,Victoria Zahran.
. Grade 2: Chelsey Arms, K:lyla Bachtel, KriStin Ballard, Ashley B:uber,
James Cunningham, Caleb Davis, Taylor Deem, Kristen Eblin, Veronica
Grimm, Ryan Jeffers, Dakota la~jdermilt, Adam Lavender, Jessica
McAdams,Ariel Nitz, Shelby Ohlinger, Erin Patterson, Molly Priddy,Jacob
Ri111e, TJ. Smith, Ryan VanMatte, Meri VanMeter, Coty Will.
Grad 3:JamieAsn,Dee Cundiff,Kindra Hammons,Lucreshia Howard,
·. Jessica Jewell, Clinton Kennedy. Aaron Oliphant, Alex Patterson, Erin
, Perkins, Calee Reees. KelseY Saut'ers,JosiVanMeter.
·
: ·Grade 4: Jonathan Allbaugll. Cornelius English. Kelsey Fife, C,helsea
: Hicks. Brittany jeffm, Bradley Jones, Lindsay McKinney. Cassandra Patter.: son, Joseph Rosier A.fnorette Salser, Molly Smith, Kaylyn Spllldling, Steven
'.1
· - ~rt.DitiynThomas. ,
· r, '.(}
·..•
.
.
•
~,~,
;~t\~

.,

. Grade 9: Bridget Balseer, Brook Bolin, lindsay Bolin, Jassiline Carte~,
Melinda Chancey, Ashley Colwell, Kaytc Davis, Candice Fetty, Jennifer
Foreman, Meghan Haynes, Krista! Johnson, Kelly Johnston , Matth..y
O'Brien, Brandon RalllSburg, Michele Runyon, Shannon Soulsby. Arnbe~
Spradling, Emily Story, Jennifer Walker, Elizabeth Wilfong,J~nnifer Zielins~
ki.
.
Grade 10: Joeline Allen, Bobbie Burson, Amber Ellis, Heather FettiJoshua Glaze, Nickolas McLaughlin, Monica Moon, Beth Plhillips, Misti
Puckett, Kristy Puckett, Jeremy Ridunond, leslie Runyon, Michael
bury, Amber Snowden, Scott Taylor, Clayton Taylor, Shauna White, Tara
Wyatt.
Grade 11: Jennifer Allen, Cam Ash, Whitney AsWey, Derrick Bolin.
Thaddeus Bumgardner, Kelly Canan, Marianne CarscyChristopoher Dodson, Chasity Fowler,AmtFrecker,Autunm Goode, Matthew Grubb, Holly
Hannan, Abby Harris, Erin Harris, Alison Hays, Julia Kennedy, Gra&lt;:e
Kitchen, Brian Kelin,Aaron Krautter,Andrea Krawsczyn, Carrie Lightfoot,
Bethany McMillin, Beatrice Morgan, Trina Noland, Christopher Pickens,
Shannon Price;Jusrin Robson, Amber Roush,Jeffrey Shank, Brooke Smith,
Brandi· Smith, Elizabeth Smith, Katherine Taylor, Cassandra Thorn, Robert
Tobin Ill, Heather Whaley, Stephanie Wigal, Melissa Young.
Grade 12: Amanda Appel, Meghan Avis,Tif!imy Barnes, Steve Beha, Lisa
Bias, Guy Bing, Robert Birchfield, Melarrie Blevins, Stephen Bobb, Bethany
Bolyles, Stacey Brewer, Beverly Burdette, Ashley Burton, John Cleland,
Amanda Coates, Keith Collins, Scott Colwell , Brant Dixon, Billie Joelle
Dye, Sean Fahner, Heather Ferrell, Stacy Gihnore, Tara Gray, Adam Grim,
Lori Harris, lanzoe Herman, Jan Hindy,Anita Holter, Amy Hysell, Sara !hie,
Ann Kauff, Stephanie Kopec, Christopher Krawsczyn, Tandy Laudennilr,
Crystal Leach, Shan on Michael, Jennifer Nease, Kimberly Peavley. Amber
Perkins, Christy Phalin, Ry.an Pratt, Erin'Roush,Jennifer Shain, Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah Smith, Joshua Sorden, Juilie Spaun, James Stanley. Brandy
Stevens,Wesley Thoene, Hollie Welch, Brooke Williams, Gillian Wilt, Tammy
Wolfe.

SaPchuryEiementary

Poll&amp;eiOJ' Eleu:euataty

Pomeroy Court cases pr~cesssed

I

Grade 5: Dakota Arms, Randy Collins, Cecilia Core, Mark Cozart,Asbley DeM~. Heather Eagle, Heather Elam, Scott Musser, Casey Richardson,
Britnee Sauters. Jerod )Yyatt, Christeena Young, Ashley Zielinski LD: Roy
Lauderm'i!t, MH: Kim Deaver, Michael Laudermilr, Scott Ramsey.

Tht Deily ltntlntl• Peg• A 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· weclnHdey, Aprll12,1000

&gt;

$ 69
480Z.

ND
. REG. OR
W/BLEACH
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
LIS.

Bananas .................~ ••

5

2/$
Cheese Singles ''•k••.. ,.., .
MINUTE MAID .
.•
. $1'99
KRAFT AMERICAN

18 oz.

•
840Z.
J
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· fange .UIC~··•••••d•••••••
PEl . .

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COOL

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VEGETABLES,
(ASST. VAR.)

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(PLAIN OR SILF·RISING)

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12.8 OZ. LIQUID

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AWEI;lER GENISIS:.,
. SILVERGAS
GRILL TO BE ·
DRAWN SATURDAY,'.
APRIL 2000
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Page A 8 • The !)ally S.ntlnel

ATIONAL BRIEFS
Toddler dies after being shot

Police: 9-year-old raped in school

Fake memorabilia ring broken

Page 81

H arold M. Davis, Rutland: Aoyed C.
Hickman, Pomeroy; Amber Lee
Well, Pomeroy: Linda S. Montgomery, Langsville; Edward G.
Smart, Albany; Ethel Lillian Orr,
Long Bottom; Vivian Marie May,
Pomeroy; Marian Anita Vancooney,
Shade.
Ruth D. Holrna!J,Syracuse;Joy B.
Neal, Pordand; Aaron Justin Vaughn,
Rutland; Larry Richani Harman,
Rutland; Tamara Lynn Cundiff,
Racine; Harry W. Richard, Portland;
Judith L. Stewart. Pomeroy; Betty J.
Bishop, Pomeroy; Dennis Dwain
Bryan, Middlepon; James W. Johnson, Pomeroy; Scott Lynn Walton,
Pomeroy; Phyllis L. Baker, Middleport; Deborah· Whiteley Stewart,
C heshire; Bernard J. Diddle, Racine;
Denzil H . Williams, Long Bottom;
Barbara A. Weeks, Pomeroy; Luz E.
White, Middleport; Marilyn Lee
Robinson, Coolville; Patricia Ann
Shain, Racine; John Paul Cani,
Racine; Estelle M. Ralph, Middle·pott; Ralph D. Mcmillin, Vinton;
Ivan L. Wood, Long Bottom; Herben L. Grate, Reedsville; Ronald B.
Harris, Long Bottom; Donny Ray
Hoflinan, Pomeroy. ·
R.oland H.Durst, Pomeroy; Dennis Matthew Donohue, Pomeroy;
Amanda Ann WeU, Shade; Paul L.
Shain, Racine; Norman L. Price,
Pomeroy; Frederick Lee Oyler,
Pomeror; Samantha Ann Folmer,
Pomel\lY; Glenn William Tuttle,
Racine; Melissa · Lee Canan,
Pomeroy; Julia Murphy, Racine; .
Roger A. Holsinger, Reedsville;
Helen M atiorie Davis, Pomeroy;
Deana Reana Good, Long Bottom;
Terri Lynn Smith, Racine; Shirley
trine Harless, Racine; Seth Adam
Wehrung, Pomeroy; Linda Kay ·
Hensley, Reedsville; Penny Lee Jones
II, Middleport; Violet L Wilford,
Reedsville; Charlotte M. Hunt, Long
Bottom; Lynda Jane Fraley, Pomeroy;
Kyle Anthony Wickline, Racine;
Kathryn L. Evans, Middleport;
Christopher L. Workman, Rutland;
Donald Robert Spaun, Racine;
Leigh Ann Mash, Pomeroy; Kate M.
Hubbard, Pomeroy; Ralph Larry
Durst; R:acine:' •
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Wilma E Eynon, Reedsville;
Charles 0 N'eal·Jr., Portland; Dana
L. Bunch; Pomeroy; Stella M . Levacy,
Racine; Mary Huddleston, Racine;
Bruce Edward Cottrill, Syracuse;
Ad1m M. Taylor, Middleport; Phyliss
M . Glasgo, Racine; Stuan W. Pullins,
Pomerqy;J:unes Michael Mourning,
Middleport; George R. Muth,
Pomeroy: Avis Laverne Bing, Long
Bottom; Nicklois Lee Leonani Sr.,
Pomeroy; Kent Gregory Lumbatis,
Albany; Kenneth H. Rizer, Portland;
Andrea L. Pauley, Portland; Marvin
Leonard Roush, Pomeroy; Beth Ann
Johnson, Langsville; Amanda L.
Brinker, Pomeroy; Carolyn L. Bll!dford, Pomeroy; James David ~rrett,
Langsville; Calista E. Searls, Middleport; Delben Dale Powell,
Reedsville; Larry Max Lehew,
Pomeroy; Frederick Dorsal Thomas, ·
Cheshire.

Wednesday, April 12, 2000

· · WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

u-llfep--Schedules
S.IMbllll

Tue8day'a rwultll
Ravenswood at Southern, 5:00
Point Pleasant at Buffalo-Putnam,
ppd.

ppd.

. Today'a achedula
Gallla Academy at Warren, 5:00
Jackson at River valley, 5:00
Eastern at Trimble·, 5:00
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5:00
Logan at Point Pleasant, 5:00
Vinton &lt;:ounty at Meigs, 5:00 . .
Thuraday'a echadula
!:astern at Wat\ama, 5:00
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Thurad•y•eechadula
Southern at South Gallla, 5:00
"Wahama at Park~sburg Catholic,

s:llo

Tannle
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Tueeday'a reaulta
· "Point Pleasant at St. Albans, ppd.
,.. ·Gallla Academy at Ponsmouth,
ppd.

'.
Today'a echadule
·• Galli a Academy at Point Pleasant,

~:30

: Wahama at South Charleston,
4:;!0
.
Thuraday'a echadule
· · Athens. at Gallla Academy, 4:30
;Point Pleasant at RavenswQOd, .

.4:30

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TBA

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NEW YORK
(AP)
Keyshawn John$on is headed to
Tampa Bay after reaching a contract agril;'ment with the Bucca,
'
n.eers . .
· A tJ:ade sending the two-time
Pl:o Bowl tet.eivet from the Jets to .
Tampa Bay for rhe 13th ·and 27th
picks in the ,draft w.S worked out
earlier in the day, but put on hold
until this 01orning, when a source
said it will become official.
The source said the deal is
worth $7 million-a-year and likely will be for eight years, making
Johnson the highest-paid receiver
in the league. The Jets will have
four fint-round picks.

INDJ4NAPQLIS· (AP) - A
videoupe
, obtained ·
by
CNN/Sports' 111ustrated shows
Indiana· basketball coach. Bob
l{iright grabbing a player by the
peck during practice and pushing
him .backwards.
;: Two· university trustees an!
Investigating the · controversial
~oach foUowing recent reports
jirim two forme~ players that he
ph)tsica\Jy abused team members.
: Last month, CNN /SI reported
former player Neil Reed's allegation that Knight choked him during a 1997 · practic.e. On the
~d,eotape, the player's head
~ppeared to snap backward. Reed
1
!~· he is the player on the videotape.
·

Pleasant Valley Hoipjtal and medial~ staffmembers are PROUD
to be aparticipatingproviderfor Aetna U.S. Healtbc4re~

........
:.·......-sign Howard
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:: tlNCINNATI (AP) - The
i:;li)cinnati Bengals have signed
cprnerback Ty Howard 'for this
season, bringing him back fiom
bsl·year when he was acquired on
~aivers from the Arizona Cardi(i':4s and plared in 12 games for
Bengals.
.
• · contract terms weren't dis£Josed. He became a , restricted
fre\:- agent after. the 1.999 season,
: Howard, 26, · a former Ohio
State player from Columbus,
~de ~hree starts last season, with
~5. uckle$ . .

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Craycraft was ordered to participate in the Conununiry Corrections program," and to serve
?00 hours of communiry service.
He was also ordered to pay w'"'~l
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of prosecution.
Both charges • are fourthdegree felonies,
L-----------------------__:------~--~--'

13041 615-4340
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DENVER (AP) Ken
Griffey Jr. is off to. his slowest
start since he .was wearing teal
and navy blue for the Seattle
Mariners.
Don't
worry,
Cincinnati Reds fans. That
could pe a good thing.
Showing signs of breaking
out of an early season slump,
Griffey hit his 13th career
grand slam and had five RBI as
Cincinnati beat rhe ·Colorado
Rockies 10-3 Tuesday1 nigh!.
Griffey was 2-for-~ 1 leaving
him 6-for-33 (. 182) it:t his first
eight games with the Reds .
After eight games in 1993,
Griffey was 6-for-33 and went
on to hit .309 with 45 hQlllers
and 109 RBis.
. The break from a whirlwind
debut week in his hometown
of Cincinnati seems to be
agreeing with Griffey. He is 3fol&lt;-7 with two homers and
seven RBis in two games at
Coors Field.
''I'm just trying to be myself
as much as I can and not take
away from the guys that have
, been here and have done the
job," said Griffey, who on
Monday became the youngest
player to hit 400 home runs.
The count to 500 began in
the fourth inning after the
' Reds loaded the bases against
Rockies
starter
Brian
Bohanon (0-1).
C olorado mal!ager Buddy
Bell · brought in left-bander
Gabe White, who was traded
from Cincinnati five days ago,
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GOOD JOB- Ken Griffey, Jr. , slaps five with Reds coach Dave Collins after Cincinnati's 10-3 win over
Colorado Tuesday night in Denver. (AP)

.Nagy'..s 4-hitter, Justice's bomb pace Tribe
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - This was the Nagy is his locati on was pretty good. l;ie
Charles Nagy that the Cleveland Indi~ns qits his spots."
·
have come to expect.
Nagy doesn't overwhelm hitters - his
Nagy allowed four hits in eight innings , fastest pitch was clocked ar 89 ·mph - but
and David Justice homered as the Indians he was able to dominate the A's by working
defeated the Oakland Athletics 5- 1 Tuesday the strike zone.
night for their fifth straight victory.
"He had a .great game. He was Charlie,"
" Nagy is the guy." He too k us there;• teammate Jim Thome said. "We've come to
Cleveland manager C harlie Manuel said. rely on him for a long time."
" He set the stage forthe season for himself."
Nagy, who has pitched at least 200 innings
,Nagy (1 - 1) struck out eight and did !JOt, in each of the last four seasons and recorded
allow .an Oakland baserunner past second I 5 wins or·more in the last five, rebounded
with the exception ofJason Giambi's fourth from a poor first outing t~tch his 122nd
homer. Nagy improved to 12-5 lifetime career win, good for a t Oth-place tie in
against the A's, who lost for the fourth time Cleveland history.
in five games.
"this guy has been on the team the ·
" If you ask most of the guys in this club- longest and he always gives you I 00 percent
house, they'd say they got themselves out,". . o ut there," Kenny Lofton said. "We all want
Oakland third baseman Eric C havez said him to throw a lot of innings."
after doubling in t hree plate appearances
Nagy, who needed just seven pitches to
against Nagy. "He had his splitter going for get out of the sixth, said it was a matter of
a coqple of innings, but the thing about finding his rhythm.

Columbus
to bid for

"I was a little rushed early. I got a little
blurry," he said. "But I settled down and
found my location with my pitches."
Justice hit his third home run of the season against Omar Olivares (1-1) on the first
pitch of the third inning to give the Indians
a 1-0 lead.
Roberto Alomar singled leading off the
· fourth and eventually scored on, a double
play. He added a sacrifice fly in the fifth .
Travis Fryman walked to open the fifth
and advanced to second on Sandy Alomar's
single. Lofton hit into a fielder's choice,
sending Fryman to third. Fryman scored
when Olivares' pick()ff throw to first sailed
into the Indians' bullpen. Lofton scored on
Alomar's sacrifice fly.
" My cleats got caught in the dirt and if I
dido 't throw the ball it would be a balk,"
Olivares said. " I tried to lob it and lost conPl~se He Tribe, Pllp

82

FOXBORO, Ma ss.
Former
Meigs
H igh
School
a ll -state · s tar
Mike Bartrum ha s had
hi s c-ontract t ermi nat ed
by the New England
Patriots.
Bartrum, 29, handled
the
long
snapping
responsibilities . for the
Patriot s
for the la s r
four years.
He ,
was
acquired
by
the
Patriot s in
·a
pre season
tr a de
with
the
-Green Bay .
Bartrum
Packers on
August 25,
1 996.
· In four seasons · wit h
the Patriots, he played
1n 57
games, a lm ost
exclusivdy on special
t ea ms.
As a r ese rve tigh t en d ,
he made two receptions,
both
for
one
yard
touchdowns against the
Baltimore Ravens, once
in 1996 and again in the
19 9 9
re!g u I a r ·
season
finale.
The
6-foot-4
in c h,
245 pound tight end·
was origi n al l y s ign ed as
a rookie fr ee agenr out
of Marshall University
1n
1 993 .
He
was
r eleased by the Chiefs
prior to th e start of the
19 94 season an~ o~t
of foot b all for a year.
H e was signed by the
G r ee n Bay Packers in
1 995, and played in four
games befor·e he s u ffered
a broken
arm,
which s id e lined h im for
the remaind er of the
seaso n.
To repla ce Bartrum on
the rosrer, the Patriot s
h ave
announced
the
s igning of former New
York Giant free agent
ce nt er/gua rd / l ong
snapper Lanc e Scott.

Draft strategists .moving into high ge~r
Penn Statd LA Uzr Arrington.could be .
· the top player taken in the drqft

NCAAs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Ohio State and Nationwide Arena m~y try to bring
NCAA men's tour nament
games to the 'downtown arena
in either 2004 or 2005, a radio
sution reported Tuesday.
Discussions are under way
among officials with the university, Nationwide Arena and
the Columbus Convention &amp;
Visitors Bureau to submit· a
bid to the NCAA this summer,WTVN reported.
The bid would be to host
first and second round games
or a regional final at Nationwide Arena, with Ohio State
serving as the host school, the
station said.
Ohio State last hosted an
NCAA men'1 basketball tourc.
nament game at St. John Arena ·
in 1970.
The school could not be
reached for immediate ccimment. A message was left Tuesday night with D~ Wallenberg, a spokesman for the ath•
letics department.
The NCAA is expected to
release bid ~equirements in . ·
June with bids due by Aug. 1.

Pats terminate
Bartrum's
contract
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CO RRESPONDENT

.

lues obtain Johnson

nu

Junior's gtand night in Denver

PIMH_R... P8pl2

.Track l Field
Thureday'a echadule
, ~uth GJIIla at Federal Hocking,
4:30
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, ·. F~'alchaduiit
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. Hannan at Ravenswood lnv., 4:30
· Point Pleasant at Winfield lnv.,

Ill.

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. Softball
TIMaclay'a reaulte
.Wahama at Roane Co., ppd.

Today'e echadule
·.. Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:00
. {liver Valley at Jackson , 5:00
· vinton County at Meigs, 5:00
· ·Point Pleasant at logan, 5:00
. : Eastern at Trimble, 0:00
.
·.:Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 :00

Sentenced on
·drug charge
POMEROY - Daniel Craycraft, 23, was sentenced to a count
of trafficking in crack cocaine and
a count of aggravated assault in
Meigs County Cornn1on Pleas
Court last week.
: Craycraft, charged in a September, 1999 drug investigation,
was sentenced to 18 months in
~rison on the drug charge, and to
an 18-month sentence on the
.Ssault charge, which was suspended by Judge Fred W. Crow

.

Wahama at Wood Co. Christian,

· lndlau trustees
lnvesllcatlftl Knlaht

COURT
NEWS
POMEROY - Bruner Land
Co., Inc., Byesville, has · filed a
judgment suit against Wayne E.
Shrimplin, Kissimee, Aa ., alleging
default on a land contract agreeeDlent.
·
T he suit as~ for judgment in
the amount of$23,482.37.

The Daily ~entinel

Giants, Tigers christen new parks, Page B2
Growing process for. OSU QB, Page B4 .

Prospective jurors selected

POMEROY - The following
Meigs County residents have been
'selected as prospective jurors for Jhe
PERRIS, Calif. (AP) - A 2-year-old girl was killed and her 6Common Pleas Court petit jury for
year-old half-sister was wounded after being shot by a man who held
the May 2000 term:
their mother captive for three days and repeatedly raped her because
MichaelT. Struble, Syracuse; Terry
. she tried to end their, relationship, authorities said.
Rae Farrar, Middleport; Roger
· The man, identified as Onemeous Phillion Jarp.es, 36, killed himSteven Clark, Pomeroy; Gary Roger
self inside the couple's home Monday after the woman escaped,
Dill, Long ·Bottom; Howai C.
police said.
Rollinson, Racine; Frances M.
The girls were shot in the head.
Alkire, Pomeroy; Betsy L. Molden,
The younger girl, identified as James' daughter, died late Tuesday
Pomeroy;Jeffrey
C. Lewis, Langsville;
The 6-year-old, the woman's daughter from another relationship,
was in critical condition, authorities said.
Mary G. Napper, Lang.wille; Angelia
Investigators said James does not have a criminal history, although
Dawn Taylor, Racine; Gary Lee
Michael, Racine; Leonard Z~Jewell,
court recerds showed James was married to another woman who
tried to get a restraining order against him in late March for violent
Pomeroy; Sonya L. Wolfe, Pomeroy;
behavior.
Ken Everett Vanmatre, Pomeroy; .
James' girlfriend on Friday said she wanted ro end the relationGary S. Bailey, Middlepon; Edna L.
ship, sheriff's Sgt. Perri Feinitein-Portales said.
Evans, Middleport; Cynthia D. StewJames bound "the woman's hands and feet with duct tape and held
an, Middlepon; Ron D. Pridemore,
her that way through the w~ekend, sexually assaulting her repeatedRacine; Georgia J. Ward, Racine;
ly, Feinstein-Portales said.
Chester Brent Rose, Racine; Dina J.
On Monday the woman persuacted James that she would not run
Tackett, Pomeroy; Troy Allen Rife.
away if she was released, but she went to a n·eighbor's home ar\d
' Racine; Donald Edward Bush Sr.,
called for help.
Racine; Tony B. Hawk, Pomeroy;
When deputies went to arrest James, they found him dead on a
George A. Patker, Pomeroy;Annie L.
bed. The two girls were foupd shot in the same room.
Harris, Middleport; Jason A.
No one heard the gunfire, Feinstein-Portales said.
Lawrence, Syracuse.
Perris is about 60 miles east of Los Angeles.
Sherri E. Baker, Reedsvelle; Jack
K. Spires, Syracuse; Ftances Weston
Parker, Middleport; Marilyn H.
Poulin, Middleport; Ruth B. Stef!CI',
NEW YORK (AP) - A 9-year-old. girl was raped by two 12Pomeroy; Anne C. Rogers, Rudand;
year-old classmates in a school suirwell hours after she was coerced
John L. Suttle, Long Bottom; Oron
into having sex in the same area by an 11-year-old boy, police said.
S. Dungee, Albany; Tom R. Reuter,
The 11-year-old has been charged with sodomy while the two
Pomeroy; Melinda M. Clark,
older boys face. rape and sodomy charges.
Pomeroy; Lillie Jean Mullins, Albany;
'I)Ie arracks happened Monday after the boys' sixth-grade class
Richard E. McDonald, Pomeroy;
was combined with the girl's fourth-grade class when the teacher for
Lois Jean Mugrage, Reedsville;James
the older students was absent, police spokeswoman Cheryl Cox said.
T. Ward, Reedsville; Tin1othy P.Jul
Margie Feinberg, a Board of Education spokeswoman, said the
Hayes, Racine; Alfred E. Rusche!,
classes were combined because the school did not have enough time
Syracuse; Violet Lois Bush, Racine;
,to get a substitute teacher.
Bruce Dana Myers, Long Bottom;
The 11-year-old somehow got the girl to leave the classroom and
Larry Clinton Holsiriger, Racine;
go to a foyer area, where she agreed to have sex, police said. 1\vo
Kenda Kay Osborn, Tuppers Plainss.
hours later, the 12-year-old boys forced the girl to the same spot and
Anna L. Hays, Pomeroy; David
she was attacked again, police said.
W. Reynolds, Middleport; Vivian
They ran away when they saw an approaching school aide, who
Carole Barber, Reedsville; Joy L.
summoned a school safety officer.
Murphy, Reedsville; Keith G.
It was not the first sexual assault this year at Communiry School
Kennedy, Rudand; Teri Jean R.oush,
200 in Harlem. On March 30, a 7-year-old boy allegedly sodomized
Racine; Rebecca L. Smith,
a 7-year-old girl, according to police reports . The girl was hospiulLangsville; Harry D. Holter, Racine;
ized and. both students are undergoing counseling, police said.
David Gene Dodson, Middlepon ;
The 7 -year-old is too young to be charged, police said.
Dan Edwaed Follrod, Pomeroy;
Tinibthy S. Browning, R eedsville;
Robert Allen Bailey, Long Bottom;
Jefl!ey C. Kimes, Reedsville; Frances
SAN DIEGO (AP) - An investigation into fake sports and
L. Burns, Pomeroy; Howard L.
celebrity memorabilia has resulted in ~har~s t~nst 20 people and . Writesel, Racine; Heather Lorena
the seizu~e of thousands of items with forged autographs- includMclain, Pomeroy; Robert W. Rwl,
ing a baseball supposedly signed by Mother Teresa, authorities said
Pomeroy; M;!ry Margaret Sheets,
Tuesday. · ·
R:eedsville; Berty Ire ne Spencer,
Merchandise included items with fake autographs from Albert
Pomeroy; D ennie V. Nutter,
Einstein, Abraham Lincoln, Marilyn Monroe, Michael Jordan, MarReedsville; Amy Lynn Hill, Long
tin Luther King Jr., Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, tylark McGwire, and
Bottom;James A. Will, Pomeroy.
Tony Gwynn.
Carl S. Morri$, Long Bottom;
Some of the items, Halpern said, were comically fake, including a
Dustin Taber Huffinan, Pomeroy;
baseball supposedly autographed by Mother Teresa.
Heather M. Humphreys, Pomeroy;
The Operation BuUpen investigation targeted a nerwork of forgMarinda K.Young-Gardner, Middleers and distributors, as well as others who provided fa~ authenticaport; Timothy L. Reed, Portland:
tion documents intended to persuade buyers the items were legiti ~
Yvonne Whittington, Middleport;
inate, said Phillip Halpern, an assistant U.S. attorney.
Debbie L. Pratt, Pomeroy; Kathy S.
The forgery ring was based in Southern California but authoriHaley Smith, Pomeroy; John C.
ties believe the merchandise was distributed nationwide and beyond.
Han, Albany; Margarete Frances
Federal agents seized items, including 10,000 signed baseballs, in
Teaford, Racine; Bessie Marie FlocCalifornia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Florida.
can, Middleport; Karen Sue Clark,
· "I would imagine stuff from this ring is in every single sure in the
Albany;Kris~ ~eJo~on , Long
country;' Halpern said.
Bottom; Anna Wetzel Rice,
Botl) McGwire and Gwynn helped investigators identity fake
Reedsville; Heather D, Haggy. Midautographs, Halpern said.
dleport; James M . Harmon Sr.,
The suspects fac.e a variety of charges including forgery, mail and
Racine; Robert C. Harten Bach,
wire fraud, racketeering, counterfeiting, and taX offenses, FBI spokesPomeroy; Orvel Milam, Middlepon;
woman Jan Caldwell said. All 20 defendants a~ expected to surrenPamela A. Douthitt, Reedsville;
der, she added.

Judgment sought

Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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week.
NEW YO~ (AP) - T he
It started, in earnest Tuesday
Washington!., R edskins have when the New York Jets agreed
maneuvered their way up in the to send disgruntled wide receivNFL draft with one player in er Keyshawn Johnson to Tampa
mind - LaVar Arrington, this Bay for the Bucs' two firstyear's " next Lawrence Taylor."
round picks and either Bert"
· But the Skins' best laid plans Enm1anuel or Reidel Anthony.
could go awry with one s@n- The 'deal will go forward if -~
tence from ~;ommissioner Paul Johnson and the Bucs can agree
T~gliabue: "With the first pick on a contract before noon Satin the 2000 NFL draft, the urday, when the draft starts.
That would give New York,
Cleveland Browns (or New York
Jets) select linebacker LaVar which already has two firstArrington of Penn State." ·
round choices, the 13th, 16rh ,
Sure, with the second and 18th and 27th picks, perhaps
third picks Washington can uke enough to trade up with C leveCourtney Brown, the· other land to No. 1 for Arrington or
prime-time Penn State defender Brown . .
and C hris Samuels, th~ Alabama
" If someone came to us with
·lin, man who can be their left . four fir&lt;t- round picks, we'd have
tackle for years to come.
to do it;' Dwight Clark, CleveBut Brown is a defensive etld, land's personnel chief, said last
of which Washington has plenry. week, probably tipping his hand
Arrington adds the impact line- too soon.
" If it were three, we 'd have to
backer the Redskins need io
help 35-year-old . owner Dan think about it."
Snyder achieve a real Super . ,- Brown and Arrington, who
.Bowl to go along with the on~s have supplante&lt;~ Aorida State
he won in his fanusy leagues.
wide receiver Peter Warrick at
TOP
-Penn State linebacker LaVer Arrington (11) could be the
Thus the intrigue of draft;·.
~
PluM ... NFL, ......2
top pii!Yir taken In the 20~ NFL Draft. (AP)
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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Page A 8 • The !)ally S.ntlnel

ATIONAL BRIEFS
Toddler dies after being shot

Police: 9-year-old raped in school

Fake memorabilia ring broken

Page 81

H arold M. Davis, Rutland: Aoyed C.
Hickman, Pomeroy; Amber Lee
Well, Pomeroy: Linda S. Montgomery, Langsville; Edward G.
Smart, Albany; Ethel Lillian Orr,
Long Bottom; Vivian Marie May,
Pomeroy; Marian Anita Vancooney,
Shade.
Ruth D. Holrna!J,Syracuse;Joy B.
Neal, Pordand; Aaron Justin Vaughn,
Rutland; Larry Richani Harman,
Rutland; Tamara Lynn Cundiff,
Racine; Harry W. Richard, Portland;
Judith L. Stewart. Pomeroy; Betty J.
Bishop, Pomeroy; Dennis Dwain
Bryan, Middlepon; James W. Johnson, Pomeroy; Scott Lynn Walton,
Pomeroy; Phyllis L. Baker, Middleport; Deborah· Whiteley Stewart,
C heshire; Bernard J. Diddle, Racine;
Denzil H . Williams, Long Bottom;
Barbara A. Weeks, Pomeroy; Luz E.
White, Middleport; Marilyn Lee
Robinson, Coolville; Patricia Ann
Shain, Racine; John Paul Cani,
Racine; Estelle M. Ralph, Middle·pott; Ralph D. Mcmillin, Vinton;
Ivan L. Wood, Long Bottom; Herben L. Grate, Reedsville; Ronald B.
Harris, Long Bottom; Donny Ray
Hoflinan, Pomeroy. ·
R.oland H.Durst, Pomeroy; Dennis Matthew Donohue, Pomeroy;
Amanda Ann WeU, Shade; Paul L.
Shain, Racine; Norman L. Price,
Pomeroy; Frederick Lee Oyler,
Pomeror; Samantha Ann Folmer,
Pomel\lY; Glenn William Tuttle,
Racine; Melissa · Lee Canan,
Pomeroy; Julia Murphy, Racine; .
Roger A. Holsinger, Reedsville;
Helen M atiorie Davis, Pomeroy;
Deana Reana Good, Long Bottom;
Terri Lynn Smith, Racine; Shirley
trine Harless, Racine; Seth Adam
Wehrung, Pomeroy; Linda Kay ·
Hensley, Reedsville; Penny Lee Jones
II, Middleport; Violet L Wilford,
Reedsville; Charlotte M. Hunt, Long
Bottom; Lynda Jane Fraley, Pomeroy;
Kyle Anthony Wickline, Racine;
Kathryn L. Evans, Middleport;
Christopher L. Workman, Rutland;
Donald Robert Spaun, Racine;
Leigh Ann Mash, Pomeroy; Kate M.
Hubbard, Pomeroy; Ralph Larry
Durst; R:acine:' •
'
• '·
Wilma E Eynon, Reedsville;
Charles 0 N'eal·Jr., Portland; Dana
L. Bunch; Pomeroy; Stella M . Levacy,
Racine; Mary Huddleston, Racine;
Bruce Edward Cottrill, Syracuse;
Ad1m M. Taylor, Middleport; Phyliss
M . Glasgo, Racine; Stuan W. Pullins,
Pomerqy;J:unes Michael Mourning,
Middleport; George R. Muth,
Pomeroy: Avis Laverne Bing, Long
Bottom; Nicklois Lee Leonani Sr.,
Pomeroy; Kent Gregory Lumbatis,
Albany; Kenneth H. Rizer, Portland;
Andrea L. Pauley, Portland; Marvin
Leonard Roush, Pomeroy; Beth Ann
Johnson, Langsville; Amanda L.
Brinker, Pomeroy; Carolyn L. Bll!dford, Pomeroy; James David ~rrett,
Langsville; Calista E. Searls, Middleport; Delben Dale Powell,
Reedsville; Larry Max Lehew,
Pomeroy; Frederick Dorsal Thomas, ·
Cheshire.

Wednesday, April 12, 2000

· · WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

u-llfep--Schedules
S.IMbllll

Tue8day'a rwultll
Ravenswood at Southern, 5:00
Point Pleasant at Buffalo-Putnam,
ppd.

ppd.

. Today'a achedula
Gallla Academy at Warren, 5:00
Jackson at River valley, 5:00
Eastern at Trimble·, 5:00
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5:00
Logan at Point Pleasant, 5:00
Vinton &lt;:ounty at Meigs, 5:00 . .
Thuraday'a echadula
!:astern at Wat\ama, 5:00
.

'· '
Thurad•y•eechadula
Southern at South Gallla, 5:00
"Wahama at Park~sburg Catholic,

s:llo

Tannle
•
.
Tueeday'a reaulta
· "Point Pleasant at St. Albans, ppd.
,.. ·Gallla Academy at Ponsmouth,
ppd.

'.
Today'a echadule
·• Galli a Academy at Point Pleasant,

~:30

: Wahama at South Charleston,
4:;!0
.
Thuraday'a echadule
· · Athens. at Gallla Academy, 4:30
;Point Pleasant at RavenswQOd, .

.4:30

..

TBA

.

NEW YORK
(AP)
Keyshawn John$on is headed to
Tampa Bay after reaching a contract agril;'ment with the Bucca,
'
n.eers . .
· A tJ:ade sending the two-time
Pl:o Bowl tet.eivet from the Jets to .
Tampa Bay for rhe 13th ·and 27th
picks in the ,draft w.S worked out
earlier in the day, but put on hold
until this 01orning, when a source
said it will become official.
The source said the deal is
worth $7 million-a-year and likely will be for eight years, making
Johnson the highest-paid receiver
in the league. The Jets will have
four fint-round picks.

INDJ4NAPQLIS· (AP) - A
videoupe
, obtained ·
by
CNN/Sports' 111ustrated shows
Indiana· basketball coach. Bob
l{iright grabbing a player by the
peck during practice and pushing
him .backwards.
;: Two· university trustees an!
Investigating the · controversial
~oach foUowing recent reports
jirim two forme~ players that he
ph)tsica\Jy abused team members.
: Last month, CNN /SI reported
former player Neil Reed's allegation that Knight choked him during a 1997 · practic.e. On the
~d,eotape, the player's head
~ppeared to snap backward. Reed
1
!~· he is the player on the videotape.
·

Pleasant Valley Hoipjtal and medial~ staffmembers are PROUD
to be aparticipatingproviderfor Aetna U.S. Healtbc4re~

........
:.·......-sign Howard
~

.

~"'

:: tlNCINNATI (AP) - The
i:;li)cinnati Bengals have signed
cprnerback Ty Howard 'for this
season, bringing him back fiom
bsl·year when he was acquired on
~aivers from the Arizona Cardi(i':4s and plared in 12 games for
Bengals.
.
• · contract terms weren't dis£Josed. He became a , restricted
fre\:- agent after. the 1.999 season,
: Howard, 26, · a former Ohio
State player from Columbus,
~de ~hree starts last season, with
~5. uckle$ . .

9te.

'

Craycraft was ordered to participate in the Conununiry Corrections program," and to serve
?00 hours of communiry service.
He was also ordered to pay w'"'~l
•
of prosecution.
Both charges • are fourthdegree felonies,
L-----------------------__:------~--~--'

13041 615-4340
•

··- --·--·-J-------~_..:.._-~--

.......
,•• •

'

•

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..

DENVER (AP) Ken
Griffey Jr. is off to. his slowest
start since he .was wearing teal
and navy blue for the Seattle
Mariners.
Don't
worry,
Cincinnati Reds fans. That
could pe a good thing.
Showing signs of breaking
out of an early season slump,
Griffey hit his 13th career
grand slam and had five RBI as
Cincinnati beat rhe ·Colorado
Rockies 10-3 Tuesday1 nigh!.
Griffey was 2-for-~ 1 leaving
him 6-for-33 (. 182) it:t his first
eight games with the Reds .
After eight games in 1993,
Griffey was 6-for-33 and went
on to hit .309 with 45 hQlllers
and 109 RBis.
. The break from a whirlwind
debut week in his hometown
of Cincinnati seems to be
agreeing with Griffey. He is 3fol&lt;-7 with two homers and
seven RBis in two games at
Coors Field.
''I'm just trying to be myself
as much as I can and not take
away from the guys that have
, been here and have done the
job," said Griffey, who on
Monday became the youngest
player to hit 400 home runs.
The count to 500 began in
the fourth inning after the
' Reds loaded the bases against
Rockies
starter
Brian
Bohanon (0-1).
C olorado mal!ager Buddy
Bell · brought in left-bander
Gabe White, who was traded
from Cincinnati five days ago,
.

'

GOOD JOB- Ken Griffey, Jr. , slaps five with Reds coach Dave Collins after Cincinnati's 10-3 win over
Colorado Tuesday night in Denver. (AP)

.Nagy'..s 4-hitter, Justice's bomb pace Tribe
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - This was the Nagy is his locati on was pretty good. l;ie
Charles Nagy that the Cleveland Indi~ns qits his spots."
·
have come to expect.
Nagy doesn't overwhelm hitters - his
Nagy allowed four hits in eight innings , fastest pitch was clocked ar 89 ·mph - but
and David Justice homered as the Indians he was able to dominate the A's by working
defeated the Oakland Athletics 5- 1 Tuesday the strike zone.
night for their fifth straight victory.
"He had a .great game. He was Charlie,"
" Nagy is the guy." He too k us there;• teammate Jim Thome said. "We've come to
Cleveland manager C harlie Manuel said. rely on him for a long time."
" He set the stage forthe season for himself."
Nagy, who has pitched at least 200 innings
,Nagy (1 - 1) struck out eight and did !JOt, in each of the last four seasons and recorded
allow .an Oakland baserunner past second I 5 wins or·more in the last five, rebounded
with the exception ofJason Giambi's fourth from a poor first outing t~tch his 122nd
homer. Nagy improved to 12-5 lifetime career win, good for a t Oth-place tie in
against the A's, who lost for the fourth time Cleveland history.
in five games.
"this guy has been on the team the ·
" If you ask most of the guys in this club- longest and he always gives you I 00 percent
house, they'd say they got themselves out,". . o ut there," Kenny Lofton said. "We all want
Oakland third baseman Eric C havez said him to throw a lot of innings."
after doubling in t hree plate appearances
Nagy, who needed just seven pitches to
against Nagy. "He had his splitter going for get out of the sixth, said it was a matter of
a coqple of innings, but the thing about finding his rhythm.

Columbus
to bid for

"I was a little rushed early. I got a little
blurry," he said. "But I settled down and
found my location with my pitches."
Justice hit his third home run of the season against Omar Olivares (1-1) on the first
pitch of the third inning to give the Indians
a 1-0 lead.
Roberto Alomar singled leading off the
· fourth and eventually scored on, a double
play. He added a sacrifice fly in the fifth .
Travis Fryman walked to open the fifth
and advanced to second on Sandy Alomar's
single. Lofton hit into a fielder's choice,
sending Fryman to third. Fryman scored
when Olivares' pick()ff throw to first sailed
into the Indians' bullpen. Lofton scored on
Alomar's sacrifice fly.
" My cleats got caught in the dirt and if I
dido 't throw the ball it would be a balk,"
Olivares said. " I tried to lob it and lost conPl~se He Tribe, Pllp

82

FOXBORO, Ma ss.
Former
Meigs
H igh
School
a ll -state · s tar
Mike Bartrum ha s had
hi s c-ontract t ermi nat ed
by the New England
Patriots.
Bartrum, 29, handled
the
long
snapping
responsibilities . for the
Patriot s
for the la s r
four years.
He ,
was
acquired
by
the
Patriot s in
·a
pre season
tr a de
with
the
-Green Bay .
Bartrum
Packers on
August 25,
1 996.
· In four seasons · wit h
the Patriots, he played
1n 57
games, a lm ost
exclusivdy on special
t ea ms.
As a r ese rve tigh t en d ,
he made two receptions,
both
for
one
yard
touchdowns against the
Baltimore Ravens, once
in 1996 and again in the
19 9 9
re!g u I a r ·
season
finale.
The
6-foot-4
in c h,
245 pound tight end·
was origi n al l y s ign ed as
a rookie fr ee agenr out
of Marshall University
1n
1 993 .
He
was
r eleased by the Chiefs
prior to th e start of the
19 94 season an~ o~t
of foot b all for a year.
H e was signed by the
G r ee n Bay Packers in
1 995, and played in four
games befor·e he s u ffered
a broken
arm,
which s id e lined h im for
the remaind er of the
seaso n.
To repla ce Bartrum on
the rosrer, the Patriot s
h ave
announced
the
s igning of former New
York Giant free agent
ce nt er/gua rd / l ong
snapper Lanc e Scott.

Draft strategists .moving into high ge~r
Penn Statd LA Uzr Arrington.could be .
· the top player taken in the drqft

NCAAs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Ohio State and Nationwide Arena m~y try to bring
NCAA men's tour nament
games to the 'downtown arena
in either 2004 or 2005, a radio
sution reported Tuesday.
Discussions are under way
among officials with the university, Nationwide Arena and
the Columbus Convention &amp;
Visitors Bureau to submit· a
bid to the NCAA this summer,WTVN reported.
The bid would be to host
first and second round games
or a regional final at Nationwide Arena, with Ohio State
serving as the host school, the
station said.
Ohio State last hosted an
NCAA men'1 basketball tourc.
nament game at St. John Arena ·
in 1970.
The school could not be
reached for immediate ccimment. A message was left Tuesday night with D~ Wallenberg, a spokesman for the ath•
letics department.
The NCAA is expected to
release bid ~equirements in . ·
June with bids due by Aug. 1.

Pats terminate
Bartrum's
contract
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CO RRESPONDENT

.

lues obtain Johnson

nu

Junior's gtand night in Denver

PIMH_R... P8pl2

.Track l Field
Thureday'a echadule
, ~uth GJIIla at Federal Hocking,
4:30
'
.
~
'
,
, ·. F~'alchaduiit
.,
. Hannan at Ravenswood lnv., 4:30
· Point Pleasant at Winfield lnv.,

Ill.

•

. Softball
TIMaclay'a reaulte
.Wahama at Roane Co., ppd.

Today'e echadule
·.. Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:00
. {liver Valley at Jackson , 5:00
· vinton County at Meigs, 5:00
· ·Point Pleasant at logan, 5:00
. : Eastern at Trimble, 0:00
.
·.:Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 :00

Sentenced on
·drug charge
POMEROY - Daniel Craycraft, 23, was sentenced to a count
of trafficking in crack cocaine and
a count of aggravated assault in
Meigs County Cornn1on Pleas
Court last week.
: Craycraft, charged in a September, 1999 drug investigation,
was sentenced to 18 months in
~rison on the drug charge, and to
an 18-month sentence on the
.Ssault charge, which was suspended by Judge Fred W. Crow

.

Wahama at Wood Co. Christian,

· lndlau trustees
lnvesllcatlftl Knlaht

COURT
NEWS
POMEROY - Bruner Land
Co., Inc., Byesville, has · filed a
judgment suit against Wayne E.
Shrimplin, Kissimee, Aa ., alleging
default on a land contract agreeeDlent.
·
T he suit as~ for judgment in
the amount of$23,482.37.

The Daily ~entinel

Giants, Tigers christen new parks, Page B2
Growing process for. OSU QB, Page B4 .

Prospective jurors selected

POMEROY - The following
Meigs County residents have been
'selected as prospective jurors for Jhe
PERRIS, Calif. (AP) - A 2-year-old girl was killed and her 6Common Pleas Court petit jury for
year-old half-sister was wounded after being shot by a man who held
the May 2000 term:
their mother captive for three days and repeatedly raped her because
MichaelT. Struble, Syracuse; Terry
. she tried to end their, relationship, authorities said.
Rae Farrar, Middleport; Roger
· The man, identified as Onemeous Phillion Jarp.es, 36, killed himSteven Clark, Pomeroy; Gary Roger
self inside the couple's home Monday after the woman escaped,
Dill, Long ·Bottom; Howai C.
police said.
Rollinson, Racine; Frances M.
The girls were shot in the head.
Alkire, Pomeroy; Betsy L. Molden,
The younger girl, identified as James' daughter, died late Tuesday
Pomeroy;Jeffrey
C. Lewis, Langsville;
The 6-year-old, the woman's daughter from another relationship,
was in critical condition, authorities said.
Mary G. Napper, Lang.wille; Angelia
Investigators said James does not have a criminal history, although
Dawn Taylor, Racine; Gary Lee
Michael, Racine; Leonard Z~Jewell,
court recerds showed James was married to another woman who
tried to get a restraining order against him in late March for violent
Pomeroy; Sonya L. Wolfe, Pomeroy;
behavior.
Ken Everett Vanmatre, Pomeroy; .
James' girlfriend on Friday said she wanted ro end the relationGary S. Bailey, Middlepon; Edna L.
ship, sheriff's Sgt. Perri Feinitein-Portales said.
Evans, Middleport; Cynthia D. StewJames bound "the woman's hands and feet with duct tape and held
an, Middlepon; Ron D. Pridemore,
her that way through the w~ekend, sexually assaulting her repeatedRacine; Georgia J. Ward, Racine;
ly, Feinstein-Portales said.
Chester Brent Rose, Racine; Dina J.
On Monday the woman persuacted James that she would not run
Tackett, Pomeroy; Troy Allen Rife.
away if she was released, but she went to a n·eighbor's home ar\d
' Racine; Donald Edward Bush Sr.,
called for help.
Racine; Tony B. Hawk, Pomeroy;
When deputies went to arrest James, they found him dead on a
George A. Patker, Pomeroy;Annie L.
bed. The two girls were foupd shot in the same room.
Harris, Middleport; Jason A.
No one heard the gunfire, Feinstein-Portales said.
Lawrence, Syracuse.
Perris is about 60 miles east of Los Angeles.
Sherri E. Baker, Reedsvelle; Jack
K. Spires, Syracuse; Ftances Weston
Parker, Middleport; Marilyn H.
Poulin, Middleport; Ruth B. Stef!CI',
NEW YORK (AP) - A 9-year-old. girl was raped by two 12Pomeroy; Anne C. Rogers, Rudand;
year-old classmates in a school suirwell hours after she was coerced
John L. Suttle, Long Bottom; Oron
into having sex in the same area by an 11-year-old boy, police said.
S. Dungee, Albany; Tom R. Reuter,
The 11-year-old has been charged with sodomy while the two
Pomeroy; Melinda M. Clark,
older boys face. rape and sodomy charges.
Pomeroy; Lillie Jean Mullins, Albany;
'I)Ie arracks happened Monday after the boys' sixth-grade class
Richard E. McDonald, Pomeroy;
was combined with the girl's fourth-grade class when the teacher for
Lois Jean Mugrage, Reedsville;James
the older students was absent, police spokeswoman Cheryl Cox said.
T. Ward, Reedsville; Tin1othy P.Jul
Margie Feinberg, a Board of Education spokeswoman, said the
Hayes, Racine; Alfred E. Rusche!,
classes were combined because the school did not have enough time
Syracuse; Violet Lois Bush, Racine;
,to get a substitute teacher.
Bruce Dana Myers, Long Bottom;
The 11-year-old somehow got the girl to leave the classroom and
Larry Clinton Holsiriger, Racine;
go to a foyer area, where she agreed to have sex, police said. 1\vo
Kenda Kay Osborn, Tuppers Plainss.
hours later, the 12-year-old boys forced the girl to the same spot and
Anna L. Hays, Pomeroy; David
she was attacked again, police said.
W. Reynolds, Middleport; Vivian
They ran away when they saw an approaching school aide, who
Carole Barber, Reedsville; Joy L.
summoned a school safety officer.
Murphy, Reedsville; Keith G.
It was not the first sexual assault this year at Communiry School
Kennedy, Rudand; Teri Jean R.oush,
200 in Harlem. On March 30, a 7-year-old boy allegedly sodomized
Racine; Rebecca L. Smith,
a 7-year-old girl, according to police reports . The girl was hospiulLangsville; Harry D. Holter, Racine;
ized and. both students are undergoing counseling, police said.
David Gene Dodson, Middlepon ;
The 7 -year-old is too young to be charged, police said.
Dan Edwaed Follrod, Pomeroy;
Tinibthy S. Browning, R eedsville;
Robert Allen Bailey, Long Bottom;
Jefl!ey C. Kimes, Reedsville; Frances
SAN DIEGO (AP) - An investigation into fake sports and
L. Burns, Pomeroy; Howard L.
celebrity memorabilia has resulted in ~har~s t~nst 20 people and . Writesel, Racine; Heather Lorena
the seizu~e of thousands of items with forged autographs- includMclain, Pomeroy; Robert W. Rwl,
ing a baseball supposedly signed by Mother Teresa, authorities said
Pomeroy; M;!ry Margaret Sheets,
Tuesday. · ·
R:eedsville; Berty Ire ne Spencer,
Merchandise included items with fake autographs from Albert
Pomeroy; D ennie V. Nutter,
Einstein, Abraham Lincoln, Marilyn Monroe, Michael Jordan, MarReedsville; Amy Lynn Hill, Long
tin Luther King Jr., Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, tylark McGwire, and
Bottom;James A. Will, Pomeroy.
Tony Gwynn.
Carl S. Morri$, Long Bottom;
Some of the items, Halpern said, were comically fake, including a
Dustin Taber Huffinan, Pomeroy;
baseball supposedly autographed by Mother Teresa.
Heather M. Humphreys, Pomeroy;
The Operation BuUpen investigation targeted a nerwork of forgMarinda K.Young-Gardner, Middleers and distributors, as well as others who provided fa~ authenticaport; Timothy L. Reed, Portland:
tion documents intended to persuade buyers the items were legiti ~
Yvonne Whittington, Middleport;
inate, said Phillip Halpern, an assistant U.S. attorney.
Debbie L. Pratt, Pomeroy; Kathy S.
The forgery ring was based in Southern California but authoriHaley Smith, Pomeroy; John C.
ties believe the merchandise was distributed nationwide and beyond.
Han, Albany; Margarete Frances
Federal agents seized items, including 10,000 signed baseballs, in
Teaford, Racine; Bessie Marie FlocCalifornia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and Florida.
can, Middleport; Karen Sue Clark,
· "I would imagine stuff from this ring is in every single sure in the
Albany;Kris~ ~eJo~on , Long
country;' Halpern said.
Bottom; Anna Wetzel Rice,
Botl) McGwire and Gwynn helped investigators identity fake
Reedsville; Heather D, Haggy. Midautographs, Halpern said.
dleport; James M . Harmon Sr.,
The suspects fac.e a variety of charges including forgery, mail and
Racine; Robert C. Harten Bach,
wire fraud, racketeering, counterfeiting, and taX offenses, FBI spokesPomeroy; Orvel Milam, Middlepon;
woman Jan Caldwell said. All 20 defendants a~ expected to surrenPamela A. Douthitt, Reedsville;
der, she added.

Judgment sought

Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\ '

•

week.
NEW YO~ (AP) - T he
It started, in earnest Tuesday
Washington!., R edskins have when the New York Jets agreed
maneuvered their way up in the to send disgruntled wide receivNFL draft with one player in er Keyshawn Johnson to Tampa
mind - LaVar Arrington, this Bay for the Bucs' two firstyear's " next Lawrence Taylor."
round picks and either Bert"
· But the Skins' best laid plans Enm1anuel or Reidel Anthony.
could go awry with one s@n- The 'deal will go forward if -~
tence from ~;ommissioner Paul Johnson and the Bucs can agree
T~gliabue: "With the first pick on a contract before noon Satin the 2000 NFL draft, the urday, when the draft starts.
That would give New York,
Cleveland Browns (or New York
Jets) select linebacker LaVar which already has two firstArrington of Penn State." ·
round choices, the 13th, 16rh ,
Sure, with the second and 18th and 27th picks, perhaps
third picks Washington can uke enough to trade up with C leveCourtney Brown, the· other land to No. 1 for Arrington or
prime-time Penn State defender Brown . .
and C hris Samuels, th~ Alabama
" If someone came to us with
·lin, man who can be their left . four fir&lt;t- round picks, we'd have
tackle for years to come.
to do it;' Dwight Clark, CleveBut Brown is a defensive etld, land's personnel chief, said last
of which Washington has plenry. week, probably tipping his hand
Arrington adds the impact line- too soon.
" If it were three, we 'd have to
backer the Redskins need io
help 35-year-old . owner Dan think about it."
Snyder achieve a real Super . ,- Brown and Arrington, who
.Bowl to go along with the on~s have supplante&lt;~ Aorida State
he won in his fanusy leagues.
wide receiver Peter Warrick at
TOP
-Penn State linebacker LaVer Arrington (11) could be the
Thus the intrigue of draft;·.
~
PluM ... NFL, ......2
top pii!Yir taken In the 20~ NFL Draft. (AP)
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·.( j

I

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•

�..
.

~

· Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

.I!' . Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12, 2000

..-.~~--~------~--------------------------------------------------------~------~~---------------------------------------------------..
....._....___
,..,..
..
.

.

....

,,

NATIONAL LEAGUE BASEBALL

\~Elster's
fi~t
·
three·ftl~
..

homer propels D~gers. ·past Giants 6-5

...

YCr9,r Bank In~-..

J

..I .~
.D

•

do n't think I've eVer see n that;' San Francisco manager Dusty Baker said. "That's a lot of home runs in
one day. Maybe we ought to look fo r somebody
that's been o ut o f the game."
Elster was retired, bur decided during the winter
to give baseball o ne more shot.
"Everything I do is kind of a bonus, because I had
no idea I was going to be here," said Elster, who hadn't had a three- homer game since Little League. " I
had in my mind I was retired. Everything is gravy for
me."
At San Francisco, C han Ho Park (2- 0) allowed
three runs and six hits in six innings, and Jeff Shaw
got three o uts fo r his second save.
·
In other games, St. Louis defea ted H ouston I 0-6,
San Diego edged Arizona 3- 2 ·in 13 innings, and
Montreal beat Pittsburgh 7-3.
Cardinals 10, Astros 6 - Pinch-hi tter Tho nm

BY THE ASSOCIATED PR ESS

:•

Kevin Elster k.nows Pacific Bell Ua rk is a home: run haven - at least for him.
~-' " Isn't it gorgeous! It's a fabulo us place," he said
·:Tuesday after the first three-homer ga me of his
::oaree r led the l os Angeles Dodgers over the San
:~franc isco Giants 6-5 in the stadium opener.
:·. " I felt comfortable," Elster said, " and obviously it
; showed."
Barry Bonds, J.T. Snow and D oug M irabelli hit
one each for .the Giants, but no o ne put one over the
: right- field wall into San Francisco Bay.
:
Before a sello ut crowd of 40,930 on a pleasant
•:aftern oon, Elster hit a thitd-inning drive off Kirk
: :R uete r (0-1) that tied it at' 1, added a two-run shot
;.in a three- ru n fifth, then hi t a solo homer in the
::~i gh th ofT Felix Ro dri guez.
· · "A guy hits th ree ho mers to initiate th e p ark - I
..' .

.

.

:~Tigers

..·.· RedS___
·.:-----...;...

:::

from Pip 81

•;: :fefr-h ander Gabe White, who was
::traded from Cincinnati five days
::ago, but the strategy backfired
&gt;when Griffey hit an 0-1 pitch 466
: · (eet into the second deck beyond
:: ~ight-center field.
;: ; "I made one mistake tonight,
i: and it was to him," White said.
~:'!One pitch, four runs just like
:;ihat. Unfortunately the one mis~; take was very costly to us as a
...
' w hoc.
I "
:.:: Griffey celebrated the slam
~; \'lith an elbow-rubbing routine
' : ?Jith his teammates in the dugout
i:but described the homer as if it
boame by accident.
::; : ''Just trying to get the ball in
, ; the outfield and somewhere in the
~:fir," he said. "I wasn't thinking
~·about hitting a grand slam. I'm just
): t:ryjng to get a guy in and a guy
~: gver in that situation. I happened

.

.:::·.

ca Park, the Tigers' first home
game in 104 years that . wasn 't
played at the corner of Michigan
and Trumbull.
"This is home," Detroit first
baseman Tony· Clark said. "It feels
good to break in with a win at
our new home."
That's nothing nciw for the
Tigers, w~o· have won the open-

ers at all three parks they haw
played in .
The Tigers, then in the Western
League, routed Columbus 17- 2 in
the Bennett Park opene r on April
28, 1896. When Navin Field, later
called Tiger Stadium, o pened on
the same sire on April 20, 1912,
Detroit beat Cleveland 6-5 . ' '
The Royals' tradition is a much

to hit the ball out."
GrifT~ is lOth on the career
slant list, tied with Harold Baines,
Robin Ventura and Mark MeGwire for the lead among active
playen. His previous slam was last
April 30.
·
"I don't think he lefi any doubt
about that one:• Reds manager
Jack McKeon said.
·
Dmitri Young added four hits,
including a three-run homer for
the Reds, who have at least one
home run in each of their first
nine games. That was plenty for
Ron Villone (2-0) as the left-hander held the Rockies to two .runs
and four hits in seven innings.
"I'll take it any way it comes
here,"Villone said. "Any time you
get runs on the board, it's a little
confidence-builder. Just go out
ep throwing, '
letting it ~"
illone was successful in
his first start at Coors Field, Griffey padded his numbers at altitude,
where he is I 0-for-27 with five

homers and 15 PJ31s.
' 'My dad was a coach here, so it
makes it a little easier," Griffey
said. "H~ tells me, 'just try to hit
line drives. If you hit it hard
enough, it wilt go."'
White, who later retired GrifFey
on a shallow fly to center, joined a
long list of pitchen who have
been victimized by the 30-yearold slugge,r - many of them at sea
level in Seatde.
· ·
"I don't think the park has anything to do with it," White said. "I
don't -think it matters where he
hits. He hits home runs everywhere, so I don't think coming
here benefits him at all."
Notes: Reds 2B Pokey Reese
did not play because of a bruised
left elbow. He hopes tO return to
the lineup for today's series finale.
Cincinnati lB Sean Casey, who
broke his right thumb in the final
exhibition game of the spring,
plans to hit off a tee Friday. He is
eligible to come off the 15-day
disabled list April 17.

___;~___;~~~-....:.------~~~---

Draft

Tribe

·.·

..

Mason Bowlin1.Lanes results

.•

I

&amp; Savings Company

• ,

..,
• ••

Pomeroy • Tuppers Plains • Gallipolis

Expos 7, Pirates 3 - Jose Vidro hit a pair of
rwo-ru n homers and Lee Stevens added a two-run
shot off Kr is Benson (0- 2), who lost for eighth time
in nine deciswns despite strikin g out a .career- high
mne.

WHERE: Dan ...ala Motors
310 E. Main St.
Po'Dleroy, Ohio

Javier Vazquez (1 - 0) apparently wa sn't bothered
by a two-hOLlr, two-minute rain delay that delayed
the start until afte r 9 p.m . H e allowed three ru ns two catned ~ in six innings. Steve Kli ne p itched

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three sco reless in nings fo r hi s first save.

Visiting Montreal has won five of si{C, whtlt: Pittsburgh has lost three straight

.

mo re recent o ne, as th ey won fo r like football players on a Novc mRamo n
Mar tihcz
(l- 1)
the second straight night with a be r day.
becam e the fi rst Boston pitcher to
walk -ofT homer.
Bri an Me chle r (1 - 1), wh o win other than hi s brot he r, Pedro,
Brian Jo hnso n fopowed up started and wo n the final game at and Garciaparra we nt , 4-for-5 as
Johnny Damon 's ninth-inning Tiger Stadium , gave · up 10 hits th e R ed Sox beat Minnesota in
game-1vinner from a day earlier and ·one walk, but allowed just th eir hom e .opener.
by hittiltg a two-run homer with two run s~ one earned - in six
Joe Mays (0- 1) took, the loss.
one out in the 12.th inning to give inning$.
White Sox U, Devil Rays 6
Kansas City a 7-5 come"from·
Freddy Garcia (1- 1) gave up
C hi cago hit four home runs,
behind win ove r the Baltimore fiw runs and six hits in si x . including consecutiw · shcm by
Orioles.
innings . The Tigers only scored C hris Singleton and Carlos lee in
"We're .not going to let our- five runs off Garcia all season in th e fifth . Singleton's two - run
selves get carried away with this. 1999 .
homer put the White Sox up 6:·5
We're nor going to let that hap·
At Kansas City, Joe kanda, at Tampa .
i
.
pen," Johnson said. "We'll always whose thi'ee-n1n homer ill the
Ray Durham hit a leadoff
be happy with a single if that's aU eighth off reliever AI Reyes had homer otT Esteban Yan ~~ 1) and
it takes."
tied it at 5, beat out an infield sin- Paul Kon erko, who went 14-foi-5
Comerica Park, built at a cost gle leading ofT the 12th against with four RBls , h':id a two-rim
of $300 million in downtown Tim Worrell (1-1) . Then Johnson inside-the-park honier in the first.
Detroit, has all the amenities, from hit his second home run to leftJose C anseco and Greg Vaughn
homered for the Devil R ays, who
statues ofTy Cobb and AI Kaline, center with one out.
to luxury suites and a &amp;rouse!, yet
Jose Santiago (1-0) pitched the have lost six of seven·
·
.
it also seemed to satisfy the base- 12th for the win.
Jim Parque (1 - 1) got the wit).
ball purists.
Cal Ripk¢n homered in his
Angell 5, Blue Jays 4. :
"It's a beautiful stadium," said first at-bat, leaving him five hits
Ramon Ortiz (1-0) pitched
Seattle's John Olerud, whose. first· from 3,000.
five steady innings in . his first
inning double was Comerica's
In other AL games, Boston game of the season, a~d. Dadn
first hit. "1\nd it's big. I thought routed · Minnesota 13-4; the Erstad hit a three-run homer for
there were some· balls today that Chicago White Sox beat Tampa heist Anaheim.
definitely would have been home Bay 13-6; and Anaheim edged
Mo Vaughn hit his first homer
runs tn the old Tiger Stadium."
Toronto 5-4.
of the year, a solo shotl iQto the
,. Red Sox 13, 1\vins 4
left"field seats leading olf~he third
Before a capacity cro.,vd ·of
39,168 on a cold afternoon that
Boston di~n't need. another ...~~i~t Kei'&lt; i,m Esgjbar. 0 (0.~~.,;to
featurecl a steady drizzle, players outstandmg performance from a gtve the Angels a 5-0 feict.
'
wore parkas -with hoods up M artinez, not with C arl Everett's
Troy Percival struck .out ~Pe
under their uniforms . Th eir two homers and Nomar Garcia- side in the ninth for his second
breath was visible in vapors - . parra's four hits.
save.

private workout and Samuels
because he showed up overweight
at his.
Some draft analysts have wide
receiver Plaxico Burress of Michi gan State falling out of the top 10,
although he seems most likely to .
go to Pittsburgh at eight.
But no one really knows.
In 1998, Randy Moss fell from a
top-five pick to ~I st and be cam~
an instant star for the Vikings.
Same for Warren Sapp, 1vho in
1995 went from a possibl~ No. I
to No. 12 and is now an All-Pro
for Tampa Bay.
At the other end is lawrence
Phillips, whom the Ran is took
s.ixth overall despite his co nsiderable baggage. He was gon e two
years later.
What do people who make the
picks think?
" I just watch the teams ahead. of
me," Ernie Accorsi, general 111anager of the Giants, said Tuesday.
"Then I make my pick and watch
th,e oiher teams again to see who
we get a shot at in the second·
round."
Yes, . the only semblance of the
truth is available draft ,,ay.

Fanners Ba:nk

Matt Whisena nt '(1-0) pitched the 13tll for th e
win .

-.

sembles.
Two years ago, Indianapolis' Bill
;. :
Polian kept everyone guessing
:: ~
from Pap 81
over whether he would take Peyton Manning or Ryan Leaf with
,. :;.: th e ve ry top, visited the Brmrus the first pick. He .rook Manning
!; iogether last week.
and says now - as Manning stars
:•: C leveland was thought to be and Leaf struggles - that Man; :li:aning toward Brown. Bur Clark · ning was always No. ! I n his heart.
::~ame o ut of the meeting gushing
The prize for most truthful GM
: ~:tbo ut Arrmgton the same way he probably goes to Buffalo's J0 hn
: :gushed about hiS buddy Joe Man- Butler, who before the 1997 draft
: :"!!na after making The Catch that said he'd jump in a1i instant if
•:wo n the 1981 NFC t1tle.The Jets AntowaiQ Smith fell to 23rd ,
:; pro bably want Arrington, too - .. where the Bills picked . Smith fell
:·Bill Parcells, who remains the ' to 23rd arid Buffalo JUmped.
:: ~ea m 's general manager for now,
This year, Snyder and his under:: ~oac he d Lawrence Taylor.
lings in Washington, notably coach
:&gt; "He looks like a great prospect," NorvTurner and personnel direc: : Parcells said ."But the bus station is tor Vinny Cerrrato, have to be get&lt; tUll of guys who were once com- ting nervous.
:;pared to lawrence Taylor." .
" We like four guys and we're
::: Th a t'~ what makes draft week so happy with two .of any of them,"
;·:(n ck.y - everybody lies or dis- Cerrato says, referring to Arrington, Brown, Samuels and Warrick.
"Whoever Cleveland takes, we're
' &lt;.
going to end up with two out' .
.....
standing
football players."
ftom Pllge 81 .
Still, Warrick and Samuels have
both dropped in some scouts' esti:·control."
mation
- Warrick because he ran
:: :. Fryman added an RBI single in
.:·the sixth . Olivares allowed five 40 yards in 'OVer 4.5 seconds at his
·:runs - four earned - and six hits
::ms'l. innings.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -,
:: : Tribe Notes: Oakland 2B
:; kandy Vel arde is expected to visit
:: ihe A's minor league facilities in
:· Arizona for further treatment
;: w hile the A's travel to cold-weathEarly Wedneac!ay Mixed Bowling League
;: ~r cities' Boston and Cleveland.
. (As of April 5)
;: velarde, recovering from a strained
rei
.
.
' W::L.
~ : teft kn ee, could begin a rehab
Mei~s County Golf Course ........................................ .....104· 16
&lt; assignment as early as next week.
The Dar!&lt; Side ...............:... ....... .......·........ .......... ..... ..........76-44
:; • The Indian s have said Paul
Dairy Queen Brazier ....... .. ... ........ ............................ .. ... : .. .68-52
:; Shuey and Steve Karsay will be
Tony's Carry Out ............................... ........ ....... ....... .......... 62-58
:-.co- closers, i1t least for the time
F.O.E. 2171 ..... .... ......................... ... .......... ... ..:... :....... .......36·84
:: being. KarS&lt;~y has both Cleveland
Meigs Industries ............ .. ................. .... ,..... .. ..... ...........:.14·1 06
:: ~aves thus far and has finished four
•: games. Shuey has fini shed two,
Team hlgh .earlle: Meigs County Golf Course (1993)
Team high game: Meigs County Golf Course (681)
!: incl udin g Tuesday night's.
· ~ • Oakland DH Jo hn Jaha, who
•: struck o ut- three tim es against
Min
High aerlea: Chuck Burton (600); Sam Smith (516)
:: Nagy, had a .478 career batting
High geme: Burton (202 &amp; 200)
·
;. ~ve rage against the Indians' pitcher
: ~ ntering the game'.
.
.
WOmtn 1
: · The Indians. have committed
High aerlee: Kaye Spenc~r (472); Aoxa~n Ru81ell (445)
; o n Nrror in their first ei11ht games.
High g1m'1: Spencer (178): Pat C1r10n 175)
:: O:~kl a nd's Frank Mcncchino did
•ltot score a nm for the fiJit rime
: l hi.s 1~ason .

..

Sp rague drove the fi.rsr pitch he sa w into the leftfield seats to tic it at 2.

begin Comerica.Park era with 5·2 v~ctory over Marin~rs:

av THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. T h&lt;· Kansas City Royals are
:;lnaking a habit of hitting walk- off
:;home runs. The Detroit Tigers
&gt; baw dnne the some by opening a
:·: ne,,; home with a win .
:·; Gregg Jefferies and Bobby
· ~ Hi ggin&lt;on each drove in two runs
:;as Detroi t beat the Seattle
:; Mariners 5·2 Tuesday at Conteri·

;· :

Howard had a go-ahead grand slam off C hris H olt
(0- 2) in the sevent h and Edgar R enteria added a
three-ru n homer la ter in the inning.
St. Louis was ted a 3-0 lead and fell behind 6-3 ·
before Howard hom ered in the seventh off C h&lt;is
H olt (0-2) , who loaded the bases with walks tQ
M cGwire and Eric Davis around a single by Jim
Edmonds, who is 7- for-7 in his last two games.
Jeff Bagwell and M oises Alou hit two- ru n·homers
for the Asrros. T here have been ' 19 ho mers in fi ve
games at Enron Field , which o pened last Friday.
Padres .3, Diamondbacks 2 (13) Ed
Sprague homered· with one our in the ninth innin g
to tie the game, th en won it with another' homer
leading off the 13th against Russ Springer (1- 1) as
Sa n Diego rallied at home.
Lefr-hande r O mar Daal was .two o uts from Arizo na'j second compl ete game in th ree days when

AMERICAN LEAGUE BASEBALL

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

I i.

Y.

I

2000 GMC JIMMY
SLS, Auto, Air, CD &amp;
Cass. , V6, 4x4, Locking
Diff., PS, Buckets,
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SUBURBAN
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2000 CHEVY
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2000 GMC
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Old••obile Aluo •
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1999 ChleVt:&lt;&gt;1et ""'&gt;uroan
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1998 Chevrolet Extended Cab i 999 Buick Ceni•ry -While,
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1996 Nissan Sentra GXE air, tilt, cruise
w.. 'IS,99'J" Now Only
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1998 Chevrolet S-IO ·
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1996 Oldsmob 1 98

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1998 Buick Century
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1996 Pontiac Sunfire4 cyl., 5 spd. , air, tilt, cruise
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Cavalier·2 Dr., 4 Cyl. , Auto, Air
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Was '1 3,99500 Now Only '11 ,85000
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Auto, Air, tilt , cruise

Was '16,995"' Now Only '15 ,250"'
1994 Chevrolet S-10 Ext Cab
2 WD , 6 Cyl., auto,
air, tilt, cruise

Was '10,900"' Now Only '8,B50"'
1994
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air, tilt, crui's e, T-T Paint
Was 'll ,495"' Now Only '9,475'"
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Now

Ford Escort 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto, Air
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1997 Jee p Grand Cherokee
Laredo - VB, Auto, Air, AMIFM
. Cassette, tilt, cruise
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1993 Fonl Explore r
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1997 Toyota Tacoma 4x4 .
5 Spd., 4 Cyl., air, extra clean ,
38,000 miles, Black
Was '14,90000 Now Only 1 13 ,275"

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4 Dr., 4x4, loaded , CD Pla ye r,

Ca ssette, tilt , cruise

Was '6,900"' Now Only '5,350&lt;•

1997

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Chnrolel Cavalier -white,
4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto, Air,
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1998 Cmlier · 2 Dr.,
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White, loaded, dan blue,
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Was s24,90000 Now Only 123,87500
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Dark Green, 4, Dr., VB, 350,
loaded , leatloer inl ., CD player
Was ' 24.900•' Now Only '21 ,850"'

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Cadallic Sedan Deville Loaded, Leather, Low Miles
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I

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Conv. while wlblack top, Sharp! 4x4,
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Was'

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�..
.

~

· Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

.I!' . Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12, 2000

..-.~~--~------~--------------------------------------------------------~------~~---------------------------------------------------..
....._....___
,..,..
..
.

.

....

,,

NATIONAL LEAGUE BASEBALL

\~Elster's
fi~t
·
three·ftl~
..

homer propels D~gers. ·past Giants 6-5

...

YCr9,r Bank In~-..

J

..I .~
.D

•

do n't think I've eVer see n that;' San Francisco manager Dusty Baker said. "That's a lot of home runs in
one day. Maybe we ought to look fo r somebody
that's been o ut o f the game."
Elster was retired, bur decided during the winter
to give baseball o ne more shot.
"Everything I do is kind of a bonus, because I had
no idea I was going to be here," said Elster, who hadn't had a three- homer game since Little League. " I
had in my mind I was retired. Everything is gravy for
me."
At San Francisco, C han Ho Park (2- 0) allowed
three runs and six hits in six innings, and Jeff Shaw
got three o uts fo r his second save.
·
In other games, St. Louis defea ted H ouston I 0-6,
San Diego edged Arizona 3- 2 ·in 13 innings, and
Montreal beat Pittsburgh 7-3.
Cardinals 10, Astros 6 - Pinch-hi tter Tho nm

BY THE ASSOCIATED PR ESS

:•

Kevin Elster k.nows Pacific Bell Ua rk is a home: run haven - at least for him.
~-' " Isn't it gorgeous! It's a fabulo us place," he said
·:Tuesday after the first three-homer ga me of his
::oaree r led the l os Angeles Dodgers over the San
:~franc isco Giants 6-5 in the stadium opener.
:·. " I felt comfortable," Elster said, " and obviously it
; showed."
Barry Bonds, J.T. Snow and D oug M irabelli hit
one each for .the Giants, but no o ne put one over the
: right- field wall into San Francisco Bay.
:
Before a sello ut crowd of 40,930 on a pleasant
•:aftern oon, Elster hit a thitd-inning drive off Kirk
: :R uete r (0-1) that tied it at' 1, added a two-run shot
;.in a three- ru n fifth, then hi t a solo homer in the
::~i gh th ofT Felix Ro dri guez.
· · "A guy hits th ree ho mers to initiate th e p ark - I
..' .

.

.

:~Tigers

..·.· RedS___
·.:-----...;...

:::

from Pip 81

•;: :fefr-h ander Gabe White, who was
::traded from Cincinnati five days
::ago, but the strategy backfired
&gt;when Griffey hit an 0-1 pitch 466
: · (eet into the second deck beyond
:: ~ight-center field.
;: ; "I made one mistake tonight,
i: and it was to him," White said.
~:'!One pitch, four runs just like
:;ihat. Unfortunately the one mis~; take was very costly to us as a
...
' w hoc.
I "
:.:: Griffey celebrated the slam
~; \'lith an elbow-rubbing routine
' : ?Jith his teammates in the dugout
i:but described the homer as if it
boame by accident.
::; : ''Just trying to get the ball in
, ; the outfield and somewhere in the
~:fir," he said. "I wasn't thinking
~·about hitting a grand slam. I'm just
): t:ryjng to get a guy in and a guy
~: gver in that situation. I happened

.

.:::·.

ca Park, the Tigers' first home
game in 104 years that . wasn 't
played at the corner of Michigan
and Trumbull.
"This is home," Detroit first
baseman Tony· Clark said. "It feels
good to break in with a win at
our new home."
That's nothing nciw for the
Tigers, w~o· have won the open-

ers at all three parks they haw
played in .
The Tigers, then in the Western
League, routed Columbus 17- 2 in
the Bennett Park opene r on April
28, 1896. When Navin Field, later
called Tiger Stadium, o pened on
the same sire on April 20, 1912,
Detroit beat Cleveland 6-5 . ' '
The Royals' tradition is a much

to hit the ball out."
GrifT~ is lOth on the career
slant list, tied with Harold Baines,
Robin Ventura and Mark MeGwire for the lead among active
playen. His previous slam was last
April 30.
·
"I don't think he lefi any doubt
about that one:• Reds manager
Jack McKeon said.
·
Dmitri Young added four hits,
including a three-run homer for
the Reds, who have at least one
home run in each of their first
nine games. That was plenty for
Ron Villone (2-0) as the left-hander held the Rockies to two .runs
and four hits in seven innings.
"I'll take it any way it comes
here,"Villone said. "Any time you
get runs on the board, it's a little
confidence-builder. Just go out
ep throwing, '
letting it ~"
illone was successful in
his first start at Coors Field, Griffey padded his numbers at altitude,
where he is I 0-for-27 with five

homers and 15 PJ31s.
' 'My dad was a coach here, so it
makes it a little easier," Griffey
said. "H~ tells me, 'just try to hit
line drives. If you hit it hard
enough, it wilt go."'
White, who later retired GrifFey
on a shallow fly to center, joined a
long list of pitchen who have
been victimized by the 30-yearold slugge,r - many of them at sea
level in Seatde.
· ·
"I don't think the park has anything to do with it," White said. "I
don't -think it matters where he
hits. He hits home runs everywhere, so I don't think coming
here benefits him at all."
Notes: Reds 2B Pokey Reese
did not play because of a bruised
left elbow. He hopes tO return to
the lineup for today's series finale.
Cincinnati lB Sean Casey, who
broke his right thumb in the final
exhibition game of the spring,
plans to hit off a tee Friday. He is
eligible to come off the 15-day
disabled list April 17.

___;~___;~~~-....:.------~~~---

Draft

Tribe

·.·

..

Mason Bowlin1.Lanes results

.•

I

&amp; Savings Company

• ,

..,
• ••

Pomeroy • Tuppers Plains • Gallipolis

Expos 7, Pirates 3 - Jose Vidro hit a pair of
rwo-ru n homers and Lee Stevens added a two-run
shot off Kr is Benson (0- 2), who lost for eighth time
in nine deciswns despite strikin g out a .career- high
mne.

WHERE: Dan ...ala Motors
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Javier Vazquez (1 - 0) apparently wa sn't bothered
by a two-hOLlr, two-minute rain delay that delayed
the start until afte r 9 p.m . H e allowed three ru ns two catned ~ in six innings. Steve Kli ne p itched

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three sco reless in nings fo r hi s first save.

Visiting Montreal has won five of si{C, whtlt: Pittsburgh has lost three straight

.

mo re recent o ne, as th ey won fo r like football players on a Novc mRamo n
Mar tihcz
(l- 1)
the second straight night with a be r day.
becam e the fi rst Boston pitcher to
walk -ofT homer.
Bri an Me chle r (1 - 1), wh o win other than hi s brot he r, Pedro,
Brian Jo hnso n fopowed up started and wo n the final game at and Garciaparra we nt , 4-for-5 as
Johnny Damon 's ninth-inning Tiger Stadium , gave · up 10 hits th e R ed Sox beat Minnesota in
game-1vinner from a day earlier and ·one walk, but allowed just th eir hom e .opener.
by hittiltg a two-run homer with two run s~ one earned - in six
Joe Mays (0- 1) took, the loss.
one out in the 12.th inning to give inning$.
White Sox U, Devil Rays 6
Kansas City a 7-5 come"from·
Freddy Garcia (1- 1) gave up
C hi cago hit four home runs,
behind win ove r the Baltimore fiw runs and six hits in si x . including consecutiw · shcm by
Orioles.
innings . The Tigers only scored C hris Singleton and Carlos lee in
"We're .not going to let our- five runs off Garcia all season in th e fifth . Singleton's two - run
selves get carried away with this. 1999 .
homer put the White Sox up 6:·5
We're nor going to let that hap·
At Kansas City, Joe kanda, at Tampa .
i
.
pen," Johnson said. "We'll always whose thi'ee-n1n homer ill the
Ray Durham hit a leadoff
be happy with a single if that's aU eighth off reliever AI Reyes had homer otT Esteban Yan ~~ 1) and
it takes."
tied it at 5, beat out an infield sin- Paul Kon erko, who went 14-foi-5
Comerica Park, built at a cost gle leading ofT the 12th against with four RBls , h':id a two-rim
of $300 million in downtown Tim Worrell (1-1) . Then Johnson inside-the-park honier in the first.
Detroit, has all the amenities, from hit his second home run to leftJose C anseco and Greg Vaughn
homered for the Devil R ays, who
statues ofTy Cobb and AI Kaline, center with one out.
to luxury suites and a &amp;rouse!, yet
Jose Santiago (1-0) pitched the have lost six of seven·
·
.
it also seemed to satisfy the base- 12th for the win.
Jim Parque (1 - 1) got the wit).
ball purists.
Cal Ripk¢n homered in his
Angell 5, Blue Jays 4. :
"It's a beautiful stadium," said first at-bat, leaving him five hits
Ramon Ortiz (1-0) pitched
Seattle's John Olerud, whose. first· from 3,000.
five steady innings in . his first
inning double was Comerica's
In other AL games, Boston game of the season, a~d. Dadn
first hit. "1\nd it's big. I thought routed · Minnesota 13-4; the Erstad hit a three-run homer for
there were some· balls today that Chicago White Sox beat Tampa heist Anaheim.
definitely would have been home Bay 13-6; and Anaheim edged
Mo Vaughn hit his first homer
runs tn the old Tiger Stadium."
Toronto 5-4.
of the year, a solo shotl iQto the
,. Red Sox 13, 1\vins 4
left"field seats leading olf~he third
Before a capacity cro.,vd ·of
39,168 on a cold afternoon that
Boston di~n't need. another ...~~i~t Kei'&lt; i,m Esgjbar. 0 (0.~~.,;to
featurecl a steady drizzle, players outstandmg performance from a gtve the Angels a 5-0 feict.
'
wore parkas -with hoods up M artinez, not with C arl Everett's
Troy Percival struck .out ~Pe
under their uniforms . Th eir two homers and Nomar Garcia- side in the ninth for his second
breath was visible in vapors - . parra's four hits.
save.

private workout and Samuels
because he showed up overweight
at his.
Some draft analysts have wide
receiver Plaxico Burress of Michi gan State falling out of the top 10,
although he seems most likely to .
go to Pittsburgh at eight.
But no one really knows.
In 1998, Randy Moss fell from a
top-five pick to ~I st and be cam~
an instant star for the Vikings.
Same for Warren Sapp, 1vho in
1995 went from a possibl~ No. I
to No. 12 and is now an All-Pro
for Tampa Bay.
At the other end is lawrence
Phillips, whom the Ran is took
s.ixth overall despite his co nsiderable baggage. He was gon e two
years later.
What do people who make the
picks think?
" I just watch the teams ahead. of
me," Ernie Accorsi, general 111anager of the Giants, said Tuesday.
"Then I make my pick and watch
th,e oiher teams again to see who
we get a shot at in the second·
round."
Yes, . the only semblance of the
truth is available draft ,,ay.

Fanners Ba:nk

Matt Whisena nt '(1-0) pitched the 13tll for th e
win .

-.

sembles.
Two years ago, Indianapolis' Bill
;. :
Polian kept everyone guessing
:: ~
from Pap 81
over whether he would take Peyton Manning or Ryan Leaf with
,. :;.: th e ve ry top, visited the Brmrus the first pick. He .rook Manning
!; iogether last week.
and says now - as Manning stars
:•: C leveland was thought to be and Leaf struggles - that Man; :li:aning toward Brown. Bur Clark · ning was always No. ! I n his heart.
::~ame o ut of the meeting gushing
The prize for most truthful GM
: ~:tbo ut Arrmgton the same way he probably goes to Buffalo's J0 hn
: :gushed about hiS buddy Joe Man- Butler, who before the 1997 draft
: :"!!na after making The Catch that said he'd jump in a1i instant if
•:wo n the 1981 NFC t1tle.The Jets AntowaiQ Smith fell to 23rd ,
:; pro bably want Arrington, too - .. where the Bills picked . Smith fell
:·Bill Parcells, who remains the ' to 23rd arid Buffalo JUmped.
:: ~ea m 's general manager for now,
This year, Snyder and his under:: ~oac he d Lawrence Taylor.
lings in Washington, notably coach
:&gt; "He looks like a great prospect," NorvTurner and personnel direc: : Parcells said ."But the bus station is tor Vinny Cerrrato, have to be get&lt; tUll of guys who were once com- ting nervous.
:;pared to lawrence Taylor." .
" We like four guys and we're
::: Th a t'~ what makes draft week so happy with two .of any of them,"
;·:(n ck.y - everybody lies or dis- Cerrato says, referring to Arrington, Brown, Samuels and Warrick.
"Whoever Cleveland takes, we're
' &lt;.
going to end up with two out' .
.....
standing
football players."
ftom Pllge 81 .
Still, Warrick and Samuels have
both dropped in some scouts' esti:·control."
mation
- Warrick because he ran
:: :. Fryman added an RBI single in
.:·the sixth . Olivares allowed five 40 yards in 'OVer 4.5 seconds at his
·:runs - four earned - and six hits
::ms'l. innings.
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -,
:: : Tribe Notes: Oakland 2B
:; kandy Vel arde is expected to visit
:: ihe A's minor league facilities in
:· Arizona for further treatment
;: w hile the A's travel to cold-weathEarly Wedneac!ay Mixed Bowling League
;: ~r cities' Boston and Cleveland.
. (As of April 5)
;: velarde, recovering from a strained
rei
.
.
' W::L.
~ : teft kn ee, could begin a rehab
Mei~s County Golf Course ........................................ .....104· 16
&lt; assignment as early as next week.
The Dar!&lt; Side ...............:... ....... .......·........ .......... ..... ..........76-44
:; • The Indian s have said Paul
Dairy Queen Brazier ....... .. ... ........ ............................ .. ... : .. .68-52
:; Shuey and Steve Karsay will be
Tony's Carry Out ............................... ........ ....... ....... .......... 62-58
:-.co- closers, i1t least for the time
F.O.E. 2171 ..... .... ......................... ... .......... ... ..:... :....... .......36·84
:: being. KarS&lt;~y has both Cleveland
Meigs Industries ............ .. ................. .... ,..... .. ..... ...........:.14·1 06
:: ~aves thus far and has finished four
•: games. Shuey has fini shed two,
Team hlgh .earlle: Meigs County Golf Course (1993)
Team high game: Meigs County Golf Course (681)
!: incl udin g Tuesday night's.
· ~ • Oakland DH Jo hn Jaha, who
•: struck o ut- three tim es against
Min
High aerlea: Chuck Burton (600); Sam Smith (516)
:: Nagy, had a .478 career batting
High geme: Burton (202 &amp; 200)
·
;. ~ve rage against the Indians' pitcher
: ~ ntering the game'.
.
.
WOmtn 1
: · The Indians. have committed
High aerlee: Kaye Spenc~r (472); Aoxa~n Ru81ell (445)
; o n Nrror in their first ei11ht games.
High g1m'1: Spencer (178): Pat C1r10n 175)
:: O:~kl a nd's Frank Mcncchino did
•ltot score a nm for the fiJit rime
: l hi.s 1~ason .

..

Sp rague drove the fi.rsr pitch he sa w into the leftfield seats to tic it at 2.

begin Comerica.Park era with 5·2 v~ctory over Marin~rs:

av THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. T h&lt;· Kansas City Royals are
:;lnaking a habit of hitting walk- off
:;home runs. The Detroit Tigers
&gt; baw dnne the some by opening a
:·: ne,,; home with a win .
:·; Gregg Jefferies and Bobby
· ~ Hi ggin&lt;on each drove in two runs
:;as Detroi t beat the Seattle
:; Mariners 5·2 Tuesday at Conteri·

;· :

Howard had a go-ahead grand slam off C hris H olt
(0- 2) in the sevent h and Edgar R enteria added a
three-ru n homer la ter in the inning.
St. Louis was ted a 3-0 lead and fell behind 6-3 ·
before Howard hom ered in the seventh off C h&lt;is
H olt (0-2) , who loaded the bases with walks tQ
M cGwire and Eric Davis around a single by Jim
Edmonds, who is 7- for-7 in his last two games.
Jeff Bagwell and M oises Alou hit two- ru n·homers
for the Asrros. T here have been ' 19 ho mers in fi ve
games at Enron Field , which o pened last Friday.
Padres .3, Diamondbacks 2 (13) Ed
Sprague homered· with one our in the ninth innin g
to tie the game, th en won it with another' homer
leading off the 13th against Russ Springer (1- 1) as
Sa n Diego rallied at home.
Lefr-hande r O mar Daal was .two o uts from Arizo na'j second compl ete game in th ree days when

AMERICAN LEAGUE BASEBALL

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

I i.

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I

199 7 Geo
Conv. while wlblack top, Sharp! 4x4,
4 cyl. , 5 spd .. AMIFM caeeette,
low miles

Was'

1999 C.li c vro lc t S- l 0 lll uzm· 4 Or., luntli·d: 4x4. Ovt' rhe ud
co n toiole , co lllp nMs. fih•: rglu st~

running hoard ~ olum . whee ls,

�Page a 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

U's Bellisari grew up in 1999

Public

(AP) -

Dunng spnng

Bellisan took ~arne b1g hits

+

and that

was

workouts, the

are He adnutted that he d1d not

1·800-833-0830

" You go from kindergarten to

their offensiVe !me to protect Bel-

first

year

hsan better They've also tned to

through the rank! and make your

It figures that when a team has

expand the offense by rhrowmg

way to JUillOr h1gh -

d1sappomtmg season, the quar-

more to the back! and light ends

he s domg

terback will catch much of the

and by addmg an option attack

Tun

blame

that they mtend to

a

6-6 last

Bellisan

recogn1zes

that

one of the b1ggest reasons the
Ituckeyes had to watch the bowl
i!IJmes on TV was because of his
on-the-Job tr:umng
' That s part of the game,

the

JUmor-to-be sa1d of the heat he

or

10

us.e

for e1ght

plays a game

Still

pattence

Stobart

If take

and that s the quarterback

for some guys than for o thers

what they giVe you and keep
moVtl)g the chams
A

year ago

What

md

wtth him IS t o have patience JUSt

they've got to look ~r,r somebody

Bellisan was the

backup to Austm Moherman

m

he

of how to h andle the s1t

uatlons a quarterback 1s present
ed

Almost

as

year because

younger brother of former Ohio

had earned 11

mage, but Bellisari seemed

State linebacker Greg Bellisan

45

10

games he completed JUst

percent of h1s passes and had

nme mterceptlons to go With

12

TD passes
But

S t obart

-

he

has

I

he

d1dn t think he

think I have a little more

started the thud game and never

freedom as to what I can say and

relmqu1shed the JOb Moherman

how to say 11 now sa1d the nat1ve

almost forgotten by the coaching

of Boca Raton Fla

staff transferred

Belhsan

Wtth Moherman gone the Job

Chuck

muc h

take an active role as a leader l ast

the first two games Bellisan, the

last

m these days of

Bellisan sa1d he has gamed a lot

m terms

bOth s1des of the !me of scnmdraw most of the fire Starting the

IS

learned last year

There were lots of problems on
to

of Belhsan's

learmng curve ' It s a process The

sprmg prac nce •

editor and callers on t3lk shows
you re not wmnmg ball games

sa1d

shoWing so far

'What we re trymg to emphaSIZe

quarterback deserves 1t

Salem

He needs to have a little btt
more

that s what

quarterbacks coach

nught have to be made m Belllsans head

took from media, letters to the

'The

grade and from there you go

process J,Jappens a lmle btt faster

the btggest Improvement

vocal

h as

become

more

There 1sn t any disputing

the

IS Bell1san s That g 1ves hm1 confi-

he's one of the cornerst ones of

receivers coach last year and now

dence but 11 also m u st g1ve the

the Buckeyes' rebUJ!dmg proJeCt

the offensive coordinator -

sa1d

coaching staff a

queasy feehng

that Belhsan wasn t the sole rea-

smce none of the backups -

son the Buckeyes seemed lost at

sh1rt freshmen Cra1g Krenzel and

times on offense

Scott M cMullen and mconung

You have to protect you h ave

red

freshman Rick McFadde n -

has

to catch and you have to throw

ever b een exposed to the speed

Stobart sa td

and VIolence of a college game

He does one of

them There are two other phases
that have be handled

In due

nme

they ll

have

But an older
• acknowl edges

he s

WISer Bell1san
not al one out

there

' I ve

been

that kind of guy

who hkes to make plays to kmd
of try to b e m control

he md

I

l earned a l ot last year You can t do
to

grow and l earn the same way Bel

Public

learned what h1s respons1b1ht1es

hsan has

Buckeyes have tned to shore up

after Ohio State

firushed

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Dtptrlmllflt of
Aging through the Buckeye
Hilla·
Hocking / Valley
Rtglontl Development
Dlltrlct Aret Agency on
Aging Route 1, Box ztt.D
Mtrlttta, Ohio It mtklng
available lunda lor lht
conetrucllon, renovation
tcqultltlon and repelr ol
oonlor lacllltlll T-Ilt lunda
" ' from the Senior
Facllltl . . lint Item In the
State of Ohio a 2000 and
2001 Biennium Budget
Appllcollone mutt ba
received ol the Aree Agency
on Aging no lotor thon Uoy
12, 2000 Tho moxlmum
otatt lunda requ. .t por
proJect
It
$50, 000
Application• and aptclllc
Information about tht
proca.. II IVIIIIblt by
conlllctlng
Cynthia McMannll,
Area Agency on Aging

,

Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12,

Ohio

1t

all

by yoursel f

Area Agency on Aging
Routo1
Boxztt.D
Marietta Ohio 45750

1-800-833.0830
(4)121tc

Notice

Public

12131/00
BldCIIII moy roquttl 1
propo111 p~~ckellrom Molly
Vemer 11 the ebovt ICidrell
or CIIH 740-374-04341
Complolod prop6 . . 1a
muot ba received It the
Buckey• Hilla ontce by 5 00
p m on Mey 12 2000
Tochnlcal lllllttnct II
avolloblo
(4j121tc

r

You 11 build~ b n.st tgg whtn
JIDU od,. with tht chml(ir&lt;Js

2000

ol Otllla County, Ohio
bearing Caoo No 1111 CV 9e
demanding that Judgmant
bo granted agalnat you lor
$31 535 57 plua coat and
lntoroll
Thla nollct will run onca
uch
wuk
lor
olx
IUCCIIIIVt Wtok&amp; tho 1111
publication bolng on tho 3rd
day of May, 2000 The
Defendant will have twtnty
eight daya from lhe day of
laat publlcttlon In which to
anower 11kl complaint
Mark E Shilts
Halliday Shlttt It Saundort
19 Locu11 Stroot
~0 Box325
Gallipolis OH 45631
Telephone (740) 446-1652
Registration 10038525
Attorney lor Plaintiff
Otlondont may obtain a
copy ol the Complaint fllod
herein from the olllce of
Norean Saundere, Clerk of
Courlo
t;lallla County
Courlhouse
Galllpollt
Ohio 45631
(3) 30 (4) 5 12 19, 26 (5) 3
6tc

1Cc&gt;lll~non

Public Notice

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
Galllpolla Building Supply
Inc
DBA 0 doll True Value
Lumber Co
Plalntlll vs
Jackie Lao Tanner
Defendant
CaN No 99 CV 96
LEGAL NOTICE
Jackie Lee Tanner, whoaa
laot
know
place
ol
,.aldence Ia 724 Eaot Main
Street, Middleport, OH
45780 Is hereby notified
that on the 8th day ol July
1999 Galllpolla Building
Supply Inc DBA
Otll
True Value Lumber co
Plaintiff Iliad a complaint
for Judgment en an account
against you ao Defendant In
the Court cl Common Pleao

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Public Notice
JERRY J ORUESER
ET AL
LEGAL NOTICE
PLAINTIFFS
The Ohio Department of
CASE NO 99 CV-G34
Aging through the Buckeye
VS
Hille
Hocking
Valley
EDITHE BURNELL
Regional
Development
WILLIAM R HUGHES
Dlatrlcl Area Agency on
MARGARET HUGHES
Aging Routt 1 Box 299 D,
AND THEIR UNKNOWN
Marltlla ,
Ohio,
Ia
HEIRS ET AL
Requesting proposals lor
DEFENDANTS
Dlaoaaa Prevention and
LEGAL NOTICE
Health Promotion In Athlno,
Defendants Edith E
Hocking Molga Monrot
Burnell (deceased) whoae
Morgan Nobla Parry tnd
I all known place of
Withington
countlaa
residence Ia Eaat Side
Funding Ia .vallable lor
Street, R 124, Mlneravlllt
Medical
Aaaeaamant,
Ohio William R Hughes
Mental Health aaoeaament,
Margarst Hughes addraoaea
Health Education, and
unknown and the Unknown
Medication Screening lor
He ira of Edith Burnell
the period ol 1/1/00 to
William R Hughes, ind
J----------~~=..:.::::.::.:.:.:.::::.::.:::.:.:...::..:.:=-j Margaret Hughea addrolltl
unknown
are hereby
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
notified that on the 9th day
of April, 1999 and March
10 2000 Jerry J Grua11r
ZOOO by NEA. Inc
and Norma J Grueaar
Plalnlllla, Iliad
tholr
complaint and amended
'f fv
complaint to quiet tltlo to
the real eatata deacrlbad In
aald complaint and other
relief In lhe Court of

o

s

t$~r

No
'
Thla notice will run aech
wook lor aht aucctaiiVt'
Wilks, the 1111 pubiiCIIIOn
baing on tho 26th dty 111·
April 2000 Tha Dofondlnll
will have twonty·alght CS.V.
from lha day Ol lt~l
publication In which to
anawar uld complllnt
O.nlu L Bunce
S u p - Court RIJ::
10042f41
O.niN Bunce Law OfficelOSE Second SlrHt
Pomeroy Ohio 45719
(740) 802 5730
Anomay lor Plalnlln.
Defendant may obtlln a
copy of the Complaint Ilia
horeln from the olllca of
Larry Spencer Clerk of
Courts, Molga County
Courthouae Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(31 22 29
(4) 5 12, 19 26
6TC

ANNOUNCEMENTS
•

005

PSYCHIC READINGS By Sophlal
CompUmentary Readlngl Amazing
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Call1 954-484-4959
START DATING TON IGHT!
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Information 1 800 ROMANCE
~'" 9735

Why wait? Sterl meeting Ohio
sing les tonig ht Ca:H toll tree 1
800 766 2623 ex1enslon 6178
30

Notice Ia hereby give~
that tha annual meeting ol
the
ahareholdara
of
Farmera Bancaharoa, Inc
will be held at lha Pomeroy
Ubrtry 216 Waot Main
Street Pomeroy, Ohio, on
the third Wednesday of
April 2000 at 4 00 p m
accord111Q to Ita byltwe, for
the purpoae of elactlnp
dlroctora
and
the
lraneacllon of such othor
bualna. . aa may properly
come btlore aald maatlng
Jo Ann Crlap, Stcratlry
(3) 28 (4) 7, 12 18 4 te

salits cam
New To You Thrift Shoppe

9 West Stimson Athens
740-5921842
Quality clothing and househo ld
Items $1 00 bag sa le every
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday
9 00.5 30
SAVE ON PRESCRIPTIONS II
You Pay F.or Your Prescriptions
At"id For Those On Medicare
We Ollar A Prescription Drug
Plan For $7 08 /Mo 1 800 386
62e1
40

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTEN CONTRACTORS
Salisbury Townehlp wnt
bo taking 11alad bldt on
Hazard Mitigation Oraqt
ProJect work lo be dona In
Salisbury Township Work
will conelll of elevation of
home• above flood laval
For ICOpa of work call (740)
802-6839 Bide wlll bt open
at
ragutar
Townahlp
mooting held at Sallabury
Townehlp
hell
et
Rocbprlnga on May 9th 11
830pm
(4) tO, 11 12 24, 211, 28 fTC

Ub Ml)(ed Pupp ies 9 Weeks
Old 740.38811413
t.!llle Black Cal Approxlmatlly 1
Y~are Old Long Haired 740
2~009

Topper rus small pick up truck/
snort bed (304)674-&lt;1828
Tw year old mate Labl Chow mx
good with kloJs playful call 740
74~ 2278
Uled Bathro om Vanity Labora
tory Medium Cabinet 740 446
3726

70

field Knowledge of telec:ommunlcetlone

Gallipolis

science experience thrH years management

&amp; VIcinity

For golf on the Trat[ call 800 949 4444
ALABAMA'S

1 800 949 4444

www

I

rtJgolt com

dtsabthly
Vacatton

MOving Selo Saturday 15th 9-?
Gfeen Terrace Centenary Furnl
turo Clothing Appliances To
Much To Llotl

Retirement

l.lntn our family of professionals to be the

I re110utrce for community health service needt.
I Pleatte submit resume's to

Pomeroy,
Mlddlaport

&amp; VIcinity

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

WV 25550

'6" Mile Yellow Flag Yard Salt
Pomeroy Middleport May 51h &amp;
6th Register now S5 00 Pick up
flag For more Information call
740 992 4197

FAX TO (304) 875-6975

~II Yord Sateo Muol Bo Pold tn

c/o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
Pt PLEASANT,
OR

PF•QUNE 2 00 p m
1111 cloy - .. lite ld
Iota run &amp;totdoy
dtkJn •I 00 p.m.
Friday Mondoy ldltlan
·I 30om Botunlly

Holidays

L1fe Insurance

Advonoo Dtoclllno 1 OOpm tho
diiY before the ld Ia to run,
Sundoy 6 Mondoy odlllon
1 OOpm Friday

~lg Inside yard aalt- Rl 124 Syr
acuae a lot of $1 00/bag clothes
Aj)rll14 15

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

.Jfyou're commg to the DteHard 500 on

(256) 362-RACE

,.

Long term

Hospitalization
Dental

'llrd and bako salo April 13th &amp;
(4111 9 ? Long Bonom Community
Butldlng

New Roofs • Repelrt
• Coating • Guttel'l

80

• Siding • Drywall

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
bUy/aell estates consignment
ajlcllon Thuradaya Bpm Middle
port Ohio &amp; WV Llconao 740
11112 9707 740 -2623

Free Estlma,es

Joseph Jacka
740·992·2068
4110100 1 mo

WAITED
umber large
Top
prwes paid also

Standmg

or 8malltrac k s

Doser work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Loggmg

SUPPORT
GROUP MEETING
Thursday April 13 2000
at630p m
SCENIC HILLS NURSING
CENTER
311 Buckrldge Ad
(BehiQd Spring Valley Cmema)
1n Gallipolis
Topic "The Importance of
Actlvllles"
Speaker 11na Moodlspaugh
Scenle H1lls Acllvtlles Director
Everyone Welcome!
Please RSVP to Pam Jones
(740) 446· 7150
II you have questions call the
Alzheimer a professionals at
SGentc Hills Nursing Center for
more Information {7401 446 7150
Scenic Htlls
"The Alzheimer s Experts"

Bllfy Goble Auct oneer Pomeroy

Ohio 740.992 7502

-

Rlek Pearson Auction Company
full lime auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
188 Ohio &amp; West VIrginia 304
77:).5785 Or 3!*77:).5447

Dailey
Truckl•g

Wedame~er s Auction Service
Gelllpol~ Ohio 740-379-2720

Dump Truck
Service
Limestone Gravel
Agricultural

90

Sand and Dirt

( R and y)

.Raclae, Ohio

949·2249

:

' .

*CONCRETE *BACKHOE SERVICES M'
*MASONRY *BOBCAT SERVICES ~
RESIDENTlAU//1////COMMERCIAL 0
FREE ESTIMATES•.••FULLY INSUQED N
Bnan Morrison I Racme, Ohto
R
(740) 985-3948
y

I

Wanted to Buy

A~solula Top Dollar All U S Sll
~•( And Gold Coin s Proofaets

Lime

after 8 00 pm
740 992 5050

Auction
and Flea Market

• Painting • Plumbing

Class A Clasa B, and Non COL
drivers needed
TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
Portland OH
7 40 843 5280 Days
740 949 2439 Eve

'"POSTAL JOBS'" ·UP To
$18 35 Hour Hiring For 2000
Free Call For Appllcat on /Exam!
nat on Information Federal Hire
F.uU Benetti 1 800.598 4504 Elt
tension 1521 (8 A M 6 PM
CS T)
A Metabolism Breakthrough I
Lost 40 lba In 2 Week s Guar
Gall Nowl t 888 821 !958
$11 $33 HOURI Govornmenl
Jobst Hiring Now! Paid Training
Full Benefits Call 7 Days I 800
MEDICAL BILLING Groat Earn
lng Potential! Full Training /Com
puler Req d 888 660 6693 Ext
4402
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 Vr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Great Benefits Cal 7
Days 60().429-3860 Ex1 J 566

Diamonds A.nUquA Jewttry Gold
R~ngs Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterling Etc Acqu a ttons Jewelry
jll T S Coin Shop 151 Secon d
Awnue GalliJol~ 740-446 2842
HoJVallan Lap Steel guitars Pedal
Steel or Consuls 740 593 7871

EMP LOYMENT

REPORTER
Here we grow agaln join
the area s number one news
team If you have a nose for
news, good news Judgment
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Including experience wtrh
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For mtemew consideration
send your resume and cover
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we

yourself to

Ohio Valley
PubbshmgCo
Attention Pubhsher
825 Third Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 45631

ACE11e1 Ia seeking a part tlmt
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provider to perform cleaning du
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ACEnat saaks results oriented
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800 22:). t 149 Ext 460
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AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or Sell
Shirley Spears 304675-1429

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110

Help Wantld

An Alcohol And Other Drug Out
patient Counstling /Prtnnt lon
Agency locatad In Gallla And
Jackton Countltl Ia Seeking

The Following Poallonl
PREVENT~ ON

EDUCATOR Full Time Position Working With
All Age Groups In Both Counties
Responslbilltlll Include Coordi
nation,. Of Drug F.ru Community
Coalition Awarene11 Act lvllies
Education Programs Training
Programs And OIVIIopmtnt And
Implementation Of New Grant
Projkto Bacheloro Dogroo And I
Or Experience Knowledge Of
Chemloal D~ncy A Pluo
VOCATIONAL REHABILITA·
TION CAS£ MANAClER - Full
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Club And Vocational Servlco Ro
ferrets Screenings EW"aluauons
Intakes General Case Manage
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Bacha loro Degree And /Or Ex
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Dtptndency A Pluo
SECRETARY- Full Tlmt Po ol
tlon In The Jackson Count~ Of
lice A Minimum 01 Hig h School
Diploma And Two Years E.:peri
ence Must PoutSI Good Com.
munlcatlon Slcllle (Written And
Oral) And Expe r ence W th Ml
crosoft Word And Excel
RECEPTIONIST - Part Time Po
smon In The Jackson County Of
fico A Minimum 01 Hig h School
Diploma Must Poueaa Good
Commu.nlcatlon Skills (Written
And Oral) And Experience With
M~rosoft Word
Send Resume By April 2! 2000
To FACTS 45 Olive Stroot Gallipolis Ohio 45&amp;31 Or FAX 740
446-8014 EOE MIFIH

110 Plid In Advo-

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PEOPLE NEEDED If You Have
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125 24 t 7 Ext 5046

Yard Sale

technology (preferred) Prevloua Netw6rk
technology experience Five yNre of computer
experience Previous hospital experience

Apnl 16th at Talladega Superspeedway,
grab that dnver and the rest
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Lost and Found

Lost Georges Creek &amp; Con
Street 4lbs Tan /Black Pomera
~len Pup Reward 740-446-3049

lnformatlonffelec:ommunlcatlona Servlc11
Bachelor a Degree In Computer Science or related

Middleport,

U 000 WEEKLY I Mailing 400
Brochureal Satisfaction Guar
antaadt Postage &amp; Supplies Pro
vldedt Rush StU Addressed
Stampocl Envolopol GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370ft 1438 Stan I!'IIN!dlatoly

Floor modal TV wor~s 740 992
52B6 days 740 992 5006 or 740.
992 7051

lost mate black &amp; wnlte Walker
Coon Hounct answers to ·eud•
ftarrlsonvllle 143 vicinity 740
l42 3225

for the coordination ot all

FoUow

Help Wantld

5 week old puppies 4 females 1
mala 2 male cats 6 months old
740 992 1453

found Husky Dog Grey &amp; Black
t-4as Blue Collar VicinitY GaiJin
~~er Plant 740 3677757 Ext

Full-time position reaponalble

Sil!ll•
Moodlapaugh AuctiOn House will be reopening lor the
weekly consignment auction Same time same place an~
verylg loada Thla weak we will have
I'URioi"JTURE (2) dreaaera couch &amp; chair waterlal vanity
(2) metal deaka (lg) wooden deek (lg) wooden olllce table
wooden wardrobe beauticians chair and other mlec
fum1ture
GLASSWARE &amp; POTTERY Fenton Depression WV
Sienko Vlcklng Cambridge Fire King Hull McC:oy and
other mise
COLLECTIBLES Good advertiSing tams ol~ tins J C
Higgins Camp stove paper roller Iron skillets cook1ng
utenalls oil lampe old tools old books records ball cards
and other mise
NEW ITEMS Lawn mower blades &amp; Wheels bicycle tires
and wheels new p1ctures and mirrors dolls and other mise
Moodlopaqh Aucltoneerlns Servlceo
(740) 992-9707 or
989-2623

Giveaway

found on Arbuckle Creek Rd
Small Collle!Mixed Puppy Very
~ute &amp; tnendly good with k ds
(304)937-3348

COORDINATOR, INFORMATION &amp;
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS,

Beech St.

110

725-24!7E~

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

99

Announcements

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
bershlp Or Timeshare ? we 11
Take Itt America s Most Sue
cesaful Campground And Time

60

Thora

Personals

&amp;hare Resale Clearinghouse Call
Flesort Salas lnternaUonal 1 BOO
423 5967 24 Hours www resort

110

AUCTION
13, 2000 6 00 pm

B5:

,.

Notice

Public Notice
Public Notice

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Avon Products Start your own In
Home Buslnesa Work Flexible
Hours EnJoy Unlimited Earnings
(304)3478838
Ba1e1 Srolhera Amusement Co If
Interested to travel please call
740 268 2950 Must be at least
18 years ok:l

•

Dental Hyganist Medical leave
tor July Send resume to Earnest
L Trani DOS P 0 Box 380 Ma
son W\125260
ORIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS
IMMEDIATE OPENJNGS Over
Tho Road Start AI 29 CPM /All
Ml Unloading Pay Personalized
D apalch Homo Ol1on Holiday I
Vacation Pay 401 K !Mad /Pras ~
Oenla l Aos lgnod 99 T2000 s
Alder Program 98% No Touch
Freight CALL SUMMIT TRANS
POATATION 8Q0.67ll-0880 EOE
Drivers 2 week Paid COL Train
lng No Experience Needed Earn
Up To $32 000 JYr Full Benefit&amp;
Call Today
1 877 230 6002
Transport
PA M
www 123pam com
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Medical lnsuranct Bill ing .Assls
lance Needed lmmedlatalyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Annual Income Call
Nowl Cell 1 600 291 4683 Dept il
109
Excollent Opponunll)'

If you want to make money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others we may have a job
for you Local Resident Excel
lent Income posslblllllea and
home office tra nlng for persons
a:etecled Must have pleasing
personality and be willing to
meet the public No experience
neceuary For more tnformauon
call Clay Roney at (304) 675
8019 or mall resume to 2413
Jackson Avenue Point Pleas
ant WV 25550 E 0 E Woodmen
of The World ltftt Insurance So
Clel)'
Excelent ()pporlu111)'
If ~ou want to malte money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others we ma~ have a job
tor you Local Rtaldent Excel
lent Income poaaibllllles and
home office training lor persons
selected Must have pleaalng
personality and be willing to
meet the publ~ No experience
nactssar:y For 'inort Information
call Clay Roney ll (3041 675
8019 or mall retumo to 24t3
Jackson Avenue Point Plea'
ant WV 25550 E 0 E Woodmen
of The World Life Insurance So
clel)'
EXCE~LENT WEIGHT LOSSI
Poworlul High Protein Low Cllbohydrata Programs Help wantAd
Immediately
www llpa4
wolghttosa com HI00.339-9t69

Gallla Meigs Community Action
Is Seeking One Laborer Far Its
Weatherization Crew This Is A
Forty Hour Position Applicant
Should Have A Background In
Healing And Cooling Send Or
Dellwr Resume And References
To GMCAA 8010 North Stale
Route 1 Choahlre OH 45620 By
4/20/00 GMCAA Ia An Equal
Opportunity E~ EEO
Needed Dancers Wed Thru
Sal 8 2 30AM (304)675 59561
(740)992 8387

PRODUOION
We have an openin8 In our
graphics department that
requires cxttUent computer
skills Must be &amp;miUar wttb
Mac Quark, Photo Shop,
and enjoy being creative
Pol!itlon o«ers 401K plan,
health &amp; ltfe Insurance plan
paid vacation and pleasant
working environment
For !ntemew consideration
send resume and cover
letter teUing us why you are
the person we are looking
for
Send 10

Publisher

Oh1o Valley
Publishmg Co.
825Third Ave
Galltpolis Ohto 4'631

110

Help Wantld

Local Trucking Company Sotklng
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pa~ Insurance Talk Vacation
And Home Evenings Call 740
286-1463
LPN S Arcadia Nursing Center Is
now accepting appUca110ns lor full
&amp; parlllmo LPN'S. Must be able
to worlt all shills &amp; be a team
player Rtqulrea 4trong tuper
vlsory Hilla Please apply In per
aon at E Main Street Coalvlllt
Ohio 740 667 3156 M F 8 00
400 EOE
MHtonnlumT...,..ceo
Is P'taaed to announce the
Grand opening of 1111 new Wall
aton calling center
We are now setting up
nteMtw appolntmonll1or
outbound taloservlce posltons
No •xperianoe necessary
Eamup10 SIM1&lt;
wnh quartelly aatory reviews
Managemont0jlportunnl08 avoll
a ~e 401 K/Medlcai/OontaUPeld
"1ca~o1ta eVtlllable 3 shifts dal~
Flo~blo ochidullng. Slarl yOur
new career with us1
Coll1 800-929-5783
for an appointment
Wo lOOk lon..rll to moetlng youl
GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
SIB 35 Hour Full Benaftta No Ex
perlence Required FrH Applk:a
ton And Information 1 888 726
9083 Ex1enalon 1701 (7 AM 1
PM CSTI
Nigh! shirt caring for elderly
hours 7pm to 9am call 740 992
5023
Now Hiring HHA CNA LPN 1 lm
mediate Openings
Felxible
Hours Compt tltlve Compensa
lion Call 740 448- 3808 Health
Management Nuraln g Servlcea I
Ul~maiO Health Cere EOE
Now Taking Applications From
Domino a Plua Gallipolis &amp; Po
moroy On~ 740-446-4040
Optical Aulstant /Receptionist
Position Available Sand Resume
To CLA 501 o/o Galllpolll Cally
Tribune 825 Third Avanue Galli
polls OH 45831
Overbrook Center 333 Page
Street Middleport has part time
poalllona tor LPN s and STNA s
available lor au shifts and wee
kends Anyone interested please
o10p by end fill out an application
EOE
Persons Interested In becoming
pool manager or serving as 1111
guilds at London Pool for the
summer of 2000 send resumes
to Sharon Cotterill clark/trea
suere Syracuse VIllage Hall Syr
ecuse Ohio 4&amp;779 by Aprll15

1 10

Help Wanted

MEDICAL BILLING Great Eatn
lng Potentlall Fun Tfllnlng /Com
pu1er Roq d 686 660 6693 Ext

4401
140

Business
Training

Golllpollo Corwor Cotlogo
(Car-s Close To Homo)
Call Todayl740-44ll-4367
HIOO 214 0452
Reg 190-0r..1214B
150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE
GREE QUICKLY Bachelo rs
Masters Doctorate By Corre
spondenc. Based Upon Prior Ed
ucatlon And Short Study Course
For FREE lnlormatlon Bookle t
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 83!6

TRAINER nttdtd to train toach
era to deliver Innovative comput
er tnlrepreneurahlp curriculum
SttkJng eomeone with experl
once wllh 111t Mlcrosolt Olllce Su
Ito 1118 lntorne~ Mil pego deolgn
and curriculum planning and dt
velopm•nt Muet be organized
persuasive poaltlve and enjoy
Interacting with diverle communi
ty membtra Previous txperlence
aa buelneas owner a plus Send
resume end three refertnctl
ann Chrlaty Brodloftl ACEntl 94
Columbua Road Athena Ohio
467Q1 Dy 211t of April EOE
UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Par
Year Earning Polonttal Oro Nood
People To Process Clalmt You
Can Work From Home We Train
MUST OWn Compulll /Modtm 1
886-332 50! 5 Ext t700 /Dal ~
URGENTLY NEEOEO plooma
dOnora eam $3S to $45 tor 2 or 3
houre weekly Call Sora Tee 74D692.e651
I

Wanted 29 People TeJ Get
$$PoldS$ To Loaa 30 LDL In The
Next 30 Days Natural &amp; Guar
anleed www ovtlalilyshop com
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
OENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TEI'JANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 81 3
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids Inc
**OOV T POSTAL JOBS.. Up
To $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
Froo Call For AppllcOIIpn /Examl
nation lnlormalloo Federal Hire
Full Benefits 1 BD0-598 4504 Ex
ltntl on t 52~ (8 A M 6 PM
CST)

12x60 mobl e home with a full
length addll on on one a¢re B(ld
1 &amp; 113 mile out t43 oft Rt 7 call
&amp;W"enlngs after 5pm 740 992
2517
12x60 two oadroom mobile home
on rented lot 10 Middleport
$2500 740 992 3Hl4

Home &amp; Business Cleaning Free
Estimates Call740-448 1056

DROWNING IN DEllP Cut
Years 011 Your Bills
GUAR
ANTEE.OI Free Enrollment Re
duce Interest !Payments LCCS
Inc 888-442 5227

Excellent care tor parson In my
home non smoker and Mobile
$600 per month (304)882 3680
Need An Electrlclan Or Carpent
er? Beat High Prices All Work
Gauranteed l Free E&amp;llmates1
740-446-2947
Painting Tuck Pointing Of Brick
Oamollt on Of Houses And Build
lngs Residential And Cammer
clal Fully In sured Call Terry
740.288 8473
Roofing plumbing exterior paint
lng odd jobs Call 740 992 0501
ask for Terry

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Applicat ion W !Ser lllce Redu ce
Payments To 65% I!CASH IN
CENTIVE OFFER I Call 1 BOO
326 8510 Exl 29
NEED CASH? Try Debt Consoli
dallon Up To $200 ooo Bad
Credll No Credit OK Credll
Cards Mortgages Monarch Fi
nanclal Group 1 800 491 1756
Ex11201 9A M 9PM EST
230

Professional
Services

Floof&amp; Add Ons Garages New
Homes Decks Painting lnS'ured
All Work Backed By 5 Vear War
ranty Free Estimates! 740 446
66!6

TURNEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Unless We Wln1
1 888 582 3345

Wanted To Do Mounts Tree
Service Buckel Truck Service
Top Tnm Removal Stump Grind
ing Fully tnsured Free Esll
mates Bidwell Ohio 1 800 638
9566 Or 740 388-9646

210

All real estate advenlsing In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes tiiiEIQal
to advertise any preference
I mitatlon or d scrim nat on
based on race color religion
sex familial status or national
or gin or any intention to
make any such preference
limitation or discrimination

Business
Opportunity

$3 000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400
Brochures AT HOMEI Guar
anteed FAEE Supplies Start lm
madlatoly 1 800 489 9477 Ext 88
(24 HIS)

Tlrad 01 Flot Race? Olllce Pollcl
lcs? Your Boas? Work From
Homo Slorl $500 S2 000+
www WC)I"I(fforn.'tOI'ne com

"S AVE BIG BUCKS TODA Y!"
14x80 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths All
Hardwood Floors New Ooub e
Pane Windows $15 OQO Owner
WI Pay $500 In Mov ng f)(
pense 740.379-906 t

This neW&amp;PBper will not
knowingly accept
adverilsemenls tor real estate
whlch lsln violation ofthe
law Our readers are hereby
ln1ormed that all dwellings
adverllsed In this neW!Ipaper
are available on an equal
opponun"y basis

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
rtcommends that you do bus I
ness wHh people you ~now and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll you have Investigated

lho offering
I.TaT
MCI • SPRINT tc
PHONE CARD Route Makes
1 000 S5 000 Nf&lt; ALL CASHI
1
Eas~ l LoCal Sites FREE In ot
This Is Not A Job $5 000 Ro
qulred 1 800 997 9866 Ext 1155
(24 Hrsl

s

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedroom 2 Full Balhs on 1 04
Acres 2Bx36 Detached Garage
$85 000 Must see Malon 80
Rd
Call for appointment
(304) 578 2028

1994 Norris 14x70 Wllh 2 Oecks
Bu ld ng &amp; Riding Lawn Mower On
Rented Lot 740-446-0626

New 14 W de 3 BR
$18 90C HIIXH!91 6777

Real Eatate
Wanted

INEEOLANOI
We Pay Top Dol ar For 20 500
AerO&amp; CI.LL RYAN AI I 800
213-8365 www counlfVIYtnl corn

'*'

RENTALS

CREDIT REPAIR I AS SEEN ON
TV! Erase Bad Cred t Lega lly
Free Info. 1 800 768 4008

ROOM AT THETOP

Molora, i'o1nero'f

1$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remain ng Payments
On Property Sod Mortgages I
Annu test Settlements! tmme
date Ouoleslll Nobody Beats
Our Prices Nat onal Contra ct
Buyers 800 490 073t E~~; t t01
www nalionaleonuactbuyars com

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Georges Portable Sawmll don t
haul your logs to the m II just catl
304 675-1957

$100 Per Hour Ho('lleworkera
Neededl large Advertising Firm
Pa~a $4 For Every Voice Mall
Retrieved Make $400 $500 Eve
ryday In Your Spare Tlmo Limited
Space 1 888 631 8454 (24 Hrs)

Tochnlclan GM and ASE carl!
flocl App~ In peroon at Don Tate

$$ Auto Loans Personal Loans
Debt Consolidation Mortgages
And Refmanclng Cred•l Problems
OK Consumers F nanclal 1 600
247 5125 Ext 1134 Void OH KS
&amp;WI

320

Experienced Lady Will Take Care
01 Elderly In Thare Home 740
245-9844

Bennetts Lawn Care Serv ce
Commercial &amp; ~esldentlal
We do mowing weed cutting
Unt clearing &amp; brush removal
lai'Kfscape &amp; custom bun fenc~~ C&amp;JI for lrae estimate
(140)388 0482/(740)709 0536

AN Suptlvlsor For 20 Bed ICF I
MR Facility Thla IS A Full Time
Management Pooltlon Wllh Bono
fila Contact Dorothy Harper AI
740 441 7148 Or Fax Rosumo
To 740-446-0138

www g--llltcorp.com

220 Money to Loan

32x80 Facto ry Repo Never Lived
In $49 950 I 800 691 6777

Wantad To Do

FINANCIAL

0427,

T red 01 Was ting Money On
Work AI Home Pro grams That
Don 1 Work? Need The Trutn7
Call 978 887 7925 24 Hours

Flental Property Two 1 Bedroom
Complex C1ty lim ts 2 Acres
Wooded lot W1th 1 Bedroom
Trater 740..441 0120

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAD CREOIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 160 DAYS 1
600 422 1598

180

POSTAL JOBS To 51.35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP ANQ EXAM
INFO CALL 1 SOO 613 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 1
OAYStqa InC

TAKE lACK YOUR LIFEI So
Your Own Bossi Earn An Extra
$500 S t 500 PT Or S2 000
$1 500 FT Per Monlh lfl0.335

Opportun lty

1 4x70 two bedrQOm trailer newer
heat pump and carpet 740 742
26t0

Will haul trash away $40 a pick
up load (304)675-11158

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY ond EASY LISTEN
lNG I Call t 800 469 S t 64 For
Appointment To Como To Nash
vlllt And Audlllon For Mtijor
Record Producers And Concert
P101110troe lntemtl www wcln ac

360

BuslnB&amp;S

$FREE CASH NOW$ F om
Wealthy Families Unloading M
1ons or Collars To Help Min m ze
The r Taxes Wr ite Immediately
W ndfa 1 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
10017

PoSial JODI $46 323 00 Yr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Greal S"eneflts Cell 1
Days 800-429 3880 Ext J 385

Immediate opening for community
support consultant In local and
surrounding area Entry level
ulea and marketing position Ex
ctlltnt management opportunity
Starling llllary of $500+1 wk plua
bonustt commlaalons btneflts
RetaJI eJCperilnce and women ex
cot MlniiiiUI)I 2 yoare cologo Degree a plus Wa train For per
aonal and confldentlallnttrvltw
COII1 843-857-o522,

210

Only

New Double Wide 3 BA 2 Batn
Only 2 le11 $26 900 1 600 691
6111
16K80 Factory New Special Pur
chase $23 000 1 800.691-8777
D1vorce Forces Sale! 312 Set Up
On Pr W"ate Lot Catch Up Pay
menls &amp; Move In 740 446 3570
NEW BANK REPO ONLY 3
LEFT Owner F nanclng Available
304 736 7295
BANK REPOS ONLY $41111 00
DOWN l
ASSUME LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS WILL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOME
EASY -F INANCING AVAILABLE
(304)76&amp;-55&amp;5
Dlrecl Factory Sale All Olsplays
Must Go Save $$$$ Only at
Oakwood Homes Nllro WV
(304)755 5885
Save Your
Dough Drive to Nitro
FlEETWOOD HOMES
nM STATE ROUTE 7
PROCTORVILLE OH 45689
NOW ARRIVIED OUR
50TH ANNIVERSARY Homo
Spac ous 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
1474 Sq Fl ONLY S3UOO Wl1h
Camp ate Setup &amp; A/C Skirting
tLimlled Produehon) Plus OUr Re
ma n ng Spe.ctals On Single
Wlde s STARTING AS LOW AS
$17 777 Our Clean LSI&amp; Model
Singlet 94 Champion 14)(70
$13900 Nlca ~2 Skyline 14x70
$12 900 Clean And Many More
Are Orastlcally Reduced For
Quick Del very Call Now For De
tails 1 881-551 0117 Local 740.

1186-0117
Land Home Package All Areas
All Cred t A sks OakwoOd Galli
polls 740-446 3093.
Huge 16x80 three bedroom/ two
bath Include$ d•llvary setup
skirting steps blocks Onl~
$272 17 per month with $1200
down Call 1 600-8 37 3238
Doublewide I Bought Wont Fft
My Lot! 304 736-7295
Model Closeout Sale
Save Big $$$
2 3 4 lledroom Homes
1 60().948 5878
New Bank Repos
on•" 1Wo left Never U\18d In
''
Can 1-800-948-5878
Now 14 wide mobile homes start
ng at $203 23 with only $925
down Lot spaces available also

:C::all:.:7_:40:.::385-962=.:::::;1~~-~~

410 Houses for Rent

1 3 Bedrooms Forecloaecr
Homes From Sl 991Mo 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details
800-319-3323 Ex1 1709
2 3BR $315 L ncoln Avenue
Homestead Rea ty (304)67~

5540
4 Room House For Rent 52 Olive
Street GallipOlis 74()..4.46-3945
Farm House 2 Baths 1 To 2
Bedrooms Gas Heat Or Fuel on
Furnace 740-379-2639
For sale or rent three bedroom In
Chaster newly remodeled up
614 501 8339
alter
dates
900pm
M ddle Aged lady To Shart
Househo d E11penses In Nice
Home 740-245-9644
Nice 1 or 2 bedroom hou111 In
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy equipped
kitchen deposit &amp; references rt
qulrod 740.992 6951
STOP RENTINGIII OWN FOR
LESS! l ow Or No Money Down
EZ Credit Approval Call Now 1
800-772 7470 El&lt;l ~13
Three bedroom 1 and 112 baths
re creation room garage 1U1
Lincoln Heights Pomeroy 740
6673966
Two bedroom house In Middle
port $300 month $300 depoalt
call740-992 5039
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1969 Atlan tic Tra tar tor Rent
2BR 1BA K tchen/0 nlngRooml
L vlngRoom In Country Big
Yard 210 Camp Ad Ashton
Damage Deposit (304)562 93031
(304)576-2649
Between Athen a and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedro om mobile homes
$260-$300 740 992 2167
2 Bedroom Mobile Home At Kerr
$2751Mo S275 Deposit No Pell
In Tra1lar 74o-44&amp;-9669
2 Bedroom Trailer Deposit And
Referen ces ~equlred No Pet•
740-446- f 1().4
For rani 3 bedroom rnoblll home
no pels 740-992 5858
Mobile home tor rent 3 bedroom
targoyard 740-9929!13
Trailer lor rent 740-992 1737
Two bedroom mob ile home for
rani In Mlddlepon $275 plue dl
po&lt;;ll 740-992 3!94
440

Apertmenta
for Rent

I and 2 bedroom apanmenta 1ur
nlshed and untum shed eecurlly
deposit req uired no pets 740
992 22!8
1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
Uti lities Pa id 94 Locust Street
Gallipolis Upatalra $285/Mo
Plus Deposit 74D-448-1340
1 Bedroom Near Holzer AJC
Economical Gas Heat WID
Hookup Quiet Location $279/
Mo + UtiiUes 740-446-29l57
1 Or 2 Bedrooms Gas Heat CA
112 Mile From Gallipolis Refer
encas &amp; Oeposlt Required 740
446-7458 740-446-4416
2 bedroom apartment In Syra
cusa $315 per month water
sawer trash Included $200 de
poSit 740.e67 35 f 6

Oakwood Gallipolis Lot Model
Sale S499 Down Single &amp; $999 2BR Atll In Mason Slove/Rofrlg
srator/UIIIitles furnished A C
Double Only 2 Lefll 740 448
Laundry Room Ctlllng Fans
1 Room House/Bath on 4 LOIS30
· :.:9.::.3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Garbage Disposal vary N6Ct No
Leon (304)458 !084
Pets
Have
Referenctl
Disney World Wrestling Fedara
Three bedroom totally rtmodeled
lion Pokomon Nlnlendo Dlslrlbu
A ZI!RO% DOWN LOANI
nslde and out tiOIIer and lot new (304)713-53521(304)$82 2827
tors Gross 4K Monthly Invest
No oown Payment Required w th furnace new appliances new car
460 First Avenue (Galllpolla) 1
men! St2 950 Perl Time 1 800
Government Sponsored Loan
pel $23.500 cal740-992-4514
Bedroom Apartment $280/Mo
508-8806 2.t Hrs
Good Credit And Steady Income
Plus Damage Deposit 740-U1
Required Call For More lnforma
Coun try Livi ng 3 5 Bedrooms
0952 740-886--453!
EARN $1 ooos WEEKLYIII Stuff
lion And For Other Financ ng Op- Pay Closing Coats &amp; Move In
lng Envelopes At Home Ill Tell !Ions Independe nce Mortgage7.4~0.~44:.;6:..:1583==------Vou How To Do 11 24 Hrs 1 888
_
888 95211
Services 1 800 84&amp;0036
Now~ Romodaled 2 Bedrooms 1 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
NO DOWN I HOMES NO CRED- Bath $6 000 304 738 7295
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
EARN $90 000 YEARLY
IT NEEOEO I GOV T FORE
f
Sal
SON ESTATES 52 Wol.lwood
lng NOT Replacing
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
330 Farms or
e
Drlw lrom $289 to $370 Walk lo
tn Wtndshlelda Free ·~i,nS&lt;Ia . j
shop &amp; movies Catl 740 446
1
360
4620
800 826 6523 US "
PROVALI BOO
EXT
TURKEY HUNTERS
2566 Equal Housing Oppoltunll)&lt;
8509
Two 20 Acre Tracts Perfect
AAAA LIQUIDATIONII Repos
Hunting Land With Access Into Beach Street Middleport rwo
sassed /Must se mr 4 New Af
Wayne Nat1ona1 Forest Can Buy bedroom rurnlshed apartment deLET THE GOVERNMENT Start
fordable Pre Fab Homes 3/4/5 Toge ther 40 Acres $33 000
~:~~~~~~lerences no pets
Your B~slness Granll Loans
Bedroo ms
Easy Assemb ly
land Contract Ava ilable 740 l. (;;;;;;~~;ill,:U;.;:~;;;;;:
Hud Tracer $800 /Wk Free Busi
•
SACRIFICEII1-888'845ot200
266 008 1
f
Family Liv ing oparl
ness lnt;:orporallon Free Check
ments
home
&amp; traile r rentals
Software Accepl Checks By Fal(
Beaul1iul Home Slle to build 340 B USIneSS an d
740 992 4514 apartments avoll
Phone Or E Mall 800 306 0873
upon 5 mllos I rom PI Pleasant
Buildings
lurnlshed &amp; unturnlshed
Fax Demand 703 904 7770
septic System &amp; County Water
doct.t13 Sand SASE To Gov t
(304)674..()0()9
.2 Apartment Comple x building
Freshly Palftled 2 Bedroom Up
Publications Dept CR 1025 Con
281140 Can be converted to off6c
stairs Apartment Crown City S.
nectlcut Ave N W Suite 1012
Bl LeW"el Spung Valley Area
es Good Income (304)675-138e
curlty Oeposh 740 256-1249
Near Hosptlal 3 Bedrooms 2
Washington DC 20036 http II
Business Build ing For Sale Grac1ous llvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
Baths Oak Kitchen Cabinets
www capltalpilbllcalions com
Famll'/ Floom 2 Car Garage Clly $1 0000080 304 773 5651
apartments at Vi llage MaOQr and
MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45/Hr
Schools 740-446 8607
Rl'w'ers de Apartments In Middle
Medical Billing Software Company
~k
Ranch 4 Bdrms LIR FR
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
port From $273 $336 Coll740
Seeks People To Process Medl
~
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppor
Bath Basement 2 F replaces
23 ACRES 423 000
tunltles.
cal Clalma From Home Training
Gas Furnace CIA 3 Acres 740
South 01 Gall polls Off SA 1 &amp; SA
Provldacl Must Own Computer 1
800-434 55!6 El&lt;l 887
44 1 0953
218 Mostly Wooded Some Flat
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
Great Place To Put A Slngtaw de
740-446-0390
For Sale By Owner 2:200 Sq Ft
1 800 213 8365
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmoled In
Cepe Cod 740 446 2105
.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.=.:.:..----- New Haven one bed room fur
come Potential No E11pertance
Ne ~essary Free Information &amp;
An e nt~ Developers
nished apartment deposit and
For sale b~ owner sect1ona l 33 A
A
1
oA
1
CD ROM lnves1men1 $4 995
1
home wltn three bedrooms two
cres pprox mater,
ere references no pets 740 892
18 995 Financing Ava llaDie Is
Lake Mob le Home deal For 0165
baths two car garage paved Housing Campground Estate
land Auromated Medical Sarvlc
dri\18 on two acres with Oh o Rlv
$99 500 A so 5 Acre lots Nice One Bdrm Unfurnished
oa Inc 800 322 1139 Ex! 050
er fronta ge For appomtment cat
A.paument Range &amp; Refrlg pro
532 000 740-388-887&amp;
Void InK~ IN CT
740 949 2745
vlded Wa ter &amp; Garbage Peid
METABOLIFE 358N OISTRteU
Depos t Required Call 7.t0 ue
BEAUTIFUL POND
~c 08 R~Hng Meadow Wllh
TORS NEEDED Were 11 For A For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
4345 After 6 OOPm
arge family room &amp; ofllce new 1""·-'' - All Around Pond Perfect
Reason It Worksl New low Dis
roo f guttering 1 car garage
Home Slle Wtth Count~ Water
One 2 bedroom &amp; two 1 bedroom
tr butor Cost Call Toll Free 888
29t2 Anniston Drive Pt Pleaa
Land Contract Available t 800
apar1ments Middleport HUD ap
88:).8859
ani (304 )675 2608 P 1ce re
proved 740 928 4941 efl11 &amp;pm
21 :).8385
duced
:::.::::::_
____
Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
colfeCI
dation S5 000 $200 000 Bad For Sa le~r Re nt 1BR House on Ethical Environmentally Con
No th 4th AW"enue Middleport 2
Credll 0 K Faa 1 800 770 0092
100x200 lot CantraiAir/Gas
earned Hunter Looking To lease
room efticlency apartment depos
Ext 215
Heat City Water Gall polls Fer
Hunting Rights Or Buy Land 300 11 and references no pats J.tory 13041675-3269
+Acres 304 744 1319
NEW AUTOMATED Home Butl
992.0165
ness Quickly Earn A Full Time FORECLOSED HOMES l ow Or o
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Now Taking Applications- 35
Income No Selling Unl mlled In
5 acres with trailer hookup excel
oownl GoW"n t And Bank Repo s
Wtst 2 Bedroom Townhouee
come VIsit hnp /IWww retlrequlck
Sting Sold Now F nanclng Ave
lent drlled water well off S~ 124
Apartments Includes Wtlf!r
ty netlce To See a Hear Complete ablo Ca Nowl I 600 355 00241 S20 000 740.64J.5185
Sewage Trash S32S/Mo 740
Presentation
Exl 8040
446.()008
CLEAN
Start Your Business Toda~
N ce two bedroom one ace wlU\
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Prime Shopping Center Space
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OWn 'rour Own Home Uftle Or No
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cenlly remodeled &amp; new snlngles
Credit OK Oakwood Galllpolll
Spring Vallay Plaza Coli 740-446ce 1304 773-5031
740-446-3093
0101

~~~~=~~~~:I s

Br

~

HOUSE

WITH THE
CLASSQIREDSI

�Page a 4 • The O.lly Sentinel

U's Bellisari grew up in 1999

Public

(AP) -

Dunng spnng

Bellisan took ~arne b1g hits

+

and that

was

workouts, the

are He adnutted that he d1d not

1·800-833-0830

" You go from kindergarten to

their offensiVe !me to protect Bel-

first

year

hsan better They've also tned to

through the rank! and make your

It figures that when a team has

expand the offense by rhrowmg

way to JUillOr h1gh -

d1sappomtmg season, the quar-

more to the back! and light ends

he s domg

terback will catch much of the

and by addmg an option attack

Tun

blame

that they mtend to

a

6-6 last

Bellisan

recogn1zes

that

one of the b1ggest reasons the
Ituckeyes had to watch the bowl
i!IJmes on TV was because of his
on-the-Job tr:umng
' That s part of the game,

the

JUmor-to-be sa1d of the heat he

or

10

us.e

for e1ght

plays a game

Still

pattence

Stobart

If take

and that s the quarterback

for some guys than for o thers

what they giVe you and keep
moVtl)g the chams
A

year ago

What

md

wtth him IS t o have patience JUSt

they've got to look ~r,r somebody

Bellisan was the

backup to Austm Moherman

m

he

of how to h andle the s1t

uatlons a quarterback 1s present
ed

Almost

as

year because

younger brother of former Ohio

had earned 11

mage, but Bellisari seemed

State linebacker Greg Bellisan

45

10

games he completed JUst

percent of h1s passes and had

nme mterceptlons to go With

12

TD passes
But

S t obart

-

he

has

I

he

d1dn t think he

think I have a little more

started the thud game and never

freedom as to what I can say and

relmqu1shed the JOb Moherman

how to say 11 now sa1d the nat1ve

almost forgotten by the coaching

of Boca Raton Fla

staff transferred

Belhsan

Wtth Moherman gone the Job

Chuck

muc h

take an active role as a leader l ast

the first two games Bellisan, the

last

m these days of

Bellisan sa1d he has gamed a lot

m terms

bOth s1des of the !me of scnmdraw most of the fire Starting the

IS

learned last year

There were lots of problems on
to

of Belhsan's

learmng curve ' It s a process The

sprmg prac nce •

editor and callers on t3lk shows
you re not wmnmg ball games

sa1d

shoWing so far

'What we re trymg to emphaSIZe

quarterback deserves 1t

Salem

He needs to have a little btt
more

that s what

quarterbacks coach

nught have to be made m Belllsans head

took from media, letters to the

'The

grade and from there you go

process J,Jappens a lmle btt faster

the btggest Improvement

vocal

h as

become

more

There 1sn t any disputing

the

IS Bell1san s That g 1ves hm1 confi-

he's one of the cornerst ones of

receivers coach last year and now

dence but 11 also m u st g1ve the

the Buckeyes' rebUJ!dmg proJeCt

the offensive coordinator -

sa1d

coaching staff a

queasy feehng

that Belhsan wasn t the sole rea-

smce none of the backups -

son the Buckeyes seemed lost at

sh1rt freshmen Cra1g Krenzel and

times on offense

Scott M cMullen and mconung

You have to protect you h ave

red

freshman Rick McFadde n -

has

to catch and you have to throw

ever b een exposed to the speed

Stobart sa td

and VIolence of a college game

He does one of

them There are two other phases
that have be handled

In due

nme

they ll

have

But an older
• acknowl edges

he s

WISer Bell1san
not al one out

there

' I ve

been

that kind of guy

who hkes to make plays to kmd
of try to b e m control

he md

I

l earned a l ot last year You can t do
to

grow and l earn the same way Bel

Public

learned what h1s respons1b1ht1es

hsan has

Buckeyes have tned to shore up

after Ohio State

firushed

Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Dtptrlmllflt of
Aging through the Buckeye
Hilla·
Hocking / Valley
Rtglontl Development
Dlltrlct Aret Agency on
Aging Route 1, Box ztt.D
Mtrlttta, Ohio It mtklng
available lunda lor lht
conetrucllon, renovation
tcqultltlon and repelr ol
oonlor lacllltlll T-Ilt lunda
" ' from the Senior
Facllltl . . lint Item In the
State of Ohio a 2000 and
2001 Biennium Budget
Appllcollone mutt ba
received ol the Aree Agency
on Aging no lotor thon Uoy
12, 2000 Tho moxlmum
otatt lunda requ. .t por
proJect
It
$50, 000
Application• and aptclllc
Information about tht
proca.. II IVIIIIblt by
conlllctlng
Cynthia McMannll,
Area Agency on Aging

,

Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll12,

Ohio

1t

all

by yoursel f

Area Agency on Aging
Routo1
Boxztt.D
Marietta Ohio 45750

1-800-833.0830
(4)121tc

Notice

Public

12131/00
BldCIIII moy roquttl 1
propo111 p~~ckellrom Molly
Vemer 11 the ebovt ICidrell
or CIIH 740-374-04341
Complolod prop6 . . 1a
muot ba received It the
Buckey• Hilla ontce by 5 00
p m on Mey 12 2000
Tochnlcal lllllttnct II
avolloblo
(4j121tc

r

You 11 build~ b n.st tgg whtn
JIDU od,. with tht chml(ir&lt;Js

2000

ol Otllla County, Ohio
bearing Caoo No 1111 CV 9e
demanding that Judgmant
bo granted agalnat you lor
$31 535 57 plua coat and
lntoroll
Thla nollct will run onca
uch
wuk
lor
olx
IUCCIIIIVt Wtok&amp; tho 1111
publication bolng on tho 3rd
day of May, 2000 The
Defendant will have twtnty
eight daya from lhe day of
laat publlcttlon In which to
anower 11kl complaint
Mark E Shilts
Halliday Shlttt It Saundort
19 Locu11 Stroot
~0 Box325
Gallipolis OH 45631
Telephone (740) 446-1652
Registration 10038525
Attorney lor Plaintiff
Otlondont may obtain a
copy ol the Complaint fllod
herein from the olllce of
Norean Saundere, Clerk of
Courlo
t;lallla County
Courlhouse
Galllpollt
Ohio 45631
(3) 30 (4) 5 12 19, 26 (5) 3
6tc

1Cc&gt;lll~non

Public Notice

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO
Galllpolla Building Supply
Inc
DBA 0 doll True Value
Lumber Co
Plalntlll vs
Jackie Lao Tanner
Defendant
CaN No 99 CV 96
LEGAL NOTICE
Jackie Lee Tanner, whoaa
laot
know
place
ol
,.aldence Ia 724 Eaot Main
Street, Middleport, OH
45780 Is hereby notified
that on the 8th day ol July
1999 Galllpolla Building
Supply Inc DBA
Otll
True Value Lumber co
Plaintiff Iliad a complaint
for Judgment en an account
against you ao Defendant In
the Court cl Common Pleao

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Public Notice
JERRY J ORUESER
ET AL
LEGAL NOTICE
PLAINTIFFS
The Ohio Department of
CASE NO 99 CV-G34
Aging through the Buckeye
VS
Hille
Hocking
Valley
EDITHE BURNELL
Regional
Development
WILLIAM R HUGHES
Dlatrlcl Area Agency on
MARGARET HUGHES
Aging Routt 1 Box 299 D,
AND THEIR UNKNOWN
Marltlla ,
Ohio,
Ia
HEIRS ET AL
Requesting proposals lor
DEFENDANTS
Dlaoaaa Prevention and
LEGAL NOTICE
Health Promotion In Athlno,
Defendants Edith E
Hocking Molga Monrot
Burnell (deceased) whoae
Morgan Nobla Parry tnd
I all known place of
Withington
countlaa
residence Ia Eaat Side
Funding Ia .vallable lor
Street, R 124, Mlneravlllt
Medical
Aaaeaamant,
Ohio William R Hughes
Mental Health aaoeaament,
Margarst Hughes addraoaea
Health Education, and
unknown and the Unknown
Medication Screening lor
He ira of Edith Burnell
the period ol 1/1/00 to
William R Hughes, ind
J----------~~=..:.::::.::.:.:.:.::::.::.:::.:.:...::..:.:=-j Margaret Hughea addrolltl
unknown
are hereby
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
notified that on the 9th day
of April, 1999 and March
10 2000 Jerry J Grua11r
ZOOO by NEA. Inc
and Norma J Grueaar
Plalnlllla, Iliad
tholr
complaint and amended
'f fv
complaint to quiet tltlo to
the real eatata deacrlbad In
aald complaint and other
relief In lhe Court of

o

s

t$~r

No
'
Thla notice will run aech
wook lor aht aucctaiiVt'
Wilks, the 1111 pubiiCIIIOn
baing on tho 26th dty 111·
April 2000 Tha Dofondlnll
will have twonty·alght CS.V.
from lha day Ol lt~l
publication In which to
anawar uld complllnt
O.nlu L Bunce
S u p - Court RIJ::
10042f41
O.niN Bunce Law OfficelOSE Second SlrHt
Pomeroy Ohio 45719
(740) 802 5730
Anomay lor Plalnlln.
Defendant may obtlln a
copy of the Complaint Ilia
horeln from the olllca of
Larry Spencer Clerk of
Courts, Molga County
Courthouae Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(31 22 29
(4) 5 12, 19 26
6TC

ANNOUNCEMENTS
•

005

PSYCHIC READINGS By Sophlal
CompUmentary Readlngl Amazing
Prckflctlons! Sol\ltB All Problems!
Call1 954-484-4959
START DATING TON IGHT!
Heve Fun Meeting Eligible Sin

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Information 1 800 ROMANCE
~'" 9735

Why wait? Sterl meeting Ohio
sing les tonig ht Ca:H toll tree 1
800 766 2623 ex1enslon 6178
30

Notice Ia hereby give~
that tha annual meeting ol
the
ahareholdara
of
Farmera Bancaharoa, Inc
will be held at lha Pomeroy
Ubrtry 216 Waot Main
Street Pomeroy, Ohio, on
the third Wednesday of
April 2000 at 4 00 p m
accord111Q to Ita byltwe, for
the purpoae of elactlnp
dlroctora
and
the
lraneacllon of such othor
bualna. . aa may properly
come btlore aald maatlng
Jo Ann Crlap, Stcratlry
(3) 28 (4) 7, 12 18 4 te

salits cam
New To You Thrift Shoppe

9 West Stimson Athens
740-5921842
Quality clothing and househo ld
Items $1 00 bag sa le every
Thursday Monday lhru Saturday
9 00.5 30
SAVE ON PRESCRIPTIONS II
You Pay F.or Your Prescriptions
At"id For Those On Medicare
We Ollar A Prescription Drug
Plan For $7 08 /Mo 1 800 386
62e1
40

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
ATTEN CONTRACTORS
Salisbury Townehlp wnt
bo taking 11alad bldt on
Hazard Mitigation Oraqt
ProJect work lo be dona In
Salisbury Township Work
will conelll of elevation of
home• above flood laval
For ICOpa of work call (740)
802-6839 Bide wlll bt open
at
ragutar
Townahlp
mooting held at Sallabury
Townehlp
hell
et
Rocbprlnga on May 9th 11
830pm
(4) tO, 11 12 24, 211, 28 fTC

Ub Ml)(ed Pupp ies 9 Weeks
Old 740.38811413
t.!llle Black Cal Approxlmatlly 1
Y~are Old Long Haired 740
2~009

Topper rus small pick up truck/
snort bed (304)674-&lt;1828
Tw year old mate Labl Chow mx
good with kloJs playful call 740
74~ 2278
Uled Bathro om Vanity Labora
tory Medium Cabinet 740 446
3726

70

field Knowledge of telec:ommunlcetlone

Gallipolis

science experience thrH years management

&amp; VIcinity

For golf on the Trat[ call 800 949 4444
ALABAMA'S

1 800 949 4444

www

I

rtJgolt com

dtsabthly
Vacatton

MOving Selo Saturday 15th 9-?
Gfeen Terrace Centenary Furnl
turo Clothing Appliances To
Much To Llotl

Retirement

l.lntn our family of professionals to be the

I re110utrce for community health service needt.
I Pleatte submit resume's to

Pomeroy,
Mlddlaport

&amp; VIcinity

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

WV 25550

'6" Mile Yellow Flag Yard Salt
Pomeroy Middleport May 51h &amp;
6th Register now S5 00 Pick up
flag For more Information call
740 992 4197

FAX TO (304) 875-6975

~II Yord Sateo Muol Bo Pold tn

c/o PERSONNEL
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
Pt PLEASANT,
OR

PF•QUNE 2 00 p m
1111 cloy - .. lite ld
Iota run &amp;totdoy
dtkJn •I 00 p.m.
Friday Mondoy ldltlan
·I 30om Botunlly

Holidays

L1fe Insurance

Advonoo Dtoclllno 1 OOpm tho
diiY before the ld Ia to run,
Sundoy 6 Mondoy odlllon
1 OOpm Friday

~lg Inside yard aalt- Rl 124 Syr
acuae a lot of $1 00/bag clothes
Aj)rll14 15

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

.Jfyou're commg to the DteHard 500 on

(256) 362-RACE

,.

Long term

Hospitalization
Dental

'llrd and bako salo April 13th &amp;
(4111 9 ? Long Bonom Community
Butldlng

New Roofs • Repelrt
• Coating • Guttel'l

80

• Siding • Drywall

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
bUy/aell estates consignment
ajlcllon Thuradaya Bpm Middle
port Ohio &amp; WV Llconao 740
11112 9707 740 -2623

Free Estlma,es

Joseph Jacka
740·992·2068
4110100 1 mo

WAITED
umber large
Top
prwes paid also

Standmg

or 8malltrac k s

Doser work.
Free Estimates
Call T&amp;R Loggmg

SUPPORT
GROUP MEETING
Thursday April 13 2000
at630p m
SCENIC HILLS NURSING
CENTER
311 Buckrldge Ad
(BehiQd Spring Valley Cmema)
1n Gallipolis
Topic "The Importance of
Actlvllles"
Speaker 11na Moodlspaugh
Scenle H1lls Acllvtlles Director
Everyone Welcome!
Please RSVP to Pam Jones
(740) 446· 7150
II you have questions call the
Alzheimer a professionals at
SGentc Hills Nursing Center for
more Information {7401 446 7150
Scenic Htlls
"The Alzheimer s Experts"

Bllfy Goble Auct oneer Pomeroy

Ohio 740.992 7502

-

Rlek Pearson Auction Company
full lime auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
188 Ohio &amp; West VIrginia 304
77:).5785 Or 3!*77:).5447

Dailey
Truckl•g

Wedame~er s Auction Service
Gelllpol~ Ohio 740-379-2720

Dump Truck
Service
Limestone Gravel
Agricultural

90

Sand and Dirt

( R and y)

.Raclae, Ohio

949·2249

:

' .

*CONCRETE *BACKHOE SERVICES M'
*MASONRY *BOBCAT SERVICES ~
RESIDENTlAU//1////COMMERCIAL 0
FREE ESTIMATES•.••FULLY INSUQED N
Bnan Morrison I Racme, Ohto
R
(740) 985-3948
y

I

Wanted to Buy

A~solula Top Dollar All U S Sll
~•( And Gold Coin s Proofaets

Lime

after 8 00 pm
740 992 5050

Auction
and Flea Market

• Painting • Plumbing

Class A Clasa B, and Non COL
drivers needed
TYE BRINAGER &amp; SONS
Portland OH
7 40 843 5280 Days
740 949 2439 Eve

'"POSTAL JOBS'" ·UP To
$18 35 Hour Hiring For 2000
Free Call For Appllcat on /Exam!
nat on Information Federal Hire
F.uU Benetti 1 800.598 4504 Elt
tension 1521 (8 A M 6 PM
CS T)
A Metabolism Breakthrough I
Lost 40 lba In 2 Week s Guar
Gall Nowl t 888 821 !958
$11 $33 HOURI Govornmenl
Jobst Hiring Now! Paid Training
Full Benefits Call 7 Days I 800
MEDICAL BILLING Groat Earn
lng Potential! Full Training /Com
puler Req d 888 660 6693 Ext
4402
Postal Jobs $48 323 00 Vr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Great Benefits Cal 7
Days 60().429-3860 Ex1 J 566

Diamonds A.nUquA Jewttry Gold
R~ngs Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterling Etc Acqu a ttons Jewelry
jll T S Coin Shop 151 Secon d
Awnue GalliJol~ 740-446 2842
HoJVallan Lap Steel guitars Pedal
Steel or Consuls 740 593 7871

EMP LOYMENT

REPORTER
Here we grow agaln join
the area s number one news
team If you have a nose for
news, good news Judgment
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skills
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Including experience wtrh
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For mtemew consideration
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we

yourself to

Ohio Valley
PubbshmgCo
Attention Pubhsher
825 Third Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 45631

ACE11e1 Ia seeking a part tlmt
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provider to perform cleaning du
tits for kitchen warehouu and
oHtce IIH Applicant must be detall orient~ and able to work In
dependently light maintenance
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preferred but not required Stnd
resume and/or latter of intent with
three references to attn Christy
Bradford ACEnot 94 Columbus
Road Alhens Ohio 46701 by
2tst at April EOE
ACEnat saaks results oriented
leader who Ia able to develop el
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communlly economic devaloP:
ment focused on youth entrepre
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businesses This persuasive net
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vlronment Grant and report writ
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experience a plus Competitive
salary a excellent benefits Send
resume and three reterencea to
ACEnal 94 Columbus Road
Athens Ohio 4570! attn Chrllty
Bradford by lhe 21st of April EOE
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DENTAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
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Needs People To Procasa Medl
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800 22:). t 149 Ext 460
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AVONI All Aroasl To Buy or Sell
Shirley Spears 304675-1429

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110

Help Wantld

An Alcohol And Other Drug Out
patient Counstling /Prtnnt lon
Agency locatad In Gallla And
Jackton Countltl Ia Seeking

The Following Poallonl
PREVENT~ ON

EDUCATOR Full Time Position Working With
All Age Groups In Both Counties
Responslbilltlll Include Coordi
nation,. Of Drug F.ru Community
Coalition Awarene11 Act lvllies
Education Programs Training
Programs And OIVIIopmtnt And
Implementation Of New Grant
Projkto Bacheloro Dogroo And I
Or Experience Knowledge Of
Chemloal D~ncy A Pluo
VOCATIONAL REHABILITA·
TION CAS£ MANAClER - Full
Time Position To Facilitate Job
Club And Vocational Servlco Ro
ferrets Screenings EW"aluauons
Intakes General Case Manage
menr And Etc tn Both Counties
Bacha loro Degree And /Or Ex
pertenco Knowledge Of Chemical
Dtptndency A Pluo
SECRETARY- Full Tlmt Po ol
tlon In The Jackson Count~ Of
lice A Minimum 01 Hig h School
Diploma And Two Years E.:peri
ence Must PoutSI Good Com.
munlcatlon Slcllle (Written And
Oral) And Expe r ence W th Ml
crosoft Word And Excel
RECEPTIONIST - Part Time Po
smon In The Jackson County Of
fico A Minimum 01 Hig h School
Diploma Must Poueaa Good
Commu.nlcatlon Skills (Written
And Oral) And Experience With
M~rosoft Word
Send Resume By April 2! 2000
To FACTS 45 Olive Stroot Gallipolis Ohio 45&amp;31 Or FAX 740
446-8014 EOE MIFIH

110 Plid In Advo-

EXCELLENT
Salary

• ATTENTION
' 29
PEOPLE NEEDED If You Have
10 To 75 Lb 1 To Lose WE PAY
'rOU S$$ All Nalurol Doctor Recommenededl Guaranteed! 1
888 806-4531

AIJ, Yanl Bolio Muot

(preferred)

OH

$800 WEEKLYI Mako Money
Helping People Racel'w'e Govern
ment Rerunds Free Det alai (24
Hr Recorded Message ) 1 800
125 24 t 7 Ext 5046

Yard Sale

technology (preferred) Prevloua Netw6rk
technology experience Five yNre of computer
experience Previous hospital experience

Apnl 16th at Talladega Superspeedway,
grab that dnver and the rest
of your dubs and come to
Alabama to play some of the
best courses m the country
You won't be competing
agamst Earnhardt, Jarrett or
Petty, but you'll gtve your dnver a workout on the worldrenowned Roben Trent Jones Golf Tratl
For uckets to Talladega Superspeedway's
Track Attack Weekend Apn)l3 16, call

Lost and Found

Lost Georges Creek &amp; Con
Street 4lbs Tan /Black Pomera
~len Pup Reward 740-446-3049

lnformatlonffelec:ommunlcatlona Servlc11
Bachelor a Degree In Computer Science or related

Middleport,

U 000 WEEKLY I Mailing 400
Brochureal Satisfaction Guar
antaadt Postage &amp; Supplies Pro
vldedt Rush StU Addressed
Stampocl Envolopol GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370ft 1438 Stan I!'IIN!dlatoly

Floor modal TV wor~s 740 992
52B6 days 740 992 5006 or 740.
992 7051

lost mate black &amp; wnlte Walker
Coon Hounct answers to ·eud•
ftarrlsonvllle 143 vicinity 740
l42 3225

for the coordination ot all

FoUow

Help Wantld

5 week old puppies 4 females 1
mala 2 male cats 6 months old
740 992 1453

found Husky Dog Grey &amp; Black
t-4as Blue Collar VicinitY GaiJin
~~er Plant 740 3677757 Ext

Full-time position reaponalble

Sil!ll•
Moodlapaugh AuctiOn House will be reopening lor the
weekly consignment auction Same time same place an~
verylg loada Thla weak we will have
I'URioi"JTURE (2) dreaaera couch &amp; chair waterlal vanity
(2) metal deaka (lg) wooden deek (lg) wooden olllce table
wooden wardrobe beauticians chair and other mlec
fum1ture
GLASSWARE &amp; POTTERY Fenton Depression WV
Sienko Vlcklng Cambridge Fire King Hull McC:oy and
other mise
COLLECTIBLES Good advertiSing tams ol~ tins J C
Higgins Camp stove paper roller Iron skillets cook1ng
utenalls oil lampe old tools old books records ball cards
and other mise
NEW ITEMS Lawn mower blades &amp; Wheels bicycle tires
and wheels new p1ctures and mirrors dolls and other mise
Moodlopaqh Aucltoneerlns Servlceo
(740) 992-9707 or
989-2623

Giveaway

found on Arbuckle Creek Rd
Small Collle!Mixed Puppy Very
~ute &amp; tnendly good with k ds
(304)937-3348

COORDINATOR, INFORMATION &amp;
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS,

Beech St.

110

725-24!7E~

Pleasant Valley
Hospital

99

Announcements

GOT A CAMPGROUND Mem
bershlp Or Timeshare ? we 11
Take Itt America s Most Sue
cesaful Campground And Time

60

Thora

Personals

&amp;hare Resale Clearinghouse Call
Flesort Salas lnternaUonal 1 BOO
423 5967 24 Hours www resort

110

AUCTION
13, 2000 6 00 pm

B5:

,.

Notice

Public Notice
Public Notice

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Avon Products Start your own In
Home Buslnesa Work Flexible
Hours EnJoy Unlimited Earnings
(304)3478838
Ba1e1 Srolhera Amusement Co If
Interested to travel please call
740 268 2950 Must be at least
18 years ok:l

•

Dental Hyganist Medical leave
tor July Send resume to Earnest
L Trani DOS P 0 Box 380 Ma
son W\125260
ORIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS
IMMEDIATE OPENJNGS Over
Tho Road Start AI 29 CPM /All
Ml Unloading Pay Personalized
D apalch Homo Ol1on Holiday I
Vacation Pay 401 K !Mad /Pras ~
Oenla l Aos lgnod 99 T2000 s
Alder Program 98% No Touch
Freight CALL SUMMIT TRANS
POATATION 8Q0.67ll-0880 EOE
Drivers 2 week Paid COL Train
lng No Experience Needed Earn
Up To $32 000 JYr Full Benefit&amp;
Call Today
1 877 230 6002
Transport
PA M
www 123pam com
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Medical lnsuranct Bill ing .Assls
lance Needed lmmedlatalyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Annual Income Call
Nowl Cell 1 600 291 4683 Dept il
109
Excollent Opponunll)'

If you want to make money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others we may have a job
for you Local Resident Excel
lent Income posslblllllea and
home office tra nlng for persons
a:etecled Must have pleasing
personality and be willing to
meet the public No experience
neceuary For more tnformauon
call Clay Roney at (304) 675
8019 or mall resume to 2413
Jackson Avenue Point Pleas
ant WV 25550 E 0 E Woodmen
of The World ltftt Insurance So
Clel)'
Excelent ()pporlu111)'
If ~ou want to malte money are
willing to work hard and like to
help others we ma~ have a job
tor you Local Rtaldent Excel
lent Income poaaibllllles and
home office training lor persons
selected Must have pleaalng
personality and be willing to
meet the publ~ No experience
nactssar:y For 'inort Information
call Clay Roney ll (3041 675
8019 or mall retumo to 24t3
Jackson Avenue Point Plea'
ant WV 25550 E 0 E Woodmen
of The World Life Insurance So
clel)'
EXCE~LENT WEIGHT LOSSI
Poworlul High Protein Low Cllbohydrata Programs Help wantAd
Immediately
www llpa4
wolghttosa com HI00.339-9t69

Gallla Meigs Community Action
Is Seeking One Laborer Far Its
Weatherization Crew This Is A
Forty Hour Position Applicant
Should Have A Background In
Healing And Cooling Send Or
Dellwr Resume And References
To GMCAA 8010 North Stale
Route 1 Choahlre OH 45620 By
4/20/00 GMCAA Ia An Equal
Opportunity E~ EEO
Needed Dancers Wed Thru
Sal 8 2 30AM (304)675 59561
(740)992 8387

PRODUOION
We have an openin8 In our
graphics department that
requires cxttUent computer
skills Must be &amp;miUar wttb
Mac Quark, Photo Shop,
and enjoy being creative
Pol!itlon o«ers 401K plan,
health &amp; ltfe Insurance plan
paid vacation and pleasant
working environment
For !ntemew consideration
send resume and cover
letter teUing us why you are
the person we are looking
for
Send 10

Publisher

Oh1o Valley
Publishmg Co.
825Third Ave
Galltpolis Ohto 4'631

110

Help Wantld

Local Trucking Company Sotklng
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pa~ Insurance Talk Vacation
And Home Evenings Call 740
286-1463
LPN S Arcadia Nursing Center Is
now accepting appUca110ns lor full
&amp; parlllmo LPN'S. Must be able
to worlt all shills &amp; be a team
player Rtqulrea 4trong tuper
vlsory Hilla Please apply In per
aon at E Main Street Coalvlllt
Ohio 740 667 3156 M F 8 00
400 EOE
MHtonnlumT...,..ceo
Is P'taaed to announce the
Grand opening of 1111 new Wall
aton calling center
We are now setting up
nteMtw appolntmonll1or
outbound taloservlce posltons
No •xperianoe necessary
Eamup10 SIM1&lt;
wnh quartelly aatory reviews
Managemont0jlportunnl08 avoll
a ~e 401 K/Medlcai/OontaUPeld
"1ca~o1ta eVtlllable 3 shifts dal~
Flo~blo ochidullng. Slarl yOur
new career with us1
Coll1 800-929-5783
for an appointment
Wo lOOk lon..rll to moetlng youl
GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
SIB 35 Hour Full Benaftta No Ex
perlence Required FrH Applk:a
ton And Information 1 888 726
9083 Ex1enalon 1701 (7 AM 1
PM CSTI
Nigh! shirt caring for elderly
hours 7pm to 9am call 740 992
5023
Now Hiring HHA CNA LPN 1 lm
mediate Openings
Felxible
Hours Compt tltlve Compensa
lion Call 740 448- 3808 Health
Management Nuraln g Servlcea I
Ul~maiO Health Cere EOE
Now Taking Applications From
Domino a Plua Gallipolis &amp; Po
moroy On~ 740-446-4040
Optical Aulstant /Receptionist
Position Available Sand Resume
To CLA 501 o/o Galllpolll Cally
Tribune 825 Third Avanue Galli
polls OH 45831
Overbrook Center 333 Page
Street Middleport has part time
poalllona tor LPN s and STNA s
available lor au shifts and wee
kends Anyone interested please
o10p by end fill out an application
EOE
Persons Interested In becoming
pool manager or serving as 1111
guilds at London Pool for the
summer of 2000 send resumes
to Sharon Cotterill clark/trea
suere Syracuse VIllage Hall Syr
ecuse Ohio 4&amp;779 by Aprll15

1 10

Help Wanted

MEDICAL BILLING Great Eatn
lng Potentlall Fun Tfllnlng /Com
pu1er Roq d 686 660 6693 Ext

4401
140

Business
Training

Golllpollo Corwor Cotlogo
(Car-s Close To Homo)
Call Todayl740-44ll-4367
HIOO 214 0452
Reg 190-0r..1214B
150

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE OE
GREE QUICKLY Bachelo rs
Masters Doctorate By Corre
spondenc. Based Upon Prior Ed
ucatlon And Short Study Course
For FREE lnlormatlon Bookle t
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1 800 964 83!6

TRAINER nttdtd to train toach
era to deliver Innovative comput
er tnlrepreneurahlp curriculum
SttkJng eomeone with experl
once wllh 111t Mlcrosolt Olllce Su
Ito 1118 lntorne~ Mil pego deolgn
and curriculum planning and dt
velopm•nt Muet be organized
persuasive poaltlve and enjoy
Interacting with diverle communi
ty membtra Previous txperlence
aa buelneas owner a plus Send
resume end three refertnctl
ann Chrlaty Brodloftl ACEntl 94
Columbua Road Athena Ohio
467Q1 Dy 211t of April EOE
UP TO $20 000 $45 000 II Par
Year Earning Polonttal Oro Nood
People To Process Clalmt You
Can Work From Home We Train
MUST OWn Compulll /Modtm 1
886-332 50! 5 Ext t700 /Dal ~
URGENTLY NEEOEO plooma
dOnora eam $3S to $45 tor 2 or 3
houre weekly Call Sora Tee 74D692.e651
I

Wanted 29 People TeJ Get
$$PoldS$ To Loaa 30 LDL In The
Next 30 Days Natural &amp; Guar
anleed www ovtlalilyshop com
WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
OENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TEI'JANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 81 3
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids Inc
**OOV T POSTAL JOBS.. Up
To $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
Froo Call For AppllcOIIpn /Examl
nation lnlormalloo Federal Hire
Full Benefits 1 BD0-598 4504 Ex
ltntl on t 52~ (8 A M 6 PM
CST)

12x60 mobl e home with a full
length addll on on one a¢re B(ld
1 &amp; 113 mile out t43 oft Rt 7 call
&amp;W"enlngs after 5pm 740 992
2517
12x60 two oadroom mobile home
on rented lot 10 Middleport
$2500 740 992 3Hl4

Home &amp; Business Cleaning Free
Estimates Call740-448 1056

DROWNING IN DEllP Cut
Years 011 Your Bills
GUAR
ANTEE.OI Free Enrollment Re
duce Interest !Payments LCCS
Inc 888-442 5227

Excellent care tor parson In my
home non smoker and Mobile
$600 per month (304)882 3680
Need An Electrlclan Or Carpent
er? Beat High Prices All Work
Gauranteed l Free E&amp;llmates1
740-446-2947
Painting Tuck Pointing Of Brick
Oamollt on Of Houses And Build
lngs Residential And Cammer
clal Fully In sured Call Terry
740.288 8473
Roofing plumbing exterior paint
lng odd jobs Call 740 992 0501
ask for Terry

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Applicat ion W !Ser lllce Redu ce
Payments To 65% I!CASH IN
CENTIVE OFFER I Call 1 BOO
326 8510 Exl 29
NEED CASH? Try Debt Consoli
dallon Up To $200 ooo Bad
Credll No Credit OK Credll
Cards Mortgages Monarch Fi
nanclal Group 1 800 491 1756
Ex11201 9A M 9PM EST
230

Professional
Services

Floof&amp; Add Ons Garages New
Homes Decks Painting lnS'ured
All Work Backed By 5 Vear War
ranty Free Estimates! 740 446
66!6

TURNEO DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Unless We Wln1
1 888 582 3345

Wanted To Do Mounts Tree
Service Buckel Truck Service
Top Tnm Removal Stump Grind
ing Fully tnsured Free Esll
mates Bidwell Ohio 1 800 638
9566 Or 740 388-9646

210

All real estate advenlsing In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes tiiiEIQal
to advertise any preference
I mitatlon or d scrim nat on
based on race color religion
sex familial status or national
or gin or any intention to
make any such preference
limitation or discrimination

Business
Opportunity

$3 000 WEEKLYI Mailing 400
Brochures AT HOMEI Guar
anteed FAEE Supplies Start lm
madlatoly 1 800 489 9477 Ext 88
(24 HIS)

Tlrad 01 Flot Race? Olllce Pollcl
lcs? Your Boas? Work From
Homo Slorl $500 S2 000+
www WC)I"I(fforn.'tOI'ne com

"S AVE BIG BUCKS TODA Y!"
14x80 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths All
Hardwood Floors New Ooub e
Pane Windows $15 OQO Owner
WI Pay $500 In Mov ng f)(
pense 740.379-906 t

This neW&amp;PBper will not
knowingly accept
adverilsemenls tor real estate
whlch lsln violation ofthe
law Our readers are hereby
ln1ormed that all dwellings
adverllsed In this neW!Ipaper
are available on an equal
opponun"y basis

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
rtcommends that you do bus I
ness wHh people you ~now and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll you have Investigated

lho offering
I.TaT
MCI • SPRINT tc
PHONE CARD Route Makes
1 000 S5 000 Nf&lt; ALL CASHI
1
Eas~ l LoCal Sites FREE In ot
This Is Not A Job $5 000 Ro
qulred 1 800 997 9866 Ext 1155
(24 Hrsl

s

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedroom 2 Full Balhs on 1 04
Acres 2Bx36 Detached Garage
$85 000 Must see Malon 80
Rd
Call for appointment
(304) 578 2028

1994 Norris 14x70 Wllh 2 Oecks
Bu ld ng &amp; Riding Lawn Mower On
Rented Lot 740-446-0626

New 14 W de 3 BR
$18 90C HIIXH!91 6777

Real Eatate
Wanted

INEEOLANOI
We Pay Top Dol ar For 20 500
AerO&amp; CI.LL RYAN AI I 800
213-8365 www counlfVIYtnl corn

'*'

RENTALS

CREDIT REPAIR I AS SEEN ON
TV! Erase Bad Cred t Lega lly
Free Info. 1 800 768 4008

ROOM AT THETOP

Molora, i'o1nero'f

1$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remain ng Payments
On Property Sod Mortgages I
Annu test Settlements! tmme
date Ouoleslll Nobody Beats
Our Prices Nat onal Contra ct
Buyers 800 490 073t E~~; t t01
www nalionaleonuactbuyars com

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Georges Portable Sawmll don t
haul your logs to the m II just catl
304 675-1957

$100 Per Hour Ho('lleworkera
Neededl large Advertising Firm
Pa~a $4 For Every Voice Mall
Retrieved Make $400 $500 Eve
ryday In Your Spare Tlmo Limited
Space 1 888 631 8454 (24 Hrs)

Tochnlclan GM and ASE carl!
flocl App~ In peroon at Don Tate

$$ Auto Loans Personal Loans
Debt Consolidation Mortgages
And Refmanclng Cred•l Problems
OK Consumers F nanclal 1 600
247 5125 Ext 1134 Void OH KS
&amp;WI

320

Experienced Lady Will Take Care
01 Elderly In Thare Home 740
245-9844

Bennetts Lawn Care Serv ce
Commercial &amp; ~esldentlal
We do mowing weed cutting
Unt clearing &amp; brush removal
lai'Kfscape &amp; custom bun fenc~~ C&amp;JI for lrae estimate
(140)388 0482/(740)709 0536

AN Suptlvlsor For 20 Bed ICF I
MR Facility Thla IS A Full Time
Management Pooltlon Wllh Bono
fila Contact Dorothy Harper AI
740 441 7148 Or Fax Rosumo
To 740-446-0138

www g--llltcorp.com

220 Money to Loan

32x80 Facto ry Repo Never Lived
In $49 950 I 800 691 6777

Wantad To Do

FINANCIAL

0427,

T red 01 Was ting Money On
Work AI Home Pro grams That
Don 1 Work? Need The Trutn7
Call 978 887 7925 24 Hours

Flental Property Two 1 Bedroom
Complex C1ty lim ts 2 Acres
Wooded lot W1th 1 Bedroom
Trater 740..441 0120

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAD CREOIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 160 DAYS 1
600 422 1598

180

POSTAL JOBS To 51.35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP ANQ EXAM
INFO CALL 1 SOO 613 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 1
OAYStqa InC

TAKE lACK YOUR LIFEI So
Your Own Bossi Earn An Extra
$500 S t 500 PT Or S2 000
$1 500 FT Per Monlh lfl0.335

Opportun lty

1 4x70 two bedrQOm trailer newer
heat pump and carpet 740 742
26t0

Will haul trash away $40 a pick
up load (304)675-11158

SINGERS! GOSPEL, CLEAN
COUNTRY ond EASY LISTEN
lNG I Call t 800 469 S t 64 For
Appointment To Como To Nash
vlllt And Audlllon For Mtijor
Record Producers And Concert
P101110troe lntemtl www wcln ac

360

BuslnB&amp;S

$FREE CASH NOW$ F om
Wealthy Families Unloading M
1ons or Collars To Help Min m ze
The r Taxes Wr ite Immediately
W ndfa 1 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
10017

PoSial JODI $46 323 00 Yr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Greal S"eneflts Cell 1
Days 800-429 3880 Ext J 385

Immediate opening for community
support consultant In local and
surrounding area Entry level
ulea and marketing position Ex
ctlltnt management opportunity
Starling llllary of $500+1 wk plua
bonustt commlaalons btneflts
RetaJI eJCperilnce and women ex
cot MlniiiiUI)I 2 yoare cologo Degree a plus Wa train For per
aonal and confldentlallnttrvltw
COII1 843-857-o522,

210

Only

New Double Wide 3 BA 2 Batn
Only 2 le11 $26 900 1 600 691
6111
16K80 Factory New Special Pur
chase $23 000 1 800.691-8777
D1vorce Forces Sale! 312 Set Up
On Pr W"ate Lot Catch Up Pay
menls &amp; Move In 740 446 3570
NEW BANK REPO ONLY 3
LEFT Owner F nanclng Available
304 736 7295
BANK REPOS ONLY $41111 00
DOWN l
ASSUME LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS WILL
PAY TO RELOCATE HOME
EASY -F INANCING AVAILABLE
(304)76&amp;-55&amp;5
Dlrecl Factory Sale All Olsplays
Must Go Save $$$$ Only at
Oakwood Homes Nllro WV
(304)755 5885
Save Your
Dough Drive to Nitro
FlEETWOOD HOMES
nM STATE ROUTE 7
PROCTORVILLE OH 45689
NOW ARRIVIED OUR
50TH ANNIVERSARY Homo
Spac ous 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
1474 Sq Fl ONLY S3UOO Wl1h
Camp ate Setup &amp; A/C Skirting
tLimlled Produehon) Plus OUr Re
ma n ng Spe.ctals On Single
Wlde s STARTING AS LOW AS
$17 777 Our Clean LSI&amp; Model
Singlet 94 Champion 14)(70
$13900 Nlca ~2 Skyline 14x70
$12 900 Clean And Many More
Are Orastlcally Reduced For
Quick Del very Call Now For De
tails 1 881-551 0117 Local 740.

1186-0117
Land Home Package All Areas
All Cred t A sks OakwoOd Galli
polls 740-446 3093.
Huge 16x80 three bedroom/ two
bath Include$ d•llvary setup
skirting steps blocks Onl~
$272 17 per month with $1200
down Call 1 600-8 37 3238
Doublewide I Bought Wont Fft
My Lot! 304 736-7295
Model Closeout Sale
Save Big $$$
2 3 4 lledroom Homes
1 60().948 5878
New Bank Repos
on•" 1Wo left Never U\18d In
''
Can 1-800-948-5878
Now 14 wide mobile homes start
ng at $203 23 with only $925
down Lot spaces available also

:C::all:.:7_:40:.::385-962=.:::::;1~~-~~

410 Houses for Rent

1 3 Bedrooms Forecloaecr
Homes From Sl 991Mo 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details
800-319-3323 Ex1 1709
2 3BR $315 L ncoln Avenue
Homestead Rea ty (304)67~

5540
4 Room House For Rent 52 Olive
Street GallipOlis 74()..4.46-3945
Farm House 2 Baths 1 To 2
Bedrooms Gas Heat Or Fuel on
Furnace 740-379-2639
For sale or rent three bedroom In
Chaster newly remodeled up
614 501 8339
alter
dates
900pm
M ddle Aged lady To Shart
Househo d E11penses In Nice
Home 740-245-9644
Nice 1 or 2 bedroom hou111 In
Middleport &amp; Pomeroy equipped
kitchen deposit &amp; references rt
qulrod 740.992 6951
STOP RENTINGIII OWN FOR
LESS! l ow Or No Money Down
EZ Credit Approval Call Now 1
800-772 7470 El&lt;l ~13
Three bedroom 1 and 112 baths
re creation room garage 1U1
Lincoln Heights Pomeroy 740
6673966
Two bedroom house In Middle
port $300 month $300 depoalt
call740-992 5039
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1969 Atlan tic Tra tar tor Rent
2BR 1BA K tchen/0 nlngRooml
L vlngRoom In Country Big
Yard 210 Camp Ad Ashton
Damage Deposit (304)562 93031
(304)576-2649
Between Athen a and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedro om mobile homes
$260-$300 740 992 2167
2 Bedroom Mobile Home At Kerr
$2751Mo S275 Deposit No Pell
In Tra1lar 74o-44&amp;-9669
2 Bedroom Trailer Deposit And
Referen ces ~equlred No Pet•
740-446- f 1().4
For rani 3 bedroom rnoblll home
no pels 740-992 5858
Mobile home tor rent 3 bedroom
targoyard 740-9929!13
Trailer lor rent 740-992 1737
Two bedroom mob ile home for
rani In Mlddlepon $275 plue dl
po&lt;;ll 740-992 3!94
440

Apertmenta
for Rent

I and 2 bedroom apanmenta 1ur
nlshed and untum shed eecurlly
deposit req uired no pets 740
992 22!8
1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
Uti lities Pa id 94 Locust Street
Gallipolis Upatalra $285/Mo
Plus Deposit 74D-448-1340
1 Bedroom Near Holzer AJC
Economical Gas Heat WID
Hookup Quiet Location $279/
Mo + UtiiUes 740-446-29l57
1 Or 2 Bedrooms Gas Heat CA
112 Mile From Gallipolis Refer
encas &amp; Oeposlt Required 740
446-7458 740-446-4416
2 bedroom apartment In Syra
cusa $315 per month water
sawer trash Included $200 de
poSit 740.e67 35 f 6

Oakwood Gallipolis Lot Model
Sale S499 Down Single &amp; $999 2BR Atll In Mason Slove/Rofrlg
srator/UIIIitles furnished A C
Double Only 2 Lefll 740 448
Laundry Room Ctlllng Fans
1 Room House/Bath on 4 LOIS30
· :.:9.::.3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Garbage Disposal vary N6Ct No
Leon (304)458 !084
Pets
Have
Referenctl
Disney World Wrestling Fedara
Three bedroom totally rtmodeled
lion Pokomon Nlnlendo Dlslrlbu
A ZI!RO% DOWN LOANI
nslde and out tiOIIer and lot new (304)713-53521(304)$82 2827
tors Gross 4K Monthly Invest
No oown Payment Required w th furnace new appliances new car
460 First Avenue (Galllpolla) 1
men! St2 950 Perl Time 1 800
Government Sponsored Loan
pel $23.500 cal740-992-4514
Bedroom Apartment $280/Mo
508-8806 2.t Hrs
Good Credit And Steady Income
Plus Damage Deposit 740-U1
Required Call For More lnforma
Coun try Livi ng 3 5 Bedrooms
0952 740-886--453!
EARN $1 ooos WEEKLYIII Stuff
lion And For Other Financ ng Op- Pay Closing Coats &amp; Move In
lng Envelopes At Home Ill Tell !Ions Independe nce Mortgage7.4~0.~44:.;6:..:1583==------Vou How To Do 11 24 Hrs 1 888
_
888 95211
Services 1 800 84&amp;0036
Now~ Romodaled 2 Bedrooms 1 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
NO DOWN I HOMES NO CRED- Bath $6 000 304 738 7295
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
EARN $90 000 YEARLY
IT NEEOEO I GOV T FORE
f
Sal
SON ESTATES 52 Wol.lwood
lng NOT Replacing
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
330 Farms or
e
Drlw lrom $289 to $370 Walk lo
tn Wtndshlelda Free ·~i,nS&lt;Ia . j
shop &amp; movies Catl 740 446
1
360
4620
800 826 6523 US "
PROVALI BOO
EXT
TURKEY HUNTERS
2566 Equal Housing Oppoltunll)&lt;
8509
Two 20 Acre Tracts Perfect
AAAA LIQUIDATIONII Repos
Hunting Land With Access Into Beach Street Middleport rwo
sassed /Must se mr 4 New Af
Wayne Nat1ona1 Forest Can Buy bedroom rurnlshed apartment deLET THE GOVERNMENT Start
fordable Pre Fab Homes 3/4/5 Toge ther 40 Acres $33 000
~:~~~~~~lerences no pets
Your B~slness Granll Loans
Bedroo ms
Easy Assemb ly
land Contract Ava ilable 740 l. (;;;;;;~~;ill,:U;.;:~;;;;;:
Hud Tracer $800 /Wk Free Busi
•
SACRIFICEII1-888'845ot200
266 008 1
f
Family Liv ing oparl
ness lnt;:orporallon Free Check
ments
home
&amp; traile r rentals
Software Accepl Checks By Fal(
Beaul1iul Home Slle to build 340 B USIneSS an d
740 992 4514 apartments avoll
Phone Or E Mall 800 306 0873
upon 5 mllos I rom PI Pleasant
Buildings
lurnlshed &amp; unturnlshed
Fax Demand 703 904 7770
septic System &amp; County Water
doct.t13 Sand SASE To Gov t
(304)674..()0()9
.2 Apartment Comple x building
Freshly Palftled 2 Bedroom Up
Publications Dept CR 1025 Con
281140 Can be converted to off6c
stairs Apartment Crown City S.
nectlcut Ave N W Suite 1012
Bl LeW"el Spung Valley Area
es Good Income (304)675-138e
curlty Oeposh 740 256-1249
Near Hosptlal 3 Bedrooms 2
Washington DC 20036 http II
Business Build ing For Sale Grac1ous llvtng 1 and 2 bedroom
Baths Oak Kitchen Cabinets
www capltalpilbllcalions com
Famll'/ Floom 2 Car Garage Clly $1 0000080 304 773 5651
apartments at Vi llage MaOQr and
MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45/Hr
Schools 740-446 8607
Rl'w'ers de Apartments In Middle
Medical Billing Software Company
~k
Ranch 4 Bdrms LIR FR
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
port From $273 $336 Coll740
Seeks People To Process Medl
~
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppor
Bath Basement 2 F replaces
23 ACRES 423 000
tunltles.
cal Clalma From Home Training
Gas Furnace CIA 3 Acres 740
South 01 Gall polls Off SA 1 &amp; SA
Provldacl Must Own Computer 1
800-434 55!6 El&lt;l 887
44 1 0953
218 Mostly Wooded Some Flat
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
Great Place To Put A Slngtaw de
740-446-0390
For Sale By Owner 2:200 Sq Ft
1 800 213 8365
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmoled In
Cepe Cod 740 446 2105
.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.=.:.:..----- New Haven one bed room fur
come Potential No E11pertance
Ne ~essary Free Information &amp;
An e nt~ Developers
nished apartment deposit and
For sale b~ owner sect1ona l 33 A
A
1
oA
1
CD ROM lnves1men1 $4 995
1
home wltn three bedrooms two
cres pprox mater,
ere references no pets 740 892
18 995 Financing Ava llaDie Is
Lake Mob le Home deal For 0165
baths two car garage paved Housing Campground Estate
land Auromated Medical Sarvlc
dri\18 on two acres with Oh o Rlv
$99 500 A so 5 Acre lots Nice One Bdrm Unfurnished
oa Inc 800 322 1139 Ex! 050
er fronta ge For appomtment cat
A.paument Range &amp; Refrlg pro
532 000 740-388-887&amp;
Void InK~ IN CT
740 949 2745
vlded Wa ter &amp; Garbage Peid
METABOLIFE 358N OISTRteU
Depos t Required Call 7.t0 ue
BEAUTIFUL POND
~c 08 R~Hng Meadow Wllh
TORS NEEDED Were 11 For A For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
4345 After 6 OOPm
arge family room &amp; ofllce new 1""·-'' - All Around Pond Perfect
Reason It Worksl New low Dis
roo f guttering 1 car garage
Home Slle Wtth Count~ Water
One 2 bedroom &amp; two 1 bedroom
tr butor Cost Call Toll Free 888
29t2 Anniston Drive Pt Pleaa
Land Contract Available t 800
apar1ments Middleport HUD ap
88:).8859
ani (304 )675 2608 P 1ce re
proved 740 928 4941 efl11 &amp;pm
21 :).8385
duced
:::.::::::_
____
Need A Loan? Try Debt Consoli
colfeCI
dation S5 000 $200 000 Bad For Sa le~r Re nt 1BR House on Ethical Environmentally Con
No th 4th AW"enue Middleport 2
Credll 0 K Faa 1 800 770 0092
100x200 lot CantraiAir/Gas
earned Hunter Looking To lease
room efticlency apartment depos
Ext 215
Heat City Water Gall polls Fer
Hunting Rights Or Buy Land 300 11 and references no pats J.tory 13041675-3269
+Acres 304 744 1319
NEW AUTOMATED Home Butl
992.0165
ness Quickly Earn A Full Time FORECLOSED HOMES l ow Or o
for sale In the Great Bend area
Now Taking Applications- 35
Income No Selling Unl mlled In
5 acres with trailer hookup excel
oownl GoW"n t And Bank Repo s
Wtst 2 Bedroom Townhouee
come VIsit hnp /IWww retlrequlck
Sting Sold Now F nanclng Ave
lent drlled water well off S~ 124
Apartments Includes Wtlf!r
ty netlce To See a Hear Complete ablo Ca Nowl I 600 355 00241 S20 000 740.64J.5185
Sewage Trash S32S/Mo 740
Presentation
Exl 8040
446.()008
CLEAN
Start Your Business Toda~
N ce two bedroom one ace wlU\
Ren ters Wanted Pilot Program
Prime Shopping Center Space
337 of Ohio ~Jver frontage Re
OWn 'rour Own Home Uftle Or No
Available At Affordable Rate
cenlly remodeled &amp; new snlngles
Credit OK Oakwood Galllpolll
Spring Vallay Plaza Coli 740-446ce 1304 773-5031
740-446-3093
0101

~~~~=~~~~:I s

Br

~

HOUSE

WITH THE
CLASSQIREDSI

�••

•
.

P~~ge

B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

440

•rtment•

for Rent
~ l'Viln
~~--------~--­
Towers now acce'ptlng appHc•Uone fo&lt; t SR. HIJD aubsld·
lzod opt. fo1 atdorly ond hond l·
""1'1*1· EOH. (00.)675-lle79.
4

,

VIllage Green Apartments· 2

, bodrooma, total ole&lt;:Uic. appllanc-

ts furnished, laundry room taclll -

tles and oloit to school, ippllcallons available at oHtce, 740-992-

3711 TOO t ·888·233-6694 Equal
Housing Opportunity

460 Space for Rent
, 600 square feat olflce building

$3!50/mo., mobile home spaces'

" $120/mo., 2 bedroom

mobttl

· homo, $300/mo.. Rlve!pall&lt;, Pomo~Q'~, 74().114~3.

Mobile Home LOt For Rent , 12·14·
t8 Wide, $125/Mo .. $100 DeposIt. References Required , 740·446·

Wed~esday,

540 MI"'Ueneoua
Merchandlle ·
Sawmill $3,795 . Saw Logo Into
Boards, Pianka, Beama. Laroe

Capacity. Boat Sawmill Voluo Anywht!l. FREE lnfonnatlon. 1-80Q571•t363 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS' 282 Sonwlll Drive. Buffalo,
NY t•225. SunqURI Pro 2.tASF Wolf! System Tanning Bed, 20 Minute Bed
With Face Tanner. 2 Years Old :

7•0·446· 3278 Doys ; 740·446-

Waterline Special: 3J.t 200 PSI

$21.95 Per 100; t • 200 PSI

0175.

MERCHANDIS£;

510

Household
Goods

Appliances :

Reconditioned

Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relrlgrators , 90 Day Guarantee!
f:r~ncn Clly Maytag , 740-446 ·

1795.

Electric HotPoinl Range. 4 yrs

old.St25. (00.)675-6693.
For Sale : Recond itioned wash-

ers. dryers and refrigerators .
Thompsons Appliance . 3407

Jaot&lt;aon Avsnue, (304)675-7388.
GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

Washe rs, dryer&amp; , refrigerators,
range s. Skaggs Applianees , 76
Vine Street , Call 740· 446·7398 ,

I·Ba8·818·0128.
R&amp;D's Used Furnllure &amp; Ap-.
pllances Great Selecllon, Priced
To Sell! ·come And Browse. ·
Corner 01 Route 7 &amp; Addison
Pike , · we Buy Furniture• 740-

827-7502 www.pc·credlt.com
VIAGRAIIIt Order By Phonel 1·

800·2.1 1·1737 Dept. F CUES·

TION? What Is www.mr19 .big·
smart .com? Ask Us. 900·947·

4319.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Past

Credit Problems OKII Even ·II
TUrned Down Beforell Reestabfish

'lbUI C1ednll t -600-659-0359.

Building
·supplies

550

2 Unclaimed StHI Bulldlngat
Factory Cancallatlo'nsl Brand
New, Still Crated! Urgent, Must
Sell. Quonset Arch Style. One Is
401160. Selling For Balance Only!

Call Jos 0 60().716+182.

5121.

530

Pets for Sale

560

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 East Main on SA 124 E. Po-

Gei'man Short Haired Pointers, 1

meroy, 74().992·2526 01 74().992·

6~M.

1539. Russ Moore, owner.

540 Mlscellaneoua
Marchandlae
$$BAD CREDIT? Got . Cash

Loans To ss.ooo. Debt Consolidation To $200,000. Credit Cards,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
Auto 'Loans Available . Meridian

C10dll Co1p. t-800·471-51 t9 EKt.
1180.
2 Electric Wheel Chairs : 1 Electric Scooter Your. Choice, $900,

304-S75·5076.
2 Grave Lots In Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens, ~ Regular

$1o,800; Will Sell FOI $1 ,200• 740·
448-6627.
•
2 Pairs 01 Roller HQckey Skates,
Size 6 -K2 Mach One; Sl!' 7

MISSions; t Huffy Bicycle ; t Dyno
Blcyde. 740·448·12t5.
·

20th Anniversary Nordic
with Workout computer ...,, ......... 1
Excellent condition,

cai 74().742·290t .
37 PeOple Needed To Lose Up
To 30 Pounds In lha Ne~et 30

Days, Free Samples, 740·44t·
1982.

VtAGAAtltt ORDER BY PHONEitt
Stay At Home Itt t-800·21 t;t737
Dept.F
WANT 'A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
WPI Finance With ·o· Down . Past
Credit Problema, No Problem. Call

Toll Froa t -8n·293-4062.
Ojsh Network .Satellite systam·scomplete one receiver systems,
$99.00; complete two receiVer
systems, $198.00. Installation

atl•l• al $49 .00, call 304·773·
5305 or 74o-992·t 182. ·
Firewood, '1\lu Cut, 740·2-45-8393.
Grubb'l Plano· tuning, &amp; rePairs,

P•oblomo? Need. Tuned? Call th,e
plano D!'.74o-448·4525
·
JANITROL HEATING AND
, COOLING EQUIP,.ENT
INSTALLEO
"If You Don't Call Us Wo .Both
Los•.• Free Estlmatest 740-446·

&amp;3011, t-110().291 ·0098.

WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Cash? No Credit OKI Slow C!edll

OK! 0 Down; Laptops Avajlable .
Rea~tablish Your C.redill Call

Nowlll 1·817·755-0005.
MerNiershlp ol Royal Oak R•aort

Club In RJclne, Oh, lor aale
cheap, call Ralph ar 814·878·

8no.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,

On·VInyl Skilling , Doo10, Wind·
ows, Anchors, Water Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur:
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps . Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·

1M16 WWWj&gt;rvb.oom'benneH
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS • Almost EvelyMI Ap-

proved Wlth SO Down! Low

Monthly Payments! t ·800·617.
3476 Ext 330.
NO MONEY DOWN Ill Compaq
HP IBM Desktops / Laptops, E·
Come rca Websltes. Start Your
HomeBusineu Today! .Almost
Everyone Approved! Low Monthly
Payments, Free Color Printer 1·

688·479·2345

Weeks, $200. 740·446-4043 Alter
Male Toy Poodle. 4-1/2 yrs old.

AKC Papal$. $50. (304)675-5089.
Mystic 'Porna· any breed dog
grooming available . Also &amp;Mw
quality and pet Poms available lor

sale. 740·949·3416 ..

Puppies lo1 Sale' AKC Boxar.
(304)671H10t9 01 (00.)862·2584.
Purebred Sl.barlan H'usky pupploa, 4 while, 1 black &amp; white. t
sable &amp; white, 8 weeks old,
wormed, .very niCe, $130 ea.; also
t black &amp; while, 4 monlh old lo·
mal,, mask, house broke, call

.74o-i92·5144.
fleglstered Bor~er Collie Pups,
Working Parema, Imported Blood
Lines, Good Markings, First

Shots, 74o-379-9110.

(ToiiFree)

www.ejump-start.com
'Piavatatlon with exira controls
and ga~ shark, over 20 games,
S738 value w!ll· sell for $350 or
••II games aer,arate $1 5·$2~ ·
electronic muse e sllmulator tenS
unu. great for adding masa and
definltlon, paid over $500 will aell

for $350, call fo1 dolalls, 740·992·
7370.
•

Furnaces, Oil Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp;' Air Conditioning
Syatema FrM 6 Year Parts &amp; Labor Warranty Benne1ts Heating &amp;

Cooli ng,

1-8tl0· 872-5967

www.of\lb.convbennett

Aon'a Gun Shop- Is having a sale
on all guns In stock. caii74G-742·

IW12.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaokaon, OhiO, t•60fl.537-9528

Doo11, 4 Speed. $850, 740-388·
8407, 74().385-8682.

1(JfltrCltlu

~tina Smlfus
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleporl, OH 45760
740-992 -1818
Comp~te Aecounri"8

C. R. Kin&amp;. C.D. Gater

lm rovement Needs

25 Years E erlence

&amp; Tru s.MI.:C.I

29670 Bashan

1992 BerettA. 84 ,000niiles , !5

speed . $3200 OBO. (304)875·
5823.
1993 Buick Regal. New Tires And

We Take Trades , Cook Motors,

741l-446-0t03.
1994 Dodge-Dakota Sport, v.a.
Auto. AC. $5.600. (304)576·297t .
19114 Red Bonn0111111 SSEI Super·
Cha1ged Turbo Fuet-lnlactedN6/
3.8 Lite•. 75K. AMtFM ste•eo,
Compact DlsciP•emtu.n sound .

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Sunroof, 6 way Power Le8ther'
Seats. Power Locke &amp; WindoWs, .

Cellula! PMne W/Boostel Kit, Air '
conditioning , Tilt, C•utae, Dual
Alrbags. ABS 4 Wheel Anii-Lock

brakes, Regularly Serviced &amp;

Matn tainod. (740l-446-o957 or
(740)-446011S2
t 995 Buick Losable Custom 4

New H
Om88
• Garages
, Complete
•

Remodelln ·
g

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992·1871

$6 .~ 00 . 00;

(2.000 UndO! Book
vatue)t 740-862·7512
1995 Ford Contour· am/fm cas·
. selle, great gas mileage, 78,000,

IOBdod. ,
1996 F· t5o . 5 speed ·oo. 4.9L,
all, good truck.
1994 Ford Escon LX wagon, am!
lm cassene, runs excellent.
1994 Olds Cutlass Supreme, am/

fm C8888Ue, V-8, _loadsd.
t994 Dodge Shadow, .am/fm caa·
sene, 84,000, great gas mileage.

Interior

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 111"1'
$300.00 Coverall
· • ·$500.00 Stlrburat
Progrenlve top line.

FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. ·

Leave Me1sage
Aher 6pm· 614-985-4180
''

"We're Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances

Ue. 1 oo-50 untAJn

t 993 Plymouth Voyage!, 6 cylln,

Parts- All Makes ·

dar automatic, am/fm cuaette, air. ·

Rutlend Co1 Sales
74().742·3311
t-886·819·96011·

740

t 992. Honda 200 4 Trax looks

t997 Blue Chevy Lumina $9,200,
74o-.t4t.Q628,

9851 Afte1 6 P.M.

245-5t2t.

t987 Chevy Ventu11 LS, 40.000
Mites, 74().245-5443.

Davldso.n Twtstad Front Spoke

Massey Ferguson 50 . Ru?s
good. (304)~5-1176.
'

1999 Black Monte CarteS Ari. Pow·
ers. In Excellent Shapel Priced

620 Wanted to Buy

To Selll74o-388-8351l.

TOBACCO QUOTA: Want To
Lease In, Good P1tce Paid Up

2000 Fo1d Esco11. st o.ooo
(304)675·5479.

610 Farm Equipment
F~r Sale : TobacCo Sticka. 740·

Front, Call Jodrey J. Farm 937·

373-4644 Can Call Collect Alt11
9:00PM.
Want

TO

Lease Tob8cco Ouots

In 'Ohio •. soe A Pound, 806·473·
tt85.
We Are Buytng Tobacco Base &amp;
Leaae, 937·895-0697 . ' {Before
t1 :00.A.M. &amp; Afle1 6 P.M.I

Utilities, Call Nowl B00-772·7470;
EXT.8336.
·
Cars!Trucka $1001 Seized and
sold localty. Hondaa, Toyota&amp;,
4x4a, more. Toll Fraa 1-8DD-8G4·

492t ox1.2597. ·

2 Palm Maraa; One 4 Yeara Okl;
One 2 Years Old; 2 Arab ian

Goldlnga: Ono 7 Yea•• Old; Ono
3~1$ Otrl, 740-388-8358.

E~ir:uude

Must se ll llll 1994 Ranger ·aa'a s
boat 150 horsepower Johnson
V-6 outboard, exceiJent condition

.

'

760 . Auto Parts &amp;
Acceesofles
Budget Priced Transmissions All
TransmiSSions, CVC Joints, 740·

245-5677.

1Anlc!&lt; 937-71KH1102.

t 980 GMC, 4X4 Truck with Topper. 1/2 ton. (3041675-2456.

Mllea; GeneratoJ FUrnace, Good

ANGUS AND CHIANGUS 'suns

t 963 lull size. 1estored. chevy

Leave Message.

Priced R'tasonably, Slate Ru~
Fa1m~

Jackaon, 740-286·!5385.

(304)675-7890.

Broke ; Also G Year Old Pacing

t990 Ford PICkup, Longbed. Now

Male, Broke To Ride. Dan HO!sh·

~Ires,

american racing

rim~.

302

OH 45858.

engine. Excellent Condition.
(304)675-8Qt8.

Butchering hogs tor sale, 2501·

1994 Chevy 2500, 4x4, manual,

3001, call 740·949·2017 alter
Spot

black, $10,800 OBO. 740·949·
t70U , _ mesaage.

Club LambS, 4 Wethers, 1 Ewe
Local Champion Bloodline, VerY

1994 ·FOld F-350,

miles, new tires &amp; wheels &amp; rTIOfl,

High Ouallty. 740·245-0485.

$15.000 ftnm. 740·992·5532.

Fall Pigs Foi Sale, Hamp And
·some Blue But• Call 740·441 ·
0968. Or 740 446 4382.

Pigs, born 2·3-00. $35. (740)256·
6573.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Mlxe~

Alpha Hay Delano Jack-

son Farm $3.00 Bale, 304:e75·
1743, 74().446-1104.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Siraw Year
' Round Delivery &amp; Volume DIS•
count Available. Heritage Farm.

Condition, $10.500. 740·44t·0440

4x~.

86,000

t997 black Chevy 5·10 S18pslde

E~etend8d Cab, 3 door, IOad•d.

25.000 mites. vel)' sha1p. lull 1a•·
tnga, St t, tOO, 7.40-949-2045 01
740·949-2203.
For sale· '89 2.9 Ranger motor

pallS, heads, manifolds. fuel lnjec,
lion pallS; atao '67 Vugo. 65,000
miles. no title. $150, 740·247·
296t .

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements ·
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

lablilhed t975. Call 24 H1s. (740)
446·0870, t ·600·287·0576. Rog·
ers Wat11proollng.
Appliance Parts And Service: All
·Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guaranteed

C&amp;C Gere•al

Home

Main·

renence· Painting , vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home rlpalr and more. For
rree eSiimate can Chat. 740-992·

D1ywell, Siding, Rools , Aqdl·
!Ions, Pe lntlng, etc . (304)674·
4623 01 (304)674-0t55.

Now taking ordera for thiS Spring. . t985 Dodge Aamcharger, 380 vFirst O~trs will Guarantee Beat&amp; ·6. 4 Spoad. Runs Good, . Needs
Earliest Pianta. o ·ewhurat Work Qn 4WO. Serious Inquiries

Livlngtton 's Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repairs
dona, free estimates . IUellme
guarantee. t2yrs on )ob experi-

falmB,(304)695-3740/895-3789.

TRANSPORTATI ON

740-1192·21147.

Onty. St ,200 .00 OBO. Call Bot·
ween 3;30Pm And 1:00Pm. 740·
367-o229
t990 FOld F-250, 300, 5 speed,

71 0 Autos for Sale
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's . Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps , And Sport Utili·

tteo. Call Nowl 800-772·7:m):
EXT. 7832.
•

new brakes, new shocks, new
ARE fiberglass topper, excellent

condition, 740·949·2411 .

ence. (304)895·3867.
Roofs, Add·Ons, Garages, New
Homes, Decks, Painting. Insured,
All work Backed By s Year ·war·
ranty, Free Estimates! 740·446-

6616.

·tton, $9,300, 740·387·02t9, 740·
387-7272.

Superl'or Home Malnte"ance
·ws Do A-1/ Repair~ on Homes:
Tralltrs, Yard Work, Plumbing,
Tr6nchfng, Eves."7ol0·44, ·0113.

t 992 GMC Jimmy 4X4. New

840

1992 Chevy 4114 ExceiJent Condl·

t 969 ~ord Muolang Good Condl•
11011, 6 Cylinder, 3 Speed, 12,300,
740-441.0116.

Tires.' Motor a Exhaust. Ex:ctl•
lent Condition . $6.500 . 080.

1983 Chevy Malibu , Excellent
Condllion , 305 , Automatic, "

,·1994, S-tO Chevy Blazer, V~ 8 ,
4WO with Towing Packa,ge .

Doors, AC, $2,200, 740446·4514.

740-992-7945

(304)773-5640.

(304)882·2787.

L ..

_!. : : : : :. . . : :Z: .~IV:~·;. !J

JL...:._

FTN Ell/mates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Porl,oroy, Ohio

22 yr.. Local

P!ISS

WHEN PAW HAS A
NtCSHTMARE, HE
· SHORE HAS A

~WICK'S.
·tt"OLIHG and .
EX(f1Vf1Tift&lt;1 .

F:AEE ESTiMATE;S

740~992·7599
(N9 SUNDAY ·Cil.LLS)

.

e•

Easl

Pass
All pass.

42

BY PHILLIP ALDER

.

Fax 304-675-2457 '

•Driveways •Tennis Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•R.oods • Streets
Lie . #003506

No Credit • Slow Crsdlt •.Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvo~ed

..

WORRYING!!!
No' l::mbarruement...

.

~

· You.'re ,-..eatld with Reepect~

A friend does something une)(pected. You ask him why, and
from me"
sometimes the explanation is so
47 "Normal"
llllrt
obvious that you k1ck yourself for
41 Chlmpelfll
not working it out. At other times,
bucket
41111m
though, you never could guess.
llll!lptl¥ldot
Wen. I doubt you' II deduce why
IIChlmlul
,
aufltx
a telephone call resulted in my
... ·-HIIW"
using this deal, which was written'
up in 19SO in Adelaide, Australia.
CELEBRITY·CIPHER
What is the right line of play in
by Lula Campo•
six hearts? West cashes the spade
Ctltbnt'l Clpht• OIYPIDa-• o11 ofllltd from quollllona by fimoue people, put.,.,
. king, then swit9hes to the dla·
p~eaenl. E10n letttr In lito clphi1 allndl fer anolhar.
.
Tottly'l c/ul: T tqUIII G
mondj!lek.
The author was Keith McNeil,
NJIKM
Kill
IICI
' T F a· J F F y L
a large. man with a gre~t sense of
humor who died in 1993.
FMIIL .'
0 AJ J
IICII
MFII
CKMIL,
"Big Hymie (North) ... is aces·
. with a machine gun as long as
L t 0 A L
VAWJ:ZJZAL
someone tells him who to point it
K· L
DZNC
L F
ZL
at, but this is all too much for him .
JITKNI
'M F
Eventually he remembers BlackCFMSI,.III.'
LCKYBLVIIKDII
K, l,J,K.,
pool, or is it Blackleg? When he
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
'Pollitctan:
a man who keeps hll ear to lhl ground
L, t-\.N,O I
grunts four no-trump; Willy the
and his mouth to a mlcr~phone.' - Evan Eear
..
· Whiz bids five hearts to show his
two bullets."
WOlD
GAMt
After winning trick two, did
you cash the heart ace? If so,
,tough!
"Willy leads a low heart to the
doll in dummy and smiles when
East shows out. The Club ace is
G
__
' Ir-T-r(-H.....
,1N.,.(
cashed 'and a club ruffed low, the
1
heart seven is. led to dummy'$
nine, and a third club is ruffed '
with. the heart ace. After a dia- ·
DUCLI·I
· mond nlff in ' the dummy, the
fl)urth club is ruffed with the hear.t
;king,.settjng up the s1.1it. Tht; dumS E S I U ~ Words of Wisdom: "It's alviays
is ~eached w.'th ' another.. dia1--,
.--..
,.4......- ..---~&lt; best to let the world knbw you as
mond ruff, the last.:tnlmp pulled
--1.1..--'.-J..
1 1 1-L._....._ you are, not as you think you -·-.
' with tlie, lhean ja~k and. that ' was
L.
.----;::-~-:--:....-:-....,.,..---.-- - be."
red ~ver all oyer." ,~ · .
., Mliel~phoniHrt'ind said that
ROLFAM
g ,.
16 O Complele the chuck,le quoted
heF favorite- fll'liC!e- in The Bridge
-.1.-..I.I...~.L..-L.
_.1.-J.
by filling In the missing wo1ds
ftit~~~y~::;:~i'i~~;,,, World is Master 'Solvers' Club.
L
you develop from step No. 3 below.
@I
Wei( McNeil wrote ·the equivaP~tNr NUM8ERED lETTERS IN
I
lent bidding' panel' article in AusTHESE SQUARES
tralian Bridge, so I looked up an
ul'lseRAMBlE ....,ove lETTERs
article"of his.

--l, .

r,.,.,

I

'

Stopin And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

1

To get a current weat er {1:
report, check the
1

.NowRen~ .·

~!28100

S~&amp;~/ll

•

750 East State Street
· Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671'

"A Better

·s entinel

"

I

1

'I

I I

a~

I

TO GET ANSWER

··Free Estimates

Centr11tert Wtl..mt

' 740-742-0419

1-800•311•3391'

April Sho111ero Bri"'J
May Floweroll

Are Your Plant Beds
Weeding: Mulching:
~
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retalnfng
Walls
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp

DBPDYIAG

PAns

AR·M;m,.. Tft.cJor &amp;
•. Equipment P1111s
Fac:tory Autlt;,rimd
Case-IH P1111s
.Dealets~
1000 St. Rt. 7; South
CooMIIe, OH 46723 .

7.....7-8111

740-949·3606

A &amp; D Auto UphOlstery ·'Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headllne~s, truck turps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers; carpets, etc.

Mon· f;rl 8!30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs ·experience

Electrlcal ~and

Refrigeration
ResldanUal or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs. Master Ll·
censed elecrrlclan. Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306. 304·675·

1786.

.\

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916
'

.

order to haye a good time.

GEMINI (May 21 -lune 20)
This should be your kind o( day
with lot ~ of people surrounding

I

)

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

THURSDAY,A,priil3, 2000
In ih~ year ahead you're likely
• ' to fiQ4 yourself making many
' more friends than usual, bringing
:·,11bout some very positi~e change!i
~- in your social life as well as at

'·

i,

,. :work.
'

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

~ You

Senior C"izen

JONES' D~count
TREE SERVICE

you. As a Gemini , you'll be ~rat­
Hied by meeting and chatting
with many dirrerent types-of peo·

pOssess a gift to instinctive-

' • ty know whal to do .and say to
~ ~nake all those with whom you·,. .
involved feel good about them·
i , !elves, which makes you very

••:'f,oputar today.. Know

where lo

t •took for {Qmance and you'll find
' ~lt. The Astro·Graph Ma1chmaker ·
; ~~lnstaluly reveals which signs are
• :·romantically perfect for you. Mail
, $2.?5 to Malchmaker, c/o this
newapaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Hill Swlon, Now Volt, NY
\ 10156. .
'
i TAURUS (April ~D-May 20) II
; ml1ht bot iiat enloyablt for you
• today to. ... k toiiiCa within the
• ·Gonftnll your own MptlCI. You
won't need to be 1mund othm In

i

or

~
\

pte.
CANCER (June 21-Jul y 22)
'o

The ability you possess today for
doing all the right things will generate the right kinds of results .
Even if something unforeseen
should occur. you'll handle il in

MEANS.

!ltride.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Make . I
it a 'point, todax to be congenial
whh everyone you encounter,
because good things ~ould sta~ to
happen for yQU t~rough contacts

of alt kinds.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Knowing how to make the most
out of the least today in any type

' for them.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Chances are your sense of method
and procedure will be e~ttremely
effective today, allowing you to
accomplish anything to which ,
you set your mind .
.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-D_ec .
21) Regardless of the people or
circumstances you find yourself
in today; just be friendly and you
· ~ hould be well received wherev e r you go.

. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Devoting your time and El tten·
tion to your family today will
imbue yuu with o deep feeling of
belo11glng, which. in turn . will
enhance your sense of well~be ing
and security.
.

4

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

of crirtum!ltartee i~ your best ft!'!let.

This is u ·good day to ~atch up on
alllhe late st news and scuttlebutt.
. Pick up the phone .and call some
friendl' you hll ven' t ·talked to in

Use il 10 bring about some1hin1
you ltuly desl~e .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23 I Wl!h
you around today, even the •hy
aoul1 will be encour11ed to
emeraelrom 1helr !hell!. Y1111love
people and lhty'll lnll!ni llvtly
rt!ll!i YOU WIHIOniy 1000 lhln11

PISCES (Peb. 20·Mar&lt;h 201
Owlna \O your talent for oraunl·
zullon, )'ou •hould be uble to ae1
II nuntber Ol menllol ih lnpM dono
ttlduy, •••• II ynu huvo a l~w
110e lul eommltttlllntt with whleh to
eontond.

quite nwhile .

f

.

"

I

My home had been burglarized. My neighbor says
that a thief really wants to live within another MAN'S

Albany, Ohio

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Swampy - Heron . Basin • Clamor- MAN'S MEANS

t mo. l)d.

Sewing machine
&amp;vacuum
cleaners repaired

!!&amp;~Ill"

43 -and void
44 Hlor bye
411 "Take--

740-992-5212

SEAMLESS
GOnERS
'

11 S·shaped
molding
12 Antitoxins
19 Wood sorrel
21 Total or Lifo
22 Wears away
23 Actor

James -

To the computer

'

Hlth &amp; Pry
Self-Storage

North
'4 NT

6 Opponenl
7 Football
player Y.A. 8 Highest card
9 Approach
10 D~p cut

24 Legat.ald org.
25 Talk
26 Feathered
llahlng lly
28 Ao..rt
29 n .. ue
30 Cupid
31 Native or
Copenhagen
37 Over there
38 Sign at a hit
ohow (abbr.)
41 Like people
wtth chicken

Opening lead: • K

It

****************·

C!)ntra~tors

West
Pass

:HARNEY

*
YARD SALE
·i
:
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT :
** . MAYENDTOEND
*
5 6-- ALL DAY ' "*

WV

'

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

L...___:

I

*****************
* . "8"
*
*: YELLOW FLAG *t

Cell Phon e 674-3311

• K J 10 8

33795 'Hiland
Rd.
'
.
·Porn:er-oy,· Ohio.

~eady?

1877 VW Camper van, stove, re·
frlgarator, tink, raised ' root, new
transmlnlon and motor, S2000
f~m .

•Room addhlona &amp;Remodeling
•Ntw Geregea
•Eiectrtcat&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp;(lulltra
:Vinyl Sl~lng &amp; Painting
. •.Pallo ·&amp; Porch Dacka

s2

F1anch City Maytag, 740·446:

7795.

6323.

Tobacco Plants

J ~~=....,;_--..:....:~..;.._j

MYERS
PAVING
" · · Henderson, WV
.
875-2497 or 4411-1428

• Q 9

'

Unco.ndltlonal lifetime guarantee.
Locctl references furnished . Es·

Jlma Drywall &amp; Construction.
New Construction ·&amp; Renlqd811

650 Seed &amp; F;illlzer

Slze.JD550G
Rate $60 per ~our
Call for minimum
rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates
.welcome ·

WILLIS'

730 V1n1 i 4-WDI

(30ol)675-5724

Dozer for Hlrt

plck~p .

Bay Malt 55" Sound And Kid
berger, .t789 Patriot Road,. Patriot,

Campers &amp;
MotorHomee

1969 Winnebago Leshalo 39,000

Rebuilt engine, new
paint. Loti · of new things •.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•AJ8 32

K Q 10 4
10 8 6
J 10 8 4
95

·~.

&amp;

New Hom~~~ • VInyl
New Garag~
• Replacement Windows
• Raom Addnioris .
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

motor, 81umlnum

790

day 4/2tot, 7:30 P.M. Feyotto

Free Delivery

•
•
•
•

• 7 65

'

WOuelltv
Repleoemeftt
Auto lodt Pa•tl
All replacement
parts

...

East

West

•AK742
t A K 6 5
• 3

.ISSILLIUILDIRS
.INC. ..

canopy, $6000, 7~·742·2420.

call740-385-2434.

,

••

•AQ7642

South

I
I'

Siding •

t971 Dodge Dump T!uck, Neada
Wo1k, Good Bed. Hyd1aullco,
$1.200. tO A.M. -2 P.M. 740-366·
9073.

County Fair Grounds, Wasl11ng·
ton Courlf10UII, Soling 200 Head,
Borrows &amp; GIRo. Conslgntfl Roo·
er B1n118y, 937·5S.·2398, Leroy

Ken Young .

t992 24' pont'l"n boat. 46 horse-

power,

houd

..

H011llng • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
. Fdl Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) .992..3470

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Types, Acceas To Ove1 10.000

720 Truck• for Sell'

,Man

1999 Harley Sportster 1200cC

9' trailer, new bed, new 1lres, tor
hauling motor cycle or :2 four
wheekl15, 740·992-786t .

ta's, Chevys, Jeepe, ·And Sport

.

Wheel &amp; Soli~ Back Wheat Black,
Lots Of Ch1ome. $14,500, 740·
446-3096.

HONDA'e $tOO, $500 &amp; UP. PO·
LICE IMPOUND. Honda's Toyo·

Nice t 978 El Camino fo• aale.
(304)875-7720. $700 111m. Laavs
message or can after 5PM.
·

74().~79-2798 .

t 994 Dyna Wide Glide Harley

oeo.

Olds AI F1om Gen•ttc

2 Black Angus Buls Croqed 2 a

,.

1,000 Milos. $10,000 OBO. 740:
4-411·7069.

CARS FROM $18/110. lm·
poundolf'lepoo. Fee. SO Down /24
Mos, Ot9.9% F01 Llotlnga t-800·
319-3323 X2156.

Llvntock

630

992·1550"
The AppliCince

Motorcycles

DroppEd mY- Gum
1n the. S6Ndbox ...

•Estes Rockets and Accessories , ;•:
•1rains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track!
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Lifeline
•Atlas

'Toll Free

"Take the pain out
· of paintingLet me do it jor you"

7/22/1"FN

• Q.J 9 53
• 7

BAUM
LUMB
State Route 248 Cheater,

740-742-9501

LIND,A'S
PAINTING

Doors, Loaded, aluminum 1.1._ _ _ _ _ _,;;;;;.;,;~
Wh11la, A/C, Tilt, Cruise , Pwr, r·
Locks, Pwr Windows, Pwr Seat&amp;,

• 9

1

Vegetable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Comblnallon Pots,
Potted Gemnlums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9·5
Sun 12·5

1nio.

Loaded t8 ,000 Miles $8,895;
t99t S-to 96,000 Miles $2,495.

:-~:

Allawer to p,.yloua Puute

primate
42 Anelent Souttl
American
Indian
48 No1J1tlve word
47 Fruhued•
, &amp;1-w.. Ill lor
53 Dance
popularized by

14 Cold time
(2 wdl.)
15 Social
fnelllbfllty
Tlto Puente
55 "Selnteld" lady
16 Puuflng
56 " Afllegislottve
eltuatlon
Powera 17 Races
18 Wttty remark
gronted . .• "
57 One who rune
20 She played
olf to wod
Carla
21 Recurring
· 58 Craves
pattern
,
23 Hiding place
DOWN
27 Made IIzzy
32 Yellow pigment 1 Russian ruler
33 - - barrel (In 2 Japanese
aborigine
trouble)
34 - B90the Luce 3 Midday
4 Chewing
35 Actor Alain substance•
36 Monfeo epent
5 Medieval
39 u.. o pencil
poem
part

04-12·00

No

''

Spring Season

to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

1993 Grand Am Sport Coupe
81,000 Milas $3,995: 1992 Cavalier R!S 2 Doors, $3,195; 1991 Lumina Euro 2 Doors, 88,000 Miles,
$3,995: 1998 S-10 AutomatiC

Utilirie•
(740) 992-3138

Syracuee
Now Open For

740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'

collont $2.900, 740-446·2750, 01
74().441·0542 LBave Message.

$6.75/50 lb. bag

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb.
Seeds 8

&amp;

Septit Sytterrur

7 Lailn dance•
131ndlon
languagll

group

Nutrena Hunters Pride Oog Food
.

.992-5776

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Struts, 110,000 Miles, Runs Ell·

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

HUB BARDS·
GREENHOUSE

HILL'S
SE.LF STORAGE

$2,000 OBO, 740-386-9151 .

se,i.ce•

1 Snerl

Ag. Service

Hou.., &amp; Traile r Site•

40 Large-eyed

ACROSS

"ALDER

Shade

$11f¥1TQp . 'I

Hepllg
BuUdo1er &amp; Backhoe

992·2772
For All Your Horne

1989 Nissan Cen tury BISek 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
I In

Good, Runs Excenant, 740·2:t5·

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI E111ctoncy 90% Gas

passenger side. (304)675-3693.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

;!lith Annual Ben~ey Pig ~11. Fri-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Sloe~.
Call Ron Evans, t -eoo-537-9528.

1989 Chevy Beretta, 4 cyl. , ntw
11res,
battery,
alternator,
t30,000mlles. runa , wrecked

1991 Blue. Hyundal 2 Doors.
Hatchback. Stereo /CD. Sunroof,

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·

367·0280.

6 cyl. , auto.

WE FINANCE COMPUTERS!
downsl FREE INTERNET! 1-686·

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacemeni Windows,
Seamless Outten &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
addilions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat ~ks.
Concrele &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

St ,595. 740-448-6981.

1990 Geo Storm, Wrecked, En·
gine &amp; Transmission Good. New
Parts, Tires. 740·256-1687.

Til PIIPIUTIOII

COISTRUCnOtt

1987 Chry&amp;ler Lebaron, 2 00011.
Automatic, " Cylinder, With Air,
Very Good Conditton, Asking

$37.00 Per tOO : All Brass CompressiOn Anings In Stock

Bad Credit • Bankruptcy . Liens Judgements OKAY\ No Turn·-

J&amp;L IISUI.ATIH I·

BoCy tn Good condition, $3,501),
Plica Negotlablo, 740-2&lt;15-6443.

Mercur~.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

+ Naw 350 HP Englno T·Topl .

WALNUT LUMBER
t ,ooo Ft. 12 Com mon .eoe Ft .:
I ,000 Ft. ft , $1.25 Ft.; tOO FL Se-

740-256-8056, Afler6 P.M.

'-\ U .El UUP

198e C1ma19, Nlw Transmlslk&gt;n,

1988

Th~ Dally Sentinel • Page B 1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1985 Clvyalor New Yorker; Goa&lt;!
Condition, St .ooo. oeo 7~&amp;22t•.

$1 ,500. (304)675-6693.

Select $1 .50 Ft. ; 500 Ft. Hickory
Select $1.50 Ft.; All Klld Dried.

•

- Wodnosdny. April 12. 2000

710 AU101 for Sale

9021 , Evenings, Le!Mt Massage.

lect S2.00 Ft. : Soft Maple Select
$1 .50 Ft.: Oak 11 $1 .00 Ft.; Some

(/&lt;

Aprll12, 2000

.

I

�••

•
.

P~~ge

B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

440

•rtment•

for Rent
~ l'Viln
~~--------~--­
Towers now acce'ptlng appHc•Uone fo&lt; t SR. HIJD aubsld·
lzod opt. fo1 atdorly ond hond l·
""1'1*1· EOH. (00.)675-lle79.
4

,

VIllage Green Apartments· 2

, bodrooma, total ole&lt;:Uic. appllanc-

ts furnished, laundry room taclll -

tles and oloit to school, ippllcallons available at oHtce, 740-992-

3711 TOO t ·888·233-6694 Equal
Housing Opportunity

460 Space for Rent
, 600 square feat olflce building

$3!50/mo., mobile home spaces'

" $120/mo., 2 bedroom

mobttl

· homo, $300/mo.. Rlve!pall&lt;, Pomo~Q'~, 74().114~3.

Mobile Home LOt For Rent , 12·14·
t8 Wide, $125/Mo .. $100 DeposIt. References Required , 740·446·

Wed~esday,

540 MI"'Ueneoua
Merchandlle ·
Sawmill $3,795 . Saw Logo Into
Boards, Pianka, Beama. Laroe

Capacity. Boat Sawmill Voluo Anywht!l. FREE lnfonnatlon. 1-80Q571•t363 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS' 282 Sonwlll Drive. Buffalo,
NY t•225. SunqURI Pro 2.tASF Wolf! System Tanning Bed, 20 Minute Bed
With Face Tanner. 2 Years Old :

7•0·446· 3278 Doys ; 740·446-

Waterline Special: 3J.t 200 PSI

$21.95 Per 100; t • 200 PSI

0175.

MERCHANDIS£;

510

Household
Goods

Appliances :

Reconditioned

Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relrlgrators , 90 Day Guarantee!
f:r~ncn Clly Maytag , 740-446 ·

1795.

Electric HotPoinl Range. 4 yrs

old.St25. (00.)675-6693.
For Sale : Recond itioned wash-

ers. dryers and refrigerators .
Thompsons Appliance . 3407

Jaot&lt;aon Avsnue, (304)675-7388.
GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

Washe rs, dryer&amp; , refrigerators,
range s. Skaggs Applianees , 76
Vine Street , Call 740· 446·7398 ,

I·Ba8·818·0128.
R&amp;D's Used Furnllure &amp; Ap-.
pllances Great Selecllon, Priced
To Sell! ·come And Browse. ·
Corner 01 Route 7 &amp; Addison
Pike , · we Buy Furniture• 740-

827-7502 www.pc·credlt.com
VIAGRAIIIt Order By Phonel 1·

800·2.1 1·1737 Dept. F CUES·

TION? What Is www.mr19 .big·
smart .com? Ask Us. 900·947·

4319.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Past

Credit Problems OKII Even ·II
TUrned Down Beforell Reestabfish

'lbUI C1ednll t -600-659-0359.

Building
·supplies

550

2 Unclaimed StHI Bulldlngat
Factory Cancallatlo'nsl Brand
New, Still Crated! Urgent, Must
Sell. Quonset Arch Style. One Is
401160. Selling For Balance Only!

Call Jos 0 60().716+182.

5121.

530

Pets for Sale

560

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques ,
1124 East Main on SA 124 E. Po-

Gei'man Short Haired Pointers, 1

meroy, 74().992·2526 01 74().992·

6~M.

1539. Russ Moore, owner.

540 Mlscellaneoua
Marchandlae
$$BAD CREDIT? Got . Cash

Loans To ss.ooo. Debt Consolidation To $200,000. Credit Cards,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
Auto 'Loans Available . Meridian

C10dll Co1p. t-800·471-51 t9 EKt.
1180.
2 Electric Wheel Chairs : 1 Electric Scooter Your. Choice, $900,

304-S75·5076.
2 Grave Lots In Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens, ~ Regular

$1o,800; Will Sell FOI $1 ,200• 740·
448-6627.
•
2 Pairs 01 Roller HQckey Skates,
Size 6 -K2 Mach One; Sl!' 7

MISSions; t Huffy Bicycle ; t Dyno
Blcyde. 740·448·12t5.
·

20th Anniversary Nordic
with Workout computer ...,, ......... 1
Excellent condition,

cai 74().742·290t .
37 PeOple Needed To Lose Up
To 30 Pounds In lha Ne~et 30

Days, Free Samples, 740·44t·
1982.

VtAGAAtltt ORDER BY PHONEitt
Stay At Home Itt t-800·21 t;t737
Dept.F
WANT 'A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
WPI Finance With ·o· Down . Past
Credit Problema, No Problem. Call

Toll Froa t -8n·293-4062.
Ojsh Network .Satellite systam·scomplete one receiver systems,
$99.00; complete two receiVer
systems, $198.00. Installation

atl•l• al $49 .00, call 304·773·
5305 or 74o-992·t 182. ·
Firewood, '1\lu Cut, 740·2-45-8393.
Grubb'l Plano· tuning, &amp; rePairs,

P•oblomo? Need. Tuned? Call th,e
plano D!'.74o-448·4525
·
JANITROL HEATING AND
, COOLING EQUIP,.ENT
INSTALLEO
"If You Don't Call Us Wo .Both
Los•.• Free Estlmatest 740-446·

&amp;3011, t-110().291 ·0098.

WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Cash? No Credit OKI Slow C!edll

OK! 0 Down; Laptops Avajlable .
Rea~tablish Your C.redill Call

Nowlll 1·817·755-0005.
MerNiershlp ol Royal Oak R•aort

Club In RJclne, Oh, lor aale
cheap, call Ralph ar 814·878·

8no.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,

On·VInyl Skilling , Doo10, Wind·
ows, Anchors, Water Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur:
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps . Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·

1M16 WWWj&gt;rvb.oom'benneH
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS • Almost EvelyMI Ap-

proved Wlth SO Down! Low

Monthly Payments! t ·800·617.
3476 Ext 330.
NO MONEY DOWN Ill Compaq
HP IBM Desktops / Laptops, E·
Come rca Websltes. Start Your
HomeBusineu Today! .Almost
Everyone Approved! Low Monthly
Payments, Free Color Printer 1·

688·479·2345

Weeks, $200. 740·446-4043 Alter
Male Toy Poodle. 4-1/2 yrs old.

AKC Papal$. $50. (304)675-5089.
Mystic 'Porna· any breed dog
grooming available . Also &amp;Mw
quality and pet Poms available lor

sale. 740·949·3416 ..

Puppies lo1 Sale' AKC Boxar.
(304)671H10t9 01 (00.)862·2584.
Purebred Sl.barlan H'usky pupploa, 4 while, 1 black &amp; white. t
sable &amp; white, 8 weeks old,
wormed, .very niCe, $130 ea.; also
t black &amp; while, 4 monlh old lo·
mal,, mask, house broke, call

.74o-i92·5144.
fleglstered Bor~er Collie Pups,
Working Parema, Imported Blood
Lines, Good Markings, First

Shots, 74o-379-9110.

(ToiiFree)

www.ejump-start.com
'Piavatatlon with exira controls
and ga~ shark, over 20 games,
S738 value w!ll· sell for $350 or
••II games aer,arate $1 5·$2~ ·
electronic muse e sllmulator tenS
unu. great for adding masa and
definltlon, paid over $500 will aell

for $350, call fo1 dolalls, 740·992·
7370.
•

Furnaces, Oil Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp;' Air Conditioning
Syatema FrM 6 Year Parts &amp; Labor Warranty Benne1ts Heating &amp;

Cooli ng,

1-8tl0· 872-5967

www.of\lb.convbennett

Aon'a Gun Shop- Is having a sale
on all guns In stock. caii74G-742·

IW12.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaokaon, OhiO, t•60fl.537-9528

Doo11, 4 Speed. $850, 740-388·
8407, 74().385-8682.

1(JfltrCltlu

~tina Smlfus
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleporl, OH 45760
740-992 -1818
Comp~te Aecounri"8

C. R. Kin&amp;. C.D. Gater

lm rovement Needs

25 Years E erlence

&amp; Tru s.MI.:C.I

29670 Bashan

1992 BerettA. 84 ,000niiles , !5

speed . $3200 OBO. (304)875·
5823.
1993 Buick Regal. New Tires And

We Take Trades , Cook Motors,

741l-446-0t03.
1994 Dodge-Dakota Sport, v.a.
Auto. AC. $5.600. (304)576·297t .
19114 Red Bonn0111111 SSEI Super·
Cha1ged Turbo Fuet-lnlactedN6/
3.8 Lite•. 75K. AMtFM ste•eo,
Compact DlsciP•emtu.n sound .

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Sunroof, 6 way Power Le8ther'
Seats. Power Locke &amp; WindoWs, .

Cellula! PMne W/Boostel Kit, Air '
conditioning , Tilt, C•utae, Dual
Alrbags. ABS 4 Wheel Anii-Lock

brakes, Regularly Serviced &amp;

Matn tainod. (740l-446-o957 or
(740)-446011S2
t 995 Buick Losable Custom 4

New H
Om88
• Garages
, Complete
•

Remodelln ·
g

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740·992·1871

$6 .~ 00 . 00;

(2.000 UndO! Book
vatue)t 740-862·7512
1995 Ford Contour· am/fm cas·
. selle, great gas mileage, 78,000,

IOBdod. ,
1996 F· t5o . 5 speed ·oo. 4.9L,
all, good truck.
1994 Ford Escon LX wagon, am!
lm cassene, runs excellent.
1994 Olds Cutlass Supreme, am/

fm C8888Ue, V-8, _loadsd.
t994 Dodge Shadow, .am/fm caa·
sene, 84,000, great gas mileage.

Interior

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per 111"1'
$300.00 Coverall
· • ·$500.00 Stlrburat
Progrenlve top line.

FREE ESTIMATES
Before 6 p.m. ·

Leave Me1sage
Aher 6pm· 614-985-4180
''

"We're Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances

Ue. 1 oo-50 untAJn

t 993 Plymouth Voyage!, 6 cylln,

Parts- All Makes ·

dar automatic, am/fm cuaette, air. ·

Rutlend Co1 Sales
74().742·3311
t-886·819·96011·

740

t 992. Honda 200 4 Trax looks

t997 Blue Chevy Lumina $9,200,
74o-.t4t.Q628,

9851 Afte1 6 P.M.

245-5t2t.

t987 Chevy Ventu11 LS, 40.000
Mites, 74().245-5443.

Davldso.n Twtstad Front Spoke

Massey Ferguson 50 . Ru?s
good. (304)~5-1176.
'

1999 Black Monte CarteS Ari. Pow·
ers. In Excellent Shapel Priced

620 Wanted to Buy

To Selll74o-388-8351l.

TOBACCO QUOTA: Want To
Lease In, Good P1tce Paid Up

2000 Fo1d Esco11. st o.ooo
(304)675·5479.

610 Farm Equipment
F~r Sale : TobacCo Sticka. 740·

Front, Call Jodrey J. Farm 937·

373-4644 Can Call Collect Alt11
9:00PM.
Want

TO

Lease Tob8cco Ouots

In 'Ohio •. soe A Pound, 806·473·
tt85.
We Are Buytng Tobacco Base &amp;
Leaae, 937·895-0697 . ' {Before
t1 :00.A.M. &amp; Afle1 6 P.M.I

Utilities, Call Nowl B00-772·7470;
EXT.8336.
·
Cars!Trucka $1001 Seized and
sold localty. Hondaa, Toyota&amp;,
4x4a, more. Toll Fraa 1-8DD-8G4·

492t ox1.2597. ·

2 Palm Maraa; One 4 Yeara Okl;
One 2 Years Old; 2 Arab ian

Goldlnga: Ono 7 Yea•• Old; Ono
3~1$ Otrl, 740-388-8358.

E~ir:uude

Must se ll llll 1994 Ranger ·aa'a s
boat 150 horsepower Johnson
V-6 outboard, exceiJent condition

.

'

760 . Auto Parts &amp;
Acceesofles
Budget Priced Transmissions All
TransmiSSions, CVC Joints, 740·

245-5677.

1Anlc!&lt; 937-71KH1102.

t 980 GMC, 4X4 Truck with Topper. 1/2 ton. (3041675-2456.

Mllea; GeneratoJ FUrnace, Good

ANGUS AND CHIANGUS 'suns

t 963 lull size. 1estored. chevy

Leave Message.

Priced R'tasonably, Slate Ru~
Fa1m~

Jackaon, 740-286·!5385.

(304)675-7890.

Broke ; Also G Year Old Pacing

t990 Ford PICkup, Longbed. Now

Male, Broke To Ride. Dan HO!sh·

~Ires,

american racing

rim~.

302

OH 45858.

engine. Excellent Condition.
(304)675-8Qt8.

Butchering hogs tor sale, 2501·

1994 Chevy 2500, 4x4, manual,

3001, call 740·949·2017 alter
Spot

black, $10,800 OBO. 740·949·
t70U , _ mesaage.

Club LambS, 4 Wethers, 1 Ewe
Local Champion Bloodline, VerY

1994 ·FOld F-350,

miles, new tires &amp; wheels &amp; rTIOfl,

High Ouallty. 740·245-0485.

$15.000 ftnm. 740·992·5532.

Fall Pigs Foi Sale, Hamp And
·some Blue But• Call 740·441 ·
0968. Or 740 446 4382.

Pigs, born 2·3-00. $35. (740)256·
6573.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Mlxe~

Alpha Hay Delano Jack-

son Farm $3.00 Bale, 304:e75·
1743, 74().446-1104.
Straw: Bright Wire Tie Siraw Year
' Round Delivery &amp; Volume DIS•
count Available. Heritage Farm.

Condition, $10.500. 740·44t·0440

4x~.

86,000

t997 black Chevy 5·10 S18pslde

E~etend8d Cab, 3 door, IOad•d.

25.000 mites. vel)' sha1p. lull 1a•·
tnga, St t, tOO, 7.40-949-2045 01
740·949-2203.
For sale· '89 2.9 Ranger motor

pallS, heads, manifolds. fuel lnjec,
lion pallS; atao '67 Vugo. 65,000
miles. no title. $150, 740·247·
296t .

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements ·
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

lablilhed t975. Call 24 H1s. (740)
446·0870, t ·600·287·0576. Rog·
ers Wat11proollng.
Appliance Parts And Service: All
·Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guaranteed

C&amp;C Gere•al

Home

Main·

renence· Painting , vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home rlpalr and more. For
rree eSiimate can Chat. 740-992·

D1ywell, Siding, Rools , Aqdl·
!Ions, Pe lntlng, etc . (304)674·
4623 01 (304)674-0t55.

Now taking ordera for thiS Spring. . t985 Dodge Aamcharger, 380 vFirst O~trs will Guarantee Beat&amp; ·6. 4 Spoad. Runs Good, . Needs
Earliest Pianta. o ·ewhurat Work Qn 4WO. Serious Inquiries

Livlngtton 's Basement Water
Proofing , all basement repairs
dona, free estimates . IUellme
guarantee. t2yrs on )ob experi-

falmB,(304)695-3740/895-3789.

TRANSPORTATI ON

740-1192·21147.

Onty. St ,200 .00 OBO. Call Bot·
ween 3;30Pm And 1:00Pm. 740·
367-o229
t990 FOld F-250, 300, 5 speed,

71 0 Autos for Sale
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's . Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps , And Sport Utili·

tteo. Call Nowl 800-772·7:m):
EXT. 7832.
•

new brakes, new shocks, new
ARE fiberglass topper, excellent

condition, 740·949·2411 .

ence. (304)895·3867.
Roofs, Add·Ons, Garages, New
Homes, Decks, Painting. Insured,
All work Backed By s Year ·war·
ranty, Free Estimates! 740·446-

6616.

·tton, $9,300, 740·387·02t9, 740·
387-7272.

Superl'or Home Malnte"ance
·ws Do A-1/ Repair~ on Homes:
Tralltrs, Yard Work, Plumbing,
Tr6nchfng, Eves."7ol0·44, ·0113.

t 992 GMC Jimmy 4X4. New

840

1992 Chevy 4114 ExceiJent Condl·

t 969 ~ord Muolang Good Condl•
11011, 6 Cylinder, 3 Speed, 12,300,
740-441.0116.

Tires.' Motor a Exhaust. Ex:ctl•
lent Condition . $6.500 . 080.

1983 Chevy Malibu , Excellent
Condllion , 305 , Automatic, "

,·1994, S-tO Chevy Blazer, V~ 8 ,
4WO with Towing Packa,ge .

Doors, AC, $2,200, 740446·4514.

740-992-7945

(304)773-5640.

(304)882·2787.

L ..

_!. : : : : :. . . : :Z: .~IV:~·;. !J

JL...:._

FTN Ell/mates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Porl,oroy, Ohio

22 yr.. Local

P!ISS

WHEN PAW HAS A
NtCSHTMARE, HE
· SHORE HAS A

~WICK'S.
·tt"OLIHG and .
EX(f1Vf1Tift&lt;1 .

F:AEE ESTiMATE;S

740~992·7599
(N9 SUNDAY ·Cil.LLS)

.

e•

Easl

Pass
All pass.

42

BY PHILLIP ALDER

.

Fax 304-675-2457 '

•Driveways •Tennis Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•R.oods • Streets
Lie . #003506

No Credit • Slow Crsdlt •.Bankruptcy
Repo • Dlvo~ed

..

WORRYING!!!
No' l::mbarruement...

.

~

· You.'re ,-..eatld with Reepect~

A friend does something une)(pected. You ask him why, and
from me"
sometimes the explanation is so
47 "Normal"
llllrt
obvious that you k1ck yourself for
41 Chlmpelfll
not working it out. At other times,
bucket
41111m
though, you never could guess.
llll!lptl¥ldot
Wen. I doubt you' II deduce why
IIChlmlul
,
aufltx
a telephone call resulted in my
... ·-HIIW"
using this deal, which was written'
up in 19SO in Adelaide, Australia.
CELEBRITY·CIPHER
What is the right line of play in
by Lula Campo•
six hearts? West cashes the spade
Ctltbnt'l Clpht• OIYPIDa-• o11 ofllltd from quollllona by fimoue people, put.,.,
. king, then swit9hes to the dla·
p~eaenl. E10n letttr In lito clphi1 allndl fer anolhar.
.
Tottly'l c/ul: T tqUIII G
mondj!lek.
The author was Keith McNeil,
NJIKM
Kill
IICI
' T F a· J F F y L
a large. man with a gre~t sense of
humor who died in 1993.
FMIIL .'
0 AJ J
IICII
MFII
CKMIL,
"Big Hymie (North) ... is aces·
. with a machine gun as long as
L t 0 A L
VAWJ:ZJZAL
someone tells him who to point it
K· L
DZNC
L F
ZL
at, but this is all too much for him .
JITKNI
'M F
Eventually he remembers BlackCFMSI,.III.'
LCKYBLVIIKDII
K, l,J,K.,
pool, or is it Blackleg? When he
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
'Pollitctan:
a man who keeps hll ear to lhl ground
L, t-\.N,O I
grunts four no-trump; Willy the
and his mouth to a mlcr~phone.' - Evan Eear
..
· Whiz bids five hearts to show his
two bullets."
WOlD
GAMt
After winning trick two, did
you cash the heart ace? If so,
,tough!
"Willy leads a low heart to the
doll in dummy and smiles when
East shows out. The Club ace is
G
__
' Ir-T-r(-H.....
,1N.,.(
cashed 'and a club ruffed low, the
1
heart seven is. led to dummy'$
nine, and a third club is ruffed '
with. the heart ace. After a dia- ·
DUCLI·I
· mond nlff in ' the dummy, the
fl)urth club is ruffed with the hear.t
;king,.settjng up the s1.1it. Tht; dumS E S I U ~ Words of Wisdom: "It's alviays
is ~eached w.'th ' another.. dia1--,
.--..
,.4......- ..---~&lt; best to let the world knbw you as
mond ruff, the last.:tnlmp pulled
--1.1..--'.-J..
1 1 1-L._....._ you are, not as you think you -·-.
' with tlie, lhean ja~k and. that ' was
L.
.----;::-~-:--:....-:-....,.,..---.-- - be."
red ~ver all oyer." ,~ · .
., Mliel~phoniHrt'ind said that
ROLFAM
g ,.
16 O Complele the chuck,le quoted
heF favorite- fll'liC!e- in The Bridge
-.1.-..I.I...~.L..-L.
_.1.-J.
by filling In the missing wo1ds
ftit~~~y~::;:~i'i~~;,,, World is Master 'Solvers' Club.
L
you develop from step No. 3 below.
@I
Wei( McNeil wrote ·the equivaP~tNr NUM8ERED lETTERS IN
I
lent bidding' panel' article in AusTHESE SQUARES
tralian Bridge, so I looked up an
ul'lseRAMBlE ....,ove lETTERs
article"of his.

--l, .

r,.,.,

I

'

Stopin And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

1

To get a current weat er {1:
report, check the
1

.NowRen~ .·

~!28100

S~&amp;~/ll

•

750 East State Street
· Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone (740) 593-6671'

"A Better

·s entinel

"

I

1

'I

I I

a~

I

TO GET ANSWER

··Free Estimates

Centr11tert Wtl..mt

' 740-742-0419

1-800•311•3391'

April Sho111ero Bri"'J
May Floweroll

Are Your Plant Beds
Weeding: Mulching:
~
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retalnfng
Walls
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp

DBPDYIAG

PAns

AR·M;m,.. Tft.cJor &amp;
•. Equipment P1111s
Fac:tory Autlt;,rimd
Case-IH P1111s
.Dealets~
1000 St. Rt. 7; South
CooMIIe, OH 46723 .

7.....7-8111

740-949·3606

A &amp; D Auto UphOlstery ·'Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headllne~s, truck turps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers; carpets, etc.

Mon· f;rl 8!30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs ·experience

Electrlcal ~and

Refrigeration
ResldanUal or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs. Master Ll·
censed elecrrlclan. Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306. 304·675·

1786.

.\

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521-0916
'

.

order to haye a good time.

GEMINI (May 21 -lune 20)
This should be your kind o( day
with lot ~ of people surrounding

I

)

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

THURSDAY,A,priil3, 2000
In ih~ year ahead you're likely
• ' to fiQ4 yourself making many
' more friends than usual, bringing
:·,11bout some very positi~e change!i
~- in your social life as well as at

'·

i,

,. :work.
'

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

~ You

Senior C"izen

JONES' D~count
TREE SERVICE

you. As a Gemini , you'll be ~rat­
Hied by meeting and chatting
with many dirrerent types-of peo·

pOssess a gift to instinctive-

' • ty know whal to do .and say to
~ ~nake all those with whom you·,. .
involved feel good about them·
i , !elves, which makes you very

••:'f,oputar today.. Know

where lo

t •took for {Qmance and you'll find
' ~lt. The Astro·Graph Ma1chmaker ·
; ~~lnstaluly reveals which signs are
• :·romantically perfect for you. Mail
, $2.?5 to Malchmaker, c/o this
newapaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Hill Swlon, Now Volt, NY
\ 10156. .
'
i TAURUS (April ~D-May 20) II
; ml1ht bot iiat enloyablt for you
• today to. ... k toiiiCa within the
• ·Gonftnll your own MptlCI. You
won't need to be 1mund othm In

i

or

~
\

pte.
CANCER (June 21-Jul y 22)
'o

The ability you possess today for
doing all the right things will generate the right kinds of results .
Even if something unforeseen
should occur. you'll handle il in

MEANS.

!ltride.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Make . I
it a 'point, todax to be congenial
whh everyone you encounter,
because good things ~ould sta~ to
happen for yQU t~rough contacts

of alt kinds.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Knowing how to make the most
out of the least today in any type

' for them.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Chances are your sense of method
and procedure will be e~ttremely
effective today, allowing you to
accomplish anything to which ,
you set your mind .
.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-D_ec .
21) Regardless of the people or
circumstances you find yourself
in today; just be friendly and you
· ~ hould be well received wherev e r you go.

. CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Devoting your time and El tten·
tion to your family today will
imbue yuu with o deep feeling of
belo11glng, which. in turn . will
enhance your sense of well~be ing
and security.
.

4

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

of crirtum!ltartee i~ your best ft!'!let.

This is u ·good day to ~atch up on
alllhe late st news and scuttlebutt.
. Pick up the phone .and call some
friendl' you hll ven' t ·talked to in

Use il 10 bring about some1hin1
you ltuly desl~e .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23 I Wl!h
you around today, even the •hy
aoul1 will be encour11ed to
emeraelrom 1helr !hell!. Y1111love
people and lhty'll lnll!ni llvtly
rt!ll!i YOU WIHIOniy 1000 lhln11

PISCES (Peb. 20·Mar&lt;h 201
Owlna \O your talent for oraunl·
zullon, )'ou •hould be uble to ae1
II nuntber Ol menllol ih lnpM dono
ttlduy, •••• II ynu huvo a l~w
110e lul eommltttlllntt with whleh to
eontond.

quite nwhile .

f

.

"

I

My home had been burglarized. My neighbor says
that a thief really wants to live within another MAN'S

Albany, Ohio

QUALITY lANDSCAPE

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Swampy - Heron . Basin • Clamor- MAN'S MEANS

t mo. l)d.

Sewing machine
&amp;vacuum
cleaners repaired

!!&amp;~Ill"

43 -and void
44 Hlor bye
411 "Take--

740-992-5212

SEAMLESS
GOnERS
'

11 S·shaped
molding
12 Antitoxins
19 Wood sorrel
21 Total or Lifo
22 Wears away
23 Actor

James -

To the computer

'

Hlth &amp; Pry
Self-Storage

North
'4 NT

6 Opponenl
7 Football
player Y.A. 8 Highest card
9 Approach
10 D~p cut

24 Legat.ald org.
25 Talk
26 Feathered
llahlng lly
28 Ao..rt
29 n .. ue
30 Cupid
31 Native or
Copenhagen
37 Over there
38 Sign at a hit
ohow (abbr.)
41 Like people
wtth chicken

Opening lead: • K

It

****************·

C!)ntra~tors

West
Pass

:HARNEY

*
YARD SALE
·i
:
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT :
** . MAYENDTOEND
*
5 6-- ALL DAY ' "*

WV

'

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

L...___:

I

*****************
* . "8"
*
*: YELLOW FLAG *t

Cell Phon e 674-3311

• K J 10 8

33795 'Hiland
Rd.
'
.
·Porn:er-oy,· Ohio.

~eady?

1877 VW Camper van, stove, re·
frlgarator, tink, raised ' root, new
transmlnlon and motor, S2000
f~m .

•Room addhlona &amp;Remodeling
•Ntw Geregea
•Eiectrtcat&amp; Plumbing
•Roofing &amp;(lulltra
:Vinyl Sl~lng &amp; Painting
. •.Pallo ·&amp; Porch Dacka

s2

F1anch City Maytag, 740·446:

7795.

6323.

Tobacco Plants

J ~~=....,;_--..:....:~..;.._j

MYERS
PAVING
" · · Henderson, WV
.
875-2497 or 4411-1428

• Q 9

'

Unco.ndltlonal lifetime guarantee.
Locctl references furnished . Es·

Jlma Drywall &amp; Construction.
New Construction ·&amp; Renlqd811

650 Seed &amp; F;illlzer

Slze.JD550G
Rate $60 per ~our
Call for minimum
rate
Free Estimates
Pond estimates
.welcome ·

WILLIS'

730 V1n1 i 4-WDI

(30ol)675-5724

Dozer for Hlrt

plck~p .

Bay Malt 55" Sound And Kid
berger, .t789 Patriot Road,. Patriot,

Campers &amp;
MotorHomee

1969 Winnebago Leshalo 39,000

Rebuilt engine, new
paint. Loti · of new things •.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

•AJ8 32

K Q 10 4
10 8 6
J 10 8 4
95

·~.

&amp;

New Hom~~~ • VInyl
New Garag~
• Replacement Windows
• Raom Addnioris .
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

motor, 81umlnum

790

day 4/2tot, 7:30 P.M. Feyotto

Free Delivery

•
•
•
•

• 7 65

'

WOuelltv
Repleoemeftt
Auto lodt Pa•tl
All replacement
parts

...

East

West

•AK742
t A K 6 5
• 3

.ISSILLIUILDIRS
.INC. ..

canopy, $6000, 7~·742·2420.

call740-385-2434.

,

••

•AQ7642

South

I
I'

Siding •

t971 Dodge Dump T!uck, Neada
Wo1k, Good Bed. Hyd1aullco,
$1.200. tO A.M. -2 P.M. 740-366·
9073.

County Fair Grounds, Wasl11ng·
ton Courlf10UII, Soling 200 Head,
Borrows &amp; GIRo. Conslgntfl Roo·
er B1n118y, 937·5S.·2398, Leroy

Ken Young .

t992 24' pont'l"n boat. 46 horse-

power,

houd

..

H011llng • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
. Fdl Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) .992..3470

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Types, Acceas To Ove1 10.000

720 Truck• for Sell'

,Man

1999 Harley Sportster 1200cC

9' trailer, new bed, new 1lres, tor
hauling motor cycle or :2 four
wheekl15, 740·992-786t .

ta's, Chevys, Jeepe, ·And Sport

.

Wheel &amp; Soli~ Back Wheat Black,
Lots Of Ch1ome. $14,500, 740·
446-3096.

HONDA'e $tOO, $500 &amp; UP. PO·
LICE IMPOUND. Honda's Toyo·

Nice t 978 El Camino fo• aale.
(304)875-7720. $700 111m. Laavs
message or can after 5PM.
·

74().~79-2798 .

t 994 Dyna Wide Glide Harley

oeo.

Olds AI F1om Gen•ttc

2 Black Angus Buls Croqed 2 a

,.

1,000 Milos. $10,000 OBO. 740:
4-411·7069.

CARS FROM $18/110. lm·
poundolf'lepoo. Fee. SO Down /24
Mos, Ot9.9% F01 Llotlnga t-800·
319-3323 X2156.

Llvntock

630

992·1550"
The AppliCince

Motorcycles

DroppEd mY- Gum
1n the. S6Ndbox ...

•Estes Rockets and Accessories , ;•:
•1rains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track!
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Lifeline
•Atlas

'Toll Free

"Take the pain out
· of paintingLet me do it jor you"

7/22/1"FN

• Q.J 9 53
• 7

BAUM
LUMB
State Route 248 Cheater,

740-742-9501

LIND,A'S
PAINTING

Doors, Loaded, aluminum 1.1._ _ _ _ _ _,;;;;;.;,;~
Wh11la, A/C, Tilt, Cruise , Pwr, r·
Locks, Pwr Windows, Pwr Seat&amp;,

• 9

1

Vegetable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets,
Porch Boxes,
Comblnallon Pots,
Potted Gemnlums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,
Lilac Trees, Assorted
Shrubs
Open Daily 9·5
Sun 12·5

1nio.

Loaded t8 ,000 Miles $8,895;
t99t S-to 96,000 Miles $2,495.

:-~:

Allawer to p,.yloua Puute

primate
42 Anelent Souttl
American
Indian
48 No1J1tlve word
47 Fruhued•
, &amp;1-w.. Ill lor
53 Dance
popularized by

14 Cold time
(2 wdl.)
15 Social
fnelllbfllty
Tlto Puente
55 "Selnteld" lady
16 Puuflng
56 " Afllegislottve
eltuatlon
Powera 17 Races
18 Wttty remark
gronted . .• "
57 One who rune
20 She played
olf to wod
Carla
21 Recurring
· 58 Craves
pattern
,
23 Hiding place
DOWN
27 Made IIzzy
32 Yellow pigment 1 Russian ruler
33 - - barrel (In 2 Japanese
aborigine
trouble)
34 - B90the Luce 3 Midday
4 Chewing
35 Actor Alain substance•
36 Monfeo epent
5 Medieval
39 u.. o pencil
poem
part

04-12·00

No

''

Spring Season

to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

1993 Grand Am Sport Coupe
81,000 Milas $3,995: 1992 Cavalier R!S 2 Doors, $3,195; 1991 Lumina Euro 2 Doors, 88,000 Miles,
$3,995: 1998 S-10 AutomatiC

Utilirie•
(740) 992-3138

Syracuee
Now Open For

740.949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'

collont $2.900, 740-446·2750, 01
74().441·0542 LBave Message.

$6.75/50 lb. bag

Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb.
Seeds 8

&amp;

Septit Sytterrur

7 Lailn dance•
131ndlon
languagll

group

Nutrena Hunters Pride Oog Food
.

.992-5776

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Struts, 110,000 Miles, Runs Ell·

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

HUB BARDS·
GREENHOUSE

HILL'S
SE.LF STORAGE

$2,000 OBO, 740-386-9151 .

se,i.ce•

1 Snerl

Ag. Service

Hou.., &amp; Traile r Site•

40 Large-eyed

ACROSS

"ALDER

Shade

$11f¥1TQp . 'I

Hepllg
BuUdo1er &amp; Backhoe

992·2772
For All Your Horne

1989 Nissan Cen tury BISek 2

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
I In

Good, Runs Excenant, 740·2:t5·

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI E111ctoncy 90% Gas

passenger side. (304)675-3693.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

;!lith Annual Ben~ey Pig ~11. Fri-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Sloe~.
Call Ron Evans, t -eoo-537-9528.

1989 Chevy Beretta, 4 cyl. , ntw
11res,
battery,
alternator,
t30,000mlles. runa , wrecked

1991 Blue. Hyundal 2 Doors.
Hatchback. Stereo /CD. Sunroof,

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·

367·0280.

6 cyl. , auto.

WE FINANCE COMPUTERS!
downsl FREE INTERNET! 1-686·

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacemeni Windows,
Seamless Outten &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
addilions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat ~ks.
Concrele &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation

St ,595. 740-448-6981.

1990 Geo Storm, Wrecked, En·
gine &amp; Transmission Good. New
Parts, Tires. 740·256-1687.

Til PIIPIUTIOII

COISTRUCnOtt

1987 Chry&amp;ler Lebaron, 2 00011.
Automatic, " Cylinder, With Air,
Very Good Conditton, Asking

$37.00 Per tOO : All Brass CompressiOn Anings In Stock

Bad Credit • Bankruptcy . Liens Judgements OKAY\ No Turn·-

J&amp;L IISUI.ATIH I·

BoCy tn Good condition, $3,501),
Plica Negotlablo, 740-2&lt;15-6443.

Mercur~.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

+ Naw 350 HP Englno T·Topl .

WALNUT LUMBER
t ,ooo Ft. 12 Com mon .eoe Ft .:
I ,000 Ft. ft , $1.25 Ft.; tOO FL Se-

740-256-8056, Afler6 P.M.

'-\ U .El UUP

198e C1ma19, Nlw Transmlslk&gt;n,

1988

Th~ Dally Sentinel • Page B 1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1985 Clvyalor New Yorker; Goa&lt;!
Condition, St .ooo. oeo 7~&amp;22t•.

$1 ,500. (304)675-6693.

Select $1 .50 Ft. ; 500 Ft. Hickory
Select $1.50 Ft.; All Klld Dried.

•

- Wodnosdny. April 12. 2000

710 AU101 for Sale

9021 , Evenings, Le!Mt Massage.

lect S2.00 Ft. : Soft Maple Select
$1 .50 Ft.: Oak 11 $1 .00 Ft.; Some

(/&lt;

Aprll12, 2000

.

I

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•
•

..

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..

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~

..

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P•ge B 8 • The Dilly Sentinel

gaJ Republican. activists
WASHINGTON (AP) - George W.
Bush plans to meet this week with a carefully selected group of gay Republican
activists, part of the ongoing effort to
nudge his presidential image back to the
political center by reaching out to constituencies that don't traditionally vote for
rhe GOP.
But ·his campaign already has signaled
that he'D attend with a not-so-open
mind.
"The Bush campaign called me in
advance of the meeting and assured me
that his positions would remain intact;'
Michael Farris; a conservative activist and
advocate of home schooling, said Tuesday.
The campaign billed Thursday's meeting as a discussion of common conservative giound, such as reforming the education, health care and tax systems, that was
unlikely to touch c:m stickier social issues,
like gay marriage, which the presumed
Republican presidential nominee opposes.
"What they wanted to do is try to get
a real good cross section of gay Republicans;• 5aid Plattsburgh, N.Y., M~yor Dan
Stewart, who was invited to the closeddoor session.
Some suggested political expediency
might be the Texas goverpor's real moti-

vation.
Kathleen ·Begala, a, spokeswoman for
Democratic presidential rival AI Gore,
said the activists should put more weight
into Bush's actions than his words during
the meeting.
She noted Bush's opposition to hate
crimes legislation after a black Texas man
was tied to a pickup truck and dragged to
his death in June 1998.
"It's not just the meeting that counts;·
Begala said. "He can talk to them, but I
think what gay Republicans would really
like him to do is something like back a
hate crimes bill in Texas."
Others said the meeting is part of
Bush·s effort to appear more moderate
after his appeals to religious conservatives
helped him win the South Carolina pres.
idimtlal primary in February.
Since then, Bush has criticized
National Rifle Asso'ciation executives for
saying President Clinton uses gun violence to furtper his agenda. He's also
announced billions of dollars in proposed
new spending on education progra~
and initiatives
,, · to
·thhelp theR working
bli poor.
h
M eeung
W1
gay
epu
· k1 ·
r
B h cansd thas
b een a pnc y ISSue .or us an
e
GOP.
. R bli
The Log C ab m epu cans, an orga-

•i .

DISCUSSION OF ISSUES_ The campaign billed Bush's;'Thufl\d.~Ji!Wil:hng as a discussion of common COflServative ground, such as rl!forrntrg the ~Jon, health
care and tax systems, that was uf11ikely to touch 011 &amp;tickler social Issues, like gay
marriage, whicn the presumed Republican presidential nominee opposes. (AP photo)
•ruzanon
, . o f gays, has ma de tt
' d'ffi
but still wanted to
t cu It rwr has shunned the
n h
h
b
·
hi
'th
n.epul,lica~
! ,..us to reac out y premmng m to meet W1 gay .,
·
gay
relau·ons
. tSsu.e~,
ta ke a stan d on gay po1tey
acco rd- ; Char1e5 Fran c·s
1, a
mg to campatgn atdes and actiVISts. Bush executive in Washington ~.ose brother,

James Francis Jr., is a prominent Bus~
fund-raiser, invited about a dozen people
to Austin, Texas, for the meeting, includ.
ing for mer Rep. Steve Gunderson of
Wisconsin and David Catania of Washington's city council, according to invite~s
and a Bush campaign official who did not
want to be identified.
Some Republicam who backed Sen.
John McCain, Bush's former presidential
rival, said the meeting could be a step
toward reconciling the two camps, as well
as a gesture that may resonate With the
Democrats and independents who supported the Arizona senator.
McC ain met with the Log Cabin
Republicans despite their differences on
some issues.
Guy Molinari, the State~ Island (N.Y.)
borough president who backed McCain,
said Bush "has to demonstrate to the electorate at large tqat he's reacQing.out."
Rep. B~ian Bil~ia~ R:Calif:, said some
Republicans: wron!liY&gt;~~ ~ey can't
relat~ ~o the ~Y:: co~~' ~:~witho~t
pandermg and wtthout ~¢rtiiQg. theu '
.perceptions of political :.~l.f:arl~'
~ng.d
~:,.: ,. •
"The gay community , ~~· ~rtaxe
. and overregulated like every()ne ~Jse:· he
sai(l.
.
'

Bush proposes $42 billi.on
in aid for working poor
CLEVELAND (Al&gt;) - Continuing his outreach to independent and moderate Democratic
voters, Republican George
Bush on Tuesday rolled out a fiveyear, $42 billion plan to help· the
working poor move up into the
middle class.
The biggest share of money,
$35 billion, would be used for tax
credits to help people who don't
get health insurance from their
employers but earn too much to
qualify for government programs
like Medicaid.They could use the
credits to gain access to basic pri·
vate health care plans.
An additional $5 billion would
be used to provide health care
through
medical
savings

w:

accounts.

The plan also would include
S1 billion to help low-income
renters buy homes and another $1
billion to give tax cr~dits to banks
t~t match the savings deposits of
poor people.
The so-called New Prosperity
Initiative continues the presumed
Republican prq.identia) nominee's outreach to independents
and moderate Democrats by talking about subjects often ignored
by GOP candidates.
In recent weeks, Bush unveiled
environmental and educational
proposals. On Wednesday, he was
speaking to a St. Louis audience
about additional health care plans.
Aides said Bush also will unveil

proposed spending cuts as part of
a broader government reform
plan.
While announcing his newest
proposals for the poor, Bush was
critici~ed for the lack of progress
on health care at hom~ in Texas,
where he is in his second term as
governor and where up ro onefourth of the population Jacks
healtli insurance.
"Our newspapers and television programs praise and profile
all the winners in our high-tech
economy, but we m.ust never
become a winner-take-all society;' Bush told about 250 community and church leaders at the
West Side Ecumenical Ministry
on Cleveland's heavily Democratic West Side.
"Our economy m.ust also
honor and reward the hard work
of factory and field, of waiting
tables an~ driving cabs- not just
enterprise, but sheer effort, not
just technology, but toil;' he said.
His Democratic opponent,
Vice President AI Gore, who also
was in O,hio campaigning in
Columbus on Monday, immediately pounced·on the Rroposal.
"Perhaps Bush calls this ..proposal his 'New Prosperity Initiative' because fixing .health care,
affordable housing and lifting
people out . o( poverty , are all
'new' to hiin, since he has failed
to address these issues in Texas,"
said a campaign statement.

Factory Invotces clearly

in all our

'

"NEW" FORD • liNCOLN • MERCURY VEHlv~v

You will know what 'we·paid, so you'll never pay too mU£h!,
YOU KEEP THE

!!

AI Gore defends
profidency~type tests
COLUMBUS (AP) -As Ohio
prepares to release the results of the
12th grade proficiency tests Friday.
some parents and teachers got a lesson in the politics of testing duting
AI Gore's visit to Avondale Elementary.
Several parents discussing education issues with Gore on Tuesday in
·the libtary of the struggling city
school of 400 students oppose the
concept and asked for Gore's help.
The vice president, who suppotts
such testing, said states must Slrike a
balance berween the need for tests
and the need to be fair to students.
"We need to me=re the performance·of the students because com:..
munities are going to have an easier
time putting the heat on the politicians, the school boards, the taxpayers and &lt;:verybody else in &lt;itder to
improve the schools if there is a fair
and accutate way to get a me:ISUrement of how the schools are doing,"
said Gore, a Democrat running for
president.
"On the other hand,~~~ liave ro
make sure there's a balanced attitude
toward tests, that you have a ·good
test that's appropriate for the kids,
and isn't destructive, but is constructive;' he said.
He said students who don't do
weU the first time should have a
chance to catch up, including the

option of summer school.
Gore's last words on the subject
- "it seems like a lot of thin~ in
life, you have to strike a balance" drew an immediate response fiom
Sherry Morales, whose fourth-grade
son Jason took the test last month.
"I ~n't think ·one test should
show how much a school is doing. I
know the teachers here work hard
for the students;' said Motales, who
said her son had trouble sleeping
before the exam because he was so
worried.
William Ross,.another Avondale
parent who participated in the
¥bmy meeting, said he belitves .in
the proficiency tests but not at the
elemenf:¥Y level. His son Josh is in
the third grade.
"It's too scressful for them;• said
Ross, 28. "A test in middle school
and high school is fine, but elementacy school is too early?'
Avondale principal Mary Arin
Bums, called Gores visit th~ highlight of her career;but she said in an
interview that she too opposes pro-.
ficiency tests.
.
· "I don't thiitk. there's ·anything
wrong at all with holding teachers
and students accountable, hl1t if
we're going to do that, it needs to be
a test that'~ developmentally appropriate for 9-year-old children," she
said.

Repo • Divorce?? ,
No Embarrasement...Your·Tre..ted with Respect!

Call Mr. Ford at 740·446-9800 or 1-800-272-5179.

Drive home in a car or tr~ck today!!

DINING
GUIDE

Supplement To:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Daily Sentinel
.Point Pleasant Register
Wednesday, April12, 2000

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