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•

. Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 30, 1999

Wednesday

DAR revisits the one~room schoolhouse
'There are still people around who do good deeds.
I knew that but sometimes.we do forget, do n't we?
Dr. Wilma Mansfield reminded me that it's true.
Recently, problems developed at Eastern High School when a faculty member who was scheduled to provide piano accompaniment for
students at the district music contest in Athens became ill with ihe flu .
It appeared that the teacher might recuperate in time to make the contest. However, things got no better so the teacher on a Friday, the day
before the contest, had to lay the problem on the line-just wasn't
going to be able to make the trip.
•
It was pretty disappointing since students do put in a considerable
amount of time and effort in preparing for the event. As a parent of a
student involved, Dr. Mansfield ponder~d on what might be done to
"save the day". She knew that it would be a problem to get a replacement who would have to face all of the new mu sic and would not
have had the experience in working with the students on the music.
Dr. Mansfield gave Jennifer Sheets a telephone call and ri:lated the
details of the situati on. Jennifer picked up the ball and went out. to
Eastern on Friday evening and worked se veral hours with the students
who were going to the contest. She met them at 8 o'clock the next
morning in Athens and accompanied the students so they could take
part 'in the competition and all went well.
Knowing Jennifer, sh,e must have had a half dozen other activities
she could have done in lieu of helping the students. But the talented
Jennifer apparently shoved those things to the side and proceeded to
• . give the students a helping hand. How like her. I'm sure the students,
• . . parents and fa culty at Eastern are delighted that Jennifer put forth so
much effort to :'do a good deed".
I probably should have known why the antique busi ness of Bobbie
Karr in Pomeroy is called Hartwell House- but I didn 't unti l a few
. days ago. May be you' ve wondered too.
It seems that in the early 190Q's, the Hartwell Mining Co., occ u. pied the building which now houses the antique business. The struc• ture is at the corner of Court and Main Streets and many of us remember in later years it housed the Blue and Grey and was the bus station
and later it became a shoe store. Bobbie recently came. into posses, sion .of a large shipping crate which was used by the mining company and has the name of the company inscribed on the side. It is now
on display at the antique store. I believe she was able to secure it
through Mrs. Ruth Moore. Incidentally, Bobbie reports that the
Hartwell Mining Co. is still alive and well.
And besides housing many, many interesting antiques , Hartwell
House also has a supply of the "Jelly Belly", the original gourmet
jelly bean on hand. The Jelly Bellies come in 39 flavors. As I recall
that was the brand that was so popular at the White House during the
Reagan years. Head and shoulders above your run of the mill jelly
beans, the Jelly Belly is more expensive than the ordinary-and considerably more tasty.
.

..

We ' ve almost wrapped up March and· now comes April to unfold
Easter, a time change and the income lax deadline. Do keep smiling.

. Kendra Marie Norri s, daughter of
·Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Norris of
Racine, is one of 42 Otterbein Coi· Jege students to he named in the
1999 edition of Who's Who Among
Students in American Universities
and Colleges.
Students are nominated by campus committees. Editors of the annual directory have included the na!Des

of these students based on their academic achievement', service to the
community, leadership in extracurricular activities and potential for
continued success.
Norris, a 1995 graduate of Southem Local High School, is a senior at
Otterbein majoring in biochemistry/molecular biology.

Estivaun Hutchinson Mallhews,
Gallipolis, a member of the French
Colony Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, was guest
speaker at the recent Charter Day
meeting of the Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR.
Manbews rev isited the one room
sc hool house which, she said, i$ too
much a part of America to be forgotten because its lessons live on in the
words of those who learned as children and grew up to mold the nation.
The co-author of "Gallia County
One Rooin Schools - The Cradle
Years'.' said that Galli a County had a
total of 164 one room schools with
many of them existing prior to 1880,
some of which still exist in one form
or another.
Some are empty and remain in
tact, some were being used for storage, others were , being used for
town ship government buildings,
church buildings, or being used by
Granges to hold their meetings.
Some school buildings, she added,
have been remodeled and serve as
homes.
The early one room school was
usually built on the highest hill in
the area and near a church if one
existed in the area. In the 1880's,
Matthews said, Gallia County had
15 town ships and each township
averaged from 9 to 15 publi'c school
buildings in order to provide a
school within walking di stance of
most students.
The speaker said that in the early
schools, all eight grades were taught
. in one room where emphasis was on
the basics of reading, spelling, writing, math, English, geography, history and health. The older children
helped teach the younger ones who
also learned from listening to the
older grades recite their le ssons
aloud. There were no hot lunch programs, she added, with everyone
bringing a lunch from home , often
packed in a three-pound lard bucket.
She noted that the school board
paid the teacher from $40 to $60 a
month. The school board, she said, .
wo~ld furnish a water bucket, dipper, broom, stove, chalk and some
coal. Often the teacher had to build
the fire each morning; however, she
said, sometimes, for . a dollar a
month, one of the older boys would
build the morning fire.
·
Water often had to be carried
from neighboring farms. The pot
bellied stove, Matthews recall~d.
was an important fixture in the one
room school house. It stood in the
middle of the floor with desks lined
on both sides of the building with
students sitting two to a double desk.
The brass school .bell is another
symbol of schools of yesteryear and

Tomorrow: T.Storms
High: 70s; Low: SO•

. Meigs County's
VolunH' 4'1 Number 22'l

..

'

Hometown Newspaper
Single Copy - 35 Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Clinton suggests aggression could cost Milosevic Kosovd
By ROBERT BURNS
consider the atrocities ·already being inflicted on Koso- we need to.'' Bacon declined to predict how long it Yugoslav air defenses have sustained "significant dam·
AP Mllltllry Writer
vars.
might take but said, "We are prepared to go as long as it age," but he declined to be more specific. He said the
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Clinton administration,
"We are going to take every action that is available takes."
communications system upon whiCh Yugoslavia's air
seeking to .raise the eost to Yugoslavia for itS scorched- within our means and capabilities to bring home the
To step up NATO's attacks, five Air Force B-1 long- defense depends is " still effective."
Fry said bad weather h!IS forced NATO to scratch
earth torching of Kosovo, says President Slobodan tragedy of his policy - President Milosevic - and his range bombers were preparing to fly.to Europe to join BMilosevic rislcs losing international support for his claim leadership and we are going at the same time continue to 52 bombers that have been launching cruise missiles at many attack missions. He showed a color-coded chart
to the Serb province. U.S: officials brushed off Milose- attack, degrade and disrupt actions of his police forces Yugoslavia since last Wednesday's start of Operation indicating weather limited airstrikes each day except the
vic's call for an end to NATO bombing.
on the ground," Clark said.
Allied Force. The B-1s, from Ellsworth Air Force Base, first, March 24.
"We need to grind away at this," Vice Adm. Scott A.
The Clinton administration has opposed indepen- S.D., are armed with gravity bombs and cluster muniBacon said NATO had no' illusions that its airstrikes
Fry, chief of intelligence for the Joint Chiefs of St.aff, dence for Kosovo, which is a province of Serbia, .while lions that are likely to be used against .staging areas of could stop the Serbs' house-to-house pillaging of ethnic
·said Tuesday as he and other U.S. officials claimed slow pressing for the kind of au\Qnomy the province enjoyed Serb military forces in Kosovo, officials said.
Albanians in Kosovo, who reportedly are being killed or
bot steady progress on Day 7 of a NATO air campaign until Milosevic forcibly abolished it in the late 1980s.
U.S. officials steadfastly refused to give a clear pic- driven from the area by the tens of thousands.
· ~ It is difficult to say we have prevented one act of
against the Yugoslav army and special police forces that About 90 percent o( KQSOvo's 1.!1 million people are tu,re of the amount of damage they believe NATO bombs
.'
ethnic Albanians. Most of the rest are Serbs. Serbia is . have inDicted on Yugoslavia's air defense network, brutality," Bacon said.
'
are routing Kosovar Albanians.
· President (linton, who has said from the start of the one of two republics in what remains of Yugoslavia.
which continues to pose a threat to allied pilots.
"This is being done very up-close and personal by
NATO campaign March 24 that it would impose a heavy
Administration officials said Clinton's remarks did
Rear Adm. Thomas R. Wilson, chief of intelligence the Yugoslav army and special police forces in small
(pli on Milosevic's means to wage war, went further not reflect a change in U.S. policy on Kosovar indepen- for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Pentagon briefing that groups of armed, vicious people going out and shooting
dence. Mike Hammer, a spokesman for r-==="""====""'===============""'=""'=="=~ people at close range, frequently burnTuesday in remarks at the State Department. .
"Today he faces the mounting cost of his continued the president'$ National Security Councruise mlssle rhotlr•t
l&gt;'lththo~r. HOiod••
ing them, shelling their houses .
U.S.NI.W '"'" WtftldyteloottmittiiiNI• on YugDIIlvmllwytwQtl• '""~~ dpanw.cyfd.
iggression," Clinton said. "For a sustained period, we . cil, said Clinton was making the point
"And we always knew that this typc
'!Viii see that his military will be seriously diminished, that if Milosevic does not back down he
·of action on the ground, highly local~y military infrastructure destroyed, the. prospect for may find the international community no
. ized, was going to. take a long time to
international support for Serbia's claim to . Kosovo longer willing to a~pt a Serbia that
stop."Bacon reiterated that the Clinton
increasingly jeopardized."
·includes Kosovo - even Kosovo with
=~
administration is not considering using
• NATO's military commander, U.S. Army Gen. Wes- autonomy. · Left unsaid was how the
..... ~
~.. -,.:.':.
ground troops in Kosovo.
•::;.=;
NATO's hope is that more concentrat;
ley Clark, said today he has been authorized to expand world community could force Milosevic
~."::l:.
ed air attacks on Serb troop formations
the range of targets of the bombing campaign. He to give up Kosovo, given NATO's
(eftised to discuss specific targets but acknowledged that unwillingness to fight a land war.
:t~":"""
and armor will begin to disrupt the local ~
increased civilian casualties could result.
At the Pentagon, officials acknowl~~
ized altacks against Kosovar Albanian
: "We have been extremely careful so far and quite edged Tuesday that NATO's bombard·civilians. Working against NATO is the
~ffective in preventing collateral damage and civilian mentis far from achieving its goals.
continued threat posed by Serb air
~asualties," Clark said on ABC's "Good Morning
"There has not been a knockout
defenses.
America." "There are no guarantees in an operation like punch," said spokesman Kenneth Bacon.
Further inform.:ltlon on crwse
this."
·"It will take much longer to degrade the

e!STIVAUN MATTHEWS
quickly began to diminish because .
of the rapid increase in population
growth. · A need for consolidation
aro~;e, The last one room school in
GaUia County operated until 1955. It
was the Yellowtown School in Clay
Township.
·
The 91 st anniversary of the chap- ·
ter was observed at the meeting.
Hosting the celebration were Abbie
. Stratton, Rae Reynolds and Karen
Werry.
Hal Kneen , Meigs County Extension ).gent presented a music program; accompanied by Stratton at
the piano. Past regents honored were

Phyllis Skin~Jj:r, Betty Milhoan,
Patricia Holter, Eleanor Smith, June
Ashley, Mary K. Yost, Rae
Reynold s, Anna Cleland and current
Regent, Pauline Atkins. Those honored but not present were Grace
Eich, Mary
Lew Johnson, Pat Ingels, and Margaret Dutton.
A buffet luncheon was served to
members and guests in the social
hall of the Grace Episcopal Church.
Next meeting will be 10 a.m. ori
April 10 at the Meigs County Public
Library with June Ashley conducting a genealogy workshop.

atNKO....,..,.,,_"''"-•_,...ort...,..

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~:~H~e~s~ai~d~a~n~y~~~~~o~f~c~iv~il~ian~c~as~ua~l:ties~·s~h~o~u~ld~~(~~u~g~o~s~la~v~)~fo~r~ces Mmuch as we think c::;:::;::~:::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::~~~:;~~~~~~l

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some types 0f Oh10

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-Page4

•

i'

.

Eastern Eagles top South Gallia, Page 5
Affair not' worth the price you pay, Page 10
.Dealing with dictators, Page 12

Tod_.y: Sunny
High: 708; Low: 50a

th~

one room school. Large bells
were also placed on the top of the
roof and used to reconvene classes.
Before classes began, students
would say the Lord's prayer, salute
the flag and have a song. Often the
Bible was read. The-'Gallia County
School Board, in early years, made
Bible reading mandatory in the
schools. However, Matthews said,
that was discontinued in 1923.
Toilet facilities, known then she
said as Outhouses -one for boys and
one for girls was outside.. Sometimes, Matthews reported from an
interview with an old timer, boys
wou ld take a chew of tobacco while
visi tin g the outhouse. So as not to be
caught by the school master, they
carved a peephole in the wall. This
way, the old timer said, an approaching tattle tale or the school master
could be spotted and the cud of
tobacco thrown away.
One room school houses were
often used for community activities,
including pie socials and spelling
bees. Spelling bees were popular not
only with students but also with parents and other adults. Also, she said,
there was usually a program given
on the last day by the children for
the parents. This program would be
followed by a basket dinner which
would be enjoyed by parents, students and neighbors.
In conclusion, Mrs . Matthews
sa id that one room schools met the
educati onal needs of the people but
as time has continued, the American
educational system has had to
change.
By 1934, the one room school

Much 31, 1tee

Wenther

/

.

missiles appears on page 12

.Athens commissioners give thumbs up to U.S. 33 projects
By JIM FREEMAN
"I think it's great news for the project," said DavenSentl"'l N-• St.ft
port. "I think it's the last link we need ... to have their
.
Route 33 improvements now have the support of approval."

boards of county commissioners .from the Franklin
"I think its great news for both counties," Thornton
County line near Columbus to the Ohio River. .
sail(. "Now we know they are on board."
The Athens County Board of Olmmissioners TuesThe reason proponents of the highway are happy is
day approved two resolutions supporting up~¥!~ to the because input from locat governments is given a great
cHARi.'EsroN, W.Va. (AP) _ 'People should "~)~~~~~~~:if' route; (rpm Athens to t)ie Ohio River at RavenswOod.
deal of consideration by the state_Transportation Review
Channel catfish and ·carp that are more than 17 inches
~ . 'J'!te-fll!lt resoluti~n, unanimQUSiy approved by co"!l ,~isory ~unci! - the bod_y whi_F,h .ll"lcs proposed
mts11oner~ Lenny Eliason; Slll Thetsen and Mark Sulh· litghway proJects for tonstruchon funafng.
potential healthproblems, officials said Tuesday in an
van, suppot:ts construction of a four-lane highway from
"(fhc Ohio Department of Transportation) has been
People also shbuld'limit eating other species such as large and .smallAthens to ))arwin and from Five Points to the Ohio hoping the (Athens County) commissioners would vote
mouth bass, sauger, white bass, hybrid stripped bass and fresh water
R•.·ver bridge at Ravenswood.
in favor of the proiect; we've been holding our breath,"
the state said.
'
The advisory is based on 26 fish tissue samples taken last year 'to test
The second resolution, which passed 2-1 with Com- said ODOT District 10 spokeswoman ·Nancy Pedigo.
fot contaminants such 115 lead and mercury, said the divisions of Environmission President Eliason dissenting, supports construe- "Now it seems like a truly regional project.''
tiqn of a "Super TWo" or limited-access two-lane high"We want to build projects that are beneficial," she
mental Protection, Natural· Resources and the Bureau for Public Health.
PCBs, which have been linked to cancer, continue to be the major
way, which is the current proposal being funded .
·said. "We know this one will be."
taminan~ the agencies said.
Eliason, a former Meigs County Chamber of ComODOT has pledged $54.1 million toward construcmerce president, said he disagreed with the two-lane res- tion· of the Athens-to-Darwin highway and almost $52
The federal government banned PCB use in 1974, but some still CliO be
olulion because he fell the first resolution, the one sup- million for the Ravenswood Connector, according to the
l'!o•unll in river sediment and aCfumulate in animals' fatty tissue.
.
PCBs were widely used as fire retardants in electrical transformers.
porting a four-lane highway, wa.s adequate.
2000-2003 Major New Construction Program .
He said the commissioners agreed to support the pro"I'm ecstauc," said Pomeroy attorney Steve Story,
ject after talking to community members and voted ·as president of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
and co-chairman of the Southeast Ohio Regional Comthey saw best for Athens County and southeast Ohio.
BATAVJA(AP) -A man convicted at least20 times of drunken driving
Copies of the resolutions were not' available for mission's Route 33 Committee. ·
who used names of dead childhood friends to get phony licenses was
review this morning. .
He said the .commissioner's approval is "very impor·
I·se:ntence:d on Tuesday to 28 years in prison.
Meigs County cornmissio~ers . Jeff Thornton and tant" and cautioned that the work of highway proponents
The sentence means that Charles
Mick Davenport were .highly pleased with the decision
Jodrey, 56, of Milford, will be) n
of their Athens County counterparts.
Contl.n ued on ·p11ge 3
prison for the rest of his life because
he is not. eligible for parole, prosecutor
Donald White said.
~eJlbltell
School. The car was not submerged, the
"There
is nothing to do except put
The suspected driver.of car inyolved in a
2 Sections - 16 Pages
report stated.
you in prison for as long as the law
Feb. 14 Athens County crash which claimed
Patrol Sgt. Jeffrey Scholl said forensic
the life of an 18-year-old Long Bottom
allows," Clermont Olunty Judge
testing
indicated Carpenter was driving the
Robert Ringland said.
woman was indicted Monday on 10 charges
car
and
that Sellers was in the back seat on
"You are a person for whom jail
stemming from the crash.
the driver's side. Another passenger, Alyshia
has no effect except to keep you off
Teddy R. Carpenter, 21, of The Plains
Whaley, 21, The Plains, was seated in the
the road."
faces five felony charges of involuntary
front passenger seat. Neither were wearing
Jodrey apologized and said he
manslaughter, aggravated vehicular• homi·
seat belts, the report stated. In addition, all
an alcoholic.
cide, aggravated ho'l'icide, aggravated vehlc- ·
had ,consumed alcohol while Carpenter and
Jodrey has been convicied at leas\
ular assault aod breaking and entering, and
20 times of drunken-driving since
Whaley
also tested positive for marijuana
five misdemeanors charges of vandalism, drithe 191i0s, assistant prosecutor Tom
ving while intoxicated, leaving the scene of an accident, use, Scholl said.
Scovanner said.
After the crash, Carpenter allegedly left the women in
reckless operation and arson in the crash which claimed ·
Six of them occurred after Jodrey
the car and broke into a nearby construction trailer. Once
Jenifer Sellers, a 1997 Southern High School graduate.
served a 10-year prison term for
Authorities allege that Carpenter, of Slater Drive, was inside the trailer he allegedly vandalized it and .attempted
Pick 7-0-4; Pick 4: 7-5-0-2
involuntary manslaughter. He killed
the driver of the 1994 Chevrolet Beretta involved in the to start a fire in the sink, Scholl said.
BNcluyt 5: 3-11-U-21-:l5
a man in 1984 while driving drunk,
Whaley was unconscious for several hours after the
wreck. According to a State Highway Patrol report, the
w.yA.
Scovanner said.
car was traveling eastbound .on Johnson Road at an esti- wreck, but recovered and flagged down a passing
Jodrey began usin·g the names
D811y 3: 2·5-9; Dally 4: 6-8-6-9
mated speed of 85 miles per hour when it slid off the road motoris~ a report stated. ·
dead childhood friends to get phony
Carpenter was arrested Monday at his home. AddiC 1999 Ohio ~llty PublithlnJ Co.
in a curve, went airborne and landed on its top before
licenses.
tional
charges are possible, the patrol reported.
sliding into a creek near t.he entrance to Athens High
I

Repeat drunken driver gets 28 years
Good Afternoon

Decades of

Listening.

We've

listened to families ever since we
began to deliver babies in

And we've

I 909 ..

learned a lot from new

moms and dads over the years, The
new Maternity and

family Center

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advanced technology and compassionate care in a comfortable
setting.
You can schedule a tour by
calling

Man indicted in death of Long Bottom woman

Today's

740-446-5030.

Voinovich to be questioned by special investigator

We'll be listening for your call! ·
Holzer Maternity &amp; Family Center

100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

With·coloring egg• whllll h com• to fun
'
'

'

..
•

to do lit

~ater11me. Tho.,'• ttendlng the r-nt "Egg
~" conducted..bY Becky B. .r, Melge County Exttnelon

igent, 11111de colorful mlnl8ture bonnet. for use •• favor•
. or tor clecomlng b••km. Here Miry Uele, lett, •nd
&amp;tiler H8rden of Syrecuse work on their c111ftl. They
glued &amp;liter g111n to the 8traw hit., 8tuck on 10me
mlnl8tu111 •nl11111l1, •nd Uld • bow lit the blck, to complete 1 c111ft looking very much like the one pictured here•

COLUMBUS (AP) - A special
investigator will question U.S. Sen.
George Voinovich today about allega·lions the former governor approved a
scheme to launder campaign money.
Dayton attorney Roger J. Makley, a
Democrat appointed by the Ohio Eleclions Commission in December, was to
question Voinovich in Columbus today,
said Mike Daw5on, a spokesman for the
senator.
The inquiry into the matter was supposed to be finished today, but Makley
will a.sk the seven-member elections
commission for more time, Phil
Richter, the commission's executive
director, said today.
He said he did not know how much
more time Makley would need.
During an appearance today in
Columbus, Voinovich declined to com·
ment about the investigation.
Voinovich, a Republican from
Cleveland who was Ohio's goVernor·
from 1!1!11 to 1998, was elected to the

U.S. Senate in November.
He'ttas been accused of approving a
plan to use a middleman to conceal the
source of $60,000 transferred from his
campaign treasury to his· brother, Paul
Voinovich, and a Statehouse lobbyist
during a 1994 re-election effort.
If found guilty, the senator could be
fined $10,000.
George Voinovich, in a four-page
affidavit filed with the elections commission Dec. 4, strenuously denied any
role in the alleged scheme.
Makl ey has interviewed · Paul
Voino-;ich 'and · vincent Panichi, who .
was Voinovich's campaign treasurer,
In a deposition filed with the elec·
tions committee, Panichi described a .
1994 meeting he said he attended wiih
the Voinoviches.
The Voinovich brothers have denied
such a meeting took place.
Pani chi said the governor approved
a plan to use a now-c)eceased political
fund-raiser as a middleman to funnel

the $60,000 to _Paul Voinovich and
Statehouse lobby1st Mtchael A. Fabt·
ano.
The money was reimbursement for
payments they made to Anthony A.
Gallagher, a former Cleveland labor
official, for working on Voinovich 's
campaign, according to records filed
with the commission.
Donald C. Brey, Panichi 's Columbus
attorney, said Panichi.'s story of what
occurred was unchanged.
R-oger Synenberg, a Cleveland
lawyer representing Paul Voinovich,
said his client's account to Makley was
unchanged from the sworn statement he
gave to the commission.
" You don't change the truth,"
Synenberg said. " The truth is the
truth."
David J. Young, a Columbus attorney representing Sen. Voinovich, said
the "investigating team is proceeding
with caution and trying to get all the
facts before going public."

Kindergarten registration and
screening for Eastern, Meigs and
Southern local schools will be held in
April and Jl,tay.
·· '
Chi!dterl'WiioWilrl:ie'five yem old
on or before Sept 30 are eligible to
attend kindergarttn during the 19992000 school year. This y..,, registra·
tion and screening for new kindergart- .
ners will be held during April and May
in all three school districts.
The kindergarten registration and
screening schedule is as follows:
Meigs Local - Rutland Elementary, April21, 742-2666; Harrisonville
Elementary, May 3, 742-3000; Salisbury Elementary, May 5, 992-3404;
Pomeroy Elementary, May 6 and 7,
992-2710; Middleport Elementary,
May 12 and 14, 992-3387; Salem
Center Elementary, May 13, 742~

3113.

'

Eastern Local, April 22 and 23 at
Eastern Elementary, 985-3304.
:
Southern Local, April 2!1 and 30 at
Southern Kindergarten, 949-2664.
Patents are asked to call or visit
one of the above-listed schools to
armnge for an appointment for kindergarten registration. Parents or
guardians must bring their child who .
is enrolling to registration.
Bring a copy of the child's birth
certificate, Social Security card and ·
immunization record.
Children should have had five
DP'f, four polio, two MMR, th~
Hepatitis B and one TB skin test with·
.in a year before entering school.
School nurses will be present at registration to answer questions concerning
immunization requirements.
School ·personnel will assess the
hearing, speech, physical and ian;
guage abiliti'l5 of children who ~
bein~ enrolled. Information about
each child's performance will be provided to parents at a later date.
Information obtained during th@J.
registration and screening process
allows 54hool staff members to plari
activities that will make your Child'~
first year of school successful and
enjoyable. Please call your school as
soon as possible and make an appoint'
mentto register your child for kinder·
garten.

Three masked gunmen
rob Cleveland area ban~
MENTOR (AP) - Police · wero
looki ng for three masked gunmen
who held up a bank and hit two peo'
pie with their handguns before flee ing in a stolen car.
The robbers were still at large
early this morning, police said.
,
1\vo people who were attacked
by the gunmen Tuesday were treated
and released from area hospitals;
said Sgt. 11m Trask. Three others
:
were treated for stress. .
The gunmen walked into a Thir(j
Fedelal Savings Bank branch a~
10:15 a.m. in this city about 20 miles
,
:
east o.f Cleveland.

..

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�'lfednesday, March 31, 1999

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'£sta5fi.sfulln 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-llln-2158 • Fax: IIG2-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
.

1

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
DIANE HILL.
Controller .

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener.JM•n•r

.~ 6ugst
~--------------------------~
column

~ Fighting

for a stronger
~ veterans administration
'

'

: By Rep. Ted Strlckt•nd

·
• A c;ouple months from now, on Memorial day, scores of politicians will
;aive eloquent speeches about the sacrifices veterans have made for our
c;ountry and about how we must keep our promises to them. The truth of
such assertions is unassailable, but it's difficult to believe some of the speakers really mean it given their lack of support for veterans issues.
· If you look the voting records of these individuals, you would find
. many of them have consistenl)y failed to support giving the Vete ~ansAdministration enough money to provide adequate health care .to our former sol·
diers. Talk is cheap. You can never underestimated the ·importance of ~m­
.paring the truth of a person's record with what they say.
•• A perfect example of this came my way last week in Washington. In the
::).veighty stake of my office's daily mail was a letter addressed to all the
;members of the house, from a faction of colleagues on the Veterans Affairs
;:COmmillcc. Headlined "We Must Keep our Promised to Veterans," the letter
,,audcd the c;ommittee's plan to increase spending on veterans.
: What the letter didn't say; however, is thatthc increase is more than a bil·
:·Hon dollars short of what is needed. Furthermore, the full funding needed
• was actually defeated in committee by the same people writing the letter.
: If one didn't know the details, it would be easy to think this letter was
:coming from people with a pro-veteran point of view. But, after the facts are
:revealed, it is clear that they were only trying to cover up the fact that they
: killed a good budget.
. · Why is this important? After years of inadequate funding. a consensus
: exists that more funding is needed 'to provide veterans the health care and
• other benefits and services they have earned. An independent budget group,
: c;omprising members of AMVETS, the Disabled American Veterans, the
:Paralyzed Veterans of America and the Veterans of Foreign Wars, recom: mended a necessary increase of $3 billion, In fact, they endorsed a budget I
· supported, which would have included an increase of $3.2 billion.
: : This long-delayed investment is necessary to do the following: .
! •invest S100 million more on mental health treatments to battle service
• related illness and d~g abuse.
: •invest $271 million more on long term care programs to free as many
:veterans as possible of the necessity of going to the hospitals.
: •invest $681 million more on the Montgomery Gl Bill to increase cover' age for tuition, fees and stipends to service members who are enlisted for at
:least three years.
• If we aren't able to mllke these crucial investments in health care, the
state of the VA will continue to deteriorate and many soldiers will suffer.
Additionally, if we don 'I make improvements to the Gl Bill, we will have
difficulty keeping the high quality soldiers our armed forces are presently
blessed with. Experience has plainly shown such investments cost us little
compared with how much they save in the future.
I will be joining those on the committee who think this additional investment is wise and necessary by asking House Budget Comminec Chairman,
John Kasich to support it when he takes up the budget this spring. And I will
continue to work for the trust of our veterans as we battle our other matters
in the budget this year.
Ted Strickland repreMnta the Stldh Dlnlct In the U.S. HouM of Reprenntatvlea.

at

Today
,In .H•. sto' ry'
1
1

By The Alloclllted Pres•
.
Today is Wednesday, March 31, the 90th day of 1999. There are 275 days
left in the year. The Jewish holiday Passover begins at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 31 1949 Newfoundland entered confederation as Canada's
lOth province. '
'
·
In 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain issued an edict
=---:---:-:-:-..,..-,...-- - -- , expelling those Jews unwilling to
rryts Wor.ld
convert to Christianity.
In 1889, French engineer

.Be

~~ir1~~~~:e~~i~~:~~r;,~;~

marking its completion.
In 1917, the United States took
possession of the Virgin Islands
from Denmark.
In 1923, the first U.S. dance
marathon, held in New York City,
ended with Alma Cummings setting a world record of 27 hours
on her feet.
In 1933, Congress authorized
the Civilian Conservation Corps.
In 1943, Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical "Oklahoma!"
opened on .Broadway.
"iil · .g...,~
In 1945, . the Tennessee
;,.. .,..._,.:Williams play "The Glass
"HII)', mlor.,, could 1/torero•t you In •
Menagerie'" opened on Broadon an tntomot·rototod •roc•?"
way.
In 1968, President Johnson stunned the c;ountry by announcing .lte would
·not run for another term of office.
In 1976, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that coma patient Karen
Anne Quinlan could be disconnected from her respirator.
In 1986, 167 people died when a Mexicana Airlines Boeing 727 crashed
in a remote mountainous region of Mexico.
In 1995, Mexican-American singer Selena, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi, Texas, by the founder of her fan club.
.
Ten years ago: The FBI announced it would conduct a criminal investisation into the massive oil spill in Alaska's Prince William Sound.
Five years ago: The PLO and Israel agreed to resume talks on Palestinian
autonomy, more than a month after the Hebron mosque massacre.
· One year ago: For the first time in history, the .Clinton administration
released a detailed financial statement for the federal government showing
its assets and liabilities. The ,U.N. Security Council imposed a new arms
embargo on Yugoslavia to pressure the Serbs. into concessions c;oncerning
ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. Former New York Congresswoman Bella
AbZilg died at age 77.
·
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Williafll Daniels is 72. Hockey Hall-of-Farner
Gordie Howe is 71. Actress Shirley Jones is 65. Country singer-songwriter
)ohn D. Loudermilk is 6S. Actor Richard Chamberlain is 64. Musician Herb
Alpert is 64. Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) is 59. Actor c;::hri~tophcr
Wallien isJ6. Comedian Gabe Kaplan is -54. Vice President AI Gore is 51.
Actress Rhea Perlman is 51, Actor Ed Marinaro is 49.

.

he wu head of Russia's foreign intelliJCIIfll
agency, Primakov financed covert supPort · o~
Communist politicians in East European countries who were likely to oppose NATO inclusi011,
our intelligence sources say. The 199S Communist win in Poland wu a significant victory for~
' 1J1Y111uter.
·
Aa ·foreign minister, he also fought tirelCSllly
against the cxpuaion of NATO to include ol"
Soviet client states like Poland, Hungary and the
~h Republic, maintaining that such a move
would dclllabillze Buropc.
While Prlmakov 1081 that ground, he manapd
to win .a NI'-1'0-Ruuia partnership agrccm~nt ;the "Founding Act" -· which has allowed h1m to
Insert .Russian intelligence officers ,at NATO,
helldquarters to ~pup Western military secrets.
He also drew ·what he called a "red line"

I llltnofteld

the rough rider and his chosen successor in the White House.
In 1912, the blustery Roosevelt
was back from a two-year African
safari, ready 10 deny Taft a second
term a~d .reclaim the White House for
himself.
Taft had never enjoyed the presidency. Seeking it had been more Mrs.
Taft's ambition than his.
.The year was spent fighting off
Roosevelt's challenge. Taft's c;ontrol
of the party machinery salvaged the
challenger's nomination.
The president would look back on
1912 and conclude he had been "a
man of straw" tossed on the winds, all
300 pounds of him.
"This is the lonesomest place in
the world," Taft remarked when the
year was over. In a private letter he
made ~ear hi~ ~esen~ent of "the
hypocnsy, the 1nsmccnty, the selfish·
ness, the monumental egotism ... that
possess Theodore Roosevelt."
Mrs. Taft confided she had stopped
reading newspaper accounts of the
struggle because, "I was in a state of

111'174"

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Snow

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The Auocleted Pre•
After a wave of showers and thunderstorms tonight, sunny to pa~ly
I;:sunny skies should return to Ohio on Thursday, the National Weather Sersaid;
·
·,·
Mild temperatures will continue, tqanks to a persistent flow of southerair, forecasters said. Highs will be 65-70.
The clouds that bring tonight'ntormy weather also will help trap the
earth's heat, keeping overnight temperatures mostly in the 50s. .
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
was 83 degrees in 1998 while the record low was 9 in 1923. Sunset
tonight will be at 6:54p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:16 a.m.
,
·

Claim thrown out against Cuyahoga judge
accu~ of preventing inmate's abortion
CLEVEl:ANo· (AP) - A judge · acted in the clear absence of jurisdic-

has thrown out il claim that a OJyahoga County judge violated a pregnant
woman's civil rights by sentencing her
to prison so she couldn't have an abortion.
·
' "ruriko Kawaguchi sued Common
Pleas Judge Patricia Oeary late last
year, claiming the judge violated her
rights by handing down a six-month
prison sentence specifically to prevent
her from getting an abortion.
· Kawaguchi, 21, eventually decided
to have the baby because she was too
far along in her. pregnancy. She gave
birth to a girl in February.
. Wayne County Common Pleas

constant rage which could do me no and sent . them, disease free, to thc:l
possible good."
Potomac.
.
,
But in March that year Mrs. Taft
So on March 27, 1912, Nellie 18ft
had put the final touches on a project drove to the Tidal Basin, where shD
that would live beyond her anger and and the wife of the Japanese Ambas•,
her husband's administration.
sador planted Yoshino cherry trees one
It was rooted in her efforts to estab- and two.
·
lish West Potomac Park on reclaimed
The blooming cherry trees reflect.land next to the river, a place previ- ing in the water quickly became. a
ously regarded as a "mosquito-infest· symbol of the city, at times seeming &lt;to,
ed swamp, 'rendezvous of tramps and soften the sharp 'edges of politics, IW
hiding place of criminals." She mod• times themselves bec;oming embroiled
eled it after the fashionable Luneta, in in c;ontroversy.
Manila, which she had enjoyed when
In 1938, President Franklin D.
her husband served as governor of the Roosevelt intervened personally . to
Philippines.
pledge the cherry trees would not be
The final touch carne in a sugges- sacrificed to build the Jefferson
lion from Eliza Scidmore, a world Memorial on the Tidal Basin. During.
traveler and expert in Japanese cui- World War II some patriots objected to
lure, that the waterside park be planted the origin of the · still-popular trees;
with cheny trees from Tokyo.
demanding that they be called Kor.ean
. The J~ese quickly agreed..But or Oriental or anything other than
m 1910 a sh1prnent of 2,000 sapltngs Japanese.
were found to be infested and were
This year, with 3,700 cheny trees
burned.
blooming on the 87th annivei'SIU')' of.
Tokyo's mayor regrouped, rounded Nellie Taft's grace note, only 125:
up 3,000 new and healthy trees, had rapidly aging or dying trees remain
them carefully watched for two years from.the original1912 batch.
.

man, D-Calif., have attracted nearly 100 co-spon- al prices are pegged to prices negotiated betw~O:
. sors to a bill that would make prescription drugs HMOs and drug companies, his proposal is "·as
available to seniors at the lowest price paid by the close to a free-market solution as you can get":
., :
federal government, which is often several times and involves "no cost to the government."
But the pharmaceutical industry argues that the:
cheaper than the usual drugstore price.
Waxman has spread interest in the bill by using Allen-Waxman bill would impose "price con•
the minority staff of the House Government .trois" because, by law, drug prices charged to the
Reform Committee to show the district staffs of federal government can rise only as much as thC:
fellow Democrats how to conduct comparisons c;onsumer price index.
bet.ween prices charged in pharmacies and tl\ose
The federal government and Medicaid systcrn
,paid by HM Os and ho5Ri tals.
·
currently account for 13 percent of prescripti.!&gt;O:
The differences are often dramatic and serve as drug purchases. If Medicare beneficiaries were
the basis for local news stories portraying the . added, the government would control the price
Member as "fighting ,to stop" drug companies about 40 percent of the market.
, :
. The pharmaceutical industry argues that thi~
from "discriminating against" or "gouging"
Medicare patients.
would inhibit investment in drug research -· the
' For instance, 'the aventge retail price for Zocor, very engine that produces the miracle drugs
a cholesterol drug, is 144 times the amount the ·seniors need 10 protect their health. ··
'
manufacturer, Merck, charges HMOs and hospil)le Waxman· Allen proposal hasn 'I been offi·
tals, which buy in bulk and have bargaining lever· cially blessed as party policy, but Waxman made
age.
a stirring presentation on its behalf to the Democ·For the ulcer drug Prilosec, the retail price is ratic Caucus last week. It's about to be co-spon. 99 percent higher; for Zoloft, an antidepressant, sored in the Senate by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·
it's 73 percent higher. For Micronase, a diabetes Mass.
•
medicine, the HMO price is 363 percent lower . It does have Democratic opposition,'chiefly
than the drugstore price and foi Synthroid, a thy· from two New Democrats, Reps. Cal Doole}'
roid replacement, I ,446 percent lower.
(Calif.) and Rush Holt (N.J.), who argue it
Congress theoretically could encourage the involves price controls that would hurt Demoerill$
formation of Medicare buying cooperatives that among high-tech entrepreneurs.
,. .
could bargain with drug companies for lower
Waxman is trying to convinc~&gt; Vice Pi'esidOnt ·
costs, but the Allen-Waxrtan bill goes much fur- AI Gore ·to embrace his propo$al, but so far the
ther. It would require drug c;omplmies to sen their Oi?ton administ~at~on is han~ing back, working
products to pharmacies at the lowest' price paid by on 1ts own prescnplton drug benefit and Medicare
·
.
·' ·
the federal government, which -· by law •• pays a package.
price even lower than the HMO-hospital cost.
. It would be gciod policy to help poor seniors ·
One federal law requires drug companies to gel the drugs they need, as Sen. John Breaux, D"
furnish the Veterans Administration, Public Health La., and Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Calif., proposed
Serv.icc and Defense Department with drugs at 24 the Bipartisan Medicare Commission.
percent less than the HMO-hospital prices. MedicThat's not good enough for the Ointon admin ~
aid gets them at a 15 percent discount.
·
istration, though. After all, poor seniors alreadY
·
.·
. Allen, in an interview, said that because feder - vote Democratic.

·~

Wealher forecast: .

Tonight. .. Showers likely. Lows in the lower 50s. South wind 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Thursdily...Showers likely, with a chance of thunderstorins. Highs in
the lower 70s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
.
.
Thursday. night. ..A chance of showers early, otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s.
·
Extended forecast:
· Friday... Partly cloudy and continued warm. Highs in the mid 70s.
: Satllrday...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the night. Continued warm. lows .in the SOs and highs in the 70s.
. · Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows iii the 50s and highs in the 60s.

against further NATO expansion. It is "unacceptable" to Russia that·the three Baltic states and former Soviet republics ' like the Ukraine consider
joining NATO.
.
Even before the current Kosovo crisis, Primakov worked diligently against NATO's effortll
to prevent pogroms in former Yugoslavia. Time
and again, at least until last week, he successfully
and almost singlc-handedly blocked NATO mlli ~ ·
tary inter.iention aimed at ending Milosevic•
sponsored genocides such as lhe tra&amp;ic tramplini
of the ethnic Albanian majority in Kosovo.
'

lion.
"For all intents and purposes, this
means the case is over," Thomas H.
Terry· ID told the Plain Dealer in a
story today.
Kawaglichi 's attorney, j:..inda
Rocker, said she planned to appeal the
ruling.
.
Wiest also dismissed all claims
against the OJyahoga Count)" com·
missioners. The decision lets stand
claims against the sheriff's department
and jail employees for what ·Rocker
termed "deliberate indifference" to
Kawaguchi's request for information
and access to a legal abortion. :

:~:~~s~C::~~~~~~~h;~~~~ Athens Commlslonets ...
ed her authority, but she had legal
jurisdiction.
.
Wiest, hearing the civil lawsuit at·
the request of the Ohio Supreme
Court, said Oeary would have been '
liable for damages only if she had

The·Daily Sentinel
•
(USPS l13·NO)
COIIlmunllJ Ntwlpaper H!Jidlap, Inc.

palllgt paid II Pomeroy, Ohio.
, Manbtr. The Associated Prep and the Ohio
Newspaper Association,

·Polt..uter: Send IOdreaa correaiOns to The
·o.ny Sentinel, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4S769.
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:

Services announced ·
Special services will be held at the Faith Chapel in Middleport, Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m. Harry Wingler of Coolville will
be the evangelist. The church is located at 923 South Third Ave. ·

Lawmakers give thoughts
on importance of reading :
COLUMBUS (AP) - The .two important to this state than learning
highest-ranking legislative leaders · how to reid well by the end of the
who helped make Gov. Bob Taft's fourth gr;t~e." Taft told the audience
volunteer-tutor program say books
and education' played a large part
early in their lives.
Senate President Richard Finan
said one summer he looked forward
each week to visits by his library's
· bookmobile, because he could find
help in prejlaring for aprogram that
allowed him to skip a grade.
" I spent every week of the summer that year reading those books,"
Finan, R-Cincinnati, told a class of
tutors and their pupils on Tuesday
before Taft signed a bill making his
Ohio Reads )lrogram law.
·
For House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, the library was imponaitt, but
(PG)
school played a larger part in prepar·
' JIK'!tiiOWEPIIZ flfTHEIIEa'
ing her fo( her career.
7:20,1:45
"It came down to a more important thing - that teacher ·that we
IOTIMS I HAD AIOIIITOU (PGt3)
remember," Davidson, R-ReynoldsNAIUII
burg told the group at Sullivant Elementary School on the city's west
side.
Taft signed the first bill to become
law under his administration - a bill
that authorizes recruiting 20,000 vol-'
unteers to help children learn to read
by the fourth grade.
. As he picked up the pen, he asked
the pupils to spell his name. Most
giggled as they spelled out the letters.
"There's a very good reasOn this
is House Bill 1. Nothing is more

School evacuated after antifreeze leak.
ClNCINNAll(AP), Thirty-six students c;omplaining of headaches, nausea
and di22iness were taken a hospital Thesday after antifreeze leaked from a broken
pipe into their high school ci8&amp;'JIDOIII.
All of the Thrpin .High School students were eXamined and released,
aulhorities said.
·
Most . of the students' symptoms

began eaSing as soon as they were in fresh
air, said Dr. Joe Rentisch, the emetgency

room physician at Merey Hospital
Anderson in suburban Anderson Township.
TJuee students were taken to the haspitalhyambulance,andtherestofthestudents rode to the hospital in school buses
with J111l1Dledics aboord.

with

Middleport court news
Five were fin~d and five others
forfeited bonds in Middleport court
conducted by Sandi lannarelli, president of Middleport Village Council,
Tuesday night. .
Fined were Virgil W. Watson, II,
West Columbia, W, Va. $25 and
costs, .expired tags, and $25, not
wearing seat belt; Craig Belcher,
Xenia, $200 and costs, FRAsuspension, $25, expired tags, $:!5 on ficti·
tious lags, and $25, no insurance;
Roger Hart, no address, $100 and
costs, menacing threats; Roger
Hook, no address, $200 and costs,

Lawn
and
Garden

assault; and Jason Boggess, Rutland,
$100 and costs, menacing threats.
Harold .Hook and Bobby
McConaha, no address, paid costs
only assault charges when they
appeared in court.
Forfeiting bonds were Daniel
Alan Eakin, Ravenswood, W. Va.,
$60, expired tags; Addena J. Russell,
Middleport, .$47, speed; Etta L.
Wise, Middleport, $60, running a
stop sign; Mandi L. Sh'eets, Syracuse, $60, assured clear distance;
and James R. Neal, Cheshire, $48,
speed.

Continued from page 1 ,
is "no way near done yet."
.
When the Route 33 corridor. is
completed, Athens County will be a
big winner due to Athens' location
on a major east-west .corridor (U,S.
50) and a north-south corridor (U.S.
33), Story speculated.
Because of that, the Atheqs
County business community has
been highly supportive of the pro·
posed highway, Story said .
Meigs County commissioners arc
sponsoring a rally supporting the
Units of the Meigs County Emer3:21 p.m., Park Street, MiddleAthens-to-Darwin highway to be gency Medical Service recorded port, Naomi Hoschar, ,treated at the
held April 9 at the Meigs County nine calls for assistance. Units scene;
Multipurpose Building in Pomeroy responding included:
3:32 p.m., Oliver Street;
from 6-7:30 p.m. Numerous elected
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Pomeroy, Richard Stone, VMH,
officials from Ohio and West Vir6:40a.m., Bald Knob-Stiversville Pomeroy squad assisted.
ginia h•ve been invited to attend.
Road, Portland, Judith Rockhold,'
RACINE
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine
2:20 p.m., volunteer fire departsquad assisted;
ment to Township Road 631 , brush
8:19a.m., Rocksprings Rehabili· fire.
tatio~t Center, Pomeroy, Evelyn
RUTLAND ..
3:53
p.m.,
McCumber Hill Road,
Thoma,
Holzer
Medical
Center,
Am Ele Power .......................39'/o
AkZQ ...... .............. :........... ......37'/o
Pomeroy squad assisted;
Beulah Collier, treated at the scene.
AmrTe.c h ............................... 57'/.
11:08 a.m., Lasley Slreet,
SCIPIO TWP VFD
Aah 011 .................................. 41 '/o
Pomeroy,
Carolyn
Reeves,
VMH;
1:55 p.m., Township Road 1004,
AT&amp;T .....................................81 Y4
I: 12 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Jeremy brush fire, Curtis Ward ·property,
Bank One ..................... :........ 54';
Rowe,
VMH;
.
Rutland VFD and squad assisted.
Bo!;l Evans ............. .............. 19"t..
Borg-Warner .........................47'&gt;
Broughton ............................ 11't.

Tools
PICKE
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

(R)

773·5583

7:15 &amp; 9:15 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:15

Ltd .........................................3811.

story, I.'ISII the newsroom at {740) 9!ll·
21!5. We wiD check your lnronnollon

••

NeW• Departmentl

The molD" number Is 991·11!!. Deport·
•ent extensions are:
Gt:nel'll Managu ....................... .Ext. 1101

Oak Hill Flnl ........................ ,.17'k
OVB ..................................... .. 42'"
One Valley .............................35'1.
Peoples ................................ 22~.
Prem Fln1 ..............................14%.
Rockwell ..............:................42~•
RD/Shell .................. ,....:.......52'1•

Saara ..................................... 45~.

Shoney:!$ ......................... ....... 2~.
FlrstStar...............................90"1•

New, .............................................E•~ 1101.

Wendy's .................... ...........28 1'/"

,

Stock reports are today's
10:~0 a.m. quotes provided by
Ad1vest of Gallipolis.
\·

or ExL •ll06

Other Servlcll
1104
1103
1100

Woarthlngton ........................ 11 '1o

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The 13th annual .all-nigh.t gospel sing will be held Friday beginning a!
7 p.m. at the Freewtll Baphsl Church, State Route 124, Rutlan~. SingetS
w1ll ~ C~oss Creek of Buffalo, W.Va.; Buildc~ Quar)et of Ripley, vi.
Va.; Smgmg J:Iands, Dunbar, W. Va.; Jubilee Trio; Called for Christ of
West Columb1a, W. Va .. ; Jody Sue Rife of Gallipolis; Delivered of
Reedsv1lle, and the Gabnel Quartet of Cheshire.

Kroger ........ :..........................581/o
Lands End ............................33'/.

O•r ••Ia .concern In all stories Is to be
accurate. U you know or an error In 1

"d•erllslot~- .. .............................. .E•~
Clrculotlon ............_ .................. .E•~
Clooollled Ad• ............................. .E•~

Gospel sing set

G8nnett ................................. 62~
Kmart ..................................... 17~

Correction Polley

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The Letart Township trustees will meet Monday, 6 p.m. at the offi~
building.
.
·
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The ~lumbia Township trustees will meet Monday, 7:3Q p.m. at thci
fire statton.
:
Rutland Township trustees will meet in regular session Tuesday, 5 p.m;
at the Rutland fire station.
,

City Holding .......................... 26~.
Federal Mogul ..................... .. 44'1o

Reader Services

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Champion .............................10Y4
Charm Shp............................. ..4

:!6 "''"' ...........................SS3.82 .
S2 ...... ...........................S10S.56
lbta O.ulde Mtlc• Counly
13 ..................................$29.25
:!6 w.eu ...........,................$".68
sz w.eu .........................$109.72

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Stocks

given carrier each week.
No subscription by mail permitted in areu
·where home carrier sti"\\K:e is avt ilable.
Publisher reserves the right to t djust rates durinll the subscription period. Subscription r.tc
,d'l111gfs m•y b&amp; implemented by changing the
duratioa of the subscription.
'

and make a cC.rnttlon lr"arnntrd.

Trustees to meet

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

. Published every 1flernoon, Monday through
.-friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
"01\io Vllllcy Publishing Company; Second cl~

ot

Announcements:

~

Bonnie L. Ourant, 51, 241 E. Canal St., N~wcomerstown, died Tuesday
. morning, March 30, 1999, at her Newcomerstown residence following a
five-year battle with cancer.
Bonnie .was born in Cleveland on June 13, 1947, and is survived by her
mother, Mtldred Skala Spengler, Bradenton, Fla. She was preceded in death
by her father, Atwood James Henry Spengler, who died in 1967. Bonnie was
a graduate of Middleport High School, class of 1965. She also attended business college in Parkersburg, W.Va. Bonnie was secretary-treasurer for the
Ourant Funeral Home for many years and assisted with the operation of the
business. Prior to that, she worked as an accountant in the regional office for
Holiday Inns, Columbus, and also held positions in Columbus with·American Bancorp, Hooper Homes, and Compensation · q&gt;nsultants. Bonnie
enjoyed gardening and raising flowers as her favorite outdoor activities and
shared' those items with her friends and neighbors. She also did needlework
and enjoyed working with various arts and crafts. Also one of j:lonnic's special joys was her love of dogs. She enjoyed raising dogs and attended dog
shows, especially those involving Afghan hounds.
In addition to her father, Bonnie was also preceded in death by a brother,
Alwood Spengler. In addition to her mother, Bonnie is also survived by her
husband, John C. Ourant, whom she married on May 1, 1984, an!l a special
niece, Leah Ann Spengler, who made her home with John and Bonnie. Bon.
nie also leaves two sisters, Kathy Green and Cindy (Mrs. Dennis) McMillian, both of Lithonia, Ga., half-brother James Hope, Cleveland, and. several nieces ~nd nephews, including Jason Poast Green, Ft. Worth, Texas, Cody
. Green, L1thonia, Eve and Dave Famiglietti, New Philadelphia, Wendy
· Pykare and Larry and Sue Pykare of Cleveland, Barbara D. and David Jung. bauer of St. Paul, Minn. Also surviving ar.e a cousin, Margaret A. (Mrs.
Robert) McAulay, Deerfield Beach, Fla., brothers-in-law James Pykare of
Cleveland and Ken L.' Ourant of Newcomerstown, and her mother and
fathet-in-law, Marge and Bill Ourant, Newcomerstown.
.
Funeral services will be held Saturday, April 3, 2 p.m. from the Ourant
Funeral Home. Pastor William C. Haggis II will officiate. Burial will follow
at West Lawn Cemetery, Newcomerstown. Friends may call in the funeral
home on Saturday, 11 a.m. until the time of the funeral. The family suggests
that memorials be made in Bonnie's name to either the Hospice of Tuscarawas County or the Tuscarawas County Animal Shelter.. Envelopes will
be available at the funeral home.
·
·

!

James Stitt, 49, was arrested Tuesday night in Pomeroy on a wamn(
from the U. S. Parole Commission and is being held in the Southeas(
Regional Jail in Nelsonville pending action by that agency.
I
Pomeroy Police·arrested Stitt near tl)e Old Liberty Bar on Main Street!
Charges against him, according to the parole violation wamnt, includct
bank robbery! assault to commit murder, and impersonating a fedenq
agent.
,

·=';Q;~f!*l~::i·i:::z:t:+.-.1:~~
Bonnie L..Ourant

howery conditions will
1:n~rsist through. Thursday

Democrats make bid to attract seniors:

·
By Morton Kondrlcke
Democrats are determined
to win back the support of
seniors in the 2000 elec\ions -even if it means breaking the
Medicare bank and revisi~ng
the failed idea of price controls.
In the seven Congressional
elections from 1980 to 1992,
Democratic candidates carri~
the ovcr-60 vole in all but one,
often by whopping margins. But Republicans
have won the last three·· in 1998, by a margin of
55 to 45 percent.
In 1992, President Ointon beat thep-President
George Bush amol\8 over-60 voters by SO to 38
percent, but in 1996, he beat former Sen. Bob
Dole, R-Kan., by only 48 to 44 percent.
What to do? The Clinton administration is
proposing to give all Medicare beneficiaries,
regardless of income, a prescription drug benefit.
That could c;ost $30 billion to $40 billion a year ·
• and the tab could double in a decade, when baby
boomers begin to retire.
The cMts are so steep that, even if the government reserves 15 percent of ·future budget surpluses for Medicare, as Ointon proposes, it will
be impossible to pay for the drug benefit and
extend the solvency of the Medic~re'1rust fund.
Partly because of the math, panty because of
partisan differences over policy and partly owing
to raw politics, no Medicare reform bill is likely to
become law this year or next •• so Democrats will
use the ·drug benefit as a campaign issue in 2000.
As an add-on strategy, congressional Democrats arc pushing legislation to substantially lower
drug prices for seniors; though the means come
perilously close to government-mandated price
controls that could crimp innovation in the drug
industry.
Reps. Tom Allen, D-Maine, and Henry Wax-

Parole violator arrested In Pomeroy

Bonni~ L. Ourant, S1, Newc;omerstown, died Tuesday, March 30, 1999,
at her res1dence.
.
· She was born in O eveland on June 13, 1947, daughter of Mildred Skala
Spengler, Bradento~, Fla., and ~he late Atwood James Henry Spengler. She
was a graduate of Mtddleport Jf1gh School, class of 1965. She was employed
at the Ourant Funeral Home, Newcomerstown.
.
She is surVived by her husband, John C. Ourant, whom she married on
May 1, 1984; two sisters, Kathy Green and Cindy M&lt;;Millian, both of Lithonia, Ga.; a half-brother, James Hope, Cleveland; several nieces and
nephews; two brothers-in-law, James Pykare .of Oeveland and Ken L.
Ourant of.Newcomerstown.
·
S~c ~as ~ preceded in death by a brother, Atwood Spengler.
serv1ces Will be ~eld Saturday, 2 p.m. at the Ourant Funeral Home with
the Pastor William C. Haggis II officiating. Burial will follow in West Lawn
Cemetery, Newcomerstown.
Friends may Saturday, 11 a.m. until the time of Services at the funeral
home. Memorial c;ontributions may be made to either the Hospice of Tuscarawas County or the Tuscarawas CountY, Animal Shelter. ·
.

--

Cherry trees were buoyant note in a cHeerl·e ss year:·
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
AIIOcllltld P~ Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Even a
had year can have a note of grace.
For President William Howard Taft ·
and his wife, Helen "Nellie" Herron
Taft, the year 1912 would prove politically difficult and personally bitter.
But like a paper hoat sent bobbing
on uncertain waters, Nellie Taft
brought to c;ompletion that year a project that would outlive the troubles.
She planted a grove of cherry trees
near the Potomac that have blossomed
for the last 87 springs.
The sinking of the Titanic on April
14, less than a moitth after the first
cherry trees were planted, cast doubt
on the era's belief in the march of
technological progress and claimed
.some 1,500 lives. Among those lost
were M.aj. Archibald Butt, ~ White..
. House atde so close to the pres1dent he
was c;onsidered an _ irreplaceable
"younger brother."
Butt had also worked loyally for
Theodore Roosevelt and had suffered
under the growing tension between

Local briefs:

Bonnie L. Ourant

•

By JIICII And1r.on
four months and a c;ouplc Serbian muucres later,
•net Jan Moller
he finally took a long-overdue stand lpi,nst MiloRussian Prime Minister
seVic's aggression. True to Primakov's earlier
Ycvgeny Primlkov and his
threat. the Russian arnbusador to NATO hu been
aides turned their Washingrecalled, some cooperation suspended, and noises
ton-bound plane around in
made about withdrawing Boanian peacekeeping
mid-air last week to protest
forces. CIA aatellltes and U.S. agenlli on the
ground are now keeping clllllc watch for the
the NATO bombing 'o f
Kosovo. Good riddance to
potential "underground" increase of Russian
. bad Russians.
arms to Serbian troops.
For several years, as foreign minister and now
Kowtowing to Primakov and his thrca)s is bad
prime minister, Primakov hu been beating the business for America. For ,one thing, 11\ere is truly
drums for his friend, the butcher of Belgrade, Slo- little Rusaia can do politically , or militarily
bodan Miloscvic.
(except with stratcaic nuclear weapons) to beck
Nothing Milosevic docs - no matter how up its bluster. Primlkov, after all, was on his way
many Bosnian Muslims died before or Kosovar to Washington to beg for money for Russia's
Albanians are dying now •• seems to quell Russ- incredibly bankrupt cc;onomy.
·
ian enthusiasm and suppon for him, even though
Further, capitulation to Primakov would rarely
the Serbs were clearly the initial
- - - - - - -..
aggressor
in
the
formerly
autonomous province of " greater
Serbia."
Russians consider the Serbs their
ethnic cousins, tracing a common
Slavic heritage back through the
centuries. That alliance was
strengthened during World War II,
when the Russians helped Serbian
)lartisan5 fight the pro-German puppet government of Croatia.
So it was no great surprise to the
Clinton administration when Primakov 's party, en route to America
to beg for billions of dollars in support of Russia's helplessly corrupt
economy, turned the plane around to
express their anger at the bombing.
Milosevic had been given plenty
of warning. He was warned that if he
did not sign the Kosovo peace
acc;ord negotiated in France, which
the Kosovar rebels signed, and if he
continued to kill ethnic Albanians
there, NATO would retaliate.
But Milosevic was counting on
Russian displeasure to stall the negotiations long enough for his troops to
complete their bloody rampage
·through Kosovo. It would not have
been without precedent. Primakov successfully serve U.S. interestS. He is, at bottom, anti-West,
and secretly threatened Ointon and our Western as many of his past actions prove. During his
allies into abandoning the bombing option last years as foreign minister, Primakov may not have
October, acc;ording to knowledgeable intellig~nce brought back the Cold War, but he did bring on a
competitive cold peace.
sources.
These sources·told our associate Dale VanAtta
"Primakov's path for Russia is one of nurturthat Primakov threatened to break the arms ing geopolitical tensions, imperial grudges, and
embargo to Serbia if America started bombing. as-yet-unfulfilled great power ambitions," avers
He also threatened to suspend Russia's coopera- Ariel Cohen, a Ru5sia expert with the Heritage
tion with NATO and vowed to withdraw Russian Foundation.
peacekeeping troops from Bosnia.
A cornerstone of this Primakov doctrine has
Clinton buckled under this threat. But now, been to thwart NATO whenever possible. When

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

h Notices

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Milosevic and Primakov are old friends

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Pomeroy • Ml.ddleport, Ohio

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�The Daily Sent~~! _

Sports

Wednesday, March 31, 1999 :

Warriors edge Trail
Blazers 93-90; Kings
defeat Jazz in OT

Raptors get 101-91
win over Cavaliers
CLEVELAND (AP) Dee second shOt opportunities."
Brown is in the comfort zone with
Cleveland never seriously chalthe ball flowing off his fingertips and lenged after Brown's two quick
into the basket.
three-poi nters sparked a 20-5 · run
That was evident Tuesday night that gave Toronto a 42-261ead.
when he scored a season-high 28
" I think it was more team defense
" poiats, including a team-record eight that did it," Brown said. "We got a
three-pointers, as the Toronto chance to get out on the break. That's
.Raptors beat the Cleveland Cavaliers how I got most of my 3s tonight. "
1 01-91.
Cedric Henderson Jed Cleveland
"I think Dee is comfortable right with 16 points, while Shawn Kemp
now. Obviously it means more to a and Derek Anderson each scored 15.
shooter to have a comfort level ," said Doug Christie added 21 points for
Toronto coach Butch Carter.
Toronto.
·
Brown said he is enjoying his hot
Cleveland used a 10-0 run in the
streak. Over his last five games, he third quarter to pull within 6(-52.
.tlas averaged 19.2 points and ' made But Brown made two three-pointers
24 three-pointers.
during a period-entling 18-9 spurt to
" Yeah, it felt good," said Br,own, put Toronto ahead 79-61.
who was .8-of-14 from long range
" Defensively, we missed a Jot of
Tuesday night. \'The ones I missed , I assignments," Kemp. said. "Sooner
was upset I missed them. You want to or later we have to realize if we want
hit every one after hitting so many." · to get better that we have got to bring
Cavs ·guard Wesley Person said it early and keep playing. We have
Brown made the difference.
not done that the last two games and
"He came out tonight and hit a it is frustrating."
co uple shots, then a couple more,"
Toronto's reserves, led by Brown, .
Person said. "That's when you know outscored the ·Cavs' substitutes 52you're on. He got a couple of threes 33.
_
in transition and that really got him
Notes: Cavs guard Brevin Knight
go ing. "
did not suit up because of a contusion
, Cavs coach Mike Prateilo said on the outside of his left knee. He is
rebounding was a problem for hi s listed as day-to-day .. .. Toronto guard
team.
Vince Carter left with a bruised right
"We were beaten badly off the. knee and Raptors forward Tracy
glass," he said. "We didn 't get many McGrady left with a sprained left

NBA roundup

NOT THIS TIME! - The Cleveland Cavaliers' Bob Sura gets his
point across to Toronto's Doug Christie during Tu~sday night's NB:A
game in Cleveland, where the Raptors left town with a 101·91 victory, (AP)
thumb in the seco nd quarter. Both
returned in the third quarter. .. .
Toronto is 4-9 lifetime agai nst the
Cavs .. .. Toronto went I I -6 in March.
the first winning month in team his-

tory.
Cleveland had a .five-game
home winning streak broken . :..
Danny Ferry hit all five of hi s shots
for Cleveland. He is 15-for- I7 in his
last three home games.

.MJ seeks half ownership of Hornets, ponders on-court return
. LOS ANGELES (AP) _:_ Michael
Jordan playing again? Wearing teal?
That's the latest buzz surrounding
Jordan 's possible purchase of part of
the Charlotte Hornets.
Fox Sports, citing anoriy'mous
sources close to Jordan, reported
Tuesday night that said one scenario
· being considered by Jordan, who led
, the Chicago Bulls to six NBA cham'pionships, would involve him playing one full season for the Hornets
while hi s ownership shares were
held in a trust or deferred. .
The report cited anonymous

sources close to Jordan, one of
whom apparently heard Jordan say
he '' has to stay in shape."
·
Jordan's agent, David Falk, could
not be reached for comment. Team
spokesman Harold Kaufman had no
comment.
It was already known that Jordan,
who earlier this year pronounced
himself "99.9 percent" retired, has
held preliminary talks with the
Hornets and NBA officials about
purchasing a 50 percent share of the
team.
The possibility · .of him playing

~gain next season is a new twi sl.

I ani unsure whether I will be able to
That scenario also would include make an investment on terms that are
Phil Jackson being brought in to acceptable to me. "
coach the team for one year and
Jord~n.
who grew up m
Dean Smith, Jordan·s college coach Wilmington and starred . at North
·at North Carolina, bein g brought Carolina, said staying involved in
aboard as team president; Fox said. the NBA " would be a fulfilling· perJordan issued · a stateme nt sonal and business challenge."
Monday confirming hi s interest in
"In addition , as a North Carolina
owning half of the team. He met last native, I would welcome the opporweek with 'comm issioner David tunity to be involved in growing the
Stern and current Hornets owner · Hornets into an elite NBA .team,"
George Shinn.
Jordan said. "It would be premature
"Atthis stage," Jord ~n sa id, " the) to comment any further. "
discuss1ons are very preliminary and

Scoreboard
rum
~ L I lll. Ia:
Detroit .............................. 37 30 6 80 219

Basketball

186
SJ. Louis ........................... 3131 11 7j 208 191
Nashville ................... ..... 26 41 7 59 173 234
Chicago ..................... ....... 2240 12 56 176 2.~2

-NBA standings

Northwest Division
y-Colorado ......... :............. J8 26 10
Calgary ....~ ....................... 28 34 12
Edmonton ......................... 28 35 II
Vanc.ouver ........ ................. 2241 II

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

rum

~

Orlando ... ... .. . .. ... ..........22
Mi ami .
19
Nt!w York .
.......... 17
Philadt!1phia .... .
... 1~
Washington ...
.. 12
Boston ..... ...................... 10
t-~ewJerscy ......... ........ ,.......... 5

I. f&lt;l.

9
9
14
14

?10
679

.517

11

414

. ~48

18 . .157
24 .172

Cmtral Division
Indiana ................................. 20 10
Atlanta ......................... ...... 19 12
Detroit ... ..
................ .... 18 12
Milwauk:el! .......................... 17 12
Toronto ..... .......... .................. 15 14
CLEV ELAND ..................... 14 14
Charlone .............................. 12 16
Chicago ,
... ............ 9 11

I '~

l
6
9
IO'h

P•c:lftc Division
y-Dal\as ................... ....4615 12
x-Phoenix '.......... .... .·... .37 26 12
Anaheim
............ .33 28 I I
San Jose ...............
. .. .27 29 17
Lm Angdes .... ........ ···'·· 28 40 5
Jt·clincht:d playoff berth
y-cl inched division title

16

.667
.613

.600

~

L 1'&lt;1.
.724

8
9

Houston ..... ... .................. .... 22
San Amoni o .. ......... ········· ... 20 10
Minnesota ..... .. "" .. ...... ... ... 1.7 I)
Dallas ....
... 10 22
DenVer ..
........ .8 2)
, Vancouver. ............. ... ..... 6 24

.667

1':

- ~67

4' :

.313

11' :'

Pacint: Division
.................. 2) 6 .793
Portland .
L.A Lakers .................... 21 II .6.:l6
Seattle ..
.... .. ll 14 .517
PhoeniK ...
.. ......... .. 14 16
467
Sacmme:nt o . .. ... . ... , .. .. 14 17 .4l2
Golden State .... ..... .. .......... 13 16 .448
LA . Clippm
................ ] 26
103

14
I j ':

,.

.'
8
9':
10
10
20

[AST[RN CONFERENCE
Allantlt Division ·

x-Ouawa
Toronlo
Buffalo
8 o.~10 n
M01111~al

L I lll. Ia: !LA

21)

179
226 200
216 179
202 204

167 22 1

Northust Division
42 21 10 94 217
39 28 6 84 2) 1
J.\ 24 I~ 81 187
J2281 ] 77190
19 _,4 10 68 16R
Dh·lsion
Jl 18 16 7R 19.1
l1 17 IR 72 18.'i

S nulhea~t

Cnml inn
Flotidn

W1uhing10n
Tampa Bay

~

19 -"~

-·-

...... 17 49

6
6

64 IH.J

--W

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WES'f[RN CONFER[NC[
Central Dlvisioo

'·

League '

TAKE ME OUT, COACH!
FOR YOUR ULTIMATE GOLF EXPERIENCE ·
THE RoBERT TRENT JoNES GoLF TRAIL &amp; ULTIMATE CoACH

Thursday's games

78.m.

RAYS : Optioned INF
~icotrlfcCiaio to Durham on the lnt ernationnl
Leaaue. Assi&amp;ncd C Jesse Levi s to their mrn or·
lcaauc camp . Sent C Julio Mosquera outright to
Durham.
,TEXAS RANGERS: Agre~d to terms with lN F
Rarael Bourni&amp;al.on a mtnor league contract Ser1t
INF Kelly Dran5fcldt to their minor-league camp.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Acquired INF-DH
Dave Hollins and cash from the Anaheim Angels for
SS Tomas Perez.

NHL standings

89
85
84
12
49

Fool~all

1~7

211
1 ~9
166
1116
192
188
19-1
26 1

N•llon•l Leaaue
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Acqu ired RHP
John Frast:atore from tht St. Louis Cardinal! for
RHP Clint Sodowsky. Placed RHP A.uon Small oil
·w.:Yvtrs for the purpose or giving him his uncolldi tional re~a~t . Opti oned LHP Brian Shouse 10 Tu c~ o!l
of the PCL and RHP Byung-Hyun Kim 10 El Paso 01
the Te11ns league.
CHICAGO CU BS : Placed RHP Marc P is~· ion a
on wui veu fo1 the purpose of giving him hts uncon ditional rdease .
CINCINNATI -REDS A ~s igt,eQ C Ja yl1ul\'k
Owc= ns ro thci1 minor-lea!I•t: ro•mp. OplkmcU .RHP
Sieve Parris to Indianapoli s of th ~ !nrenwcit.uml

Coo!le Join us for your next gotftng trip. You can take 111• CoAcH for a really pleasant ltde
· to a tnJiy picturesque Mltlng--.at any of the 18 Championship courses on The Trail.

~you can travel in comfort

Great Golf Packages are availabl e,

to, from a nd along The Trail on'

in cluding the ultimate ·package ... trav-

the decked-out Trail Ride from

eling in lu xury with up to twenty golf-

Ultimate Coac h. The renowned
Ro u"RT TR GN T J oN t;s Cot.!'

ing buddies in the Ut :rt MATE Co,I Cft.
Ca ll toll -free 800-949-4444. for infor-

TR AIL is home to LPGA. Nike

mation on ihe Ut:l'JMA'm "golf trip. It's

Tour, and NCAA Championships.

the only way to trave l:

'

ALABAMA'S

l11l@U~ .

FlOR ID A. MAR LINS · Plnc~d OF Clifl' Fl oy•l
on the 15-dny dtsnbled liM
HOU SlON ASTROS: Auis.ned C Paul Balm. C
R:~ndy Knorr !lOd OF Ryan Tho mpson ro 1he1r min()f·
leag ue camp.
ST LOU IS CA RDINALS : As5igncd C Mr~rl· u ~
Jensen and OF Thomas Howard rn thetr mmor·

Get the latest in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Eastern defeats South Gallia 13-1, notch .s eason's first win
By SCOTT WOLFE
E81tern Head Coach
Visiting Eastern pounded out 14
;hits, half of which came in the sixth
' inning as Eastern rolled to a 13-1 win
over the South Gallia Rebels
Tuesday night in a non-league baseball contest. The game was called for
the mercy rule after six frames.
: Eastern's Josh Will had a no-hitter
through four innings, but Sam Nieto
broke the no-hit bid with a single to
center field. Will struck out eight and

walked one, while eventually giving
up three hits. Man Mumpower surfered the Joss in going the distance
with three walks and five strikeouts.
Although · not indicated by the
score, the game was a close 5-0
going into the sixth inning when
Eastern (1 -0} broke the game open
with nine runs . South Gallia (0-2)
had played the Meigs Countians
tough to that point. ·
Easte(ll took a 1-0 lead in the first
,

on a Chris Lyons single.- a Josh Will
RBI double and a passed ball strike
out on Eric Smith, tllat allowed
Smith to reach fir$t safely. Will
struck out the side in the first for
Eastern.
All was quiet-in the second round,
but in the third frame Brad Willford
drew a one out walk, Jeremy.
Coleman doubled and freshman Ben
Holter lined a two out two-run single. Josh Broderick singled· home a·

run and Wes Crow reached on an
error with thefourth run ofthe inning
coming home on the overthrow at
first. EHS led 5-0.
Eastern left ope runner stranded in
the fifth inning but did not score . In
the sixth frame, freshman Bradley
Brannon led off with a single. Chris
Lyons singled and Josh Will pic ked
up his third and fourth RBis with a
double to deep center. Brad Willford
had an RBI single, then Jeremy

Coleman doubled home a run, Joe
Dillon reac hed on an error, Jimmie
Putman reached on an error, Kirt
Spencer walked and Lyons hit a two
run single for the 13-0 lead.
South Gallia scored on a one-out
single by Bailey, an error and a single by Mumpower.
.
South Gallia hitters were Rick
Bailey, Mumpower and Nieto.
Eastern hitt ers were Jed by fre sh. man Chris Lyons with a 3-4 mght

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Ravenswood Red Devils
defeated the Southern Tornadoes 155 Tuesday night in ·a non-league
baseball game at Racine. Southern is
0-1 and Ravenswood is 2-0.
·
· Ravenswood took a 5-0 lead as
four Southern ·errors and sing les by
·Claudio, Knik and Wolfe produced

www:rtJaott.com

Brann on each sin gled .

Eastern hosts Miller today.
lnnin~ M;lli;

'

Eastern ................. 104-008= I3- 14J3
SnUih Gallia .. .. ... 000-00 I= I-3•5
WP-Will and Broderick
LP-M umpower and Harri son

the runs.
Southern came right back and
took a 5-llead, when Josh Ervin singled and an error on Jesse Little's hit
ball prpduced the run.
.
Southern was scoreless until the
fourth inni ng, . but Ravenswood
scored four more runs in the second.
The big blow was a Kruk three-run
home run . The Devils scored two

more runs in the third when Romeo
singled, Archer doubled and two
more errors by Southern allowed
home a run.
Ravenswood went on to score
four more runs to claim the big. win.
In Southern's four-run fourth, Josh
Davis was hit by a pitch, Adam
Cumings walked, Adam Williams. singled, and Josh Ervin had a two-

run double, Jesse Little had an RBI
single and J.B. Boso walked home a
run .
~
Southern hitters were Josh Ervin
with a double and si ngle; Jamie
Baker a double, and singles by
Williams, Little, Boso, and Davis.
Kruk Jed Ravenswood . with a
home run and single.
Josh Davis got the SHS start and

suffered the Joss in just tw o inni ngs
of work. He walked one , fanned
none, and gave up nine run s o n nine
hits. Jamie Baker pitched in relief,
fanning two, walking none and giving up six runs on seven hits. Overall
SHS pitching allowed 15 runs, 14
hits, had two strikeouts, one walk.
and ten errors.

Ravenswood's Kruk p~eked

win wilh a seven hit. five-run game.
He fann ed seven and walked five as
the Dev ils .commilled four errors. :
Southern hosts Waterford today.
Inning totals
Ravenswood .......... .542-22= I5-14-4
Southern ................... ! 00 40=5-7- 10
LP-Josh Davi s. Jami e Baker and
Josh Ervin
up the
WP-Kruk ;md Curry.

DiSarcina breaks
forearm·, to sit out
first half of season
Exhibition
baseball
By The Associated Press
With the start of the major league
season le ss than a week away, teams
are scrambling to 1111 hole s created
by injuries and making decisions on
which players to cut before their
salaries become guaramced .
Today is the deadline for teams to
release players on their 40-man rosters without paying their full salaries,
and there was a flurry of moves on
the eve of the deadline.
·
In Tuesday's bi ggest news. the
Anaheim Angels found out shortstop
Gary DiSarcina will be sidelined 3-4
months because of hiS broken left
forearm . instead of returning amund
opening day, as originally thought.
DiSarcina was struck by a fun go
bat during batting practice on Feb.
2 I. A CAT scan Monday showed the
bone has not completely healed .
THE END IS NEAR - Spectators and National Park Service offi- Tha arena that 20 years served aa the home court of the Cleveland DiSarcina, 31, will have a plate
cials watch as the wrecking bell Oust a11ove the water-spraying Cavaliers fell Into dlause after the Cilvallera were moved to down· screwed into his forearm to allow for
proper healing.
truck) goes l.n to the wall at Richfield Coliseum in Richfield, Ohio. town Cleveland In 1994.(AP)

Cavaliers' old home
·to ·give way to parkland

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio
State began spring practice on
Tuesday without two -time All American left guard Rob Murphy,
who has been suspended from the
!Cam because of pucir grades.
" Rob Murphy will not be practici:ng this spring because of academi cs," coach John Cooper said. " He
has 'been suspended from this team
until he gets that part in better
shape."
. Junior kicker Dan Stultz also will
miss spring drills. He had lower back
surgery in February to repair a herni ated di sk that bothered him last · season. He is expected back in the fall.
Murphy was a last-minute qualifi·
er in summer &gt;choo l hist year, along
with linebacker Andy Katzenmoycr
and strong safety Damon Moore.
"I am not going through another

summer like we went through last
summer, so he better get with it or he
will not play for us," Cooper said.
"And he can do it . He has backed
himself into a corner academically
and he can get himself out. "
Murphy could not be reached for ,
comment on Tuesday. His phone number was not listed.
Last year, Murphy, Katzenritoyer
and Moore didn't know unti I. the
week of the season opener if they
would be eligible to play, a prospect
that kept fans, coaches and fellow
players anxious.
Katzenmoyer has left for the NFL
with a year of eligibility remainin g
and Moore was a senior last season.
Murphy, who considered leaving
early but ·decided to stay for his
senior season , was expected to be. the
team leader this fall.

Ohio DOW schedules advan'ced
turkey ·hunting clinic for April 11The Ohio Division of Wildlife in cooperation with Hocking CoiJege wi ll
host a turkey hunting clinic at Lake Snowden, 5900 U.S. Route 50 Wes t, :
Albany, on April I I from I to 5 p.m.
.
. .
In structor for thi s advanced hunter educatiOn program w11l be Geo rge
Foreman, Athens Cou nty wildlife office r and turkey hunter,
The course i&gt; geared to beginner as weiJ as experienced turke~ hunters
and covers topi cs including hunting techniques, safety, hunter ethics, shotgun patterning, scouting and calling. Class size is open to 100 prospectiVe
hunters and interested indi viduals should prereg ister by calling Foreman at
(740) 448-4017 or Keith Kittle at (740) 69H-3 03S.
.
Ohio's sprin g wild turkey hunt~n g season opens Aprd 26 and cx_tends
through May 16. For the first time 1n the htstory of spnng turkey hunung'"
·Ohio, hunters wiiJ be ahlc to hunt on Sunday, ad~mg three days to the sea-

Huntin g hours arc one-half hour before sunri se to noon dail y. On ly shotguns, crossbows and longbows arc permmcd for harvesnng turkey. Hun1 crs .I
with the proper license and perm 1ts can take up to two bearded turke ys during the season:

••

The Nq-w York Yankees traded
right-handed rcl1e\.1 \!r Da rn.::n Hoi nles
and abo ut S I million to th e Anzona
Di amond hncks for pi1.cher Ben Ford
und mi nnr kH ,\! li C catcher lz-zy
Moli na.
•
The trade "111 save the Yan kc;es
5527,000 "' lu xury ta x anu reduce
their n;t ajor leag ue- high payroll to
about $85 million.
Earlier in the day, Arizona traded
pitcher Clint Sadowsky to the St.
Louis Cardinals for rig ht-hander
John Frascmorc.
"They were in a group of four or
five that we were reall y actively talking about ," An wna ge neral manager .
Joe Garagiola Jr. said, " and I'm really happy these arc the two we would
come out or this with .··

Anaheim dealt 5W itch-hitti'ng
infielder Dave Hollins to Toron to for
minor league infielder 1 omas Perer..
Troy Glaus, the third pick overall ,in
the ' 1997 amateur draft , will pi.6y
third for the Angels, who a~o
released infielde r Andy StankiewiCz
and right -handed reliever 'Rich
•
(See EXHIBITIONS on Pagefil

,.

RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) Gund brothers, owners of the
Demolition of the former home of Cavaliers. The Trust promptly resold
the Cleveland Cavaliers has started · it to the park service for $9.27 milso the National Park Service can lion - the purchase price plus
clear the 'location for use a• a park- demolition costs.
land.
The park service will convert the
A wreckin g ball took several location into part of the Cuyahoga
whacks · at the vacant Coliseum Valley Nati onal Recreation Area '
Tuesday and demolition is expec ted stretching between Cleveland and ·
to be &lt;:ompleted in the fall , said Akron .
Christopher Knopf of the Trust for
Brief demoliuon work was halted
Public Land, 11 San Francisco-based in mid.March because a req uired
non-profit land conservation organi · pennit hadn ' t been issued. Knopf
zation.
'
said the permit delay limited the
The Trust purchase d the 20,000- kickoff wrecking ball work to a cereseat arena, home of the ·Cleveland monial role .
Cavaliers of the National Basketball
The Cavaliers moved to Gund
Association from 1974-94, and its Arena in Cleveland in 1994.
327 acres for $7 million , fro m the

son.

El&amp;ht Sltea In Alabama - 800-949-4444 -

•

•
and a walk. se ni or Jeremy Culellltln
wi th a 3-4 night and two doubles t3
RBJ's); and Josh Will 2-5 and four
RBJ's. 'Eric Smith was 2-4, Bnld
Willford , Ben Holter. Broderick and

·R avenswood ~ruises to 15~5 baseball victory over Southern

OSU starts spring football
practice without Murphy

Baseball

Hockey

~

Football
N1dional

Hockey
National Hockey Leacue
CAROLINA HURRICANES: Signed G Anurs
l.rbe 10 :1 multiyear coptracl .
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS: Signed 0 Eri c
Desjardins to a fou r-year contract
_
SAN JOSE SHARKS: Assigned G Joh n
Nabokov 10 Kemucky of the AHL.

BoSion m Monueal. 1 p.m.
f-lorida at Washing10n.
Pimburgh ;u Onawa, 7".\ p m
Tampa Bay a1 S1. Louis. B p.m.
.Phili!delphia Ill Nashville. 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Ca lgary, 9 p.m.
Toronl o 111 Edmonl on, 9 p.m.

American Leaaue
ANAHEIM ANGELS : Relealied IN F Andy
StaniOewicz rrom a minor-league contmcl. Placed
RHP Rich Delucia on waivers for the purpose Of
giving him his uncondi1ional release .
BOSTON "RED SOX : Released OF Mi drC
Cummings. Sen1 RHP Brad Clonu 10 their miQorleague camp
CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Released OF John
Cange losi. Placed RHP Danen Hall on 1he 15-day
Barter and RHP Robinson Checo to Toledo of tht:
International League. Assigned 18 Dave McCarty
and RHP Nelson Cru2 to their minor-lt:ague camp
NEW YORK YANKEES: Traded RHP Darren
Holmes and cash to the Ari20na Dtamondbacks for C
lzzy Molina and RHP Ben Ford.
OAKLAND AlliLETICS: Cla""""l.lil' Roo
off waiv ers fr om the
Tradt:d

Thursday's games

New Jersey ............... )9 2211
Pittsburgh
..... 3'6 2j 13
Philadelphia
........H-2318
N.Y. Rnngen ...
Jl ~J 10
N.Y. lsl nnders
20 45 9

Basketball ·
Nallonal Basketball Association
NBA: Fined New York F Kun Thomas $~ ,000
and C Chris Dudley $2,500 and L.A. Lakers FRi ck
Fo11 $2,000 and C Shaquille O'N eal $3,500 for t~ir
acli ons ln Su nday's g~:~me .

Transactions

Indiana at Toronto. 1 p m.
Chicago at Delroit. 7:30p m.
CLEVELAND al New York, 7:]0 p.m.
Philadelphia a1 Mi1mi, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta al New

fum

MINNESOTA VIKINdS: Signed LB Corey
Miller.

Anaheim at New Jersey. 7:30p.m.
N.Y blondeu at Florida. 7.30 p m.
Los Angeles ar Oelroil. 7 :~ 0 p m
Buffalo al Chicago, 8:.10 P-[ll
Tampa Bay ill Da ll as . 8 :~0 p.m
Toronto at Vancouver, 10 p ~ m
Colorado -at San Jose. 10:30 p.m.

Tuesday's scores
Bos1on 109, Charlene 99
Delroit 9~. At lanta 77
Orlando lOll New Jersey 98
Toronto 101. CLEVELAND 91
New York 94, lndia.na 93
Minnesota 98, Dallas 78
San Antonio 95, S~illtle 87
Milwilukee 107, W~:~shington 10~
· Chi cago 91. Philadelphia 81
1
Va nco uver IQI. Denver 87
Sacramento 10-i, Utah 101-0T
H o u ~to n 104. L.A. Clippers 95
Golden Slate 93, Penland 90

...__

league camp.

a

Tonight's games

!ill

.710
.258
.200

209 146
190 178
194 174
16B 172
168 196

Cnrolina J, Philadelphia 3- tie
Onawa 6, Pimburgh 4
Calgary 3, Colorado 3-tie
Phoenix 7, Edmomon 4

Midwest Dh'ision
........ .. .21

104
86
77
71
61

Los Angeles 2. Boston l-OT
Nashville J, Wastlington 2

WESTERN CONFERENC[

rum
Utah ......... {...

86 215 186
68 194 207
67 205 205
SS 176 226

Thesday's scores

.586
.517
,500
.419
.300

-·-

!iA

Philadelphia 81 ; Vancouver 101,
Denver 87; and Houston I 04, Los
Angeles Clippers 95 .
By TJie Associate~ Press
·
Celtics 109, Hornets 99
The best in the West were beaten
Kenny Anderson scored 22 points
by a couple of California teams with and Boston shot a season-high 59
losing records.
,
· percent from the field to snap
Rimbo Coles and John Starks Charlotte's eight-game home winsparked a fourth-quarter rally that ning streak.
Pistons 93, Hawks 77
gave the Golden State Warriors a 9390 victory over the Portland Trail
At Atlanta, Grant Hill scored 28
Blazers.
points as Detroit won its fourth
Poriland still has a league-best straight ·and snapped the Hawks '
23-6 record, 'but two of the losses five-game winning streak .
have come at Golden State, The Timberwolves 98, Mavericks 78
Warriors beat the Blazers 105- 100 in
Kevin .Garnell had 22 points, nine
double overtime ori Feb. 14.
rebounds and eight assists as the
"Obviously, we didn't Jearn from injury-plagued Timberwolves won i'n
.
our first expe rien ce here," Portland · Minneapolis.
Magic 100, Nets 98
guard Greg Anthony sa1d . "It 's not
rocket science. They were just the
Nick Anderson had 28 points and
most aggressive team They out- 10 rebounds, and Jiorace Grant hit a
worked us."
baseline jumper with 16.6 seco nds as
Coles fini.shed with 24 points, the Magic won at home.
Knick&gt; 94, Pacers 93
including I l in the fourth quarter.
Patrick Ewing scored 37 points,
Starks scored 16 points. including
nine in the final peri od when. the hi s most in two years, ~nd was
Warriors overcame an eight-poi nt involved in an altercation with Jalen
deficit.
Rose as New York beat Indiana ·at
"I just got _into the llow of the Madison Square Garden.
game," Coles said. .
·
BuckS 107, Wizards lOS
Vernon Maxw ell scored 33 points
Ray Allen scored 25 points and
and
fell ow
reserve
Predrag Glenn Robinson scored with 3.1 secStojakovic added 26 as Sacramento onds left as the Bucks beat the
Wizards in Milwaukee.
beat Utah 104-101 m overtime.
Bulls 91, 76ers 81
Although Kings star Chris
Webber mi ssed his _;;econd straight
Toni Kukoc, returning after missgame with the' llu, Sacramento still ing three games with with a sore
managed to beat a Utah team that back, scored 26 points as Chicago
leads ·the Midwest Division with a snapped a four-game losing streak by
2 I -8 record.
winning at the United Center.
"Our bench did an excellent job."
Spurs 95, SuperSonics 87
said King s center Vlade Divac, ,who
At San Antonio, Tim Duncan
finished with eight points and I3 scored 26 points as the Spurs got
rebounds.
their 14th win in 16 games.
Maxwell made six three-po inters
Rockets 104, Clippers 95
and Stojakovic had five as · At Los Angeles, 'rookie Michael
Sacramento used long- range shoot· Dicke rson and Brent Price scored 19
ing to overcome a lack of production points each to help Houston win its
from its starters.
. ninth straight.
"They made bunch of threes, "
Grizzlies 101, Nuggets 87
Utah guard Jeff Hornacek said.
Shareef Abdur-Rahim scored -22
"They did a good job of going points as Vancouver handed Denver
inside, then quickly passing it out- tts 22nd straight road loss.
side. Maxwe ll can play that type of
game, he 's a streak shooter. The Sports brief
other guy (Stojakovic) was hitting
Basketball
them, t.oo."
NEW YORK (AP)- Even a thrilling
In other NBA games, . it was
Boston I09, Charlotte 99; Detroit93, national championship game could not
prevent TV ratings from falling to an all·
Atlanta 77; Orlando 100, New Jersey time
low for CBS. Connecticut's up.se\ of
98; New York 94, Indiana 93; Duke on Monday night posted a 17.2
Minnesota 98, Dallas 78;' San national rating and a 27 share, the lowest
Antonio 95, ·seatile 87; Milwaukee since CBS began televising .the even1· in
107, Washington 105; Chicago 91 , ·1982.

Wednesday, March 31, 19~9

'

'~-'

. '·

.

'.

'[

~

. ,,

'
)

••

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Wednesday, March 31,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 31, 1999

ShaWnee State baseball team sweeps Rio in doubleheader ::
By ANDREW CARTER
OVP Staff Writer
~ The University of Rio Grande let
early leads slip away in a pair of losses to Shawnee State Unive.rsity on
Tuesday. The Bears swept the
"

Redmen in the American Mideast a grand slam in the sixth inning to
Conference opener for Rio Grande.
·
give the Bears the victory.
The Bears rallied from a 3-2
Shawnee State rallied from a 4- I
deficit to earn a 9-4 win in the front deficit in the second game to win 9half of the doubleheader at Stanley 3. Shawnee State scored five runs in
L. Evans Field. Josh Cawein blasted the sixth, two of which came off the

bat of Shawn Randolph who ripped a
two-run shot to give Shawnee State a
7-3 lead . The Bears picked up two
more runs in the seventh to round out
the scori ng. •
Rio Grande (5- 14) hosts. Mount

Vernon Nazarene in AMC play
Saturday at I p.m.
lgnjql &amp;nilll : Gamll
Shawnee State ...... 00 1-044-0=9-7-2
Rio Grande ........... 20 1-1 00-0=4;7-1
WP: Eldridge

.

By BRIAN S. AKAE
AP Auto Writer

Shawnee State ...... 001 - 105-2=9-8-2•
Rio Grande ........... 101 - 100-0=3-7-2
o WP: Fyffe
LP: Austin

NEW YORK - General Motors
Corp.'s tmbitious plans to build a
new typ, of assembly plant that uses
fewer workers likely will be delayed
;because of union opposition, GM's
.president acknowledged.
G . Richard Wagoner Jr. said Tuesday that GM's April deadline to
begin construction of the so-called
'''m odular " assembly plants may
liave been unreali stic. But he also
said that discussions with the United
Auto Workers on the issue have been
productive.
; GM wants to replace its aging
s mall-car plants ·in Lansing, Mich.,
and Lordstown, Ohio, with the new
· type of plant in which parts suppliers
have a larger role in assembling the
cars. Such plants already are in oper-

Major league baseball ha·s no plans to rule on andro in 1999
By STEVE WILSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
Baseball -is beginning the season
by pitching around andro.
· " Our policy is, we really don't
have one," Oakland Athletics trainer
Larry Davis said.
Unlike the Olympics, the NFL,
the NCAA, the men's and women·'s
lennis tours, and most recently the
:NBA among sports that have taken
..,;tands against steroid use, baseball is
·going into another season without
:any rules about potentially danger;il us performance-enhancing sub~ t a n ces.

: No one among the owners, union
j;}r commissioner 's offi ce wanted to
'tarn ish Mark McGwire's home run
"record or tackle the thorny issue of
,drug-testing by barring androstene-dione and other testosterone boost"
::ers.
: So they commissioned a study of
'll ndro by Harvard sc ientists and held
:Off a decision until those res ults, and
)'Ossibly more studies, are in.
That means virtually r\o chance of
.a ban thi s season.
·
·. Until then, McGwire is free to use
over-the-counter pill he 's taken
:fdr nearly two years , just as all play-

:u..e

~Flames,

ers are free to use any of a variety of
so-called dietary supplements and
prescription drugs banned by other
.
sports. .
McGwire came to s pring training
saying he's still taking andro.
"It's legal ," he said . " Major
league baseball is not the IOC .. It had
absolutely nothing to do with me hit·
ting a baseball. It had something to
do with getting through the workouts
during the season when you're worn
down as an athlete."
Gabe Kapler, the Detroit Tigers
rookie ce nter fie lder who has
appeared on !he cover of several
bodybuildin g magazi nes, agreed
with McGwire that andro is " noi
going to make you hit any better."
He said a substance that can help
an athlete recover from weight room
workouts and contribute to his
stren gth and fitness is alluring ,
'"My brother 's on (andro) right
now, " Kapler said. " I'm waiting to
see what he thinks of it. If he likes it.
if he thinks it 's ·something that's
helpful , I'll look into ii."
Baseball 's non-policy on andro
doesn't sit well with everyone in the
game.
·
" Base ball seems to be taking

more of a - I want to be cautious
when I this - drawn-out process,"
, Detroit strength and conditioning
coach Brad Andress said . "Because
they' re in no hurry to find out specifically what the stuff is, even though
factions around them, the NFL,
Olympic committee, everybody else,
have definitively made a rule on
(andro) based on information that
they have gathered. Baseball thinks
that they can find different information."
Andress said he wouldn't recom mend andro to players, and neither
would many other trainers.
" We' re leery about something
that there's not enough studies performed o n it yet to really know ... "the
long-term effect of it," said Cplorado
Rockies head trainer Tom Probst.
" It may be one of those · things
where we ' ll find out in 10 years that
it's fine , or that it may be a cancer
agent, " Probst said . "There's too
l]lany question marks right now. It's
still a player's choice to take it or not
. take it. We advise against it as a medical team ."
Rockies left fielder Dante
Bi chette said he . stopped taking
andro last season because "there was

too much negativity about it ... like it
is illegal or something like that."
·.. n wasn't thatl was scared of it,
because I didn't feel any effects from
it," Bichette said. " It was simply
because of th~ bad press that it got. I
didn 'I want people to judge me by_it.
It if was helping me a lot, then I
might .have stuck with it."
Houston Astros general manager
Gerry Hunsicker said team doctors
and trainers are try.ing to educate
players about andro and other muscle-building substances.
" We've told players, 'You use the
s upplements at yo ur own risk,'
Hwnsicker said. "We wbuld prefer
that they wouldn't use (~ndro), just
because (effects) are unknown , but
it's not illegal and , at .this point,
we've not uncovered any data to suggest it is harmful to a player."
The Harvard study commissioned
by -liase!i'il~wners and the union
does not address the issue of safety.
It focu ses solely on whether andro
has any effect on testosterone levels
and, if so, by how much. ·Gene Orza ,
the .second-highest ranking . union
official, said further study would
need to be done on whether andro
actually builds muscle mass and

enhimces performance in baseball.
More importantly, he said, ·baseOrza said he simplY. assumts · ball "really neell,s to ~ddress ~e b1g-.
andro is safe because the federal ger issue of anabohc stermds and
government hasn't banned it.
out-of-competi~on testing. If andr1&gt;
" Wrong," said Dr. .Gary Wadler is out there, how do we _know they're.
of NYU Medical Center, one of the not taking oth.e r anaboh.c sterotds? "
nation 's leading steroid experts and a
"There ;s been · much attention
longti·me consultant to several prodirected
toward andro, but we should
fessional sports. "The side effects
be
addressing
the broader issue of .
are delayed long down the road. It
anabolic
steroids.
That should be on
was a mistake for the '94 (federal)
of
all
professional
sports."
the
table
act to put that category of substance
on the supplement li st. It belongs,
Sandy Alderson, executive , vice
not necessarily on the controlled sub- president of baseball operauons,
stance li st like other anabolic claimed steroid use in baseball " hassteroids, but at least as a prescription n' t really been a problem, and it's not
drug, like peniciilin. Tlie government clear it's problem today, eith~r
err~.
. .
. .
because it's widespread or because tt
~o me, a sterotd ts a stero.td ts a . actuall has some concrete effect." .
stermd . You can' t argue wtth tt.
Y
.
Andro is a steroid , and it becomes, in
Some clubs,. he acknowledged;
the body, testosterone ."
have discovered players using ana•
Wadler doesn' t discount the value bolic steroids at the minor league
of testing andro •. which _was used by level and have implemented screen •
East German swtmmers tn the 1970s, ing and counseling programs.
but. he said that in delaying a deci" I won't dispute that there ~
sion baseball is trying to "wish away
major league players out there using
the problem."
There's abundant evidence, he andro," he said. "But to the extent
said, to show that andro converts, to they ' re using (other anabolic)
testosterone and poses a long-term steroids ... I think there's a total
absence of evidence of that. " '
danger. .

ation

NHLroundup
'~y KEN RAPPOPORT
J'.P Hockey Writer
: · It 's been , a y.ob.!,le since the
·Edmonton Oilers llnlL. Calgary
:Flames have played each other for
·something significant at this time of
season. This year is different. ·
: ; The Flames lead the Oilers by one
:PQint for the eighth playoff spot in
-the NHL' s Western · Conference .
:rney went one up on their Alberta
:Ptovince rivals with a 3-3 tie against
.(::olorado on Tuesday night, while
;Epmonton was losing 7-4 to
.Phoenix.
: : With eight games remaining, the

:u,e

• •

goal for the visiting Flames, who
ended a two-game losing streak.
"He got qne goal, but he was
Theo,'' Calgary coach Brian Sutter
said. " He's a world-class player, but
we d.id a darn good job against him,"
Coyotes 7, Oilers 4
Robert Reichel had two goals and
an assist and Keith Tkachu!&lt; notched
four assists as Phoenix matched a
franchise record with six first-period
goals in its victory at Edmonton .
The line of Tkachuk, Shane Doan
and Jeremy Roenick combined for
eight points in the first period and 10
points overall. Doan finished with a
goal and ·two assists, while Roenick
had one goal and two assists.
Mike Grier had two goals for the
Oilers, who trailed 5-0 after f5 :46 of

the first period.
" We were soundly beaten by a
hockey club that I don't think is that
much better than ours," Oilers coach
Ron Low said. ·
Kings l, Bruins l-OT
Olli Jokinen scored with I :06left
in overtime as Los Angeles slowed
Boston 's playoff run.
.
The loss snapped a six-game
unbeaten streak for the Bruins, who
remained five points ahead of the
New York Rangers , and Florida
Panthers for the eighth and final
,.playoff spot -in the . NHL's . Eastern
Conference. Bo.ston has nine games
remaining in the regular season, five
of them at home.
Rob Blake gave the visiting Kings
· a 1-0 lead at 5:40 of the third period.

Sergei Samsonov tied the game at
12:09.
Th.e win broke a four-game losing
streak for the Kings .
Predators 3, Capitals l
Scott Walker scored an unassisted
goal with 3:56 left to give Nashville
the victory:
.
NaShville completed a two-game
season sweep of the Capitals in its
first trip to Washington.
Matt Herr gave .Washington a 2-1
lead earlier in the third period, but
Tom Fitzgerald tied it for the
Predators at 8:47.
·
Senators 6, Penguins 4
Sami Salo scored three · goals for
his first career hat trick as Ottawa
overcame a three-goal deficit and
won its first game in Pittsburgh.
The Senators were U- 13-3 at t~ e

Georgia hires Ha~rick as men's basketball coach ?~~~~enya:;~c:r!~~ti;;:~~h~~~:s~
;J3y PAUL NEWBERRY

Harrick was
chosen
o ver
; ; ATHENS , Ga . (AP) Jim Appalachian State's Buzz Peterson,
+Iarrick was hired today as basket- who was endorsed by Dean Smith
l&gt;all coach at Georgia after guiding and Mic hael Jordan, his former
:VCLA to a national championship in coach and teammate, respectively, at
~ ~Q5 and spending the past two sea- North Carolina. The other finali st,
:f;Ons at Rhode Island.
Delaware 's Mike Brey, rem~JVed
• A source close to the ~ituation , himself from consideration.
.. peaking on condition of an onymity,
Georgia president Michael Adam s
j:qnfi[111ed Harri ck as the choice. He apparently was . the driving force
'Will succeed Ron Jirsa, who was behind the hiring of Harrick , who
:f·iied March II after failin g to lead was at Pepperdine when Adarris was
lJcorgia to the NCAA tournament the sc hool's vice president of devel,
:!luring his two years.
·
opment.
- Georgia called a I :30 p·.m. news
Harrick, 60, has a career record of
:co nference to announce the hiring.
404- 190 in 19 years as a head coach

:Exhibition
baseball...
•

:Pelucia - eating Delucia's guar'tlnteed $700,000 salary in process.
: C leve land traded first base
·prospect Mike Glavine, the younger
brother of At lanta pitcher Tom
:G!avin e, to the Braves for future con.,;reerations.
: : oakland traded right-hand ed
l&gt;i!cher Jay Witasick to Kansas City
•
-for a player to be named and cash.
• ; Also, Boston asked .for unconditi onal release waivers on outfielder
~idre Cummings , who led AL
:)&gt;inch-hitters with a .346 batting
•dve rage last year: He became
"'"pendable when Boston obtained
:i:nltfielder Jon Nunnally from
~ incinnati last Thursqay. Cummings
gets $110,656 in terminat ion pay
in stead of the $450,000 he was
awarded as a loser in salary arbitra4ion.
·
: Ri ght-hander Marc Pisciotta was
)&gt;laced on unconditidnal release
"'Naivers by the Chicago ·Cubs and
:Will get $5 1,147 in termination pay
i nstead of his $208,000 salary.
· : Right-hander Aaron Small met a
.si milar fa te. Arizona placed him on
;release waivers, meaning he gets
.$51, 147 in termination pay rather
.l han hi s $250,000 salary.
: In other moves, Oakland claimed
"'eft-hander 'Ron Mahay off waivers
l"rom the Red Sox, and Texas agreed
lo a minor league contract with
i nfielder Rafael Boumigal . Florida
_put outfielder Cliff Floyd on the 15-day disabled list because of a
:;;prained left knee.
: In games Tuesday:
Mets l, Marlins 0
: .
• · At Port St. Lucie , Fla.. Ore!
:'Hers hi ser allowed two hits in fi ve
·sliutout innings, improvi ng to 2-0
1jnce signing with New York last
:;week.
•
Devil Rays 5, Twins 3
: At St. Petersburg, Fla .. Rolando
~Arrojo, making hi s first appearance
. in 12 days after recovering from a
• strained back, allowed one run and
: four hits in four inning s.
: ·
Expos 7, Orioles 6
: At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Orlando
-Merced drove in three runs with a
•
•
•
'•

rcontinued

at Pepperdine, UCLA , and Rhode
Island . He accepted the Georgia job
after agreeing not to bring his son,
Jim Jr., as an assistant coact\ because
of the staie's anti-nepotism law.
After winning the national title at
UCLA, Harrick was fired on· Nov. 6 ,
1996, for hi s invol vement with a
recruiting dinner involving more
players than allowed by NCAA rules.
Harri ck paid the dinner tab and
allegedly lied about how many people were at the dinner.
Harrick apologi zed .and admitted
to a·lapse in judgment but said he did
not deserve to be fired . He accused

five road games ( 4-0-1 ).
UCLA athletic director Peter Dalis of
The Pengui.ns lost a substantial
being " out to get me."
lead for t)le second consecutive
After sitting out the 1996-97 season, Harrick returned to coaching at
~hode Island, leading the . Rams to
two straight appearances in . the
NCAA tournament. They reached the
regional final in 1998 and lost to
North Carolina Charlotte in the first
round this year.
Harrick was the Pepperdine coach
for nine seaso ns, a tenure that began
.in 1979 and included four NCAA
tourname nt appearances and the only
losing seaso n of his college career in
1986-.87.

double and a homer. . Jose Vidro also
homered and had ' three RB! s.
Montreal's 12 wins thi s spring are its
most since 1993.
Reds 4, Yankees 2
At Sarasota, Fla .. Dmitri Young
had another two-hit game and doubled hom e the tiebreaking run .
Red Sox 7, Rangers 1
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Pat Rapp
gave up one run and four hits in 5 2/3
innings, allowing a solo homer U&gt;
Juan Gonzalez.
Braves 3, Indians l
At Winter Haven, Fla. , rookie
Odalis Perez allowed one hit in five ·
shutout innings, and Eddie Perez and
Bret Boone hit solo homers off loser
Bartolo Colon.
Astros 6, Tigers 3
At Kissimmee, Fla., "'Richard
Hidalgo hit a two-run homer and
Searl Bergman allowed two runs and
six hits in six innings.
Royals 5, Phillies 4
At C learwater, Fla., . Glendon
Rusch, competing for a spot in
Kansas City's rotation, allowed two
runs and six hits in five innings, and
Scott Leius hit a three-run homer.
Pirates 6, Blue Jays 4·
At Bradenton, Fla.; former No. I
draft pick Kris Benson allowed one
run and five hits in s ix innings, 'then
learned he won a spot on Pittsburgh 's

six in six shutout innirigs.
Athletics 10, Angels l
At Phoenix , Kenny Rogers
pitched 4 1/3 shutout innings apd
Jason Gi am bi,. A.J . Hinch and
Olmedo Saenz each homered.
Mariners 9, Di.amondbacks S
At Tucson, M-iz:, Russ Davis hit
his team-record ninth· spring homer,
doubled and added ·an RBI single.
Alex Rodriguez had a two-run homer
and a do uble .
Giants 10, Cubs 9
At Scottsdale, Ariz., Barry B,onds
hit a three-run homer as San

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2 lbs of Mashed Potatoes &amp; 1
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Dinners

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Easter
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Cookies

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we Reoervethe Right to Umlt Quantities • Prlceo Ellocllve Thru Sat., April 3, 1999 • USOA Food Stamps and WtC Coupons Accepted • Not Roaponolbte lor 'JYpographlcal or Pictorial Errors•
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vehicle demand is exceeding expec- •
lations, GM already is producing ~~
full capacity for many of its vehicles,'
especially its high-profit trucks,
When demand exceeds production
and buyers have to wait for th.,;,.
orders, some customers end up til
co mpetitors ' showrooms.
GM's market share s hrank to
about 29 percent last year from 3.l'
percent in 1997, in large part because
.
of last summer's strikes.
" With strong markets it makes it
harder to ge t share but easier to make
it on the bottom line ," he s aid . "So:
it's a problem I can deal with. "

tl'o4fe to /lollfe.~l

over~eas .

CHICAGO - Bank One, which
has been quietly eliminating jobs following the merger between First
Chicago NBD Corp. and Bane One,
says it is well on the way to achieving the cost savings expected from
that deal.
·' In its first public acknowledgment
that it has been cutting jobs, the
nation' s fourth -largest bank said
Monday it hopes to reduce .its work
force by 5 percent, or 4,700 j obs, by
the middle of next year as it integrates
!&gt;ystems and operations across a 14slate region .
·
News of the job cuts came in
annual filings that Bank One made
Monday with the Securities and
Exchange
Commission.
But
spokesman Stan Lata said Wall Street
. analysts had been informed earlier.
1
' We really haven' t put together a
~ist o f spec ific s where the jobs have
"een e ither out sourced or eliminated,
1but where branches have been sold is
&lt;pretty obvipus," he said.
The Chicago-based compan y's
'stock initiall y rose on the New York
Stock Exchan ge as word of the cuts
spread. But it closed down 56 114
~e nt s, or I percent, at $55.43 3/4 a
share in a mostly down stock market.
Bank One has been trying to conv)nce Wall Street that it can make
~ood on its promises of hi gher earnings and $930 milli on in annual cost
s~v ings despite a hi story of problems
that First Chicago NBD and Bane
One encountered in absorbing smaller competitors.
Lata said the company already had
elim inated 2,690 of the jo bs by
December and was wdrking to reach
its staffin g goals through the sale of
bank branches, attrition, outsourcing
and consolidation.
Bank One took a pretax restructuring charge of $9S4 million in the
fourth quarter of 1998 and expects to
Tecord another $526 millio n in merger- related charges this year, the company said m its filing . Of the $526
millio n thi s year, $54 million '!'ill be
costs to integrate systems.
In the past few months, the bank
has eliminated jobs in corporate lendin g and overseas trading .
It also had significant overlap in
Indiana , the only state where the two
former banks competed heav il y
against eac h other, and saw jobs
reduced after selling bran ches there.
Many of those jobs went to banks that
bought the branches, Lata noted .
Meanwhile, the company has been
expanding staff in Ohio for its retail
banking. operati ons and investments
bu siness. Bank O ne headquarters
. moved f;o m Columbu s, Ohio, to
C hicago in the merger. The company
prom ised to maintain s ~bs tan tial
operations in the Columbus area. ·
John Challenger, presiden t of the
outpl acement firm Challenger, Gray
&amp; C hri stmas. said job cut s this year
arc likely to remain hig h as companies continue to merge to cut costs
and satisfy Wall Street's demands for
increased profit s.
,'
Bank One. like other banks thm
have rece ntl y merged, hopes to
becOme a center for one-slop shoppin g for financial services suc h as
loans, credit and mutual fun ds . But
analy sts have said tha t will take time
as the companies merge their cultures
and operations.
Bank One has $260 bi llion in
assets, more than 2,000 branches and
9 ,150 automated te ller machines in
the Midwest, South and Southwest.

~----------------------·

FREEWErtEK~NDbGEtA~WAYi

Project Yellowstone before contract political posturing intended to boost goals in a meeting with Wall Street
.
talks, the project could be delayed the union leader 's tough image before analysts Monday. ·
"There's no backing off,'' he said.
until fall at the soonest. GM 's current the UAW rank and file . Yokich made
The world's largest automaker
his remarks at the UAW's triennial
contract expires in September.
has set what it calls a "stretc h goal"
"If it goes slower than faster, bargaining conve ntion in Detroit.
GM says it loses up to $1 ,000 on to earn $4 billion this year in North
that's the consequence we'll have to
face,'' Wagoner said. " Hopefully, it each sma ll car it builds and that it Amenca and $900 million in Europe.
doesn't take thM long. But l think we needs to find ways to reduce its costs It expects to lose about $150 million
want to try to stay with this. idea. I if it's to continue buildin g small cars in Asia and about the same amount in
Lati n America. Wagoner ·said a
haven't in any way given up trying to in North America .
bet·
Wagoner
said
GM
was
doing
stretch goal is the best GM believes
find something that will wotk."
Wagoner said ·talks so far have ter than expected in North America so it can do if "if everything goes
been constructive. But he declined to farthi s year but was falli ng behind in great."
But Wagoner said it will be tough
comment on Yokich 's blunt criticism. Europe because of. weak sales in
Other GM exec utives privately Germany. He disputed a report that forGM to meet its goal of32 percent
discounted Yokich's comments as GM had backed off its 1999 financial of the U.S. market this year. Although

--

EASTMAN'S ..• to/1(/l({.(l(t't# ;lf;l(t!elalf,t!

By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer

POMEROY AUTO PARTS

Francisco overcame a 9-3 deficit.
Manny Alexander drove in six runs
with a grand slam and a two-run double.
Padres 9, brewers 4
At Peoria , Ariz. , Greg Myers
homered, doubled and drove in fo1ur
runs. Andy Ashby was hit on His
right index finger trying to bunt in
·the seconq, causing a tiny blood blister.
White Sox 6, Rockies 1
At" Tucson , Magglio Ordonez
went 3-for-4 with a homer and three
RBis. Rockies ace Darryl Kite, 1-5
this spring, allowed six runs and
seven hits in 5 213 .innings .

WAGNER HARDWARE
1.99 Was
1/2" 10'

game. They led 3-1 at Buffalo II
minutes into the third period on
Sunday and lost 4-3 in overtime.
Magnus Arvedson scored twice
for Ottawa. NHL scoring leader
Jaromir Jagr had his .37th goal and
two assists for Pittsburgh.
Flyers 3, Hurricanes 3
At Philadelphia, Martin Gelinas
scored at II :05 of the third period to
help Carolina twice overcome twogoal de{icits and tie the Flyers,
. Gelinas' goal spoiled a memo·
rable night by Phjladelphia goalie
Ron Hextall, who lied a club record
with two assists.
Ray Sheppard and Marek Malik
also scored for the Southeast
Division-leading Hurricanes, who
have won only one of their last six
(1-3-2). Rod Brind'Amour had a
goal and an assist and Mikael
Rcnberg and Steve Duchesne also ,
had goals for the Flyers, 3-1-1 jn
their last five.

• Parts Pros at,

rotation .
Dodgers 2, Cardinals 0
At Jupiter, Fla. , . Darren Dreifo rt
allowed just three hits and struck out

Wagoner said the plan , ca lled
"Project Yellowstone," will ·never
work if the union' doesn't sign on. He
said GM was receptive to alternatives.
" I don't think we can proclaim
that that's the only formula," he said. ,
"So we' re kind of wide open•to dis·
cuss various issues."
National contract talks with GM,
Ford Motor Co. and the Chrysler unit
of DaimlerChrysler AG begin in
June. Yokich said modular assembly
would be a maj or issue in the negotiations.
·
If GM fails to reach agreement on

Bank One
·plans 4, 700
job cutbacks

iaand see the

fr~m Pages&gt;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: In a modular plant, preassembled
parts modules are delivered to the
plant b y outside suppliers. Far fewer
tJAW workers would be needed .to
assemble each car because most of
the subassembly work would done by
the lower-cost suppliers.
• Wagoner's comments at the New
York International Auto Show came
two days after UAW Pres ident
Stephen-Yokichattacked GM 's plan
as "j ust another way to destroy
good -paying jobs and benefit s. " .
Detai ls of the plan are already under
~egotiation with the pl ants ' UAW
locals and their national leadership in
Detroit.

Avalanche skate to 3-3 tie; Senators top Penguins 6-4
Flames and Oilers wili ' face each
other three' times .
" It's a big po int with this many
game s left in the season, especially
on the road," Calgary center Jarome
Iginla said after the tie at Colorado.
" It was a battle o ut there. We definitely wanted to win, but it's a big
point. "
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was Los
Angeles 2, Boston I in overtime;
Nashville 3, Washington 2; Ottawa6,
Pittsburgh 4; and Philadelphia 3,
Carolina 3. ·
Avalanche 3, Flames 3
Theo Fleury, facing Calgary for
the first time since being traded to
Colorado, had a goal and an assist
against hi s former team.
Derek Morris had the. game-tying

',

GM likely to delay construction of 'modular' plant

LP: Campbell

lppinllmlll: Gam l

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;!Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Wednesday, March·31, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thf Dally Sentinel• Page 9:

Wednesday, Marc~ 31, 199£
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1999 EASTER COLORING CONTEST
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·FRUTH PHARMACY

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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
POMEROY, OHIO '

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The Daily Sentinel:

_.&lt;·-By The Bend

Page 10 ~-

.

By MELANIE BURNEY

'

As~ Iated Press Writer

VVoman's affair teaches her that it wasn't worth paying the price

Ann Landers: Two years
was a married woman who
~:ante mvolved wllh a marn ed
at work.
:• At first, tt was just ntrting, but
t:J:cfore lon'g, we knew we were m
love It was excuing and wonderful
'\fe ftnally dectded to dtvorce our
spouses and get marned
• ' What do I have today? My two
ch.tldren, who were once happy and
-tell-adjusted, are now m therapy. I
a11o have huge legal btlls
~~ My m· laws desptse me because
t{iey see their grandchtldren only
tJ'Iice a year. I have a husband who

stts tn a chair at ntght drinkmg beer
and smoking cigarettes whtle I cook,
clean and fold laundry.
I wtsh I had used the effort I spe nt
trymg to hide my affatr and put tt to
work savmg my first marn age. I'
would have been a lot happier.
Please prmt my letter so other marned women will thmk before they
start foo lmg around -SMART TOO
LATE
DEAR SMART: I wonder how
many married women (and· men)
who are tltrttng or foohn g around m
the workplace wtll see themse lves m
your letter I would not be surprised
tf your words ntpped some of those
romances m the bud.
Thanks for all the marriages you
may have saved today As for yours,
I sugges t counselmg. If the couch
potato won' t go wnh you, go alone
Dear Ann Landers: I come from

a large family. A few months ago,
we lost our dad. Dunng hts tll ness,
he made a detatled hst at ttems he
wanted to leave to his children and
grandchtldren. Mom told htm, "Thts
ts still my home, and these are my
thmgs, too. Nothing leaves "
Thts led to a dtsc uss ton between
my brothers and ststers We agreed
that nothmg would be taken from
the house.
A few stblings; however, have
been takmg t!ems for thetr chtldren.
Tht s angered the rest of us, and we
asked them to return these items.
We argued that Mom ts sltll ahve
and these things belong to her As of
now, not one of the. stbhn gs has
returned anythtng.
We also fee l that when Mom
goes, the hetrloom ttem s should be
handed down to us and not to the
gt andchtldren Then, tf we choose,

we will pass them on to the next
generalton., Please, Ann , prmt this
letter and your comments so the
enttre family can read them -DISCORD IN CANADA
DEAR CANADA: I have no
idea tf Grandma ts leav mg behtnd
the crow n Jewels of the Ottoman
Emptre or some p~ts , pans and beaded lamp shades.
I suggest she htre a prolesstonal
appratser and an attorney and get a
wtll spelled out now. If she doesn' t,
I predict a world-class famtly light
that wtll tum into a two-generation
disaster.
Mea nwhtle, forget about the
ll ems that have already been taken
from the house. It sounds as tf
th ere's enough dtssenston as 11 is
Dear Ann Landers: My wife
and I recently vt slted her 86-yearold ll)Other tn Oklahoma While we

DEAR GRAND: Most people
today buy lhetr phones. However, it
wouldn' t hurt for my readers to take
a good, hard look at their next phone•
bill and see tf there are any incorre~~
leasing charges.
Again, I love the way you readers
look out for one another.
Is that Ann Landers column you.
chpped years ago ye llow wtth age?
For a copy of her most frequentl:t•
requested poems and essays, send ·a.
self-addressed, long, bustness-sizc
envelope and a chec k or mone:t'
order for $5.25 (this tncludes
postage and handling) to Gems, c/o
Ann Landers, P 0 Box 11562,
Chtcago, !II. 60611 -0562 (In Cana··
da, send $6.25.)
To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past column s, vtsit
the Creators Syndtcate web page at
www.creators.com

were there, she asked us to look at
her telephone bill, which showed
lease charges for four phones at
S4.45 each.
She had been paying these lease
charges for over 23 years. We dts·
covered that one of the phones had
been taken out of her house 20
years before, and two phones had
not been used for over 15 years.
I wonder how many senior citi·
zens are unknowingly paying lease
charges fl?r old phones that are no
longer tn use.
Please alert your readers to
check tf th e~ are betng billed for
"Consumer Lease Services" and see
whtch instruments the btl! apphes to.
Incorrect charges can be removed by
calling the telephone company customer servtce department. It's worth
looking tnlo · · BOB IN GRAND
PRAIRIE, TEXAS

Society Scrapbook
~ ~~~~~~~~~
The good news IS that automobtle manufacturers are working on
the mstallatton of a latch on the mstde of motor vehicle trunks so that
they can be opened eastly should the need anse-and tt does. I
beheve General Motors has ns latch system completed
The bad news ts that Htllary hasn't yet made a defintte decisiOn
on whether she will seek a New York State U S. Senate seat. I
haven 't done an m depth study on the matter but from an overall
viewpomt, my hope ts that her deciston wtll be negattve.

'

The Racine Fall Festtval Commtttee asked that I remmd you that
the committee ts sponsonng a gospel mustc program at 7:30 p.m.,
this Saturday m the Southern Htgh School Audttonum.
The program should be quite appropnate smce it ts Holy Week
and the mustc wtll be gospel. Featured performers will be The
Builders Quartet of Rtpley, W. Va.; The Lewts Famtly of Ltncol·
ntown, Ga., and an award winning harmomca player, Mtke Stevens
of Ontano, Canada
In conjunction wnh the program, a bean dinner will be served in
the school cafetena begmmng at 5 p.m. so you can really have an
evemng out

·"

•

I'm told that Carolyn and George Korn, fonner Pomeroy rest·
dents, ran into problems recently while returnmg from a vacation trip
to Flonda.
Carolyn, as you remember, I'm sure, ts a heart transplant patten!
and became til whtle on the road She was taken to an Atlanta hospita! and she and George are now back at thetr home m Carroll.
We're back to square one on the old beer bottles Michael Stewart
found on the riverbank below Middleport recently. Several readers
from the descnptton tdenltfied them as origmally commg from the
Wildermuth Brewery m Pomeroy
However, Btll Matlack sent a cltppmg of the find to Sally Ash·
worth, former restdent now It vmg m Flonda and she wrote saymg
that the mittals on the bottles 1ndtcate the the bottles dtd not come
from the Wtlderm uth operation Sally ts a granddaughter of the late
Charles Wtldenmuth, one of the opetator's of the former brewery.
The year, 1926, was a pretty active one in Metgs County
In the fall of that year. the Metgs Pubhshmg Co. launched the
publ tcatton of a new datly newspaper whtch wa' known as The Daily
Tnbune. Horace W Karr was nam ed man agmg editor of the new
datly as well as that of the week ly news edt tton known as the Tnbune
Telegraph
Former Mtddleport rcstdent, Gene Rtce, now hvmg m St. Petersburg, Fla, wrnes that hiS uncl e, Harry Rtce, was servmg as shenff
that year Harry dted as the result of an acctdent tn Logan the next
year after lransporttn g pnsuners to Columbus Hto daughlet is Ros·
alie Fre nch, fonmerly of Mtddl eport, who now ltves in Columbus
Whoopt Goldberg ts a fabulous entertamer I wonder tf 11 was
reall y necessary for the producers of the Academy Awards to put her
in all of those wetrd costumes as a part of the show. I'm surpnsed
that a star of her status dtdn 't renege Some entertamers need all of
the costumes they can get- but not Whoopt Do keep stnthflg.

DKG members hold meeting
Members of four chapters of Delta
Kappa Gamma heard about Bnstol
Village, a rettrement community near
Waverly, dunng a meettng held
recently at the Ftrst Bapttst Church m
Waverly
Chapters represented were Alpha
Omicron, Beta Tau, Beta Alpha and
Delta Epstlon
Jay Early, executt ve dtrector of
Bristol Vtllage, gave a htslory of the
retirement communny whtch started
i~ 1962 and now has 30 percent of the
tdwn's populatton. There are mdt v-tdtljll homes, ass isted hvmg apartments,
a~d nursmg care factltttes The
etnphasts ts on keepmg people as
independent. as posstblc, while preservmg thetr tdenttty, and provtdtng It
at a moderate cost. People can enter
the vtllage at 62 Some work there
phrtllme and many act1 v1t1cs are
offered tncludmg danctn g, swim·
rr!'ng, golf, gardenmg, dt scuss ton

Lunch was catered at a buffet table
by Donna Kahch. Tables carrted out a
spring mottf and favors were candles
and nowcr seeds.
Alpha Omtcron President MarJone
Fetty prestded at the meeting of Alpha
Otmcron. She gave the treasyrer 's
rcpon tn the absence of Deborah
Hammond, and Nelhe Parker gave
the secretary's repott and read thank
you notes from Seremty House
Newsletters were dtstnbuted, and
March btrthdays were recogmzed. A
card was stgned for Ida Mae Crabtree.
Membcrshtp chatrman, 'Pam Toon
reported $62 was collected for World
Fellowship at the February mettng
Scholarshtp chatrman Sandra Walker
read a membership apphcauon and
the soc tcty voted to accept the person
Rosahc Story, Fetty, Walker, and
Parker represented Meigs Cou nty
Next meetmg wtll be Apnl 26 at St
Peter and Paul Ch urch tn Wellston .

Parenting class to be offered
Access to Human Resource
Development wtll be conducung a
stx·Sess ton parenttng class tn April
The class wtll focu s on tssues ol
parents with children who are eight
years of age or older.
Speciftc concerns addressed wil
be self-esteem, study skill s, dtsc t·
pline, commumcatotn , health and
nutntion , commumty support and
problem solving.
The course wtll be htghly interacltve wtth guest speakers from
Access and the communiy. Classes
wtll be held on Tuesdays and Thurs·
days from 9 am until non begmtng
on Apnl 13 and endmg on April 29
at the Mtddleport Church of Chnsl
Family Ltfe Center
To regtster for the class or to get
more information , restdent may contact Sherry Shambltn, 992-3088
Methodist women to attend
annual retreat
The Athens Dtslnct Untted
Methodist Women wtll have their
annual spnng retreat April 10 at The
Plains Untted Methodtst Church.
Registratton and !tght breakfast
wtll be served at 9 a.m. The retreat
wtll begt n at 9:30 and end at 2 30
p m. Theme ts "Stretcher Bearers"
wtth Nancy Schltchera. retreat
leader
To make reservattons, Methodtst
women are to send a check for $10
made out to the Athens Dtstnct

The Commumty Calendar ts pub·
hshed as a free servtce to non -pro lit
groups wishmg to announce meelmgs and spec tal events. The calen·
dar ts not designed to promote sales
or fund ratsers of any ty pe Items are
pnnted as space permtts and cann ot
be guaranteed to run a spccJfJ c num ber ol day s

Meeting held ·
The sufferin gs of those who
signed the Declaration of lndcpen·
cence was dtscussed by James
Lochary of Amesvtlle , speaker at a
rece nt meeung of the Ewtngs Chap·
ter, Sons of the Ameican Revolutton.
a1 the Meigs Museum.
Lochary, who ts also president of
the chapter, said that ftve of the stgners were captured and tortured, nine
fought tn the war and dted as a
result, and two others were imprisoned
He also detailed the numerous
signers whose homes were burned
and robbed by Brittsh supporters.
Seventeen stgners lost everything
they owned and were not reim·
bursed, Lochary reported .
During the meet mg one member
displayed a famtly hetrloom which
has passed through the Lovett farnt·
ly of Metgs County,
It was a Confederate soildier's
gun found agatnst a fen ce at Port·
land afte the Battl e of Buffington
Island. The gun was a 58 cahber
rine made a\ the Palmetto Armory in
So uth Carolma Charter mem ber
Wallace Bradford of Cherry Rtdge
was reported sttll 1ll but showmg
unprovemc nt Cards for htm and
Mrs Pau l M•rtm were "gned.
Members were asked to submit

MIDDLEPO RT - Mtddlcport
Literary Club, 2 p m Wednesday,
home of Leah Jean Ord Oltta
Heighton to rev iew "Falltng Lc,aves.
by Adelene Yen Mah, and Jeanette
Thomas will rev tew "George Wash·
mgton-A Ltfe" by Wtlltam S. Randall
REEDS VILLE - Spectal meetmg. Eastern Local Board of Ed uca·
uon, Wednesday, 5,30 p.m at the
admtnt strahon office. Purpose to
closeout corActs on butldmg and
renovatton projects, approve person· ·
nel and handle any other busmess
which may legally come before the
board m a spectal sesston.

of Ltving Sav ior,
Frtday and Satunday, 7
p m and Sunday, 2 p.m Pastor
Ralph Savage. speaker

Revtval at Full

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Stat
Grange 778, regular meetmg. ~ p.m'
wnh potluck supper, SaiUrday, 6· 3~
p.m.

Would you like to be in

better shape?
'

'
'
What You
WIU Leanu

• Nutritional advice
• How to improve cardiovascular endurance
• Muscle toning techniques
• Proper stretching techniques
• Motivation techniques
The classes wi II be offered at
Holzer Clinic's Sycamore facili-ty,
6:00 AM - 7:00 AM and
5:30 PM - 6:30 PM
on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Hoberl~cu.i•

-tthll .,.. . .

,,.,ea..a

0.18polllt0blo 4-l
. ('740) ••• h441

Call 446-!1244 to sign up for the class of your
choice. Classes begin April 20th and end May 27th.
Cost is $60 a person for the entire 6 week program.
Call and reserve your spot .~odayl!

(

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

American icon since they were

unvetled m 1954, perfectly m synch
wtlh the qutckentng pace of life.
Swanson wasn't the first compa·
ny to try tts hand at frozen meals but
earlier attempts were met wtth ltmited success The dtnners became a hit
as more and more famthes began
eattng tn front of thetr new televi -

sions.
Gerry Thom as was the Swanson
executtve who came up with the
idea of frozen dmners to get nd of
520,000 pounds of excess turkey. He
sketched a drawing of a three-compartment aluminum tray, presented tl
to hts bosses and then came up with

lhe name "TV dinner."

" It 's the classic example of
necessity being th'e mother of mventton," srud Thomas, 77, now retired.
· A company bacteriologtst, Betty
Cronin , perfected cooking techntques for the meal, figuring out
how to get the breadmg to slay on
the meat during the freezing and
then the baking
The first meal - turkey, com
bread dressmg and gravy, buttered
peas and sweet potatoes - sold for
98 cents. Although Swanson initially only ordered 5,000 dinners, the
gamble paid off - the company
sold 10 mtlhon the first year.
A frozen fried chicken dinn,er was
introduced in 1955, the same year
~ampbell Soup Co. acquired the
Omaha, Neb -based Swanson,
which went on to become a leader m
the convemence revo lutiOn and a

$300 milhon business.
Swanson sto pped callin g tts
meals TV Dmners tn 1962 because
exec utives feared it would dtscour·
age consumers from eatmg the
meals at any ume.
Yet during the anniversary cele·
bration, "TV Dmner" wtll appear
on spectal edttton packaging and 45
authentic aluminum trays will be
rolled out for a sweepstakes.
The grand pnze? A big-screen
TV.

TV DINNER ~!STORY - A framed TV dinner cover is shown with the famous aluminum tray and the :
new special edtllon Ia mark the 45th anniversary.

In a dizzying market, America's oldest brands·
court continued prosperity with shoppers

WINNER '- Hoola, the drug free hippo, of Health Racave,Y Services, Inc. conducted e drug·free coloring contest for fifth graders
at Ealtern Elementary. Entrlas were judged by Meigs High School
Teen lnstltut.e members. Winner was Mark Guess who was presented with a Dare t·ahlrt and a color my work drug free pen. Hera the
winner poses with Hoopla and Julie Wandling, program specialist of
Health Recovery Services.

Is your stress stressing your kids?

By TED ANTHONY
AP National Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Just
off the food court at Mall St
Matthews, a shmy consumer palace
m Louisvtlle's eastern suburbs, teens
roam the roomy noor of a popular
store and ponder pamstaking fashton
choices: Tank tops or baggy plaid?
Jeans or cargo pants?
Not a bad demographtc - espe·
cially for a 109-year·old company.
Abercrombte &amp; Fitch , which a
decade ago was fading faster than
the market for the arcane mtscellany
it sold, rem vented itself. In abandon·
mg shotguns and tea sets tor stylish
clothes, the firm that once outfttled
Hemmgway found unprecedented
nationwtde prosperity and became a
Wall Street darling.
'
"The merchandtse we used to
carry was a confusing co mbination," says Lonme Fogel, the company's director of investor relations
" People knew our name, but they
weren 't sure what Abercrombie was
and what it wasn't So it was resurrected "

Facmg a late- 1990s marketplace
of dizzying intncacy and a ftckle
natton of consumers ravenous for
the new and different, the•companies
behind some of America's oldest,
mosi famthar brand names are confrontin g a harsh reality· TraditiOn
tsn't always enough.
Famthanty tsn't the problem
These arc names long omntprese nt
on supermarket shelves, on clothmg
racks and tn adverusements names famthar to generattons, the
bedrocks of retail America: Camp·
bell's. Budweiser Kodak. Ftg New·
tons. IBM. Ford. Coca-Cola L.L
Bean . Ivory
A well-known name alone does·

llyREDBOOK
A Hearst Magazine
For The Associated Press
, Children pick up signals you may not krow you're sending, and the prtce
they pay can be htgh. In the March tssue of Redbook magazme, Tamara Eber·
lein o.ffers some ways to give them - and you - a break.
. If n seems your kids act up or melt down just when you need them to be
gt?od, there's a reason. "Stress ts contagious, " says Dr. Bett1e B. Youngs. "A
kjd can catch it from hi s parents, even when the sour£e of anxtety- Dad 's
JOb hunt or M om's feud with a fnend - doesn't directly mvolve the chtld."
: Youngs ts a famtly counselor in Del Mar, Cahf., and author of "Stress and n' l ensure eternal success.
Consider the 146-year-old Levt
Your Child. Helping Kids Cope with the Strains and Pressures of Ltfe."
Scientific evidence shows that, over time, too much stress i'ffects children's Strauss Co., whtch last month
learning and.memory, a~d that constant anxtety can alter growth hormone lev- announced a new slate of 5,900.lay·
els Whtle tl s unreahsuc to thtnk we can eliminate stress from our hves, we offs with a vow to retool its marketcan shteld our kids from tis worst effects.
. Look for patterns when your kid tenses up. "A chtld 's sense of security
spnngs from her behef that parents are m control," Youngs says. "When your
hfe feels out of control, her antennae can ptck that up, and she can feel overwhelmed."
Under stress, we're often meaner Sometimes, says Kathleen Fnsbee, a By RICHARD N. OSTLING
computer spectahsl in Reston, Va., " I feel too rush(,d to answer my kids' ques- AP Religion Writer
What better gtft for Easter or
tions or let them make up thetr own minds Instead , I start treatmg them hke
Passover
than a Bible, the mosi fasct·
prOJects to be effictently managed."
nattng
and
mnuenttaJ book ever Wnt·
None of us ts a saml, and an occasional harsh word, unreasonable demand
or skipped playume is no big deal. But when your stress ts chrome, your chil- len?
Fine, but whtch Bible? The cus·
dren may feCI they're JUSt one more task on your "to-do" list Some kids even
lomer
's head spms whtle rovmg
get sick.
bookstore
rusles and scanning all the
"The younger the child, the more upsettmg it is," Youngs says "Rememscnptural
opttons.
ber, you're her whole world."
Since Consumer Reports ts
Often, tt's the ltttle thmg s that dri ve you nuts. You'll help your children
unhkely to rate Btbles, here's a "Teswhen you take steps to ease up yourself A few mommy-tested tactic s·
- Somewhere m your day, find an untapped opportunlly lor calm ttmc for taments" column buyer's guide,
First, choose from among the var·
yourself.
tous
Enghsh translattons.
· - Transfom1 your mommg madness into bhssful ttme alone. No, you
For Jews, that's simple. The only
dqn't have to get up earher; let the kids sleep later. Shower and dress without
choice is Tanakh: The Holy Scnp·
referee ing list tights, and they still make the school bus on ttme.
- Lower your standards. "I don' t worry tfthe kids wear wnnkled clothes, lures, from Jewish Pubhcatton Soctskip an occastOnal bath , or eat macaroni three nights in a row ,"says Kann ety - at least witt! Everett Fox com·
pletes hts marve lous buttdtosyncratS~tel , a 'f\1 producer from Katonah, N Y "Cuttmg these comers doesn 't hun
tc translauon for Schoeken Books
my fami ly the way stress-mduced screamtng can "
For Cathohcs, things are some: - Leave work at work Even if you have a home office, you need to set
what Sllnple. The U.S chun:h's one
boundanes
oflicial translauon, th e New Ameri·
- Learn to stop tak mg on more than you can reasonably handle
, You 'll never get rtd of all the crazy-making stuff. but that's where these ttps can Btble (NAB) , ts the natUtal
chmce as the verston famthar from
for insulatt ng yo ur ktds come 111
- Embrace routme "At work there's a plan for every slluauon, whereas readmgs lor Mass and children's c.tl·
wi th the ktds I was ne ver sure what mtght happen next, ' says Lon Klaus of edu sm
However, some Catho ltcs thtnk
Rtdgetield, Conn "So I cstabltshed roullncs. After sehoul, 11 's snack, chat,
homework, dtnner, dtshcs, bath, bcdttme. Kid s cooperate when \hey know the NAB reads hke a TV newscast
and preler the New Jerusa lem Btble
what's expected of them, I' m calmer and they are, too."
(Doubleday,
1985), a very Bnush
, Focus fully (if bne lly) on your chtld "If I devote half my attention to my
rcndiuon
daughter and hall to work, she feels cheated," says Jenmfer Berger, a doctor·
Speakmg of Protestants, they have
a! studen t m Cambndge, Mass. "But tf I get on the lloorto play, we both relax .
a
dcnominatton
for every taste and
Wnhm 20 mmutes, she's ready to amuse herself"
that
also
goes
for
thetr Btbles. There
Let them vent "Express mg feehngs helps clu ldren gatn a sense of con·
trol," says Dr., PaulE Jose, an assoctate ptufessor of psychology at Loyola arc vanous snnplified Scnptures for
Untverstty 10 Chtcago To get kids to open up, choose a pnvate settmg away those who lind tl diflicult to read any thmg 111 Enghsh, or anythtng as con·
from stbltngs..

tng to better suit what a company
offtcial called today' s "last-food
consumer" Or, more drastically,
Jpana, the ubiqutlous 1950s tooth·
paste ("Brusha, brusha, b~usha")
that is vtnually forgotten today.
"Amencan history ts full of sto·
ries of compames that could not
adjust to changmg markets," says
Robert Sobel, a professor emeritus
of business history at Hofstra Unt·
verstty m Hempstead, N.Y
This ts hardly a secret. Venerable
companies of all stripes have spent
recent years devismg new marketing
tacttcs that blend consumer-comforting tradition wtlh the progressiveness that's crucial to continued

wtlh the popular Tabasco pepper
sauce, which has al so "co-branded"
with Hemz Ketchup and A· I Steak
Sauce.
Tabasco's contmu~d success m
the pepper-sauce market, in fact ,
exemphfics the balance between
lookmg back and lookmg forward.
Its advertising is careful to sound
traditional themes (CIVIl War-era
family
business, down-home
Louistana tsland, pepper mash aged
m white·oak barrels), but tl also
markets itself as cuttmg-edge and
trendy (Tabasco neckltes, CaJun
cooking festivals, a Super Bowl ad
featunng a mosqullo that explodes
after sucking the blood of a Tabasco
success
lov er).
" We ' re constantly being bomWhat's more, a popular dnnk on
barded with the new So sl.IPdenly college campuses, the Praine Ftre,
something that's been around for combmes a shot of tequila with a
I00 years ts a point of security," splash of Tabasco. A trendter vanasays Jared Miller, co-author of lton blends Tabasco wtth cinnamon
"What Logos Do and How•They Do sc hnapps - somethmg co mpany
It. " "As tlte world changes around prestdent Paul C.P. Mcilhenny
us .. those really become our famtly, learned wtth some bemusement in a
our secunty, our tdentity. But there 's rural Loutstana oyster bar last
a remterpretation by every era."
month He dtdn 't hke dnnkmg it. but
So Kellogg Co.'s ftrst new Frost· he apprectated what it meant - that
ed Flakes ad campatgn m 14 years IS youn g people co nSider Tabasco
a set of wink-nudge, documentary cool
style commerctals - but the star ts
"Thet e are all sorts of balanctn g
sttll Tony the Ttge r So General acts needed tn markettng," MeII hen·
Motors Corp. trie s a new bunch of ny says " Do you go after the Avery
Chevy ads, but behtnd them ts a Island story - 'aged tn whtle oak
ttme· tested slogan· "See the USA tn barrels?' Or do you go fo r the
your Chevrolet.'' And so L.L. Bean explodmg mosquito because heal ts
Jazzes up lls catalog, goes online and in ? You have to do both "
tntroduces a new women's clothtng
lt comes down to the most baste
line - whtle carefully matntatnm g busmess prncuce of all· Know your
tls brand's New England image
"You take the classtc appeal, and
you take tl to another generauon.''
says Rich Donaldson, spokesman
for the 87-year-old company.
Another approach is "co-brand·
mg," which combmes the power of
two brand names to enhven a product. Doritos has marketed a Taco
Bell-navored nacho chtp. And Sltm
Jirlt offers a meat snack navorcd

market Robert McMath, a market·
mg guru and consultant who runs
the New Products Showcase and
Learning Center tn Ithaca, N.Y. says
many brands make missteps
nonetheless.
"Alka-Selll,er, for a while, went.
out of the RIOp·plop fizz. fizz busi· .
pess and tned to out·Advil Advil. In
the end, they completely confused
who they are," he says. And Kodak
" let FUJI run away with the image
market "
"But look at Campbell's soup," ,
McMath says. "They're constantly'
re- inventing themselves. They ' re
d01ng research, they're coming up
wtth new slogans." One recent ad
features a workmg mother choosing
Campbell 's soup over freezer din·:
ners for her child, combmmg the.
comfort-food tradtltoh wtth the !at-'
ter-day concern of hurried meals. ·
Thus do brands avotd being:
cast mlo the dustbm of product hts.'
lory. by maintainmg that intncate'
balance between yesterday and·
today, between tradiuon and trend,
betwee n playm g it safe and gomg,
outstde the box.
·
"The danger is when tho
pres tdent (of a company) says, 'My:
father came up wtth that product and·
1t's a monumenr to hi s memory and:
we ' re not going to get nd ot tl as
lon g as I' m here.' And of course he's
not there four years later," says
Sobel, the business htstonan " J(
'
you ' te \"edded to the past, you're'
gomg to fai l "
'

TESTAMENTS: A guide to gift
Bibles for Easter and Passover ·

Dr. Kelly Roush, Chiropractor and
Sports Injury Physician at Holzer Clinic,
is offering a 6 week wellness class to help you
get rid of those winter blues and get in shape
for some summer fun.

STIVERS VILLE - Easter pup·
pet show wtll be presented Thursday
at 7 30 p m at the Suversvtlle Communtty Church

lt nd a
old Bt ll Burrows set adnft a message tn a bottle Wtlltam Bu rrows 1n Worce s ter , the search was
nJore than 45 years ago o n Cape Cod Bay. he ho pe d "' tended to wes tetn Mas sac husetts . A Wt lltam BUt ·
it• would noat to Europe Or ma ybe Chtna
rows was found m Longmeadow.
Hi s wife an swered th e phone a nd wa s a skeptica l
: In stead, tl apparently traveled tn ttme , not space .
t'he bottle was found Satu rda y by Chrtsttan and unttl her hu sband latd het doubts to re st " I vague ·
~ach e ! Herd er nca r Sandy Ne c k's ttp not far ly remember do1n g tt ," Burrows said Tu e sda y
rrom where ll was launched .
When the note was read ba ck to ht m, he lit ughcd.
The dated note tns tde the gree n screw-top bottle " I wasn ' t very creative in those dan." he satd
Chtef Range r Anth ony Tr01an o ft gurc s th e bottle
satd. "Wtll the person who fmd s th ts let me kn ow ·
where and when tl was ptcked up ? My name ts may have been buned tn a dune all tlu s tnn c unttl
Willtam Burrows , 212 Lincoln Street, Worcester, ht gh !Ides all owed tl to fl oa t to shore

•

'

Summer is coming!

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Town
meetmg, Thursday, 7 p.m at the
Tuppers Plams School.

fVIessage in the bottle doesn't travel far from launch site
.' BARNSTABLE . Mass (APJ - When 12-yearWhen a compu ter database cou ld n ' t

.

frozen foods division.
Indeed, Swanson's menus have
changed hule over the decades. The
company sttll features main courses
hke fned chicken, Salisbury steak
and roast turkey
A browme or cobbler desert still
comes in its individual compartment
and the turkey - COll)plemented by
potatoes, corn and green beans sltll has a gooey cranberry concoc·
tion at its side
"It's part of Amen can culture,"
Kessler said at the company's headquarters just oulstde Philadelphta.
· "We 're proud of who we are."
TV dinners- the label has stuck
long after company offtctals
dropped the term - have become an

:1

noo n, non-smokmg

PORTLAND - Lebanon Town·
shtp Trustees. 7 p m Wednesday at
townshtp butlding. ·

,

•

CHERRY HILL, N.J. (AP) ~CJmce, ~ouch potatoes - the orig.
mal TV dmner ts in reruns
The Swanson TV dinner, the
archetypal home meal of conve·
nience born during the Eisenhower
~dmintstration, is gettmg a market·
tng . overhaul as part of the 45th
anmversary for C.A. Swanson and
Sons. ·
The company plans to unv.eil 10
new ~roducts this year and spend
$10 mtlhon on adverttsmg. It is even
te~porartly bnngmg back the aJu.
mmum tray, which it long ago
re~laced with microwaveable packagmg, and wtll again use the words
"TV dinner " on its frozen meals.
Swanson parent Vlastc Foods
InternatiOnal ts try ing to regam
some of the market share tt began
losing tn the '70s when Nestle took
over the No. I spot in the $4 btl !ton
frozen foods industry
Swanson ranks fourth behmd
Nestle , which makes the Stouffer's
and Lean CUisine brands. Amencans
did buy more than 160 milhon
Swanson dinners last year, but that
was down from a peak of about 175
mdhon m 1994.
"It's been a neglected brand for a
number of years," satd Murray
Kessler, prestdent of the Swanson

1

Swanson turns to TV dinner to boost.sales

'

meetmg ,
Sacred Heart Cathohc Church ,
ANTIQUITY -

'

nomtnees for the annual S.A.R. DAR or the SAR with the date and
awards for flag ·display, herioism, place to be ann ounced latet.
Next meetmg has been set for
good ctltZenshtp, ftre safety and law
·
Apnl
22 at the Metgs Mu seum. Dinenforcement The chapter will vote
can be made at 992~
ner
reservations
on these m Aprtl.
Myron Jones, veterans' offtcer, 3810. The chapter wtll no Ionge
J
reported on the computer web snes mail out reservation cards.
for WWII, tbe Korean Conntct, asnd
••
the Vietnam Connict As Revolu•'
Girl Scout skating party
tionary War graves chatrman, he
,
also reported that the grave of Jor·
The Big Bend Servtce Untl of tk~
dan Manring has been marked at
Centervtlle and needs to be dedicat· Gtrl s Scouts held tts annual skatitl~
party on March 28 at Skale·A·W~j
ed later this spnng
;
Mtchael Worley of New Marsh· Roller Rtnk, Chester
The
event
was
attended
by
regi.'s!
field reported 9n the recently acti·
vated Ewmgs Chapter web site. It tere d adults and Gtrl Scouts Jw.
wtll be updated by the next meeting, Metgs County. Troops atte nding
were· Pomeroy Senior Troop Jlgijj
he said.
Southern
Cadette Troop lll5l .
The chapter voted to request
Meigs County Senior Troop 126;1 ~
Meig~ High School to move its
prom next year to another weekend . Mtddlepon Brownte Troop I016;
The prom has prevented studnets Rutland Cadette Troop I051; Rtit;
from entenng the annual speech land Junior Troop 1196; Sahsbul}:
contest because of a connict tn Brownie Troop 1220, SalisbuJY'
dates. Lochary stgned an autho· Daisy Troop 1259; Syracuse Brow~
ri zation to form a local chapter of te Troop 1120; Eastern Browr\i~ .
the Chtdlren of the American Revo- Troop 1316, Chester Daisy TroOp'
13 34.
•
lution.
The service unit holds thts ev~'
Appltcations for membershtp are
now bemg accepted. Any chtld from each year as part of the celebratiO"
btrth to age 21 may join tf they have of Gtrl Scouung tn the Umtea:
a blood-related ancestor whoi served States Girl Scouts began tn JhCI
Untted States' on Man:h 1.2,. 19 ~
m the Amencan Revoution as a soldt er or as an asststmg patrtot Ketth Girls interested m JOintng Gl~'
Ashley may be contacted for further Scouts or adults wt shing to vohini
teer should contact Dentse Holman
information or applicattons.
at
992-3895 or Brenda Neutzling ai
Another genealogy workshop is
'
betng planned for Athens tht s sprtng 992-6679.
for anyone wishmg to JOtn etther the

WEDNESDAY

qoups, and crafts

Mass ."

Unt ted Methodtsl women to Vtrgtn ta
Scott, P. 0 B ox 95 , Barlow, Oho
45712 by Apn l 5

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

A reheating

Wednesday, March 31,1999

- ··'-·
r.

Wednesday, March 31, 1999

'

·'

tent-nch as the Bible, or anythmg at
all.
·
But readers without those handt ·
caps have four all-purpose opttons
- King James Verston (KJV )
Btttat n's literary gold standard from
1611 ts beloved by Anglophiles, aesthetes, Southerners and conservatives. It sucks close to the ongmal
writings, too, but there are problems·
Some 300 English words have
changed meantng over the centuries,
and Elizabethan prose is a bll of a
stretch.
" New" Kmg James verswns wmc
around those drawbacks but don't
solve one baste llaw The KJV drew
upon a very limited body of anctent
manuscnpts. Any lranslatton from
the past half-century, smce the dts·
covery of the Dead Sea Scroll s, wtll
be consrderably closer to the ongtnal
- Revtsed Standard Verswn
(RSV). Thts US. translatton from
IY52, updated tn 197 1, ts tdeal tf
words such as "thee" and "thou" are
no problem and you want all the
advantages of the Ktng James whtlc
avoiding the problems (Conservatt ve
Evangeltcals who beheve the Btblc is
error-free plan to tinker wnh the RSV
and produce the "Enghsh Standatd
Vcrs1on ." )

- New

Imcrnauonal

Vers 1on

(NIV). Issued tn 1978, tt cunently
nvals the KJV m US sales because u
was produced by and for Evangelt cals. who tlommatc among Btblchuycrs

men's

Colognes &amp; Gift Sets

20°/o OFF
Cologne C. After Shaues

29'/o OFF
Open Easter Sunday 10 AM-1 PM
Prices Good Through Sunday

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
Kenneth McCUllough, A. Ph . Charlea Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, A. Ph.

Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. toe p.m. Sat. -....m.·8 p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
E. Main

PRESCRIPTION
PH. 1182·2lltili
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, OH
Open Week Nlghta '1111 8

::-----:-....J

�•'

'.

'Page 12 • The Daily Sentln~

Wednesday, March

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

31, 1999

W!~'dnesday,

March

31 , 1999

The Daily Sentinel• P~ge

WASHINGTON TODAY: Difficulties of ·n egotiating with tyrants

•

'

; eyTOM RAUM
A. .oclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - It seemed a famil iar pat\tm: the United States conducting ·airstril,es against the
country of an authoritarian ruler who ignored repeated
threats and reneged on earlier promises.
•
Didn 't that j ust happen a few months ago with U.S.
- and British airstrikes agai nst Iraq?
Tile United States )llants Yugos lav President Slobo- d~n M ilosevic to agree to stop his offensive against
Albanian-speaking citizens of the Serbian pro vince of
Kosovo and sign a peace agreement - just as it wants
Saddam Hussem to keep his post-Gulf War commitments to allow inlemational inspec1ions of weapons
sites.
In a similar example of possible broken promises, the
Clinto n administration and members of Congress are
alarmed that communist-ron North Korea might be continuing to develop nuclear weapons - in violation of a
1994 agreement .
How can the United States get its adversaries to hve
up 10 pledges e.tracted largely by the threat of force?
Not easily, when the adversari es are iron-fisted lead. ers such as Milosevic and Saddam, suggested Janusz

Bugajski , dtrector of East European studies for the Ce nter for Strateg ic and International Studtes.
"If somebody has arbitrary power m the coun try,
then they act arbitrarily. Whether they sign ag reements
or not, they can' t be trusted," he said.
" Thai's why force is needed," Bu gajs~ 1 added.
" Signin g a paper is meaningless with Milosev ic. We
should have dealt wtlh him m a Similar way eight years
ago."
Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, se ni or Democrat on
the Senate Foreign Rc latt ons Committee, said "we have
a di fferent calcul us now" and that's why the admimstratwn fi nds tlse lf dealing more often with leaders it considers to be thugs .
The world of superpowers was made up of " fairl y
cautious actors,': Biden suggested . " We are dealing now
with a group of tm-armed diclators- malevolent , dangerous dictators."
"These guys don' t operate under the same rational
basis that we do. They are cunning. They are smart. But
they have fewer cards to pl ay. and their cards arc less
obvtous," Biden said .
The quality of thug· dom rna be intens ified by the
'ticians in describing
rhetoric used by presidents and

_
Pentagon s·crambles
By JOHN DIAMOND
Asl!oclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A decade ago, defense analysts were telling Pentagon proc~rement planners to buy
co nvention ally armed crUise missiles. Presidents, they
said. would want a weapon that could inflict damage on a
spec ific target wtthoul risking a U.S. pilot over hostile territory.
Today the predtclion of these analysts has come true.
But because of inertta in developing cruise mi ssiles as a
conventional weapon, and problems in developing
replacement deSigns, the Pentagon is worried its s uppl y is
running low. With nearly 400 Air Force and Navy crui se
~ miss il es used against Iraq in December and scores more
.fired against Yugoslavia over the past week, the Pentagon
j s now scrambling to avoid a shortage.
· Before the latest NATO strikes over Kosovo and Serbia, the Air Force was down to 150 cruise missiles carrying co nventional warheads. At least 30 have been
launched since then. The Navy has more than 2,000 but is
using them up at a fast rate . No cruise missile production
line is in operatwn .
' The dwindling of cruise missiles is "something we do
-worry about," Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said
Tuesday. " We have a supply now but it won't last forev- er. But we certainly have enough to continue striking
important targets."
Air power analysts have been warning Pentagon planners for at least a decade to buy more conyentional cruise
missiles for use in limited conflicts in whtch presidents
would want to project power without risking losing a
ptlot, said David Ochmanek, a Rand Corp. analyst.
"The good news is , as analysts, we've been vindicated
on our position," Ochmanek said. "The bad news is we
. didn't convince anybody."
In the 1991 Persian Gulf War, perceptions changed as
stnke planners realized that cruise missile could be used

adversaries as evil - to help rally public support for
confrontation.
" What if someone had listeneo to Winston Churchill
and stood up to Ado lf Hitler earher? How many people's
li ves might have been saved?" Clinton said last week of
NATO's dec ision to confront Milosevic militarily.
George Bush made the same Hitler comparison in
talking abo ut Saddam in 1990-9 1.
Cuba's Fidel Castro has long been demo nized by
A merican political leaders, as has Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi .
Mickey Edwards, a former Republican congressman
from Okl ahoma who now teaches at Harvard, said it is
problematic knowing that a totalitarian leader may be
agreeing to something only bec ause of the threat of force
- and then to see him repeatedly break his promise.
" It 's a little like the 'Peanuts' comJC strip, where the
football always gets yanked out."
But sometim es, there really ts no alternative. " You
always have to keep trying in any case until it 's clear it
won'i work . We try to do everythin g we can to av01d
havi ng a military solution ," satd Edwards, who was the
sen ior Republican on the House Appropriation s subcommittee on foreign operali ons.

As to demonizing enemies, " I think everyone needs
to demonize our enemies. When you' re dropping bombs
on people, it's easier if you think they're prelly awful
people," he said.
When dictators break their word. it's tmportant to not
de lay the inevitabl e, suggested Secretary of Stale
Madeleine Albright.
" Here we arc in 1999 at the end of what historians
agree has been the bl oodiest century in the history of the
world . And we know how the blood was created and
why it happened.
" It happened bec ause there were evil dictators or
aggressive leaders in countries wllo felt that their own
space was not big enough and that they had to expand
it," she said in de fending the use of force against Milosevic.
But Sen . Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, said he's troubled
by a process in which pledges are extracted from foreign
leaders by military force - or with a promi se to stop
using force - as in dealing with Mil osevic.
·
"That is using our armed.forces as a process of nego·
tiating, not for the purpose· for which we maintain o~r
military to defend our national interests abroad ,"
Stevens said.

avert cruise missile shortage

·against heavily defended targets without nsking personnel directly.
A s ingle Air Force B-52, fl y in g out&lt; ide enemy tern tory - as far as I ,500 miles from Its target - can launch
eight conventional atr-launched crut sc nusst lcs (CA LCMs) from its bomb bay and a doze n more from pods
under each wing. Each mi ss ile carries a 3,000-pound conventional warhead. Navy ships and suhmarines as far as
1,350 ·miles from a land targe t can launch Tomahawks
'carrying a I ,000-pound conventi onal warhead.
Bul cruise missiles, which arc satellite gt11ded, arc also
expensive: The Tomahawks cost more than $1 million
each. CALCMs, in current -year dollars, cost $1.9 ·m illion .
The Air Force announced Tuesday that the Office of
Management and Budget was permitting tl to convert 92
,,,,·s".' t.les ,· nto CALCM ". Tile $51
nuclear -l,·pped "rut'sc
~
·'
'
million program will reqUire congressiOnal approval. The
last such nuclear-to-conventional con versions rolled off
the line in 1993 and the last lime a new air-launched
. .
d .
d
" Th
.
cruiSe mtsst 1e was e1tvere was 198v .
e pnme cQntractor w&amp;s Boeing Co.
The Navy; meanwhile, is seeking a $11 3 milhon emergency appropriation to convert 324 Tomahawks to the Iatest model with upgraded guidance and a conventional
blast warhead . Raytheon Co. closed its Tucson, Ariz., production ·line in January after deli vering the last of the new
Tomahawks 10 the Navy.
"We continue to manage the inventory very closely
and we will meet all of our operation al requirements,"
Navy Lt. Meghan Mariman satd .
The Pentagon was developing a successor to the conventional air-launched cru.tse mi ssile - the Tri-Service
Standoff Attack Mt' sst'le - but canceled ,-,,n December
1994 due to 1pirahng costs. Now it is rushing another airlaunched cruise mi ssile, the Joi nt Air-to-Surface Stand off
Missile, for $3 billion, toward production by 2002.
Prior to the probl ems that ki lled the TSSAM program.

defe nse analysts said !he Atr Force was slow to recognize
that a weapon designed to deliver nuc lear warheads had
great pot~ nti al for con ventional warfare.
The service's ptlot culture also made ii difficult to
embrace whatts essentially a pil otless jet plane.
The Navy was less resistant to the concept. Navy interest 111 cru iSe miSsiles was .sparked by Egypt's use of a
Sov iet-tn ade Styx cruise missile to sink the Israeli
destroyer Elath during the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, accord-

ing to a Navy paper on the subject.
The Na vy developed a production assembly line for
conventional Tomahawks, whereas the Air Force limited
itself to convertin g nuclear-tipped weapons into conventiona! cruise mtssilcs.
During the 42-day air war over Iraq in the 199 1 Persian
Gulf War, the Navy fired 288 Tomahawks. Last December, in only four days of air strikes on Iraq, !he Navy
J~unc hed more than 300 Tomahawks.

r-==========-r:=:::::=::=====:-r==:::=:;::::=:::=::===-r-==::=::7.=7.=:::::====
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF RECEIPT OF
401 APP~ICATION ·
Public notice Ia hereby
given that the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) Dlvlalon
ol Surface Water (DSW) haa
received on application tor,
and haa begun to conalder
whether to laaue or deny, a
Clean Water Act Section
401 earllllcatlon lor a P,..,.
)act to etablllze the right
daacandlng bank ol the
Ohio River along State
Route 338 at mila 2.04 and
Ohio River Mile 239. The
application wao aubmltt6d
by the Ohio Department ol
Tranaportatlon, P.O. Box
899, Columbus, Ohio 432160899. The pro)oct Ia tocatld
near the southern llmlto ol
Antiquity, Letart Townahlp,
Melgt County. Thll pro)act
Ia authorized by the
Huntington Dlatrlct Corpa
ol
Engineer•
under
Nationwide Porm.lt 13 pend-

Public Notice
tng water quality certlllcalion form Ohio EPA.
The dlochlrgea !rom the
activity, II approwd, would
r•ult In degradation to, or
lowering ol,tho water quailty of the Ohio River. The
review ol the application
will be conductld, and a
declalon whoither to grant
or deny the application will
be made, In accordance
with Chaptera 3745·1-o5, an
antldegradotlon review ol
the application wtlt be eondueled before deciding
whether to allow a lowering
ol the water quellty. Other
alternatlvea resulting In
leaaer or no degredetlon, or
lowering ol water quality,
wtlt be considered by Ohio
EPI\ during the . review
proceaa.
No axclualona or waivaro,
aa outlined by Paragraph
3745-1·05 (D) ol the
Antldegradatlon
Rule
(effective •• ol May 1,
1998), apply or may be
granted by the Director ol

Ohio EPA.
Starting April 5, 1999,
copleo ol tho appllcotlona
lor the certlllcotlon and
technical support lnlormatlon may be lntlpecled at
Ohio EPA/DSW, Lazarua
Government Canter, 122.
South
Front
Street,
Columbua, Qhlo, by nrat
calling (814) 844-2001 .
Appllcatldna can be made
available at Ohio EPA
District Olllcea by catltng
the aome number.
Peroona wlahlng to 1) be
on Ohio EPA's lntertatad
partlee mailing llat lor thla
pro)oct, 2) raquaet a public
hearing, or 3) aubmlt written com menlo lor Ohio
EPA'a conalderatlon In
reviewing the application
should do eo In writing to
Ohio EPA/DSW, AHantlon:
Permits Proea111ng Unit,
P.O. Box 1049, Columbuo,
Ohio 43216-1049 within 30
days oltha dlita olthla publie notice.
(3) 311TC

PUBUC NOTICE
The
Olive
Towne hlp
Truoteeo will ....,epl ooolld
bldtlor a 1971 Chevy Dump
Truck,
Serial ·
ICE831P108795.
A
Minimum bid ol $1,000.00 Ia
required, and the Olhll
Townahlp Truateea rellrve .
the right to ra)ecl any or ~II
bldt, or to 1111 to the higheat bidder. Bide muat be
racalvld by April 1, 19t9,
and wtlt be opened and
reviewed at the regu!Jtr
townehlp mtatlng on April
5th, at 7:30 P.M., at the
townahlp garege. To maJ&lt;e
arrangement to view the
vehicle, call740-3711-8149:
Olive Townahlp TruiiHI ;
Martha Dural, Clerk
55498 4th Avenue
.;
Reeclavllle, Oh 45772
17, 24,31 3 TC

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
economy finished 1998 with an
explosion of growth but it wasn't
enough to prevent the decade 's first
dro p in corporate profits.
The gross dome stic product
surged at .a seasonally 'adjusted 6
. percent annual rate during the last
three months of the year, the Commerce Department said today.
That was down onl y sh ghtly
!rom the department 's earlier es ti mate o f 6.1 percent and wa s
enough, wnh earlier quarters' perform ance, to increase the sum .of all
goods and servi ces produced Wtlhin
U.S. borders by a robust 3 9 percent
in 1998.
The department's first estimate
of aft er-tax . corporate profit s
showed a drop at a I percent rate in
the fourth quarter, markin g the third
quarterly decline of the year.
And for all o f 1998, proftt s
slipped 2.2 percent, the first drop
smce 1989, when profits fell 4.8
perce nt in a prec ursor to the 199091 recession.
Profits are being pinche&lt;l by the
combin ation of tncreaSin g labor
costs and the inability of manufacturing firms to ratse pnces · m the
fa ce o f stiff price competition from
imports produced in countries with
devalued currenc tes.
A price index tied to the GDP
rose just I percent m 1998. There
hasn',t been a ra1e that low since·
1959, also I perce nt, and there hasn 't been one lower since 1950.
Wall Street remains undaunted.
_ The Dow Jones average o f industn -- al stoc ks hroke !he I0 ,000 barrier
for the ftrst time on Monday, before

Overseas

eco nomi c

Lost M,. Seagle &amp; Femai(Ger·

man S mipherd, with a c ~er
chain, 1n Ashton Area. (31l')5'76 -

4036

BI_SSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Gar99es
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
No Sunda Calls) ·

Linda's Painting
'lllke the pain out of
painting, and let me
doitforyou
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

740-985-4180
Free Estimates

~ftftf?;tf&amp;ft~ft~ft~ft·
~ J.D. COISTRUftiOI C

~

ft

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
"Speciali•ing In Log Home• "
Commer cial &amp; Reoid ential
2B yra. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

Computer Grephlcs
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services ·
-&lt;:ommen!lal
•Realdentlal
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chea1er, Ohio .

740-985-4422

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• NetD Conttruction

• Renwdeling
• Siding
• :No JoH 'Too'Big or
'lOoSmall

Seplic Sytlem &amp;
U1ilitie•

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Today, Hormone Replacement Therapy (H RT) is a hot topic in media circles and
there is a lot of confusion about its risks and benefits. Every 7 seconds a woman

happens in a post menopausal state, in particular the role of estrogen.

1urmoil

allowed U.S . exports to mcrease
only 1.5 perce nt, the weakest in 15
years, while imports shot up 10.6
percent.
That hurt ex port-dependent
industries, parti cul arly the food
industry, which suffered a sharp
reduction in profits. Other sectors
wi th profit declines tnclude fabri cated metal products, pe troleum
and coa l, communicati ons and
tran sportatwn.

Long-distance services want
.t hird party to resolve complaints
By JEANNINE AVERSA
and handle refunds. The FCC -.lould
Associated Press Writer
. approve all panel members, an AT&amp;T
WAS HINGTON (AP) - Long- offictal satd .
dtstance customers whose telephone
The panel would have 30 days to
.service was illega ll y switc hed would determ ine whether an tllegal· service
be able to take thetr complamts to a change occurred. If so, and a custh trd-pany group, under an industry tomer paid the charges, the offe ndi ng
proposal.
company would have to tetu rn the
AT&amp;T, MCI WorldCom, Spn nt total amount of money to the cusand assoctauons representin g smaller tamer's ori gin al cam er.
long-distance companies on Tuesday
Theyt carrier would the n send half
offe red the proposal , which must be of that amount to the affec ted cusapproved by the Federal Communi - tamer in the form of a credit, the pro·cations Commtssion before it could posal states_ Thnt way, customers
be impl emented.
would not have to be rebilled at thctr
An Ind ustry-funded panel, includ- normal rate and refund the difference.
in g representatives of large and small
If a customer was ill ega ll y
. long-dis tance compantes and con- switched and dtd not pay anyt hing.
sumer groups, woul.d be created to 'they would receive the fi rst 30 days
fie ld complai nts, determine liability of service free .

Est•ogn Deficiency

E1t1ogen hneflb

Post menopausal is an estrogen
deficiency state where estrogens produced from ovaries
become minimal. Some of the
effects of estrogen deficiency
are:
1. Hot Flashes: so% of
menopausal women complain of sudQ.en sensations of
flush ing and extreme
warmth, profuse sweating
and tremors. This actually
begins in the perimenopausal
period when estrogen levels
start falling.
z. Atrophy of Breast and
Genitalia: Loss of "tone" is
common and can lead·to
discomfort.
3· Osteoporosis: Accelerated loss
of bone mineral at menopause
causes thinning of the bone
in io% of women. Many
women don't experience
·symptoms until it results in
fTactures of the back, hip
joints and arms as well as
stooped posture and loss of
height.
4 · Coronal')' Artel')' Disease: Risk
of having myocardia infarctions increases after the age
of 6o. By that age, the
chances of a woman having a
heart attack Is equal - sometimes greater - than men at
the same age.

Estrogen replacement therapy
can help offset ma·n y of the
problems related to estrogen
deficiency.
• It helps relieve hot flashes and
symptoms of discomfort.
• Osteoporosis risk is greatly
reduced. It can help preserve
bone density, even if estrogens
are started after age 6o and
continued.
• There is a so% reduction of
risk from heart problems related to coronary artery disease
and heart attacks in post
menopausal women on ERT.
• H RT decreases the risk of
Alzheimer's Disease and delays
its onset by protection of nerve
cells and by improving the circulation to the brain.
• The risk of colorectal cancer is
decreased.

Estrogen. Women on ERT
should have a pap smear test
annually to make sure.
• Breast Cancer: To some extent,
this risk is being countered by
use of progesterone as part of
the estrogen replacement
therapy. Women on ERT should
have annual mammograms
and be cautious about using it
if they have a family history of
breast cancer.

' 3/11199 TFN

While ERT has many benefits,
women need to know about the
risks associated with its use ...
and how to reduce them.
• Endometrial Can,er: Estrogen
causes growth of endometrial
ti ssue in the uterus which can
lead to cancer. To some extent, ·
this can be countered by using
. Progestins a long w ith

IHplilj Our P;onsl•
with Spedal Care and
Spedal 4=arlng.

~·
Holzer ·Clinic

I

Siding, Soffit, Paint,
Metal, Lamination , Pole
Buildings, Decks , Etc.

Free Eatimale11
~ Carpenter
B. Haning -,

1lj

1740) 698·1713
~~-

GUN SHOOT

Buy, sell ~r'frade
· , In the. :;;,., .~

CLASS)~II~DSI
Happy Ad

Colltp'atulatlons
on your

110

Help Wanted

I'LEXIBILITl;
F~ST E.UININGS,
IJNLIMITED llEW~RD8
take COIIIroJ of )'OUr lime and

your eamlnas!
An t•dtlna,
home-based BeautiControl health
and beauty buslnm en m11ke

your dreams come lrue.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
oQaragea
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

PAR,.S

All Makes Tractor &amp;

1000 St. Rt. 7 Soulh
Coolville, OH 45723

740 887-0388

D&lt;!n't Need A Big
One Call a Little
One
DRIVEWAY STONE
Light Hauling t.~p
to

CHICK DAY

HILL'S

May 13th

SELF STORACE

Place order by
April 7th

29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-949-2217

R &amp; G Supply

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' 1&lt; 30'
Hours
7:00AM·8PM

992-2164

OISM/1 mo.

Easter Buffet

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

*Fri. &amp; Sat. 5-1 0
* Sunday 9-3

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

For reservations call
698-2450 or 800-644-2422

The Carpenter Inn
NW of

Free Estimates

Pomeroy

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

our euy, slep-by·sfep

compenAtlon
plan,
awanl•
winnlaa health and btauty
prod•cb,
comp~hen sln
tndnlna, tala support and m o ~ !

.... llll~ ·~·KElt
140.SII·4111
•

B ton

992-5455

miles

Unlimited Tanning for
month. of April $30.00

HORSES

Shear Illusions
293 S . 2nd

Movmg fYard Sate· 9-6, Th.ursday
&amp; Fnday, 681 Fa irfield Church
Road, No t Responsible For ~ c Cidents.
.·

Thrusday, Friday, Saturday, 9·5
185

Amb l eside

Buy, SeU, Train or Boord

AIIO Riding l.elsons

Middleport

HooiRollow

Lnm.it~mm992-2sso

Panna
740-698-3290

8UUTICONT llOl.

D riv e,

Kerr,

Across From Post Office .

•

Toys, Beanie Babies, Wome ns
Clo thes, Men 's C lothes, Toddle r
Clothes, All Brand Name, Lots Ot
Mise' 8-? 4/1, 4/2, 63 SbtJ th
Fourth, Cheshire.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
234 Lmcoln H1t1, March 30- ApriJ 3 .
Toys, cto thmg , new bike pa·ns;
toots. tons of miSe

3 fam 1ly. Apri l 1-2-3, 1 0am·4~m ,
ra1n cancels, 'c heap ' , across
from th e back of Powell 's SupeF
Value. on MechaniC St.
All Yard Sales Mu st Be PaiJ;I In
Advanc e . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day bef o re the ad Is to rUn ,
Sunday &amp; Mo nday edition ~
1:OOpm Frld 11y.

stools, toasler, !rOn , T- Fal Qeep
fryer, telephone, clothing, shoes,
p1ctures , old small child's roeke r,
toys &amp; dol ts. chrldren &amp; ad ult
ctothmg &amp; lots &amp; tots of what nots

tn boxes

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Fr •day &amp; Sa t urday( Ap rll 3/3),
2616 Lmcoln Avenue. Pl.P t. ,
Bact&lt; Yard C lo l hes/W~t n o t sffurniture &amp; More Aa1n Cancels
·
Garage Sate 6 miles out Je rrys
Run Road /App le Grove Aprt1 I ,

2. 3 9·? (304 j576·2635.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

80

Auction
and Flea Marke~

Aucuon ev ery Thursday, Am
Vets Bui lding. Gallipolis, ·Oh ., all
new 1tems . 6:30pm , call 740-992-

.Don•s
tteating &amp; Cooling

5827

Nee4 a friend ln the business
Call me at (7 40) 7 42-2842

Auction Fnday Night At 6 ~M .
Another Great Load Of Merc hflndlsel lO CRied AI 2 4 1 Th1rd A'-'e·
nue, Gallipolis
Au ctm n· Sa tv rday, Ap ri l 3, 1999 .
Old Amencan Leg1on bui lding,
Middleport lots of new merchan·
dise: Snack bar. 6.00pm. Auc;Jioneer Jim Reedy.

Remember
"Done right the first time"

Bill Moodlspau gh Auct io neeripg .
Complete Auct1o neenng Ser\{IC·
es. Consignment 'au c tion· ·M1II
Street. M1ddtepo1t. Thursdjlys .
Oh1 o License 87693 740 - 989~

"Priced right all the time"

2623

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Top Soil, Fill birt
740-992-3470
"

15

388-1618 .

Garage sale· ram or shine, 5 famIly, Wed . Mar 31 , Thu rs. April J &amp;
Fnday April 2M, fo rm ally Joe's
G1ft Shop 3202 , dishes. pots; -bar

740 742-8888

DEPOYSAG

business ror II lillie I S $39,99!
Recftn

Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

985-4473

Start your own BuutiConlrol

planner ror I UCCtSI, I lucnll\'t

· Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats,.motorcycle.seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

Cheater, Ohio .

Mamaw:
Taylor

Rutland, Ohio

985-4422

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

reUrement
I Love You ,

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Agricultural Lime,
limestone • Gravel ·
Dirt • Sand

Racine Gtn Club
Ntast Hollow Rd.
Ewery Stnday
12:30 pm
Limit 680 siHvt
.737 back bore

949-1701

tho following collateral:
1997
FORO ESCORT
t FA~P13P5VW310551
Tho Farmer• Bank and
Savlnga
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves
the right to bid at this ule,
and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to aale.
Further, The Farmera Bank
and Saving Company
reservaa the right to re(ecl
any or all blda submitted.
Further, tho above collateral
will be aold In the condition
It Ia tn, with no express or
Implied warrantlea given.
For further Information,
contact Sheila at 7-22138 extenelon 122.
(3)31 (4)1, 2,
3TC

The family of
Bruce E. CaldweU
wanl• to thank aU tl1e
friend. atul raeig/tbora
for the food, flower~ ,
prayers and kindneu
al 1he lime of our
lou . For Rev. Paul
Taylor, for the
wonderful Semwra,
the Choir lhat •ang,
1he PaUbearer. and
lhe Fioher Funeral
Home for their
kindneu .
Joanna, Betty. Everett,
Eu ana, and Ral h

Esb gn Rts'kl

Carpenters Building America

.Jeremy L. Roush

PUBUCNOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, April 3,
1899, at 11 :00 a.m., o public
aate will be held at 500 Eaat
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, to Hit for coah the
following collateral:
1978 MARAUDER TRAVE~
TRAILER 306223
The Farmers Bank and
Saving•
Company,

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Grind Feed

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•Lawnl:are·lulp
~ llalnteunce • Plullng
·Mulching
• RelalnlngW.U a ldcll
PaUo Conllructloa

Public Notice

E RIVER AG
SERVICE

le Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

-Complete Auto Seroice-

Card of Thanks

CarrNotes ts a
service of Holzer Clinic.

for ln11ant

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

PUBUCNOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, April 3,
1999, at 10:00 a.m., a public
oole will be hold at 211 Weal
Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmora Bank
and Savlngt Comp~ny
parking lot, to aelllor cash

The decision to use or not use
Estrogen Replacement Therapy
involves weighing the benefits
and risks individually. Make
sure to talk to your physician
about HRT to discu5s.your needs
and options.

Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progre111ve top line.
Uc. II 00-50 itno""'

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

Wood- Vinyl-Metal

·10:00 a.m. Satu rday.

3/1 5 1 mo.

Pomeroy Esgles

Haning's Home
Improvements

Is to run. Su nday
edition. 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday ed ition

Joe Wilson
(740) 992·4277

I

740·742·2138

Public Notice

ALL Yard S.les Must • •
Be Paid In Advance. ..,
QEAQLINE: 2:00 p.m. .,
the day be fore the •d -'

Call 985·383I

WORRYING!!!

&amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre ·

Yard Sale
Ga llipolis
&amp; VIcinity

199B Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representalive
Larry Schey

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

Limestone

70

Apr il 1st , 2nd, And 3rd , 5170
State Route 650 , Bidwell, 8·5 ,·7&gt;10-

Clllllfted
Lud'~C:IIl"-ll!lellat,

Public Notice

Maldnt 11le Right Dectstcm

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

CREDit

Hauling

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS lfff Pl.US AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP PLUS THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A SAlliNG
Of UP fO $ l00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE. CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
:. DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NO'F AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WILL
END JUNE 21, 1999.

tho right to bid at lhlt ule,
and to withdraw the ,above
collateral prior to sole.
Further, The Farmers Bank
and Saving
Company
reurvea the right to reject
any or ott blda oubmllted.
Further, the abow collateral
will bo aold In the 'condition
' It Ia In, with no expr11a or
lmpltld warrentloa given.
For further Information,
contact Sheila at 74Q-992·
2138 extanelon 122.
(3) 31 (4)1, 2, .
3TC

Replacement Therapy. To better understand HRT, it is very important to know what

WiOiam Safranek;

JUST IN TIME FOR SPRING REPAIRS
AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A SPECIAL ON OUR
CYLINDEI{ PACKAGES

Pomeroy, Ohio, raeervee

in the U.S. is turning so years of age and millions are asking for Hormone

(740) 992•3131 •

Lost Walker Pup, Male, L ast
Seen Vinton Cemetery Bt &amp;ek &amp;
While, Llltle Bit Of Brown, No ~ol ·
Jar, 740-388-8536.
·

"Build Your Dream"

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact :

Seroicet
House &amp; Trailer Sites

FREE Estimates
(7401 992·SS35 or

.'\

_t

''m
zt4n1 •u'•
Bulldo•~r &amp; Backhoe

"Call Today"

Remodeling

M&amp;J

debtor of financial obligation• and arrange a fair
distribution of auetl . Debtor• in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" propeny for hil or her personal
uoe. Thlo may include a car, a house, clotheo, and
bouoehold goodo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Fonner-"Yelvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
. Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

"To give or
·
not to give"

ft

Custom Homes

can relieve a

C~t?;tt?;t~~~~~ti!·r~~

992·2753

LANDSCAPE
DDIDNS

ft

Phone 740~992-3987
.tr..
John Dean; Owner 1 ~ ~ II.!!J

Dave's Garage

settling back to close at9,913 Tues·
day.
Labor costs are increas in g
because the long expansion, which
began its ninlh year m Marc h,
reduced the unemployment rate to a
29-year low last year
Plentiful jobs and surgmg stoc k
pri ces have been the princ ipal fuel
of the growth in consumer spend mg. which represents about twothirds of economic activity.
It rose at a 5 percent seasonally
adjusted annual rate in the fourth
quarter and 4 9 peccent fo r all of
1998, the most in 14 years
In addition to wages, consumers
spent some of thetr stock gain s and
tapped their home equity in a wave
of refinancing last year after mortgage rates fell to three-decade lows.
That has shown up as a btg drop
m the natwn 's savings rate from 2.1
percent in 1997 to just 0 .5 percent
m 1998, !he lowest • ince 1933. In
fact, the rate was zero during the
fourth quarter.
Also conuibuting to economic
growth were bu siness investment in
computers and 01her new equipment, up 16.5 percent last year, and
housing con struction, up I 0.4 percent, the most since 1984.

Lost an~ Foun~

60

POMIROY MACHINI SHOP
250 CONDOR ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
NOiliE-748-992·2406 OR 304-415-1555

Corporate profits' decline
.for first time in nine years

13

Marty~

Power
Washing
Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting
Interior &amp; Exterior
15Vrs. Experlenoe

742-1701
YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Addltlone &amp; Rtrnocltllng

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roonng
• Interior &amp; Exterior
·Painting .
• Also Concrete Work
• Patio decks &amp; guttering
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Now Ope ra For
Sprirag Season
Complete Line Of
Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Flats $6.50
1:-'r1111ifl• Hedtlilw

c~,.,

...,,.

Hangmg Baskets
Bloqmlng &amp; Foliage
$5.75&amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golde n
Buckeye Card
Ope n
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

HUlBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRA CUSE.:
992-5776
3 OTFN

R1ck Pearson Auction Company,
lull t1 me auctwneer. · complete
auc t1o n
s erv1c e
Lice nsed
M66,0hlo &amp; West Vi rgima, 304nJ-5785 Or 304·773·5447.
,

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

Don't Worry About Your Fut ure
Let Our Psychics P'ut You r Mmd
At Ease Call Now! 1-900-7406 500 Ext. 3593, 18 + $3 99 Per
M1n. Se rv-U 6 19-645·8434 http ·/!
www thehotpages2.comlnsfpsych •c 1250291.htm

RIVERS IDE AUCTION BARN
Eve r y Saturday N1gh t 7 P.M ..
'
Crown C1ty, 740·256-6989
Wedemeyer 's Auc tion Se r vice,
Gallipolis, Ohio J'40·379-2720. ,

90

Wanted to Buy '

Ab so lute Top Dollar. All U S.' S1I·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofs.ets.
D1amonds ~n uque Jewa! r~ . Gold
Amg s. Pre- t 930 U.S Currency.
Sterling. Etc ACQIJISI!ions Jew,elry

Beginner Cake DecoraMg Class es. April 6th, Call 740-446 -2 134

For De tailS. D J.' s Crall Snop,
2390 Jackson P1ke. GallipoliS

· M T S. Com Shop , 15 1 Second
Avenue, Galhpolis, 740-446-2842:
Anhque s. top pric es pa1d, River me An11ques, Pomeroy, Ollie ,
Ru ss Mo ore owner, 740-992·

DISPLAY HOMES
NEEDED
For V•nyl S1d1ng And Repl ac emen t Wi ndows . 100% Fmanclng
No Application Refuser! Low Low
Mon thly Payments, Before And
Af ter Pictures Plus Advert1s1ng
Rights
Release Are Required 1-800-536·
5695 24/Hr
Free
Dietary
Supplement
Brochures Write To ADF Distributors, P 0 Box 563 , Chester,

W.VA.26034 .
New To You Thr1N Shoppe

9 West St1mson, Athens
740·592-1842
Quality clothing and household
1tems. $1 .0.0 bag sa te every
Thu rsday. Monclay thru Saturday

2526

Buying Stand1ng TmlbB!, 740-256 6172
Clean La te Model c 'ars ' O r
Tr uc ks, 1990 Mode!s Or Newer.
Sm!lh Sul ek Pont 1ac. 1900 Ea,st ern Avenue . Gallipolis

--'-----

Wan I To Sell Your Stuff? Call Riverside Aucuon And Let Us Sell It
For You. 740-256-6989
·
Want ed To B u~

Used Mob• te
Homes. Call 740·446-0175 , 304 -

675·5965
Wanted. Cars , Trucks An y C&lt;Jn
d•tiOn, 740 38B-9062. 740 -446 -

PART

·

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

9•()().5 •30
Opening Of New Res tuara'11 In
Crown C1ty
Betsy Ross' Eatery
24866 St At 7 South
CroWn C1ty. Ohio

740 -256·6495
Loca ted Wllhm Arnolds Fo od
Mart
MondayThru Saturday
11 00 AM Thru 3:00 PM

Help Wanted ,

$$EARN EXTRA CASH$$
tn oependent Co ntractors Neected
To Delive r The New Ch&amp; mp1on
Pubhshmg Telepho ne DlrectQries
AI Lea s t 18 Years Of Age , ~nd

Gi ve away

Gh•eaway
Ga rd en
{304)675·3030.

110

In The Oh io Valley Area ·Must· Be

EnJOY Country Cooking Ana Fam
tty Hos pl!Bllly By Betsy .Ro ss
Sheets. Owner And Operator
"TASTE WORTH SAVORING! "

40

'

Spot,

Two year old black &amp; while mal&amp;
Husky to country home only 740·

Have Use Of An Insure d Vehicle
Delivery Starts Ma rc h 23.1!fil9 .
Cal l ~ ow To R"'se rve A Route In
Your Are a Mar ket Olstrl butlon

Spec1ahs1s, Inc
CALL 1· 88 9-6 06·8900
FREE

TOLL

$$Dance rs S$ ladies 18 01 ottjer
ca ll 7 40-992·638 7 or 304·675 ·
595 5 aft er 6.30 PM . Wed . thru

Sat. Sou lhfor k St10 wbar. Pt.

992·7614 ,

Pleasonl , WV.

60

AVON I Al l Areas ! Shirley
Spears. 304 675·1429.
'

Lost and Found

Lost · Wh i te German Shepherd /
Husky m1x, black eye, brown eye .
ChilO S pet. Ft8l'l'fOOdS Rd \IICIOIIy,
please call740-992-7077 .

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs S25 K ·S80K fY r. 1-800-

Lost. Around Wai- Mart, Amg
Sentimental Value . Reward ! 740

Drl\lers wanted 10 delivN flOwe rs .
no ove rn igh t, CO L and medka l

476-B653 X 7777. www

1cwp. co~

·4&lt;16 ·4070 ,

card required. 740·247·2664

Lost · female golden Lab , white ,
med1um s1ze, NICholson Htll viCinity, 74Q·742 ·1050

Nt ghl sh11t , 7p m· 9am ful l l i me
health care , 1410·992·5023 for In·
terview.

•
"

'
\

�Wednesday, March 31, 1999

Wednesday, March 31, 1999
'

..(LLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 15..

.

BaJDOJ:

------

uoe • - • " '

...... eo

•

Pomeroy • M£ddleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

------------------------------------------~
mcm.
ACROS8
• Locll

·=-

O n e - - 37 l!xpotrti111M&gt;-I*I
7..._1n

1

lldloo•worda

41 2,100, Romen

13 "'Crocodile-" 44 KlnolmDII0-

180

Certilled dayOare 2 lull lime openIngs on Bailey Run Rd 740-992

DAMNO POSmONS
AVAILABLE

Single Orlver Late Model Ken·
worths Whh Reelers West Coast
Carrlor
ClaSI BOTR
Team Straight Truck Late Model

Frelghtllners With Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements

800 Mile Aadlus Home Deliver

..s
Atleasl 25 Voars 01d
Atteast 2 Vaara Experience
GoodMVR
W..kly Pay
Health Insurance Available
WOr'&lt; Well Wl1h The Pi.C&gt;ilc
For More Information Call 800
437 6784 Hra 6 30 A M ·5 P.M
General Office /Sales Expert
enced Preferred Full Time, lm·
med1a1e Opening Apply Lifestyle
Furniture 856 Third Avenue, Gal
IIPOH• 1o-2 No Pllone cans
INSTRUCTORS /TEACHERS
Needed In GallipOlis For An 8
~aak Summer Youth Training
Program ( June To August} To
Teach Basic Math Reading Pre
Employment Job Sk1ll&amp; And Aval
lion Flight Subjects VIsit Our
Webs !a AI WWW HITEK ORG
Or Call HITek AI I 800 397-6490

It pa~s to lose weigntl 42 people
needed to lose weight nowl All
natural guaranteed doctor rae
ommendod Call 668 717-8478
LPN s and CNA s • Ravenswood
Center (formerly Ravenswood
VIllage) Is now accepting appll
cations for full and part time po
siUons Excellent benefits pack·
age If Interested please apply In
person Monday through Friday
9AM-4PM or write Attention Do
nella Dugan DON 200 South
Ritchie Avenue Ravenswood
WV 26164 Phono(304)273-9385
E 0 E A Genesis ElderCare
Facility
Medical Processor
FTIPT No t)(perience necessary
Will train PC required Earn 40K
Call Boo-663-7440
Medical Processor FT fPT No
Exp Nee Wlll Tra1n PC Req Earn
40K Call~ 7440
Need 7 Ladles To Sell A110n 74D44B-3358
Needed Dedicated AN's With
Strong Supervisory Skills {Shill
Differential Offered) Please Apply
In Parson A.t Scenic Hills Nur11ing
Center 31 t Buck ridge Ad Bid·

-

--- --

E &amp; s Lawn ServiCe Design I~
plementat1on
and Service
Ava ilable for Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free estl·
mates SatlsfactiOJI guaranteed

Klneon Drtve, 3 Bedrooms LMng
Room Kilchen Bath Laundry
Carport With Utlllly Fenced Yard
740-446-2801

Greg Milhoan 3041675-4628

large family home for aale on ten
lovely acres tour bedrooms two
and one half balhs two fireplaces
formal living room and lamlly
room four car garage and two
storage buildings two apar1ments
which are complet1ly futniShld
Please call740-992·2292

Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes Light Fhc
ture, Healing Sy&amp;tems and Re
roooolng 1304)674.0126
EJCcellent Carel Person In m~
home in country/mobile/non
smoker/ $800 month! Nice
(304)882 3800

Both Positions

well OH

3 BR 2BA 2 Car Garage 1 Acfo
A Musl Seo Letarl (304)882
3518

3509 ask fcH' Melissa

ClasaAOTR

-

Experienced Mother &amp; Babysitter
Accepting Inquiries At 740 256
6537 Day Shill Only AI Her
Home
Furniture repair restoration &amp; re·
finishing, custom built reproduc·
tlons Uz &amp; Bannan Roush 740
992 1100 Appalachian Wood
WOr'&lt;li
Georges Portable Sawmill don't
haul vour logs to the mill just call
304-e75-1957
Hfli~&amp; 3 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Hand!
capped, 740-441·1536

Housecleaning Dependable Honest, Good References Years Of
Experience
740 446-7525
Leal/0 A Message

Men And Women Need!d To Do
Telopoone Operalor Wor'&lt; For
LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

Will do babysilllng In my home
West Cotumb1a Area (304)773
9118

' Day And EWirllng
Shills Allailable
' Ful And Pan llme Opening
• No Experience Needed
We Train
• Homemakers Work While
Children Are tn Schoot
• College Studems Welcome
Apply In Person AI
t7 Pine Street
GaiiiPQIIs 0t1
Tues March 30th
Wed March 31st
Thurs Apn11st
3 00 PM lll B00 PM Only
Ask Far Mr Wiseman

Will mow lawns trim an~ odd
jObs hauli\g 74ll 992-4286

Now laking applications for Drlvers at Dominos Pizza \)alllpolls
and Pomeroy Stores Only 740
446-4040
Off1ce posillon ava1labie In local
do ctors olllce Some technical
work required Experi enced and
business education preferred
Send resume c/o The Dally Sentinet P 0 Box 729 61 Pomeroy
OH 45789
OTR Driver Needed f' Year Flat
E)(perlence Class A COL Camp
Pay Bonus Program late Model
Conventional
740 44 1 0607
Days 740 441 0558 A.Her6 PM
Overbrook Center 333 Paga St ,
Middleport has partt1me posi·
lions for LPN s available for all
shifts &amp; weekends anyone Inter
ested please stop by &amp; 1111 out an

appiiCaUon E 0 E
Overbrook Center 333 Page
Street , Middleport has full time
postuons for AN Vent Nunes
available lor all shifts and wee
kends Anyone interested please
stop by and f1ll out an application
EOE
Postal Jobs to $18 35/HR Inc
benetlts No experience For App
and Exam Info Call1800813
3585 Exl 8826 8AM • 9PM 7
Days Ids lr&lt;

_

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1 888-582 3345

6862
Bank Flepo Mobile Homes Single
Wide &amp; Sectlonals Ftnancinc Lit
lie As $500 Down 740-742.0510
Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
365-9821
Single Parent Program 304 7367295

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fa1r Housing Act
of 1966 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ·any preference
liml1allon or dlscnmlnatlon
based on race color religion
58)( familial status or nat1onal
origin or any tntent10n to
make any such prefere nce
limitation or discrlmtnaiiOn •

New 1999 141t70 three bedroom
1ncludes 6 months FREE lol rent
Includes washer &amp; d~er skirting,
delu11e steps and setup Only
$200 74 per monlh wllh $1150
down can 1 aoo 837 3238
Oak Wood Homes Barboursville
wv $999 Down 7 9 Financing
304 736-3409
Three bedroom
740-742·2545

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which IS 1M violatiOn of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advenlsed In lhls newspaper
are 8\lallable on an equal
opponuntty basis

350

STNA s Wa nted Call Laura At
Medl Home Health Private Care
1 800-481 6334
Total Tree Power Line Clearing
Wo rke r Needed Top Climbers
Start Today Call For Interview
740 256 1576
Wlldll1e Jobs/$21 60/Hr Inc
benefits Game Wardens/Securl
ty/Malntenance/Park Rangers
No exp needed For App and
Exam Info Call 1 800·813
3585,Ed 8827 BAM· 9PM, 7
days Ide lr&lt;

140

Business
Training

Clolllpollo C.roer College
{careers Close To Home) Cell
Todayl 74ll-446-4387 1-600214-0452 Reg 19(),05 12748

•

$1500

Lot•

&amp; Acreage

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View
Qallla Counly,
$32 000 More Acreage Available
740.388-8678
5 250 Acre Lot Wllh 50x70 Build
tno Concrete Floor &amp; Lolt
Across From Addavllla School
740-367 7465

RESUMES UNLIIIlTED Oilers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 386
3800
SceniC Hills Nursing Center 311
Budcrldge Rd BldweD OH Is Now
Accepting Applications For
Friendly Outgotno And Depend
able LPN II &amp; STNA 5 Please
Apply In person At The Front
Desk Between 8 30 A M ·4 30
PM

1~x70

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths $199/Mo
1-304· 736·7295

REAL ESTATE

ApprOlclmatefy 3 5 Acre11 In Per~
Township Phone Alter 5 00 740·
448-4609
Approximat&amp;l\1 30 Acres Just 5
Miles From Gallipolis All Woods
With Nice Building Lots Electric
&amp; Water Available Can After • 30
740-448-7585

3 br hvtng room d1n1ng room tg
updated kitchen lull basement
nice lot on Mt Verno n A.ve 304
875 1303

Three Adjoining Lota Southern
Florida Close lo Gull (304)882·
3130

333 Third Avenue Gallipolis 2
References Required Call After 5
PM 740.441-Q432

360

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $280 $300, sewer
water and trash included, 740
992·2167

2 Bedroom Mobtle Home For
Aenl No Pols 74Q.446.0722
2 Bedroom Trailer $250/Mo &amp;
Deposit Call Arter e 740·446·
4318

2 Bedrooms In Porter Area Oe·
posit &amp; References Required No
Pels $2BM.1o 740.3611-9182
2 BR Mobile Home, Sandhill
Fload No Pets, Reference Re
qulred (304)675-3834

Nice &amp; Clean Expando, In The
COuniry. 740-256-8574
Apartments

.

nished and unfurnlahad, security
deposit required no pets 7&lt;&amp;0
992-2218
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco·
nomical Gas Heat Near Holzer,
W/0 Hook-Up Quiet Location
$279/Mo Plus Uillllies 740 448
2957

7806
2 Bedroom Apartment In Cante
nary Appliance&amp; Furnished, Utili
lies Paid EICCepl Electric, Clean $285/MQ. 740-256· 1135
2 Bedroom Aparlmenl AI Galllpo·
ill Ferry wv 304-875-2548
2bdrm apts total electric appliances furniahed, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992
3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Wealwood Drive
!rom $279 lo S358 Wal~ lo shop
&amp; movie&amp; Call 740 4~6 2568
Equal Housing Opporlunlly
Beautiful Modern 1 Sedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Utilities Inter·
vlew References, No Pets, Lease,
Doposll Available, 4115/99 In
City 74ll-44B-3664

Beech 51

Mlddlepor~

2 bedroom
turnlshed apartment ullllllell paid
deposit &amp; references 740·992·
0165
Christy s Family ll~lng apart·
ments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740 992·4514 aparlmanto avail
able furniShed &amp; unfurnished
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Across From Park, AC, No Peta
Relerances Deposit $325/Mo
740-448·11235 740.446-0577

Houses for Rent

2 3 Bedrooms On Chestnut
Siroel $350/Mo Pay Own Ulill
Ilea Leave Message 740 U62515
2 BR House ln Ballemaade
$300 00 a month, plus deposit
No paiS (304)67!5o1477

229 Burk hart Lane 2 Bedrooms,
W/0 Hook Up $340/Mo Deposll
Cii!Toll Free 668 840-0521

Appllanc..
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Rtfr~
gratora 90 Day Guarantee!
Franch Clly Maylag, 740·448·
7795
For Sale Reconditioned wbh·
ers, dryen and relrlgeratora
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Alllf!UO, (304)875o7388
GOOD US!D APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78
Vine &amp;lrtOI Call 740·446·7398,
Home lntenor &amp; Other Household
Mlscallarl'IOUI Call After 3PM
1304)874-0087
New And Used Furnllurt Store
Below Holiday Inn Kanague SlOp
And See Us 740-446-4782

530

Antlqusa

Antique bath tub with claw
$250 call740-992 3041

felt

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
1124 E Main Slrael on Rl 124,
Pomero~ HOuu M TW 10 00
am 1o800pm,Sunday1001o
B 00 p m 740·992·2526 Ru11
Moore owner

540

Mlscellansous
Merchandlae

12 Vinyl Replacement Windows
Double Hung DoUble Pane Tilt
While $850 740-441.()853
12 Church Pews 10 Ft Long
$350, 740 448 8306
ta• DlracTV Beiallltt &amp;~atamo
$69 00 purchase price with thll!la
month free programming llmtled
limo ollor, ca~ 1·800-779-8194
2 Camping spot11 On Bristol Mo·
tor Speedway Grounds For Nat
car Race Ap&lt;ll111h, &amp; 121h Good
Wednesday 71h Till Monda~ 121h
cen740-448-1111

Newly Remodeled 1 BA Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis Location No Pets $300 + Ulilllles
Reference Required 740 446

3 Place Sactton With Bed Brown
Recliner Chair, $250 All 740·398·
8621
AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breaklhroughlll Lose 10·200
Pounds Easy Quick
Fasl
Dramatic Results 100% Natura!
Doctor f1ecommended Free Sam·
pies Caii740-44H982
Baby Bad Htgh Chair Car Seat
Slroller And Walker 304·675·
4548
Colt Anaconda 44 Remlng,on
Mag 4 Inch BLSS w/ Holsler
(304)882-3893
DIRECT TV Installed With 3
Months FrH Programming At An
Unbetie'labte Price! 1 677·223·
2688
For sale· Furbys &amp; Furby
Beanies call 740·742·2511 or t·
800·837·8217 Umllsd quanllilee
Grubb a Piano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740-446-4525
JET
AERATION MCTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebulll In Slock
Call Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528

New &amp; Ustd Furnaces Gas,
E~trlc, Air Condlilonlng New As
Low As $200 553 Jackson Pike
9 5 7&lt;&amp;0 446-8308, 1~800 291

0098
Nice New &amp; Uaed Furniture And
Appliances 740·448·1004 740·
446-4039 Anytime

terprlsas To Install For You If
You Don t c•u Us, We Bolh L,osei
553 Jackson Pike 740 44e-630B
0008
9 09::
8;___________
Nice two bedroom aparlmenl In 1 :800-::.:2::.:.H=l
Syracuse, $275 per month $200 Walerllno Special 314 200 PSI
deposit uiUtties nor Included 7.4021 95 Per 100 1• 200 PSI
867 3516
$37 00 Por 100 All Brass Com
North 3rd Ave Mtddlepott 2 Pf&amp;sslon Fittings tn Stock
bedroom unfurnished apartment
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
depooll &amp; raleronces 740 992
Jackson 01110 1 800- 537 9526
0185
550
Building

s

Now Taking Appl ications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
448.()()08
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 Baih Fully Cor
P81ed Pado No Polo L.aasa Plus
Security Oepoall Required 740
446-3481 740-448-0101

Two bedroom apartment In Po ·
morll)&lt; no polo, 740.992 15858

460

Space for Rent

Mobile home 111te available bet
ween A then&amp; and Pomeroy call
740-385-4367

470

Wanted to Rent

Wanted To Rent House Or Farm
Nice Kitchen Near Galllpotlll
513·851-01 00
Want To Rent Large House Prl·
vale
Setting
Aea
R1nt
1304)675 6688

AKC Registered Pug puppies 5
wetka old two females , $450
tach, three males ,
ea,ch
OBO, lawn wlih black lace 740
247-4161

s•oo

Supplies
Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande OH Call 740 ·245
5121
pOLf RU!LQINQS
Horse Barna. Garages Any Style
Any Size, Free Estimate&amp; 740
384-4587

560

Pelt lor

Sale

AcquartumA with accessorial &amp;
llah (no leaks) IOgaV$25 20gaV
$50 29gall$75 (304)773 5051
AKC boxer pups (brindle) three
male one female ready for
EasiOr $350, call740-992·2313
AKC Lab puppies provan gun
dogs, references 3 generations
hera &amp;holt wormed 1101 Checked
black &amp; yellow $150 to $200
740-992 3879 aftor !Spm
AKC Labradore Retrieve r Pup
pies Make e~ecellant Easter
gills (304)4158·2443
AKC Pomeranian 6 Weeks Old
$300 12 Weoko Old $300 7
Monlhs Old 1175 Nice Easier
G1111740-388 8642

Good Gra&amp;l Hay $1 75 Bole 740446-1104
L:erge round balta of mixed hay
5)(6, $15 each loaded on your
lruck, 740-985 3925

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Dekalb Seed Corn &amp; Soy Bean•
For Sale (304)675-1506

710

Pupplas 4 Males $250, 2 BIUII
2 Sliver Shots &amp; Wormed 740
258-1421

'90 Chrysler LeBaron, $2500
080 740-992 7039

8 v Soulhalde Aquartum
2006 Camden Avenue
Parkerlburll, WV 28101

'91 lincoln Towne Car, nice I
clean, low miles, runs great,
priced welt below wh~sale 740
992 2358, If no answer please

304-485-1293
Puppies &amp; Killen!
Full line of pets supplies
Boston Terrier Pups S100 Each
No Pepers 740·258·8251 , 740·
440.8172
Easter Bunnies! Excellent Pats
Or 4·H Project Rabblls 740· 367·
7016
For Sate Pekingese Pup 3
Monlhs Old, Blonde 740·4484083 740-448.0319

Full Blooded Eslkmo Spitz, 4
Mates 1 Female, Mother &amp; Fa·
ther On Premesls, No Papers,
$50, 740-446-3281
Golden Retriever AKC Puppies
Shots Wormed Female·$200 00
Malt $150 oo 740·379 2524 or
740.379-2961
Aabblls Pedigreed Mlni·Lops,
Sandy Or Sleel Colors, 7 Weeks
wllh Papers $10 oo 740 379·
9213
AKC White German Shepherd
Pups , Famous Snowcloud Line
Serloue lnqulrlee Only, $300 740.
245-9213

570

Musical
Instruments

Roland X P·80 Keyboard Now
New Model Stand In
dUlled 11200 (304)n3-61BO
Con~tlon

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610

Farm Equipment

15 ·20 Used Tractors In Stock
8 99% Financing Used Hay
Equipment Financing As Low A.s
3 9% Used Planters 5% New
John Deere Tractor Financing
7 99% Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lqwn
Your Local John Daere Deater
Galilpollo Ohio 740 446 24.12 Or
1·9()()().594-1111
1964 Model Valley HOrse Trailer
Rod Good Condlilon $1500
(304)675-1178
230 Massav Ferguson Tractor
400 Hours, Like New, Call Eveni\g&amp;, 740-448 2158
5 Ft Brush Hog Never been
used $450 00 OBO (304)675·
3824
50% off all remaining merchan
dlae, l'lerythlng must go this
week Store will close forever at
noon on Sat Hurry In lor the best
deals In town Siders Equipment,
US AOUIB 35, Hendemon WV
JD 7000 No Till B-30 Corn Planlor
Dry Fertilizer Excellent Condition
F1450 5 -18 JD Plow E)(cellent
Condlllon Se¥eral Chisel Plows &amp;
Olscs
Several Tractors To
Choose From 70 HP 220 HP 2
WD &amp; 4 WD J&amp;H Equlpmenl
Sale11 Inc Wllkes~ille OH 740 ~
869-5101
Massey Harris Pony wllh Attach
menl&amp;, 1500 (304)875-7930
Used LIH Truck Fork&amp; For Sale
Varlouo Sizes $100 $125, Per
Sei, 740-379-2757

620

Wanted to Buy

Will Pav Cash for 11to 5 acres fo
l.lnd lor building slla Cell (740)
245-5365

630

Livestock

10th Annual Champion Drive
ClUb Pig Sale Friday Apnl 9 1999
7 00 PM Fayette County Fair
grounds Washington C H Ohio
Sailing 200+ Barrows Gills &amp; A
Few Selecl Boar Pigs Auctoneer
Merlin Woodrutt Sale Day 1740
335·9120 Ganer Genetics Don
Black 814 87t-7697 Jady Swine
Farm Joe Oresback 740 884
4647 Rick Sta" 740.998-2515

2 Registered AQHA Horses veru
G
•'
entia Show Horses 740 367
7539

I :::.::;________________

Autos for Sale

leave message
1977 Corveue 3.50 Automatic T
Tops A/C White With Tan lnterl·
or, 50,700 MMe11 Good Condllion,
Beslcmt. 74~1021
1980·tHOCARS FROM$500
Pollee Impounds And Tax
Repo s For Lis lings Call 1 BOO
319 3323 EX1 4420
1984 Toyola Camry Good body
runs good Needs a little work
(304 )875-5460
1985 Mercury Grand Marquis
Automatic 302 V 8, Remanufac
tured Engine Has 52 000 Miles,
Full Po- $850 740-448·7215
1987 Buick Park Avenue 3 8
3800 Engine, Excellent Work Car,
740 388-8997
1987 Nissan Maxi Good condl·
lion $2 500 1984 Chevy Cusrom
Van Good condlllon $2 soo
(304)895·3925

1992 Red Pontiac Grand Am
$5 soo Please Call 740 36 7
5055
1993 Ford Taurus $3 000 I OBC
(304)892·3448
1993 Grand AM GT Loaded
Power Everything Must Sell!
$5,000 1988 Caprice 350 Molor
Runs Greali Body Good $1 200
740,682.1324
1994
Cadillac
Fleelwood
Brougham 24 000 Aelual Miles 3
Year Cadalllc Certllled Warranty,
Loaded Like New, 74fl.44B-4254,
740-448-0205
1997 Honda Accord LX 4 Doors,
Black Wlih Gold Package P/W
NC Ceoseno Has 58 000 Mlles
304 882 2343 Daytime 304 882·

2283 ElllningS
1998 Cavalier LS 4 Doors Au
tom AJC Rear Defrost A~t FM
&amp; Cassella 22 500 Miles Aqua
Blua Wllh Reily Wheels Price Ia
$9 500 00 OBC 740-256 1011
1998 Red Cavalier Z24, Sun
Roo!, CD, 4spd Au1o AC Power
Door/Windows
$15900
(304)773-5117

720

Trucks for Sale

1946 Chevy Truck 1 1on car
hauling Wedgle
with new
lenders need completed, $2 000
orlredo (304)882 3652
1982 Dodge 1 Ton Truck W•th 12
Ft Enclosed Fiberglass Bed
S3 ooo Also Mini Monster Pa
recta True!« Uke New s1 aoo c,n
740 446-6783 Aher 7 PM
1968 Che11y Truck E~tcellent
Body All Original Wllh Original
Manuals Runs Goodi740·379-

292B
1986 Nlssan 2 WD Good Shape
S1 200 Firm 740 256 1421
1987 International 466 Diesel
Dump Truck Engine- Low Mila
age New Tires New Bedllner
12 000 00 llrm
Hooper Equipment Tra1 ier Trl
Axle New Tires Pantel Hitch
$3 500 00 f1rm
1985 Dodge Pickup Runs Good
$900 (304)895-3859 Anylime

Sloe/

Spacial SPrlng Feeder Call Sole
Sllurday April 101h All PM All
Consignments Welcome, Caltle
Will Be Accopled After 4 PM On
Frklay Hauling A'1811able Athens
Livestock Sales 740 592 2322
7~98 3531
Wanted Nubian Does 740 446

5504

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

1000 lbs of good mixed hav lied
wllh plaslic $1 5 each 740 898
2755

IQ
•AK8653
• 8 2
1 A 8 7 6

r

'

1984 Gold Wing, 740-992·1135

•

1985 Yamaha 700 Maxima , •
sueet Bike Nice condition jla
rage kepi $2.200 oeo (304)675- '
3824
\

YORE NEW
HUBBY DOES
TH' DISHES

1200 Windshield Bags New
Battery, 2 Seats, Du&amp;I·Cover,
17 300 miles $7 900 (304)578· ,

2383

...,.....---:--.,..,....,....-,---"•

'??

3 "E plurlbuo - "

-

4 Dentlot'a dog.

5

Command

to 1

8 More uncanny

7

lrald

a That glrl
t

Saarinen

Stool pigeon

10 Exchange
premium
It Betltat
12 Architect -

IT'$ FllOM $OM~ 8ANIC

•

!

NfV~~ ~tA,l&gt;

;r.

airport

•
'''

Of •• A

175 HP Evinrude Lola Of EXIr~a~
$9 800 740-245-9109
•

Norlh
11

Pass

2•

Pass

3t

Pass

aNT
56

Pass
Pass

4•
6NT

All pass

Kheyy'm
27 Eat
29 Fawn, og.

East

30 Actre.. Rowl.lnda
31 Poetic nome

Pass

for Ireland
37 Movere'

vehicle
40 Some Louvre
worlls
'
41 Ancl.lnt
Porolon
42 TV'a telklng ,
horee

4311Nvy
atrlng
45Huo

46 Enormouo
47 Biblical groin

muaure

49 502, Rom1111
50 Adam'&amp; mote ,

the second full moon m any calendar
month And this year we have two, on

52 Poetic
•
p,repoaHion
53 - Kapllll" :_

CELEBRITY CIPHER

ly rare deal, wh1ch occurred m Den·
mark What ts unusual about tt?
No auctton was gtvcn, but thts one
ISn't absurd When you open w1th a
m1ntmum

THE BORN LOSER
F"

1-\0W l.QN£, I~ r-\N:.\11-1~ SL\I'PED

1997 Kawasaki Jel Ski 1100 cc 3
se.-ler Aluminum Trailer Life
Jackal Excellenl Shapel $5,500
740-992 3537

West
Pass

Jan 31 and today So, to match thts
upcommon event, here IS an extreme

•

C--------------------,
1990 20 Fi Siratoa Fishing SKI

South
1•

Well apparently a blue moon ts

..

f
•

1973 Star Craft V BotJ:om Boat :
and 6 Horse Mercury and Minke- .
Ia Trolling $1 0001 (740) 245 •
5872

19 "- a
Wonderful
Uft"
21 Glowing
•
22 Private Belley ~
23 Declldent
24 Waohlngton

25-vu
28 Poet-

come from?

~

~

F"

.,

f-\E.'S !».'{-TQ-1»:( 1:.\61-\T t\\OW, M
IF f'f-~ STILL CJJTWt:ffii&gt;Of'l\\E
NE£1'., l'Ll ~'IE.. TO fl.lT 1-\\f.\ 00

DIX. (i)\W, TO ((fff'f\lt-1\ OFf

114£

Sears 10• Aluminum John Boat:
with oars Trolling and outboard j
mo10rs $300 (304)882 3448.
•
Auto Part•

1 Ul44 lnvoalon
date
2 -·--dubdub

By Phillip Alder
We all know the expre&lt;Sion "once
m a blue moon," but where does 1t

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

-------------------·
250 Honda Custom Street Bike.

760

25 CoHiomlll boll
club
28 Chocoloty
conloctlon
32 Novel~ Zol.l
33Evltder
34 Singer Jocbon
35 Kate Nelligan

Second blue
moon of year

1997 Honda Gold Wing Aspen- •
cade New CondiUon 3500 mlleol ,
740.256-6126
..

for Sale

DOWN

38 Genus of onto

1990 Harley Davidson Sportster

&amp; Motors

numerol

Operung lead ••

1986 Hondo 250 4 Tracks A TV
Needs starter starter clutch and .
battery $BOO (304)882 3448

Boats

58 Whlrtpoola
57 Bird, oftllll

18 Sundllll

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer South

•wD

s•so 00

55 Florldl product

17S-pohtlo

I).L

__...,

T~lt-IOlOC.Y
\~

F\1-117.&gt;

----~

Wfo..'( It-ITO I{LrPUcur-...J~

Of: u f(. t:.'IE.!:-'1' '1'~
r-,m}fli&gt;OI'&amp;\1~ 01&gt;,.'1' I

&amp;

hopes hiS partner can make
There IS no lead gtven because I
sull haven t dec1ded what I would
p1ck'
Wtth

b01h mm or sun

Budget Priced Transmission•
and Engines All Typea Access"
To Ov11 tO 000 Tranamlulona ~
740-245-5877

UDJRD

CEX

IE WI

BZWWYWV

D J P

J

c

HUHTWC
X E

X D W

Z E S W

SHJC

OHI

VENBWI

,

U W B X
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The tmal purpose of art IS 10 mtens1ly even If
necessary, to exacerbate the moral consciousness of people n Norman
Mailer

WOlD

m three rounds, there me 12 "easy'

lAM I

S1x hearts" also on Jos 1ng only one

I

HUDLOS

trump tnck when lhc hearts dtvtde 3
One Of The Areas Largest Be·
lecilons Of Late Model Auto
Parts Late Model Motora Trans
mlsslona Body &amp; Suspension
Parts Best Prices In The RegiOn
On After Market Sheet Metal,
Fenders Hoods Doors Wind
shields Radiators A C Conden
sora o~ar 100 Cars tn Last 30
Days For Parta, O~er 25 Lata
Model Repalrables Powerllna,
Auto Syllems 740 532 0139 O•
U S Toll Free BOO 482·8280 Kill&amp;'
Hill Ohio

3 Even stx dmmonds , on the 4 2 Ill
can be made North s dub loser diS·
appears on the second heart wmner,

Original 283 Engine &amp; Shorty
Power Glide Transmltslon, Out Of
1984 Chevy $500 For Pair 740
258 6854

broughl home D o you know of one'

and you ca n maneu ver to lose JUSI
one trump tnck F1nally, SIX clubs 1s
makable too
When thd you last see a deal m
wh1ch all hvc small slams can be
made' Now we aiC lookmg tor a deal
m whtch all five grand slams can be

790

Campers

e

SEE OIAR~IE BROWN?'(OU
JVST ~AVE TO BELIEIIE!

Reeae hitch &amp; recel\ler &amp; Reese
pinnal nltch with 2• ball end light
and brake plug $195 OBC aluml ,
num extruded running boards 1
$45 OBO wllh brackols lull llze
bug deflector and front bumper air
toller $35 OBO, lull size Pandilln
er bedllner tailgate and end p1o
1eclor $155 oeo. tuilolze bed
mal S35 OBO 1997 ARE llber '
glass topper with front slider and
sliding side glass cost $85 new.
sell lor $725 OBO All came !rom
1985 lull size Chevy all in graal
condition Call 740-992-1111 11 np
answer leave massage

•

•

Don t get Slung by high prlc.,'
Shop the da•~fled ..ctron

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSW£R

II III

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Needle • JOmt- Muggy • Mother- THEY DO
Some people Will never be pleased They complain
when they don't get what's com1ng to them and even
more when THEY DO

IWEDNESDAY

&amp;

Motor Homes

5

PRINT NUMBERED lETTEIS IN
THESE SQUARES

MARCH 31

~
~

1998 Rockwood Popup Camper
Bought new last Auguat Hn
Furnace Air Conditioner Tinted
Windows 2 Queen Beds 01
neue Couch Stove Icebox Tal·
let New screened-in porch (n8\ler
used) Sold lor S9 700 asking
$7 000 (740)992 2908

•
•
~

1994 Che11y Silverado 4X4 Low
miles 1 owner (304)675 2883
Aller 5PM

1996 Chevy S 10 Siandard Shorl
Bed Cassette No A/C 31 500
miles $5 BOO (304)895·3808 Or
(304)695 3025
1998 Oodgo Ram
Cab SLT laramie
59 000 miles
Musl
1
$17 500
Evenings (304JB75·
3290 Oay·(304)44B-4290

Home
Improvements

v.
~~

------~~~~-----::
BASEMENT
~
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llletlme goarantee
Local referencea furnished Es·
iabllshed 1975 Cal 24 Hra (74Q)
446 0870 1-800 287-0576 ~og
ers Walerprooflng
Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
parlance Ali Work Guarant11d
French City Maytag 740·•46·
7795
C&amp;C General Home Malo·
tenence· Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doors, windows baths
mobile home repair and mor1 For
lree estimate call Che1 1•0 992·
6323

Vans

1988 Blazer 4WO 6 cylinder au
tomallc AC PS PB great thape
$3700 740 992 7478 or 740 949
2045

one outstandmg p1ece of mfonnat1on

Malchmnker mstontly reveals wh1ch

&amp; 4-WDI

1986 Ford Customized Conver
ston Van Loaded 4 Captain
Seats Lg Sofa like back seat
AMIFM Cassette Stereo System
AC new rlres Reese hitch alec
!ric brake hook up Looks sharp,
runs great 6 cyl $3 000 OBO
(304 )675 8704

Thursday, Apnl I , 1999
Perhaps your greatest talent m the
year ahead wtll be an ah1hty to see
opponun111es that are not so readdy
apparent to others g1vmg you a
Jump·Siat1 1hat could prove qutte ben
efictal
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19) It
beh ooves you to hsten closely to
whal other people have 10 say today
Among the chauenng !here could be
thai mtghl be qutte valuable 10 you
Kn ow where to look for romance and
you'll f1nd 11 The Astro Graph

1998 F 150 XL Like New 5
Speed AC, Under 7 000 Miles
Must Selll $14,500 740·6823448

730

ASTRO·GRAPH

Llvl lion's Basement Water
Pro lng, all basement repa irs
don Jree eallmatas lifetime
guara tee 12yrs on job expert
enoe (304)895·3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master u!
cen11ad electrician Ridenour
Eleclncal WV00030B 304 B75
1786

s1gns arc romanucnlly perfect for
you Ma1l $2 75 10 Ma1chmaker c/o
thts newspaper, PO Box 1758, Mur
ray H•ll Sialton, New York NY
10156
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
Slnvc to be mdustr1ous, because

once on a roll , there s e good chance
rou' ll not only nccnmphsh iodny •

chores, hut get u ltttlc ahead on
tomorrow '!i work You II he glad
you d1d
GEMINI

(May

2 ! - Junc

20)

Although lhc weekend 1sn t quite
here yet you could gel an eorly stort
on 11 as today s events thrust you mto
Impromptu soc ani ocUVIUes Howcv
cr 11 shouldn t mtcrrcre wnh your
dulles
CANCER (June 2 1 July 22)Tius

could turn out to be your kmd of day
wuh nciiVIUC!i surroundmg the pco
pic you love hcst your lmmly Th1s
helps you keep e•erythmg m per·

spect l\C
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Possessmg
~uch an ocuvc alert mtnd will have
you scckmg ou1 as many mental c,;hal
Jenges as you can find today Keep

mg your focus on nreas that test your
smarts will be sttmulaung
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sep1 22) The
emphaSis of the day migh1,be pla•ed
on financial conditiOns that capture
your fancy Pmv1dcd you manage
your resources prudcnily, ihts could

he a very producllvc day
LIBRA (Sepl 2l·0•1 23) Rcce1v
recognition from your peers
today for a JOb well done will do
wonders for cncourn(!mg you to do
more makmg you qullc an elfectlve

mg

produ~er

SCORPIO (Oci 24-Nov 22) A

qmel environment mtght be JUSI what
you need today to collect your
thoughts and be able to concentrate
better on somethmg amportant you
need to accomplish Seek lhe necessary sohtude
SAGIITARIUS (Nov 23 Dec.
21) II will be your unagmat1ve fac
ult1es thai could help prov1de ihe
mental picture you need to clanfy an
obJective ioday While you re al tt,
renect on futunsuc posslbllttles 1oo'
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Provtded you arc lef1 tu your own

dev1ces. you can he n preuy good
nchtcver tot.lny Dctcrm1nc )'11ur (IWn
methods ond pnx.:cdures as much as
poss1 hle, nnd ycm II succeed
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fch 19)
You rc JUdgment IS opt to he hcller
than or those you cn-.:ountcr lod .ly 'iO
he linn nbout conCepts ynu hchc\c m
and dnn 1 let o lhcrs d1scournge ycm
hclorc tr ym~ 1hcm nu t
PISCES (Fch 20 March 20 1
Bc ~nu sc
the ~umpass 1 on and com
mnn sense you dl!iplny for th ose m

.or

trouble, you could lind ) OUrse lf qunc

demnnd wnh pals "hn l 1nd "'"'""'
sel ves m undMrtcd prcdiic amj~niS
u\day

Ill

I Googroph&lt; Explonn ICC)

I

.

'

KWBBHPGC

workmg and the spade Jack droppmg

lucky Watt one moment Now con·
Sider a co ntrac t of SIX spades That
gets home wtth lhc same 12 tncks

New Truck Bed &amp; Tall Gate for
73·78 Ford F1501250, Including
gaa lank covers (304)862·3893

HUHTWCJCF

VWZJFJENB

finesses

tncks vta f1ve spades two hearts
three diamonds and 1w o dubs
You rc probably thmk1ng that w as

Accessories

, H

to reb1d m

your stx card (unless the four IS a
maJOr that can be shown convement·
ly) North b1ds out hiS shape wttb four
clubs, but m case he ts 5-0-4-4, South
raiSes Now North b1ds what he

,.

FU~'( f\0~ ~t;to.U.

6-4, It 1S normal

by Luis Campos
Celebrity CIF** CMJ~ogrwns are cr.ated lrom quotationa by famoua people put and presenl
Each letter in lhe cipher aland! tor anolher Today's c.IUB K &amp;qUitll J

4292

1994 Gao Tracker 4x4 48 000
Milas Good Shape $4 900 oo
KC Auto Sales 740 446 8172 Or
74ll 256 9251

Reg istered Black Angus Bulls/
11 13 month I of age A 1 Sires
9FB3 Fullback ldoal14 18 and
Eaoy (304)675-2098

South

1995 Wlndstar Gl Automatic. AI
C Door Locks 42 ooo Mllu.,
$13500,740-387.0108
""

Motorcycles

54R-ve

cl1mlnal

• 10 7 5 4
6 K 9 4

87,015 Miles $7 500 Coli Alltr ,
1 00 PM 740-448-2394
•

48WONIWIY
51 Monotony

IOIMIIIIng
tiMon
prmntloua

20 Elir: prefix
21 AlcMd o

• J 9 2
• QJ 7

• 6 54 3
• 10 9 4
• Q 9 3
• 10 52

1992 Toyota SR5 , 4x4,
Cab VB 5 Speed
Condition New Tires
1804
_::19::9::;3_C_h_evy---,S_1_0_4_X-:4-::11:-ru-:ci&lt;-:V::'·f:::, :

740

J 6

• QJ 3
East

Well&amp;

4x4

1997 Yamaha Tlmberwolfa
A l:V 12 500 (304)882·3448

INdlrLo
Duc-

1989 Ford F150 6 cylinder au
tomatlc air, 119,000 miles, looks
and runs good, $2300 740 247

Markel Lambs For Salal Call al
ter 4 00 P m (740)-256 1534
Miniature Horae 1 Year Old Call
74 44 H 7B3After 7 P:M

Quality Registered Angus Bulls
Cummings
Angus
farm
(304)675 6248

t A K

,..t:

750

1991 Pontiac Flreblrd Red V6
engine AT, AC, Tlop, very low
miles Great ~raduatlon Gift
(304)675 2153

North
03 31 99
I A K 10 8 7
• 2

1984 Ford Bronco 4 Wheel D....,,
Automatic Good Rubber S1 500, •

740-446-2983

45VIotnomeoo

mlliU-

1979 4x4 Chevy haW 10n, lulllize
very clean, new engine no ru11,
new palnl. $3 800, 740-992-78111

1991 Cavalier 2 Doors, Excetlenl
Condition Standard Tranam1s•
slon, $2 395, 1992 Cavalier, 2
Doors $2 595 Cook Molors 740.
441Hl103
1991 Ford Tempo BB 000 miles 4
door PW &amp; POL, air amltm casselle asking $2300, 740·742·
1334

14 Dlotance
meuure
15 One who

'

1953 Dodge M-37 Mllliary True~
Removable Hard Top Niodo Mo101' Worll. $900, 740-379-9036
'

$1 000 00 Firm
12 Fl Sunglow Boat
(304)895-3270

1992 Chevy Full Size Silverado
Stepstde Pickup 5 Spd 44000
m1tes like New gara(le Kept
$9000 1304)675-3753

Outstanding Angus And Chlan
gus Bulls , Reasonabl~ Priced
Slate Run Farms Jackson Ohio
74ll 288-5395

&amp; 4-WDs

1991 Bonneville excettenl condl
11on PB AC 3 8 engine
740 949-2045

26 Bulcher Hogs 250 Lbs ses
Each Fair Pigs $65 Each 1•0
245- 9557
Fair Pigs for Sale! E11cellant Blood
Unesl For more information Call
(740) 245 5672 or (740) 387
0583

o-

Vans

TRAN SPORTATION

AKC Registered Weimaraner

3 PIIIC8 Queen Size Bedroom Su
ite Good Condition $100 7~0
446-2212

Prlmestar new direct spacial
free Installation 3 months free
programming limited time only 1·
888-285·2123
PAP. Is SUPPLY
We Are Professional Installation
And Service Supply we Sell
Wholesale To The Public we
Stock Janllrol Heating And CooJ·
tng Equipment Duct Work .Reg·
!stars And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or we
Can Arrange F.or Lawrence En·

Modern 1BR all utilities paid
except electric $250tdeposll
Gallipolis Farry Area (304)675
1371/675-3230

AKC Registered Golden Reutever
2 Years Old For Stud Service
Papers Available contact Mike
Brewer At 304·173 501 ~ Or
l.eavtMessage

1 888-81 B-0128

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middlepori From $249·$373 Call 740.
992·5084 Equal Housing Oppor·
!unities

I

•

Almond Kenmore Waaher &amp; Dryer $150 Bolh Will SOporale While
Kenmore Washer 175, Kenmore
Dryor $75, Harvell Gold Sldo By
Side Admlralll25 Call Allor 5,
7 40-44B-lJOII6

One 7'x9 Garege Door Wlih
Opsner $150, One 32' Slorm
Door One 32' Oulllde Door, 740256-8747

iCapped EOH 304-675-8879

410

Goods

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath Clean, References &amp; De·
posll Aequlred, UUIIIIes Paid 740448·1519

Anihony Land CO

500 Acres

Houaehold

for Rent

W.. Pay Cash 1·800 213 8365

RENTALS

By Owner 2910 Meadowbrook
Drive 3BA LA Den w/FP 18A
Newly remodeled in 1998/
(Roo! windows siding C!Oor N
C Carpet} Nice Lands caping
Privacy
Fence
$74 500
Call 1304)875 5143
Aller
530PM

1&lt;4x70 two bedroom trailer 1250
monlh $150 dopotli , no poll
740-742 2714

TWin Rivera Tower now accepting
applications lor 1BR HUD sub
sldlzed apt tor elderly and hand

We Buy land 30

By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate will sell hoU&amp;e wllh
out lots for S89 000 7&lt;&amp;0· 992
2704 74ll 992 5698

•

Real Eatste
Wanted

6 Bedrooms -4 Bath Brick Home
Corner Lot Across Form High
School Same Block As Grade
SchOol And Ball Field For Sale
Or May Trade For Acerage 7-40
448-4794

for Rent

•

1988 14X70 2BR 1BA Claylon
Excollonl Condition (304)875
5108 or 1304)576 2101

Doublewlde On Lol, BOO 383

· - - - - - - - -. .

Mobile Homes

2 bedroom apartment In Middle
port we pay water sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per
monlh $100 deposli 740 992

3 Acres With Double Wide In
Vinton No Flooding Will Sell On
Land Contract Wllh Down Payment $29 ooo, 740-256-6793

Economy Healing And Cooling
Factor~ 10 Years Parts &amp; Labor
74ll 245 9009

420

1 BR Aparlmenl lor renl, $275 00
per month In Mason, WV In
eludes utilities Call (304)773·
5054

pletly Furnished Or Unfurnished
New Furnace CA Also Sx1 6
Storage Building Located 802
Wells Run Road Crown City 740258-1193

Servlcea

Clean Efficient, 2BR Refertnc·
es Doposll No Pel&amp; (304)875
5162

1983, 14X52 Mansion Total Gas,
2BR New Relrlg &amp; Carpel Exira
Nice Gallipolis Ferry Will ba
ready lo pull $7800 (304)675·

2 Bedrooms 14x70 Trailer Com·

Professional

7462

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenle fur-

1994 16x80 Sunshme Mobile
Home Three Bedrooms Two
Bathrooms Walk tn Closets Utili·
ly Room Electric Heat Pump Re·
trlgerator And Stove Included
Call Ahor4 PM 740.2451302

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you ha~e Investigated
!heoltflnng

New Haven· 2BR home garage
River Frontage Oeposlt Refer
oncos, Lease Call (304)934

1976 Nashua 12F1 x 65F1, Wllh A
10F1 X 16F1 Addlllon CIA New
Carpet And VInyl Underpinning
Front And Back Poroh Included
$8,000 740 245-5503

1993 1B Fl xBO Fl Nice 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths New Carpet
Front &amp; Back Porch Excellent
Condition, Must Be Movedl 740
4411269

Business

Famlty /Professionals Home one
Aero l.o1 LR OR FR Tllree /Foor
Bedrooms 2 Baths Single Car
Garage Gas / Water Included,
L,ocated Two Milos From Holzer,
Three Miles From Gallipolis,
Available •t1 740-446·•4•7. Rtf·
erences /Security Deposit Ae ·
qulred

440

1992 Norris 16Fi X 70FT Vinyl
Wlih Shingles 2 Bdrms 2 Baths
All Electric Appllencas Porches
Carport 740-256-6336

Opportunity

510

1974 Spring Maynard Good Con·
dillon $3 500 May Lea~e On
Aenlsd Lol 740 367.()632

n92

Will help with elderly In their
home In PI Pleasant (304)674
0048

230

mo-

A.KC Registered Female Pomera·
nlan, Orange-Sable Color •
monlhs old
S175 (304)675·
8195

7 Rooma 48 011~1 Street, 740
446-~

Mobile home for rent In Racine
no pete, 740-992 5858

1976114)(.60 HoUypark Trailer
Total Electric 2BR Price Re
duced! For more Information, call
(304)n3-5543 aher 4PM

Will Do Light Carpentry work
Roofing Yard Work Land Scap
lng, Mowmg, House Painting, In·
side &amp; Ou11 Low Prices Low Es
rlmate 740-388-6316

210

Mobile Homes

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom
bile horne 740.992 5039

We Do Home Improvements
From Top To Bottom For Free
Eallmalos 740 245 9046

FINANCIAL

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private appoint
ment can 740.992 5696

for Sale

Mowing Trimming WeedeaUng
Tree Trimming Stump Grinding
Painting No Job Too Big Or To
Small! References L.eave Mas
sage 74G-446-6802

NOW HIRING
$170 00 PER WEEK/PT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)

Ranch Home on 3/4 Acre Lot
5BR 2 1/2 Beth Den, Uvlngroom
with Fireplace Dining Room
Kitchen .fully e(lulpped Basement with Pool Table Outsld•
Deck with 27ft Abo~e Ground
Pool 3 Car Attached Garage
Good Price, Great House Call tor
Appolnunenl (304)882 3652

320

Lawn Mowing Service Small
Garden Tilling Clean Out Garage
and Olher Odd Jobs (304)675
3628

Will stay with elder!~ person In
their home nights only Have
Aeferences/Expenence
(304)675-1898 aher6PM

Modular home on 100x100 lot In
Mason WV Three bedroom two
baths famltv room/ kitchen com·
bo living roonv' dining room com·
bo appliances Included fireplace
and central air two car garage
porches and lentt 74D-949 9004
arter6pm

Spring Valley 2 11ory family
home 4 Bedroom 2 1/2 Baths
LIVIng Room Dlnlng Room Eat·ln
Kitchen lg Famliv Room 740
245-9337

Interior &amp; Exterior Palnling, Ex·
perlenced Relerences Reason·
able Aetas For Free Es11mate
74ll·388 8041

Now accepting applications for
n6ght shift El Dorado AdUlt Home
Basic f1rst aid &amp; BCII re(luired
740-992·5039

730

MEf!CHANDISE

Wanted To Do

I

�•

.

•
•

'

•••

.

••

'

~

11• The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, March 31. 1999 '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

:Witness claiming mistreatment allowed to.testify' in trial
PIGGY HARRIS ·
-.eoclalld P1 11 Writer

justice charges.
"This is mammoth," said Associ' :: LITn.E ROCK, Ark. - Prose- ate Independent Counsel Mark Bar•c;ptors of a criminal case against rett after rising from his chair to
Whitewater figure Susan McDougal address the judge about the ruling .
Were stunned by a judge's decision to
Outside the courthouse, Barrett
lllow testimony from a Virginia said, " I think we've been on the
Woman who claims, as Mrs. McDou- defense since the defense case began,
g~l does, that she was mistreated by
but this is a different level. "
Ms. Steele faces a May 3 trial in
IJ!dependent Counsel Kenneth Starr.
.; Now in its fourth week, the trial Alexandria, Va., charged by Starr's
ftk)k a dramatic tum Tuesday wlten office with three counts of obstrucU.;S. District Judge George Howard lion of justice and one count of makJr. heard testimony from Julie Hiatt ing false statements in the probe
Steele of .Richmond, Va. He then involving President Clinton and
pnted a defense request that Ms. · Kathleen Willey, a former White
Sll!ele be allowed to tell her story to House volunteer. Mrs. Willey alleges
the jury that will decide Mrs. Clinton made an unwanted sexual
M_cDougal's guilt or innocence on advance in 1993. Ms. Steele says she
ctiminal contempt and obstruction of

Descendant
Tojo visits
Peari ·Harbor

of

was asked by Mrs. Willey to tell a lie
that supported the allegation.
In testimony before Howard, Ms.
Steele said she gave accurate in formation to the FBI and before the federal grand jury last year about Mrs.
Willey but nevertheless was indicted.
She said Starr's prosecutors also
questioned her brother, one .of her
daughters, her accounta.nt and her
neighbors and . friends before she
was indicted. She also suspected
Starr's office investigated her adoplion of her son, now 8, she said.
Barrett and a fellow prosecutor,
Julie Myers, argued against Ms.
Steele's testimony. They contended
that it would create "a mini trial" in
the trial against Mrs. McDougal and

STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday

Press Writer

: :· PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
)'l:tore than 57 years after the Japane~ llttac)t on Pearl Harbor, the grand·ifiiughter of the general who ordered
tJlj: strike paid her respects .to Amer'iean veterans.
,
::· Yuko Tojo bowed her head Tues~y at the large marble wall on the
·vss Arizona memorial. The wall lists
I~ names of the 1,177 servicemen
'*}lo perished aboard the battleship in
ttl~ Dec. 7, 1941, surprise attack.
- ~ More than 900 sailors were
eptombed in the sunken vessel.
·• "I was moved by the names ofthe
on the wall.. This
victims
engraved
.
. .
gave me patn tn my heart," ToJO, 59,
Sl\id through her interpreter, Isao
tlshiba.
·
• Tojo, wearing black and at times ·
clutching the arm of her daughter, did
nOt watch the 20-minute movie
sliowing footage of the attack that
n'ormally is viewed before taking the
short boat ride to the memorial.
~· Tojo said her visit fulfills a dying
wish of her grandfather, Gen. Hideki Tojo, the Japanese war minister
~ho ordered the attack that brought
I~ United States into World War II.
~ In all, 2,388 American soldiers
u~d civilians died that day.
.
• Stanley lgawa, a U.S. veteran of
World War II, said there was no reasun for Tojo to visit. "I really want
tct' know what her purpose is here,"
. lpwa said. "I don't think it's her
Pl!lce to be here. "
: However, Monica Nye of Utica,
NfY., introduced herself and
eltibraced Tojo, causing tears to well
u~ in the eyes of both women. Nye 's
father flew in one of the escort aird~ft used ·during the Japanese surrender ceremony aboard the uss
~ssouri on Sept. 2, 1945.
• Gen. Tojo was hanged by the
A lies in 1948 after being convicted
a; a war criminal. "General Tojo was
aJapanese samurai, so he wanted to
sliow respect to those war dead," said
rojo, who also uses her married
n~e. lwanami .
•
;: Her 1992 book about her grandfBther led to last year's movie,
''Pride," which portrayed Tojo as the
vJ(:tim of vindictive Allied judges
~ing his trial on war crimes.
• "Tojo was totally different from
u;tler," she said. "Hitler murdered
hlit own people. Tojo fought to save
h~."

IAM-IOPM
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;' She has planned visits to Arlington National Cemetery outside WashiJi!ton, D.C., Los Angeles and Seattri in an effort to rehabilitate the
Jti\mory of her grandfather.
~ She also is undertaking a fundrt;;ing effort to build a m·emorial for
those killed in the battle of Peleliu, a
s~all Micronesian island near Palau.
:;: "I have to do something for all the
vf&amp;tims of war, and all the war
~1d ," she said. "This is my impera'tve.''

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NORTHERN
WHITE BAtH
TISSUE

GENUINE ·#l

,.
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4ctions to end
marriages filed

~Iliff Wooten, Athens, March 26;
flrederick E. Werry, Pomeroy, and
flolichelle A. Werry, Parkersburg,
-.tva., March 18.
i; Divorces asked- Kandi Bachtel
POtts, Long Bottom, from Josh L.
.,Its, Pomeroy, March 25; William
If. Doczi, Middleport, from Cecilia
IJ. Doczi, Bidwell, March 22: Avanel
~lliday, Langsville, from Robert L.
HOlliday, Middleport,' March 19: ·
~Jchel Maines, Racine, from Jack R.
~ines,. South Lebanon, March 18.
~ Dissolutions granted - Michael
~well Bing and Sue Ann Bing,
hlftrch 22; Myrtie Mae Colburn and
lliadley Neal Colburn, March 22;
IQ)se Mary Yoho and Lawrence Heralp Yoho, March 22.
: Divorces granted - Jerome Nel son McKenzie from Karen Sue
MCKenzie, March 22; Kim McCiel1 and Lloyd McClellan. March 22 .

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because she · feared Starr would
charge her with perjury if she didn't •
say whal he wanted.
:
Barrett noted the judge hu
allowed limited testimony from •
Whitewater defendant Steve Smith Z
and a lawyerfor a former McDougal :
employee regarding their treatment
by Starr's prosecutors.
,
But Bar'rett said Ms. Steele's tes- ,
timony was different: It relates to ;
incidents that occurred after Mrs. ··
McDougal's alleged crimes, it relates '
to investigations outside the McDou! •S
gal investigation, and it is offered as •
evidence ofprosecutorial misconduct ,.
and pot as evidence of what Mrs. :
McDougal thought before refusing to
answer the grand jury questions.
'

r------·'-----------------------------------------P 0 WE Ll 'S
PRODUCTS

By BEN DIPIETRO

~~soclated

exceeds' the court's previous order ing other witnesses.
barring the defense from using evi·
Mrs. McDougal testified that her
dence from other investigations.
late ex:husband, James McDougal,
They asked for time io file written told her .to· cooperate with Starr's
arguments, but the judge said he had office and tell a lie that she had a sexheard enough arguments. They asked ual affair with Clinlon. Mrs. McDoufor a continuance of the trial until gal said she did not discuss sex in an
Monday so they could get "up to ABC television interview, shown to
speed" on the case that Starr's office th~ jury, because it was personal. S~e
brought against Ms. Steele. The judge . srud Tuesday, after court, that s~ dtd
said no:
not have a sexual affatr with Clinton.
"He (the defense lawyer) is simOuts.ide .the courthouse, Barrell
ply presenting this to the jury to show complamed.that Mrs., McDougal has
modus operandi," Howard told pros· been attacktng Starr s office as her
ec'utors.
defense to the criminal charges.
Ms. Steele is to testify before the
Mrs. McDougal says she refused
jury Friday. In the meantime, Mrs. to answer federal grand jury quesMcDougal finished five days on the tions in 1996 and 1998 about her forwitness stand, and the defense is call- mer business partners, the Clintons,

,'

WlnA .

BANKROLL
Thls~k
Powell'~ -,uper

Value

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