<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8029" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8029?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-21T10:19:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18442">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8785d2bd3f8d169cb01a8a50d18a4fad.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f30a80617fa8b4b388b54efb9d394b56</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26036">
                  <text>•

•

.page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Aprll26, 1999

..

Weather
Today:Showen
High: eoa; Low: 50s

Looking for your Racine Grange donates charter to Museum
"Eddie" at the pound
, By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

Not everyone reading this column knows that Eddie, one of the
major characters on the television show, "Frasier" was once a shelter dog. Turned into his local pound, bouncy, i;,..epressible Eddie
was rejected by his family because he was so mischievous, could '
not endure being bored, and was always up to something. .
Apparently, Eddie merely needed .to be occupied and give vent
to his passion for acti ng. If I can stay up late, I'll tune into "Frasier" just to w~tc h Eddie. This sweet dog made his owners life much
happier - not to mention financially secure'
You too could find your lifelong companion, your special friend,
at the pound. To show off our pound and to encourage people to
visit (it's NOT the place you remember from three years ago), the
Meigs County Humane Society is plann ing a very special weeke nd.
But don 't wait until the first weekend in May_to visit the Meigs
County Dog She lter. Your "Eddie" could be wai ting for you, now.
. The North Shore Animal League, with PETsMART Charities as
its official sponsor, has chosen May I and 2, Saturday and Sunday,
as Pet Adoptathon Weekend of 1999. Soci~ty volunteers are organIZJng the Adoptathon t n Metgs Coun ty, wht ch wi II take place at the
Rock Spr.ings Fairgrounds (ncar the dog shelter) from 12 noon until
5 p.m. ·
The mi ssio n of the North Shore Animal League, which
embarked o,n its first Adoptathon several years ago to raise awareness about animals _in need of homes, is to bring together shelters,
anomal c6ntrol factio toes. rescue and foster care organi zati ons for the
commo n goal of saving more animal s' li.ves.

.

This year's sponsor is PETsMART Charities, the ~rganization
that so generously provided the Meigs.. County Humane Society
woth $3.000 fo r our Spay and Neuter ·program. As cif March I,
thanks to PETsMART Charities, we were able to provide ovet 36
o pe rati ons~

.

·

The charter of abstinence from organization called "The Lincoln
alcoholic beverages signed in the League" because of Lincoln's
early 1900s by residents of Oak earlier abstinence pledge.
Grove near Racine was presented
The Lincoln Legion asked
recently to the Meigs County both youth and ad ults to sign
Museum.
pledges of abstinence.
The Racine Grange came into
The organization, which was
possession of the charter when it headquartered in Westerville,
purchased the Oak Grove Ohio, establi shed a chapter at
Methodist Episcopal Church · Oak Gr ove through the Oak
building after the church c losed Grove Methodist Episcopal
in 1971.
Church Sunday School.
The history of the abstinence
Racine Grange obtained the
charter goes back to Lincoln's charter when it purchased the
time . '
.. building at the dosing of the
In 1846 Abraham Lincoln church in 1971.
wrote of his pledge of total abstiAfter prohibition ended, abstinence from alcoholic beverage-s nence organizati ons faded from
and called for signers at a country the scene .
schoolhouse to do the same .
The charter shows the names
In 1903, the Anti-S'Iloon of many local residents.
. League formed a branc h of its

information about vaccinati ons, spaying and neutering, and gener-

al health issues.
. For those people adopting dogs that weekend, we 'will be provodmg pre-approved Spay and Neuter coupons for a half-price
operation, free dog food samples, as well as additional infoimalion
useful to new ow ners.

A staff m em~er of the Meigs Veterinary Clinic will be 'on hand
to answer questions about breeds, dog care and animal health, and
the dog warden will be there. to process licenses .
. Our volunteers will administer adoption questionnaires, talk
woth prospec tt ve famihes , and hand o'ut literature. Each dog will be
treated with anti-flea and tick medication aoid will be brushed,
ready to go home wi'th you. ·
.
.
. A~geJa Sharp, Meigs County Humane Society volunteer coordonatmg tht s event, has arranged for treats for the kids and refreshme~ts f or sale. The Columbus- based band, "Porcelain," including
Metgs County natove Paul Sharp, will perform on Saturday, May ) ,
Slartong at 2 p.m. There woll also be an appearance by an Elvis Presley ompersonator, and his friend , Safety Pup.
If you would like to volunteer to help her, contact her at 66934 16.

a

'

Meigs County's
v"'""'"

service required annual skin tests.

. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board, Monday, 7 p.m. at district office building
on State Route .681.
·

MIDDLEPORT ..:._. OH KAN
Coin Club regular meeting 7:40
p.m., Riverbend Arts Council building, Middleport. Meeting is free and
open to the public . Open auctian and
refreshments . ·Members, visitors

ings and special events. The calendar iS' not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num.ber of days.

ATHENS - Fimlrice commiuee, ·' w'elcome.
· Athens,Mei gs Educational Service
. Center, Monday. 2 p.m. offices, 507
MONDAY
Richl and Ave., Athens.
·
TUESDAY
CHAUNCEY - Revival MonPOMEROY
Atuxiliary pf
. day through May I,. Red town Free
R!JTJ-AND - Open door ses- Drew Webster Post 39, American
Methodist Church, State Route 13. siooi with State Rep. John Carey, Legion, 2 p.m. Tuesday at the haiL
north of Chauncey, with The Mes- Monday, 1)2:30 to 3;30 p.m . at the
sengers, John Elswick.
. Rutland village hall in the Rutland
CHESTER --' Meigs County
Civic Ce nter.
Holiness rally, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
RUUAND - Rutland Garden
Chester Nazarene Churc~ . Speaker,
Club, home of Dorothy Woodard,
RACINE - Free skin testing . Rev. Herb Grate.
Monday I p.m.
·
· clinic, Connie Karschnik , R.N.,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse, ar
POMEROY - Meigs Cou~ty
· POMEROY - Veterans Service the fire station, Monday, 4:30 t&lt;&gt; · Public Library Board, Tuesclay, 9:30
Commission, 7:30p.m: Monday, at 6:30 p. m. All individuals in food a.m. at library.

·l't N""''"''

Mi!ldiPpntl • PonH.•toy. Ohio

) ·1'1

_ __,.

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park, 6:30 p. m.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Free diabetic
scree ning, Wednesday, 8:30 to II
a.t)L, Veterans Memorial Medic11l
Clinic.' ·
·

The New Haven and Mason fire departments responded to lhe call
1-erourtd 12:58 a.m. Upon arri.val, the building was fully invol.ved.
, Gary Cotton, owner of lhe restaurant, said he learned through the New
'Haven fire ~hief lhat the electri~al blaze began in the motor of a walk-1rl
cooler in the back of the building.
·
Cotton laid the restaurant employs 10 people, and he has not determined
if he will rtppen lhe restaurant. ·
- Further.information and lhe amo~nt of damage were not available.
On Sunday, the sprinkler in AEP's River Division at Lakin extinguished
a blize at the facility, Blake ~.
. . .
.
·
MitiOR and New Haven fire departments responded to the II :21 a.m.
call. When they arrived, the fire· wu extinguished .
._: 'Kejih'iJarling, the River Divisinn'lf·senerat m'atltlger, s.aJd there was a .. By BRiAN
_.. - ·- '•·
small fire in one of the offices that was put oul by the sprinkler system. A · senttn•t Nawa Staff
couple of radios were lost in lhe fire, but the water was cleaned up and the
Middleport Village Council
busineaa reopened Monday morning.
•
approved funds for a study of its
water and sewage service rates and
will apply for grant funding for
QNQNNATI (AP) '- The federimprovements to its water ahd sew1\fll'tiiOOfl al government has informed Gov. erage systems.
Bob Taft that there was not enough
Jlly Shutt, president of Floyd
uninsured damage in loniado-strick·
Brown Associalea, the village's
~n subilibs to warrant special assis:
engineering firm, and Becky Hayes,
tance.
also of FBA, met with Middleport
The Federal Emergency Manaae1 Section • 10 l'lacs
Village Council during their regular
meeting on Monday evening to disance will cover most of the estimatcuss needed · improvements to the
menl
Monday
insured
$82Agency
million said
in diunage
in Hamilsystem.
ton, Warren· and Clinton counties.
FBA has Conducted studies ofthe
The agency rejected Taft's request to
sewer system, which is a combined
declare them disaster areas, which
storm and sanitary sewer system,and the village water system, which
federal
would 'loans
have made
and grants.
them eligible for
has been subject to dis ussion
The communities will have to
because of varying levels of \blatile
IUI'If to the. stale to help with costs
Organic Compounds, chemicals
for restoring neighborhoods hit by
from an unknown source which
I nfll'llt'~.
the April 9 tornado, which killed
have contaminated the water in one
four people.
of the village:S two w.ells.
QHJO
"BaSed on a careful review of the
Council voted to · approve a
Pick 3: 0-6-0; Pick 4: 6-5-7-1
information available, it has been
$7 ,500 rate study, which is required
a.deye5: 1-4-16-21-25
detennined that the impact of this
by Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
W,YA 0
event is not of a ~verily and niagniRegional DcvelopR)eni Center, the
o.o; J: 4-4-0; DaUt 4: 2-7-6-3 ,tude ·that warrants a major disaster agency which will assist the village
0 1999'*'&gt; Yllley..PlbliJttlq Co.
declaration," FEMA Director James
in plll'llling grant funds through the
l. Witt wrote to Tall;
Issue II, CDBG and Ohio Public

RUTLAND - R~tland Friendly
Gardeners, open meeti'ng, Rutland
Church of Christ, W~dnesday, 7:30
p.m. Representative of Waterscapes
to speak.

~

' I'

=

,.

~~5~~~~~~~]
~=~~===;~~]

,,

By STEVEN K. PAU~N
Aaaoclllted Prau Writer

""
'

..I

'

''
I'

-

~f

"&gt;.

'"

CALL TODAY FOR
.MORE INFORMATION"

MONTH
haa bean daclerld
·a nd ~Tiau• Donation
.,.d In .,.. ltlempt to
the public about the
of donation, John~RuiMII, a volilntMr lor
.
Ina ,r Ohio and an organ
r.eolplant hlmNH, dlatrlbutad
tnformatlon about rthe atata'a
organ and tiMua donltlon ,_.
to ~latrar Sue
· alaon lut
Malaon
i)GIIICI that Ohio drlver'a lloana• Indicate a drtver'a 1111111~ Ngardlng donation, but
e,a1c1 that next ot kin ahould
:atlll ba llllvlald, baoauaa their
· ;Oonaant II 'ntqillrld before
Hll ba made at the
. me o1 .d llth.
.

(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
H N SERVICES

.., ,.,.

lram

fnnatlone

1

•

.
•

•
i

lv

I

•

•'

••
•

FUN FOR ALL- A Family Fun F._.; homed by thalhlga County Proucutlng Attorney, Holzer Medleal center, Melga County
H111th Department and the Ohio Unlvanlty eou.g. of Oateopathlc Medicine, brought atr11ma of peoplalnto Eaatarn Eleman·
tary School on Saturday. Over eo exhibitor~~, nnglng from llMith
can and public HI'VIce provldan to colleg11 and local bualnan,
u, pr-nted lnfonMtlon, hNith screenings and tevon to tha
public. Local girl acout troopa Mt up a camp on the front-lawn of
.the achool. In addition to Information and Mrvlcea, antartaln·
··mant, Including a baakatbltll exhibition, 1 live OJ and atorytalllng,
wu alao Included. Cory Dun, 10, of N- Haven, W.va., Ia pictured, left, ualng a Braille writer at the carleton School arnt Malga
lndu!lb'IH tabla, aa Sharry McCleary Ianda a hand.

approves

·WorkJ·~atns.

.

·- ' r ·- ·

, sewer ........

- · are no lonaer accurate.

Council also authorized' payment
to FBAof an amount up to $3,000 to .
- work with BH/HVRDD in preparing
grant applications. Hayes expla,ned
lhat the fees would, be reimbursable
through any grants~~joans received
by the _village. .
Shutts explained that their recent
survey of ~werage facilitiea shows
·. a need for new controls and pomps
at sewerage lift stations in the ·viilag~. which will oost an estimated
$280,000, .due to lhe condition of the
stations.
.
Jean Craig, president of the
~of Public Affairs, aaid that s~e
· would be meeting with reprcsentaliv"'' of the Gallia County Rural
Water District and Leading Creek
Conservancy District to discliSll the
possibility of purchasing drinkina
water from their operations, in _an
.attempt to address the VOC issue.
The board has already entered into
discussions with the village of
Pomeroy regarding such in arrange. ment.
Craig said that both Gallia County Rural. 'and lCCD have offered
proposals to the village in the past,
but noted that thole proposlis were
made in 1994 and cost projections

Craig also said that the Ohio EPA
continues to encouraae a joint
municipal water system between
Middleport and .Pomeroy to remedy
the VOC'problem. Last month's
VOC testing reflected an increase in
the VOC levels in water from 6Re of
the village's two wells.
During the discussi.on of water
service, Councilman Steve Houchins suggested that.the Board of Publie Affairs investigate the possibility
of the village's purchasing water
from the 'Galli a County system to
serve residents in Hobson, who were
promised water ~rvice ~hen the
area was annexed _some eight years
ago.
In other action, council .met in
executive session before approving
pay rai~s for village employees.
Hourly employees will receive
acr05S-the-board raises· of 4S cents
per hour, and salaried employees
will receive (aises of two percent.
Council conducted the first reading of a resolution authorizing mortgage releases for homeowners in the
Betsy Ross housing project; an,d the
first reading of an ordinance relating
. ·
Continued on page 3

Suspect's girlfriend purchased two of the guns used in school shooting

y

PROG

The board also created the supplemental position of
coach; Mick Winebrenner, head baseball coach; and
Howie Caldwell, athletic director.
inarchmg band director which was filled by Greg Vance:
In ad~ition, it was noted that Donna Sayre, second
The following supplemental contracts were approved
contingent upon student interest: Ryan Lemley, reserve grade teacher at Syracuse Elementary, has transferred,
baseball coach; Gregory Vance, pep band director; Ryan . into the second grade position at Letart Falls. Brenda
Lemley, junior high boys' basketball coach (~venlh McQuire has transferred into the Syracuse second grade
position 'while Wanda Shuter has transferred into the
grade).
.
Also .awarded supplemental contracts were• Kim Syracuse DH position vacated by McQuire.
'The board met with district parent Joyce Weddle who
Romine, yearbook; Dennie Hill, Title I treasurer; Dave
Barr, 1itle I coordinator; Vicki Northup, 1ille I parent presented board members with a letter addressing safety
resource coordinator; Kim Romine; 1illc IX compliance at the schools following the school shooting in Littleton,
officer; Dave Barr, handicapped coordinator; Joyce .Colo: She said teachers need to pay more attention to the
Thoren, food service supervisor; Shirley Sayre, guid- students and not give them mortuJetentions or send them
ance; 'Diane Dunfee, FHA; Daniel Riffle, transportation to the altemative-to-suspension'i::hool. She also said her
supervisor; Aaron . Sayre, . vocational FFA; Tom son has received a lot of detentions for things that were
Weilvermm Thoren, tec~nology . coordinators; Dennie her fault, not his, such as failing to send absence excusHill, general fund.
es to school.
Dennis Taylor of Shelly Materials Inc. Racine Plant
· The following ~ drivers were approved for supplemental routes: Larry Smith, Syracuse Elementary/Meip invited schools to the plant's "Community Appreciation
High School/Eastern Elementary; Thomas Hill, Letart Day" which will be held Friday, May 21,9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Falls Elementary; Daniel Riffle, Letart Falls Elemen- The event will include plant tours, towboat rides, snacks
tary; Wendell Ervin, Portland Elementary.
and prizes.
In other personnel matters, the board approved Jeanie
C.T, Chapman asked board members to consider
Allen and Rebecca Ball as substitute secretary/aides and repealing the district's current pay-to-play policy for stuapproved Mark Swann as a substitute teacher.
Continued on page 3

NEW HAVEN - New Haven's Village Pizia was destroyed in an
morning fire Monday, Mason County 911 Director Chuck Btat..e

Today's Sentinel

'

35 Cents

Area organizations
hold a Family Fun Fest

Good

' '

Single Copy-

POMEROY - Immunization
Clinic, Meigs County Health
Department, 9 to II a.m. and I to 3
p. m. Tuesday. Each child to be
accompanied by parents/legal
guardian, to present shot iecord.

Feds deny request for tornado help

EDICAL
ELIGIBIL

'

Hometown Newspaper

approved · in July, 1998, for construction management
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
services. The state money will be matched l&lt;X:ally by
The SOuthern Local Board of Education is hoping $4,042,000 from a 23-year, S.39 mill bond/levy issue
preliminary site work can begin on a new district-wide · approved on May 5, 1998, for a total of $9,810,988. ·
elementary school later this summer.
Pottmeyer said schematic drawings for the new K-8
The board met in regular session Monday nig~t at building have been approved'by the state.
SOuthern High School with architect Jack Poumeyer
Lawrence said board members have discussed holdWith Marr-Knapp-Crawfis Associates Inc. of New ing a ground breaking ceretiiQtly at the site possibly later
Philadelphia.
this summer.
- Initial plans call for removing about 18 inches of topIn personnel matters, the board approved five-year
soli from the buildina site next to the high school and . contracts for teachers Jennifer Roush and Wanda Shuler
replacing that with about 8,000 cubic yards of fill . In and one-year contracts for teachers Michelle Barr, Maraddition, some prcliminuy work may al'so be done' on garet Guinther, James Ryan Lemley, Tricia McNickle,
utilities in the area and on installing an additional 6re Daran Jay Rees, Carolyn Robinson and Gregory Van' •.
hydrant on school property.
The board reemployed Howard Dave Barr as admin- ·
We hope to have a bid package ready by May for site istrative assistant on a one-year contract.
Y/Ork and to sec dirt moving by the end of July, said
The following continuing contracts werC' also
5_uperintendent James Lawrence. Beginning the site approved: Charles Lawrence· and Julian Scott Hill, bus
work in advance of the main construt:tion should allow · drivers, and Tom Lane, custodian. A two-year contract
tbe building contractor to begin work soilner.
was approved for bus driver Kathy Miller,
· • The building project was held _up for apprbximately
The following .were approved for supplemental con~lx months pending the award of additional funding by tracts for the 1999-2000 school year: Dave Barr, head
the state. The additional $1,817,953 will be added onto football coach; Howie Caldwell, head volleyball coach;
$3,951,035 provided by the state under a school funding Alan Crisp, held girls' basketball coach; Jay Rees, head
plan. began in 1990, including an addition of $299,235 boys' basketball coach; Howie Caldwell, head softball

ment.
A.large group of descendants o{
one of the raiders was present)
Major General John H. Smith,
Adjutant General of Ohio, made
some brief rem arkS concerning the
bravery of the. soldiers. He notejf
that the first U.S. Congressional
Medal of Honor went .to Pvt. Par:
rott, one of the Ohio raiders.
•

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

new location, 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

groups wishing to announce meer-

-PageS

Site work may beg.in this summer on new Southern Elem_
entary

CHARTER PRE~ENTED - Keith Ashley, past master of Racine
Grange, presented a local charter pushing the pledge of l,lncoln,
described at the time as "the great abstainer" to Margaret Parker,
director of the Meigs County museum.

Community

'. .
The Community Calendar is published .as afree service to non-profi t

Red Wings, Sabres,
Stars all going for
swaaps In NHL playoffs

•

A plaque that was originall y · General" in Georgia and then tried served in the 33rd Ohio Volunteers
dedicated in the 1930's to the hero- to make their way back to Union along side of soldierS from Meigs
ic efforts of a group of Ohio Civi l territory.
· County.
War soldiers was recently moved
The group was finally capture,
Myron Jones, Jr. , represented
to a new location in the Ohio and some 'were hanged as spies Brooks-Grant Camp No. 7 Sons of
Statehouse, the rnuseum area.
while others were impri so ned. Union Veterans of the Civil War of
This plaque honored Union sol- Wa)t Disney Studios later made Middleport, as its commander, and
diers called "Andrews' Raid ers". this eve nt famous in a movie was accompanied by Keith Ashley
These men stole a Confederate called "The Great Locomotive of Pomeroy who represented the
steam locomotive called "The Chase". Some of these raiders commander of . the Ohio Depart-

"

Local diamond results, Page 4&amp;5
Granny charges for services, Page 10
Time out for tips, Page 6

Sports

•

Local men attend relocation of Civil War plaque at statehouse

·

. Our goal with the Pet Adoptathon is to empty the dog pound, to
raose awareness about the wonderful dogs available for adoption
right here in Pomeroy, and to !Jrovide prospective owners with

Tomorrow: Showera
High: eoa; Lc&gt;w: 408 ··

April 27, 1SIIMI

.

. .'
'.
'

LmLETON, Colo. (AP)- The 1~-ycar-old
·girlfriend of Columbine High School gunman
Dylan Klebold apparendy bought at least two of
the weapons used in the 11tt1c:k. at a Denver-area
gun sbow, authorities said. '
·
.
Investigators also were checking a report from
a Colorado Sprinp glfn detiler that the other gunman, Eric Harris, was among five teens who tried
to buy a' machine gun and another weapon last
•month. ·
. The Denver Rocky Mountain News and The
·Denver Post reported today that investigators
believe the girlfriend, Robyn K. Andenon,
bought three weapol)ll not long after her, 18th
birthday in November. The Denver Rocky Mounlain News said she was believed to have bOught
two guns.
Harris, 18, and Klebold, 17, committed suicide
after bursting into Columbine High Schct,OI with
guns and bombs a week ago today, killing 12 fellow studenll and one teacher. Four guns were
found in the school.
·
Ms. Andenon was questioned Monday and
aulhoritiea describe her as a witness, not a sus. pect. District Attorney Dave Thomas said.1he was
cooperating with investigators.
Prolecutors laid the weapons may have been
porchued teplly.
. "We think -three of them were provided by the
girlfriend of Klebold, " Marie Paulter, a J~fferson
Counly c:ltief district lltorney, told the Post. "She
boqht them because she wu o!der. She wu 18at
the time. She boupt the111 in November or
December,

"We're not sure she committed a crime under
"They were re~l mopey, Hke pun.~ kids wi~h
Colorado statute. If you provide a handgun to a the makeup on, It ke punk rockers, Bemstetn
perSon under 18, that's a violation of the statule. 1 said. "To me, it was just another bunch of kids
lfyou.provideashotgunorariOe,that'snotavio- who wished they could own everythmg they sec
lation."
..
·
on the wall here. This is like Toys R Us 10 them."
The operator of the Tanner Gun Show, which
Bernstein said Harris ''was doing all the. talkholds shows in the Denver area several times a ing." .
.
·
year, said the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
investigators still believe that sdmeon~ other
.and Firearms asked on Monday for a list of all of than Klebold and Hams w~ aware of thetr plans
the show's exhibitors.
in the days and weeks leadtng up to the attack.
Prosecuton think Ms. Anderson bought two
"There's a lot of munitions there," Stone said.
shotguns and a rifle. District AUorney Dave "Either somebody el~ brought it in or they
Thomas said prosecutors are not sure what brought it in arid stored it.... It's hard lo get that
knowledF she had about how the guns would be · in under your raincoat and not be noticed."·
·used. Jefferson County Sheriff John Stone
Stone said three b,oys who were arrested"near
acknowledged it was possible that she did know Columb!ne on the day of the attack have not been
how Klebold and Harris to planned to u~ the cleared tn the case.
auns.
.
"I'm suspicious of their st~ry,". SIQne sal~ .
"She's not going to use those for pheiSanl "They are not out of the~~ t~ thts one yet ,
hunting." Stone told the News.
· ~so M~day, authontles ~d Klebold and
A man who was at Ms. Anderson home Hams had ~med for an even bogger bloodbath•.
declined to comment, sayil)g the family waster- P!?tting to kill hundreds ~f ~tudents,_ and then. to
rorized by reporters, the Post said.
·
htJack a plane and crash tt mto New York City.
Mel Bernstein, owner of Dragon Arms, told · lnvesiigators cited · a diuy they found that .,as
inveatigators lhat four teen-age boys dressed in kepi by Harris.
,
trench coats and a young womln came to his store
.The attack's bold, btZif!C nature led to spe~uin early March. They tried to buy an ~ -60 _latton lhat the. gunmen mtght have been taking
machine gun and a pistol equipped -wtth a drugs, bul toxocology tests revelled no drup or
silencer. He said he declined to seU the guns kl alcohol .iu their bodies, the county wroner 's
Harris because he wu too young. When the office satd.
young woman in the group tried to buy the guns,
makes it a little .more frightening lo m~ lhat
saying she was 18, he escorted them from the they were of sound mmd and not under lhe mflustore.
ence of alcohol and druss," Thomas told
Bernstein said the incident was captured ·on a MSNBC. ·, ,
.
surveillance videotape that he turned over to fedColumbtne s campus remamed closed to
erll authorities.
·
everyone except bomb squads and investigators.

mayor's race
Jean Craig is one of two Republi can candidates to have filed for the

Middleport Mayor 's · race, to be
determined next week.
Craig, who servea u the chairman of the Middleport Board of
Public Affairs, has' stressed coopera.tion among the mayor, village council and residents irr ihe community
as a solution to problems now facing . ·
the.viii age. ·
'"This election is not abOut the
prior achievements of any candidate," Craig said. "The candidate
chosen should not be one who simply wishes to be in control in order .
to promote his or her own ideas, but
one who will represent the people."
"Middleport is slowly dying from
neglect," Craig said. "Middleport
has problems that must be solved by
elected officials, not by idle talk.
The village collected approximately
a quarter of a million dollars in
taxes, and people have a right to
know what is being done with their
money."
'"The mayor is not the legislative
authority of a town, the village
council is. I will not make promise;&amp;
staling what Ialone will do, because
it must be a joint effort between the
mayor and cou'ncil and the citizens
of the village in order for the community to prosper."
"Running a village is not a oneman show by any imagination, nor
should 1} be."
Craig said that she would consider a monthly newsletter for resi- .
dents, if elected, and would seck
additional grant funds for streets,
water and sewerage projects.
Craig, who once served as a
member of the village council, and
as ( member of the Republican Cen- .
tral Committee, also said that she
would like to explore the possibility
of conducting 0pen town · meetinp
in addition to the village council's
business meetinp,

·:II

'

•·

•
' '

•

..

.

�Tueaday, April 27, 1.999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

=1 commenta

Death Notices

The Daily Sentinel
'£st46ftsui u. J94a
~

.

111 Court St., Pomer~. Olllo
7062·2150 • Fu; 1182·2157

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaller
DIANE HILL
Control'-

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M•n~~ger
n. Sentinel

'"'""-.,.,..._....,.,,,.

·-y.

-·· __, -·.,.,._,

••Gml•,.,.. to liN «&lt;llor from,...,_ on • btoM,.,. ot top.

- - ol '*"tt "' I II llod.
• • a, •nddqtm.phoMIHMIIb«. Spclty• ,_.,,.,.•• ••••~

- .. Sholl -. -

('IIIII -

or IHIJ ,..,. ""' -

to•,..

.,. t.tlw. lUll to: Lott«o to lito _ . , TINI Senllnol, Itt Cowt II.,
Ohio 461ft; or, FAX to 7~1/S7.

.

.

&lt;&lt;J=Iegulator: Banks
prepared for ·
millennium b.ug
By PAUL SOUHRADA
AP Bultln... Wrher
COLUMBUS (AP)- Federal regulators say .there's only one .way the
Y2K computer bug can cause a bank panic: if bank customers panic. .
. : "The biggest 'problem we have is an overreaction by the public because
. of bad information," Bud Burkle, vice president of banking supervision with
· the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, told reporters last week.
The Y2K bug occurs because many computers programmed to recognize only the last two
.·
~ digits of a year might not work properly begin·
• ning Jan. 1, 2000. If that happens, some warn
,.... """'
the machines might assume it's 1900 and lose
•
all sorts.of financial information- from bank
balances to ATM transactions.
It's not going to happen, Burkle predicted. For one thing, the Fed has
required its member banks to have contingency plans. For some, that .means
making paper copies of bank records on the Friday before the New Year's
weekend.
!iocking Valley Bank in Athens spent about $100,000 last year to upgrade
its system, said Bick Weissenrieder, president and chief executive officer.
· . The chore is a little bigger at ·Huntington National Bank, a multistate
.
operation with branches in Ohio, Michigan, Indiana and Florida.
Columbus-based Huntington has spent about $30 1]1illion over the past
three years on the Y2K fix, said Doug Spence, president of the Huntington
subsidiary in charge of the process.
Burkle said a recent Fed audit showed that somewhere in the range of 95
percent to 97 percent of the banks"in Ohio, West Virginia, western Pennsylyania and eastern Kentucky already are in compliance with the Fed's rules
· for having their computers glitch-proofed.
Many of the rest are in compliance but haven't been given the all-clear
from an independent auditor, he added.
The others, well, have eight more months to get their problems sorted out.
How certain is Burkle that the banking industry will survive the millennium bug?
"I haven't iold my mother to take any· money out of the bank," he said.
Besid~, as Weissenrieder points out: "Unless we're willing to forget
how much you owe us, we're not going to forget how much money you
have. It's the same computer.''

·y · E A R
·""" "' 1 I 1 I 1
'C R U N C H

Today In History
By The Aeeoclatecl Preaa
.
.
Today is Tuesday, April 27, the !17th day of 1999. There are 248 days left
in the year.
·
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 27, 1521, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan was killed
by natives in the Philippines.
On this date:
· In 1509, Pope Julius II excommunicated the Italian state of Venice.
· , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , In 1805, a force Jed
by U.S. Marines captured the city of Derna,
on the shores of
WKE~E liA\IE YOII ewH
Tripoli.
Wf'l.( BEE.Pt WORRtE~
In .1822, the 18th
president
of the Unite!~
5\CI(.
~'f ~
States, Ulysses S.
Gr81Jt, was born in
ALL ~\6\\i
Point Pleasant, Ohio.
RW&amp;!
In 1865, the steamer
Sultana exploded on
the Mississippi River
near Memphis, Tenn.,
killing more than
•
1,400 Union prisoners
ofwar. · '
In 193~: American
poet
Hart
Cr,ne
drowned after jumping
from a steamer· while
en route to New York;
lte was 32.
In 1937, the nation's
first Social Security
.ooo • ~~- _
checks were distrib""""17•'
.
.._
~
www.coma.com
• ,• .,.HlA. • ·
Ute d•
In 1967, Expo '67
)Vas officially opened in Montreal by Canadian ·Prime Minister Lester B.
. Pearson.
In 1973, during the Watergate scandal, Acting FBI Director L. Patrick
Gray resigned.
·
In 1978, convicted Watergate defendant John D..Ehrlichm~ was released
from an Arizona prison a:fter servins 18 months.
.In 1978, 51 construction workers plunged to their deaths when a scaffold
inside a cooling tower at the Pleasants Power Station site in Weat Virginia
fell 168 feet to the ground.
Ten years ago: More than 150,000 students and workers calling for
democracy marched, cheered and sang through central Beijing.
• ,
Five years ago: Former President Richard M. Nixon was remembered.at
: : an outdoor funeral service attended by all five of his successors at the Nixon
• · preaidcntial library in Yorba Linda, Calif.
.
~ : _ One year ago: A Pentagon panel said remains of the Vietnam veteran in
;. : the Tomb of the Unkriowns in Arlington National Cemetery should be
.; ' ~xhumed to determine whether they belonsed to Air Force First U Michael
'• · J. Blassie, as his family believed. (The remains were later positively idcnti·
fled as those of Blassie.)
·
Today's Birthdays: Actor Jack Klusman is 77. Civil ripts activist Corel·
Ia Scott King is 72. ActrCIS Anouk Aimee is 67. Announcer Casey Kasem is
67. Broadcast journalist Phil Jones is 62. Actreas Judy Came is ~. Opera
• • singer Judith Blegen is 58. Rhythm-and-bluca sinser Cuba &lt;Joolijns is SS.
': . · Sinser Ann Peebles is 52. Rock singer Kale Pierson (The B-52's) is 51.
: . Rhythm-and-blues singer Herbie Murrell (The Stylistica) is SO. Actor Dou·
:· . --_iJas Sheehan ("Knots Landing") is SO. Rock musician Ace Frchley (KISS)
js 48. Pop singer Sheena Easton is 40. Sinser Mica Paris is 30. Rock singermusician Travis Meeks (Days of the New) is 20.
··
-·

Berry's ·World

.....
..

.

Oh~weather

..,,

~ ~

'

President a i nton has a
srand vision -- if not exactly a
srand strategy -· for the new
NATO, but it's failing its first
crucial test in Kosovo.
As the alliance gets ready to
celebrate its SOth anniversary,
it faces the question: If the entity that contained the mighty
Soviet Union can't defeat
pathetic Serbia, what can it do? To their credit,
Clinton and other NATO heads of government
agree that they can't stand by and do nothing in
the face of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic's slaughter of the Kosovar innocents.
But if they don 'I defeat him, he will defeat
NATO. That's what's happening right now, and
the result could be no "new NATO," and maybe
no NATO at all.
Kosovo is the test of Clinton's
proposed new "strategic concept"
'
that NATO should not merely be a
defensive alliance protecting the territory of its member countries.
Instead, jt shoui(J involve itself "out
of area" - in this case in the socalled "internal affairs" of a sovereign nation.
Doing so against the will of the
sovereign government •• Serbia -violates the United Nations' charter
as well as NATO rules.
Yet NATO is doing· it, and the
United Nations is not objecting, as
much for moral reasons as strategic
ones. The strategic ones have to do
with the destabilizing effects of hun·
dreds of thousands of refugees pouring across borders into ethnically
• r
.. '
volatile countries that can't afford to
I . ! :
keep them.
But NATO leaders also share a
sense of what civilized Europe
ought to be like at the edge of the
21'st century, and Milosevic's barbarism threatens it.
Clinton has bCen enunciating this
vision as part of his public justification for allied bombing of Serbia.
It's a Wilsonian vision that asks
nations to place idealistic notions of L----,.-------'--~----,----..,.------..----------'-'--:'. :)., ,.•.,
J., .J II',
"multiethnic democracy" a on par
Clinton, in particular, already has taken con·• . , '
wi'th "vital national interests"-- and'"values" on Kosovo.
siderable
political risk over Kosovo. Adversaries • . ' , I
a par with. "territory" -- as rea5ons for waging
But the overwhelming problem is that neither
who
couldn
'I throw him out of offi~e over sex
war.
Clinton nor other NATO leaders' are willing to
fully
expect
he'll be disgraced in foreign policy. · .":
In his address to the American Society of risk many of their soldiers' Jives -· or their own
So,
he
may
as well go for a full victory -- witfl,.·., ·
Newspaper Editors last week, Ointon said that political fortunes -- to actually triumph over
Kosovo was part of a "great battle" underv.iay at Milosevic. "Multiethnic democracy" apparently ground troops, almost certainly -- and convince
. the end of the 20th century, pitting "integration" is worth bombing for, but not launching a ground NATO this weekend to go along. This is not .a- ,. r &lt;
versus "disintegration," "globalism" against war over-- even though it's becoming increasin·g- question of means. The West has the combined .
military power .to defeat tiny Serbia. This is t - - "tribalism," and "oppression" versus "empower- ·. ly c;Je'ar that it will take a ground war to wi~. ·
question
of will. That is, it's a moral qucltion . .· ~ ~~
· ment."
At the rate things are going, NATO will keep
"Most of us," he said, "have a vision of the bombing for weeks or months, while Milosevic
(Morton Kandracke J• ~~ ~ltor I# '• ";, ·
Roll C•ll, the new•peper or C•pltoi Hill.)
··
21st century" involving the "triumph of peace, continues devastating the population of Kosovo.
Copyrlght11H
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
·; r -' )
prosperity and personal freedom," respect for
Serbia may lose its oil refineries and military

Accuwe~

•• ,

.Fighting
•
over
arts
isn't
new·~-;:
. t d • h• t
es e ay 1n

ory

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
~
One journalist objected to th~· ,. ,. , .
r
~ist's
·:flying, tu'?blin~ and reclif!-. ; • .
Aaaoclattd Preaa Writer
I
I
mg
cupods"
and hos "wolderness of
,
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
I
ds
"
'
garan
.
.
•n
artist's work was called "gaudy"
But others thought the carping'.:. ·... .
More to the point, Meigs could
and ·11 V.ile," a "Senseless tangle" of lion papers he had (ifed just weeks
was
self-serving and overblown. ·, : •
whirling cherubs unworthy of a earlier, he signed one prominent find .no American trained as Brumidi
"Much
of the unfavorable criti: ,
saloon and certainly not good fresco, "C. Brumidi Artist Citizen of was in the demanding art of (resco,
cism
of
the
decoration ... come:~ · . ' :"
in which paint is applied directly
. enough for the Capitol of the United the U.S."
"The unique description was and rapidly to the damp mortar of from the f.!:iends of inferior artists' • --·;1'
States.
who could not get employed upon" .: ,
The complaints amounted to art • undoubtedly a response to criticism building walls .
the
work, and is the mere outpouring · "'.'
Wolanin
links
opposition
to
Brucriticism by lawmakers, a paint-pot of him as a foreigner," says Capitol
of
envy
or malice," said The New ' : ' J '
midi
to
the
1850s
surge
of
the
new
tempest in the halls of t~e newly curator Barbara A. Wolanin in
York
Tribune.
·
expanded Capitol building.
"Constantino Brumidi, Artist of the American or "Know · Nothing"
Civil
War
put
an
end
to
art:
..
..
·'
The
As it sputtered through the late Capitol," the first full-scale explo- party.
The party earned its · popular criticism. Brumidi painted industri-· ' .. •
1850s, one fact kept the pot boiling: . ration of Brumidi's life and work.
.
• "
Constantino Brumidi; the artist in · Brumidi's gesture did not end a name when members of the small ously for another two decades.
.Today,
some
140
years
after
the
;
,
~L
·
secret
society
at
its
core
replied,
"I
·
question, was a bearded Italian polit- controversy marked by newspaper
patnt·pot.
war
began,
art
experts
ical refugee who spoke halting Eng- sniping, fuming speeches on the know nothing," when asked about
focus on preserving Brumidi's art, _ •
House floor and petitions by native- their activities.
lish.
· '
By the late 18SOs there were not wiping it out.
Foreigners, it was claimed, had born artists who demanded an
Re~torers .a~e removing ~ecader · ··I~ ·~
no claim on decorating the walls of embargo against foreign compc;ti- scores of "Know Nothing'' memof
grome, doscolored varmsh anil . · " 1 ,
bers
in
the
House.
They
had
allies
in
tion.
·
this new American landmark.
heavy-handed
' overpaintina-.....that· · •· ..,, 1
native-born
artists
who
had
been
The argument is long over. BruIt was ·a culture battle on a scale
•·
have
literally
entombed
the fr.e~: · ~; • :,·
denied
commissions
at
the
Capitol.
midi's Sel)llte frescoes, his painting not to be repeated until the fight over
in
the
Senate's
Brumidi
corridor.
,' ·: •,.:.. ,;
"The .criticism voiced during
in the eye of the dome, his sculpture- . government funding of the arts in
"It's
eKciting,
because
basicaJJ,.
· ·: · '
congressional debates of Meigs for
imitating frieze around the rotunda the late 20th century. .
When an ano·nymous letter writer hiring foreign artists and of Brumidi no one alive has seen this work the •·' "
and the frescoed corridor named for
him have become American land- · suggested that the fresco Brumidi for not being American was clearly way he painted it," said Wolanin, lhf.
marks in their own right.
had signed . be "wiped out," the connected to the nativist and anti- curator. "The color and details we :~~
immigrant stance of the Know Noth- are uncovering are fresh and won• ..
Restorers now labor to preserve artist's patron stood his ground.
dertul." ·
his vision.
"It matters not where an artist is ing movement," Wolanin writes.
EDITORS NOTE: Lewrence ~:· ;; "• . ,
1n. artists' petition accused
But in 1857 Brumidi was vulner- born: that is beyond his control,"
Knuteon
hu reported on Con-. "· ". ·
able to anti-immigrant sentiment. wrote Army Capt. Montgomery C. Meigs of "filling the Capitol with.an
grn•,
the
White HiluM •nd Wull-· -"'" •
And he responded as only an artist Meigs, the military engineer over- indi!ICriminate collection of decora- lngton'• hletory
ror mora tlllln
.
seeing completion of the House and tive trash which would not be toler- yure.
could.
.. .. ,. ~ ..
ated in a large bar saloon."
. Heartened by the final nat_uraliza- Senate wings.
' ... :.. · • ··j,. ~

IS

30:
. .·." ;;

We knowhow kids kill
· Currently, 192 million
By S•ra Ecktl
firearms lay fallow in the
One of the scariest things about the killings at
homes of private citizens. ·
Columbine High School is that it appears the per·
Not surprisingly, our ~i­
petrators got what they wanted.
ety's fondness for guns
They were outcasts to whom most students
has yielded a lot of
rarely gave a passing thought. Loners who were
deaths.
According to the
not taken seriously and certainly not feared. If .
lobbying
group Handgun
they wanted to make their mark on the world,
Control,
9,390 ·people
then they certainly succeeded.
were murdered with
Because we're paying attention to them now.
·Their pictures are on the front page of every handguns in the United States in 1996. Compare
newspaper in _America. Psychologists on every . that to two in New Zealand, 15 in Japan, 30 in
news channel are analyzing their motivations. Oreal Britain, 106 in Canada ~nd 213 in Germany.
This disparity has nd;t escaped the notice of the
And the worda "Trenchcoat Mafia" have passed
world.
"How many more times does America, the '
from the lips of everyone from Peter Jennoilgs to
· 'superpower,' have to witness childreh screaming
Larry King to Oprah Winfrey.
So it's a little chilling to consider how other · in a classroom before it starts to act on its own
disenfranchised young men are reading all this. If problems?" ·asked David Smith, a U.S.-based cor·
a suicidal teen were to decide that he too would reapPndent for Britain's Ooannel Four TV net- ·
like to go out with a bang, what is going to sfOp work.
The London Evening Standard answered: "So
him?
extravagant
is the American concept of 'freeNot our nation's gun-control laws. One terrible
dom,'
and
so
deep-rooted is the pollution of
Jesson we have learned from all these school slayings is that we Jive in a country where kids have firearms of a)l kinds throughout the country, that
there is little prospect that even this latest monaccess to semi-automatic weapons.

...

~

with

guns:_ :.:._;.~

•
I Toledo 142'158' I
I llenafhld

0

r

~

""~

· S,Odcommenteto 11M •utllor In CIINofthia&gt;·'' ·· ·· 1:
newep•per or · Mnd 1\er e-m111 at ..
1 . .,J· ·
meol.com.

....u.•·

-

:-' .· ~

~~,..

By ~ AaaOc:JatiCI Prliaa
Clouds will build over Ohio tonight and showers and possibly lhunderstor.ms are likely over.the S?uthem half of the state on Wednesday, the
Natoon~l Weather Scrvoce sa1d.
.
Tem~ratures will be seasonable, with lows tonight in the 40s and highs
Wednesday in the upper 50s north and ~-65 south.
Fair $kies will return on Thursday and continue into the weekend, forecasters sa1d.
.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station wa$ 88 depees in 1990 while the record low was 28 in 1971. Sunset
lonig~t Will be al8:21 p.m. an~ sunrise Wednesday at 6:36a.m.
·
Weather forecast:
ToniSJ!t. ..Showers likely. Lows 50 to 55. East wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance'ef rain 70 percent. .
Wednesday... ~ain· likely. Highs near 60. Chance of rain 60 percent . .
Wednesday mght ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 40s.
'
Exteoded forecast:
. Thursday... Partly ·cloudy. Highs in the mid 60s.
Fridat...Partly cloudy. MQfning lows in the lower 40s. Highs in the mid
60s.
.
Sattirday... Partly cloudy. Morning lows in the 40s. Highs in the lower
70s.
.

Middleport council •e•
Contlnutd'trom pag• 1

to trash and ru!Jbish on private properties. -·
·
Arnold JohnSon of the village
recreation committee noted that the
village had received a donation of
paint for the pool, buf noted that volunteers were needed to do the paint·
ing.
·
Myron, Duffield of the Middleper) Community Association Bilked
that a Middleport Tree Authority,
which waS first appointed in 1991,
be reesta~lished so that grant funds
can be secured for replacing trees in
the downtown business distnct.
CouncR also!
- Hired Cheri Johnson as the
pool manager for the summer season, with · Councilman Bob Pooler

· The paily Sentinel
(IJSPS li3·Mt)
C-llyN....,.pei'Hotdql,lo&lt;.

.

P\lblishdd_. every aftemoon. Monell)' lhrou&amp;h
Fridly, Ill' ~It St., Pomeroy, Oh10, by the
Ohio V..lky Publisbin&amp; Campany. Second dw
postage plid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mtlllber: ,Tbe Aaociated Press and tbe Ohio
New1p1per Alloclation.
Poltmatm Send lddRu corm:doru to The
O.Uy Sendr-1, Ill eo.n St., Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

'
'
SIJBSCRimON RATES
If Canter or M - Route

On&lt; - ••:.............................. .$2.110
One Monlb ................................ $8.10
Ooe v.. r.....................:............. $104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oail)l. ....................................... 3$ Cen~a

Subscribe,. '1101 dnirin1to PlY dw carrier may
remit in ldnace direa to 11M Dllly 5emiMI on
a three, liz •or 12 mo.tll bllia. Credit will ba
aiven
'"""' .... by
week.
No aublcrlptton
mall perinlHed in arta~~
where home a.rria tervk:e is avaiiJble.
"'bliJMr RICrYCII d.e riJht to adjust fiiC!I dur•
ln. the subKrlption period. Sublaiptl011 nit~:~
clliaau mv be lmptemealed br duotolnathl

duration oiJIMIIUblcripllon/

• .
I
MAIL SUBSCRJmON
llllldt M.., Coouol7

13 11Hu................:..........l21.30

26 w..u ........................... ,S,3.82
'z w..~a ..........................,~.56

13 !:.~.~~~25

26 Weeki .......... ,............. :::;;:~

4

Capyrlght11H N!WIPAPIR ENTERPRIIE AI8N. , .• · ,, r ·• •V

•IColumbual#•te1' I

Rain is likely to persist in
region
through Wednesday
.'

• "' ;

':&gt;,'' :

D~sta

k:o

•

In Japan, the daily Yomiuri Shim!lun, spoJc;? : ''
for much of the world when it simply sail!: • .. '
u America, the aun society, is sick."··
:· ~ ; .
In' the wake of the Columbine killil)gs,
' · •·
has been a lot of discussion about tile r9dt of
society's "sickness." Are young l!oy.,hootina
their classmates because their mothers are wnrli~
in&amp;? BecauSe they've .been raised to
.. • , .. (,
their emotions? Because !heir culture ' worship!.,,., ,._,.,, .
cele~rity? Because they watched too many action: ·.
movoes? Played to~ many video g.,ues?, Linked,;;,,~· .1 .
to too many Web soles?
The answer could be all of thae•thinp, or:it:• ·
could be none of these things. Determining why- ••• .,, •
children kill children will be a long and difficult '''
process. But determining how they do it is n6t.''
They kill their classmates with guns. 'And until we
find a way to keep guns out of the hands of children, they will continue to do so.
••

' .....

I•

l43'tw

•
••
\

strosity will provoke a meaningful shift in public·. · r
attitudes."

for

MICH.

• •

t

24 , 1999, at St.
Joseph 's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
She was born March 18, 1909, in Nobe, W.Va., daughter of the late James
and Annie Radabaugh Murphy. She was a homemaker and 8 member of the
Reedsville United Methodist Church.
·
·
Survivors include three sons and daughters-in-law, Lowell and Sue
Chevalier of Reedsville, Zenith and Nancy Chevalier of Belpre, and Garrel
and ~ren Chevalier of Fredrickstown; two daughters and sons-in·law, EveIyn and. Guy Spencer, and Caryl and Roy Reed, all of Tupper:; Plai ns; a sister, OaJsy Provance of Athens; 17 grandchildren; 21 great-grandchildren;
five gre~l -grea_t -grandc hildre n ; several nieces and nephews.
,
Servoces woll be held at I p.m. today at Reedsville United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Wendell Stutler officiating. -Burial will follow in
Reedsville Cemetery.
.
Visitation was held Monday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at White Funeral Home
Coolville.
'

Wednesday, Apr. 28

installatiOns, but the Kosovars will , lose their
homes, their land and their Jives. ~ "·- ·
If bombing doesn't bring Milosevic to heel, it's
entirely possible that a demoralized NATO,will·.
cut a "diplomatic" deal with him that ratifies th!l- : • •
results of ethnic cleansing. That's what' happened
in
Bosnia, but this time there'll be no disguising .
"We are in Kosovo," he said, u because we
.
care about saving lives and we care about the the fact that Milosevic has won.
If that's how this adventur~ ends, it's a fair ~1.. ·: ·.
character of the multiethnic post-Cold War
that NATO will be reluctant fiver again to try an
world."
It's a glowing vision -· civilized nations fight· "out of area" ~peration for humanitarian aims. •.
ing to protect the oppressed and advance libe~al It'll be the end of the "new NATO."
The defeat might even threaten the "old _
values -- but it's endangered by more than MiloNATO,"
althoup arguably the alliance could stiU. ~.'
. sevic.
find
work
preparing to defend Western and Central · ·
For one thing, \he vision is not matched with a
Europe
against
potential expansionism by Russia.
clear set of goals or a military strategy. It's obvi·
Somehow,
at
the NATO summit this weekend,• ' •
ous, for instance, that the forces NATO created to·
blunt a Soviet invasion of Western Europe are too the alliance has to decide what it wants its future
~eav~ to perform "out of area" missions like 'to be.
minorities and sh~d struggle against disease,
environmental degradation, terrorism, organized
crime and mass destruction.
.
The vision is endangered, Clinton said, "by
the•oldest demon of human society: hatred of
those who are not like us."

By Morton Kondreek•

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

•

Clinton's 'new NATO' at risk in Kosovo.....,

Lona
Chevalier
Lona Chevalier, 90, Reedsvi lle, died Saturday, April

52•W..u ......................... Siop.n

Rcadt:r Ser v1•.,,s

Correc:tlon PolleY

'

o.............................. bo

Ioconte. If,.......

..................... .,.............
w~ wut ....... ' " '

tefonoolloa

Newt Depli1mlntJ

Tloo •••., .........

m.zus. J)lport.

ante•••••re:
Geltnl r+-•. . . . . . . . .......ExL 1101
~- "...........................................ElL 1101
•.
orExl-1106
1

Other Senti~
Ad¥trthlooi. .................................Exl. 1104
ClmolotiQoo ..................................ExL 110J
C&amp;.&amp;W ,..,............................. .ixt.llOO

"

-

'

- And approved a donation of
$1,000 to the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce for tourism work.
Present, in addition to Houchins
and Pooler, were Councilman Roger
Manley, and Council President
Sandy lannatelli, who presided at
the meeting; and Clerk Bryan
Swann.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... .4~.
Akzo .......••••....•••••......•.•.•.•••••• 45'1.
AmrTech ........................ ;......66' •
Aah 011 ............................ :.•..•42'1a
ATIT .....................................!541f•
Bank One .............................. 57~
Bob Evans .......................... :.18'!.

Borg-Warner .......................54'·

Broughton .............................14'.1
Champion .................................&amp;

Charm Shps ..........•••••••••••••••. 3•.'.
City Holdlng .......................... 31'M

Federal Mogul.. .................... 51'1•
Gannett ........ ,.......................74"!.
Kmart .................................... 15~~e

Kroger ...................................54~

Lends End ............................. 39~·

Lie! ......................................... 4~~·

Oak Hill Flnl. ........................ 17 1.

ova ..........;............................43Y.

One Valley ...............................38
Peopl•• ................................ 23-'!.
Prem Fln1............................... 12'4
Rockwe11 ...............................51'•
RD/Shelt ........ .., ........: ............ s&amp;Y.

Seers .....................................43'·
Shoney's ................................ 1'4
FlrstStar .............:....................32

Wendy'a ................................27!Y.
Worlhlnglon .......................... 13'1.

-·-·-

Stock reports are today's
10:30 a.m. quotes provide!! by
Advest of Gallipolis.

Desta Lenora Hudnall, 80, Albany, died Sunday, April 25 1999, at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
'
A homemaker, she was born June 12, 1918, in Albany, daughter of the
late Samuel C. and Ina Bell Hudnall McNutt.
·
She is survived by nine children and their spouses, Opal and Wilfred
Sharpe of Athens, Howard and Addie Hudnall of Albany, Willard and Linda
Hildn~il of Albany; Gloria and Larry King of Shade, Joan King of Harrtsonvolle, Glenna Wade of. Albany, Robert Hudnall and Enda King of
Albany, Charlotte and Jim Hudnall of Albany, and Alfred and Becky Hudnail of Albany; 58 grandchildren; 62 great-grandchildren; six great-greatgrandchildren; three sisters, Ruby Beckett and Gertrude Nicholas, both of
Carrolton, and Betty Smitley of Mineral City; nine half-brothers and halfsisters; Elizabeth McNutt, Orville, Harvey, Larry, Gary, Floyd, Michael and
Joseph McNutt, all of the Canton area, Linda Butcher of Texas.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ernest Hudnall ; a son, David ·
H!ldnall; a stillborn daughter, Lenora ·Hudnall; four grandchildren; two
great-grandcholdren; five brothers and sisters; four half-brothers.
·
Services will be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, with the Rev. John Elswick officiating. Burial will be in Hanning
Cemetery.
·
·
Friends may call Tuesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Maria W. Waldnig

Ohio schools consl·der .
Punl"shment o'ver threats

Site work ...

Pond clinic tonight
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District along with the Natural Resources Conservation Service and the Meigs Extension Service, will
sponsor a Pond clinic tonight (Tuesday) from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at Hickory
Lake, Tuppers Plains.
Topics will include pond animal control, what to look for in a good
pond Site, fish slockong, plant control around the pond, and Ohio's Dam
Laws.
Those attending arc invited to take their families, a blanket, lawn
chairs or lawn chairs. The pond is located on the Bill and Cathy Mildren
land. Refreshments will be served.

Boil advisory lifted
The Racine Water Department has lifted the boil advisory for Broadway, Vine, Cherry and Walnut Streets.

Elections office 0'nen
I'

The Meigs County Board of Elections will be open Saturday froni 9
a.m. to noon for those who qualify to vote absentee. Monday will be the

;~n;: 3~~.~~ voting absentee and the office :"'ill be open from 8:30a.m.
On Friday at I p.m. there will be a public testing of equipment in
preparation for ·the May 4 primary. Republican. primaries will take place
·on M'ddl
·
• 1 eport and Pomeroy with only six precincts
bejng involved.
Fl~e·dest·'oys

Pi''"""" •nn .

''
~"' ''
.
Nevi Haven's Village Pizza Inn was destroyed in an early morning fire
Monday. Chuck Blake, 911 director, reportechhat New Haven and Mason
fire departments responded to the call around 12:58 .a.m. Cause of the
blaze which started in the rear of the U.S. 33 restaurant, was determined
to be electrical, starting in a motor of a cooler, acrording to owner Gary
Cotton. Village Pizza had 10 employees. Cotton said he does not know if
he will reopen the restaurant.
.
..
Both Mason and New Haven were also on the scene of a small office
fire at AEP 's River Division at Lakin Sunday morning, Blake reported.
The sprinkler system extinguished the blaze before firemen arrived.

'-r===========:;===::=:=:==~~~~~~::::;_.J
Announcem~ e n·t s ·e·
_

.

.

Dinller planned
.The Wilton Civic Association will ~ponsor a spaghetti dinner at the
Woikesvolle Communoty Center, Sunday, with serving to begin at noon.

Minersville UMC yard sale

Maria W. Waldnig, Syracuse, died Monday, April 26, 1999 in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

EATON (AP) - A 14-year-old
boy accused of threatening to blow up
his school remains in a detention center while the superintendent decides
whether to expel him.
An expulsion hearing was scheduled today for the boy, who was sent
to the West Central Juvenile Detention Center in Troy pentling investigation .
" We need to send a message that
this was no joke," Eaton Superintendent Samuel Crow. .
·
The boy Wa!\ taken into custody at
Dixon Middle School on Friday after
he allegedly threatened another student and said he. would blow up the
school, located about 20 miles west of
Dayton.
Although the, boy has not been
charged, Preble County Juvenile and
Probate Judge Wilfrid Dues ordered
him detained. Dues noted the problem
oCcurred only days after the school
massacre in Littleton, Colo.
"The message. that I wanted to
send to the kid and the community is
that what happened at Littleton is·not
going to happen here if we have anything to do with it,'' Dues said.
In nearby Piqua; two students face
expulsion for alleged! y making
threats.
.
A 17-year-old girl has been suspended for 10 ~ays and could be
expelled for phoning a threat to Piqua
High School on Friday. The caller
said that "what happened in Colorado
is going to happen here."
Police said the girl didn 't want to

Local bri fs:

go to school and thought classes
would be canceled because of the call.
· Authorities are considering · charges
and Superintendent Jerry Clark will
decide whether to expel her.
An 11-year-old student at Piqua's
High Street Elementary School was
suspended Friday for saying he would
"blow up ·people." Police haven't
decided whether to file charges. .
In Ravenna, an e-mail bomb threat
prompted the evacuation of Brown
Middle School seventh- and tighthgraders anq Rausch Intermediate
Sc hool lift
1 h- and sixth-graders. The
two
schools
connected. in northeast Ohio are

The Sunday School class of the Minersville United Methodist Church
will hold a yard sale May 3 and 4, 9-4 p.m. at the home of Nathan Roush,
state Route 124. Syracuse.

8IO(}dffl.ObJ/e SCheduled

A bloodmobile is scheduled for Friday, 1-7 p.m. at the Wilkesville
Community Center. To schedule an appointment, eall David Stiffler Jr.
blood drive coordinator, at (740) 669-4671. Donors must be at least
years old, weigh at leastllO pounds and be in good ·health.

11

AA to.meet
AA. AI-Anon and Non-smoking group will meet at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy, 161 Mulberry Ave., Thursday noon.

Bake sale planned .

Rock Springs United Methodist Women will hold a bake sale Saturday
at God's Net on Main Street•. Pomeroy, beginning at10 a.m.

S

6

t

t

OngreS Se

. A songfest will be held at the old DeKier Church May 15, 7 p.m.
Smgers are mvoted to come and take part in the service.

Screening coming

.

Ufe Line Screening will be returning to the Senior Citizens Center on
May 7to do health screenings to.detect the risk of stroke. The tests to be
... d are caroll"d artery screening, abdominal aortic aneurysm and
onere
ankle brachial index. The tests are offered for $35 each. Also 'offered will
be
. a bone density screening for osteoporosis. Those interested must regtster at least 24 hours on advance by calling 1-800-4906-4557. Life Line
Police searched the buildings and · Screening is the nation 's leading provider of health screenings.
~~--~~--~~~~~~~~~==~====~~----_J
fuundnobomb.
AtWHJowickMiddJeSchooJ, two MUSI.CI"an's
eighth-graders who brought a manual
.
mIg
on making bombs to SChOOl Monday
face expulsion and possible criminal
.
US I
SS
prosecution, police said. ·
DAYTON(AP) - Policewantto with Tupac Shakur and Dr. Ore on
Matches. rope and carbon dioxi~e&gt; know whether the shooting death of "California l..pve." He released a
cartridges were found by officers who R&amp;B star Roger Troutman was the greatest-hits album in 1996 and
searched the house of one of the boys. result of a dispute over his family's reportedly planned to tour this sumWillowick Detective Ron Zalack said failed business.
mer.
other items found at the borne and in
Troutman,. who had hits such as
The Dayton Daily News reported
a trash 'can behind the school could " More Bounce to the Ounce" and " I · today that a company establiShed in
possibly .be used to make boJ11bS, but . Want to Be Your Man,'' was sho't by 1980 by five Troutman brothers had
police declined to say what they were. his brother as part of a murder-sui- gone into bankruptcy. liquidation.
Material removed from cide, the Montgomery County coro- Troutman Enterprises had three
's office ruled Monday.
recording studios and expanded to
sewer line not human ncrLarry
Troutman, 54, shot Roger, rehabilitating properties and training
DAYToN (AP) Material 47, four times outside a recording unskilled workers in the 1980s. The
removed by police from a home's studio early ~nday, then shot him- company filed for bankruptcy in
clogged sewer line is not human, a self in the head with the same gun a 1992, listing $3.8 milli on in debts .
coroner's official said today.
short time later, the coroner's office and $414,~ in delinquent taxes.
" It was negative for human mateconcluded.
In 1996, a judge decided that the
rial. It's most probably animal," said
The motive was unclear, Dayton case should be switched from · a
Ken 5etz, executive director of the
Montgomery County coroner's police Detective Carol Johnson said . . bankruptcy reorganization to a Jiqui"Everything is purely speculative dation. The case is ongoing,
office.
at
this
moment,'' she said. " We are
Lester Troutman, one of the five
Police said skin was found Mon-. interviewing
family members and brothers, declined to talk about the
day after a private sewer worker went
business associates to at least .try to business:
to the home on the city's so~th side.
piece together what happened, or if
..
there were any problems prior to the

d eath
· ht
.
be reI ated to b
.0 e
.

Continued from page 1
dent athletes. Students must current.ly pay a $25 fee to play sports. No
action was taken on the request.
The board also approved the
placement of advertisements at the
Units of the Meigs County·Emerhigh school football field to support
gency .Medical Service recorded
the football program.
A 1999-2000 school calendar 'three calls for assistance Monday.
was also approved. The first day of Units responding included:
RUTLAND
school for student~ be Aug. 24
7:03
p.m.,
Overbrook Nursing
with the last day for students \leing
Center, Middleport, Maxine Philson,
May 25, 2000.
Jan. 1,' 8, 11, 12, 14, 15 and VMH.
SALEMVFD
March 9 and 15 were approved as
9:50
p.m.,
Star Hall Road, hay
calamity days due to snow.
bale
fire,
no
injuries·
reported.
, Present were board President
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Bob Collins, hoard members Marty
7:06 p.m., Main Streeo, John
Morarity, Doug Little, Dave Kucsma and Ron Cammarata, and Trea- Schering, Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital.
·
surer Dennie Hill.

EMS logs 3 calls

incident."

· Coroner James Davis said the
shooting may have invoived a business dispute between the brothers,
with Larry objeciing to Roger
"going out on his own."
Roger Troutman had recently resurrected his career by collaborating

The Sentinel
News Hotline
.

992-2156

To offer story suggestions, report late·
breaking news ana offer news tips

or- ......... .

....,., &lt;Ill., .......,..... II (140) 9tJ.

2155.

voting against the appointment;
- Approved the purchase of a
used jetter for the BPA, at a cost of
$14,000;
.

Lenora. Hudnall

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

•

BEAUTY, QUALITY, CRAFTSMANSHIP
Enduring MemQrials Priced
To Suit Your Budget
520 W. Main St. - l'omeroy, 0
Phone 992-2588
Vinton - 388-8603
Gallipolis - 440·0852

j

NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)
7:00 &amp; t :20 DAILY
IIATlNEES SAT/SUN 1:00

•

•

�.

The Daily Sentin~!

orts

·Avalanche wins; Maple ·Leafs,
Hurricanes take series leads

Tuesday, Aprfl27, 1999

Ramirez's 1Oth-inning RBI single helps Indians beat A's 5-4
EORG.U~

!1 ( • '
(

~

o:: ... .

..

rt-

Y. '"

1.A-""t
·~~t~ c

&lt;•.- ·1·!·• .,_ f&gt;&lt;=
J'
l&gt;oe . Y,.,-., Y.A' '! :
.~-k A : •) ' ':.""' J·
he~ r
~ ~ .. ~

·ee

"

,,.
f • ·~
-~lot\&gt;- lt~~

~':-V-1· · z- i (4
~~~ "f (n ~c ' '&lt;c} .-:d
'!
• 1 ( • 't ~I'! "I;... i !
'I!" I •!' · I'!~
... ,. . .. tt
!, ·: rM· "r: ,c r ·'= : •. 4 ._,._,~A

· "" ,..,...
, I

. ,..

"""

·.-;

~

4..-t:'\1

..J.L •... (:

t

:·-::

~ ~

, ·~·

.... ',K :

r, . . . ,.

'J•I ..,· ~ }•, -

t.f• f

,. !') . . ,..;,;;.

,. ...

:4"'" JSI,( • .~~. ~• .,

',. ·'

WI) J h .t ';.

rt..£

4

·

;s:

-~lot.~ · · ~ . . . "" ~f':"
f ~-l ~;. .......

l

4.tu.t ft.:rtt ·.,~

,..

•• .u 't

~

t4..t!
'

r

* f.'

·.

'

C ;s..O

Jf

-..e I'

~~

,,.~

""'-&lt;'hoi~ llOQ-flM br•bo Ql~ "' 1""&gt;-

(.J;OZIMwJ "

lib _,.

""""
'
r.rubad ~ TflOI; I'IWitpl.

~

"'n
.

me

~

=

s....ru.

~

r

---

tu

'""j'

-

.....,-d -i&lt;:rl ;c-.e

I

'"-u: ,

(r._. 3Jd IIF ;_ ~ : .l) &gt;&lt;ad
fin.t Tn:.t\ Fr.a.an tr.rt-"'

In

!he

weal AI 13-S.
.a~a)
{.le-,ebzid
!.he btil rtt«d "' lhr l.w_ · M.o.-Jd\ ~ w llurd
I&amp;JfJf bf&lt;C\
·
' '" •
• &gt;CQfing lhrt 1 ! trr•K and
fJUJlt . !Q-&gt;,

A I -~-~ ~·to btta ablt Iii t&lt;:flltr
(jrJfAea ,.
.,.-:,,n r "' "~'" uri:, -..bea Clcleb:ad 11 lea.. , 1
v- 1-:r [)J. •fill G•,.,dcn "-"'lflal •.on•n!-• 8

(Ja.t b .r A '

.

• a +2 teal aM li•.e
la.v
Gram
aDd

Bm Grx&gt; e hn ;;..-., RBI "li1k
f.uw Dlaz ...,.j !br 'IOJI"C • Jtn a
I•Hr
&lt;JoL.bl, Ill the \eC.&lt;Jnd aM

Angels top Blue Jays 4-3; Twins, Tigers, Braves also post wins
Major league
baseball roundup
liJy Thl
.

1'· . · V'...:~ _.
.et ttp~; A ~~· ~I t , .).lf_ed ~ ~ or.r "li': .~ ~~~ ·n go
~orr r. f..A:JfU t; (; )
•b&lt;Jt -:.try - ?t- =l ;&gt;!;&lt;~ I· lha. Sr.ar.wm \1e . m
-'-f•.. -5 r(W
W&lt; r.wi 11, ucppb}ll; ~"
'''Bl ..: I&gt;,. ,.,.,.J Aril.tY ,, S· 'eden
l.flrr...t .r.~cn'\tlj -..t hat1 vm,~t.r
~• .w ;&amp;~r, t..;lA
''),'~:; ~~ .g, rm~ra
... -tl')f 2-frA_l /. Htd: t'N rrff.i
drJI\ e 1ft
fi.•orlt ·~ Ttn• 1\ • !t•frUt.o! •lll'loitA hll&gt;.tl~t'~ k:~t!u.!- rJ.th.Jt
.1'r&lt;1'! f'Qt1..., ~l' 1-..1
v,. 't..: · er..d
ai.d ~'Y''J fM':/;d \oi'Ar.t
ttr.M • t•ll·

"=

•t"'

deltn'\J'f;~ pb.:ot. JJ) «"DIn f~eld ~ M~ w&gt;ppe&lt;~ a. fi•c-

made,. (

)'

pme "-'"111 weal

Boo R~ •2·2 t u:.illfnd ea!IK
h1t• on •u tnn
&lt;ln.ld '"" 1001
~ p,~..
10 .• iw h" for,. pmt:
Twuts·
lj~::.. i ·m tr;~; ~~ r"7:· . .! .o: 4 t-t.tt~t
&lt;l'f)er.tr Apnl ') Hulllff allied hrm
~:..:rc ''" lt~~t f1fV' 1~#:. .. ·.t- ·tf,-;:• ·.t 'r:H~} l i~~ 1h I. Jd"i.lt. lf;,
"'•• l llh f&lt;-" the • oli
.. rlh a home run- "'" ml-·.cab and a
1 ,yht •,t,~ ~:4.l'ft · ··&lt; f4r-~ _,
t..1 .u...J ttK.m~r!!-d ,,H ~ur.-,
fr. '.JI\llt-1 r\L ,4nrt"· Jt ,,._\ WOOf lhl&lt; tfJ !hot piau 10 the \l•lh
·n~ \ r;J~~rt~ ~£ ,. . .
:._f- .. ·• l'•;lrtf"'" 11 II k&lt;~lm;' •;If tl&gt;t lnt- Mmr.,evJU I, ~ -~·~JI'JI 2 a:r,d l.kufJI\ i.
HulliCt ·, founh-mrung grand sl.un
~lf(j
11tth '.'' u~ 11 1 1'1 ~J{Jiri l •lfl.rfii..IJ ftJ
;n lhr Mw'&gt;llr••nc - m. 12th m the
,,., ft r1h v, r.v-....t.,Jff,'::· k~' fiJII.,.,.., . ,,~
J ~ ,,,~. m2h1 \ Sl .:u.uon
/".fi'/t t ;.#; 4 • tr. ' '"' r
lc:&lt;og...., thu"""""'- c:ime oil
• '·'• IJ;;,nT. L• '4':
A d:.n l ~ &lt;h J.
i :"J(J'I"Id.il 5- . j.nd Tim W•h-fleld • I· '- ,_ bea1en tr. I he
o.r1 t~;ltl plirf: Jolrinff,J!. .Jfeif
Tv. • ((., the ~~JOd ttme tn · nu)(
• 1~/e, ~J:J• 61 lmt" dr.d. t~ 11 it\ 4l H~JY \tc,n f"-"!~1 Anlhr..;, $·2
CM«r .Uru .\h
Trombk:- p•nched
T•in.• 6, R«t Y.x 2
1''"' " ~r· Ln.41 &gt;iiVl . Tllc. •!I&lt;Jk
•r:,.,u. 4-''! t/;,·Jf'''' ···~ • .,, ;z !':-../ • le.4Jfl . . ;, rttl::: J4Jf . n u.t1 4 lr;t mnn:: lfllrn"JtJru HunteJ tul ~ ~ffi;nd \.I4ST1 lhrec mnon~ ''" h1&gt; lirA "'' e
•:n r,t fr•.Jttj .&amp; \ifA'~jfit'IJ a~. tk JniiJ lls~1. \i1!, ,.~.tJ K.h ... a., \t) flfl:tmn~ th.dl nt: ·.e drrr .c m o t ~sccr -h't,gh h '·~ run.' and
T Jlt'O 7. :\larillin'&gt; 0
4

'' and
""""!he

""'Y"

ne,j.

1

NHL playoffs

J,;u::t h&lt;""""'d rn lhr fr!&lt;lrth · afltr
Fr:• rr ~r reatheti '"' the firr.t of,I•H&gt;
t. thrrrJ m,,.m~n f:rl(; Cha&gt;e7
'\r.k.: Jackv,n tl:u 17 . otraJpll
..a•e rl.atrro~ ''' la\1 ..,~m He ~~asn ·[
"I' n • 04·.c ,_,r.c Aut I 19911.
11&gt;-nh &lt;;xnt h•111ng 1n the cle:utup
.ptA {IJr the flf•t tiRIC , the A \ ha•e
u&gt;Cd 19 hn&lt;1il" '" tiJell 211 game&gt;...
Cl&lt;"•&lt;land ha' ""reo;! four "' more
run• m J5uf IHpmc&gt;,gmng 12-3rn
tiVJ\t l()nlf&gt;l\ ... "Jl10 1\'\ !Ja&gt;e fi Vtrr
up II unearned run• 1n the l01.11t two
gam&lt;•

..... oe;c:.;. - \l' -e
,....,~.:."" ~.~.
11 •
tt.r
H m IJl1f k&gt;-1

?t
.,. f -A t. ' _
Z)adcil.id
.'ll mmo I &lt;b a. &lt;"1:
" ' - ( - , I Kmd.a .Jimoal

,,...,.,..,. ~t

1 f~ hit~

ar.t•1

a~,-

Ot-·~i

~

•

r.r.d""' -

.

-.n l&lt;...dc4 _, ur;ll
,.,
D:a·,Jd J
AI'I K&lt; c t.lOd ;lt.e b&lt;..ar.m lmt n f•.r w I .

z-~··Jc:t
JIJ/J':'ft!! At-n ...u U:.-1
;, 1 ,- ,.A s. .!J:-• ,._~ :;t&gt; ~ lid
14 ,. .~ · ",..;a.' ~Itt::··~ •t fl: UJ
•;, . _ --.~ •t t• . ... Y- r -r~ .it.l a: :rttAJ •*UI.
•. •..-; •« 't ,~; .;; , r f J tf~e '::i.J

} h:

~·'"'lilf:d

b..:t.v
fr ..w;

r...l !he
:.r,clda I •.lr.\11 ...-

". ~ t !~='.. ~I; .,·~~::. ~.1'-J v..-"'t:t!'11otl,.!p!''l

h

M~
( &lt;Jt

w.

·i

'

bt.

UJifl.t ~Alt~ \U.W.edtaw.

·

.,~

\"')V;IJ

,-«;.¥ ,..,

41

r1

•..~ ·. ·.t!-tj ,.

I

-.
· ~Jt

.uri(&gt;( •

&lt;Ill

~ 1 '&gt;czlhni blf/.;pxl 41

&amp;.1

~·u·t~

r

"'

•1 ~Itt rdot&lt;oed
••., r illtd
td

.,.;Ked the . • rnnong run on a Jon
Scchhr lnplc and pa•'led ball.
Ea\lern v.cnr do ~.&lt;n ·1- 2-3 tn each of
the 1a~, 1Wo annmg -, and v.1nnin_g
pllche r Kctlh Carroll \!ruck out
"''en () (the Ia" mne bailers
U \l&lt;"rn htiiCI' "ere led b,- Em
Smuh wnh a 4-5 mghr and two
onple•; Brad W1llford 3--4, Josh W1ll
2-4 and h1L\ by Jomm1e Purman.
Chn' LyHn\ and Dus1in Huffman .
Ca.'&lt;!) lone• had three hits for
Federal.. whole Jeremy Adam s.
E&lt;lwards and Guc.. each had lwo-hll
games and Scchkar a lnple and l a.'&gt;&lt;m
McCumber a single.
lnnjng l!lWJ
Fed. Hocki ng .. 100-021-311=9-11-1
Eastern ...•..•.... 102-IJ 14-()()0=8-13-4

Ju3n Eocarn.ac1on .ind Karrm 15-da~ """" ·IO·C&lt;HI\1 cxpedori on and .
G..-tu home.-ed r.&gt;ll lmne !&gt;loner II- happoly headed hmne Monday nigh1. ' .
, ,_ ;md Brun !&gt;lr&gt;&lt;hkl G-2J. ailov.e&lt;l aftc"r bca11ng I he l·lnrHIIl Mnrhn• 5-3.
The 1np '" l'lul adelplm , !Jenver,
~\eft h1a 1n &lt;ae' en mmn2s at
St~ Domt 0ou1 BrocaJI and Mel . lA!' Angclc' and Miam1 mdudcd a
""o""our , .a ramout' ;md two off days.
Rop; finoWd '""" petfe.c1 •ehd
Dell-on tJ&lt;d ~ .awn hrgh v. nh 15 The c, nl y lonrcr A1lan1a tnp Wah durh•~• .,,lh Em:arrw:ooo and Dean ong lhc I'I'J6 Olympic, _
·me NL l:a•tlcadcr&gt; hod a 10-run
Palllttl e:och tinng J-for-5 ·me
Tiger&gt; g01 tMII seciJ!l(! Ylutout of rhe nmlh mnmg m one .v 1ctory and a
SC\CO· run 121h tnninf! 10 anot her. On
&lt;USOO . .. Ink Semk "a. blankro for
Monday, the y 'cored rwice' 1n the
the ru&gt;~ ume
mnth when Wah WeJS&gt; hir a lie· .
Br.u.s 5, :O.brlim ~
.-\t :O.ham1 . th&lt;- Allanta Br.o"'' goo hrcak10g RBI \ ingle and Andruw
pknt) ol m1lca~e 00! of the secoltll· Jtmc' \tole home on a hnrchcd runIonghi lnp m frandmc hi"Of)
dn"" n.
Atlanta •o~.cnt -3 on .a fuur-&lt;lt·~ .

a row, and now we ' rc on our way

Alianck

Wednnd•y '• ~-'"'"

';m I r:tt~t:IWJ Hhrhii.lt 1-.f/J

i\ L ~tand ingli
llhiWrtJ

w

...

~

I)

~

~
/Ij/,

11

'I

fi! J

Jl•itfl,,,

Ill

'I

j,;U'1'"' .: ... I

fI

'J

4

14

''JIJ,
'i'SIJ
'V

H .W•uu~·

[,8

•

)

&gt;,

1J

, .... t,,t

. ~

j,i,,,,.t-11 ...

r ·"·'"' I,,,

,. '

7 '' h!
ill
~ 14
I} · 4/IJ

'J
'•

AI IIJ•/Iil I ,~,,,.., 2- 21

111 ·
I' ,,,

' ,,

,,

'7 '

fiJ

II

' , .. t ''''"'

1\ r,~ l wm.

1:
II

'•7'J

'J

. ...

!I

'

II

"'

... ,tllr .

\1muJay'\
!.t t11111 t• 4
I /i'II&lt;&gt;JI '

~ ·urt'•

(~II u.l/l l ~ ! ll ~~;u

r .oto •.. o'
'

}lj'

'A IIJoWI I

I ••

I',,

L&gt;ll&gt;j• &gt; ~\ ., 1
•r'. I• '"

I) I

·

ll ••IJ•I II 1f'&lt;lllfi1·•J

I Jr,l.o•.Jj,, "'tl..r.!J I Ill If)

II ,,, II oliHO•Ar 11-l •IP.III-'

J ,,,,,

"f''

l l 1:oupo•· 1 I r

II

MJUW\••I :•I/.1!11•••1 0

• 11', I• th

'•·" Y· rl 11 1- 111r1n ! IJ J ,,1 I"'·'' 1'.1"1•• ' II I'; 1 ~
I' " '
I •,p , rfl&gt; , I 11 "'''11' 11 f1 II :11 1\I,,JJJI'I/rJ II il l~~ f•' l } I 1
I' 111
Il l VI I 1\f/IJI/•L•r:r J IJ.tl fJ ., ~LuuJ I ( ,,.,, j,,,,ll
,, llj( j ~ ,. Ill
l11 111111 l lloulllJH•II• I} 1 ,,, ' lruuL- t ll u11 l.loftrlr
11, IIJij'i J; IIl
IIJ I1'

pitch. later .cored on a ; ingle by
Smoth.
Belpre made 11 3-0 in the founh- . ·
tnnirig on a Meigs error and back-to ·
back &gt;Jnglcs by Srrmhcrs and'

WP-Carmll and E&lt;J,. Mds
LP-b on;. Woll 15th LP 1 and
GoiAA ·
· l~dpn 9, \leigs 0
"The Belpre Golden Eagles broke
open iii close game '41th su runs 1n
the '•xth mnmg as Belpre defeat
~1e1g s 9.!1 111- Tn- Valle) Conference
baseball action Monday "''ening al
Belpre .
llJe loss was the secmld in a row
for Meogs as rhe Marauders fall to 97 · O\'c rall and 7-4 in !he Ohio

M cGu~re .

"The Gu lden Eag les blew lhc game
open in rhe •ixth inning . Two walks. · ·
two hil batters. a doubl e b)l West an
SJngle by Deem and a Meigs error · .
made il a 9-0 Belpre win. ·
Deem picked up the win with helpfrom McGui re. The lwo c"o mbined lo
Di\'JSI On .
strike out 11. · and give up fi,.e hi~ .. :
Belpre scored their lim run in the McOuire had a double and a single 10
second ~nning . McGui re doubled and lead Be Ipre.
.
Jeremiah Benlley was lhe slarter
.core on a &gt;~ngle by Poling. Tlie host ·
added another run in the fourlh
inning. ·Poling. who was hit by a (See LOCAL NINES on PageS)

..... ......

'\Sil
WI

16

2'i

14

YJ

&lt;

lrlrl ll.il/1&lt;1

l rnful Ui•lWJfl
2'1 lfJ

11 All,;rr)f&lt;&gt;•

2JS

Mt1willll'. .u

2"i

lklmtt

fl21

2(J

'i4"i

22

~~

·w.

i-'JT .s "' I.lAIIt rr 'It ;It t I

r I.I.V tLA.NI:J

21

Zl

477

(

!2

,.~

1, 1

,,,,,(If,.,
,,,,.,,,,

-·-

YYJ

l!'

""'

' \" " Arri&lt;&gt; II IIJ
~ illiiUI I III

12

211

17

t, l)

M lllr..:··•ot~

22

u,

l .lf' l ill"f

14
IS

V;; r,cl,,l\ n

t u.

171

fj

I!J&lt;"h;, r ~··• a llfiJ

211

'''·''''· 'r f H~') r ll'l

J',;u~ ifit'
~ /' •111 1~1rr• l
I. A LM·r t'
!'hill" /Ill

j{,t)

I ~7

' '·1·111\o M,r•lrv.u 1 l1 J! IJ
f1 lf u•lv.oll I I )
1 ( oh / .~r\;~1~ ~ 1 (J
K-M r \I"IIII!IIIIJIIJI

7~

'J I o: n!rHIII•• 'I l

71

22
21
20
JJ

( •&gt;Jitkll ":.t;J ic

I A C! l J'JX:I ~

Z9
11

·r: .

"'
I

4

,,•

"'

. C:6ti'IIUJ.:l '

turr.nw

l%
11 1

~IIC\

W L l'&lt;t.
'•
~
1'

r,1,1

11
II
~ • 14

i\ 1

I'
1
I'

) hI

"}' ,

I)

fl

l'll!I IHirljlhl/1

Ill

Mllll!ll'lli

I lr•rul.l

~1·J
~ 1fr

fl
.Ill

' 111 )!1~ 11 1 11
Mll~~o· ~tuhf'

I'Jitdltlljrih

, ( hll fljll
1 INt 'INf'IIA'I I

, ,,,;

,.,

1\11

~,

f)

,011

II

f1

4/t

7
7

'I
II)

•1 \~
41}

\ rmll lli!•IMn

I I·

I

f•'U

.\ n 11111U

II
11

'I
HI

1~11

·1'14

II
/o

10
IJ

•144
,I(J(}

l .1~t AIIKilll't
( Hi&lt;llll ll!l

lf pU, iPII ~ 1\ llll ltlh

2' 4
210

•.

147

121.
I I~

1r1

II J I l-2

40

'\1
j;JiflWOI.!tl ~ · ~.
lJ .
He~rrml Ill: II Ct n M11dltra I ~ II. Allfllt: cr~e k
Wuy r111111r i1 ll -Spt'tu&amp; Kt lr11111 Kie/Jit: 21 14 ft ll')•
C'•ildwlt lllt UUUI \'tlh: 21 lf1 lilt) Dll)'lc:•lllw n
rttl tlfWWII 211 I K l.rruw f 't lll l'11tlr f') I'J fllt i·Cinl
l)ruc)lll , Vrr•Htllr.l IK

I(I

J

J'
\'

•

"
I

••

,."

Mnnd~ty 'l'l ~etun·.ti
Atln tllll :; , l•lrHidn 1

· R.U FF.4.1..0 BILLS S1!nred RB Anthony Gray
IJENVF.R BRONCOS Ar:ree-d to w ntuct tern"

~H7

R r151~ n ~ f 'arflhr161

k;ilh K'fl( l 2- t

r ·l!lrrl:.dn 2 '\::t,n

) · ~·

I ()1

lead~

Call1radt1

·

2

IJiviHiun IV
l'lt.

I· I•Jt OIIIU(/ •I ) ICJ 2,

2"i5

l'l •pll ( 'rt y nr1hel flf)) J2 I
'\.St hmr)' l'1l 10· 2
4· C.:o l~~tu hnmll 12) '' I
.C, Muwl )~ ln wu Wlut•·ouk ( I )I) 1
ft•l!clun H 2
7•W l ,llicl l)' S1•ia: •lt 7 II

207
liW
I H~
I I \I

K Mhl l l ~ t \J 2

.?M

1(}4

9!J

'J·('r ldcu..,ll lc l'•' t!)' 7 I
74
IO. N \{lthll b u tr C't1l ( 'ruwlr,•d 11 1 '' 2
,·1 1
:t~IUIMhl 'li lthllhiH
Stetanrl . IU: 1 l · ~•lltlht r tK ii tl t r luilker ,,~ 12·
S!lltlt tiiJ(IIU'u llhtf'tct I I 1111 Mmttt l'll\ Jllitl l-ur
MurJ tdOfr. \(1 J I . W I\ .1 OW WOOl) S YMMI ~ S
) llt 7•1)1 ,. Ill
•
t 'INf' NNA'II iNt'IIJ!Ifl I) 0 ) 111 l'ltli lt~•·ltllu n VA I.IW .~4 14 fk l ~ycu v ll l c H l ~ · l.lt!lnl e'H
ll'l· lic: tluirr ~ ~ lt1l111 I'J 1'1 lilt I ll La rum c:. Nt:W
~~dd llht~ l · l,, 7 :0.~ I' "' ·
r'fth•tl•ll (Smlliom 0 1} 111 l ll}ttJ ,, t l I" Ht [mil~: l I· . Rlr~,.I IK . IIJ ,'i (..l urrh' llilll S t IJ l O·I-ultOflll St.
Wc:tldt.lllltl) 14
It I In jllll
,
. l.uit 1\ltt:••lt•• rltt •IWU I I )Ill Mllw,tukctt ( k t~llt'
0 I I 1 0111 111
'1ttlt IJ ,.~ , , IA •I•hy 1'1 1 tot Nt·w y,,,k !Vu~lut t
1 ) } Jllp I ll
I'Ut-lflll l ll l"'d !tnlolt ! d ) Ill At lnul u ll'rt'rl U U)
.
·
I ·Wrou
stl!ndln~es
AdnHw "' "~ 1111111 I ill 111 ll n n i iHrl !K&lt;'I)'Ih1ld ~ ~ .
I t Km 11111
·

B as k etb a ll

NIJA

~ 'tt l tlirir litl llhtt!MIIO• I ) Itl ~~ l ,o~ll• l fiU ictl •

.

knt.'1
J~ad-.

l-11

Tonl~hl 's

PACKER.~!

Nnnrd Ken Hn oc.,

ANDERSON$

games

Outtw;J ''' ft ,l{;,lo 7 p"'
· N~ Jer'ot')' at l'rtt \buf)!h

7 \( 1 p "'
p it l
IJalhu at l..d momo11 !J 'II p m
IJclfOll at Arwhctm 111 ~ p m

7

f'lt&lt;JC'IU ~ ;11 ~~

·list!

·l1 7
-'"'"'

I .11U 1 ~

7

\('j

Wtdnesday 1s games

zw

C:.ttoltpa 1.11 H o~tOil , 7 p m
Turunw at l'h1 l:.delphw 7 p m

San Jo\C

a1

Col.,ado. I0 11 m ·

I' ;

Transactions

M1 arru 'JII .CI.I:VEJ .AN/ 1M
New Y111k 91. L11arl u11e K4 .
ll•ru•ltm W2. I. A I...:Jktli XO
11-hlwauk.cc: W . Wll \hlllf:lnn 91
D11111n 101 l'htCIIJ'' 'J.1
11mc:nJA 'JlJ 1/J.ah ~~
Ponhmd 1J1, IJcn.,.tr 17
&lt;Jvldert Stnte I 14, ~aoa 1nen11J K9
~an ,l.u tlmw 114 .L 1\ c;hppcra tstl

ll anle)' ft1 1U /torn 'I tJ C},U tl •
•
J-LOMIIJ/\ MAH.UN.\ . OplrQntd RHP Ri'1fad

'f•~niKht'.IJ: KitMU
1 p n1

Medina to Cal&amp;lll)' uf the I'll .
·
fiO USTf)N A!)TKUS : Placed C Mn.:: h
Mc lu ~key on· the 1.5-dl y d1 sahlcd l"t . I'!Jr cha~ the

I •

I.

l.

Baseball
Nallonal Lt:at:ut
.
AIUZO NA UI AMUNIJilACKS Opuoned OF

IJunte l'owcll tu Tuno11 nf the PCL

R~ca lttd

!'

INF

•

'

D

I

' . ' ~if'

j'

• '1•

..

EASTERN &lt;.:ONFF.RF.IWCE
...

i

,.

.

U

tax defcm:j

and with no·kx~&lt;.l, then we have the plan f&lt;x

'·'·'•

.

Extra·Large Capacity
z.s,..d washer
• 8 Cycll!S

• 3 Wash/Rinae Water Temp.
Combl~~ttlons
SALE

Contributi&lt;Mt~ ll&gt; the p~m can be made when

I

'38900

LJ(R6232E

ir\ cmvcnio..'l11 fc&gt;r you. Stop Ul wr

Extra-Lsrge Capacity

El•~rlc Dryer
• 3 {lrylng Cycln Including

llh'i:ncy and !K.'C us 1oclay!

Aulomallc Dry
• 2 Temperature Soningl .
• Slde-Sw.lng Door
,
LER362•E
SALE

v#uto-fJu!Mn 11uutwnt:e
Life Home 'Ce1 Buelnosa

Local nines ...

The pa1r. 0nIy

$64
.,,
..

_

I

..

28900

71.0"/l)fi&lt;J/w,'~·

..

.•..

•
'

"...
t.

•t ROGAN Gf~
.

''

RNER _:;

IniUranca Services

214 Ea•l Maior
Pomeroy

992-6687

-·-

Southern 9, Miller 2.
The Southern Tornadoes defeated
the Miller Falcons (0-12) by a 9-2
score . at Racine Monday night in
high school varsity softball action.
Southern (7-9) rook 'a 7-0 lead in
the first and , never looked back as
Regina Manuel picked up the win
with a nice pitching effort with a
good relief stint from Kim Sayre.
. In lhe seven-run Southern first,
the Tornadoes took advantage of
eighl walks and an error, scoring
without lhe benefit of a hit The

f v•x•'rc interc&gt;tcd in earning high interest on ymr "'JVi~,

1\I! Kl ftld~l e

l!f.!u

GRI:.EN BAY

scores

'J· Mllll&lt;lll i(I W:f 'VMIIC)' I I)

(J

Wnh111 Ufvltl!lll

~~~'' IJi rJid

2w .

.~ · Gnr.d lfldltl ll Vt~ l lc'y Ill f!H
lt -I •JhllJIIIWII M 11m ue I I J 1.1· 2
'I · I~ONHJ N .
~ Wf\j . f.~' ION

&lt;'41111riii1Jivltllln
. \J I J&gt;!IJ ~

tla,

UIUJI
l·l'lntn c J ~o runhtih Al!lrr r 14J 'i ..fJ
2 W/IU :L J(\ JJ IJ I((, ri,J /4 "!
l jll cllllll lfo) Ill I

4 Al!lc:a Scnc:ct1 1·. K I

f-'ootNII l...ngue
RAlTIMORE RAVENS R~ka~d S Ralph

Our de rred annuity
plan . mterest you.

Ul•l•inn Ill

"r

V.wttt' rfl Hh'l'lm1

, 'f'IMI~
Atlsww
N,w Yu1. ·

f{)()tball
1\l:~ tion.al

2. Ptul:tdrlpfllrl I . Toronto

17~

HI

Hock•y
Naliooal Hockty l....eagiH'
•
NHL Su)pendred'Anabcim LW S1u Giarnson f01
one game tor crQu;; hcd~mg Dttrott ~ Kn1 Di':aper m
a game on Apn l 1~
.
ANA HEIM MIGH 'I Y DUC KS R ~calltd o·'
M1kt Crow le ~. 0 f!Jel Kwtalkowslo. LW Mik.~
Leclnc and LW letem) 'S te,·~nson from Ctncmnatt ,
of lht AHL. and G Patmk Lahmr from Kans.&amp;u Cuy
of 1ht JHL
PI~TSB U R G U PI .NGUIN:S R ~r:~Jied C Bnan ...
fi omn from Adnond:ld. ol the AHL

'&gt;llh QR O.m Mrllt.r

Mondays!~

(.'h :tll&lt; ! lt ~ !Jil!JIOIIIO,

NL standingH

H,. 30 p m

Hockey

Munday's scores
.

10 VJ p m

prettdtnt of ptnootiC'1

KANSAS OTY OUEFS Agrttd ro rerms with
QB W&amp;rTerJ M0011 011 a 1-. o-y~arr conlmCt and LB
Ma111cus PartorJ 011 a thftt-ye&lt;W cootracl

S1a1tn·

'•

l I

flJ

:vj

Basketball ·
S1tional Buld.baH AftOciartlon
N8A Fmod TorODW F JoN! Wallac.c S.5DXI a.ad
hwhana G Tu\t" Bei.I.SJ.IXXI for flagrant foilb comrmnrd rna ,arne on ApnJ 2.5
' CLEVl).AN D CAVA LIERS fi!oc.ed G Breun
Kn11hl mt !he lft'JUted hsl Acuvat~d G Derek
Andeuon from lht Injured riM

Wil.tlrmpon J J flrlandr;o 7 V) p m
· Nt:'fw kucy ;~~ IJctJ rJII. 7 }t) p m
Nlt'l" YOJk ar Atl.¥rlfa 7 V) p m
~.cl)f• ill Mntfi('VJ(;J ii p m
1 or vttto at M~ lwaulu , !j: 30 p m
~jj~IJ.r.M _ P ortlanrl 10pm

t k'l

21
2i
ll
2-'i

r. d ortdll'd t•lt~•J tl ht-rtll
&gt;·drndx:d ll r\'n••m tHie

\llo'l&lt; I! '}
(1 jj
St! ' "~ II/; I I N C rm'"" ll o .~t.~'\'c r ·I I 1 'i,!J I 2
'"' l.l•lrr ' ~lr I ' · l ' ru:r ~h' "t rt1 \I 14 'w lmr \ 2
I~ "uhl111 ( r,jfH,rtl l.IJ llr f.akt"Wf•no:l 2~ 17-IJ.,hhn
":.•1•t1o Ill I~ ( 111 M•otll,., 27 I'J.(' y:rlmp I "" ' ]1
j iJ

.

21
2-1

\ran It

71J

z't

Sacu.mc~m 'i

a~ . Sanie ,

YKr

JACKSONVILLE JACUARS Signed (!T Larry
SfTllrb
~

pm

Wednesday\ ~aiJWJ .

J)h isk~tt
.
. 1,1 II • 111j(i

~~(;lfll('llf il

11/J

IJ

~

II ()aUas. 1\ VJ p m

'\.an A.n&amp;orti'o •
Uut1

L -1'&lt;1.

7'i1J
7'!.7

I J:,ll '' ~

V~\ tf

NHL first-round playoffs

14
12

' I ;t.do

CHI.andn"' lnc:hana.

ll

r.1ktw.n1 l)jvillon

Jur.u

I AI'/

I 1J

n

2

M4

17
20

( it&lt;athlll:

jll

Ill ,, Xil\1( 1

m
41"1.1

Wo~~, l un¥'""

I

SM

a. Ntw Seney. l!·p m

Mt.amt

Nnr Orbm ol tbt.

ANDERSON'S

•

Kayfa Grover; Cecil-Ia Core and Jiliam Jenkins.
Standing are are coach Mike Jenkins, Alisha
Stumbo, Jenny Young, Justine Dowler, Heather
Elem, Morgan Molden , Christeena Young, Alison
Woods and coach Ken McCullough.

1

BRADBURY TAKES FIFTH The Bradbury Yellow Jackets
took second place in the annual
Meigs Local Elementary SchoQI
Basketball tournament at lhe
Larry Morrison Gymnasi'911 at
Rock Springs. In front are•(L-R)
·Josh Kimes, Trey Ebersbac:/1 and
Brandon Kimes. Standing are
Matt Imboden, Jamie Ellis, .Tyler
Wayland and Roger Davidson.
Behind them are coaches Skip
Imboden, Tim Ebersbach' and
Ray Kimes.

'

Local high school
softball

. .

PCl.

GIRLS' DIVISION CHJ~MI'S
sion of the Meigs Local Elementary Basketball
·toumament, the Pomeroy Elementary Panthers
posted the championship win. Members of the
winning team are (L-R in front) Meghan Cleland,

game was scoreless until lhe TVC title hunt. Belpre owns a 8-2
Souther!' sixth when Kim lhle conference record.
Belpre scored first in the third
pounded a long 1wo-run home -run
inning
Adams led off Ihe inning wilh
for the 9-2 win.
Manuel -fanned one , gave up one a single. she later came into score on
Afler trailing 4-.1 -early, the hil and walked one with Souohern's a Staci Adams single. Belpre addod
Eastern Eagles came back 10 defeal defense making lhree errors behind another run in I he fourth inning on a
ihe Federal Hocking Lancers 7-5 her.. Say're fanned six, gave up three walk 10 Mollohan, a Meigs error and
Monday
night in Tri -Valley
a single off the bat of Luman.
hits and walked one.
Conference Hocking Division sofrThe Golden Eagles broke the
Miller's Alcica Jone s suffered the
ball action.
.
loss with four slrikeouls. f 4 walks game wide open in the fifth inning.
Federal look a i-0 lead on two ·
Belpre scored four runs on the
and four hilS against ·her.
singles and an error before Stephanie
Southern hil\ers were Kim lhlc slrcnglh of three walks, and singles
Evans struc~ out the nexr two hailers with a ~orne run , Kim Sayre a single, by Starr, Staci Adams and Malone.
10 extinguish lhdlames. The Eagles ·
Meigs scored 1heir only run in the
Kara King a single and Fallon Roush
· (7-7) came back with one on a a single. Drawing walks "(ere lhlc, seventh inning on a triple by Brandy
Milhoan double in lhe second to cut Lawson. Sayre (3). ·Manuel. Ashli Tobin and a single off ohe bat of
rhe Lancers' lead 10 2- 1.
·
Davis (2), Stacy Lyons (2). Kara Shannon Price .
Federal scored IWO in l.he lop or King (2), Heather Daily and Dena
Stad Adams picked up the win
the fourth, but Eastern rode , a Suzy
scanering five hios , walking two and
.
Milhoan home run with Becky Davis Sayre:
striking out seVen. She was also the
·lnnjngMm
.
aboard 10 a 4-3 delicit. The Eagles
Miller ... ................. 002-000-0=2 4 I big hiller for Belpre with a pair of ,
plated 1hree more in the fifth 1u take Sowhem .............. .. 800-002-&lt;=9 4 3 single s.
1hc lead for oood at 6-3, then held on ·
Amy Hy sell was the ·srancr and
WP-Manucl , Sayre (5th) and
' for the win. losi ng pitcher for Meig s, Hy se ll
Davis
\.
Eastern hitters were led by Suzy
slruck oul seven, walked eight and
LP-Jones and (.eckkone
Milhoan who had a double and a
·
gave up six hits. Price had two sin-*home run . Other hillers were Juli
. gles 10 lead Meigs. Tobin a~ded her
Bdpre 6, Meigs I
Hayman wilh a single, Valerie Karr a
Host Belpre broke open a cl ose lriple and Amher Vining and Abhy
single, Angi Wolfe a single and two game with four runs in the fiflh Harris each singled.
RB!s, !;&gt;avis a single and Slephanie inning and went on to defeal Meigs
Meigs will hosl Vinton County on
Evans a single.
.
6-1 in Tri-Valley Conference softball Wednesday.
Federal Hocking hillers were
Inning llitm
aclion Monday evening ar Belpre.
Hornsby, Suzy Bond 1wo singles and
The loss was only lhe second of Meigs .. ..............000-000-1 = 1-5-0
Calaway two singles.
lhe season for the Marauders as lheir Belpre ...................001-140-x=fl-6 -4
Stephanie !;vans picked up the record falls to 14-2 overall and 9-2 in
Slaci Adams (WP) and Mollohan
win wilh four slrike outs and four the Ohio Division. The Marauders
Hysell (LP) and Harris
walks.
leadBelpre by a one half game in lhe
Highland suffered the loss with
one strikeout and two walks .
lnnjng IWlb.
Rebates Up To $500.00 or 6 Mo. Same As Cash
Federal Hocking ... 020-201-0=5-5-2 . ·
Eastern ....... ...... ..... 0 10-231 -x= 7-7-1
WP-Evans and Karr .
LP,Highland and Bond

,. ...
•\ • •

coatriC1 o( C Paul Bako from

goalie Patrick Roy with 3:02 gone in 40 saves ao -Philadelphia as Toronto
the 1h11d penod to give San Jose a I· took a 2- 1 lead in the se ries despite
0 lead.
gelling outsliot 41-21.
Roy, whq slOpped 23 shots, faced
Philadelphia's Sandy McCart hy
43 San Jose ~ h ots in Saturday 's accused Toronto's Tie Domi .of using
serie• opener, which lhe Avalanche a racial slur. Domi denied it, and
won 3-1. He now has 101 pl~ff NHL official s wCTe looki ng into the
viclories, an on-going NHL rec rd . accusat ion. .
.
Vernon , who faced 16 Col ado
" He dropped anN-bomb on me,"
shms in the lhird period alone, ad/said McCarthy, who squared off wilh
34 saves.
.
Oomi several Urnes during the secThere had been a queslion · und period .
whether Sharks coach Darryl Sutter
Domi said McCanhy, who is pan
mi ght starl backup Steve Shields, black and pari nalive American , spar
who was solid down the stretch in in hi s face. Oomi natly denied lhe
1he regular season . But Vernon. 0-5- acc usali on, which threalened lo
I in his past six starts, has more play- embroil rhe l':IHL in a racial c6nlrooff experience, with Stanley Cup vcrsy in the middle or the playoffs..
lilies wilh both Calgary and Delroit.
Sie ve Thomas, mali gned m
The Sharks had a great chance Phil adelphia for a hard check on Eric
midway lhrough tbe second period , Desjardins in the second game,
when Marco Sturm caught Roy out scored the game-winner on a power
of goal. Stunn had a seemi ngly wide- play 40 seconds into the second perio'pen shot from in front of the crease ,- od. h snapped an 0-for-15 powerbut Roy dived toward the goal and play droughl on lhc scncs; and 0-formimculou sly slopped~ 1he puck wilh 33 including lhe end of lhc regular
his slick.
season.
The Avalanche were wilho ut
Mike John son also scored for the
defenseman Alexei Gusarov, who Leafs, and Karl Dykhuis scored the
sprained his -left knee in a collision Flyers' only goal.
with Fleury in Game I. Gusarov is .
Hurricanes 3, Bruins 2
.
oul indefinitely. and will probably
A di spuled third-peri od goal gave
miss the resl of the· series.
Carolina a 2- 1 lead in rhe se ries.
San Jose was without dcfenseman
Andrei Kovalenko's skate was in
Andrei Zyuzin. who is se rving the lhc crease when the puck go1 past
second of a two-game suspension for Byron Dafoe 2:54 inlo the period.
slashing Anaheim left wing Jim The visitors then held on for their
McKenzie on April 17.
second stmight 3-2 win .
the series was delayed bec ause of
With rhe score tied a1 2. Roher!
the mass killings at Columbine High Kron .passed the puck from . behind
School in Liltleton, Colo., outside of the goal Ime lo Dafoe's left . .The
Denver. The firsl 1wo games had puck appeared to precede Kova l en~o
been scheduled for last Wednesday irHo the crease · and ricochel off
and Thursday nighls in Denver. In Dafoe.
re spect for those. slain, the series did
Officials reviewed lhc play . on
nol get under way until SaiUrday in video as Boston coach Pat Bums
San Jose.
yelled at them. Bu1 he changed his
Colorado was one of 1hree road - 1unc after seei ng the video replay.
··The puck was io the crease
teams to win Monday night as
Toron10 edged Philadelphia 2-1 and before he (Kovalenko) wenl i~ ."
Carolina tripped Bosron 3-2 .
Burns said. '.' )I bounced off Byron's
glove hand and wenl in lhc nel and
Maple Leafs 2, Flyers I
, In a game marred by accusalions that 's a break I wish we could gel,
of a racial slur, Cunis Joseph made but you have to make your breaks." .

Southern, Ea$tern defeat Miller,
Federal HQcking; •Meigs loses

•' •'

~rOtlal Bouon, 7 p m
Cl..£VELAM&gt; ac Phdadelphut 7 p m

!ill

(!}CJ

21
17

l ~c- lcnc·y

..

M2

"' fh!I Wifl ( lliJil IJ s I "' IJ"

1 H.•IIUIIrHtli41 l,lfl .

l'l (

14
11
19

24
2Z
11

Ui.-b:hm J

..,,.,.,m

~amn

I PI· ~ 11 I 1/r ,,, f ! 11•

K/NIIfl

,f 1 ttM f.,.. ~
rlao: ""' ' ..nal r..-i•rl~ toe ...,,.. poll for 'If.,. Auuo..1;11~d
l•r,.u lh! lflu •, Jhxb 'ldwK•I AtJrktll AU&lt;"-1&lt;1111,11
Jr •.·t:l'lfi'. ~.11!, ftrU pl.otr .,,~n rn piltt:rlllll" ..e\1

.'• h oi&gt;"UII l 1"''•ll)• , ~ I II i
t fJ ',fl .t•.' •l•' I J, o~ Lm;l · ! tllll

,,

z•
1'1

"kw VrK\

II''"";, ~ • :..rc ~MIII" I'
,.,.., f Hilt&gt; lr1 rf• ~hoed ty41•d10rH 1('4HI\ Ho

t'h

' · lh\f'&gt; ll .1
. ,, , ,,fl]" lj

'JmJiKh1' 11

2~

· Ohio H.S. poll

VHdHfl UhiWrll

·~

I,,,,,~, f ~ •.oh.:antrll
l1 Y 11q ) "'

30
29

l111l~~n.11

7 4iJ p m
~

I·

l!'LI'&lt;I.

'.l"I~WSIJ

M ti1111Ul

hflll..utr/• ' /'n••u II I! ill AI!Jtotrlll IC/11.1'f1/IC IJ I)

t . ,~nd Hh;.,.,... ,
t I J ' t l l , fo'~J;
( !,,. ,;1!1',

iii

7 1~

]- IJ

m. .~ ·

~ · M IMrtl

p 111
( 1~1( INH .4."1 1 l l£1f.rJb, fJ cl I :ill YhJhod.:lfJiou•
IO r~'ll 'l ' ' 1 1fi rur.
' I 111' ~11• l fr• hw:l fJ 21 a.r l it" Ida &lt;Jian.wwltr I
I. 1 I ,,.. I• r/,
..
l'/1'\ 1-\tJjt.dl:'t t P~r· I 1111 M d w~J I-.a:: IWI,.,cllll •l
l. I• 7 W, t rs1
•.
(Mil IJtf'~l &gt; IU Jtdlrt.v t I I t :.~ . Nev. y;ilt IJ,ttrt
I 11 7 l'q.ru
·

I Ht·mw...-~

l'. ~n·n

IDal .

back to Denver,'· Hcjduk .said. "" It's
rhe best situation." ·
Three series can end 10nigh1.
Buffalo. which leads Onawa 3-0. is
al home. Dallas and Delroit, both up
3-0, arc al Edmonton and Anaheim ,
respeclively .
The other two games lonight are
New Jersey al Pinsburgh and
Phoenix at St. Louis. The Penguins
and Coyotes arc ahead 2-1 in those
series.
The Avalanche tied 1he.game !ale
in the lhird period on Adam Foote's
goal. which slipped undernealh
Vernon as he fell lo the icc amid a
tangle of players in front of the net
Vincent Damphousse, · traded to
the Sharks from Montreal on March
23, sent the puck pasl Colorado

...

Scoreboard
Baseball

By ANNE M. PETERSON
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Milan
Hejduk doesn't see himself as a hero.
The rcsl of lhe Colorado Avalanche
see il differenlly.
Hejduk. a rookie righl wing,
scored 7:53 inl() overtime Monday
nighl , ,giving lhe Avalanche a 2-1
viciOry over the San Jose Sharks.
With the win , Colorado look a 2-0
series lead to Denver for lhe nex t
lhree games:
"That's the playoffs. You have
different heroes on differcnl nighls.
, It 's a 2&lt;l-man effort," righ1 wing
Thcoren Fleury said. " h was grea110
see Milan score, he 's a gifted hockey
player. You can tell he's a gihed goal ·
scorer.:·
Hejduk, who had 14 goals and 34
assisls in the reg ular season, lOOk a
pass from Colorado · captain Joe
Sakic and fought off Sharks lcfl wing
Jeff Friesen in from of the crease lo
bear Sharks goalie Mike Vernon .
Afterward , the enlire learn
engulfed the smiling rookie along the
boards, while Vernon hit lhe goalposl
angrily with his stick.
.. It was greal for us to win two i.n

..

Southern hammers Miller 26-5; Eastern, Meigs drop decisions
Ro k'
f'tdtnl H&lt;..c~ing 9. Eaourn 8 001
·11x: IO.O\I&lt;"m Eagle' k,.,t a . 9-~
hcanbr~ak.cr 1n nme · mnmg&gt; IIJ the
F«kral H&lt;Jii kong Lance.,, 'A&lt;..,day
n1ght
Jn
•.ann;
Tn- Valley
Conference · ba&lt;eball actwn a1
Ea\U:m Federal also won the completion of a 17-13 makt:-up game
frmn earher 1n the \&lt;a&lt;On.
In the regularl y .chedultJJ game.
Eaotcm 15-g) foughl lr.ick wilh four
run• in 1hc •ixlh UJ take an H- 7 lead in
to lhc .cvenlh, oot (or lhc lhird URIC
1h" year E'"t.ern lot.~ afler holding a
lead gOJng into the Ia" frame .
The Lancers ( J(J-4) lied i1 in the
oeventh on a Mall E&lt;lwards lead off
tnple and J.J. Gu.e•• single. Federal

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aprll27, 1999

n

The Daily Sentinel o Page 5

,..,•
•

(Continued from Page 4)
and loser for Meigs wirh help from
Aaron Vanlnwagen. The two combined to strike out nine, walk lhree
. and · scalier seven hits. Adam
Bullington, Tommy Roush , J.T.
Humphreys, Pal Marlin and Odie
Karr had the Meigs hils all sfngles.
Meigs will host ViniO·n County on
Wednesl:lay.
lnnjng l!lWJ .
Meigs .. ..................000-000-0=0-7-2
Belpre ........ .......... .OI0-116-x=9-5-1
Batteries
Deem (WP). M~Guirc (6 &amp; save )
and Poling
.
Benlley (LP), .· Vanlnwagcn and
Humphreys

•

•

toJburMom
. '. '

Pt. Pleasant, WV

Ripley, WV

. 985-4222

(304) 675-72$4

(304) 378-5940

•

This Mother's Day, a heartfelt "thank you" could
be the best gift you could ever give your motheL
·Don't miss this·opportunity to say it.

•

"

To Be Published
Friday, May 7

IX3 Greeting· $10.00

I X5 Greeliug- $13.00:

HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

Daily Sentinel

(PICTURE)

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME) ,

HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

LOVE, JOHN , JOE
AND SUSAN

WARNER HEATING &amp;COOLING, INC.

Chester, Ohio

a

.

.I

LOVE, JOHN,
JOE AND
SUSAN

·'

Is Offering A FR~E
Space Guard Air Cleaner (Valued At

'
\

$400.00)

With Purchase Of
LENNOX. Equipment

De(l(liillt' F(,r This Specia.l Mother 's
Tribute Is Mouday, May 3, 12 noon ·
Fill out lhe form beloJW and drop off with payment to
The Daily Sentinel "Mother's Day"
Ill Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

There·has never been a better
lime lo buy a Lennox
HP26 Heat Pump.
•Save up 10 50% on energy bills.
•Be warm all winter and 'cool

[{:i'acL'E-o'NE."--;!x3G'Ri:'E·iiN'G:.$i0.00'---8~xs"G'R;E~;NG';iPic~uRE..:Su.oo-:-,

nexl summer.
•Preseason savings rhrough
May 15.

I
I

(PLEASE PRINT or TYPE) ·
•

I MOTHER'S NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Heal Pumps Heal, Cool and Sa~e

I YOUR NAME(S) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - 1

.I

WARNER HEATING &amp;COOLING, INC.

IYOURADDRES S : - - - ' - - - : - : - - - - - - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

1·800{67·4223 Ali'lA_........,.,.._..
:,..
0

1'011111

ICJTY,STATE: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ , , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . : . . - IPHONE: ·

I

·. .

'
•

MAKE CHECK PAYABLE TO: THE DAILY SENTINEL

L------------------------------------~-----~
•

' I.

•

•

�Page

.Pom~roy • Middleport, Ohio

6 • The Dally Sehtlnel

Titme 0 ut For liIpS

r_:_:._::=::::::;::::~:--":'"'._..,

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family ·and Consumer Sciences/Community
Development
Do you know what you are call ng!

If. not,

1t

is easy to dtscover the

nuh'icnl s that arc in the foods you eat.
All you have to do IS read the " Nutn ti o n · Fact~' l abel .
,ln 1994 food -labels wetc rei'ISed
to provide &amp;'OU with more current and

&gt;la ndardtzcd t'nfonnauon . Jn the past.
I he labels had conecnlratcd on mini-

mum amounts of vitamms and mincrab . Today the labels cover the nutri cm s of: which consumers tend to get
too mlid1. such as fat and sOO ium .
on the lahcl now '1 At the
IPp thcfc . mu ~t be a dc s~ npllon ol the
Wliat

IS

Hmnu nt of food that make ~ up a ~c rv­
i ng. It will explain the numhc1 of
:-.en 1ngs 111 the containc1 and the
11U lll h~r Of .:;dories for a S ln~IC scrvlll g The llU!llbC I of c alo ll c~ I rom rat
\\ rl l al~o he Included in thi s sec ti on
' Th ~ next pan ol thl' lancl hsts variuu..; nutrient s, thc1r amounts and the
pL'n.: L' t'l.ta ~c o f th e rcl:ommc m.h::d
Daily Va lues that o ne scrvmg of the
1\ md \'·ll ll pro' ide Fats iLrc g1vc n first·.
Nn more thJn ~ O(A. of your total calo-

cha&gt;C a stew that would have the beef
and I he vc••ctables listed first so you
"
·
rized below the fats.' These should could get more nutrients for your
account for no more than 10% of mone y.
your total datly caloric&gt;.
It ts pQssihlc !hat the label may
Cholesterol and sodium arc listed have a nutrition description such as
·
next on 1he label. They are specified " low fat". " fat - free" or "high -fiber."
in milligrams and druly percentages. This infonnation must be accurate
The maximum amount of cholesterol and cenain guidelines must be fol found in food s should be no more lowed. For mslance. tf a product says
than 300 milligrams per day; sodi- that it is fat- f(ec, cholesterol -free,
urn 's limll is 2400 milligrams.
sodium -free, etc .• then there is no fat,
Total carbohydrates follow sodi- cholesterol or sodium (or almbst
um. with sub-cmcgories of dietary none) m a scrvmg. The words " with.. •
d
fiber and sugars. Experts suggest! hat out, 'no," an '"ze ro" may be inter55-60% of your .c~ l ories come from changed for 'Tree."' Other claims can
carbohydrate s. This refers to 300g for be : low fat- 3g or less;.low saturated
fat - l g or less: low sodium -less than
total carboh ydrate s and 25g for fiber.
Thi s would be approxtmately 1, 100 140mg; very low sodmm - less than
calories base.d upon a 2.000 calorie a _ 35mg ; low chole sterol - le ss than
day dtel . TI1c majority of these calo- 20mg: low calori c - 40 calories or
ries should be complex carbohy- less. .
drates, not sugars.
Labels on ·meat seafood and poul.
'
.
· Protein is the last of the more try arc gtven for IOOg servmgs. If the ·
important nutrients gtven in grams. label says that it ts lean, then that
Research studtes indicate that only means that it has less than I Og of fat,
about 15 '1r ol your total caloncs less· than 4• of satutatcd fat and less
.
.
than 95mg of cholesterol Extra lean
should come lrom protem.
Other nulncnls such as Vuamtn A. refers to less I han 5g ul fat. less than
Vitamin C. Ca lcium and Iron may be 2g o f saturate'd fat and less than 95mg
h&gt;icd wllh the pe rce ntage uf Daily of cholcslct ul .
Th
·
·
be 1 · h ·
· d'
VaI uc s for a 2,000 ca Ione
tel
e
II a product I S satd to
11g 10 a

ries should be from fats (65 grams or
less). Saturated fat s will be catego-

m£1.riufacturet may al so dc~.:Jdc tu
show percentages of other VIHim im

and mineral s.
The food label must have a li st of
.
mgrcdu! nt ~ from the most to the least
so you will know what foods are in
the product. Let 's say that a can of
beef stew has a li sting of: water, potatoes. beef. carrot s. S?li. peas, ·nour
and seasoning s. There is m ore water
in the slew than anything else. You
may wish to \'ompare brands and puP

parucular nut11cnt . then a se~v mg
should contam 20'fr more of the·
Daily Value or that nutrient If the'
word " loss" is used. then it should
have 2591 less of a nutnent or r..:alo-

- - - - -- - -

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Health line

24-Hour

Availability
• ••••
•••• •••
1:,·~&gt;

(304) 675-2828

I

I

-

----·------

'II

-

..,\1'..., \'.L'

·,·::\;
'l1 1 lli

\l'l·-......

\k1

-·----- -.. - - -

A .special section ·devoted to
•
" a l umnus "
your JI'.avorzte

your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples,etc.
im:nelrnoer

•
•

I
I

Tobe
p~blished

Friday,
May 28, 1999

II

~··]

l~L k'-.[:1:'1-. ~·. l1l:1~'-·r:1-.

Remember When?

I

2.4 Nulaancp: Any condl-

ric s for that'spccitic food
By using your knowledge ol what
nutrition lahel s explain, you can gel
the best nutrition from the foods you
buy and consume. The label can
serve as a guide for hel ping you plan
a healthy diet.

•
------·

Public Notice
tank Clllntra WhO aarvlce
dlapoul ayttoma lnoldo or
outoldo of tho Dlatrlcl and
dlopoao of tho maforlal
within tho Dlotrlct muat 1110
comply with thl• roguletlon.
1.4 Sewage tank cloanlng
companlto thall aubmlt
monthly Information to tho
Melgo County General
Health Olalrlct, outlining the
following: sourco, typo, and
amount of ooptage, dlspoaal area, weather condlllono,
soli condltlona and other
such pertinent Information
dHmad necessary by the
Board of Health. Thla lnlormatlon shall Ia on forma
prescribed by the Board.
Failure of the oeptage
cleaning company to aub·
mltthoae reports may leopardlu operating llcanee.
Reporta will be submitted
quarterly with due datoa of
March 1,June1, September
1, and December 1, rospeclively.
SECTION 2: Definitions:
· 2.1 Board of Health or
Board: The Malga county
Board or Health afpolntod
under provisions o Section
13 709.02) or the Ohio
Rovlae~ Code.
22 _Department or Health
Department: The Meigs
County General Health
District.
2.3 Holding Tank: Any
facility, designed to be
water11ght, which It used
for the storage and decem~
position of human excre·
mednrt or other wastes In llq·
u1 orm.

in
The Daily
Sentinel

lion of · aeptage that Ia
potentially lnjurloua to the
health, aalety, comfort, or
prop•rty of a person, or that
pollutes watere or the state.
2.5 Paraon: Any lndlvld·
ual, partnership,, copartner·
ship, llrm, company, corpo·
' ration, association, joint
stock company, trust,
estate, political subdivision, state agency and any
other legal entity or their
legal representative, agents
or assigns.
2.6 Potable Water: Water
which Is aatlsf.actory lor
drinking, culinary, and
domestic purposes.
2.7 Privy : Any sanitary,
waterless device for the collection an~ atorage of
human excrement but not
. lncl~dlng commode's or
other portable receptacles.
2.8
Property
Owner:
Parson or entity that allows
the application of aeptago
on property under hla/har
ownership or management.
2.9 • Registrant: Any per·
son servicing oowaga dlspoaal syateme and holdlrig
a valid Melga County regis·
tretlon.
2.10 Realdantlal Sewage
Dlspoaal System: Any saptic tank, aerobic treatment
tank, privy or holding tank
used to trtll sewage from
raeldentlal ~welllngs . .
2.11 Semi·Publlc Sewage
Treatment Facility: A prl·
vately owned treatment
facility that provides treat·
ment for property open and
acceaalble to the publtc.
Theoe facilities Include, but
are not limited to churches,
restaurants, schools, parks,
and atoraa.
2.12 Saptaga: The mixed
liquid, ocum, and solid contents of aeptlc tanka,
areauon unlta, prlvlea, and
o_ther typos or on·alte lreat·
mant or holding aystams
for domestic and or commercial sanitary wastes.
Septaga shall not Include
waste materlala for grease
traps or lnduetrlal waatea.
2.13 Saptage Hauler: Any
person who angagea In the
collection, traneporfatlon,
and dlapoaal of the contanto of sewage disposal
systems.
2.14 Servicing: The clean-

ing,

removing,

hauling,

Public Notice
&amp;afore the Decemtar 31at
uplreUon date.
SECTION 4: Servicing:
4.1 VehJclee, Implements,

conlalntra, and all othor
equipment aholl Ia oporll·
ad In such manner •• not to
CaUIO I heolth haurd or
nulaance.
4.2 Any accldantaleplllegt
ahall be cleaned up and tho
ar.. . dlalnfacted 10 aa to
render the spillage harm·
leta to humono and ani·

mala.

·

4.3 The property being
oorvlcos shall be loft In a
sanitary condition.
4.4 Water used for flushIng tanka or other sewage
containers shall be dis·
posed of In tho ssm• man·
nar ae the wastes.
.
4.5 Discharge of waatot or
lluahlng water Into a lake,
atraam, or other aurtace or

underground
water
resource shalt be cauae for
Immediate suapanalon of
&lt;~glatratlon.

4.6 Alternate or oxparlmental mothoda of diiiPDAI
will
bo
lndlvldlllllly
useiSed, and ahall meet
Department approval,
4. 7 Non blodogradeblo
materials must be aaparat·

·ad from the aoptaga II the
siptago Ia to ba land
applied. Such matorlela
mutt Ia dlapoaed of In 1
manner approved of by the
Department.
SECTION 5:
Vehlclo
lnapactlon, ldontlflcatlon
and
Equipment
Roqulremanta:
5.1 lnapectlon: Any per·
oon engaged In oarvlng,
ohall' permit tholr vehlclea
and oqulpment to be
Inspected upon requoat at
any time and place, ao amy
be . designated 'by tho
Department. lnspactlono of
all vehicles ueed for aervlng
may be made at leaot quar·
terly by the Oepartmant and
In conjunction with regis·
tratlon renowal. Vohlcloo
which determined to con·
form
with
equipment
of
tho
requlremente
will
be
Department
approved for 11rvlng In
Meigs County. All vahlcleo
uoad In aervlng may be
required to have a current
Ohio Highway Vohlclo
Inspection Sticker.
5.2
Equipment
Raqulraments: All vehlcloa
and equipment uaed In-oer·
vlclng ~hall conform to the
rollowlng:
A. Vehicles and equipment
shall &amp;a designed and main·
talned In goOd repair ao as
not to create a public nul·
sa nee or health hazard. ·
B. Vehicles and equipment
must be stored In a manner
that will not ceuaa a nul·
sa nett and shall be used for

no other purpoaaa. All
tanka utlll•ed In tha han·
dllng or saptaga shall bo
affectlvely aecured on each
truck.
·
c. Each tank on a vehicle
ohall be elrong enough for
all practical conditione of

operation, be leakproof,
and deolgnod to be kept
tightly cloaad to prevent
spillage or ascapa ·of odors
while In tranalt or etorage.
Tanka shall be conotructed
of suitable materlalo and
property mounted on the
vehicle. '
D. Pumps shall be adequate
for ~he required aervlca.
Pump Installation ehall be
designed to prevent back·
flow
and
leakage.
Connections ahall be provided with watertight oeale.
E. Discharge valvaa on
tanka shall be watortlght
and shall be located and
constructed so aa to parmlt
unobstructed dlachargo
Into the place of dlapoaal.
F. Hosea and piping ahall be
stored and sealed ao as to
prevent leakage or dripping
In transit. ·
5.3 Vehicle Identification:
Tho name and addraso of
the company muot be
shown on each side or tho
truck. Tho roglllratlon nu111o
bar
Issued
by
the
Department for each veh~
cia muot also be shown on
both aldee and tha rear of
the vehicle. All lenora and
numbtra mutt bt 1 minimum of four (4) Inches In
height and muet be of contrasting color.
5.4 Certificate Ranowel:
Each year tha Deportment
will
Issue reglatratlon
r,enewal certlflcatae for
placement In vahlclea,
·5,5 Dtfacto and Vlolatlono:
Dolocll or violations on
aarvlca vohlclta and/or
equipment may yauet au•
penalon of tho vahlclo roglatratlon until the dafacto or
vlolallona aro corrected, If
ouch violations ere considered 'I public nulaance or a
health hazard.
SECTION 6:
Septage
Dlepoaai/Land Application,
Permit, and lnspectlono:
6.1 General Statement:. No
poraon ahall. apply, pormlt
or cauee the dlapooal of
aeptag• on land In Mtlga
County
unle18
the
· Department haa leaued a
·parmlt for that alta.
6.2 Application for . Sltt
Approval: To obtain 1 parmit to apply aaptege to 1
olio In Malga County an
application muot bo filed
and ahllllncludo tht follow·
lng minimum Information
end any other reaoonablo
Information daomod nee••
oary by the Dopartmtnt:
A. Tht application llhell Ia
tlgned by the reglatared
otwogo tank cleaner ancf by
the land owner where uptaga 11 to bo ltnd applied.
B. The addrau or legal
deacrlptlon of tho pro-d

storage, and/or disposal of
Cassie Lelgh ·Nease
Joan VanMatre
Hoffman
..
septage.
Meigs High· School
Site: Contiguous
2.15
Wahama High School
land In common ownership
Cliss of 1994
Class of 1966
for which an application for
one aaptage hauler to apply
septage has been submlt.ted.
· 2.16 SubaurfacolnjecUon:
Incorporation Into the soli
with plow or equipment
aptclllcally dealgnad for
placamanr of a liquid below
a aoll aurflice.
SECTION 3: Registration
of Sewage Tank Cleaners:
3.1 No Peroon ahall
remove, ttanaport, store, or
dispose of septage or other
reoldua from sewage dis·
poaal systema within Melga
County unless such person
lo rtglaterad ao a aowage
tank . cleaner by the
~
Dapartmentc Any parson
aervlclng their own aowaga
dlapooal system and dlapoalng of tha oaptago on.
'I
their own proparty tnd ln a
manner approved by the
Department will not Ia
required to be reglatered.
3.2 To · obtain registration
to
angege . In uwaga tank
Deadline Fri. May 14- 4 pm
eervlclng within Meigs
County, the aewage tank
cleaner mual flrll complete
an application for roglstratlon and aubmll II to thle
==;::;:::::=:::=~===lr-=~:;:~::;::::=::s~::-r-=::;:::;:~::;===="T==~~=;:;:::;====-1 Department. Tha eppllca·
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
lion shell be accomponled
by a '"' f!labllthod by the
Board. Each oddl!lonel
any and all bide. Minimum
tho Melga County General through tho roqulremonll vehicle used lor 8trvlelng
LEGAL NOTICE
Health Dlotrlct (the Board) of the Melga County Board requlroa uparoll lea utabRecine VIllage Clark Karen bid $1,200. Bide to Ia told
In aealod onvelop marked
IIndt that It Ia In the public of
Lr,ona ~ will racolvo aealed
Health
Saplago llshed by the Board.
health lnterut or tho roll· Regulation.
b do unlll4:0o PM, Monday, "Bid for Cruletr".
3.3 Tho Board may require
dante of Melge County . to
May 3,',1999, lor a 1991 Ford Karen Lyona, VIllage Clerk
1.3 Persona .angogod on the aowage ' .tank cleaning
manage Ita own health h... the bualnou of a·ewage company to obtain 1 bond
· Crown VIctoria 4DR (Old .PO Box 375
arde and public health nul·, tank cloanlng shall comply prior
Pollee· Cruloer) hit a new Recine, OH 45771
to
reglatrotlon
unceo that may occur In with the Melga County approve!.
·
Jdper Motor uaod only (4) 27, 30 2TC
tho 11rvlngo of aeptaga.
8000 mllea on the 50,000
3.4 Rtglotratlona luued
Board of Health Soptago
1.2 T~e Board directs that Rogulatlon and ahlill pro- under thla roguletlon ohall
mllaa or. 3 .year warranty.
Public Notice
no person shall tranaport, vide
Vehicle may bo ooan by
tho
Health be valid for the year luued
atore, uoo, or. dlepoae of Commlulonor ouch Infer• end expire at 12:00 midcontaot[ng the clork at the
SEPTAGE REGULATIONS
aaptage, eawago 'solids .or meuon as may be required night on Decemlar 31at.
municipal building. Council
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
1111.
will open bide It 7 PM.
3.5 Application for renewal
SECTION
1:
General other residual manor form on tho forma provided by
the treatment of private rot· the Meigs County Health of raglllratlon ahall ba subC. Solla map of the land·
Vehicle sold 11 let Council
Provlalona
dllpotlllrtl.
1.1 The Board of Health of ldtntlal aowoga excopt Department. All aawaga mitted , to tht Department
roaerv9s tho right to reject

I SpeCial recognition for '50th, 25th &amp; lOth year.
1 (1949 1974 1989) $6.00 per photo or $10/coupl~.
I Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Name ______________________________

School

.IJJ!b . Year _____.,--____________
~

1

•

Nickname------------------------------------

••

..

.-

Tuesday, Aprll27, 1999

o . Teat holea may Ia
requlrtd to determine depth
to btdrock or wllor tablos.
E. Location of bodl.. of
Wlltr end walla within 500
fttt or tho lan·dlapoaal

ar ...
F. Dttcrlpllon ol the
mtthod or land appllcetlon
to bo uud.
G. Provide 1 map or akttch
of the alte ohowlng llelda to
Ia uaed for lend appllca·
tlon, Including: (I) total
8Croago for aoch field; (2)
dlatancea from homto,
property linea, roadwaya,
bulldlnga, walla, aprlnga,
claterna,
fence
linea,

atreame,

ponde,

and

drelhagt dltchu. (3) Land
u11gt (Crape, etc.)
6.3 FH: The application
ahall Ia aubmlned 'af letlt
thirty daya prior to the date
of Intended use for land dl•
paul. A r.. may Ia tttabllshed by the Board to Ia
ramlnod with tho appllca·
tlon. Each additional alto
may_require 1 uperate IH
at astabllahtd by the
Board.
6.4 Action by tha Health
The
Department:
Department thall review tho
Information contained In
tho application, Inspect the
alto In the presence or the
land owner and/or the eppll·
cant and approve or disapprove the alta. If tho alta Ia
not approved, tho property
owner and tho applicant
shall ba provided reaoona
for disapproval.
6.5 Site lnapactlon: Any
peroon who haa applied for
and received a parmi! pur·
auant to thla Saptage
Regulation ahall ba doemad
to have given consent to
raaaona~le unannounced
lnapecUona oltholr land by
rapre18ntetlvea or the
Department lor tho purpo11
of determining complal·
aanca with this regulation .
The
Department
may
Inspect each pormllted alta
at quarterly. Any permit
holder who refused or Inter·
!area with the reaaonablo
lnapectlona tat forth In this
regulation ahell forfeit the
permit. Furthermore, the
Dapartmant may lmpoaa
more restrictive condition•
than those contained In this
regulation for the purpoiS
of preventing or eliminating
a nuisance or a health haz·
ard.
6.6 Expiration of Parmi!:
All Site permits Issued ahall
be valid lor one year from
the date Issued. Upon the
expiration of any permit
under thla aecllon no fur·
thor septaga ehall ba
applied until a new permit
lor the sit~ laauad.
8.7
suspenalon
end
Ravocotlon Permit: A permit may be suapended or
revoked by the Board when
It Is determined that tha
landowner or aeptage .tank
cleaner hai failed to comply
with thle regulation.
SECTION 7:
Land
Rulee
for
Application
Surface Application or
Subaurfaca Injection:
7.1 Septagt dlapoaal Ia
not parmtned on land uud
lor paaturlng livestock dur·
lng the currant growing
teason or any cropland
used lor growing vegata·
blea Intended for human
ccnaumptlon during the
current crop Year.
.
7.2 Saptage ahall not Ia
applied on alopta greater
than twelve percent (12%).
7.3 Septaga shall not Ia
apraad on 1now covered or
frozen ground whore alopea
axcead two percent (2%).
7.4 Septege ahall not Ia
applied within three hun·
dred (300) feat of panda,
lakes, streama, walla, ell·
lerna, or tprlngt.
7.5 Septoge shall not Ia
applied within one hundred
(100) feat of Primary,
Secondary, or unimproved
dlrtroade. .
7.6 Septoga ahall not "'
appllod wllhl~ fifty (50) feet
of any property line. A mini·
mum dlatance of one thou·
sand (1 ,000) feel from any
rteldentlal dwelllng, bual·
neaa, or area used for
rtcrtotlonol purpoua.
7.7 Saptega ehall not be
applied In artll aubl'!"l to ·
frequent ftoocllng.
7.8 Septega ahall not Ia
applied within tho water
ahed of 1 pond . or lake
which aervaa aa the aource
of any potlblt water aupply.
7.9 Septage waata mutt
Ia thinly opreed over the
aurfact of the ground.
Pooling of uptage will n~t
Ia permlltad.
7, tO Soptega waatea ehell
not Ia dlapoaed of by dis·
charge Into or on any ditch,
dry run, pond, lake, atreem,
cave, alnkhole, mine, gravel
pit, or quarry.
7,11 Stptaga thall nof bo
applied in areoa when tha
permanent or ' tllllPOrary
, water tablto art within
rorty-elght (48) lnchll of
the aurface.
7.12 Tho rate of dlapoaal
ohalt · not exceed twelve
thouund (12,000) gallon•
per aero per year. In no
110

wa-

Public Notice

Public Notice

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

tvent thlll paola or
N allowed to accullllllatt.
7 13 No peraon ahall
apply, permit, or c11111 the
application of otplagt to
land during edvarN -!her conditione or In uturet·
ed fltldt.
7.14 No pereon thall
apply, permit, or cau11 the
application of 11ptago to
lend aunaat or &amp;afore tunrill.
7.15 All rtglstored stptogo
haultra muet obtain wrlllon
parmlealon from 1 woate
wller trutmant facility otatlng that •the wuta water
lreatmant facility will accept
their IIIJIIagt lor treatment
and
dlapoaol
during

40

6 Montn Old Malt Puppy(will be
btg dog). to a good I'IOmt 10 run
IOo"' 1304)675-1907
Free Puppie&amp; : 112 Cocker Spa~ ­
lel, Raccoon Road After 3 P lilt
7~1.()417 .

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Rutland, Ohio

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

Senice1
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy11enu &amp;

or should an emergency
occur. A copy of thlo parmlulon shall Ia oubmllted
to tho Health-Department at
tho time of raglatratlon or

Mon- Fri 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

Urilirw..
(7401 992-3131

740 742-8888

.

7.16 The Department
requlraa Immediate notlfl·
cation or any aplll or arnar·
goncy aeptage land application made by the aeptoge
hauler. If the Health
Deportment Ia closed, notl·
flcatlon must be mada dur·
lng thi next buslntta day.
SECTION 8: Variances:
8.1 Tho Board may hoor
appeals and grant Individual variances from thla rag·
ulatlon when It Is detar·
mined that no aubatantlel
hoalth hazard Ia. a likely to
occur therefrom end unneonsary hardship might
roault In atrlct complle~ca
. with thll regulation. Tho
requnt for a variance ahall
bo flied In writing with the
Board and ahall be cona.lderad by the Board at their
next regularly achoduled
meeting.
SECTION 9: Peneltln: .I
9.1Any pareon who vtolataa any provlalon of thla
regulation shall b&lt;t In viola·
lion of Section 3707.48 and
subject to tha panaltloa provided by 3707.99 of the
Ohio Ravlaed Code. E8Ch
and avery violation ohell
conatltuto
a
aeparalt
offense.
·
9.2 Tht Board may euapond or revoke any rogl•
tratlon
luued
under
Section 3 or any permit
Issued under Soctlon 8 of
this iogulatlon. Befort any
such suspension or revoce·
lion of a registration or parmit Ia made, the Board ahall
give a wrllten .notlca to the
reglatrant not permit holder
that the Board contem·
platae the auapanslon or
revocation or the samo end
give rauone theroforo.
Such notice ahell appoint 1
time for a hearing &amp;afore
the Board and will Ia Hnt
by certified and uncertified
mall. Tha reglotrant may
present auch tvldanco aa
they daalre at the hearing. ·
Altar healing the evldan..,
tha Board shall dacldt the

DEPOYS Ali
PAI,.S

BLSSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Factory Authori~ed
Case-IH Parts

New Homes • Vinyl
Sid ing •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

Dealers.

COMMEROAL and RESIDENTIAL

1000 Sr. Rt. 7 South

FREE ESTIMATES
614-992·7643

Equipment Parts

CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality

Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots

25 yrs experience
Free Estlmotes
740.742-8608
omaroy Eaglea
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Meln St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 CoveraJJ
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top Una.
Uc. I D0-50 nnemn

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
Roofing· • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sldlnga • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

HowBrd

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

GuHers
Downspouts .

appoart jual an right arid\In
accordanco with regulation.
SECTION 10: Eflact of
Partial Invalidity
· t0.1 If ono part, aectlon,
paragraph, or provision of
theae rogulatlona shall be
adjudged by any court com·
petont jurisdiction to be
Invalid; such Judgement
· ahall not affect, Invalidate,
or nullify the reminder of
theae regulations, but ahlll
~e confined to. that portion
immediately Involved In
aald controversy.
SECTION
11
Mlscellaneoue ~awa and
Ragulatlona
11.1 Jn addition to tha
requlromanta ott forth In
thaao regulatlona, all Land
Dlapoul Slt01 ahall be
maintained In compliance
with all axletlng attte and

CANDLE· MAKERS
We

GuHer Cleaning

now have 30 NEW

Candle making
fragranceslll .
· •Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

"THE COUNTRY

CANDLE SHOP"
Tuea- Friday 1o-e
Sat 111-4

Rt. 124 Mlner:svllle.-Oh

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168
4{2 TFN

· MYERS TREE

SERVICE

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

992-4559

KEITH MYERS '
INSURED OWNER

fOUll SAVE MONE r
111 IHE ctASSIFIEDS

.AND..TIIAf"l NO lULU

'local atatutea, ordlnancea,

. 110

codes, and rogulatlona.
SECTION 12:
Elfactlva
·Date:
12.1 Thla regulation -ahall
ba affective on 4-14-99 end
thall replace any prtvloua
regulation governing the
aervlclng of aeptaga adopt-ad by the Melga County
Board of Health.
Upon a motion made by
Gent Jaffora, Prtoldont of
tho Board of Health ond
aecohded by Jim Clifford,
Jr., VIce Praaldent of the
Board of Health, tha regula·
tiona were adopted for
Molga County aa or Aprll14,
1999. The Board reaponded

Longbottom, Ohio
(740) 985-3677

Help Wanted

LPN
Veterans Memorial Hospital is
loolfing for caring, dedicated,
Licensed Practical Nurses •
Must have ·current Oh.io license.
~,,

;, , , , , , tlltf

, , , , , RIIINrtll ?f0~992·2f0f

II fDIIOWi j

Gene Jolfora, Prealdent,
Board of Htelth-yea
Jim Clifford, Jr., VIet .
.Prtoldtnt, Board .or H11ltb- ·
yea
Ann Sarrett, Mamtar, Board
Of Htlllh•YII
'
Joann Crlap, Mtmbtr,
Board or Heallh·yo
One Board Vocancy·
Jean Jaffoi'B, Pr•ldent
Jim Clifford, Jr., VIet
Prealdent .
Ann Barrett, Member
Joann Crlap, Millibar
Jon D. Jacoba, RS, Doputy
Health Commluloner
Margie S. Lawactn, DDS
Health Commlsaloner
(4) V 1TC
.
(5) 4, 11 2TC

---

29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

250 COl DOl 51.

· POMEIOY, OHIO 45769
. PHOIIE-74G-992-2406 01 304415·3555

740-949~2217
Sizes 5' x. 1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours ·
7:00AM -8 PM
Mo/li/1 mo.

Now Open For
Spring Season
Complete Una Of
~gelable

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SfiLE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
April 30th-May lst

00

--~

Gat an average size hOuse
steam cleaned. high pressure
washed.&amp;, scrubbed

$149.99
Call Captain Steamer
304 ·675·1304

...

J

GARAGE SALE
Ewing Residence
300 4th St.
Pomeroy,

OH 45769

Friday, April 30th
9 am-4 pm
Saturday, May 1st
9 am-12 noon

60

740 ·992·5858 .

Lost · Heanng A1ct. Bet.ve.en Hendftrson &amp; Kanauga, $1 00 Rewa rd,,
(30&lt;)675-2065

2D Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

HUlBARD'S
G!IEENHOUSE
SYIUCIJSE

992-5776
3

TFN

HORSES
Buy, SeU, TraUt or Bqanl
Also Rldlng'l11sons

BooiBoUow
FU'IIII

Larry's Lawn
Care

DRIVEWAY STONE

Fre'e Eatimatea

'Sitrubbery Maintenance
•ser.ing Meigs and Gallla Counties
1n Ohio and Mason County In WV

•o.r .... ht. . . . .,.. ........

up to 8 ton

1-740-742-2803 or
1-740-446-3822

992·5455

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERYICE

On Flatwooas Jt.d.,
Lab/Mix, Black, with
White markings on each
paw, tip offail, and
• a~ross chest

4

Fam~ lles ·

•Eleetrlcll &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing I Guttero
•VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
•Patio I Porch Dtolct

Public Sale and Auction

V.C. YOUNG JJI
1182-4215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yro. Local

PUBLIC AUC,.ION

Townh ouse , Corner John son
Ridge &amp; Addis on Pike House · ·
hold , Linen s. Clotnes. Children
And Acl ufts ! Some Treasures FOr

=---'.

Everyone!

ALL Y•rd S.lea Must
Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day berore lhe ad

11 to run. Sunday
edttlon ·2:00p.m.

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

1S241 State Route 7 South Cloth·
mg. Al l Sizes; Videos , Books
Items, Too Many To listt

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in lhe Great Bend
'
r

Wednesday, .Thursday, Fr iday,
8:30-5:00. 8479 State Route 160.
Toots. Books, Gun. lots Of Mise!

Friday. Mondov e&lt;lttlon
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.
April 301~. Mal' 1S t, 2nd , 9 · ? At

-Complete'Auto Service-

'6' Mila Yellow Flag Yard Sa le,
Pomeroy-Middleport, April 3p,
Ma~ I Regis ter now $5.00 Pick
up flag. For more inlormatlon call ..

debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtor s in bankruptcy ntay
keep Hexempt" JlfOP'(_rtY for his or he'r perRonal

use. This may includ~ar,

A

740·992-4197.

POWER WISH
Trucka-kector
Trallon-hou•• molllll
Homtl-dtcltl-drlvtwlyl
Equlpm~~~t
&amp;o.g-

Robert &amp; Betty Swkk 33455 Swick Rd. approxi·
mately .03 mlles West of Rutland, Ohio on St. Rt.
124 to Lasher Rd: approximately 1"1/2 mlle to
Swick- Rd. then approximately 1 mile to Fann.
. Watch for auction signs. .

c-

JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:

STETHEIII@EUREKANET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES

"TRACTORS"

38782 Sumner Road ,

P
. Ohio 454769
A.C. ' 017 w/3 pt. hitch, VAC case w/ new rear
tires, FarmeU Cub No. Hyd. Serial #40401 w/ ·
new tires &amp; side Mt. mower, cub cadet 126 w/ Masoa Bowlin&amp;
mower deck.
Lane•

· "EQUIPMENT"

Sund}Y I Monday edition·
1:Ollpil) Friday.
April ~. May 112 . Indoors, behind
Meigs Fa irgr ound , collector
Items, Homa .lnterlor. glassWare
Oon't miss this one t 8afT'I·?

wmmms~~~mrn·~~~

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens; Ohio

Apr il 30· May 1, 474 Sycamore
StrMt, Mll:ldlep0r1, Ohio 9-5.

~~Rt.t~~~~c~~~~

#E. J.D. CONSTRUCTION

Basement Sale· Snerry O'Brl8rl'
residence , Adams ACI .. t.etart. Friday, Aprll 30 and Saturday, May
1 . La rge selection of clot hing ,
baby ac cessories , nouseho!d
Items, etc Call 740·247-4024

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

~

.

"Specittli:ing J, iog Homes"

Large yard sale - , April 30 and
May 1, 108m-5pm Lill ian Weese

Comme1·cinl &amp; Hcsidentiul

residence , Oak Gro11e Rd ,
Ra cine. Beanie babies , exarcise
eqUipment. stove . doors. lo ts of
nice clothing.

Licensed &amp; Insured

28 yrs. exp.

Phone 740·992·3987
· J()hn Dean; Owner

CREDIT

Vard Sale At Ne.w Ha11en . 30th
Apnl; 1st May, 9·5PM. 1OOO&amp;Sth
Sl. If ques1ion s call (304 )882·

3779

, 80

• Credit • Slow Credit •

Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced
·

-- ~

[STO~ ·WORIYIND!!f
~'

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

//

for

1\acsday • No 'Illp
Wednesday. Mcn's .l.eape
Thursday • Mix~ Leape
St~rtl•l That 7:10 P.M.

15.5 craft westinghouse chest freezer, table &amp; 6
chairs, Gibson · re&amp;lgerator, Maytag washer &amp;
dryer, Sharp microwave, recUners, love seat, 25"
Zenith T.V., end &amp; coffee tables, three 3pc.bed·
room suites, baby bed, deck, office chair, 2
drawer flle cabinets, stands, lamps, fisher VIIS,
gas range, metal wanlrobe, Gibson refrigerator,
Maytag wringer washcl; Redwood lawn furniture, living room suite, sewing machine, ,misc..
dishes, pots &amp; pans, electrical appliances, collection of Porcelain figurines, basket collection,
Dehumidifier, Kerosene heater, and tread·mill.

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre.

740·742·213'1

•New Homas
•Garages
.. •Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
. 985-4473
7122/tfn

Dan .Smith • Racln., Ohio
Auctioneer Ohio # 1344
w.va #SIS
. Ca•h
Positive ID
Refreshments lly Star Gran1•
Nof Ro•ponal61o lt~~r Auldenla
or 1o•• of Property

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

740-992-3470
·•

L1 censed

773-5785 Or 304·773·5447

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
E11er y Sat urday Night 7 PM .,
Crown Co(V, 7&lt;10·256-&lt;;989
Wedemeyer 's Auction Serv1ce .
Gallipolis. Ohio 740·379·2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U.S. Sil ·
11er And Gold Coms , Proolsets .

Marty~

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION .
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug

Power
Washing
Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes

Painting. Drywall Repair "
• Interior &amp; Exterior
1 5 Yr•. Experience

&amp; Shot

742·1701

Matches

Diamonds. Antique·Jewelry, Gold
·Rings, Pre · 1930 U S Currency,
Sterllrlg . Etc. ACQuisit ions Jewelfy
·MTS COtnSMp 151 Secona
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·2842.

"

Antiques . top prices pa1d. AllierIna Antiques , Pomeroy, Oh 10,
Ru ss Moore owner, 740 -992 ·
2526

Clean late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Model s Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pont iac. 1900 Ea st·
ern Avenue, GaU JpoUs.
·
Wan t To Sell Your Stufl? Ca ll Rl\1·
erside Auction And Le t Us Sell 11
For You. 74Q- 25&amp;-e989.
Wanted To Buy : Used Mob i le
Homes . Call H0· 4~6 ·0 1 75 , 0r

WJOS

005

TV 27
Local

Wanted: Cars . Ttucks Any Con·
d•tton . 740 ·~ 88 · 9062 , 740· 446 ·
PART.

Start Dat ing Tonig ht I Have fun

EMPLOYMENT
S ERVICES

BOO-ROMANCE. extensoo9681

30

.

Anno.uncements

DIABETIC PATIENTS : Vou .May
Be Entitle d To Rece•ve YOur O•a·
betic Supp lies At No Cost To

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
'

985-4422
n

$$$Make Monev l$$$ Work -Al
Home ·

Easy Wo rk , E~~t ce ll en l Pay Free
Detai ls! Send S,A S E To Nat'i
Homeowrker's Assoc iati on. Po.

New To You TMh Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens
740·592· 1842
Qua lity clothing and .household
1 1tems . $1 00. bag nle every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9'00·5:30.

Assemble

Products"

SO. 675, Rlptev. WV 25271
Are You Energet iC, Moti vatell .
And Caring? SC111lc Hills Nursi('g
Center Is Looking For lnctlvlduals
Who Are Currently State Te!te~
Nursing Assistants To Work In ·
Our Compr&amp;h!Jn,lve Care FacUlty,
Please Appl y ~n Person To 311
Buckr ldge Roact. Bh1we ll, QH ..
..SS14.

Giveaway

-4 Ge rman Shepherd Puppt,es.

Also , l ong Ha ired Oash ound ,
740-441--()118.

~tub,

5 Ft
2 F1. Gold lavra.'
tory, To Gtve Away. (304) 895 ~

Chester, Ohio

Help Wanted

677-6561 .

40

AgrlcuHural Lime,

110

You. For More lntormation, 1·888 ·

Going Out Of Business Sate: 30%
011 Stora Wide, Wilton CaKe Sup·
piles. Merckens Chocolate. 0 J.'s
Cratt Shop, 2390 Jackson Pike.

Re Le HOLLON
TRUCKING

1012

304·675-5965.

playing the Ohio Dating Game. 1·

Television
For Free
Program Guide
CaU 992-2727

Personals

740-·2134.

(UmeStoneLowR•tea)

serv1ce ..

166 .0h lo &amp; West V!rg 1n1a , 304 ·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ROBERT BISSELL
.CONSTRUCTION

es. Cons1gnme nt auc tion· M!ll
Street . Midd leport . ,Thursdays .
Ohi o License 17693 740 · ~89 ·
2623

auction

3111199 TFN
'

Bill MOOd ispaug rl '.UCtiOneenng.
Complete Au clionee rii'IQ ServiC·

Rick Pearso n Auclion Company,

Summer League
Begins 1st Week
In May

"HOUSEHOLD"

Auction
and Flea Market

l ull t1me a uct1oneer. complete

773-5300

3 pt. plow for AC, 5' AC pull type brush cutter,
cultivator for cub, 3 pt. blade, caSe cultivator,
'wood cut off saw for Farinall cub, Single shovel
plow, single marking out plow, A case plow.

•

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

~~~fpf.t~~fC'~~~~

~

.

All Yard Saln Must Be Paid 1n •
Advence. Deadline: 1:OOpm t6• ·
day before the ad Is to ruft;

house, clothes , and

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact :

lir.&gt;
!Jl!l;

·

Pomeroy,
Middleport&amp; VIcinity

can relieve a

~=~~~
TRI·STATE MOBILE

SATURDAY
MAY 1, 1999
10:00 A.M.

Fr1day Apnl 30th. Sat·

u rday May tst , g .? Bu,la'o' llle

Dave's Garage

•Room addHion• 1 Remodeling

~flflmlftl

Watering can, pie safe rough, com jabber, Ice
tongs, milk cans, large kettle, broad ax, treadle
sewing machine, stone crocks, wood trunks
Owners • Rollert &amp; Bettr Swick

a.

.L. Roush
949-1701

•Ntw Gareau

Her ·~:urn.

"Antique or Collector's Items"

Gallipolis
Vicinity

household goodo. ·

Lo1t Puppy

Log chairs, cub cadet blade, wheel weights for
cub, anvil, power tools, belt sander, elec.
11lpack, jig, drills &amp; ets., tool boxes, Homelite
trimmer, welder 30-~0, drill press, lawn bag self
propelled mower, simplify roto tiller, ptish
mowers, 8hp craftsman mower, Garllen tractor
cultivate , wheelbarrow, alum. ladder, turf tires
for cub cadet, window fan, large utility trailer,
McCullough chain saw, Misc. lawn tools, chicken ladder, air compressor, power washer, nice,
grinder, acetylene outfit &amp; more:
·

Yard Sale

Maintenance and Manicunng
'Residential &amp; Commercial

Light Hauling

1•,;~[-r

70

,Je1re1ny

*Professional RoutJne Lawn

Landscape Material,
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost

medleatloo . (3041675-6351 ,

DegrnCerlllled
Landticape lpeclallat,
OID-171

Exdud•• B.ddl"6 c.,.."i..,...

Need ..t Big One
CaU ..t Uttll. One

lost : Sma ll Do g, Wear 1ng Red
Collar with a Bell on lt Needs his

• Mllaa._..ce • Plaallllg
· • Malchlng
• Retaining Wall 8 Brick
Palla Canstrut:llon

197
Don~

last: redbohe COQ(lhound, orange
col lar. "Grunt', Forest Run Ad . vicimty, 7&lt;W-949·2756

• Lawn C.e • Dnlgn

All Fiala $6.50
Hanging Saskets
BloomlnB &amp; Foliage
$5.75 lo Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1·5

Lost and Found

Found : pair of gtau es . Cote
Stree t. MtdcUeporl vtc tn 1ty. call

Register Now $5.00-Pick up Flag

&amp;Bed~lng Plants

"TOOLS &amp; MISC."

Help Wanted

rMi\

SELF STORAGE

Free puppies 10 a good ho ~t ,
GcJiden Retr~ever/Cocker Spanie l
mtx . ready to g1ve away Call
Christi or Josh at 74 0·992·50:{5 •
af1er 6pm

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER . AGA WILL GIVE YO U THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS flff "US AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP "UI THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS j SAVIIIfi
OF UP TO $ r00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. TlfiS SPRlNG SPECIAL WILL
END JUNE 21, \999.
.

l . Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Free Estimates

.n:IIIT IN TIME FOI'l8PIUNO UPAillS
AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A SPICIAL ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
.

POMEIOY MACHINE SHOP

740-698-3290

matter In auch manner ,.. It

Veterans Memorial Hospital is
looking
for caring, dedicated
.
'
Registered Nurses. Contact
Hu.m an Resources, 115 E.
Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
740-992-2104
~

HILL'S

{No Sunday Calls)

REGISTERED NURSES

'

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

"'"""
Bni/Jo•er
&amp; Backhoe

adverse weather conditione

ren"wal.

Giveaway

3972.

.

.,

Compu te r Users Needed. Work • ~
Own Hrs. $25K ·$80KI Yr. 1·800476-1!653 X 7777. www.tcwp:co"'

�•
P-ae 8 • The D•lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

__
.......•.
1===== :=cpl·

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
-------------------------------------------------------.,,.,
:-•'

PHILLIP
ALDER

,.__.

ACROSS

""-·

320 Mobile Homea
lor ;tale

Cotmetologlst Netded, Business
Growing , Guaranteed W.ages

PIUs IAore. 7&lt;1Q-4.46-'/2e7
Maintenance Employee General
Maintenance 01 Low -Income
Apartment Complew: Electrical I
Re111Qtratlon /Plumbing /Carpentry /Custodial !Groundakeeplng

Computer A Plut Good Benefits
Applications Available At Gallia

MHA, 381 Buct&lt; A&lt;lga Rood, Bid·
wall Ohio 45814 740·446 0251
AppliCations Accepted Until May
15, 1999 GMH~ I&amp; An Equal Op-

Employer.

ponuni1'1

Are Pfllerrld Knowledge 01 HUC

Now accepting applications lor

nl!lhl ohlft, E1 Oorado Ad~t Home
Basic first aid &amp; BCII required
740-992·5039
Now taking appl!callons lor Or~v·
era at Domino's Pizza Gallipolis
and Pomeroy Stores Only 740

••e

Full-Time Finance Anlstant II /
MIS - A Community Mental
Health Agency Serving A Three
County Area Is Seeking Cand l·
dates Fo( The Pos ttJon Of
Finance Assistant II !MIS Quail
fled App licants Must Have A
Bachelor's Degree to Accounting
Or Related F1eld, A Minimum Of
Two Years Experience With Computeriz:ad Accounts Payable And
Cash D•Sbursements Processing
And Meet Agency 's Fleet In·
surance Carrier Drivi ng ReqWre·
ments Skills And Abll llles That

1040

Outpatient Therapists - Part Time
And Full-Time Poslrtons Avail
able To Provide Outpatient Men·
tal lieallh Services To Adults
And /Or Children Must Be Ll ·
censld (Or Licensure EligiDie le
Psychology Assistant Counselor

Train... PC, LSW LISW Or PCC)
In Counsel ing , Social Work Or
Psychology In OHIO Preference
Given To Candidates W!lh Prevl·
ous Experience In A Mentel

Haallh Setting
Comepeltlve S•larles And Bepe·
fUs Ollered
Please Send
Resumes To Sherry Gordon Human Resou rce Manager Wood·
land Center, Inc , 3086 State Ro·

uto 160 Gallloplls O~o 45631 Or
Call 740·446 5500 EOEIAA Em·
ployer
Part T1me Receptionist Wanted
For Busy Construction Office
Must Work Well With Public ·An·
swer Phones Schedulmg Etc
E~~:per l ence IN The Construct ion
Area A Plus Please Send Re
sume To Christians Construe
tlon, Inc 1403 Eastern Ave Gal·

llpolls, OH 45631 NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
Phlebotomist· Immediate openings lor e•perlenced phleboto ·
mist, lull or part time Responsibilities would Include collecting
specimens from nursing home
pa11ents In southeast Ohio Send
resume The Dall~ Sentinel, PO
Bo• 729 82 Pomeroy. Ohio

45769
DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:
ClassAOTA
Single Driver Late Model Ken·
wor1hs Wllh Reelers West Coast
Carrier

Class BOTA
Team Straight Truck Late Model
Frelghtllners With Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements
800 Mile Radius Home Deliver·

lo&amp;

And HAP Regulations Preferred
Go\lernmentai Accounting, Espe··
c !alty Mental Health Agenclts
W ith CMHC Software, Medicaid
Al')a Other Third Party Payees
And Prior Expenenca With Lotus
1 2, 3 Work Perfect 5 t , 6 0 And
Experience With Grant Funding
Sourcas Is Also Preferred Send·
Resumes To Sharry Gordon
Mangaer 01 Human Resources
Woodland Cen ters 3086 Slate
Route 160, Gall1oplls, Ohio 45631

EOEJM Employer
Gallla Meigs Community Action
Has Used Office Equipment For
Sale The List 01 Items I&amp; Avai l
able At The Main Office In
Cheshire Ohio Anyontt Interested In Bidding On This Equipment
May Pick Up A List During The
Hours 01 8 00 A M And 4 30
PM , Monday Through Fn day
For Further InformatiOn Cal l 740

GoodMVA
Week~ Pay
Health Insurance A\/BIIable
Wo;k w,n With The Public
For Mo're Information Call 800·

4379764 Hrs 930AM

S~M

Earn $104·$200 plus tree par
traits Invite your friends to your
home lor a professional glamour

portrait party 900·426-6383
Easy Work! Excellent Payt As
semble Products at Home Call
Toll Free 1·800·467-5566 Ext

12170
OPERATOR

Trencher Experience Helpful.

740.532 2695
OPPORTUNITY FOR THE
NEW MILLENNIUM
Growtn OrganizatiOn 5eeks
Temtory Marketing
Manager For Local Areallt
Guaranteed Salary
$26,900 To Stan
Commission And Benefit
Program Available
First Year Potential 01

$35 000 $40,000

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bual·
ness with people you know, and
NOT t() send money through the
mall until you have investigated

1111 ollerlng

AREA PEPSI /COKE ROUTE
30 New Machines With High
Prof1t locations! Earn 1OOK Year-

ly 1·8Q0.367-9416
Avail VENDING Rio • Soli By 5I
S 10 20 Locallons I4K ·SIOK
$4,000 t /Mo Income F i nane~
Avail Toll Free t 888 538·9508

For Salel The Jumbo! State Route
141 $125 000 00 OBO 740 •463500
VENDING Lazy Persons Cream
Few Hours • Good S Price To
Sell Fraa Brochure 800·820·

6782

230

Professional
Services

45640, Or Call 1-740-296·1463
To Schedule An Interview
Needing Cook an~ Bartender!

Call 1740) 367 0219

Postal Jobs to $1 S 35/Hr Inc
Benefits No 'Experience For
App And EKam lnlor, Call 1 BOO·
813 3585 Ext 8825 8AM-9PM
7 Days Ids 1nc
Recreation Director Full Time
High school degree or equlva l
ent Associate Degree preferred
Certification In accordance with
regulatory agencies governing
ce nter Comprehensive benellts
package ,which Includes 40t(k)
Point Pleasant Center State Ro·
uta 62 Route 1 Box 326 Point
Pleasant wv 25550 A Genesis
Eldercare Network EOE

TURNEC OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

1·888-841+181

Vlsn Our Web Sne At
www magnollagraphcs com
ACCESS Head Start Is Accept·
tng Applications For The Follow
ing Posn1on
Community P1rtner1hlp Coor·
dlnetor: Applicants Muat Have

A Minimum 01 A High School Dl·
ploma Previous Experience In
Polley Council And OrgaAizatlons
Serving Children And Families

Prelarrld Aa18 01 Pay Is $11 00 I

hr

•

HOUIIkiiPir. Applicants Must

Ha1'11 A Minimum 01 A High
Sehool [Hptoma Experience In All
Areas Of Housekeeping Practlc·
et Preferred. Muat Maintain A
Valid Driver's License. And Have
Reliable Transporratlon Rate 01
Pay II $5.50 IHr
Maintenance Worker: Appllc ·
anta Muat Have A Minimum Of A

High SChool Diploma Or Equlval·
ent Experience And Technical
Knowledge Of Maintenance, Elec·
trlcal, Plumbing And Carpentry
Preferred Must Furnl1fl Tools
Neceuary For General Main·
tenance Outlet A Valid Driver's

Llcllnlt And Reliable Transports·
HonAMult

Appllcanll For Thlo Poolllon May
Submit A Reaume To Jeannie
wuuama , Human Re10urce Manag•r. Acceu To Human Re·
tource Otvelopment, P 0 Box

RESUMES UNLIMITED

1992 I 4x70 Redman trailer. 3
bedroom. 1 bath, fully carpeted,

storm wiMowro 112,500, 740-742·
2795 altor :Jpm

740-245-1302.

This newspaper w1ll not
knowingly accept
advertlsement5 lor real estate
whiCh Is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
adVertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basts

Total Tree Care Is Hiring Experienced Grand Men &amp; Top Climb
Wanted- Secretar~, must have
references must be reliable be
able to do taxes ledger and com·
plate office work Send resume to

PO Box 27 Pomeroy OH 45769
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc
eenellls Game Wardens Secur·
lty, Maintenance Park Rangers
No .fxp Needed For App And
Exam Info Call 1 800 813·3585,
Ext 8827 BAM·9PM 7 Days Ids

Inc

7 Cays

Ids Inc

Business
Training

(Careers Close To Home) Call

Todayl 740-446-4367, 1-800
214.0452, Rag 190 05 12746

Wanted To Do

Approved Master Licensed Elec·
trlclan WV025956 Free Estl·
mates for Res idential Services

{304)675-7927

$200 74 per monlh wllh I 1150
down Call 1-800-837·3238
Nice Home Sol Up On Lot Make
2 Payments Move In , 4 Years
Loft On ~oan 1304)722·7140
Prlca Raduced , 1996, Skyline,
Mobile Home, 14)(70 TaiBI EI~C·
trtc, 2BRf Shingle Roof Exc11·

lenl COndftlon (304)675-7045
1 Plus Acre 2 Bdrm Trailer, Well

&amp; C Water 2 Slor B $24,500 00
Applegrovs, W Va 304·576·
2557 Make App1
Very Nlcel Remodeled 3 Bdrms ,

1987 Clay!on Mocno Homa 14F1

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,
WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide , 304·

310 Homes for Sale

738·3409

rage CentraiAir, Patio. Porch

$77,000 1304)675 2533
3 Bedroom Home, 2906 Meadow
brook Drive Call {304)675·4360
after 4PM
3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Years Old 281t30 Attached Ga·
rage, 12x24 Build ing, Barn &amp;
Tractor Sh'Sd 59 112 Acres Or
Will Sell tiouse &amp; Loti Me.gs Co
740 992 3537
3 Bedrooms Set On 3 Acres
Large Rooms 3 Bay Garage
Close To School And Buckeye
3 BR 2BA 2 Car Garage 1 Acre

A Must Sse Lolart 1304)862·
3516
By owner 725 Page Street, Mid·
dteport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate will sen house Wllfl
out lots lor $89 000 740·992·

2704 740-!!92·5696

O.lllpotlo c.,.., Colleve

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
lnctudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting
deluxe 1teps and setup On~y

quiries Only 740-446-4207

Aural $69 000 00 740 379-2112

Wildlife Jobs $21 60/Hr Inc
Benef1ts Game Wardens Securl·
ty,Ma ln tenance,Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For App /Exam
Info
can
1 aoo a 13·3585

Alter 4 Yeafl, 304-736-7295

)( 7Q.Ft $10 500 00 Serious In-

REAL ESTATE

For Sale By Owner Well Main·
tained 48R BI·Lt:'llel, 38A Large
FamilyRoom w/Fireplace Living·
room , Kitchen (All Appliances

Slay) , DlnlngAoom. Uilllty Room
Central Air/Heat Pump Large Lot
at corner ol Belle &amp; SandHill, 3 5
mites out 2 Car Anached Ga·
rage, separate
26)(60
3doors paint
ot stor-

age $160 000
1304)675-5403

by appl

330 Farms for Sale
26 Acres MIL. 6 Stall Horse Bam.
3 Bedroom House, Fence 740·

381Hl504

Buslnass and
Buildings

Commercial Building In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease Call

1603)366·9436

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
10 112 Acres, 3BR, C A, 2BA
DB Garage, Basemen! {304 )875·
4575
4 20 Acres Approx 4 miles North
of Pt Pleasant, on Route 62
Good building site access to
city water, 2 tenths mile off main

h1ghway $25,000 (304)875·5084
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallla County
$32.000 More Acreage Available,

740-388-8678

.

Apple Grove Memorial GardenIa
now offering a limited lime special on Cemetery lots from April

1, 1999, lo July 1, 1999 Buy 3

5 Miles

lleaulnul Building
I

Water Available,

430Pm 7&gt;40-446-7!565
B~FUL

Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes, light Fix·
ture , Heating Systems and Re·

modeling {740)441·1401
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-675·1957
Have 1 Opening FOf 24 Hour In
Home CerG Of Eldertt Or Handl

copped, 740-441-1536
Interior &amp; exterior pa1ntlng lawn
servlc~. haUl trash junk. demo
lion, house. bam shed, 591-7617
Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Ex
pertenced. References Reason·
able Rates For Free Esllmate

740-396-8041
K&amp;G Cleaning, &amp; Painting Services Interior EX1erlor, For Free Eatl·
mates, 740·441-1044, 740·441 -

0459
lawn Mowing Service

Small

I

{304)675

chine
For Sale By Owner 4BR, 3000
Square Foot House 4 Car Ga·
rage , 5 A~res , Very Secluded

$199,999{803)396·9436

BRUNER LAND
740-441·1482

HOME FOR SALE
WALNUT PLACE
SUBDIVISION,
SYRACUSE, OHIO
New 1200 square foot energy effi
clent Three bedroom, two full
baths two car garage, river vtew,
dock nearby Ready now I 740·

992·7953, 740·992·5404
992·6910 O\'Onlngs

Of

740·

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER
2 Story Near Downtown on 8th
Street • Call from t to 11 PM

(304)675-4808 or 675-3991
Ranch House, 314 Acre Lot, ~A,

2 112BA Den LlvlngAoom wl
Fireplace, Dln tngRoom Kirchen/
Fully Equip , Basement w/PooiTabte Deck wi27Ft Aboveground Pool, 3 Car Attached Ge·
rage In Good Neighborhood In
New Haven WV Call For Appt

(304)662·3652

Gardin Tilling, Clean OU1 Garage
and 01her Odd JobS {304)675·
3626

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport
secluded and prlva,te, appoint·

Link Corllllod Babyslller avail-

monl, cal 740·992-5696

able on Grtar Road

Fle~lble

Hours, Call Shanna {304)675·
5081
S&amp;S Lawn Care,
Residential, Fret
Will Oo Lawn Mowing, Gallipolis,
Spring Valley Area , Dependable

Call Tim, 740-WI-6340.
Will all with lhe elderly cy 1he
hour or weekly, reasonable rates:
10 flirt e.~el)erlence 740-949:

2M3

Aestrlcttd Residential Lots Lo·
cated A Comfortable Distance
From Gallipolis. Double Wldea
Are Permitted "Leave All Your
Cares In Town, Buy Yourselt A
Piece 01 Ground• lots Start At
$6 750 5% Down Land Contract
Now Available Call For Free
Map!! 1·BOQ-213=-8365

Spring Vallty, 2 story family
home .t\ Bedroom, 2 112 Baths

Living Room Clnlng Room, Eat-In
Kllchen Lg Family Room 740·
245-9337

Three bedroom home wllh kns of
c:losat space, ctoae to school, on
corner lot. storage building one
bedroom rental home Included,

Golllo Co.: 88 +Woo&lt;led Acres
On Williams Holow $40.000 Cash
Price Ju81 Off SR 21 9 Friendly
Ridge Rd , 15 Acres $14,000.
Public Water, City Schools \
Teens Run Ad 10 Acres $tO,OOO

-$1,000 Down+ 1132/Mo

Malga Co. PicK of The Week i
Oyes'llllte, 10 5 Acrea With
Stream $8,5001 Danvllte, Briar
Ridge Ad -7 Acres $13,000 On
SA 325. Nice 9 Acre!! $17 000
Public Water Rutland Whiles Hill
Rd, 11 Acres $14,000 Or 9 Acr·
es $12,000, Pubfk: Water
Call NOW For Free Mapa +
Owl')ar Financing Info Take 10%
OH l,.tat Price On Cash Buysl
Building tot In svracuae- nice
nelghborhoo.d, all utilities avail·

ablo $13 900, call740-992-7727

360

Real Estate
Wanted

we Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acree
we Pay Cash 1-800·21 3-83115,
Anthony Land co
KENTAL~

410 Hou... for Rent

Peta for Sale

puppieo wl1h papo11, 5 monlhs.
$135, 740-946-2451

Adora~e female Cocker Spaniel

AKC Rogllltfld Oo&lt;lln Rotrlovor
2 Yoa11 Old, For Slud Service,
1 Paporo Avollablo, Conlscl Mlko
Brewer At · 394·773-5011

Tara Townhouse Apiflmenta ,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Flooll, CA 1 1/2 Bath, FuMy Clr·
pe1ocf, Polio, No Poll, LooM Pluo
Sacurlty Copoolt Required. 740·
446-3481. 740-446-D 101.

$350/Mo , Pluo Dapool1, No Inoklo Pe111740-882-9032,
2 Bedrooms, Aefrlgera10r. Slove
Furnished, $150 Doposli, 58 Mill
Cr.. k, GllllpOIII, 740-446--3870

sldlzed apt for elderly and nand·

EOH 304-875-8679

pon, no pets, 74().992 7853

470 Wanted to Rent

Your Home Ia Just. A Phone Call

Houoo Wllhln 15 Mllao 01 Borg

Away 304-736-7295

Warner.

420 Mobile Horne•

Kllchen. 513·851·0100, Or 740·
441·3896

for Rent

Yard ,

Office building- Minersville 600
square loot,' air conditioned, vtry

Bidwell IPonar Area, $3'/5/Mo , All
Utlllllo&amp; lncJudld, 740-441-o720.

nlco. $350 per month plus dopoolt, 740-949-2093.

12x85 trailer In Tuppers Plaint,
Ohio, three bedroom, air, washer
&amp; dryer hOok up no pata good
reterences, &lt;ltpoalt &amp; B month
ltaae required, 740·985·3522 al·

MER C HANDI S E

992 2167

French City Maylag, 740-448·
7795

2 Bdrm Mobile Home. Ale,

$300 oo Monlh Plus Depos11 And
Utilities Relrencea Required No

Bodo, Full Silt And Twin Complete. COuch &amp; Oesl&lt;, Cryer, Elaolrlc Slova, RecHnar &amp; TaCio 740446-9742

Pets Coll740-992·5477
2 bedroom mobile home In Mid·

dloporl, Oh , no pets, 740·992·
5443

~or Sale ~ Reconditioned waah ·

8.11 Boulllokfo .Aquorlum

1

19811 Chl!'lrolet Truek, Low MHes

Fish, Blrdo. Pond Supplies
Sun 1·4PM, Mon -Sat 11AM·
6PM Fish Tank/Pol Shop, 2413

Tralnad, 740-3e7-7T05

Ctnlor, 740·448·1884 For lnlormallon
Jact&lt; Ruooell lomalo puppy Crown
and white, short hair, small bread
$250 740-742·2050

Roglslerod Puppies· Pokanasa.
Black&amp;Whlla, S250oa Shi1Zu,
Gold&amp;Biack, $300oa Mlnlalure

New Mobile Home Park at Galli·

While, $1 50ea Paek·A·Poo,
Black&amp;Whlto,
Gold&amp;Whllo,
$200ea (304)675-1073

Plus Deposit, Refrence.s Avail·

allle May 1st740-448-8199

Antiques

530

Nlca 3 bedroom mobile home, In
MK!dlopon Oh .. no pe11, 740-992·

5958

Raglatered Wolf Pup, 4 Months

Old $150 Call Alter 7 PM 740·
387-D189

:

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

1992 Oodgo Caravan, 4 Cylinder, •'
Aulo., A/C, 101,000 Ml , $2,750 00 •
OBO 1990 Dodge Cargo Van :

•

1993 Chill)' Converato, Van , V· •
8, Rear Air, $12.000 (304)875· •
3787
t

-:-::::----:::--:--:---:-= '

1994 4X4 Geo Tracker, 48,000 :
Mllea, .t Wheel Or, Great Condl· 1

lion SUOO 00 740-448-8172, Of
740-2156-8251 .
•

$10,500,740-742-3013

•

1995 Plymouth Grand Voyager ;
SE Loaded Full power with quad 1
aullng and rear bench Over· •
Head digital conaole 2-tone 1
Green &amp; Driftwood 3 3V8, •

call 740-742-2773 or 740-742·
2220

(304)875-3738.

74().446-3684

7 40

Motorcycla
•

7~1-0872

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiM

1 al'ld 2 bedroom apartments fur·
rUshed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

16 hp Cub Cadet 4-4• deck lawn
mower for aale, good condition,
$895, call 740~992·2143 or 740·

For Sale IH/12" Clok, Brllllon/1 2'

r:ondhlon (304)89S.3165

992·221 8

992-6373

$279 00 Per Month, Plus Utl1111es
740·446·2957

1

Sx6 111 beef utility b'aier with s&lt;lls,

Apt for Rent Water And Trash

740- 992"4144 after 6pm

Paid No Palo In Gallipolis
396·1100

Algano For Sale, sso {304)8751374

2 Bdrms . CIA, Gu Haat, Waoher

AMA_ZING

Dryer Hookup, 1 Milt From Town,
No Pels After 5 OOPm 740-448·
7456

Breakthroughlll Lose 10·200
Pound4 Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Raautts, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam·
plesCall740-441-1982

2 bedroom apartment in Middle·
port we pay water sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; electric, S200 per

Baby

Bed,

METABOLIBII

Dressing

Table,

monlh, $100 depoell, 740-992·
7606

Suoller. HighChair, and Cer s .. t
{304)675-45411

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Beanie Sables For Sale, 740-2455443.

Campus, 740-246--!5658

I·----:-:-:-..:,_---COOLQQWN

I

2 Bedroom Apar-tment, Rio
Grande Area, Close To College,

central ~lr Conditioning Ad"td
To Your Furnace 3 Ton lna,alled

I3501Mo.. Includes All Ullllllos.

$1,500, 2 112 Ton $1,350,2 Ton

Deposit Required , 1-1!188-840-

S1,250, The Above Includes Nor·
mal lnol•llallon II lt&gt;u Don't Call

0521
2bdrm apts • total alectrto, appllancas furntsl'led laundry rOOll'
raciHtiaa, ctoae to school In -town
Appllcattont available at. VIllage
Green Apia . •49 or call 740·992·

3rll EOH ·

~EAUTIFU~ APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive

lrom $279 1p 1358 Walk 1o shop

Us W. Both LOst/74Q-446-6308,
Or 1·800-29Hl098
For sate · used Snapper riding
mower, 26" grass pick up avilf.:
able May be seen at 204 Condor

su.. l, Pomeroy Phone 74().992·
2975 Brand now dick
GruCb s Plano- tuning &amp; repal11.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call tl'le

plano OJ 740-44&amp;&lt;1525

&amp; movies Call 740-446·2568.

Equal Houolng Opportunity.
Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; ldtllltles, Inter·
view, References, No Pet1, Leaae,

Oopostl, Non Smok11o, Avallallle,
4/1 51991n City 7•().448-3664

-

Oetuxt One Bedroom Apt Con~
venlent, Private Entrance Central Air and Heat Dishwasher
ptue Washer &amp; Dryer $:)50 per
month Non·Smoklng Phone

{304)675-5733
Furnished Upatalra 2 Rooma &amp;
Bath, Clean, Refsrencea, &amp; De-

posit Roqulrad, Ulllltles Pa&lt;l 74().
446-1519.
Gr41cloua living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vlllage Manor and
Atveratde Apartments In Middle-

pori From $249-$373 Call 740·
992·5084 Equal Houolng Opportunities

Modarn 1BA All UIIIIUoo Paid
Excep1 Eloclrlc Galllpollo Forry
Area . S250 montl'l + Deposit
{304)675-1371/875-3230
Newly Romodoltd 1 BR ~pl.
Prime Oownlown Galllpolla Looa•
lion No PolO. $300. + UIIIIUoo
Aefarance Rtqulred, 740· "*'8·
0008
Notth 3rd Ave , Middleport, 2
bedroom, unturNihtd epertmlnt,
depoen &amp; references, 740·982·

Cultlpacker, Both Excellent Geh
Forage Wagon Tim-Rock

J 920

Farm (304)675-4306

2• Fl Round AboYI Ground Pool,
G
""•••
--,ood__,~-'..,.,'-7_40-446-8c_....:....:..1.:..89,;___

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repairad, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.

Uka Now Spalding Pool Table!
$500 00 P~ 1740) 44Nl886
Nordic Track leg Sl'laper, New

Ford Dvna Balance Mowing Ma·
chine, Series 515 7 Foot Cut,
Massie Ferguson Model 12

Square Bailer, 740-256-8296

Llveatock

630
742·1903

3 Year Old, Chf·Angua Bull 740·

448-91156, 740·446-7421

4 Year Old Peln1 Gelding $1 ooo.
740-367•7221
4·HIFFA Fair Lambs, Quality and
reasonaly Prtcadl Phone· (740)·

256-1330
7 year old Galling. Pari Walking
H018e (304)576-3343
Fll~.

2 Year Old

Filly, Excel~nt Bloodlines, 2 Year·

ling Pony, 740·396-032 1
Angus Bull1or Salel {740) 2455084
Fair Plgo lor Salol Excollonl Blood
Llntsl For mora infOrmation Call·

{740)·245·5672

Of

{740) 367·

PRIMEBTAR
Froo DhciSpoclol
Free lnatallatlon . 3 months lree

Ver~ Nice Sorrel 8 Year Old

Quarter Mare, Call Alter 5 P: M

740-3'79-2820

Hay &amp; Grain

.710 Autos for Sale
'90 Ford Crown Victoria, 302, au·

1omatic, PW, PL PS, goo&lt;! condl·
tton, no ruat , $2500 740·992 ·

And

Tax

Repo'o For Llotlnge Call 1·800·
319-33.23 Eat 4420
1988 Chevy Cortlca, automatic,
runa good, good gas mileage, 4

-

s

Uras Clue. 1195

1987 Chryolor Filth Av-nuo. V-8
automatic. ruhs good, no ruat

Ty Beantu. Chrlatmaa 811r,

1878 Hondamatlc, excellent con·
dillon, wtndah ..kl, aaddlt bags In·

Wanttd· good und futon wllh

.

eluded, rod, 5750

Call740-742-4510

01115

blacl1 culhlon, 740-9112-5053

1888 Pontiac Grand Prix, fwo
door, automallc, air, verv good

Walorllno Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Par 100; 1" 200 PSI

condlllon 116,000 mlleo, $2000
740-992-7689
•

3 Bedrooms Near Holzer Medical

Now Taking Applloallono- 3$

Three bedroom , hall b8aement
home, country setting In Pomeroy,

Weat 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenta, lnctudtl Water
Sewage, Traah, $315/Mo, 740·

446-0008

$37 00 Par too : All Brass Com·

prelllon Fitting&amp; In Stocl&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;oon, Onlo. 1·8QO.I537 9528

't'OV SEE, THE P~OBL.EM
IS I'M TOO 'I'OONG •••
• I'M TOO SMALL .•

Auto Parts l

Budget Priced Transmtnlofli' :
and Engines, All Types, Acceaa •
To Over 10,000 Tranamlaslona, '
eve Jolnto, 740·245-5677

Weal

Nortla

1!:u1

Pus
Puo

29

Pau
All p88ll

p...,

4•

.-

24 Mora mlnlly

21 Dehndlnt'l
anawer
28Pei,....Jusn

30 Come ...,..,.
34 Charm
31 Fall
;!IllWhitney
31Dogar

-.. .:

coyote
31 ChrlelmH

To start," lei's mod1fy 1he wellknown saying for shipwrecked swlors
dymg of thirst mto one for bndge
players· Entries, entnes everywhere,
bul not a wmner m Sight
Thai ISn ' t quite true m today's
deal, but you must be careful Smmg
South , you cru1se mlo four spades.
The defenders lake the first 1hree dmmond tncks, then exit w1th a club,
How would you contmue?
If Nonh were not a passed hand,
two hearts would be a shght overb1d,
w1th an mherent nsk of dnvmg lhe
par1nersl11p too h1gh. However, the
alternative of one no-trump is dangerous loo, perhaps causmg a good 53 bean fitlo be miSsed Solllh 's three·
spade reb1d 1s reasonable The sevencard su1t IS strong, and the bean ace
IS a b1g plus The club king IS a debatable value , though.
West led the d1amond seve n, h1s
founh-h•ghest promtsmg alleasl one
honor m the suit Easl won wuh lhe
ace, then returned the e&amp;ghl, the
h1gher of two remammg cards After
cashmg hts dtamond wmners , Wesl
swttched to lhe club I 0.
Declarer was faced wilh playmg
lhe lrump SUit for no loser The correct, percenlage play ts low to 1he
queen, wmmng whenever East has
kmg-doublelon or West has Jack -s mgleton However, 1f Ihe latter pos1t1on
pr~va1led, declarer would requtre
two dummy entri~s 10 lake a pa1r of
spade finesses. So, he called for lhe
club ace, crashmg h1s own king Then
declarer played a spade to hts queen,
droppmg Wesl's Jack Back to dum·
m.y w1th a bean, South led a spade to
h1s I0, cashed 1he spade .ace, and
cla1med

40 Growing old
42 Sc:c&gt;lan*1'a
41N.-.
nation
50 1Ag41152 Monlel far Mr.
Ed
53Anlcteln
Arlee

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Lula

Campoa

c:...triy ~ cryptOQrltnt IN CIMilld lram quotatiOns by famous~ past and~
E.m litter In .,_ q,t1er .t.ndllor lnCMh« TOOIY8 aue; A «lfja/1 K

" LV I

WIDWILXTK

JFYCZVFIKC

Z J F Z V

JFWIDZ

ZGXYCLDTOA

EGD

FZ

Cl X 0

G E

LVI

l V I

K F PI Z.

MIT Y
ZVIWVIDC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION •vou know you're gettmg old when all lhe namea tn
your black book have M 0 after them • - Amold Palmer

•••••
·'::~:~' S(C~c(llA-~i.trs·
lor
lAIII

QAY I. POI&amp;AN ......;;...__....,....;........

- - - , - - - - lllllotl

-~

•

r:"r"'!c":mb:-"

low 10 lonn lour wordt

lI
~

AR V I L

r
.

::

I I

1~

...,v,....:L~-11":-.,'.

_w\':"E....,..N

Is I'

_.

j-

One dummy to another,
' Sure I've got a good me~
chan1c That's why I keep go1ng to h1m ---- - ----"

I

~7;--,,-::8-r,-T,-,,-::g-r,-1 0
1
-L_..___._......_..___._..J1
•

.

•

•

•

•

•

Completa rho chuckle quored

by f.ll1ng tn the m•s.smg words
you develop from step No 3 below

SCRAM..tm ANSWERS
Syrupy • Pnce • Ovate • Frenzy- NEVER USE

campera&amp;

' I've come to the conclusion ," the husband s1ghed,
that life 1s like a ten speed b1ke Most of us have gears

Don't got st"'f by high prices'
Shop lh• class/fiN/ S«llon

Motor Homea
•
719;::8;;7;-::S::e::lf-"::c:":o::n~te~ln~a::d;-::C::a":m-po~r :

we NEVER USE' "

ITUESDAY

Steeps 6, Microwave, Air Conc:l{
toner, New Awning, Excellent
~

APRIL 271

1988 Pace Arrow Motor Home. B2' ;
I

Heat Awning, Electrlo Jack Ex·'
cellent Condition Stored lnaldll: t

During Wlnler $11,500 {304)57.1;•. /
2345
1r ~ ~ i
Truck Camper 8 Fl. Sloopo 4, · !

Tollol, AI Around GOOd Condlllon,
1250.00 740-245-11858

I

810

Home
Improvement•

ASTRO·GBAPH

Local references furnlehed

Ef·

llbll&amp;hed 1975 CIH 24 lifo ('7&gt;10)
448 0870, 1·800.287-0578 Rog·
•
..., Walerprooftng

AI

Appliance Parts And Servlct.
Name Branda Ovtlr 25 Ynrs Ex·
perl!lnc• All Work Guarantied,
French Clly Maylag, 740·44~·

n95

C&amp;C

•

Gonerol

Home

Malo•

1985. CaloCrlty Runs Goo&lt;!, Nice
work Car 158,000 mlloo, V-8
Aulo_ Air· 51,500 (304)875-5084.

carpanuy, doOro, wlndo.,a, bal!!f!,
mobile homO repair and mot11. ~
!reo ftllmalo call Chot, 740.891·
8323.
,.,

llvtnftaton'a Basement Watir
P100 lng, all buement IIPIIrl'
.done, free eatlmates, tllellme 1
guarantee 12yrs on job expe;t"'

enco {304)695-3967

•,

840 Electrical and , ·
Refrigeration

'.

Rtlldtntlal or commttclat wlrt,._)
new service or repatra Mealer ,L,Io
cenaed tteotrtclan RldenQUt "

Eloclrlcal, WV000306, 304·075·
1786
1
•

~

I

Wednesday, April 28, 1999
Be grateful for what comes easily in your life, but don'l show alack
of apprecialion for wha1 you mual
work hard lo achieve A aood balance
in your outlook will brina about a
•00!1 year.
: TAURUS (Apni2Q.May 20) Tho
"!uch of the good life can be your
wors1 enemy today, so plllalce of all
llii1115 in moderation Don 'I be lempt·
ed lo overindulsc 1n whal you hke
besl, such as food or beveraae. lllu·
IJIS, 1rea1 yourself lo a birthday gift.
~nd !he requ11ed refund form and for
your Aslro-Oraph predlc110ns for lhc
year ahead by mallina $2 and self~ slllnped envelope IOAslroGraph, C/o this newspaper, P.O. Bo•
Ina, Murray Hill Slalion, New
York, NY 10 I S6 Be sure lo stale
your Zodiac 111n
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Spon1111Ci1y is a Jll11C you play well, but
rm~ember not 10 sp&lt;lng lhinss on
P!'OJ!Ie who aren'l prepared physi·
cahy or emotionally lo handle wha1
you're dumplns on lhem
CANCER (June 21 -luly 22)

V!CWinB people II fKe vatue before
you even plio know !hem would be
a nrisiakc today. Don't take anylhlna
for atanled, because surpnaea milhl
be 1n staR for your
LEO (July 23-Aui. 22) (llhers
who 1111y not have your heal 1n1cres1
at heart milht lllcmpllo 111111he show
loday. Be your aracious self. but be
your own bon as well when dealing
wnh SIICh types.
VIROO (Aua. '23-Sepl. 22) The
secret 10 success today is to keep your
. financial affairs In sood balance al all
11mes Should a new lnckle come rn
from an une•pecled source, don ' I lei
a Oood Oow out
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) When
soclahzmg today, suck 10 fnends
whose interesiS parallel youn, and
you'll hove aaQOd lime. Poor choic·
) es of palo could apollevcryone'a fun.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. 22)
There's always a chou:e between
rollin&amp; up your sleeves and 1etlinJ 1
job done, or leninalhinp pile up for
future problems. Choose lhe former
no miller bow temptina it ia to coast
today.

SAOI1TARJUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) Don't go looting for ill wdl in
sta1emen1s made by olheiS where
none wu inlended If someone
makes an out of lme, chllnce com·
mcnltoday, loush i1 off
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You won't be 100 happy if you allow
yourself to SCI drawn in1o a situation
today where another's exctsso•
become your liabililies Stay on your
toes and don 'I be vulnerable
AQUARIUS (Jon 20-Feb. 19)
Avo1d being lempled 10 make assessmcniS based on wha1 you wan1 1hings
10 be, ra1her lhan whatlhey really are
lllosrcal perapeclives could give you
'
a headache
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) W1ld
suessing {he odds or avoiding the
1rulh when presen1ed 10 you today
wrll lead lo losses, especially 1n
money issues. Face lhinss boldly and
all will be well
ARIES(March21 ·Aprd 19)Treal
everyone equally 1ns1ead of 1ry1ng 10
be nice only 10 lhose you lhink can
help you 1oday Your besl a1d mighl
come from a least expected source.

•

."

22 FnhloNibly

Pau

NIW gas lanka &amp; IJody parts. D 1
R Aulo, Rlploy. wv (304)372·
3933 Of H!OQ-273-9329
'

Condlllonl Cail.l740)-446-4262 "

9 Temp. un"
10 GM&gt;us of anla ,
11 Eapl..
12 lt'a ..-lly In
tho trunk
19c-...,.t~...

't'OO SEE, IT
ISN'T AS
THOU6H I'M
61TTE~ OR
AN'r'THING ..

I

tentnce· Painting. vinyl aiding~

Uo, We Bolh Loool 553 J(cl&lt;oon
Plko, 740· 440·0308. 800-281·
0098

P96

32 Actor Cariou

P.tANUTS

A~ssor111

790

t:,;"';orrbecbel:kk

TEEy EL

IIASEIIENT
W-'TEAPIIOOUncondlllonal lllotime guarooiH.

1110·1HOCAAS FROM $500

Cuck-Coi·Bird-Jock-Pounct-Ear·
ly 1'10 for omall onet $75 lor
CIYIIImU!Ieltl304)et5-1311

760

TRA N SPORTATI O N

Impounds,

hllll-l nolll
31 Mra., In Madrid

7 Weird quality
8 Soapnulk8r'a

IMKtlc.
5 9oorW lhln

SERV I CE~

O.keiC 9Hd Corn &amp; Soy Soans
For Sale {304)675-1506

Pollee

Jr

I

hp, $5500 Fun boal Sot aJ 399.
South Third Stroel, Mlddloporl,
74().992-7727.

850 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

peg 1,1. IIJPPL,V
Wholesale To The Public We
Stock Janllro1 Heating And Cool·
tng Equipment, Duel Work, RegIsters, And Related Mattrlala For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furnish A list Of O.a~tl To
Install For You II You Don't Call

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

1 c-poalllon
2 Slnv-' Cyncll
3 FIN!*i

Stove, RelriQ , Furnace, Dinette, ~

large Square Balsa 01 Good Hay
For Sale. 740-3'79-26311

7405

And BIIVICI Supply We Sell

~--...

buill carb, $1350 740·992·21 43
or 74Q-992-6373

1997, 26Ft Torry Camper Air, :

programing, caN 666-285-2123
We Art Professional Installation

Yamaha Blaster 4 wheeler, netf+ '
piston and rings, brakes and ri· '

Fair Plg&amp;,Call Aller 8 OOPm 740245-9047.

Condftlonl $200, 740-37'9-2218

Sol $800007&gt;40-446-3664

Artie Cat ~54 Bearcat Bougbt :
new In December '98 bcellenf ..

II Loaded, Like New $28,000. •
(304)675-3787.
'•

Owner MOVIng New 01,.1een Size
4 Piece White Wlcktir Bedroom

f'ANTS
Ail-E
OONNA
OPEN
LIP LIKE
A DRM.
CHUTE

$3500 1304)273-2300

0583

840

Q 10 8 7 5 3

··-·-my··-.

DOWN

27 Governor
2t Guido'•

1994 Four Wlnns Fling, 14', 1l5- ~

2 yearling Charlala bulls, 740·

A PH A Yaarllng

.. -

1995 Yamaha Big Bear 4K4, 350" :
cc Gun Rack end Scabbard.

1 Bdrm , Extra Nice, First Month
Free With One Year lease

BIG NATE

To Lilli Excellent Condlllo.n.l;

$10 500 00

717 N H Silage Chopper Wlih 2
Row Corn Head, $1,800 00. Aloo,
N H Silage Blower. -$1 .ooo 00 .
740-843-2285

Apartment&amp;
for Rent

1

1981 Harley Low Rkllt, Too Much

610 Farm Equipment

...Of COO~, INJ:JTLY MIOOT _,AAI...

DO

6 automatic, elr, cruise, lilt whetf, f
excellent condition, aaklng 1

1124 E. Main Streol. on At 124,

Oak Bullet Fainting Couch,
Ortner, Etc No Dealers Please,

1:\CN~TLY, CHIEF, 1-\0~

1995 Ford Wlndstar van, 3 8L, ~-

tlon Great for travel/vacation.

Moore owner

,..THE BORN LOSER

59,000mlloo Excellonl Condl·

FA RM S U PPLI E S
&amp; LI VESTOC K

..

I

Red &amp; white sweet potato plants ,

6 oo p m 740-992·2528 ; Ruso

Two becfroom, all electric, In
country, $325 per montl'l plua &amp;e·
curlty deposit and references,

glne, runa good, good Urtl , •

Buy or aeU \ Riverine AnUQuea:
Pomeroy. Houri M.T W 10.00
am 10 6:00 p.m, Sunday 1 00 10

Trailer For Ronl &amp; Lo1 For Renl,
740-448-1279

Pepper, S250aa unrogiSior,d

580

'90 Chevy Aatro va-n, all wheel"'" .

5900 00 080, 740-2e8-1233

57"-"'ut.

By Phillip Alder

1978 Ford BI'OfiC() 740-446-8588

Dog Obedience Classes Now
Forming The Right Paw Training

Waahera, dryers, refrigerators,

A C 1200 BTU $70 (304)6758693.

•

Yens &amp; 4-WDs

$2000; 740-742·2e15

• A 8 8
• Q. 7 3

Not a drop
to drink

1993 Ford EX1endod Cn 250 :
Turbo Oleool , 115,800, 740·441· ,
9317

730

-

" 5 4 2

Opening lead: • 7

drlvo, PW POL , good condlllon, ,
S5500; '72 Mack 1ruck. 237 on- •

Shellesa, Black&amp;Whlte, Sable&amp;

Miles N 01 Holzer $300 00 Monlh

I'M ON VACATION

.I PLUMB
FERCIOT II

:

'1

GOOD ,USED APPLIANCES

Nice 2 Bdrm CIA Hwy 160 4

Monaoon Slerep, 12 Cloc CD •
Changer Fully Loaded! Will Take 1

$750 00 {304)578-8005.

Shauzers, Black&amp;SIIver, Salt&amp;

Kenmore Dryer, $80. Whirlpool

BARNEY

Puppleo &amp;Kltltno
Fulllno ol pellsuppl"'

Jackoon Avenue, (304)875-7388.

6908

Soulll

Blue Melalllc, 5 7 Llllr, LS 1 Efl.

7&gt;40-446-1788

55 Cooking fat

Dealer: North

1987 Ford Ranger 4 Cyl , 5
Speed
New Pa int (Biacli) :

Blchon Frlse AKC 1 Female. 1
Malt, Pooslblo Doll,.ry, 740-379·
2899, 740-379-9081

-.:h

21 AtllrmetloM
23 Lontlnl
24 Gll...211nvltmlon

Vulnerable: Both

1996 Pontiac Trani · Am, NIV)I

~

5411pr..tby

zo~r·pol- 55 B•lled on t11a

l!:ul
• K 9 4

AK

mus1 oelll $8900 OBO 740 9491014

•s•a

-

11Ac __ ....._

17..._
,. 502, Roman

• Q 54

720 Trucka lor Sale

qulred, 74Q-245-5582 After 5 740.
245·5690

ranges. Skaggo Appllancoo, 76
Vlno Slroll. Call 740-448·7398,
1-888..!18.()128

• A

report

=~

cepl1,ll

• A9

2006 Clmdln A111nuo
Parlrorsburg. WV 28101
304-485-1293

2 Bedroom Trailer loated On
Jackson Pika, Referencea At·

polls Ferry Now acoepUng appll·

4 Dooro,
Lotded, Cold Air, SUOO OBO,
740-441-o564

Pay etr 740-ue

ers, dryata and refrigerators
Tnompaona Appliance 3~07

cations lor tots on alta (304)675-

Trona , AIC, AnUiock Brakot. ;
Goo&lt;! Condlllon $-4,500 00 OBO
740-378·9141

glne, Leather Interior, 10 Speaker

AKC While Gorman Shepherd
Pups, $300 740-245-9213

CFA Registered Himalayan Seal
Point Klttena, Wormed, Litter

Appliances
Reconditioned
Wuhera, Dryers, Aange!l, Relrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

Autom ..

1997 Ford Aspire, 4 cylinder, air,
dual alrbags, e~~:cellenl condition, '

Jackaon Avenue/Point Pleasant

HouMhold
Goods

510

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
conditioned, $260·$300, aewer,
water and trash Included. 7&lt;40

1995 Chevy Corsica

Weal
• J
• J 10 7
e KJ I 7
• 10 i 6 ' 4
South

1

eacl'l, shots 8 months old, 740·
696· 108!5

{304)875-2063

terBOOpm

7512

1997 Camero, 8.000 mllas Loadad {304)875-5946.

Nice

For Leaae

490

EEK&amp;MEEK

1995 Buick LtSabro Cullom 4

llnao 3 months &amp; 5 montho, $200
tach, AKC Collleo, throo mala&amp;,
oablol whl1a, oyos nmmal. 1200

150 00 740-446-8627

74().385-43117.

Fenced

She\1111, saCie/ while, lour

Adult Female Or Mate Puppy,

Mobile home site available btt·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

Three bedroom houu In Middle·

2
oWKQ88S
• 10 s 2
6 A J"2

Ooora. Blue Loaded, 740-Sd-

bU lathtt'

15 w. Ill for
18.._._.,

• s

1992 Pon11ac Grande Prix, Coif
3117-5055

Or

AKC SICerlan Huoky Puppleo
Bluo Eyes, $150 oo To $200 oo

460 Space for Rent

References Required, No Peta,

1892 Hondo Accord, ll( , 2 DoOr
Coupe I Speed, 215K, S3 7!\0
000, 740--78

mates, shots, champion blood·

appllctllono lor 1BR. HUC ouC·

Ona Bedroom Hoult In Galllpollo,

13 AobWII Dee
14 Oplial
lppiiCIIOI'

LL&lt;N~vo~~~------1 1885 Neon Hlghllnt

-;

Twin Rlvtfl Tower now accepting
~

Cenlor, No Polo, $800/Mo .. Plus
Ulll111oo, &amp; Depoau, Aelerencoo
Raqulrtd, 740·448-0885, Aller 5
~M.

(304)875-1368.
tached G rage , Rodney Area

Nlca Small 2 Bedroom. 5 Room

74().992·6154

nawly remodeled, uklng $37,500,
740-992-n45

Alo Orondo, OH Call 740·2•5·
5121

560

S38
.. Otpotlt &amp; Goo&lt;! Atllr
encoo, 40-448-2801

House, Near Centerville IThur~
man, Gallla SChoOII, County We·
ter Included, Plant A Garden,

440

340

Block, brlck, aawer pipes, wind·
owa linteta, etc Claude Wlnlera ,

One Bedroom Apartment In Pt
Pleasant Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No Peta Phone

Roomy 2 Bedroomo Wllh AI·

Clean . E111clenl, 28R . Aolerencoo, Oapool1, No Polo . (304)6755162

Pool Was 1205,090 00 Now
$175 000 001 (740) 367.0219

30 Acres

2808 Lea¥&amp; Massage on Ma

Balhs, 11/C, Acc.11 To Pool. 740446·3481 Or 74Q·446-0101 Allor
500PM

740-992-720 1

Gra"" Marl&lt;ers (304)576-2n9

E &amp; S Lawn Service Design lm·
plemen1atlon
and Serv1ce
Available lor~ Sprlng Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free estl
mates SatisfactiOn guaranleed
Greg Milhoan 304/675·4628

lblo, luml&amp;hed &amp; 11tlurrilhld

Large White Colonial Hou11 At
Tara Apts ., 3 Bdrma , 2 Full

50 Acre Farm, 3 Bedroom House
2 full Baths, 32ft x 60ft Barn ,
Black Top Driveway Swimming

lots, get the 4th tree Special
Sale Companion and Individual

A11nlston

Hookup, $275 00 Aonl Wllh De·
posll 740·446·3481 Or 740-446·
0101 Al1or500PM

1 Bedroom Trailer Secluded Lot

13995 Quick delivery Call 740·
385-9621

of 1968 which makes It Ulegal
to advertise ~any preference,
hll"'itat•on or d1scnmlnatio11
based on race. color. religion,
se" familial status or national
angln or any Intention to
make any such preference,
l~mllatlon or discrimination "

Cl'lrlsty'a Fa mil~ Living, apart•
menta. home &amp; trailer rentals ,
7&lt;40·992·&lt;4514, apartmenttavatl·

$3501Mo , + $300 Ooposll, 740441-1308

Good selection of used homes
wllh 2 or 3 bedrooms .Starling at

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

756 Flrsl Avo , 1 Bdrm. 1 Balh,
Newly Renovated , Waaher Dryer

41~--

43 tloniDIHI

I.

1992, 26X52 DouCiaWidO In
Ashton Area 3BR, 2BA on 112
Acre lot
Price Reduced.

8Q0.383-e~2

3BA 1 112BA, Family Room Ga

The Doadllno For Accepllng Ap·
pile allons Ia Monday, May 10,
1999 5 00 PM For Addlilonal In·
lormallon Call 74o-441·3010, 8 00
-s·oo PM , Monday Thru Friday
plover,

With Heal Pump, 740·441 - 0959:
74().379-2196

Low Interest Ra"a For 1sl Time
Buyers, Limited Time Available,

2103 Uount Vernon Avenue

441-o316

Acceu To Human Resource De·

1992 14x70 Oakwood 2 Bed·
rooms , 2 Full Baths, All Electric

Ca11After4~M

3900

318. Gallpoh, OH 4M,31

velopmonl Ia An .AAIEEO Em·

Condition 740·448-6157 Aller
400Pm

frigtrator And Stove Included,

1·666·582·3345

AI This Opportunity
-

All Elect , 2 Porches. Very Good

ty Room EloclriC Hla1 Pump, A•

Seeking Pos!tlve, Enthu!uasllc,
Career Minded Individual,
Reta1l Sates IBankmg
Experience Hetplul
Degree A Plus 2 Years Minimum
Protected TerrHor; And
Established Accounts
Women Do Exceedingly Well
Call For Personal
And Conlldentlallnterv1ew

1982 Flealwobd 14F1 x 70F1,
$9,500 00 2 Bdnno, 2 S.lhl CIA,

Home , Three Bedrooms TWo
Bathrooms, Walk-In CIO!Ieta, Utili·

Personalized Resumes And
Much Moret lnttr\llew Materials
To Get You Prepared, 740·388·

1·80

1973 Hlllcrtsttwo bedroom mollilo home, 740·992·5039

Make 2 Payments No Payment

Local Trucking Compan~ Seeking
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits Send Resume
To PO Box 109 Jackson Ohio

140

t6x80 VInyl ,SI'IIngla, Assume
lotlfl, 1·8Q0.383-6682

1994 18x60 Sunohlno MoCIIe

lipolls 1o-2 No Phone Calls

M!HPM

12x65 Master Crall. 1WO llldroom,
ona bath, gao heal, $-4500 negoli740-992-1042

(304)576-2993

General Offic e ISaias Experl
enced Prtferred Full· Time lm·
mediate Opening Apply Lifestyle
Furniture. 856 Th1rd Avenue Gal·

Ext 8827

EQUIPMENT

Bualn111
Opportunity

367-1'341

ors 740-339 33n
Both PositiOns
Atleasl 25 Years Old
Atleast 2 Years Experience

210

•
•'

.J

•

21 Denomlntlllon
40 Clllp In a cl1lp

7 Conlroueellal

FINANCIAL

ANiW11" 10 PtldDUI Puzzle

_,

___ .....~.- -. -

...

- -- -- ______,__,:.

~.

- - - ~--c·· - - - -' -

.

�.'

•

•

.

-

•

•

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10

Tuesday, Aprll27, 1999

This granny charges family for services - does she have ot~er problems?
DEAR MABEL: This does not
sound to me like most family relalionships. ora your mother grow up
very poor? How is her mental
health? I hesitate to say more·
because I don't know her background. All I can say is, it's very sad.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
tempted many times to write to you

tab!e. The tiny thing hesi tated, stagWhen she pulled them out of .
gered arou nd, weaved back and class last year, she said she would be
fonh on the table top, and then ·got ho!lle schooling them. Ann, she hasthe hi ccups. When we, tried to figure ' n't done _any schooling at· all. The
out what was going on, we sniffed kids do nothing but play video
the jar and found out that the fruit games and watch TV _all day The
juice had fermented and our little bat younger one, who is 12, has asked to
was drunk. -- L.H. IN HAWKINS , go_back .to school, but Kelly refuses
and then, she charged me $12 for
TEXAS ,
to send her.
·
you think about a grandmother who "water, detergent and electricity."
&lt;,'bout more serious subjects. but the
DEA~ L.H.: Not many people
The 14-year-old is already so
charges for baby-sitting her grandIs this n\)rmal behavior? When- 'inebriated-a nimals stories did il .
get close enough to a bat to deter- · lazy, he 'has no interest in doing any- ·
children? l'ln not talking about reg- ever my mother needs a ride anyMany years ago, .when we went mine whether it is drunk or sober: thing when he grows up.
ular day care, Ann. I mean babysit- where, she asks me to drive her, and campin g in the Pennsy lvania woods, Thanks for the scientific research.
I don 'I know what will become or
ting on a Saturday night once -eve(}' I wouldn't think of requesting pay- my 10-year-old brother found a
Dear Ann Landers: I am having these children if th,ey don 't get an
two weeks.
·
ment. She_ always says, "You have- , small bat asleep near the cabin. He a serious problem with my hus- education. I could report Kelly to the
I ~now my mother doesn' t owe more money than I have, " whi ch is brought it to Mom and asked where band's sister, "Kelly." Kelly has two authorities, but it would create a
me baby-sitting privileges, but it true, but that' doesn't mean I'm-rich. he might keep it for a while . She . children who are not getting any tremendous problem with my inI don't know what to make of gave him a quart-sized cannin g jar m ed ucation whatsoever. She refuses to laws. If I don't get involved, I will
- seems to me she is very peculiar
about money. For example, last year, thi s, Ann. When I see the way my which 'she ·had kept fruit for th ~ trip, put the children in public school never forgive fllY~elf. I really care
our home needed some electrical frie nds are treated by their mothers, and after punching holes in the lid, because she 's afraid of gangs and about these kids, Ann. How can I
and plumbing work done. I asked- I ·am hun that my mom is so differ- we put the still-sleeping bat inside .
drugs. She won 't put them in private help them? -- NO .- FUTURE IN
my mother jf we could' come to her ent. Please tell me what you think
Several hours laier, the bat woke school beca use she "cannot afford TEXAS.
·house and use her shower and wash about this.--MABEL IN MICHI- up, and we let him out on the picnic it."
DEAR TEXAS: Please insist
some clothes. She sa id, "Of course," GAN

_that your husband become involved
at once. Tell him if he won 't, you
will. \ben, do it. If the mother of
these children -- or your in-laws ·gets mad al you, so what? Somebody has to save them , and it just
may be you. Please pump op._your
cour~ge, and do what needs to be
done. You will never regret it.
Do you have questions about sex,
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager" is
fmnk and to the point. Send a self
addressed, long, businesS-size enve-

lope and a check or money order for
$3 .75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann . Landers, P.O. Box 11562 Chicago, Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4 .55.) To find out more about Ann ·.
Landers and rea&lt;j her past columns,
visit the Creators Syndicate web
page· at www:crealors.com.

Meigs Local District-to ·observe right-to;.read and math week
Sc hools in the Meigs Local District w·i iJ ha•;e a variety ofongoing
activities nexr week. May 3 ~7, in

Middl eport's theme is "Cele- younger students, and take a trip to
brate"designating each day a differ- · The Middleport Library. The eighth
ent hpliday.- Monday will be wear a graders will study a unit on the Civil
mask for Halloween, Tuesday bring War and do-different activities deala ornament for Christmas, Wednes - ing with Martin Luther King's
day' wear red, white,. and blue for speech.
.
.
Independence Day, Thursday wear a
David Gaul, principal of Me1gs
hat for Easter, and Friday, bring a Middle S&gt;hool, will give a daily
birthday care for birthdays .
quote fqr students to -ponder and
The students will decorate their there will be a schoolwide book fair.
doors penaining to· one of the five
Meigs High School will be
holidays. Other activities will exploring career options 'and
include an assembly, . around the requirements. Students will print out
world-math activities, alphabet infonnation from the web sites and a
game, egg and spoon race, daily copy will be given to each student.
' trivia question, scavenger hunts, They will use a newspaper each dayguess the candy in the jar and birto· integrating newspaper anicles into
lessons.
·
dav oanies on Fridav.
Bradbury 's theme is "Get on the
Teachers involved in the proRight Track by. Reading" with activ- grams include: Bradbury, Shannon_
ities to included a slogan co ntest, Korn ; Harrisonville, Paula Chancey ;
daily drawing for door prizes, race Middlepon, Liz Story and Teresa
· car demonstration, door decorating Carr; Pomeroy, Janet Hoffman,
· contest, dress-up day, and hot wheel B.ryan Zirkle, and Becky Triplett ;
race using estimation and standard Rutland , Linda McManus; Salem
Center, Shirley VanMeter; Sal is bury,
RESOLUTION SIGNED -A resolution deslgnatl11g May 3-7 as Right to Reed and Math Week In Meigs
measu~ment .
Barb
Mathews
Crow;
Meigs
Middle
Local
schools was signed this waek. Administrators and participating school representatives at the
Rutland 's theme is "Study of
School,
Ron
Drexler
and
Pam
Vogt
;
signing
were from the left, seated,- Ron Drexler, William Buckley, auperlntendent; Wendy Haler, asall·
Space" and the classes will 'have
Meigs
High
School,
Tim
Lawson
tant
superintendent;
and Lester Manuel; and standing, .Elizabeth Story, Shirley VanMeter, Barb Mllth·
,guest readers on Wednesday and
ahd
Lester
Manuel
;
Title
Direc
tor
ews
Crow,
Janet
Hoffman,
Tlni Lawson, Bryan Zirkle, Teresa Carr, and Pam Vogt. Absent were Shannon
Thursday, and space videos for
1
·
grades 3, 4, and 5. The children will ·and _Assistant Superintendent Wendy · Korn, Paula Chancey, Becky Triplett, and Linda McManus.
be taking home "bookworms"for
use in recording their reading at
home. They will be introduced to the
sun and planets through decorating

observaijce of Right-to-Read and
Math Week.
At Pomeroy Elementary, stud_ents
wi ll learn about Neil Annstrong and
John Glenn .and their pan in the
NPiS A space program. They will
have a Troll book fair, daily trivia,
door and writing contests, principal's reading challenge, and plane·tarium day.
They will also he having special
treats like astronaut sandwiches,
space juice, and family ice cream
with all the toppings. Their theme is
" Readin~ &amp; Math Are Out Of This
World."
Salem Center will be "Goirig To
Camp" The various activities will
include reading the book, Berenstain
Bears Go To Camp, there will be a
craft day, Five Little Campers fin·gerplay, make animal. puppets and
:drinking cups, tell ghost -stories, and
·make samores. Grades K-1 will have
a hidden picture puzzle, and grades
2-5 will have a word search
.puzzle.
,
Contests will include coloring
projects, books read each day, question of the day,math problem solving, books read for the .week, marshmallow estimation, and ' knapsack
game.
doors, a n art day, a space lesson, an
Salisbury's program will include alien dress-up day, and writing day. . ·
door contests, silent readi_ng, sloganStudents will be holding a canned
contest, bookmarks with slogans, food drive for the Meigs County
and a book swap. The best math stu- Cooperative Parish. Another activity
dent of the week and best reading .will be to celebrate space with a
student of the week Will he recog- read-in. Students.are to take blankets
. nized.
·
and/or pillows , books, and goodies
Rain forest food will be served in and have a quiet reading pany.
the cafeteria, and the Columbus Zoo
Meigs Middle School will have a
will be brining the "canopy crea- variety of activities during Right-to- I
tures" to school. Monday is Wel- Read &amp; Math Week. The sixth
come to ihe Rai n Forest, Tuesday is graders will have ice cream sundaes
Math Estimate Day, Wednesday is in which the ,students will figure
Salisbury Blue and ·White Day, cost, capacity, time, and volume
Thursday is Read and Count Button measurements. The seventh graders
Day, and Friday will be Rain Forest will have 'math games, mind benCreature Day..
ders, computer games, geoboards,
Harrisonville's theme is "Score and they will also survey the school
Big With Reading And Math." propeny using graphs, chans, and
· Ongoin g activities will . be daily maps.
sports math trivia questions, daily
The eighth graders will measure
door pri ze drawings, "Sports in the the -heights of buildings using shadNews" school-wide newspaper pro- ows and proportion.
ject, "World Series Writing" contest,
Sustained silent reading will be
"Touchdown Readers" minutes held throughout the building. :The sp&lt;;nt reading project, "Just For Fun" sixth grade will read and discuss ·
basketball shoot-a-than, "Math novels and stories about or to their
Baseball" activity,. jersey ·day, ball mothers. The seventh graders will
cap day, and estimation contests.
write tributes to their moms, read to

Southern, Eastern lose, Page 4
Beau doesn't want marriage, Page 7
Changing vacation plans, Page 6

Today: Showers
High: eo.; Low: 40•
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 60•; Low: 40•

Philadelphia outduels
the Reds to take a 10
Inning, 1-0 win
-Page 4

'

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 Nurnher 250

Smgle Copy - 35 Cents

Clinton .offers.new gun-control measures, explosives restrictions
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Aaaocr.t.d Pnn Wrtt.r

years," also proposes banning juvenile possession of the Brady law, would cover dynamite, blasting caps and
•Mandatory prison sentences of th ree to I 0 years and
semiautomatic assault rifles, halting imports of all high- the like, not materials that-can be blended into an explo- $10,000 fine~ for adults, including parents, who allow
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - One week to the day after capacity ammunition clips and lim iting an individual's . sive mixture. In' Littleton, Colo., the student killers used children access to guns .
The adult could be held liable whenever a juvenile
.lhe Colora4o school shooting. President Ointon pro!":'.'Ellll~ homemade hand
and pipe bombs in .their ram•
posed gun-control legislation today to raise the I_egal age es to one per
page through Columbine High . crime is committed and the adult "knowingly or reckfor handgun possession from 18 to 21 and hold negligent month.
School. In Oklahoma City, two tons lessly allowed it to occur," said White House spokesman
parents liable when their children cOmmit crimes with
In addiof explosive . made frol)l common Barry Toiv. He added ·that the legislation's standard of
jUI!S.
tion, Ointon
fertilizer were us~ to blow up the reckless conduct would be " a difficult. standard to
Buyers of explosives would also be subject to the renewed ·
federal building in 1995. .
meet. "
.
Clinton
raised
this.
provision long before the Littleton
. same Brady law background checks as gun purchasers. measures
Ointon also propa6ed:
"It is criminal how easy it is for children in America that died in
•Mandatory
child-safety shootings and it is not meant to suggest thai those
killers' parents should be blamed, Toiv said.
to obtain guns," Hillary Rodham Clinton said at a White the last Conlocks on all guns sold.
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, who repreHouse ceremony, where she led her husband and an gress.
He
•Extension of an existing ban
assembly of lawmakers in a moment of silence for the suggested he
on juvenile possession of handguns sents South' Dakota, where guns are popular among
community of Littleton, Colo.
. was counting
to include semiautomatic assault ranchers and sportsmen, was skeptical about passing any
' The president said his proposals would amount to no on outrage
.
_rines; also a ban on importation of new restrictions.
''I'm not sure that gun legislation is what we need,"
more than minor delays and minor hassles for sportsmen · over the Colorado sbooting to.push them through this all ammunition magazines that hold more than 10
and legal gun owners.
year over objections of the gun lobby.
rounds, an extension of current law banning imports of Dakhle told reponers Mqnday. 'He suggested the school
shootings were -a societal problem stemming from
"It's going to be a hassle for them. It's worth iL It's ,
"It's not just the culture of violence that has to those made since 1994.
worth it: We're sorry - it's worth it," Ointon said. change. It's the culture of hunting and sport shooting
• •Background checks on buyers for all gun-show parental and teacher neglect and violence in the media
and on the.Intemet.
·
"People's lives are at stake here." .
that has to stop financing efforts to frighten their mem- sales.
·
·
.
"Those are the kinds of things we better be looking
In extensive remarks preceding the president, Mrs. bers," Ointon said.
•.A lifetime ban on gun ownership for people who
at,'' Daschle said.
Ointon said she doubted the administration:s ability to
"It's not going to be easy,'~ said Sen. John Chafee, R- · commit violent crim~s as juveniles.
Andrew Molchan, director of the National Associa"create a perfect set of solutions that, if followed, would R.I., a supporter who scoffed at crjtics saying schOol
•A three-day waiting period for all handgun purchashave prevented what happened at Columbine High violence is a cultural problem.
· es, with an additional two days if law officers need them tion of Federally Licensed Gpn Dealers, said the 7,000
School.''
·
"This isn 'I about schools ... this is about this distort- to complete their investigation. Until last year, the Brady gun dealers he represents suppon a lifetime ban on gun
But, she added, "That does not mean . that we are ed interpretation of the Constitution 'that convinces oth- Act provided five days for police to conduct background ownership for anyone wh&lt;J commits a violent crime.
·But the rest of Clinton's package, Molchan said, "is
:either hopeless or helpless."
erwise rational citizens that it is their inalienable right to checks on buyers if they needed that much time. Now, it
-; The president's. O!llnibus -crime package, which .the be armed to the teeth," Chafee said.
limitS them to three days, but most checks are instanta- an unfortunate diversion and, in our view, a dangerous
~ite House trumpeted as "the 'm~t comprehensive
The explosives provision, which aims to treat the sale neous. Never before has there been a minimum, manda· diversion that takes energy; time and thought away from
the real issues. '
Jun legislation any administration hils pot forward in 30 of explosives the same way gun sales are treated under tory waiting period:
1

Com-missioners approve Edwards Road closing
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Staff
.
The Meigs County Commissioners voted to vacate a portion of a Chester
Township-roadway d~ring their regular meeting on Tuesday afternoon.
The board held a: public hearing on the proposed closing of Edwards
Road, which was attended by seven· people who live on the road. .
The roadway was the subject of a recent civil lawsuit in the Coun of
O.EVELAND (AP)- A national official with the AFL-QO gave a: dubi\Ammon
Pleas, according to Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, who atten~­
.ous adricvemenl award Tuesday to a company where a lubpr union says
ed
'f:uesday
's hearing.
workers have had their fingen mangled due to a lack of safety tquipmenl
The
lawsuit
involved a dispute over ownership and access issues, Lentes
Linda Chavez-Thompson, vice president of !he nationa!'Afl...CIO,Iead a
said, and Judge Fred W. Crow III did not determine ownership, but did grant
_delegation of about 15 injured workers, union members and community SUJ&gt;'
access to one of the residents of the road.
•
·
)Xll1ers to three companies owned by Drcison International Inc. They tried to
The
trustees
in
Chester
Township,
in
ihe
mejllltime,
have
been maintainpresent company 1ept llfllllalives with \WO aWards~~ were IUilled away.
ing
the
r
oad,
and
re&lt;;eived
mileage
credit
from
the
state
for
the
road, but have
· '"They threw us out because they don't w1111t to fiear .tl\ey're bad employno
record
of
ownership.
·
.
·
ers,"Oiavez..ThomptiOII said after police were called to keep the protesters
According
to
Lentes,
the
issue
of
ownership
of
public
roadways
has
oft' Drcison's property.
become an issue across the state, and the Cllester Township Trustees requestChavez-Thompt1011 wanted to pre5ent Dreison with the AFL-QO's
ed
the closing of the roadway in order to avoid liability and possible tres"Wane Health &amp; Safety Violator of the Year" award. The second award was
passing allegations.
·
from Oeveland members of Jobs With Justice, which determined that the
In
other
business,
the
commissioners
passed
a
resolution
declaring
this
company deserved its award for worst employer of the year.
week
as
National
Crime
Victims
RightsWeek
in
Meigs
County,_
and
B!'OthThe two awards marked Workers Memorial Day, which is being
er resolution declaring April Child Abuse Prevention Month.
·
observed nationally Wednesday.
.
Lentes,
and
Victims
Advocates
Connie
Dodson
and
Christi
Lynch,
noted
·"They're bringing thiid world conditions to. Ocveland. We're opposed to
that
the
local
victims
assistance
program,
administered
through
the
prosethis sweatshtp." said Sleye Cagan, coordin~ of the Oeveland chapter of Jobs
cuting attorney's office, planned activities this week, including a special d_inWith Justice.
..
. •
ner 'recognizing crime victims.
· ·
Dmson 1epresentatives refused to comment Tuesday, .eferring all questions
'
Commissioner
Jeffrey
Thomton
commended
Perry
Varnadoe,
Meigs
to their altomCy, Andy Meyer, who did not r~:tum phone calls. Dreison, which
employs 500 worldwide, owns seven companies that. make prod,ucts for the, County "!X'nomic development director, and local resident Patty Pickens for
their work in trying to attract a v-eterans home in Meigs County.
lnlflSportalion. aaricultural and mining industries.
PROCLAMATION SIGNED - Melga County Commlsaloners
The state announced last week that the home; which was sought by sev- Jeffrey Thornton, Janet Howard and Mick Davenport are pic·
" When people are not protected on
the job because a company wants to eral southeastern Ohio ·counties, would be located in Brown County.
-tur:ed signing e proclamation declaring thla wNk National Crime
Thornton said that lie was disappointed by the decision, saying that spec- VIctims Rights WNk. Alao pictured are VIctims Advocates
Citt comers, that's.· wrong,'' Chavezifications for the home were changed during the site selection process, and Chrlatl Lynch and Connie Dodaon, and Prosecuting Attorney
Thompson said.
that some sites, including the site in Brown County that was selected, were John L.entM.
James Fl'lher, 37, of Cleveland, said he
proposed after a state-imposed deadline.
Today's
WIB fired from hi5 .T!echanic's job for ·
• Authorized .an_advance for a hazard mitigation grant account;
"If we have to follow the state's rules, they should have to f9II0w their.
2 Sections " 12 Pages
being a whislleblower again!~ Drd!;en.
• Tabled action on the sale of an emergency sq uad , pending review Jlf a
owo rules," Thornton said. "I think that the people in Meigs County were
He said be W8'l the (X)III(liUIY's Ooatpabid
by Robert Byer of the counly 'EMS office.
·
cheated by the decision."
lional Safety and Health Adrt!inNnitim
Present,
in
addition
to
Thorpton,
were
.
C
ommissioners
Janet
Howard
and
The commissioners also:
tepr ertlalive tind openly aitici&gt;Jed the
Mick Davenport.
• Approved several transfers of funds for county depanments;
(X)IIIJliiOY for not having enough safety
metiSIIRS in place.
Fisher said he was fired after leaving Work wilh pennission to attend
A Rutland Elementary class has a $pecial Powderhorn Elementary School students likely
an OSHA conference. He said the
connection to the Colorado community devas- attend Columbine High School.
U.S. Department of Labor was investated by a school shooting last week.
Jenkins said on Monday that several' of her
tigating his firing.
·students in the fifth grade class of Donna former students had continued iheir long-dis"Lots of people get ~urt at DrciJ.enklns have been writing to students at Pow- lance friendships with the Colorado students,
Lotteries
son," Fisher said, pointing out some derhorn Elementary School in Littleton, Colo., and that one former student, now a junior at
of the protester.; who have been
as a sP.,cial year' lons project through Weekly Meigs High School, had contacted her about
QQIO
injure(! on the job. ,
Reader, the children :s newspaper which is dis-. the incident last week.
PlckJ; 1-2-S; Plck4: 1-2-2-7
'Thnya Degan, of l'lmla, said She la!l
·
·
Jenkins said that her students had etpressed
tributed
in school$.
Boacb1 5: 8-21-26' 29-30
pert
of
her
risJtt
index
finger
in
a
July
·
The
school,
a~rding
to
Jenkins,
is
located
concern
for the Colorado community, but were
W.YA.
accident She said lingUIIded madlinery only a short distilnce from Columbine Hi&amp;h · handlins the news well.
· Dally 3:'6-2-6; Dlllly 4: 4·0.5·2
CIIRd her finaci" to be pulled into
School, where two Sludents killed 13 people
A sctiool-wide assembly to address student
0 i\J99Qblo \IIIIey hbibili., Co.
heavy machinery. ·
and themselves in a shootin&amp; rampage last concerns about the incident was .conduc.ted at
week.
Rutland Elementary School last week, accordlenkiti.s said that the 23 students wrote let- · ing to Principal Rusty Bookman.
·
ters to their pen pals on Thursday, following
CONDOLENCES _An extra large card,
the tragedy, and expressed their sympathies and elCp!WAing aympathlM to the realdenta of
good wishes to t~eir fellow students.
Uttlltlm, Colo., 11 being circulated by the
According to Jenkins, students in .her class Melga County VIctim• Aael"anct~ Prohave been writing to their peers in the same gram. Here, Chrlatl Lyncl:l, VIctlma AdvoClllorado school for seven years.
cata, helfMI Becky Ellla algn tha card. It will
· It is, therefore possible, that studen!f from be ava!lilble to atgn at the office of the
Rutland Elementary in years past have ~rre- Proeecutlng Attomey, and at 1 apeclal
sponded
with victims or their friends, 'since tlma of crime dlnnll' on friday.
-·-

presents
award to Cleveland company

Rutland students send condolences to Colorado school

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to ~-profit
POMEROY -- Immunization
groups wishing to announce meet- Clinic, Meigs County Health
i'ngs and special events. The calen- Dcpanment, 9 to II a.m. and I to 3
dar is not designed io promote sales p.m. Tuesday. Each child to be
or fund raisers of any type. Items are accompanied by parents/legal •
printed as space permits and cannot · guardian, to present shot record.
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
WEDNESDAY
TUES.DAY
POMEROY -- Free diabetic
POMEROY -- Auxiliary of Drew . screening, Wednesday, 8:30 •to II .
Webster Post 39, American Legion, a.m., Veterans Memorial Medical
2 p.m. Tuesday atthe.bltll.
Clinic.

e

CHESTER -- Meigs County
RUTLAND -- Rutland Friendly
I'Ioliness rally, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at . Gardeners, open meeting, Rutland
Chester Nazarene Church. Speaker, . Church of Christ, Wednesday, 7:30
Rev. Herb Grate.
p.m. Representative of Waterscapes
to speak.
POMEROY -- Meigs County
~
Public Library Board, Tuesday, 9:30
MIDDLEPORT -- The Middlea.m. at library.
·
pan Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m. Wednesday, at the home of
RACINE -- Rac ine Area Com- Gaye Perrin. Ida Diehl will review
munity Organization, Tuesday, Star . "Jewel in the Evening Sky" by Mary
Mill Park., 6:30 .ni.
.Ann Minata.

.
seize drugs, money il rakl
&amp;entors Lawmen
A
search or several

guided
of Pomeroy

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your ·
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
. Toll Freel
. DIAL

TOURING TOWN - A
group of Hnlor citizen•
from Marietta racielved
guided toura of Pomeroy
on
Tuesday,
giving
Pomeroy's VIctorian tour
guldtl a chance to ahow
off their co8tum... Hare,
Tour Guide Mary Powell
explain• the architecture
of the downtown area to
one ol the groupe.

iml"Ti WINNER - B. J. Smith, centll', winner In the Melga
County Right to Ufe oratory conteat, took ftrat place In the Ohio
· COfllpetltlon h ..d In Columbus Seturdliy. She now quallflee ~
fMirtlcl.,._ In the .Mtlo1111l oonteet which will be held In Mllwllllk•, Wlec. on June 20. Wlnn• there will r.celv. a 11,500 echol·
arahlp. Here AI Harteon, chairman, pr...nw Smith and the local
run!!Sf-up Michele Hupp with pltlquee.
·

. 992·7834

.
Hol:Jer Clinic ... Keeping the Promile/

'I

Aprll28, 10110

Weather

Good Afternoon

---Community Calendar---

•

WednesCiay

\

----- -~JI..- ----~-

••

..•

•

_________

;'___.........
'

multi ~~ency

Rutland~area

locations overnight yielded large quantities of
marijuana, oocaine and cash, Meigs County Pros-&lt;c:uting Anorney John R. Lentes announced Ibis
morning.

·'

l.entes and Sheriff James M. Soulsby said
their offtceS, in conjunction with the Middlepori
Poiioe Department, the Major Crimes Task Force
(administered by Lentes' office~ the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation and Identification, and
001ine units from Alltens and Mason Cooniy1
W.Va., panicipoled in the search.
As a resuh of the searcheo, 47-year-old Fred
Priddy, Rutland, was arrested and is being held in
tht Meigs County Jail.
· Lentes said Priddy is being held pepding rhe .
filing of fonnal charges and fu~her stated that
Priddy has a previous felony drug ronviaion. -

-·----

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="425">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9855">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26038">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26037">
              <text>April 27, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1257">
      <name>chevalier</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="718">
      <name>hudnall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="87">
      <name>murphy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2774">
      <name>waldnig</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
