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                  <text>Thursday

Meigs beats Vinton County 13-3, Page 4
Parents responsibilities, Page 12
.Los Alamos spy probe, Page 6

Today: Sunny
·
lilgh: eo.; Low: 401

Tomorrow: Sunny

High: eo.; Low: 401

'' .

April 20, 1WII

•

Weather

•

Philadelphia 12-8
-Page4

•

.e

a1
Meigs County's

. Ho!Jletown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 251

Stngl c Copy . 35 Cents

vinced him to come on l)oard, too.
By JIM FREEMAN .
The Log Jam Festival will be held in a natural, bowl-shaped
Sentinel New• Staff
.
Meigs County will host three of today 's hottest country and valley on property along Groundho9 Creek near the Meigs
County community of Portland, and ncar Ravenswood, W.Va.
western stars anhe Log Jam Festival in Portland. .
The concert, s~heduled for Friday, June 18, will· showcase and 1-77. He said he came lip with the 'name "Log Jam Festi·
.
performers David Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney and Toby val" several years ago.
Cottrill
said
15,000
tickets
are
being
printed
and
more
can
Keith.
·
·
MCA Records artist David Lee Murphy, a self-professed be made available if needed.
Tickets are expeCted to go on sale early next moath and will
"10-year overnight sensation", is promoting his newest album,
We Can't All Be Angels.
,
· cost $20, advance, or $25 at the gate and the first show starts
He is perhaps better known for his song "Dust On the Bot- at7:30 p.m:
Concert-goers should bring lawnchairs (hay bales will be
tle." He is scheduled to perform at 7:30p.m.
Kenny Chesney's latest record on the BNA Records label, provided), and concessions will be available.
Cottrill also said he hopes the facility can be· used for sevEverywhere We Go, features the number one hit song "How
eral
concerts each year, including rock 'n' roll.
Forever. Feels." He is set to take stage at 9:15 p.m.
For
ticket information, call 1-877-LOG JAMM, or visit
Toby Keith; a Mercury-Nashville Records artist, has reeorded six albums including his latest, Greatest Hits Volume I, www.logjamco;mcerts.com on·the internet ..
wliich includes "Getcha Some." He performs at 10:45 p.m.
The. artists' . internet sites show them scheduled for the
'LOG JAM! PLANNED -'- Portl•nd'• Chrl• Cottrill,
event.
co-organizer of the Log Jam Featlval, dlacua.• ed 1111
The festival is being organized by Portland's Jeff Harris and plana for the outdoor cqncert with member• of the
Chris Cottrill.
Melga County Chamber of Commerce Wedneed•y
·• "Ever since my first concert, this is something I wanted to night. He I• ahown here with • poater promoting the
do,'' Cottrill said.
.
June 18 event which will feature country atara David
A former employee of Harris', he said he eventually con- Lee Murplly, Kenny Chaeney and Toby Keith.

===~

.

. ' ·,,· . . 'Pa..,~
.""'
...,o·n·· ·.· · · · · · · · · · '··
• srx'te4in ·~ Llwn.·.i nd'"'""'"•n
..., "- E_

·- ·••••··. ·.•,.-- ·r·,..,.... ·. ·.·. ,.. .·.·.·. ·..·.·. .'Giilll~;
.
·.Ml.on;
. . . Meigs
. 'COililtlei • Wedniiclliy,
··
April· 21, 11188 ' .

..

·•t:: '

Co1ne On Over To Bob's

'

.

OUR
GREENHOUSES
. ARE

Mason or Gallipolis Location For

'

THE LARGEST SELEOION &amp; BEST .PLANTS IN THE TRI·COUNTY AREAl
·(Our Retail facUlties Are Stocked Fresh Dady With Plants from Our Greenhouses)

BURSTIN
WITH ..

meet to
settle 'Ohio' trademark dispute
COLUMBUS (AP)- Congenial discussions by two old fril:nds settled a
between Ohio snd Ohio State universities that was starting
10 tum nasty.
Attorneys for the two schools agreed Wednesday on a proposal that was
worked out during the past several months by the universities' presidents,
who have been hsndling the matter personally.
.
• ·
Basically, the deal says Ohio University in Athens gets the trademark for
word "Ohio" but Ohio State gets to use it sometimes, too.
· Ohio University President Robert Glidden·sent the proposal to OSU President William Kirwsn on Mooday_ It resolves how much claim each school
will have 10 tile word Ohio in selling everytblnartrom ~!lJirtiiiO ldlool

f.: ~~~~~·s olfer-foliowed a ~~ng he and Kirwsn had'(;~eek. .

County commission -names May 6 as 'A Day of Prayer'
May f! has been declared a Day 'of Prayer in Meigs County. Proclamations
were signed Tuesday by the Meigs County Commissioners, Mayor Frank
Vaughsn of Pomeroy snd Acting Mayor Ssndy lallnarelli of Middleport.
A week's worth of events arc plsnned for the local observsnce. ·In addition to the Day of Prayer observance on the step$·of the Meigs County Courthouse on May 6, the Meigs County Day of Prayer Committee will hold a
, ·Bible Reading Marathon, beginning Sunday at4 p.m., which will continue
from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday snd Wednesday, and from 8
a.m. until 10 a.m. on Thursday.
The Bible reading will t&amp;kc place.at the pavilion in the Pomeroy Parking
Lot.
During the hours of the Bible Reading Marsthon, a continuous Prayer
Vigil will be underway at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church.~:
· The week's events will conclude next Thursday with a Concert of Prayer
at the Ash Str'cet Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport at 7 p.m.
The event Is a nalioliwide observsnce, sccording to the local event's coordinator, l..es Haymsn.
,
"Millions of.A,mcri~ of .V ,wtha,\Vi!J..pl!lor ~o~tl!!er IICI'IW tile nation
at town lquaRI, stat. capital acep., atedlums, JWI!al.c:hurehea, syn..,.._
and other public places to. observe the 48th consecutive National Day of
Prayer," .Haymsn said, noting that this year's event in Meigs County is the
seventh consoc:utive local Day of Prayer.
·
·'
Thepnnual event was established by an act of Congress in 1952, 1111d was
passed' as a bill, signed by President Ronald Reagan in 1988, ·which set the
date of the snnual observsncc for the first Thursday in May.

·

DAY
- Sandy lan~lll, ac:tlnQ mayor ot Mlddl•
pOrt, Melga County Co~mlulonera Jeffrey Thornton, il•net
Howard and Mlck Davenport, •nd Pomeroy Mayor Frank V.Ugh•n lllgned proclamlltlona declllrlng M•y e • a O.y of Prayer In
Melg• County. Alllo pl~ured are Steve Beha and Faith Heyman,
membl~ of theloclll National Day of Prey• Committee.

The two are old friends and took over discussions months aao. after the
two schools' legal affairs and public tl:lalions offices had waged a high-profile and often·hostile battle since December 1998.
That's when Ohio State sent its objections to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office over Ohio University's exclusive right to the word. Their dispute
was headed for the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board In Washington.·
Computer
Merchandising royalties were at stake, but the fight has been more about
owner
for
pride and image.
·
•
By
JIM
FREEMAN
The
board
adopted
a
resolution
retaining
the
law
Ohio University's trademark royalty revenue is only about $100,000 a
•
. firm of Peck, Schaffer &amp; Williams, Columbus, as con- threatening customer
yesr, with about half of that coming from items with the Ohio tradcmsrk. · ·s.nUnel Newe Staff
AKRON (AP) -· A computer
• Updates on· the Meigs Local Building Project were struction counsel for the building project. The firm will
Ohio State gets about $3 million a year in royalty income, but little of that
slorc
owner accused of defrauding
is from merchsndisc with jilst Ohio on it, said Anne H. Chasser, OSU licens- dis&lt;:ussed during Tuesday night's regular meeting of the help the district with the selection of an architect and in customers snd threatening to kill a
Meigs Local Board of Education.
ensuring paperwork is filled out correctly. There is no
i . directo
man wbo complained was sentenced
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley,
Treasurer
Cindy
cost unless the school construction issue passes.
In the early 1990s, Ohio UniversiAt the April 13 board meeting, Buckley said the to 15 months in prison.
ty obtained a trademark registration Rhonemus and board President John Hood met'earlicr
. . Igor Abrainovsky, 22, of May~
for the word Ohio on uses such as · 'Tuesday with the State Controlling Board which issue 'should · cost slightly less thsn three mills and field , Heights, was sentenced
athletic ch:ithing. Ohio Stile did not informed them it has set sside money for the renovation added that permanent improvement levy could also be · Wednesday in U.S. District Court.
respond until it discovered in 1997 of Meigs High School and for two new elementary used to help fund the construction program.
In personnel matters, the board accepted the retire- after pleading guilty to .interstate:
that its rights to such names as Ohio schools and a new middle school.
Currcndy the state is proposing to pay $25,421,604, ment resignation of Benny J. Slawter, industrial arts trsnsportation of threatening cOm-·
Stadiuf11 might technically be in
matched by a local share of $5,701,000 for a total of teacher, snd hired the following as coaches for the munication, mail fraud snd m~n&amp;
jeopan!y.
false statements to the FBI, U.S;
Ohio University said it would allow $31,122,604 for the building project. Voters in the 1999-2000 school year on supplemental contracts: attorney Bill 'Edwards said. Judge
such uses to continue, but Ohio Stale, Meigs Local district will likely decide on the issue on Mike Kennedy, head track; Ron Hill, · assistant high James Gwin ordered Abramovsky to
school track; Jesse Vail, middle school track; Don
concerned that the trademark might Nov. 2.
Board
members
discussed
the
need
to
acquire
sites
Dixon, assistsnt middle school track; Scot Gheen, head pay $49,122 in restitution .
overly restrict its future uses of Ohio;
The FBI arrested Abramovslcy in
for the prospective building projects. The new middle baseball; Dan Thomas, reserve baseball; Darin Logsn,
~lenged the registration.
November
after investigating com-:
Ohio UniV.rsity contended it is school, if approved, will likely be built on district: girls' softball; Nathsn Hansen, girls' reserve softball.
plaints
Shout
his Twinsburg busi-'
The board also met in executive session to discuss
popularly identified with the name owned property adjacent MeigS · High School near
ness,
Stargate
2000
Computer Inc. .
the hirina of personnel snd negotiations. No action foiOhio and the Columbus school with Pomeroy.
When customers complained·
The board should receive final funding notification lowed.
the name Ohio State, much as
about
the. equipment snd tried to
. Present were Buckley, Rhonemus, Hood and board
Lotteries
Unive..ity of Michigan and Miclli- from . the controlling bosrd .on Aug. tO after which it
.
return
it, Abramovsky threatened
gan State University are identified by will }lave to meet to pass resolutions before the Aug. 19 members Scott Walton, Roger Abbott, Randy them, the FBI'said.
·
· Humphreys and Wayne Davis.
the names Michigan and Michigan de~line to place the issue on the November ballot.
9-1-S; Pick 4: 4-Q-Q-8
State.
IS.1per l..etto: 12-15-16-31-39-46
However, Ohio State araued that it
alio has historically bee!! identified
America~ democracy."
of American military perso~nel in danger."
as just "Ohio" and that it wanted 10 By KATHERINE RIZZO
2-8-4; Daily 4: 8-7-1-2
Boehner found himself on the same side of
Rep. James Tr;ificant, D-Ohio, voted for
protect the potential to use the word Aaeoclated Preu Writer
0 1999 Ot.IO Yallor hbllollloa Co.
WASHINGTON
(AP)
For
Ohioans
in
a
vote
as
Democrat
Ted
Strickland,
a
supporter.
that
messure and introduced legisl~tion of his
Ohio alone in the fulure.
Congress, .the House debate over Amerin's of President Clinton's .handling of the Kosovo own, which was not before the House on.
involvement in Kosovo scrambled what nor- crisis.
·
Wednesday .
· "We ought not tie the hands of our present
Traficanl wants America to arm the rebels.
mally :are predictable party lines.
For instance, two Republicans who oppose or future presidents," said Strickland, who . fighting the forces of Slobodan Milosevic in:
the use of ground troops ended up on opposite
the province of Kosovo.
.
,
at the , .
' 'The Albanian Kosovars remaining in
sides of a vote on exactly that issue. .
Rep. John Boehner- who's been nothiita
time ami 1uy
Kosovo don't have weeks or months," he said ..
but critical of the Clinton administration's
whllt laupport. N
'·'NATO ca'n airdr9p desperately needed miliresponse to the slayings, rapes and homeburn• later time thq
tary supplies in a matter of days.
.
Ina suffered by Kosovo's ethnic Albanians clllln,. the •trat.gr to
"Before making the decision to send ground. ·
dCcided his criticism should not go so far as tel
tNr national
troops, !he U.S. should give the (rebels) a
clip the.wings of the nation's chief executive.
I'll take a look at
fighting chance to stop the slaughter.of Alba.n-.
Rep. John Kssich, who's workina aaaresian Kosovars."
·
sively to try .to run for the job of chief execuRepublican Steve Chabot said he wants the'
tive, had no such qualms, snd helped lead the
-lfep. Ted
United States to get out of Yugoslavia.
"Our involvement in this conflict is·
effort to '. pass a resolution requiring that the
president get conaressional approval before
· ss
to the wrong," said Chabot, who at the committee'
sending in ground troops.
nation's military leadership.
level voted for a resolution c,alling for removal
"We Ito not need to step on the accelerator
"They say we don 't need ground troops at , of American forces currently participating in
and ratchet up the violence in Yugosl4via," the. present time and I say that's what I support. "Operation Allied Force."
said Kasich. "Troops on the ground would If at a later time they change the strategy to.
Chabot said the mission lacked a clearly
achieve our national policy, I'll take a look at defined mission and credible exit strategy. As a
only reinforce a failed policy."
Boehner expressed concern for precedent that," he said,
result, he said, hundreds of millions of dollars
and the presidency.
Strickland and Boehner were joined on the have been spent without progress toward stop" As distressed as many .of us are over the losina side of the congressional· approval vote ping Serb forces or returning refugees to their
Clinton Administration's ill-conceived strate- by Ohio Democrats Tom Sawyer, Tony Hall homes.
,
aies in the Balkans, Conaress must resist the and Sherrod Brown, plus Republican Paul Gill· " I find myself ir agreement with former
temptation to take any action that would do mor. The rest of the delegation v.oted with Secretary of Siate Henry Kissinger, who told
further damaae to the institution of the presi- Kuich and the majority.
our conimitt1.e that th is operation is · an
dency itself," he said.
Republican Rob Portman said he supported unprecedented expansioh of NATO authority
"Good intention.s alone arc not enough to that resolution because " President Clinton - a very dangerous precedent indeed," said
justify tampering with the underpinnings ,of cannot be given a blank check to put the lives Chabot.

Meigs Local updated on building program

LOR

store
sentenced

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Ohio lawmakers weigh in on military question·

...

•
'

•

___;__~----~------~----------------~~
· ~-~~_:~~--.c___:______~----~--------------------------------------;··~--------------------~·~~~----------'"'

�Commentary

Thurldey, Aprll2t, 1 •

By

'E.st46&amp;WI in 1948

111 CoUrt St, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-ee2·21SO • Fax: m-2,57

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publleher
DIANE HILL
Controller

n.. Sentinel •••••,.,.,. 10 ,.,. ..,_ltom ,....,. on • bload , . , . . , . .

_
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Ohio ..,..;'W, FAX to 7fO.NNf67.

·

Focus on school safety
By REP. JOHN CAREY

Tragedy in our nation 's schools has once again brought the issue of
school safety into our daily conversations. The violent rampage a suburban
Denver school reinforces our efforts to ensure ·safety in our schools. The
recent incidents experienced there, ·and· in other
communities like Springfield, Oregon; Edinboro,
Pennsylvania; and Jonesboro, Arkansas have made
an everlasting mark on the minds and hearts of all
Americans. While it may be impossible to com·
pletely stop violent episodes, we must do all we can
to deter such violent acts.
School violence is a complicated societal problem. It is not; however, insurmountable. Many
schools have created safe and sound environments,
overcoming the influences of violence in their communities. Many schools have developed successful,
comprehensive school safety plans that incorporate
effective, reaearch based programs and strategies;
zero tolerance for drugs and weapons; and community collaboration.
This week in the Ohio House of Representatives, we passed legislation in
an attempt to curb violence in schools. Senate Bill I would require all Ohio
school disiricts to develop a safety plan. A safety plan would include notification of police and affected parents of violent incidents. The bill would also
provide tougher penalties for violent crimes committed on school property
by allowing judges to add two years to a sentence handed down for violent
crimes within newly created "School Safety Zones.""Areas covered by this
definition would include school property, school buses, bus stops and school
activities. .
Moreover, students could be suspended or expelled for misconduct
directed at teachers or administrators beyond school property. Students
would it tougher to escape suspension by transferring to another school.
"Additionalpr0 visions of SB I would:
•Allow schools to expel students for firearm and knife relate~ violations
that occur off school property but at a school sponsored event.
•Permit school districts to deny admittance to ·any student suspe.nded
from ano!her Ohio school district until the penalty expires.
. •Ban expelled students from taking school paid. college courses as a way
around expulsion.
. ·
.
•Enable the state to suspend driver instruction permits or driver's licenses for students suspended or expelled for violation school weapons policies.
While schools are Still among the safest places for America's young people (90 percent of the nation's schools are free of serious, violent crime),
violent crime continues to plague a number of our" schools. And, with the
recent oCcurrences throughout the nation, I feel it is time to get tough on
school violence. We need to give school districts as many tools as necessary ·
to protect their students.
Recent statistics are also a cause of concern for the safety of our schools.
Nearjy 8 perc_ent of.students in a recent statewide survey reported carrying
a gun, knife or other weapon to school during the previous 30 days, In the
same survey, 4 percent of students said they did not attend school during one
or more of the previous .30 days because they felt unsafe ·at school. Also, •
more than 5,000 students violated their school weapons policy during 1997,
according to the Ohio department of Education. These statistics need to
change, and legislation such as SB 1 may help change them.
I look forward to Governor Bob Taft signing SB I and giving our school .
districts another tOol to create a safe, learning environment for our children.
While it is impossible to rule out violence in all aspects of our children's
lives, I hope this legislation will help reduce the occurrence of tragedy in our
schools.
· ·
·.
John CINy rep,...ntl the 84th Dlltrlet In the Ohio HOUII of RepreHntlllvM.

.

Letter
to
the editor
.
.
Families in need
.

'

I was outraged by an article that I read in the Columbus Dispatch dated
March 17, 1999. I find very upsetting thatthe GOP would be squabbling

over what to do with-the excess money from the welfare reform. If these
Republica,n congressmen would go back to the districts where they were
voted into office and see the poverty, they would know what to do with the
extra billions of dollars. They rieed tO realize thin there are a -Jot of hard
working men and women doing all they can do to support their families and
still not meeting the most meager of means. There are still families g,oing
without proper nutrition, clothing, and housing even thougli the moms and
dads may be working two or even three jobs apiece.
I am currently in charge of soliciting funds for a local food pantry and can
see first hand the number &lt;if needy families increasing on a weekly basis. We
are having a time making sure that we have enough to supply the families
that come to us for help. The families that come to us are the hard working.
honest peciple who are trying to make ends ·meat from week to week and
struggling. It is heartbreaking to see these men and women humbled before
me asking for my help.
If the excess money in question could be disbursed among the foOd
pantries across the country we cou.ld help a lot more people than we are currently able to.
·
The cause of SOII1e of the hardships was the welfare reform bill that was
paased. I am for the reform, j&gt;ut I DO NOT believe it should have beeri completely taken away from the people that. have found themselves in a situation
where they are trying the best they can and still not able to support their fam·
ily. A little more time. and thought should have been used when developing
the stipulations for the bill. If the wealthy congressmen, who by the way are
noraffected by their decisions, would have went and talked to some REAL
American citizens and used their thoughts on the matter a better reform bill
could have ·been passed and a Jot of these issues could have been avoided. ·
·
· Ervin Stlrr
Director of God'* Btorehou• Pantry
VInton County

--Today In History.,_,...;.....__
By Till "'-oclatld p,...

·
· "-Today is Thursday, April 29, the 119th day of 1999. There are 246 days
left in the year.
,
·
TOC!&amp;y'a Hishlight in History:
_
One hundred years ago, on April 29, 1899, jazz legend Duke Ellington
Wll bom in Washington D.C.
On this date:
In 1861, Maryland's House'of Deleaates voted against seceding from the
Union.
·
IIi ~862, New Orle- fell to Union forces during the_Civil War.
.
In 1916, the Eutet Risins in Dublin collapse4 as Irish nationillists surrendered to British authorities.

•

Moi1on Kondrecke

House Speaker Dennis
Hastcrt, R-111., really seems ta
be trying to get big, bipartisan
things do~ in Congress this
year. Of course, he's· almost
certainly doomed to fail.
"There's a Jot of good things
I think we can do on a biparti·
san basis;" he said in an inter·
view last week. "It doesn't
,
have to be all Republican or all DcmocraL That's
my view." .
After the vitriol of the Ginsrich-Oin'ton era,
Hasiert's attitude is a welcome new departure, but
I suspect even he knows that it has severe lim itations. ·
·
Af, he says, a missile defense bill and the "Ed·
Flex".bill giving states more leeway in use of federal education money passed with bipartisan sup)lllrt. Even the budget garnered .some Democratic
votes.
·
But, unless Hastert's Republicans capitulate to Democratic terms
on the big items -- Social Security,
Medicare, health care reform and
electricity deregulation -· the
chances for agreement are slim.
Democrats deny it on the record,
but they are nat interested in an
accomplishment-rich 106th Con'
gress. To the contrary, they think
that the charge "do-nothing Con· ·
gr_ess" got them to within six seats
of retaking power, and they are set·
ling thingS up .to do it again.
Hastert's visible efforts to "work
together" · and "find common
ground" do serve a political pur·
pose. They deny the Democrats the
.kind of juicy target that .former
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., pre·'·a.~·
sented, and they open the way for
.nr;;a·.·
.....
. -:-.
the .GOP to say that "do-nothing
Democrats" frustrated progress.
In furtherance of agreements,
Hastert has had one -- though only
one -- one-on-one' talk with l'resi· .
dent Clinton. He has had fellaw
Republicans seek out Democratic
·cosponsors an key early legislation t:~~~~
and has held several meetings with.
Democratic House leaders.
· He's willing to compromise on taxes, .on
"If we invade Kosovo, we'd need a base io ' more from them than "We'll get back to you." He :
Social Security, Medicare, environmental policy operate from. We needed six months to get ready ought to start brandishins the slogan "do-nothing ·
and the final shape of the budget.
to free Kuwait, with hundreds of thousands of Democrais" in public.
• •·•
De facto, he is even supporting President Clin· troops. I'm no military expert. I· was only ' in
Correction
· •·
·Officials at Massachusetts General Hospital ia
ton on Kosovo, but he wants Clinton to explain it ROTC in college. Bull know it's difficult to do.
better and find his way to a negotiated settlement,
·~ we have to keep the pressure on and reach a
Boston aggressively deny that the hospital is on ·
even though he thinks Serbian dictator Slobodan · negotiated peace. We need to be in sync with the the brink of closing, as I wrote April 19. I with·
Milosevic is "a thug.''
Russians. If !here is a negotiated peace, there draw the assertion.
He told me, "I've listened to (Secretary of needs to be a peace-ke.eping force. It's a much
(Morton KondriiCkl 18 IXIICutlve edHor of ·
Roll C•ll, the newep~per of C.pllol Hill.)
""'
State Madeleine) Albright, to (Defense Secretary better alternative than an invasibn."
·
.

Friday, Apr. 30

.¢
[!!!i!~]311'/G2:::J

0

Youn

•

own 31•113•

•

0

Books, 1991).
"Friday evening. Sundown. The
Sabbath has begun. MerChants and
clerks mave their way though crowded streets toward home, dlange their
dress and-go off to the house of the
Lord. The sounds of the street are
replaced by foot traffic as the feet of
the faithful shuffle reverently to the
synagogues.
"Soon prayers will be offered and
q'"et blessings bestowed on the people of faith. Now they will return to
the: stillness of the home.
"Slowly, through the sleeping
hours, the spirit of the synagogue can
seep deeply into the lower levels of the
human soul. Uke raindrops left free to
seep slowly to the levels where they
can do the most good, the blessed
thoughts af the worship hour are free
to find their probing way to the hidden
hallways of the mind where powerful
and .silent and unseen forces gather
and wait for daylight.
·
" With the morning they will

advance into the awakened mind,
bringing pleasant moods, healthy
thoughts and creative ideas."
The early Ouisti-, like the Jews,
. met for worship in the evening. It was
sometime later that O!ristian churChes
began worshiping on Sunday morning.
A&amp;,Jong as people went home after
church to spend a restful afternoon
and evening, the good effects of the
morning lingered. It is not so with the
modem Sabbath.
Public speakers have noted that
when they speak in the morning or
afternoon, their remarks don't make as
great an impression on their audience
as the same speech given in the
. evening. Psydlologists explain this by
saying that earlier in the day our mental faculties are keenesL We are more
.alert and not as likely·to accept uncritically what the person speaking has to
say.
,
· But when· we are tired and the
darkness has its relaxing effect on us,

our minds are more m:cptive to w~at:
is presented to us. The flickering can:
dlelight in some churches can produce
the Sa.me hypnotic effect.
·
Spiritual truths planted in our .
. minds in such a setting will grow bet;
ter. If we go to bed with these truth$ ·
still fresh in our minds, they will reach ··
even deeper into our subconscious and :
find their way "to the hidden hallways
of the ritind where powerful and silent
and unseen forces gather."
.·
The new best-selling novel',
. "Evensong" (Ballantine Books, 1999) .
by Gail Godwin, gives this fine ;
description of the late afternoon-early
evening service known by that lovely "
name in the Episoopal O!urch:
·.
"A worship service said or sung fJ..
. the onset of evening to mark the cl~JS~; . •
of the day and to compose the miM · ·
· and renew the spirit for the coming-;
day."
We all need that more than we ,
know. .
-Copyrlght'l181 NEA.

A heartening·note of solid sanity
· who governs now only because to come from a former anti-war -extremist. (111~
By Ben Wattenberg
he has formed a coalition with a French were not at the seminar, but their governYes indeed, as Wim Kok, the prime minister of
Holland, told a Democratic Leadership Council
sometimes loony German ment of the left is privatizing government compaGreeq party: Massimo D'Ale.- nies (aster. than the conservatives did.) And they
symposium on Sunday, "the Third Way is a two- ·
ma, prime minister of Italy, was all bought Kok's notian of the two-way Third
way street," - and in more ways than one. And,
a communist in the old days Way: Recipients of the fruits o( the social contract
yes, the whole idea of the "Third Way,'' as
before he put together the new must act with personal responsibility and dili·
described at the DLC meeting by four European
"Olive Tree Coalitian."
prime ministers and President Clinton·, is based on .
gence, or get. off the governmentteaL (All this, of
Their "parties are still members course, with a social democratic human face.) : .
a gross caricature of harsh conservatism. And it's
of a relic called "The, Socialist
true that elected Democrats in America who proNow, skeptics may ask whether these )cadets
International," and their parties will have the political cOurage to Jive up to such
fess to be New Democrats favoring the "Third
Way" include I) those who .are fibbing, 2) those . were often quick in denouncing ~America while thoughts when faced with harsh bluster from their
who believe in Thirdism but are not able or ready counting on American military might to defend . leftist constituencies. So far, not bad. Blair partie~
to light f0r it, and 3) too few
believers and fight·. them from the Soviet threat during the Cold War.. ularly has stared down the · old JefL Fernier
.
ers.
Now, in an obfuscating minuet, these political spcechwriters like me believe that rhetoric often
Let me finish my Jist of negatives, because -- men are saying that they, ilnd their parties, were, · yields reality, particularly so in the present cir·
believe it or not -· this ends up as a positive uh, wrons. After all, the call for a Third Way did pumstance where the leaders of the parties of the
· assessment. It is true that when five elected not originate with conservatives. The c:onaerva- left have finally mastered no-free-lunch arith·
wonky leaders of common politieal persuasion tives in the 1980s were saying theirs was "the metic.
are mixed with a. large battery of television cam- party of ideas,'' and they were win nina elections
Facing reality domeatically has a peat bonus:
eras, there will be repetitious self-congratulatory, talking about free markets, privatization and It helpa face other rellities. Blair said that the
self-aggrandizing bloviation ••• yada, yada, deregulation while getting tough on crime, wei: NATO meeting In Washington, with 19 membei •
empowerment, subsidiarity, the social contract, fare and the SOviets.
·
nations and 23 olher nations who wer:t.preaent ~ :
It was the parties of the left that came out for "Partners for Peace," would prov~ tO'tle a "his- '
yada, yada, community, J!ersonal responsibility,
information ase. marketS, alobalization, yada, another way, a Third Way, because (to their credit) toric moment:" I believe it. Totalitarian ~vem­
yada. It is true that there was a partisan·dimension they realized that their way wasn't working •• not ments, like Slobodan Milosevic's, often believe
to the long seminar purportedly about the changes their top-down centralized governments, not their that the democracies are soft and soggy at the CCII·
in political thought in the democratic world. The tax-and-spend economics, not their obeisance to ter and won't face up to thuggery.
l,eadem managed not to mention the two magic union political power, not their pi'otectionist trade
Wro~l· Democracies may be alow to chanae ·
words that did so 'much to set the change into . policies, not their permissive social policieS, not domestically. They may be slow to act violently
motion: "Reaganu and "Th.alcher.
their Nervous Nellie fear thai force in the interna- or collectively. But Milosevic, in the. ruins of hja
Still, Jet ii be said, there was a heartening note tional arena is most always out of bounds.
country, will have time to reconsider what liap. ·
Now, here they were, in America for the 50th pens when the good guys get aood and mad.
of solid sanity to the gathering: Remember just
•·
who the players represent and w.ho they once . anniverlary of NATO, mcetina under the auspices Copyrlghtt ... NEWIPAPI!R l!NTI!RPRIII! AIIN. ' '
were. Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair leads of the Demtx:ratic J..eademhip Council, the preBen WllttenlllfV, 1 •nlor fellow 11 the :
the Labour Party, which, as he note&lt;~, was until mier Third Way spokesparty. And they preached Amerlolln E~ lnltlluW, Ie the IIUthor ·ot ·
only recently perceived II "favoring thugs over · that globalization can be a tool for prosperity. "V.)uu Metter Molt" end 11 the hoet of a._ :
the old ladies they beat up." Oet1nany's Chancel· Schroeder called fo.r more flexibility of markets, weeklv public tlllvlelon prO(IrltJI "Thlrill &gt;
. . · .·
lor Gerhard Schroeder is a fOflller radical Marxist including labor markets, not the words expected T•nk ''
.

11

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Couple Injured In accident
A Pomeroy couple was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital following an accident in Middleport on Wednesday evening:
Gary M. Smith; 49, and his wife, Judy Smith, sustained injuries in the
accident which occurred at the intersection of South Third Avenue and
General Hartinger Parkway.
Accordi.ng to an officer with the Middleport-Police Department, Smith
was driving south on South Third Av91ue when his vehicle, a 1998 Ford,
was struck on the side by a vehicle drive~ by Cynthia R. Hawkins of Mid'
dleport.
.
. Smith's vehicle spun in the intersection and flipped on its top, the officer said.
No citations have been issued, but the accident remains under investi·
gat ion.

Announcements:
Special meeting

-

Middleport Village Council will meet in special session on Tuesday at
6:30p.m ..to discuss personnel issues.
·

URG Meigs Center advising

.

. URG Meigs Center advising and preregistratio-n will t!e held Wednesday, 3-6 p.m. at the Meigs Center in Middleport. All students currently
enrolled qtust call the Meigs Center to schedule an appointment for advising and registration. Anyone interested in attending classes this summer
or next fall should call the center or stop by. To schedule an appointment
call 992-6450.

•

Winding Trail Garden Club
The Winding Trail Garden Club will meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the
home of Alice Thompson.

..
·-··
...

By George R. PIIIII•I!Z
.
Does_flagging church attendance
these days have anything 10 do with
the time we hold our worship service?
It is not just that many of us like to
sleep in on Sunday morning or that
th~re are other things we prefer to do
when we have a day off from work.
· The trouble may be that instead of
going to dlurch in the morning. we
should be going in the evening.
Psychologically, a morning worship service is .all wrong -- especially
in our culture where the mood of
peace and quiet crea~ by the one
hour of worship on Sunday morning is
soon broken by the noisy crowds at
the mall, the impatient drivers on the
highways, and the excited fans at the
baseball game.
·
.
This is our Sabbath, our "day of
rest and recreation."
Compare that with !he Sabbath
scene in JeDJSwem painted by Robert
Schuller in his book "Believe in the
God Who Believes in You" (Bantam

Citation Issued tn two-car accident

W. VA.

.

Evening servic_
e serves us ·.best:.

I Death Notices I

Local briefs:
Robert E. Dailey, 75, 32308 Happy Hollow Road, Rutland, was cited
for failure to yield by the Oallia-Meiga Post of the State Highway Patrol
following a two-car accident Wednesday on County Road 3 (l..eading
Creek).
·
.
Troopers said Dailey was exiting a private driveway, Jour-tenths of a
mile nonh of State Route 124, at 3:30 p.m. to head north on J..eading
Creek and collided with a.southbound car driven by Sara J. Williams, 17,
38096 Batey Road, Middleport.
Damage to both cars was slight, according to the report.

Ohio weather

William) Cohen, to ihe Joint Chiefs (of Staff)' and
Hastert acknowledged trying to avoid sho~·
(National Security Adviser Sandy) Berger," he ..OOwn votes on Rep. Tom Campbell's, R-Cahf.,
said.
.•
proposals . for a complete withdrawal from the ·
"But the best person to explain why we're ih Balkans or a declaration of war.
Kosovo is the president. He actually has a philos·
"Most of our folks think that while the &amp;!r war
ophy on pan-Slavism and why it's·important to be is going on we need to stand by it and work 11 out.
there. ...
·
Stick with the administration and see if their plan
"He basically said, 'If we are to have peace really works," he said.
into the 21st century, we need to (have) a solid
Hasler! said he doesn't think the war in Kosorelationship with the Soviet Union.'
vo has to interfere with the passage of legislation.
"'Because of our relationship with them and
"It's kind of like when impeachment was
the Serbs and the Slavsin Bulgaria and Rumania, going on, we were passing legislation and doing
we just need to stabilize the area.' It was very things, but nobody focused. Kosovo is a big issue,
sood. It did make sense."
but ... hopefully we're soing IQ ... work with the
Hastert said he is dead' against putting ground president on Social Security" and Medicare.
troops into combat either to topple Milosevic or to
There's hope for a Medicare bill passing the
clear Kosovo of Serbian forces.
Senate, he said, and "We're trying to keep an ..
"It's a moral dilemma. I met Milosevic once, engagement with the White House, carry on dis' .
five years ago, and I found him a thug. But to take cussions and get those big things &lt;lone. I think :
him out, you'd have to invade Yugoslavia from that's what the American people expect of us." .
the north with hundreds of thousands of troops. ...
It's true, but good luck. Hastert may meet with' ·
The American people won 'I stand for that.
Democrats; but I'd be amazed if he gets anything_:

The Dally Sentinel• P.ge 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather,

Hastert makes bid for bipartisanship

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
: GeMI'III M•n~~ger

Thursday, Aprll29, 1999

P~ge~

Sing to be held

.

Ah~mn

sing will be held May 17 at the Mt. Olive Community Church,
Long Bottom with "Eternity" from Point Pleasant. Pastor Lawrence bush
invites the public.
.

Applications being accepted
Ap,plications are being accepted for lifeguards at ·the Middleport pool.
Applications may be picked up at the mayor's office in village hall.

Dinner planned

Cincinnati sues gun makers
·as schools .handle threats
CINCJNN.....-n (AP)- The school
shootings in Colorado became part of
the debate Wednesday as City Coun- .,
cil voted to join Oeveland and other
U:S. cities in suing gun manufacturers;
. City Council voted 5-4 to go for"\ard with the lawsuit in Hamilton .
Co~nty Common Pleas Court.
The suit seeks to recover the costs
of gun-related violence.
; Councitman Jim Thrbell, one of
the four opponents, sai.d there is no·
chance the lawsuit will succeed. He
P\)inted out that two students used
pipe bombs as well as guns in the
sChool massacre in Littleton, Colo.
. "What are we to do when kids are
making pipe bombs at home? Sue the
pipe manufacturers?" Tarbell. said.
. The lawsuit names 16 gun manufacturers and three trade associations.
It · (loes not ask for a specific dollar
amount.
!Stanley Chesley, a local product
liability lawyer, will handle the law·
suit. Chesley also is co-a&gt;~~nsel in a
similar lawsuit in New'Orleans.

Faith Full Gospel Church

Stocks

Am Ele Power .......................41 ~
Akzo ......................................451t.
AmrTech ...............................68'1.
Ash 011 .................................42 "!.
AT&amp;T .............................. ;......53\
!lank One .............................60'·
Bob Evans ............................18'~
Borg-Warner ........................58'1.
Broughton ...........................15"1.
Champion ...............................&amp;~.
Charm Shp• ..................... ,.... 3•t.

City Holdlng ............................30
Federal Mogul .........................48

GanMtt ................................. 72'h
Kmar1 ....................................... 15
Kroger ·..................................sst,~.
Landt End ...............................38

Ltd ......................................... 44'14
Oak Hill Flnl ............... :.......... 1B'k
OVB ....................................... 43~
One Valley ............................ 3&amp;~.
People• .................................. 26
Prem Flnl ............................... 12"

{IISPSliJ-960)
CommualiJ New~p~pcr Holdlnp, Inc.

Roekwell .............................. so•t.

RD/Shall .....:.........................58'-

S.el'li ....................................45~

Publilbed evel)' afttmoon, Monday tllrot.~&amp;h
friday, Ill Coun 51., P0111er0y, Ohio, by the
Dblo \\1~1 Publlahln&amp; Company. Se&lt;ond dw
~.. paid II l'omo!OJ, Ohio.
·
M-JM, n. Allocilted .Prell ud lhe Ohio
Nowtpopa Allocillioft.

&amp;haney's .............................. ,.,_
FlratStllr·................................32Y.

Wencly'e ....:........................... 28~.
Worthlngt~n.......................... 13'.1.

-·-·-

aa Send lddrus 00fl'tt1i0111 to The
Dell,- Sentinel,' 111 Court St., Poriteroy, Ohio
457159.
.
SUII!ICRII'TION RATES
P

Stock reports era today'a
10:30 a.m. quol.. provided by
Advelt of Qalllpolla.

8)' Carrier or Motor Route

tOne-k ........:........................$2.00

~ev!val will be held at the Faith l'ull Gospel Church. Long Bottom,
begmmng Sunday and continuing through Friday, 7 p.m. nightly with
· Evangelist David Dailey.
.

Sutton Township Trustees
The Sutton Township Boaili' of Trustees will hold its regular monthly
meeting Monday; 7.:30 p.m. at Syracuse Village Hall.

Flynt's lawyers can't question teen before trial
CINCINNATI (AP) - Larry
Flynt's lawyers will have to wait for
the start of his obscenity trial to qqestion a teen-ager who will be one of the
key witnesses.
A judge ruled Wednesday that a
16-year-old boy who allegedly
boug!ll a pornographic videotape, at
Flynt's store downtown dpes not have
to testify at a pretrial hearing. Aynt,
publisher of Hustler magazine,
oj)ened the store in October 1997 and
sells sex toys there, along with videos,
Hustler and other publications. ·
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Patrick Dinkelacker also said
he's not sure whether he will permit
testimony that the boy has been used
frequently by police in sting opera·
lions because he looks much Older
than his age.
"I'm not exactly sure any of this
can be used at trial;" the judge said.
Flynt, 55, and his brother Jimmy,
49, .were indicted a year ago on
chall!es of pandeiing obscenity, con-

·

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
tnoldo Melp Counl)'
U Weeki.................: ......... JZ7.30
. 26 ....... ki ............................SSJ.82
. lZ -Ill .......................... .$ lOS~
Ra.. O.llldc Molp c ...ty
13 -111.:......................... .$29.:!5

:~~:j'

.

sz-u ..........................SI09.n

-~
··

Reader Scrvrccs
.

....,, ................... (74G) "l2155. We wiU ....k yoor taro..,.....

""\!-a............., lfwornolod.
' · Newe D1ptrtmenta
Tile

•ala ...bor II "l-2155. Deport•

•na tlte•••• 1n::

Geoerol Mo-c.................,.... ExL 1101
New, ....;........................................ExL'1102
or ElL 1106

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Other Servtcee

Aaveriblq. ..............~ ............. :..Ext. 1104
Clmtla..................................... ExL UOJ
O..tlled Ali&amp; ...........:.................ExL 1100

••

COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER
50447 sa 124

,:· ...

26 -u ............................ssua

Correction Polley

spiracy, disseminating material harmful to a minor and engaging in a paltern of corrupt activity.
If convicted on all charges at their
May 10 trial, the Flynts could get up
to 24 years in prison and $65,000 in
lines.
Prosecutors allege that the store
sold the boy a p&lt;imographic tape even
though he was only 14 years old at the
. lime. Defense lawyers said pol ice
have used the boy more than 50 times
in sling operations against stores that
sell alcohol to minors because he
looks to be at least 21 years old.
A woman accused of selling the
boy alcohol has testified that he 's
large and has a beard.
Defense lawyer H. louis· Sirkin
told Dinkelacker that he wanted to
question the boy to learn more abOut
his dealings with police and why he
was used in the Flynt investigation.
· "We'd like to know what information this young man may have given
the prosecutors," he said.

~f~~L~Jt~lf~tt~£~tt~l£~f!~lf~~
(;&gt;J
. ~(1 OPEN .&amp;
~~)
;~ sJ'l' KAREN'S GvmmOUSES ~.J'~ ~

wllcre bome canieJ ~ervice II available.
I'Ublbllei reaen~ca the riJht to 1djw11 r,les dur·
ina 1he MJblcriplion period. Subscripc!On ra1e
cblfiJII N)' bt lmpklmenred by chanlin&amp; che
dU'I'IIioa or the aubscriplion.

O.r -•• ......,. to all noriH lllo be
ac:c•l'8te. Jr ' " 'bow of •• emr I• •

·

Cleveland filed suit agains\17 gun
manufacturers on April 8, joirung a
Revival slater!
·
list of cities · that includes New .
Revival ~ill be held Friday, 7:30p.m., Saturday, 3 p.m. and Sunday, 1
Orleans, Chicago, Miami/Dade
fullow1ng Sunday school and pol-luck dinner at Lifeline Apostolic
p.m.
Co~nty and Bridgeport, Conn. ·
Church, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va. William Villars, evangelist. No Sunday
The manufacturers have to · be
evening
service will be held.
.
·
held reaponsible for what they have
cr~aled," Mayor Roxanne Qualls
Fish &amp; Game Assoc.
The Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Association will · hold its monthly
meeting May 8 instead of May 1.
· ··
.

The Daily Sentinel

· One Momh ................................ S8.70 ·
0ae Yeu........ ,.. ,....................... S104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
• O.il,:........................................ 35 Cenu
Sublcrfbe11 not duirina to pa~ 1he carrier m•y
Nmilln advance direct to The Daily Sentinel on
1 three, 1ix or 12 monlb buil. Credit will be
· &amp;iven c:anicr e1dl week.
·
No aublcripltoa by m1il permitted in 1reu

A dinner will be held at the Lottridge Community Center Sunday with
serving from noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost is $6. On the second and fourth Fridays from 7 to 12p.m. country music, bands and individual musicians are
welcome. There is no admission charge, and on Tuesdays from 10 to I
o.m. a senior citizens ootluck and social will be held.
·

Raollle, OR 45'771 ·

f,;
~.'.,:

· !"

· e

· .;
·.
~·

\ . '1

:-_. :
: ""

. ·. e
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Dale and the gang arc doing it AGAIN!
. ~· ·
Saturday, May 1. 1999· Sunday, May 2, 1999 • Saturday Only! We are having a free grilled hot dog day,
•).
'
11:00 am-4:00pm
BUT remember we've MOVED! We are back down on the farm in Racine.
Go through Racine-on 124 east, we're about 4. miles ouuide of. town, on the right.
·
Special on Roses S12.?9
·
D~r Prizes Drawing Sat. &amp; Sun.
. .
Remember Mother's Day: Lots of Plants to chooS&lt; from or Purchase a Gift Certifocarc
.
· "Buy 3 Flats or. 3 Hanging Baskets ($7.99 Value) for$2LOO
' '.
e .'·
COMEONOVERANDJOINTHEFUN
··.
Open Mon. - Sat. 9:00 - 6;00 Sun. 12:00 to 6:00
~
•"•
·
Phone: 740-949-2682
•"• "" :

~ ,:
'

~. • •

available to answer an

uestlons

, , ~~'- • ::

'.\~~~-~
....~~... ~~
~~~ .-~........
~t~ .....,, ... ~t,"~ .......... ~~~ ....~.&amp;. ~.... ·)::
~ :~1':'- ·~ ~ !~:-.~:~ ~ .~~- ~ ~ ..~ .... '.
:

Ruth Allen, 55, Minersville, died Wednesday at her residence. Arrange· ·
ments will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
:

..

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·'

William H. Coleman

William H. Coleman, 81 , Reedsville, died Wednesday, April 28, 1999, at :
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va. ·
•·
He was born March 6, 1918, in Long Bottom , son of the late John R. and
Cora E. Bailey Coleman. He retired after 36 years from the Pennsyl vania,
Penn Central and Conrail Railroads in 1976.
He was a veteran of World·War II serving with t_he !15th Combat Engineers from 1942-45 in the Pacific Theater. He was a lifetime member of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 905,3, Tuppers Plains, the Knights of Pythias
F&amp;J Lodge, Canal Winchester, since 1958. He also participated in the CCC,
WPA and cwr programs.
'
S~rvivor5 include his wife, Della H. Evan~ Coleman, to whom he was
marned on Oct. 14, 1940; two sons and daughters-in-Jaw; William L. and
Lmda Coleman of Junclion City and Jimmie R. and Donna Coleman of
Newark; four grandchildren and six · great-grandchildren; three sisters,
Gladys Ritchie of Belpre, Audra Bowman of Sabina and Elizabeth Bowman
of St. U&gt;uis, Mo.
He was.preceded in death by three brothers and four sisters,
Services will ·be held Saturday, 11 a.m. at White Funeral Home ,
Coolville, with the· Rev. Marc Eaton officiating. Burial will be in Sand Hill
Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.

Funeral home worker accused of .
leaving corpse outside topless bar
COLUMBUS (AP) - The owner
Harber has worked at Hall Funer·
of a funeral home says he will accept .al Home in Procto.Ville for 17 years,
the resigna!ion of an employee wile but offered on Tuesday night to
left the embalmed body of an 88- resign, owner Ernest Hall said "
year-old man in a hearse while he Wednesday. He planned to accept !he
went into a topless bar.
resignation.
·
Authorities said James Harber, 44,
Hall did not support what hap:
of Proctorville, was taking the body pened but said the sheriff had blown
from Wooster, in northeasl Ohio, to a the incident out of proportion. Hall
funeral home in Proctorville, about said the body was covered with two
165 miles away, when he parked at sheets and a blanket in a minivan
the Candy Store and went inside.
· with tinted glass.
During a routine patrol, a sheriff's
"He did nol abuse," Hall. said .
deputy. saw the clothed body at 2:30 " )-le may have neglected, but he did
a.m. Tuesday in the van. Sheriff Jim hot.abuse.''
·
Kames sa_id the van was unlocked
Harber could .not be reached.
and the body was uncovered, on a There -is no phone listing for him in
rot, '.'in plain view of anyone who Proctorville.
walked by.''
The family of the dead man was
Harber pleaded innocent Wednes- very understanding, Hall said.
day to abuse of a corpse ~nd was The first script for The Mod Squad~freed on $50 bond.·lf conv1cted he (1968-73) was written in 1960. The .
could be sentenced to up to 90 days · premise was based on a real-life nar- .
m Jail and a $750 fine. .
cotics squad of the 19SOs.
The name of the dead man was not
.~
released.

.Hosp~tal news
VeteraDs Memorial
Wednesday admissions·- Albert
Roush, Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges- none.
Holzer Medk•l Center
Discharges April 28 - Alice
Buckley. Charles Sarson.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Rkhard
Connelly, son, Mason, W.Va.
(Published wilb permissioD)

EMS logs 4 calls
·Units of the Meigs County Em-ergency Medical Service recorded
four calls·fOr assistance Wednesday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH·
1:33 p.m., Laurel Cliff J{oad,
Pomeroy, Dennis Robinson, Holzer
Medical Center;
5;39 p.m., state Route 124, Minersville, Ruth Allen, dead on arrival;
8:47 p.m ., stale Route 692,
Pageville, Stella Eggleton, HMC,
Rutland squad assisted . .
RACINE
9:45 a·:m.. McKenzie Ridge
Road, Carl Hubbard, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)
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APPRECIATE THE
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ENDURES"
One of Ohio's oldest, largest and
most respu-tcd monument wmpaniu

ABOUT YOU

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..... • • t!, 1:21

N... ...... S&amp; II .........,.
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SeM Ccmeoy, Cat.me lela,kroes (/.dm'Adwllln)

t)

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~~..).

Ruth Allen

Ill ...... 11'0-1~ •
520 W Main St. _: Poh1eroy, 0
Phone 992-2588
Vinton - 388·8603
Gallipolis - 446-0852

~tal, 7:11, t4l

Roberto B«igoo, Niroetta BriEctO (Drwna)
. . . . . (Ri ll tal 4:41,.,. t41
lle'tOO Sawa. Seih G!ill\ Jaci ~ !Caror!tl

'

.,

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•

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

•

111 CourtSL, Pomeroy, Ohio
740 1102·2158 • Fu: 1102-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
'

ROBERT L WINGETT

Publlaher
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G - . t MIIIIIO'I'

Focus on school safety

By REP. JOHN CAREY

Tragedy in our nation's schools has .once again brought the issue of
school safety into our daily conversations. The violent rampage a suburban
Denver school reinforces our efforts to ensure safety in our schools. The
recent incidents experienced there, and in other .
communities like Springfield, Oregon; Edinboro,
Pennsylvania; and Jonesboro, Arkansas have made
an everlasting mark on the minds·and hearts of all
Americans. While it may be impossible to .completely stop violent episodes, we must do all we can
to deter such violent acts.
School violence is a complicated societal prob. lem. It is not; however, insurmountable. Many
schools have created safe and sound environments,
overcoming the influences of violence in their communities. Many schools havo developed successful,
comprehensive school safety plans that incorporate
effective, research based prpgrams aild strategies;
.~
zero tolerance for drugs and weapons; and community collaooration, \ .
This week in the Ohio House of Representatives, we passed legislati~~n
an attempt to curb violence in schools. Senate Bill1 would require all Oh1o
school districts to develop a safety plan. A safety plan would incl.ude notification of police and affected parents of violent incidents. The bill would also
provide tougher penalties for violent crimes committed on school property
. by ·allowing judges to add two years to a sehtenc~ .handed down for violent
crimes·within newly created "School Safety Zon.es.""Areas covered by this
definition would include school property, school buses, bus stops and school
activities.
. ~oreover, students could be suspended or expelled for misconduct
directed at teachers or administrators beyond school property. Students
would it tougher to escape suspension by transferring to another school.
Additional provisions of SB I would:
·
·
•Allow schools to expel students for (!rearm and knife related violations
that occur off .school property but at a school sponsored evenL
•Permit school districts to deny admittance to ·any student suspended
from anotber Ohio school district until the penaUy expires.
•Ban expel~ed students from taking school paid college. courses as a way
around expulsion.
•Enable the state to suspend driver instruction pem.its or driver's lice!IScs for students suspended or expelled for violation school weapons policies.
While schools are still among the safest places for America's young people (90 ~rcent of tbe nation 's schools are free of serious, violent crime),
violent crime continues to plague a number of our schools. And, with the
recent occurrences throughout the nation, I feel it .is time to get tough on
~hool violence. We need to give school districts as many tools as necessary
to· protect tbeir students.
. Recent statistics arc also a cause of concern for the safety of our schools.
Nearly 8 percent·of students in a recent statewide survey .reported carrying
a gun, knife or other weapon to school during the previous 30 days. In the
same survey, 4 percent of students said they did not attend school during one
o,r more of the previous 30 days because they felt unsafe at school. Also,
more than 5,000 students violated their school weapons policy during 1997,
apcording to the Ohio department of Education. These statistics need to
change, arid iegislation .such as SB 1' may help change them. ·
!look forward to Governor Bob Taft signing SB 1 and giving our school
districts another tool to create a safe, learning environment for our children.
While it is impossible to rule out violence in all aspects of our children's
lives, I hope this legislation will help reduce the occurrence of tragedy in our
schools.
John Clrey repreMntl the Mlh Dlltrlct In the Ohio Hou.. of Repr•

•

House Speaker Dennis
Hastert, R-111., really seems to
be trying to get big. bipartisan
things done in Congress this .
year. Of course, he's ·almost
certainly doomed to fail.
"There's a Jot of good things
I think we can do on a bipartisan basis," he said in an interview last week. "It doesn 't
have to be all Republican or all DemocraL That's
my view." ·
·
After the vitriol of the Gingrich-Ointon ers,
Hastert's attitude is a welcome new departure, but
1 suspect even he knows that it has severe iimitations. .
As he says, a missile defense bill and tbe "EdFlex" bill giving states more leeway in use of federal education money passed with bipartisan support. Even the budget garnered some Democratic
votes.
·
· But, unless Hastcrt's R~publi ­
cans capitulate to Democratic terms
on the big items -- Social Security;
Medicare, health care reform and
electricity deregulation -- the
chances for agreement are slim.
Democrats deny it on the record,
but they are not iQterested in an
accomplishment-rich 106th Congress. To the contrary, they .think
that the charge "do-nothing Congress" got them to within six seats
of retaking power, and they arc setting things up to do it ·again.
Hastert's visible efforts to "work
together" and " find common
ground" do serve a political purpose. They deny the Democrats the
kind of juicy target that former
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., presented, .and they open the way for
·the GOP to say t~at "do-nothing
Democrats" frustrated progress.
In furtlieran~=C of agreements,
Hastert has ha&lt;l one -- though only
one -- one-on-one talk with President Clinton. He has had fellow
Republicans seek out Democratic · f:t~S~2
cosponsors on key, early legislation
and has held several meetings with
Democratic House leaders.
He's willing to compromise on taxes, on
"If we invade Kosovo, we'd need a base to more from them than "We'll get back to you." He :
Social Security, Medicare, environmental policy operate from. We needed six months to get ready . ought to start brandishing the slogan "do-nolhins '
to free Kuwait, with hundrods of. thousands of Democrats" in public.
and the final shape of the budgcL
••
Correction
.
De facto, he is even supporting President Clin- troops. I'm no military expert. I was only in
Officials at Massachusetts General Hospital iD
ton on Kosovo, but he wants Clinton to explain it ROTC in college. But I know it's difficult to do.
better and find his way to a negotiated settlement,
"We have to keep the pressure on and reach a · Boston aggressively deny that the hospital is on ·
even though he thinks Serbian dictator Slobodan negqtiated peace. We need to be in sync with the. the brink of closing, as I wrote April 19. I withMilosev.ic is "a thug."
·
Russians. If there is a negotiated peace, there , draw the assertion.
(Morton Kondracke 11 execllllve .tltor of He told me, "I've listened to (Secretary' of needs to be a peace-keeping force. It's a ·much
Roll Call, the nft'lp•per of C.pltiDI Hill;) • •'- :" ·
State Madeleine) Albright, to (Defense Secretary better alternative than an invasibn."
·

Evening service serves us be.s t:

advance into the awakened mind, our minds' arc more receptive to wh'ai :
By George R. Playei)Z
_
. Books, 1991).
Does flagging church attendance
"Friday evening. Sundown. The bringing pi!Casant moods, l)ealthy is presented to us. The flickCring can:
dlelight in some churches C:an produc:c;
these days have anything to do with Sabbath has begun. Merchants and thoughts and creative ideas."
The early Ouistians, like the Jews, the same hypnotic cffecL .
·
the time we hold our worship Service? clerks~ove their way though crowd. It is not just that many of us like to ed streets toward home, change their met for worship in the evening. It was
Spiritual truths pianled in our .
sleep in on Sunday morning or that dress and go off to the house of the sometime later that Olristian chuil:hes minds in suclt a setting will grow bet; .
there arc other things we prefer to do Lord. The souixls of the street arc began worshiping on Sunday mom- ter. If we go tO bed with these truth$
still fresh in our minds, they will reach ··
when we have a day off from work.
replaced by foot traffic as the·feet of ing.
The trouble may be that instead of the faithful shuffle reverently to the
As long as people went home after even deeper into our subconscious and ;
going to church in the morning. we synagogues.
'
.
church to spend a restful afternoon find their way "to the hidden hallwayS
should be going in the eve~ing.
"Soon prayers will be offered and and evening. the good effects of the of the mind where powerful and silent
Psychologically, a morning wor- quiet blessings bestowed on the peo- morning lingered. It is not so with the and UIIS!CCn forces gather."
. :
ship service is all wrong -- especially pie of faith. Now they will return to modem Sabbath.
· The new best-selling novel',
in our culture where the mood of the stillness of the home.
PubliC speakers have noted that "Evensong" (Ballantine Books, 1999) .
peace and quiet created by the one
"Slowly, through the sleeping when they speak in the morning or by .Gail Godwin, gives this fitie ;
hour of w9rship on Sunday morning is hours, the spirit of the synagogue can aftemocin, their remarks don't make 1!5 description of-the late afternoOn-early ..
soon broken by the noisy crowds at seepdeeplyintothelowerlevelsofthe great. an impression on tbeir audience evening service known by that lovely
the mall, the impstient drivers on the human soul. Like raindrops left free to as the same speech kiven in the name in the Episcopal Oturch:
·_
MntatlvM.
highways, and the excited fans at the - seep sl9wly to the levels where they evening. Psychologists explain this by
"A worship service said or suns ~ .
baseball game.
· . can do the most good, the blessed saying1hat earlier in the day our men- .the onset of evening to mark the ciOSC:. '
This is our Sabbath, our ''day of · thoughts of the worship hour are free tal faculties are keenest. We arc more of the day and to compose the miDi!. ·
rest and recreation."
to find their probing way to the hidden alert and not as'likely to accept uncrit- and renew the spirit for the coming· :
.,
. Compare that with the Sabbath hallways of the mind where powerful ically what the person speaking has to day."
We all need that more than we ,
I was outraged by an·. article that I read in the Columbus Dispatch dated · scene in Jerusalem painted by Robert and silent and unseen forces gather say.
But when we are tired and tbe know.
March 17, 1999. I find very upsetting that the GOP would be squabbling Schuller in his book "Believe in the and wait for daylight.
"With the morning they will darkness has its relaxing effect on us, .copyrlghl1111111 NEA.
over what to do with the excess money from the welfare reform. If these God Who Believes in You" (Bantam
Republican congressmen would go back to the districts where they were
voted into office and see the poverty, tbey would know what to dO with. the
extra billions of doll8!'5. They ·need to realize that there arc a Jot of hard
working men and women doing all they can do to support their families and
still not meeting the· most meager of means. There arc still families 110ing
who governs naw only because to ·come from a former anti-war extremist. ('11M; ·
witho.ut proper nutrition, clothing, and housing even though the moms and By Ben Wlltl11berg
he has formed a coalition with a French were not at the seminar, but their governYes
indeed,
as
Wim
Kok,
the
prime
~inister
of
dads' may,be working two or even three jobs apiece.
sometimes
Holland,
told
a
Democratic
Leadership
Council
loony German ment of the left Is privatizing government compa·
· I am currently in charge of soliciting funds for a local food pantr.y and can
symposium
on
Sunday,
"the
Third
Way
is
a
twoGreen
psrty:
Massimo
D' Ale- nies faster than the conservatives did.) And they
see first hand the number of needy families increasing on a weekly basis. We
rna,
prime
minister
of
Italy,
was all bought Kok's notion of the two-way Third
way
street,"
-and
in
more
ways
than
one.
And,
are having a time making sure that we have enough to supply the families
a communist in the old days Way: Recipients of the fruits of the social contract
that come to us for help. The.families that come to us are the hard working. yes, the whole idea of the "Third Way," ss
before
he put together the new must act with · personal responsibility and dili·
described
at
tbe
DLC
meeting
by
four
European
honest people who are trying to make ends meat from week to week and
prime
ministers
and
President
Clinton,
is
based
on
"Olive
Tree Coalition.''
. gence, or get off the gov~rnment teaL (All this, of ·
struggling. It is heartbreaking to see these men and women humbled before
a
gross
caricature
of
harsh
conservatism.
A!ld
it's
Their
parties
are
still
members
course, with a social democratic.human face.) : .
me asking for my help.
•
true
that
elected
Democrats
in
America
who
proof
a
relic
called
"The
Socialist
Now, skeptics may ask whether these !cadets
If. the excess money in question could ,be disbursed among the fOOd
International," and their parties will have tbe political courage to Jive up to sucli
pantnes across the country we could help a lot more people than we are cur- fess to ·be .New Democrats favoring the "Third
Way" include I) those who are fibbing, 2) those were often quick in denouncing America while thoughts when faced with harsh bluster from their
rently able to.
'
who
believe in Thirdism but are .not able or ready counting on American military might to defend leftist constituencies. So far, not bad. Bliir partie:
The cause of some of the hardships was the' welfare reform bill that was
to
fight
for it, and 3) too few believers and fight- them from the Soviet threat during the Cold War. u)arly hu stared down the old JefL Former
- - pssse&lt;U am for !he ~fQ!lll,-buU DO NOT.!!clieve it should have been comers.
·
Now, in an obfuscating minue~ these political speechwriters like.. me beljeve that rhetoric often
pletely taken away from the people that have found themselves in a situation
Let
me
finish
my
Jist
'of
negatives,
because
-men
are saying that they, and their parties, were, yields reality, particularly so in the present cir·
where they are trying the best they can and still not able to support their fam"
believe
it
or
not
-this
ends
up
as
a
positive
uh,
wrong.
After all, the call for a Third Way did cumstancc where the leaden of the parties of the
ily. A.little .more time a,nd thought should have been used when developing
the stipulations for the bill. If the wealthy congressmen, who by the way are assessment It is true that when five elected not originate wi.th conservativ,es. The conserva- left have finally mastered no-free-lunch arith·
not affected by their decisions, would have went and talked to some REAL · wonky leaden of common political persuasion tives in the 1980s were saying theirs was "the me tic.
Facing reality domestically has a pat bonus:
American citizens arid used their thoughts \)n the matter a better reform bill are mixed with a large battery of television cam- party of ideas," and they were winning elections
eras,
there
will
be
repetitious
self-congratulatory,
talking
about
free
markets,
privatization
and
It
h!Cips
face other realities. Blair said that the
could have been passed and a lot of these issues could have been avoided.
self-aggrandizing
bloviation
-·yada,
yada,
deregulation
while
getting
tough
on
crime,
welNATO
meetinli
in Washin&amp;~on, with 19 membei •
Ervlnat.rr
empowerment,
subsidiarity,
the
social
contract,
fare
and
the
Soviets.
nations
and
23
other
nations who we~ present iut :.
Director of God'• Btorlhou• Plllltry
yada,
yada,
community,
personal
responsibility,
It
was
the
parties
of
the
left
that
came
out
for
VInton County"
"Partners for l'llaoe," would prove to be a "his- '
information age, markets, globaJization, yada, another way, a Third Way, because (to tbeir credit) toric moment." I believe it. Totalitarian govern·
yada. It is true that there was a parti.san dimension they reali~ed that their way wasn't working -- not ments, like Slobodan Milosevic:'s, often beli'eve
to the long seminar purportedly about the changes their top-down centralized governments, not their that the democracies are soft and sogay at the &lt;:en·
By The ANoc:llted p,...
in political thouglit in the democratic world..The tax·and-spen(economics, not their obeisance to ter and won't face up to thuggery.
··
-" Today is Thursday, Apri129, the ll9th day of 1999. There arc 246 days leaders managed not to mention the two magic union political power, not their protectionist trade
Wrona. Democracies may be alow to chanse
left in the year. ·
.
words that did .so ·much to 11et the change into J)Oiicies, not their permissive social policies, not domestically. They may be ,Jow to act violently .
Today's Highli)lht in History: . .
·
motion: ' Reagan" and ..Thatcher."
their Nervous Nellie fear that force in tbe intema- · or collectively. But Milosevic, in the ruins of hja
One hundred years ago, on April 29, 1899, jazz lesend Duke Ellington
Still, Jet it be said, there was a h~rtening note tional arena is most always out of bounds.
country, will have time to reconsider what liap. ·
wu born in Washington D.C.
of solid sanity· to the gathering: Remember just
Now, here tbey were, in America for the 50th pens when the good guys get good and mad.
•
On this date:
. who the players represent and ·w.ho they on"" anniversary of NATO, meeiins under the auspices Copyrtgllt1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIII! AIIH: '
In 1861, Maryland's House of Deleaates voted agai.nst seceding from the were. .Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair leads of the Democratic Leadership Council, the preBen Wllter'olllry, I 1111101' fell- It the
tbe Labour Party, which, as he note4, was 'ljlitil mier Third Way spokcsparty. And they preached American El'lllrpriH lneutut., 11 the lllllhor of
Union.
In 1862, New Orleans fell to Union forces durinsthe Ovil 'War,
only recently perceived as "favoling thugs over that globalization can 'be a tool for prosperity. MVIIuM Matter Molt" lnd 11 the holt of the .
In 1916, the Euler Risins in Dublin collapsed as Irish nationalists sur- the old ladies they beat up. "·Gerlnany's Chancel- Schroeder called for ..more flexibility of markets, WHkly public lei.VI!IIOn progrll)l . "Thlrik : •
·
; :
. rendered to Brilillt authorities.
·
lor Gerhard Schroeder is a former radical Marxist including IJ\bor markets, not lhe words expected T:•nk."

Letter to the editor
Families In need

A .heartening note 9f solid sanity·;

.

Today In History.---'-

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Local brl fs:

Weather
AccuWaalhere forecast for cia

atures

MICH.

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- • IND..

0

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Voun .Cown H•te:a•

I•

l ~o·~~~a·

•I COiumbuo I#•JtM•

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William H. Colema·n
William H. Coleman, 81, Reedsville, died Wednesday, April28, 1999, at '
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
'
He was born March 6, 1918, in Long Bottom, son of the late John R. and
Cora E. Bailey COleman. H~ retired after 36 years from the Pennsylvania,
Penn Central and Conrail Railroads jn 1976.
· ·
,
He was a veteran of World War II serving with the 115th Combat Engineers from 1942-45 in the Pacific Theater. He was a lifetime member of the
Veterans of Foreign 'Wars Post 9053, Tuppers Plains, the Knights of Pythias·
I'&amp;J Lodge, Canal Winchester, since 1958. He also participated in the CCC,
WPA and CWf programs.
Jh
· ..
Survivors include his wife, "iiclla H. Evans Coleman, to whom he was
married on O~t. 14, 1940; two sons and daughters-in-law, William L. and
linda Coleman of Junction City and Jimmie R. and Donna Coleman of
Newark; four grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; three sisters,
Gladys Ritchie of Belpre, Audra Bowman of Sabina and Elizabeth Bowman
of St. Louis, Mo.
·
·
He was 'preceded in death by three brothers and four sisters.
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with lhe Rev. Marc Eaton officiating. Burial will be in Sand Hill
Cemetery, Long Bollom.
·
Friends may call Fri'day, 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.

W. VA.

Announcements:
Middleport Village Council will meet in special session on Tuesday at·
6:30 p.m. to discuss personnel issues.
.
.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The owner
Harber haS worked at Hall Funerof a funeral home says he will accept ai Home in Proctorville for 17 years,
URG Meigs Center advising and preregistrstion will be held Wednesthe resignation of an employee wbo . but offered on Tuesday night to
day, 3-6 p.m. at the Meigs Center in Middleport. All students currently
left the embalmed body of an 88- resign, owner Ernest · Hall said
enrolled must csll the Meigs Center to schedule an appointment for advisyear-old man in a hearse while he Wednesday. He planned to accept the
ing and registration. Anyone interested in attending classes this summer
went i~to a topless bar.
resignation.
or next fall should call the center or stop by. .To schedule an appointment
Authorities said James Harber, 44,
Hall did not support what hapcall 992-6450 .
.of Proctorville, was taking the body pened but said the sheriff had blown
from Wooster, in northeast Ohio, to a the incident out of proportion. Hall
Winding Trail Garden Club
funeral home in Proctorville, about said the body was covered with two
The Winding Trail Garden Club will meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m ..at the
165 miles away, when he parked at sheets and a blanket in a minivan
home of Alice Thompson.
the Candy Store and went inside.
with tinted glass.
'
Sing to be held
During a routine patrol, a sheriff's
"He did not abuse," Hall said.
A hymn sing will be beld May 17 at the MI. Olive Community Church,
deputy saw the clothed body at 2:30 "He may have neglected, but he did
Long Bottom with "Eternity" from Point Pleasant. Pastor Lawrence bush
a.m. Tuesday in the van. Sheriff lim not abuse."
invites the public.
Karnes said the van was unlocked
Harber could not be reached.
.
and
the
body
was
uncovered,
on
a
There
is no phone listing for him in
Applications being accepted
cot,
"in
plain
view
of
anyone
.who
Proctorville.
Applications are being accepted for lifeguards at the Middleport pool.
walked by."
.
The family of the dead man was
Applications niay be picked up at the mayor's office in village hall. ·
Harber pleaded innocent Wednes- very understanding, Hall said.
Dinner planned
day to abuse of a corpse and was · The first script for Til• Mod Squad
freed on $50 bond. If convicted he (1968-73) was written in 196tlc The
A dinner will be held at the Lottridge Community Center Sunday with
could be sentenced to up to 90 days premise was based on a real-life narserving from noon to 1:30 p.m. Cost is $6. On the second and fourth Friin jail and a $750 fine.
days from 7to 12 p.m. country music, bands and individual musicians are
cotics squad of the 1950s.
The name of the !lead man was not
welcome. There is no admission charge, and on Tuesdays from 10 to I .
released.
o.m. a senior citizens patluck and social will be held.

URG Meigs Center advising

gradual warming trend

'

By The A11ocl1ted Prill
.
High pressure centered over Canada will produce a pretty weekend in
Ohio, the National Weather Service said.
.
· Skies will be mostly sunny on Friday, as the high pressure builds, and
highs will be mostly in the 60s.
·
· There will be some high clouds on Saturday but still lots of sun and
highs near 70.
The record·high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather siation was 86 degrees in 1899 while the record low was 28 in 1.9.77. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:23 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:33 a.m.
· · ·
Weather forecast:
' Tonight... Clear. Lows from the upper 30s to the iow~r 40s. Northeast
wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs 65 to 70.
Friday night. ..Mostly clear. Lows near 40.
Extended forecast:
Saturday...Ciear and warmer.. Highs in the mid arid upper 70s.
Lows in the mid and upper 40s and highs 75 to 80 .
clear. Lows 50 toSS and highs 15 to 80.

Cincinnati sues gun makers
as schools handle threats
CINCINNATI (AP)- The school
shootings in Colorado became part of
the debale Wednesday as City Coun- .,
cil voted to join Oev~Jand and.other
U:S. cities in suing gun manufacturers;
· City Council voted S-4 to go forward with the lawsuit in Hamilton
cOunty Common Pleas Coun.
The suit seeks to recover the costs
of gun-related vioience.
.· Councilman Jim Thrbell, one of
the four opponents, said there is no
chance the lawsuit will succeed. He
p&lt;;&gt;iitted out that two students used
pipj:. bombs as well as guns in the
S!lhool massacre in Littleton, Colo.
. ''What arc we to do when kids arc
making pipe bombs at home? Sue the
pi~ manufacturers?" Tarbell said.
. The. lawsuit names 16 gun manu-.
facturers and three trade associationS.
It" (toes not ask for a specific dollar
amount.
•
.
Stanley Chesley, a local product
liability lawyer, will handle the Jawsuit. Chesley also is co-courisel in a
siri'lilar
lawsuit in New
Orleans.
,,
'

Cleveland filed suit against 17 gun
manufacturers .on April 8, joining a
list of cities that includes New
Orleans, Chicago, · Miami/Dade
County and Bridgeport, Conn. ·
"The manufacturers .have to be
held responsible for what they have
created," Mayor Roxanne Qualls

Sto.cks

Am Ele Power .. ;.................... 41 ~

7
/•

Akzo ......................................45
AmrTech .........................;.....68"Aih 011 .................................. 42 1 ~.
AT6T .....................................53'h
Bank One .............................600.

Bob Evana ............................ 18~
Borg-Wai'IMir ................,....... 58~
Broughton ........................... 15"1.
Champion ..............:................8'Chl!rm Shpa .....................,....3"1.
City Holding ............................30
Federal Mogul ......................... 46
Gann•tt ................................. 72~
Kmart ........................................ 15
Kroger ..................................55'1.
Lande End ...............................38

Ltd ............... ;.........................44~.

Oak Hill Flni ..........................18Y.

ova ................:.........~ ............4~ ~

One Valley ............................381·
People• ........,......................... 26

(USPS lll-NO)
COIIIIIIIdlltJ News....,.,. Holdl-ln'-

Roclcwell ...... ;....... ~ ................ so'~.
RD/Shell ...............................5&amp;~,.

*""""'•

Ne....-per Alloclatioo.
I I. Selld llddma Wrret'tionl 10 Tl)e
Dally Senlinel, 111 Court St., Poriteroy, Ollio
45769
.
, suj,scRJPI'ION RATES

r ..

llr Carrlerw M'"or Rau1e

Pretn Flnl ............................... 12\

Sear~

....................................45'1.

Shoney•a ..............,............... 1"1.
FlrstStar ................................ 32~
Wendy'e ........................ ~ ....... 28~·
Worthlngton .......................... 13o

-·-·-

Stock reports are today'•
10:30 a.m. quote• provided by
Adveat of Galllpolle.

OM \Veek ,. ...... :....................... J2.00
. ' OM M-................................ $8.70

'

Ooe Year................................... SJ04.00
SINGLE COPY PIJCE

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Sublcribcl'l 110t delirin&amp; to pay the carrier may
remit in advuce direct tofte O,ily Sentinel on
1 three:, abt or 12 month buil. Credit will be
&amp;fven ~~ eiCh ~cck.
No aublcriplion by mail pennitted in areas
where home carrier ae;JVice 11 avtilable.
P\ibliiiMr !*rvea the ript to adjust rates dur·
Ina the aubecrlption period. SublcriptiOn rate
ch..p may be implemented by chan&amp;in&amp;the
dum too of the 11.1blcription. ·

~

CotTectlo" Polley
.cclll'llle. n ,.. 'bow ot •• error •.• •

tolel7, coli tile ltWII'OOII II (740) 99llJ55. We •• dlotk fOir llfol'llltloot
IJI\I . . . . 1 cwrnclloo lfworrMtod.

' · New1 Dep1rtm111"

· Tlte .iloilo 1111ber Is 991-lJS!. Deport•
•nlnttalloatan:
Geoerol M•••n ........................ExL 1101
New• ....c......................................;ExL 110l
·
or EXL 1106 ,

_

Other S.r:vlc••

Ajl..rtbtq. .................... :.............Ext. i't04
Clrcolodooi ...................................ExL 1103 .
Clloollled Atla ...............................ExL 1100

,,

.

'

Revival ~ill be held Friday, 7:30p.m., Saturday, 3 p.m. ~nd Sunday, 1
p.m. follow~ng Sunday school and pot-luck dinner at Lifeline Apostolic
Church, Pmnt Pleasant, W.Va. William Vi liars, evangelist. No Sunday
evening service will be held.
·.

Fish &amp; Game Assoc.
The Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Association will · hold its monthly
meetingMay8insteadofMayl.

EMS
. logs 4 calls .·

Sutton
Township
Trustees
Th s
1i

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical · Service recorded
four calls for assistance Wednesday. '

e utton ownship Board of TrusteeS' will hold its regular monthly
meeting Monday, 7:30p.m. at Syracuse Village Hall.
·

Flynt's laWyers can't question teen before trial
CINCINNATI (AP) - Larry
Flynt's lawyers will have to wait for
the start of his obscenity trial to quCS:
lion a teen-ager who will be one of the
key witnesses.
·A judge ruled Wednesday that a
16-year-old boy who allegedly
bought a pornographic videotape at
Flynt's store downtown does not have
to testify at a pretrial hearing. Flyn~
publisher of Hustler magazine,
opened the store in October 1997 and
sells sex toys there, along with videos,
Hustler and other publications.
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Patrick Dinkelacker also said
he's not sure whether he will permit
testimony that the boy has been uSed
frequently by police in sting operalions because he looks much older
than his age.
"I'm not exactly sure any of this
' can be used at trial," the judge said.
Flynt, 55, and his brother Jimmy,
49, were indicted a ycsr ago on
charges of psndering obscenity, con-

units c~~~ i~~~:~*cH
1:33 p.m., Laurel Cliff Road,
P,omeroy, Dennis Robinson, Holzer
Medical Center;
5:39 p.m., state Route 124, Min. ersviile, Ruth Alien, dead on arrival;
8:47 p.m., state Route 692,
Pageville, Stella Eggleton, HMC,
Rutland squad assisted.
..
RACINE
. · 9:45 a.m., McKenzie Ridge
Road, Carl Hubbard, Pleasant Valley
Hospital. .

spiracy, dissemiQating material harmCui to a minor and engaging in a pst. tern of corrupt activity.
If C()nvicted on all charges at their
May 10.trial, the FJynts could get up
to 24 years in prison and $65,000 in
fines.
Prosecutors allege that .the store
sold the boy a pornographic tape even
though he was only 14 years old at the
time. Defense lawyers said police
have used the boy more than SO.times
in sting operations against stores that
sell alcohol to minorn because he
looks to be at least 21 years old. ·
A woman accused of selling the ·
boy alcohol has testified that he's ·
large and has a beard.
Defense lawyer H. Louis Sirkin
told Dinkeiacker that he wanted to
question the boy to Jearn more about
his dealings with police and why he
was used in the Flynt investigation.
" We'd lilc:e to know what information this young man may have given
the prosecutors," he said.

.&amp;

10447 SR IZ4
RadDe, OR 41771 .
e

Wednesday admissions -Albert
Roush, Pomeroy.
, 'i ..
. Wednesday discharges - none.
HOlzer Medial Centu
Discharges April 28 - Alice
Buckley, Charles Sarson.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Connelly, son, Mason, W.Va.
(Published with permission)

Revival slated ·

COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER

Reaclcr Services

Veterans Memorial

begmnmg Sunday and contmumg through Friday, 7 p.m. nightly with
Evangelist David Dailey.

·OPEN
~- KAREN'S oyuaoUSES ~$"~

s2 \\1Deu ......................... .sa09:72

Hospital new$

~ev!val will. be held at t~e ~aith Full, Gospel Church, Long Bottom,

fl'i

MAILSUISCRIPTION .
llllideMetpC..•I7
13 .................................. J27.30
. 26 \\leelui ...........................J~3.82
. 52 w..a:..........................sut~.56
Otttolde Melp&lt;;ottnty
13 .................................. J:zll.lS
26 \Vaeb ........................... .$56.158

Oor ..t1 CGICir8 II 111 olerlto Is to be

Fslth Full Gospel Church

rr'!.!!..!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!'="'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'il

The Daily Sentinel
Pitblllllod.,evety
M..,...y th""'sh
friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by tbe
Dbio Valley Publitbin&amp; Coniptny. s.·cond c:lus
p6oap ptlitiM P-.oy, Ohio.
.
*ztsn Tbe A......;MtNt .Prta and lhe Ohio

Funeral home worker accused of
leaving corpse outside topless bar

Special meeting

Southern Ohio will see

·'

.

· A Pomeroy couple was transported to Veterans Memorial HoSpital following ·an accident in Middleport on Wednesday evening.
•
Gary M. Smith, 49, and his wife, Judy Smith, sustained injuries in the
accident which,occurred at the intersection of South Third Avenue and
General Hartinger Parkway.
.
According to.an officer with the Middleport Police Department, SJ11ilh
was driving south on South Third Avenue when his vehiCle, a 1998 Ford,
was struck on the side by a vehicle driven by Cynthia R. Hawkins of Middleport.
Smith's vehicle spun in the intersection and flipped on its top, the offi·
cer said.
No citations have been issued; but the accident remains under investigation.

c

40'/83'

'
Ruth Allen, SS, Minersville,
died Wednesday at her residence. Arrange- '
ments will be announ&lt;;ed by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
:

Couple Injured In sec/dent

•

I ...,.......d

Ruth Allen

Robert E. Dailey, 75, 32308 Happy Hollow Road, Rutland, was cited
for failure to yield by the Gallia-Meigs Post of tbe State Highway Patrol
following a two-&lt;:ar ~dent Wednesday on County Road 3 (Leading
Creek).
Troopers said Dailey was exiting a private driveway, four·tenths of a
mile north of State Route 124, at .3t30 p.m. to head north on Leading
Creek and collided with a southbound car driven by Sara J. Williams, 17,
38096 Batey Road, Middleport.
Damage to both csrs was slight, according to the report.

F;lday, Apr. 30

.¢

I Death Notices I

Citation Issued In two-car sec/dent

Ohio weather

William) Cohen, to the Joint Chiefs (of Staff) and
Hastert acknowledged trying to avoid sho:-v•
(National Security Adviser Sandy) Berger," he down votes on ~ep. Tom Canlpbeli's, R-Caht.,
said.
.
.
proposals for a complete Withdrawal from the
"But the best person to explain ~hy we're in Balkans ot a·deciaration of war. .
.
Kosovo is the president. He actually 'has a philos"Most of our folks think that wh1le the 111 war
ophy on pan-Siavism and why it's imponant to be is going on we need to stand by it and work.it out.
there. ...
Stick with the administration and see if the11 plan
"He basically said, 'If we are to have pesce really works," he said.
into the 21St century, we need to (have) a solid
Hastert said he doesn't think the war i~ K~
relationship with the Soviet Union.'
vo has to interfere with the passage of leg1slat1on.
'"Because of our relationship with them and
"It's kind of like when impeachment was
the Serbs and the Slavsin Bulgaria and Rumania, going on, we were passing legislation and doins
we just need to stabilize the area.' It was very things, but nobody focus"'!· Kosovo is a big. issue,
good. It did make sense."
but ... hopefully we're gomg to ... work w1th the
Hasler! said he is dead against putting ground president on Social Security'.' and Medicare.
troops into combat either to topple Milasevic or to
There's hope for a Medicare bill ' passing the
clear Kosovo of Serbian lorces.
. Senate, he said, and " We'le trying to keep an .
" It's a moral dilemma. I met Milosevic once, engagement with the White House, carry on dis- ·
five years ago, and I found him a thug. But to take cussions and get those big things done. I think :
· him out, you'd have to invade Yugoslavia from that's what the American people expect of us.'' .
the north with hundreds of thousands of troops. ...
It's true, but good luck. Hastert may meet with· ·
The American people won't stand for that.
Democrats, but I'd be amazed if he gets anything: :

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Thurldey,.Aprtl20,1111

Hastert makes ·bid for bipartisanship.
By MortcHt Kondl'IIC:U

'E.st4l!flsfld Ill 1948

Thursday, Aprll29, 1999

PegeA2.

Dale and the gang are doing it AGAIN!
Saturday, May I, l999- Sunday, May 2, 1999 - Sat~rday Only! We are having a free grilled hot dog day,
I I :00 am - 4:0Q pm·
BUT remember we've MOVED! We are back down on 1he farm in Raoine.
Go through Radne on 124 east, we're about 4 miles outside of town, on the right.
·
Special on Roses $12.99
·
· Door Prizes Drawing Sat. &amp; Sun.
·
.
Remember Mother's Day: l.ots of Planrs ro ohoose from or Purchase a Gilt Certificate
· 'Buy 3 Flats or 3 Hangin&amp;. Baskets
Value) fur $21.00
COME ON OVER AND
THE FUN
Open Mon. 12:00. to 6:00

NEVER BEEN KISSED
7:00 I 8:20 DAILY .
M4nNEES SATISUII t :00 I 3:20

ANALVZE THIS •
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
SANDRA BULLOCK

FORCES OF NATURE'""

OuR CusTOMERS

THE RAREsT
QUALITY 01' ALL:

APPRECIATt:

"QUALITY THAT
ENDURES" .
One of' Ohio's oldeu, largest and

I m•ost 'retj&gt;CC:tcd monument companies

520 W. Main St. _: Pomeroy, 0'

Phone 992-2588
Vi nton - ass:ssos
Galliwlis - 446-0852

&amp;It I l lf&amp;t~ • r:., til, 1.W,
Setll C«nery,CRilt Zelam5 iAdift'.ldoenlile)
IIIII .....IF&amp;•~ • r:., 4a,1:1i,t411
Rollerto l!eoigli, Nicoletta Braschi (Orlma)
llllllltli IRI II til, 4:41, 'l2, t4l
c- Sm. Sell G1aen. J8ti ~ ICanedyJ

�•

The Daily Sentin~l

Sports

Excellent Meeting receives ·a-1 odds to win .Kentucky Derby

Thursday, Aprll29, 1999

B

RICHARD ROSENBLATT
:~LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) _ ~ob
Uaffert knows he made the nght
choice.
: But earlier in the day, with a 10
l(,m. deadline closing in for entering
horses in Saturday 's Kelltucky
Oerby, he paced at his barn, cell
' phone in hand. owners waiting in the
wings .to see if Baffert would enter
his filly, Excellent Meeting.
Finally, after a week of suspense,
~affert figured three chances are better thitn two in his bid for an unpreceAented third consecutive Derby vic"tory.
.
. " We entered General Challenge,
with Gary Stevens· we entered Prime
Timber with D~vid Flores; and
• Excellent Meeting is in the Derby
With Kent Desormeaux," Baffen said
Wednesday at Barn 33 where his
two Derb winners, Si,lver Charm
· "
y ·
II(
h
8)1dd Real Qmet, were wa mg I e
~.lle ..ThrO~- filly is doing great r feel
·"••
·
'
~lie earned her way into the race and
J ' h' k h • · ood
h to win the
· ·t:;; .~ e s g
enoug
~ AiWednesday evening's draw for
~ost position , Baffert found out
"'"ere his horses stood - and only
·Excellent Meeting ended up in a
· spot No.6 in·a full field of20
·
'

t4

Baseball Marau·d ers
·get 13-3 mercy-rule
win ·over Vinton Co.
Blf DAVE HARRIS
third inning on a walk lmd a' Meigs
Sentinel CoiTespo!'ident
errQr..
Meigs made it 10-2 in the bottom
Meigs erupted for nine runs in the
first inning and coasted to a 13-3 win of the third when Bullington reached
over Vinton County in Tri-Valley on a fielders choice, three walks later
baseball
action Meigs the eight run lead.
.
Conference
Wedn'esday evening at Meigs High
In the top of the fifth inning the
School.
.
. Vikings scored a single run when
The game was called after five McF.erren took on over the right field ·
innings due to mercy f1!le.
fence justlo the left of lhe 315 sign
The win breaks a two game losing to pull to within 10.3.
streak for Meigs, and raises its recOrd
Meigs closed out the scoring in
to '10· 7 overall and 8-4 in the Ohio fifth with three more runs. Bentley
Division. Meigs will travel to River led off the .inning with a single, but
Valley today for a non .conference, was thrown out trying to steal secgame.
ond. Bullington followed with a douMeigs sent 13 bailers to the plate ble, and Stewart singled. After awalk
.in the first inning in plating the nine to Brown, Humphreys tripled to end
runs. Jeremiah Bentley Ied off the the game.
inning by reaching on a Viking error.
Humphrj:ys went the route to pick
Adam Bullington and Rusty Stewart up the win on a three hitter. The
both followed with singles. Jeff senior struck out eight walking four.
Brown reached on a Viking error, and Humphreys just missed the cycle
J.T. Humphreys followed with a sin• with a single, double and triple.·
gle. Ryan Ramsburg then reached on Bullington added II' pair of doubles
WALKING TALL- The Cleveland Indians' Manny Ramirez {rig~
. a fielders choice before the first and a single. Bentley and Stewart 'shouts to ...mmatea In the dugout shorlllf after homering to bring
Marauder out was recorded.
added a pair of singles each.
Roberto Alomar (left) In to store In the third Inning of Wedrieldly
Pat Martin walked and one out
Ward was the starter an&lt;floser for night's road game ljgalnst the Oakland Athletlca, who loll 4·1. (AI&gt;}
lat~( Bentiey singled and Bullington Vinton County, Clemons went the
followed with his second single of final Jhree.innings. McFerren had the
C'MONI BOUNCE BACKI - Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubensee the inning. Stewart reached o.n an home run; Lueik added a double, and
pats pitcher Brett Tomko after Tomko gave up three homers In the error, befpre finally the hist out was Clemons a single.
·
first Inning of Wednesday night's game against the host
recorded
with
the
host
on
top
9-0.
Jnnioa
.l!illla
Blf ROB GLOSTER
second inning, and worked out of.. a
P!tlladelphla Phlllles, who lost 12-fl. (AP)
·
The Vikings scored a run in the Vinton Courily ............Oll-01=3-3-3
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
jam in the seventh by getting pinchbotlom of the second. inning on a Meigs ...... :...... ,: ......901-03=13-10-2 Manny Ramirez always has provided hitter Tim Raines to hit into an.
walk, a single by Clemons, and a
.
Batteries ,
·
!lashes of power in the middle of inning-ending double play.
fielders choice to make it 9-1 . Vinton
Humphreys (W) and Deuwiller
Steve
Reed
and
Paul
Cleveland's lineup. Now, he has
· County made it 9-2 in the top of the
Ward (L), Clemons (2) and. Lash become dangerolll! ~n a regular Assenmacher pitched . the eighth for
PHILADELPHIA (AP) :C. For also had a two-run single in the ninth
basis.
the Indians, and Mike Jackson
· Cincinnati Reds relief pitcher Scott to pad the leijd. The Reds trailed 7-I
Ramirez hit a two-run homer for pitched the ninth for his sixth save.
. Williamson,. it was a matter of after four innings and 8-3 after five .
the second straight night, giving him
A.J. Hin~h had an RBI single in
"He_'s done a great job all year,"
30 RBis in April, and Jaret Wright the second for the A's, driving in Eric
: changing his delivery.
A starter for most of his minor McKeon said of Reese, who has the
pitched seven strong innings as the Chavez - who got a double when
: league career, Williamson now finds third-highest batting average iri the
Indians defeated the · Oakland his routine tly fell in front of
; himself in the bullpen for the Reds. staning lineup. "He's not recognized
Athletics ·4-1 Wednesday.
Ramirez in right field..
.
"This is the first time I've been so · Haynes ( 1-4) allowed two runs on
· But he found out that it was neces- as a great hitter but he should be."
; sary to change more than just timing
Although the deficit was big,
Trimble's Brady Trac.e was resur- the umpire indicated the out sign on consistent, but it's too early and it four hits and four wallcs in seven
; to become a quality reliever.
· McKeon was not shocked with the rected from knee surgery at the hands ihe third out. EHS' still had a chance doesn't matter," Ramirez said. "I'm innings and strucl&lt; out six.
. "I had a starter's mentality and I result.
"Haynes pitched a fine .game. He
of the Eastern Eagles Wednesday at first, 'but never made the throw, ljllt just go_ing to try to keep it up as much
: tried to take that into relieving and it
·
'
just pitch¢ on a night we couldn't
"This team has proven all year night as the Tomcats defeated the the runner was then called safe aild as 1can."
: just didn't work," Williamson said that we can come back against any- Eagles 12-2 in Glouster during a var- five more runs crossed !he plate that
Ramirez, closing in on the major do it," Ns manager Art Howe said.
· after pitching three shutout innings body," McKeon said.
sity Tri-Valley Conference contest.
inning.
league record of-35 RB!s in April set "He did his job, we just couldn't get
: to earn his first major league win as
Meanwhile, Phillies manager
Trace came on after being out
Brannon pitched well the rest of by Texas' Juan Gonzalez last season, ·anything against Wrighi."
: the Reds beat the Philadelphia Terry Francona wishes that he could nearly a month to stifle the Eagles' . the way.
·
hit his seventh homer of the season
Notes: Cleveland's Wil Cordero
· Phillies 12-8 Wednesday night. "I solve his team's bullpen woes simply bats with · 10 strikeouts and two
Eastern hitters were Chris Lyons in the third inning.
left the game in the fifth inning with
. : was erratic and out of the strike by changing someone's motion. His walks.
with a single, Josh Will two doubles,
"Watching him, I think he's the a bruised right wrist. He was hit by a
.. zone."
,
Bradley Brannon in his first varsi- .and Eric Smith a single .
relievers were ~nable to hold onto
purest hitter in the game . .He knows pitch two innings earlier..... The
:
That started to change under the the bi'g lead late and the club lost ty start suffered the loss, but pitched
Trimble hitters were Robbie what he's doing and he never gets Indians placed right-handed reliever ·
: direction of pitching coach Don clo~er Jeff Brantley to the disabled · well. Brannon fanned two, walked Cooper and D. McClellan with two fooled," Wright said of Ramirez. "I Paul Shuey on the 15-day disable4
: Gullett and bullpen coach Tom list following the game due to ·an five and hitlwo. Both pitchers went . hits each, Trace a double, Brown a love ·having him over here."
list with a strained left hamstring and
· Hume. Gullett and Hume urged aggravation of an inj~ry to his pitch- the distance.
double and single, and-singles by J.
David Justice led off the ninth replaced him on the roster with right·
: Williamson to pitch solely from the ing shoulder.
·with his third hQmer and · Omar bander Paul.Wagner. Shuey, 2-1 with
Eastern went up 1-0 in the first on' Guinther and Adam Jago. ·
: stretch instead of using the windup
"We certainly had bullpen prob- an error, a walk to Josh Broderick loplo&amp; Jmab ·
Vizquel ·added an RBI single as a 2.13 ERA in a team-high 11
.. when the bases were clear.
lems tonight," Francona said. "You and double by Josh Will.
Easlern·......... :........ lOI-000-0=2-4-3 Cleveland improved its record lo 15- appearances, hurt himself Sunday at
"They ' ve been· working with me don't ever want to lose a game like
.
Trimble came back with eight, Trimble ............. 800-100-4=12-10-2 5 - best in the majors - by win- Boston. ... Haynes has pitched at
· on the stretch," Williamson said. that. We just didn 'I 'do the job in a although when Trimble had the bases
WP-Trace and Brown
ning its third straight game against least six innings in each of his. five
: "I've tried it during. my last three bad loss."
full and two out with the score 3-l,
LP-Brannon and Broderick
Oakland. The Indians are 7-0 this starts this season .... Hideo Nomo,
The loss of Brantley cenainly
: outings and I found that I'm a lot
season when Ramirez homers.
recently released by 'the C_hicago
·· more consistent in the strike zone." raises more problems for a Phillies I ~,·nton
Oakland starter . Jimmy Haynes Cubs, worked out for the Indians on
·
Williamson also got his first team that has struggled with its V j
.
·
I
pitched his bes! game of the season, Tuesday, but decided to skip the
: major · league save on Sunday in a relievers.
but got tagged for the homer by scheduled simulated game today to
• win over Houston. His consistency
"1'\le hope is that we rushed him
·~u
Ramirez
pursue other opportunities . .... Ben
: has impressed Reds manager Jack back too soon," Francona said.
V' t
I .A
. ·
"I w~s hitting my spots. I just Grieve, the AL rookie of the year last
"We'll get him thoroughly.checked.
; McKeon.
'
. made one mistake," Haynes said. "It season, went 0-for-4 for Oakland to
Spaun and a pair of ground outs.
was just a fastball away, I tried to drop his batting average to . f36. He
·•
" He continues to do it," McKeon and do whatever is appropriate to get Blf'DAVE HARRIS
Vinton County scored in five of
But the Vikings ended any d)_ance throw it dowh but 1 got it up too is in a 3-for-30 slump. · ... Tony
·: said. "We were only counting on let- him healed."
Brantley, who was forced to leave the seven innings as the Vikings · of a Marauder comeback in the sev- muc(1. When -you leave a ball over Phillips failed to score for. the A's,
: ting him go one inning."
Williamson needed his teammates the game after walking one and strik- rolled to a 14-4 win over Meigs in enth inning with five more runs, hils the plate it will get . hit, that's the breaking a seven-game streak with at
least one run scored .... Oakland's
: to score nine runs in the final three ing out Williamson, seemed unsure Tri-Valley Conference softball action . in the inning came off the ,. bats of price you pay. "
Caudill, Jenkins, Orlowski and
Wright (2-0) allowed one run .on Matt Stairs returned as designated
Wednesday at Meigs High School.
of what' was ailing him .
• innings to secure the victory.
.
"I don't have any pain, it's just
five hits. He retired 10 straight bat- hitter after missing two games with a
The loss was the second in a row Pickett.
:
"I really wasn't worried about a
Cecil was lhe wimiing pitcher giv- ters starting with the last out of the strained right groin.
: win for myself," he said. "I wanted fatigue." he said of the injury that for .the Marauders and drops their
,......;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,_ _ _....,. ..
• to hold the Phillies where they also forced him to miss time earlier record to 14-3 overall and _9-3 in the ing up five hits, striking out seven
TVC.
and
walking
four.
Pickett,
Caudill
~
.. were.
·
this season. " I had to change the way
The Vikings scored in the second and Orlowski had two singles each 10 ~"Get
: · Pokey Reese had three RB Is in I was throwing just to get something
inning
without the benefit of a base lead Vinton County.
• the last two innings, including a two- on the ball. It JUSt felt tired , yeti felt
hit to take a 1-0 lead. The Vikings
Amy Hysell was the losing pitch; run single in the ninth to break an 8- great thls afternoon."
Philadelphia's poor bullpen effon added four more runs in the third er, she gave up 11 hits, walked rwo .. .
• 8 tie. Pinch-hitter Jeffrey Hammonds
overshadowed a strong hilling per- inning to take a 5-0 lead. Caudill, and struck out four. Tony a Miller had -....
'
. formance. The Phillies scored four Seitz, Cecil and Picket .had Viking a pair of singles to lead Meigs, Spaun
~ Meigs
added a double, Bethany Boyles and
runs in the first inning, getting con- hits. .
Meigs
fielding
let
them
down
in
Abby Harris each had singles. , .
secutive homeFS from Scott Rolen
the
fourth
·inning
as
three
Meigs
Meigs will travel to River Valley
and Rico Brogna and an inside-theerrors plated two more runs as today. , · .
park shot by Ron Gant. ·
.
Rolen had a career-high four hits Vinton took a 7-0 lead. The Vikings Inpioe.r.inala
opened
up
a
9-0
lead
in
the.
fifth
.
Vinton
County
..
014-220-5=14-11-0
and
just
missed
a
fifth
when
his
drive
'
,
The Meigs Marauders drew the in the ·eighth was caught at the base inning on a walk and singles by Meigs ....................()()().OIO.O=l-5-7
·
Batteries .
: top seed for the Division II sectional of the fence . Doug Glanville also had Orlowski and Fee.
Cecil (WP) and Orlowski
Meigs finally dented the plate in
·softball tournament, ·which begins a three-run homer and knocked in
the fifth inning on a double by Julie
Hysell (LP) and Harris
: Saturday.
four runs.
• . The Marauders will take on the
• wmner of Saturday's game between
·: Jackson and Nelsonville-York.
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy will bill and take ·
• The winner of that contest gets a
• shot at top seed Meigs on May 5.
asilgnmen~ on the foilowlng diabetic supplies:
Enjoy An Afternoon At the Mf!igs Co~nty Fairgrou~ Near
: River Valley is also in the Meigs half
.; of the playoff bracket.
with a prescription ·fro.m your doctor:
The Dog Shrlter
·
.·
• The winner ·of the Gallia
Blood Gluco!Je Monltdrlng Systems
:Academy-Vinton County contest
• faces the winner of the Alexander·Glucose Testing Strips
Saturday, May 1, 12 noon to 5 pm
.: Federal Hocking contest slated for
,; May 4.
Sunday, May 2, 12 noon to 5 pm
Lancets

·.

Meet SoMe Wuderful Dote-Who Need He1111
Balloons for the kids .

',

·.''

Thesday, May 4
Gallia Academy v. Vinton County
Alexander v, Federal Hocking

''

.'

A veterinarian wiU be on hand to answer que&amp;tiOns about pet car!:
Free literature on pet ca.re . ·

SW I)HtK LUH)t

t.!te11IIM• 111ttl , , . ,

fldopt a dog and get one half paid on sm/neater
and fr" dog food samples
.

~

Sectional pairings
Sa1Urd11y
Jackson v. Nelson¥ille-York

Hear the band on Saturday· at 2 pm

When your Medicare deductible Is paid, we will
bill Medicare for 80% and your secondary
Insurance for the remainder. This can result,ln ·
you not paying anything for the above diabetic
supplies. If you have any · questions sie
Debbie, Monday through Friday 9 a.m •• 5 ,p.m.

Talk to McGrujf, the Crime Dog

'

·

'

Humane

u.,...,

111. Nonlo, SMre A......,
an&lt;l p~,_, Clunilwo.

EHI')'OM , . . , . , _ ,

Wednesday, May ·S
• Meigs v. Jackson/Nel sonvill~. •York winner
· .River Valley v. Wellston

'•

Pharmacy

MeW. Co"""

R. Ph. Charles
Hanning, R. Ph.
thru Fri. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m.• 8 p.IJl.
Sunday 10~ 00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2955
E. Main
Frlendly Service
Pomeroy, Oh.
Week
'11119
: I

I

.SilO

II

.389

1

.
Westem DMilon
Te1'1'·:"""""" """"""'"""'"'" '2 , 9

.'m

l
J

3&gt;

8. Bahimort 2

Texu 8, New York 6
CLEVELAND 4. Oakland I
~tt ~~o;to 10

New Yoiil (Mendoza 2-1) at Tuas (Morgan 4·0),
8JI p.m.
, Tort~nto (Halladay 2-0) at Anaheim (Hill 0-1),
10: ~5 p.m.

Friday's games
" Minnt5ota &lt;Hawkins 1-3) at Baltimore (PoniOil
Q-12), 7:05p.m.
·
, Detroit (Weaver 2-0) at Tampa Bay (Arrojo 1·2). ·
7:05p.m.
..
. .
New York (Penine 0-0) at Kansas Cny (Wnnstck
I). I), 8:()l p.m.
·
. CLEVELAND (&lt;;:olon 3-0) at Texas {Helling I·
3). 8:31p.m.
· Chicago (Na~o~ arro 1-1) at Am~lejm (S parks 0-;\).
10:05 p.m.
' Toronto (Escobar 2· 0) at St:allle (Fouero 0-:\),
'IO:OS p.m.
Boston (Harikkala 1·0) at ~Ook l and {Roger.s 0-2).
10:35 p.m.

lfl"lskm

.l! L

"7

Ctmtnl 01.-iskHI
1
Houston ............................. 1t 9
Pimi:Klrsh ...........................9 10

Milwaukee ................ ... ......9

II

Chicago ..... :................ ... ..... 8 10
..... 8 II

'· INCINNATL ..... .:

.632
..550
.474
.410

....

J

3~t

S

,~,~ -

l
I

.

. .. .
~

.1. ,...-

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

i

••

-- -- ~ --

..

t

---

137·1014 • (740} 181...14 • POl

OHIO•(IIGiit

.. ...9

36

716
.187

.m
.m

.....
.200
.418

GIJ.

I!

~!

It
17

19~

26

7&gt;

10 ~
II ~
12 ~

14
21

99 PONnAc GRAND PRIX GTP

Orlando 93, Wuhington 86
~tr'Qit

101. New Jer~C)' 9)

Atlantp, 76, New York _73

2 Dr, VS, sunroof, Bright Red
WAS$26,340

Minnewa 97, fboulx 92
Milwaukee 115. Torooto 102
Portland 119, Seanle 84

Philadelphia at New York, 7:30p.m.
Boston at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Charlone al ·lhdiana, 8 p.m.
Oall.u .11 Houston , 8:30p.m.
Golden Stat~ at Ulah, 9 p.m.
Phoenix'11 Ocrlver, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Vancouver, 10 p.m. ·
Portland-at .L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.

Friday's games
New Jersey at Orlando, 7:;\0 p.m.
Toronto a1 CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at AtiMta, 7:30p.m.
· Olitago at Olarloue, 7::\0 p.m.
Golden State at Minne!Ota, 8 p.m.
Utah at Hou~ton , 8 p.m,
Detmitat Milwaukee. 8:30 p.m.
Den\·er at Seanle, 10 p.m.

ifli:.Q\\\.\,,&lt;o\'.)e

~q o\l
~

0eO•

~\0~''?,.
~~A~

o•\~

•"'

Phlladelpllia at Toronto, 1 p.m.
Plltsburgh ai New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
8os1on MCarolina, 7:30p.m.
San Jose MColondo, 7:30 p.m.
S!. Louis at Phoenilt, 10:30 p.m.

Transa ct ions

Today's.1ames

• OUaco (FamJworth O-O)'Dt Fl~da (Sanchez 0.
· 2),1:05p.m.
·
. ~ AriUina (~aal 2-1) at Hotuton (Hampton 1-1),.
l:JI p.m.
1 ., Ollorado (Kile 1·2) at St. Louis &lt;Mercker 2.0),
·.
1 1:40 p.m.
1
SanDieso(W. Willian-is 1-0)a!'NewYork(Jonu
J.O), 1:40pm
.
l&lt;!s Angeles (Voldc:s 2-0) at M1lwaukee (Eldred
0-0), 2:01pm.
~
San Franc1sco (Ortiz 2-2) at Montreal (Pavano 0-

( 3]. 7:05 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Beoe 1-0) 81 Phllodelphla (loewer
1-1), 7:0S p.m.
.
Pitisblqh (Silva 0-0) at Atlanta (Maddv" J-0),
1:40 p.m.
~ ,

Friday's games .

utP Tom Mll'tin from the I.S-day to the 60:-day disabled liat.
CHICAGO WHm SOX: A&lt;jivMed OF Briin
Si111111011 from lhe ll-day &lt;Uibledlilt lad optioned
him to Charlotte of the International Lcq.ue.
Df:I'ROITTIGERS: ThodedOFBri .. HuMerlo
the Seattle M.-inen for two pla_yen to be named.
SEArrt.ll MARINERS: Optioned RHP Bl&lt;ft
Hindlliffe lo Tacoma of the Pacific Coast League.
NatioMI lap.e
NL: Suspended MilwaUkee Br111wen . INF ·
Fernando Viftllwo aamcs for puuilll a finger In an
umpire's face d~rin1 1 dispute over pitches in an
April23aome.
· .
.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Placed SS Ricky
Gutlemz on tbe 1!1-day disabled liJt,
PHILADELPHIA PHILLlES: Opoioned C
. Bobby Eualella to Scranton· Wilke(-Bam of tbe
· lntemariorial Lcquc. PlaCed RHP Jeff Brantley on
lhe IS-day disabled list Purchased the contract of
RHP Ste"e Montjomery from Scran1on Wilkes Barre
of the International Leaa\lt.
C.ut(lrnlli U.aue
S"~ JOSE GIANTS: Placed OF Carlos
Vai4em;ma on the disab~ list ~~i&amp;ned RHP David
Chl!am.uo extended spnna tr~nanJ .. ~ccalled RHP
. BenJ• Mtller from eitended spnna tnul)inJ.

1 San Dieao (Spencer 0.2) at Olicaao (Mulholhmd
1·0) 3·20 m.
~ s'c. i.ouf~ (BOiten(.eld 4-0) at MonbUI (Vllqlltz
; 1· 1), 7:0S p.m.
~ Los Anaelel (C. Pt.rez 0.3) at Philadelphia (Byrd
2- 1), 7:01p.m.
B··L b 11
Houslon' (Beraman ·0-1) 11 Florida (Meadows)·
~tt 8
1
1), 7:0.5 p.m.·
'
·N•tlonel luketblll AIIOCI•tlon
~
Colorado (AstacioQ--J) at Pinsbuqh (St'hourek I·
PHOENIX SUNS: Placed G Gerald .Brown on
, 1)1 7 :0~ p.m.
.
1he Injured list. Slaned GAlvin Sims for the remtlin·
i Aritona (:lobnson· 2·1&gt; at -Milwaukee (K.•rl 2·1), der olt~ sea•on.
17:05 p.m.
·
·
• San Franc:isto (Es1es 2·1) M New York- (Watton
Football
: t-2).7:10p.m.
· .
I
N•Uonal Football Le•sut
., CINCIN~ATI (Avery 1·1 ~atAlanta (Smoltz .\.
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Sianed RB Michnel
0), 7140 p.m.
BasniJhlto a threC-year cotttract.
'
•
lNDIANAPOUS OOUS: Tenninated 1he con·
ttiCII ,.of DB Robert Blackmon and DL AI Fontenoe.
Basketb.1ll
Wai"ed OL C'bartric Darby.
· .
NEW YORK GIANTS; Named Jerry Reese
ntisiant dirH:tor of pro personnel.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Tmd&lt;d QB Rod~~&lt;y
Peele to the WashinJton Red1khn for a 2000 sb.th'
round dnft plek.
EASTERN CONF£RENCE
OAKLAND · RAIDERS: Sifntd S Cho.rles
Alhnde 01YIIlol'l
,.
Mincy.
PtlTSBU~GH STEELERS: ~&lt; -sl&amp;ll&lt;d LB
:
....
Carlos Emmoo• artd DL Orpheus Roye to one-)'tN"
lh ' C:ORU'ICtl .
.ll-Orlando .....:....................... 31 · 17 .646
l'lllladelphiol .......................,.. 26 19 .~78
l

~ ~~ ~

,

,

......~o.

v6'

· '~ct.....
-~A

".~:&gt;·'o~'lfiP.s"
r lt"'.s' r~,lt!
t\ ~1.
'I r __....;;;_;...;:t------:--~,~ ,~z
~s.~~)'~~ ee'9e
~\ , t
91 PONTIAC SUIIIRE 4 Cyl, auto, air, AM/FM, tilt ~ .J
AA

'

. ·
American~
·
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Placed RHP Paul
Shuey on lhe 1S-day disab1ed lisl, r«roactive to April
26. Purclwtd lhc: C()Gtraet o(RHP PMII Wagner from
Buffalo of lhc lniCmatiorw.l Le111uc. Transfened

25,101

" . •...... 5

'fonicht's games
CLEVELAND at Wasllin&amp;ton,' 7 p.m.

Baseball

'

'

---

Friday's games

.421

~ • • San Franci~ 4, Montreal 3
•• • CINCINNATII2, Phllodelphia 8
' : • Chicqo 6, Florid!!- I
' . · Lo• Anse1es 3, Milwaukee 2
~ • • New York'4, San DieJO 3
.-··: Atlanta'· Pinsb\qh 4
• • Arizona 10, Houston 6
: • Color,ado 9, St. l..ovis 1
•,

.

'

No games loniaht

!! : .Wednesday's scores

I

vrrr

Wednesday's stores

Western Di"ilion

.

i

Meigs football
llnkfest slated
for May 8

Bos1on 4, Catolina I; series tied 2·2
Philadelphia .5. Torumo 2: series ti~ed 2·2
San J~ 4, Colorado 2; Colo~ leacb series 2·

San Francbco ....................... l5 7 .682
,-Mzona ... ,........... .................. l2 10 .545
~1..os Angeles ... ~ ...................... ll 10 .524 '
~ ~ Dlego .... ........................ ,..9 II .4.50
~1orado ...... ..... ~ .....................1 10 .412

•

s tern. s 0 ftbaJief,S
I'
de"'ea
t .,.,.
,-•m·b11le· "•2
11
f
9

NHL first-round pl~yoffs

e.s.

. 6~

New York ................ ,............ 12 9 .171
Philadelphio .................. ........ ll
9 . l~
Montrtal .................................6 13 .3 16.
Florida .... ,...............................6 IS .286

St. L.oui1 ..... .'......................... 12

2

r;;S

H ockey

, 'AIIonto ................ .................. IJ

.

12 .739
13 .711
17 .622
· 23 .SOO
29 .310
31 . . 311
38 .174

PadRe Di.-ltion
y-Ponland .................:, ......... .34 II
•-L.A. Laken .......................27 19
Phpenix ...........................,.....2• 22
SIC1'8l1lalto ........................... 23 23
Seattle ................................... 22 24
GoldEn State ......................... 20 25

'

NL standing~
~ISitm

J
J
1'1
7'
7'1
17

1

Wednesday's S&lt;ores

Today's games

~........ ...... :

•

x-San Antonio ... ................... 32
x-Houslon ............................. 28
Minncs0la ............................. l3
Dallas ................................... !7
Denover .................................. l~
Vancouvtr ............................... 8

L.A. Clippen.......... ....
x-clincbed playoff berth
y-cllnched division lit\e

'Tampa Bay (A lvarez 0-1) at O!icago (S irotka I·
20:01 p.m.
•
·
, Detroil {Miicki 1-1) at Seattle (Hemy 2-0), 3;35
p.m.
CLEVELAND (Burba 1-0) at Oaklaiid (Oquist 2;l.); -4 ;~ p.{n.
'
1 Kaasu City (Suppan 0.3) at BaltilllOI'e (ErickJon
1).4), 7:01p.m.
.

1Um

..511
.478
41i7
.261

l! :L l&lt;l.

•-Uoalo ................................J&lt;

Boston 9. Minnesota 4
OH ~ Chicaco 10, Ta.mpa Bay 7; O.ica1o 9, Tampa
Bay I
Cit~

- ~65

M•d•cst Di¥1skNI

rua

7

Wednesday's scores
Kansas

.6JO
.6)0
.%1

beat in New Mexico was going to Mohammed al Maktoum.
Ltvely (Crat_g Perret, 50.1); Vai!Jol Challenge (Gary Stevens, 3-1), Fn••:
2
come wi~ the Derby last year? .~o I
Worldly Manner, wi~ner of~: (~~~~·s~~~~~~~:; {]l~ ~~~e(~~~~ ~)~C~:~~~~'(c~~~~f:;;;o,~:
thmk-you can.thro:-" all that out. d ~f four ~~~ts~year In ~~a~ trial ~mith 8-1)'· Worldly Manner (Jerry Vicar (Shane Sellers, 6-1); Menifee:
Excellent Meeung a1so 1s entere
tales: a ~a r tn a P
.
. •
• . K' b r
p·
(P D 5 I)· d Le
D
Kid'
1
in Friday's Kentucky Oaks, mebea~ing rae:_ tn Du~~~ '" !archEu~~bi~ r:~~~~y l~b~r~do ~ ~~ ;~• Pri~: (J~~ ;:~t;s ] ;~1 ). mon rop
•
Baffert has unul an hour or so oore un aten tn ree s s. 10 •
.
•
- A '
.'
G
•
'
the Oaks' 5 :47~.m . post ttme to 1998, also won a. tnal tn which Timl!er(Davtd ores, 7· 2 ), enera1
;
make a final declston on the _tilly. . W'!rldly Manner dtd not compete: ~
"Right ~.ow lthtnk she ~Ill ru~ In Aljabr leaves from the No. 5 post,
the Derby. Baffert sa1d, but I ve Wo~ldly Manner No. 12 ..
been kno":~ to ,change my mmd. A
_J am very happy :-"llh,my ~ost
few tm1es. _
.
. .
postltons! no complatnts, .. tr~ne~
j
f 1
Silverbullet(lay, · also _tra1ned by Saeed b1_n Suroor sa1d~ · I I m
Baffert and owned by Mtke Pegram, AlJ3br .w11l show some speed .from
.
Spencer a single. Keith a single, and :
IS the odds-on favont_e m the o.aks. the •,n,s1de. The other horse wtll be
A six-run fifth inning broke open Walton a single.
'
a close game as .the .Eastern
If Exce11ent Meeung goes m .the fime .
.
'
.
.
C ,Eagles
Eastern hosts Wahama tonighl.
1
Derby, 11 would be" the first ume
The tramer, along w1th Shetkh rolled to a 7-2 Tn- Va ley on oerence
louin&amp; tl!tll1
'
si nce 1984 that two fillies ran for the Mohammed, arnved at Churchill ~f~all d wm . h ov~r Ginm~le Eastern ..................000-061-0= 7-4-4 ;
roses. Three_Ring. who won her last Downs o~ Wednesday.
e nes ay ntg t tn
ous er. Trimble ...............·.. 001-1 00-0=2-7· 7 ;
two races by 6 1/4 l~ngths· and 14
There s als? a fiv.e-horse mut~ ~~er~ ~; now two games above
Evans (W) and Karr
lengths~ respecuvely, IS the other. In field, which mcludes controverstal . T a bl .
1-0 . h
rth
Dillon (L) and Weaver
'B4, tramer D. Wayne Lukas sent out Arkansas Derby wmner Valhol. The b ~m e wen~ uph d 1 "-~ e ~u •
Althea and Life's Magic.
others a~e Ecton Park, K One Ktng, ut .astern, w o a pu JUS one
If all 20 start it would be the first K1mberhte Ptpe and Lemon Drop base runner on base the first four
full field since. l984, and just the Kid. The field is listed atl2- L .
innings,_erupted for six. runs in the
13th time there's been a field of 20 or
The last field horse to Wtn the flftlhk. wdllsh onhe out,EDamelle sh~dncer
· th e Derbv' was Canonero
II in 1971
wa e ' tep
more horses. A'fter 23 star ted '"
.
. ·
T f(ame Svans reac elk on
d
1OOth derby in 1974, Churchill
Valhol got mto the Derby only an err~r, 1 any pencer . wa e .
Downs limited the field 10 20.
after a judge in Arkansas ruled that Chasaue Hollon wal.ked, Knsten
The sixth annual Meigs Football :
The most popular post position the track must pay the $300.000 fir st- Chevaher reached on a~ ~rr~~~~~i~ golf tournament will be held on•
for Derby winners has been the No. I place purse to owner James Ja~ks? n . ~ayman ~a~ an RBI Sl g • d An i Saturday. May'S at the Meigs County:
slot, but the last winner from that The Arkansas Racmg CommiSSIOn
rehacd e on an en:or,l a~
Golf Course.
:
· spot was Fetdinand in l986. Adoms. had held up the purse wh1le mvestl·
o e a _a two-run smg e o rna e
The tournament will .begin with a•
the Wood Memonal wmner tratnM gat1~g whether JOCkey Btlly Palm the~core 6 ~;~tern.
. 9 a.m. shotgun start.
-;
by Nick Zito leaves from the No. 1 carrted an electncal dev1ce to spur
~stern a e an msurance run rn
The
tournament
will
be
a
four-·
post.
'
Valholto the win. Valhol will be rid- the stxth. .
.
Lexington
Stakes
winner den by Willie Martinez.
.
.
-Stepha,ue Evans picked up the . player scramble, bring your own:
Charismatic and Blue Grass wmner
The field, from the Jatl ou t: wm With five str•ke outs and !WO team fonnat. The team must have a;
Menifee leave from 'post positions Adonis (Jorge Chavez, 30-1 ); Three walks .. Amanda Dtllon suffered the team handicap of 40+. with onl y one;
which have never produced ~ Derby Ring (John Velazq~ez; 20-1 ); Ecton loss wtth 13 s1~1keouts and stx walks. team member under 10. Cost of the.
winner _ Charismati~ from No. 17 ?ark (Robbie Davis, 12-1); Stephen Tnmble made seve.n erroedrsb. V . tournament is $45 and includes cart,
and Menifeefrom No. 19.
Got Even (Chris McCarron , 12-1);
Eastern h11ters were I
Y a1en~ lunch and beverages.
A skins game will also be bel&lt;!. .
The other coupled entry in the Aljabr (Daragh O' Donahue, 12-1); Karr wtth a s mgle and double, Juh .
For more infonnatwn. call Mike
Derby is Worldly Manner' and Aljabr, Excellent
Meetmg
(Kent Hayman ·a. smgle and Ang• Wolfe a
Chancey
at 992~2158 (work) or 992owned by the Godolphin Stable of Deso rmeaux , 3-1); Desert Hero st~gle. Tnmble hnter. were Kock
0064
at
(home).
sheiks Maktoum al Maktoum and (Corey Nakatani, 15-1 ); Answer w1th two smgles, D11lon a double,

WESTERN CONFERENCE
J

NBA standings

I

-·-

.2~0

Anaheam ......... ........................9 12 .429
SeMtle ....................'.............:.. .9 12 .429
!)aklllld .......................... :....... 9 13 .409

NOTICE

:
Division II sedlonal seedings
.- I. MEIGS
:: 2. Jackson
~ 3. Nelsonville- York
~ 4. River Valley
- 5. Wellston
· : 6. Alexander
;. 7. Federal Hocking
::·s. Vinton County
~ 9. Gallia Academy

e.s.

~~

KansuCny ............................ 7

DaI•1y seDtIDe
• 1

Come' To The 1999 Pe• ldoptathon

Centnl Division
x-lndiana .............................. 29 17
x-AIIruna ................ .............. 29 17 '
Deuoh ,..........•.. ,................... 2~ 20
Milwaukee ........................... 26 20
Charlone ............................... 2J 22
roromo ............................ ... 22 24
CLEVELAND ....... _............ 21 24
Chicago ................ .............. 12 34

Detroit .................................. IO II .476
Minnesot~ ................._. .............9 13 .409

the latest in sports news from the"'

MEDICARE PATIENTS WHO ARE
DIABETICS, YOU NO LONGER HAVE
TO BE INSULIN DEPENDENT:

l! L

Central Dl"lAon
CLEVELAND ..................... II I . 1~
Chicqo ........................ :........ ll
7 .611

.

gets
· top seed
in D-11 sectional

n

TampaBay............
.. ... 11 · II
'Baldmore...
................ .5 1.5

1

'

be doesn't· reaily care that it's been
·
·the favonte
· won the
20 years smce
Derby
'
. "I ;,as the favorite last year with
Indian Charlie," Bafferl said. "But
we knew Real Quiet was doing the
best of the two. You can talk about
the jinxes and all that, but who wQUld
have thought that a horse that got

NewYor\ ........................... 13 .. 6 '. 684
:t'pronto .......
.. ........ 13 9 .591
BOston....
. ......... 11 I0 -~ 24

County "'0'lis
d er.s 14•4
0 11:er Ma

'

nothin;o~s~' da;~gfo~~~a~~~~ 1~~

Boston .................................. \8 28
Washinaton ........................... 16 30
N~wJc,rsey ....................... :... \4

E•ltun Division

l'um

Trimble mercy-rules
baseball Eagles 12-2

.

··
Pri~e Tim~! will leave from the
No. 14 post, ano General Challenge
from the No. 15 slot. Because the
regular starting gate holds only 14
horses, an auxiliary gate will be
added fortheothersixentries.
John and Betty Mabee own both
General Challenge and Excellent
Meeting; and the entrv was made the
3-1 e~rly-morntnt . favonte by
Churchtll Downs oadsmaker M1ke
Battaglia.
Prime Timber, owned by Aarg n
·Jones, was the second chotec at 7-2,
while Menifee, trained by Elliot
Walden, was the third choice at 5-1.
General . Challenge and Prime
Timber finished 1-2 in the Santa
Aniia Derby, while Excellent
Meeting has an impressive four-race
.winning streak and seven victories in
II career starts.
.
Of
be'
1 f
't ·

At standings

.Reds beat Phils
. 12-8

..

three- ear-olds

New York ...........:...... ."....... ... 24' 22

Tribe downs A's 4-1

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tr-urtday, Aprll29, 1999

V6, auto, air, Bordeaux Red
WAS $20,368

~18,

WAS$12,900 ....................... NOW'10,600
96 CADILlAC SEVIUE STS, ve, auto, air, leather
int, WAS $29,900 .................................. '24,500
96 CADii.lAC SEDAN DMW ve, auto, air, leather
int, WAS $24,999:.. ...............,............... '20,400
95 CADILlAC SEVIUE SLS VI, auto, air, leather Int.
WAS $24,900 ................................. ,...... '20,100
97 CHEVY CAVALIER 4 Dr, 4 cyl, auto,aii, cass,
WAS $10,900 GM1674 .... ..... .' .......... :...... '9400
91 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 Dr, 4 cyl, auto, cruise,
WAS $13,900.: ......... .... .........................'10,SOO
• 961UICK PARK AYE V6, auto, air, cass, tilt,
cruise, WASt'$-17,999 ...... :............. :....... '15,650
96 CHEVY lUMINA V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise,
WAS $10,900.................... .. ........ ............'1150
96 DODGE EXT CAI2 WD. P/U SLT Laramie VB.
loaded, Red, WAS $18,995 ................. '1 6,100
94 PONnAC SUNIIRD 4 Cyl, air, auto, WAS
$4995 ............................. :........ ........ ........ '4250
95 CHEVY SUIURIAN 1/2 TON 414, LQ~~ded
WAS $22,900................... :., ............. .. ...'19,600
96 PONTIAC fiREIIRD. auto, air, T-tops, WAS
$12,900 ................................. .... .......... '11,150
91 FORD RAHGIR EXT CAI4 WD, ve. auto, air. tilt,
cruise, CD player, WAS $18,950 .......... '17,450
96 OIRYSUR TOWN &amp; COUNTRY VAN, Ve. auto. air.
til, cruise, CO player, WAS $t8,950 .......... S17,450
91 CHEVY SilVERADO lWI1!2 ton, V6, auto, air,
cass, 9800 mi. WAS $19,900 .............. '17,.50
96 CHEVY 1/2 TOll EXT CAl 4 WD, auto, air,tih,
cruse, WAS $21,995 ................... ......... !19,100
·91 OLDS IRAYADA AWD V6. loaded, WAS

MONDAY.FIIDAY 9AM • 8PM • SAT 9AM· 4PM
SUN 1PM • 5PM .

Tax &amp;flile fees not included. All rebates to dealer

,.,111
/

..

99 CHEVY LUMINA
V6, auto, air, Jade Green
WAS$18,~

New Only

$14 964

•

�•

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentl.n el

Thursday, April 29, 1999

•

Thuraday, April 29, 1999

Officials may face sanctions over handling of Los Alamos spy probe
By H. JOSEF HEBERT
.
Allocl•tecl Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A number of Energy Department and
national weapons laboratory ·officials f"!'e possible disciplinary action
because a scientist was provided continued access to top ·nuclear
secrets long after he became a target of an espionage investigation ,
government officials say.
An internal Energy Department investigation of the scientist and
possible theft of secrets by China at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico is focusing on " why was this man permitted
access for so long, " a senior official said Wednesday.
The· Taiwan.born scientist, Wen Ho Lee, was fired on. March 8 for
security violations, but he had been the prime target of an FBI invesligation int6 the theft of weapons secrets for nearly three years at the
weapons research lab.
Jhe thefts allegedly occurred in the 1980s. Lee, who worked at the
lab since 1978, has not been charged with a crime and has denied
beiog involved in any espionage.
Only late -last year was Lee shifted to where he would not have
access to the most ~ec ure nuclear weapons material, including extensive computer codes on weapons design and performance, according
to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Meanwhile, it was learned Wednesday that Investigators for nearly
two years were prevented from examining Lee's personal computer at
Los Alamos because Los Alamos employees never 'had been put on
formal notice that their computers were subject to search.
.
A search of Lee's computer was proposed as early as 1996, but both
FBI and Justice Department lawyers said a warrant would be needed
because the lab's computers did not contain warnings they were .sub·
ject to search as government property, the officials s~id, and there was
not enough hard evidence to get a warrant.

When investigators finally examined Lee's computer after the sci·
enlist had been fired, they found the computer contained extensive
files of top-secret weapons design and performance codes, although
the computer was part of an unclassified system with wide access and
could be used to se nd data in and out of the lab complex.
The discovery of top-secret data in Lee's less secure computer is
expected to raise new. questions" about why he was allowed to keep his
security clearance and allowed continued access to some of the lab 's
most sensitive weapons data more than two years aft.er he ·became a
leading suspect in the alleged theft by China of information on a
sophisticated nuclear warheads, the W-88, in the 1980s.
Senior Energy Department officials have concluded that some disciplinary action is warranted against a number of both department an~
Los Alamos laboratory officials for failing to take action against Lee
sooner, said one official.
.
" There were communication gaffs, failure'S' to notify offiCials within Los Alamos and between Los· Alamos and the department about
Lee's status and why he wasn ' t removed from sensitive .areas," said
one official familiar with an internal investigation now under way.
Los Alamos has about 20,000 computers and only about 3,000 of
them are in a. classified system whose access is limited to employees
with top-secret clearance, according to lab officials.
Most of the files in Lee's computer had been transferred from Los
Alamos' highly secure comput~r system in 1994-95, although e\li·
dence was found the Lee made some authorized transfers as early as
1983, an official said.
lie said there was no evidence that the files were accessed from
outside the laboratory, but also no assurance thai they were not.
"Classified n~clear weapons codes at Los Alamos were transferred
to an unclassified ~omputer system," Energy Secretary Bill Richardson acknowledged 1n a statement late Wednesday, although not com-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NOTHING RUNS
UKE A DEERE-

.'

A••ocl•tiAI Pr••• Writer
WASHINGTON (t\P) Lawyers ·for
Microsoft today interviewed an executive
involved in America Online's nearly $10 billion
' pijrchase of Netscape, after a judge questioned
whether the deal might affect the outcome of the
Microsoft antitrust trial.
Microsoft lawyer Michael Lacovara ques;
tioned Peter Currie, Netscape's chief administrative officer, today. Currie also is Netscape's former chief financial officer ant:d
elp.ed put
together the company's sale t9 A , which was
finalized last month.
In a highly unusual twist; repo rs were
allowed to attend almost all Currie's interview at
· a hotel in downtown Washington because of an
· obscure 1913 law covering antitrust depositions,
which are normally conducted .in private.
Lawyers closed the room for only I 0 minutes,
when questions turned to confidential .business
plans. The interview with Currie spanned more
than two hours.
Lacovara asked Currie mostly about the origins of AOL's stunning $9.9 billion purchase of
Netscape. Currie said the first discussions started in late August but tume~ serious in September.
The 1913 law also forced the disclosure of
transcripts from more than · 90 depositions
already taken in preparation for the trial. Most of
those, including three days of interviews with
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, were released
publicly today.
.
The Gates transcripts mostly duplicate
excerpts from testimony already played in court,
· but also include new sections related to
Microsoft's dealings with Netscape and other

companies.
Gates reluctantly admitted that Netscape's
Internet software, its browser, .was Microsoft's
prime competitor at the dawn of what lawyers in
the case refer to as the "browser wars."
"At some point we definitely thought of the
Netscape browser as the number o~e in terms of
how our Windows browsing would be compared
by users a~d which they would select," Gates
said.
In early 1996 Netscape's browser, called
"Navigator," held more than half the market for
brows~rs - dwarfing Microsoft's rival . "Internet Explorer" product.
The government accuses Microsoft of illegally using its influence as the maker of the dominant Windows operating systems to defend its
monopoly and try to extend into new markets,
including Internet browsers.
Gates' hedged admission followed lengthy
verbal gymnastics during the .September 1998
deposition with government lawyer David
Boies. Gates tried hard to avoid even saying the
word "Netscape," but eventually relented.
U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson
previously decided to allow Microsoft- in the
middle of its antitrust trial - to begin gathering
evidence about the implications of AOL's purchase of Netscape.
AOL, with nearly 17 million subscribers, is
the world's largest Internet . provider. Netscape
produces sutcessful Web browsing software and
owns Netcenter, one of the most popular sites on
the Internet.
Shortly after the sale was announced last
November, the judge suggested that there
''might be a very significant change in the playing field."

I

Carmichael's Farm &amp; ·Lawn
IIIII Plnec:reat Drlva

Galllpoll•

Airosslram Gallia Auto Soles on old lit. 3S Wtst

992-2825 •

".=---.--------

Citgo
SR124 ·
Racine, Ohio

·u

'

•

... ~-

Microsoft 11sked Currie when the Justice
-Department. was notified about the deal, since it
could affect its legal case against Microsoft. "I
don 't know when the Justice Department was
informed, maybe September," Currie said.
But, he. add~d, the implications of the purchase on the trial was "not my bailiwick." He
said the companies knew the arrangement could
affect the ongoing trial, but decided that "we
need to make decisions about the business and
treat the trial as a separate issue."
Boies later denied that the Justice Department
knew about AOL's plans until November.
As part of its antitrust case, the government
alleges that Microsoft illegally· wields its influence as the manufacturer of the dominant Win- l hi'&amp;l
dows operating system, which is used to run
most of the world ~s personal computers.
For example, government lawyers contend ·
that· Microsoft forces consumers who buy Win- 1 .y:• 1;:.1
dows also. to u.se its bun.dled Internet software,
discouraging people from using rival. Web soft·
ware, such as Netscape's.
·
Part of the JusticeDepartment's arguments in
the courtroom have focused on AOL's decision
in March 1996 to distribute Microsoft's browser,
nQt Netscape's, to its millions of subscribers.
But wit}l; AOL's purchase of Netscape,
Microsoft ' eX'ecu~ives - including Gates -.
. expect AOL eventually to distribute Netscape's
·browser, ·giving it a dramatic boost. AOL is l:ontractually obligated to continue distributing
Microsoft's browser until January 2001.
Another deposition was set for Friday in San
Francisco, where Microsoft was expected to
question Mike Poppv, vice president and chief
operating officer ·at Sun Microsystems Inc. It
also will be open to the public and media.

..

.

ON THE SCHEDULE

......... -·

.

---

_
, oa~ Earnhardt
Jr.• Chevrolet, 148.576 mph.
Comlnll up: Auto ClUb 300 Mt19,1998
Catlromla Spee&lt;iway,
· -:Todd Bodine_,
Footana. 2-mlle trl-oval. 150
this race from tile 28th
laps
startln&amp; posftlon In 1997. •. . '
- : Saturday. May 1
only Matt l&lt;enseth. tnlrd llOth
llolondlriC cllomplon: Dale . years . has flnlshed In tile toP
Earnhardt Jr.
nve at bo1h pre.lous races
here. ..• This race was
CIAIIIJtne - : Steve
Pal1&lt;. ChevrQiet. 175.·15 1
preYiously known as tile
mph, Oct. .18, 1997
l&lt;enwood 300.

·yCMD'1brn

.

'

. LIIMnFt.O.' rlrn
Dear NASCAR Thi1 Week,
for the people OUI here in TV
land, this i• a bia probtem.

...

.,

S8e us' for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;

The race can' noise (from)

lOP TEN

Accessories

in-car cameru ovtrrides the
announcers. Can they fii thi1?
Clllr I&lt; T~ Bryut
. Sewl~tK, Tean.

• Weeki)' ·rAnklncs by NASCAR Tnla weak writer Monte Dutton.

lalt week'a reNdf'C Ia In parentheses .

Ridenour
Supply

Still atop the standtnQs
Ever1thln8 but a win
T~ed to help Jarrett

1. C11 Jeff hl1oNI
2. C4) ll8le -

3. Cll -

St. Rt. 248

4.

(2)

LUCk has run

Jeff-

e: ·c•1 .......,

985-3308

La-

M-

e.

Cll Ruaty Wol._
7. Cll Tony itewort
I. C-) O...llnllwllt

t. Ctl Jolin Alldrottt
10. C-1 KOII k h -

Jelf!\/Uion product/Ott offlciob

attempt to bG/anet tilt annOUIJC·
·en' commr11ti with tltt sound of
racing. wlttch many jQIIS ./ike to

out ·

.Fouuh with a bullet
tn "the bl&amp; wreck"
Arsttop.ftve
Don't count him out
Four top.lOs In flvettlea
Back-to-bock top.10s

heaT. It I th &amp;Dme

~y

with

' crowd nol.rr at otllrr spo"nlng
IW'IIU. We IUggtJI }'OW U{»'US
your opittlotU to.yotu focal
ntrworA: affiliates Mtd C4ble
comp(my, and perltoPJ tltry could

pas! along your comntenu to the
appropritUe people.

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

Dear NASCAR This Week,
Hu the Ra11man ever dropped
a Oaa on the track71fao, who
picked i! up?
Hu any driver ever hit a pace

car? Ia the driver of the pace car
protec:t.Cd?
Ad1m LcVuseur

Auburn, Mkh.

•

F111111y Jf'INI MofiiJ !WtitltM •·

tiii.J. Ai t"e "'""'TUM racr.

Q

blad:flag MU itUJd~~~trtn.tly
dropperton tire ,track, The wind
aruJ tile {:UTJ cuused tire flag to
drift all tile way atoUfld tilt trade
10

fROM LAST WEEK

ably

WINJ1011 CUP IIIIID
Dolo Earrlllrdlllll&gt;Wd .ho Is lltlll lho , _ a / Talladop

period. As for rM pace car Mhrg
ltit, ... ~CQ/J .Jullfg tlri.r ltappl!lf
SOtrft years

'

ra~

back at an All Pro

ill JefferJOfl, Ge~. In mmr

cau.1, tile pacr·CtJr driller wears
seat heirs but ItO Jtelmel..Malty
years agu. during the

IUICIIIIIAIID NATIONAL

l~tdianapolfs

Terry '--'le won tile clotolt oerleo raoe In hiStory, ed&amp;l'll
lnO!her Chl'lrolet driver, Joe
by an estimated 2.35
Inches (.002 olo second) In lho TouchlltllnO Enef&amp;Y 300. ·

Ne1•-·

500, the pau Cf1l'

ctWJwd /1tto D stand IQQI/ed with
J'ff'Pir, and a numMr ofP:£nOtu
IIWt' ;,.jwtd. Ewr sittct tltal .
time, Itt mcJJI forms of rue: ing. rh.pau Cllr hll.f lwen Jri~lf "r
someotte with adequort- troini11g
to do the job pro~r(y.

field. revorslrlfl a yelr·

lorotlttentl, but Lal&gt;orote end Nemecl1ek pve tile Cui&gt; IOOOtlii!Mera
a 1-2 tlnllh. One ot the blllllt ol all TallatleCa crastoes eliminated
23 taiB, lncludlfC pole winner Ken Schreder, WhO escaped

unharmed hom his burn!• Chewolet.

··.

nn dalfli1p and ptUwn~

IWU piclced up by a clea11up

Cft'\11 dur/rtg th~ lft!XI CQUiitm

. ~- iiORIICaly ~ ott 08lo Jlmltlln ""' DltlHard !iOO:
Earnhlrdl won hie eiChth WINton Cup race at NASCAR'a tatnt
track, twice aa ~at al"rffO'M' else in the track's 30-year hlatory.
Rookie Tony St-t once apln proved his mettle. nnlshl,. a
career-best ftfth behind Earnhardl:, Jarrett, Mart&lt; Martin and Pontiac
· teammlltO Bobby'--·

Only tt.o Winston Cup d - . made tho

the second turn. It apparetttly

~~ wH

.

••••••••••••
Who'allot- .
· Y.lhO'aNot

"'ar.lltiJt'IHwla
1. Before Dale E11nhardt won tne Winston Cup
champiOnShip In 1990. Who Was the 1~s1. driYer

• 11011 Mark Marun, seven·top.

10 nnl~ .. one win.

• As part of the Star·Tetettsm
· Autofell 81 leW Motor Speectwey

to wiR the·title In a black car?

,on Saturn.,.. Mlr; 1, fans can

.

• 11011 SIO~I,. MaRin. only
once 1n 111e 101&gt; 10.

a~

leiendl Cll'l and BrdoleiOS on
"U'I TPD Motor Soetdw8')1. ·. I 1/~
mile IIOflelt triCtl.. Ten 1101 In a
uaenas cer costs S!Kl; a,

I~ ll .. H 'I !l96t Ul 10~118 '10f18 '1

8BnOOieiO IS $40, Mth Ill Slfet}'
equtl)nlenl DtOY!ded. Fot more

IIIJMIN¥

tntormauon, c111 P&amp;H RICI,. 11

f' 7) 48!5-7223.

••••e•e•••e•
AROUND THE GARAGE

)CCIEWOF.
• 1\!&gt;o else? Dale

Call us for all your
travel needs

Earnhardt hetln·t clone

better ll1an se.enth olnce
he loSt lho Daytol\li !iOO to
Jeff Gordon. AI TellatleC&amp; •
hOWeVer. he and crew
cNet Kevtn Hamt~ tound
lho fiiiCit: 111a1n. Earnh81\lt
wat 81:118 to tum the tableS .

.Leo's Cruise
t!J' 'l'mfld
.740-992-4233
800..795·1110

on old restrlctor.pfate foe
Dale Jarrett with a
memorable DltlHe«f 500
viCtOry.

202 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohl&lt;&gt; 45769

'

.

A'ITENTION

ATlENTION .

ADVERTISERS!!

9f floM Have ct'he /tleed for Speed•••

ADVERTISERS!!

Advertise on this page

we've got lt/11

Advertis~ on this page

Call992-2155
Dave Ext. 104·
Kathy Ext. 105
For m·ore Information
•

Fast, Friendly
Service
949-3099

••• ••••••••••

I'ROFII f

·Jeff Burton
"

.

Chester

-_,Jeff

Gordon,
Chevrolet.155.012 mph. June
22. 1997
: Tills is tile tnlrd
Winston CUp race at tile·
Soulhem California track ••.•
Go&lt;oon won the race In 1997
and tte pole In '98••• . Sacks
actually set his track record In
tile second round of quallf)1fli.
Joe Nemecl1ek won tile pole
111at 10ar.

•

SI/H/:,

Israeli casualties in a war of attrition to persuade Israel to relinquish
the Golan · Heights, a strategic
plateau on the Syrian border, Arens ·
said.
That, he said, "would be a very
big mistake for Israel to make,"
creating the imprcsaion "it is so .
easy to bring us tQ our knees."
Arens said Israel would evacuate
IICiuthern Lebanon if it had . assurances that Hezbollah guerrillas .
would not attack northern Israel.
On Tuesday, Arens uked the
Clinton administration tp appeal 19
Assad to curb anti-Israeli· guerrilla !
attacks.
Arens said Assad may possibly .
·
be distracted preparing for a successor and may need "shock treatment" to recognize the growing
danger.
. "We have. a fragile situation in
southern Lebanon," Arens said
after a round of talks with top U.S.
officials. "This is a powder keg that
has the potential of blowing up."

'

·

• IUHh lerleo, Auto Club 300
2;30 p.m. • Saturday • ABC
~liP! California 500
• Wlntton Cup-· C - NAMIOO California Speedway;
2 p.111: • Sunday • ABC
Fontana, 2-mue·tri-oval. 250
laps
- : Sunday. May 2
D il ldiiiC ..,.ripiGn: Mal1&lt;
Martin
Trick qllllti)~ICGre&amp; sacks. Cl1evrolel.
.
183.753 mph, June .21, 1997

Israeli-Lebanese border tensions
on the rise, Arens warns
WASHINGTON (AP)- Israeli
· Defense Minister Moshe Arens
today accuse·d Syria of fighting a
war by proxy with Israeli troops in
southern Lebanon.
Arens, here for talks with . the
Clinton administration and Con,
gress, said if Israel suffers a large
number of casualties "we will have
to respond accordingly."
Israel maintains a security
enclave with troops and mostly
Christian militia in southern
Lebanon to deter cross-border
attacks on northern Israel.
Arens said Syria funnels
weapons to the Hezbollah guerrillas
whose clashes with Israeli troops
· are on the rise agajn.
.. Lebanon is not an independent
country," the defense minister said.
"Whatever happens in Lebanon is
dictated by Damascus."
Syrian President Hafez Assad
may be counting on mounting

Second Ave.-• Mld41eport, OH

Hill!!i

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
advance since the. Labor Department began tracking these figures in 1982.
AP Economics Writer
.
. The overall gain reflected a 0.5 percent advance in wages and salaries and
· WASHINGTON (AP) -Wages and lxinefits for American workers rose a 0.3 percent rise in benefit costs,.which include health insurance and pena slight 0.4 percent in the first three months of the year, the smallest amount sion contributions, The wages and salaries increase was the smallest since·
on record, indicating the lowest unemployment in three decades is still not September 1992 and the benefit advance was the lowest since March 1997.
generating wag~ pre5sures.
,
For the 12 months ending in March, overall employment costs were up 3
The 0.4 percent increase reported today in the Labor Department's percent, an even bel}er showing than a 3 percent rise for the 12 months endEmployment Cost Benefit was just half the 0.8 percent advance that private ing in March 1998.
.
economists had been expecting. The first-quarter gain followed a much largThe current economic expansion is already the longest in peacetime hiser, 0.7 percent advance from October through December of last year.
tory with uninterrupted growth for more than eight years. Well before this
While small wage and benefit gains are generally not good news for point in most previous expansions, tight labor markets have triggered rising
workers, the moderation in wage pressures is occurring at a time of low wage demands and forced the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates
inflation as well, meaning that work,ers' take-home-pay is not being eroded to slow the economy, a process th~t often leads to a new recession.
by higher inflation. ·
The biggest rise in wages and benefits was enjoyed byservice workers, a
The inflation-sensitive government bond market rallied on the figures, rise of 1.1 percent. Manufacturing·workers saw wages and benefits increase
pushing down yields ·on 30-year Treasury bonds to 5.51· percent in early by just 0.6 )iercent. This sector has been the hardest hit by the Asian currentrading today from 5.58 percent late Wednesday.
·cy crisis, suffering a loss of more than 300,000 jobs in the past year.
Tile slack wage pressures are occurring. even though the ovdrall unemployment rate dipped to a 29-year-low of 4.2 percent in March. For all of last ·
year, unemployment averaged its lowest leyel in three decades.
The combination of slight wage pressure and low unemployment has
given the. Federal Reserve the leeway to allow the economy to continue
growing at a rapid clip without feeling the need·to start raising interest rates
to prevent inflation.
·
. · A second report today showed further good news for American workers. '
The Labor Department said new claims for unemployment benefits declined
by a larger-than -expected amount last week, falling to 294,000 new claims, ·
dowtr'zO,OOO people from ·the week before. It was the biggest one-week .
decline in three months. ·
·
. Fewer new claims for unemployment benefits. mean job layoffs are ·
declining. The big drop in claims was a surprise to analysts; who had expect·
ed little change following a decline of 5,000 the previous week after two
· weeks of increases in applii:ations.
The 0.4 ~rcent rise in wages and benefits was the. smallest quarterly '

By BARRY SCHWEID

Nortt~

106

(740) 446-2412

American wages and benefits rise by smallest amo~nt on record

AP Diplomatic Writer

....... ___
_.,

menting on specifics.
~
Richardson said in an interview that new security measures - both
a physical firewall and extensive monitoring of computer systems "will prevent these kinds of transfers" in the future. " I believe we arc
cyber security safe," he said.
.
The top-secret data found in Lee's computer with new file numbers
included computer codes used in )"capons design and a~alysis of
nuclear tests.
·
·
.
.
The codes are especially important in the government's assessment
of weapons performance without actual nuclear testing, b~t could also
be helpful ·to spmeone trying to· copy U.S. warhead destgn, nuclear
weapons experts said.
Previously, administration officials including Richardson had. said
no attempt was madt to lift Lee's security clearance and move h1m to
a less sensitive job because of concern that such a move it might tip
him that he wks the target of an investigation.
an-ApnTN alliiCKOil a oonvoy near sa 1
·
·
· ·

MiCrOSOft to question executives in Netscape sale
By TED BRI.DIS

The Dally .Sentinel • Page 7

,,

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...;__ -.:.

____

,

High Speed Internet ·
Access With Cable
Modems!

total•web
.. .................. ..r.....m
Call Now. And Sign·Upl
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Dave Ext. ·104
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For more information

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Thur.ctay, Aprl! 29, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

'

•

researchers find brain can understan·d speech, even backward$.

What say?
By RICK CALLAHAN
Auodatecl P ftlls Writer
The ability to understand
speech is so deeply ingrained that
people can decipher recorded sentences that have been chopped into
brief segments and played backwards , researchers reported today.
Digitally rec orded sentences
were sliced into very short segments in the study, then reversed.
The distorted speech was played to
seven test subjects.

The participants had no problem understanding the sentences.
Their brafns were apparently able
to perceive the syllables as sou nding nearly the same whether heard
backwards or forwards .
" When you distort speech, it
distorts cenai n aspects, but other
parameters are still able to convey
the message, " sa id Kourosh
Saberi, a researcher at the California Institute of Technology's divi- ·
sion of biol ogy.

Saberi and David R. Perrott of
California State University in Los
Angeles' department of psychology reported their findings in
today 's iss ue of the journal Nature.
Ray Kent, a professor of communicative di sorders at the Universi!y of Wt scons in in Madison,
said the researc h demonstrates that
many areas of the brain are used to
handl e com plicated auditory signals.·
Not only are hoth hemi sphere s

of the brain involved in speech thtngs have been done to distort or
processing, but eyesight plays a muddy the signal," Kent said.
significant role by allowing people " Somehow the information is pre to unconsciously lip read to fill in served {)r at least recoverable to us
.even when il's played backwards."
mi ssi ng data, Kent said.
Steven ·Greenberg, a researcher
Anyone who has gone to a party
held in a crowded room filled with . at the International Computer Sci music and chattering pe·ople has ence Institute in Berkl!ley, Calif.,
tapped tho' e skill s to understand said the findings could so meday
lead to improved speech-recogni what others are say ing, he said.
'' What this tells us is that tion programs that allow comput speech is quite robust. We can per- ers .to respond to spoken comceive it even when a number of mands . "

GilIllpoll a
I VIcinity

It also adds to a growing b *
of evidence disputing the notiiJ;I\
that individual vowels and conso:
nants are crucial to understandmg
the spoken word, he said.

Garege

BOSToN (AP) - After reviewThe five -year survival , rate in cent. said · Kara Smigel , a spokesing tbe res!'lts of prostate biopsies me n whose cancer is detected early woma~ for the National Cancer
perforrnKd in the mid - 1990s, a su!Y- and has not spread is nearly 99 per- Institute.
urban fiospital found that 2.0 men
·were misdiagnosed and suffer from
. cancer they were told they did not
Public Notice
have.
"We feel shock, anger, disbelief
sherlli'e Sete of R•l Eetate
......__ there's nothing we can do," said
·. The SUitt of Ohio,
loletge County.
the wife of one misd iagnosed
The Benk of New York, 11
patient, requesti ng that the family's
~ ~ $ ~- ~ '-"S.u:.A!.U'&lt;!i,l
ll l!
$
Trulltt, under lht Pooling
ident ity and hometown. be kept
end Servicing Agreement
anonymous. "We don 't know what 's
deled 11 of loloy 31 , 111111,
going to happen."
Sertea 1-a· va. Gregory
'Bueh, lka Gregory Bulh,
She said her 62-year-old husband
, Friday &amp; Saturday April 30-May 1
"' A.
II at., No. 88 CV 0211.
was told two weeks ago by Sturdy
In pureuence of en Order
Memorial Hospital 'that hi s test jlad ~
M~ny
Many
al Sate In the 1boY1 entlltiCI
been inaccurately reported by a forecaon, I will offer lor 111• 11
public euetlon, In the lbOVI
mer pathologist. Since then, her husnemlld County, on the 21111
band has been told to seek aggresol Uey, 1m, 11 10:00
The Ohio River Bear Co. &amp; Wicker Buggy c:~ dey
sive radiation therapy.
o'clock A.M., the following
Because of the errors, the cancer ~
Middleport, Ohio 10 • 5 pm . '
: deecrtbed reel eatale TO BE
was left undiagnosed and untreated ·
SOLD AS A UNIT, tlluetlld
In the Townehlp ol ...blnan,
~~
$
~~~
$
in the 20 men for some time , per"
County
.., lolelgl and Still
haps' lowering the ir chances of surol Ohio to-wn:
vival.
Parcel No. 1: Being I
The hospital 30 miles south of
pert of Section 27, Town 3,
Rengt 11 , . ol the Ohio
Boston planned a news conference •
Company'•
P u r c h I I o:
for today to discuss the biopsies.
•~
Beginning 11 the Narthllll
The · fl awed exam s were per- .
corner ol • live ecre lot
forrn~d between January 1995 and • c:l
formerly owned by John
Morgen, Iller by Devtd
December 1997, The Sun Chronicle • Jonn; thence South to the
of Attleboro reported this week.
Boutheoet corner ol 11td
Sturdy Me morial has said it
live ecre tot; thence w11.1
reviewed 279 tests and discovered
lour 1111 to 1 tUJke; thence
South to Long Run: thence
that 20 were botched . Two of the 20 - ~
"'"
following the m11ndtrtnge
men have·apparently died of unrel at~ ,.,
ol aald run to IInde ownlld
ed -ca uses, the hospital told the
b·y. Janet: thence following
newspaper.
,
the eatd lint Will 'to the
Officia ls at S,turd y · Memorial tit
place ol beginning,
contelnlng twelve acrtt ,
would not release the conditions of
moreorteea.
the · other misdiagnosed men, nor
Perce! No. 2: Alto the
elaborate on what triggered the
following preml111 ettuatlld
review of the tests.
In the ume Stclton, Being
The mistakes are under investi gaof 1 ltva acre lot told by
Me,Y Jene Sittler end John
tion by the state's 'Department of
Slttleno
Oevld Jon11, end
Public Health and Board of Regi ~­
contelnlng one hell •ere,
tration in Medicine. Both groups
· more or ,,... Bt(llnntng II
refu sed comment Wednesday.
the norlh..et corner olllld
live ecra lot n11r • popter
The tests were supposed to detect
1r11; thence Wnl to the
malignant celis in the prostat~; a
road; thence fallowing the
walnut-sizeq organ in men located
reed to where the ·-Una
JU St ~ l o w the bladder.
com11 to the .r011d; thence
Approx imately 1,79,000 men are
di agnosed with. prostate can ce r
Middleport 992~5627 .
N. -2nd Ave.
nationwi.de eve ry year. About
37,000 men die of the disease each
year, accordi ng to the A merican
Cance r Society.
every Saturday

, can relieve a

Get the latest in sports news from the

992-2156

.Daily Sentinel

~·
~

Yellow Flag Sale.!
1$ items!
5$ items!
30% off candles!

~

.

.\.ill!J~~L,ruK ~$~-~~

Sidewalk
Days

IJ

Fri. ~ay

~pril

&amp; Satu,rday
JO &amp; May 1

~$~-~:::..&lt;..:::

r -- - - - - - ' - - ·- - ' - - - - ·· -

-

-

-----

Pleasant V ~Hey Hospital

Health line
(304) 675-2828
-·-,

- --·-- - -

. night
6:30p.m .
American Legion
Middleport
Postl28
Starburst $3000
Door Prize $200
· 145 pepple or
more wil( play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
r.egular game

Public Notice

52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
P hone: 740-843-5572

•

Near the 338 &amp; I~ splh in the Great Bend

North to the plue of
beginning.
Parcel No. 3: The
'fallowing reel · eetele
attueled tn lilt Townahlp of
Ltbenon, County of Uetga;
end atatt of Ohio: Being In
Stctton No. %7, Town No. 3,
end Ronge No. 11 :
Beginning on the North line
of 8atd StetiOft at a ·point
110 rode Ent of the
N~rthWIII corner: th.enct
w111 following eeld North
Une of uld uctlon ebout
Eighty rode to t h e - of
the public roed; thence
following the center .of lilt
publlo roed South to the
South Unt oll1nd1 dlldtd
by John .F. Torrence end
Elizabeth Torrence to
Gwenllyen Jan11 by diiCI
deled November 18, 11182;
thence following the Huth
line of utd tend I dllldlld by
Torrence to llld Jonn
ebOut Eighty rode to the
eoutheeet corner thtrtol;
thence North parellill wllh
the Weet lint of 11ld
Section to the ptect ol
beginning, containing ebOut
43 ocree, more or'!-.
Perce I No . 4: . The
following . reel 111111
altuated In the townehlp of
...benan, .county ol loletgl,
Stet• ol Ohio, bounded and
. dllcrlbtd 11 loiii!Wt:
Sllua~e In 11ctton %7, Town
3, Rengl' l1 , ol the· Ohio
Compeny•1 Purch111 .en"
beginning 1t the eouthweet
corner of 1 12 ecre tract of
lend prallnlly owned by
Dayton Heymen, , which t 2
1cre tract ol land 11 Porcal
No: One In a dead recorded
In Val. 138, P1g1 351, lolttgl
co. Deed Record•: thence
South 50 IHI to e croll cut
tn 1 rook; thence tn a
North•••terly couru,
cra..lng two cr01111 cutin
·1 rock, ebout 1345 fill 11 1
uniform dlatan~• of 50 l11t
from the eoutherly Una. ol
11td 12 ecre tract to a point
50 feet South or the
Norlh1111 comer ol utd 12
ecre tract; then011 North 50
het;
ind
thence
Southw..terly elong the
IOUihtrly lint Dl 11ld 12
acre trect to the place ol
beginning, containing 1 1/2

acre. more or leaa.

Excepting and reearvlng
to former grantore, Charlll
H. SUJineker and Orpha M.
Slllnakar, their htlrt end
uetgn1 lor ever,
1n
undivided on•h•ll lntaraat
In all the ott gee end ell
othar mtnerata lying under
end within the premt111
hereby conveyed being
percele _No. 1 to No. !,
tncluetve, abOve d-rlbed,
with the rtghl to eftltr uld
preml•••· to praepect end
drill lor, dtvetop, produce
. and remove the ume, wtth

the neo1111ry machinery
thtralare and the right to
u•"' muah .of the eurt.ce
It !MY be MCI-rylorlhl
P!'fPOMI " - ! d.
·
Current Deed R-ded n
11/23/M In Volume 15, Pege
3811. .

Property

commonty
Long Run
Roed, Long BoHom, OH

kn~ 11: 33794

48743.

· Perce! 1: OI-OOOU.OOO,
08·00053.000 ·end 01·
00051.000.
Seld Preml111 Apprallld
II S27 ,000.00 and cennot be
Hid lor leu then two-lhlrda
of IIIII emount.
. TERMS OF SALE: Ten .

Public Notice

·· - ·- ·percent (10%) clOWn at the:

.

time the bid 11 acoaptlld ..
Be lance to be peld within · ·
thirty (30) deye: Any tum :
not petd wttllln utd thirty·
(30) dll)'l lhall beer lnttrtet:
11 the rete ol 11.71% per.
annum from data ol ..... · , ·
J1m11 M. Saullby, Sheriff,:
Metal County, OH
·· ·
Corflele, UcNellle I Rlnl ;
Co., LP.A. BY: Herbert J,
Krlmer
25200 Chllgrln Blvd;, Suite:
Clevlllncl, OH 44122
Phone: (218) ~7200
FIX: (218) ~7210.
(4) 22,21

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

740-~2134 .

•B.:eW.a

'

!!60 So. Jrd.
610 So. Jrd.
764 So. Jrd.

B~

. Fn• E11fmat.1
'Profelllonal Routine Lawn
Mal~ and Manlallng
'RMklential &amp; Commercial
"SSmAAbBry Malntenarce
'SeMng Meigs ond Galla Count!•
in' Ohio and Mason County in WV

G•ranlauru

796 So. 3nl.
911So.3nl.
16S No. 4th.
412 So. 4tb.
2!1 So. Stb.
342 So. lith.
193 So. 7th

I

477 $ycamore
732 Sycamore St.
liSS11l Sycamore
692ArtLewil
76SBnadway

101 Cotu1e Dr.
1! Riverview Dr. ·
1301 Pnel St.

'4

N

•Aocrflng &amp;Gutllrl
•VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
. •Pallo &amp; Porch Dlckl ,
FrHEIIimNI
V.C. YOUNG Ill

1·740..742·2803 or
. 1-74CJ.446.3822

Hon•

8flllne 1at WHII
JEFF STETHEM
In 14•v
BISSELL BUILDERS,
PHONE: (7&lt;10) 185-4218
'lllelday - No Tap
INC.
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUAEKANET.COII
Wedllesday - Mea's Ltigue
New Homes • Vi!IYI
. FREE ESTIMATES
lbunday -Mixed Leape
Siding •New Garages ·
_38712 - 7rJI P.l.
• Replacement Windows ; .__.:;:::::......,.=z..:;:ONo::.::&gt;414=:"':..-.1 lltrtlit1

HILL'S
:sELF STORAGE

Ewing Residence
·300 4th St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

29870 Beahan Road
:Racine, Ohio 45n1

n.,

.740.949·2217

· • Room AddHions
• Roofing

.." Slzte 5' X 10'
, to 10' x .30'

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

FREE ESTIMATES

81'4-992-7543

_. ....

. ..

(No Sunday Calls)

-- -

'

Equipment Parts.
Factory Authorized
Caoe-IH Parto
-Dealers.

Sidewalks, Patio•
Parking Lots

25yrs experience
Free Estimates •
740-742-8608

1000 St. Rl. ·7 Soulh
Coolvii'!2,H 45723

:

HOWARD
:EXCAVATING CO.

Buy, S•l!• Train or Boord
~10 Alclng IMIOn1

..... Hollow
F.._
74(1.698 3290

II

Br.!IJoaer &amp; ·Backlwe

Sen&gt;ic••

;Houae &amp; Trailer Siieo

'

;

I

Tilt following Nil 111111
Jlllultld In lilt County of

lhllll, In lilt • - of Ohio,
on ,h TOWI'IIhlp of 1111111,
lllld banded 1nd "-rlllld ·

II foHGLbl:

9033

60

Don't Need A BitJ OM
CaU A UnLI OM

DRIVEWAY STONE
I

i
'

Landscape Material,_
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

'

'
'

- ·

YELLOW FLAG

(304)675·2085.

YfiRD SfiLE

Lost riiCibOne ooonnound. orange
collar. ·orunt•, Forest Aun Ad . vi·
clnlly, 74().949-2758.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
April 30th-May. lst .

Lost : Small Do g. w ear ing Red
Collar with a Bell on It Needs his

Regilter Now $5.00-Pick up Flag
nfrlrmtatlon

medlcatlon. (304)675-6351 .

992.:.4197 ·

Public Notice
beginning, being 111 'ofiiiii'
No. Nine (8)and Ten (10) . .
racordad In ptet or
Mlrtlnlburg.
Rlltrenoa Dftd! Volume
313, Pege 158, llelgl
County Recorcle.
Auditor'• Parae! Not.: 1300403.000 lnci1M0404.000
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
35281 O.Jtttr Road, Dtxttr,
Ohio 457211
REAL ESTATE APPRAJIEO
AT: $5,000.00. The real
. . - cannot be told lor
1•11 thMt twa-thlrda the
epprallld value.
TERMS OF SALE:
10%·
down dey of ula, bell,_
on delivery ot dlld. Sold
lllbject to - n d hall tllll
end ICCIIUad I ttll rill
..-IIXII• ,

Janlll lol. Soultby

Gallipolis
2 Family

~:;. ~~~~·:•Y

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarpS, COnVertible &amp; vinyl tOpS,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat COVers, carpets. 1 etc.

"'

46

30, sat. 18t. misc. OOtning. T

oys,

~~~~,~~~:~··· wnor• .,. su·
3 Family; May lSI . 9-3 , ·11 7
Third ." Clothing: Men's, Women's ,

•8888
40
742
-----•..;.;.,..;...;,;;;;...;;~;;.;;,---...o-~l
..

Toys.
~

·

Families; F'iday April 30lh, Sat·

uraay May 1st. 9·1 Butaville

TownMuu. Co rner Johnson
Ridge &amp; AddisOn Plkt 1 House·
hold, Linens. Clothes , Ch ll dren
And Adults1 Some Treasures For
EYeryonel

AIJ, Ylrd SaiH Mull

.p~:::rn::~:·

thl dey before U. •d
II to run. Sunday

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS ·.

Pomeroy, OH

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

P•~~=oo

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

$300.00 Ccivel'llll.
$500.00 Stlrbum

.VINYL REPLACEMENT WIN DOWS AT

Longbouom, Ohio
(740) 985-3677

Howard L. Wrltesel

. ROOFING
NEW·IEPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Marty's

......,
Power
Homes, Decka
&amp; Mobile Homes

ltdltloo · 2:00p.m.
Frldoy. l!onday ed ~lo n
· 10:00 ..... Satui!IIY.

AP.ril 301h, May· 1st. Stale Route
. 218. 1 Mile Above Mercerville.
~arold Davis Residence. .
Big 3 Family: Saturday 511 Sl. 1O·
6 : Su.nday 5/2nd , Noon -IS ; Mon·
day 5t3rd , 10·6. 1722 Chatham

FACI'ORY DIRECT PRI CES

.------_.;..--i· •'

' We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
lragranceslll
· •Birdhouses • Bear ·
• Wreaths • Refills

MJIIE COUNTRY ,,
CANDlE SHOP"

~

Frldly 1M
Set 11).4

Rt. 124 Mlneravlllt, Oh

Unda's Painting
'Illkc the pain out
of painting, and le.t
me do It for you.
INTERIOR

Before 6 pm leave
massage. After 6 pm

740·985-41Bo
. F/'86 Estimates

8112-48511

Jade's Roo . 111
&amp; Coastructlon
Rooting • Repalra .

eCoatlnga •
Siding• • Painting

• DrYwall&amp;
•Plumbing

Palpting,'Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
I 5 Yn. E"pe.Wnc•

~oaeph Jacks

742·1701

740·992•2061

Free Estimates

·e· _M ile Yellow Flag Yard Sate ,
Pomeroy-Middleport , Aprl 1 30,
· May 1. Register now $5 .00. PiCk
up !lag. For m.ore Information eatt
3 family, Saturday, May 1st. Ro derick Grimm's residence , 838

!!roadway, Raci,.., 011 ..
Advance. O..dtl,..: 1:OOpm tho
diY. b efo re t h• ed 11 to run,
Sundl y l Mondl1 edltlon-

y,

Yerd eill- April 30 I Mey 1,
Dale Ellia ruidence on Titus Ad
S,.,..l boY• cloJhe.. mltc. ll•mt.
....... 9-5.
April 30 · May 1, 474 Sycamore
Street, Midd:lepOI't, Ohio. 9-5.
Yard Salt· Sherry O'Brien resi dence . Adams Ad ., Lellrt. Friday,
April 30 and Salurdly, May 1.
Large selection of ·clothing, baby
accenorle&amp;, household Items,
·etc. C.II7&gt;W-247-&gt;1024.

Everylhing. Yard Sale, Friday 30th

Frid!IY.
Saturday..
Sun~ay,
Beanlu . knick kniCk&amp;, shelves :
te mps. 4 .wheeler, 4.5 miles past,
Hanisonvillo, on 143.
Garage/ yard 881.. saturday. 5111
99. 8:00·4:00. Top of Chester Hlll'
oo SR 2-48. Wreaths, swags, prom
dresses. Oodge uuck rims. ro ok·
tng eMir, clolhe&amp;, mac.
Large yard sale· Apr il 30 and
May 1. 1Oam-5pm. Lillian Weese
residen ce , Oak Grove Ad ,
Racine . Beanie bablll, exercise
eQuipment, stove, doors, lots ol

nk:a clothing.

RUTLAND, OH.
· AMIRICAN
LIGION
lEECH GROVE
lOAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Awnue.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Umntone • Gravel

Dirt · Sand

1-

985 4422

Cheater, Ohio

WJOS
TV27

Loccll
Television
For Free
Program G uide

Call992-2727

Spring rummag1 aale· Heath
Melhodlst Church , 3"9 S Third
Avenue , ~iddieport. Ap ri l 30th ·
May 1st. 9am-3pm.
Three family, B8shen Rd ., two

mlleo

oH

l

Georges Creek Road From S.R. 7
·N, Home lnlerior, H~h Chair, Are·
place. Dresser. Boys CIOthel!l .c-6,
· Jury Clblnal. Bll&lt;es. Toys. Misc.

SR 124. -

· Friday &amp;

Salun18y, 1(H.

·

Vard sale- SR' 681 Hll ol Darwin.
Saturday, Sunday &amp; M onday.
LOok 10l Signs.

Community Yard Sate: Friday •130
&amp; Saturday 5/ 1, :1110 Milt Oul

-

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

lo15 ol ml&amp;c.

AprN 30 • !loy 1,:i,~ th. 8:30Am TN
5:30Pm . 62 ~nn Orlve . Hospita l
Bed. Mtsc:enaneous.

top nn.. 1..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __,
Uc. I Q0.50 ,n..,., ·

CANDLE- MAKERS

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Mov ing sale and 4 family yard
&amp;a le · April 30 &amp; May 1. Bam·
5pm . State Route 124 , one mile
from Southern High School, Curl·
man
residence .
FuJniture ,
clothes. llshlng eQuipment, Chris!·
mas decorallons, duck clorhes.
bird houses. housel'lold Item s.

BoPikt.lnAdvoncO.

KEITH MYERS

Progrea~v~

Fridey ·Satt.&lt;dayJ ·

May 1-·2, 48379 Scout Camp Rd.,
4 Family: 4130th; 5f1at, 2nd , 9·5 , . Chesler. OI,S:hel , children 's
clothes. video !SPII and more.
1264 G~orge8 Creek. 1 114 Mile
Aaln cance ls.
From Route 7

AT 1:30 P.M.
Mlln St.,

,
' ·

~;00 .

Bonom , OH 45743.

eurnon

Soy's , Baby. Ma1ernityl Bike ,

REMOVAL
JNSUUiiOWNER

10

11\ru May 41h.'6152ll 6R 124, L0/'9 ;

3 Family BaCk Ya •o Salol Frloay

Mon. Frl8:30 •. 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

·FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, POMEROY .·
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33 .
6 MILES NORTH_ OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

3TC

lol~~"g~~~::tJ:P

v••• .s.,., st . R• z

crown Ctlj. Monda'/ 1111 '"'"""'

Rutland, Ohio

992· 455
Thuradaya

30, to 511 .

Dave Stout rnld1nc:e, ·206S W.
College Rd .. 5'118Cuot. Mly IS&lt;.

&amp; VIcinity

I&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

(4) 22. :zt (5) •

Public Notice

Yard Sale

70

Pf'Ql!HE: 2:00p.m.

TREE AND STUMP

enol

t :OOpm FLost' Hearing Ald. Betwe8n Hen ..
deraon &amp; Ka.Rauga, $100 Reward,

.up to 8 ton

SERVICE

·Saturday Only Several Family
Yard Sale : 9·'5, ~015 Second ·
Avenue , Someth ing For Every-

All V1rd S.ltl Uuet Be Paid In

Found: pair of gla&amp;Ses, Cole
Stree t, Midd lepo rt Vicin ity, call
740-992-58 58.
.

Light Hauling

.MYERS TREE

'

7.W.992·4197.

2266.

· Compost

740-992-3470

Lo.st and Found

Found· genll e Aottwell•r. Bow·
man's Run &amp; Morning Star Rd., will
give to good nome. 740 ·949 ·

j

Tilt falloWing deecrlbad · .
l'lill Illite tltulltd In
DMStON
M1rttnebtlrg, 1nd comCOURTHOUSE
illlflalng at lilt lf!Utlt IIIII
POMEROY, OHIO 45788
- o f Lot No. 1 lnd run7441-N2-2t114
.
ning th'" hundred and
Floadpleln Vertance Bolrd'
......,. 1111 to I pi- of will mill M1y 41 1HII· It
IMOinnlng, running Will 2:00 pm In thl Meige
ninety lut; tlllnae Iouth County Commtealonere
OM hundl'ld end tin 1111; omce.
!hence lilt ninety IHt; Ed-rd Werry,
lhtnal Norlll OM hundfld
Floodplain Maneger
lnd ten ,... to lilt pi- ol . (4) 28 (5) 3 2TC .

''

7

'
Limestone,
I
' Gravel, Sand, I
•
'
' ' Top·Soli, Fill Dirt ''
I

Ulililifr•

• NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of 111 Order of
1111 le•ued out of the
Common P'"• Court . ot
Mllge County, Ohio, In !Ill
of lilt ibne NatloNJI ·
· ~k, Plelntlft, ve. Uncle
lleiVtr eka Undlt D. liM-,
tt_.el., Delendllnta, upon, a
J~t!gement tht~ln ren·
tllrM, being Celt No. llfl.
·cv.. In ulcl Court, I will
on... tor .... It lilt front
door of lilt Courthaall In
Pomeroy, Uelge County,
Ol)lo, 011 lilt 21111 .. dey of'
MQ, 1..., at 10:00 1.m., lilt
loiiOwlnil Iandi lnd t rMnll, loaated II 352e1
DMttr Road, Dexter, Ohio
41121. A complete ltQtl
CINorlptlon ol . the real
llitatllt .. lol. .:

'

(Ume StoneLowRittl) ,

'

: · Land Clearing &amp;
:•
Grading
Sepllc S;rtlerru &amp;
'

FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

..

'

'

WICKS
'.
HAULING

-HORSES
..

F
"

. Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

3111/89 TFN

'

'' 748111...1
'
!

·

Joe N. Seyre
140·742·2138

All Makes Tractor &amp;

·(!uality Driveway•,

I •l%11
&amp;uUew

•NewHomea.
•Garage•
•Complete

Hauling
.Limestone &amp;Gravel
' Rnsonable Rates
'

·'

DIPOYIII
tDNIIICTIDN ' . PUft

"Symmes Creek"
Friday, April 30th
9:30
- 1 am .

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

~.;;;..:;;;;.;.;;.:~;;;;~....1,, .

. ·coNCRETE

PrA,.An,t!• Live Music by · ·

SAYRE
TRUCKING

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAI.

Houre
7:00AM · .8 PM

Giveaway
Female, e to 8 monlhs

Pup pies: Pa rt Border Collie, ~rl
Auatrallan Shepherd, 740·388·

7'73-S:SOO ·

*"' drt•ew•,a

Saturday May 1 &amp;I , 9-4 , .A t The
Corner Of Route 160, BucK Ridge.SOrnet!llng For E..,yonel

Month Old. 7.W.2~253.

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

lqutpm•rf CIIMttl&amp; Dts:: urrd

Saturday and Sunday, 5th House
~t . 588, Lots

past Teus Ad . On
o1 Eve&lt;Yihlng. 9-5

Kittens! 1 Solid Grey Male, 1
Orange A Black Ca lica, Two 5

Muon Bowlin&amp;

Tructci-IIIC!or
Trelln-holitM-IIIOIJIIt

Brand C~lh&lt;ng, Toys, Misc.

.after 6pm.

·· Pomeroy, Ohto
22 1... Local

MOillE
POWER WISH

Longaberger Basketa , Cralls ,
Home ·Interior, Furn iture , Name

State Rou!l 554 At Eno, East ot
Porter. Morgan's Center Youth 41

Chrisll 0 1 Jooh ' a1 7&gt;10·992·5035

1824215 .

TRI~AATI

:ll!lii TfN

GARAGE SALE

132 Butternut'Ave.
141 Buttemat Ave,
219·Mulberry Ave.

•Room lddltlon1 &amp; Rtrncxltltng

•New GlrlgH
.
•EIICtrlclll Plumbing

. ............. '" L-"': .....

c~ ..... Sotnetni/'9 "" Everyone
Saturday 1St. 9:oo-.c :oo, Ra tn or
Sn tne. 5-41 RouSh Lane. Chestl lre ,

Thursday, Fnday 9:00-? Old Post
1 Collie,
OH!c;t S.R. 160 In Vinton. lots Of
old. To Country Homes Only!
Baby Clo1hes (Twin Boys) Swings,
Great Olsposltl on! (740'1 ·256 · . Carriers, Walkers, Stroller&amp;, Girls
9123,
ClOthes Size 10· 14, Ladles L·XL
. Dishes. Home 1nterl0r, Beanle Ba4 German Shepherd Puppies, ·btes. Toy&amp; , LOIS Of MIIC. Items ,
~ Aia o . Long Haired Oasf10und,
Rain CafiCIIs.
7-'0·441..0118.
Truck Cap. Wa sher &amp; Dryer, An·
Adorable Puppies. Mixed Breed,
tlque Dining Roo m Suite . Gas
Will Be Medium SiZed. To Good
Range. Two Gun Cabi0411S, Tools.
Hornet 740.446-4412.
Single Sewing Machine In ·Cabl·
net, New &amp; Used Camtte Tapes
Electric . wash ing machine: 1wo
&amp; VCR'Tapes . Glassware. Nick
wire pet cages , pet carrler ; 740Nats lots ot Mis¢111., 15-49 Addi·
992-m 1.
son Pike, 10:00Am-5:00Pm, A'l·
day And Saturday.
Free Puppies: 1f2 Cocker Spari·
lei, Raccoon Road , After 3 P.M.
Wednesday . Thursday. Friday.
74().441.Q417 .
8:30-5 :00 , 6479 Sl.ate Route 160,
Free puppies to a good home ,
Tools. Books. GLJ'I, Lots Of ~li&amp;d
Golden Retriever/Cocke r Spaniel
Yard Sat! : 7-40 Fourth ~ve . 9:00
miM, ready to g ive away. Call

YOUII'S
CARPENTER HRYICE

Care

tt:l-1776 . ..

April 30th - May 1
9:00a.m. • 3:00 p.m.

US Kerr St.
142 Maiq St.
326 Main St.
7421/l Main St.
132 Mala St.
·ISO Maia St.

9.()0.5:30.

40 .

SYRACUS E .

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
Parish Hall ~222 Jackson Ave.

Pomeroy

Quality 'ClOth ing ano housenoto
hems . St .OO bag sate every
.Thursday. Monday·_thr u Saturday

CJ~· ~ft;J~~~~~~~~

l.arrJ''• Lawa

Public Notice

290 No; 2nd
231 So. 2nd.
110 So. 2nd
IS So.J~.
349So. Jrd.

T&gt;W-592·1842

~

John Dean ; Owner

HUIIARD'J
IIIIIIIIIOUSI

Rummage Sale

Middle110rt

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stii'T'ISon, Athens

fill

Hanging Bas kets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
S5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
we.Honor Golden
Buckeye Cart!
•
. Open
,9,5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

APRIL 30TH &amp; MAY IST.-~'"7'ALL DAY

100 Raee St.
2S7 Main St.
241 Lincoln St.
377 Lincoln St.
4 Peach Cirde
91li Gen Hartinger .
738 Pearl St. '
391Ath St.
31S Beech St.
4S7 Beech'St.-

2835; Kevin Ouo&amp;1,(304)&amp;75-!5'15.

Spriryr Se&lt;UO!I ,
Complete Une Of ·
VBQelllble &amp; Bedding Plants
All Fl8ta $6.50

' 1740) t92·JIJI

lSI No. 2nd.
2Sl No. lad

Kirkland Memorial Gard vns. Lot!J ,
Memor ials, Mem or 11 Aeslora ·
lion . Call: Lynn Durst. (305 )675·
2465; Mike Plcke s .f30")675·

NOVJ Open For

(5) I 3TC

LAG YABD SALE

30 Announcements

POMIIOY IIACIIIIIIIIIOP
250 COIIIOI ST.
POMIIOY, 01110 45769 .
PIOIII-740-tt2•240t 01 ,OWII·JI!III

•••

MILE YELLOW

, BOO· ROMANCE, eX1enslon 9681 :

.Furniture , Bath Fixtures , Home
Interior. Carpet Cluner , Slarr
Ste~r. MUCh Morel ·
Sat . 1&amp;1: 9.5. At 337 Roush Laf'\8 .
Chesh ire. Baby uems, Furn iture ,

Oft Sto(e Wide, Wilton Cake Sup·
plie&amp;, Mercken&amp; Choco late, 0 J i
Cratt Shop . 2390 ·JackSon Pllte .

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, 'AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRS .
1
t iLL OF CAS llfl P&amp;U AN ACA IDENTIFIED
CAP ' " ' THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE CIVEN AWAY AT THE .
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A IAVIIIG
Of " 10 $100.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA. DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WILL
tND JUNE 21, 1999.

.

May 1st, 1099, 8-7 '9&amp;3 S.A ,U1 ,

Personilla

Sian D;aUng Tonlght1 Have tu n'
playing tne Onlo Dating Game. 1·

William.Sa&amp;anek, .
(7 4.0) 592-5025 Atbene, O:hio

.JUft IN Toot I"'R aPIUNG UPAIU
ACA CAS, INC. IS OFFERING A SPICIAl ON OUR
c;YLINDER PACKAGES

~

··s"

005

!&gt;'( 9·1

Going Out Of Suaineu Sale: 30'Y.

240

Times
Presents Live Music by
"Amixlt
Saturday, May 1st
9pm-1am

latgt 3 Family: 11 2•1 SlJie AO·
... 7 South, Ffldoy ol/30, SatU&lt;day

ANNOUNCEMENTS

For lnfonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

.
'":Complete Auto Service-

speech.wav"

Public Notice

5~~.

lrtsidl Sale Evergreen Ad . Otf
State AI. 1 eo. Lots or nama.
Cheool E~ ..... gol

debtor of financial oblisation• and arrange a fair
distribution of aooeiJ, Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for hii or her perlonal
uoe . Thio may include a ear, a house, clothes, and
houoehold goods. ·

Fonner-"Velver Hammer"

EDITOR'S NOTE - Samples
o f speech-reversed sentences are
available on the Internet by visiting
ftp://cyboscine.etho.caltech .edu/p
ub/saberi · and selecting. " Saberi~

To offer story suggestions, report late~
breaking news and offer news tips

11 1t4 S.R.

Rain /Shlot, 9-1

Dave's Garage

The Sentinel·News Hotline

hospital misdiagnoses 20 cancer patients

Sal~:

Aprtr 30th, t.tay 111, 3rd, &amp; 4th,

.

Shock, anger' -

The Dally Sentinel e Page 9

• Middleport, ~hi(_)_

T.huraday, Aprll 29, 1999

Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Femllj Otroge SoleiFrl.' 1 Sat.
.April 30th/May I st, 8·6PM. Route

117, Follow .Signs.

Friday And Saturday 8-5 : 4pr ll
30th , May 1&amp;1, located In Spring · 3Famuv Yard Sale . Fr iday.30th/
Valley; 101 Buhl ·Morton Road , . Saturday, hi , 8:30 -3 :307 Cross
rairroad 11 Bealt Sohoo l, 2nd
HouM On HIM l!ei1lnd Foodlancl.

iano on left.

Friday April 30, Sat . May 1. 8
milts South of Galllpoll&amp;; S1ate
Routt 7 Toddlers clothea; size 18
F004'1thl to 3T
Friday, SatUrday, 9 : evenlng, 26
Chillicothe Road . ,Gall ipolis.
Houstf101d Items, Clothing. Mls·

c:allaneoua.

·

~rl .

Sat Sun., 8 Miles on Route 2

Noflh. Savortt Ani-.
Friday buldi C3JIIipolls Ferry
Poi! Office , 9AM·? Girls &amp; Boys

Ciot!llng, Toys. Stroller, etc.
Friday/ April 30. Saturday/May 1,

10AM-6PM. Ou1 8act&lt; ol 2224 Mt

Hill &amp; Neal 4/30 6/ 1199 B To 4
SUite Route 850.
·
'
Home · Interior , Toys , Clothing.
Prom Drtssu, Misc . 9·4 , May
111 II Rain May 8th, .Adrian Avt·
nue, orr Fourth Awnu• ·CioH To ·

GOC.

•

Huge ~ Fomlly Sale; 4129 ··tl/111,
9-6 , 111 DriYe On Right 011 Routt
7 On &amp;IIden Road , Numerous

vernon Aven ue. lots &amp; L.ots ot
Items.
· Ntce Yard S.Je:· Aoueh StrMt In
Maao n, W\1. Sat/May 1st. Cloth·
tng, Toya, Houteholct, Mlscella,

,_.-And Mont
Stt· May 1, New H1ven BloCk '
Sate. t07 HazlewOOd Dr. Men
SpeCIII

Sttectloft

Tools·Qid

1.

P~enu· Two Utility Tralltrt. Golf ·

111tnl..

.CIIbl, MisCOIIaMOO&amp;.

'

Huge Yard Salt: 4:5 mile• froiT) ·
town oown Routt 7 on light Baby
boys clothes, 0-1 2 monthl, girls
S·611. clothes . All Brand names
Satellite Dish. Toys , and more

Saturday, May 1, 7AM·? 2~611
lincoln Avenue , Pt. Pleasant.

1

tO

ched&lt; cull Friday Apr" 30, 10 Mil
1sl

)

,

F'"niture, C!Oll1el, C.D.'I.
Yard Sa le At New Haven , 30th ·

April; 111 May, 9-5PM. 1000&amp;5th :
. St. It questions c1H (30-4)882· ,

3778.

.

�..
P~~ge10

• The Dally Sentinel

PHILLIP

ALDER

~

Bill Moodlapaugh Auct ioneering.
• .Complete Auctk&gt;nttrlng Servlc: 11. eanalgnment aucllon- Mill
• Str..t, Middleport, Th'undays.

• Ohio Lletnlt 17893. 740·989-

• 2823.
:
•
•
•

Rick PNrton Auction Company,
tull time auctlonur, e6mptete
auction
urvlce. Licensed
He,Ohio &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

· 773-5785 a.. -n3-eoo7 .

, AIVEf181DE AUCTION BARN

E~Jtry

Saturday Night 7 P.M.,
CIQMl City, 7~2-89
• Wedemeyer's Auction S~rv lce ,
Gallpollo, Ohio 7~379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

AbiOIUII Top Dollar. All U.S. Sliver ~nd Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds. Antique ;Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre· 1930 U.S. Curren cy,
Sterling , Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1!51 Second

· A - Gaillpoia, 74()-446.2842.
Ant iques, top prices paid, RiverIne Antlquee , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 7-40-992·
2526.
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith Buic~ Pontiac, 1900 East·
a Avenue, Galilpols.
o Sell Your Stuff? Call Alv·
er a Auction And Lei Us Sell U
For 'fou, 7~256-11989 .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted ·

$$$Make Money!$$$ Work. At
Home - Assemble Products .
Easy Work, Excellent Pay. Free
Details! Send S.A .S.E To: Nat'l
Homeowrker's Association, P.O.
Box 875, Ripll\f, WV 25271 .

Poatll Joba to $18 .35/Hr. Inc.
Benefits, .No Experience . For

"'PP· W

Exam lnfor., Call 1-80()..

Recreat ion Cirector: Full Time.
High achOoi degree or equlval·
ent. As50C:Jate OegrM preferred.
Certillcatton In accordance with
regulatory agencies governi ng
center..- Comprehens ive benet lis
package which lncludea -401 (k).
Point Pleasant Center, State Ro·
ute 62, Route ~, eo~ 326, Point
Pleasant, wv 25550. A Genesis
Eldercare Nolwl)rl&lt;. EOE.

carrter.
Class B OTR:
Team Straight Truck, Late Model
Frelghtllnars Wllh Sleepers. Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements,
800 Mile Radius, Home Cellver~.

Bolli Positions:
Atleast 25 'ftlars Old
Atleast2 Years Experience

GoodMVA
Wtotoly Pay
.
Health ln&amp;urance Available
~Well Will\ The

Pul&gt;lc

For More IJ'Iformatlon Call 800-

437-8764, Hrs. 8;30 A.M. ·5 P.M.
Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As·
aemble Products at Home, Call
Toll Free. 1-800-467·5566 Ext
12170

EQUIPMENT

OPERATOR

Trencher Experience Helpful,

740-532-2595.
Gallla Meigs Community Action
Has Uaed Office Equipment For
~ale . The List Of Items Is Available At The Main Office tn
Chelhlre , Ohio. Anyone Interest·
ed In Bidding On This Equipment
May Pick Up A List Curing The
Hours 01 8:00 A.M. And 4:30
P.M., Monday Through Friday.
For Further Information Call 740·

387-7341.

General Olflce !Sales . hperl·
enced Pre_lerrad Fuii·TirMe, lm·
mediate Opening: Apply· Lifestyle
Fu'rnllure, 856 Third Avenue, Gal·
llpolls. 1o-2. No Phone Cans
jewelry Sales Retail Sates and
Computer Exp-erience Required .
AcquisitiOns Fine Jewelry, 151
Second Ave . Gallipolis . Apply
Mofldav t!lru Friday.
Local Trucking Company Seeking .
Qualified True~ Crivers. Good
·Ply And Benefits.·Send Res·ume

3800.

White Glove-.parl time help, 19·
20 hours week, $8.00 pe[ hour.
7~742 - 2579 .

Wild life Job&amp; to $21 .60/Hr. tnc .
Benefits. Game Wardens, Secur·
lty, Maintenanc, , Park Rangers.
No EKp. Needed . For App. And
Exam Into Call 1·800·813·3585,
Ext 8.827 8A.f.4-9PM. 7 ,D'ays fda

Inc.

Need

help

EXTRA INCOME HOWl
Envalopo Stuffing ••• 1600·$800
Mry--

-

Ot!llll: SASE 10
lnllmattonallnc. ,

t:mCOnlytollndAva.

llrooldyn, -

304-875·1957.

'

.

Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Of Handicapped, 740-44 t-t 538.
·
Interior &amp; exterior painting, tawn
service, haul trash, junk, demolion, house, barn, shed, 591·9817.
Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Experienced, References, Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate ,

740-388-804 t.

Now liking appllcallona for Orlvett at Domtno•a Pizza, Gaplpolla

5081 ,

.

Need Your Lawn Mowed? Call
Erin lor the lowest prices In townl
Call Now, Umltad Openings.

17401245-9454.

3 Bedroom Home, 2906 Meadowbrook Ortve . Call {30.)675--4380,
after -4PM

3 bedroom, large living room, 2
car garage, on 20 acres, Herman

Ad., Gallipolis. 175,000, 740·84351 59.

S&amp;S Lawn Cant, Commercial &amp;
ResldentiBI. Free Estimates! 74-0-

441-0318.

.

Will do babyslttlng In my home

In Mason. WV. (304)173-6081.
FINANCIAL

210

Bu1lne1i
Opportunity

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

w.

EXCELLENT CONDITION: 2

For Sale By Owner: 38R, 1 1I
2BA.. large family room &amp; office,
upstairs totally remodiled, new
roof, guttering, water aoftner &amp;
lots of extras. 2912 Annlalon
Crlva, Pl. Plea&amp;ant, (304)675·
2608 . Leave Message on Ma·

chiM.

"

For Sale By Owner: 48R, 3000
Square Foot House. 4 Car Garage, 5 .&amp;:cres, Very Secluded.

$199,999 (8031368-9438.

HOME FOR SALE
WALNUT PLACE
SUBDIVISION,
SYRiiC\ISE, OHIO
New 1200 square foot entl'0' efficient. Three bedroom, two tull
baths, two car .garage, river view,
dock nearby. Ready nowi 1•0·

992-7953, 740·992·5404 01 700-

.Price Reduced, 1988, Skyline,
trlc, 2BR, Shingle Roof. Excel·

lent Condttlon. l304!e75-7005.
1 Plus Acre, 2 Bdm'l. Tl'aller, WaU
&amp; C. Water, 2 Stor B. $20,500.00
Applegrove, w. Va. 30•~!5 76·
2557 Make Appl.
Oakwood Homtl earbouravllle,
WV. $499 Cown Single Wide ,
$999 Down Double Wide. 304·

Farm~ for Sale

388-ll504.

50 Acnl Farm, 3 Bedroom House,
2 full Baths, 3211. X 60ft. Barn,
Black Top Driveway: Swimming

Pool ·, Wao $20!,000.00 Now
$175,000.0011740) 387-oi!19

340 · l[lullneea and

.

Three bedroom, halt ballmtnt

t-888-582-3345

· PERTLY:Savea on repainting Indefinitely. we ust the exclusive
Von 'Schrader V53 Power Wall·

Cleaning Syllom. Prottela paint,

homo, country -ng In Pomeroy,
new~ romodllld,
7~992-noe.

320

Uklng $37.500,

·

14•70 3 8tdrOOI'no, t Bath, Vlrtyt
Siding, Shingle Root, Thorrnopono
Windows And Wood Burning

Flroptaee. ~oa.,.d Homo. Ontv
$245.00 Per Month. CALL t-8008811-1763:
18x80 Vinyl Shingle, Asaume
loin, HIOQ-383 8M2.

11172 ACADEMY
t 2•80 3 Btdroorno, 1 Bath, Nice
Shape, Includes Dtii!Jtry OnlY

$2,99!.00 CALL t-740-8211-901 9.
1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

bill homo, 740-992-11039.

mo·

REAL ESTATE

1973 Ramada t2x80 Mobllt
Home, ·2 Bldrooma, Cenval Atr,
Aango Top, 0..0 And Ratrlgorator, Good Condition, Call' Afltr
6:00 P.M. For Appotntman•, 740245-11382.

Homes for Sale

1988 14X70 2BA, tBA Clayton.
Excellen1 Condition. (304)675!108 or (304)578-2101 .

leave• glass, retards ctlalking.
Anti·MIIdew, n~ odor, sanlllzea.
Free tallmatet. Call Clearly

Cltan 111304)87~.

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue. 3BR
1 1/2BA.. Family Room, Garage,

580

P.M, 740-

Frultl &amp;
Vegetables

5 HP Go·CIIrt, $~50 , OBO 740·
258-8189.

MITABOLIIM

Sreakthroughlll Lose t 0·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fa.,l
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
OOCtor Reoomrnendld. Free 81mptas Cell 740-44 t. t982.
Baby Btd, Drtlllng Table,
Stroller, Hlgl'tChalr, and Cer Seat.

1304je75-2508.
ESTATES, 52 Weatwood Drive

CQOLQQWH
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace. 3 Ton Installed

$1,500; 2 1/2 Ton $f,350: 2 Ton
St ,260; The AI&gt;OYe tncludts Nor-

mallnstatlatton . If You Oon't CBI/
Ill WI Both LoHI 740 448 8308,
Of 1-800-291-qo98.

610 Farm. Equipment
· Alllet Chotmor, GoOd Condlllonl
7~245-9565 .
.
Ferguson 30 tractor for sale, call
740-6137-3262. '
Ford Dyna Balance MoWinG Ma·
Chine, Series 515 1 Foot Cut;
Massie Ferguson Model 12

7930.

10 1f2 Acres, 3BR, C.A., 2BA,

4.20 Acres A.pprox. 4 mllu North
of Pt.Pieasant, on Route 12.
Good building site, ecceaa to
city water, 2 tenths mile .off main
h~hwa)'. $25,000

(304je75-5064.

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage I
Lake VIew, Gallla County,
$32,000 More Acreage Available,
7~388-8878 .

.

Apple Grove Memorial Garden '•
now offering ' limited ·lime ape·
cial on Cemetlry Lots, rrom April

t, 1989, to July t, 1999. lluv 3

Cell After 4:30Pm. 740-448-1'585.

Pienta~

1740)·379-2370

830

Llvaatocik

25th Annual Jackson County
Polled Hereford Sale. 1111 Cows
with Calves, 13 Heifers, 5 Bulls;
Jackson County Livestock Mar·
ket, Falrplaln, wv, Saturda~.

BEAUTIFUL

$8,750. 5% Down Land Conttaet
Now Available. Call For Free
Mapo. t-800-213-8385 . .

360

Real Estate

(304je75-5733.
Furnished Upstelrs 2 Rooma &amp;

Bath, Cloan, Ro1eronceo: l Do·
poon Aequlrod, Utllltlll Paid, 740446-1519.

992-5084. Equal Houotng Opportunlllas.
.
.

Except Electric. GaiUpolla Ferry
Area. 1250 month + Deposit.

RENTALS

Houses for Rent

7~448-088!,

~M .

Aner 5

New Haven 2Bedroom Home,
Garage. River Frontage. references, Depot II,, &amp; Lease. (ao.l)9~·

7082.

Clean, Ettlcient, 2BR . Referenc·

ao, Dopooll, No Poto. (304)875!1112..
.
Nloe Small 2 Btdr~om, 5 Room
House, Near Centerville fThurman, Gatlla Schools, County Wa·
ter Included, Plant A Gardtp,
1350/Mo., Plua Oeposlt •.No ln-

oktl _ , 740-882-9032.

Lawn Mower: Btlggo And 'Strallon
.Motor, Servlctd, Ready To Go,

740-245-57115.
Now Irregular kldo laona &amp; shorts,
2 for $5.00. Slo l'egg)l, 132 But·
lornut,

Moving. New Queen Slzo
4 Piece While Wicker Bedroom

Sot $800.00 740-448-3864.

PRIMEITAR
Frot -Spacial

Ntwtv · Remodolod 1 9R Apt.
Prime Downtown Ollllpolls Loca·
tlon. No .Poll. $300. + Utllltloo.
Reference Required. 740·4U·

0008.

North 3rd Avo., Middleport, 2
bedroom,. untuf!lllhtd aparlmlnt,
7~0-992-

Now Taking Appllettlono- 35

Wast a Bedroom TownhouH·
Apartmenta, tncludea Water
Sow~

l'ornori!V. Ohio.

Nordic Track L~ Sh1per, New
~I $200, 740-379-2218.

1304!e78-t371/e75-3230.

0185. .

wo Pay Coon. 1·800-213·8385,
Anthorty lMd Co.

JET
AERATION MOIOAS
Aepalrod, Now &amp; Aobultt In Stock.
Cei Ron Evans. t·800-:z·9528.

Traoh, $315/Mo., 740·

Free lnatallallon, 3 month"- tree

fl"'Prnlnil, dan 888·265-21 23.
PltO. LI,IUPPLY

We Are Profeutonat h')atallatlon

And Sarvtca Supptv. Wo Soil
Wholoaalt To Tho Public. Wo
Stock Janltrot Heating And Cool-

Ing ~quipment 1 cuct Y#Ofk, Reg~
IStlfl, And Related Materials For
You To l[lltatl Your Own Or We
Can Furntlh A Lilt Of Doatara To
lnotall For Vou. It Vou Don't Call
Us, We Both Lolli 1553 Jackson

Plko, 700·448·8308, 800·291·

For Rent: 14x70 Mobile Home-3

Badroom, t 112 Balho, Front
Porch, 7 milts out ot llmlla' on

SR7, Privata S.ltlng, $300./molllh
pluo utlllllat. $200 Depoon, Appli1990 Aovat Covo, toX74, cations Avallblo ot1403 ·Etalorn
2Bath&amp;, Skyllghtl In l&lt;ltchan. II· . Avo. Galllpollo. Call: 17401·448·
land Stove, Underpinning &amp;' 4514. 8-5. Ahor 5pm call: (740)·
Porch. $10,000.1304)882-2208.
446-3208

1

l740)·245· 5e72 or 17401 387·
0583

1991 . Chev, Conversion Van ,

Full-Size, Mark 111. Loaded,
92,000mllea , lOoks &amp; runs gre1t1

$8,500, (304je75-2949.

1890 DOdgo Corgo Van $900.00

OBQ, 7~258-1233.

(304je78-1388.
dleporl; one bedroom

t~rnlahed

Ona klrooon AporlmOm tor Rom

In Rio Grandt. Call: 17401·245·
.

9082

Tara Townhoust Aplftmenta,
Very Spacious, 2 /Bedrooms, a

Ti'cybltt Ho!ll AoiD Tiller, Etaetrlc
Start -Ridlni Mower, Gravely
ICommorcllllYf&gt;ol. 80' Cut, Ro·

64o

Hay

&amp; Gralri

Large Squara Ba~ 01 Good Hav
For Sail. 740-379-2838. .

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer ·

TRANSPORTATI (n~

Af\d 24' Ertenskln Ladders. 7-40·

319-3323 Ext. 4020.

Ftooro. CA. 1 112 81111, Fu&amp;v Car·

Twin RiverO T-r - -Uno
appllcallono for 1BR. HUO aub·
oldlzld .,.. lot tldlrl)' tnd lllndlclppld. EOH :!6H78-em.

480 Spaae lor Flat)t
.

·510

HOuNhold
. _!)oocll

Wallrllno Spacial: 314 200 PSI
$21 .85 Por tOO; I' ·200 PSI
137 .oo Per t 00; All Braoo ComP1811ton Fllllnga In SIDck '
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

RecondUitMd
Waolltra, diyin, Rlfttlla, Nof~·

All Steel Bulldlng .Warehouu f

.AKC Whitt Gorman Shaphord
~. $300, 7~205-11213.

3o44&amp;-t293

:!OO&amp;·ca.- A -

Partoorobura. wv 25101

Stove, Rtcllnor I Ttllll, 740446-8742.

~~­
Fulllnt
ol ptta II.Wiill

For Bale: A1condltloned waah·
trl, dryera 1nd retrlgeratprs •

Flah , Blrcta, Pond Supplies.

Thompoono Appliance. 3407
Jadcaon Avanuo, (304!e7~7388.

Sun.t -4PM , Mon .-Sat. t tAM·
8PM. Flth Tank/Pot Shop, 2413
Jaclcaon Avenue/Point Pleaaant.

(304je78-2053.

:

1981 Hartov Low Rktlr, Too Much
To Lilli Excellent Condition! .

He

PEANUTS

Yamaha Blasler 4 wheeler, new
piltOn and tlngs, brakes and rea
buill carl&gt;., $1350, 740-992·2143

It ,500.00 740-048-4938.

,.

1988 Chevy COrsica, automatic,
runs good, good gas mileage, 4

rwwUroo, blue, $1195.
1887 Chryotir Filth Avonuo, V-8

760

Auto.Parte &amp; ·

Acceeaorlea
eve .to~te. 740-205-58n.

'

'

1978 Hondamatlc, ~xcallant 'con­
ditlon, Windshield, Yddll bags In-

d - . rod, $780.

Cel740-702--4510.
·1988 PoFltiac Grand Prix, two
door, lutomatlc, air, very good

condition, t f8,000 mlloo $2000
740-1192-7888. .
'
'

·

Now goo tanks &amp; i&gt;od)' ~arta. D &amp;

R' Auto, Ripley, WV. (3041372·
3833 Orl-600-273-9329.
.

790

Camparl &amp;
Motor Homea

· '

During

WfoiOr, $11 ,1100. (304)571-1

1

SEflVIC ES

810

.

~~"'-~lmjpr=o~V~tl~m~ltl~n~tl:.__
Unconditional llfttime guaranlet.
Local 11ferencea fumrahtd. Ea·
187~. C8lt 24 Hro. (740)

008-ot70, 1·800.287·0!78. A90·
. . Wals&lt;prootlng.
•
.

AppUa~eo· P1r11 And SofYiea: All

~arne Brands Over

25 VIars Ex·

perttnce All Work Guaranteed,

French City Mav1ag , 740·4-(1·

ntl5.

1890 Nlssan Stanz1. Exc.ltent

'

....... ASTRO·GRAPJi

Home

•

C&amp;C General Home Matn· ·
ttnence: Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpontry, doorl, wlndcwo. balho,

. - homo f1PIIr and mora. For
lrM atllmatt csH Cha1 740-11928323.
'

1988, ~. lluna Good, Nlco ·
l•samtnt Weltr
Work Car. 1&amp;8,000 mlloo, v-8 LlvlngttO(I'I
Proofing,
all
bl!ltmtnl
rep1lra
Auto, Air. $1 ,500.13041875-8014,
done, free ••tlmltll, llttllmt
I 990 GEO P~omExcolilnt Condi- auarantH. 1a~ra on job e~rl­
. .
tion Auno Groatt $2,800.00 (740) .-oo. (304-3887.
448-0794
840 E!e9trlcal and .

Shape, ocvt. 5Spoed, 14,000.
I 985 Buick T '!YPo Rogal, 3.SSFI
T•rbo Hvportoch Chip, Digital
Daoh, Cllmatt Control, 1304)875t !n/578-2082.

ITHURSDAY

I

Budget Priced Tranatftlnlen:t
and Engines, AII'JYpH, AcCIII
To Over 10,000 Transmlnlopl,

autom1t1c, runs good no rust ·

$595.

-··

31=-32 M- Oot I

Blu~·

wood

3 rn.-of
company

4 · PlofGPA

6 Thalllnklnil '

faallng
7 Spanl-.dtaM

'"""-

ICharHon

-on·a org.

• llcmcl1
10-COolfed
willlgt"MM

11 IITtlablt
12 Of avarltty
11 DOE'a .

-30-·--

two,Ume .

~~

28TVaclenca

:WPralane

35 Slladt of

clffaaMCe
38 Whan
llltFranc:h
fry '
35TV_,.,
Ted
39 FNII rtponer
40Diacanl
42 AddHionltl

b...-t-+--

&lt;WAgtMd(willl)
41 Shor1 aletp

. 50Ntlhtrlanda

cammur.

52I.Mia.._

aullfx

53 Chemical

tndfng

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•
c...tdy Cipher crr:::.•••
CfMied from quolatiol-. by~ poeop'e, pat hi P"'Mf!!
Etch
l'lthe dptw Mandl fot IAOIIer.. Tcxily'• ct.· N ~ S
art

• up' z p

X Ill P

VYPZFGVO

SVOE

YPZPAA

X'·M P

HZWEIGX

WT

VTTAI . POX

vo

P .0 E

NWGFPXA.'
V 'R· FGP
GWWHPZ
. PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II takes lime to save lime."- Joe Taylor
· "Ti.me Is a circus always packing up and ~Ying away." - Ben Hecht

•

0 L B A R

rI

t

r---::'-7.-:-...,.,---:---, "' .
0
1
X AM
1::,' ·.
Quote trom famous femin tst:
5
_
_
_
_
_
·'
I
have
never heard a man ask .
I
for advice on how to manage a

I I I r
-rH-,:Irl.r-C-IC...::E..,.._I ;r::~:::-~~~ -c·k:c·kl~"quored

~•._....__.r..___,_l_...l_·..~r_..l.

by t .tl.ng 1M the missi ng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCIAM LETS ANSWEIS
Mortal· Depth · Fence · Jumper· PEOPLE
One·teacher to another on field trip to zoo: "A zoo is "
where savaQe beasts are protected from PEOPLE "

comple1tly tnclostd, atorage
c•nvaa &amp; aluminum framing una.
dar carriage, aluminum akin &amp;
othe&lt;-740-882-7143:

1987 Muotang 4 Cvllndor, Auto,

1988 Chevy Corotca , 2.8, Htgh
Mileage. Looka &amp; Rune Greall
It ,500. (3041675-29111.

·-

8

1990 SUnlrtCUr Party Hut; 28' l
trailer,
- ·lllld (IHo 11t11n
40 hr. on It), new ctnvaa cab

234&amp;.

Good .

55=."--.h

for Sale

1987 ·c1maro,

Runa

BUT ON NINE AND TWENT'r'
SllE ADMITS SHE ONL'( '
GUESSED SO ON M'f PAPER
. I WAS WONDERING IF..

or7--8373.

1997, 28Ft. Tarrv Camper. •tr;
Hoal, Awning, Eltetrlc Jack. Excolton! Condition. Storad tnoldt!

Supplies

'

Motorcyclea·

t984 ·DOdgo AriM, - • Work,
High Mills, 1200, 1~387-i49t .'

For Mort Dilallo, $3,500, 740·
245-0318. ·

·Building .

Bodo, Full 81zo And 'TWin Com.
~lc

Aopo'o. For Llotlngs Call t-800·

550

1.¥.-Aquarlum

Etae-

-And" . Tili"

Loaded, Many New Paris, Call

gratoro, IO. , !Iav Guaronlttl
French City Maytag, 740·448'1785.
piiiO. Couctl &amp; Dollk, Dryor,

lmpounda, ·

Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800-537-11!528

each, shots, e montha oiti· 740898-1085.
'

Appll1nceij: ;

fi8Ct-1990 CARl FIIDIU800

1983 Chavv Caprice, 4 Ill' Sedan,
Nlca tnslda And Out, Auno Ooodl
7~205-9585.
.

pt1ld. Polio, No Ptto, lMst PIUa

Socij~ty Dapool1 AaQulrod, 740-- t , 740-448o011)1,
'

1818 Ford Tempo XL Nlci,
Cl11n, eo,ooo 1ctua1 miles.
(740)-258-1 102 Ask For Junior.

Pollee

258-88118.

(304je75-0879.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

Dekatb SMd Corn &amp; Soy&lt;toano
For Sail. (304je75-1~.

built Engine ·42• Grass Catcher
5' Brush Ho9 · 4' Wood Trailer
With Sktlo •4 Lawn Rolllr Snow
Bur Snow Blade, Electric Blade,
Fits Anv VehiCle: ·5' Drag Blade •

Troyblll Chippor /Shrtddor · 18'

. _BIG N~TE

tlon. Great for lravellvacation .

25&amp;8839.

740-3'19-2820.

'80 For&lt;! CrownVtctoril, 302, au·
tomallc, PW, PL, PS, good condl•
tlon, no rutt , $2500, '740 ·992·
7405.

maru. t&gt;r oato. (304!e7S.1725.

head dlgitat console. 2-tont
Grun &amp; Driftwood. 3.3Ve,

Fair Plgo,Call Aftlf e:OOPm 740- '$10,500.00 ' 740-o441-o872.
245-11047.
1988 Suzuki 700 Intruder, All
R,.glstered Btack·Angua Yearling Chrome, LIUII Mlloaga, Excattant
Bull out of 8·FB3f Fullback, Cor\d. 51,800.00 OBO. Mon To Fn
740-379-9232
'
13041675-2088.
Aeglsllrod Llmousln Bulls: Rid, 1995 Vamaha .Big Bear 4X4, 35o
Black, Polled, 9 Months To 2 CC. Gun Rack and Scabbard.
$3500.1304)273-2300.
'INto. 7~3111-7800.
Very Nice Sorrel 8 Year Old f 998 Yamaha 350 Warrior, Aid·
Quarter M•re . Call After 5 P.M. din Yory Utili, $3.500, OBO t&lt;t0-

Ra,nbow Sweeper, with anach·

Now IAobtll Home Park at 01111· Arena, Bbw·Out 80x100, 70xt00,
polio Forry. f&lt;!ow IIOCOPifng appll- 80xt 25, I DOX150 30·50% Ott
cattono for loll on olio. 1304!e75· · O.B.O.. 800-379·3754.
$250 month, $150 dopoon, 740· . etiOfl.
Block, brick, eewer ptpea, wind·
742·2114.
owa. lintels, elc ..Claude Winters,
470 Wanted to Rant
RIO Grando, OH Call 740 ·245·
2 &amp; 3 l1ldroom mo11111 homoo, air
conditioned, $280-$300, aewor, Houoo Wllhln 15. Mllto 01 Borg 5121.
Warner. Ffnced Ylrd , Nice
water and trasll Included, 740~
Kllchon, 5f3-85t-OIOD, Or 740· 580 Pew for Sale
992·2187.
441 ·- ·
·AKC st.eltle~ . aabllf whlt•1 lour
a Bdrm Mobile Home. Ale,
male.a, anots, champion blood·
$300.00 Momh Plus Dtpoll1 And
r,1 [' &lt;C IIMJill 'iE
llnoo, 3 monii\S &amp; 5 months, $200
Utilities. Refrencts F4eqult'R. No
llch; AKC comes, thrM males,
Ptta: Cal 7*992-54n.
oabil/l"hilt, •va• Dmlllll, $200

Cormldc Rold, 740 418 1114.

PB:

1979 ChtvV t/2 0&gt;n oWO, PS.
automatic, too ff\llrty now porta to
1101, askOig 15800, price " nogotl- . 740-992·7551 .

74!1

Lineal :For mora Information Call:

One Bedroom Apartment In Pt.
Pleaunt. Furnished. Very Nice
and Clean . No Pets . Phone

t4x70 lwo·bltdroom, 10111 electric;
121155 two bedroom, total oloctrle:

Small 2 lllclroom Mobile Homo,
1200/Mo. Pluo Dopolll, Bob Me·

1978 Foro Bronco. 740 418 6588-

Fair ptga tor Setet Exetttem Blood

710 Auto1 fOr Sale

for Rent

208-seiO

glnt, runa ,J ood, good tlril,
$2000: 7~7 ·2575.
.
.

59,000mlloo . Eacellont Condl·

0098.

7~385-4387.

qull8d, 740-245-5582 Allor. 5 740-

&amp; 4-WDI

Angus Bull for Saltt (740) 205·
5064
.

448 0001.

Mobile home alta availlblt bet·
ween Athena end Pomeroy, c111

2 Bedroom Tralter, Lollited On
Jlcklon Pike, Reterences Rt·

Fily, Excellent Bk&gt;odiU., 2 Yearllrig Pony, 740-388-0321 .

...,_,....
=.

East
Dbl.
All paas

By Phillip Alder
Many tournament players compete o nly in pairs events, where il is
your partner and you against lhe
world. Bul learn games are fun too.
· You enter 'I!'? pairs, o ne playi'ng ·
Nonh-South, \he other East· West ·'
at differenl tables, obviously! Afte.r a
set of boards against a nother learn,
you "ompare ,resuhs. In loday 's deal,
Sou1h played well to land fo ur heans,
so he was hopeful of a gain for his
team . It didn 'I' work out lhat way.
The deal v;as played in England,
and lhe bidding sh.o ws the local Acol .
sys tem at its worst . First, Soutli
opens with s ubminimum values.
Then North, who has a lovely hand
for hearts, canriot tell his panner
tmmedtalely. (Agreed, this allowed
East to double, which helped South
P"
... in the play.) N ext, South rebid s in a
t-IEV£~ :){'(KT ~'( TIII-.E IN "fiv e-card s uit. You should never do
oW; ~1 . /~--- that with a sane allernative; South
should have raised to three clubs .·
After winning with the dia mond
quee n, East switc hed to ht s singleton
club . Declarer won with dumm y's
ace, drew trumps irt two rounds.
cas hed lhe club king, played" a di a~
mo nd to dummy 's ace, and ex ited
with a diamond. Thi s endplayed
East, who could concede the contract
by e ither leading away from the
spade king or conceding a ruff-anddi scard. He chose the latter
When' lhey scored up, the declar·
er learned thai the opposing Soulh
had won an ovenrick 1 West led the .
spade two : 10, king , ace. Declarer
drew trumps , cashed dummy 's spade
queen and club ace, then led a low
club . Whe n Eas1 discarded , South
won with the king and played a diamond 10 dummy 's 10. Again , East
was endplaved.
.returned a 'low
diamond, bul declarer won wilh his
Jack.

1998 Ford Ranger Super Cab.
Four Door. 4.0 Ll.ter, V-e, Auto.,
Air. SLT. Pkg. 24,000 mllto. AI·

1995 Plymouth Grand Voyager

depoatt &amp; references,

We Buy Land: 30 -500 Acral,

reaaonaly Prk:edl Phone: (7•or

4•

46 IRS empta,.,

13 w..-ng 111rc1
14 rm.tllatnt
15 a.JI al'yllnl,
47 - -Kappa
..... 11111yftnda
II
51 Plied
16 C!tP
54
Paou;,ew.,Y of F-!7~f:.l~
..,ae"'nMMnt
17 Unltiod
11 Swlaa r1wr
-lc
20 Wrltw Lovin
51PN'.cl
21 Ac1NaaC- 51 s~aau td
23 " Agnua -·
24"-nl
DOWN
25 One of Bun'•
1 MuckrakAr
5 "Yollre(...:..atu
27TMiy
Slnclllr
Dlpln1o ell
awm. ~·a
2 Srnoolhed

_out that way

$750.00. (3041578-tiOOS.

'90 cnavv Aotro van, all whttl·
drive, PW, POL; good condl~cn.
$5500; '72 Mack truck, 237 on·

2•

41 DDE•-Im
43 Kinder gw b• a F-t'='t-:'lii

It didn't work

1987 Ford Ranger 4 Cyl., 5
Speed , New Paint (Black)

Van1

Nonb

.tO~'Ictnt

Opening lead: • 9

TH' HOT AIR II

720 Trucks for Sale

730

e

34 ~ .-...... ~

37 TMm of oxon

28 Dfflor

·

SE Losdld. Full- with quad
lilting and rear bench . Over·

Modern I BA All \JIIIItllo Paid

Restricted Residential Lots Located A Comfortable Distance
From Gallipolis. Ooubie Wldll
Art Permitted. •Leave All Your
Cares In To.wn, BUy Yourself A
PlaCe Of Grounct• Loti Stan At

sun root, CD pfav8r, $22,000, 7~992-7312. '

A.P.H.A. V..ntng Filly; 2 Yoar Old

plano Or. 740 448 4!525

·TALKIN' ABOUT

97 Ford Explorer XLT, ltlthtr ln-

ilblo.-&amp;unfumlohod.
Deluxe Oni Bedroom Apt. 'c on·
venlent, Private Enlr•nca. Central Air 1nd" Heat. Olshwaaher
plus Watnor &amp; Dryer. $3!0. por
month. Non~ Smoking. · Phon a

SHIT TN' DOOR II

YO'RE LETTIN' OUT ALL

•

258-1330

Prot&gt;llmo? NHll Tuned? Calllha

Wm
Paso
Paso

.BARNEY

t 995 Noon Hlghllno 4 Dobro,
Loaded, Cold Air, $3,500 OPO,
7~1~ .
.

btrlor,

7 3

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer; South

Good.. Condition. $0 ,!00.00 OBO
740-379-9141 .

ments, home &amp; trailer rentals.
7o40·992· 4~14, apartment• avail· · Chubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.

tots, get the 4th free. Special ,
Sate: Companion and- Individual Oroctous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Grave MarUra.l304)578-2779.
Rlveralde Apartment• In Mkldlt·
Approximately 30 Aerts, 5 Milas port. From $24V.I373. Call 740·

From Gelllpotto: Staulltut Building
Sites, Electric &amp; Water AvailatH,

1995 Chevy Cors1c1, AU!om.
Trans .. A/C, Antllock Brakes,

Wanted to Buy AC No Tilt born

· Gott Clubs, Top Fllgh1 Tour,
Beautiful MOdern 1 Bedroom Graphite Shatta, 3 Through Pitch· 3 Year Old, Chi-Angus Bull 740.
Apartment Rorlt I Utllllloo;lnlor· lng Wedtlo, New $595, Sell $400 446-9858, 740-448'7021 .
.
view, At"'-, No Poll, I.Mst, 080, 7.0.2!18-8899.
4 Year Old Point Golding, St ,Ooo,
Deposit, Non Smokers, Available,
740-387·7221.
Grten
Sofa
&amp;
Recliner
Set.
Very
4/t 51991n City. 740-448-38&amp;1.
Good Condition. 1125. (304)875·
4·HIF.FA Fair Lembo: Quality ond
Chrtsty's Family Living, apart- 4898.

DB Goroge, Basement. (304)6754575.
.

• J

OBO 700·258·
.' .

sum. BalllrlOI.I304!e78-7802.

1803)388-9438.

350 Low &amp; Acreage

• K J

$2 , 40~

620 Wanted to Buy

May t, 1999, 7:30PM. (39418953514.

Equal Hl&gt;uOing Opponunlty.

Mlleo ,
1233.

1988 Pontiac Trana -Am, N8vy

Beige Tweed Sofa /Love Selt,
Nice $200; F4tfrlgarator /Almond,

08-

linder,. Aulomatlc, AC , 87 ,000

• A 3
• ·QI0642

Blue Motatllc, 5.7 Lllor, LS t"En·
gino, Laslhar lntorlor, 10 Sptaller
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc •CfD
Changer, Fullv Loadtdl Will Take
.Pay 0!1, 740-448--4548.
•.

Apartment, 2 Bedrooms, Dining

Aplf1ment, ·~alitpolls Ferry,
poslt Afqulred. No Peta.

I 994 Ptvmouth Sundance, 4 Cy-

Gift. (30416711-3734.
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

menta, 11350. OBO (304)875-

Excellent Condllton, $200, 740·
388-9ol16 Alttr 5 ~M.
.

Soutli

1897 Red Pontiac Sunrlrt. Sun·
roof, Rldlo/Callltti/A.C. Will
sell ror pay·off. Nice Graduation

Groen Apls. t48 or csM 740-992·
3711 . EOH.
Room, Kttqnon, Utility Room, No
Pets, Dopo•tt. $400/Mo., Aetoroncoa, 740-24&amp;-5053.

(740)-446o0t03

&gt;

MIHIY Harrll Pony wlth AHICh•

5443.

1992 Honda Accord , LX, 2 Doot

Coupo, 5 Bpood, 2t5K, 53,750
080, 740-388-i878.

1997 camaro, 8,000 mttoo. Load·
od. l304je75-5945.

from $278 to $358. watk to ohop
&amp; movlos. Call 740·445·25BB.

420 . Mobile Home•

Own A New 1999 Fleetwood

Old $150 Call Aller
387.0188.

Commercial Building in Hendtr·
son For Sill or Lease. Call

Awrfl, 304-738-7295.

$800.00 DOWN

, 4 Montha

Beanie Babllo For Sail, 740-245-

BEAUTIFUL APAI!TMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Your Homo lo Jull A Phone Call

Mobile Homes
· for Sale ·

II pupPV, brown
and whitt, Shon tr, small breed,
$250, 7~702·20 .

Squaro Bailer, 7~258-6299 .

-OIOollp&gt;lo. 74Mn·818t .

on

..

1304)875-4548.

Requtrod,

740-992-6154.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUAITY ./8111
. No Fat Untoea Wo Wlnt·

2bdrm . apt1., total electric, ap·
pllances furnished. laundry room
faetlltlaa. cioN to school In town.
Appttcalions avallab• at: Village

Ont bedroom apartment In Mkl·

corner lot, storage buNdlng, one
bedroom rental .home Included,

·

160, 6 miiH North of Holzar Hos-

plta1.1740)-448o3t.85

Fair Limb For Sale,

$110. (304je75-5082.

$995, call 740-992-2143 or 740·
992-8373.

AMAZING

2 Bedroom Apt . on Stale Route

For lnfor·

matton.

18 hp. Cub Cadel _...deck lawn
mower for sale, good c:onditlon,

Deposit Requlrid. t ·888-840-

0521 .

3 Bedrooms Near Holzer Medtcal
Center, No Pets, 1800/Mo., ftlus
Ulllttlea, &amp; 01post1, References

~ehool,

Merchandise

Algona For Sale, $50. 13041875·
1374.

Restored Victor1an hOme situated
on 12 acres, Village Mlddlepon,
secluded and private. appoint·
ment, pall 7-40·992·5696.

Three bedroom home with tots of

740-448-3884 .

2 Bedroom Apartment, Rio
Grande Ant•. Close To College,

$350/Mo., lneludOI All Ulllltlll,

7~0 ·448 ·1 864

Registered won

Campus, 740-2-.

410

141 . $125,000.00 OBO 740-446· · closet &amp;pace, close to
Professional
Services

Et~ ­

Mobllo Home, t4K70. Total

Forming Tha Right

a

2258toavo...._,

Top Tradt Winds Convulon
Van, 1 owntrt 1992 Cavalier 2
Door, Auto, AIC. Cook Motors.

Dog Obedience

I Have

arlh
• Q 10
• A K 53
+ A 10 4
'A 53 2
Well
Eut
• J 7 4 2
•Kt885
• 8 8
• J 7
• 9 2
+ KQ885
• Q 10 9 .7 4
•a

I 994 Dodge B-250 Luxury High-

llalntd, 7~7-7705 ,
Centtr,

1992 Dodge Splrl1, • C)'llndar automatic, air, new engine, trlnater·
able •arranty, $2500, 740· 7•2-

1882 Pontiac Qrende Prix, Call
387·~.
.

CFA Registered t1lmalayan
Point Kittens. Wormed , 1

Jacl&lt; Au... H10

5x8 un bed ullity tratte&lt; with sk!lo.
7~992--4144 all0r8pm.

(304)882-3852.

For SaJet The Juntxll Stale Route
3500.

month, $100 dopoalt, 740-892-

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University 01 Rio Granda

· Wanted

Ranch House, 3'-4 Acr'e Lot, 5BR,
2 1/2BA , Cen , LlvlngF4oom wJ
Flrepl~ce. OinlngRoom, Kitchen/
Fully Equip., easement wJPool·
Table, Deck wJ27Ft. Aboveground Pool, 3 Car Attached Ga·
rage. In Good Neighborhood In
New Haven, WV. Call For Appt.

2 bedroom apartment In Middlepen, WI fl8l' W810f, &amp; traoh,
you Pll' gao &amp; oltelrie, $200 PI'

Browor AI 304-773-!0tt .Or

Pomoloy. Hours: M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 ID
8:00 p.m. 740-992-2528, Run

Paid, No Pete. tn Galllpolte. 740388-1100

Len On Loan.13041722-7140.

Building•

Cozy two bedroom home locat.ct
In ,Mason,
va .. affordable, akl·
minum aiding, Anderson windows,
lmmadlata posaession, Call 740.

(3041675-5733.

7808.

0818.

age. $180,000 shown by appt.
1304)675-5003.

Buy or 1111. Riverine AntiQues,
112.t E. Main Street, on Rt. 12•.

Moore owner.

Nice Home Stt Up On Lot. Make
2 Paymenta. Move In, 4 Years

3 Bedroom House, Fence,· 740·

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home . 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,
Living Room, Dining Room, Eat-tn
Kitc hen . Lg Family Room . 740·
245-9337

310

deluxe otopo and sttup. Ontv
$200.74 per month with Itt 50
down.t:alt t-800-837-32311.

By owner, 725 Page sr,..et, Mlddl-" houso &amp; 3 Iota, must 111
to appreciate, wiM sell house without lots for $89,000, 740-982-

recommend&amp; that you do bust·
ness with people you kno.w, and
NOT to sand money through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering

230

Includes 8 montlll FREE lot rant.

26 Acnlo MIL, 8 Slall Horse Bam,

Stay), OlnlngRoom, Utility Room, .

Antiques

Apt for F4enl; Water And Truh

Aural. $89,000.00. 7~3711-21 12.

By Owner: S.andHIII Road/Point
Pleasant; Brick Flanch, 3Bed·roomB, 2Baths, Basement. lWo/2
car gar~ges, Acre LOI.{7t0}"'41·

530

540 Ml-llaneou•

330

central Air/Heal Pump. Large Lot
at corner.of Belle &amp; SandHill, 3.!5
miles out. 2 c ·ar Attached Ga·
rage, separate garage, 26)(80,
3doors, paint room. Lots of stor·

1 and2bldroom~lut·
nlshld and untumlshed, MCUrfty

New And Ustd FurnHurt Store
Balow Holiday IM, Kanauga. Slop
¥&lt;~ Saa Uo. 740 448 4782.

Oak Bulfel Fainting Coucll,
Drauer, Etc. No Dealers Please,

3 Bedrooms, Set bn 3 Acres.
Large Rooms, 3 Bay Garage,
Close To School And Buckeye

For Sale By owner: win Main·
talned 4BR BI·Laval, 3BA, larg•
FamilyRoom w/Fireplace, Living·
room, Kitchen (Ali Appliances

for .Rent

3&amp;5-9621 .

738-3409.

2704, 7~992-5896.

Loeva---

1 Bedroom /pt. All convenlenc·
11. Unfurnished, Private en·
trance. 4th Slrtet. Pt. Pteasant.

992-6810 tMN'IInga

and Pom.roy Storoo. Only, 740· . CtnlriiAiis~tlo, l'llrch, 177 000
(304 je78.
. ' '
418 1040

'

Collage View Or. $33,000 .00
1700)-245-9667

Kenmore Dryer, $80. Whirlpool
A.C. 1200 BTU, 570. (304)875·

74().448-2957.

New 1998 14x70 thrH bedroom,

3 BedrOom Farmhouse on 1 acre

Link Certified Babysitter avail·
able on Grear Road . Flexible
Hours, Call Shanna, (30&lt;t)675·

'lbrk I 1230

Now acceptl~=llcatlona for
night ohll. El
Adult Homo.
Baolo llrot aid &amp; BCII roqulrod ,
740-992-5038.

Homes for SaIa

Paper• Available, Contact .Mike

Good llltcUon of used home a
with 2 Or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

1 lnotudes wuhe&lt; &amp; dryer, okltting,

Story, 3 Bedrqoma, 2 112 Baths,
Naar ·Holzer, Immediate Posses·
&amp;ion, 74(1-446-9672.

WALL·CEILING CLEANEO EX·

NO GIMMICKS .

~~~op~po~rtu~n~ily~ba~st~··~~~

1·888-8t"128. ·

8893.

·depo'sll requlrtd, no pals, 740.

Make 2 Payments No Payment
Afllf'.• '1Url, 304-73&amp;-7295.

modeling 1700)401·1001 .

days in May, $6 .00 hour, 7-40-

702-2579.

advertised In this neoNSpaper
are available On an equal

992-3557 or 700·992·3041 .

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

· 12&gt;&lt;85, 7~702-2803.

Apartment.

992-2216.
Low ln..res' Rates For 1st Time
1 1 Bdrm., Extra Nlca, Firat Month ·
Buyers, Limited Tlme.Avallable,
Fret With One Yttr L1111 .
800-383-8882.
$279.00 Ptt Mcnth, Ptuo UtiNtllo.

7~992-3537 .

130.)675-4040, tor a Fret Eo-

oprlng ctaaning, 4 or 5

-

Informed that all dwe!Nngs

Electric Ma)ntenanca Service.
Wiring, Breaker Boxes, Light .Fixture, Heating Systems, and Re-

Umale.

EJIIl. Nee. Wllllaln PC Aeq. Earn
401&lt; Catt 800-663-74io.

w•

2 bedroom mobile home. total

law. Our readers are hereby

140

Gelllpollo Ca101r cotlogo ·
1Caratr11 Close To Home) Call
Todayt . 7~408-4367 , t-8oo2t4-0452, Reg 1~5-t274B.

440

$39115 . Quick delivery. Call 700-

Tractor Shed. 69 t/2 Acres Or
Will Soli Houot &amp; Loti Meigs Co.

Buslneas
Training

2'195altor3pm.·

Fl.-· 2 -

Adorable temate Cocker Spaniel
puppl11 wllh papers. ' montha.

1135, 740-Mtl-2451 .
Plua oapoall. Retrtncea. Avail- Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
AKC Aaglotortd 'Golden Aat~....­
blo May 1 l7_." ...... • 89
range a. Sk1ggs Appliances, 78
._
a _ _:_•_
~
___1_ · -~ I Vlno Stroll, Call 74Q.448~398, · 2 Yeafl Old, For Stud service,

1892 14x70 Redman trailer, 3
bedroom, 1 bath, fully carpeted,
storm wlndowt, $12,500, 7..0.7-42-

rooms, 2 Fult Batl'll, all Electrlcl
taka Pavoftl (7 40~258-9382

knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate

~310

Nice 2 Bdrm CIA, H•V lBO, 4 ODOD USED APPLIANCES
Mlleo N Of Hot..,; $300.00 -th

Nice 3 bedroom mobile hOI'NI , In
Middllpot1.
On.. no pato, 7~9925858.
·

1995 14•72

This newspaper will not

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ranch HouB8
1 Years Old, 28x30 Attached Ga·
rage, 12x2-4 Building, Barn &amp;

Carpel and Upholatery Cleaned
without ' Steam• or Absorbent
Compounds. Soaplall Anti· AeMaintenance Employee. General soll Detergents used· exclusiveMaintenance 01 Low -tncomfl ly. Safe lor all fabrics. Fast dry·
Apartment Complex. Electrical 1 lng ( t -2 hOurs). Eliminates over·
Relrlgerauon /Plumbing /Carpen· wetting , Guaranteed Work. Call
try /Cuatodlai /Groundakeeplng . Clearly Ctoan at 13041875-4040
Computer A Plus. Good Benefits. tor Free Esdrnatasl
Appllcetlons Available At Gatlla
MHA, 381 Buck ~ktgo Aosd, Bid- Does Your Hou'e Siding, Deck,
wall, Ohio 45814. 740·446-02!1 . or DriVeway need a cleaning? If
Application• Accepted Until May so, Ptenure Washing Ia ·the an·
15, 1899. GMHA loAn Equal Of&gt;' swerl .Call Clearly Clean aJ
Medical Proceaaor FT /PT No

the Federal Fair Housing ACt
Of 19fX! whiCh makes It Illegal
to adv&amp;rtlse •any preterenc:e,
limitation Of' discrimination
bued on race, color, religion,
sex familial status Of national
origin, or any Intention to ·
make any sUch preference,
limitation or discrimfnatloil.•

Wildlife Jobs $21 .60/Hr. Inc .
Benefits. Game Warden&amp;;St"Curl·
ty,Malntanance ,Park Rangers.
No Exp. Needed .cFor App./Exam
Info
Call
1·800·813·3585,
Ext.BB27, BAM -9PM, 1 Cays
fds.lnc.

456-40, Or Call 1-740·286-1463
.To Schedule Ar Interview.,

E""*"".

All real estate advertising lj"'

mrs newspaper Is StJbled to

whlotlls In l'(olatlon oflhe

Wanted- Secretary, must have
references, must be reliable, be
able to do ta.lles, ledger and complate office work. Send resume to:
P.O. Box 27, l'llmaroy, OH 45769.

To: P.O. 8ox 109 Jackson, Ohio

portunlty

510,500.00. 7~205-tt20 .

RESUMES UNLIMITED Ollero
Pauonallzad Resume• And
Much More! Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared, 740·388·

Greg Milhoan: 30oW75-4828.

Single Crlver, Late Modal Ken·
worths With Reefers. Wast Coast

New Gas Furnace IHiat Pump, 2
Porches, Many Extraal Asking:

813-3585, Ext. 8826, 8AM-9 PM,
7 Days tds,IN:.

Are You Energetic, , Motivated, 1.80 Wanted To Do
And Caring? Scenic Hills Nursil)g
Cent.ar Is looking For Individuals Approved Master Licensed Elec·
Who Are Currently' State Tested triclan : WV025958, Free EstiNuralng Assistants. To Work In mates for Residential Services.
Our Comprehenelve Care FacUlty. '1300)675-7927.
Please Apply In Person To 311 Carpentry. 08cks, Porches, Addl·
Buckrldge Road, Bidwell, ·O,H lions, RemOdels, 740·441-1 316.
45614.
Child Care Provider has an
AVON I Ail A.reaat To Suy or Sell. Opening lor a chHd three or Older.
Shlrtav Spears, 304-675·1429.
12 years Experience. Call: (740)Computer Users Needed. Work 441..0359
Own Hrs. $25K ·$80KI Yr. t-800- Christian Wo'man Will Do Child478-8653 X7717, www.lcwp.com
care In My Home Only. $12 .00
Cosmetologist Needed, Business Cay For 1 Child, $20.00 Cay For
Growing, Guaranteed Wages 2, Ect. CPA Cenllltd, EMT. Co",
Pending . 'Refrences. CaH 740·
Plus More. 740'448-7267
245-95B2.
Crl.vara needed to transport cars
·to &amp; from auctions, call740-992- E &amp; S Lawn Service: Design. Implementation , ar'ld Service.
8088 be-n &amp;am &amp; 8pm.
Available tor Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and pl,lnllng. Free estl·
DRIVING POSITIONS
mates. Satisfaction guaranteed.
AVAILABLE:

CIOII·AOTR:

1SKl1 1'4x70 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath,

-

'

33 ......... full

1 "--Ilon on •
hUiiklt
7 IJUIIIt
.....uo.tala
MlaiChl-

boxoo

Auction

and FIN Market

ACROSS

Refrlgaratlon . · .
1Rtlkilntlll or eommaretet wtrtng,

tatVicl 01 ropalrl. 4cenlld tltculolen. Ridenour
~i:rtcot , WV00030&amp;, 304·875·

l

.•

Friday. APril 30, 1999
Dare to be hopeful and optimistic
in the year.ahead, because situations
where you are stronaly motivated
:will have extremely aood chances for
l!eina successfully fulfilled,
TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
Someone migh1 attempt to usurp
rr,our interests today, but your
in~tincts ond self·preservalion .will be
'!Uile astule. It doesn' t seem likely
· thai any adversary will win against
you. Get a jump on life by under·
. •!Jinding the innuences'lhat ' llaovem
)'OU in lhe year ahead. Send the
. required refund form and for your
Attr~raph ~ictions by mailing
S2 to Astro-Graph, Clo lhis newspa·
.per, P.O. Box 1738, Murray Hill Sla·
(jon, New York, NY 10136. Be sure
to .state your Zodiac sign .
' GEMINI (May 2l ·lune 20) Negalive thouafols will be shofi. IJved with
you today. You ' re more ~eCcpttvelo

ideas or messases.or an inspirational.
!'81ure dtat'll dominate ycur behavior.
.; C ... NCI!R (June 2 f -July 22)
.Because of ~our. inacnuily loday,
fOU'II find way• to achieve )'our ·

...
objectiv~s much·to the amozcmcnt of
others, even though they misht be
anything but easy.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Try to
share time with friends today wiio·are
both active and optimistic , .TheY
could satisfy a need you h•ve for
companiqnship as well as Inspirational lhinkins more lhan you may
n::alize.
. VIROO (Aug. 23 -Sep\. 22)
SIIould you have to draw upon the
support and/or resources of others in
order . to achieve your objectives
today, this won 'o be a bed arranaement. !f you profit, they 'llalso aain .
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 2J)Asood
sense of humor and a philosophical
auilllde wil~ be your best auributes
today. When you introduce·harmony
. into your involvements, it'll pulloo;e .
lii'OUnd you II ease.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The
aliility IO transfonn whaiiiiJPCIU"S ...., •
less into oomethina worthwhile and
functional is your natural talent.
Those wiio obServe you do so today,
wi,ll learn from you. ·
SAOITrARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc .
21) Bein1 blessed with the wliele-

withal to charm the birds out of tre~s
will be a gilll1;8ftled to you today, but

· you must take care not to use this to
II')' 10 manipulate others .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) If
some aood things of a malerial nature
develop for you today due to 1he
efforts of others more than your own,
do not be reluclanl to share whatev•
· er you gain.
AQUARIUS (Ian . 20.Feb. 19)
Anything unplea:~~~nl that might hop-

pen early won't have an impact on
the entire day if you doh 't lose your

sense of humor or take life -and/or
people too seriously. Remain opli·

rilistic.

·

PISCES (Feb. 20-Murch 20) It
won't be out of line Tor you to remind
someone who pwes an obl igation to
you 1ha1 his or her accounlls overdue
today. The promise wu made by 1he
&lt;kblor llld need$ to be upheld.
ARIES (Marah 21·April 19) .
AltllcNJh yeu may not realize it, your
innue~ over odlers is quite strons
today, so be very careful what you
say or do, becau~e ycurdeeds will be'
Ioken 'to hean.·
··

APRIL29I

�I .

_:-c,,_By The-Bend

The Daily Sentinel
,

.

Page 12

Thursday, Aprll29, 1999
.
Are parents responsible for grown children's irresponsible actions?
·.t'&lt;

'

Wc;~ther

money .as fast as he earns it and
Dear Ann Landen: Tell me·
expects to borrow from us whenever where w~ went wrong in raising our
he needs cash.
children. Our oldest daughter, age
Where is it written ·that children 34, has been manied twice. Our
have a right to expect such things middle son is 33 and manied his
from their parent's? My husband fourth wife last week after a whirlspent 20 years in the Army and now wind, three month courtship. Our
works as a factory supervisor. We youngest daughter manied at age
Dear Ann Landers: My husband ering a bigger apartment, although tried to teach our children the value 15, had two children by the age of 17
and I !lave two sons in their early their current place is fine and they of a dollar, the importance of saving and _gave both of them up for adop20s. The oldest one, who is married, are not planning to have children.
and the dangers of ctedit.
tion. She divorced her husband, marcalls me and complains incessantly
Our younger son has moved back
We love our children but wonder · ried another man and is divorced
about his finances. He resents the borne after nearly starving to d,eath. when, if ever; they will mke respon- again. Now, she is planning her third
money we ·spend on trips when he He made good money and could sibility for themselves and realize wedding, and she is only 32 years
has severe cash problems.
have had anything he wanted but that we owe them nothing more. We old.
·
A~n. if thi s son managed his
wound up pawning everything valu- have considered telling them they
Two of our children have filed fqr
income better, his financial situation able that he owned. We gave him are on their own and the bank is bankruptcy. They are just as irrewould be a lot healthier. He and his several loans to pay off his various closed. What do you think '! -- HAD sponsible with their credit as they
wife spend like there is no tomor· debts and help him get back on hi,s IT IN KENTUCKY
have been with' their maniages.
row, din·e out often and see several feet.
.. DEAR .. KENTUCKY: Stop
When our 15-year-old --:as pregmovies or plays every week .
Did he learn anything from his constdenng, and tell them out- nilnt, ! -told her I would take care of
After they married, his first pur- experience? No. He n0 w has a job, right. It's time you stopped being her child if she -lived at home and
chase was a new car; in spite of the lives at home and has no expenses. I enablers. Please keep reading -- you finished school. She wasn 't interestfact that the old car was perfectly cook for him, do his laundry and have a double out there somewhere: ed.
dependable. Now, they are consid- clean his room. He run s through

My dream was for all our chil- with dangerous choices. Stop berat·
dren to be educated and have great ing yourselves. You did your best --·
careers. I would have supported now, let it rest. I've seen parents
them in any dream they wanted -- whQ were alcoholic, neglectful and
but they ha4#1o dreams.
irresponsible, but their children
My hustfand and I have been turned out extremely weH. 1llere's
manied for~ 37 years and have had no . perfect formula for successful
some hard umes but never once con- parenthood ·· at least ) don 't know
sidered divorce. If we could make it of it.
work, why can't our children? I wish
Is alcohol ruining your life or the
I knew what my hll!!band and I did to life of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
m'alce therrr«o. irresponsible. Where How to Recognize It, How to Deal
did we go wrong? -DEPRESSED IN With ll, How to Conquer It" can turn
THE UNfiW'l STATES.
things around. Send a self addressed,
DEAR DEPRESSED: Parents long, business-size envelope and a
who are loving, attentive, support- check or money order for $3 .75 (this
ive, finn and consistent with their includes P9Stage and handling) to:
children usuaijy get the best results, Alcohol, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
but not all d\lldren are born with the .11562 Chicago, IIi. 60611-0562. (In
same basic material. Genetics plays Canada, send $4.55 .)
a big part in fl"ow children respond to
To find out more about Ann Lanthe world arohnd them.
ders and read her. past columns, visit
Let's face it, our world today is the Creators Syndicate web page at
confusing, .c mplicated and filled www.creators.com.
••

Rory Calt1oun, TV's 'Tex~n,' dead at 76
PHOENIX (AP) - Like father, like son:. Motorcycle daredevil Robbie Knievel plans to jump his bike 0 ver a 200-foot
portion of the Grand Canyon toni'ght.
'·The stunt, which will be broadcast live .for East Coast viewers at 9 p.m. EDT and tape-delayed for other time zones·, will be
shown nationally on Fox television.

The jump is set for the Hualapai Indian Reservation west of
Grand Canyon National Park. Failure to clear the canyon would
send Knievel, 36, plunging up to 2,500 feet. He says he won't
wear a parachute.
Knievel's famed father, Evel, had talked about JUmping the
Orand Canyon but never made an attempt. .
..
He did try to jump 1.800 feet across the Snake River Canyon
in Idaho using a rocket in 197·4, but his parachute deployed too
early' and he failed. He suffered only scrapes and bruises.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Vice President AI Gore and his
wife, Tipper, are planning to attend their first Kentucky Derby
on Saturday as guests of Gov. Paul Patton .
"They were invited, and thought it'd be a great opportunity
to come. I told Mrs. Gore she would have .fun," said her chief
of staff, Audrey Haynes.
. Patton, a fellow Democrat, is supporting Gore (or president
m 2000. The last vice president to attend the race ...:. George
Bush in 1983- went on to win the presidency.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- Tony drlando has sued Wayne
Newton for more than $15 million, claiming his former friend
wrongly threw him out of the theater they once shared in BranSon.
The performers last year shared what was then the Talk of
the T.O.W.N. Theatre until Newton, whose company held the
lease on the building, locked Orlando out, saying Orlando owed
him more than $2 million .
The lockout cost Orlando $125,000 from II canceled shows· ·
last year, and millions more in earni'ngs he would have made
over the next two seaso ns, the federal lawsuit claims. The suit
was filed Wednesday.
.
.
Orlando would not comment. Newton spokesman Ho;_,ard
Cotner said he was nabbergasted.
.
"Are you serious? Are you sure it's not the other way
· around'" he asked. "This. guy walked out of town owing the
Newtons $800,000. ''
'
The theater's name, T.O.W.N., is an acronym for Tony
Orlando and Wayne Newton.
:'
·
MEXICO CITY (AP) - After making her mark in films like
"Selena" and "Out of Sight," actress Jennifer Lopez yearns for
a. shot at Broadway - . ideally a starring role in "West Side
Story."
Lopez was in Mexic'o City on · Wednesday to promote her

debut album, "On the 6," due out June l. She said the title is a
refer~nce to the early days of her career, -when she took. New
York City's No. 6 subway train to her singing chiss.
. Calling the album "a natural progression of things," Lopez
said she plans to continue acting, but hopes to appear in a
Broadway musical, and that Leonard Bernstein's "West Side
Story" would be her tep choice.
·
Lopez Is to appear Friday at New York City's Madison
Square Garden.
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) - Groundbreaking for a new
building to house the Country Music Hall of Fame is set for
June 17, after the city council allocated $2 million for the $37
million project.
The new· building will cover a city block and will house
exhibits about country music, offices and a library. The current
hall is on Music Row about two miles away.
So far, $12 million has been raised for the project.
.
The groundbreaking will come when thousands of country
music fans are already in Nashville for the Fan Fair festival that
includes performances and autograph and photo sessions. It
starts June 14.
·

By JE.FF WILSON
career accelerate afier a meeting
Associated Press'Writer
with agent Henry Willson, who disBURBANK, Calif (AP) - Rory covered and invented names for
Calhoun caught his first acting bre~k Rock Hudson, Tab Hunter and Troy
while riding a horse, and his rugged ·Donahue.
He was considered ideal for such
image and handsome face prop~lled
him from there.
Westerns as " Massacre River,"
Calhoun, the lanky lumberjack "Rogue River," "Yellow Tomaand a stalwart hero of Western hawk" and "Four Guns to the Bormovies and the TV series "The der." In the late '40s and early '50s,
Texan," died Wednesday at age 76. he also appeared in "The Red
He had been hospitalized fpr 10 House," "Ticket to Tomahawk,"
days with advan_ced stages of "How to Marry a Millionaire,"
emphysema and diabetes, said his "Meet Me After ·the Show" and
· longtime friend, Paul Dean .
"With a Song in My Heart.:'
· From 1958 to 1960, Calhoun
Calhoun often told the story of
how he was discovered in 1943 starred in a CBS television Western,
while he was horseriding in the Hol- ~'The Texan." He played Big Bill
lywood Hills. Alan Ladd, then a top Longley, a fast gun who traveled
star, liappened to be out riding, too. from town to town helping those
"I met this fellow up in .the hill ~ who were victimized by bad men.
and .stopped to talk," Calhoun
In his later career, Calhoun
recalled. "He asked me if l was an appeared . in lower ·budget films,
~ctor, and I saio, 'Hell, no!' We many .of them made. abroad. Among
·• Rory Calhoun
talked some more and he asked, the titles: "The Treasure of Pancho
Calhoun was born in Los Angeles
In 1948, Calhoun married I..:atin
'How would you like to be in Villa," "Flight to Hong Kong,"
films?"'
"Marco Polo;" "The Colossus of and grew up in Santa Cruz, Calif. He entertainer Uta Baron, and ihey had
His,f•ce and sturdy physique won Rhodes," "Young Fury," "Black dropped out of high school to wan, three children. They divorced in
him lesser roles in "Someth'ing for Spurs" a~d "The Adventures · of der the West.
1970.
the Boys, " "Sunday Dinner for a Marco Polo."
,
"I'd read about Tombstone ·
In 1971 Calhoun married former
Soldier," "The Bullfighters" and
In 1982-87, he appeared on th,e (Ariz.) and all of the bad men," he journalist Susan Langley. They had
other wartime films.
CBS soap opera "Capitol," playing reealled. "I was a wild kid for a daughter before divorcing after
His most important. ·early role Judson '!Yier, head of one of the two adventure. So I went io Tombstone, five years.
came as boxer James Corbett ,in feuding families in the show.
but I arrived 50 years too late."
Funeral arrangements were
"The Great John L."
He also was host of reruns of
He hired out as ~ bronco buster incomplete lat~ Wednesday.
The actor, whose real name was "Death Valley Days" In tlie syndi- and mined silver near Reno before
returning to Santa Cruz.·
Francis Timothy Durgin, saw his cated "Western Star Theater."

Community.· Calendar-._.·- - - - - - - ' - The Community Calendar is 'pub- must be 17 years old, weigh at least
lished as a free service to non-profit 110 pounds and be in good health.
groups wishing to announce meetings and spec tal events. The calendar . POMEROY - Women's AA
is not designed ro promote sales or meeting, 7 p.m. at 1607 Nye Ave.,
fund raisers of any type. 'Items arc open discussion.
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific numMIDDLEPORT
Wesleyan
ber of days.
Bible Holiness Church, Middleport,
will hold a weekend meeting, Friday
'
THURSDAY
through Sunday, 7:30 p.m. nightly
POMEROY - Big Bend Girl with Rev.·Steve Manley from New
Scout Service Unit leaders' meeting England guest speaker. Pastor Doug
will be held Thursday, 7 p.m. at Trin· · Cox invites the public.
ity Church, Pomeroy. Program and
finance report training will be held.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - · Star
FRIDAY
Grange 778, Saturday, potluck supWILKESVILLE
Wilkesville per, 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting,
·
·. Community Center, Red ·cross 8 p.m.
Bloodmobile, 1 to 7 p.m. Donors
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Satur-.
day, 7:30 p.m. with homecoming
night to be observed. Refreshments.
POMEROY - Closed AA big
book study meeting, 8 p.m. at Sac'red
Heart Cathol-ic Church. No smoking.

· iiiissfon.ary and world traveler, will
be speaking S~nday, 7 p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim Chapd, state Route
143, Pomeroy. Rev. · Victor Roush,
pastor, invites the public.

MONDAY
·RACINE - Annual inspection of
Racine Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments afterwards.

LONG BOTTOM - Revival
CARPENTER Columbia
beginning Sunday through May 8 at Township Board of Trustees meeting
Faith Full Gospel Church with Evan- Mom!ay, 7:30 p.m. at the fire station.
gelisrDavid Dailey.

On·'OVer.To Bolf•s•••
•

I

.

t1QuaUty

JACIC.SON·PERJCJNS
·
.
...,..l'f'lv RoseBushes "Cadillac of Roses"
ALEXANDER BAJ'ITON
BIRTH ANNOJ,INCED ~ Renee
and Scott Berton' announce the
birth of their third ~hlld, Alexan·
dar Kyle, b!&gt;rn March 24, 19119, at
· St. Jo11ph's Hosplllllln Parkers·
burg, W.Va. The Infant weighed
eight pounda, ~lx ouncea, and
meeeured 20 and half Inches
long. ·
He wee welcomed h&lt;ime by
hie brother Zachery, and slater,

Mo~Y.-:~nder

EASTER COLORING cONTEST . WINNERS - WlniMirl In .tiM
ennll81 Dlllly SentiiMII e..ter Coloring Conteat were recognized
Tueadey. Winners are ahown In order, from left: frorit row, agea 4-8,
Michael Lee, Katie Wilfong end Samantha Petteraon; bec!l row, agel
·11-12, ·Beverly Rutk, Jllll Young end Whitney Thoene. They are
ahown with Dally Sentinel. edvertl81ng repr81entetlve Kathy
WHIIemaon.
fl

'

dectl~eted

wee
dur·
lng the E111ter ltrvlcea lit The
Mfddleport Church of the
NIIZireiMI. Ttt• Rev. Greg Cundiff
officiated during thl Ht'Yicea,
and eprlnkled Alexander with
Wllter from th'- petell of 11 long
stemmed red ·roae. The baby
wee dre11ed In • white chrlallln·
lng aull that was worn by his
father, 111 an Infant, at a similar
nrvlce •.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 40a

•

•

a1
Meigs County's

Mark Lewts' 4 hits
powers Reds past
Philadelphia 7-3
-Page4
'

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middl eport • PolllPruy, Oluo

Vnltttow ·l't NtttttiH ·r ." •·'

S1ngle Copy- 35 Cents

Air -campaign intensifies as House panel votes $12~9 billion to pay for itBy ANNE GEARAN
Assodated Press Writer
·
. WASH~NGT0!"1 (AP)- TJ:e ~.S. -l~d NATO bo_mbtng campaogn agatns! Yugoslavoa mtensrfied drao:n~ttcal- :
ly as a House romm1ttee ~pproved nearly $13 btllton to
fund_Pentag~n operattons m the Balkans and elsewhere.
Pres1dent Chnton had asked. for half as mu~h mo~ey.
Gen. _Henry Shel!on, chao~an of the Jomt Ol!,efs of .,
Staf!, smd the ~mbtngcampwgn has entered the dom-tnat1_on phase.
.
That !Deans ~arplanes try t~ hit en~my troops on the
ground, m additton to the supphes and onfrastructure that
support· Y~goslav President Slobodan Milosevic's military fT!aChtne. . .
·
·
ln. what was appar~ntl~ t~e largest onslaught to date,
NATO planned 670 alf mtSSt!JnS through?ut the day and
night Thursday t~ take advantage of clearm~ weather. Of
those, 296were hsted as attack or rombat fltghts and the
_oth~rs a mixt?re o~ suppo~ and recon~aissan~,
So today sa btg one, Shelton saJd at a brtefing for
reporters.
. . ..
.
.
Shelton was to begm vosoung U.S. &amp;If crews tn the
reg!?n toda~ as part of a s~OJI trip t.o the Balkans.
.
NATO IS ronductlng &amp;If operations over Yugoslavta
~th ~y and ~i.ght, virt.ually around the ~lock," Shelton
sao d. Ou~ mthtary strokes have taken a heavy toll on

Good Afternoon

oday's

Sentinel

l &amp;ectlons • ll Pages
Ia

Lollt•l H': ,

dino
ftdl3: 9-7.S; Pkk4: 8-?-8-6
Buckeye 5: 9-13-IS-18-28
W.VA. '

Dally 3: 1-8-4; DaUy 4: 3-1-3-3
C t \199 Obio v.tley PubHobtna Co.

!'111osevic's forces and his security
to accept renditions for peace in the refugees as !hey accused Republicans of undermin· '
mfrastructure."
.
. the provin~ or Kosovo, and ing American troops with an unexpected 213-213
Shelton noted clear skies w.ere
allow ethntc Albanian refugees House vote Wednesday to withheld support for the
predocted over Yugosla~ia for the
to return t? their homes under NATO air campaign.
·
next several days, ~htch should
the protectoon of an internationHouse. Democratic leader Dick Gephardt of Misallow for more bombtng runs. .
al peace-keeping force.
souri called the vote "a low moment in foreign policy
Oouds ~~mpe_r the lasers and
Refugees and aid workers and the history of this institution."
.
ot~er prec~sto~ 1_nstruments that
I
report a string of atrocitjes,
He blamed " a small but determined extreme majorguode_ many mossoles and bombs,
including mass killings, by Serb ity " for orchestrating the outcome.
and ptlots have .turned back or held
forces inside Kosovo and hunBut Rep. Tom Delay, R-Texas; the House maj ori off on _droppmg bombs when
dreds of thousands of refugees ty whip, noted that 26 Democrats als o voted against
weather mterfe~ed.
have fled the southern Serbian the air strikes.
· The S12.9 billion spending
province in recent weeks.
The partisan finger-pointing came as 'a 10-mempackage approv~d !hursday b~ the
serbia, led by Milosevic, is ber congressional delegation led by Rep. Curt WeiH9use Appropnatoons Commottee
the dominant of two republics . don, R-Pa., headed to Vienna, Austria, to meet with
was double wh~t President Ointon
that make up Yugoslavia. Other members of t~c Russian Duma to discuss possible
~equested. It wtll cover the fightSlavic countries have split from ways of resolving the Balkans crisis.
.
.
mg -and buttress Pentagon needs
the federation since the end of
In the Senate a showdown loomed over whether
around the globe. House . floor from Yugotlevle'elergnt oil refinery In the Cold War.
to try to limit 'the president's war powers as the
debate was expected next week.
NoYI Sad following I NATO air ltrlke.
serbia wants to retain con- House has sought to do- or .give him a fre...- hand.
Also Thursday, . . Def~nse Secret~ry William Cohen . trol of Kosovo, which it regards as the republic's cut,
A bipartisan group led by Sen . John McCain, R·
announced he was sendmg 10 addttoonal B-52 bombers tural cradle despite the fact that ethnic Serbs were actu- Ariz. wanted to give the president the power to use
to Europe, more _than ~o~bling the number now flying ally a minority there until a few weeks ago. NATO "wh~tever means necessary" to end the war. Others,
long-range bombmg mtsstons from a base In England. . wants the province to be autonomous but still remain a including Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott R·
The NATO bombing campaign that began March 24 nominal part of Serblil.
Miss., considered such a move too open -ended. '
was desogned to force the serb-led Yugoslav government
Congressional Democrats invoked the suffering of
A senate vote could come next week.

ODOT committee
ends public hearings

Kersh to headline regatta entertainment

ver Thorn" from Caldwell, Ohio who performs top 40 rountry, old standard
country, bluegrass and old classic rock songs; and Hunter, a newly formed
group featuring foriner members of "The Photons" and Point Pleasant's
Wendell Kelsey. Hunter will play on th~ 4th Street barg~ stage Friday and
Saturday nights.
·
The Regatta entertainment rommittee, under the directibn of Steve Newsome, is rontinuing to book oth~r entertainers to fill the two stages through·
out the weekend..
.
.
The Mason County Ministerial Association has booked "The Clark Family Twins• and local artists "ldleTymes" for their Saturday afternoon concert
at the State 'theatre.
·
·
Tamara Grate, 1998 Regatta Queen" will relinquish her crown on Thursday, June 24;' at the State Theatre. The annual Regatta parade _is slated for
Friday evening. The Pleasant Valley Hospital River· Run and sternwheeler
races are on tap Saturday ,afternoon, along with cruises ·on the P.A. Denny
am."
, .
Friday night, the .Park ·will. rock with the sounds of "Southern Rock All and deckhand rompetitions.
A bass tournament will bring fishermen from around the state 10 Point
Stars." This group is composed of Dave Hlubek, founder of .Molly 1-btchet;
~ ginia.
Jli•M""'~ {OJ p r i . - ·
Proponents ptlleled nearly 6,000 Jakaon Spira, faundina mllllllxr otBI.-k'outl.,lftija , 44o ~~r!'l• 1• •
signatures, saying it will help attract of The Rosaington Band and Radio Tokyo; and Pete Geddes, foundi:r of'Tite· narnent boat parade and weigh-in are still in rhe woriCI.
On June 26, the annual West Viiginia ·Bottle Show and Auction will be
· buslnes,'l to Appalachia and improve Buster Olerry Band.
held,
in conjunction. with the Regatta, at the National Guard Armory. The
The Southern Rock All Stars play with - combination of musical talent
safety.
show
will be from 9 a.m. to I p.m. followed by an auction at I :30 p.m. ·
Opponents offered 1,571 signa- that electrifies audiences with a sourhern rock style that is their own. They
The
Regatta committee is still working on final plans and schedules for
tures. Some say the project is not a storm the stage with lightning licks on guitar, thundering drums and boomthe
weekend
of fun. If you would like more information on this year's event,
wise use of tax dollars, want a dif- . ing bass.
Other bands already scheduled to appear during the Regatta include "Sil- call (304) 675-6897.
ferent route.
COLUMBUS (AP) ..:.. An Ohio
Department of Transportation rommittee has finishC!l taking public
comments about a proposal to ·
straighten parts of U.S. 33 through
southeast Ohio. .
The Transportation Review and
Advisory Committee . will decide
· May 26 whether to go ahead with the
project, although planning already is
well under way. The last day for
public comments was Monday.
The plan is part of a decad~-loog
effort to straighten ·and widen the
U.S. 33'corridor ronn.ecting Colum;
bus with Interstate 77 in West Vir-

N115hville .recording artist David Kersh will headline the ,entertainment
for the Ninth Annual Point Pleasant Steinwheel Regatta June 24- 27.
Kersh will take the stage at Battle Monument Park Saturday, June 26,
arounil t\:30 p.m. His show will be followed at 10 p.m. by fireworks sponsored by the City of Point Pleasant and Kraemer and Sons. ·
Texas native Kersh, who released his debut album in fall 1996, has
topped the chart with Top 10 hits including "Goodnight Sweetheart,"
"Another You," "Day In, Day Out,'' and "If I Never Stop Loving You." He
·has also released a remake of the Eric Oapton hit "Wonderful Tonight."
Kersh's traditional country sound mixes with a '90s touch that links
today's generation to the wide-ranging roots of country music.
"l!ve always left myself wide open as far as the spectrum of country
music today," Kersh said. "I try and cover all of it, because that's just me.
That's why I do rock 'n' roll in my live show, its very much a part of who l

mix, and a mixed pomeranian, along
with three litters of puppies, all ideal
pets, are waiting for· new homes;
The Adoptathon is sponsored locally
by the Meigs County Humane Society
and across the oountrj&gt; by the. North
Shore Animal League and PETsMAIU
Olarities. Two day.s of activities are
planned for the event, which p1omises
to be enjoyable even for those not inter·
ested in.adopting dogs.
While the goal is to empty the
pound, those attending will be able to
take in roncerts by.Porcelain, a Colum·
bus-based band, on Saturday, and by a
local Elvis Presley impersooator and
Safety Pup on Sunday. Both· shows will
take. to the stage at 2 p.m;
·Those who do choose a new pet will.
be given dog food samples, informadog• 'ng thll Wtrekentl'l, A4:lo1Mth4)n,
tiona) material about caring for a new
Pound be held from noon
pet," and a certificate from the Humane
IN Mgel' to lind , _ hoiiiM durSociety for a half-price spay .or neuter
PROM 1GIIII Melg8 High
Approximately l5 dogs and puppies, Meigs County's First Pet Adoptathon to operation.
·
School prom king end q - will be •lected
•:perfect" fof'families looking for a nice he held Sat'urday and Sooday.
. T!te event will take place at the from thll group · of cendldlt.. Saturday .
pet, are on hand at the Meigs County
· Acconding to Dog Warden Bill Dye, Rocksprings Fairgrounds, near the dog night T11e cendldllelllre from the left, Sheri ·
DOg Pound, w~iting to be adopted at · beagle · mixes, shepherd mixes, a lab shelter.
Wright, Becky Johneon, Bridget V.ughen, B,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~--~------~

Aly:aon PetteriOI\, end king,
Ryan Rl1118burg, J. T. Humphreya, Denial
Hennen, Jeremiah Bentley, end Dwight 14*1hower. Theme of the jJrom Is ."Only for One
Night ..

Top .Southern scholars ·hOnored at banquet

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Helen Moosbian,.

·

Sports

April 30, 11K18

Local diamond results, Page 4&amp;5 ·
Family relationships &amp; stress, Page·8
Beat ofthe Bend, Page 12

Today: Sunny '
High: IIOa; Low: 40a

.. • • •

.

'

Friday

'

•Budded &amp;: Blooming •
Over lSO varieties to choose from

*BOB'S IS.FULLY STOCKED
All YOUR FAVORITE SUMMER
ANNUALS AND BEAunFUL HANGING BASKETS •
Shipped to our retail locations t/aily, fresh from the greenhouse
Including:
Marigolds • Alyssum • Ageratum • SaMa • Impatiens
• Begonias • Boston Ferns • Zonal Geraniums
• And Much More
TWO LOCATIONS:
1/4 MILE NORTH OF POMEFIOY·MASON BFIIDOE, MASON, WV
PHONE (304) n3..a721
OPEN 7 DAYS
A 'WEEK
'
2400 EASTERN AVENUE, OALUPOUS, OHIO.
PHONE (740) 448-1171 . OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

By JIM FREEMAN
"People are talking about South. Sentinel Newl Stiff 1
,'
ern High School,~ he said. "You
Eighty students from the South·
shouldn.'t be able to .do what you
em Local S~hool District were
are doing. You are a JlO!lr district,
honored Thursday night at the disan isolated district."
' -He credited the district's teachers
lrict's twelfth annual academic
· excellence banquet held at Southand staff for the district's high perern High School in Racine.
centage of students attending postState Representative John Carey
high sc~ool colleges and universities, and the district's score on the
(R-Wellston) briefly addressed the
students, encouraging ihem to view
recently released state reJ&gt;ort card
learning as • life-long pursuit.
on schools.
Carey, elected state represent&amp;·
Ironically, the name of last_year's
schofarship winner, Heather Nirole
live In f':lovember, 1994, formerly
served as mayor of Wellston and
Jones, was the first name drawn,
SOiiihem ..venth
•. before that served as aid for former
but since the scholarship is good
gl'lder
Bethany
Amberger
..-lve!l.
1 fr81h1118n
U.S. Representative Ciarence
_ Stlte Repn- fonhe freshman year only, another
YHI'
8Cholll'lhlp from the Unlverelty of Rio
Miller.
·
1e~tlvl John . Ctrly (R·W•II· name had to be drawn.
He said people told him that no lton) ''ltlrndlng addr8l81d 80
Also, Middleport-Pomeroy Gr1nde 1t the Southern Loc1l Ac1demlc
one fro~ _southeastern ,Ohio with-. Southern Local' academic hon· Rotary Club mem~r and Syracuse A-rd• Banquet Thllt'ldly night at Southam
out poltttcal connecuons could 0 , _ and their gll8lt8 lit Thur8- Elementary Proncrpal Robert Bee- High School In RICine. She II ahOWn with
work In Congress, but through hard dliy nlght'l Southern Local Aced· gle presented a $100 savings bond URG'• J1ke BI!M, left, 1nd URG Prelldent Dr.
Berry M. Dol'ley. Her nemew• Hlected It 1'111work and effort he ·managed emlc A-rd• Banquet.
to Merri Collins. .
'
dom.
·
become a member of Miller's staff. .
·
Both Amberger and Collins'
tie
and
Rachell
Marshall
,
Carey told the crowd of 381 people that the Ohio · names were.selected at random, ·
' Southern Junior High ~ eighth grade, Crystal Cot- .
legislature still plans- despite legal challenges- on
Honorees were:
trill,
Mariam El-Dabaja and Brandon Smith; seventh
engratlng Ohio's state motto, "With God all things are
Southern High School - 12th grade, Teresa Bush,
grade,
Bethany Amberger, Stephanie Bradford, Codi
possible," on the newly .renovated' statehouse in O!rista Circle, Jenny Carleton, Josh Ervin, Suzanne
Davis,
Sarah Hawley, Tabitha Jones, Andrea Tedford
Columbus.
·
Evans, Jenny Howerton, Jeremiah Johnson, Kara Klng,
"If you take away any one thing tonight, take away Jesse Little, J.ason Roush and Kim Sayre; lith grade, and Katie Sayre.
Letart Falls Elementary - serond grade, Kevin
this: With God all things are possible," he said.
Jamie Baker, Heather Dailey, Stacy Ervin, Clint~n
Copplck,
Christopher .Holter, Tosha Jones, ' Brittany
Jake Bapst, from the University of Rio Grande, and Hatcher, Kim Ihle, Amber Maynard, Kyle Norris, Julte
Meldau,
Rachael
-Pickens, Anthony Shamblin and
URG President Dr. Barry M..Doiscy presented a fresh- Nakao, O!ris Randolph and Brandon Wolfe; lOth
Caleb
·
U
tt;
third
grade,
Erin Olapman, Megan Day,
·man year scholarship wort!¥ $2,443 to seventh-grader grade, Jonathan Evans, Olad Hubbard, Shauna Manuel
Brittany
Hill
and
Whitney
Riffle.
Bethany Amberger. •
and Brenna Sisaon; ninth gr~de, Joe Cornell, Tyler Lit·

,,

~· -~·-- ----,-·--·--··

-· -- ......-·----·----·
--;._
__
•

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

---·--- ·-------

... ;._,._._... _,:._....,....._ __

-

~ ·

PRESENTED
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club preeented 1 $100'
..vlngl bond to SyriCUH Elementlry wcond
gr1der Merrl Collin• It the Southern Local Ace·
demlc Award• Benq~t T11ur8day night. She Ia
ahown with Syr1cu.. Principal Robert Blegle,
who 11 a member of the Rotlry Club. Her name
wH Hlected It r1ndom.
Portland Elementary - fourth grade, Miranda ·
McKelvey, Bethany Vance;.fifth grade, Dustin Brinager, Heather Nicole Jones; si ~th grade, Sara Cammarata,
1

Continued on page 3

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