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_:-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

.. • • •

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'

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
'
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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·

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-· -- ......-·----·----·
--;._
__
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---·--- ·-------

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

-

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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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Friday, Aprll30, 1999

Commentary

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Hazel Brafford Arnold

weather

Hazel Brafford Arnold, 82, Pomeroy, died Thursday, April 29, 1999 at. bet
residence.
She was born Oct~ S, 1916 in Red House, W.Va., daughter of the late John
William and E.valine Mash Brofford. She was a homemaker and attended the
Zion Church of Christ.
She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Bertha and Patrick
Willilirns of Ray, and Evaline and Ronald McNally of Amesville; three sons and
two daughters-in-law, Lester and Lois Arnold of Westerville, and Nathan Ill and
Shejla Annold, and Wallet Arnold, all of Pomeroy: a stepdaughter and son-in·
law, Maybelle and John DeVer of Otarleston, W.Va.; a sister, Burdell Brofford
of Columbus;.bmthers, Anhur Brofford of Columbus, and Harold Brofford cif
Westerville; two sisters-in-law, Isabel Brofford of Westerville, and· Ruth Brof·
ford of Grove City; tO grandchildren and 13 gr'eat·grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Nathan Eddy Arnold II; four
brothers, William, Clayton, Alfred and Brady Brofford; and a sister, Pearl Oark .
Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy, with
Pastor Virgil Phillips oij'icjating. Burial will be in the Horner Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call allbe funeral home from 4-9 p.m. today.

Saturday, May 1

The media blame the high school, the town, the
scoop for the media to print that one!), ahd the .
parents
•• hell, they'll even blame themselves if
killers aren't in it. 'Oddballs were rejected by other
they
think
viewers will watch it.
oddballs •• how alienated can you get?
Oh, and guns. If the kids hadn 'I had guns, none
They called themselves Goths, but actual
·
· Goths have denounced their actions. Actual Goths if this would have happened.
Conversely, if only there had been MORE
spend their time putting on pale makeup and read·
ing Poe. They do not run amok with machine guns, these two kids could have been shot down
before the killin1 began. Teachers with concealed
guns.
weapons.
That's what America needs.
They listened to Marilyn Manson COs. Is Mar·
Simple
expi'IJlation? These were nerds with
ilyn Manson to blame? No. Marilyn Manson has
guns
out
to
blow up a world that mocked !hell),
dcplpred the .killing. (Rock stars are apparently
and
to
which
they believe they would never
now required to deplore massacres as a price for
belong. These outbursts of adolescent rage, like
their fame.) ·
.They played· DOOM and QUAKE.. Arc the spate of disgnmllcd employee massaaei in
videogames to blame? No. Mil.lions of nerds play the '80s, just a toxic byproduct of capitalism, the
high price of freedom . They're the leimadoes of
DOOM and QUAKE, and kill nothing but time.
. They committed their crimes on Hitler's binh· Aberty, the earthquakes, the raging fire.
If we could predict these horrible events,
day. Were they Nazis? No. One of them was Jew·

I Monoftold

INO.

l41 'n0'

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Kathryn Chapman .

r-·- ---"------------------...,------------ - -

,..,_y.

:E ditorial views.

YEAH...

IGITA

W. VA.
KV.

c

Inc.

-

HU5&amp;Sil4CK

INJNt

EVERYPAY ·
AFTER SCHOOL

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Lament of an old-fa.s.hioned ·investor

Mystery of who ordered·Pan Am bombing remains •

TQday In History

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:Nearly .perfect.conditions
forecast for- this
.. weekend
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~y The Aasocleted

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Kathryn Chapman, Gallipolis, died Friday, April 30, 1999 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
Arrangements will be announced by the fisher Funeral Home.•

Springs cleanup for Racine Village will be held the first week of May.
Residents are to put items at the curb for pickup. Batteries, tires and oir
cans will not be accepted.

SHS ham-turkey dinner
Southern Junior High School will hold a ham-turkey dinner Sunday,
11 ·2 p.m. at Southern High School in Racine. Adults $4.75, children
$3 .~0 . Take-out av~ilable . Menu includes ham or tur~ey, noodl es, sides,
beverage and dessens.

Election luncheon
An election day luncheon will be held Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at
Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.

Sing to be held
A hymn sing will be held S.alurday, 7 p.m. at the Mt. Oiive Communi· ·
ty Church. Long Bottom, with "Eternity" from Point Pleasa'nt, W. Va.
si nging. Pastor Lawrence Bush invites the public.

Dance set

·

·

A round and square dance will be held Satu~day from 8 to u· p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053. True Country will play and Ronnie
Wood will be the' caller.

Council meeting changed ·
. Syracuse Village Council will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at village hall
mstead of Thursday, the regular meeting time.

Eastern Board to meet

John N. Hill

Eastern Local School Board will have a special meeting Monday, 6:311
p.m. at the administration office. Purpose will be to review and perhap!
award bids for building projects.
· '

John N. Hill, 83, Letart Falls, died Friday, April30, 1999 in the
Ravenswood (W.Va.) Care Center.
.Services will be' held Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Roush funeral Home, .
Ravenswood, and friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from 2·
4 and 7-9 p.m.
Further arrangements will 'be announced.
·

Immunization clinic set

Carl ·Hubbard

The Meigs County Health Depanmenl will offer an immunization clin;
ic Tuesday, I to 7 p.m. at the Meigs Multipurpose Center on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. Ea~h c~il~ ~ust be accompanied by a parenl/legaf
guard1an and present the ch1ld s Immunization record.

ESC to meet

Pre••" .
,
The governance committee of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service
A nearly perfect weekend; weatherwise, 'ts being predicted for Ohio.
Center will meet Monday, all p.m. at the office located at 320 East Main
Carl. Leslie ~ubbard, 87, Racine, died &lt;;~n Friday, April 30, 1999, at the
Forecasters say it will be sunny and dry Saturday and Sunday, with
Street, Pomeroy. The policy committee Will meet on May 13 at 6 p.m. at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
highs mostly in the 70s:
. ·
the office located at 507 Richland Ave., Athens.
·
He was born in Syracuse on January 7, 1912, to the late Leslie and Mary
. ·A high pressure system centered over tbe Great Lakes is being credited Hendricks.Hubbard. He was a retired ironworker with Local 787 in Parkers·
AA groups to meet
·
by the National Weather Service for the· lovely conditions.
burg. W.Va., and attended the Church of the Nazarene. He was also a member
An open discussion meeting of the Women's AA will be held at i607
With skies clear, overnight ,temperatures ·~iJI dip into the upper 30s.
of the Pomeroy• Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM.
Nye
Avenue, Pomeroy, tonighi (Friday) at 7 p.m . Saturday there will be~ .
The record-high temperature for this dat~ · al ·the Columbus weather sla·
Surviving are three sons and daughters-in-law: larry and Edie Hubbard of
closed
AA Big Book study meeting, non-smoking.
'ion was 89 degrees in 1942 while the recori:J.Iow was 30 fn 1971. Sunset
Racine,
Roger
and
Nancy
Hubbard
of
Racine,
and
James
and
Shiela
Hubbard,
Trustees
set session
tonight will be at 8:24p.m. and sunrise Saturday 6:32a.m.
·
lancaster; a daughter and son-in-law, Bonnie and Ronnie Ransom of Racine; a
The Rutland Township Trustees will meet at5 p.in. Tuesday at the Rut~ .
Weather forecast:
brother, Oris Hubbard, Pomeroy; 25 grandchildren and 27 great grandchildren.
land Fire Station.
Tonight...Cieai. Lows 40 to 45. Light northeast )'lind.
He was preceded in death by his first wife, Minnie Adrienne Whitlock Hub·
Saturday... Mostly sunny. Highs 70.to 75.
.
. bard; a daughter, !'laney Hubbard Patterson; a son, Ronnie Hubbard; a stepson, .
. Saturcllly night ...Clear. Lows.in the mid 40s.
William Whitlock; four brothets: lawrenoe, Norman, Edison, and William•
1 'f • ...: ...... I
.n
Exted.ded rorecast: "'
Hubbard; four sistets: Elizabeth Stewart, Louise Anderson, Mildred Pierce, and
Sunclar:~.Sunny. Highs in the mid 10s.
'
Virginia Molden,
· YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - A process for a structure within whi&lt;;'ti
clear. Lows·50 to 55.and ~ighs 75to 80.
Graveside se..Vices will be held at II a.m.' on Monday, May 3, -1999 at the Democratic leader says he was they could operate," Morley told the
cloudy. Lows 50 io 55 and highs 80 to 85.
Letart Falls Cemelery·Chapel in Racine.
. ·
approached by a man who wants to Chronicle Tribune of Warrel}.
•·
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeiat Home in Racine on Sunday from take a jailed mob leader's place.
"Then he said 'Don't worry.
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services will be held on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.,
Michael Morley, who is chairman We're not going IQ ask you to fix a
. s(\lall explosive device.
under the direction of the Pomeroy' Racine Lodge 164, F&amp;AM. ·
By The Ass!!clalell fress
of the party in Mahoning County, case If we have to whack someone /"
Three school districts in an easterq
said the man approacheo him · in a
Strollo, 68, is behind bars aft~r
•. fie said the device was found after .
Ohio couqty. cancel¢ c!i~Sj~e!!Joday . ~.hoo! ,ncar th~ building at Maysville
·
·
•
restaurant in March - just weeks pleading guilty in February to ru~ ­
for undisclosed safety reasons, and High School, and was removed and
Charles Roben Lewis Sarson, n; Racine, died Thursday, April 29, 1999 after mob leader Leoine ·" Lenny" ning a mob operation in eastern
deputies were posted at some schools detonated. No one was injured.
Strollo testified against his subordi· Ohio, plotting to kill a rival gang
in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
in a neighborjng county after an
..
.
.
leader, running a numbers game al)d
• Stephenson said he put officers at
He was born in New Brighton, Pa. on May. 10, 1926, son of the taie nates.
elqllosive lft:?ce w~ found_on one ,the schools to raise law · enforce· . Wheeler aqd Ethel Pickens Sarson. He was a heavy equipment operator for
Morley sa1d the man; whom he bribing qfficials. Dozens of othe.ri;
•campus, ofticiala·satd. . · ·
mentts visibility. ·
·
llvans Concrete, now Martin Marietta, in Ravenswood, W.Va. He was a had never mel, S.id he had been in have been convicted of taking part in
lbey are the latest closures and
contact with Cleveland and Pitts· a wide range of mob·rl\lated activl·
"Everybody's very uneasy about member of the Racine American Legion, Post602.
·
~ports of heightened tension followties.
.
all this," he said today. "I wanted to
Surviving are his wife, Stella McCoy Sarson; three daughters and sons· burgh members of the mob. .
ing shootings last· week in Littleton, make sure kids saw these oftieers iri·law: Batban and 10m La'ite, Cheryl and Paul Milliron ·and Stella
· "He told me rhatthey recognized
Morley sa.id he inlle:nuJ*d ~
Colo., whfch left 15 people dead.
there. I wanted them to understand "~a~my" and Carl Alley, all tif Racine; a son, Michael Sarson of Racine; a void existed and they had decided man, told him he was not interesiOd
'
. In Gu~rnsey , GoUJ!Iy, the ·,Epst we're trying to provide a safe erivi· five grandchildren; and two sisters, Margaret Wolfe of Racine, and Juanita to work with him in establishing a in helping and called the FBI.
Guernsey, Cambridge and Rolling ronment." ..,
Justice of Belpre! ·
·
Hills districts ·canceled classes for
Four Xenia High School students
He was also preceded in death by his brothers, Wheeler Sarson Jr., Ralph
what the sheriff's dCpartment would were charged and suspended on Sarson .and Harold Sarson; two sisters, Louise Meredith and Virgie Ours; .
Units of the Meigs County Emer· arrival;
·
describe only as safety concerns. All Thursday after allegedly threatening and two grandchildren. .
.
gency
Medical
Service
recorded
nine
6:34·p.m
.•
Beec~
Stree~
Pomeroy,
undetermined number of students "to do something similar" to what
Graveside services will b~ 11 a.m. Saturday in the Letan Falls Cemetery,
were affeCted..~·'·,. { \ j l u . , 11., ~ occurred · in Littleton, Colo., police with the Rev. Bruce Utt officiating. Friends may .call at the Roush Funeral calls for assistance Thursday. Units James Ward, treated ·attbe scene;
responding included:
8:15 p.m.,' North Second Avenue',
In Muskingutn. CounJy, _14 U. Dan Donaliue said.
Home, Ravenswood, W.Va., ofrom 5-8 p.m. today.
C::::ENTRAL DISPATCH
Robbie Clonch, treated at the 5cene,
deputies were placed at middle and
12:18 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabil· Middlepon squad assisted . .
high schools as a precaution arid ·to
.
itation
Center, Louie Sarson, Veter· ·
.
RACINE
ease fears following the disi:overy on
ans
Memorial
Hospital,
Pomeroy
6:27p.m.,
VFD 'and squad to state
. Thursday of what Sheriff Bob
squad
assisted;
Route
·124,
motor-vehicle
accident,
Stephensop wou)d describe only as a
7:46 a.m., Third Street, Middle· Amy Shultz, VMH.
·
•
•
port, Mike Smith, VMH, Mi&lt;jdleport RUTLAND
Volunteer Fire Depanmenl and
2:30 p.m., RRC, Iva Denn'y,
squad assisted;
VMH.
~ATI/"'1\""
10:23 a.m., Bigley. Ridge Road,
TUPPERS PLAINS
BAAOIN NIGHT
Long
Bottom,
David
Priddy.
VMH,
10:25
a.m., state Route 124,
ALL 8EAT8 $2:00
Reedsville squad assisted;
Leonard Barber, Camden-Clark
2:17 p.m., Kingsbury Road, Memorial Hospital, Reedsvil]~
Pomeroy, Hazel Arnold, dead on squad assisted.
·
·
t

Democratic chairman: man wantefJ
to take jailed mob leader's place

......

~ch.~ols

re

target o' threats

charles R Sarson

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

441····

The Daily: :Sel1ttin•~ll
.. (USPs il)...0)
,
. Co01mouolly N....,.por Holdlwp,tne.

,.

Top Southern .s cholars ...

·

Pubtilhed ~·ry wrooon, folooday IJu""aJI
Fridly, 111 Cout1 St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
'Ohio VIlle) ·PubtlohinK Compony.-Sooond ct..

~~ :t:.tOhr\:;.:io&lt;lthe ~bia:·
New.,..,.,~ ·

- :

.... -

........,.llld Hllf'llllellftlaiOIWI•'fttl •
Dol~ s.o~tttot, ·m ~ St., Pl&gt;n·~~o~;d'
4! 7 · sulltilcalf'I'JON RATES ~

1~c.n~or .. Motor-i

ene w..t..,............................. .S2W
one
Mooth: ................: .............. $8.70
One Ycar..................... ~ ............ $104.00
SINGLE copy Pf\ICE
s.~~;;';;;;i'[i;;iri~~·;;;·j;;:'ii;;'~~~
,.m111n ""'""".diN&lt;StoTho o.;ay Sentinel on

~::~~:.!J.,:~h bui• Cr~k .wml"'
No nbocrii&gt;&lt;il&gt;!t t.y ,.;t pmniued ,• .,...

SCHOLARS- Tha following Southern Locelalementary atudenta wera honored
·"l'huraday n~ht at the $outhem Local Acadtmlr.
Excell111ce ·Banqult• Th.v
ara ' from lift·' front ~•ow
• •J \ _,C_ _&amp; '
..:11
"'!
-,
• ~ •._._. Fal 1 Elemantary aacond graue, Kevin Copplck, Chrtatopher Holter, Toeha Jones, Brit·
tany Meldau, Rachael Plckena, Anthony Shamblin and Celab Uti; third greda, Erin Chapman,
Megan Day, Brittany Hill and Whitney Rime; ncond row- Portland Elementary fourth grada,
Miranda McKelvey! Bathany Vance; fifth grade, Dualln Brlnag.1er, Haathlr 1\!lcole Jonea; alxth
: grade, Sara Cammarata,
Autumn Reed , Bryan Smith
and Ryan
Smith·1 third row - Syracu11 El•
,
.
.
mantary ncond grade, Zachary Aah, Merrl Collin a, Alex.Hawley, Emma Huntar, CheiHa Pape and
Sac mdalntflh!_Patleraon; third grada, Morgan Brown, 4nctaay BIIZZird, Heather Cundiff, Stephania
11n r .... rah El-DabaJa and.Erlc Plerca;.fCIJirth row, Syracu~te Elamentary fourth grada, Nlcholaa
Buck, Chance Colllna, Olivia Dudding, Mallory Hlll1Jacob Huntar, Adalle Rice and AahiH Taaford;
fifth grade, Ryan Amberger and John Bantz; alxth grade, Aahton Brown and Stecy Snyder.
.

whercr home Wrier aerY ice is available. 'Ptlbli1her JQerva the risht to ldjllllrlleJ dur·
iaa the aulllcrlptlon period. Subterlplion rlilll

Continued from paga 1
grade, Ashton Brown and Stac~ .
Autumn Reed, Bryan · Smith and · Snyder.
·
..
Ryan Smith.
Honorees were presented medal·
lions by Southern Local Board of
Syracuse Elementary - second Education President Roben Collins: ,
grade, Zachary Ash, Merri Collins,
Alex Hawley, Emma Hunter,
Chelsea Pape· and Samantha Patter·
son; third grade, Morgan Brown .
Lindsay .Buzzard, Heather Cundiff,
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah El·Dabaja
and Eric Pierce ; fourth · grade,
Nicholas Buck, Chance Collins,
Olivia Dudding, Mallory Hill,
Jacob Hunter, Adelle Rice and Ash·
lee Teaford; fifth grade, Ryan
Amberger ·and John Bentz; sixth

fhanps '"" be implemented .by clwlaina the ·
dut.~tian

of the sublocriplion.
•:''
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MAtLSIJIIIICRIPTIIIN

. itul!l• M. . CooniJ

13 Weeb: .......................... $27.30
26 Weeki .............. :............ .S$3.82
!2 w..u .....................:.... .su~.!li
Oublde Melp CouolJ
. 13 W..lat .....!..,...l .........:.:.s29.2S .
26 W..kl-...................... .$$6.68
52 """~ ...... ,..............._,,S109.7%

LOST &amp; FOUND {PQ13)

. N~o.pi.rt~ta "
••••' ...be(

wtfl.ll~.S'.' JWPart;

••urt 11 • • 1n1
·
Gtaerat Maa...........................EltL UOt
1

N...~ .........................:.....:.............Ext; 1102
or ExL 1106

Other Sarvlcea

AdwertlolQ. ........................:......,.E•L 1~114
Ctrallllo1L..:. ....::...•..:...:.........EltL 1103

ClaiiiW lliii&amp;L o.l.l.,;,'o\,L,.~,,..-,.,.,.,.,,Eft.r llOO

7:20 &amp; 1:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20&amp; 3:20

denta Ml'l honored
night at the
L.ocet Acadamlc Excellence
Shown
ara, by row from lift: flrat row ..- eighth
Cryttal Cottrill, Mariam El~DabaJa and Brandon
Smith; eevtmth grade, Bethany Ambel'gar,
Bradford, Codl Davl1, Sarah Hawlay, Tebltha
Jonas, Andrea Tedford and Kltla Sayra;
row -10th grada, Jonathan Evans, Chad Hubbard, Shauna Manuel and Branna Sls10n; ninth· grade, Joe Cornell, Tyler Utile and Rachell Mar•
aha II; third row -11th grade, Jaml" Bakar, Haathar Dailey, Stacy Ervin, Kim lhla, Ambar Maynard,
Kyla Norrla, Julie Nak10, Chris Randolph and Brandon Wolfe; fourth row- 12th grade, Teraaa
. Bueh, Chrlata Clrcl,, Jtmny Carllto", Joeh Ervin, Suzanne Evans; Jenny Howarton,' Jaramlah
Joh~aon, Kara King,, Jas11 Utile, Jnon Rouah end Kim Sayra.

.

.. . '
..

•

........

'I

..

By 1111 Sholl"
MMsacres are called
."tragedies,'' as though some
111 Court St., PomerOy, Ohio
demented Shakespeare had
740 1182-2150 • Fax: 1182·2157
scribbledotl)cse ugly IICCIIcs.
• But the traply is over by
the time we sit down to
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
watch it. The acton either
are
dead or have ned in ter·
ROBERT L WINGETT
ror.
AI I we get to see arc "'c
Publlahar
stretchers leaving the scene~
the authorities searchina
.
DIANE HILL
CHARLENE.HOEFUCH
through
the
rubble,
as
tl!e
suave
voices
of the air·
Controller
General Man.,waves tell us what we'rc.supposed to think about
it.
We're aftcn:nath junkies, uninvited guests who
1lN Sentinel tNIGOII'NIII ,.,.,.. 1o rt.• M/101 from ,....,.. Ott • , _ , , . , . . ot ,...
blunder
onto the crime scene and help ourselves to
loe.
(* ., - } ,. ol
P'
~ Jttt.,. .,.. ,._'-'*1 MHI •N m.y I»~- E~ Mould lntJiutH • _,.,..,.,._.
the
grief
of others, as if the mere act of paying
•da1 .,., tttG tMyt~trw phoM numb«. Sptlelfy • d.,. H ,_.•• • ,..,.,.,. to • ,..
Wow , . , . 01 ,.,., 111111 to: Ull.,. to Ill• editor, TIN Sentinel, 111 Court at,
attention had earned us a piece of it. .
Ohio U'fl; or, FAJ( lo 740-~117.
'
We seem to thiQk that these
events occur so we can learn sonic·
thing. Why, then, do the lessons
always remain the same? Sooner or
later, you'd think we'd graduate and.
move on ..
Certainly, we get our share of
liere ~excerpts from editorials in newspapers in the United States:
~MY
explanations.
We are given .theories
:The News Herald of Panama City, Fla.,
about what drove the killers to i~
'.pn Colorado school shootings:
how we could have prevented this
· · We ~now who is responsible for turning the Colorado high school into a. tragedy, what we must do to stop the .
lilling field . ... We even know ... who possibly could have prevented it: ne•t one. But the explanations are as
;Mike Vendegnia, or Alisa Owen, or Greg Barnes. Others, too, and students appalling as ·the m·assacres them·
·all.
·
selves.
·
. Dy Jan Klebold, recalled fellow senior Vendegnia, "was into guns and ·
After the carnage, we get the hot ·
air, the blow-dried heads bringing
.stufflike that. We'd talk and joke around."
. Klebold and Eric Harris always "were joking around saying, 'We are the tears live to your Jiving room.
From all across the country, . the
·going to•shoot you,'" Owen said.
· It was Barnes who told the Denver Rocky Mountain News that no one media descend. In the parking Jots of
took .Harris and Klebold seriously. He needed no prompting to add, "That Littleton, Colo., video crews stand
around drinking coffee, waiting for
was a mistake." ... ·
,
.
some
weeping· teen to walk by so
It's not pleasant to imagine·a scliool resource officer or an administrator ·
asking parents to come in to talk about suspicions other students have of they can grab a'shot.
Psychologists crawl out of the
their son. But that apparently is the only prevention that can work . ...
: In truth, the first defense against a situation like this·is other students. It's woodwork to tell us when the people
of Littleton can expect closure. Only
politicians whO cloud..the issue.
.
.
·
when closure is achieved, to the sat·
The Seattle Times, on Colorado school shootings:
Adolf Hitler was born 110 .years ago April 20 and committed suicide a isfaction of the media, will we stop
half-century ago, but he lives on ·..:... resurrected to describe war crimes in far· watching..
•
So what are the excuses this
·a.way Kosovo and to inspire unspeakable horrors toward children so close to
time?
home.
The boys killed because they were outsiders. ish. They killed white athletes, an act Hiller would would we really try to stop them? No. We'd stan.d
Two students became gunmen at a middle-class sub~rban high school
in their way, cameranolling, ready to capture ali)'
·near Denver, Colo., killing 15 people and wounding at least23 others in one they were members of the Trenchcoat Mafia, we have abhorred.
"Where were their parents?" we cry. Well, rampage a.s it happens. The aftermath of Littleton
·of the worst shooting rampages in recent history. Classmates say the boys were told, • ·group of weirdos on the fringes of what were they supposed to do? Suspect that their is just another morbid diversion, until the next
were part of a group that spoke admiringly of Hitler and wore swastikas on high school culture. Bu't no, the actual Trenchcoat
own children were about to embark on a killing beast comes along.
their clotlling; the carefully planned spree was aimed first at minoritjes and Mafia said that the killers were only on the fringes
spree,
Md tum them .in? What then? Guidance Copyrlghl1811 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. .
of theidringe. Sure enough, there's a picture of
·athletes, then at any human being in their paths ....
'
The first rash of shootings prompted disbelief that such a thing could hap- the Trenchcoat Mafia in the yearbook (what a counseling?
.Jien at a school. By Springfield last May, the disbelief had narrowed. Once
t~e nation unwillingly absorbed school shootings as a freakish reality of
modern education, the disbelief was no longer that it could happen, but that
it might happen often, or nearby.
•
·
Hitler is an inappropriate metaptior for nearly any current event, QO mal· By .JOHN CUNNIFF
Smart investors also diversified, stocks.
The old-fashioned , 1
.t~r how terrible. But one of the lessons of Hitler is the frightening ability of
And so, "armed with youth, a
AP Sueln- Analyel
if they could afford to do so. They
:humans to ·accept the terrible as normal.
·
·
. NEWYORI&lt;(AP) - Th~lamenl bought a ·variety ·of stocks so they . wealth of knowledge, and unbound· investor, for example, once
The Times-Picayune, New Orleans,
of the old-fashioned investor sounds wouldn't be vulnerable to a down· ed energy, I was sure t 'wo~ld make could estit(Ulte the value of
today like that of the worried clergy· turn in one. And then they wailed. my mark in the investment world,"
an Lessons from Littleton:
Perritt recently told readers of his ,a company's shares
· ; Maybe the Trenchcoat Mafia didn't seem any more threatening than other man: How do you find your way in patiently.
There was little disagreement ''Mutual Fund Letter."
through such indicators as
teenage cliques that adopt a certain look or attitude, even if that attitude was · an environment where values don't
count?
And he did. His work with under·
about
all this. You invested only
rebellious and antisocial. ...
·
The . old-fashioned investor, for
nlued . small-company . stocks is price-earnings or price- .
But Tuesday's carnage at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., is a example, once could estimate the after wary investigation; you
greatly. appreciated by a generation . equity ratios. These ratios
horrifying reminder to school officials everywhere that th~y need to be vig· value of a company's shares through watched each quarter-point 'price of
small investors. His analyse~ of.
chapge;
you
waited
patiently
over
ilant when it comes to violence....
were time-teste,tl.
such
indicators
.as
price-earnings
or
mutual
funds are widety followed .
.
the
long·haul,
usua.
l
ly
for
y~ars.
· · The Littleton attack, after all, is not an isolated incident: Even as violence
Partly with tongue in cheek -to
History had shown this was the
continues tq deere~ on school campuses nationwide, with 90 percent of price-equity ratios. These ratios
were.
time-tested.
what
extent is open to various inter· so. That's the way to go; ask any kid:
way to go, and people !ike Benjamin
·schools reporting no serious violent crimes, incidents like those in Pearl,
prctalions
- Perritt says he had a
But for poor Perritt and his like, .
In a marketplace where for years Graham, the father of modern secu·
Miss.; Paducah, Ky.; Jonesboro, Ark.; and Springfield, Ore., seem to signal
had been willing to pay 14 rities analysis, were to be ignored at good measure of the marketplace, .the time is wrong. "I have bee~
a terrifying and deadly trend. Loners, ki(js who are teased and ostracized, investors
times annual earnings, for example, your peril. They had laid down the "until I rail headfirst into the decade cursed,'' he says. "I believed what!
turn to acts of unspeakable violence. Littleton's distinction is that it was the a profitable, growing. well-managed
.
had been taught"
of the 1990s.."
rules; you obeyed.
most deadly....
company
with
good
products
might
What
happened
then,
he
says,
is
And so, h(lalti~•. ll!t"tears of
.
You
probably
studied
Graham's
It's encouraging that many schools and communities aren 'I ignoring the
that
"everything
I
was
taug~t
about·
the
crocodi Je staining ·a ·visage thar
be a buy at 7 times.
teachings, just as Gerald Perritt
potential for a tragedy in their. midst.
It might, at least, have been wonh studied them while earning a doctor· successful investing in business once exuded'confidence,"[ have lit·
·aut grants, workshops and programs can only do·so much. The bottom
looking into, which more than inci· ate in business administration.
school doesn't work anymore."
tie chance of making 10 percent OJ
line is paying attentiolj. and everyone,- parents, volunteers who work·with
"As practiced, the way to invest is 20 ~rcent a day from my invest-:
dentally is what old-fashioned
Graham
preached
that
the
surest
. ybuth, teachers, administrators and even other students - ·needs to have investors did before buying. You
way to capital erosion wlis to pay lei take a handful of stocks w)tose ment portfolio."
' their antennae up....
Undoubtedly, he has your sympa· .
never bought hastily; no more than too much for the stock of a good names you got from Internet chat
Daily Jefferson County Union,
you'd sell in just a few weeks.
rooms.
Buy
stocks
that
have
no"
thy.
Perhaps you too ·havc:had the :
90mpany, says Perritt, a still savvy
That was before time sped ·up, invesleir and investment advisor.
earnings at all. And don't fall in loVe same fate befall you, and so you ·
Fort Atkinson, Wis., on school shootings:
with them.
·understand. •·
.
:
which
was
back
in
the
pre-1990s.
"Old
Ben
told
me,''
he
said,
to
In the minutes and hours after the first shots were fired in Littleton, Colo.,
Rather
·than
succumbing
to
the
Returns
·
of
that
sort,
Perri
II
:
Back
then,
companies
earned
money
"do
your
homework,
locate
well-run
the media were scrambling to piece together the scenario inside Columbine
by being efficient, by cutting companies, and pay a modest multi· · lure of long-term investing, trade despairs, "are reserved for investors ·
High School. ...
expenses,
managing capital, deveJ: pie of expected earnings:" Th.at, said out of these high-flying stocks and under the age of~ who have never ·
In ·the days that followed, however, the big question has been: How can
·
America stop tragedies such as this from happening again? And everyone oping products and growing slowly. Ben, was the way to prosper .in take your profits after a few hours or seen the stock market go down."
seems to have a different answer.
There are those who would have us install metal detectors in our schools
or require students to wear uniforms so no teen-ager feels or can be differ·
· By J.cii Ancler110n
Palestine-General Com· report that JibrU personally met.with Iranian cab- .
epl and outside the pack.
·
mand (PFLP-Gq, which inet. ministers and Revolutionary Guard leaders
: Thert are · others who tout stricter gun control, saying that curbing and Jen Holler
Even
if
the
chief
suspects
in
the
bombing
of
31\
generally
specializes in twice in July 1988 to seal the despicable deal. The
forearms' availability is the first step in halting violence.
vicious attacks on inno· final go-ahead was given in Beirut weeks later.
: There are people, including some Wisconsin legislators, who propose · American airliner are convicted this year, the
Several key u,s. intelligence 5!1U~S agree
cents· in Israel. He was
families of the victims may be no closer to find·
b~nning minors' purchase of COs .and tapes bearing labels that warn of
that
the PLO's version makes a lot of sense. Iran
ing
out
which
top
leaders
of
which
countries
kicked
out
of
the
Palestine
nasty, inciteful and questionable lyrics. ...
·
was
viscerally ·angiy att~e United States, but did·
ordered
the·
terrorism.
·
Liberation
Organization·
: While well-meaning, these are knee-jerk responses to a much deeper
In
December
1988,
Pan
Am
Flight
103
was
decades
ago,
and
has
more
n
'I
feel
it could afford an overt •• trB~:Cable •• ter·
ptoblem troubling America's children, and turning off TVs, banning COs or
rorist
act
while it was busy with the Iran-Iraq hosblown
up
in
the
air
over
the
tiny
village
of
than
once
tried
to
assassi·
ll)lnsfor~
·ng schools into prisons w.ill not alo~e prevent another Littleton,
·
.
lilities.
·
Lockerbie, Scotland. All 259 passengers on the
nate his enemy Yasse~
Jenesboro r West Paducah 'from taking place.
.
plane
••
189
of
them
Americans··
and
11
persons
Arafat.
·
Jibril was hurting for cash at the !18me time.
: We do I claim to be psychologists, but it seems clear that many children
Thou&amp;h
he had been no great friend of Iran, his
on
the
ground
were
killed.
Arafal
himself
once
showed
us
a
PLO
intclli·
ate not learning two very basic concepts that previous generations were
normal
.
patrons, Libya's Qaddafi and Syria's
Evidence
in
the
murky
world
of
intelligence
gence
report
that
detailed
Jibril's
involvement
in
tl!"ghl at home from ea.rly on:. Resil"Ct and responsibility. ... '
.Hafez
Assad,
were coming up shorl. Jibril was
soon
pointed
to
a
contract
hit
arranged
by
an
the
bombing.
Certainly
Arafat
has
r~ns
to
dis·
• America has become a nation that treats the symptoms instead of the dis·
never
a
mercenary
before or si nee, but such an
else. Teaching respect and resp&lt;lnsibili.ty early on at home might not single· angry, America-hating Iranian government in credit Jibril, whose PFLP·GC is one of.the most
l
operation
could
fit
into
his twisted anti-Israel pat·
cahoots with a radical Palestinian terrorist group. important rejectionist Palestinian aroups doing
h~edly stave offan epidemic ofs~hool violence, butit is a very good piB~:C
But physical evidence developed a strong. link .everything it can to quash Arafal'l deals for peace · tern.
to start.
: ~sides, Jibril's PllLP·GC was the lone terror·
to two Libyan intelligence agents, Abdel Basset wid~ Israel.
Ali ai-Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah.
But ·independent U.S. intelligence sources ist group with the expertise and previous expcri·
Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi refused for have alleged for years that the Iranians paid Jibril ilnce in blowing up airplanes. They perfected the
·ltr The Auocl...cl Pre..
years to tum them over for trial in Scotland, to blow up the airliner. The two Libyans current· plastiq~e-expiOBive bqmb, which ~ld be plant~
: Today is Frida~,Apri130,the !20th day of 1999. There are 245 days left whieh produced American-led international sane· ly charged with the crime were .likely ·involved, . ed aboard a plane and alta4:hed .lei an altimeter.
in the year.
.
.
lions.
they add, but 'the directors and paymasters were designed lei trigger the bomb .whe·n the plane·
: Today's Highll&amp;ht in History:
A compromise wu recently reached, and the Iranian government officials, and the overseers reached a certain altitude.
; On April 30, 1939, the New York World's Fair officially opened. ,
· 1Wo months before the explosion, in fact, a
two were flown to the Netherlands where; on were Jibril and the PFLP·GC. Jibril maintains
• On this date:
·
'
. April 14, they were formally bound over for an headquarters both in tripoli, Libya, and Damas· PFLP·OC cell was raided in Germany and one ot
: ·tn 1789, George Washington took office in New York as the first prcsi- upcoming trial before three Scottish judges in The cus, Syria.
these devices was found in ihe terrorists' apart·
· d~nl of the United States. .
·
·
Hague.
1
These sources also believed the PLO had more men!.
: In 1803, the United States purchased the Louisiana Territory from France.
The case is strona. and the two Libyans may be II!XCSS to details about this operation than did the
In a bizarre, clandesti?e J)le~ting · in l?amascus
, In 1812, ·Louisiana became the 18th state of the Union.
.convicted. But that. won't answer the question of CIA or Israel's MOIISad spy service. For that rea· once, we confronted JibrU with 110me of these
: In .1900, Hawaii was organized as a U.S. territory.
who ordered the bo"\bing: Qaddafi? The Syrians? son, we once successfully pressed Yas5er Arafat facts. He had no part of that operation, he protest·
; In t90b, engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones of the Illinois Central Rail· Iran?
·
personally for a look at an llnglish·translation, ed. And he suggested we shouldn 'I run the&gt; •. ;~·'
road was killed in a wreck near Vaughan, Miss., after staying at the controls
• I'
Our extensive intelligence 110urces · on this . classified PLO document on the Pan Am bomb· "insp,ired" Iranian leadc!lhip down because they·
irl an effort to save the passengers.
·
·
·
.
were irying·to do some wonderful things.
.
case, interViewed bY. our associate Dale Van Alta ina.
. In I 943, as Russian troops approached his Berlin bunker, Adolf ~iller over several years, still point the finger at Iran.·
The secret PLO . report reveals Iran paid $8
And the device discovered in Germany? It was
committed suicide along with his wif.,Of one day, Eva Broun.
The.consiatency of the intelligence reporting.from . million to Jibril and his. henchmen to carry out the curious, Jlbril admitted, but he maintained the
· In 1970, President Nixon announced the United States wu sending CIA sources, plus Russian and Arab intelligen,ce bloody deed, which was to be a retaliation for Ihe altimeter was to be used for mountain-climbing.
troops into c.mbodia, an action that sparked widespread protest.
officials, is compelling. ·
·
·accidental 1987 American shootdown of an Iran· Why was it attached lei a plastique.filled Toihiba:
In 1973, Nixon announced the resignations of top aldea H.R. Haldeman
The contract went to Ahmed Jibril, a terrorist ian passenger liner.
radio? He l~ughed, but provided no explanation. · .
and John Ehrllchman, along·with Attorney General Richard 0. Kleindienst who heads the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Arafat's intelligence officers claim in the Copyrtghttltll, United I'Hiure llynclleile, Jno.
and White House counsel John Dean.
. .I
.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Announcement
Death Notices .--Racine
sets cleanup

The Daily Sentinel Just anothe.r morbid diversion'£sta6(tsfid iJ1 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7:00 &amp; 1:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20

�•

.
Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

1997). I think he 'II be fine."
Loewer was more critical of his
latest effort
"!dug a deep hole and we weren't
able to get out of it this time," he
said."! was up in the strike wne too
much early in the game and I wasn't
able to make the adjustment until it
was basically too latl!."
For Lewis, the return to·
Philadelphia was special. For one, he ·
enjoyed his season with the Phillies,
and it gave him a chance to show up
the team that let him go last season.
"There's no question I was trying
hard," Lewis said. "That was some·
thing I'll never forget. But I have no
hard feelings. It just feel s good to

The Wahama White Falcons
scored five runs the first inning en
route to soundly defeating the nutter·
ing Eastern Eagles I8·0 Thursday
night in a non-league baseball con·
test at Eastern High School.
Eastern (5-11) was playing with·
out the services of (i ve starters who
failed to show up for warm-ups.
John Smith, Northrup. and David
Tennant combined for a three-hit
shut out. They fanned three and
walked two.
Easterner Eric Smith, recovering
from a line-drive shot two days ago,
went 'three innings, with relief from
Jeremy Coleman and Joe Dillon.
Brad Willford caught another good

win." .

LewiS believed that he was
benched dunn)! the Phillies' final
games in 1998 due to money issues.
He was getting $1,500 a plate
appearance at that point of the season
but didn ' t play 1n the team 's doubleheader on the last day of the season.

Eastern softball team cruises
to 10•2 victory over Wahama

game.
Eastern hitters were Wes Crow,
Dustin Huffman; ·and Ben Holter. .
Walks went to Bradley Brannon and
Joe Dillon .
Wahama (14-8) got hits from Joe
Finnicium with a double and two
singles, Alan Staats two singles, and
B. Roush with two singles.
Eastern goes to Waterford today.
lnglnclglll.l
Wabama ................528-3 0= I 8-12·0
Eastern .......................000·00=0·3·5 .
Batteries
.
,
Wahama: Smith (W), Northrup, . ·
:
Tennalll and Huff
Eastern: Smith (L), Coleman,:;
Dillon. and Will ford

Basketball
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
Center M1chael Bradley, who set a
Kentucky record for field goal per·
centage, and guard Ryan Hogan have
left the team, giving the Wildcats
only seven returning scholarship
players.
Kentucky athletic director C.M.
Newton said both players told him
they thought it was in their best inter·
ests to transfer without giving any .
further reason .
Basketball
FULLERTON, Calif. (AP)- Cal

(See REDS on Page 5)
FOILS DOUBLE PLAY
Philadelphia second . sacker
Marion Anderson(16) leaps out
bf the way of Cincinnati's Mark
Lewis after getting lewis out at
second base In the second
lnnln,!l of Thursday night's
National League game In
Philadelphia, where the Reds
won 7-3. Anderson's bid to get
the double play failed. (AP)

The Eastern softball team won its
lourth straight game Thursday by
beating Wahama 10-2.
Stephanie Evans picked up the
win with a six-hit , three strike out
performance. She also walked just
one.
Howard suffered the loss with two
strikeouts and no walks, She gave up
f1fteen h1ts.
Eastern ( 10- 7) scored three runs
in the firs.t inning on a Kri sten
Chevalier single, a Jul i Hayman single, Val · Karr reached on an error to
~

.

State Fullert?n was placed on foui. ;
years _probauon by the NCAA for; ·
violations jnvol~ing the men.'s i)as-:;
ketball program.
,
The Division "I Committee orr ;
Infractions decided that the Titans' ·
wilt lose two sc holarships for the
next two years, from 13 to II , and
barred scholarships for junior college
transfers for \hree years.
There were no sancuons regard·
ing postseason play or television.
The violati ons mostly involved
recruiting and providing improper
inducements.

By RICHARD ROSENBLATT .
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP) - Nick
Zi'to remembers his first Kentucky
Derby well ·The trainer remembers
his second Kentucky Derby even bet·

Jerry Eggers, Cain McKinney, Eric Burnam, Zach
Weber and mascot Joshua Burnam. Standing are tcr.
" I remember standing there look·
Curtis Varian, Zach Buah, coach Sam Morrison,
mg
at everythi ng, t~lking to a reporter
Jeffrey Baughman and coach Greg Burnam.
and luukin ' ba~k . look in ' hack.
lookin' back," Zitb said Thursday.
"Finally, she asked , 'What are you
look mg at?'
" I told her I didn ' t want to miss
anything."
He didn'·t. On his second tnp to
Churc hill Downs, m 1991. Zito won
his fir st Kentucky Derby with Strike
lhe Gold.
Three years later; he won agai n
w1th Go for Gm, making him one of
three tramers to win a pair of derbies
thi s decade. Bob Baffert and D.
Wayn'e Lukas are the others: Baffert ·
won the last tw o with Real Quiet in
'98 and Silver Charm in '97: Lukas
won the tw o before with Grindstone
in '96 and Thunder Gulch in '95.
A wi n in Saturday's !25th Derby
by any of them would break the tie
and leave the victor with the distinc·
11on of being the Derby's "Trainer of
the Decade."
·
"After you win, it's like 'wow!'
and you just wan! to keep goi ng,"
said Zito, glancing around the back·
stretch Thursday morning to . make
sure his Derby horses, Adonis and
Stephen Got Even, were OK. "It's
unbelievable to think you've won two
KQr~tucky derbies.and you ' re pushing
for a th11d .one. That's what makes
America great, huh ?"
Baffert is pushing for an unprece·

SIXTH GRADE
- The Salem
Center Mustangs cljllmed a championship victory
over the Bradbury Yellow Jackets to claim the
annual Meigs Local Elementary School Basketball
Tournament sixth-grade crown. Kneeling are (L·R)

•

Scoreboard
Arizona fStoUlemyre 2· 1) at Milwaukee (Abbon

·0-31. 2:05p.m.

St, Louis (Osborne 0-21 at Montreal (Thurman O·
IJ.7:05p m
Los Angeles (Dre ifon J.l) p.t Ptuladelphta
(Spolj aric 0-2 ). 7·0S p.m.
Houston (Limn 3-1} ac f1onda (Spnn8cr 0-3),

AL standings
'

Ea1tern Division

•

Ium

.11: .. ll;l.

6 700
10 .565
10 .524
12 II .522
. 5 16 .138

New York
Toronto
Boston ..

... 14
.. I J
. II

Tampa Bay .

..

Bahuoore .

7:05p.m

Iii

CINCIN NATI (Harni sch
(Millwood 1-2). 7·10 p.m

2':
3':
3':
9':

Chica~o

16 5 762
II
8 519
10 12 455
.. 8 II 421

...

Detro•t ..
Kansas Cuy
Min~sota

.9

I)

Sunday's ganies

4

6 '·~

1

7',

409

Western Di"hlon

10 545
12 . 4~5
Seattle ........ .............. .. 10 12 455
Oakland .......................... 9 14 39 1

Tega ....................... ..... , 12
Anaheim ...................... 10

Atlanta

CINCINNATI al Atlanlb, 1.10 p m
St. Louis at Montreal, 1:3!1 p m.
l9:i AAgt:lel at Philadelphia, I 35 p m
Colomdo at Pitllbursh, 1.3!1 p m.
San Fnmciscp at New York, 1:40pm
Arb:ona 111 Milwaukee, 2.05 p m
San Diego at Chicago, 2.20 p m.
Hou11un at Aorida, 4 OS p.m

Central Division
ClEVE~AND

ac

2·2)

,

1''
.

Iwa

CL~VELAND

8, Oakland 3
Kansas Cil) 1S, Balumore .5
New York 5, Texas ]
Anahe1m 17, Toronto i

Tonight's games

,

7

'~~:wmYork (~lttlle 0-0) arK ansas C11y {W11asick
o.]l. ~ 0~ p m
_.CLEVELAND (Colon J.O) m Texas (Helhng I·
•

J •·

I O:~;~o (Nav11rro 1· 1) at Amihetm !Sparks 0· ').

' Toronto {Escobar 2·0l at Scaule tfo.ssero 0-l).

(J

10:15 p.m

Hockey
National Hockey .... ,,,. ·
PHOENIX COYOTES: Auigncd D Brad Tiley
and C Daniel Briere tb Springfield o( lhe AHL
' ST. LOUIS BLUES: Ex~ended their 11Jrtttnl! n~
with the Worce~w:r ke Cats of the ~HL throuah·

2003-04.

.

x-Miami . .
x-Orlando
Phi ladelphia
New York . .
Bosto.n ·
Washmgron .. .. . . . . .

.. 1'&lt;1.

~

31 15
31 17

646

26

20

565

25

22

532

19

28

404
362
.304

.17 30

NewJene}' ................ ........ 14

.'12

Q-2).

JERRY BIBBEE

!ill

674

I

5

6~ .

I t~

g ~i

3' t
6' 1
7' ·

0.0). 1..15 p m
• 8 os10n (P Moninez 4-1 ) at Oaklartd (Heredia ].
. 1)!'40S pm
· ToroBto CCarpt:nter 2· 1) a1 Seanle (Moyer 1·,1)

·US pm
• Detro1 1 (M~hlcr

l-n ar Tampa Bay (W1tt 2·01.

6:,5pm ·
. New York [(o ne .1·01 ul Konsus Clly IPausley J.
0}, 8:05 p.n1
,
CLEVEI.AND (Gooden 0-0) or Teli.US !Sele J- 1J
S : ~S

p.m.

Chicogo (Ba ldwHI 2 2) at Anaheim ffm ley 1·21
IQ'·O!Ipm

1 ~:;

I. 1'&lt;1.

10

.696
.l45

Arizona ........ , . .. ...... 12 n .522
Co lorado ........................ 8 10 .444
St.n Drcao .......................9 12 .429

•

l7

6'
?'

10'.

ll
14
25

196

1

8 BUICK LESABRE

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, Pwr. Seat, Local Trade

1997 FORD F350
XLT, 4X4, 7.3L, Diesel, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt,
Cruise, PW, POL, Only 29,000 Miles

;

3'~

4

51~

6

1997 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER

1995 FORD EXPLORER

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise,
All Power Equipment, Only 25,000 Miles

XLT, V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass, Tilt, Cruise, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, Local Trade· hi

Today's games

Penland at San Antonio, 3:30 p.m.
Milwaukee oi Boston. 7 p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia. 7 p.m.
Chicago at Miami. 7:30p.m.
WaJhinaton at New Jersey. 8 p.m.
Golde n Stale at Dallas. 8 p m ·
LA. Clippers at Mmnesota. 8 p.m.
Vancouver at Phocmx. I0 p m.

S"nday's games
New York 11 Indiana, I p.m.
Utah at S11n Antonio, 130 p.m.

:Los Angele• (C Perez 0.3) at Phtla4elphia (Byrd
2, 1). 7:05p.m
• Houston (Beramnn 0· 1) ot Flon da·(McadowJ J.
1•, 7·03 p m.
.
• Colorado (Astncto 0-3) 111 PilllburJh {Schourek II,, 7:05pm.
• Arizonn CR. Johnson 2-1) at Milwaukee (Karl 21). 7:0l p m.
,t San Franctsco fEste' 2- 1) arNew Yofl.: (Wat~on I·
'I· 7:10p.m.
• CINCINNATI cAvery 1-1) at Atlanta. &lt;Smaltz J-

.

0!, 7:40p.m. .

1992 CHEVY 5·1 0 412

,·

2.8l, V-6, 5 Sptf., Air Conti., AM!FM Cass, PS, PB,
Fiberglass Topper, Local Trade-In

L.A Laken at: Seanle,l:JO p.m
All ama at CLEVELAND, 6 p.m.
Phillldelphia at Detroit, 1 p.m
Ponland at Denver. 7 p m.
Charlouc at Miami, 1:30 p.m.
LA Clipprrs at Houston , 8 JO p.m
Phoeni~ a1 Sacramento, 9 p.m.

1992 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
V·B, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise, PS, . PB,
PW, PDL, Etc, Local Trade

the people and friends
of· Poa~ero:r,
My name' is Kenny .Klein. I am running on 1he
ticket for Mayor. I have lived in Meigs County
all my life, for the.past 30 years. Ill~ In the tow.n of Pomeroy. , ! served as a Deputy for the Meigs County
She,iff Dept. fot S years (1984-1989). Since !left the Sheriff's ,offloe, I have w~rked as a carpente_r tn M~tgs
County. F.or,tlll.lbe y~ars that (nave lived in Pomeroy, I still feellhis Is a beaubful town and 1t is ftlled wuh
hard wclrking, rCJJ)Cetable people (Young and old). I would like your volt for Mayor on May 4. .If I am
elected inlo office 1 willlry my best to do the following things.
.
'
. .
1. 1 will try my be~t to improve city streels and roads. Inside and outside of busmess diStnct. ·
2. !'will continue in the efforts to improve water and it's lines in the village.
·
3. 1would·like 10 also have 'parking meters removed in the village. I feel that people lhat shop
in Pomeroy should not have to pay for pj~rking to shop here.
.
'.
4, I will keep the 81rcets clean, river bank g111ss cut, city's parks and plaY,,grounds clean and ~rese ntable to
lhc publ,il'. •.
·
·
•
·
·
• ,
' h'
't
S. 1will try to improve things for the young- people In lhc vllla"c. Afl~·allthey re part OI t IS communi Y
. also.
..
II ' ~
•t 1
bod
These are just a few lhings lhat I feel should be taken care of m lhe ~i ag_e. ou ca~ P ease every y,
bull would like to try 10, We all know it takes team work.lo accomplish thmgs. So we all need to work
together. (Mayor, Villuge ~ouncil Mef~!bers, busi~ess owners and ~ople of Pomeroy) ·
. . . .
Thank you for your lime and (9r readmg my article. I am very senous In what I have slated •n thiS arucle.

Hockey
NHL first-round playoffs
Tonlaht's aamn
Philadelphia at Toronto. 1 p.m.
Plnaburah M New Jersey. 7:30 p,m.
Bo1t011 at Cuolina, 7:30pm.
Son Jose nt Colorado. 7:30p.m.
St, Loul ~ at Phoenix, 10:30 p.IIJ.

Saturday's pme

Saturday's gam••

, Colorado (WnghtO.O) ot Piusburgh (8en•oo 1 ·2 ~.
II)$ p m. .
• Snn F'runciaco (B rock 2· 1) at Nrw York
{Hershiu:r 1·2 1. 1:40pm
' San Oi!!Bo (CitnlC nt 0·2) at Chica~o (Snndeu 0·
.1). 2 20 p.m.

•

Sun JoliC

l)j

Colorado. 7.30 p.m.

Sunday's aames

.

New Jersey a.t PillsburJh. 2 p.m.
PhMnt)laf St. Ului1. 2 p.m.. if necennry
Carolina nt Bo11on. 7 : ~ p m.
Toronto at Philndelphia. 7:;i0 p.m.

Phone
740-992-2196

461 S. Third
Ave .
Middleport '

...... , ••••••• , . . - . ., 4

fer..,.,

1-r IW.
' " .....1. ''·· , ..... '., .... 41769

'

.
'

fidence offensively as welLHe hangs
around the basket. He's under contw l. He makes nice little pump fakes,
and he finishes plays He's really
becoming a complete player."
· Wallace and teammate forward
Otis Thorpe, who also scored 20
points, took advantage of an under·
manned Clevel and team , which was
mi ssing forward Shawn Kemp for
· the · fourth game m a row. Wallace
· and Thorpe co mbined to inake 18 of
19 •hots from the field.
" It shows in that area how much
we m1ss Shawn," said Danny Ferry,
who led the Cavaliers with 18.poi nts.
By losing to Washington and with
t~e
Nel" York , Knicks' win,
Cleveland was eliminated from the·
playoff race.
Wallace said his anonymity on
·offense helps him.
·
" I wouldn' t say I'm look ing for it

'Reds...
.

Saturday's games

• San Oicao (Spencer 0-2) at Chicago (Mulholland

'

170

Pacific Dh is10n
)· l'artl and . . ..
.14 12 7W
x·L.I\ Lnktrs
lll I'J 596
PhOC!l!lt ..
25 2Z · .532
Sm:ramento . . ...... ..... , . l~ 2.\ .5 10
Seaule . ..
. 22 2-1 ~78
Golden State .... .
,. 10 26 435

I.OJ:l:20 p.m
• St , L.om• (.Soucnfield 4-0) at Montreal ( Vazquez
1&lt;1). 7:05pm

,

11
20',

l().I

Tonight's games

Thursday's scortl

•

II':

JBJ

New Ji:rsey at OrlaOOo, 7 30 p.m.
Toronto at CLEVELAND, 7:30pm.
Indiana ac Atlanta. 7:30 pm.
Ch1cngo ar Charlotte. 7:30pm
Golde n State at MrnnesOla. ·8 p.m.
Utah mHouuon. 8 p m.
'
Detroit at Milwaukee. 8.30 p m
Denver nt Suttle. 10 p.m

.. Chicago !I, f1oridp 2
·
~ Houston S, Arizona 2
• (olorado 6, St. Loul5 2
: New York 8, San Diego S
• Lo1 Anaelel 1.0, Milwaukee 4
• San Fr,nci1co 6, Monueal !I
.. CINCJNN ATI 7, Philadelphia :1
• Atlanta 8, Pmsburijh 1

•

14
.R 19

500

Thursday's scores

Crnlral Dl"lsion
Sr. Louis ... .. . .. ...... ........ .12 8 600
Hbust on .. . .. ............. .1 2 9 .l71
Qucoso ,.... .. .... ........ .. .... 9 I0 414
CINCINNATI ................... 9 II .450
PY.IIburgh ......... ................ 9 II .450
Milwaukee ......................... 9 I 2, .429

t.P• Anscks ............. ·.12

29
1l

I '·
6' :

' Wa.shiugron 97, CLEVELAND 86
New York 8~. Philtldc:lptlia 70
Bost on 101. Miami 96
lndiano 11.5. Charloue 110-0T
Dalla.s 91, Housron 81
Utah 96. Golden State 8~
Phoc n11 98, Denver 87
San Amonio 99, Vancouver 72
LA Laktu lOS. Portland 89
Sacra~nto 103, LA Cli ppen HI

Atlanta .... .. .. ... ...... . ...... 14 7 .661
New York ..................... 13 9 .591
Pniladelphro ...
. ... .II ' I Q l24
Morureal ... .... . . .. ... .... .6 14 JOO
FlOrida .... .. .. .... . ....... ,6 16 .273

Wrsltm Divislen
Sin Froncisco .. . . .. . .. 16 · 7

.]45
717 ,
.609

plnyorf bcnh
y-cli nc;hed division mle

El!lt;:n Dl"islon
~

18

Dall as
Denver
Vancm,ver .

"
lJ

like a minivacation."

mg the others he\ already won three .

Baffert has the mosl form1dable derbies. Bafferl's horses wtll leave
comi ngent ol all for the Derby. cn1e lrom post Nus. 6. 14 and 15
coupled entry of the ge lding General
Certainly. success breed• succc"
Cha llenge and the filly Excellent and owners have been quick to jump
Meeting is the morning favorite at 3- on the Baffcrt handwagon Luka.' and ,
I , while Prime Ttmbcr is the second Zito do OK. too.
'
BaiTert tratns General Challcng:e"
choice in .the full fie ld of 20 three·
year-olds'.at 7-2.
and Extc llcnt Meeting for J ~ hn and
Excellent Mectmg was also , Bett y' Mabee. 1h1ec -timc Echps;
entered in tod~y's Kentucky Oaks, Award -wtn'ning breeders : Prin&lt;"
with Baffert expected to make a deci· Timber for timber executive Aar&lt;Wo'
sion this morning on which race he Jones; and Stiver Charm for Bob anti:
wants ld run her in
Beverly Lewis.
·
• :.
· "We're !eav1ng our opt ions
Lukas has been !he longtime trail{'..,.
open," Baffert satd.
er for Will.am T Young, but ai90':
Lukas. meanwhile, is the veteran trains for the Lcw~&gt;es, Zno plays on.
of the group. a trainer who has sad· his New York connect ions and trains ·
Yankees
boss
George
died at least one Derby horse every for
year starti ng in !98 1 His first win ' S1einbrenncr and Boston Celtics•
came with the filly Winning Colors in preSidenl and coac h Rick Pitino.
·.
1988.
"There's been talk all week about·
The 51-year·old Zito will be in hi s the Derby. about who's gomg to d.~ ·
nmth Derby, the 46-year-old Baffert what and how it 's going to unfo ld and
his fourth. Both trainers won their riders and trainers and different guys
first Derby the second time around- doing different things." Lukas sai4,:
Zito after Thirty Six Red finiShed " but the bottom !me IS il gets down to·:
ninth in 1990: and Baffert after the horse. and I' ve been blessed wtt~ .
.Cavonnier was second and Semoran prime dollars and owners who are
14th in '96,
very supportive and let me come here.
~
Elected .to racing's Hall of Fame year after year...
on T~esday, the 63-year-old Lukas
While Lukas has collected 10 wins
will se nd out Cat Thief and in Tuple Crown races starting wtth
Charismatic in the 11/4-mile Derby, Codex's 1980 Preakness vtctory.
which will carry a record purse of Baffert has four classic VIc lones in
$1,201,200 if all 20 horses start . The · two years .
winner's share would be a record

'

more, but I'm getting more touches
right arou~d t!le basket," he said.
''Teams have not paid much attention to me. They ' re doing a lot uf
trapping , l ~tt in g me sneak in the
backdoor, 'get a lot oflayups."
After falling behind by 17 points
in the f11st hal f, the Wizards rallied
for a 68-67 lead on Chns Whitney's
threc-pomt play wi 1h 47 seconds left
in the 1h11d qu arter.
Wlutney scored eight points dur·
ing a 19-5 run that extended
Washington 's lead to 82-71 . Tim
Legler sank I WO threc-poimers down
the stretch as the Wizqrd s pulled
away.
·
.
"We play well, but when a team
makes a run on us, we don' t stop it,"
Ferry said. "We l o~e our confidence
a little bit."
The Cavaliers, who shot 67 per·
cent from· the field in the f11st half,
used a 19-3 run 'to take a 5 1-34 lead.
Andrew
DeClercq and Ferry were a
(Continu'ed from Page 4)
.
combined 9-for- 11 from the f1eld for
• "It. surprises me that he- feels that' 'fh\trsday and had seven hits in the the Cavs in the the first half.
~ay," Francona said. " l thought I series. Tile club also was aided by
Notes: Cavs forward Corie
l howed him a lot of respect as a pro- two RBis apiece by Barry Larkin and . Blount will undergo surgery on his
fessional. Certainly, his not playing Mike Cameron.
injured left knee Tuesday and will
lhe last games last year was not done
Cincinnati, which came back miss the rest of the season.... He
·b ut of a lack of respect."
'
from' five runs down in the seventh to joins Kemp (sprained foot), Brevin
· '' ! love Philadelpilia and I love win on Wednesday, picked up right Knighl (fractured h&lt;ind) and
'\he Phillies fan s," Lewis said. "! where they left off and jumped out to Zydrunas llgauskas (fractured foot )
~ave no hard feelings but I was dis- . a 5·0 lead after three innings.
on ·Cleveland's injured list.... With
:appointed in the way it ended. But it
"We definitely had the momen· four games left, Cleveland· (21 -25) is
;&gt;"orked out for .the best. •
tum," Cameron said of the Reds' in danger of finishing with its first
, The Red• certainly got the best early surge. ''I'm sure it took a lot losmg record since 1990-91.
'out of Lewis in thi s three-game out of them."
leries. He was 4-for-4 in the win on

I
'WASHINGTON
(AP) .
!.Washington Wizards center Ben
f Wallace is u•ually at his besl on the
1defensive 'end.
'r Agamst
.
the Cleveland Cavaliers
: on Thursday night, Wallace showed
· he can also help offensively.
: Wallace scored a career-high 20
; points and grabbed 10 rebounds as
r the Wi zards defeated the Cavaliets
!,9 7-86 Thursili1y ni gill. Tho win
·~napped .Washingto n's seven·gamo
:·losin g .s treak, and ex tended
:cleveland's winless streak to seven
: games.
~
" Ben had a great ni ght."
:washington coach Jim Brovell i said.
&lt;"Ben has been so solid. You know
·: ftc's going to give you effort on the
;defensive end , reboundmg and
blocking shots, and he 's done.that so
well.
·
· "But now he's really gained con-

!ill

1'&lt;1.

~ - cli n ched

NL standings
l'llm

l)

Mnm~sum

I.

12
18

L.A. Clippers ...... ,..... 9 J7

Sunday's games
• MmneM.Jia at Dt~huu ure. I 35 p m
• Detroir ~• Tan~a Bay. I l5 p m
. : New York at :msas Cuy. 2 0~ p m
. Bo~ ton at Oakltmd. 4 05 p.m
• Toronro at Seaul~ 4 l5 p m
· CLEVELAND"at Te11as 8 05 p.n1
· Chrc&amp;go 81 Anahcln) 8:05pm

.

'fl.

x- Utah ..... ,............~.
3~
~t·San Amo nto ......... . J~
It-Houston . ..
.. 28

.

$YU1.200
There 's been a fri endly nvalry
among the ltiree , wi1h Zilo claiming
he picked the No I post for Adoni s,',because "I don ·, want 'to he ncar
Baffert's horses."' and Lukas remind -''

\Wizards d·efeat.Cavaliers ·97-86

:It's the Dealer Behind The Deal
....-:::-:=T.
='hat :Afa.lres The BEA.L Dll'l'e:reneel

Mklwest Division
: Mi n nc5o!ll (Radke 2-1:) at BaltJmore (Coppiu~er

.

dented three in a row.
"I know there 's going to be a year
when I don't have anythmg, so I JUSt
try 10 stay calm and cool and enjoy
lhe moment ," Baffen said. "The
Derby 's become a fun th ing for me.

:

WESTERN CONFERENCE
. Jwn

Saturday's games

. '
Sophomore lead-off hiller Kristen
Chevalier went 5-5 with a doubled ,
Karr had two St ngles, Hayman a sin; ..
gle, Wolfe 1wo singles , Milhoan ~ .
single, Evan• two singles, Chasatie ,
Holl on a single, and Cinda Clifford~
si ngle.
Wahama hitters were Lathey.,
Field,, Shiltz (2), Howard and
Lamberl all wtth single&gt;.
Eastern goes 10 Wmerford to night .
I on in g l!!.IJ!Ij
Wahama .. ........... 002 -()()(). 0=2-6-~
Eastern ..............320-500-x= 10- 15·2

• DIVISION RUNNERS-UP- .The Bradbury Yellow .Chet Wlgl!l and Donnie Whan •. Behind them are
• Jackets placed second In the annual Meigs Locitl Lulie Rauth, Ryan Frazier; Matt Holley, coach Alex
: Elementary School Baaketball Tournament sixth· Bell, Josh Buzzard and Brandon Bell.
• grade tournament. Kneeling are (L·R) Justin Bell,

3~:

~~j

-*-

.L - - ·

14\1
17

Centra~ Dlvlslon
•·lndi Ma · .. · · · · · · · ·309 111 6~ 8
li·AIIanta , ..... ,,,., ... .. , 2 I
6~0
Delroir " ... ...
· ..... 26 20 .565
Milwaukee.....
.. ..126 ~0 , 565 .
Charlotte
H 23 500
Torunlo . . ..
. 22 14 478

2~~~~~LAND

.

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE·.

Atlantic Division

.
. Boston !Gross 0-0l at Oakland (Rogers

ST. LOUIS RAMS: Released OL ZKh Wiegeri.

i"'""

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Tampa Bay 4, Chicago I
Seaule 22, Detroit 6

I ;05 pm

Gueu.

\

NBA standings

Thursday's scores

1). 8.) • n m

Dye to a one-year contract.
CLEVELAND BROWNS: Rckl\led RB Pope
PeiU'IOn ~ RB John Henry Mills. QB Jarne• Ritchey
ond WR Fred Brock.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Re·slaned PK Olinde
Mare 10 a one-yeN contract Waived WR Terry

Basketball

2
2

:.MiruNIOCI CH•wiUa• I-J) 81 Baltimore (Po~on 1).
·
. c
2) , 7.0 _, p.m.
~ Dt'lroit (WcDve-r 2-0) at Tampa Bay (Arrojo 1-2)

April28. Activated 38 Scott Brottus from the 1!1-day the IS-day di sabled list , retroacttve to Apnl 21.
disabled list. ~eca lled ,LHP Tony Fosu.s from Recalled RHP Kyle Funswonh from Iowa of the
Columbus of the lntcrnauonal League. Optioned OF PCL.
~
Shane Spencer to Co lumbu s.
CIN CINNATI REDS Opt1oned RHP Bretf
Baseball
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS. Acttvated LHP Tomko 10 ln,hanopohs of lhe International Leaaue.
American IAasue
Wilson Alvarez frofn' the IS-dtly di sobled hst
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Stgned RHP Huieo
AL Suspended Cle\·cland Indians RHP Jaret Optioned LHP Norm Charlton to DIUham of the . Nomo.
Wnghr f1ve ga~s . and Cle:veland INF J1m Tho!TII: ' lnlernauonal League.
and Boston Red Sox OF Darrr:n Uwis and lH P
TEXAS RANGERS: Announced the resignBtion
Basketball
Rhea I Connter thrre games each. and fined ttlCm an o ( Tom Schieffer, president, to become consultnnt
National Ba~ketball AuodaUon
u ndt ~closed amount for theu parts in two brnwl1 an
and help de\·elop real eataiC around The Ballpark.
HOU STON ROCKETS Atti vated C Stanley
an Apnl 23 gDme
Extended their c~ntraCI with the Sav,111nah Sand Roberu from the injured li st. Placed G Matt Maloney
CLE VELAND INDIANS: Activated OF Jocob Gnats of the South Arl:umc League lhrouah Sept 30, on
!he: injured list.
Cruz from the 15·day d1sabled hst aDd opttoned .hrm 2002
.
ro Butfolo of the International League .
Football
NEW YORK YANKEES: Placed ' RHP Roger
National Leape
N•tlumd Football Luaue
Clemens on !he 15-day disabled ltst. retroactive to
CHICAGO CUBS . Placed RHP Jon Ueber' on
~RIZONA CARDINALS: Sisned OT Eme11

Transactions

bring home a run , Angi Wolfe sm·
gled, Suzy Milhoan si ngled, and
Stephanie Evans singled.
.
The Eagles boosted that lead to 5·
0 in the second when Chevalier Sin·
gled again , Hayman reached on a
fielder's cho1cc, and Karr singled.
Milhoan reached on an error that
brought home the second run of the
inning.
Wahama plated t"' o m the 1h1rd tu
tighten the score at 5-2. but Eastern
had a big five -run fifth til break open
the game. ·

'Trainer of the Decade' honors
may.await Zito, Lucas or Baffert:

•

Sports briefs

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll30, 1999

•

'

Baseball

•

Wahama baseball
club beats EHS 18·0·

Reds beat Phils 7-3
.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - It certainly wasn't Philadelphia Phillies
manager Terry Francona's best day at
the ballpark.
Thursday began · w'ith the news
that his closer, Jeff Brantley, would
miss at least four months due to a
tear in his right shoulder and proba·
bly would be gone for the rest of the
season.
Francona then saw young pitching prospect Carlton Loewer (1 · 2)
struggle· agam, giving up live runs
and seven hits in five innings to reg. ister
his second consecutive. bad out·
.
mg.
Then, to top it off, Francona had
to watch his former ·second baseman,
Mark Lewis, tie a career-high with
four hits as the ·Ci'ncinnati Reds
defeated the Phillies 7-3.
Brantley, who had thought that he
might be able to pitch through the
injury he suffered in the Phillies' 12·
8 loss Wednesday night, got the bad
news from team physic.an Dr. Phillip
•· Marone.
"When a guy like that goes down,
you tend to think more about him
than us, " Francona said. " He 's given
us everything he had."
With Loewer, Francona reminded
everyone that he is a young pi tcher
and that pat1ence is needed.
"That's going to happen with
youn g pitchers," Francona said.
"There are growing pains. When you
have young pitchers there will be
inconsistencies. He's gotten a whole
lo.t better since he 's gotten here (in

•

Friday, April 30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.I

'

'

qo,l5o·

Brand New 1999·
Pontiac Grand Prix GT

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• AMIFM Cassette

~7,150*

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Firebird

• T•Tops .
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM CD System

•Crui,roh
• Aluminum Wheels

• Traction Control
• Aluminum Wheels
• Loaded!

• Loacledl

~4,850*
•Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Power Door Locks

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE Coupe
I• AM/FM Stereo
• Traction Control
• Nicely Equipped! .

...

~2;150*
•Automatic
• Air .Conditioning
• AMIFM CD System

Brarid New 1999 Pontiac
Sunflre SE Coupe·
• Till StHring

• Rur Window Defroster
• Loacledl

'Ta&gt;&lt;es. Tags, Tille Feeltidr1. Ae0ate Included il sale !liCe ~ new vellido listed where applicalile. "On approwd credt. On selec!ed models.
Prices Good olp&lt;i 30th flru Ma1 awl. Not '-liilllt for typographical
.
·

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�Friday, Aprll30, .1999

Friday, Aprll30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

•

Cases concluded during recent County Cou'rt session ·
The followmg cases were resolved
recently in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patnck H. O'Bnen.
Fined were: Kim Armstrong,
Pomeroy. contributing to the dehnquency of a mi nor, costs, stx months
Jatl suspended upon the condttion that
the child has no more unexcused
absences for the remainder of the
school year; Stephanie Keys, Portland contributing costs six months
Jail s~spended upo~ the c~ndition that
the chtld has no more unexcused
abse nces for the remamder of the
sc hoo I year; Annetta !&gt;terce,
Pomeroy, contributing, costs, 30 days
jail su~pended to seven days, Edtth
Watson, Pomeroy, contnbuting, costs,

30 days Jatl suspended to seven
days; Marion Watson, Pomeroy. contnbutmg, costs, 30 days jatl suspended to seven days.
Thomas D Adk ins, Portland, dnving under fi nanctal responsi bility
ac tion suspen"on. $300 plus costs,
six months Jail suspended to 20 days.
two years probati on, ve hicle immobtltzation; Mark Reese, Rac me, cnmtn al trespass $50 plus costs three
days Jai l suspended, one year probauon, restraintn g order tss ued: Jason
All en, Syracuse, underage consump·
uon. $200 plus costs. five days J8 tl
suspended, probation unttl 21 years
of age, optt on of 40 hours commu m. ty se\vtce tn lte u of Ime, dl!iordetl y

condu•t. costs only, Jerrod R. Mtlls,
Rac ine, underage consumption. $200
plus c'osts. fi ve days jail suspend~d.
probatiOn unttl 21 ye ars of age.
option of 40 hours comm unity servtce tn heu of fi ne,
Ryan P. Nease, Syracuse, unde rage C\)nsumptipn, $200 plus costs,
five days jatl suspended, probation
until 21 years of age, optton of 40
hours community servtce m lte u of
fin e; Mtchael L Little, Pomeroy, no
operator's license, $150 plus ~ostS,
three days Jail suspended; fa1lure to
control, $30 plus costs; hit -sktp,
$100 plus costs, three day~ Jatl suspended; Jeremy R Coleman,

.

The followmg Metgs County residents have been chosen as prospec.ttve grand JUrors for the May 1999
grand jury term
Conme Darlene Davts, Middleport ; Steven Rudolph Elfnnk,
Albany , Genevteve Lyons, Long Bortom : Edward Wtl,ham Wells, Syracuse; Kevtn B. Fmk, Pomeroy; Loretta J. France, Rutland , Ryan G Sinclair, Shade; Chnstina Dawn Maxey,
Reed svtll e; Tracy Mane Hupp,
Racin e. Carolyn J. Whtte, Long Bottom, Walter M. Grueser, Pomeroy.
Roben Jason Hall, Mtddleport, Jason
M. Rowe, Rac me; Wendy Lynn
Shuler, Racme, Kenneth Dewayne
Browntng, Long Bottom; Debbie J.
Htll , Ractne; Robert Milton Varian,
Syracuse; 'Todd Devm Dunbebin,
Shade; Christina L. Ritchie,
Reedsville; Jeffrey James Unruh,
Ractne , Eula Mae Odegard,
Pomeroy; Anthony R Rowe, Mid-

c ': _

P us costs; Minter V. Fryar,. no reg tstratt on;

costs, ftcllt tous tags, S15 plus costs;
John W. Cox, Galhpohs, overload.
$~SO plus costs; msecure load, costs
only; Mtchae l Free man, S~racuse,
seat belt, $ l5 plus costs; fatlure to
control, $30 plus costs;
Tam my R. Lane, Racme, possesstOn, $SO plus costs; drug paraphernalt a, $75 plus costs, three days J8tl
suspended, Loretta L. Rett.mtre,
Pomeroy, left of center, $30 suspend~d, .c?sls, seat belt, $25 plus
cos ts. Tcrrt D Mayo_,Athens, no OL,
$ 150 plus costs, five days jad and $75
suspended upon proof of a valid operator's license within 30days, one year
probah on, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Dexter.
no front lice nse plates, costs onl y;
Goldte V Linle, Pomeroy; Walter Hawthorne J. Murphy, Middleport,
B Laudermi It, P.omeroy; Jane lhle, disorderly conduct, costs, 30daysJail
Langsville ; S,ltirley D Roof, suspended, one year probation ;
Pomeroy, Homer L. Proffin, Rae me, Jonathon Dellavalle, Rutland, unsafe
Rachel Katheryn Hunon, Rutland ; --:mdshteld, $100 suspended, costs.
Btlli Jo Bentley, Pomeroy; John W. stx months probation;
Brogan, Pomeroy; David Lawrence
Andy Patterson, Syracuse, left of
Grate, Long Bonom; Stanley N Watson, Rutland; Cmdy Jean Rhonemus,
Shade; Robert C. Avis, Cool ville;
Carne Josephme Roush, Ractne; By PAUL RECER
Deborah Anne Roach , Albany; AP Science Writer
Gladys Barber, Reedsville; Edward
WASHINGTON- For 20 years,
Dale Anderson, Langsvtlle, Angela sctentists have been puzzled and
Dawn Russell, Rutland; James L alarmed abou1 the deformities and
Chadwell, Long Bonom; Ma&lt;tne populatiOn declines among some
Black, Pomeroy; Billie Allen Davts, frogs. Now, researchers say on~ of
Pomeroy, George E. Sellers, Raeme; the reasons is a parasitic worm as
Wesley M. Smtth, Pomeroy, Mtchael small as the period at the end of thts
Joseph Ebltn, Rutland ,' Nancy J
sentence
Whtle, Pomeroy; Stacte Kathleen
Two studaes today m the journal
Reed, Rutland; Ruth E Runyon,. Sctencc report that laboratory
Pomeroy; and Randy A Hamon, research shows a trematode, a Simple
Albany.
parasitic f1atwllrm , is infecting tadpoles that grow into frogs with
deformed , mtssmg or multiple hind
legs
Carl D. Johnston, Lebanon;
The worm infection, says Stanley
Deed, John C. and Barbara S.
Hensley to Edna M. and Manhew S. K Sess10ns of Hartwick College in
Oneonta, N.Y., causes the tadpoles to
Hensley, Tuppers Plams,
Rtght of way, Roger, E. Jan, develop cysts where thear hmd legs
George A. and Mildred I. Ziegler to grow, resulting m severe malformaliOn that doom s the antmal after it
D T. Atha Inc., Bedford;
Rtghl of way, Earnest E. and becomes a frog .
"Every smgle frog I have looked
Mana E. Nelson to D.T. Atha Inc .,
at wtth extra legs, and 1 have looked
Bedford;
Rtght of way, Perry Scon Knepper at hundreds, all have these cysts
around the deformity," said Sesto D.T. Alha Inc., Bedford ,
stons,
who co-authored one of the
Rtght of way, Harry Yarbrough to
Science
studtes
D.T. Atha Inc., Rutland,
,
Pieter T.J. Johnson, a recent gradRtght of way, Gregory C. and Januatc
of Stanford University now
tee -H. Davts to D.T. Atha Inc , Beddoing research at Claremont McKenfor~
f
ld L
0
'D T t,h' o~ wayB, ed~nad· am bell to
. . . a nc .,
or '
.
Rtght of way, Mutl Boudtnol and
Charles Zeigler to D.T. Alha Inc.,
B df d·
e Deed
or • Dorothy M. Clark to Den·
Ch 't Cl
s1
ntS ares ark , a tsbury;
Deed, Clara Mae Darst to Clara
Mae and William E. Darst, Mtddlcport;
Deed, Rebecca Jean Terry to
• Mindy Patterson, Middleport
'
Deed, Nora R and Robert H.
Eason to Ronald L. and Shtrley L.
Mtller, Chester.

Worm

w,

Deed. Sandra and Jeffrey L
Wnkeman David L Mary M and
John C. Sh~ets to Ezr~ James Sheets,
Prange parcels;
Deed, Roger L. and Phyllis Etleen
Spencerto Lmda s. Pulltns, Salisbury
parcel;
Deed, James E and Phyllts Jean
Wttherell to Jeffrey M. Newell and
Menam A Glaze, Salisbury parcels;
Deed, James F. Jr. and Debra c.
Evans to Scott M. and Julie E. Oilton, Pomeroy; .
Deed, Damel and Martha Cunningham lo Dan C. and Patricta A
Arnold, Sctpio;
Deed, Dan C and Patricia A.
Arnold to Daniel and Martha Cun. h
. .
mng am, Sctpto,
Deed, Nanette Kalis to Christine
W. Lawson, Columbia·
0 ee d • Constance 'S. Carter to
Robert A and J r L w
.
. uta . agner,
Alexander Coulad1s, Bedford parcels;
Deed, Amber Ntcole Hayes to
J~~;el~regory Hayes, Mtddleport
P
•
·.
·
Deed, Lots Allen to Howard and
·
Donna Larkms, Lebanon;
d
·
·
Dee , CmdY J AI 1en, Cmdy
J. and

-I

I·I
..- ,I

plus
~o~ts, 5ark A. Bro':n, Syracuse, '":at
e t, $ l plus costs, Mtchael Pacrce,
30
Al bany, speed, S plus costs; seat
be lt, SZ 5 plus co~ts, Stephame J. Fos20
ter, Wellston , fatlure to control. $
plus costs; Otts H. Core: Pomeroy,
s~i~t belt, $2025 plus costs. latlure to
/lay, S plus .costs; Rt chard W.
G tffiths, New Braumfield, Tex as,
' f ed, S30 plus costs; seal belt, $25
Pus costs,
.
Rex A Thornton, Racme, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Crystal L. Thornton, Racine, seat belt, $15 plus costs;
Anthony C. Roush, Mason, WVa.,
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Philtp L:
Ervin Jr., Albany, fictitious regtSira· tton , $20 plus costs; Ktmberly R.
Hill, Athens, spe~d. $30 plus costs;
Jennifer 1:.. Roush, Racine, fat lure IQ
stop at red light, $20 plus costs;
Charles V. Rue Jr., Athens, speed, $30
plus costs; Brian J. Thoila, Ractne,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Kevtn R

821,150*

To be
published

• Vortec V-8 Power
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

F~iday,

Mkklleport Cbun:h or Cllrl•l

na College, earned Sessions' early
work one step further by collecting
trematodes from snatls m four ponds
where deformed frogs were found.
Laboratory tadpoles were then infected with the worms.
Johnson found that the more
trematode mfe cttons the tadpoles
acquired, the more the legs of the
adult frog were deformed, multiplied
or missmg And he also showed that
the deformtttes developed in the laboratory experiments were the same as
those seen in the four ponds m northern Cali forma
Andrew Blaustetn, an Oregon
Staie University ecologist who conducted experiments to determine if
ultraviolet radtation was causing the
wtdespread problem, called Johnson's work "the best experimental
evtdence showing a cause for the
limb deformation in amphibians."
, Researchers worldwtde have noted for years rhat many species of
frogs are 111 dechne, particularly in the
northern and western United Slates,
Central America and Australia.
Scientists have suspected ' pesticides, chemical pollution and excess
UV radtaUon caused by a lhinnang of
the atmosphere's ozone layer. A great
deal of research has been devoted to

Sth alld Main

Assembly of God
ubet\y Aut•bly or God

Kono Chun:h ofChriJI
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m...Pastor-Jcffrc y Wall ace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Sunday schOOl - 9:30 a.m.
Worsh1p • 11 a m artd 6 p.m.

FA&lt; Will Bopllil Cllun:h
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor· Lc s Haym an
Sunday Servtc:e • 7 00 p m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servl«-7 00 p.m.

Rolland fll'll Baptlll Cbun:h
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m

Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

WorshJp • 10:30 a. m.

Bnodbury Chun:h of Chrkl

Sund&gt;y Sch

the issue because the ·sudden deriliSe
of frogs was considered a possible
warning about an unknown envtronmental problem
But the studies by JoMson and
Sessions show that at least some of
the frog ·problems are caused by
Mother Nature.
Johnson said the increased de formiues caused by the parasite could be
part of ~ natural biological oycle.
However, he said it is loo early to
hold human s blameless, saymg that
feruhzer .runoff may have caused an
tncrease m water snatls that arc key
hosts of the parastte.
The arematode has a life cycle that
tncludes snails, tadpoles and frogs,
and b~rd~ . A Just-hatched form oftbe
parasue ts consumed or. absorbed by
a snatl The wormdevelops into alarvae that ~s depo~tted m a pond. The
worm swtms unul It hooks onto a ladpole and then form s ~y~ts m the leg
buds of the developmg amphtbtan .
When.the frog matures, its hi~d legs
are eather m~ssmg, m~lttphed or
deformed. Thts makes the frog an
eas~ prey for birds, which become
the next hostl)f the parasite.
Dtgestive JUtces of the bird release
trematodes from thear cysts an the

1- 9:30a.m.

Evangelist Mtke MOOre
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worsh1p - 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -1 p.m.

Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill LitHe
Su11day School - IOa.m
Worship- 11a m , 6 : 3~ m
Wednesday Servtcn· 6 p m

He~nlock

Grove Churd1
Pastor· Oe11e Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Worsh1p · 9.30 a,m., 1 p.m.

Roeclsvllle Church orChrill

Belhlthtm Bopllsl Churdl
·Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Ger~e Morris

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.

Sunday Worshtt- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p m.
Wednesday B tile Study • 6 00 p m.

Christian Union

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenina; - 7:30p.m.
Thur1day Servtccs- 7:30

. Paolor: ·!\&lt;Y·J""".R! Acree,_Sj-,
0Lm.
W011 p -Jla.m., 6 ~-m

• -,r,khcio!!

'"

VlctOl'J Bopllsllnder,ndont

. -.
folah Bopllll Chur&lt;lt

Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Cral8, Jr.
Sunday School ·9:30a .m.
Worship ~ 10:45 a.m.

Anllqullf Bopdol

Scott Wolle
Southern High School
Cla88of19n

VIcky Dent Pumphrey
Melga High School
Claaaof19n

Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.
.

.

'

Deadline Fri. May 14- 4 pm
.~

~

-

..

Worship· 10.30 a.m.

Reedavllle
Worship· 9 30 am
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m

UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

•

Groce Episcopal Chun:h

33226 Chtldren's Home Rd.
Sunday School • J 1 a.m.

Synwse Church of lhe Naurene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
WBGS Radto-10.30 am datly 9 am SUJ]day

WJOS-TV 27-3 30 p m. Sunda)

4-4;30 Saturday
Sunday School- 9 30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Chnst- 7 p.m

Putor: Sharon Hausmar1
Sunday SchoOl • 9 a m.
Worship . 10 am
Tuesday Services-7:30p.m

Pomeroy Churdl of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Orimm,Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
wonhip . 10:30 a m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Ceatral Cluater

Albul'J (Syracuse)

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Ka1harin Foster
Rev. Deborah Rank1n, Clergy
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday Schoo111 00 a.m , :
www.frognet net/--dcanety - •

Pastor: Chad Emnck
Sunday School - 9.4.5 'a m.
Worship ·lla m
Wednesday Services · 7.30 p.m.

Ch-r Cllur&lt;h of tht NuartM
Pastor• Rev. Herbert Grale
Sunday School • 9.30 a m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Enterprise'
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a m
Worstl1p . 9 am.

Holiness

Po!Wemy Walllde Chur&lt;b orCbriJt

Community Church
Pastor: Re111. Amos T1Jiis
Mam Street, Rutland
Sunday Worship-10 00 am
Sunday SefVIct-7 p m

Rolland Church of the Nuarene
-.;
Pastor. Rev. Samuel W. Buye

FlatwOods
Pastor: Keith Rader
.Sunday School - 10 a m.
Worship · 11 am.

Sunday Scbool • 9 30 a m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. ,

Fornt Rua
Putor: Chad Emrick
'sunday School - 10 o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.

Dan•llle HoiJaHS Churth
31057 State Route 325, l.angsvlle
Pastor Dr. J.D Young
~
Sunday !IC'hool · 9.30 a.m.
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.•&amp; 7 p.m:
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.. .l.

.

Endtime House or Pnyer
(a t 8urli11gham church off Route 33)
Pastor Robert Vance
Sunday worship 10 a m
Wednesday se rvtce - 6 30 p m.

,

Middleport Community Chu.rth
575 Pearl St , Mtddleport
Pa~tor. Sam Anderw n
Sunday School10 a.m.
Evemng - 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday Servtce- 7:30 p.m.
Faltb Valley Tabernacle Churc:h

Batley RUn Road
Pastor Rev. Em men Rawso11
Sunday Evemng 7 p.m
Thursday Servtce - 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mluion
1411 Brtdgeman St , Syracuse
Rev Mike Thompson,Pa§tor
Sunday School · 10 a m
Eveni11g - 6 p m
Wednesday Se Nice • 7 p.m.

Porlland flnt Cllun:h oflllo NuanM
Pastor: M1rk M•tson
Sund1y School · l0:30a.m.
Momma Won~hip · 11:15 am.
Sunday Service- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servitcs- 7 p.m.

Brand New 1999 Chevy
~REME S.Series Pickup

Clifton Tabernacle Ch•rch
Cl1 flon, W Va,
Sunday School - 10 a R}
Worsh ip - 7 p.m
Wed nesday Serv1ce - 7 p m
New Ute Vktory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor B1ll State11
Sund~y Services · 10 a m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wed nesday · 7 p m. &amp; Yourh 7 p.m
Full Gospel Churth or Clle Uving Savior
Rt 338, Anuqu ll )l
Pastor lc~se Mom§
Ass!. Paslot!i lim Morris
Serv1cc5 Saturd&lt;ty 7.30 p. m.

Pentecostal
Penterostal Assembl)'
St Rt 124, Racme
Pastor Wt lham Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a. m
Eve11mg- 7 p m
Wednesday Sen.r 1ces- 7 p. m
Middleport Pent« ostal

Th1rd Ave
Pastor. Rev Clark Baker
Sunday School . 10 il m
Evem ng- 6 p m
Wednesday Ser;vaces 7·00 p m

Presbyterian
Syracuse First United Pmb)'lerian
Pasto r. Rev Knsana Robtnson
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
W ors~1 p t1 a. m

OffRI 124

Pastor Edsel Hart
Sunday 'School • 9 30 a.m
Worsh1p-1030a m , 7:30 pm

Harri!iOnvllle P'rnbyterian Church
Worsh1p- 9 a m
Sunday School- 9.45 a.m

DJe!WIIIe Community Churdt

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

Mkldlepon Presbyteriaa
Sunday Schoot- 9 a. m.
Wots h1p 10 a m

Morse Chapel Church

Seventh-Day Adventist

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9 30 a m
Worship · 10·45 a m , 1 30 p m
Wednesda) 7 30 p.m
ML Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9 30 a m
Evenmg - 7 p m
Wedneday SeNJce • 7 p m

Uolted Foith Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pnss
Pastor: Rev. Robcn E Smith, Sr.
Sunday School . 9 30 a m
Worshtp- 10':30 a m , 7 p m
Wednesday Sctvtce • 7 p m

Full Gospel Uablbouse
33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter •
Sunday School - 10 a m
Eve11ing 7 30 p m
Tuesday &amp; Thursda y - 7.30 p.m

S.venlh·Day Adnntist
Mulberry HtS. RQ., Pomeroy
Pas10r Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p m
Worsh1p- ) p m

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Bn:lhrcn
In Christ Church
Texas Commumt y. off CR 82
Pas tor Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Wors h1p - 10 )Q a m , 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday Services 1 7·30 p m
Eden United Bret.hrtn in Christ
2 lf2 m1les north of Re~ds,·1l k
on Statt: Route 124
Paslor. Rev. Robe n Markley
Sunday School - 11 am .
Sunday Worship - 10 00 a.m. &amp; 7:00pm ·
Wednesday Ser\lces - 7:30 p.m
... Wed nesday Youth Serv1ce - 7.30 p m

South Bethel New Testament

Sil ver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School - 9 a m.
Sun Worshtp - 10 10 a.m, 6 p m
Wedne5da y Servit%. 7 p.m
..

Carletoalatenleaomlnatl011al Church

Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Cl)'de Hendenon
Sunday School · 9·30 £1m
1
Worship Serv1ce 10 JQ a.m.
No Sunday or Wed11esday Ni&amp;ht Se rv1ccs
Freedom G011pel Miulon
Bald Knob, onCo. Rd. J I

Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Wo~hlp- '7 p m
W~ke't

Cbopel Wtsleyon

Coolville Road
Pas&amp;or: Rev. Ph tllip Rid er~out
Sunday School - 9:-30a.m.
Worship. 10 30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

Crow's Family Restaurant ~is~er ' ~uueral ;Jiame ..;~~n•:- •
228 W. Main St., Pometoy

• XTREME Appearance Pkg.
•16" Aluminum Wheals
• Wall Equipped!

.. =·
Full line of

INSURANCE

'"""..,.,

.
GENCIES Inc.

West VIrginia's J1 Chevy, Pontiac, Iuick, Dlda,
And ):uatom Van Pealer.
.·.

Apostolic Faith

Hazel Communlly Church

'Featuring Kentuciry Fried Cllicikerl'

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Sport Suspension

Chu~ch or Jrsus Christ,

_
ATTEND .TH·E CHURCH OF.YOUR·CHOICE

School

.

RoeclsvllleJlell

Sumfay School • 9 30 a m

Episcopal

Bill Quickel 992.-n

Nickname

O.J. White Rd. offSt.~Rt. 160 '
Pastor. P.J. Chapman
Sunday School· lOjJ m
Worship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor. Rev. Rola11d Wildman

Mimster· Danny Btas
Sunda,Y School - 9:30a.m.
Worshtp-10.30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvite5 - 7 p.m.

'

.

€hun:h nrGod orPropllccy •

Pastor. Theron Durham •
Sundny - 9.30 am and 7 p.m.
WednesdB y- 7 p m.

Faith Gospel Church

Cbvrdl of-th uareae
Pastor:
sa Waldeck
Sunda
hooJ - 9:30a.m.
Worsh p- 10:45 am , 7p m
Wednesday Strv ices- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
• Loa1BelloM

'

Harrisonville Community Church

Nazarene

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship-9:30a.m

Sunday school and worship l 0:2S

Pomm1y Cll111'&lt;b of CbriJt
'212 W Main So.

•
.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9am
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Serv1ces • 7 p m

· Tuppen Plains Sl. Paul

Sun. Con. -8:4~-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mus· 9:30a.m.
Oatley Mw • 8.30 a.m.

.

...

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev Margaret J. Robmso n
Serv1 cts· Wed nesday, 7 30 p m
Sunday, 2 30 p m

Sunday sc hool - I0 a m
Worship · l l a m
Wednesday Serv1cc - 7 p m

Mlddlepol1 Church oflhe Nazarene
Pastor- Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School - 9 30 am
Worshrp - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p. .
Wednesday SeNiccs- 7 p.

~

. Trloll) Cllur'ctl
SCoond&amp; lynn, Pome,oY'

Sat. Con. 4:4S-S:I5p.m.: MaSJ- ~ ·30 p m.

'

~

The Believen' Fellowship Ministry

Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

~

Sunday Evening . 6!00 p.m.

Socr'ed HUrl Colhotk: Cburdl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

• Rear Step Bumper
• Styled Wheels
• Well Equipped!

t

Long Bottom
Pastor Sle"'e Reed
Su11day School · 9 30 a.m
Wonhip·930 am and7 p m
Wed nesday - 7 p.m.
Fnday ·fellowship service 7 p.m.

Co.Rd.63

Wo($11ip •~) ~ m., 6 30 p m.
,,
Cloetter

\

Flnt Sunday of Month . 7.30 p m seN ice

Ca tholtc

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• 4 Wheal Dlac Bra~ea w/ABS

.....

Congregationill

Wonhip · 10:4~ a.m.

All New 1999.Cheyy
Silverado 4x4 Pickup

i.

I

Sunday SciKx&gt;l · 9:30a.m.

Salem St.
Pastor· Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servtces. 7 p m.

• Crulae ContrQI
• Styled Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

..

Apple and Secoqd Sts
Pastor: Rev David Russell
Sunday School and WQJ'lhip·lO a.m
Evcnlna Servites· 6:30 p.m.
WednesdaY Services· 6:30p.m.:

ML Morlllh Bopllol
founh &amp; Main So., Middlepon

All New 1999 Chevy Silverado
Extended Cab 4x4 Pickup

Alloed
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:1 0 a.m .

Torch Church

NortbtMI CIUJter

•
Syn.cuse First Chdrdl of God

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
}f'/otlhlp • 11 a.m.

S.....)\'8chi&gt;ot/,&lt;9:30o~..,. ,

Thu~y Services· 7 p.m.

Rutla-.d O.urch or Go4 -4t_.. ~ ~......,
Paslor: Ron 1Jfeatti ' ' .&gt;J~
Sur~day Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m. ~

foresl Run Boptlsl .

Grand Street
Sunday School • 10 a m.
Worship- 11 a.ra.
Wednesday Servict!l • 8 p.m.

Off 124 behind Wtlkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spnes

• .' WOniltU-JO!:!jla:m., t f-m.

•'

~

Railroad St , Mason
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worshlp·11 a.m ,6~m.
Wednesday ~rvic:es - p.m.

ML Olive Unlled MedlodiR

Evenang • 6 p.m.
Wedc\e!ida~ Senolce!i . 7 p.m.
r · 4A' • ...,

'

Bethel Chun:h
Townohlp Rd., 468C

Hn&lt;klalfOrl Chun:h

Melt!• Coopendlve Pl!li..

(

Matn &amp; Fifth Sl
Sunday School - I0 a m
Worship - 9 a m
Tuesday Servtces • 7 p m.

Wednesday Serv,tce · 7:30p.m.

MI. Morlob Church of God
Mile Htll Rd, Racine
Pastor: Brlce Utt

t

Coolville Chun:h

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
WoW.ip · lOa m
Wednesday Scrv1cts · 10 am

"'· ''-''- :-J

Sunday School -9:45 a m,

.525 N. 2nd St. Mid Iepore
Pastor: James E Keesee
Worship· JO..m., 7 p.m.
Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

Coolville United M:ethOdlsl Parish
Pastor: Heier~ Kline
{

7 30 p'm. (3nl &amp;. 4th Sun)

C lo ur r n ot God

Wednesday Services - p m

Radne

United Methodist

Hartford, W Va
Pastor.Jim Hughes
Sunday School· 11 am
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

St. Rt 143 just off Rt. 7

Astro Conversion Van

Pastor: Bnan Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m
Worshtp - 11 a m

. Gnham United MtDDdllt
Worship · 9 30 am (lst &amp; 2nd Sun),

Hartrord Chorch or Chrilt In

HII!Jidellopllll Chun:h

* Brand New 1999 Chevy

Our SaYiour Ltnhtnn Church
Walnul and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Postor: Davtd Russell
Sunday Scftool . 10:00 a.m.
Wolih1p . 11 a.ro.

'

Chrtstian Union

Old Belhd f,.. Wlllllo!.ll'l Claun:h
28601 So. Rt 7, Mi dlepon

'

Pme Grove
Rey Donald C Fritz
Worshtp · 9 00 a m
Sunday School - 10:00 am.

East Letart
Pastor: Bnan Hark11en
Sund11y School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p m.

Worship - !!a.m.

Rej oicing Ufe Chu rch
500 N 2nd A\'e , Mtdd lepon

Faith FuU Gospel Churdl

Sunday se rvice, 10.00 a. m , 7·00 p.m.
Youth Fellowstup Sunday, 7:00 pm
Wed nesday serv tce, 7·00 ~ m

MomlnaSaar
Pastor: Oewayne Stutler
Sunday School ~ II a.m.
Wor!&lt;ihtp - 10 a m

St. Paul Lulhtraa Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St , Pomeroy
llev, Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.

Pastor: Pb11tp Sturm
Sunday School : 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp Set'\IICC 10.30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

StlvenviUe Wonl of f1lth
Pas1or Dav1d Dailey
Sunday School 9 30 a.m
Evenmg - 7 p m

SnowyiiJe ..
Sunday School - lO a,m
Worsh1p - 9 a m

Lutheran

Pastor-Tim Ihie
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Worsh1p • 10 30 am , 7:30pm
Wednesday Servtee 7 30 p m

Pomeroy Pike, Co Rd.
Pastor: ReY. Blackwood
Sundav School - 9.30 a.m.
Worship' 10 30 a m , 7.30 p.m.
WednesdJ~y Service- 7 30 p.m.

Pastor· Ron Ftercc
Sunday School • 9 15 11 ,m.
Wors htp - 10 IS a m

SL John Lullloran Chun:h

LanRSvllle Chriltlan Church

' MI. U•loa Btpllst
Pastor : Joe N. Sa;re
Sunday School-9.4 a.m.
Eve111n/c ·6:30p.m.
Wednesday erv1ces • 6 30p.m.

'

Sunday Schooll0.20-11 a.m.
Relief Soc1ety/Pnesthood 11 :05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Service, 9-10.15 am.
Homemaking mee1i11g, 1st Thu rs. - 7 p m

Calury Bible Ch un:h

1/4 m1le past F HI Me1g.'j: un New L1 ma Rd.
Paslur IVilliam Van Meter
Sunday-7 00 p m.
Wednesday-7:00pm.
Fnday-7:00 p.m

Racine, Oh10
Pastor· Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · 9.30 a.m
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00 p.m.

St. Ro. 160. 446·6247 or 446· 7486

Pllstor• Re\' , Fr~tnkhn Dtcktns
Ser\lttt-· Frida,y, 7 p rn

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd s.

The Chun:h-Df Jesus
Christ of l..(ltter·Day Saints

F• llh l' dlowship Crusade for Chrta

Pas10r- Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School -9: 30a.m.
Worship 10:30 am
Wednesday Serv1ces . 7 p m

Pastor Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshtp - 9 a. m
Wednesday Servi ces - 10 a.m

of Llllrr Day
Penland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School - 9 30 am.
Worsh tp - 10 30 a m
Wednesday Services - 7 30 p.m

Falrvie.- Bible C•IU"dl
Letart, W Va. Rt I
Pa!ilor John Hart
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Wbrsh1p 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7 00 p.m.

ChriJtiaD fellowship C tattr
Salem S1., Rulland
Pastor: Robert E Musser
S undzy School • 10 a m
Worship - 11 15 a m , 7 p m
Wednesday Scrv1cc • 7 p m

Bethany

Hk:kory Hlllo Chun:h ofChrlsl

Sllt~er

·

M~hodillt Churth
Pastor: David De Win '
Sunday School • 9 30 am.
Worsh1p • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. m.
Wednesday Service -- 7:00p.m.

Bl'ldrord Chun:h or Cllrlll

Radae f1rsl Baptist ·
Pastor Rick Rule
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices- 7-(lO p.m.

Pl!flOr Erme Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wed nesday servtce, 7 p.m.

Rutl•nd
Sunday School -·9:30a.m.
Won;hip • 10:30 a m.
Th ursday Services. 7 p.m

Laurel ClifT Free

Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
M1n1ster: Doug Shamblin
Youth MII"IJSter Bill Amberger
Sunday School · 9:30am
Worship - 8 00 am, 10.30 am, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 00 p m

Wednesday Serv ice- 7:00p.m.

Faith Chopel

923 S. Third St, Middleport

Salem 'Center

Sunday Scl)ool ·9:30am
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7p m.

Worship - IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.

Scf\'lce time: Sullday I 0:30a.m
Wednesday 7 pm

Rock Sprlnp

HyaeJI Run Holinea Cburth
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a. m., 7·p.m.
Thursday Serv1cc. 7;30 p.t:n

Rutland Churcb or Chrisl

Flnl Bapllal ~hurcb
Pa ~lor Mark Marrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday Sthool - 9 ~ 1 5 a.m.

Atllpe L!fe Center

"Fuii-Gospc: l Church"
Pastors John &amp; Pany Wade
603 Second Ave' Mason

Pastor· Keith Rider
Sunday School · 9·15 a m
Wo rs ht ~ . 10 am
Youth Fellowsh1p, Sunday. 6 p.m

Pastor: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship· 9 30 p.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 30 p m

Pastor. Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Firat Solllbem Baptist
41872 Pomerob P1k:e
Pastor· E Lamar 'Bryant
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices · 7:00p.m.

47439 Re1bel Rd. , Chesler
Pasion · Rev Mll')' alld Harokl Cook
Sunday Servtces 10 am . &amp; 6 p m.
Wednesday ScNices . 7 p.m.

773-5017

!5 Pearl Sl., Middleport

Sunday School- 10 15 a~ .

Pomeroy Flnt Baptl1t
East ~in St.

Harvts( Outreach Mlalt lritl

Pomeroy
Pastor: Conme Flares
Sunday School. 915 am
Worsh1p • 10·30 a.m.
B1ble Study Tuesday. 10 a.m.

Wesley10 Bible HollnHS Church

Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communio11 - 16 a. m.

Worship · 10:4.5 a.m

Other Churches

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 am
\Yorsbt p • 10 am

l/2 mtle off Rt. 32.5
Rev. O'Dell Manley
Su11day School • 9:30 a m
Worship - 10:30 a m , 7:30 p.m.
Wednesda y Service. 7 30 p.m

Tuppen Plain Church or Christ
~
Instrumental
Pastor Terry Stewart

•

Mlaen., IJie
Pislur Chad Emrtck
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

P~ IOr :

Zioa Cllurdt of Cbrbt
Pomeroy, Harrtson\lille Rd (Rt 1•3)
Pastor· Roger Watson
Sunday School · 9:30 am.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
We~nt!da y Services- 1 p.m.

Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Wednesday Ser\litt -7:30p.m.

Plat Gron Bible Holiness Churtl1

Bearwallow Rkl&amp;e Church or Chrltt
- Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 pm.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

astor: Jim D1ny
S70 Grant St., Middleport

Pastor: Vernapye SuJJavan
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m
Worsh.tp • IO:JU a.m

Rose of.Sharon HollnHs Chun:h
l.eadtng Cteek Rd, Ruiland
Paslor Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a m
Sunday wo rs~ l p .7 p m.
Wcd ne!iday prayer mceung· 7 p.m.

Wonhlp. 9:30a.m.

Hope Bor.IJI Cburdl (Soul,eral

Harrisonville Road
Pas1or: Rev. Viaor RoiJ5b
Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m.

Worshtp- II am, 7:30p.m

Youlh Ministe r: Btll Frazier
. Sunday School - 9·30 a.m.
Worshtp-- 8·1.5, 10:30 a.m , 7 p m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p m.

Bapt1 st

Heoth (Middleport)

Colul'J Pll&amp;rim Chapel

Pastor: AI Hanson

P.O. Box 467, Duddi ng Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Scrvicea- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p. m.

cause frog deformities

qJ,B50*

I Special recogrution for 50th, 25th &amp; lOth year.
1 (1949 t974 t989) $6.00 per photo or $10/couple.

If

Cltur&lt;lt of J - Cltrtot Ajlootollc

Church of Christ

·•
•
•

Year

, Wo11ihip • 10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pu tor: James Miller
Sunday School · 10:30 l .m.
Evenin&amp; -7!30 p.m.•

'

Name

Apostolic

Rudond Fnt Will Boptlol

your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples,etc.

I
1

.I
.I

J·Ractnc, seat bell, $

Hill, New Haven, W.Va., speed, $30
plus costs; Fred A. Waugh, Sugar
Grove speed S30 plus costs· Ange la
D Lo,ga n, Middleport , spe~. $5Q
plus costs; Dean E. Hankl a,
Muskego, Wi se., seat belt, $25 plus
costs;
·
Ke nneth B. Batley, Marielta,
speed, $30 plus costs; Eugene J.
Long, Long Bottom, failure to maintain control, $30 plus costs; Marshall
A. Slater, Albany, seat belt, $25 plus
costs, Dennt s A. Schramm, Chagrin
Falls, speed, $30 plus costs; Gregory B. Osburn , Belpre, window tmt,
$30 plus costs, John M Wheeler,
Albany, seat belt. $25 plus costs;
Pamela K Cunningham, Syracuse,
speed. $30 plus costs; James· A.
Cullen Wes tlake. speed, $30 plus
costs; c ratg E. F.IS hcr. sutton , W"
. va.,
failure to control, $30 plus costs;
Thuan Q. Nguyen , Columbus. seal
belt, $25 plus costs; Cecilia A Harrts, Mason, seat belt. $25 plus costs;
Shaun M. Seth , Pomeroy, fatlure to
control, $20 plus costs; improper
passing, $20 plus costs; Shane S. Circle, Racine, speed, $50 plus costs.

• Power Windows &amp; Locka
• Air Conditioning
• High Gloaa Walnut Wood • Ground Elleeta
• Fully Loadadl
• Rear Sola Bed

May 28, 1999
in
The Daily
,., Sentinel

:I

tn g:

S

A special section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"
,

,........,.

tmot Y

820 850

Remember When?
.

.

par~site may

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Metgs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton ·
,
Deed, David A. Trout and Carma
J.,Trout, Columbta;
Deed, Ora P. Bass to Barbara c
Koker and Mark Brown, Syracuse,
Deed, Dolphus Jr. and Wanda c
Burke to Merle and Barbara Jones,
Pomeroy parcel;
Deed, Jeff Snowden to Jeff and
Carolyn Snowden, Rutland;
Deed. Alberta and John Montgomery to Jeff and Carolyn Snowden, Rutland parcels,
Deed , Gardner L. and Patrtcia L.
Wehrung to Roger and April Hart,
Pomeroy;
Deed Donna and D
F k
D
•
M an.nyL '"d'
onna 111 tamson lo artm an
Ttna F. Searles,
. Rutland
C H.
II
Dee d, Wh ttney . aptonsta to
William R Ha tonstall and Edith K
·
Kn ttel M ddl p
1
1
~eed , ~or~p~ ~~~e ~~bert H
Eason to Mtchael H. and Joyce N
Chne Chester 1 61 acres·
' d D ' ·h
d ·
E
Dcc , c 111a an 1ames
·R tch J
E
J
Sh
1
te parcels·
r. 1o zra ames
eets '
.Orange
'

·

Syra~u~e, fat lure 10 control, $30 plus f;~~eb'aW.Va.,_speed, S30 plus25costs,

Prospective grand juror list released
dleport; Sarah L. 1ohnson, Mtddleport; Atl ec n Gr ace Wehrung.
Pomeroy.
Tracy L. Lockhart , Tuppets.
Plains, James W Barton, Pomeroy:
Apnl Lyn n Hudson, Pomeroy; Donna M Tay lor, Mtddleport , Teresa L
Grimes, Albany ; Juhe A Hubbard,
Syracuse, Jose Delgado. Maddleport;
John Vtrgil Bogard , Sr.. Long Bottom, Theresa B. Bell, Rae me : Sharon
R. John son. Coolvtlle. Wtlltam Stan·
ley Cross, Ractne. Ivan C. Powell,
Ractne . Gerald 0 . Pulltns. Sr ,
Pomeroy. Vtrgtl B. Teaford,
Pomeroy; Thor Ol son Carsey,
Pomeroy, Yvonne S. Young.
Pomeroy; Melvm L. Le~. Jr ,
Pomeroy; Edgar W. Rose , Cheshtre ;
Susan E Myher. Dexter; Rex K.
Butcher, Pomeroy ; Leo Glenwood
Ktng , Coolvtlle; Rosahe R. Johnson,
Shade ; Kevtn Ray Whobrey,
Pomeroy; Walter Frednck Garnes,

.

Re~svllle, . unreasonable speed for c~nter, $5_0 ~us _costs, seat belt, $25
~0 ~ ~~~dt;IOns, $20 plus costs; seat Pus costs, . urti~Jeffe~s. ~om~roy,

Monday - Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1
- 8 pm

•

TOLl FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372 -2 844 •

Support your
local
churches

Place an ad in this space

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RACINE
MOWER CUNIC
Biiggs &amp;
Master Service Tec~ftniC.IEli\

PHARMACY~·

INSURANCE
...SERVICES .

" Main '
:• 214·E.
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR
992-5130 Pomeroy
949-2804
EWING FUNERAL HOME
Advertise yo~o~r
business each· week ' · Dignity and Service A[ways

In P!ls spas:•

,

and s~pport local..
.. .l ~

• ·~&lt;~

We Fill Doctors'
. Prescriptions
992-2955

FUNERAL HOME

~2-2121
1d6 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy

"We

A.~eept Prene~d

'Ji'tlrujBn"

112·1200
Lundy Brown
Dlrwctor

www.tompcdcn.com
,I

992-5432

590 East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769

Advertise your
business each week
In this space

J"rancis FLORIST

and support local

740-992·5444

Jr - Director

Meis• Counly~ 0/dell Florisl
IIi! 1'111 Mill Pt&amp;IPIJ,
740-992-2644
740-992-6298
L.r U. S"""l Yo•r

NEW HAVEN

Established 1913

264 South Second Ave.•Middleport. OH
740-992-5141
eruce A. FISher . Director

,_,n Brown
174 LIYM su..t

ThoU~Jhh

W'ull

FFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Searching for a
local church?

992-7075

Check the Sentinel
every Friday!

172. North Second Ave.
Oh

�.

...

. The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

.

The Dally Sentinel·

By The Bend

Gelllpolle
&amp; VIcinity

'

CLEAN
30

Announcements

Dear Ann 'Landers: 1 have an 8- son. I .offered to drive her and stay
year-old nephew whose parents for the party so I could bring her
went through a bitter divorce . My home. We had a great time. My exbrother left '' Jason's" mom when the sister-in-law was lovely to us, and
boy was 18 months old and remar- Jason was thrilled that we came.
A few days later, I received an
ried two years ago. Since then, his
new wife has repeatedly told my · angry, phone call from my brother's
mother and me that she wants us to wife . Slie was furious we had attend have no contact with Jason's mother. cd the party. I explained that we
I was never close to my brother's ex- we nt for Jason's sake, but she ker t
wife , so thi s was not a problem for ye lli ng that we had betrayed noy
'me . Howeve r, my mother ha s main - brotber and her, and then , she hung
tained a more cordial relation ship. up un me . I worry about my nephew
although she has not visi ted .ihe ex- living in this battle zone. Was I
wife since my brother remarried.
wrung ' to have driven Mom tO th e
Recently, Jason in vited my par- · party ''- LAKE WORTH , FLA .
DEAR LAKE WORTH: No.
cnts, .who arc in their 70s, tu hi s .
birthda.y party, held at hi&gt; mother's and you don' t owe your new sisterhouse 90 miles away. My father did - in -law an explanation -- much less
n' t think he should go, but my moth- an apo logy -- and you can .tell her I
er wanted to be there for her grand - sa id so.

-,----~-- Community

Calendaf:_.- - - -

FRIDAY
me nt s.
WILKESVILLE - Wil~e sv ill e
Com munity Center, Red Cross ·
POME;ROY - Closed AA bi g
Bloodmoblle. I to 7 p.m. Donors book study meeting, 8 p.m. at
must be 17 years old, weigh at Sacred Heart ·cat holi c Church. No
least 110 pounds and be in good smoking.
health.
POMEROY - . Women 's AA
meeting, 7 p.m. at. l607 Nyc Ave ,
ope n disc ussio n.
Wesleyan
. MIDDLEPORT
Bible Holiness Church, Middleport, will hold a weekend meeting, Friday through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. ni ghtl y with Rev. Ste~e Manle y from New England . guest
speaker. Pastor Doug Cox invites
the public .
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778 , Saturday, potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m. fol lowed by
meeting, 8 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - · Hymn
sing, Saturday, 7 p.m. at the Mt.
Oli ve Commu nity Church, Long
Bottom. "Etern it y" from Point
Pleasant, W Va. to sing .
HARR ISONV ILLE
Harri so nville Lodge 411 , F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. wi th hnmecoming night to be observed. RefreshPublic Notice

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Helen Mooshi·
an, mi ss ionary and world traveler,
will be speak ing Sunday, 7 p.m. at
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, state
Route 143, Pomeroy. Rev. Victor
Roush, pastor, invites the public.
LONG BOTTOM - Revival
beginning Sunday through May 7
at Faith Full Gospel Church with
Evangelist David Dailey.

Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at th e
office building . .
CHESH IRE - Emmaus Gatheri ng, Cheshire United Methodist
'Churc h, 7:30p.m. Monday.
RUTLAND .- A free ski n test. ing clintc will be offered by Meigs
County Tubercul osis Nurse Connie Karschnik, RN , at the Rutland
Fire Station Monday, ~:30-6:30
. p.m . All individuals who are in
food service are required to obtai n
yearl y skin tests.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Board of Trustees. regu.lar
meeting Monday, _ 7:30 p.m. at ·
Syracuse Village Hall.

TUESDAY
MONDAY
RACJNE - Anh ual i,nspection
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
of Raci ne Chapter 134, Order of Village Counci l. s p~c ial meetin g,
the Eastern Star, Monday, 7-:30 . 6:30p.m., to discuss personnel.
p.m. Refreshmenls afterwards.
ALFRED - Board of Orange
CAR PENTE R ~ Cdlumbia Tow nship Trustees, Tuesday 7:30
Township Board of Trustees meet- · p.m ·., home of the clerk, Osie Foiling Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the fire rod .
station .

·

POMER-OY
Sali sbury
RACINE - Rac in e Village. Tow ns.hip Trustees, reg ul ar· meetCouncil meet ing Monday, 7 p.m.. ing, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. town ship
at the munictpal building.
hall on Rocksprings Road.
LETART -

letart Township

Public Notlcl!

•

LEGAL NOTICE
In the eattmatod amount or
Recine Vllloge Clerk Karen
$188,000, providing the
Lyona will receive oealod · county meeta applicable
bide untll4:00 PM, Monday, •requlrementt.
Moy 3, teet, lor 1 Ultl1 Ford
The II rot or two public
Crown Vlctorlo 4Dr. (Old
heerlngo will be held Moy
Pollee Crulur) hoe 1 new
17, 1eet at 7:00P.M. at t~e
J11per Motor ueed only
Metga County Courthouae,
8000 mllee or 3 yeer waiTIIn- . Common Pl111 Courtroom,
ty,
Pomeroy, Ohio to provide
Vehicle may be aHn by
cltlzena with the pertinent
contacting the clerk at the
lnlormetlon about the CDBG
Municipal Building, Council
Formula pragrom can lund
will open blda 11 7 PM.
a broad ronge of 1ctlvltlll,
Vohlcleoold ao tat Council
Including:
economic
reurvoo the right to reject
development prciltcta,
any 1nd or all blda.
atreot,
w1tor •up ply,
Blda to beln allied enV111drelnoge and u n l t l l r y op
marked
" Bid
lor
lmprovomerlta,
perk
Crulaer". ·
ac q u laltlo n
1nd
Karon Lyona, VIllage Clerk
lmprovementa, demolition
PO Box 375 .
Ol U~llll llructuree, lhd
Reclne, OH45n1
rthlbllltotlon
of
(4) 23, 30 .2TC
neighborhood. lacllltlea.
The ectlvlllll muat by
.Public Notice·
d11tgned to primarily
benellt low ·•nd moderateNOTICE OF PUBUC
Income peraona, aid In the
.
HEARING
prevention or alum and
Melga County lnllnda to
blight, or mao! en urgent
apply
to
the
Ohio
neodolthocommunlty,
.
Dwr:tmont ol Dovelopmont
Cltlzona are encouraged
lol\ "lundlng under the
to anend thll mH.IIng on
Community Development
May 17, .1889 to make
Block Grant (CDBG) Small
auggeatlona and to provide
CHill Progrem, 1 loderetly·
public Input on varlou•
I u n d e .d
pro 11 r 1m
activit) I I which may be
admlnlatered by the atato.
undertaken In thla pr0r1rem.
Melga County Ia eligible lor
II a participant will need
Flacat Year 99 CDBG
auxiliary aid~ (Interpreter,
Formula Alloeatlon.rundtng
bralllad or llped material,

Public Notice

BINGO

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
. RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$700.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
'ROAD
In Memory of
Deloris Powell:
41301I928- II241I999
I LOVE YOU MOM
And Happy Birthday too
As this is your uy
And my wish for you
Is to luep shouting
in hea·ven
And praising our Lord
TiU wt'r'l!' reunittd
Thm we'D shout

In virrg
Memory of
Mickey Randolph

Buy, Soil, Tralft or Board

1014169 - 4130188

HooiBon-

No Morning dawns,
no night returns
that we do no't
think pf you. When
links of life are
broken and loved ·
ones have to part,
it leaves a wound
that never heals to
" a broken heart.
When evening
shades are falling
and we sit alone, to
our hearts come
this feeling, if "nly
you were h'ome.
Sadly Missed By,
Mom, Dad, D.].,
Family &amp; Frienru

Farma
. 740-698-3290

HORSES .

110

WANTED.: .Due to r«ent.e/(pansion, B.C.S. currently has
opening In Meiss County: .
1) 33 lu-s/Wk: 8 am Sat lhru 8 amMon;_sleep-over
.required;
'
2) 25 lu-s/Wk: 8 am-8 pm, Sat./Sun; .
5) Emergency kllef (substitutes): hours scheduled as
needed;
We are se:udling for compassionate professionals with a
team vision and a desire to teach pmonal and communf.
ty skills to Individuals with mental retardation. lbe work
. environment Is Informal and rewarding. lbe requirements
art: high school dlploma/GED, valld drlver;s license, three
years good driving experience and adequate automobile
Insurance coverage. B.C.S, offers comprehensive tnlnlng
In the field of MR/DD. Starting slllary: ~5-SO/hour.
Interested appUcants need to specify position of Interest
and send resume lo: •
BUCKEY£ COMMUNITY SERVICES
P.O. Box 604
jackson, OH 445640-0604
..
All applicants niuot .be post•,marked by'· 5!6199. Equal
Opportunity I!mployer. ·

Complete Line Of

Repo • Divorced

20

·tarry'• Lawa

YOUNG'S
CIRPENTER SERVICE
•Room teldftlon1 a Remotlalln&amp;

'

Fre~ E•tlmt.ate•
'Professional Rou!na Lawn
Maintenance ana Manicuring

•EIICtrtcal &amp; Plumbing
•Rooftng.&amp; Guttera
•VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
•PIIIo &amp; Porch Deekl

'Shrubbe&lt;y Maint81l8nce
'Serving Meigs and Clallia Counties
In Ohio and.Ma$on cOOn!Y In 'IN

........................

&amp; Remodeling

'.fir...

•

SELF STORAGE
Racine, Ohio 45771 '

:'740-949·2217

Quality Driveways,

~

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
....

'I
••

_.

5 ""UP'

·H egllnp

Bnlldoaer &amp; Backhoe

Senice•
Houoe. &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Seplit Sy1lemt &amp;
Utililw•
(740) 992·1111
- Howard

1.,.

Wrltesel ·

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR .

'

... ·..

~

.'

Low Rates)

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

29th, 30th . May 1st, •6 Burnen ·
Road, Kanauga.
3 Family : M3y lSI. 9· 3. · 117
Third. Clo thing ~ Men's. Worhen's,
Boy's, Baby. Maternity! Bike.
Toys,
3 Family : Krine r Road , AcroS&amp;
Fr.o m CQon Club. Saturday 9-5 ,
T.V.. VCR. FurnlllJ'"e, l ots Morel

Power ·
;Washl•g
Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes

· Palnting,'Drywall Repair
1 lntBrlor &amp; Exterior
' l5 Yn . E~tperi41race

April 30th-May 1st

!

up to 8 ton

IN5U~OWNER

Senior Dleeoanta
Fl'ftEdlmatee

Mon·· Frl 8:30 •

Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progre . .lve 'top line.

(740) 985-3677

Lie. It 00.50

30 NEW

Candle making
fragrance~? Ill
• Wreaths • Refills

"THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP"

Tue•· Frtday 11l-8

Linda's Painting
'Dike the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Befqre

6 pm

leave·

message . After

·Roofing • Repall'l ·
• Drywall

&amp;

• Plumbing

Free Estimates

Joseph ·Jacks
40·992·2061
.
'

6 pm

740·985-4180
Free Estimates.

RUT... ND, OH.
AMERICAN
'
liGION
lEECH GROVE ·
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug

&amp; Shot'

Matches

Mondoy odlllon
·· tO:OO a.m. Sotunloy.
Aprll30 · May t ,3,4 Ill . 8:30Am Til
5:30Pm . 62 Ann Drive . Hospital
Bed. Miscellaneous. .

5:00 .

April 30th . t.tay 191, State Route

~~~~ld'o~~:: A~~:".!"""""'" ·

l

7

~r~~~~~~- ~nrf;'7=4=2=-88==8=8="=====)

·

8;
512nd,
~oon · 6 ; Mon·
BigSunday
3 Family:
Saturday
511st, 10·
day 5/3rd . 10-6. 1722 Chatham
AWi nue.

1

CommunitY Yard Sale: Friday 4130

&amp; Saturday 51 1,' ;J/ 10 Mile Out
Georges Creek Roa d From S.R. 7
N. Home Interior, High Chair, Fireplace. Dresser. Boys Clothes 4·6,
Jury Cabinet, Bikes, Toys. M i~.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
FORMERLY OF II 0 COURT STREn, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILE$ NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD I B
VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
fACfORY DIRECf PRICES

992-4559

Jtck~•

edition· 2:00 p.m.
F~doy.

Over 40 yra experience

Lonsbotrom, Ohio

CANDLE· MAKERS

BtPoltllnAdvenco.
Df!PUNE: 2:00p.m.
tho doy bofont tho ...
II ID run. Sundly .

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

Club Bingo On

KEITH MYERS

AlJ, Yenl Situ Mutt

Rutland, Ohio

992·5455 .

' Pomeroy; OH

Sldlnga • Painting

5 Family: Friday ·Sunday, Ctnte·
nary Past Jumbo. Home Interior,
Dishes. Furniture. Transfer Pump ..
ChUdrens Clothing.

. A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Light Hauling

J1.T 8:30 P.M.
· Main St.,

•Coating• •

5 Family Yard Sale And Hot Oog
Sale: Market Street, Bidwell, Ohio
Saturday May 1st.

Register Now $5.00-Pick up Flag
'nrn1at1on cal 992 -4197 ·

Thursdays

Rooflaa
r&amp; (.ltltr•clfH

4 Family : 4/!!llth, 511 st. '2nd, 9·5,
1264 GeorgeS Creek, 1 1/4 Mile
From Ro ute 7.

Compost

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

We now have

4 Famil ies : Friday April 30th. SBt· ·
urday May lsi , 9·? Bulavllle
Townhoust, Corner Jo hnso n
Ridge &amp; Add.lson Pike. House·
hold. Linens . Cl othes . Children·
And Adults! Some Treasu res For
E"varyonet .

YELLOW Fl.fiG
. YRRP SALE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

.Rj.

'

•'

&amp; VIcinity

Landscape Material,

740-992-3470

Sat 10--4
124 Mlntravlllt, Oh

Marty's

Yard Sale
· Gallipolis

DRIVEWAY STONE

WICKS
HAULING.

:FREE ESTIMATES
""'TFN

Lost: Blonde Shetp Dog, 5 Year
Old, Pink Color, Gone 2 Weeks,
740-446· t692.
70

Don 11 N..ed A. Big One
Call A. Lillie One

(Lime Stone-

•Birdhouses • Bear

949-2168

l

Hauling
llmestQ!l' &amp; Gravel
Re"sonable Rates
JoeN. Sayre

.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
, Painting

. ~ 742-t701
..

Roush
949-1701

3111 199 TFN

--

985-4473-

11I I

Jel&gt;ellllY .L.

740·742·2138

ESTIMATEES

Found· gentle Rottweller. Bow·
man's Run &amp; Morning Star Rd., will
give to good hOme, 740-949·
2266.

SAYRE
TRUCKING/

Equipment Parts
Factory A11thorized
'" Ca8e-IH ·Parts

Sidewalks, Patios
n
.1

&amp; Compare

Lost and Found

I 1 Mil e Down State Route 218,
Everylhi"O Clleapl saturday.

: CO CRETE -- DBPOYSAG
PAR7S
tONNICliDN All Makes
Tractor &amp;

Remodeling

60

lllesday . No 'lap
Wednesday· Men's League
Thursday - Mix~ League
'Stlrtlnt nm1 1:,. P.M.

"""'Nmo.Dd.

•Complete •

Puppies: Part Border Cptl le. Part
Australian Sheph ard , 740· 388·
9033.

. a IJ.A'I'I

Begins 1et Week
In May

614·992·7643 .

•Garagea

Kitte ns! 1 Solid Grey Ma le, 1
Orange &amp; Black Calico. Tw o 5
t.tonth Old, 740-260-8253.

Degree CuUfted ·
LUidiCilll ·~clllllt,

Summer League

FREE ' ESTIMATES

7:00AM·8PM

Free Kittens , 6 Weeks Old, Long
Haired, litter Trained In Eureka ,
On Aou te 7, Pho ne: 740·256·
6780 Leave Message.

PaUo CqnllrucUon

77HSOO

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

•Hours

Bea utllul All While Adult Cat,
loving. Make A Good Pet , 740·
258-6445.
.
'

• Malahlnuace • Plaallag
• Malcblag
• Relalalng W.U 8 Irick

Malon Bow.._
Lana

• Roofing

5' X 10'
to 10' :x 30'

ft1~~~~~~~ft ~ f!r.~\,e&gt;:·~

• Lawa care • Dellgn

38782 SUrmer Rood,
ONo 45076~

Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions

~

.

p

WJOS

R. L. HOLLON

TV27

TRUCKING

Local
Television

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

For Free
Protp"am Guide
CaU 992-2727

Agricultural Lime,
·Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

985 4422
Cheater, Ohio
•

1O(oli5/'Ntttn

Auction
and Flea Market

Inside Salt Eve rgreen Ad . Oft
Stalt At. 160. LOll ot' iltmt .
Choap' Evo'Y'hlno must go!

Bill Moodlspaugtt Auc:tion. .rino :
Complete AuctlonHrlng Servlc·
ea. Cons ignment IUCtion · Mill •
Striet , Midd leport, Thursd ay s. ,
Ohio Llctntt 17883. 7•0·989· :.
2623.
'f

'

Alcli Pears on Auction Company, •
lull tlmt auctioneer, complete
auct ion
service . ·ucenstCI
166,0h lo &amp; Wtst Ylrglni8 , 304· . •
773-5785 Or 304-773-5&gt;147.

Moving Sate: Furniture . House·
hold Gooda , Some Farm Equip·
ment, Lot&amp; 01 Odds &amp; Ends , Car
Parta, Etc, 4058 State AOUie 141,
Actost From Aunt Clara's Am ish
S10ro: Saturday. Sunday.

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 7 P.M.,
Crown Cllv. 740.2-989
WeQ.e mt~ yer ' s Auct ion Service ,tlall&lt;&gt;ot~. Ollie 740·379-2720 .

Sat. tat: 9 ·~. At 337 Aoual'llana.
Cheshire . Baby Items, Furn iture,
Clothe&amp; , Something tor Everyone

90

Wanted to Buy

Abs ol.ute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit· •
ver And Gold Colna, Proofseta1 • .
Oiamonds . Antique. Jewelry, Gold .•
Ring s, Pre-1 9,30 U.S. Currency,'
Sterling, Etc. Ac~ul atllons Jewelry I
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7~2842 .

Saturday and Sunday. 5th House
past Taxu Ad. On At. 588, Lots
o1 EVOf'llhtno. 9-5 •
,
Sa turday MEiy 1&amp;1 , 850 t&lt;rau&amp;
Bed&lt; Roa&lt;l.
Saturday May 1st, 9·4, At The
Corner Of Route 160, Buck Ridge.
Somelhlng For Everyone!
.

Ant iques. lop prices paid , River· .
lne Antiques , Pomeroy, Oh io ~
Run Moore owner. 7.C0-992 · ···

Saturday Only Several Family
Yard Sale : 9 ·~. 1015 Setond
~ v enue. Somathlng For Evtry ·
ontl

2~26

Clea n late Model Cars Or
Truck&amp; . 1990 Modell Or Newtr, .
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 East: •
ern Avenue , Gallipolis.
·

Sma ll Estate : Friday 30th , Satur·
day 1st , Sunday 2nd. Northup
-;C:-o:::llle-,-;F,-om-a""t•-.:-6-to.:,8,-m_o_n_tns Yellowtown Road Off lincoln Pike
Want To Sell Your Stuff? Call Aiv.
old . To Country Homos Only ! By S. A. 141 , ~See Signs). Furnl·
eralde Auction And Let Us Sell 11
, Great D'lapos llionl (740)·256·· ture . Camper, Jeep , Old Truck,
ForYoo . 740·2-989.
9.1.:.23:.:.- - - - - - - Small /Large Ho usehold Ap·,
'
1 5-· 1!2 month old Col lie pup , to pllances. Gun, Bow. Etc.
,
EMPLOYMENT
good home wtth kids . 740·992 · State Route 554 At Eno, East of
SERVICES
6805 , 740·992·4050 ask ror' Porter. Morgan's Center Youth 41
30", 10 511 .
.
Michelle .

'

FREE EST/MATES

New Homes • Vinyl

~

80

Giveaway

Ad orab le Puppies , MilCed Breed,
Will Be Medium Sized, To Good
Homel740.446-44t2.

John Dean; Owner

STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM

.BlS.SELL BUILDERS,
INC.

lULL'S'

11'~

.lfn...
ti'.!l

&amp; Insured

Phone 740·992-3987

EMAIL:

Pomeroy. Ohio
22 yn. Local .

Licensed

Truekl·triCior

PHONE: (740) 9§5-4218

Frw&amp;tlmat11
Ill

1·740-446-3622 .

•New Homes

•

.

TtaUIII·"'"'IIf·moblle

Hon~~~-dockl-dnviWIYI
fqulpilllltl ClflnMI &amp; OtgrNolli
JEFf STElliEII

V.C. YOUNG
te2-t215

1·740.742·2803 or

e~iver

\

No Hunting or Trespassing on
Medors Locust Ridge Tree Farm .

• ·

28 yra. exp,

POWER WASH

•Now Ooro&amp;••

'RHidtnlial 6 Commercial

ROBERT IISSiLL
CONSTRUCTION

Paid for by Sam Eblen, candidate for Mayor.

Jones

lu Log Home1"
Commercial &amp; Residential

TRI·STATI MOIILI

Free Estimates

rvedicated to tfie peoplewfio tlijoy poetry.

Ronnie

iiSpeci.ali~ing

25 vrs.experience

&amp; Staff

Owner:

• New Homes

992·5776

~.

..

Ins.

: ~Ct~~~~~~~~~~
;,..
J D CONSTRUCTION l{fl-.
:-,
ltl..'!i
lfJ•, ,
t

It """.~

sh Patel, . D, FACP

Yrs. Exp. •

I

· Parking L~t• ,

In tfie soul of'Paris
1lows tfie Seine %ver,
1.eflecnng .
1fie grace and disgrace
Of tfie 1rencfi fi~tory;
!fl~fits and delights
Of tfiesun Ring,
andtfie ruling elite;
'Expression of tfie
. Suppressed lilliputian mass,
1fie guillotine;
. 1fie triumph of Ji'apoleon,
1fie blooming Lilies of :Mo11et,
flnd Venus,
_1fie godess of/ave, ·
lmprisioned in the Louvre.
tJlalesn (}late/

New To You Thrltt Shoppe
9 West Stlm&amp;Ofl, Athen s
740-592·1842
Ou al l1y clothing and househol d
items . $1 .00 bag sale every
Thur'sday. Monday lhru Saturday
900-5:30.

You're Treated· with Re!Bpttctl

SYRACUSE

FREE

My name is Sam Eblen, candidate for Mayor full time. I am a native of Meigs
County, 3 1/2 years in Middleport. My qualifications are: Retired from G.T.E.
directed and taught traininj)schools. Business experience: credit union represen·
tative, real estate assistant, construction supervisor. Law enforcement: 9 1/2 years
state patrol auxiliary, rank captain, 3• years Athens County Deputy Sheriff..
Military: Sth Army Air Force In South Paciflc World War 1\vo, Ufe time member
D.A.V. American Legion, member of Buckeye Sheriff's Association, member of
Middleport Park and Recreation Committee, Instrumental In securing a grant for
General Hartinger Park of $27,000 to upgrade the Park. My goal as Mayor is to
bring business and people back to Middleport, upgrade all the departments in the
village to better serve the.publlc, and to see your tax benefit you and yours and
much ·more. Isn't ·it time for you to take charge and to support a candidate who
will support your views and ideas and not one for simply PersOnal gain?
Sam Eblen, 38 Hudson Street, Middleport Oh. 45(60, Phone 992-4103.

No Embarrassment ... • . ·

GREENHOUSE

Stop

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00 PER DAY.

•

Announcements

40

740.:742·8·

..

WORRYING!!!

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

·

Pereonale

Kirkland Mtmorlal Garde na. lots,
Memorials , Memo rial Restora:
tlon . Call: Lynn Durst , (305)675·
2465 : Mike Plc ke M.(304)675·
2835; Kevi n Oursq304)875-5415.

,

BUllARD'S

POMEROY lUCHlNI SHOP
. 250 COIIDOI ST.
.
POMEROY, OHIO 41769
PHOII-740-992·2406 01 104-415·3555

rtaw 0

.

We Honor Golden '·
Buckeye Card ·
', Clpen •
9·5 Weekday Sunday t -5

\ .

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT
CYLINDER , AGA WILt GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FltL OF GAS fiEf "US AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP "US THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A ·
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE ·.
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A lAVING
Of UP FO $100.00 DEPENDING ON THE SlZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SJZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR ·
OUTRIGHT SALE. THJS SPRING SPECIAL WlU
END JUNE 21, 1999.

EOE

005

30

Vegelable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Flail $6.50
E•cl.ul•• B•ddb., Ger•mi..,..
Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; J:ollage ·

Public Notice

TO THE VOTERS OF MIDDLEP-ORT:

..

·
·
;
·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

May tot, 1999, 8-? 4963 S.A. 141 ,
Furn iture , Bath Fhnurea. Home
Interior. Carpet Cleaner. Stair
Stepper. Much Morel

Start Dating Ton ight! Have lun
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1·
800·AOMANCE . exten sion 9681 .

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

Slzea

has part time
positions for
LPN's available
for all shifts and
weekends.
Anyone interested
please stop by&amp;.
fill out an
application.

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

•shrubs &amp; Trees

·

Large 3 fo#lm lly· 112..7 State Ro·
ute 1 South, Friday 4!30. Salurdav
511 , 9-?

wmmms~~~~~~~

Y1rd Sate AI Ntw H1v•n . 30th
Ap ril; 111 May, 9·5PM . 1000&amp;511'\
St II qut&amp;Uona call ~304) 88 2·
3n9

161.

On Flatwoods ~d.,
Lab/Mix, Black, with
White markings on each
paw, tip ar Tail, and
a~ross chest
•••••• f•r ler letvrR.

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy co ntact:

· $5.75 &amp; Lip

AGA GAS, INC. JS OFFERJNG A SPECIAL ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
.

333 Page Street,
Middleport

'

•Geraniums, Azaleas

JUST IN TIME FOR SPRING REP~

Over Brook
Center

household goods.

Phone: 740-843-5572

-CREDIT

Now Open For
. Spring S~aoon

·j

Lo•t Puppy

keep uexempt" Jlroperty for hi.s or her personal
use. Thi s may includ e a cu.r , a h ouse, clothe~, ancJ

-Complete Auto Seroice-

211670 Beahan Road

'

124

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

Help Wanted

Immediate opening for Full-time or
Part-time Radiographer. Must be AART
certified, Ohio License or eligible. Must
be able to work independently. Will
require rotating shifts to include weekends, 20 minutes response time. for oncall responsibilities. If interested could
work 40-hour·weekend shift. If interest.ed please send resume to VeteransMemorial Hospital, 115 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or call 740992-2104, ext. 237.

Announcement&amp;

aaltattve natentng device, matted to the Melge County
other) due to a dl. .blllty, CommiMionera,
plene conllct Gloria Kloea, courthouu, Pomeroy, Ohio
Clerk, prior to May t7, teet 457118.
II 740-992·2895 In order to · Janet Howard, Prealdent,
onaure that your nelda will 11 1 I 11 1
C o u n 1y
be accommodated.
The Commlletonera
·
Metga County CourthOUII (4) 30
Ia handteapped act~~ltbte.
(5) 5, .12 3TC
Wrtnen commenta will lie
accepted until 4:30 P.M.,
May 17, 11198, and may be

•

Alao Riding l.nlona

RADIOLGIC TECHNOLOGIST

'

Rt.

Racine, Ohio

Thout:h I mis• your ""ik
And your warm tmbrttee
I tan ttiU ••• rht love of
God on you face
!)o my dear mother
Enjoy your uy
For I '0 love you forn~er
Forn~er and Always ·
Fom~n Loved "'"'
. Grt!lit/y Mis"~
Children"
Grandthlkbm

every.,.Saturday
night
6:30p,m.
Ame~ican Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst.$3000
Door Prize $200
. 1.45 people or
more will play
$1000 cover all.
Average $90 per
regular game

52954 Stat e

Cai'e

BINGo·

can relieve •
debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtor&amp; In bankruptcy may

' "
Fonner-"Velver H ammer

CU.SSIFIEDSI

· 1onu more

30

KRDPI CY

Dave's Garage

HOUSE

WITH THE
In Memory

Dear Apn Landers: This is for
"Upfront in Vermont," the disabled
woman who didn ' l mind the questi ons children asked when the y
noti ced that she was "different. "
Well, Ann , she may feel OK about
the question s, but I don 't.
If people don't know me we ll
enough to ask about my se1t life.
they should not be asking about my
di sability. And neither should their
children. When I am out doin g my
dail y business, the las t thing I'm
mteres ted in is giving some child a
lesson in manners. It is. not acceptable for a chi ld to.;nvade someone's
privacy because he or she happens to
ha ve a di sability. We deserve the
same co urtesy and respect as able bodied people: The nature or ex tent
of my disability · is nobody 's business. -- ANGRY IN MONTANA
DE;AR MONTANA: Apparently,
you have n't come lu terms with yo ur
disability, or you wouldn 't be so
upset by innocent children who ask
que st ion s. Please try to understand
that it is their natural curiosity about
people wh'o arc different froni them.

'
Hugt Y1rd Salt:
miles from
town down Rwto 7 on ngno. eaby
tiO~I clothes , 0-12 months, g1rls
5·6• clothu All Brand namu.
Satellite Olth , T0y1, and mo11 10
cliedl out! Friday Ao&lt;H 30. to May

•.s

Pagel
Friday, April 30, 1999

'

Pl PIIHIIIt
&amp; VIcinity

Tr uck c·ap , wasner &amp; Dryer. An~~
Help Wanted
tlque Dining Aoom Su ite, Gas 1 10
Ra nge ,Two Gun CabiF"lttl , Tools; $$$Make t.tonoyll$$ Work At •
Single Sewing Macnlne In Cabl·
Home • Auembll Produ Cts.' ·'
net, New &amp; Used Casaene ·Tape s Easy Work . E.:cellent ·P ty. Fre• 1
&amp; VCA Ta pes, Glassware, Nick Detall tl Send S.A.S.E. To : Nat'l
Nats Lots Of Mlscet!., 1549 Addi·
Homeowrke"r" s Association. P.O.
son Pike, 1O:OOAm-5:00Pm . Fri· -Boll 675 , Ripley, W\125271 .
Clay AM Saturday.
Are You Energet ic, MoU't'ated .
Yard Sale : 740 Fourth. Ave. 9:00 ' AnCI Caring? Seen~ Hilla Nursing
Center Is Looking For Individuals
to 3:00. Fnday -Saturday!
Who' Are .Currently State Tes ted
Nursing Asslsta ntt To Work In ··
Pomeroy,
OUr Comprehensive Care Fadlky. ·
Middleport
Please .Apply In Ptraon To 311
Buckrld ge 'Road. Bidwel l. OH
&amp; VIcinity
456 14.
."6" Milt Yellow Flag Yard Sale,
Pomeroy-Middleport, April 30. AVON I All Area s! To Buy or Se ll.
Sturtey Spears. 304-675·1•29.
t.tay t . Reg ister now $5 .00 . PICk
up flag. For mort inlormation call
CARDIOVASCULAR
740-992-4t97.
SONOGRAPHER
3 family , Saturday, May 1st, Roderick Grimm's residence, 838
POSITION AYAIW~E
.·,
Brbadwa;, Racine. Oh ..
Outstanding Opportunity For A •: ,.
4 1amllv yard ia~ Ao&lt;ll 30 &amp; f.ta1
Motivated Enet:getlc: Sonographer
1. Yost res idence out of Au tlaM
For A Busy Outpatient Dlagnosllc
on Loop Rd . Intersection of Me·
And A~hatl Facility In The
Cumber Rd . Rocker , curtains , Athens , Phlo Area. Candidatli
clothing. misc . Items too nu·· Must Be Registered Or Registry
merous to mention .
Ellgibl~ In Vascular Ttchnology .
Dul le&amp; Include; Echo, \'ascu lar , ..
7 lamlly. May 3·4. behind Maso· And Carotid Ultrasound Wilh E,~~;.'
nlc Lodge . Racine . rain or Shine
perience In Abdominal And Ob· · '
Clothing, small to plus sizes, fur· stetrlcs Preferred. E•cellent Sal·
niture. mi crowave&amp;, tramp oline, ary And Ben~ttits· Package Ava11·
lot&amp; of mi&amp;c. 9am- 7
able. Interested · Candidatu
AU Y1rd S1l11 Mu1t Be Paid In Shou ld Conta ct Ken Or Tony "
'
Advlnce. O.adllna: 1:00pm the 740-687-5025.
d1y before the ad 11 to run ,
Computer Use rs Needed. Work ·'
Sund1y l Monday edltlon- ·own
Hrs. S25K ·S8DKJ·Yr. 1·800· • ,

I;;.==:::..==::.;...__

-----=---. .

•

1:OOpm Fltday.

•7'6·8653)!:

Y1rd lilt· April 3o • il!tlay 1,
Oale Ellis residence on Titus Rd.
Small Coy's clothes. misc. items.
Hours 9-5.

Cosmetologl·st NHded, Bl.lslness
Growing". Guaranteed Wage.&amp;
Plus More. 740-4&lt;6-72t7

Apri l 30· Mey 1, 47• Sycamore
Street, Middlepprt, Ohio. 9·5.

Orlvtrs needed 10 transport ears ,
to &amp; lrom auctiQns, call 740·992·
6088 between 98m &amp; &amp;prn.

Dave Stout residence. 206.5 W.
College Rd., Syracuse, May 1st.

DRIVING POSITIONS

Evtrythlng Yard Sale. Friday· 30th
thru May •th. 61522 SR 124. long
Bottom. OH 45743.
.
Sunday,
Friday.
Saturday.
Beanies, kn ick knacks, snelves.
lamps, 4 wheeler. • .5 miles past
Harrisonville, on 143.
Garage sale· Saturday I Sunday,
33 t 40 SA 124, Lanosvilli.
Garage! yard sale- Saturday, 5111
99. 8:00-4 :00. Top of Chester Hill
on SA 2-48. Wreaths, swags, prom
dresses , Dodge truck rima, rock·
lng chair, clothes, misc.
May 1•2, 46379 Scout Camp Rd .,
Chester. Oi&amp;hes, child ren' s
c·lothe s, video tapes and more.
Ra in cancels.
May 1St; roadside park, Syracuse . Plus plus sizes. and more
Saturday, 10.7
·
Moving sale and 4 family yard
sale· Apr il 30 &amp; May 1, 8 em~
5pm . State Route 124. one ml!e
fro(tl Southern High Sci'IOol , Curl·
man
reside n,ce. Furn iture ,
clothes, rlshing equipment, Christ·
mas decorat ions . duel&lt; clothes.
bird houses, househO ld items.
k:IIS of misc.

s·pfing rummage sale · Hellllh
Methodist Church , 349 S. Third
Avenue. Middleport. April 30th·
May lsi, 9am·3pm.
·
Three fam ily, Bas han Rd ., two
mjtes ot1 SA 124. Ra Cine. Friday &amp;
saturday, 1Q-4 ,_

m7. www.1cwp.com

AYAIWL£:
Class A.OTA:
Singl!f Driver, late Model Ken· · .
wo rths Wiih Reelers. West Coast "
Carrier.
Class B OTA·' •
Team Straight Tru ck , Late Moder·.
Fre1ght11ners Wltl'l Sleepers. Mu st ,
Have Air Brake Endorsements ...
~00 Mile Radius. Home Deliver·· J
185.
Both Positions:
Atleast 25 Years Old
Atieast 2 Years Experience
Good t.tVR
Weekly Pay
Health Insurance Available
Work Well With The P~c
For More Information Ca ll 806· ~
437·S764, Hrs. 8:30A .M. ·5 P.M
'

------------------~
Easy Work I Ex cellenl Pay ! A.s ·-"'

se mble Products at Home . Call &lt;
Tol l Free. 1·800· 467 ·5566 Ext - ..
12170

EQUIPMENT

OPERATOR

Tr111n cher Experience Helpful .
740-532·2695 .
General Office /Sales . Expe n·

~~~~~~:~=~~~~: =~~~~~:·s~~ ~

F ~H nl t ure. 856 Tl'llrd AV8nue, Gal· · ;
lipolis, 1()..2, No Phone CaMs.
• •

Jewelry Sales Retail Salts and :
Computer ElCper lence Req uired : .
Acquisit ions Fin e Jewelry. t 51
Second Avit. Gallipolis. Apply
t.tonday IIUU Friday.

.

.

Local Trucking Company Seek ing •
Friday And Saturday S·S: Apr il
30th , May tst , Located In Spting Yard &amp;ale· SA 681 east of Darwin .. Qualif ied Tr uck Drivers &lt; Good : •
·
Valley, 101 Buhl ·.Motion Roa d, SatUrday, Sunday &amp; Monday. Pay And Bene fi ts . Send Resume
To. P.O. Sox 109 Jackson. Ohio · •
House On Hill Behind Foodland .
Loo61: lor ,lgns.
4~640 . Or Call 1·740·286 ·1463 ..
To SChedule .trn lntervltw.
t
Friday April 30 . Sat May 1. 8
Pt. Pleasant
miles South of Gallipolis: Slate
&amp; VIcinity
Maintenance Employet. General , ;
Acute 7 Toddlers clothes: size 18
Ma lnltnanct Of Low -Income · ~
mo:..nlll:.:s:.:t.:.o.:.3T~----- I 3 Family Garage Sale , May 3rd Apartmen t Complex . Electrical 1 t
end 4th , SAM·? , 102 Mary St .. Ael rlgera·uon !Plumbing /Carpen· - 1
Friday, i aturday, 9 ·Evening . 26 New Haven.
try ICustodlal IGroufldlll;.,ping. :
C"h ll l/cotne Road , 'Gallipol is.
Household Items. Clothing. Mls- 3 Flmlty O.rage SIIIIFrl. 1 Sit. Computer .tr Plus. Good Benefits. • ,
cellaneous.
April 30th/May 1st S-6 PM Floute App lications Availab le At Gallla ~
MHA, 3«1 Buck Aktge Road . a.td· ~ • ~ .
Garage . Sa lt : 111U S.R. 554, 87 •FollowSigns.
wel l, Ohio •5&amp;1•. 7•0·448:02'1. ~
4p ril 30th , May h i, 3rd , &amp; •th, Fri. Sat. Sun., B Milts on Route 2 Applications Accepltd Until May · • 4
t5, t991!. GMHA Is An Equal Op- ' •
Aaln /Sh ine. 9-?
Norlll. s-al Anllquoa.
Ga rage Sale: May tJt, 3rd , Thru
7th. 1.2 Milts Out Aoute 21 8,
Variety Of lltmt.

Nice Ylrd Slle: Routh Strett In
M11on, wv. Sat/May t st. Cloth·
lng, Toya, Housohqld. Mloctlll·

Garage Salt: Slturtlay ~1 " · e.....
615 Third A"ll'enue. Longaberger.
Washer , Convectio n Oven,
Beanies &amp; Clothes,
Hill 4 ~ 11 413 511 199 • 8 To 4 ,
Stato Roote S!O.

neous Items, Anti Moret
Sat ·May 1. New Haven Block
Sa le, 107 Hazltwood or. Men
Sp8cle i St ltction Too lt ·Oid
Planoa-Two Utility frallero . Qoll
Clubs, Mlscollllneouo.

o

Homt lnttrlor, Toys , Cloth ing,
Pro m Oreues. Ml&amp;c. 9·4 , May
1st II Ra in r-,ay 8th, Ad r.lln Ave·
nue, Ott Fourlh Avenue Close To

GDC.
Huge S Family Sale : 4129 ·511 at,
9-&amp;, 1St Drive On Right Ofl Route
7 On Bladen Road , Numtrous
Item$.

Saturday. May 1. 7AM· ? 2611
l inco ln Av.enue ,. Pt. Pleasa nt .
F ·
Clo
c0
urrnture,
thts, . .'a.

•

Sa turday,/May 1, 8AM·?, Annis·
ton .Dr lve/Pt". Pleasant , Little ·
Tykes Toys , Home· lnterlor,
Children Books, Sony-S1trto,
Household ·ltems. Chlldrtn!Adutt
Clolf'l1nQ1

~~~~-~~~E~mp~~
~-· ~----- ~· ;

Medica l Processor FT tPT No '
Exp. N.c. Will Train PC Req. Earn ' ~
40K Call IIOo-863-7440.
_:.:~~:.::.:~~------ ·: ·
NMd help spring cteaning, 4 or 5 ~ '
dayt In May, $6 .00 hour, ?40· .. • :
742-2879.
' j

NO GIMMICK&amp;
EXTRA INCOME NOWt

'

,. ' I

!

Envelope Stuffing ··- $800·$800 , • ~

-!

.,..ry week.

Free DetailS: SASE to ,
lntttmatlonallnc.
1375 Coney lslarld Ave.
Brooklyn. NewYolt 1:1230

'

•~
•

~•~

•

NOw accepting applications lor .. ,
night thth, ElllortiCIO AdlAI Homo . ' i
Bulc !!rot ald &amp; ICII rtqulrod . · .I
740-992-5039.
• . ',
'I

�I

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April 30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
"" 1
The Dally Senttnel • Page 11
:1F~rl~da~y~,~A~pr~ll~3~0~,1~~~----~~~;_----~--~------------_:~~~~~~========~====::=:~~======~~~~======~
'••ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP

-10--

ACROSS

ALDER
1

.,_
·-tWo

7 CultlvaiJ ~

540
18 hp

E~ecellent

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subJ8Cf to
the Fec!eral Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which makes t llegal

For Sate By Owner 3BA 1 11
2BA large family room &amp; office
upstairs totally remodeled new
roof gulterlng water softner &amp;
tots of extr.as 2912 ,t,nnl&amp;ton
Onve Pf Pleasant (304}675
2608 Leave Message on Ma
Chlllll

•

Postal Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc
Benefits No Experience For
App And Exam lnlor Call 1 800
Bt3 3585 Ext 8B26 BAM 9PM
7 Days Ids Inc
Recreation Director Full Time
H gh school degree or equlval
ent Associate Degree preferred
Certification In accordance w1th
regulatory agencies governing
center Comprehensive benefits
package which mcludes 401(k)
Point Pleasant Center State Ao
uta 62 Route 1 Box 328 Point
Plea&amp;Bnt WV 25550 A Ge1'18sls
Eldercart Network EOE
Restuarent Managers Radiology
Tachs STNA s LPNS RN s Stop
by 995 Jackson Pika 1201 or
Call (740) 446 4188 for mora in
formation Global Recrultlfs
RE6UME8 UNLIMITED Oilers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388
3800 wanted Secrerary must have
references must be reliable be
able to do tall8s ledger and com
plate on!ce work Send resume to
~0 Box 27 PomeiO)&lt; OH 45769
WANTED Due To Recent E•
panslon B C S Currently Has
Openings In Meigs County t) 33
Hrs Mk B AM sat Thru 8 AM
Mon Sleep Over Required 2)
25 Hra Mk B AM 8 PM SB!I
Sun 3) Emergency Relief {SUbsU
tutea) Hours Scheduled As
Needed We Are Searc:hlng For
Compuslonate Professionals
yYith A Team V alan And A. De
sire To Teach Personal And
Community Skills To Individuals
With Mental Relardatlon The
Work Environment Is Informal
And Rewarding The Require
ments Are High Schoo Diploma J
GEO Valid Drivers License
Three Years Good Driving Ex
pertence And Adequate Automo
bile Insurance Coverage B C S
Offers Comprehens ve Tra1ning In
The Field Of MRIDD Starting Sal
ary $5 50 /Hour Interested Ap
pi cants Need To Spec Position
Of Interest And Sand Resume To
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES
PO BOX SIM
JACKSON OH f584Q.060o1
All Applications Mus! Be Post
Marked By 5/6199 Equal Opper
tunlry Employer

tv

White Glove part time help 19
20 hours week $6 CO per hour
740 742 2679
w ldlle Jobs to $2t 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardens Secur
lly Maintenance Park Rangers
No Ew:p Needed For App And
Exam lnlo Call 1 600 813 3585
E•l BB27 BAM 9PM 7 Days Ids
Inc
Wildlife Jobs $2t 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardena Securi
ty Maintenance Park Rangers
No Ew:p Needed For App /Exam
lnra
Call
t BOO 8t3 3585
Ext 8827 BAM 9PM 7 Days
Ids inc

140

Bualne11
Training

Golllpollo Carwor COtltga
(Careers ClOse To Home) Call
Today! 740-4411-43117 t-8002r4-Q.I52 Reg ISO-OS t274B

180

Wanted To Do

Approved Master Ucenaed Elec
lrlclan WV025956 Froo Eotl
mates for Residential Services
(304)1175-7927
Carpentry Decks Porches ,t,dd
IIOno Remodels 74().4411316
Child Care Provider hal an
Opening lor a Child throe or Older
t2 years E~~perlance Call {740)
441-0359
Christian Woman Will Do Child
care In My Home Only S12 oo
Day Far 1 Child $20 00 Day For
2 Errt CPR Ctrtlftarl EMT Cart
Pending Relrenctl pall 740·
245-9562
E &amp; s Lawn Sorvlco Deo~n lm
plementaUon
and Slrvlca
Available for Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planUng Free eeti
mates SatlefacUQn guaranteed
Greg MHa-. 3041675-4828

Electric Malntenanct Service
Wiring Breaker 8o&gt;it1, Light Fix
wro Healing Syotomo and At
mortollng {740)441 1401

to advertise

hm •latiOn or d scrlmlnat•on

based on race color rehg•on
se.: tamtl at status or na,l:lonal
ongm or any lntentron to
make any suCh preference
hmitai!On or dlscrlmlnallon •

For Sate By Owner 4BR 3000
Square Foot House -4 Car Ga
rage 5 ,t,cres Vary Secluded
$199 999(803)366 9436
SOB1

Need Your Law n Mowed? Call
Erin for the lowest prices 10 town!
Call ~ow L m ted Openings
(740)245-9454
S&amp;S Lawn Care Commercial &amp;
R•&amp; dentlal Free Estimates I 740
441-0318

W 11 do babysiUing in my hOme
In Mason WV {304)773-606t

FINANCIA L

i!iOIIE FOR SALE
WALNUT PLACE
SUBDIVISION
SYRACUSE OHIO
New 1200 square fool energ~ effi
clent Three bedroom two full
baths two car garage river vtew
dock nearby Ready now• 740
992 7953 740 992 5404 or 740
992.:00t0 even ngs

Ntce two bedroom home with
basement Mulberry He~ghts Po
mero~ $50 000 firm 740 992
2186
Ranch House 314 Acre Lot 5BA

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ness with people ~ou know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have mve&amp;tlgatei:t
the otfenng

Employment The Housing Au
thor ty of the C1ty of Point Pleas
ant Is seeking a cand1date for a
management post110n The sue
cessfut candidate will be respon
sib e for assisting the Execu1tve
Director In dall~ operation of the
authority The housing authority
manages 142 units of Federal
low Income public housing and
122 Sect1on 8 ~o~nlla Applicant
must posses excellent human
re lation skills to work with sen
sltivity with low Income families
a 1 levels of government and the
pr vats sector Individua l shOuld
be capable of achlevtog certllled
Publ c Housing Manager Cerlifl
cation within one year of emp ov
ment An associate degree or
equivalent management eJCperi
anee in a comparable organize
tlon or program are the m1nlmum
requirements Resume must be
received at the housing authority
oll~e PO Bo• 517 404 Second
Street Point Pleasant West Vir
glnla 25550 before 4 OOPM Fri
day May t4 t999 E 0 E
For Salel The Jumbo! State Route
t4t $125 000 00 080 740 446
3500

230

Profii&amp;Sional
Services

Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned
without "Steam• or Abaorbl\nt
Compounds Soapleas Anti Fie
soil Detergents used exclusive
ly Safe lor all labr!cs Fast dry
lng (1 2 hours) El mlnatea over
wetting Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean et {304)6!5 4040
for Free Estimates!

2 H2 BA Den llvlngRoom w/

F replace DtnmgRoom Kitchen/
Fully Equip Basement w/Pool
Table Deck wi27Ft Abov~
ground Pool 3 Car Attached Ga
rage Jn Good Neighborhood m
New Haven WV Call For Appt
{304)682 3652
Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres V1llage Middleport
secluded and privata appoint
ment call 740-992 5696
Spring VaHey 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom 2 t/2 Baths
Uvmg Room Dining Room Eat In
Kitchen Lg Family Room 740
245 9337
Three bedroom home with lots of
Closet space close to school on
corner lot storage building one
bedroom rental home Included
740 992-llt54

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

$50000DOWN
Own A New 1999 Fleelwood
14x70 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath V nyl
Siding Shingle Roof Thermopane
Windows And Wood Burning
Fireplace Loaded Home Only
$245 00 Per Month C\LL 1 800.
656-1763

t2x65 Master Craft two bedroom
one bath gas heat $4000 negotl
at&gt;e 74().992 t042
t6x80 Vinyl Shingle Assume
Loan t 600-383-68112
1872 ACADEMY
12x60 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Nice
Shape Includes Oalivary Only
$299500CALL t 74082B 90t9

~ any preter~;~nca

nus newspaper w II not
know1ngly accept
advertisements for real estate
whtch s in VlOiation of the
law our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
a~vertlsed n this f1e)NSpaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bass

~~~~~~~~~~~~
350 Lots &amp; Acreage

=

t 0 112 Acres 3BR C A 2BA
DB Garage easement {304)675
4575

2 Bu ldmg Sites left off Route 33
n Mason $t5 000 an Acra
(304)882 3772

4 20 Acres Approx 4 miles North
of PI Pleasant on Route 62
Good building site access to
city water 2 tenths mile off main
nlghway $25 000 (304)6'15-5084
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew Gallla County
$32 000 More Acreage Available
740-388-8678

Apple Grove Memorial Garden Is
now otter ng a limited time spa
clal on Cemetery Lots from AprH
1 1999 to July 1 1999 Buy 3
lots get the 4th free Special
Sate Compamon and Individual
Grave MarKers (304)576 2779
Appro&lt;tmalely 30 Acres 5 Miles
From Gallipolis Beautiful Building
Sites Electric &amp; Water Available
Call After 4 30Pm 7~«e 7565

BEAUTIFUL
Restricted Residential Lot&amp; lo
cated A Comfortable Distance
From GalliPOlis Double Wtd~s
Are PermUted "Leave Ali Your
cares In Town Buy Yourself A
Piece Of Ground" Lots Start At
$8 750 5% Dawn Land Contract
Now Avallabll Call For Free
Maps 1-800 213.8365
360 Real Estste
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
Wo Pay Cash 1 BOO 2t3 6365
Anthony Land Co

RENTALS

197:3 Hlllcrestlwo bedroom mo
bile home 740 992 5039

1973 Ramada 12x60 Mobile
Home 2 Bedrooms Central Air
Range Top Oven And Refrlgera
tor Good Condition Call After
6 00 PM For Appolntmant 740
245-9392

Does Your House Siding Deck
or Orlvewa~ need a cleaning? II
so Preasure Weahlng Is the an
swerf Call Clearly Clean at
(304)675 4040 tor a Free Ea
tlmate

3 Bedrooms Near Holzer Medical
Center No Ptts $800/Mo Plus
Ulllities, &amp; Deposit References
Flequ)rod 740 446-0885 Alltr 5
~M

New Haven 2Bedroom Home
Garage River Frontage referenc
os Deposit &amp; Lease {304)934
7462

3 Bedroom Farmhouse on 1 acre
Collage View Dr $33 000 00
{740)-245-9687

3 Bedroom Home 2906 Meadow
brook Drive Call {304)675 4360
after 4PM
3 bedroom large living room 2
car garage on 20 acres Herman
Rd GaiNpolls $75 000 740 843
5t59
3 Bedrooms 2 Beth Ranch House
7 Years Old 2BII30 Attached Ga
raga 12•24 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed 69 1/2 Acres Or
Will Sell Houae 1 Loti Meigs Co
740 992 3537

3 Bed,ooms Set On 3 Acres
large Rooms 3 Bay Garage
Cloae To School And Buckeye
Rural $89 000 00 74().379 2112

Bv owner 725 Page Street Mid

dleport house &amp; 3 Iota must see
to apprltCiate will sell house with
out Iota lor $B9 000 740 992
2704 740 992 5698

By Owner SandHill AoadfPolnt
Pleasant Brick Ranch 3Bed
rooms 2Baths Basement Two/2
car garages Acre Lot (740)441
06t8
For Sate By Owner Well Main
talned 4BA Bl Level 3BA Large
FamltyRaom w/Firoplaca Living
room Kitchen (All Appllancll
Stay) DlnlngRoam Utility Roam
Central Air/Heat Pu~ Large Lot
at corner of Ballo &amp; sandHIU. 3 5
mllos out 2 Car Anachad Ga
rage aeparate garage 28X60
3doora paint room Lots of stor
age $180 000 shown by appt
{304)675-5403
Cozy two bedroom home toceted
In Mason w Va affordable alu
mlnum siding Anderson windows
Immediate posHUion Call 740
992 3557 or 74().992 304t
EXCELLENT CONDITION 2
Story 3 9odroamo 2 112 Baths
Near Holzer Immediate l'j)tlea
alan 74().446-9872
,

pllal (740) 446-3185

2tldrm apts total electric ap
pltancea furmihed )aundry room
facilities close to achool In town

Applications available at VIllage
Green Apta 149 or call 74Q-992
371r EOH
Apartment 2 Bedrooms Dining
Room Kitchen Utility Room No
Pets Deposit $4091Mo Refer
ences 74Q.24S-S053
Apaument Gallipolis Ferry De
posit Required
No Pets
1304 1675 2548
BEAUTIFUL APAF\TMENTS AT
BUDGET PRIOES AT JACKSON
ESTA1ES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equal Housing Opportunlly

Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Ulllltlea Inter
view Reterences No Pets tease
Deposit Non Smokers Available
4115199fnCIIy 74().446-3664
Christy s Family Living apart
menta home &amp; trailer rentals
7-40 992 451-4 apartments avail
able furnished &amp; unfurnls~
Furnished Upstairs 2 Roams &amp;
Bath Clean References &amp; De
posit ReqUired Utilities Paid 740-

446 1519
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apanments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Opper
tunltles
Modern tBA All Utllilles Paid
Except Electric Gallipolis Ferry
Area $250 month + Deposit
1304)675 1371/675-3230
Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt
Prima Downtown Gallipolis Loca
lion No Pels $300 + Utilities
Reference Required 740 446
0008
North 3 rd ,t,ve Middleport 2
bedroom unfurnished apartment
deposit &amp; reference&amp; 740 992·
0165
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apartments Includes Water
Sewaga Trash $315/Mo 740
448 0008
One Bedroom Apartment in PI
Pleal&amp;f'!l Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No Pete Phone
(304 )675 t38B
One bedroom apartment In Mid~
dlaport one bedroom furnlahed
house in GaiNpoHs 74().992 9t91
one Bedroom Apartment for Rent
In Rio Grande Call (740) 245

9082
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 t/2 Bath Fully Cor
pelld Pa11a No Poll Le811 Plua
Security Depaoli Required 7 40
448-3481 740-448-0101
1\ltil'l Ri~ere Tower now accepting
appllcallano tar 1BR HUD sub
sldlzed apt lor elderly and hand
lcapped EOH 304-B75-BB79

Space for Rent

New Mobile Home Park at Galli
polls Ferr~ Now accepting appll
cations for lots on site (304)875
6908

14x70 two bedroom total electric
12x55 two bedroom total electric
$250 month $t50 dopost 740.
742-2714

REAL ESTATE

2103 Mount vernon Avenue 38R
1 112BA Family Room Garage
CentraiAir Pallo Porcl'l $77 000
{304)675-2533

160 El mites North or Holzer Hos

Mobile hpme site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
74G-385 4387

WALL CEILING CLEANED EX·
PERTLY Saves on repainting In
definitely We use the exclusive
Von Schrader V~3 Power Wall
Cleaning System Protect&amp; paint
leaves glass retards cha lking
Ant i Mildew no odor sanitizes
Free eatlmatea Call Clearly
Clean at{304)675-4040

Homes for Sale

~ Bedroom Apt on State Route

460

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless Wa Wlnl
t 888 ~ 3345

310

2 Bedroom Apartment Rio
Grande Are&amp; Clo!it To College
$350/Mo Includes All Utilities
Deposit Required t 888 B40
052t

t995 t4,72 Ft Aeetwood 2 Bed
rooms 2 Full Baths all Electric!
Will lekS Peyotl! (740) 256-9382
1996 t4 Ft •72 Ft 2 Bedroom&amp; 2
Full Baths Total Electric May
Leave on LOt $2t 900 OBO 740
245-9834

2 bedroom mobile home tolat
elec~lc

t2•SS 74().742 2803

Low !nterf!lsl Rates For 1st Time
Buyers Umlted Time Available
600-383-6862
Good aetecllon of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
385-982t
Make 2 Payments No Payment
After4 Years 304-736-7295
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
Includes 8 rnomhs FREE lot rent
lnctudea washar &amp; dryer skirting
de luw:e steps and setup Onfy
$200 74 por month wllh $t ISO
down Callt-80Q-837 3238
Nice Home Set Up On Lot Make
2 Payments Move In 4 Years
Loft OrtLoan {304)722 7t40
Price Reduced t98B Skyline
MOtlila Hom&amp; 14X70 Total Elec
trlc 2BR Shingle AoQf. Ew:eel
ltnr COndition {304)675-7045
1 Plus Acre 2 Bdrm Trailer Wall
&amp; C Water 2 Slor B $24 500 00
App tegrove w va 304 576
25571.1ake Appl

Oakwood Homes Barbours-ville
WV $499 Down Single Wide
1999 Down Double Wldft 304
738-3409
330 Fanna for Sale
2S Acres MIL 8 Stall HorH Bam
3 Bedroom House Fence 740
38fHI50ol

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned $260 $309 sewer
water and trash Included 740
992 2167
2 Bedroom Trailer Loated On
Jackson Pike References Re
qu red 740 245-5582 Allor 5 74().
245-5690
Small 2 Bedroom Mobile Home
$200/Mo Plus Deposit Bob Me
Cormick Road 740 ~
For Flent 14x70 Mobile Home 3
Bedroom 11 !2 Baths Front
Porch 7 miles out of limits on
SA7 Privata Setting $300 /month
pliJs utilities $200 Doposll Appll
cations Available at t 403 Eastern
Ave Gallipolis Call (740) 448
4514 B S Aller 5pm coli {740)
446-3248

House Within 15 Mllt1 Of Borg
Warner Fenced Yard Nice
Kitchen 5t3 851 OtOO Or740
44t 3896

MERCHAND ISE

510

Houaehold
GOode

14C1\Mge-

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Cub Cadet ••· deck lawn

mower lor sale good condition

start up home Owner

.pay closi ng cost 3BA w/Base
ment Elac1rlc Heave A $32 000
{304)882 3712

POSITON CLINCAL SUPER
VISOR for the Gallla Jackson
Meigs Treatment ,t,11ernatl~es to
Street Crime {TASC J program
Fult-llme posthOn With county em,
ployee benefits package Ll
censed lnc:Jependent Social
Worker (LISW) or Licensed Pro
fessional Clinical Counselor
(LPCC) requ~red Mlmmum of two
years Experience working In a
substance abuse and/or cnmLnal
jus!lcf!l set11ng prf!lferred Duties
Include but are not llm•ted to per
form ng comprehens ve assen
ments and referrals monltonng
relallonshlps with AOD treatment
prov ders and at the courts
Ouaflry Assurance reporting and
reviewing the ac!l~illes of the
case management and ur nalysls
components Additional require
ments Val d Ohio drivers license
to fulfill travel requirement Salary
$24 790 $35 000 negatlared ac
cording to experience licensure
and educat ion ,t,ppllcatlon&amp;
available b~ taw: or piCkup at 414
Second Avenue Suite 202 Galli
polis Ohio Gallla Jackson Meigs
TASC IS an Equal Opportunity
Employer funded by the Ohio De
partment of Alcohol and Drug Ad
diction Service through the Gal
ua Jackson Meigs Board or Atco
hoi Drug Addict ion and Mental
Health Service

13 lapel liM lur

$995 call 740 992 2t43 or 740
992-6373

Farm 3 Bedroom Houae
2 lull Baths 32ft • 60ft Barn
Black Top Driveway Swimming
Pool
was $205 ooo oo Now
lt75 000 001{740) 387-Q2t9

340

Commercial Building In Hander
aon For Sale or leaae Call
{803)366-9438

K Q7 4
•KJ8742
t

East
10 8 6 2

• 8 7 5
• J 9 63
• Q 10 9 5

256 6t89
AMAZING
IIETABDLISII
Sreakthroughlll Lose 10 200
Fast
Pounds Easy Quick
Dramatic Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free SamplasCall740-44t 1982

South

Baby Bed Dressing Table
Stroller t-l~hChalr and Car Seat
{304)675-4548

630

Beanie Babies For sa1o 740 245

2 Buct&lt;s 8 &amp; 10 weeks old

Beige Tweed Sofa /Love Seat
Nice $200 Refrigerator /Almond
E•cellent Condition $200 740
3811-9416 After 5 ~M
Commercial culvert 20 long 12
gauge cal 74Q.992 5623
COOLDQWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed
$t 500 2 t/2 Ton S1 350 2 Ton
$1 250 The Above Includes Nor
mal lnatallation If You Oon t Call
U1 Wo Bolh Losti740.446-630B
Or t BOO 29Hlii9B

Couch For Sale Blue &amp; Mauve
Floral Used Very Little E•cel
lent Condition {304)675-2902
Garage Door Torsion Bar
Springs S90 080 4 Chairs Table
Dlnene $20 080 7-2340
Golf Clubs Tap Flight Tour
Graphite Shafts 3 Through Pilch
lng Wedge New $595 Sell $400
OBO 740 256-6898

Felr Plga for Saiti Ew:cellant
Lineal For mora information
{740) 24S 5672 or (740)
0583
Fair Plga Call After 6 OOPm
245-9047

Green Sofa &amp; Recliner Set Very
Good Condition $125 {304)875
4B96

1 Have a Fair Lamb For Sale
$tt0 (304)B75-5492

Grubb; Plano luning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740 446 4525

Registered Black Angus Yearling
Bull out of 9 FB31 Fullback
{304)675-2099

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 BOQ-537 9528

Lawn Mower Briggs And Stratton
Motor Serviced Ready To Go
74().245 5795
New Irregular kldl!l jeans I shorts
2 tor $5 oo See Peggy t32 But
ternut PomerO'j 0/"llo.
Nordic Track Le_g Shapor New
Condlllanl $150 74().379-2216
Owner Moving New Queen Size
4 Piece White Wicker Bodraam
sat $600 oo 740-446 3664
PRIMESTAR
Frwo 011101 flpoclal
Free Installation 3 rnontha tree
programing call 888 265-2t23

pap

II. ayppLy

We Are Profe&amp;slonal lnatallalion
And -&amp;orvloo Supply. Wo Soli
Wholesale To The Public We
Stock Janltrol Heating And Cool
lng Equipment DucfWorto Reg
lsters And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furnish ~ Llll Of Dialers to
Install Far You If You Donj Call
Us We Both Loael .5~3 Jackson
Pika 740 446·8308 800 291
0098
Rainbow Sweeper with attach
menll tor sail {304)675-t725
Troybllt Horse Rato Tiller Eleotrtc
Start Rldlni Mower Gravely
(Commarclall\lpa) 60' Cut Ro
built Engine 42• Gras&amp; Catcher
5 Bruoh Ho9 4 Wood Trailer
W th Sides .-4: Lawn Roller Snow
Bear Snow Blado Electric Blade
Fils Arr; Vehicle 5 Drag Blade
Trayblll Chipper /Shredder HI
,t,nd 24 Extension Ladders 7-40
256-6898

Two 5000 BTU air conditioners
new Lawn Bo~ lawn
Ynow~r $200 nrm 74Q.992-l!154

S100 each

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

,.:...;_,,..:....,;.=:~~:-:::"-:-::::-:
Large Square Bales Of GC)()(J Hay
For SBIO 740-3J'9.2B39

TR AN SPORTAT IO N

'90 Ford Crown Victoria 302 automatic PW PL PS good eondJ..
lion no rust $2~00 740 992
7405
19B8 Ford Tempo XL Nlct
Clean eo ooa actual mllaa
(740) 256 t 102 Ask For Junior
1973 Olds Omega 49 000 Actual
Milos Original Paint Claad
Shape! $3.600 740.387 1!037

Appliances
Flecondltloned
Washers Or~ers Ranges Refri
gratora 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Maytag 740 446

T~~
StfAP~l&gt;.

wAY IT'S

THE BORN LOSER
Tf\E Df!:.INK YOU

"'I

\1-\\::,

) -----~~~I) I

l~

.,

'10lJR ~lf&gt;.L
f'I.Kro

199 t Chev Conversion Van
Full Slza Mark Ill Loaded
92 ooomues looks &amp; runs great!
$6 !500 {304)675-2949

1

t 990 Dodge Cargo Van $900 00

080 740 256 1233.
t995 Plymouth Grand Voyager
SE Loaded Full power wllh quod
aaatlng and rear bench Over
head dlgllal console 2 tone
Graan &amp; Dr.lttwood 3 3V6
59 OOOmllea Exeellenl Conal
tlon Great for travel/vacation
(304)675 4879

4

740

Motorcyclea

t981 Haney Law Rider Too Much
To Llatl Excellent Condition!
StO 500 00 74Q.44Hl872
1986 Suzuki 700 Intruder All
Chrome l.ittle Mileage Excellent
Cond $1 800 00 OBO Mon To Frl
74().379 9232

1110 •1110 CARS FROM 1!00
Pollee Impound&amp;
And Tu
Rapo a Far Lllllngs Call I BOO
319-3323 EMI 4420

1987 t300cc Yamaha Venture
Fully Orused 2 New Halma"
$3 000 080 74().387~

t983 CheVy Ceprlce 4 Or sedan

1989 300 Kawasaki Bayou tour
WI!Hitr lt800 740-992 4555

74Q.2415-9!i85

1998 Yamane 3SO Warrior Rid
den Very Little $3 !100 080 74().

1983 Ford LTD v B runs good
neada some front end work mo
tors good body has some rust
$400 00 080 304 675-13t1

'OI'IPITION?

t,
I

BIG NATE
HE 'I'

Wll1G!Hl

1

TH I 5 TE.A.!'\ I !&gt;N T FOR
ME

I M ASKIN&lt;; TO

51-!AKE

BE TRA!&gt;EP 6ACK TO

A LEr.'

'JOE.S C.HIC.I&lt;.EN-

YOU ~E.
ON DE:CI&lt;.'

I

Wj:~AT?

A

Wti'INEP..

_~-~

77~

Bada Full Size And Twin Com
piOto Couch &amp; Desk Dryer Elec
trlc Sto'l Rocllnar &amp; Tabla 740
~9742

'(OU UNDER5TAND,
DON'T 'IOU? 'f'OU

4 wheeler neft'
brakn 'l.nd rt
740 992 2143

eelhedral chy
21 Fauh IInder
22 Pae"23 !lqrnlr Pyle

money

10 Launder

7 Ronald

portreyer

openrng lead?
The firs! South found the best lrne
He led hts club at tnck two West
du c ked hopmg for a mtsguess but
South remembered the overcall He
went up wtth dummy s kmg then he
ruffed a club and led a dtamond West
(correctly) ducked agatn declarer
won tn dummy ruffed a club rulfed
a spade drew trumps and clarmed I 0
trrcks from one spade stx hearts one
dtamond one club and a spade ruff
rn the dummy
At the other table Soulh prolllpl
ly ruffed a spade at tnck two then
paused for thought Was tt unlucky
that he was now desuned to fmtsh
one down? Suppose South calls for
dummy s dramond kmg West wrns
w1th the ace and swttches to a trump
South must lose two spades one d1a
mond and one club
It IS tough to find but West does
beuer
lead a trump tntttally If
South plays hts club, West wms and
returns hts second heart Later West

24 Throat
25 C.tehea
26 Al1lflelal bah
27 Saroyan 1
My Name
Ia-"
29 Papas
30 'TWo worde ol
understandIng
31 Anglo-Saxon
menial
37 Go by plane

38 Edmonton
hockey team
40 Seta of

legend I
41 Golf mound•
42 Droop
43 Slo. .n Indian
45 Manx'elack
46 lrllh Gaelic
47 Cooling

drtnu
...,...+--f-~f-+-1-i 49 Halton
50 Mentalleto

-...L......I-...L......I-...1.....1

claim -

52 Jan p r 53 Wheellng'e II

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campo•
c.tlbtly C~M&amp;t CfWI)IODr8ml art crNted from quotaiiOnl b'f latnoue people pat and P esen•
,...~ 1et1ei kl 1M cipher Alndl for another TOO.y'a eM N aqu.t/4 P

'E PH

XA

CXDIIYEID

EPDIJMP
NXYEJDH
TXVM

OPXYP

z

DHZYPHA

YPZVVHR

E PH
LIEXIV

EP H

AYDHHV

WXCID

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "We re the ultrmate American band
producl of an affluent society • - AHce Cooper
(c) 1898 by NEA Inc

merely the end

SO

£trs·

'::~:~' S@~.(llA-"
_....;,:;,:,:,;__;;;....:;
loy CI"Y • POllAN
Roorrange len.rt of
0 four
or:ramblod -d•
l~lto~

I I I I pI
I
I

WOlD
1&amp;111

t.o..J.;.~ .y-._

low to form four words

COYUTH

I

VCC!l

A

PRINT NUMBERED tEHERS

'1::111' IN THESE SQUA~ES

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO

•

GET ANSWER

UTS ANSWERS
, '2, ,, 9
Hungry Labor Axtom Cliche MARRIAGE
$ClAM

Don 1get Sl""f by high prrcPS 1
Shop the classr(ied section

I FRIDAY

Buildi ng
Supplies

All Slee t Bulldlng Warehouse 1
Arena Blow Out 60x100 70x100
80x125 1COx I 50 30 50% Off
0 B 0 1100-379-3754

1987 Chrysler Fifth Avenue V 8
automatic runs good no rust
$595

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
Rio Granda OH Call 740 245
5121

1976 Hondamatlc excellent con
dillon windshield saddle bags In
eluded red, $750
Call740.742-4510

Auto Pllrta &amp;
Acceaeorlea

Budge t Priced Tranemlsalona
and Engines Alll\lpeJ Acca11
To Over 10 000 Tranamlaalopa
eve Joints 740.245-5677
New gas tank! &amp; body peril D &amp;
R Auto Ripley WV (304)372
3933 or t-l!OO 273-9329

8:10

Home
lmprovementa

5858

BASEMENT
WAT-ERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local refe.rences furnished Es
tabllshed 1975 Call 24 lira {740)
446 0870 1 800 2B7 0576 Rog
era Waterproofing

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished 11curitv
deposit required no pela 7-40
992 22t8

1 Bdrm Extra Nice Firat Month
Free Wltll One Year Lease
$279 00 Peri Month Plus UUIItlos
74 0. 446 2957

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E11
parlance All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag 740 446
7795

81 unrurntahtd

C&amp;C General Home Meln
ttnenct Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doora wlndowa baths
molli!J home ropalr and moro Far
free tlllmate call Chet 740 992
6323

t Badraom Apl All 'l!lnvonlan~
prrvate an
trance 4th Street pt Plea1ent
(304)67 733
Apt for Rent Water And Trash
Paid No Pats In Galllpolll 740
386 noo

s.s

Middle
port we pay water HWIII' I tralh
you pay gas &amp; oloc1rla $200 per
month $100 dopoolt 740 992
7soa

2 Door
$3 750

Livingston s Basement Water
Proofing an buement repair•
done lrt!, estimates lifetime
guarantet 12yra 9n Job experl
once (:)04)895-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Fflflr,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE S fOCK

a mtstake
One South was gutlty of th1s
cnme m tOday s deal In four hearts
how would you contmue after wtn
nmg 1he firsllnck wtth the spade ace?
D1d West have a more effecuve

FO~JVE ME,
DON'T VOU?

Good

Nlc:e 3 bedroom motMia home In
Middleport Ph no pats 740 992

2 Bedroom Apertmonl Adjacent
To Universlly Of Alp G r .
Carni)IJS 74Q-24H858

"

6 Nervoua-

I Gl!E55

Show Saddle Small Stoct&lt; Trailer
740-446-3880 Alltr 6 ~ M

From Holzer Hospital $3!0/Mo
74().441 tst9

Amaz
19 Englloh

olgn
9 Anglo-S.xon

ducks one round of d.amonds

SER VI CES

440

the comics
12 Bondloader

8 Fifth zodiac

30 1999

H~h

1987 Camero Runs
$1 500 00 74o-«8-4931l

-

41 41Acroa

marble
4 Drink olowly
5 ·--CIUr

Dey

11 Mlaa Ken of

Rngan 'a
dlughler

lYpe ofpltlylng

w

2511-6839

t984 Dodge Aries Needs work
Miles $200 74().3117 7491

fRE.FE.R TO
PLAY FO!&lt;.

Watertlno Special 314 200 PSI
$2r 95 Par tOO 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Por 100 All Braaa Com
preoslon Fittings In Stocl&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jactrson Ohio 1 600-537 9528

550

311 l..argl trucka
37 Predict
3t Yo-Yo Ma, lor

gmng down m makable contract after
makable contraCI
But the opponents complam tf I
spend trme at trrck one
observed
one such declarer
Of course they do I replred
They know that 1f you play tmme
drately you are more lrkely to make

YOV r.NOy/ ••

t978 Ford LTD AIC Pwr Steer
Vory Good Shepol $1 400 00
1740) 245 5003

N~o Inside And Out Runs Goodl

$~IN

1998 Ford Ranger Super C-.b
Four Door 4 0 Liter V 8 AUIO
Air SLT Pkg 24 000 miles As
sumo Balance {304)675-7842

90 Chevy Aslro van all wheel
Registered Llmousl~ BuU• Red
Slack Rolled 9 Months To 2 drive PW POL g~od candlt14n,
$5500 72 Mack truck 237 en
Years 74().387 7800
gina runs good good lites
lWo Young pall Bulls Ono Black $2000 740 742 267~
One Aid 74().256 6!t0
t979 Chevy 1/2 ton 4WO PS PB
vary Nice Sorrel 8 Year Old automatic too many new parts to
Quarter Mare Call After 5 PM list asking $5500 price Ia n~l
74().379-2820
ablo 74Q-992 7551

llurtl*l

By Phillip Alder
In my classes, I constantly stress
the necesstty for counting and plan
nrng before playmg from the dummy
at trrck one Those who follow my
gurdclrnes become pro fie tent players
those who tgoore them charge ahead

wOMeN y/ON'T l&gt;An Mt B~CAUSt
,
Of MY SK-11'1 'ONI&gt;ITION.

:=.:._________,

1 Arciii!Kt-

33 Faahlon

Think first,
play later

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
II

ftl'lt 1111-

DOWN

318y-

Fnday April

s

GGidllneet •

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LADDER!!--

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10/Picku~ 2 8 ve PSI
PB AC 5speed transmission .. 1
owner Real nice truck $2 60.0
{304)67~ 3824
11993 Chevy Suburban o4w:o4 Load
UO ed $17 000 740 446-9357

32

WATCH-YORE-

ALL WE
GOT IS

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28 - , . hero
-Murphy

• A K Q J 10 3

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All pas.

LOWEEZ.Y--CAN l SORRY
YORe STEP LADDER ?

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Room fop

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N
nles 1 with Billy 1 yet to birth 1 t 998 Pontiac Trans Am Navy
Nubian Nanny with t Billy Saa Blue Metallic 57 Lltor LS' 1 En
nem$200 {304)1175-1926
glne Leather lmerlor tO Speaker
Monsoon Stereo 12 Disc CD
25th Annual Jackson County Changer Fully Loaded! Will l'ake
Polled Hereford Sale 12 Cows Pay 011 740-44S..C546
with Catvea 13 Heifers 5 Bulls
Jackson County Livestock Mar 97 Ford ExplOrer XLT leather In
kat Falrplaln wv Saturday tarlor sun roof CD player power
May t t999 7 30PM {304)995 $22 000 74().992 7312
3514
720 Trucks for Sale
4 HIFFA Fair Lambs Quality and
reuanaly Priced I Phone {740) t985
t 0 pickup 4 cyllnrfer
25&amp;-1330
fuel Injection 4 speed transmls
slon
Excellent
conduton
9 Hor10s 5 Paints 2 Sorralls 2 $2 000 {304)675-3824
Studs Prices Start AI $450 74().
446-4t10
Full Slu
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Angus Bull tor Salol (740) 245

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Dealer South

Livestock

11
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30• Electric Range Stalnleea Western Show Saddle English
Stool Soil Cleaning $t50 Full
Box Spring&amp; &amp; Mallraaa &amp; Bed
Frame $65 740 256-&amp;145

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5 HP Go Carl $250 OBO 740

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$69 00 three month tree programming Um-ed ~me oiler expires 5I
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Automatic AC 87 000
$2 400 080 740 256-

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lon Wheel Spray 717 Field
Chopper

1994 Dodge B 250 Lu•ury High
Top Trade Winds Convealon
Van 1 owner! 1992 Cawauer 2
Door ~uto ~IC cook Motor•

(740~448.0103

Residential or commercial w1rlng 1
urvkle or repalrs Muter Ll
cenaed electrician Ridenour
Electrical WVOOOSOe 304 676
1768

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•

ASTRO·GRAPH
Salur&lt;lay, May I 1999
A pronounced tmprovement m
mauers thai relale to your career or
ambattOns as well as a nse rn slatus
are strong possabahues m the year
ahead Success wtll be from a com
bma11on of both effort and luck
TAURUS (April 20 May 20) It
looks ltke you could have the qght
people backmg you up today when
you need them Thetr support wtll be
a cnllcal faclor m achrevmg the
resulls you're hr;lpmg for Trymg to
patch up a broken romance 0 The
Astro Graph Matchmaker can help
you understand whal to do to make
the relat1onsh1p work Mat I $2 75 to
Matchmaker c/o lhts new$paper,
~ PO Box 1758 Murray Htll Slallon,
l.:t, New York NY 10156
GI3M1Nl (May 21 June 20) Con·
dllrons tn general are more promasmg
lt;Jday than usual, so be opumtsttc

te~ardmg any new ente"J)nse or ven·
ture you're undenakrng You have
JUSt cause for your enthusrasm
CANCER (June 21 July 22)

\

23 Dec
Reexamme your ObJcCttves today, 21) Your sOCtal
could
because goals that mtght no t have take on new srgntftcance today
been auamable earlter rn lhe week Through an exchange of pleasantnes
may be achreved now Focus trl on wnh someone you' ll meet somethrng
the most meamngtul
qutte beneficral may result
LEO (July 23 Aug 21) Today
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
may otter you a
leatnmg Thmgs look good for you today rn
expenence one that could be most satualaons you have adequately pre
enJO) able and grattfyrng It s also pared lor The end results should
somethrng you II have a useful applt· please you more than you had anuc
catron for later
apated
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) ll
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
someone tS successfully handling a Bemg on the go and movrng about
mauer that affecls your mlerests, \ unrestnctedly 1s what w1ll make you
don't offer any advtce to change the the happtest today Even mundane
Sttuatton lfthu\gs aren 1 bro~e. don't errands could turn mto varrous types

-.lu~le

frx them
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) The
luck of someone else who tS pros·
permg and tlounshmg •auld rub of(
on you today through assocmuon
Team up wrth such a person rl you get

of pleasant expenences
PISCES (Feb 20 Marc h 20)
Should some\luhg opportune develop
for you where your financtaltnterests
are concerned make every effort to
c apitalize on this fortunate trend ol

the chance
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) In
are~ where you were pre.aously
stymted, opportumltes could now
suddenly develop for you ' Take
advantage of thts surpnstng tum of
events today

events
ARIES (March 21 Apnl -19)
Because of your remarkable rest lien
crand abthly to bounce back m spnc
of what happens, chances are you re
gomg to enJOY an cxcepuonally sue
cesslul day

Quote from famous fem1~ 1s t I have never heard a
man ask for adv1ce on how to manage a career and
~~6QP1Ar,!=

APRIL 30 I

�'

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aprll30, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Along the River

Pomeroy to stage "Spring.Celebration Saturday
oca amt y ts as tng or your prayers.
The second child of James and Becky Snodgrass, born on April 23
eveloped pneumo-thorax, a lung condition, and had to be taken to Chil
ren's Hospital in Colum'bus last Saturday. The infant has been on a venti
ator ever since and is expected to be a1 the hospital for several weeks . .
The seven pound baby is named Wesley Mitchell. Grandparents are Ji
nd Lois Snodgrass and Randy and De nise Williams. So please remembe
iJtle Wesley in your prayers.
'
By the way. the father of Wesley is the same James Snodgrass who wa
un over by his own pickup truck about two weeks ago. He bad it parke
n an inCline, the brakes failed and in his attempt to stop the vehicle, Jame
as run over and dragged for about 30 feet. He is employed as a guard .a
. he Gavi n Plant and probably fee ls that he's really having a run of bad luc
bout now. Let 's hope thi ngs gel better for him and his family.
Interesting ...
Well known Meigs Counl ian, Mrs. Martha Chambers ha&lt; had a lot o
atching double digits in her life.
. Currently, Martha is lookin g forward to her birthday. on May 5 when sh
ill be 88 in 1999.
Martha was born May 5. 1911 and married iii 1933; had a baby Eric. in
1944 and (he family bought thei r country home in 1955 when Eric was II.
arlha had her first asthma attack in 1966 and the fami ly purchased its Col
t., home in Middleport in 1988. And by the way, the house number is 88.
If you want to remember Martha with a card or message for her birthday,
.he address is Mrs. Martha Chambers. Veterans Memorial Hospital Extend
d Care Unit , 11 5 East Memorial Dri ve, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Ac tivities ranging from demonstrations of creative crafts to barber·
shop and band music wi ll be fea·
tured at the "Springs Celebration" 10
be held in Pomeroy Saturday.
Activities will get underway at
8:30a.m. with the opening of a quilt
show at People's Bank. That display
will be open for publ ic viewing until
3 p.m. Visitors are also invi ted to
·visit the City National Bank where
sketches of the Pomeroy mural are
on display, and the Fanner's Bank to
see a vintage photograph exhibit.
. Both of those banks will be open
from 9 a.m. to noon. ·
At II a.m. in the mini-park about
20 crafters .will begin craft demonstrations and selling their creations.
They wi ll be there until 4 p.m.
Flowers from local growers wil) be

for sale on the streets and several
merchants will have sidewalk sales
all day.
AI 12:30 the barbershop quanet
will sing and at I p.m. a segment of
the Meigs Marauder Band's variety
show to be presented at Meigs l:ligh
School on May 6 and 7 will be presented. The Community Band will
perfonn from 5 to 6 p.m.

Robert Krein
Robert A. Klein has joined the
United States Army under the
Delayed. Entry Program at the U.S.
Anny Recruiting Station in Athens.
The program gives young men
and women the opportunity to delay
entering active duty for up to one
year.
The enlistment gives the new sol·
dier the opportunity to learn a new
Skill , travi:l, and become eligible to
receive as much as $50,000 toward a
college education. After completion
of basic military training, soldiers
receive advanced individual training
in their career specialty.
Klein, who attends Meigs Hi gh
School, will report to Fort Leonard
Wood. Waynesville, Mo .. for basic
training, in August.
·
He is the son of Robert aQd
Tammy S. Klein of Pomeroy.

• (800)

99 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GTP
2 Dr, V6, sunroof, Brigllt Red

~
~

Friday &amp; Saturday April 30-May 1

91 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 4 Cyi, auto,

The Ohio River Bear Co. &amp; Wicker Buggy
,.
. Middleport, Ohio 10 • 5 pm

~
99 BUICK CENTURY
~

t:t

~

~~$~·~m$

-.

Family
and
Friends

l4

•

w..,.s: J:&gt;ftltinu

.~· . . . . . . ;-. . . , ,~Z
·'-!s.(J~(Jfq ee~e
~-~ AIJ
AM/FM. tilt

WAS $12,900 ....................... NOW 10,600
96 CADillAC SEVIllE SIS, va, auto, air, leather
•rl
.
'
int, WAS $29,900..:.... :....... , .................. '24,500
96 CADIUAC'SEDAN DEVIllE V8, auto. air, leather
Int. WAS $24,999 .............. :................... 120,400
95 CADILLAC SEVIllE SlS YS, auto, air, leather Int.
' '20,100
WAS $24,900 .............. ..........................
97 CHM CAVAliER 4 Dr, 4 cYI. auto,air, cass.
WAS $10,900 GM1874 .: ..., .... ,.:...... .i.. .....'9400
91 PONnAC.GRAIID AM 4 or. 4 cyl, auto, cruise, ..
WAS $13,900 ........:: ................. ........;....110,100
96 IUICII PARK AYE ve. auto, air, cass. tilt,
cruise, WAS $17,999 .... :.......;............... 115,650
96 CHM lUMINA V6, auto, air, tilt,, qruise,
WAS $10,90Q..............................:.. :........'IISO
96 DO~ EJtCA12 WO, f'N SLT l.a{amle va,
loaded, Rllll, WAS $18,995 .......... ~ ... ... '16,100
94 PONTIAC SUNIIRD 4 Cyl, air, auto, WAS
'

. "'

t:t

•~

'~O'eO'

1

~-

Many t$ items! Many 5$ items!
30% off candles.!

·

l-----~--....;.

~~$~-~SAL!!$

~.

·~6''
•IQ

"''• 0

Maternal 'grandparents are Ray
and Carolyn Diagle of Minden, La.,
and paternal grandparents are Dan
and Barbara Cremean s of Rutland.

Yellow Flag Sale!

•

~

ounces.

~.

$25, 1o1
, WAS $26,~0 .

Weston Cremeans birth announced
Derek ~nd Chelsea Cremeans of
Minden , La. announce the birth of a
son, Weston Brooks, born on March
3. He wetghcd' seven pounds. live

Parent group looks to
combat school violence

4' ·

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

18,

5

•

..' " ' " " '

•

1

$4995 .......................................................I 42so.

95 CHM SUBQRIAN 1/2 ION 4X4, Loaded
WAS $22,900 ...... ,..................!.......,·...... '19,600
96 PONTIAC FIREBI~D. auto, air, Hops, WAS
$12,900 .......... ................ .. ..................... 111,850
91 FORD RANGER EXT CAB 4 WD, V6, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, CD player, WAS $18,950 .......... '17,450
96 CHRYSlER TOWN &amp;COUNTRY VAN, vs, auto, air,
till. cruise, CD player, WAS $18.~ ..........$17,450
98 CHM SllYIRADO lWI. 1f2 tlin, V6, auto, air,
cass, 9800 ml.,WAS $19,~ ...... ......... '17,150
96 CHEVY 1/2 ION EXT CAB 4 WD, auto, air, tilt,
cruse, WAS $21,995 ............................ 119,100
98 OlDS IRAVADA AWD Vs, loaded, WAS

I~

V6, auto, air, Jade Green
WAS$18,654

Now Onlr

14 964

$

BIDWELL - . Recognizing lhat
IIOUtheastem Ohio schoolchildren arc
nOI immune from violent incidents, a
parerit volunteer organization has
fom\ed at Bidwell-Porter Elementary
School to find ways of ensuring student safety.
Schools Against Violence in Edu- ,
cation (SAVE) was .fonned in the
· wake of lhe AP-fii1S incident where a
13-year-old male B-P student allegedly entered lhe sc~ool wilh a handgun.
. Allhough lhe student is currently
under house arrest while he faces a
charge of conveyanJ:C of a firearm on
school pioperty and haa ~~~ expelled
from IChOQJ~ IJio SAVE committee is
••• Uf'ieviewing lhe possibility of
placing &amp;ea~rity cameras, and using
metal detcetora and walkie-talkiea for
~r communication.'
, · :.""
. The group is also looking into a ·
prosrarn entitled "Partners in EducatiOn," and has sent for literature on
anti-school violence programs for
school administrators' to review..
Olher a"enues of assistance arc
being reviewed, including school
counselors and full-time security perSOMel.
. Principal Shirley Doss, with the
assistance of several parents, has
located resources for parents, students
and slaff. Last week, each student
received a a~py of 121hings a student
can do to stop violence in lhe schools
and 121hings a parent can do to stem
violence in lhe schools.
· Additional brochures will be sent
home each Friday for parents and
c:hildren to review togelher, a SAVE
spokesperson said.
"The goal of the SAVE committee
ls to put as many .of the safety measures in place • possible, as.soon as
possible," the apokespe~n said.
"Having a committee will not save
our children. Only a working committee takine action will assist In saving
11ur c:hildrcn."
.
Some fund-rasiers will. be imple·
· mentcd to brine in additional revenue
needed for the group's projeCts, the
spokesperson said.
· The committee is encouraging
anyone · wilh suggestions it should
review to c:onlact Doss or Shelia
Regan of the school PTO, or attend
SAVE's meetings at B-P on Thursilays at 7 p.m.

Good Morning
Today'• ' ' · • ~ ttlbwl
18 Sedl0111 • IU haea

Clelfteds
Comla
Editorials

Alonl tbe R!nr

While v isiting at a nursing f\ome, we nlet

a woman w hd mentioned that she had no

Obltyadca
Spqdl

family or close friend s. We lylow that sometimes
older people do forget certain things, and it is

For in Christ jesus""" are all·wrr.s of God. through faith .
0

'J\5

B14

Landowner, ODOT
mull ways to save
Important waterhole
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlme•s.ntrnel Btlllf
RACINE - For MeigS County green- ·
house farmers Cecil and Sue Rice, owners. of Sue's Greenhouses, the propo~
Ravenswood Connector presents somewhat of a dilemma. · ·
·
Although Mr. Rice says the highway
will expand the couple's business opportunities, it may also threaten a naturally
nowing spring -- the lifeblood of their
greenhouse business.
The $58.1 million, 14.5-mile
Ravenswood Connector, which will ulii·
mately connect U.S. 33 near. Pomeroy to.
1-17 near Ravenawood, W,ya., f~nnine a
1- c.~ITidor.· from ColuAibus to -chlrlesttm,
W.Va., is Scheduled to be constructed in
three continuous phases beginning anytime after June 30, 2001.. The highway ·
will be constructed as a two-lane on a
four-lane right of way and currently ranks
high on the state's list of Pl'opo~ new
highway. .
·
The project, which crosses a portion of
lhe Rice farm in lhe Morningstar area of
~eigs County, will likely put a busy U.S.
highway and many prospective customers within easy re~h of their business .
But of even more concern to Mr. Rice
is the spring which waters his entire operation. The waterhole lies at lhe head of a
draw behind his barn and greenhouses,
and within yards of the proposed route.
He is concerned that construction of
.the rr;~ad will damage the spring or its
source of water, if that happens he says
he will likely have to go out of business.
So, while be stands to profit from lhe
road, the same highway may also destroy
his business.
Initially, Mr. Rice says he confronted
consultants, hired by the Ohio Department of Transportation to survey the
Ravenswood Connector corridor. He
ac:c:used them of felling trees, C:Utting
locks on galea, and in general just being
disrespectful to property owners.
But Rice says lately he has gotten
plenty of cooperation from regjonal
ODOT officials, inc:ludine project manager Saleh EI-Dabaja and planning engineer Tony Durham, who have visited his
farm for a firsthand view of lhe problem
aild to disaass his concerns.
"They are looking for a way to slide·

SUN I PM- SPM
Tax &amp;Title. fees not included, All rebales lo dealer

room."
I

·'i'(''"

. Vol. 34, No. 11

•

•I

..

·'

all students should have access to updated equipment.
The state's SchooiNet program had assi.sted Gallia·
County Local in placing computers in its K-4 clasli~·
rooms, but board members said they didn't want students' learning with the help of technology to end there.
"This is something the community will also hav'e
access to," Lanning stressed.
Literature distributed by !he levy's supporters note
that the bulk of the tax increase to occ:ur should the levy
pass will lie paid by public utlities and business - abol{t
$308,490. The remaining estimated $81.510 per year
will come from residen.tial and agricultural sourc:ea.
On a residenoe valued at $69,000, the annual additional cost to the homeowner is eStimated at $18.38,1evy
suppo,rters said . .

Only Republicans·
going to the polls
in Meigs primary
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Tlmee-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Only Republicans in the six precincts of
Middl.eport and Pomeroy will be going to the polls in Tu~s­
day's primary, according to Rita Smith, clirector of lhe
Meigs County Board of Elections.
The only contests · - - -- - - -- --..,-..,...,
arc in the mayor's
race· where Jean
Craig and Samuel
A. Eblen arc vying
for the nomination
in Middleport, and
John W. Blaettn'ar
and Kenny Klein for
the nomination in
Pomeroy.
The primary winners in the m•'Y""'
races wiil go ·
the general election
in November · without
competition
unless. a resident
files as an independent candidate prior . PREPARING FOR THE PRioiARY
to Monday's 4 p.m. - With voting tMing pillet " ' deadline, or as a lilly In only llx Of Mllga Counly'e
write-in candidate 28 jiNCincta, ~Itt the 8oM'II
before Sept. 13.
Of E~na fqulid e-ttitlll rMdy a
Unopposed c:an- lot ...., then 11-1. HeN RIOt.
'd
Smith, left, and Barblnl Smllh, P'9dt ates ?n Tuesday's .,.....voting rnaltlrlal8 to be moved
ballot tn Pomeroy to the jiNCinets.
·
will be Kathy Hysell .
·
for clerk-treasurer, and Scott M. Dillon and Gcri Walton for
. membe,rs of council.
In · Middleport the unopposed candidates are Bryan
Swann for clerk-treasurer; Stephen . Houchins for member
of council; and Donald Stivers for a full tenn, and Bernard.
D. Gilkey for the unexpired tenn ending on Dec. 31, 2001
on the Board of Trustees of Publ ic Affairs.
A contest for -the two seats on Pomeroy council in the
November general election was assured last week when
VALUABLE WATERHOLE- FhlclnHrM farmer Cecil Rice, who llong,wlth _hll
wlfl, Sue, -nand opera Sue·• GI'MIIhou-. point. out a 8prlng which wate.-.
Bryan Shank filed as an independent candidate. His name
tile farmlnt operation. Htlt conc:emed thllt the propoHd R-n-d con nee· . will appear on the ballot in November along·wilh the two
tor will Cllmlge 11M lflriRIIIRd II talldng With Ohio o.p8rtiUMt Of Tranaportallon
Republican nominees Tuesday.
·
ofllcllle to pnllrnt tiM wlterholt. Meanwhile, 1M tlllnb the couple'• butlneu
Since there is . no Democrat primary and some votefS
will Improve If the highway Is conltnlcttd.
might want to vote in the Republican primary, Smith point- .
ed
out that a change in party affil iation c:an be done at the
He said El-Dabaja was very helpful,
lhat road down a bit, away from the
polls on election day by simply signing a form. Polls will
spring. • Rice said. "I figure if they can but did not .have the' •uthority to make
be open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. .
·
move·it four times, lhey c:an move it one any chaneea. "H~ told me what I had to
. The last. day to vote absentee is Monday at !he Board of
more time." he said, referring to changes do." he said.
Elections· office, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.ni.
in preliminary road routes.
"Tom Hedrlc:k (ODOT District lO
Smith said lhat reasons which qualify regist~;red vote{S
Rice ~d they arc hoping to possibly director of planning) and Tony Durham
to vote absentee include being 62 years .of ago or more,
move lhe road another 2~ feet to the had lhe authority to go to southernmost
planning to be absent from the county on elec:tion day, havsouth while keeping it within the limits of part of the environmental doc:umen~" he
ing a dis~ility which prevents them from aetting to the
the environmental iinpac:t statement. The said.
polling
plaoe, working as an election officer, fire fighter,
road will still remain on his property, he
"I've eot confidence this euy
peace
office
or emergency medical service provider, or
pointed out.
.Continued on Pill' A2
being unable·to vote that day for religious reasons.

BellevUle hydroelectric power plant goes onli~e
BELLEVILLE. W.VA. - Whit do you get Hydroelectric Powe.r Plant in Wood Q&gt;unty;
·when you combine 104 thousand cubic yardS W.Va., directly across the river from
of concrete, 12 million pounds of re,inforcing . Reedsville, is now online and generatin11 comsteel bars an~ 950,000 cubic: yards of excavat- mercial electricity.
AMP-Dhio, which will operate the new
ed dirt along the Ohio River.:l
Electricity.
plant, has experienoed some difficulties in
Project OMEGA JV-5, now to be known as re.Ching a stage of completioq. mainly due to
American MuniCipal Power-Ohio's Belleville a bankrupk:y filing in 1997 by lhe general con-

By MIWSSIA RUSSELL ·

R.S. V. Galallam J:Z~

. l

lnserJ
M
Cl

Old spring vs. new roa

Tlmu-S.ntlnel Sta"
GALLIPOLIS - n;lchers and staff in' lhe
Gallipolis City School District were updated on ,;
crisis manaeement plan durine an inacrvioe at
Gallla Academy High School on Friday, updaling
employees on procediures for handling extreme
sittlationil.
Kenny Declw~ the district's transportation
directilr, outilned the plan and provided each faculty member wllh a copy.
"We have performed mock crisis situations
$\lith all emergency ailencies in lhe county,"
Deckard siid. "WC have prepared for severe
. wealher and emereenc:y situations in lhe school, .
ind hostage situations on a bus and the class-

' MONDAY-FRIDAY 9AM • 8PM • SAT 9AM -4PM

.. '

"With the climate we're working in now, we have two
the community, the levy's proposal
items for security purposes," he said, ·referring to height-.
added.
ened awareness of school safety following last month's
"It would' bring the buildings up
killings at a Littleton, Colo., high school.
·
to date, and expose the students to
· If passed, the levy promisea to provide four student
the latest trends in technology." said
computers, plus a teacher computer and printer in all
Lanning. "The students would have
classrooms, Internet connection, a server connected to a
familill!'ity with computers and
network to provide access to files and prograrns,.i"'"rbecome users before they enter the
. vice opportunities for . staff, appropriate furniture for
field they choose.•
.
dassrooms and labs, and replacement of outdated terini- ·
The superintendent noted that
nals with PCs in .each offioe. ·
unnlng
Internet access for all students will
Each school would receive an annual software budget
provide them with "unlimited"
for equipmen~ a repair procedure would be established resourc:ea for learning and research.
to expedite repairs or replacement, and ·a new computer
The board of education initially acted in January to
lab will be install_ed for each school that is ac:cessible by place the levy .on the primary ballot, citing concerns that .

tractor, Atkinson Construction Co.
direction Qf the company's' insurance bonding
Kenne!h Hegemann, president of AMP- company, who contracted with the Oark ConOhio, told J'be Sunday Times-Sentinel on Fri- .struetion Co .
The project will provide electricity to c~­
day lhat the ·financial difficulties resulted in
the firm's "diverting attention•· from pe~ding tomers in Northeastern and Southwestern
projects, resulting in a nearly one-year delay Ohio, 115ing a tran~mission line across the river
to Reedsville and through Eastern Meip
in completion.
Continued on page A2
· . The work was finally Completed under the

City schools updated on crisis management plan

loving family and good friends is indeed rich and they have. been blessed
by God. The Bible tells us that rome friendships may no! last. but that
some friend s are more loyal than brothel's. We are all members of GOd's
family, and we are called together in faith by Christ Jesus whO is the
Savior of the wo.rld. "What a frie nd we have in jesus, • is ali old Christian
song that reminds Us·tl).at those who know Jeaus as their Lord and Savior
should never have to IIBY that !hey have no family or friends.

Dl·7

0 111911 Olllo Volley Pvblillll.. Co.

even possible for them to not be able to remeinber
those who w ere clost to them. However, this sitUation did cause us to
realize how blessed wt 8r:e to have family and close friends. ·
Human nature is such, that at times we may not truly appreciate what
we have until it is called to our attention , perhaps by the passing away of
· a dear r elativ~ or the moving away of a good friend. A person who ·b as a

Sunny

Details on
pageA3

entittt

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • May 2, 1999

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme•Sentlnel Stllff
GALLIPOLIS- An increasingly technology-dependent world has made its presence in lhe classroom a
must, and the Gallia-County LocBI Schools hope lhe passage of a !-mill levy will bring its students closer to
knowing how to use the.tools in today's workplace.
The levy, expec:ted to gener~te about $390,~ . per '
year for the five years of its duration, will be dec:tded by
voters in the school district in Tuesday's primary.
Superintendent Robert Lanning stressed that the levy
will not only pay for tec:hnologic:al upgrades in the distric:t's classrooms, but allio provide for networked sec:urity'·in each building and the installation of surveillance
equipment in all of its sc:hoolbuses.

Newswatcl!l

••.,.....

HI: 708
Low: 408

.Levy designed to meet needs of technology-dependent world

.1

Mew Only

• PageM

tmes
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

I note with disdain that one of the hambu.rger cliains-none of them i
eigs County, however- has resorted to using the impressive song "Amer·ca, the Beautiful" complete with vocal to promote the sale of its products.
eems like a new low in advertising to me. Do keep sp1iling.

Ralph Day
Navy Hos pitalman Apprentice.
.Ralph J. Day, son of Ralph J. and
Retta K. Day of Rac ine, was recently deployed to a combined arms
exercise at M~rin e Corps Air
. Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif.
During the annual eight-week
long exe rcise. Day and his fellow
Marines co nducted 1actical training
and operatio ns with · other units
using "arious weapons, tacti cal·
vehicles and artillery to improve
combat readiness. Day is one of
more than 50,000 Marines that participale annually in about 250 train·
ing exercises to increase proficiency
in all phases of land combat operatjons.
.
The 1996 gradu ate of Meigs High
Schoof joined the Navy ·in July,
!997.

•Pege 81

•

Do you have a favori te al4mnus you'd like lo give special recognition
r is there a favorite teacher, a spouse, child, grandparent or.someone you'
arlicularly lile 10 honor on what is known basically as alumni weekend?
Well, Debbie Call of The Daily Sentinel offi ce staff, has ·a promotio
oi ng that might just serve your purpose. For $6 you can 'Publish a photo o
our honoree on.a special "Remember When" page to be published in Th
entinel on Friday, May 28. The page will fe ature special recognition fo
Oth, 25 th and IOth year alumni and you can use a photo of a couple for $10
hotos can be current or old .
..
·
·
· If you' rc interested just give Debbie a call ar 992-2 155, Extension II 00
nd she' ll answer any questions you might have. The page is run in th
cwspaper annuall y and is growing in popularity each year.

Military News Notes

for the

Felllured on P. . C1

,.

$1 oo

Yugoslavia agrees
to release u.s.
·soldiers to
Jesse Jackson

'Run

Hope for
tlbQIIi/oned
horses

QUILT SHOW ,... Colorful
quilts of many patterns mada by
loc:al residents will be on display
at Peoples Bank Saturday. The
show will be·open from 8:30 a.m.
to 3 p.m. and Joan Wolfe, manager, invites tile public to view
the display, 111 part of Pomeroy's
"Spring Celebration."

._~e

· ·
•

•

ORG.-. NIZE FUND RAISER
- These students hi the nursIng · pl'ogram at Meigs Hlg.h
School helped the · Amerlcaf!
Hearl Assotiation raise $927 in
the AHA 's " Have a · Heart"
fundraiser, distributing paper.
hearts for personalization to
area businesses.
The students participating
were, front , 1-r, Lacy Banks,
Kelli Lightfoot, Heidi Matson,·
Stephanie
Jones,
Tamara
0 ' Dell, Rhonda Campbell.
Ba.ck, 1-r, Dave Shuler, CJ Scarberry, Shannon Smith, Jessica
Matson and Jodie Pooler•.
Margie B.l ake is .the group 's
teacher.

Aren' t the downtown business section and parki ng lots in Pomeroy look
·ng great thi s spring? There have been all sorts of new plantings and ne
ddi ti ons to add to the attractiveness of the downtown area.
I believe .I detect the creativity and hard work of Sarah and John Fishe
·n the ~ e w features .. Aren't they fabulous! And I'm talking about the Fish
rs.

Inside

Dr. J. Black, from ACCESS, a program that tremendous help in an emergency situation, roc:provides mental heallh services to the communi- oenizable 10 tags for every valid visitor, just simty, disc:USICd its involvement in a. crisis.
ple ptecautionary measures to ensure that we will
"WC can have a· number of staff at an emer- lake every step nec:eaury to ensure safety in our
.11enc:y situation, such as In Littleton, CQlo., ln a schools."
.
.number of !\ours," Black said. "We are there to
City Schools Superintendent Jack PaytOn was
provide couiiiCllng and olher such services to also on hand ~r,the event.
those who need us."
''The main k is to keep the kids en11aged in
"A lot of people believe lhat it can't happen learning." Pay n said. "Rumors are a very big
here," Gallipolis Police Roger Brandenbetry told problem riJht now, and they are.very dangerous."
lhe group. "But you never know. That's why we
Both polioe and Khool oftlcials stressed late
have to hope for the best, but plan for the worst. last week that a flood of rumors triggered by the
"We can't euarantee safety without lockine April 20 slayings at Columbine High School are
this· plaoe up like a priaon, that's why we need to being taken serio115IY and investigated.
implement new, more atrinaent safety precauReporta of threats and !he presence of guns in
tions," the chief aded. "Emergency drills, like the ac:hools have proven· false, school' and law
those used for fires and tornadoes, could be a enforc:cmeiu officials said.

••

Rio Grande president to
Interview for Delta State post
RIO GRANDE - University of Rio Grande president
Dr. Barry M..Dorsey is scheduled to meet with school offi- .
cials and community leaders at .Dclta State University i ~
Cleveland, Miss., on Monday as part_of. his interview for
the sc:hpol's presidency. Dorsey, who also acrvea as the
president of Rio Grande Community 'College, is one 11f
four finalists for the president's position.
The other candidates include Dr. Paul L. Gaston, provost
and executive vice president at Northern Kentucky University, Dr. David L. Potter, provost and executive vice president at George
Mason University in Virginia, and Dr. Roy H. Saieo, c:hiiiiOCIIor of Auburn
University-Montgomery in Alabama.
•
Delta State, located in Mississippi's 20-county Delta Reeion. was founded in 1925 and boasts an enrollment or over 4,000 students. The universi~
offers .[ j baccalaureate degrees in 38 majors and nine master's deeree programs. Dorsey began his tenn as president of Rio Grande in Augu5t, 1991.

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