<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8036" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8036?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T04:52:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18449">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/8e45ab13d2cf957fd64b367a5a502d23.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0160f198d6be37b812a01d4356e29a6e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26057">
                  <text>Pege12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Tuesday, May 4, 1999

'Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

'Gopt,er 1:-iill': ·the last-stop for Florida's outlaws
ByRON WORD
A. .oclated Preu Writer
RAIFORD. Aa.- After killing Chic;ago Mayor Anton Cerrnalc in a failed ·
as~sin&amp;!ion altempr on President-elec( .Frankl.in Roosevelt, a 33-year-old
ltahan bncklayer wound up in Aorida's electric chair a month later.
" Viva ltalia! Goodbye to all poor people ev~rywhere'" Giuseppe
gara said when asked for his final words. "Push the button t Go ahead, push
the button!"
.
·
Zangara an? other killers like him are buried alongside rapists, thieves
and other cnmmals 1.n orderly rows under aged pines on the grounds of Union
Correctmnal Instnuuon. More than I ,000 inmates in all have found their final
resting plac~ in the. cemetery known both as "Boot Hill " and " Gopher Hill."
All d1ed m Aonda pnsons. The1r grave markers give nq hint of the crimes •
that led to them spending .their final days behind bars. Their plots are marked
W1lh concrete slabs beanng hcense tag-shaped metal plate. stamped in' the
pnson's motor vehicle tag plant with name, date of death and Depanment
of Corrections number.
Zangara, who emigrated from Italy to Hackensack, N.J., is the most nolo·
rious criminal laid to rest here. He fired several shots at Roosevelt's car in
Miami's Bayfront Park on Feb. 15, 1933, missing the president-elect but fatally woundmg Cennak. He was quoled as saying he did it.because he hated
all -official s and rich people.

zan.

· Weather

Thiny-three days later, on March 20, Zangara was put to death in the al suit of civilian clothes. The cost to taXpayers is $940 for emb~lming, cas- ·
swiftest legal execution this century, according to Blaise Picchi, author of ket and clothing, said Debbie Buchanan, a prison spokeswoman. Cremations
the book , " The Five Weeks of Giuseppe Zangara: The Man Who Would are $425 plus $55 for a pouch to hold the ashes.
..
About 70 of the graves an: those of indigent residents ofAonda State HasAssassinate FOR."
Like relatives' of many of the other criminals, Zangara's refused to claim pital in nearby Macclenny.
·
·
. .
his body. On his tombstone, his name is misspelled "Zangana Giuseppe"
About once a week on average, a prison work crew under the dtrecuon
•·
·ofComctions Officer Jerry Br:yant will dig a grave and then sometimes servoand the date of his death is·Jisted incorrectly as March 30.
Seventy-four of the 240 1nmates executed in Florida's electric chllf, are ~ ·~~~~as the unclainied bpdy of an inmate is laid to rest. .
buried in the ~emetery, about 50 miles southwest of Jacksonvillt.
if. ,,
IfdM -family requests .it, the deceased Is cremaled, aqd the remams of .51
Among them is Frank' John son, the first person to die in the Jtaie'$ tlec· creiiUIICd inmates are buried here. When the old graveyard filled up, a new
tric chair. Johnson was executed Oct. 7, 1924, for the fatal shooting ofiOCC: ' one apcned in 1995 abou! a mite down the road . .
motive engineer Atley B. Terrell during a robbery in Jacksonville. , , .
Bryantll;eeps a book listing the names of the dead and the location of their
'lbe first inmate buried in the cem~tery was lust ice Rice, •.black w~aied ' gi.v~.
.
.'
.
on Oct. 30, 191 3. He was followed by Samuel Small , a white who dtCi!l pn •..Ail inmates get a simple funeral , said Robert Clyatt, one of 12 chaplams
April 10, l914. Unlike many ~emcterics of me time which segregated g/t!Ye$\• ,w'ho rota~C-perforrning )ast rites. ·
.
.
·
·.... · • :; '',ll's ' ~ty much \ike otherfunerals, excepr we don '! have any singing,"
. by race, R1ce and Small were buried side by side, .
Another notonous cnmmalmterred here IS Ollis Toole, who &lt;.'ont'!!l.sed • ·. said Oyi!t, a Freewill· Baptist who usually reads from the Scriptures and
and later recanted his . inv~lvement in t~ 1981 slaying of 6:-y~-old ~~ deliwra • .short message.
·
.
Walsh. Toole, on.ce a ~1dekack of Texas kill~r Hen~ Lee Lu~, d~ed tri. ~.- •. ~ ' "lt's 11ot as elaborptt Wthere ~e no mourners," he sajd. .
m 1996 after.bemg d1agnosed as havmg carrhosas of the hyer. He was~~ .(,-~ TbD o'I\'IY guard bufied 6ri Boot'H\11 is W.H. !'fettle$; who died .of a heart
er charged wuh the Walsh death.
.
·; ', ·_ljtaclt 1111 March 31, 1953,,at as,e 26. He had no family to claim h1s body.
The deceased get a sample wooden co~n w11h metal.h;endle_s and a~~: .•~ ~ .~~only upright heiodstone in the cemetery.
• ... · ' Itsays simply : "Gone But Not Forgot~n.: ·

•

.'

because our people were in need."
Housed in clean, relatively spa·
cious' quarters, these refugees are
among the luckiest of 60,000 ethnic
Albanians who have reached Tirana
from.lhe mountainous area bordering
· Kosovo.
.~
Even before the influx, the Alban· ·
ian capital was bursting at the seams.
Post-Coinm.unism immigration from
the countryside has swelled Tirana's
. population from 250,000·to perhaps
600,000 over the past decade, strain·
ing water and power supplies, and
spawning shantytowns on the city's
outskirts.
While most of the refugees have
been taken in by Tirana families.
about 4,500 live in "Magic Town,"
a camp that sprawls across a sports

•Potential petit jurors
:chosen for May term
The following were listed as Jr., Middleport; .Larry V. .Romine,
potential members of the May tenn Pomeroy; Kevin Sheppard, Racine;
· petit jury ofthe Meigs County Coun
Cindy A. Smith , Middleport;
of Common Pleas:
Steve W. Hudson, Middlepon; TereJoshua Paul Witherell, Pomeroy; sa Renee Dralce, Pomeroy; Forrest R.
Christopher K. Becker, Middleport; Teaford Jr., Racine; Doris J. Bailey,
Coy B. Starcher, Pomeroy; James A. Middleport; Joseph Paul McElroy,
Sisson, Pomeroy; Roger W. Hayman, Pomeroy; Linda Lane Broderick,
Long B'ottom; Isabelle S. Heitger, Pomeroy; Michael J. Frymyer,
Pomeroy; Kathryn Jean Dodson, Shade; Betty Sue VanMatre, MiddlePomeroy; Dorothy Sue . Loscar, port; Misty D. Markins, Pomeroy;
Coolville; Josette Dupree Legan, . Robert Earl Trussell, Reedsville;
Racine; .Clara Belle Riley, Middle· Robert L. Cunningham, Syracuse;
port; Arthur Carroll, Long Bottom; Judy A. Riggs, Reedsville; Ralph
Doreen Smith, Middleport; Mary Herman Werry, Pomeroy; Sheila M..
Jane Grogan, Middleport; Raymond McDaniel, Rutland; Cheyenne
Edward Chandler, Langsville; Mary Michelle Newman, Albany; Ruth F.
Jane 'Workman, Pomeroy; Tarnmi Koenig, Reedsville; Raymond F.
Laine Barber, Reedsville; Stacey C. Jewell, Pomeroy; Sharon Ann Singer,
Shank, Racine; Helena H. D'Au· Long Bottom; Teddy Allen Warner,
gustino, Albany; Raymond Lee Pomeroy; Kathleen M. Cleland,
Wilcox, Middleport; Travis W. Cain, Racine; Charles Louis Cunningham,
Albany; John Mark Haggerty, Mid- Pomeroy; William E. Tippie, Syradleport; Rebecca Jane Hill, Racine; cuse; James Leslie Hess, Pomeroy;
Jack Hilton Shiflet, Rutland; Zane M.
Candy Sue Arix, Pomeroy; RusThomson, Shade;
.
sell Lee Haning Jr., Albany; Mildred
John Marion Yost, Rutland; Bar- Marvine Bowen, Pomeroy; Leota M.
bara S. VanCooney, Portland; Debo· Massar, Reedsville; Dorothy M.
rah Leah Shal]l, Racine; Ethel M. Reeves, Pomeroy; Harvey D. Hens·
Nicholson, Rutland;ludith A. Arnold, ley, Syracuse; Raymond John Ward
Middleport; Bruce J. Reed, Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Scott William .Brinker,'
Diana .Carol Kimes, Reedsville; Po_me[oy; James Michel Mourning,
Pauline G. Kennedy, Pomeroy ; Tim- Mtddleport:. William R. Myers,
othy D. Brinager, Racine ; Michelle Pomeroy; Doris A. Buchanan,
Ann Sayre,. Racine; Angela Michelle Reedsville; Faye Elizabeth Schultz,
Manuel, Racine; Bobby J. Campbell , Pomeroy; Jerod A. Moore, SyraMiddleport; William J. Roush, .cuse; Russell B. Combs, Rutland;
Pomeroy; Cathy Ann Hammon, John Edward Clonch, Pomeroy; ·
Pomeroy; Lela.Delores Hawk, Long · Robert Eugene Klein , Pomeroy; Jay
Bottom; Lyle D.. Nichols, Tuppers · W. Harris, Middleport; Jennifer Rose .
Plains; Crystal L. Jewell, Rutland; Yeauger, Racine; Martha S. Mayer,
Danny W. Davis, Rutland; Susan Pomeroy; Vera Jane Holliday, Rut·
Louise Suttle, Long Bouom; Walter land; Sonya L. Wolfe, Pomeroy;
D. McFee Jr., Middleport; Jeff Neil Renee Richard, Pomeroy;, Frederick
Durst, .Reedsville; Juanita L. Milton Tuttle, Pomeroy; Patty L. CarGuinther, Racine; Christina D. Perry, son, Middleport;
·
Albany; Nathan Roush, Syracuse;
Michael
Thomas
Burke,
Nathan Lynn Brady, Albany; Vir- · Coolville; Robert Lee Snowden, Rut·
gil E. Westfall, Long Bottom; Stacey · land; Mary Ann Winebrenner, Syra·
· Marie Vickers, Pomeroy ; Mary A. cuse; Johnny R. Klein·, Tuppers
Hart, Reedsville; Helen L. Hemsley, Plains; Victoria Lynn Cundiff,
Pomeroy; Paul E. Pe~ry Sr., Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Juanita Yvonne Frederick,
James L. Brewer Sr., Middleport; Racine; 'E. Loraine Venoy, Pomeroy;
Aoyd A. Graham, Syracuse; Gary Bonnie Jean Williams; Pomeroy;
Lee · Howard, Pomeroy; Misty R. Tony R. Dugan, Rutland; Althea G.
Hayman, Syracuse; Edith M.. Cogar, Morgan, Albany; · Judy Dell
Syracuse; Frances Bernita Maxson, Humphreys, Pomeroy; Timothy Lee
Reedsville; Larry L. Crites ·sr., Hill, Racine; Shannon Marie HubReedsville; Michael Lee Lambert, bard, · Pomeroy; Todd Shannon
Rutland; · Victoria K. Nottingham, Bastin, Albany; Charles F. Chancey,
Racine; Ocie D. McCune, Rutland; Pomeroy; Margaret L. Kennedy,
Betty J. Hawley, Middleport; Renee Pomeroy; Carl 0 . Smith, Reedsville;
D. Todd, Pomeroy; Michael Andrew Linden John Kelly, Middleport; Nan·
Bailey, Long Bottom; Michael D. cy Jean Smith, Pomeroy; Opal J.
Smith, Syracuse: l,.inda L. Y;onker, Kauff, Pomeroy; Peggy L. Mullins,
·Pomeroy; Karla J. Demoss, Racine; Rutland; Ronnie Gene Johnson,
Harry E. Johnson, Pomeroy; Joyce N. · Racine; Rosalie Story, Pomeroy; Jack
Cline, Middleport;
K. Spires, Syracuse;
·
·
Roy E. Miller, Po~eroy ; Jeffrey
David L. Parsons, Middleport';.
A. Hill, Long llouom; Ricky Wayne. Heather· Michelle Wise, Pomeroy;
Morris, Pomeroy: Ronald Allen William James Mahaffey, Albany;
Keyes, Syracuse: Betty L. Bell, Kimberly Beall, Portland; Jeremy
Racine; Frank Harold Fitch, Middle- Wayne Barber, Coolville; Amos
pori; Bertino ~ozingo, Rutland; Boone Cross Jr., Reedsville; Peggy
George Napier, Tuppers Plains ; Lee Ellis, Middleport.
Melissa J. Goble, Racine; George K.
Church, Reedsville; Mona K. Ervin,
Racine; Margaret K. Gloeckner,
The following couples were
.Racine; Randy A.. Wheeler, Racine; issued marriage licenses recently in
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Racine; John N. the Meigs County Probate Court of
Ginther, Long Bottom; Jack L. Cum- Judge Robert Buck:
mins, Racine; H. Glenn Brown, RutKevin Shawn McGuire, 28,
land; Denise D. Qualls, Middleport; Mason, W.Va., and Cynthia Sue Den·
Stephen Adam Jenkins, Pomeroy; ney, 29, Middleport; Jason Conrad
Bennie J. Wright, Pomeroy; Ardis R. Blair, 23, and Therese Dawn Bise, 20,
Waggoner, Albany; Charles F. Perry both of Vienna, W.Va.

and amusement-park complex.
The camp has scores of prefabri·
caled houses and hundreds of tents,
but the nine-member Elshani family
- who ned Kosovo after Serbs
shelled their village and burned their
house - prefer the can vas-covered
back of their t!Uck.
"I had a big fann, a good life,"
said Sulejman Elshani, .30, eating
breakfast on the grass near a rocketship ride. " We'd go back now if we
could."
Many refugees stay initially in the
Sports Palace, Tir~na 's largest arena.
But conditions there are unpleasant;
crews ·periodically sweep through
spraying disinfectant.
"You can't even breathe there,"
said Sabahat Devolli, 29. who along
with her husband and two sons
moved into Kotorri 's building.
"Here, it's not exactly like home, but
.it's nice."
Kotorri,-44, supplies the refugees

with food he buys himself - most· and providing telephone service.· But
· ly pasta and rice. There is enough to Red Cross workers say it is hard to
eat, though little in the way of fruit, spread word of the program because
vegetables or fresh milk, Mrs ..Devol· Tirana's ~efugees are so si:atiered .•
li said.
Kotorri also has bought textbooks
The Red Cross also ov~rsees the
and supplies for the ground-floor distribution of food to refugees stayclassroom. There is a morning ses- ing with local families, provUUl\g a
sion for younger children, an after- 30-daysupplyofbasicratiQnstoeach
noon session for older ones, lliughl by registered refugee.
·
volunteers.
.
There are widespread suspicions;
Autura Dema, one of the teachers,' however, that profiteers are diverting
~aid the children are way behind in some of the aid. The Red Cross says
their studies, even forgetting lessons · it knows of no large-scale corruption,
learned earlier in the year in Kosovo. and suggests that most food aid sur"They like to l~am," she said. " It facing at markets comes from
helps them get over their traumas." refugees bartering for other com-..
One pupil, 11-year' old Elvesa modities.
Gas hi, lost a brother and sister on the
The focxJ..aid program is sup- ·
chaotic journey to Tirana.
pose&lt;! to be extended to host families,
"S.~e says she cri~s all night fot!' many of them poor, but this hasn't
them, Mrs. Dema Said.
· • happened yet on a broad scale.
. . The International Red Cross is try;; · "We're very aware ofthe need for
mg to reumte separated· re(ugees: ;i aasistance to host families," said
broadcasllng names over the radio ·"' Ellen Svennes ·of the federation of

By MICHELLE LOCKE
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
SAN QUENTIN, Calif, - A Viet·
nam veteran who .received a Pui]Jie
Heart on death row was executed by
injection early Tuesday for beating an
elderly woman to death.
· Manuel Babbitt died at 3:37a.m.

EDT, a day after his 50th birthday, 'll spllto!he skin on her 'foreheld to the
after all his court appeals were• bone. Het frail heart gave out under
denied.
the"attack.
·
·
.
Babbitt was ~enlenced to death for _
Babbitt said he dldn '·t remember
killing Leah Schendel in ·q980. ~He l"'hat happened that night,.cr the folwas convicted of brealcipg into.'he~ . tlowing:. evening when , he attac.ked
apartment and hammering her with another woman, breakigg clff wlie,n a
punches that broke her dentures and
·
·

Volume 49, Number 236

'

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnal Newa Staff
Jean Craig of Middleport and John W. Blaettnar of
Pomeroy will advance to the general election in Novem·
ber as the Republican mayoral candidates following
Tuesday's Republican primaries.
.
Craig defeated Samuel A. Eblen with a 'vole tally of
1231o 84, and Blaettnar, who served as Pomeroy Mayor
several yeais ago, defealed Kenny Klein with a vote of
131 to 37.
In Middleport, where 213 Republicans went to the
polls, Oerk!l'reasurer Bryan Swann received 155 votes,
Councilman Stephen Houchins received 155 votes and
~nald L Stivers and Bernard D. Gilkey, candidates for
the board of trustees of public ,affairs, received 155 .and
15 I votes, respectively.
.

.

A Tirana economist, Zef Preci,
said the government must take action,
"Albania's image ' could be
destroyed if the government can't ai&lt;l
the families housing refugees," 'he
said. "People will send the refugees
:
back to the camps."
Kotorri would like government
help for his ~e lf-made refugee cente'
but doesn't expect it. .He retains a
skepticism of bureaucracy acquired
during Albania 's Communist era,
when he spent 12 years in jail for
alleged anti-state activities.
Now, he is a one·man relief
agency for · his guests, even. hiring
some for his furniture and bakery
busi nesi;es.
"I hve wit(J them , with their problems," he said. ''l'do what I can to
ease their suffering."

Slivers was appointed to that board late last year,
along with Craig and Myron Duffield.
Duffield and Robert Robinson, both Democrats, ~ill
appear on the November ballot Robinson has .filed as a
candidate for village· oouncil. No Democrat filed for
either mayor's post.
In Pomeroy, 177 ballots were cast, and Qerk!l'reasurer Kathy Hysell received 158 votes. Council mem·
bers Scott M. Dillon and Geri Walton received 133 and
113 votes, respectively. .
Monday was the filing deadline for independent can·
didales, and none filed, so candidates who advance to
the November election will be unopposed unless write· ·
in candidates (ile .before the September 13 deadline.
· Craig, who has served as chairman of the t&gt;oard 'of ·
public affairs for the past six months, said W~nesday

rves
ngs
anniversary with ·memorial markers
KENT (AP) ...:.. Kent State University has begun marking the places
where four students were killed by Ohio National Guard fire during a Viet·
nam War protest on May 4, 1970.
In January, Kent Stale's board of trustees aulhoriz~d the insltalhlti011 of
markers in lhe parking lot spaces where the students died on this northeast. I
Ohio school's campus.
Although oonstruction for the memorials isn't expected to start for
weeks, lhe school's a~minislralion decided to seal off the parking lot spots
for Tuesday's commemoration.
·
.
Each of the s~ces was deooraied with a triangular granite marker with
the name of one cif the students and the date of the shootings . .
The markeNJ, which will be removed today, will be officially dedicated
Sept. 8.
An overnight vigil· and the ri~ging of a campus bell also marked the
anniversary of when the National Guard opene~ fire to queli a can1pu:s 1
protest. In addition to the four who were killed, nine students were wound·
ed.

he.

friend iushed to. aid.
The fomier Marine was turned in
to police by his brother, Bill, whose ·
suspicions were aroused after he
found items stolen in the Schendel
slaying in Manuel Babbitt's belong·
ings. ·
·

Sentinel

•

•

I .

morning ibat she will begin preparing immediately for
the mayor's position.
·
''ll's.a long. hard roe to hoe, and it will take a lot of
work," Craig said. "I'm going to begin right .now in
familiarizing myself with the exact workings of this vii· ·
lage, because you can't enter office in January and say,
''OK, now I'm going to be the mayor."'
·
Craig said that she \viii also continue to work closely
with oouncil members.
,
..., want to .instill in the council members that they are .
the legislative body. The mayor should lJe a leader, and
a helpmate to council, but council members must make
the decisions."
Blaettnar, too, said he was already looking at projects
that he feels need addressing. and said that the village
water system must be a priority. According to .Blaettnar,

a seoond well for the system should be built.
·,
Blaetlnar also said that recreational opportun iti es,
including repairs to the park on Mechanic Street and the
bike and walking path now being considered.
"I have worked with ·practically all of the oounci ..
members and they're good people, so 1 don't anticipate
any proble~s." Blaeunar said.
Voters in the villages of Racine, Rutland and Syta·
cuse will elect their mayors and council members in
November's general election, because those officials 1'\111
on a. non-partisan basis.
·
Board of Elections officials last night said that tiN;
turnout of Republican voters was lower than they hW:I
anticipated. With 3,178 registered ~epublicans in the
two villages, the voter turnout of 390 was calculated,at
just over 12 percent.
·

Dedicated poll worker takes duty seriously

: Today's

.

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Craig and Blaettnar win Republica·n mayor's contest~

WASHINGfON (AP)- Sen. George \binovich and his allies in the
over what's to become of state tobacco settlement money are optimistic about
the prospects for getting Congress to see things their way.
AI issue is whether the federal government can .take a portion of the more
than $206 billion in settlements to be paid to sl~ by tobacco ~panics,
whether it can dictate how states spend their windfalls, or whether the money
is kept off limits to Uncle Sam. ·
.
·
.
\binovich, R-Ohio, has been one of the leaders of an effon to enact "hands
off" legislation.
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R·Texas, inserted into a spending bill an
amendment that would accomplish thai goal in the current fiscal year. So a
·
lobbying effort by Voinovich
governors, mayors and state legisla·
tors has switched to the House'Senate
conference committee which is creat·
j
ing a final version of the bill.
Groups which oppose letting the
federal government get any of the
2 Sections • 12 Pages
tobaccq settlem~nt money staged a
news conference Tuesday designed to
7
C.ICnd•r
•how . the depth of their alliance,
Clapllled1
9&amp;10
which includes active participation by
groups representing all levels of state
Comlq
11
and local government.
Editorials
"It's unconscionable for the federal
government to try lo take whit
belongs to the states," \binovich said.
"We need to keep this provision in
· the bill."
. ·
\binovich, Hutchison and other
senators have beliten back an attempt
OHIO
to order the states to spend half
their settlement money on programs
Plck3: 3-8-3; Pkk4: 1·2·0·9
to reduce smoking and assist tobacco
Buckeye 5: S·IO.I9·20·31
fanners.
W.VA.
They said the states should be trust·.
Daly 3: 4-S.Si Dally 4: 9·9·S·4
ed
lo ac! responsibly with the money
01'199011lo\'olky
they work!'(! to receive.

~

•

Hometown Newspaper
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.

By KATHERINE 'RIZZO
Allaoc:laWd .,_Writer

'

-Page 4

Meigs County's
';['"••&lt;1··~r~·'

Senator thinks victory
In fight over settlelnent dollars

.

Cincinnati tops
Arizona 6-4

•

Pu.rple .Heart recipien,~!J~~~ by lethal injection

Marriage licenses.
.

.

Eastern diamond squads win, Page 4
Letting go of anger, Page 7
Meigs variety show, Page 8

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70s; l:ow: 50s

Red Cross societies. "But for the
time being we've had to prioritize the
refugees.'' ·

May5,10118

Today: Showers
High: 70s; Low: 80a

Albania's crowded capital making room for refugee.s
By DAVID CRARY
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
TIRANA, Albania - A Greek
bank was just about to move into
Dilaver Kolorri's new office building
when war got in the way.
Kotorri 's family occupies a top·
floor suite, but the Tirana busi ness·
man has turned over the rest of his
three-story building to houseguests
·- 220 refugees from Kosovo . ·
Instead of offices for investments
and loans, there is a communal
kitchen, an improvised school, and
room after room filled with dis·
placed families and their belongings.
"I was going to get $6,000 month·
ly rent from the bank," Kotorri said.
· "Then catastrophe struck our Kosovo brother~. I cancel~d the contmct

Wednesday

•

paint.
"It will be better than it was," she said, adding. "I
don't know what I'd have done without my family."
She renected on changes in the voting process, not·
ing that the work is easier today. In the past. poll work ..

t'JHENS (M)- An Ohio Uni·
versity sophomore has been defeated
in his attempt to run for the City
Council Jlresidencr.
·
Patrick Shea was beaten by
Council President Guy Philips in th e
Democratic primary.
·
Philips received 435 votes, or 58
percent of the total, while Shea had
315, or 42 percent
Philips 'will nin for a third term as
council president in the Nov. 2 gen·
eral election.
''i~~.
He said he had anticipated a close
'"
" race against Shea.
·
"I was extremely concerned I've
always h~d tremendOus support
from Ohio University students and
this till)e l was running against an
Ohio Univerrsity sophomore," he
said.
,
Shea, whose hometown is Ketter·
DEVOTED POLL WORKER- Roae Slaaon, a ing. is a member of the university 's
poll workar at Pomaroy'a Firat Precinct, 1howed student Senate.
up tor work Tueaday after driving from Gallon
Earlier this year. he had criticized
attar a tire damaged har S.Cond Street home In council members in this southeast
February. Slaaon, a poll worker IInce 11158, Ia Ohio oollege town when they voted
expected to move back home (n a few WJeka.
to revise the city housing code.
ers used to tally the ballots by hand and then report the ·
~e' revisio~s inc_luded a ban
results 'Jo the board of elections; today the ballots are agamst students practice of ~lactn g
counted automatically at the board of elections.
couches on porches of privately
"We used to work until 2 o'clock in the rooming," owned homes used for student hous·
she said. ·
·
. ing.
~--------------~

-·

Top Meigs county students honored
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel N - Sblff
The accomplishments of 48 scholars·
were celebrated at the 15th annual Meigs
County Academic Excellence banquet held
Tuesday night in the Meigs High School
cafeteria.
. John Costanzo, superintendent of the
Athens-Meigs Educational. Service Center,
congratulated the young scholars on achiev·
ing academic excellence and encouraged
them to develop positive self-coneepts, to
be solf-directed, and to continue to work
toward their potential .
·
"As scholars you have the ability to
affect the· lives of other people," said
Costanzo, suggesting thai their intellect carries a responsibility which when applied to
research and human development projects
can bring health and happiness lo others;
· He cited rules for sucx:ess as laid out in a
recent research project which included
"have faith in God, have faith in yourself,
work hard, be oonsis.tent and dop ~t give up."
More than 200 students, parents, friends,
and school personnel attended the banquet
which honored the top students of Eastern,
Meigs and Southern School Districts in
grades two, four, six, junior high and high
school.
Jesse Little, a senior at Southern High
School, was selected · as recipient of tlie
Franklin B. Walter AII·Scholaslic Award.
He was presented 1 plaque by Costanzo.and
· Bob Barton, vice-preaide'nt of the Athens·
Meigs Governing Board. Other nominees
for lhc award we~e Stephanie Evans from
Eastern, and Bridget Vaughan from Meigs.
LitUe, son of Connie and Doug Little,
will be one of 88 sch~lars in Ohio to be hon·

Jolnthe
Aaaoolatlon .o f lAnw c.mara In Ita annual .food drlw on Satur·
day. The aniluil - n t Ia the largaat of Ita kind In the nation, and
all food oollec!Wd locally will go to local food t!anka, In Polnwoy
to the Melga UnltM Methocllat Cooperatl~ Pariah. Poatal cu•
tomera are aaked to place non-perlahable food ltema (but no
gla•la,.) at their l'llllllbox•·on Saturday tor pickup, or to drop .
Jtama at the Pomeroy Poat otnce. Lllat year, ovar 1,800 pounda ·
of food wu collacted In Pomeroy. Pictured with Mayor Fr.nk ·.
V.ughan, who algned a proclamation tor the day, a,. letter car·
r1ere Jim Pulllna and Carl Carmichael, and Pomaroy Poatmaater
Charlft Grim.
·
.
••

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa St.ff
Nothing it seems can keep long-time Pomeroy First
Precinct poll worker Rose Sisson from her post.
Sisson has resided in Galion. with her son and daugh·
ter-in·law, Alfred and Alice .Sisson, since Feb. 12 after
her Second Street home was damaged in a Feb. 9. fire.
The fire, which gutted a neighboring home, caused
extensive damage to Sisson's home .
Tuesday morning, Sisson showed up for work at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church where Republican citizens of
the First Precinct .were nominating their choice for .
mayor. Her son drove her down and plans were for her
to return to Galion Tuesday evening.
Residents of the First Precinct had voted at the audi torium in the Pomeroy Municipai .Building. However,
after Pomeroy Village Council voted to use the audito·
rium · to house the police departmen~ a new polling
place was required.
That was when the church volunteered its· meeting
room, according to Jane Frymyer of the Meigs County
Board of Elections. Ironically, the new polling place is
located just across the street from Sisson's fire damaged
home, which is currently undergoing extensive renova·
lions.
Sissonh.as lived liil'omeroy all of lter11fe"ind has
resided on Second Street since 195S. She became I poll
wor(&lt;er in 1956 and in the las143 years has only missed
work one time - thai due to an operation.
Her reason for returning Tue~ay : !'I wanted to see
the people."
She said lhe Lutheran church basement is a comfort·
able polling place and that she has received many good
oomments aboui the location.
Meanwhile, she is looking forward to returning to
her home iri about three weeks. The house will have·
new siding. new roof, drywall, ·carpet, fixtures and

Student loses bid
for Athens city
council oresidency ·

ored at a recognition banquet in Columbus
on May 12.".
·
Small trophies were presented to each of
the scholars.
Meigs students honored were Erinne
Kennedy, Bradbury; Daniel Bookman,
Harrisonville; Jert:id Wyatt, .·Pomeroy;
Bethany King, Rutland; James Wallace,
Salem Center, and Dru Reed, Salisbury, all
fourth graders; Renee Bailey, Patrick ~w­
ell, Katie Reed, Chesler Wigal, Sarah
Wilkes, Melinda Chancey, Kayte Davis,
Michelle Runyon, Emily Story, and Eliza·
beth Wilfong, Meigs Middle .School; Der·
rick Bolin, Christopher Dodson; Carrie
Lightfoot. Adam Shank, Stephanie Wigal,
Lacy Banks, Tricia Davis, Jessica Johnson,.
Rebecca Johnson, Tamra O'Dell, Rebekah
Smith, and Bridge! Vaughan, Meigs High
School.
.
ored at tha Melga County Academic Excellence banEastern students recognized were Erin quet Tueaday night were preaentad trophlea by Bob
Weber, Tyler Lee, Derek Baum, Cody Dill, Barton, vice prealdent of the governing board of tho
Canie Crow, Canie Wiggins, Eastern Ele- ·Athena-Melga Educa~al Service Center. Erin Weber,
mentary; Juli Bailey, Joshua Kehl, Stephanie a fourth
at Ealtam Element.ry, waa the llrat to
Evans, John Proffitt, and Jessica Marcum, racalve a
'
·
Eastern High School.
. Southern students honored were Miranda
McKelvey, fourth grade. Portland; Sara Q
Cammarata, sixth '!lrade, Portland; Jawb
· Hunter, fourth grade, ~yracuse; Ashton
· Brown, , sixth grade, Syracuse; Brandon
Smith, Southern Junior High, and Jonathan
Evans, Brenna Sisson, Jesse Little, and Kara
King. Southern High School. ·
. Jody Howard, Talented and Gifted Coor·
dinator for the oounty, gave the welcome and
introduced the superintendents, ~ryl Well,
Eastern; William Buckley, Meigs. and James
Lawrence, Southern. The invocation before
the dinner was
by Robert Barton.
- J1aM Uttle, aenlor at Soutt1ann,
waa 1 the
of tha Franklin B. · Walter AllScholaatlc
The plaque pr1aanted by John
Coatanzo, auparlntendent of the Athena Melga Ceil·
tar, lett, and Bob Barton, vloe prealdent of the Center'agovwnlng board.
•
RECOGNIZED- Top e.mant.ry and middle achool
acholara In Melga Local ·recognized at the Melga
County Academic Excellence .banquet Tueaclay night
Included left to right, 1utad, Erln!M Kennedy, Daniel
Bookman, Jerod Wyatt, l!lethany King, Dru Reed and
Ren• Bailey; and atandlng, Katla Reed, .Cheater
Wigal, Sarah Wllkaa, Kayte Davia, Michelle Runyon,
Emily Story, and Elizabeth Wilfong. ·
~~-----,-,

�- ·, ...
''

,C ommentary
The _Daily Sentinel
'Esta6{rsfi.erf in 1948

Ptgt 2

r liE: Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Wednesday, May 5, 1999

Wtclntldty, M1y II, 10011

~~!!!!!~~l

Can Bush's bipartisanship survive D.C.?

Ohio weather

By Morton Kondracke

Thursday, May 6

In 1997, though, Bush rntroduced a bold tax
reform agenda that got rewritten in lhe stale
House and then demolished in the state Senate.
Bush's orrgrnal idea was to cut property taxes
by $3 bill ron: rncrease stale [undrng for education,
and replace th e existr ng business franchise tax ..
which hrts.Ju&gt;avy industry hardest -- with a broadbased business tax amountrng 10 a value-added
tax
A state House committee, headed by Democratic state Rep. Paul Sadler, rewrote the ·boll lo
hroaden the franchiSe tax to cover partnerships
lr k~ law frrms, JOrnl operatmg agreements among
big or! companies and investment houses Bush
fought for rt, but the mterests killed it.
. .
In the end, Bush got just a $1 billion property
tax cut -- fashioned at Bush's recommendation to
chrefly benefil small homeowners-- bul he advertised it in lhe 1998 campaign as "the biggest tax

decrde whether to increase teacher pay, Sadler
wants lo mandate a $3,000 increase to raise average pay .. currently so low thai Texas ranks 361h
among the states.
Sadler also rs blocking Bush's proposal to try a
voucher system on a pilot basrs for low-income
children in nonperformrng schools
Is this Pllftisan warfare being waged by Sadler,
an East Texas Democrat and trial lawyer, to hurt
Bush and help Vice Presrdent AI Gore?
Hardly. Sadler told me, referring to Bush· "We
are good friends We do disagree on occasion, but
I never doubt his sincerity, loyalty or dedication lo
purpose. We have our polrcy drfferences and we
drscuss them ."
The legrslative session isn't over until May 31
and, likely as not, B'Jsh's discussoons with Sadler
and other legiSi otors wrll wir. ·.tim some move·
ment on taxes. Thai's especially likely because

AUSTIN, Texas - Once
agarn, Te xas Gov George W.
111 Court St., P.omeroy, Ohio
Bush (R) is lrkely to fall short
740.992·2156 • Fax: 992-2157
o[ hiS state legiSlative goals thrs
year But will thai damage his
presrdential prospects? Nope
Community Newspaper Holdi~gs, Inc.
That's because, as he proved
when hrs program tanked rn
ROBERT L. WINGETI
1997, he has great abrlity to
Publisher
accentuate the posrlrves of what
he does get out of the legislature
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE Hill
And Bush wrll get part of what he asked for
General Manager
Contfoller
because he has developed such a cooperatrve rei a·
uonsh&lt;p with top Democrats in the legislature that
lhey don 't waniiO do hrm serrous pohtrcal damage.
TM SenU net w.icom•• l•tf.,• to th• .VIIor from r•IHhr• on • bro.d '""fl• ol top..
Ice. Short l•tt•,. (300 word1 or ,.,,, havt tM btat cha"c. of IHI/ng publlahwl.
In fact, Bush collaborates so well with DemocTJIJNd lett•• ,,.. pret.~ and an may b• adll«t Each ahould fnclud• • afgnalur.,
rats
here that, if he gets elected president and the
addrtaa, and d•YIIm• phon• numb-. Sp.clfy• d11t1 ffth~'• • ,..f.,.nc. to • prt·
House goes Democratrc, rt wrll be fascrnatlng to
vloua artlcl• or lattar. Mall to. t..tt.ra to tha «&lt;ltor, Tht Sentinel, 111 Court St,
Pomaroy, Dhlo 45169, or, FAX to 74(J..gg2 2157
see whether he can establ ish Austr nstyle coll egralrty rn Washrngton or rf ~T'- ([) IIU foot~ WI"'" STA11·1'"C1P&gt;I"'·
Was hrngton converts hrrn to rts hyper- HUL~
'
partrsanship
For rnstarn:e, House Speaker [)ennis Hastert, R-Ill , and President Clln·
ton h11vc had JUSt a s1ngle one on nne
mcetmg thrs yea r, but Ru sh lun cl&lt;es
weekly wrth Texas House Speaker
Pete Laney, a Democrat
Former Lt Gov Bob Bullock (li)
S'.lbmltted by Lt. Richard E. Grau
worked so closely 1\ rth Bush rn tire
.-:-r·'I '~ ·Molgs Post Ohio State lilghway Patrol
It J::a tune tu start thmkmg abo ut summer trave l and fam1ly vacations The 199'i and 1997 lcgrsbttrve 'essru ns
\\drn weather br 111gs.out more motonsts, wh tch leads to more traff1c, and thai Bullock endorsed Bush for rell.&gt;!CII IIall y more &lt;lrrv.ng problems
electr on rn 1998 ins1ead of Dernocral
~,u rnrner dnvmg does not have tu e4uate to travel nightmares, however,
Gary Maur o, one of whose krds rs
Bullock's godchild
' S lon g as certmn tssues are kept m mrnd
- ~.
" He's wo rked closer wrth the leg! ore most on the lr st of summer dnvmg fru strations arc the numerous
roatlway construction projects undert aken durrng warm weather monlhs rslature lhan any governor I've seen"
1Jnd0ubted ly, road closures, orange ba,rel s, and long delays wrl1 affecl many in 40 yea rs in ·lexas polrtrcs, Bullock
' )hlO dnvers th1s summer Despite the rnconvcnlences, remember these pro·
told me
•'ch are necessary lo ensurrng the roadway surfaces are safe for travel
Bush made a pornl of not cam{ t•ok for the Ohro State llrghway Patrol's "OrtJhe, Road" segment each paignrng against incumbent Democvcek on the Ohro News Network for detar ls on locations around the state rats rn the legrslature who supported
vhcre tr ave l may be hampered due to ongorng consl ructr on projecl~
hrs programs, although he drd rarse
;\nother way to check travel cond1tions statewide IS through the Patrol's lots of money for the state GOP and
'coi l free road and weather condrtr ons hothne, 1-888 2-0HROAD Addition- campaigned for GOP candidates in
•II) roa d and weather con&lt;jrtrons are avarlable through the Patro l's web srle open-seal races and lhose running
•t w ww state oh us(ohiostatepatrol/
against hostile Democrats.
This rs Bush's thrrd legislative sesi&gt;atrence , cautr on, and following posted traffic srgns wr ll help you get
sron -- hrs last rf he gets elected pres·
I' "''rgh an) road co nstruct ron woes th rs summer
~~~~ AF£ ASS'161EP At-4 ~~~iA FO~ ~C:EABI.E MSEMilY
'n rld passe nger safety IS another rmportan t toprc thrs time of the year rdent in 2000, hrs second -to-last if he
TO ft'fiTIO" 111e 61W!ll~ f01t RE~E'S$ &lt;1F .GitiiNAAC!$
', use of rhe numher of fa mrlies ernbarkrng on vacat1 on travel The fact loses and serves out his second term
''l lllS that motor vehrcle crashes are the llrghesl cause of death lor chrl
endrng rn 2002
cut rn Texas hrstory "He got 59 percent of the vote. rndependently elected slate Comptroller Carole
1," 1n the Urutcd States
Texas' legrslature only meets for 140 days
This year, with the state running an estimated , Rylander (R) is expecled to come up with a revIn Oh ro, chrld safety seats arf manrlato ry for children under fou r years of every two years, but in Texas' weak -governorshrp $56 brllron surplus, Bush called for a $2 billion enue estimate, selling the state budget surplus al
&lt;Re or who wergh under 40 pounds
syslern, rt has more to say about the slale 's prror- property tax cut and SI 6 billron in new spendrng $6 5 billion rather than $5.6 billron.
Du nng a recent chr ld safety seat inspection event rn Lancaster, state rties than the governor does Nonetheless, Bush's for educatron •• $1 billion in no-strings aid 10
Bush aides admit his presidential strategizing
trnnpers rnspected 63 car seats, and found only three to be correct!) frrst sessron in 1995 ·- followrng hr s surprise local drslncts and $600 rnrl)ron to improve read- has cut rnto hrs usuallegrslative schmoozing time
defeat of popular Gov. Ann Rrchards (D) ·· was a ing and fight "social promotion" •• plus sales- this year, but it's clear he ' ll get some tax cuts and
'" '1 1\cd If you have questron~ about lhc proper rnstal lat ron of a chrld safe
c ,&lt; t, I encourage you to contact your local Patrol post
&lt;;pcctacul ar success
and busmess·tax cut.~
educatron improvements -- plenty enough to
I '• eryonc shares the responsibility to protect ch ildren by complying wrth
Though both houst;s were l) emocrat-con·
But the legislature has other odeas Sadler, claim on the carnpargn trarl thai he's a "compas&gt;hpJ\ ch dd passe nger safety laws. It rs drfficult to argue agarnst the fact that trolled, the four key rtems on Bush's agenda •• chnrrmnn of the House education committee, is sionate conservative."
h!l d safety se ats save li ves Through public educatr on efforts and enforce· welfare reform. tort reform, localized control of proposrng JUSt a $500 mrllion cut in property
(Morton Kondracke le axecullve editor ol
r .en! of chrld passe nger salety laws, the Patrol will continue to work at sav- education and tougher 1uvenrle justice laws ·- taxes and $4.2 brllion rn education spendrng.
Roll Call, lhe newspaper or Capitol Hill.)
' oo the li ves of ch ildren
sarled through
Whereas' Bush proposed letting local districts Copyrlght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS~ ASSN.
l{esc mch cond ucted by the Nat ronal Highway Traffrc Safety Admrnrs,it0n (N H I SA) shows chrld safety scats, when prope rly rnstalled and uti cd redL•ce th e risk of death by 69 percent for rnfants and 47 percent for

L 1A al bri ts:
Postal applications accepted

'""

d 1lcr'\
rt n! tl1rrc maJOr summer tra. . el IHJ iidays, Memonal Day, July 4th, nncl

I .J bM Day tradrtwnally yreld tragrc events on Ohro roadways. Last year, 42
&gt;cople were kill ed on Ohro roadways during these three holiday perrods
. \ tot,tl of 15 people dred over the four day Memorial Day weekend, six
' n le were krllcd over the July 41h perrod, and 21 were krlled over the four·
' )' Labor Day "eekend in 1998,
i\kuhol and rmparred drrvrng continues to be a contrrbuting factor rn too
l WI Y of these lragedres ' State troopers made 1,812 rmparred drrvrng arrests
" t year during the three sumnier holrday penods.
Mal&lt;rng sure your vehrcle rs travel-ready is an important key to safe sum·
nrcr trave l. Automobrle ma!lltenance should !llciude checking wrndshield
' &lt;pcrs, trres. lrghts, and flurd levels It IS also a good rdea to ensure the
&gt;rakes and transmrssron are working properly
f he emergency krt kept rn your vehrcle dunng the winter should be con&lt;erted for sum mer travel
Cunsrder the followrng rtem s when putt!llg together a summer travel
c mcq~e ncy krt CB radr o or ce llular phone, nares or safety reneclors, "Send
I k ip" or "Call Pol ice" srgns, whrte nag or handkerchref; first ard krt, flash lrght, '"'d rellectrve tape
1 he Oh1o Slate Hrghway Palrol conl!llues to have . a vanety of way s
•lu o11gh whrch the motorrng publ rc can assrst troopers in the goal to rncrease
. tfcty on Ohro ru ttlw a)s
Motonsts arc encouraged to contact the Palrol- by dralrng 1-877-71 \I ROL • hrs new number se rves as anolher lrnk between the pu blrc and
I 1irollu recerve hrghway help, report aggressive drivers, and advise troop
',,o f disabl ed vehrc les
Safety on Ohr o roadways thrs summer lllVOives a com mitment from all
,,otorrsts by slow rng down, wcarrng safety belts, and avoidrng unnecessary
I)\ 1

:t)day In History
y f he Associated Press
,
'lod.Ly is Wednesday, May 5, the I 25th day of IY99. There arc 240 clays
ft in the year
'Jbday's lf &lt;ghlrght rn Hrstory .
On May 5, 1961, astronaut Alan B Shepard Jr became America's first
mce traveler as he made a 15-mrnute , sub-orbital flight in a caps ul e
I unched from Cape Canaveral, Pia
On th rs date
ln1 818, pohtrcal philosopher Karl Marx was born rn Prussia
In 1821, Napoleon Bonaparle dred in ex ile on the island of St Helena
In 189 1, Carnegre Hall (then named " Musrc Hall") had rl~ open rng nrght
ltl t·.Je:w York City.
In I093, pan ic hrt the l'ilew York Stock Exchange, by year's end, the
c mntry was in the throes of a seve re depressron ,
In J923, John 'I' Scopes was arrested in Tennessee for teaching Darwi n's
tl &lt;cory of e'olulron
In 1942, sales of sugar resumed in lhe IJ nrted States under a raloonrng
r·rogrmn

In 1945, rn the only [,olal attack of rl• krnd durrng Worl p War II , a Japan ·
balloon bomb ex ploded on Gearhart Mounlarn rn Oregon, killrng the
llr cgnant wife of a minister and frve children
In ' 1955, West Germany became a soverergn state.
Jn 190 I, Irish Republican Army hunger·strrker Bobby Sands dred at the
Maze Prison in Northern Ireland in his 66th day without food.
Ten years ago. A foderal JUdge ordered sweeprng changes rn the FBI's
promotion system, months after the judge fou nd that the bureau had sys1\' mntrcally di scriminated against rts Hi spanic employees in advancements
,md :.tssi gnmcnts
Frve years ago Singapore caned American teen-ager Mtchacl Fay for
va ndalisrn, a day after Ihe sentence was reduced from six lashes to four in
",,~mse to :rn nppeal by Presid ent Clinton, who considered the punishment
• &gt;C

'l hi[ Sh

One year •ago An exasperated Secretary of State Madeleine Albrrght
lled on Israel to hand over an additional 13 percent of the West Ban~ to
hi.( Palestrnians, on top of the 27 percent already relrnqurshed. Israel, how' v~r, conlrnued lo balk at the proposal

They have enabled us to be true to ourselves
By Sara Eckel

1y

On a recent nr ght to Wisconsr n, I
sat next lu a woman w ho was a

buyer for Calvrn Klern As soon as
she told me her JOb, I could tell she
was very proud of rt. She had lh e
look on her face , that people who
love their JObs frequently have -- she
expected me to be rmpressed
And I was. I told her lhat her
career so unded excitrng, and she
qurckly agreed She told me she tlew
all over the counlry .. gorng to fashion shows and managrng the department-store representatives that
reported to her
She asked me what was bringin g
me to Mrl waukce, .nul I told her I
was grvrng a speech at the Unrversrty of W1sconsm
"Whal's the speec h about'!" she
·•skcd
"Femtnisrn," I replled
At this, she reco rled . "Femrntsm! " she said, shakrng her head.
" I think femrnism has farled us "
"Why?"
"Because I'm not sure women
are better off now Sure, we have the
carec1s But we've socnficecl farni -

"Bul that was our
chorce "
My lr avel companron conceded this
poonl , but I don'l
think she was ulti ·
mately convinced that feminism
hadn't somehow failed her
Tlus altrtude has always confused
me What exaclly drd we expect
femm1sm to do for us? Feminism
has brought us brrlh control, lhe
vote, the right to own property, to
get drvorced and to go to college It
has enabled us to pursue careers we
love, and to be well-compensated
for them
So why are we so q~&gt;~ck to blame
fem inism whe n we feel the tccnsicst
brt of drssatrsfaction rn our lo ves?
Recently, I saw a televisron panel
t.11krng about the movie " l'rtanic"
A woman on the panel sard that she
thought women had rt a lot better
when rules like "Women and chil·
dren first" strll apphed It 's true that
geltong rnto lhe lrfeboat frrsl certarnly was a nrce perk of womanhood
back th en But I found it rnteresting

th at lhe panelist forgot about aneth·
cr plotline rn lhat movie: The main
charaCter, Rose, was beong forced to
marry a man she despi!!Cd because
she and her mother had no means of
earnrng income. I also found rt onteresting lhat lhiS television panelist ..
who had a high-ranking polrcy posi·
lion ·- apparently saw no connection
between her own success and the
rrse of feminism.
The mothers of femr nism -Susan B. Anlhony, Margarel Sanger,
Elizabeth Blackwell, Betty Friedan,
Gloria Steinem and countless others
.. worked long and hard to garn us
the freedoms that we now enjoy. But
hke most mothers, their work has
gone largely unappreciated. Instead
of thanking them for everything they
have grven us, we blame lhem for
whatever IS mrssing
Wouldn't it be nice if this Moth·
er's Day we could thank all the
women who worked so lrrelessly
and lhanklessly for our benefit?
They never set out to make our lives
perfect .. only Ia gove us lhe lools to
live them the way we choose,
whether that means running a major

Wou/dn 't it be 11ice if this
Mother's Day we could.thank
all the women who worked so
tirelessly and thanklessly for
our benefit?· They never set
out to make our lives perfect •
• only to-give us the tools to
live them the way we choose,
whether that means running
a major corporation or a
household full of children.
corporation or a household full of
children. In short, they have enabled
us to be true Ia ourselves, and to
make our own mistakes And for this
we should be grateful.
So on Mother 's Day, it seems
approprrate to salute all the women
who worked tirelessly and thanklessly for our benefil. Our lives may
be more complicated now. And they
may even be more difficult. Thank
goodness.
•
Copyrlghl1- NEA.
Send commenle lo tiM IUthor
In care ollhla newapaper or eend
her e-mail at saraaumaol.com.

The book we have been waiting for
tion. The Movement Thai ,
Remade America" (1 he Free
Wnting rn the Amencan HIStorical Revrew in
Apn l 1994, Columbra historr an Alan Brrnkley
Press, 1999). by Lee Edwards,
call ed Amencun cqnservatrsm "an orphan rn hi s·
a professor of politics at the
torical scholarship." It isn't hard to see why Most
Catholic University of America
academic hrstorr ans are dyed·in·the-woolliberals,
and a senior fellow of lhe Herand il must parnful for lhem 10 contemplate, let
itage Foundation. Edwards had
alone chron icl e, the march of the American con·
already written seven other
books, including biographies
servativ c movement from just about nowhere in
of Barry Goldwater and Ronald
J 950 lo dornrnatron of lhe national polrtrcal scene
Reagan, but this new volume is
in 1980 and most of the subsequent years
Wh ~ n ll onald Reagan was fi r&gt;t elected.presrunquestronably hrs masterwork. No serious con·
dent rn 1980, I assumed that histonans would sup- servative, and no serious student of the conserva·
press therr revulsion and begin grindrng out turgid trve movement, can afford to be without it.
The book's scholarship is exlensive and metic·
texts putting thrs major development and its
antecedents rn the worst possoble lrght. So I hur· ulous. In addition to consultrng lhe slender ranks
ried to turn out a book of my own, rccountrng of books based on or near lhe subject, Edwards
events as l had witnessed and remembered them, was able to draw (for example) on the literally
before hrstory co uld congeal m some hostrle and hundreds of personal interviews he had conducted
tendentious way ("The Rise of the Right," in the course of researching his biography of
Goldwater, as well as on questionnarres filled out
Wilham Morrow and Co., 1984).
I needn 't have worried. 1 he years rolled on, for him by more than 70 prominent conservatives
and still no professional historian shouldered the in connectiOn with the currenl volume.
Edwards has lhus established himself in the
task. What's more, my own book was quast·autobrograJ:lhical " a serres of reminiscences on what very front rank of historians on the subject of
I personally had done and witnessed dunng near- American conservatism: It occurred to one
ly four decades m the conservatove movement. reviewer to complain lhat Edwards' obvrous sym·
Large areas were left untouched, or were touched pathy for his subject disqualified him as a student
on only lightly WhM the world strll awaited, and of it. But no one has questioned the wntrngs of
badly needed, wa• a thoroughgoing hisloncal Arl~ur Schlesinger Jr on- Roosevelt and Kennedy
account of the entire phenomenon, written l)y a . on such a ground, and rndeed Edwards' strikong
balance and objeclivity lend added strength to his
profcssronal scholar.
analysrs.
Well, the good news is that such a book has at
Edwards specifies four major leaders as central
last been published· " !'he Conservative RevoluBy William A. Rusher

J

•

"

I

.

Opal Jacqueline Boyce
Opal Jacqueline Doy ce, 66, Putnt Pleasan t, w Va. died Tuesday, May l ,
1999 rn Holzer Mcdrc. l Ccn t~r
Born July 31, 1932 rn Mason Co u dy, w Va . daughter of the late Edward
! rankl&lt;n Cheesebrew Sr, and Mabel Or.t Sayre Cheescbrew of Pom t Pleasant, she w.ts a homem.tker. and attended the Weskyan Church She was a .
member of the church ·s l;rd&lt; cs tellowshrp
She was also preceded rn death hy her first husband, R1 chard E. Grbbs ,
and .r son, Edward E (hbb s

_:__ _ _ _ _ _"'_~----:---·-----·--

Market hog registration

· Market hog regrstr.otron fur IW9 •I -ll and FF/\ m ar~l· t h" g, \ hthl\ &lt;m
wrll be held Saturday, 9-11 am at th e Mcrgs County f rirgrnunds Crange
Hall Any 4 H or FFA member pbnnrng 10 show tll.lfket hog". " 1 th e IYY~'
Metgs Co unty r.m mu't rcg&lt;stc• theH anrrnals (m,oxrmum ol tw0 gilt• an d
two b..u rows) tll lhc above llatc and 11mC lor ntOit.: ,nforrnut1o n , ~· onr:.~ct
('hrp Hagge rty, Cuunty Extcnsrvn Agent, 4-11, Jl til e Mt~g, ( uunly
Lxtcnsron Ofl rcc ,,t 992- 6696

-

1

Denzel Eugene 'Gene' Boggess, 56, of 22739 Bucktuwn Road , Letart
Fall;, dtcd ru.:sd.1y. May 4. 1999, at hrs home
i-I&lt;Jrn Apnl 14 1943 •n Lct.trt f- alls son ,of Dc"' e Oouglas Boggess or:
Lrtari Fnlls an-d the late Denzel L. IJngg~:-..~, he was a truck dnver and 1
IJ.rmer
li e ts olso surv tved by h" wife, Agnes Luc•llc Bn nkcr Boggess to whom
he "' ·" marn e ~ on Jan. H, 196H, rn Racr nc, a so n, Donald Boggess uf Letart
I ails; a srstcr, Lrnda Roberts of Pomeroy, and several aunt• and uncles
He was preccdeQ rn death by a brother Rnhcrt Boggess
Servrc ~' wtll be Fnday. II am. at the Lct.ort F.rlls Cemetery Chapef
Frr cnds may call fnday, 9-10:30 a m at Cremeens Funeral Home .
Rac1nc

Ann 0 u n c e nJ en ts :

L__

~

1999 AccuWeother Inc

Chance of thunderstorms,
showers forecast for are!'
By The Associated Press
A chnncc of showe"' and thundc• ,rorms rs expected to contrnuc through
the weekend"' Oh ro.
Temperatures wrll rr sc rnto 70s Lj,,, woll be mainly rn the 5Us 'I he Jl&lt;l"" J
srbrlrly of showers and thunderstorms wrll pcrsrst over the entorc ·tate today
A low prcs.sure system wrll &gt;luw l,l move a&lt;ross lhe Great Lakes, the 1
National Wcalher Scrvrce so d 1\:llliX'r.otures wrll be near to sli ghtly .tbo•c
normal th rough the weekend w1th n ch mce of severe storms
'
Weekend hrghs wrll be 65 to 70 111 the nor1h and 70 lo 75 rn the :,aulh I
Lows wrll bern Ihe 50s
,
\
The record !ugh temperature for toddy at the Columbus wc.Jihcr •.tallc&gt;ll ,,
92 set rn 1952 The rr:nml lnw "32 set rn 1979. Sunset We&lt;l ncscl.i) .It the I
Columbus wcalhcr stalron r&gt;at 8:29 p 111. Sunrrsc Thursday rs .11 6 20 a nl I
Weath~r forecast:
Tonrght Mostly cloudy wrth a do.~nce of showers and lhumlcrstunns
Lows mlhc lower 60s. Soulh wind 5 tu 10 mph. Chance ot mrn 40 percent
Thursday... Mostly clo udy. Showers and thunderstorms hkcly fro.m late
morn1ng on Hrghs around 80. Chance of rmn 70 percent
I

l

The Daily Sentinel
{USI'S U\ 960)
Comnmmt)' Ntwspaper Holdings, Inc.
Pubh5hed C\'ery aUeroooo, Monday through
Fuday, I l l Cuun St , Pumtni)', Oluo. by lhl!
Oluo Va ll ~y rubhshtng Co m p~ll)' Seccmrl el I ~S
postage p;nd ~~ Pom~roy, Ohrn
Membfr: 1 he A.WM:ta(ed Prus and th e OJun
New~pllp er A.s.'JOCrj;t iOn
J'onma.orter: Send addteSJ cum:L1 rou ~ to 1 be
011dy Se ntmd, 111 Coun St, Pt:&gt;meruy, Obro

4&lt;769

SlJ U~RIIYfiON RhfES

Survl\'rng rn add&lt;tron to her molh, , are her hushand. Ru,;oll W Buyce, a
son. Rrchard Allan CJ hercsa) G1bh&lt; of Co lumbus. two daughters, Velvet
Dawn (D.il c Jr) Jackson of Galliroils, and Beth (Rrr .m) Gl over of Porn t
Town meeting
Pka~ant, ,, stepson, Donal d w. ·w, ncly" (Beverly) Boyce of Columbus, a
A lown mectrng wtll be held rn Tuppers Plaoo ~ o.11 hurbday at 7 pIll.
stepd.1ughtcr, Alrce Ru th (Jun) Wa} of Waverly , 13 grandchi ldren and ; rx
Attorney Garry Hunter, who rcpres: nts rcsrden&lt;o m the v1tl.ogc nn th e
gt eat-grandcluldren, frve srstcrs, Phylhs (Brll) Stevens of Apple Gro'l. ,
sewe r drstrrct r&lt;suc woll .tltend Ihe m, clrng.
' W Va, Rosemary (Brll) Cook of Pomeroy. Con me Graham of Pornt Plea, .
ant , Beverly (Don ••ld "Woody") Royce of Colun\ bccs ond Sherry (Dale )
Right to Life to mefit·
Bryant •,r !1 c O,~k, I I" .. rml two hrvthers Ldvwd I "Sonr;y · (( ,tmlyn )
A Rrght lo l.rl e nrcctrng "''II be held .tt I he l'nmcrov Lrb rory, M ~&gt; mlay
Ch&lt;'cst bre w ol Ptndl.&gt;s Park, Fla , and Lm v Walter (Sharon) Chceschre,,
at 7 30 p.rn
of Roo Grande
Sale planned
Servrccs will be ll am. Fnday rn the Crow-Husscll Funeral Ho;;,e. Pornt
Ay.lfd sale sponsored by the S&lt;~ r&lt; •) i'u wn&lt;h&lt;p 1 ,die&lt; Auxtlt 1n .,.,, 11 he
•'leas,tnt wrth the Rev John Ha&lt;haway a n~ the Hov II W "Winn1e" Durst
held Saturday trom 9 am to ~ p 01 ot the t~rehwsc 111 llmrsonv~ll e 1 . ~ffr cra ; r ng ~urr,il wil~ he rn the Suncrcst Cemetery Fnends m.ty , all at th e
Donations .uc bc tng accepted food wrll be sold on the &lt;lay of sa le Con.uner.J, hc•rnc Irom 7-~ P m. Thursd,ty
tact Rhea Lanlz, 142-2R 19 or Lrnda Donohue, 742-3046

I Wi II iam Ray Dean

12 cars off track in derail men
BRYAN (AP) - One tra&lt;n
sl ruck another trarn backrng onto a
\ruck early t&lt; •da), derailtng up to 17
cars ,m d two loc ornoti\CS
No one was seriously iuJured in
the derailm ent ahout 12·15 a m., a
mrle outsrde thrs northwcsl Ohro
crt y. sard Jerry M.111on, assrstan t
crty frrc ch rcl
Be Rard an e.1stbound Conrarl
frcr ghl tra in hrt fl.ttbcd car, lh at
were llcrng swrt&lt;hed onlo the track
Conrarl
spokesma n
Ui m
MCGee han sa1d mnc cars from thl
eastbo und tram, travclrng from
Chr cago to ll arrrsburg, Pa , and
ctght cars from the westbound
trarn, headed fr(&gt;m Toledo tu
Elkh art , lnu , went off I he tr .tck
fh e lr ac k os c losed whrle the
clean up continu es
The frc 1ght trao n's tw crew
mcmh.:rs Wt:rt tu:ah.:d and rclea~cd

By Carrier or Motor Rou!r
Ont" \\~ ek . . , , • , ... .. $2,00
One Month .. ..... ... ..... • .SB 7U

One Y(ar •
•
. SlOJ 00
SINGLE COI'Y PIUCF.
Dtuly.. .... •.. , . .... ....... •••..• JS Cents
Srrhsc rrhers not rielinng to pay the canie r may
rcm •t rn advance due'-1to The Daily Seruinel ~
3 three. ~ ix ot 12 month has1s Credr! w11l bl'!
grven camcr each wee k
No subo;cdptron by rrlarl pn mttted rn ared
w.hel'l!! home camn service I" rw ailable

MA11UX

t•l
8:45, 8:85
K11100 Reel'eS. tMie-Alrt Moss [Sci F1)

11ubl1sher restrves the nJbt 1u adJUSt i ill~~ Jur

tnr. the 5ubllCI'rptron penod Subsct1ptran 111te
chauge.s mfly be lll\f'lementr d by c h A:Il J~IlS tho•
dt•mllOn ut l ht wOO C'rlplrou
MAll SUBSCR IPTION
lo ~u le i\1dg.~ (l)rmly

13 w"'' .. ,..
26 \\'eeks ,

, ..

S2 Weeh .. , ...

f... Sl7

30
SS3 82

,

ENTMPNINT

'"' !

7:00, 8:25

PUSHING TIN

~~

7:115, 8:~.5

Sean ConMiy, Ca!Mnrre Zeta..llll!s [Adill'iMvootll'!)
John Cusacll, !lilly Poll Thornton (Comedy)

IIUT-OF·TOWNERS

.. • ,$105-'6

Rates 011tshlr MeiJ ~ Counly
1~ w~ ch
S29 2.'i
26 Weeh
$56 68
52 Weeks
••• ... .$10972

t~"'

esj

DenzeiEugene'Gene'Boggess

The multo·posrtron · 470" postal ox.om wrll he g&lt; ven rn June, oft enn!i
applrcanls an opportunrty to be cons idered for cr ly letter earner, cle rk , fluo
sortmg mach1n e operator, ma1l handl er, m~1l processor and mark-up cit.: Ik
career pos1t10ns.
~
Anyone mtcrc~tcd tn 1akwg the postal exam must re~~~~tcr hy hll1 ng
out an exam applr c.rt nat speerftc locatoons. on specrfrc d.ty&gt; , dunng the
month of M.ty.
•
·
Locall y, applications lor JOh&lt; 111 the 417 ZIP Code Mea wil l he tak en
on M.1y 15 from 10 a.m until 3.30 p n1. at th e Athens Po&gt;t Oflrcc, local·
ed on West Strmson Avenue, The Galltpolis Post Office, located at 440
Second Avenue, will accept applrcatruns for Jobs rn the 456 ZIP Cudc
area, oncludrng Coallon , Jackson. Oak l!rll. Wellston, ll &lt;d~' e ll , Chc,h~re.
Ga llipohs, Kerr, Thurm.m, Patn ot. Vmton, Crown C'1 ty and Rro Gr,mdc
The exam was lust ~ rven rn I&lt;JY4

Gve.B..p.Ql!lm.ll

Patrol offers tips for
$8fe summer driving

at

LIFE (A)
720&amp; 9200AILY

7:15

Goltlie

a ho,plt,l.
The frcrght troon earned tcl l!v rs i on~. m,nl ,wd nther freight, loca l
authont1cs sauJ
The tr~lln also wa~ transportin g ;1
smnH dmount nf ch em1cals, hul 11
WdS not ci L:a r 1t MlY nf the m lfC11al
spilled. M.rn qn sarJ
He satd up to 8,000 g,tllo ns of

&lt;~ I

lllt's e l fuel irorn !he lm:ulll\ JtiVC '

Wrl l,.n n llay Dean, 74, Rutland, d1cd Tuesday, May 4, 1999 at hcs resrdencc

Be was born June 18, 1924 rn Rro Grande, son ol the late Wrllram Ran·
dolph and Mary J Thornton Dean. lie was rctrrcd from the Phrllrp Sporn
Pl,mt al New Haven, W Va. where he served as a un1t fore man
He w,ts a US. Army veteran of World War II, and a Purple He;rrt recrpr ·
c nl li e was a memner ol Amcm an 1 e~r n ~ Post 467 at Rutl an d. and the Cotu gcv rl k M.ISOnrc Lodge 54. AF &amp; 1\M
Survrvrng arc da~ghters , S.lUnd ra Kay T•llrs and Terresa Lynn Wood of
Rutlancl, ,, SISler, Holen Wrckllnc uf Jackso n, and fou r grandchr ldren and one
f rcat-gr~llldson

He v. as .1lso preceded 111 de1rth by hrs wife, Im ogene Sayre Dean; a brother, Jam es Dean, and a srster. Lucr lle McDcrmoll
M cGee han sn1d no hazar dous
Scrvrces wrll be 11 am Fnday on the Casto Funeral Home, Evans,
matcftals w ere mvolvcd
wva ,wrth the Rev Gerald H Sayre officiatrng Burral Wlll follow tn the
H~;; cou ld not Immed ia tely con ~ 13\nrne Memoroal Cemetery, Cottagevrlk, W Va, woth mrhtary ho nors by
firm dctarl ~ prov1dcd by local VFW Post 6669 of RavcnswoDlf F~r enJs may call at theOrrchf1eld 1-uneral
a uthont1rs J he 1nvcst1gatwn w,1s Home, flutla nd, from 5·9 p m today. and at the Casto Funeral Hom e from
contu'\ u1ng
5 9 p m J hursday
Bryan IS ahout 50 miles west of
Toledu.

sptl led

EMS logs 6 calls

Unrts of Ihe Mcr gs County Emer
gcnq Mcdlc.ll Sc rvi&lt;.:c rccord&lt;.:d S l\
calls lor assrst.u1ce Tuesday. Umts
resrxmdrng mrlurlc·d
.
( 'EN'l'U'\tlll~l 'Af( ll
3 a m , Beech Street Mtdclkr0rt,
Troy
Todd, Veterans Mcmorr .ol Hos1
pital ·
9 30 a,m , Butternu t A1 ~ nut ,
Pomeroy, Dcora Wrnmg, tre ated ,t
- the scene;
R 19 p.m , stale Route 24&amp;, Long
Bottom, Carl Nottingham, Hol&gt;u
Mcd&lt;cn l Center
R,\CJ NE
3 50 p.m , Blrrrd lloflow Road
Paul me Wolle, VMH;
5.08 p no., st.l le Route 124,
Bertha Dr chi, treated ot the scene,
5·40 p m , &gt;olunt cer fire depart ·
ment and squad lo Bashan Ro.1d,
brush fire, no rnJun es report ed,
Bashan VFD asSisted

Rena McDanie ~

Rcn,, McD ,rrll d , 86. nl Mrddlcport. J"~ Wednesday May 5. 1999, at lhc
Holzer MoLI"al Cen ter rn Gall&lt;poi!S
Anangcrncnts w1ll he announu:d lctl~.:r by Wh1 tc Funeral Home 10
Coolv ilk.

Sheppard suit on track
CLEVELAND (AP) - A CIVO
lawsu rt arrsr ng from the celebrated
Dr Sam Sh t.: rr 1rd murder case
rem,uns on tr,ll k for trml Oct 18.
artorncy•. (or bmh srdcs satd
Cuy.thug.t C oun tv Prosecu tor
Wll lr.tnl M.N&lt;n and the Sheppard
estate \ ~morney T~rry G1lbcn , met
pm ately I ucsday wrth Cuy.&lt;hoga
County Com mon Pkas Judge Ron

Sustcr (o drsc~ss trral arrangements
In a case that helped rnsprre TV 's
"The Fugottve," Sheppard was convocted of kr lhng hiS wofe. Marrlyn,
m I'154 and spent I0 years rn pnson
hdo rc bcmg acqu1tted at a rctna l.
Sheppard 's son. Sam Reese
Sheppard of Oakland. Calif, bas
ltlcU a wrongful 1mp1'1sonmcnt su it
agarnst th e state.

•

'

Hospital news

Correction Polley
Our nu11 U roncrrn in all dories 1, to be
accurntt. U ynu kno w of an crrdr In a
!ilory, call the newstnum at (740l !)'2·
2155. W-.: win ciiC.'c k ym.n l!lfun u,dhu

Holzer Mrrlknl Center
Dischurg&lt;&gt; r;:a} ~ - Marg.u ct
Eam ,H&lt;lf, Junrm H.dl, Bullre Hu»
(l'ublrsl&gt;&lt;'&lt;l wtth permiss ion)

and makt a oorTtCtionlfwurrunfed

Nows Departments
1 he mam number Is 9CJ2 -Z l5S lh p.-rtmt nt f~tf'n., lflns arc •

C.enernl Manng1·r.
New!\. . .. .. . ..

M

t·" !101
...... ,.,. ...,.!:'"· 11112
or ht 110(,

M11P.gs County's ub~ervance of the
National Day of Prayer
~ the Courlhouse steps in Pomeroy.

Other Services
Advertising ... .... . ...... , . . . Ext. U04
Circulation .
.
Ett. UOJ

Ctmtnrd Ad• . .. ... .. . .EHI. uoo

to American political conservatism: "Mr. Republican' ' (Robert Taft), "Mr Conservatrve" (Barry
Goldwater), "Mr. Presrdent" (Ronald Reagan),
and "Mr. Speaker" (Newt Gingrrch). II can be
argued that Taft doesn't really belong in that pan·
theon: He was actually the last acknowledged
conscrvalive spokesman in lhe Republrcan Party
before the modern conservative movement got
under way in the early 1950s, and indeed anumber of subsequently prominent conservatives
(including Goldwater) voted for Eisenhower over
Taft as the par~y·s nomrnec al the 1952 conven·
tion. But this is nitpicking.
Unlike my own 1984 memoir, "Tiic Conserv·
alive Revolution" ~a refully describes the issues
and policies championed by Taft up to and during
the Republicans ' brief congressional ascendancy
rn 1953-54. And since hos book, far from ending
wrth 1980, covers events right through 1996,
Edwards is able to include descriptions of consc:r·
vatrve policies during the Reagan and Bush
admiriistrations and even through the 104th Congress elected, thanks 10 Gingrich, in 1994.
He concludes wrlh a bracing chapter entitled,
''Can Conservatives Govern?" His answer:
" Of course they can •. The conservative revolulion is here to slay." That rsn't bias; it isn't evion
overoptimism. Thbse are lhe words of a man who
has studied the conservative movement deeply,
and knows its strengths -- and has recorded them
in this im pressive book.
Copyrlght1188 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Wtll..m A. Ruaher It 1 Dltllngulahed Fellow of tho
Cllrtmont lntlltutt lor the Study of Sltltamtnthlp
ond Politico! Phllooophy.

s ay, May 8, 1999
,11:30 a.m. I : 0 p.m.

£ur11peon lligh Pre11u_re

1anning Bed

'
Turbo
22000
Most Advanced Tanning

Rockers
11 1!11 f, &lt;tf ,\lf1Jun1,'t l1rt /u 1nl•lt'

"~ " "' QJ....

Star~ing

at

'

..... '4lti!iA ll..l"" '\;1''·

'

~\

'

:Nfotfier 's 'Day

Spectal

Ruy ,'J Session s At Regular Price
(;t•l Second 3 Sessions
112 Price

COUNTRY TANN
9 '9 Z· S756
,,

If *"

This is a call to all ~1eigs
Countians to unite together in
prayer in acknowledgment on
God. Plan to join us for 5minutes
or for one hour! Bring along vnn•I
laWil chair. Public prayers \\ill be
offered on behalf of national,
state, and local govermnent lead·
ers, and for churches,
and rommunities.

Store Houra
Mon· Sat

9:30 . 5:00

ANDERSON~s iCil
FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE
POMEROY

992·3671

IIJ

FOR INFORMATION CALL:

Pastor Les Hayman
Steve Beha

992-7410
698-7245

�•

•
•

'

Sports

W-ednesday, May 5, 1999

The D_.JLJ;.Ly Sent.•.. . . el

•

Meigs, Vinton Cou'nty claim team wins in EHS track meet

Page 4.

Wednesday, May 5, 1999'

...

Larkin hits tie-breaking homer, scores three runs

Participating schools in a recent 7th Rult, South Gallia 108'7M
110-mettr hurdles
track meet at Eastern High School
1st Meadows. Meies :IS.7
were Vinton County, Meigs, South 2nd Johnson. Mei&amp;s: 19.3
Gallia, Nelsonville York, Trimble, 3rd Hill, Vinton County : 19.4 '
41h Riley, Alex :20,4
Alexander; and Eastern _

·

Reds battle to beat Diamondbacks
6-4
•

(

By JOE KAY_
popped il up , TI1erc's no real con&gt;~S- pl ay"
CINCINNATI (AP) Jack Ieney yet."
''Til.l! ''""a momentum killer,"
The DiamotJdbacks have been Rce s~ said. " They h;1d it ~~ing
McKcul)·s 611{)th wm ' as a major,
league manager came c.oum·sy ol his consistent whil e losing their la 0t thl'tc, "
three games, th eir worst slump si nce
n1c1c was 111urc. Tony Womack
slump ing team captain,
Barry Larkin scored tlucc times they opened the season 0-4_They've got picked off first base' during
and hit a tiebret~king two-run homer consistently run themselves nut ..1 Ariwn., 's fou r-run rally in th~ third
Tuesday
night , leading
the ral lies.
inn ing, ,\nd)n the series opcnc1.
Cincinnati Reds to a 6-4 viqmy ovc1
Man Williams hit a thrcc-rnn Williams umkrcut a nil! ) by ~•!llmg
the Ari tuna Diamondbacks_
homer, his lith, and Luis Gonza lcl, hit by a g1uunllc1 ,,. he 1111 toward;
Tiw come-from-behind win gave ,exte nded the longest hilling streak in thir~'
McKeon his 60Uth wm one nigbl the majors thi s sea&lt;on to IR games.
'It wasn't the hallg'""" in" nut·
aller former Reds manager- Davey hut the Diamondbacks hurt them- shdl , htll 11 ccrtJII;Iy was part of it, "
Johnson got victury No. I ,(}()() with selves with pour base running ,
man,,gcr Buck Showalter said "We
Los Angeles
With the score lied at4 111 the liUI&lt; &gt;hould haw '""' se ven or eigln nn"
'' I didn 't think murl1 about it ullli l inning, Gonzalez drew a leadoff _ on the bhanJ "
I saw it on I he note sheet ,' ' s:ud walk from Jason Bere and Williams
Dt'nnys Reyes( 1-0) rdi cvcd Berc
McKeon , ce lebr,ating , the 50th followed -with a double to tl1e gap in aft er Wil liams' double anu didn 'l
annivcrs;uy ol hi s fi rst year in pro- left-celllcr_Gonzalez stopped at third alluw a l1i"l "vcr I 213 inni ng' Dann Y,
fessional hascball " I' ve been , and then broke lor home when the Grave; pitched the n1111 h fnr hi&gt;
blessed to have that many wins, I' ve Reds made a throw to second to try fourth ,,,,vc in :,i, chann· 1 .
managed over I ,200 games_ I' m just to get Wi ll fmns and the ball rolled a
McKeon, f&gt;H, has gone 600 (J()\
thankful for the opportunities,"
few feet awny from Pokey Reese
.IS u n~;111 agc1 Jl K:ni '&gt;IS City,
He alsu was thankfu l that Larkin
Aflcr a few steps, Gon7.alc7, rea l Oakland Sa11 Diq!o and Cinciuna!1
· showed signs of coming aroun&lt; ,
11cd he had no chance to sco re, He He's , 121- 129 "' 1wo ) cu1,, with the'
Larkin, hitting only ' I or, a! game slopped halfway and was lagged IJUI' Reds,
time, broke a 4-4 tie i11 the sixth
" The way (Reese) turned , I'
, Bii an J'ohn son's lwn -run donhk
innmg with hi sJifth homer off Omar though! the 'ba ll was a Jut fartlll'r put the Reds ahead in the second
Daal (2-3) He was reluctant to ca ll away," Gonzalez said "Then th e- in ning. hut i\rilona sen t eiglll hail ers
his first homer since April 24 a per- next thing I knew, I was i,n Ia-Ia land to th e plate fot lour run s in the thi"L
~nnal turnin g !]oint.
'' We were just all being aggacs · Glm7,.llc; jlaLi ;, run-scori nl! s in~lc

Boys' results

outs in the fourth tied it anJ highli ghted one of Daal\ biggest prob
lcms. ln hi s lasl iwo 1-.tou1s, DaJI ha.;
given up .\e~r·cn run s oo tw~ oul hi t'-:
Notes: Umpire c a., llucknor
tcplaccd Kerwin Danley for the la;t
two games of- the senes. Danley
heca mt• li~ht he aded during the
opener Monday ami was kept at a
hospitnl uvenught for tcs" llan iC'I
·'•" released Tuesday evening and
returned' to his home in Phoenix to
sec hiS lamily doctor lor lurthor
tests,--- Ariwna !'ell to 5-7 with ono
game le ft on a 13-g:,me \filL Tl-f
Dia1nundl&gt;acks arc 6- 12 on the road
this season, __ Uonzillez is 27-101-67
L403J dn ring'his &lt;trcak Hi •: 2-for-4

Eagles whip Miller
16-5;-Ravenswood .
beats Southern 13~1
Local high school
baseball
The Eastern baseball team halted
a nine-game skid Tuesday by pounding the Miller Falcons , 16-5 in the
last regular season game, Eastern 1s
, 6-14 overall and 3-12' in the league
Eastern has lost four games while
leading going into the last mning,
Miller is 3-14,
-Eastern took an early lead, then
rode the strong pitching of Josh Will
to victory, Will fanned I0, gave up
just, four h1ts, and walked non e,
wh1le gam ing s01ne reli ef fro m
Bradley Branno n hefore , comin g
,back to fin iSh out the game, Brannon
gave up three hits,
Eastern scored two in the first
' inning when Josh Broderick WO' hit
with a pitch and socred on a Jeremy
Coleman sin gle
Joe Dillon reached on an error
and scored on an RBI si ngle by
Jimmie Putman for the 2-0 lead,
Miler came right hck with one for a
, 2- 1 score, Eastern added a ru n on
four walks (Broderick, Enc Smith,
Wcs Crow, and an RBI walk from
Coleman) 111 the second , The EnQ ic&lt;
added three in tlie third on a Jm1~nic
Putman double, a Dustin Hu ffman
walk, and an infield Si ngle by Ben
Holter, Brodenck had a lung two-run
double to len fur a6-1 lead, Bradley
Brannon and R), G1bbs had a tworun s in gle and two-run double
respectively m the seven th inning in
which Eastern plated seven runs,
Eastern hillers were led hy
Jeremy Coleman and Jimm1e Putman
' with 3-3 night~. Joe D1llon 2-5, Ben
Holler 2-4, a double by RJ , Gibhs,
and si ngles by Broderick, Josh Will ,
and Enc Smith,
Miller hitters were Randy Nelson
2-4, Lanning a double, Spencer a single, D, Lanning a doulllc, Kell er a

si lfglc, and Humpln cy a ~ m g l e,
Eastern hosts' Miller in

Chevali er a Single.
fanning c i ~ht ~tnd ·wnl k1ng lnc whir
Easter~ hurler Steph anie Evans hillin g une,

kept the Falcons at odds lor much ol
the game,_as she cl ung to a no-hiller
for 5 21~ mmngs , TI1e !nne hit came
h~ Jackson in the bonom of the sixth
wnh two outs , Evans fa nned 10 and
'Walked JU St two,

High jump

ht Gordemer, Alex 5'4"
2nd CaldwelL Eas1ern 5'4"

Shol put
Ist Hawk . Ale:t 45'4"
2nd Odenthal, Nelsonvtllc 44'9"
\rd Griffin. Trimh le 42' 10"
4th ~ nu r. rhcndri th. Nebun}·;llt· 41 '4"
, ,h Ri ley, Alex 40' 11 "
(lth Ewing, Tnrnble 39'8 "
7.th lhgcr. Eastern 39'

J8X, __ WilllillliS extended h1s hit -

tin~ ,\treak lu st:vc n games 1 10 - lnr~

29L ___ Reese str.1ined hi s hip and left
the ,i.!ttlllc in the sixth inni ng ....
Lark1n has gone 5.804 carcc a :n:bat~
w11hout' a grand slam. the !on,I:!C~I
acti VL &lt;&gt;U r ak . Tht.. f'uh ;' ~ 1 111'~ (i~rwr
llit hi s fitst in 6,1:16 &lt;~1-llats 'lilcsday

I ~~

4th

__ _13rell Tomko, dcn10ted to Triple -/,
lJI.IIian apu li s last Thursday, made Iii ~
lu st start 1\Jr the lnclian• on Tu," dav

By TOM CANAVAN
EAST RUTHERFORD, N J, (AP)
- Is Jaromir Jagr emerging from
Mario Lemieux's shadow?
Cappin g a cou rageous playoff
pcrformam:.e in whil:h he served as
both the Pinsburgh Penguins ' inspi rational and on-icc leader. Jagr had a
hantl in three goals in leading them to
a 4-2 win over the New Jersey Devils
in Game 7 of their first- round playoff
series Tuesday ni ght
"People judge you by how you
play in the playoffs, not the regular
sea~o n " Jagr said, " If you can d9
something to help the team win and
become the leader that takes them to

ln!!iru:!lllJ!Is

Eastern is &gt;latcd for a make -up F,astern _______ ___ ______ l)l)()- 102-1111 J-4 i
wit/jl&lt;' ~mnhe rn either Th11rsday or Mi llet ,,.,.,., _, .., Ollll-OIXI-IIIhll-1-,
Friday and pl ay, in !he Di viSi on Ill
Jlatteries
sccti(&gt; nol linals at Belpre on Monday,
Evans (W) and Karr
Eaqcrn defeat ed Sout hern :1-IL
Jones (L) :md Lcckkone

En~tm

ll'
New York. ..
16
Tcromo ..... , .
. .15
1\mpll Btty , .. .......
. 14
llQ5tQn . .. . ., , .. . .... . . . 12
1\uhimore .
.. ... 8

l)ef1Q11

Kun sns Ci l)'
MlllllCS()ta

1'orever

518 East Main Street,

992-1161

Pomeroy, Ohio

Conference series against fourth seeded Toronto, starting on Friday.
Six th-seeded Boston begins play
against seventh-seeded Buffalo on
TI10rsday -in the other semifinal in
what is now a wide-open bracket
with the elimination u[ the top three
seeds, New Jersey, Ottawa and
Carolina, respectively_
Jagr has long been one of the
NHL's top scorers, l eadi~g the
league three of the last five years.

9
U

640
.536

14

IJ

500
480

17

.\20

IS
11
I)
II
II

7
II

710
' 141

14 481
I)
45R
15 m

'12
11 15
ll 14
ll 15
14

"

C lu ~ng(l

:q,

2~

J'h

4

EASTERN CONFERENCE

»:1.£&lt;1,

Ium

l ·Miami

-1 ':

"

6',
7',

D o~ t o n .

Wnshmg1on ...
N;ew

5JS
464

1

A62
444

2' ·

l

:n

16 673
17 ' 653
27 22 55 1
26 2) 5)1
.. 19 ~ 0 ..188
.18 31
)61
.. '.. ,, .15 ]4 ,106

,;-Orlando .
11-Philuddphi a
11 -New York
,, ,,
J er~)' ,

32

I

6

7

14
ll

18

Ct nll'lll Division
y-lndmna ...................3.\ 17 .660
11- AIIant:~ .... , ............30 19 .612
,.lt-Oetroh . .. .
. ...... 29 20 $9:2
x-Milwaukee . ,
, . , .28 21 571
Ch~1 lo11 ~ .. .......... ... .. ,.25 2.&amp;
510
CLEVELAND ~
22 27 44'9

Toronto

Clu t:~go

22 27

-·-

. I)

J6

B o~ l o n

+-

2':

1';{

7' ~

101!

449

IO' J

265

. 19'·

7 . U~

1Nav:mn I

Mldwtsl Dl"islon

(Rallfl I ll

. 7 ·0~

:!) ,, , Ral!irurorc (Gu1m:m

0

pm

Ct ly ( Wita ~r c.k (J I) :11 ·1:1rnpa !Jay (Rupt•
0·0) 7 05 Jl m
Oak l:md (Rogers 0·2) :11 Toronw lr::sco b&lt;~r 2..0)
7:05p.m.
.
·~
St•aulc (fasscro 0-~) 111 CLEVELAND Wmbu 2·
0). 7:05p.m
·
' Anaheun (Spnrh O. J) HI l'letroit {WI!'aVL"f J- 1)_
105 p,m.
New York (Pcuiuc 0· 1) at t.•I 11 111C~fl ln { ll .nv lon ~ I·
.! ), S:O'i p.m.

H1i an

Thursday's games

&lt;l

K .m~as C11y ( Pitt ~ ley
J .~) ,' I2 .J 5rm

1- IJ at Tnmp11 Hay CAn'OJU
·
Nl!'w York (Lone 4·0) (II Mmnescta tRadkl!' .\-2),
I 15 pm
Chu:ago (Haldwm 2-21 at 9 allm10n! {Ponson 121 l 05 p.m.
·
Texas (Sclc 3-2) nt Boslon (S:l.berhllgen 2-1 ), 7 :0~
p~m
"
Unkhmd aleredta 1-2) at l oroniO {Cnrpcmcr 3-1),
7'0.5 p.m.

- - - -·=-- ~
-:
~:

Seattle {Muytt 1-4)

t1t

CLEVELANI&gt; {Culnn l -

1). 7 05 p.m

MAYJ'AG

Anahetm (Fmley I 2) a1 IJe troh (Fimie 0-0), 7·05

pm

NL standings

ATLANTISTMWAS 'IE

E1s1em Division

.1!: L l&lt;l.

Iwn

• Swirl -Away '" Water Extraction System Draws
Residue Out of the Tub, Keeping Whites White .

RANGE
MBY111g Bakes It Best•

REFRIGERATOR
m-_::K~e~e:P..::;s:F:o:o~d~F.resh

• Even

• Consumer

Rated# I'

Baking,
Evon

' Freshlock
Cabinet
· Gallon -

Browning
1Baslid ll'l lwo
rtn:+' COQI\If! lo,tr tlr,r.
tor ltVBI" ~ 'n

Plus
.Door

MllYtag elt&lt;:tric

Stomgo

rilf1{j@S VII ltJDdjllQ
b r ~r)ds ,

, I! ,8
17 10
" I J JJ
,! 17
,,,6 21

t\t);1nta , ..

• Unique TurboRinse'" System Powers Residue
Out of Clothes for Out$tandlng Cleaning .

New York .
• Phi llldelphil) .
Mon rrcnl
F1crtda
I

I

,692
,630
,500
,) 20
l2l

Gil
1'·,
~
9'~

' I t il

Central DI'Yiston
'0 615
10 .. 000
Chicago .
.. ..... 13 · 11 , S42
Pittsburgh .. ..... .. . .... 12 I \ .480
Mi lw:tokct ................. 12 14 462

Ho u~1 o n ....... , ... .. ........ 1 16
Sl. LoU IS ..................... 1

s

CINCINNA11 , _ ,,, ,,,,, I I

14 440

Wntun Di"k1on
17 11
San Fr/\nciu o .
t5 12
Los Angclt·s
.
.. 14 14
Ari1.ona
10 IJ
to lorndu
'
.. 10 16
S11n Die11o

t

.

507
556
500
.43..'i
. 1~5

I'

J

••

•

Tuesd y's scur~s
Ch1C'ngo IJ. Cok&gt;rado 12
l'htlndelphm \, SAn Die~~:o 0
Montrc:~l 2, Los ,\nfeles I
CINCINNATI 6, Ar lOrt:l 4

Mllwnukee 11, f1ondu I
Hou5Hlll 6. New York I
Sn n fr:mdscu 7. Pm sh1n gh .&amp;
S1. L•'uis, 9. All.111tu I

Today's games

FRENCH CITY·
446·7795
Easte'rn Ave.
Across from McDorwM's

..
Gallipolis

Slln D1tgiJ (Spcnct:1{kl) ot l'hillll.lcl l'lliu iByrd 2·
1\. IO"i p m
M1lwn11ket' {Kmll· ll al FIOJidtl (Meallows ~ · 21.
J·O."ip.m.
S! LOUI$ (Rultenflcld ·l-U) m All rmm (Smoh, .!OJ. 1. 10 p m
Colormlo (f\ amcto 1-.11 at Chkngc (Mulhollnnd
' 2- 0) 2 20 p.m
Lo.~ 1\ngele~ (Pere1, 1-1) 111 M1•nn enl (yu,q uc-t Il l. 7:0.'i p.m.
Snn F~;m cin· v (1.: ~ 1(!~ 2·2) m P11Uh•ngh (Schourck
1-2 ) 7 05pm
An1o1o11 (R Joh11 son 2· 1J n1 ('INCINNI\TI IA\'el')'
1-l). 7 0~ J.l Ill
Ho11~1n11 ([h:r~ml1ll 1·1I &lt;ll New Ymk U un t: .~ 1·01
7 \~Jllll

Ttlllll
x.·U!ah ..
:\·Still Aruomn . ,

- »: , L m

,740

.... J7

IJ

. , . J6

I I .135

. ... . . .... 30 19
' ,_, ll 24
.... 19 ;\I

Dallas... .. . Denver . , , ...

Vancouver .

NBA standhtgs

8

Kansa ~

Opening

The past two years , Jagr has heen
their leader, and he really emerged as
one in this senes , i\flcr mi ssmg four
, games with a painfu l groin injury, he'
revived the Pen guihs in Game (1 with
a game-tyi ng, third-perind goal and
then the game-winner 10 overtime,
"He is so huge." Pen gu ms cqach
Kevin Constantine said , :' We were
two minutes -from eh mination ,
Without him, we are elimin ated,''
Thm als? miglll have resulted in

X·Minnesota

Gil

l&gt;lvlslon

"

!Jill .

Door

7 () .

7th COe n. Trimhle 71' 10"
100-met.:r hurdl es
lsi Foli J[!mcs Alcx.andcr l(l {)(;
2nd Va nsickle. Ea ~ tcm 17 (,1(
~nl M l.'r~cr. ~ l c tg&lt;; 19 (,9

advance 1he eighth-seeded Pen guins tea ms were led hy Lemi eux. who mmatc the fran chise unless the
to
a
second-rou nd
Eastern retired in 1997.
tcr IS Ieso lvcd MlOn,

Tonight 's gamt.-s

Arche r ,l-4, Luk e Sal mons 4-4-, and
LJ:m Curry 3-3_ The only mhcr hi t
was a hun t single hy Chris Claudio,
So uthern has a douhl c- hcadcr
make-up w1th Federal some time this

Candles} Spring Slates} 'Roseville
rpottery} Career 'Bird J[ouses}
Or Jvfaf&lt;e Your Own Sift 13asfi.ets

~~

Chicut!O

Tc x.a.' !Hclhng 2&lt;\) a1

Acooss

Sower;, Yrm on ( 'oun" 77 6

6th Sc hnll. Alexa nd er

Jrd

Md..&gt;on;~ld .

/'lelsonv11le 30 5

4th Mullens. Vm1on Ccrunly .30 6
5th Harold . Vmton County 30 7

6th Palmer. Vm10n County 32 2
7th H-aner. South Ga llm ·32 7
3,200·Jl1t!'lt:r run
1st B ordcn ~.:k . Eastern l4 15

2nd Smnh, Alexander 14.26
J rd Simms. Vinton County 14 49
Hayes, Meigs 14 58
5th llanon. Vmton Coum y 16;06
4x100-meter rtlay
l\1 E~tem 56~
'
2nd Vtnton County 56 8

4th

\rd T run bit 'i9 7
Jth Ale)(andc r J 04 t
4xl00-meltr relay
lSI Vmton County 2·01 'i
2nd Alnander 2·OI 6
3rd 1 rnnblc 2 06 l
4th Metgs ~ tO 6
51hf..aqern 2.J29 ·
r1th 'ioulh Li:~t h a 2 14 S
4x800-metcr

hi Ylll!(ln C'uUnl) 12 \4

rthH'

.

211d f&gt;lt.' lgs t 141) 2
J rd Alt:\(lndcl 1-l 19 7
·h400·mt&gt;tcr rday

!st. Y111t on Co unt y~ 47
' 2nd Alcxandc1 4 Ci!i 2
11([ ~kt~ 'i 'i 12 7
~th ~u u th t,a\II:J "22
i th 1 ru nbk 6 12M

·E;1slcrn \ will hos t il &lt;i 'ncxl mccl
Sat•nday.

the Cup, that's how people are g01ng Although he was a mcmhcr of the the Pengums' cxun ctll&gt;n,., l ~eca u se the with ,5:30 w play. -Ge111ntn Titu\ and scor in g chances. '• ! don't think we
to JUdge you."
·
Penguins ' Stanley Cup winner"- tn frnnclmoc is currcmly in hankrup1cy Jan Hrdin a also scored in Gam e 7
had one hrcakaway m seven g-ames
Jagr·'s
performance
helped 1991 and ' 92, those ~nd subsequen t court The NHL has lhrea tcncd to tcr"He (Jagr) draws the allen! ion of We, rc u;ually a team that has a lot 0f

WESTERN CONFERENCE

• Easy

~ lh

4x4()(,.mclcr relay

Basketball
l&lt;l.

L

Centr:al Division

i. ,.' LEVELJ\NO

U.1klund
'Iennie ..

Stop

WJt hcu1. " ] c'l;~ndt' l 95 7'

2ntl Bu1, Ale"andcr 8J ' f1~
3rd D1lhon. Ale xande r ~ t t t ·
4th 81 ;u\non, E&lt;~"le 1n RI '7"

1st Meigs 3 5J
2nd Vm1on Cou my 3 . ~5
~rd Alexander 4: 13
4th Eastern 4 28
~ th South Gall ta 4 ~4

Atlantic DivtsiOil

Wul~rn

PreWashing

l ~t

I st Thomas. Me1gs .28 6

•

Otvision

lfom

lu11s

• Consumer

Disc u ~·

)rd Alexander :49 .6
4th Vmron Cou111 y :50 7
5th South Gaflta .CiO 7
6th Eastem :51.0

2), 8 10 p,m.

AL stimding.&lt;~

Wcdfc fired a thr~ c · hiHL~r, walked
four, ,UJJ ra nncd IOU!. 1\~L\'(' Il S WOOd
made .J U:-&gt;t three en urs .
.So uth ern !Jitt ers werl' C umi ngs ,
.Iamie B a~~ ~ a r.; ingk , und HoS{l ;1
dnuh lc

Gifts for Mother's Day

4x100-mclt'r relay

P1Usburah CR1tctne 1-]) at St. Louis (Osborne 1-

baseball IS refusmg to allow the net
work to swi tch three Sunda y ni gh1
games JR September to ESPN2 and
run NA" games ,on the b1ggcr-auu1
cncc ES PN,
,
Paul Beeston, the ch1el a1dc to
commiss ioner Bud Selig, sent ESPN
a letter April 21 saying the sport was
termin ating Its $88 million-a-- ye ar
deal with the network after th iS season

DRYER

Meigs I0:I0,6 •

x·Houston ....

l)etrol! J. Anaheim I
011klnnd JJ Toronto.!
Kall SH~ City 1 T!!lliJlH ll .1y '
Anhimo1e 9. Chi cugo ~ t iHI
Mumcwla 8 Nl!'w Yo,k S

Inning !!!~ Ravcn&gt;wood ,
243-11" 13- 11 - 1
,Southern _____________________ ()() 1-00= 1-3-7
Batteries
WP-Wolfe (W) and C111TV
LP -Hii!I L), Boso and C~ mi~gs

Shnt (1111

1st Sowers, VmtonCu unl) 31'ii
2nd Brannon. Easte rn 28' 11
3rd Wstha m. Alexandr..:r 27'5 "
4th Dalton. Ncl ~onvtlk 27' 'i
51h Ca udtll. Vinton Counl\ 27'
6th But A!eunde r 26'
·
7th Davi!', Meigs 259"

lsi Meigs :47.7
2nd Nelsovtlle ·49 2

Thursday '• game ,

Thesday '" st•ores

week and a partial make-up wi th
Ne xt Tucsd&lt;~v. Southcn1
hq~ t s Wn.terford in thr.: Di vi.\ lllll l V
scct 1o naltournorncnt in RactrH.: .

71h Marcinko. £:.'\Stern 12'2

41h Ale xander lU;21 .7

2nd Montgonlt:ry. Vmlon Coun1y JO

7th Haley, South Ga!!ia '20,84

400·mder d~t!tlt
Ist Thotnas. Mcrgs 1·63
2nd DDcen , Vimon Count y I.OK 7
hd Reffcn Vinton Cuunf} I 10 '
4tlt F1lcr. 1\lexamk1 I 12 I
"ilh Jones Vmton Counl) I 11 'i
6th Duken , Trimble . I: t 1 'i
·~
71lt S!e1Ck. 1\lcxnndcr t I) 2
,
JUO lm r dh~
' l ~ t Fulic Jame .,,,\le.~.uHI Ct .'\I 'i
2ud I r• nt , Trimbk ·'i1 1
1ul M t'(LCI , Vmwn l" uuili Y 'i7 J
4th l11pph:n , Ne!su nvtllc York 'i~ S
5th Ntch t) l ~. Eastern 'i9
(dh J ou~s. SoU1h Gall t.l 'i4 'i
7th Snmld~·n 1\kt~ \ (.1)'
lfOO·nu·tcr run
r (\ U;lkcr E:tSICf!l :; (,() 0
2nd norderh. k E ilS{Crn 2. '8 0
1td McCon~.;klc Vtntut1Count} 'UI&lt;.J
Jth la~ h Vuunn Ct•untv I IN 7
. 'irh Enci ner, M t! l~ ~ .1 I~ l

6th NidiUis, Eastern 11'::!"

2nd Vinton Coun.ty I 0 :07 . I R

3rd

E ~ k y.

Baseball

home run tu Adam
Cum mgs , hi s eighth of th e year.

a plane for Havana ,
Through an intcrp1 etcr, ihe lieutenan t on duty "undcrsioud he was
l'equcsting asy lum and 1111mcdiately
not1r,cd INS offi c~a l s,'"sa ld police
spokesman
Rnhc11
Wei nhold ,
Hcrre r&lt;~ is now in the custody of the
Imm igration and Naturalizati on
Service.
Rep, Bob Menend ez, D-NJ , a
foe of Fidel Castro's regime, sa1d the
man's full name is Rigobcrto Herrcrn
Betancourt,

3n..J Filer, Ale x. 12:12
41h Taylor, E\lstem 12:2 1
S1h Johnson, Mefg~ 12:22
Nh McColl. Meigs 12·29
7th Ousle y. Vinton County 12.56
4x8QO .metn relay
• lsi Eastem 9:5:l 9

IOO·meter dash
1st Harold, Vin ton County 13 7
2nd Baker. Easte rn 13 9
] rd McDonald . Nelsonv•lk York 13 9
4th Warga. Alexander . J4 0
5th Mulhns. \ m!on County 14 '1
tith Hoesack, Alex:;mder 14 4
71ttJoncs. Sou1h Ga lha 14 9
1,6QO·meter run
lSI Baker, Eastern : 6·26 9
2nd BroOOrick. Eas tern 6 2!1 4
Jrd Simms, Vtnton Co unty . 6 44 2
4t h McConcklc. ~tnl rm C'ullnly fi "I R
'i1h Lash, Vrntoll Cuu nty 6 St\ 4
6th Banen, Vinwn Coum) (,-'iQ
7th 1\lcCIIc:::m. Tnmhlc 7 U1

7th Ex hoe Tnmiblt 3 46 2
200-meter dash

111 ~ 11 -

the b('".1 drfcns1vc p\11) \.'n on the oJd- lhrlll rushes, and we didn 't ~: rea t e
team,'' Con".t:mtm c smd . " It anythmg lhe whole series.'!

l) th cl

Desp11c being constantly hi!, Jagr
was just as gooJ'in Ga me 7 "' se ndmg the Devi ls to thw third 'traighl
early playoff eXIL
Jagr also had a lot of l1elp from
Alexei Kovalev and Martin S1raka
this series ,
Kovalev had fo ur gu:ils, 10cluding
one late in the second penod that put
PiHsburgh ahead fpr gomL Straka set
up the first two goals and sc ored on
the rebound of Jagr 's breakaway shot

makes more rn&lt; 'lll for a Kmalcv or
guys on diffcrci11 li nes "
The Pengum' also played very
smart against New Jersey, a team that
beat them lour vf f1vc games 111 the
reg ulhr •cason They used a two-man
forechec k all series, bottlin g the
Devils 10 thCir own end
"They u1dn't make any mi stakes,", said Dc.VJ !s goa li e Martin
Brodeur,, who faced JUSt 13 shots in
Game 7, although m,ost were good

Scoreboard

run . For the second stra1ght season ,

~==-.-\ Aate!l81 •

.Jll{ways ·&amp;

lional

Baseball
NEW YORK (AP) - ESPN fil cJ
sui t against major league baseball in
federal court to try to pr event tcrmi
nation of the network's regular-season contract. which has three years to

Herrera defects to U.S. after Cubans'
12-6 win over Orioles in exhibition game
By MARY PEMBERTON
BALTIMORE (AP) -A Cuhan
pitching coach walked into poli ce
headquarters .after wanderin g th e.
streets of Baltimore ,for e1ght hours
and sa1d he wanted to remam 111 the
Unit~d States.
.
Rtgoberto Herrera requested asylum around 10 a.rn, Tuesday, some
10 hours after the Cubans beat {he
Orioles 12-6. He arrived at a down'
town Baltimore police statiQn hours
after his
hastily boarded

1st W1dener. Alex 10:44

61h Man1foeld, Easltrn 3:26 0

Jagr-helps .Penguins eli.m inate Devils 4-2,.win series 4-3

and allowed eight hit s and rhr~ c ru n~,

t\naheun .

Belpre

3,200-n•eter run

4th Chimchest. Trilnble 20
5th Sno&gt;.A den , Me1gs 20 47
61h Pill mer, Vinton Coun ty 20 67

First-round·play ends

thu t.l 1nning

lutlr..·1~ wen.:

.

2nd Boyles, .Eastern I0.49

~ th Gi lders, Tnmble .52 .7
6th Crow, Ale~~: 54 0 .J
7th Claar, Vin10n County :5S 3
" 800-mder nm

Tnmble I IQ'2"

Kauffman, Tnmble :25 .9

·

41 h Riley. Alex :49,1

5th ll:.nvk . Alc.ll. I 18'
flth (jrinun. Meigs 11 5'8"

lwu stnk couts , two walks , and the
Tornndoc s de fense harl "L'vc n CITO r s.
-' Rave nswood s RK:k Wull c was
the wmnc1. He gave up one run . a

R,t\' C.'II"i\HliJtl

Au rrkl!~.

7~h

'

3n.l Si.ll., Trimble 4'6~
41h Karr. Eastern 4'4"
5th Hosac k., Ale.ll. 4'2"
5th Hayes Vinton Count y 4'2'"
Long jump
I st Vansickle, Eastern 14'9 5"
2nd 1-losack, Alexupder. I4'2''
l1d Haye,, Vinton County 11'9"
41h Jones. Trimble 13'1J"
5th Haner. South Gatha I 1'2'

6th Savage, Vinton Counly :2S.5

Alex 1·02.0
300-metcr hurdl&lt;'!i
1st Johnson. Meigs .45 8
2nd Meadows, Me1gs 46 2
J rd Hill. Vinton County, 4R.O

Discus
Rtlcy, Alex 138'7'

High jump
lst Vansickle. Eas te rn 4'10"
2nd Lent, Tnmble 4'8'.

51h Loone-y, Alex :255

3rd Bickle, South Gatlia
5
4th Rodiger. Alex :I 2 6
5th Chaney, Alex : l2,7
6th Smart, Vinton County : 12.9

7th

•

3rd Wolf, ~elson1• ille :lB

61h Boyles, Eastern I :0! 8

2nd Ranlt=~. Tnrnblc 1:\~ ' 7"
3rd Roush. Meigs 1 2~ 6"

an CITOr, Dav1s knocked home a ruu

the on a 4-3 ground out , and Milhoan
had an RBI smgle_ Eastern had onl y
Thursday nt Eostcm
four hits, but made good use oft hem;
Inning tota ls
Milhoan was 2-3 wit two RBI 's,
Eastern---- -------- 213-20 1-7= 16-14-1
Miller .. ___
__ 100-000-4=5-7-1 Mystics pick
Batteries
.Holdsclaw first
Will (W), Brannon, Wi ll and
in WNBA draft
Brodenck
La nning (L), NeJ,on, Keller and
NEW YORK (AP)- Chamiq uc
Humphrey ,
Hold
sclaw. a four-time all-American
·-*who led Tennessee to three consecuRavenswood 13, Sou thern I
A Racine, Rave nswood Red ti ve national titles, was the No , 'I
Dev ils blasted - the Sout l1crn p1 ck by the Washington Mystics in·
T01 nadoes 13- 1 Tuesday in a non- th e WNBA draft Hold sclaw was the
l cagu~ hascbnll CDnt ec;1 So11t hcrn onl y coll ege pl ayer draticd in the
frosh Brice Hrll su!Ie,cd \ he loss lir,&lt;t round.
desp ite a good effort .
He was relieved by J,B , Boso,
The co1nbi ned for 13 1uns, II hits ,

16'Q . '\~

115, A/e:tander 101 5, Trimtlle 44 .
Me•gs 36, Nel~ n vdl e 14. SoUi h Ga ll ia 12

4th Blazer, Meigs :25 3

7rh Fdcr, Alex 5:32.7
400-meter d m h
1st Rodn~uez, Meigs :54.3 ,
2nd Arnold, Nelsonville 56.8
3rd Homen, Meigs :57.5
4th Sa\lage. Vmton Cou nty :57 8
S1h Kauffmnn, Trimhle 1·00.7

6th Hooten , Me1gs 17'

E11~1em

lith Proffin. Eastern 2:22. t
7t h Love, Vinton County 2·'11 9
200-metrr d11sh
Ist Haggerty, Meigs :24.5
2nd Amold, Nelsonville :24 7

5th Crow, Alex 20.9
61h Ct3.1l, Vmton County :21 J
7th Karcey, Alex :24 8
100-m,ter da.c;h
I st Haggeny, Meigs :I t .7
2nd Roush , Meigs 12 0

5th Wilhere!l, Meigs 5, 17,5
61h Eldridge. Vinlon Counly 5:21 ,6

4th Caldwell, Eastem 17'5 5"
5th Loone)'. Alex. I T3 ~

Team scores : Vinton Co unt y 238 .5.

51h Arman,Alex 2:2 L6

lsi Reynolds Vmton County 4 ·H I.J

1rd Rodngut7, Me1gs ·l 7'9"

IWI' I~)rr natKC rais.cd hi s avcntgc to

41h Eldridge, Vtnton County 2·21 3

2nd Boyles, Eastern 4:56.6
'rd Widener. Alex 4:S9 6
4th Stanley. Meigs 5:00

ht Johnson, Meigs 19' 10"
2nd {'offrnan. Trimble 18'7"

7th BJCklt&gt;. Sotllh Gallia

3rd Wllherell. Meigs 2:IlJ

1.600-meter run

Long jump

:n

Girls' team results

ht Stanley. Meigs 2:10.0
2nd Reynolds, Vinton County 2 .12 2

7th Keucrhcndnck, Nelson viii.:: : I::\ I

1rd Hnll. V iuton Count y 5'2"
dt h Looney, Ale::&lt; 5'2"
,

ESP.N f"l
I , , "t
I eS aWSUI
against MLB

Diviswn IV sectio nal tournament

Alelliander 103,

Yilllon COunty 70, Eas(em 53, Tnmble 35.
Nelson'llille York 35, Soulh Gullia II

Eastern softball.club shuts out Miller ~-0

the1r r~~~ rd to 12 ~8 With a J-0 \.\o lll
over _l n:Valley C~nfere ncc foe
M11lc1 luesday mght dunng a
Hockmg 0JVSJun make-up_ Eas tern
IS now 9-6 m the league: ,
Coach Pam Dou lhl \1 s Eagks
took a 1-0 !"ad m the fourth on a
Becky DavJS smg le and RBI double
by Suzy Milhoan , All was quiet untir
the sixth when Stephanie Evans led
uff with a walk, Chasatie reached on

1 ~3.

Ttam scores: Meigs

J could ~ rtv thi.lt. It 's n sivc. We took 'ourselve:-; from sc..:coud ;111d Willlm m. hit hi" founh t-Kml~~ r.. in ove r 6 2/_1 111nlngs a~'i in·~
'struggl e," Larki n s;uct' " I had the and th1 rd with no out ,to second base seven games fo r a 4-2 !cad
Lmtisv1 lk
Rcc11c:. lwo-run s1ngk w1th tv., 0
FORCED OUT - Cincinnati shortstop Barry Larkin throws to first same pitch in my last at ~ bat and and on.c ·out. It ended up hemg tt hi g
base after forcing out the Arizona Diamondbacks' Kelly Stinnett at
second base .in t.he, sec'?nd inning of Tuesday night's National
League game m Ctnctnnatt, where the Reds won 6·4. Larkin scored
three runs and hit a two-run homer to push the Reds to the victory.
The Eastern Lady E~g lcs bo0stcd Dav1s had a s in g le and Kriste n
/\lcdfi J ntlC''i .;:ufTcrC"d the Joe;;:-.. Monday m tht; llrsl round of the ~cc
(AP)
.
.
.
·
'' I Wish

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.,

..... 14 15
......... 8

41

Pactnc Dl\'lslon
y-Pon!and ...
. ·-.. .~5 14
11.-L.A. lake1s ·..
. .. 30 \9
11.-Sacramemo
26 2~
11.-Phoem,.
. 26 23
Sc~u l e . ..
24 25
Golden S1nte .
21 28
L A Clippl.'rs
..
9 40
-.-Clinched pl t1yoff be1th
y-clinched di VISIOn tlllc
1. -ch nch!C'd Lot1fe rC'rtce IItie

,612
!iiO
JI!O

,l!6

Seanle m LA. Clippers, !OJO p m.
V~ncoo ver at Sut:ramemo. 10::\0 p m.
Ponlnnd at LA Lakers, 10&lt;
10 p m

Wasdnl from Pawtucket c f the lmernmion!ll Leagul!'
lkstgnaJrtl RHP1im Hari kkala. for ~~~~ign rneot Scn1
C &amp;ctt i-bu ebcr~ 10 l'awtuckt· t on 01 reiMhilllutwn

San Aotonio 01 Gn lden State, IO.JO p ni

:1~~ 111.nnw:111

,1§3

.7.14
612
5JI

53 1

Hockey
.5
9
9

490

II

429
184

14'
2f'1

Tuesday's scores
Mmmi ~J AllantCl 79
Chnrl otle 11 7. Philadelphia 11 0-0T
lndi41n~ 100, CLEVELANO 78
Milwaukee 99. ·roronto 86

Houston 100. Minnesota 8.\
Uttlh 99. L A. Chppc1s R2

Snn Antonio 87. Ponland BI
Scnnle 110. D1illas 100 ·

NHL playoffs
'J'uesday"s firS!·round linall's
Pmsburgh 4 Nelv Jc-1Se') 2. Putsburgh

w itt ~

~e d es

4· I
St Luui s I Phnem.\ 0-0 :r. St

t nui ~

wms ~ l' n c~

St&lt;cond· round old ion
,

Tonight's regular-seas•m finales
CLEV[L,,ND m'IOrontu 7 p m
Uelrmt 1\1 Philadclplun. 7 p.m
Charlouc at Boston. 7 p "I·

Milwauka: 111 New Jmcy. 7 JO pIll
\\lruhmgtonnr ,\tl :~ ma 7:30p.m.
Mulllli :11New York. 8 p.m
Ort~ndo ~t Clw:ngo , M.\0 p.m
Houston ::11 Denver, 91!.111
~1nmesma :11 PlmlliJ&lt; . 10 Jl m

Transactions
ll :tsehall
Am~rican

Leagut

BI\I .'J"IM(li{E ORIOI FS Rt:llllkll IB C.ah w
P itkt' llll ~

PICKENS
HARDWARE

'DETROIT TIGERS: Recalled RHP Nelson Cruz
f1um Totl!'du of lmermuiOil.ll Lcasue Optioned INF
Lu1~ Gau:tn tu Tokdn
'tORONTO BLUE JAY S Ploccd OF Gerommo
lk rrnn on the 15-d.. y d1 ~ahled ltsl n•lrn.tcltvc to May
2 ft ec~ ll ~ d o r Antl10n~ S.11iders from Syrn c u ~ .of
rh..: l!ttt.:rnntwnal Leagu e..
National Ltague
C. OLORADU HOCKIE.o.; OjiiiOncd IWI' Jarrw.: y
Wt1gh110 &lt;.' p lor~d&lt;l Sp n n~s of the PCL
i.llS t\ Nli ELI·S IJUIJI..oERS r\c!llntcd RHI'
''\ntn mro Osuna from the 15·dny dtsn hled h ~ t
or n(lllC'(I LHP Jrff 1\IJ!lenkn 111 A l l'o u qu ~ tqm~ 111 rl1e
P(L

l'hur~ay

liulfalo «I Uosto n. 7.30 p.m.
St Loui S at Dallas, S p m.
Frida!
Piusburgh a1Toronlo. 7 p.m
Uct1oit at Cvlut.tdo. 7·JO p rn
Saturday
Pmsburgh 31 Toromo. 7 p.m
St Wut~ a1 Dallas, 7 .JtJ p.m.

While th is &lt;cries will best be
remembered fnr Jagr's return , it 's
also going to go down as another
playoff e mbarr~ss ment for the
Devils. now 2-5 in Game 7s,

ll:1sketh all
N:~lwnal 8askt lh &gt;~ ll A~".n: iatio11
. I'IIOENI X '\UNS '&gt;IJUit'i-1 Ci R.m dy ll \108~ 1 nn
1\e k a~rtl {i

,\h111

'\im~

DEFI·RUST
•Protects metal, wood
and masonry surfaces
•Gloss enamel finish
•Easy to apply

· Fnutball
National I'Of;lhldl Lt :lgllt'
C'INCINN t\Tr flENG ,\ LS Rc ~ ~ gnt•o.!
lllad. man tn 11 one 'year contrrlJ I

l)(i

Ken

Hork ey
.
N IUit •nalll i~~: kr} l .t':J KU l' '
Nlll ~tncd l'h1ladelphr.J ll yt: , ~ l h.mtmll1 I d
S111Jc1 ~5 0.{()0 aml w;IC'h Rn~t"l Nl·1lsnn S1 ~·ooo 1u1
L! lll l l\ lll of NHI nffit'111' .unl &lt;11 1• &lt;•·•1111 11. :tlh'r 1
~·lllll' un f'ol 1} J
'
St\N JOS r SII ,\ J.tK &lt;: S,•nt I) \n,h S1111t1n In

h tllll Rocht' q c, of thl' ln1 f' ln nliu n:d
l\ ,·u1u1~ ~
l ca ~ uc'
.
!mo:;TON I~F H SO'\ Rt·rr~ lh:d Rill' l•dm .

,,f tlw XII I

PICKENS
HARDWARE
103 South 2nd, Mason, W.VA.

Phone: ·773·5583

I

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

.&lt;By
The
Bend
·-· · . ...

, ;.

The Daily Sentinel
Page7
Wednesday, May 5, 1999

'

told my girl friend had been advised
to have the crystal repacked , but

MEIGS SCHOLARS HONORED - Meigs High
School students honored for excellence at the
Academic Excellence banquet were left to right,
seated, Derrick Bolin, Christopher Dodson;

Dear·Ann Landers: I am ll{riting about "Content in Calif.," who
was left out of her alcoholic moth ·
er's will. I was impressed she was
able to feel so good about herself
when her parents were such negative influences in her life. I know
what a rough road it is when one's
·
parents are like that.
My . parent s had two sons. I
always felt they favored l)lY broth·
cd was told by my godmother that
my patents disliked me because my
mother almost died when I was
born . As lar back as I can remem'ber, I was the prime target when
anything went wrong in their lives.
When I was 30, I met a wonderful· nun who gave me a positive out·
look that reshaped my life . She
said , "Love your parents for the life
they gave you, nnd let go of the
pain they caused."
.
Just as recovering alcoholics
must le'!rn to "let)lo and let God,"
children must also learn those
skills. With the excess baggage jet:
tisoncd, I was able to put my life
together And learning to let go also
kept me from picking up extra bag·
gage along the road I now traveL
Pass it on, Ann. -BILL IN N.H.

Ca~rie Lightfoot, Adam Shank, and Stephanie

Wigal; and standing, Lacy Banks; Trlcla Davis,
Jessica Johnson, Tamra O'Dell, Rebekah
Smith, and Bridget Vaughan,

scl~ol,arshiD at Tuesday nlght'a Malga County Hunter; and
Ashton Brown, Jonathan
Academic Excellence Banquet ware these Evans, Branna Sisson, Jesse Little, and Kara
Southern atudants: lafl to right; Hated; Mlran· · King.
.
.
·
.
:

.

KAREN'S GREENHOUSES ·
8
COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER .

In honor of Mother~ Day, thio ...,ekend .Oe are ,Pving a FREE plant to aU rnothero/
Special of the weak:.Wide selection of Clematis only $7.99 each.
Beautiful 1 Fern baskets only $9.99
12" Fem Baskets only $19.99

o·

Color howls, plutm, poreh hx••· herhl porth •oxu-giwe. MOM so111e color far Mother's Day

New shipment of shrubs &amp; perennials

EASTERN
DENTS HONORED- Present- . Baum, Cody Dill and Carrie Crow;
. ad trophies for academic excellence at last Carrie Wiggins, Jull Bailey, Joshua
night's banquet held at Meigs High School were Stephanie Evans, John Proffitt, and Jessica
left to right, seated E~ln Weber, Tyler Lee, Derek Marcum.

Attacking electricity supply.is part
of NATO psychological warfare

I

By'ROBERT BURNS
.
· meet NATO's demands for a settleAP Military Writer
mcnt. "
By _, Most traffic lights in_,ijeigr!lde
'
WASHINGTON (AP) temporarily cutting off electricity to were still out Tuesday, and many
millions of Serb civilians, · NATO residents ·Spe nt a seco nd night in
hopes to increase the psychological darkness.
strain on a civilian · population that
Whether the inconvenience of
after 42 days of bombardment has losing electrical powe r temporarily
remained mostly defiant.
across as much as 70 percent of Scr"We arc ahle to turn off and on bia -- ami the knowledge that it can
the light switch in Belgrade, and happen again at any time - is
hopefull y also to thereby turn the enou gh to se riously undermine poplights on in the heads and minds of ular su ppo rt in Serbia for Yugoslav
the Belgrade leadership," NATO President Slobodan Milosevic is
,spokesman Jamie Shea sa id this doubtful , in the view of some private
week.
analysts.
It is p1gt of tightenin g the
" It docs have a psychological
"noose," as the senior NATO com· effect, but unfortunately it has the
mander, Gen. Wesley Clark, put it reverse psychological effect: giving
after the - recent NATO summit, the peopl e· of Yugoslavia a sense of
where leaders gave the go-ahead to victimization, that they are the
use special cluster bombs .that dis· unjust targets of NATO bombing,"
persc carbon filaments across wires said William Arkin, a military spethat conduct electricity, thereby cialist who studied U.S. bombing in
short-circuiting the transformers.
the 1991 Gulf War:
The lights throughout much of
" The military effect is negligiScrbia were off for about seve n ble,:' Arkin said, " and the psychohours Monday after the '' blackout logical and political effect could be
bombing" conducted by U.S. Air negative."
Force plane$ that dropped the highly
Losing el ectrical power is ccrclassified weapons on electrical tainly not the ·only price civilians in
transformers. Pentagon offi.cials left · Serbia have paid during the bomb- ·
little doubt that the main intent was ing. An undetermined number have
to rattle the civilians.
been ki ll ed in th e attacks - which
"It should ·have the impact of NATOrcpcatcdlysays-arenotaimed
alerting them to the fact that incon- at · civilians - and bombs have
veniences like this ·will continue as 'destroyed houses, pinched fuel supwe intensify the air campaign," Pen- plies, shredded many roads and
lagon spok.esman Kenneth Bacon bridges, knocked out parts of Serb
said Monday. " And that there's one television and radio and disabled
easy way iu slop them, and that is to parts of the Ielephonc syst~m.

Jr7:t

~

. ':i ·. ·:·

~·.

. ,.

''

. '

. &gt;"'!"

·~

PI'

REMEMBER WE HAVE MOVED back to our Racine localion-

'Bring tlie liids over to see ou~ miniature liorses, pig(ny goats and slieep in our petting zoo.
Hours: Mon.-sat. 9-6 Sunday Noon-6

.

~Avallqble

Calendar
1

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meet·
ings and special events. The calendar
is not · designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type : Items are
printed as space pctmits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
·

i.

tltf

C'-"'

..,.

.,.~..... .;

)'·,

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday

1;

'.

'

\

ori rat:e plans $20 and higher

Phones
start at

.

.

·+·I ·' I•

':1 -'

1f ".... . !

.

0

·-·

•

(740) 992-0060,

i' ' '
l

'

THURSDAY
CHESHIRI!· ~ Revival. 7 p.m.
Thursday through Saturday, Poplar
Ridge FWB, State Route 554, Special singing, Nonna Taylor, evangelist.

ggc
Sprays

and up

USDA ChoiCe Beef
Boneless ·
L)

&gt;l •.

•'

Large variety of silk bouquets
·.and wreaths now on hand.

Reg. ~ Light •

'

I

Bun length

Round·
Oscar .Mayer Meat
·:.Steak
Weiners

S. ' 21
•

·Gallon Jug Skim or ! )
Food land 2% ·Milk I

c

~·'

&gt;

Lb.

'

'

Asst.

Foodland ·Vegetables

·~·...S

Mom's Watercolor

oz. cans

BQuquet

$

49
Available
by the

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

I

.

Cert.olo-~

$4.99 p00nes ate f!COUditiOIItd.
Ratt plan mi~ are local peak minutes.
Toll aod I'NIT!ing not i~.

Bob Evans
Farm Sausage

wireless
that works...

for~u

.,

~

11b.
rolls

.

s
Hams
Boneless Chicken s
Breast

s

Superiors Whole
Boneless Tavern

29
Lb.

99
Lb .

.s

99
34.5 oz

. • · ·RED RIPE

Caltfornia S~a · be .
Wr rnes

'

Return Jonathan
. RACINE Meigs Ch~pter, Daughters of the
American
Revolution , Racine
Library, 10 a.m. program will be by
Mary Kay Yost , speaking on the lives
· of first ladies of Ohio's . U.S. presidents. Hostesses, ~lisha Young, Ber·
nice Carpenter and Pauline. Atkins.

.

L---~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~---~

POMEROY - Mother-daughter
banquet, "Zion Church of Christ ,
State Route 14~. 6:30 .p.!Jl. Friday.
Potluck, program .to follow.
SATURDAY
. BURLINGHAM ~ Burlingham
Modern Woodmen Camp 7230 '
Mother's Day potluck dinner Satur. day, 5 p.m. at the Woodmen Hall.
Meat, salad, tolls, pop, coffee and tea
provided. Each mother to receive a
,flower.
·

0

.

Food land
Coffee

RACINE
Racine GFange,
· Thursday, 7 ;30 p.m at the hall.
Inspection, second degree.
•
FRIDAY
CHESTER- Hymn sing, 7 p.m.
Friday, Harvest Outreach Church, ·
Riebel Road, Chester, featuring
. Gabriel Quartet, · Harvest , ,Time
Singers from Wet Jefferson, and
it

I

·:Memorial 'flowers
Asst. silk

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, O.E.S., Middleport
Masonic Temple, Thursday, 7:3(} .
p.m.

local singers.

992·0060.
Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•

I

1999

··lil

Family Practice, Lab, and X-Ray
Have Extended Hours Past 6:00 PM

To schedule an appointment or
fof more details, call

(

POMEROY - Relay for Life
meeting, 5 p.m. Wednesday,
· Pomeroy Library conference room:

November

.

..

.IROT.HKR."S IDAY S:PECliALS

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - S~ipio Township
Trustees, town hall , 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.

.

until

r

, ·. · ·.~

ruin a perfectly good frie ndship 'if she will split the remainmg cost
over this. There should be some with you . We all have to pay a prloe
compensation fr om the insurance for bad .j udgment, and thi s sm11ll
coverage, and you can hire an attor- calamity is a perfect example of
ney to find out if you have any just that.
recourse with the store .
•
·Feeling pressured to have sex ?
Since you have gotten some
How
well -informed are y9u? Write
money from the freight company
for
Ann
Landers' booklet "Sex and
and your friend cannot afford to
the
Teenager."
replace the · broken crystal, ask her

Community

r·ii(~Holle'r : -Me.lgs··clilii'f,
~

WlaRSrl of nr Open Houaa $50.00 gHt certlf11ataa w:ara: ·
loll Johnson, lawanawood, WV-hcky Wallll, lotaJI, Ohio COIIGUTUlATI.OHSI

,"-lght_Clinics_, . .·i .. ·~

, .· ~~:

. DEAR BILL: That woman gave
you some excellent advice to live
by Thank y0u. for suggesting that I
pass it on.
Dear f\nn Landers: When we
became engaged . la~ t year, my
fiance and I r~gistcred fo~ expensive crystaL My best friend volunteered to get us the crystal at a
wholesale price since she had contacts with the manufacturer.
After the wedding , we sent her a
check for $2,000 to cover the cost .
of a comJ1Iete set of 16 wine, watet
and· champagne glasses.
The crystal arrived four months
later. Much to our dismay, a quartet
of the glasses were broken .
I filed three dainis against the
freight company. They paid two,
saying they were not responsible
for the remaining loss since the
glasses were not damaged . during
· handling.

' F-h ""pply of beclcUng p...... and veyetah... coadng on
Cucumber, squash, cantaloupe, &amp; watermelon pll!nts are up!!
ALL GREEIOIOUSES OPEN TO THE PUBUC
Pink &amp; Purple Wave Petunias are going fast, hurry in to get yours

she insisted on shipping the glasses
· as they ~e~e instead of paying the
.additional ,repacking charge.
Even ·though the '.cartons were
insured, tlie store tells me it is not
responsible. Now, what do I do? I
I then contacted the store that believe my girlfriend should have
issued the shipping orders. I was called me before she decided not to

repack the cartons . I would have
been happy to pay the additional
charge.
.
My friend is not financially able
to'· replace the broken glasses, and I
don't want to pay for them twice.
We are both upset about thi s ..Who
is responsible, Ann ? -- HALLANDALE. FLA.
DEAR HALLANDALE: Don' t

c

lb.

ODLAND
Quentltlee • Prlcee EffectM Tllru

lndWIC

~UPERMARKETS
.
'

·Not

or Ptctortel Errora.
J

�---

The D il y

Wednesday, May 5, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • rhe Daily Sentinel

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

ROCK AND ROLL ROADSHOW • About100 Meigs High Schooi music students will be tak·
ing part in· a vari'ty show to be staged Thursday and Friday nights at 7 p.m. in the Larry R.
Morris on gymnasium. A wide range of selections from the rock and roll era will be presented in s'ong and dance by band, choir 'and guitar class members. The show is directed by
Toney Dingess, and the choreography handled by Paulette Harrison and Julie Howard.
Susan Page, pianist, and selected band members will accompany the 21J numbers In the
show.
"Rock and Roll is Here to Stay" by the full cast will open, the show which will also include
selections jly Dwight Icenhower, the .Elvis impersonator, pictured left, solo and ensemble
vocalists, ~nd dance routines .
.
,
·
Pictured above, Renee Stewart, Jackie Buck, Sara lhle, Laura Payne, B. J . Smith, Sarah
Houser, Betheny McMillen, and Sara Fife, I tor, in black mini-skirts and pastel shirts, will sing
"Best Friend's Wedding '', "wish in ' and Hop in "' and "Say a Little Prayer."

amtlp

~dio1ne
John

c. Wolf, D.o.

=
-lnt
Ohio

Associ~\e Professor

~lc

of Family Medicine
()uesti on: Because I'm very
rJcti vc outdoors, ( seem· to get sun·
, burned eve ry summer. It 's usually
mild and c lea r~ up in a few days. hut
y~.: ar

I got hl tstcrs and my v.:rrc
maJc me go to sec the" doc1nr. He

Ia"'!

ren ted lhe sunburn and said that I
r; H,I

Sl:COlld

;j

degree burn . Is Lhat

· I • ' I th oug h! tlwt \'i.'as just where
1 "'

"il ljlll d.

i\ 11 0.,WCT

burned by a flame or hot
A sunburn i.., produ(.;c d

\.l,. la; n lht:· ult ravio let ray~ in sun li ght

da111a1-!C the deeper growrng laye rs
• /ll1c sJ...Ln . Tht· tcs ultinl! init a tt ~; ,j I•'
~~~~· ~k ttt. lduod vc~sl: l "i . ;nd assocJal ,. d 11 lH ' c:ll l '\l.~ " 11lc inn:.tnlm :llinJ I
·.•.·· c, dl a :-.u nhUJn . P(lill d e~.- dop '!
·.•. hen the nc1vc ce ll s wit hin the 'iki n
.ue 'o ltlll ulal cd ac; parl of the inll amm.tt ton process. It may take o~ny ·
·' here from o ne to 12 hc,turs after Lhe
•111 expc J'i urc for the pain to ~ l art.
I he deg ree qf pain is dtre!.:tly rcla!cti
Ut 11ic 'icvcr it y of th.c hurn and !he
\ IlL n! nffc&lt;.:tc d ski n area.
I h:. dl! t rn nh i C ill ~ a'i~U(; iatc d wi lh
hurn"i nrc relm cd 10 the nmnunt of

1k in involved, the depth nf the burn ,

\

three days, The
damaged skin
usuall y peels uri in a week or two .
This type of burn is referred to as a
superficia l, or rust-degree, burn .
II second-degree hurn produces
damage deeper int o the skin 'and can
be very (1ainfu l. Eve n air blowing
across the burn can hurt. In add!tion
tv the p&lt;tin . the ~k in wi ll bli ster.
Healing usually takes two or three
wcc h and a perm anent mi ld .scar or
(: hangc in skin l:o lor may. hut usu;.d
ly d ocs not. occ ur.
A third-dcg.n.:c or '' total- thick ness
hu 1n.. da 11 1ag~·s .ti l the la yc1s ol -;k in.
Tfl ud11 ng a new thi r&lt;.I -Ucgrcc hurn
~\.t1 !J ~ iJg ht J11 ~~" 1HC l(i:-1)' gin: ~O IIIC
J rsl.!omfoJt , bu1 Jt ·s nothin g like tlt c
sheer agnny Lhat thi s wou ld proQU(.;L'
i f the hurn was ol the less seve re,

parti al-thi ckne ss varie ty. Hea lin g
takes man y wccb and a lways pro·
duces .t .;;car.

As a ge neral guid eline , il' you
huvc (mly a 1111ld s\mbufn, yo u can

prohahl y lake ,CiiiC of it yourse lf.
You -.hould protcc l tbc skin , stay out
,,f the loiun, ~tnd take aspi1 in , ace t~ -

.

,

the ind i\' tdu;d \ :tge a'ld pree xistin g

ht'til1 11 co ndi lions (e .g, diabete s) Ihat
·may he prc"icnt. A~ your duL:tor in di
r ated, th e specifi c cause 0f 1hc htllll
- th e sun. hoiling water. dt ~mH.:a l
ti!JUry or other cause is not in'tprul ,tn l. The c;~ttn1 of 'i kin d r~mage J&lt;.,
wh.ll c o unt s. The label '\ u11burn''
~lil ly tciJ .c, rl1:11 th e damage cnme
' 10111 hci ng uut in th'-' ~ un, not tl 1c
l ' tent of the i11jury.
tJr

A typicu l ' unburn is pain l.ul with
\\' tt hout being tom.: he&lt;.l , but the

"~ unb urn ed "

look and assoC tatcd
d! scomfort imJ)rovc after two or

Women~

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
Vay 6th 71t', 81!'1 . 5971 S.R 14 1

The Associate Degree in Nursing
program at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community is
receiving hi gh marks on a mUional
test.
The Sehoul of Nursing was
rece ntly informed that more than 90
percent of its 1998 gr~duales passed
the National Counci l Licensure
Exam for RN 's the first time they
took the test. The passing rate for the
first li me taking the test is above the
nalional average of 85.3 percent and
even a little higher than the passing
average for recent classes in the
sehoul.
"We arc happy," said Associate
Professor Don na Mitchell , Ph.D:,
RN , CNS . Milchell, who is the chair
of the School of Nur&lt;ing, said the
school continuall y evaluates its programs and makes improvements in
them .
Assoc iate Prufessm Nancy
''Benny" Gooldin , MSN, RN. CNS .
CNAA. said the hi gh marks on the
rest are just one indicator of the sue·
cess the program is hav in g graduat ing quality nurses .
:T he feedhack we have received

BANKRUPTCY

c•n reli·•· u

dt·l...tor uf finuudul oiJiiga lions unci un·a ng,e u fair
di !! trilt ution of UI!Kcls. DcLtors iu lwnk l'uptcy nm y
'k,·t~p ue;Jenipt" }JI'opnly for hi s or her pcrsunul
ww. Thi Mma y. inclndtl u cui-, a houM
t'. clothrs, ancl
household good_s .
Fnr Infnrmu tinn R~gurc li n~ H twk ntptc·y c·onl ul'l:

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

f\l\.\."1

FonnPr- "Yelet•t II.tutlltt4' r "
· 02954 S ta iP Ht. 124
Haeine, Ohio
Phone: 740-ll4:l -55i2

J.lmemmt/TopsoU

Ua••"nc

llulldozer &amp; /la ck/we
ServiN·•

I fHUfil \ &amp; Tnlilt~r Sitf'R
Land Clearing &amp; ·
Grading
S(!p fi c Sysleml &amp;

INsu~ se.~~~ouN"I'

WV Farm Museum
gospel sing planned
f'ina l plans were rn ade at the lasi
West Virg1nia Slate Farm Museum
monthly mee ting for th e Nin th
t\nn util Bend Arc" Gospel Jubilee. It
,vi ii he held 11tc1 c May 13 through
16

Alo ng with over 40 sin grng
!'ro up~

Irom tlu oughuu r lhe country,

the li't i,ncludc ~ local groups Ete rni ty. Na rrow Way, Builders Quartet ,
ldkt yiiiCI , Gloryland Beli ever. ,
Ha ndy Parson .., ~ nd niorc. Nationally
.Jct.: l.ti uwd gr'oup'i Primi ri vc QuHrlcl.
l.i ill !! lll ~

Echrlc..,, f'cr rv Sisl cr'i .
~;!.t n&lt;.Jing Tall , Siug1 ng Cookcs and
( 'qokc Brolhe rs arc also on the
~dh; dulr..: .

. Adnu.;s'inn is fr.ce. but love oll crlng" will he tukcn.

C11n pi1tg IS 'available with full
ltou k-ups hy ca lling the farm museIBn at (\75-5737. Foud conscss iuns,
pic nic tahlcs , dmlng in the .new uir
u mJitioned dining room sealing 200
pl'oplc will be offered .
Th ose allcndi ng should bring
law n cl 1.\1irs. jackets and hlankcts fo 1'
m •r l evenings. No alcoholic bcveri1gc' arc pcrmi(ted. Many singing
!'fiHtp' will have tapes, videos and
ctllwr llcms for sale, and an mea wi ll
I c '"I a&lt; idc in order for those allcndttlt' ro vic;ft and get hcner ucquaimcd
,., ith lire s i n ge r.~.

Amity Billfolds
Men's &amp; Women's

1 Price
Cold Pop
20 oz. BottlE;~

Cover Girl
Cosmetics

-ComplPh' Auto SProice-

fro m e mpl oyers has hccn very po~i ­

ti vc,'' Gooldin said. "Many o ( our
students are also going on to pursue
bao helor degrees."

30o/o Off

QUALITY WINDOWSYSTE~S
FORMERLY OF II 0 COURT STREET, POMER9Y
IS NOW LOCATED STATE· ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

A locally awned company with over 28 yrs
experience hos now exlendeJ 'our coverage oreo Ia
intlude all of Gollia Co. ond porlions of Meigs,

AI GRS our business "is

·Mulching

TRH'. AND STUMP
REMOVAL

KEITH MYERS
INSURED

Longlmuom , Ul1io''

(740)

.

(;all A l..illle One

•prpfessional Routine Lawn.
Mrunranance and Maniour1!1g

L t. ttls ·upc Material,

•Re!ldenllal &amp; Commercial

To11soil &amp; Mushroom
I'

•Shrubbery Maintenance
•servmg Metgs and Ga1Ha Counties
1nOhio and Mason County 10 'IN
"O• r .ocd It fo Mob Yo• look GGoo4•

Ligh t,,Huuling

1-740-742-2803 or ·
1-740-446-3622

H toll

,.

..

POMEROY IAACHINE SHOP
250 CONDOR ST.
~
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
ri!O'I!-740·99:1·H06 OR 304·485·3555

~~~~:~~~~~~~~--

BlSSELL BUILDERS,
. INC.

Howard L. Writese l

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Now Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Roplaceme nl Windows
• Room Additions
·• Roofing ·

lost Puppy

Help Wa nted

On Flatwoods ltd.,
Lab/Mix, Bla~k . with
White markings on each
paw, tip of rail, and ·
a~ross chest
Reward for Her Re l~ rn.

O ve rbrook
(:euler
333 Pup;e Street,
!\Iiddle port
lu1s part time
, pn8ilioll!l fm·
Ll 'N 's nv ullaLie
f 01' all shifts uucl
,..eekeJ!ds.
Anyone interested
.please stop by &amp;
till out nn

Card of Thanks
would like to Thank
Chester Fire Dept. , Mat')'
Percja.1, Alabcrta Hysell,
Kenda Ernst, Sally Bissell,
joey Weeks, l.amar .!.yons
and Angie Rigsby for their
time and effort for making
'lad Fishen; Benenr Dance
hrld April 23nl a success.
·Thank you
Carla Kimes

· Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

COMMERCIAL and RE~IDENTIAL
FR EE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

949·2168

SAY.RE
TRUCKING

Trucks .. tractor

Trailers-houses-mobile
H o m es- d ~~Cks - drtvowajs

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
740·742·2 138

Equipment Clesned &amp; Digressed

JEFF STETHEM
RHONE: (740) 965-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANETCCM

FREE ESnMATE!;
38782 Sumner RCI!Id,

3111/99 TFN

PomeiOV,01\lo 454769

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Mason Bowling
Lanes

Roofing • Repai rs

77~·5~00

•Coating s •
Siding s • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• P lumbing

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446·3644
'J

"

Begins 1st Week
In May
Thesday · No l'dp
Wednesday· Men's league
Thur5day - Miled League
Starling Tlrno 7:JO P.M.

Free EstimR tes

'.

. - · VIctorian Two Story
This very well cared for home on Main Street
features qutstanding oak · woodwork. Very nice
layout allows for 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, living
room , dining room, eat-in kitchen . Also a 1 car
attached garage. ' If you like character, this is a
must see. $57,500 #219'

Summer League

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

May 7-8-9
MAson Co. Fairgrounds
8 a.m.-S p.m.
Inside Outside Space
Available
Call 304-675-5463
304-773-5696
Used Furniture, Antiques
&amp; More

A 62 North of Point Pleasant

CANDLE· MAKERS

(1-fme StoneLow Ratos)

We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
fragrances! II
•fli rdhouses • Bear
• Wreat hs • Refills

WICKS
UAULING
..

HTHECOUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP"

Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
Fill Dirt
740-992·3470

Top Soli,

•

Tues- Friday 10-6
sat 10-4
Rt. 124 Minersville, Oh
992-4559

gage. clocks cabtnel. old dtshf!ls,

linens. much ITIUCh mout

Patios

.

1 Female Calhco Kttlc n Black !!.
740 256·6253

Or~rtgc .

Free

Oafloatlc;

Yo u

Dtg

House tra iler frame and metal to
CUf up ,mt! !OW!&gt; 1 awa y, 7110·
/410 '0:!195

M

wo;;-d

-~~~- ;.,-,7· s-;;;;;

Hems.[ 304)882-3173.

60

co r*,- ~ l!'JIRUC~~"~ION
I
New Homes &amp; Remode ling
#/A
fl i! 1, GarageS, Pole 8 uiiC '1QS , Rou f1!tg, S'd'
t I~Q

0385

~

-

i304 )u95 3703

il

n....
1

. 1·

J

1 ; ~ 11 t • ol .

"~t'!'(: i 11 /i:;i 11 g J" tux Jl, ,,llt' ~
·
· Cottllllt'rTi:t l 8. H•·!'o id•·ut lld

ll l

l ,u

Wmo.Jiuru PuiChiH Tr:c~tttr
MIX Sl!ver Chaw . Vtcmll: 1~1rd
Aven ue. 740-441 -0583, 740 1&lt;11 -

~
~ll ... ,
M&gt;.

f lU

28 yrs . exp. ·
Licensed &amp; Insu red
~
. . ..1
'.
Phone 740·992-3913l

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hou"rs
7 :00-AM • 8 PM

..

For

~=====J:.••::":m::oprt

-Linda's Pointing ·

Thke the pain out ·
of painting, ;u!ll !,·t _
me do it for yo lt.

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

·Room additions &amp; Remodeling
•New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng &amp; Gutters
•Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting'
•Pallo &amp; Porch Decks ,
Frte EtiJmalos
. V.C. YOUNG ill
R92-6215
Poi'noroy, Ohio

22 yr•. I.urni

__

fTIOU~

and Moret

------'----

S1nith Bu~ct.. Ponti ac , 1900 East·
fliO AVt.&gt;OUe,_:_G::_'ij::jpo::_I::_IS_ __ _
II ~ou don't have tH~e or want ts
Ylu d Sale, 1 wih Ouy your misc .
1tems &amp; clothes 740·446·3352 or

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

edition - 2:00 p.m.
friday. MondAy edition
Buka Sale Hot Doas. CorntJ1eaCJ
and Beans

Cakes. ·Ptes

SAtur'dny

May 8, 9·3, Foodtllnd i''Rt 160 P1o--.
tor Sommer ul ks Sot~lh
Gar!m Htgh School f01 all Stdte
Cheerleaamg In Aus11a1a. an Do

r

ceed~

na\lon Apprec1ate dl Cal l 1740)

44S· 121 1 or ( 7~ 0H?~6·9 134
Ga rage

Sale

167 Wood land

DriVe, 514th. 5tt1. 6th. 7tn 9 AM ·
5 PM. Lots

Help Wanted

110

• 10.00 e.m . SaH.udl'ly.

Goo&lt;Mss

Garage Sale Ma~ tst . Jrd, Ttlru
7 th , 1.2 MilO S Out Aoule 21 8.
Variety Olllems
Ga 1age Sale: Too ls. Good Lawn
Mo'l)'er. 2 A1r COM1t1oners. ,Lt1v11s
E l~; . May 6th , 7th . &amp; 8th, 9 To 5.

432 HedgewoorlOt1ve. Gsllipoi,IS

$$SMake Mo-ney!U.S Work A.t
Home · AssemlliB Produc ts
Easy Wo1 k . Elcellent Pa y. Frei
Oetatls! Send SA S E To . Nll l'l
Hornsowrk ef'S Ass ocla!IUO, PO
Sox 675. Ripley. WV 25271.
93 Year old ,Fema le Need s D ally
Companton 8 '30A M . . 6 30P.M .
(7 40)·446 -4333 Call after

5 OOPM.
Attentson Hunters The Ohio Val·
ley Hun11ng Club Has Ope n ings ·
For 15 Members . we Ha't'e
Lei'ISf'O 1400 Ac:res 0 1 l and lf'l t
A10 Grar.de We Are l ooldng For
Respons1ble Hun ters Member·
stup Is $500 Per Yea r Call 74110·

682·7 480 For More Information,
GuiEied Hunts tn OhtO, Ca na da .

ColoradO

All M;ok,es 'I't·:u·l"r &amp;

33 Sm1thers St strAight .A crp! S
trom Thu Wai·Mur t Gold house
on lett. Lot5 ul JltaJ cl~ an clothmg
lor lh e Wl'lOifl! f,HT'JIIy (Brand
Names) . Bet'S CI01hmg Curtlllns .
gi&lt;JU. w,J r8 , ShoPs Ptctures

· Anen tlon 11

61h S ,71h {Kerwoods Residents) .

PARTS

1\tllli(lHI Pilt P:u·t l~
F ut lnry ..\u t hcwi1'' d
l'a , ,• 1II l'urlo

.74D-GB7.0363

740·992·

.

Late Model C t~rs Or
Truck-s 1990 Models Or Newer,

Cl ean

the day before the ud
ll to run. Sunday

.H uge Yard Sale Tr1wsoay May·

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
1/o, OH 457~3

~ "" ne r .

For '1\lu, 740·25H 9B9.

DEPOYSAG

Coolv

-

8 1 P1ld In Adve nc~ .
~:2 : 00p . m .

,.. .

Do·.J I, ,.,,

Gall~'" · 740-446-2842.

AIJ. Yard Sales Must

\Va shiug

742-1701

u.s. Stl·

Wdnl To Sell 'tour S:u11? Ca ll Rllf·
ersidfl Auc!I01 And · Let Us Sell It

b~es

Marty's
Power

Free Estimates

Ausol"' Top Dollar . All

740-4&lt;1 6·1 379

'

740-985-4180

G•illpol-.
"
'" O"a 740-379-27~.
c;v
90 w
d
B
--,-an~t.,e...,._to__u.:y...,._

May !31h &amp;1th Clotll•ng· A rtul1
Gn Js Toys . O•s l es, Ell."an B Sa

t:ull 992-2727

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painling , Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
15 l1 s. 1-:.'lp ~·ri{lru' t'

INTER IOR
Before 6 pm leave
message . Afte r 6 pm

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
E&gt;ery Sat urday Nigh! 7 P.M
Ccown C1ty, 740·256- 6009

:; ale 97J Ew ~r..)t f,t~ r'l Hd. U1dwt1 1

Guitle

~~

R1ck PMrson Audwn C ompe n)'
lull time auctioneer. co mplete
auction
service .
L1 censecl
r 66 .0 hlo &amp; West Vl &gt;gmta. 304·
773 5785 Qc ')04 773-5447.

Rus-. MoQre
2526

rens Clothnlg, Ant 1 qu~ s.

Fn't~

f&gt;m~:nrm

_

Ant•QU(&gt;S !oo pr tces paH1. RiverInA Anti ques . P.omero~ . Ohio.

3 Fam1l18$ At 1q3~ Chftfham Sl
May 5, 6, &amp; 7th. Furnoture Ch1IQ

•I SUm
•

Tel

740-949-2217

2623._ _ __ _ _ __

'"'nue.

Yard. Sale

clomes !1ke new. btP.e and

Local

BUt MOOdi &amp;paugh Auc tione er ing
Comprete 'Aucuoneer lng ServiC·
es . Con sig nment au c iJ OO· M ill
Sheet. M•do tepo n. Tnursd ~y s .
Ohio L tc ense I 7693 7 40 · 989 ·

70

•

2 lan11ly.. Sa t 13 00 R&lt;ltntS hme 6
mdes oul 2 18, 112 n'lltA up PP.riM~
Rd. Fowlers &lt;.~nd Menges G• rl:;

.TV 27

SELF STORACE .

nue. Galltp c l ls Large Loaa 0 1
Merchandise From lndlana.

Rac me area. ctl•ld s pe t 740 949

Gallipolis
&amp; Vi cinity

wJos ·

HILL'S

Auct1on: May 7 , 1999. Fr1day.
Night 6 '00 PM 241 Third Ave ·

ver And Gold Coms . Proo lsets
D•arnonos. Ant 1cue Jewelry. Goi&lt;J
.Amos. Pre- 1930 L1 S . Curre; ncy.
Ster ling E.tc Acoui$1hons Jewelry
· M 1 S Coin Shop. 15 ! Second

3128 ·

~

Auction
and -Flea Market

~

Lost: fem31e S1ber1an Hus~~;y. bluf
oves. one Olrnd . Tanner 5 q 110

)ft"(

Ni ce Plus S ill'!
Womens Clott11ng . OOCis &amp; EMS
OH Sandtull Road.

WijtJemeyer·s· Au ction Se1vlca .

Four~d

JJr.\

.,

Lost and Found

Trader Park

Fqday Only

!10

Giveaway ·

_~l,;(7;...4.;..0;;.)t-;.7_4;.:..2;..·.;;;8..;8..;8;.;8;.._____. 1scrap

J• D•

Items Qu ilt s, Dishes, Pots
Pa n s. Glass.·C iothes . Aolique
items. Furmtur e . Oll1ce items Fn
and Sal. May 7·8, sam until 4pm
Locus t Rd. No rt h Pt . Pteasa~ t
Sc':hwar~l

40

· ~~~
AI':\. .111':\. ~ ~
\.'•'•• .lltY:\. ~
~
• ~
~
11
111
11
11
11
11
11
11

fil_.·.,

Btg 81g 'l'ard Sale Partial Estate

740-592 1&amp;.12

· - ·••-

.Iii:\

------_:_-:---

Ouahty 'clolhmg an d houSehold
Items . $1.00 tlnq sale e•·ery
fhu.r sday' Monday ttJtu S&lt;i tUtoay
9:00- 5:30.

M on~ Frl 8:30 '" 5:00
Over 40 yrs experie-nce

[11~• : 11.11 f Ji ! ~ · 1 ~

Pl Pleasant
· &amp; VIcinity

New To You Thntt Shoppe
9 West Sttms oo. Athens

Truckseats, car seats, headliners,
. truck tarpsl convenible &amp; vinyl tops,
Fpur wheeler seats. motorcycle seats.
boat covers, carpets, etc.
'---

m1SC

30 .A nnouncements

· Rutland, Ohio

G igantic sale! Hundreds ot
Items! Must see to be lie ve !
G lassware '~~ O men ' s plu s sites
t'lousenold m'sc ; antiques
records . apphahces , book£., jewel·
ry, (2) nctlng lawn trKlWari, sports
•eqUtpment. Mus! see! Mus! sell!
May 7th 8th &amp; 91h . Friday lhru
SurdQV, 9am · 5pm. 34820 Stall!
Route 7 Norlh. Pome roy acros s
from lhs Sk ata·a· way &amp; beside
!he State Highwa"V Garage. ·
Aal ne r.l tuds.... n huge garage sa le':
May 6, 7 &amp; e. Tac\erv111e Rd .
Aa cme Tools, dolls, collectibles:

Dal! ng Ton1 gl\t! Have fun
playing the Ohio Oal!ng CiamA. 1·
BOO-ROMANCE , extensiOn 9661 .

A&amp; P Auto .Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Ad .

Fr11jay· 133 6uuer 11 ut Ave nue
Coller. ltbles. lamos . tables . lug ·

Slart

Jerenay .L. lltousb
949-1701

Hilt

9am· 4pm MIJe
OhiO

----------

Personals

005

Landscape Spee!allst,
OSU-ATI

.---=~~·~.-.-

Mason County
Flea Market

Ma~ · a ,
nl! ,

Rae

. .
ANNOUNCEMENTS

(No Sunday Calls)

TRI-STATE MOBILE
I'QWER WASH .

Commun ity .Yard sate· Saturday,

~ ..

Degree Certified

-:-

Gutters

992·5455

EOE

JUST IN TIM"E FOR SPRING REPAIRS

,l(;tl C ,\ ~ . INC. I ~ OFI-' Ei!I NG A SPECIAlo ~ IJUI{
cYLINUt-:ll PACfl:,\t:F~
.

IF YO U !.EASE UB 1' 1 UCHA SE OUT IIIGIIT A
CY I..I NUEII, ,\ GA WILL t ;l\' E YOU TIH: FlllST
FILL or GA S FREE PlUS ' ·~ ,\GA IIJI-: i" TIFJI·: n
CAP PlUS TilE f'IIN'Wl-' ' II) HI·:CWI'I.:H FOB A
CUTTJNt:;..JJUl'FI'I' TO Il l!: ll iVhN AWAY AT TilE
EN Tl OF Til E' l'!lO',IOTION. Til l~ IS A SAVING
OF UP TO $.I 00.00 Dt PE NDI NG ON T ilE ~m:
t.;Y U t-&lt;D EIIS YOU ~LI.I ·:r: T. PLF: -\SII CONT,\CT
YOUll LOCAl. o\UTH Olti ZEII AGA IJE,\LER FOR
IJRTAILS. ALl. SIZES AHF. NOT AV,\II ,A ili.E FOil
UUTBIG IIT SALE. Till S SPitiNG SI'ECI"I. WJLL
F"olll ,IU N!o: 21, 1999.

Sunday &amp; Mond cy edition ·
1:OOpm Frldey.

F1ee Estimoles
740-742-8608

• Rotalnlng Wall 8 Brick
Pallo Consttuctlon

Free Estimlllei

DRIVEWAY STONE

o.p\'licution.

985 ~3677

Lalr'ry's Lawn
Care

·o, ,'t Neerl A Big Uue

11 o

~lllt

Senior Dllc:ounts
Free Eltimates

S lug &amp; Shot·
Matches

let

Guidelines

FllEE ml_MA1'ES

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

RUTLAND, OH.
•
AMERICAN
· LEGION
BEECH GROVE
. ROAD
GUN_SHOOT
SUN., 1:00PM

Adva nce . Deadline: 1:00pm lhe
day before th e ed le to run ,

25 yrs experience

Cell Phone

740-698-3290

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa id I n

Purkiug Lot s

i ......

Cont. NWV003506

Compost

Sidt·w.alk ~.

• La\m Care • Design
• Maintenance • Planting

opening in Meigs County:
I J 33 hrs/wk: 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon; sleep·over

I

I,

Farms

up

. llr .,

Items'

Wednasda~

Pomeroy,
Middleport. ·
&amp; Vicinity

(Juu!it)' Dl'iwwa) s.

(304) 674·3311

H~HoUow

'

R~

Ho u !l~nol d

Monday Tueo:;da y,&amp;
9001 0

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

.•-tf1),1
•4.........
. ·=~ ~
~7-~ ,_ &gt;ii &lt;"&lt;

Office

Tntin or Dotml

Also Riding Lessons

..

·" CAiiL ·

(304) 675-2457

HORSES
H ~ty, .5'4•11,

"'

No Embarrassment ...
You're Tre ated with Respect!
Call Now for Instant A P.roval!!"'

•Parking Lots
•Basketball Courts
•Driveways
·Grading Work
•Hauling Stone

Y'trd Sa •tl Bl:! tmoo! Or Furntlur,.

ano. Ollie r

10/25/Q6itfn

•••

We Do ...

Covch. O.ueen MA tHes&amp;, Ce•!Ung
Fan, and LOIS Mlcs I

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
R&amp;no • Divorced

Hende rson, WV

Ttru· sr1ay· Fr td ay · Sat Cornf!r ,....,
Aou1e t ~' &amp; Ne •ghborhood R t1

DUMP TRUCK

CREDIT PROBLEMS??

.PAVING

-·
WANTF.D: Due to recetil expansion, B.C.S. runendy has

, A. Ph.
Hanning, R Ph.
Mon. lhru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sal 8 a.m.·8
Sunday 10:00 a.m. 10 4:00 p.m.
.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.

•

MYERS

City

TRUCKING

-

P o meroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
I
$300.00 Coverall
$50Q.OO Sterbursl
'
Prog ressive top line. '•
Lie. II 00-50 t&gt;n.,.tn '.

Sefl1rlg Ou1 Sale' May 7 and B "·
S1de,t. Cu ll At 7 North C r&lt;lw"

R. L. HOLLON

1-800-967-477 4

VINYL REP LIICEMEN'I WINDOWS AT
FACTO RY DII&lt; E&lt;."I' !'RICES

S'Y/IA t: liS F.

Rou te 325 So u th. H ous eholt.i

Items NJCe Clothes. Baby Items

7/22/ffn

.CAll TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICEIMmDIATHY

M.,y 71h B-4

Saturday May Bth, 8-1. 4480 Stak.

985-4473

Vinton &amp; Lawrence counties.

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

110 · Help Wanted

$2.19

Movmg Sale Thursday ~6th &amp;
F1 1day 517th, Tools. Equ1pmen1 . ·
H ous~;hO i d llerrs . Follow Stgl •
Otl Little Bullsk1n &amp; Hwy 218 .

•Ne w Home s
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

General Refuse Service

VISIT OUR OFF!tE/SHOW ROOM THlR£;

·- ·

$2.99

Mat i Th·8tll,

ROBERT BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION

of
Gollia County!

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

.

Ptice

10 oz.

MM . Wonen. Ch!Jdren' s clotht::$
Mrsc Items 550 Jay' Dr. Fnday

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

To The Residenls

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp;' Foliage ,
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp;Trees
'we Honor Golde·n
Buckeye Card
. Open
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

Earrings-

required;
2) 2S hrS/wk; 8 arn-8 pm, SatJSun;
S) Emergency Relld (substitutes): hours scheduled as
needed;
·
We are searching for compassionate profes5ionals with a
team vision and a desire to leach personal and communi·
ly skills to Individuals with mental retardation. The work
environment Is Informal IIIII rewudlng. The requirements
are: hlgb Khool dlploma/GED, valid drlver;s license, three
years good driving experience and adequate automobUe
Insurance coverage. B.C.S. offen comprehensive tra!njng
In the lleld of MR/DD. Starting salary• $S.SO/hour.
Interested applicants need 10 specify position of lqterest
and send resume 1o:
.
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SErfVICES
P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 44S64 0-0604.
Al.l applicants must be posl·,marked by S/6/99. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

May 7~ 8th 9-? 7909 State Route 7, Rear, Cheshire, Nice Cloth·
1ng Household kerns, Mist

[7401 992-383,8

f:xf'lmj,., n f'fitlilllf (;'e,mJII/nl

or

Mnrshmullow , Bu.tterscotclr ,
. t emmr. or mint S qttures ·

CIQihe_::_
' ~------

IW.tlili\\l·""'tUil V

Comple te Line Of
Vegelable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Flats $6.50

Public Notice

Only $7.99
$i6.9'9

CaJdweiL Ttudllo'J
112 1.111@ , Out Left Forll Ad BllD/

GALLIPOLI~ OHIO 45631

Nor• 0 1•eu For
SJJrillg Seaso11

· Pubilc Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
&amp;lllotlvo llotonlng dovlco, Danloa L Bunce
Provlelons and Davie·
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
oth11)' due to a dleablllty, Supreme · Court
Reg. Bacon Wagea, . varloua
HEARING
lnour~nce
requl&lt;omonte,
Melgo County Intends to pleaae conteCI Glorle Kloee, 110042141
varlouo equal oppMunlty
apply to the Ohio Clerk, prior to May 17, 1999 Danl .. Bunco Law Office
provtolono, and tho roqulr•
Oepartmont or Devolopmom at 740-992-2895 In order to fos E. Second St.
tMnlo lor a paytMnt bond
minophen or ibuprofen for the dis - lor lundlng under the enaure that your nMda will -P.O. Box 711
and portormanco bong lor
comfort. l!on 'l put buller or oth er Community Dev•lopmonl be accommodated. The Pomeroy, OH 457fi9
100% of tho contflct price.
Block Grant (CDBG) Small Melge County Courthouto (740) 992·5730
"gooey" suhstances on the burn . Cities Programt a federally~ to handicapped acc•lllblo.
No bidder may wlthdflw
Attorney lor Plalnlllfa
· Non -prescription sunburn produr..:t s ,t u ,n d ~ d
program
Wrnten comment• will be
Oofendant may obtalti a hlo bid within thirty {30)
may be soo)hi ng. hue they will not admlnloterod by the otole. accepted unlit 4:30 P.M., copy ol the c;omplalnt lila deye after tho actual date of
speed healing.
· Melge County Ia eligible tor May 17, 1999, and may be h11eln form the ofllce of tho opening thereof. Tho
County
·
Fiscal Year 99 CDBG mallod to tho Melge County Larry Spencer, Clerk ol. Molge
·II you ICel sick because of the Formula Allocation funding Commlaelonera1
Commlaslontrl
r•••rv••
Court,
Malga
County
burn , or if it covers a large percent- In the aetlmated amount of CoutlhouH, Pomeroy, Ohio Courthouse, Pomeroy, OH tho right to wolve any lnfor·
malltleo or to rajact any or
age of yo ur body. you should sec $186,000, providing ' tho 45769.
46789
all bide.
yo ur doc ror. More· Scycrc burn s wirh county meeta applicable Janet Howard, Prealdant, (4) 14, 21, 28
Janet Howard, Prealdem
Melgo
County
{5) 5, 12, 19 6TC
immediate hlislcring or blackening requirement,.
Malge
County
The tlrot ol two public Commlaslonera
of the &lt;kin shoitld have a doctor 's hearlngo will be hold May (4) 30
Commllllonore
Public Notte•
{4) 22, 28 (5) 5 3TC
allc nti on I&lt;•Jay -- don' t wai l unti l 17, 1899 at 7:00P.M. at the (5) 5, t2 3TC
NOTICE TO
next week. Deep burn-s uvc1 a lmgc M81ga County Courthouse,
CONTRACTORS
.
Public Notice
anHILiiiL nf the body surface cun he Common Plea• Courtroom,
Soalod propoulo for lha
·
Pomeroy, Ohio to provide
lnotallatlon of Water Line
immedi ately life threateni ng and cltizeno with the pertinent
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
require prompt hospitalization.
lnlo•matlon aboullho CDBG OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO · Extenelon, Gate Valvee,
Public Notice
Water Motera, and Fluoh
JERRY J. GRUESER,
Here nrc lwo tips thai will help Formula program can lund
Hydrant,
Gilkey
Ridge
ET'AL.,
keep yuu lmm ltavmg to deal with a broad ranga of actlvltiu,
Road, Malgo County, Ohio,
PLAINTIFFS,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
th e pain n f ~ unbu rn lh is summer:
Including:
economl~
will
be received by lhs
vs.
Tho E11torn local Board
development prole~!•,
Malga
County of Education will accept
EDITH E. BURNELL,
- .- ;\\uld bei ng outdo{)rs during
atreet. water supply,
Commlaalonare
at
their bldo lor tho conetructlon of
ETAL.,
the hours of the day when the sun 's drainage and oanltary HWII
DEFENDANTS
office
at
tho
Courthouae,
two melaltpole atructure
ray s arc tht: most direct -- betwee n lmprovementa,
park
CASE NO. 99-CV-Q34
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until bulldlngo located at 348900
about · IOa.m. and 2 p.m.
acqulaltlon
and
LEGAL NOTICE
10:00 A.M., May 17, 1998 SA 7, Rotdavllle, Ohio. blda
lmprovemenlo, demolition
Dolondanto
Edith E. and then at -1:00 P.M., at will be opened In the Office
-- W il ~ n yqu go ou1 sidc during ol unsafe atructurea, and
the day. pwlcct your sk111 with cloth- r aha bIll tall o'n
o I Burnell, et al .. whoea loot oald office opened and rod of tho Treaourar of the
Eaotorn Local School
i11 g 01 by pu111ng a numhcr 15, or neighborhood ' laclllllea. known place Of rseldonco lo aloud for the following:
East Side St., S.R.. 124,
Tho Jnalallatlon of 4800 Dletrlct Wedn..day, June II,
hi !! hcr. ~tt n \c rcc n lot ion o n th e The actlviUea must by Minersville, Ohio and tho·
Unear foot of 3" PVC CL· 1999 at 12:00 p.m.
de s igned io primarily
ex pose&lt;.I areas o l your body.
benefit low and moderate· Unknown Helra ol Edith E.
200 Pipe, two 3" ·Gate
Bulldlngo are aolollowa:
Valvoo, 6 Water Motera and
1. 40 toot by 80 loot
Surnc studi es suggest that 2000- Income peroono, aid In the Burnell addrlla unknown,
one Fluoh Hydrant to ba metal/pole otructuro 'lo bl
111 ~ nf vitamin C &lt;1 day ot usc of vil · prevention o f slum and are hereby notlllod that on
the
·141h
day
ol
April,
1999,
locited at Gilkey Road, uoed · aa a multl·purpoao
&lt;nni n E w ill redu..:t.' 1bc ,, . , J.;
.., un
'blight, or meet an urgent
Jerry J. Gruaur and Norma
Bodford Townehlp d. 235, otorago/racraatlonal buildburn . That see mS to me li ke a :;ale need of the c::ommunlty.
J.
~rueaar, Plalnllflo, fllod
Malgo County, Ohio. Plana, Ing.
J ·
·
d
Clllzono are encouraged
Speclllcatlona, and bid
2. 40 foal by 58 fool_metal
an mcxpcns1ve a diti onal prccau- to attend thll meeting: on their complaint and other
lion .
May 17, 1999 to make rallel In lhl . Court ol lormo may bl oocurod . at /pole atructura to bl uHCI
" Fa mily Medicin e" is a weekly auggoellone and to provide Common Pl111 ol Melge the ofllca of Triplett 11 • malntenanca/buo
Ohio, bearing Caae Engln-lng, 112 1/2 Co~rt gorago. .
column. To subn1it questions, .public .Input on varloua County,
No. 99-CV-Q34
Strset, Pomeroy, Ohio. A
8oth building• will have ,
write to .lohn c. Wull', 0.0., Ohio acllvltlea which may be Thla notice wtll run one a psym.nl of Seventy Five concreto oloba, plumbing
Uni versity· College of Os1 c1Jpathic undertaken In lhla program. weak for IIX IUCCIIIhla ($75.00) (Non-rolundablo) and tloctrlcal work. Muhl•
II e participant will need
Hall, auxiliary aida (Interpreter, w..ka, tho lilt publication dollar~ will bl roqulrod for purpo11 building oholllo to .
Medi&lt;inc,
Grosvenor
being on the 19th day ol ! · each Ht ol plana and opec· be by "Golden Giant."
Athens, Ohio 45701.
brallled or taped material, May,
1999. The Defondama lflcotlono, check modo HVAC · contract will be
will have twonty..lght daye
payable
to
Trlplett awarded aeparatoly on the
Card of Thanks
lrom the day,ollaat publlca- Englneorlng.
aams day. Speclllcatlona
Each bid muot bl accom• for building oystom are
r - - - - - - - - - ·."llon In which to anawor aald
panlod by eHhar 1 bid bond available altha admlnlllraThe family of Ray complaint.
In en amount of 100% of the llvo ofllcoo IOCIIIod at50008
(Pee Wee) Stanley
bid amoum with a eurtty SR 681 , Rtodavlllo, Ohio.
In Memory
oallalactory
to the aforeeald
Each bid ohall be eccomwould like to thank the
.county penlod by a 10% bid bond
.Melge
·ln.Memorial of
church family, friends
Commlaalonare or by certl- supported by a Power ol
flod chock, caahllre chock, Attorney, lor the bondlngJ
Neva M. Grimm May 5th
and family for cards,
or· latter ol credit upon a agent, and a certlncata f•om
Thirteen years ago, God
flowers, food and aU·
Dapertmom
of
oolvent bank In the amount tho
called you home to ot not loll than 10% of tho lnouranct. Blda art to bl
their lo ve and
Heaven's lovely . Hower bid amount In favor of the 181ltd and addre11ed to
kindness. Most of all
aloraoald Melge County Uaa M. Ritchie, Treaauror,
garden Where sweet joy Commlaalonoro. Bid bondo Eaatern Local School
their prayers, without
ohall. be •ccompanlod by Dlatrlct, 50008 SR 881,
blossoms "bloom. Your
all of these we wotild
Proof of Authority ol tho R"dovlllo, Ohio 46772 ·and'
1
memory an(l love dearest
ofllclal or ag.nt signing the plainly morkod on the out·
11ot have made It
bond.
oldo "Bids for Building" and
mother are the brightest
through (he toss 'of our
"Bide
for
HAVC."
1\.&lt;rm Specinl- 1'/m rsday Only
Bldo
ahlll
bl
eulod
and
blossoms there.
marked
.ae
Bid
for
"Gilkey
Succeaalul
bidder
will bl
loved
one.
50% OJ}'
Your loving family
Ridge
Rood
Water
Una
roqulrod
to
ocqulre
a
porfor·
A special tba11ks to
Exlontlon Bid" and mlllod mllitce bond accopteble to
or delivered to:
owner.
.
the American Legion
Molga
c;ounty
The
boord
raaerveo
the
Post . 140, the VFW Post
Card of Thanks
Commlaolonaro right to reJect all bide or any
9926, Ne w Haven
CourthPUH
Co~~~tlete. cftp()f
portl()n of a bid. For eddl·
Pomeroy,
Ohio
457811
.
Ilona!
Information, pleaao
Funeralliome and the
Thanks to all businesses,
Attention of blddera lo contact Deryl E. Well,
staff at Carl! Haven
Individuals and friends of
called to all of tho roqulll- Suparlntondonl, at · (740)
.mom•
conlolnod In lhle ·bid 867-6079.
Tara Fisher who donated to
Nursing Home.
packet, particularly· to the U11 M. RHchlo, Trueurer
New Releases In Music ·
help make benefit and
. Bless each and
Federal Labor Standard 0 {5) '&amp;, t2, 19,28 4TC
, .
raffle
a
success.
everyone,
Cn«rlle.&lt; . 'Reg . $9.99
Reel Estate General

I

May 7 &amp; 8 Past

JONES'
TRHSBMGE

Near U,te 338 &amp; 124 split in the Grcill Bend

lltilitif•l

crnzEN

e.t&gt;-

Dave's Garage

Ra rn /S hine, 9·7 Mtcrowave
Washer, Wedtj1ng Oreu. Clot l
tng, Ml~ .. Baby

Pv!C.h Sale Fnday

Colognes -T imex . Watches
&amp; Gift Sets
30 /o Off.

20% Off

Yard Sale

Nursing program
earns high marks

3J30Tflll ,

that makes you feel
sick should rompt trip to doctor

tinel • P~ge 9

70

992·5776

~) unburn

s..

',

Homp lnt Mu.: 1l nlul"h r 11"' tl you
were l)ere l.u,r 'h e AucltlH you
won:t wa.nr to 1Tl1ss tl'ls Yare Hug!!
S~te! 9am ui1 ? No Eiltly S:1t es
Ple~set

Large SaiP Thu·&amp;dJy M"Y
l n t~

o t ever vi'Hq n

~\e Gi11hOO h&lt;t-

Sill! II-i

6tn

71f·Secn ~td

8 30·' nuln

~-

--- - --

worl( !rom hOme
f trn SS00·$4000 PT/PT
1.80()..863· 1635 or
wr.YV.slartahomebiz com

Computer USIHS Needed Work

Own Hrs $25K $SOK/ Vr. 1· 800 •
475-8653 ~ 7717 , www 1cwp.com
Cc smetotog1st Needed , Bus iness
Growing , Guarartteed Wages
Plus More 740·446-7~7

I

.

tr Store Food Oemone trelora
Ne8deq, Ail Ar eas Of Oh ~o &amp;
W IJ A 330 '335·1 749

~-~'-'-"""-----

•.

�•

•
The Da1ly Sentmel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 5, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

OOP YOIJ GO Gfi'.T
TH WtZE.~ I

THrNI&lt;. HE OUGI&lt;TA

TAA£ A LOOK AT
TH06E TWO

RESUMES UNLIMITED Olle '
Pe sona zed

DIIIVINO POSmOHS
AVAILABLE
C~ssAOTR

Single Driver lata Mode Ken

worths With Reefers West Coast

Cel!ler
CIMIBOTR
Team Straight Truck Late Mode
Freight! na s W th Sleepe &amp; Must
Have Air Brtlke Endo sements
800 Mile Radius Home Deliver

Resumes An d
Much More nter vlew Mate al s
To Get Yo u P epa ed 740 388

3000
Scenic HtiiS Nursln.g Cen te Is
Now Ac cepti ng Appt allons For
The Po s t on 01 Social Se vices
Dire ctor LSW P eue Se d Re
sume And Sa ary ReQ u aments
To Charla B own At Seen c HI s
Nursing Center 3 1 1 Buck d g e
Aoad Bidwet OH 456 14
(Member Of EOE)

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS

lei

Both Positions
Atlelst 25 Years Old
At.,.st 2 '!liars EJCPOflonce
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay

t-Mtalth Insurance A.vallabte
Wo!lc Wei W th The Public
For More Informer on Cal 800
• 43-78764 Hrs 830AM SPM

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! As
semble PrOducts at Home Ca I
Tot Free 1 BOO 467 5566 Ext

12170
Hiring

HEAVY EQUIP OPERATORS
AND CARPENTERS
2 Years Experience

Necessary Can t 800-339 651 a
Between 8 00 AM 5 00 P:M

An Equal Opportun ty Employer
Ho zer Home Care Of Oak Hill

Community Med cal Center Seek
lng Full T me AN To Prov de
Skilled Nursing Ca e To Home
care Cl ents Hou s Monday Fri
day 8 4 Some Weaken~ And On

Ca I Work Previous Home Hea lh
Experience Prefe ed 2 Year&amp;

Med Surg EKperlence Aequl ed
Send Resume To Oak H II Com
munlty Medica Center Allen! on
Brenda McKenz e 350 Charlotte

Holzer Sen o Care Cente Is
Cur anti~ Tak ng Appl cations FQ
State Tested Nursing Assis ants
Ex ce l ent Wo king Env onmen
And Bel el ts N o Ph one Ca Is
Please App y In Pe so n At 330
Co lon a! 0 ve Bld we
Oh o

456 4

The Me gs Loca Schoo 0 s c
s cu rently se ek ng app cal ons
I om ce rt I ed app ca ni s o As
slstant Va s ty Fo o tba 1 Coac h
Freshmnn Foo ba 1 Coach (2 po
SitiOnS) 7th &amp; 8th Grade Foolbal
Coach Boys As sist ant va slty
Basketb all Coach Boys Rese ve
Basketbal Coac h Boys Middle
School Basketbal Coach (2 pos
lions) Assistant Hlgl'1 Sclloo
Tra ck Coach wresu ng Coach
G IS Assistant VolleytJa l Coach
G r s M dd e Schoo Vo ayb a
Coach G s Assist ant ~ dd e
School Vo Ieyb a I Coa ch G Is
Mddle School Baskalba 1 Coach
High School Chee eader Adv
so M ddle School Chee eade
Advlso S uden Cou nc Adv so
and Ou z Team Adv sor to the
1999 2000 sch oo year AP. pl c
ants must hold a vtl ld Oh o
teach ng ce fl cat e and o
coaching pos li ons mus t meet
certl cation requ remc nts of Oh o
fo r spor s mad c ne an d CPR
Pe sons in ere s ed shou d con
tact B I Buckley Super n endent
Meigs Loca Schoo l 0 st c t PO
Box 272 Pomeroy Oh o

Avenue Oak H I OH 45656
EOE
Jewe ~ Sales Rata I Sales and
Computer EJ:perlence Required
Acquisitions Fine Jewe ~ 1 51
Second Ave Ga Upo s App y
Monday lhru Friday

Ca rpet and Upl'lolste y C eaned
w lho ut St ea m o Abs o bent
Compounds Soa p ess Anti Ae
so Oete gents used axe us ve
y Safe ror a! lab cs Fast dry
ng (1 2 hours) El minates ove
we ling Gvaran lced Wo k Cal
C e a r l~ C ean at (304)6 75 4040
or Free Est1males
Does You House Sid ng Deck
or D veway need a clean ng? 11
so P ass ure Was h ng s the ~ n
swe
Ca ll Clea y C ea n a
(30 4)6 75 4040 to a Fre e Es
twna te

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS?

AI Posit ons Drivers n Store
And Assistant Manege Pas
tlons Available D ve s Earn
Hourly Wage + Tips &amp; Comm s
slons Please Apply At The Gal 1

1 688 562 3345
WALL CEILING CLEANED EX
PEAT LV Save s on ePa nllng in
def n te y We use he exc us ve
Vo n Sc radar V53 Power Wa I
C ean lng S ~s em Pro ects pan
eaves gla ss eta ds cha k ng
Ant M ldew no odo sa nitizes
F ee est mates Cal C ea v
Clean a (304)675 4040

l{;flAS:SUIFOIE!DSi

Angelon (914)569-9802
Med ca Processor FT fPT No
EKP Nee Will Train PC Aeq Earn
4QK Ca I !IOO-Il83-7440

Need help spr ng cleaning 4 or 5
days n May $6 00 hour 740

742 2679
HEEDED IMMEDIATELYIII

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home) Cal

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
tOO Jackson P ke

Gallpol s OH 45631 1563
Phone 740-446 5105
Fa. !TOO 740 446 5106

day A174Q.446.7150

PART TIME LPN POSITION

E 8. S Lawn Service Des gn lm
plementat on
and Se v ce
Aval able lo Spr ng Cle an up
fertilz ng' and plant ng Fee est
mates Sat sfac ion gua ant eed
Greg M lhoan 304/675 4623

W no Breaker Boxes L ght F r.
tu re Heat ng Systems and Re
modetng (740)441 1401

740 388 8041

h s ewspape Is sub eel to
the Federa Fa Hous ng Act
of 1968 wh cl makes tllega
to advert se a ny prelerence
m tat on or d scr m na110n
based on ace co or ret g on
sex fam I al status or national
ong n o any n entlon to
make any su ch preference
mit atl on o d scrim! a on

1992 1 4x70 Oakwood 2 Bed
ooms 2 Ful Baths All E ectr c
With Heal Pump NO 441 0959
740 379 2798

441 0543

ptlcant Must Have An Oh o Nuts
lng License Holzer Senior Care
Offers Excellent Benefits (Pa d
Vacation Paid Hollda~s Etc ) If
lnlerelted In A Challeng ng Post

ecom111en ds tha t you do bu s
ness w lh people you know and
NOT to send money th ough the
mall Unlll you M '.'e Inves t gollld
the offering

nial Or ve Bidwell Ohio 45614

EOE

Part time office wQrk part lime
cashier well established busi
nan Send resume to The oat ~
Sentinel PO Bo. 72 975 Pomer

ay OH olll769

Posrat Jobs to $18 35fHr Inc
Benerua No Experience For

App And Exam lnfor Call I 81)0.
a13 3585 Ext 8828 8AM 9PM

7 Dill'l fdt Inc

REGISTERED NURSE Jad&lt;lon
Gonorol Hoopltal Rlplojl WV
-fuii-RNofor CCUor
ModfSu!g Curr""' WV Stall Ucenu PriYioUa rellvant upeli-

onco Reply lo .lod&lt;ton Gonoral
SO. 720 Ripley
WV 25271 EOE

Hoopllal

~0

Restuarent Managers Rad ology

Tocho STNA 1 LPN1 RN 8 Slop
by 995 Jachon Pike t20i or
Call (740)448 4188 lor moro In
lonnallor! Globol Rocrulfero

FINANC!AL

Emp oyment The Housing Au
thorlty of the CUy of Po nt P eas
ant a seeking a cand date tor a
management pas lio n The sue
cessful cand date' Will be respon
slble lor ass sling the Executive
Director n daily opera! on of the
authori y The housing authorll~
manages 142 un ta of Ff!deral
low Income publ c housing and
122 Section 8 units Appl cant
must posses exce lent human
relation sk !Ia teJ work with san
a tlvlty wtth low ncome tam! es
all levels of government and the
private aector lnd vldua should
be capable of achieving ce t fled
Public Housing Manager ~· 1 fi
cation within one year of emp oy
ment An associate degree or
equivalent management expert
ence In a comparable organlza
tion or program art the minimum
reQuirements Reaume must be
received at the housing authority
otuce PO Box 517 404 Second
51 eel Point Pleasant West Vir

gin a 25550 bolore 4 OOPM Frl
day May 14 1999 E 0 E

'

Pets (304)675 5162
New Haven 2Bedroom Home
Ga age River Frontage ale enc
es Deposit &amp; Lease (304)9 34

Pets lor Sale

5 AK C Boxf'
810 1

pup s

740 742

Ready To Go MAY 16th 740 379

2863

Mod f ed New Pa Is Auto 4x4

(304)675 1754 $6 500 0 80

MERCHAND!SE

You Home Is Ju6t A Phone Ca I
Away 304 736 7295

BARNEY

I •

t996 14 Ft K72 Ft 2 Bed ooms 2
Full Baths Total Ele ctr c May
Leave On Lo $21 900 OBO 740

245 9834
t996 11XBO Dutch Mobile Home
:3 Bed oo m 2 Full Bath Shing e
Ao oling v n~t S d ng Porches
and
landscap ng
Included

$29 000 060 Call (304)675
6821
elec IC 12K6~ 740 742 2803
Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buye s l m) edT me Aval eb e

1 Bdrm Extra Nlr.e F1rst Month
F ee Wl1h One Yea Lease
S279 00 Pe Mo nth Plus Ut t es
].10 446 2957

abe 740 992 7551
Fo d new Ho lan d Tra ctor Sate
bo Sy nch o BXB Tm ns F And A
Sh It e LA. gp Pump ~ Remotes 4
ou ets
Zy Fu Wa rtnty

Bedroom Apt A 1 conven anc
es Unfurnished P vale en
trance 4th St eet PI P eaeant

(304 )675 5733

2

2 bed oom apartment in M dd e
pDf! we pay water sewer &amp; trash
you pav gas &amp; e ectrlc $200 pe
monrh $ 00 deposit 740 992

ups ta rs to a y emodeled new
roof guit ar ng water soflner &amp;
Ia s o P. xll!.S 29 12 Annist on,
0 ve P Peasant ~304)575
2608 Lea" e Messag e on Ma
Fa SA le B~ Owner 4BR 3000
Sq ua re Foot Ho use 4 C a Ga
rage 5 Acre s Very Se c luded

$199 999 (803)366 9436
Hou se For Sa e 2219 Oak St

3082
in Mason WV Adams
Ike new one and 1/2
from g ade schoo 7
and bath ca 1 Sue Hall

Large fam ly home lor sate on ten
lovely ac es Fou bed ooms wo
and one half bo hs two llrep aces
fo mal lv ng roo m and fern y
room four car garage and two
storage bu !dings Two apa t
ments wh .Ch are completely tur
n shed Please ca 740 992

2 Bedroom Apartment
Ao
Grande Area Close To Colege
$350!Mo inc udes AU Uti Ilea
Depos I Requ ed I 888 MO

N ce Home Set lJ p On Lot Make
2 Payments Move n 4 Yea e

2 Bedroom Apt on Slate Route
160 6 m tes No th of Ho zer Hos

Rent Busler New 1999 14x70 2
o 3 Bedroo ms Onl~ $995 00
Down S195 oo per month Free
De Ivery and Sel Up Call 1 BOO
948 5678

1991 Chev Conv e sion Van
Fu S ze Mark 111 Loa ded
92 OOOm e looks &amp; uns g e~t
$6 500 (304)675-2949

736 :1409

340

w"

Christy s Famil~ Llvrng property
Ia sa e 202 204 N Second Ave
nue Middlepo t Four 2 bedroom
apartments two comma cal units
39 5,x1 16 brick o d Firestone
bu ld ng Asking price $69 500
make offer Income S1620 month
call 740 992 4514 ask for Chris
Martin
Commerc at Bu ld
so n Fo Sate o

ng

In Hender
Lease Call

(a03)386 9438

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 Bu d ng Sites tell of! Route 33
in Mason $ 5 000 an Acre

1304)8a2 3172
as

B acktop Frontage &amp;
V ew
Ga Ita County
$32 000 More Acreage Aval abe

5 Ac
Lake

740 386 8670

Nice two bedroom ho me w th
basement Mulberry Heights Po
meroy $50 000 r m 7AO 992

App e Gro\le Memo al Ga den s
now olferlng a limited time spe
cia! on Cemetery Lots from Ap I
t 1999 to Jut~ I 1999 Buy 3
ots ge the 4th free Spec at
Sale Companion and Individual
Gave Ma ke s (304)576 2779

Pomeroy one bedroom home
needs cosmetic rep:t s $12 000
make ofler Sy acuse daub e
wide 4 bed oon s block lounda
tlon newlv remodeled carpet

se2 000 neautlfu 50x201 lol al
appl ances &amp; dishwasher lnclud
ed 740 992 4!514 ask tor Chr s
Martn
Restored VIctor an home situated
on 12 acres Village Middleport
see uded and pr vate appoint

menl eel 740 992 5696
Spr ng valley 2 story lam y
home 4 Bedroom 2 1/2 Baths
Llvmo Room Dining Room Eat n
K tchen Lg Family Room 740

245-9337
Three bedroorn home with 1018 of
closet space close to school on
corner lot storage bu ld ng one
bedroom rent a home Included

Beautiful Home Sites t Ac e 5
Acres and 6 Acres 1o miles
fro m Pt PI Public water Prl
vale (304~75-59t II 450..1542

BEAUTIFUL
Aestriclld Residential L'Ots Lo
eated A Comfortable 0 stance
From Gall pot s Double Wide a
Are Permitted Leave All Your
Ca as In Town Buy Yourself A
P ece 01 Ground Lots Start At
$8 750 5% Down land Contract
Now Available Call For Frse

ScHOOf, o~

A(.UPuNC.TU~f

Hunting F1shlng Lots of Prlvacyl
CIOBO 10 Town $175K (740) 258

_12_1~
6 ------------~~

38 Life story
40 Travels
41 UQJt of force

42 Frequently In

hel l tr

Stoc kho lm

h ~.;ar t s

H

\.\Cvcr

Breakth ough I Lo se
o 200
Pounds Ertsy
Q u ck
Fa st
Drama lc Result s 1OOo/. Natu a
Docto Recommended Frae Sam

ptogCa 7404411962
Be ge TwE'ed So l8 Lo ve

Sea l

N ce $200 Re gera or Al mnnd
EMce lent Conditi on $200 740
38~

9416 AMe 5 PM

11-\0~

IDI'OO:ll!llE fQF:.

0 1 We 1 I

c ea n au ooo
( 740~266

IH '! !

Nice

a

1"1

1102 Ask Fo Junlo

li e

15 Alum um Boal 20 H P Mn
cu ~ Less thD.n SOH T a fer
swlve cha rs carpe Ll\le Well
T o I ng Mota Battery Exce en

Cond._.,llo_n-,-(;._3_0 4;:_)6_7_5-_2_66_5-.----c1990 Sunt acke Party Hut 28 &amp;
a e new powe heAd (lAss tha
40 h on t) nev canvos da
co mp e el y enr. os J s o 'I 1
r.Arw~ l " n Ol./rr' f nm nr.
dP. r.a h1.ge l! luml u r ~k
~
other el(tras 740 992 7 14:-l

remarkable

50 Realtors
unit

52 Mountain on

Crete
53 Almosphere

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb ~ Crphe cryplog ams a o c P il 00 I om quo o O!'l! by amous peopl6 pas and p esen
Ea h lett
hP ciphR ;md!i f anotho:H" TodB y :s .;:/ a Z "'1UBJ.oi V

GFD

c

t m e v11h

l1c d a

ZPCIPAP O G

p 0

K F D A C U D AC A

F V UT A

T

G C

d )~c k ltuf111 g I s pan c1 c J li d
vc1rult th lu ny B ut 1\ dcr sson
tr ustcli I s 1 a t 11,; s w n~.: 1 11 g t 1 tlw
LIUbJ ck N w w 11t the 50 l1U11p
spl t c!..: cl lrcr 1;-tn CI Ut ol ntrol ftl
&gt;h1 ng '" ' drw n (Yes )e,dmg tltr
d 1 nd JR k tllr 1ck th ' " dcfcH I' til&lt;
t c l I u I \ 1 l) c 1c lr d )
Ill tkcs s nne Jc!cnse
he 11 tit&lt;
I ct c I&lt;ut sp odes (Do yo u th nk
s, ulh sh uld I r e Jvc tl o ked ) ts
1r ~;t tl
tth
I :s 1 ng ) ide s I
I 1 k1 r 1~htl lo o though I s pp "
N th u uld be
d n p tdes 111 I
a\C ( c p i
) c rls ) \\ csl s ta ts
v1th t V{ top d1 1 ds I t Fa t mu ~
rufl the cc md 1 s Vllch 1 1 hc"t
ufled hy We st The n tho ch 1 no nil
1Kk In n~ dun 11 ) 11 uti lea \ nc
d cu lal l': f u l ie to &lt;lrf'l
1.1 np' 11 I
~et hack to th e dun 1 y lo 11kc il '
ltc 1 lmcs&lt;.;c

740 286 539

TRANSPORTATION

47 Rural s kyline
sight
48 Somelhlng

WTWQ

GPRDW

F T I B

GFTG
NPOGPIION

KCGDAJH
K C DG

F T I 8

HDFVNP

UDAVFPA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION Bes dPs f rr h s pass1ons 1nc uded chess spo Is
and cryptography - Warners Joe Hyams on Stanley Kubr ck

10

OuJsta nd ng Ang s And Chl an
g ul1 Bu Is Reasonab y Pr cod
State Run Fa n~ lacksnn Oh n

(304 675 2098

AI
44 Arrow poison
46 Mls&amp;rle abbr

the

And c ss n cashed !u s 1r p d11
11 n Is l lib rg diS a1Ch tg a
Cllt OIIrt £ g cfub on the
CC ( U
unO l lu.: t c ls 1 n nu1 n ~ r ~ ~ )

1\ Df\'1 \0 P\o:MOWLEIX£

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Regs ered ack Angus Yea ng
Bu o ut of 9 F8 3 Fu !back

~sy

43 Java man

Swede

ntercsun g quest tan IS th s C an Eost
Wes t dclcal f&lt; sp, dcs
Wcsl s three dt t nunds was a we &gt;k
JUm p J\ crcall sho ' ng •n pr nc1ple
tbuul 6 )() lug h c &lt;r&gt;l p IS ln d "
Jc CO S X en d SUit \Vtth a SC VCI Ill
cal Li nc would so m c t Jill&lt;.'" b d lm r
tit tn nu s hut that h s 1he t1 s odv m
lagc ( l k g th e au
n r l t) cc

1740) 367 7210

1 ~8 3 Ford T.,m no XL

BIG NATE
OEIVIOUS L'(

AN

ISOLATED
INCIDENT

1973 0 d s Omega 49 000 Actual
Mile s Orig nai Pa int Gooct

Shape $3 800 740 36! 503

- -1980 1990 CARS FROM $'1011

Pot co Impo und s
And ra x
Repo s Fo LI S1ings Ca 1 800

31 9 3323 E1&lt;1 4420

PEANUTS

':~~:~~,

S© \\4ll ~- ~ t,trs·

- - - - - - - 14ud ~y ClAY. ,DUAN

'
WOlD

••••

0

horronge letter&amp; of the
fou r sc a mb led wo ds be
low to fo m fou wo ds

[1uvoH

I' I

[I

--]-,!
I I I r J :,
r

-::R -=o --:O
c-cM::-::-T
s
.

TI
r 1I I I
.

.

T0

_

A 1\ N y

7

_

_

.

.

_

L--'- .....L--'---'--·-

2bdrm apts Iota electric ap
p lances furnished aundry oom
lac I t es c ose to school n town
Appl cat ems eva able at VI age
G een Apt&amp; J49 or cal 740 992

371 EOH
Apartment 2 Bedrooms 0 nrng
Room K tchon Utllty Room No
Pe s Oepos 1 $400/Mo Refer
ences 740 245-5053

Goll Clubs Top F ght Tou
Graph te Shafts 3 Through f' tch
lng Wedge New $595 Se $4 00

080 740 258 689a

1987 Toyot a Ce ca GT 5 Spe ed
A C Sun Roof P S P B Ru ns
Great Call 740 446 2t07 740

My netghbor had a b umpe r
st c ke r lha\ read IRS_ They
Have What It Takes To Take
W ha t
Complele he chuckle ouoled

O
you

by f I ng n t~e mung wo ds
deve op om step No 3 below

1988 Ch evy Cos c:a 2 8 -1 gh
M leage Look s &amp; Ru n:, G eat

------~------

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 o $350 Wa k lo shop
&amp; movies Ca 740 44G 2568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Christy s Fam y Living apart
ments home &amp; trai er entals
740 992 4514 apartments ava
able furnished &amp; unfu nlslied
Gracious lving t and 2 bed oom
apa lmenls at VI age Manor and
Riverside Apa tments In Middle
pori From $249 $373 Ca I 740

992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tun lies
Modern 1BR A I Utili es Pa d
Except Electric Gallipol s Ferry
Area $250 month + Df!pos 1

(304)675-13711a75 3230
New Haven t bedroom !urn shed
apartment deposil &amp; rete ences
740 992 0165
SA Apl
Newly Remodeled
Prime Downtown Ga Upol s Loca
lion No Pets $300 + Ulll ties
Reference Required 740 446

0008
Nice 2 bedroom apartment n Syr
acuse $285 a monlh tra sh n
c uded $200 deposit 740 667

35 6
North 3rd Ave M ddleport 2
bedroom unfurnished apartment
deposit &amp; refe ences 740 992
0165
Now Taking Applications 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Inc udaa Water
Sewage Traah $315/Mo 740
. .6 0008

One Bedroom ~partmenl n Pt
Pleasant Furn shed very Nice
and Clean No Pels Phone

(304)675-1386

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired NB\1 &amp; Reb
n Sock
Call Ron Evcms 1 800 537 95.28

198 6 Do dg ll Dynasty 4 OOOI S
Automat e $1 500 740 446 9582
1988 Pan ac Gran d Pri &gt;: tw o
Ooor automati c a r very good
co nd 1 on 116 000 m le!i $2000

740 992 7689

Johnso n s Used Fu n lure
pllances 740 446 4039 740
1004 5 Mile&amp; Out BulaoJ e
011 35 Right On Keel"' RoRI.I
House On Left

fAp
446
P ke
Blue

Call now 1 61)0.263-2640

pRO I s SUPPL'!

We Are P otesslonal ln sta a on
And Se v ce Sup(;l v We Sel
Wholesa e To The Pub! c We
Stock Jan 1ro Heat ng An I Coo
ing Equ pment Duc t Wo k Aeg
!stars And Rela "d MA erla s Fo
You To In stall Yo Own 0 We
Can Furn sh A I lsi 01 0Aale s To
Install Fo You II Yo Don Ca
Us We Bolh Lose' 553 JacksCl

P ko 740 44 6
0098

~ 30a

1989 Dodg e Sha dow 4 Door s
Automati c Many New Parts
$2 000 Also t Cyl nde Au omat
c Tran s &amp; Re ar End Drive S haft
Fo Fortt Ra nge $100 740 256

6986

PRIMESTAA
Free Direct Special

800 291

Troyb II HorsE! Rota Tl 19 Elect c
Stall A din g Mower Grevely
(Comme ciel Type) 60 Cut Re
built Eng ne 42 G ass Catche
5 8 uah Hog 4 WQod Trell a
With Sides 4 Lawn Rollru Snow
Sea Sno.,.,. B ado E ectrlc Blade
F!tl!! An~ Vehicle 5 Drag Blade
Troytii Ch pp e Shred der 16
And 24 Ell.tPn'! nn L Adt1 ~ J1. 740

256 6890

Two 5000 BTU El l cond t 0n 0 5
S100 each new Lawn B o ~ law n
mower $200frm 740 9926 1511

1990 Chryste 5th Ave!lue Very
Good Co ndition On e Owner
C ean Ex cel ant Gas Mileage
8 7 00 0 M es Alarrr Sy stem

A6S $5500 (304)675 7614

1994 Oodgft B 250 Luxu v H Qh
Top T a(.J e W nds Co nvesi or
Van 1 own or l 1~ 92 Cl'lva er 2
Do or AIIO A C Co ok Mo o a
(740)44~

1994 Plvmouth Sundance 4 Cy
Iinde Au o mi\1 c AC 87 00 0

Mle• S2 400 OBO 740 258
123:)
1994 Pontia c Sunt11d lE 67 000

Mtes $4000 74044101 32
19 95 Buick LeSab1e Custo m -t
Doors Btu(! Loaded 74 0 68 2

751 2

1997 Cav a le

PS PB 42 00 0

M ea Cruise Tilt CO

Pla~ e

Ask ng $10 500 740 4411-401 0

Two Ga e Post Two 6 x6 ChB n
Link Gates With Hardwa A Bes

Offer CRt 304 675 3515

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

ROBOTMAN
m~&lt;ms'

AU. Y ~1)\S
SJiAJ,\IN

1978 Chevy mQtO hom 23 al
condlt oned ~~;~v e yth ng wo rk s
ca l 740 698 0502

l'AI~~N!i IN

1995 Nornad Deluxe 30 Ftft~
WheA will st de o 1 roo n cent al
air &amp; heat m crowave oven ster
eo se I conla ned hold ng tan~s
1 wale 3 waste 51h wheel t)ltch
electric levelers back rear staDJ
llzer jac:ks 5th whee stand- and
cove lor camper used very tilt e

SERV!CES
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

WATE~PROOFING

Uncondlt onal lllet me guaran ee
Local lfer81'\ces lurn shed Es

la~lshed 1975 can 24 Hrs (7401
448 OB70 1 800 ~87 0576 Rog

e s Wa e proof ng

Appliance Pa Is And Se vice A
Name B ands Over 25 Years EM
pe r ence All Work Guo a.ntea~
Frenct'! City Maylag 740 44 6

7795

C&amp; C Gener al Home Ma ri
tenence Palnl tng vinyl siding
carpent y doors w ru:lows baths
mObi e home repa r and mo e For
free esllma e call Chef 740 993
L vinp.slo n s Ba semen Water
Proo f ng a I basem &amp;fl l repairs
dono lr ao est mates lfel me
guarante e 12yrs o n 10b ex per t

(304)675 2475

Wat er I a Spec Ia

once (304)895 3887

840

RON EVANS ENTERPRISE S
Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9528

$700

--- ---~--

WHITES META L DETECTOR S
4338

A Auto Ripley WV 1304) 37?
3933 or t DQ0-273 9329

6323

Used 2 /2 Ton Heal Pump &amp; A
Condit onlng
un
S40o

Aon Alis o 1 t 210 Second Ave
nue Ga llpa li s Oh o 71\0 ot .t6

s t llltrn o ff l ghts when the y LEAVE a roo m

New gas tank s &amp; body pa s 0 &amp;

0103

$37 00 Per 100 All B ass Corn
pression Fittings in Stock

Close To Holzer&amp; $385/Mo P us
Deposit 740-446 2801

Vtsual Uncle HOI el Octave LEAVE
Yo u c a n tell who was ra ts ed n the 30 sa nd 4 0 s Th ey

$12900 7407422005

$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PS

New Apartment With
Garage 2 Bedrooms
Nice Lawn References ReQuired

SC:RAM LETS ANSWERS

245 9164
$1 500 (304)675 2949

Map! 1 110().213 8365

Its not a Farmers Farm Its a
Large Beautllu Home In the Mid
die of Lots or Acreage Good

nobleman

29 Totals

l o 11l s 1 nnrny Gullhcrg and I t s
/\nd e1 &lt; n " n lh s pam e \ C I b) 1
WldC ln O g t 1 he) r ckCICd hau l
$ 1 fiJO c tch
I I ' le t) l) c \ ICI ald \\ Cil

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

same spac s 2?. 9 00 30 tO 2WD
42 PTO HP I Aemato We

71 o Autos lor Sale
METABOLISM

r

competitor

pltal (740)448 3165

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Bu11iness and
Buildings

·-,-----

orbtt

27 Greek peak
28 British

I ehn ny 18 2 1 S 'c d ~&lt; h 1nte1n t

agamst four

0521

Oakw ood Home s Barboursv lie
WV $499 Down Single Wide
$999 Down Double W de 304

2292

2168

7806

New 1999 14x70 thee bed c om
nc udes 6 months FREE lot rent
nc udes washe &amp; dryer sk rting
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 pe month w th $ 50
down Cal 1 800 837 3236

Used SlngieWide A ound S1oo
par month Cal 1 aoo 948 5676
Fo Sa e By Owne 3BR 1 I
2BA Ia ge faml y oom &amp; of ce

5199 cal 1 BOO 779 8194

1 Bedroom Pa tley Furniture
Apartment Utll ties Paid $300 oo
mann (740) 367 0611

Good se ec on ol used homes
wlh 2 o 3 bed ooms Sla tng at
$3995 Ou ck de ve y Cal 740

Sto y 3 Bed ooms 2 112 Baths
Nea Holzer lmmed ate Posses
slon 74Q.446-9672

East
Pass
All pass

By Phillip Alder
lmla) s deal ucc t rred J urmg II o
N1kf ts )),1' Ch a 1p1 ms) p wh c h

$20 90 0 00 4630 55PTO HP

- - -8 - - - -

18 DirecTV Sate lte Systems
$69 00 threA mon h I oo program
ming lim ted time offer e~ep er, 5

AMAZING

385 9621

North
Pass
4•

Do you see it?

1996 3oo EX Honda w th Ext a~
1905 200 SX Han Ia or Par t s

- -----

bundle

21 Most dlotant
point In an

33 Puts to work

1979 Chevy 112 on 4WO PS PS
automat c too many new pa t&amp; k
st a~;iklng $5500 price li negot

GOOD USED APPL ANCES

!j40 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

J(orbul
11 Cult
12 Fatuous
13 Deep yearning

Howwaa -

- know?
20 Catton

23 At a distance
24 Small wood
once
25 Vogue

u trump

1 and 2 bed oom apartments fur
n shed and unfu nished securlly
deposit required no pets 740
992 2218

8 Hawaiian
goose

gymnaat

31 Dictionary

94 G ancl Che okee La edo 4)f4
llu!Om.:tllc 72 000 m&amp; 9 !1 CD Dad
ed exce an con d on $13 0~
hpme 740 367 Ot 19 eve lngt::
we k 74 0 992 6677 tA. ee kd a y~
afik to Stephanie

3930 4WO 45 PTO HP 192'Tu

Buy or sell AlvA rw An ques
1124 E Main Sl e ~ l o n A 24
Po me oy Ho u s M 1 W 0 00
am to6 00p m Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 740 992 ~ 526 R "~
Moo e owne

choice

18

9 Olympic

Openmg lead • II

Spf'I CS 16 !1 00 0 0
Come See Th e New TN 55 65 75
4W O mode s with Super Ste e
w II tu n sho l e than a 2 WD
KeP.Iefs Serv ce Center St AI
87 Pt Pleas ant &amp; A p ev Road
Phone (304}895 3874

800 363 8662

3 Bedrooms 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Yo ars 0 d 28x30 Alla ched Ga
age 12K24 Bu din g Barn &amp;
T acto She d 69 112 Ac re s 0
WI I Se I House &amp; Lot Meig s Co

3.

lnd PTO 13 500 00 3010

Apartments
lor Rent

3 Morays
4 Jake anthology
5 Banned
Insecticide
6 Hockey great
Bobby
7 Coin IOSI

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs

(nice) (304)675 a 65

1 8a8 BIB-D1 28

1 601 hairdo
2 Haaten•

compiler

7795

Washe s tt ~e s ef !,Qera o s
ra nges Skagg s App ances 76
Vine Street Cal 7&lt;10 44 6 7396

DOWN

22 Plaza tmp

West
3•
Pass

South

ALL GONE ff

Household
Goods

GE
Reg ge ato
20 6
Cub f (good) Couch &amp; Lov&amp; Seat

23 Loto
26 OPEC
commodity
27 WWII-era
agency
30 Pureue
32 In one o cupo
34 State wilhdul
proof
35 Greeted the
villain
36 Map abbr
37 Subolde
39 Roebuck s

Vulnerable Ne1ther
Dealer South

Ffl d F 50 XL 4 J~ 4 5Speep

AC 300 6 Cyl (304)675 17'!14
$9 500 0 80 1979 Fo d 351

YOU MADE YORE SPAGHETTI

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Applia nces
Re con d-t oned
Washa s Orye s Aangets Refri
g alors 90 Day Gu ara n eel
F ench City May ag 740 446

5039

•AKQJ3 2
" A J 10 3
• 10 7 3

•

Gal

510

14x70 two bedroom tra ler n Mid
dlepo t $300 pe month 740 992

South

995 Fo d ExplOrer &lt;t DR 42K M
Loaded M nt Cond Sand Ceto
In &amp; Ou By Ow ner {304)6 '75

1 99~

• 8
oloKQ8 5 3 2

• J 10 6

New Mob! e Home Pa k at
pols Fe ry Now accep ng appll
cat ons fo Ia s Of'1 s te (304)675

6908

10 9 6

6055

Dog Obedience Class es Now
Form no T t1e R gru Paw Tra nlng
Center 740 446 1864 For lnlo

Antietam

East
• 4
•KB7 6 4

••AKJ9 5 4 2

(304)895 30001695-3237

$250 740 742 2050

~ ce Sma 2 Bed oom 5 Room
House Near Cente v lie fThur
man Gal Ia Schools County Wa
er Included P ani A Garden
$325 Mo Pus Depos 1 No In
side Pets! 740.682-9032

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

•

Sho !Bed
4X4 3Ei0 Automall c l oaded
6 0 Ooo n es Ha d Ro Ov e
AI Bags Rad ator Good S4 700

Jack Russe 1 female puppy brown
and while she hB r smal breed

7462

440

2 bedroom mobile home total

740.99!1 6154

560

1 In front
42 TM Bucke~e
6 Expression ol
Slate
dlomay
45 Plaything
10 Evil oneo
46 Same prolix
12 Willingly
49 Conclusion
14 Tell
51 One ollhe B
IS florida fruh
vllamlno
18 Fororunner ol 54 Earthquake
1M CIA
55 Fit to owallow
17 AFLo pertner 56 Schoolchild o
19 College olllclal
dread
20 Gettysburg and 57 Coat of mall

05 05 99

West

1995 Dod ge Ram

s

2 Bedroom w/Basemenl &amp; Ga
age Oepos t &amp; Aefereoces No

Needs Repa s

$10 000 080 (304)675 5570

pllrl40 Dwelll

ACROSS

• 8 7 5
.. Q 9 52
• Q6
• A 9 7 4

EEK&amp; MEEK

Mo e Very N~et (304)675 6055

after 5pm

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

DoubteBun k

~

304 675 0660 0 740 742 2022

Bu11iness
Opportunity

boe Or Judy A1740.446 7323

410 Houses for Rent

989 Ke nwonh T soo 425H P w
Jake Brake 9Sp eed 400 Re a s

AKC Reg1s1e ad Lan Pu ppies

1994 Sky ne Supreme 14x74
3BR 2BA Vinyl&amp; Shingle Roof
Ga den Tub ClAir Total Elect
K tchen Island Wa k In Coset &amp;

(304 675 2533

House
Street
b ocks
roo ms

EOH 304 676-6679

Cal Afte 4 PM 740.245 1302

2103 Moun Ve non Avenue 3BR
1 2BA Fami y Room Ga age
Cent a AI Pat o Porch $77 000

EXCELLENT CONDITION

~Pfl&lt;ld

1994 t6x80 Sunsh ne Mob e
Ho me Three Bedrooms Two
Bath ooms Walk In C osets Utt I
ty Room Electric Heat Pu"1' Re
f ge at o And Stove Included

Pt P easanl $2a 000 (304)895

Need a Baby Sitter lor the Sum
mer?? Day or Evening s (740)

RENTALS

2 Bedroom Ho se In Galllpol

Twin Ave s T()V(8r now accept ng
app c ations to ~BR HUD sub
aldlzed apt for e derly and hand
Upstairs Ttlre e Room Apa tmen
At 65 Second Avenue Gall po
1 s Nex To Ub ary $350 Mo
Pus Capos I No Pels Cal Deb

$16 500 00 (740)446 8113

A I ea estate Mvertis ng n

chne

In er o &amp; Extenor Pain lng Ex
per enc ed Att erences Reason
able Rates For Free Est mate

Anthpr&gt;Y Land Co

Cond ton

1 800.736-3332

210

lion Apply In Por&amp;an At 380 Colo

E~ece ent

Ple ase Help 3 Bed oom 2
Ba hs ust take over Payments!

Ho zer Senior Care Cente A
Progressive Long Te m Care
Company Is Currently Taking Ap
plical ona For Part Time LPN Po
Bit ons The Facti ry IS LocateD In
Tne Southern Reg on Of Oh o
We Are Se.klng Individuals Who
W II Ensure The H ghe111 Stan

dard Of Re&amp;ldanl Care The Ap

245 9392

lof On Loan (304)722 7140

441 0359

We Buy Land 30 500 Ac es
We Pav, Ca1h 1 800 2t3 8365

199 141tx721t Shlng o Roof V nyt

180 Wanted To Do

E ectr c Maintenan ce Ser v ce

Nurse Aide Train ng Classes
Come Join Ou Team That Makes
A Dilference We Are Offer ng
Nurse A de Training Classes On
Site AI Seen c Hlf s Nurs ng CerJ
ter II You Have Prev ous y Com
p eted An Appl cation Please
Come And Apply Aga n Or Con
tact Pam Ca dwe I 8 30 A M To
4 30 PM Wednesday Thru Fr

197 3 Ramada 12x60 Mob le
Home 2 Bedrooms Cent sf Air
Range Top Oven And Aelr gera
tor Good Condition Call After
6 00 PM Fo Appoln ment 740

S ding

Exce enl Wage And Benefit

Rosie Ward
Director Of Human Resources

Real Estate
Wanted

Ta a Town house Apar t ments
Very Sp ac ous 2 Bedro oms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Ful y Ca
pe ed Pallo No Pets Lease Pus
Secuf lty Deposl Req ed 740
446-348 1 740 4&lt;\6.(1 10

---'-- - - - - , --

Po ch $14 000 (304)862 2246

Today 740 446-4367 1 aoo
214 0452 Reg •90 05 12746

Child Ca e P ovide t1as a n
Opening for a ch ld three o Olde
12 yeas Expe ence Ca 1 (740}

360

- --------------·1304 576 2438

1990 Aoya
Cove
14X74
28a hs Sky ghls In Kitchen Is
land Stove Underp nnlng &amp;

Holzer Medical Center IS Seek ng
A Licensed Bo e Operator Can
d dates Must Have A H gh P es
sur&amp; Boler Ope ator's license In
The State 01 Oh o

If lnte esled Please COntact

t973 H !!crest two bedroom mo
bile home 740 992 5039

(304)773 5319 /6pm-11pm

740 992 3537

PB&lt;I&lt;age

(740) 256 1216

Schultz Mobl

1961 14X65 T allor 2BR HI

no

140

Assume

AC
1 Bath Appl ances 2
Porche6 10X24 PI P $6 000

310 Homes lor Sale

WI dl e Jobs $21 GO H
nc
Bene ts Game Wa dens Securi
1~ Maintenance Pa k Range s
No E~ep Needed Fo App Exam
Into
Ca l
18006133585
E~tt 88 27 SAM 9PM 7 Day s
Ids tnc

16 x80 \I ny Shingle
Loan 1 BOO 383-6862

2452

REAL ESTATE

a

able 740.992 1042

1980 141C65 e ectrlc 2 bedroom
2 luI baths very good cond ton
$ 11 000 ca I even ngs 740 949

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Monegor

W tdlle Jobs to S2 60 Hr Inc
Bene its Game Wa dens Se cur
ty Ma ntenance Park Range s
No E~ep Needed Fo App Anq
EKam Info Call 1 800
3 3585
EKI 88 2 7 SAM 9PM 7 Days ds

12)(65 Master Craft two bedroom
one bath gas heal $4000 negoll

e Home
Needs Wo k Ask ng saoo
(304)675-7663 Alte 6PM

No Fee Un ess We Win!

PQio Lm~ Caesars
Rapidly eJ:pand ng cmerna c rcult
has Immediate open ng If you
tlave food serv ce or reta 1 man
agement expe ences this wou d
be a natu al It Relocation to
P ttsbu gh Pa requr ed Prev ous
movie theatre management/pro
Ject on booth experiences a b g
plus Excelent start ng sa ary and
benefits package included Re o
cation fees will be eimbursed
Start Now Caree growth s un
I m ted! Tra nlng will be prov ded
Pease lax resume to Joseph D

tOx!'iO tra le South Second Ave
nue Middleport f nlshed bu d 110
large lot w th goldfi sh po nds
$22 000 re ntal un t 740 992
451 4 ask for Chr s Ma In

Shad ed Camps te by the Ri '.'er
Boat ng Fi shi ng and Priv ate!
$4 00 00 Down $73 00 month

North

1988 GMC 112 Ton 'FJII 5!2'8
Pickup T uck lor tale Au o L o ~
Mil~s {304)675 8900

month (740) 256 1216

t969

Th s newspaper WII no
know ng y accep
adver1 semenl-; fo eat estate
whch s 1 vo auon of the
aw Ou reado s a e he eby
nfo med 1 at a dwe ings
advort sed n h s newspape
ae ava abe o an equnl
opportun ty bas s

LITTLE CAESARS s Now Hr ng

Home S 1e Mob Home s Wei
co me Lois of Woods Plenty of
Room! &amp;400 00 Down $145 00

:PHILLIP
ALDER

1985 Chevy B ;ner Good Shepe

Low Mleage 740 256 11 02

Electrical and
Refrigeration

ASTRO·ORAPH
Thursday t)iay b 1999
Seek outlets tn the year ahead lhnt
wtll glYe you the opportunity to ~arn
new 1h1ngs By expondmg your
knowledge 1here could be some b1g
benefits denved from II
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20}
Should you run mto someone whose
ou1look on thmgs IS totally conllllt}'
lo yours today forego the temptatiOn
lo argue your .o1de Nothmg wtll be
Batned by debattn8 ph1losophy
Know whereto look for romance and
you II find 11 The Aslrll Graph
Matchmaker mstantly reveals whtch
stgns are rornanucally perfect for
you Mad $2 7~ to Matchmaker c/o
lhts newspaper PO Box 1758 Mur
ray H1ll Stat1on New York NY
10156
GEMINI (!&gt;lay 21 June 20) lrou
ble can be avorded today by keep1ng
your nose out of other people s bust
ness If It doesn t dtrectly concern
\If tt don I tniCfJCCI let ll be
\ &gt;J ( I R (June 21 July 22) In
orc..lt.: 1 hr 'iUCcessfultn IJotnt effon
today the auns and tdeas of a cohort
rnu&lt;1 he compalrble to yours II

you rc not m S) nc the project Will
fall nal
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Only rely
on yourself 1f you have an tmportant
Ia!~ thnl must be accomplished on
ume today because others m1ght ndt
be as consctenuous or d1ltgent as you
It might lie left undone
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22} Don t
let someone who has a h11tory of
bunghng thmgs m lhe past talk you
mto gellrng mvolved m another of hts
lamebram rdeas II rsn t hkely h15 or
her pallem has chenJed
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23} Let old
wounds set a chance to lieal Instead
of reopcnmg ISSues where you and
your mate hove preVIously dl!agreed
If the hurt 1s sttU sore 1he trtltauon
wtll be greater th1s ume
SCORPIO (Oct 24 No• 22)
Demand1n1 others to drop whatlhey
are do1g1 and help you mstelld will
get you nowhere futtoday Be real
tSltc thouahtful of thetr tome and
they II a••• you atd when they can
SAOITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Unmomtored your spendtng

coutd gel 1o1ally out of har d 10day
Its best you make a hst of what you
need tn advance to avmd bccommg
extravagant wh1le you shop
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Mnderauon m aU lhmgs should be
your motto today Without d1sc•
phne 11 could be qulle easy for you
to ovenndulge m lhe good 1hmgs of
hfe aad pay a hefty prrce later
AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Should duly call today and you are
requtred to adJUSt your schedule m
order 1o accommodnte an obhpauu
don 1make a b1g deal of 11 Smile and
thmgs won t be as annoymg
PISCES (Feb 20 March 2UJ
Don 1 let your easy gomg nature
desert you today when ynu re wllh
fnends who are reluctant 10 foltow
what you d hke to do Lei the maJOr
ny rule and go along wrlh the gang
ARIES {March 21 April 19) n.,
way to 1mpress others 1$ not hy bent,
showy phony or a know tl oil Those
types of 1actrcs tum people off Ynu
wot t have to be anythtng but wh l
you Are today m order to get anen
t1on

IWEDNESDAY

:~

MAY sl

�•

•

•

themselves and t&amp;eir students.
A variety of topics will be discussed in the class, incl uding per·
sonal stress management, emotional IQ, implementation of coli·
"' ion Ce nt er.
Talk about gelling lnsl in the h i ~ retirement party as well as lhc
I\ three -graduate Uc dtt course nict resolution strategies, dealing
shufne.
ku\dncssc!i wh ich have bee n cxlcmJ· tit led "Strateg ies for Daily Sur- with difficult student s and/or
At least 10 mCtl;l5crs of. the 1989 ed to him by Kri &lt;li Ehlen, library n var· will he offered vi a &gt;al cllite peers, and promoting student self·
graduating class nf Southern High ~cn• i cc director, sLaff members and hroadcast June 21- 25 , June Jll, discipline .
·
School are Just that A special the buard . Harry- wi ll be missed July 2 1 and Jul y 28 !rom Y:OO
The one graduate credit course ,
reunion of the c l as~ is being planned that 's tor sure
"Successful Grant Writing Procea.m. to noon.
for May 29 and there wilrbc a dance
Thi s c'nurs e. is dcs ig'ned lo pr u ~ dures" will be offered through the
beginning at 8 p.m., at the Racine
Aunt Maude i:-. always tell ing J'nc vide educa tors with th e knowl· Internet ~articipants can tak ~ the
American Legion HaiL
that it\ berter to work with the con - edg e and &lt;ki ll s needed to create course from any location where
Members or the class who '\lruc ti on gang than wit h the wrcck- more p9sitivc lcarmng environ· they ha ve access to the Internet
received invitations arc asked to mg LTl' W. ... Nnw whatever docs ~ he
This course is designed to pro··
rncnt s, thu s r;cli cving stre ss for
RSVP and those who are "lost" arc mean ':' Do kr l!p . ; miling .
asked to

t: u nt ~I C I

vide school practitioners with the
knowledge and skill s needed to
write grant proposals for purposes
of soliciting funds for implement·
ing and/or supportins educational
projects and programs.
While the focus is on educa·
lion, the stra tegies employed are
applicable to many other nonprofit areas. The course can be taken
between Jun e 21 and August 16.
For registration materia l for
the two courses , residents may
contact OSU • The Centers at
Piketon at (740) 289-2071 .
Deadline _ for regi stration IS

May 21. These two classes are
being brought to your local com·
munity by Ohio Stale University
Extension through OSU CA RES.
The courses are desig.,:d and
orfered through a collaborative
effort of A Professional Develop··
ment Partnership: Virtual Univer·
sity (Columbus Education Associ·
ation, Ohio Education Ass ociation
and The Ohio Stale Universi ty
College of Educat ion) and The
Ohio State ' University Office of
· Continuing Education UniversitY:
College .
·

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70s; Low: 608 ·

Meigs County's

STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday

Mr. and.. Mrs. R&lt;tlph (iravc ~. v.:c ll
known Pomeroy resident s, will ma rk
their- 65th wedd in g anniversary t im~
Su nday, May 9. .
Both Mr. anJ Mrs. ' Grav·c~ Jrc

th ere.
pleased
time.

Accepts Credit Cards·

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOb THRU May 8, l999

Ralph especial ly wi ll he

w hear frOm you at

thi ~

A varied sprin g , rnu~ i c al pn1gram

wi ll be presented by the Maste rworks Chorale nt 3 .p.m. Sunday at

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

LAY'S POTATO

DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

CHIPS
(ASST. YAR.)

the fine arts center on the C&lt;tmpus of

the Un ivcr.&lt;i ty of Rio Gra nde.

(DORITOS 9 OZ.
$1.69)

Acc omp ani st for lhc musical

group, direc ted by Dr, Mcrv Murdock, is Pomeroy allorn cy, Jennifer
Sheets, and several Meigs Countians
dt1 sing with the choir. The concert
is free of charge and it mi ght be a
nice outing lor Mother's Day. .

$ 29
Pork Chops •••••~~.~ ••••••• ~. _ · ·

3
Pork Rihs~ •• ;~·~.:••••••••• 9 9

BONELESS BUnERFLY

Mike. Roberts of Akron , former
· Meigs ..rcs idCJit Jnd a · &lt;:cillector of
Mei!!s Co unt y memorabi.lia , repnrls

that he has 15 dillcrcnt type s of
"Gw·· hecr hott lcs. The ··cw··. lie
says, stands fur Gottl eih Wildermuth, fath er of Charle&lt; Wi ldermuth.
who foun ded the . Condo r St. ,
Pomeroy, brewery. His ··Gw·· inter,.

COUNTRY ·sTYLE

prctntion, Mike rcpons. is vcr ifi ~:U
by a hccr crate trorn Lht.: company

The weekend !l.doptathon held to

lic sa itl good bye tn !-larry Rou sh.
E:tglc Ridge Road , Racin e·. Suo\day
wllh a farewell party h..:Jd ;1 ! th L'
p,;mcroy Library.
Harry has wr&lt;~prcd up IS y c;1r~
wilh the lihrary scrvtCl' . lie wa 'l prese nted a pla que from the dJ.., tt iL·t
library bomd nl tnl stCL'" · n ,; 1n ccr
Lifi..:atc_o:m d" gift of nwn9 fwm th~.:
staff pl.us g1ft.s anU card "' from the

public. .
'
' · Harry rcall y appreciat es all of the

ll.

_.

_

LB.

.

$

FAMILY PAK

Chicken.Breasts ••L:-.
HONEY SUCKLE FROZEN
.

.

Smoked

1

19

"HONEY SUCKLE

Turkeys
••••••••••
,
••
t9
....

C

'•

.
7,
1 ·
_
·
69c
•••••••
_

$

Dogs

. 12 oz.

.

Mother ' s - Day

FRESH

Cantalou~s.:::.~;9 9 c

TROPICANA SEA!ON'S BEST ·.

hea lth examinati ons at a s pe cial

·

Or~nge . Ju•ce •••• !!~!...

· One of of eve ry three women

has not had a pa p test, hrca_st
gyne c ul o ~H.: a l

· care se rviL:c s suc h as prenata l, ·

post partum , birth con trol, and

BROUGHTON

9
9
C
Pud.d•ng •••••••••••• ~

KRAFT HANDI
e SNACK 4PACK

.

mid ~ lifC scrvil:cs ," said Karnlyn

Kun t. . spo kesman for the vrgitnizati on. ''These scrv iecs arc crit i-

cal in keeping women healthy and
hel ping women hecn mc mothers
w~cn

they arc ready-"
·
" Planned Parenth ood pro vides
women with access to a full range
of qualit y rcproducti vc health
1

tare, " said , KuriZ , "and Mothcr s

Day and Health Moms Week arc.
the perfect opportunit ies to give
the gift of good health ."
To make a 1-l calth y Moms
Week ap p&lt;Jinllncort at Pla qn ed
Paren th ood. rc; idc nts may call 1H00-230-PLAN .

INSTANT

That charge is punishable by up to I0 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Kdly aJUid be reoommended for a sentence of about six years if he follows

99

lI

120Z.

KRAFT ORIG•. :
YELYEETA &amp;
OR DELUXE ~C· &amp;
CHEESE DINNER:

=~~~~on~h~is~~~:to:"cooperate
investigators
and. aocept
with whichwith
he isfederal
charged.
·

_,.,Ill'•. oonlli_it I ia--Ap-il lll!n"ill Cii-. County Common Pleas

Court of violating Ohio law by canying a axteealcd weapon.
He is due Friday in U.S. District Court to enter his guilty plea to the feder·
weapons chatge before Judge Hennan Weber, government Jl'O""CUtor ~I ph
Kohnen ~ Tliur!iday. The judge.is not bound by tenns of the plea agreement.
Kohnen declined to say what information the .government expects from
Kdly.
'
Kelly had been· Jiving at a soulhwesl Ohio barn, in Wam:n County's Oregonia community, when he was arrested
Aprill4. Federal atJthorities confiSCBI·
ed two semiautoinatic pisto)s lie is
accused of having. according to a document that prosecutors filed in aJUrt
Tuesday.
.
A federal agent's affidavit identifies
Kelly as a member of the Clmn:h or
Jesus &lt;luist Ouistian.
The agent said the FBI has· idenli·
tied the organization as art anti·govemmen~ white supremacist group
based in the New Vienna community
in Clinton County. The group is a
chapter of the Aryan Nations organi·
zatioo b~ in Hayden Lake, Idaho,
I!CCQnling to the .government's afll.
Lotteries
davit
Kelly began attending the Church of
OHIO
Jesus Olrist Olrislian in Febr\lary
Pkk3: 7·1·1; Pkk4: 8-1·7·3
1997. Ointon .County sheriff's offiSuper Lotto: 2·10·18-28,39-41
cers observed him on lhe builldin;g's I
Kicker: 2·2-0.0-4,3
. roof Cluring Sunday servioes
W.)TJ\,
with a haltdgun and peering through
D811y 3: 9-9·1; Dllll)' 4: S-1·9·8
binoculars, according to the affi·
9 1'1199 Olllo Vllley Pllblilhtna Co.
davit.

Good Afternoon

.FABRIC

May 10- 15.
Planned Parenthood· of Sou th·
east Ohio wi th an offi ce in tlo c
Veterans Memori al Hospital Clin ic Bu ild ing will be offeri ng

checkup or ph ys ical · in the past
year and this will be the "gift of
good hea lth " offered throug h
Plann ed Parenth ood .
' ·T ~rou g hout the year, Planned
Parcntho9d pro vide&lt; a wide range
of preve nt ive reproductive healt h

~;"!=: white supremacist has agreed to plead guilty to a weapons charge

cooperate with the government's invc:Stigatioo of others, according to a
I "'""' document
·
The government's plea agreement, liled in court Tuesday, with Kale T. Kelly
he agreed to plead guilty to illegal possession of firearms by a convicted

DOWNY

many

enthood 's nutinn al l-l ca lt hy Mom s _
Week program. to hl' c.: clc hr:1.1 ccl

examination ,

1

2/$4 1

wom en will receive the g ift o f
• good
healt h through Planned Pao -

rate of $35 .

CINCINNATI (AP) - A man described by federal authorities as an and·

..

•

Planned Parenthood
offers low-cost exams
. ~ - hi s

MAXWELL
HOUSE

COMB, 13.5 OZ.
BWEBERRY MORNING,
15.5. OZ. BANANA
NUT CRUNCH,
.
13 0%. (UIIBERRY ·• :
AlMOND CRUNCH . ; '

kind word s pas sed along h' him &lt;1!

I

.~J.4
$

_

Cottage CheeJe:~o;~.
DAIRY LANE FAMILY PACK

Ice c,ealll
. ..........!.~!!:~~~
'

·
200Z.
2/$5
•
k1es•••• •••••••••••
.

'

KRAFt (ASST. YAR.) SHREDDED

c

3/$)
I&lt;.25-15.25 OZ.

I

3202.

$)99

. oz69

4

2

93-121 oz.

Win A

BANKROLL

89

4

talked abovt it a lot."
Chapman ~aid he spoke with Gibbs the last time
Gibbs was home . ·
He said Gibbs ex pressed no regr.ets or (ears about
.
serving in active duty in Yugoslavia_ '
"It's his job and he had to do it, " Chapman said.
Family friend Julie Turkal said besides flying,
David Gibbs' biggest dream was to have a son.
"And now that boy will never know his father,"
Mrs. Turkal told The (Canton) Repository. "This just
isn'tthe way this is supposed to happen."
Ri chert was from Chetek, Wis . His mother, Flo -·
Reichert, told the Chippewa Herald of Chippewa
Falls, Wi s.; that ·military personnel came to her home
about_) a.m. Wednesday to tell her of her son's death.
She described her son as "very caring, friendly. He
loved his family ."
·
Reichert had been living in Ge rmany with his wife
and their daughter and two sons, said his mother-in·
law Judy Green .
The airmen 's bodi es were to be flown to Ramstein
Air Bas.e in Germany on Wednesday night and Iran!·
ferred to a nearby U.S. military hospital before being
returned to the. United States, the military said.

Tom I?ooley is chairman of the evening show to
begin at 7:30p.m.
Myron Duffield, president, reported that there are
now 48 paid members. He alSo noted that plans are inoving forward for the Honey Bear Festival on Aug. 14.
Arrangements for removing the old tree stumps along
North Second were discussed as well as preparing the
beds ror the planting of the summer_·flowers.
This is planned to begin the middle of May '!'&gt;that it
can be completed ·before alumni weekend . Help is needed with the beautification work and· anyone willing to
assist is asked to call992·4197. It is not necessary to be
a member of the Community Association to take part in
the llctivilies, Duffield stressed.
In the street report, it was noted lhal there is a new
thrift shop opening at the comer of fifth and Mill atlhe
Manley Recycle Center.
Duffield reported on the yellow flag sale last weekend noting that the(e was a total of 64 yard sales in the.
villages. Of the 64 sales, 44 residents bought new flags
and contributed towards the cost of advertising.
Five locations ~sed their old !lags but did not con·
tribute, and 15 sal~s occurred without .flag5. and took
advantage of the community l!dvertising.

OWE Employee-Emp.loyer breakfast held
Meigs High School.'s Occupational Work EXperience
class held its annual Employee-Employer BreakfaSt on
April 29 at Craw's Farnily Restaurant in Pomeroy.
St~dents honored employers and guests by presenting
plaques, clocks and .other gifts.
Employers who w.ere recognized at lhe event were:
Danny Crow of Craw's Family Restaurant; Jay Heiss of
, Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers; Steve Hutton of
Hutton's Car Wash; Nancy King of Dairy Queen Brazier;
\Aura Minor of Meijer's in Lancaster; Christie Barcus of
Golden Corral; Lisa Gilmore and Tarnmy Swcher of
Middleport Trophies and Tees; Huey Eason of E&amp;E Bor,
derline Surveying; Deana Larkins and Connie Roush of
McDonald~s; Russ Moore of Riverine Antiques; Linda
Johnson and David Snyder of Overbrook Center; and
Gina Brown of Art Hill's Greenhouses.
Other employers who were recognized, but . were
unable to attend were: Taw John's and KFC, both in
Athens; Gi~anni's, McDonald's and Hardee's in Belpre;
Dairy Queen Brazier of Alb!my; Vaughan's Supennarket
in Middleport and Big Bend Foodland, Pomeroy.
.
Other guests were Tony Deem, assistant principal at
Meig5 High School; Bill Buckley, superintendent of
Meip l..o\)al School District; Cliff Kennedy, guidance
counselor of Meip High School; David Hatris of The
Daily Sentinel; Nancy Hill, Meigs County Juvenile Offi·
cer, and Carol Brewer, Athens/Meitpi ESC.
Mick Davenport, Gene Triplett and [)on Swisher,
memben; of the OWE Advisory Committee also attended.

Students attending were Jennifer Anthony, David
Camp, Denise Cotterill, :rim Irwin, Derek Holsinger,
Steve Hoover, Josh Hooten, Steve Hoover, Clinton Hom,
Man: Jones, Dennis Jones. Bob Kauff, Michelle King,
Shannon Michael, Macie Pierce, Olris Reftmi re, Erin
Roush, Chl!d Schuler, Robby Smith, Jaymie Osborne,
Aaron Frechette, and Ronnie Lutz.
Ron Logan is the class instructor.

•

·$2-00

EMPLOYERS HONORED - Studentl In the
OWE progr1m It Melga High School hoated
their •nnu•l Employee-Emplo,_.. BrNkflllt It-

Crow'• F•mlly Reataul'llnt In Pomeroy on April
211, honoring employeralor their partlclpatlon In
the progl'll...

.

Free Cash!

,.

.~

·aI",nnears
in· court
I"
on Ul
~"ug cha"ne
':I

I
I
A Rutland man who is the subject .
of mulli·agency drug operation
made his first appearanq: in court
. Wednesday.
Fred Priddy, 47, was arrested
April 28 the result of an ongoing
operation involving the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office, the Major
Crimes Task Force (administered by _
the Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney 's Office), and other agen- _
cles including lhe Ohio Bureau of
Crimi nallnvestigation· and ldenlifi·
cation.
Priddy was to be anaigned on a
felony charge of drug possession, .
but the arraignment was continued
to allow him to Jiave an attorney pre·
sent
No plea was entered on the

~:~~~·

according to " "" d~uProsecuting Attorney John R.
L'entes said officers found drugs and
cash as a result of their search I ast
week.
Numerous cars and other items
seized from Priddy are allegedly
being held under guard at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
·
Priddy remains in the Meigs
County Jail.
0

Parish Clothing
Shop expanding
to Racine

where two heavily armed tee~,age gunmen killed 12 students and a teacher before killing themselves.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Support for gun control
Clinton's proposals include raising the legal age for
jumped in t!te week after the high school shootings in handgun possession -from 18lo 21 and holding negligent
Colorl!do, according to an Associated Press poll, and parents responsible when their children commit crimes
people said reducing violence in TV shows and the with guns.
lnovies were key to .avoiding future schOQI violence.
" ll just seems it's too easy for minors to get guns, nol
The 51 percent who-think tougher gun laws are more just off the street but from within the household.'• said
effective than tighter enforcement of current laws is up Maria Vigil, a 26-year-&lt;~ ld ·mother of four from Fort
9 percentage points from just before the deaths at the Collins, Colo. "I like the idea of wailing until you're 21
school in Uttleton, Colo. Also; 40 percent of !!dulls said to buy."
·
parents should face'charges if a child younger than 18
Olarllon Hesto,n, president of the National Rifle
commits a crime with a gun.
AssoCiation, argues that better enfoleement of current
ICR of Media, Pa., conducted one poll in the four gun laws is the answer.
days before the April20 rampage. Some of the questions
Those most likely to shi~t positions after the Col·
were r~ated in an April 28-May 2 poll.
orl!do shootings were senior citizens and wome.n. Just
Before the school shootings, 47 percent said better over half of older Americans supponed tougher gun con·
enforcement of existing Jaws was the way to limit gun trois before the shooting. compared with more than two·
violence, while 42 peicent said tougher gun laws would thirds afterward. Among women, two-thirds supported
be more effective. After the shootinp, 51 percent said , tougher gun laws in the first poll; about three-quarters
tougher aun laws would be more effective, _while 39 per· favorl:d them after th~ shootinp.
tent said better enforcement
When people were asked after the shootingfi what oilc
A similar increase was found when people were slep would be most effeetive in stopping school viouked whelher they favored or opposed stricter aun-con· lence, 27 percent said reducing violence in TV shows
trollaws. In the fin;t poll, 55 percen.t )Yere in favor and and movies, 23 percent favored using metal detectors in
40 percent were o~. The terond poll found 63 per· schools and 21 percent chose in~reased counseling for
cent in favor and 31 percent oppoecd.
teens.
.
Whether President Ointon and others who are calling
It stands to reiSOII that havina more violent images in
for. tougher gun laws succeed may depend, in part, on movies, TV sbc&gt;Ws and video games would affect peo·
whether lhc increased public support is permanent or pie's behavior, said Gary MacTavish, a 54-year-&lt;~ld
merely a short-lived re~tion to the Littleton tfliedy, engineer and father of three trown children.

$ · 99

(4 ROLL PACK)

Arrangements for orange and black flags to fly in
downtown Middleport the week of May 23 in celebration of Alumni Weekwere made al Tuesday's meeting of
the Middleport Community Association in the Peoples
·sank conference room.
·
Members were encouraged to put memorabilia in
their windows as it welcome lo'returRing alumni, and the
alumni officers will be contacted.about the possibflity of
hanging the large alumni banner on Mill Street
The nexl ~omm·unity event will be Fourth of July
activities to begin about noon and conclude with a fire·
works display at 9:30 p.m. Plans cal.! for ~rafters, flea
marketers, and farm produce sales from 1 to 5 p.m. Food
will be available during lhe day. ·
Something new this year will be an "open stage" for
anyone who would like to entertain. ll will be handled
with a signup board where individual or groups can play,
pick, sing or.dance durina the afternoon. Time slo~__!o'jll
~limited to half-bout periods.
'·
•
The parade will lake place at 6 p.m. with awards to be
preSented at 7 p.m. on the stage at Diles Park. Those
wishing to participate in the parade are asked to call
Myron Duffield. More details of the. parade will be
announced later.

By WILL LESTlR
.
Aeeocllted Prela Writer

·

This Week
Powell's Super
Value -

S.nyle Copy - 35 Cent·'

Poll ·finds support for stricter gun
laws jumps after Colorado shootings

.
3

BOZ.

(REG. OR LIGHn

SOFTENER

·May ·flo we reB

64\n:..l

KUFT BBQ SAUCE
·KRAFT
STOKELY'S
(ASST. FLAY.)
VEGETABLES - MIRACLE WHIP
(ASST. VAR.)

•••

$ ,, $2''
1

2/$

Hometown Newspaper

utes.
pilot, his moth er said.
The crash was the second in nine
Mrs. Gibbs learned of her 5on 's death
days involving one or the two dozen fteav.early Wednesday morning, then spenl the
ily armed anti-tank Apaches deployed in
day with family and friends at her home. ·
Albania.
David Gibbs' father Charles; a retired ·
The cause of the crash was under
Stark County deputy sheriff, died on
investigation,
but the Army said there were
Christmas Eve 1998. Mrs. Gibbs said she
no indi~ations of hostile fire.
had not seen her son since the funeral, but
Gibbs was a 1980 graduate of Mas·
she received a letter from him lhis week.
sillon Washington High School, where be
He was concerned about flying in an
played defensive ba~k on the 1979 .Massi!·
unfamiliar area, she said. Military
Jon football team that went 10-0.
spokesman Lt. Col. Garrie Dornan said the
Although he wasn 't a starter, he was
helicopter crashed in "remote, rugged,
a
hard
worker, reliable, and &lt;!isciplined,
mountainous terrain."
said Mike Currence, 59, then the head
David Gibbs · and his wife, Jean, had
three children : Allison, 10, Megan, 8, and David, 7 coach of the Massillon team. ,
· " He was the kind of All·Ailleri~an kid that you
months. They were stationed with him in Germany,
Mrs. Gibbs said.
· would want on your team," Currence said Wednes·
-" He was happy-go-lucky. He liked life," his day night.
· Neighbor Kristopher Chapman, 18, a senior at
mother said. "He was a very good father."
The two airmen were killed when their Apache Massillon Washington,_said Gibbs could always be
helicopter went down in a nighttime training mission counted on for advice whenever he visited. Chapman
in Albania. Army official~ said the two were dead is thinking about a mililary career.
"He liked what he did," Chapman said . " He
when the first res~ue team arrived, within 15 min·

, says
cooperate with prosecutors

$1''

·~

Sausage~·;.

SUPERIOR'S

H

. C

.

- Page4

Alumni Week slated to begin May 23 Rutland man

COFFEE

LB

Turkey Breasts ••••·•
.HILLSHIRE FARMS _ .

C

Sl1ced Hams......L!·•• 99 ·

'

And the Meigs County Puhlic
Lihrary Stall and Board and the pub-

". _

.J4A!~STOWN SPIUL · . ·

whic!1 he owns. It read&gt;: " G. Wi lder-.
muth Br 'g Co., Pomeroy. o.-·
encourage,the ad opt 11 tn uf dt1gs fm m
the Meigs Co unty pound on the
· RoCk Spnn gs f-a irg 1uu nd "i was
t.l cclarcJ quite: s u~t&lt;: s~ ful m th;1t' IX
ch'g.., - wh tch prohahl y W! lU id l1avc
hccn cuthan"i:t.cd --· were ild!,ptcJ hy
Mcogs reSidents. I hope all I ~ of
tlu.: m ended up in lovi ng.horncs.

By ANDY RESNIK
AIIOCIIted Prill Writer
COLUMBUS (AP)- Dorothy and Charles Gibbs
were always a little nervous about their son David's
choice of a military career. But they weren'taboutlo
· stand in his way.
,
"We always knew there could be a chance of hav·
ing a problem, but that's what he wanted," Mrs.
Gibbs said. "He wanted to be happy." ·
. David A. Gibbs, 38, of Massillon, and Kevin L.
Reichert, 28, of Wisconsin, both chief warrant offi·
cers, were killed early Wednesday in an Apache heli·
copter crash in Albania during a training mission .
The two deaths were NATO's first fatalities in its
6-week-old air campaign against Yugoslavia.
Dorothy Gibbs said her youngest son was passion·
ate about several things: his family, s~rving his coun:
try- and flying.
"He w~nted to fly helicopters...·. He always liked
it and thought it was a gOQd career move," Mrs.
Gibbs said Wednesday night in a telephone interview
from her home in Massilton.
Gibbs served four years in the Marines after high
school, then switched to the Army so he could be a

$ 99

298 SECOND ST.

of Veterans Memorial H.osp itJ I.
Room 143 , 11 5 E. Memorial Omc.
Pomeroy. and card s wil l rcm:h. them ·

Reds 5-1

Ohio airman killed in Kosovo training mission

24 PK. CUBE

8 AM·10 PM

confined to th e Extended Care Unit

shuts down the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 237

PEPSI &amp; MT.
DEW
PRODUCTS

P0 WEL l 'S

The Big Unit

'

Mcl antc VanMeter

the DJ and the '"" of thc.hui ld ing.

Lady Marauders advance, Page 4
Paternity issues, Page 7
Brooks named 'Artist of the Decade', Page 12

Today: Showers
High: 708; Low; 608

Quil.lcn at 949-21 21 or Sherry
Tcaf&lt;lld ·Rifne at 94 ~ - 25 40 in ordco
to gtt lOgged in . Eilhcr Melanic or
Sherry wi ll ·hc glad l(l hear frum you.
Please touch hti"C with the m. Thnsc.
attendin g the dance will be ask ed for
a $ 10 donation at the door 11 1 pay for ·

M.y II, 1ggg

Weather

Ohio State University Education courses to be offered locally
This summer Meigs .County
educat ors c:tn earn profc.sional
devel opment credit through the
OSU Pikchln RcseJrch and Ex tcn·

·sy :· s,ob Hoeflich

Thurs~ay

Wednesday, May 5, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

--·

----

An offshoot of the Mei gs County
United Methodist Cooperative Parish
clothing store is .opening soon in
· Racine.
4
"We're calling it 'God's Oothing
Parish," said Rev. Brian Harkness
· who ministers at the Racine and East
Letart United Melhodist O!urches. ·
"It will be a Jot smaller and not ·
have as much selection of the.
Pomeroy store," he said.
"We will try to focus on kids'
clothes and everyday wear."
Harkness also said the new store,
located on Thind Street in .abuilding
formerly occupied by Paul's Barber
Shop, is going to try to have some
emergency food.
· "Not much, maybe jvst a few
boxes," he said.
Harkness is heading up the project .
which will operate under the auspices · of the Cooperative Parish, which has
secured a five-year lei!C on the build· :.
ing.
:
He said the building has been the ~
subject of extensive renovatiop.
~
Plans call to open the store on May •
15 with hours to be announced later,
he said, adding that much work .
remains to be done.
:·we're going to have to crunch lo ·
get it done," he said.
"There are no clolhes down there
yet We have to .put lights up, install a ..
caslfregister. We've worked our tails •
off for about two months or three." ~
. He said the business will be ;-~
staffed mostly by volunteers from "'
the Racine area and that volunteers :
are still being sought.
·~
· "We will take clothing dona·
lions," he said, adding that the new
store does not have a lot of storage
space.

'

-·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="426">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9856">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26059">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26058">
              <text>May 5, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1709">
      <name>boggess</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4419">
      <name>boyce</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3220">
      <name>cheesebrew</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="628">
      <name>dean</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="181">
      <name>mcdaniel</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
