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•

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.

'

-·

�•

ThuradQ, May 6, 1999

·.commentary
The Daily

S~ntinel

'£sta6Mul in l948

•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-m-215&amp; ·Fax: m-21!17

Community Newspaper H~ldlngs, . lnc.
ROBERT L. WINGETT

'·

Publl•h•r
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Generel Manager

•

DIANE HILL
Controller
•

n.. Sentinel lftlcotMa ,.,.,. ro Ill• Nltot trOm ,.._,.on •broH,.,.ottoP.

Ia. Shott ,.,.,.. (3/IJCI wonM or ,._} Mw the. bNI t:l'ultK» of l»&gt;nQ pub/Wt«&lt;.
ryp.d ,_,.,.. .,. pNtef"fWW•nd aH tn~~y IN ~~- &amp;cit ahould lncludfl• .tgtUf~,
Mid,_., •nd d•ytlme phoM num,_, Specify • tUfa If thMw'• • ,.,~ to • ,...
vloua article rx J.tf•. , . , to: Utt•• to fh• «1/lor, .,.,.,. SenHnel, 1ft Courl St.,

PomMOy, Ohio 457U;·or, FAX to 1«J.H2-2111.

i Letters to the' e.d itor
Locals work for veterans' home
. Over the past few years a dedicated group of local citizens pave worked
diligently to bring a new veterans' home to southeastern Ohio, and specific cally to Meigs County. A state panel recently issued its recommendations,
i wi'lh which we have serious disagreements. That; however, doesn't diminish
: the many hours of work and dedication of the people who worked on this
! project.
:
Patty Pockens was an original advocate of a southern Ohio veterans'
. home, and offered to donate land to bring the facility to Meigs County. She
' spent many days working on this needed project and de~erves our thanks.
: The Meigs County Commissioners have been staunch supporters of the
• p(oject and traveled to the statehouse to lend suppon .for the county's efforts.
: The same can be said about our local veterans office and the veterans ser: vice commission. Their help was so valuable "ro the efforts. American
:· Legions and VFWs throughout the county were also wonderfully support·
ive. Senator Mike Shoemaker and Representative John .(:arey also stood
wi th us through out this effort.
Perry Varnadoe
Meigs County Economic DevelOpment Director
Pomeroy

RLDS Church not a cult

P~~ge

:.Z

I Death

Thureday, Mey I, 1H8

After Littleton: Right, left need ne.w views

Rena McDaniel, 86, Middleport, died Wednesday, May 5, 1999, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
A homemaker, she was born March 31, 1913, in New Haven, W.Va .,
daughter of the late Daqiel and Alma Roush Lyons.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Bessie and John Landaker
of Pomeroy; a son and daughter-in-law, George and Louise Staats of Tuppers Plains; eight grandchildren; seven stepgrandchildren; several great.
grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by two brothers and one sister, and one great ~
grandchild. .
. ·
Graveside services will be held Saturday, 11 a.m. at the Gilmore Cemetery near Minersville .with the Pastor Teresa Waldeck officiating.
Friends may call Friday, 5-8 p.m. at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville.
·

Friday, May 7

Right after the Green segment, the " Good We also need to restrie'l the availability of guns.
·By Morton KondrKke
Morning America" folks illustrated the syn- We ·need to put pressure on the entertainment
ABC's ."Good Mor.ning
drome. Co-host Charles Gibson observed that the industry to tone down the levels of explicit vio. America" team is as good as
White House might take up Sen. Joe Lieberman's, lence. We need more discipline in schools and
there is on television, but two
D-eo·nn., call for a summit meeting of entenain- more character education."
segments last Thursday illustratGore endtlrsed the idea of Lieberman and Sen.
mcnt executives to discuss youth violence. ·
ed what's missing in many
John
McCain, R·Ariz., for an entertainment sum·
"I get uncomfortable with this," he said,
responSI:s to the Littleton, Colo.,
"because ... is the government going to be crack- mit and consumer boycotts of sponsors.of violent
school massacre.
ing down on the entertainment industry in some and explicit TV shows. But the vice president
First, Diane Sawyer intercouldn't bring himself to accept another proposal
way? You get into First Amendment questions."
viewed Esther Green, who heroadvanced on the show.
News-reader
Antonio
Mora
added:
"I
think
ically survived a carjacking with
.
When Larry Pratt, executive director of Gun
her baby in Fayettevill~, Ga., by secretly calling that someiimes the media gets too much blame for
Owners
of America, suggested that having more
what
clearly
were
disturbed
children."
911 on her cell phone and directing a dispatcher
armed
adults
in schools -- say, assistant principals ·
Littleton could be a transforming event in
while pretending to talk to her kidnappers. .
The interview was fine, with one exception. In America if media people started looking at their trained with guns -- could stop student assaults,
nearly every sentence recounting her ordeal, she responsibilities, libe~als put moral pressure on Gore dismissed the idea as "highly irresponsi·
attributed her courage to "the grace of God" and their Hollywood friends, 'secqlarists reconsidered ble.
Really? Pratt didn 'I suggest that students tote
said her survival was the result of "the goodness . religion in schools and conservatives opened their
of God."
"I have learned," she said,
"that with God I .can have the
strength of eagles, that I can
fly." And when she and her baby
were safe, "the first thing I did
was thank and praise God."
There was an obvious opportunity here to inquire about the
power of religious faith, but
Sawyer acted as though she
either didn't hear the word
"God" or, more likely, found
Green's devoutness too difficult
.to handle.
what's tha' got to do with
Littleton? Fo r one thing, deep
religious .faith clearly is the
antithesis oflhe "dark side" that
killers Eric Harris and Dylan ·
Klebold lived. They even shot
born-again Christian Cassie
Bemall after she affirmed her
belief in God.
Sawyer's failure to follow up
on the subject -- admittedly, it
came up in a separate context-was a small example of the
inability of opinion leaders to
step beyond thdr comfort zones
and preconceptions, which is an
absolute neeessity if the prob·
lem of youth violence is to be solved.
minds to the possibility that guns could be less weapons to protect themselves, but pointed out
As conservative commentator William Kristol available.
that other scheol rampages have been stoppe!l by
has observed, Littleton can be as culturally deci·
The person who normally should lead a nation- arrned o'fficials.
..
·
.
sive an event as the Oklahoma City bombing, al dialogue is President Gi.nton, but his first
Gore.• while closed to some ideas; .seems open
which substantially put an e.nd 'to "angry-white- major response to Littleton was to propose new to many others. He was moved, he said, by a parmale chic" in the mid-1990s.
gun laws. They are certainly called for-- it ought ent in Littleton who whispered to him, '"These
But cultural renewal can happen only if people to be impossible for minors to. acquire assault children cannot have died in vain. We have to
are willing to think afresh about what to do. rifles .. but distrust of Clinton likely will sink his make changes. Promise me we will make
· Unfortun~tely, with some exceptions, most com- proposals.
·
changes. Promise me."' Naturally, Gore said, he
mentators are nurturing their intellectual prejuOne person who shows some tendency to promised.
dices ·over Littleton, not transcending th~m.
break the ideological mold is Vice Ptesident AI
To fulfill the promise, cultural groups all need
The immediate reaction of m05t liberals was to Gore, who said in an MSNBC town meeting, "I to reform themselves -- not blame the usual sus·
call for gun control. Consei'Vatives instantly think we need changes in a variety of places, not ·pects.
..
blamed ·~the culture," especially Hollywood, and only iri government, but in families. All .adults
(Morton Kondr•ckela executive editor of Roll
preemptively denounced. "kneO:jerk" gun control · need to be more involved in the lives of c~il- can, the newspeper of Capitol Hill.)
proposals.
.
dren .... We need mentors and support networks. .Copyrtght11110 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. .

Francis G. Rove·re

tt

~
KY.

v~~~~w.v..
Inc, .

Pt. Ooudy

Cloucty · Showtrl

T·ttOI'ITII

By Tht Aasoclated Prtaa
·
. A slow-moving low pressure system and associated upper air distur·
ba~ce~ will produce a lingering threat of showers and thundeistorms for
Ohio into the weekend, forecasters said.
Highs on Friday and through the weekend will be around 75, the
National Weather Service said.
The rain should end by Monday.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 91 degrees in 1959 and the record low was 29 in 1968. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:30p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:25a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows ncar 60. Light southwest wind. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday...Partly sunny with a chance of showers and thunderston'ns.
Highs.around 80. Chlince of rain 50 percent.
Friday night ... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s. ·
Exteaded forecast:
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 70s.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows in the mid 50s
and highs in the mid 70s.

r.eSCU8 pilOt after plan.e crasheS
CIEVELANQ(AP) - Apilotwas
.' rescued from Lake Erie after his small
plane went down, the Coast Guard
said.
David Whitehead, 30, suffered from
hypothermia and was listed in stable
condition at MctroHealth Medical Cen- .
.· ter, a ho6pital spokeswoman said. He
the only · perSon in the singleengine plane, said Coast Guard Petty
Officcr Chris Grooms.
. • 1'he Coast Guard :,can:hed the 1ake
Yor about 45 minutes Wednesday after
receiving a report that a Piper Cherokee ·

s

E .M

.

. '[Jnits responding included: ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH

-.

.

. The ptlot was found about se~en
rrules o_ff the Qevelan~ lakefront.
. Whttehead was fatogued and weart~g only pants and shoes when Exect!!lve Petty Officer Joh? MaClean of the
Coast Guard pulled htm aboard.

6:56 p.m., Point Lane, Pomeroy,
MIDDLEPORI'
10:01 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitalion Center, Pomeroy, Myrtle
·Stanley, VMH.
POMEROY
9:~5 a.m., Pearl Street, Racine,
Sherrie Reedy, VMH.
RUTLAND .
~:48 p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Harold
Thaxton, Holzer Medical Center.

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPSlO.lMO)

·

c......., Ntw1poporH~ lac.
· 1\!blitbed every afteraoon, Mondly 1hrou&amp;h
Friday, 111 C..n St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by ohe
Ohio Yalley PubtiJhina Compony. Second el111
po1t1tt peid 11

Helen Frances Rovere

-----..'.O..,,u,bitUaries.
'
a• •••• ••••e•d
'

""

'

Obllu.._ .. -. •

.

.

~ .

- Announcements:
card _shower·

r-

'

The 96th birthday of Emma Smith, a resident of Overbrook Center, win
be observed Friday. Cards may he sent to her at Overbrook, Room 206,
Overbrook Center, 333 Page Street, Middleport, 45760. Family and friend&amp;
are invited to stop by at .the Center Friday from 4:30 to 6:30p.m.

Boil order issued ·
Leading Creek Conservancy District customers east of the intersection
of Laurel Giff and Hiland roads will be under a boil advisory until further
notice following a water leak in the Laurel Qiff area near Pomeroy.

Meigs Local Board of Education
The Meigs Local Board of Education regular meeting scheduled for May

Helen Frances Rovere, 77, of Allamuchy Township, N.J., formerly of
Meigs County and ·Portola Valley, Calif., died Sunday, May 2, 1999, at her
residence as the result of a house.fire.
A homemaker, she was born Feb. 19, 1922, at Middleport, daughter of the
late Alfred and Helen Laughead Elberfeld. She was a. member of the Menlo
Park Country Club, Menlo Park, Calif., the Daughters Of the Anierican Revolution, Pomeroy; and the Delta Delta Delta sorority of Duke University. She
was a 1939 graduate of Pomeroy High School and attended both Duke and
Ohio State University graduating.from OSU in 1943.
She is survived by a son, Brad Sargent, and a daughter, Carol Thordsen,
both of Green Township, N.J.; a brother, Richard Elberfeld of Hamilton; a
sister, Mary E. Morris of Pomeroy; two grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Her husband, Francis G. Rovere, also died in the blaze.
t
Private services and burial will be hel~ under arrangement by' the
Cochran Funeral Home in Hacket~town , N.J.

bJ-.. flnwllllornM. Obltuartla
- jiiiNIII'IICI .- - "'!1!11' IIU 10 ICC Cniii!Cda . _ ljlotrtng 11101'0 lnlormotlonlhon
to~tri'lheooc~DMIIINoacM,.
·

William Dean
.

11 will be held Monday, May 17,7 p.m. at the district office on the second

Hoor of the PomeroY, Municipal Building. .

·

Chamber of Commerce
The monthly -Meigs County Chamber of Commerce luncheon will be
held Tuesday, noon at Carleton School in Syracuse. Renee Cacchillo, Ohio
Works, will be t~e guest speaker. .

Seminar planned

.

The Meigs 6 unty Chamber of Commerce in conjunction with the
Small Business Development Center is holding·a seminar, D.evelopingYour
Sales Skills, May 18, 1-4 p.m. at the Pomeroy library: Cost is S15. 1b preregister, call 992-5005.

Boosters to meet
The Southern Junior High Boosters will meet Tuesday, 6 ·p.m. A spring
bash and election of officers will be discussed.

Trustees to meet
Bedford Township Trustees will hold their regular meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the lownhall.

Revival set
Special services at the Rose of Sharon Holiness Church , Rutland, will
be held Friday through May 16 at 7 p.m. Evangelist Larry Warren ofWashington,.lnd. Pastor Dewey K.infilt!t,Yi!es the public.
.

Chittenden agrees
to sell 14 Vermont
Bank branches

.,

William Ray Dean, /'4, of Rutland, died on Tuesday, May 4, 1999, at his
home, following an exten.ded illness.
He was born on June 18, 1924 in Rio Grande, son of the late William
Ran9olph and Mary J. Thornton Dean. He was a retired unit .foreman at
RIJflAND, Vt. (AP) - ChittenPhilhp Sporn Plant at New Haven, W.Va. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army
den
Corp. has agreed to sell 14 Verduring World War II, and a recipient of a Purple Heart medal. He was a
mont
National Bank branches to
member of the American Legion Post 467 in Rutland, and was a member of
'Cleveland-based
banking company
·the Cottageville Masonic Lodge 54, F&amp;AM.
.
.
.
Surviving are two daughters and sons-in-law, Sa11dra Kay (Danny) Tillis Charter· One Financial Inc. for $42
·
~nd Terresa Lynn (Lee) Wood, Rutland; a sister, Helen Wickline of Jackson; million.
four grandchildren: Heather Rathburn, Joshua Wood, Donny Tillis and . The deal is part of Chittenden's
Jay me Bickford; a great grandson, Ezra Rathburn, and a special friend, Ade- acquisition of the Brattleboro-based
Vermont Financial Services Corp.;
line Snowden.
Besides his wife, he was preceded in death by his wife, Imogene Sayre which the oompany announced in .
· December.
Dean, a brother, James Dean, ~nd a sister, Lucille McDermott.
·
The cempany also is negotiating
Funeral services will be held on Friday, May 7, 1999 at the Casto Funerwith one or more banks to·divest addi·
·a) Home in Evans, W.Va., with Rev. Gerald B. Sayre officiating. Burial will tiona) branches including one or more
follow at the Blaine Memorial Cemetery in Cottageville, W.Va., with mili·
offices in Rutland, a Chittenden offi1
tary·honors by the Raven~wood VFW Post 6669.
cial said this week.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 5 to 9.p.m.
Charter One of Cleveland will buy
the 14 Vermont National branches,
CINCINNATI (AP)- Prompted gram thai connects kids with other which have total deposits of $400 mil.in part by last month's shootings at kids in a positive environment and lion and hav.e $120 million in ooma Colorado high school, the Greater that connects them with positive mercialloans. Charter One said it paid
a deposit premium of 10.5 percent, or
Cincinnati YMCA plans to open six role models."
$42
million, to acquire the branches.
centers during the next two years to
try and reach out to teen-agers.
The centers, placed in rehabilitated old buildings, will be set up
independently from the YMCA
facilities and will try to be more
. teen'orieqt~d, said Ron Chambless,
senior vice president. He anno11nced
the $5 .million program Tuesday.
· "There's not !JlUCh emphasis on
the prevention side of what society
can do for young people," Chambless said. "There needs to be more
focus on a positive prevention pro-

LOST &amp; FOUND (PG13)
7:20 I 8:20 DAILY .

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Join VsAt
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Pomeroy, Ohio.

M. .btn Tbc: Alleclaled Preu. and the Ohio
Newtpaper Alloclalion.

Believe it or not, we rely on mir_
a cles

•

down.

.Francis G. Rovere,'82, Allamuchy Township, NJ:, died Sunday, May 2,
1999, at his residence the result of a house fi!e.
He was born Nov. 9, 1916, in San Francisco, Calif., son of the late Silvio
J. and Etta Schaeffer Rovere. He retired in .1977 as vice president of Argonaut Insurance Company, Menlo Park, Calif. He was a member of the
Menlo Park Counlry Club.
He is survived by a daughter, Anne Kline of Louisburg, W.Va.; a sister,
Marie Rovere of San Francisco; and Me grandchild.
His wife, Helen F. Elberfeld Rovere; also died in the blaze.
. Private services and burial will be held with arrangements by the Cochran
Funeral Home, Hackettstown, N.J.
·

The Meigs County Sheriff's Office investigated an auto accident in Syracuse on Tuesday, involving injuries, and another in Rutland on Thursday.
Franklin Molden, 69, of Pomeroy, was westbound on Beech Grove Rd.
on Thursday when he swerved to miss a deer that ran into his car's path, losl
control and ran off the left side of the road. He then hit a fence, a mailbox
and a utility pole before coming to rest in a ditch.
Aooording to the department 's accident repon, Molden was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by Rutland EMS, and was treated an~
'released for minor visible injuries. lfe was not cited.
There were also no citations issued in a Tuesday accident in Syracuse. ·
According to the sheriff's department, Michael F. Freeman, 18, of Syracuse, was traveling westbound on State Route 124' in Syracuse, attempting
lo tum right on College Street, and struck a ditch and bank.
The aceident report states that Freeman turned too soon, but no citations
were issued and no injuries were reported.
·

r:;;~.~~g;ca~i!:~~c~:;~:'::. · ~~';:::ar;:~~~e~~~':i !~~:~~al Cincinnati YMCA to open teen centers

:•
h • k •h
: . must t In Wit

'

was experiencing power problems and
had crashed into the lake, which had a
wat~r temperature ~f 52 degrees.
Jom Ware, an 311 t~c manli!!er at
t~ Burke Lakefront Airport, satd the
pol~t radioed the tower at1~7 ~-111- and
quicklr, called ~k to say, He s gomg

l·o· g ·s .4 . c· a· II s

.
..
.
· Units of the Meigs County 'Emer-

:•: ' 'ln. musl'c 0· ne

.

...

.Aurr1M

rain will linger
through the weekend

:.JhOUght for Todav·

::

Rain

reat ~ of

;-Today.
In History
.

:

•

.o.•a«t.~••

'MacArthur' not wanted .for Belg_ r~de

·the heart .and
fieel 'th th e
brain."
·

.~oca.' .~rlefs:
Notices I Accidents
investigated

Rena McDan·iel

I would like to address the story of Jeffrey L11ngren, Ron and Susan Luff,
: and the Avery family that were murdered 10 years ago. ·
· It is a horrible thing for anyone to take the lives ofiothers and then to say
that God told him to do this. It is also a horrible thing to say that because of
: the ieachings of the Reorganized Church of Jesus C.hrist of Latter Day Saints
• that these people were murdered. I have been a mem!)er·of the RLDS Church·
. [or 43 years, since I was 8. years old, and I ca11 stand and say that I have
! ~ever in ~y life ever heard of such horrific teachings of human sacrifice. I
;would no subject my family to such teachings. The six main teachings.of the
(RLDS Chu rch are: faith, repentance, baptisms, laying on of han&lt;js, r.esurrec:tion of the dead, and eternal judgment. We believe in 'God, the Father, Jesus
:Christ, the Only Begotte.n Son, and in .the Holy Spirit We believe the Ten
•tommandments and Christ's teaching of love and respect for all people. We
:!lelieve that through the atonement of Christ all mankind may be saved by
~obed ience to the laws and ordinances of the gospel. We can also be saved by
·God's grace.
- ·
·
: I think it is very unfair and judgmental for some people to call the RLDS
;{::hurch a cult. We .are NOT a cult. We do not follow one man and let him
'Jilake decisions for us. We have a Democratic conference every .two years at
:Independen ce, Mo., with delegates from all over the world to vote on dif. :rerent aspects of the church .
.
:: Theie are evil people in all churches and because ·some would commit
murder does not mean that a church leaches thiS&gt;. It truly hurts my soul ·and
MacArthur. needed ttiem only to moderated ends of "limited war." Joint Chiefs and the Truman adminlieart to think that some of the people of my community would think .that I By Ben Wattenberg
and
Daniel
Wattenberg
confirm
and spotlight his own. The debate about limited war that istration. He demanded authority :to
Jlelieve in human sacrifice. I meet people every day and I come face to face
The indecision and delay, the MacArthur was first in his class at echoed through Vietnam and .the expand the war-- to blbckade Chini,
!"ith them. They know me and I know them and they know my family. I just
restricted means and fuzzy objec- West • Point, the most decorated Gulf War and continues today in the. bomb its industrial base and use
w~nt you, the public, to know that the RLDS Church teaches love and
tives, the unwieldy coalition and war American soldier of World War I (he criticism of the Balkan air war all nationalist Chinese troops in Korea
·iespect to all peop.le and in no way believes·in human sacrifice.
.
·
and on the' Chinese mainland.
·
: I would like to invite 1111 to come to the RLDS Church unannounced at · by committee, the resilient enemy, preened on the front without gas began with MacArthur in Korea,
In late November, 1950, 300,000
Not wanting to siphon resources .
any time and see for yourselves what kind of religion the church offers; then the mutual recriminations between mask or helmet), Army Chief of
. soldiers and civilian policy makers, Staff and the highest paid soldier in Chinese and North Korean troops from the far more .important Euro- .
Judge for yourselves instead of listening or reading about the hearsay.
:
Unda Evma the political maneuvering on the ·the world as military adviser to the swept down from the mountains and pean military theater and fearing a
Racine home front -- Kosovo would have Philippines .. all before World War divided MacArthur's advancing wider war involving the Soviets
· seemed familiar to General Douglas II and the events that would etch Him armies, forcing · the longest retreat (who had the bomb by then), Tra·
MacArthur. He saw it all as com- forever into American memory.
(300 miles) in U.S. military history . . man rejected all of MacArthur!s
mander of U.N. forces in Korea.
The so's-your-mother rivalry Despite the reversal, MacArthur demands. Truman had decided the
Oh, and it Was the weather's fault between the two dominant U.S. gen- remained committed to the objective policy,, says series host David
.
.
• By The Associated Press
in Korea, too! Snow was blamed for erals of World War II intermitlently of reunifying Korea (the Truman McCullough: "Limited war."
;
Today is Thursday, May 6, the !26th-day of 1999, There are 239 days left the failure of aerial reconnaissance lightens the grave, world-at-war administration had expanded its
The restrictions, MacArthur hat:· \n the year.
'
·
to detect the massive Chinese cr05s- tone of " MacArthur": "Best clerk I original goal of ejecting North Kore- rumphed to,the press, were a "hand·• ·
· Today 's ·Highlight in History: '
. ing of the Yalu River .into North : ever had," a jealous MacArthur an forces from South Korea after icap without precedent in military
On May 6, 1937, the hydrogen-filled German dirigible Hindenburg Korea.
would say of Ike after the latter's MacArthur 's electrifying Inchon history."
~ burned and crashed in Lakehurst, N.J., killing 35 of the 97 people on board
"MacArthur," a new PBS televi -. swift, wartime rise. "I studied dra- landing). The general reasoned that · On his own narrowly regional
• and a Navy crewman on the ground.
sion biography of. maybe the great- matics under MacArthur for seven the military threat to South Korea terms, MacArthur may been right.
On this date :
:
est (and cerlliinly the most contro· years, " cracked Ike of the man would persist until Kim II Sung's North Korea remains a military
:
In 1861, Arkansas seceded from the Uni on.
.
versial) American general of the wh05e theatrical style was by turns communist regime in the north was threat to this day-- not just to South
•
In !889, the Paris Exposi ti on formally opened, featuring the just-com- 20th century, airs May· 17 and 18 on OOf11ically . pompous (the ever-pre- defeated. (Then, too, the proud old Korea, but to Japan as · well. B~t
. public television stations. It is must sent Philippines field marshall 's warrior hardly wanted to end his ~residents, unlike theater commanpleted Eiffel Tower..
. .
::;
--. --~.&amp;.·
In 1910, · Bfltain's Ktng · viewing for armchair generals com- cap) and profoundly inspiring ("I legendary military career with an &lt;jt'rs, arc paid to think globally, not
• ,•
Edward VII.
manding NATO forces in the Balka· shall return").
embarrassing setback dealt by the act l""all,y -- and Truman held his
· . MacArthur was perhaps· the first communist dictator he derided as . shaky alliance together and repulsed .
In 1935, the Works .Progress ns from their Barcaloungers.
•. •
Administration began operating.
Some soldiers, like MacArthur's '· important American military figure "Kim Buck Too.")
communist aggression without start·
To. achieve his ambitious goal, · ing World War lll. And his containIn 1941, dictator Josef Stalin long:time subOrdinate Eisenhower, to recognize (and bitterly ~esist) the
assumed 'the Soviet premiership. depend on wars to release their new mil.itary realities of the nuclear MacArthur launched a harassing meni policy brought ultimate victory
•
replacing Vyacheslav M. MoJo- greatness.
age -- the .modulated means and bureaucratic campaign against the in the Cold War.
tov.
:
In 1942, dtiring World War II,
some 15,()00 Americans and FilWI
ipinos on Corregidor surren- .
ulate about the extrao(dinary, Efi:em Zimbalist describes a personal experience ·
By Geo;ga R. Plagenz
dered to the Japanese.
the unlikely and even to he had when his car blew a tire, leaving him
explore
Mr.
Rosen
was
a
floorwalker
who
walked
his
In 1954, lnedical student
hope for what is now believed stranded while on his way to an important
•
Roger Bannister broke the four- beat in a Brooklyn department store in the 1930s.
••
engagement.
to
be impossible."
A
now
extinct
species,
floorwalkers
"walked
with
minute mile during a track meet
The
public's
fascination
with
He had no jack.
. .
a
slow,
almost
grave
gait
around
the
·
store
·to
- George Szell, in Oxford, England.
,'
An
old
while-hair~
man
.drov.;
by
out
of
mira~les
and
angels
is
.
still
questions. a.bout where items
Hungarian-American
In 1960, Britain 's Princess answer customer~'
•'
growing.
One
of
the
most
popunowhere
in
a
sputtering.
battered
jalopy
and
were
locatedc"
conductor (1897-1970). Margaret married Anthony Armlar programs on television is offered the use of his jack. After changing the tire,
· .Author David M I says one of Mr. Rosen's
strong-Jon~s, · a commoner,· at
"Touched by an Angel" with the entertainer "looked back to thank the old gen·
answers to a custom r is still famous. A la'dy,
• Westminster Abbey. They divorced in 1978.
Della Reese.
tleman.· I gasped! Jalopy and man had vanished.
exasperated by her futile efforts to find some arti:
In 1987, CIA Director William J. Casey died at age 74.
•
cle
she
wanted,
blurted
out
to
Mr.
Rosen,
"HeavMagazines
like
Guideposts
and
.
Angels
011
Without a sound. Years later, .when 1 drew closer
In 1992, actress Marlene Dietrich died at her Paris home at age 90. ·
to
God, I felt -- and I believe now -- that the old
ens,
it
will
take
a
mi'
r
acle
for
me
to
find
it.
Do
you
Earth
have
high
readership.
Both
are
Norman
In 1996, the body of. former CIA Director William E. Colby was found
man
was sent to help me."
believe
in
miracles?"
·
Vincent
Peale
publications.
Some
of
the
stories
i.n
W'15hed up on a riverbank in southern Maryland, eight days after he 'd disMr. Rosen 's memorable answer was " No, but them sound like science fiction . ·
Then lhere is the story of the woman on the
~~.
·.
.
In a recent issue of Angels on Earth (a golf course unaware that a tornado was approach· Ten years ago: Sunday Silence scored an upset victory over Easy Goer in I rely on them all the time."
bimonthly
that "presents true stories about God's ing.
John F. Kennedy had another view of miracles.
• the !15th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs.
She heard a voice say, "Go home-- now!" She
:
Five years ago: Former Arkansas state worker Paula Jones filed suit Asked once if he believed in them, he said, "Yes, angels and humans who have played angelic roles
in
daily
life"),
a
driver
tells.
of
losing
control
of
looked
around and saw a man.
bull
never
rely
on
them."
' against President Clinton, alleging he'd sexually harassed her in 1991.
his
car
while
speeding
along
the
highw;~y
in
Are
you
more
like
Mr.
Rosen
er
JFK?
·
must have been 8 or 9 feet tall·· by far tlie
"He
One year ·ago: Rep. Dan Burton, chairman of the House fund-raising
In
any
c,11se,
miracles
(and
angels,
an
associat.
northern
Oregon.
The
auto
had
veered
off
the
road
·
biggest
man I have ever seen. He was muscuhu'
, inquiry, apologized IQ GOP colleagues for the furor over his release of
onto
the
slag-covered
shoulder.
ed
phenomenon)
arc
now
being
taken
more
seriand
JX)Werful
looking, dreased in a white tunic
~ selected portions of tapes of Webster Hubbell's prison conversations; Bur"Dead
ahead
loomed
the
concrete
abutment
of
belted
at
the
waist.
ously
than
at
any
time
since
the
Middle
Ages
: ton's top investigator departed, ordered fired by Hoilse Speaker Newt qin"Suddenly I realized who the imposing preS' grich. Astronomers announced the detection of a gamma rar burst in a when people had no difficulty believing in such · an overpass. The car barreled forward, aimed for
disaster.
ence .was. No wonder angels in the Bibl~
: . ~alaxy 12 billion light years away, that was equal to the energy expended by things. The age of science pretty much eliminated
"But
the
car
didn
't
keep
going
straight.
It
announced themselves with the words, 'Fear
!&gt;&lt;lief
in
miracles
and
angels.
~!he sun in a trillion years.
·
'
,
··
turned,
purely
on
its
own.
The
car
made
an
impos-'
1
Now
a
return
to
spirituality
and
a
willingness
i : Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Willie Mays is .68. U.S. Sen. of science to !!Ike a closer look at things that once sibly abrupt left turn back onto the road, then cen- not."'
Living in a world of ine&gt;torablc natural laws, of
: ' Richard Shelby (R-Aia.) is 65. Rock singer Bob Seger is 54. Singer Jimmie
tered
itself.
were
ruled
out
of
rational
discourse
are
creating
a
course
we moderns don't believe in mi~s or
: Dale Gilmore is 54. Actor Ben Masters is 52. Actor Gregg Henry is 47.
"
Somebody
was
watching
over
me
with
brothangels.
But like Mr. Rosen, we rely on them all
new
interest
in
"
tbe
impossible."
.
~ British Prime MinisterJony Blair is 46. Actor George Clooney is 38. Actress
the
time.
erly
care."
Benson,
M.D.,
of
the
Harvard
Medical
Herbert
Rom a Downey is 36. Rock singer-musician Tony Scalzo (F115tball) is 35.
In a Guideposts story, violinist-composer Coryrlghl18tV NEWSPAPER ENTERPflll! AIIH.
School, says "we should allow ourselves to spec,
Rock musician Mark Bryan (Hootie and the Blowfish) is 32.

;

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3 .

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel
".r
Page 4
Thureday, May 6, 1998

I.
.

-

1

Marauders move on to sectionai finals

'Big Unit' tosses four-h/.tter

Meigs softballers
down Jackson 7-2

Diamondbacks get-.:
5-1 Win over Reds &lt;

By DAV£ HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Top seeded Meigs advanced to the
finals in Division II sectiona1tournament play with a 7~2 win over
Jackson, Wednesday afternoon at
Meigs High School.
Meigs (17-3) will now advance
to the championship game on
Wednesday, May 12 at home against
Wellston . The Golden Rockets
defeated R_i ver Valley 14-11 on
Wednesday. Jackson drops to 4-17
Meigs took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning. Bethany
Boyles walked and came in to score
on a Shannon ' Price single. Meigs
. added to the lead in the . sec:ond
inning on ·a walk to Tawny Jones ,
and a single by Amy Hysell.
Jackson battled back in the top of
the third inning to tie the game at 2all. A walk to !son and singles by
Molly Blankenship and Jamie Coyan
tied the game.
The Marauders retook the lead m
the top of the third inning, Stephanie
Wigal reached on a Jackson error.
moved to second on a walk , and
came in to score on ·an Abby Harris
sacrifice fly.

The Marauders built onto their
lead in the fifth inni!lg. Harris doubled, and four walks gave Meigs a 6·2 advantage. Meigs closed out the
scoring in the top of the sixth inning.
Tonya Miller walked, Hysell singled
and Brady Tobin followed with a
double to close out the scoring.
Hysell ran her record to 10-3 with
the win, she gave up three hits,
walked four and struck out 11 . Tangy
Laudermilt pitched the final inning,
striking out two.
Price and Hysell had two singles
each to lead the Maniuders, Tobin
and Harris added a double each to
round out the hitting.
Lindsay Hughes was the losing
pitcher, she struck out three, walked
12 and gave up six hits. Melissa
Green, Blankenship and Coyan had
the.Jackson hits all singles.

By TERRY KINNEY
·
"I take a great deal of pride trying
I,:INCINNATI (AP)- It's a long to get .lefties out," Johnson said.
road· trip when a pitcher gets three
j'line .lefl-)landed batters hav~
starts. ·
faced Johnson this season, includin,&amp;
" It's heen a grind. But I feel like lhree pitchers. Casey was just th~
I 'finally did something to con- second to get a hit. The other was
tribute," said Randy Johnson, who Milwaukc!e's Fernando Vina.
pitched a four-hitter in his second
"He's an aggressive batter.'.'
complete game of the -season as the 'Johnson said. ':I took at their expn;sArizona Diamondbacks beat the sions when they face me, apd he
Cincinnati Reds 5-l Wednesday hung in there. f made a .mistakt to
night.
him. But when he came up again, 1
" We were fortunate that the rota- beared down a little more."
tion fell that Randy pitched three
Casey, who ·slapped' a. single to
times on this trip, "
said the opposite 'field, admitted be!ng
Diamondbacks manager Buck intimidated.
·
. · ..
Showalter.
·
· · "There was one time on my fir!jl
· Johnson (3-1) got no decision in at-bat.when I fouled back a 2-2 slRic
the first two, although Ari~ona won er," Casey said. "He was about !0
both.
feet away getting a new ball, and h~
"The last two times, my arrn felt just gave me this stare. I wondered.
like I'd pitched, but I didn't really 'W hoa, where 's the next pitch goil)g
Inning~
have anything [o show for it," to be?'
.
. .•
Jackson ..... .... ... .. ....002-000-0=2-3-2
Johnso,n said. '' I was detennined to
"I ended ·. up grounding out to
Meigs......... ,........ :.. Jtl-031-x=7-6-1
go out there and pitch a good him, and I asked the firSt baseman,
Batteries
•
game."
'Does he stare at everybody lif&lt;t
Amy Hysell (W), Tangy . WIGAL SCORES- The Meigs Marauders' Stephanie Wigal (ieft)
Johnson threw n of 110 pitches that, or is it just me1.' ·He satd,
Laudermilt (7) and Abby Harris
gets past Jackson's catcher and scores during Wedneiday's for strikes, struck out eight and 'That's just his intimidation factor.' I
Lindsay Hughes (L) and Jessica Division II sectional semifinal game at Meigs High School, where the walked none in the 58th complete was intimidated for a second." . ·
Lambert
Marauders' 7-2 victory earned them a berth opposite Wellston In the· game of his career. He allowed an
Arizona scored in the first . on
· finals. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
RBI single to Pokey Reese in the Luis Gonzalez's , sacrifice · flY,
llfth following Brian Johnson's two- Johnson, who 'has been working on
. . out double.
his hitting since rewrning to
~'They were swinging early in the National League last"year, doubled
count," he said. "I guess, they didn't in a run in the second for the third
again, Jose Mesa was in the middle the middle of a mess.
never forgave him for failing to close want to get behind."
RBI of his career.
·
Once of the infield at Jacobs Field and in
And ·as he watched the ninth out Game 7 of the 1997 World Series
Jay Bell- drove in three runs with · Bell made it 3-0 when'-he hit his
inning unfold, Indians manager Mike and who by · turning on him had a solo homer and a bases-loaded sin- ninth home run leading off the third,
Hargrove remembered being in this prompted his trade.
gle as Arizona stopped a three-game then hit a 1wo-run single in the
situation many times before. This,
He opened the ninth by striking losing streak. The Diamondbacks fourth for a 5-0 lead.
.
however, was different.
out Kenny Lofton before first base- finished the longest road trip in team
Notes: Gonzalez .extended h1s
"I was hoping we'd beat him," man Segui made a diving; rolling
6-7.
hitting streak to 19 with a leadoff.
Basketball
: Hargrove said. "I di\ln't 'have any stop of Enrique Wilson's hard smash history
Steve Avery (1-3) allowed all five double in the eighth. The .streak is a
warm and fuzzy thoughts."
and from the ground tossed to Mesa runs and seven hits in live innings. club record and the .longest in 1&amp;1!
•
But
Mesa,
with
the
help
of
a
sencovering the bag.
NBA final
"'Dteir guy was just too much," majors this season. He was 1-for-~
. standings
.
sational defensive play by David
"That's one of'the best plays I've Reds manager. Jack. McKeon said. with a sacrifice fly .... Matt.Williams
. EASTERN CONFERENCE ,
Segui, closed out Cleveland in the ever seen, 1• said .Mariners second "If you give him an early' lead, he 's was . 0-for-4, snapping his seven:
Iii
A.dantlc Division
ninth for the save in a triumphant baseman David Bell, who also
He's tough without alead. He game hitting streak. ... Avery had
Ium
:!!' I. ..... !ill
return- and preserved the Seattle enjoy~d 1\is return to Clevel;md. tough.
Z·Miam.i ................ ............... 3"3 17 .660
was
tough
on us , but he's 'tough on pitched at least seven innings in eac&amp;
x.-Orlnndo ............................. JJ 17 .660
Mariners' 6-5 win pver the Indians . "That was unbelievable." ·
everybody."
of his first five starts but'failed. t9
X·Philadelphia :..................... 28 22 .l60
5
· . Mesa, pitching at The Jake for the
Mesa then walked Roberto
x.-New York .......... ............. ... 27 23 l4()
6
In
a
mati:hup
of
one
of
baseball'~
become the first Reds pitcher sine,e
Boston ..... , ......... ........... ........ 19 ."\I .)80
14
'first time since Cleveland iraded.him Alomar, hut got Manny Ramirez to
most
intimidating
pitchers
against
Tom
Browning in 1991 to go at least
Washinglon ........... ...... ..... ..... l8 32 .)60
. 15
last
his. seventh save in line OUt tO Bell for cine of the sweet·
New Jersey .......... . . ........ 16 , J4 .320
17
tbe worst-hitting team in the major seven innings in his first six staits ...~
as usual, it wasn 't est saves of his turbulent career.
leagues
- Cincinnati has a .234 Cincinnati's team batting average'
Central Division
"He got the job done," Seattle
y-lndiana .... ................ :......... )) 17 .660
team
average
- ·the most interesting dropped four . more points to ,234
ran in from the bullpen to manager Lou Piniella said. "I'm
x-Atlanta .......... ,.......... .. ......31 t9 .620
2
confrontation
was Johnson vs. left- afterfacing Johnson.
. ··'
x-OeU'Ciil .. ..... ........................29 2t .lBO
4
••••1..11,. ninth, Mesa was 'booed by
x-Milwaukee ........................28 22 .l60
l
lianded
first
baseman
Sean
Catiey.
mlm~l..of the same Indians fans who
Charlene ...............................26 24 .l20
7
(See INDIANS on Patle.S)

Mesa returns, .helps M's beat Tri·be 6-5
By TOM WITHERS

CLEVELAND (AP) -

·

!he

Scoreboard
Baseball
: AL standings
Easl«m DiYi.sioo.

:!!' I. llJ.

Iwll

.. 11

9

.654

14
14

.517

:-Toronto ... .. .

.... . 15
..... .. ... ..15

, Dos(on

........ ... , .. 12

14

. Baltimore

.... ....... .. .9

17

Ne,w York ..
' Tampa Bay

.517
.462
.346

Cmlral Divbion
• CLEVELAND .. .......... ....... 18 8 .692
Chicaso .................... ......... 13 12 .520
Dc:!toit ..................
.... 13 15 .464
Kansas Cicy .......................11 14 .440
Minnesota ............. ... .... ....... 11 16 .407

Western Division
Tc:xu ..................................... l5 12
Oakland ............................... 14 15
Seanle .................. ............ ,.. .IJ 14
Annheim ............... ................ IJ 15

.556
.483
.481
.464

2
2

2'1

..

Toronto .................................23 27
CLEVELAND ................... ...22 28
Chicago ............................... 13 37

-·-

Wednesday's scores

.440

.260

10
ll
20

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Tc:"'u S.. Boston 3
Bal1imor~ 8, Oicago 0
Tampa Bay 10, K,nsas City 7
Oakland 8. TOtont o 2
Anahe-im 4, Detroit I
S~"allle 6, CLEVELAND 5
New York 5. Minne sota ~

Ium

z-San Antonio.
K·Utah .......
ll.-1-lou~tcn

li.-Minnesota
Dallas .. .

KansM City (Pittsley 1·1) at Tampa Bay (Arrojo
1·3). 12:35 p.m.
. ·
New .York. (Cone 4-0J at Minnesota (Radke 3·2).
1:15 p.m. '
Chicago (Baldwin 2-2) at Ballimon: CPon50n 12), 3:05p .m
•
Te.-;as (Sele 3-2 1at Basion (Saberhagen 2-1). 7:05

p.m.
Oakland &lt;Heredia 1-11 :u Toronto (Carpeme r 31), 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Mo,·er ·1-4) at CLEVELANO (Co l o n ~1). 7:05 p.m . •
AnahcLm IFinley 1-2 1at Dt:troit {Fiorie Q-0). 7OS
p.m.

Denver ..........
Vancouver :.....

:!!' I. llJ.

)J

J)
J)

.740
.740

........ Jt

19

.620

25
.... 19 31
........... 14 36
.......... B 42

.500
.380
.280
. t60

..... .37
........ 15

Pacific Division
y-Pord and ......... ................... 35 IS
x-l.A , Lakers .................... 31 19
li.-Sacramento...... ................ 27 23
li.-Phoenix ... ,...;... ................ 27 23
Seanle ................................ 25 ·2S
Golden State ....................... 21 · 29
L.A. Cli ppers' ........................ 9 41
lll·clinched playoff benh
y-d inched divisi on tit le
z-clinch~d conf~r~m.-e title

Iii
6
12

IB
21
29

.700
.620
.540
.S40
.SQO

4
8
8
10

.420

14

.ISO

26

Wednesdafs regularaseason finales

Friday's games
Annheim (01i"nres 3-2) nt Boston (Maninez5·1 1.
7:05p.m.
Texa~ (Clark 2-21 at Toronto (Henlgen 1- 1). 7:05 ,
p.m.
T:tmfia Bay (Win 3-0l at CLEVELAND (Gooden
1-0), 7 : 0~ p.m.
Bahirnore (Mussi rm 4-1 1:11 Petroil (Thompson 42). 7:05p.m.
. ·
· ·
Srauk {Suzub 0-0) at New York Clrabu 0-0).

p.ni

Oakland (Candioui 2·.\) ar Chicago (ParqYr 3-2).
8:05p.m

Kansu City (Appier 2-2) at Minnesota (M ilton Q.
l), 8:05 p.m.

Torbmo 96. CLEVELAND 87
Phila()elphia lOS , Detroil 100-0T
Chnr1otte 1~~ . Boston 129-20T
New Jersey 115, Milwaukee 107
Atlanta 100, Washington 92
New York 101. Mi ami 88 .
-Orlando 10~ . Chicago 83
HouSion 95, Denver 88
Phoeni" 100. Mimte:sota 96
. Seattle 107. L.A. Clippru 105
· Sacrnrnf!nto 99, Vancouver 95
L.A. Lakt:rs 119: POrtland 91
San Antonio 88. Go~n State 81

Hockey

NL standings
Eadem Division

:rwo

:!!' I. llJ.

. AIIonta .............. ........... 19
New York
............... 17
Phil!klelphia ................... 14
Montreal .......
.. ... R
Aorida ............... ,............... fi

R .704

Iii

Tonl&amp;hl's games

.f/J7
l .l .519
1R ..l08
22 .214

St.Louis ............................... I S II

.5'17

Chicago .............................. ,IJ
Pittsburgh ............................ 13
Milwaukee ........................... .IJ
CINC!NNATI.. .................... .tt

12

.520

13

.500

14 • .481"
15 .423

BuffnJo at Boston. 7:30p.m.
St. Louis at Dallas, 8 p.m.

Friday's games

~Angeln

Arizona .... ... ,
Colorado
San Diego ....

12 .586
12 57 1
14 .511
13 .458
I? .370

Pittsburgh at Toronto, 1 p.m.
DelrOit at Colorlklo, 7:30p.m.

,,
..

Transactions

3

J'J

4

5',

Baseball

Wnttrn Diwblon

.. .... 11
......
.... 16
........ IS
. ..... . ...... II
........ 10

NHL conferece semifinals

II

Ctnlral Division
Houston ...... ,........ . ............... 17 10 ' .630

San Francisco .......

•••

7'huradaz, May &amp;,1999

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Ppmeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

Smith, Stotts captur~ wins in latest Skyline Speedway race.s
J'woJ Meigs County drivers carne
Stotts has done quite well in the Jeff Burdette, fast Qualifier Larry
away with most of the loot Saturday- past in the Modified division at Bond at 13.77 seconds, Andy Bond
night at Skyline Speedway as Skyline and once again showed the and Mike McDaniel to claim the fea Pomeroy's Todd Smith won the fans he still has the skills to capture a ture ' finish in his IITI. Smilh also
Super Late Model division and . feature win.
.
claimed the win in the dash as heat
Darwin's Chris Stotts' claimed the
Competition was a factor, espe- wins went to Andy Bond and Ryan
modified main.
cially from Kenny Johnson in the Ill Cline.
• After one week of operation, pro- car of Tom Powell, as Johnso n
Smith is sponsored by Taz's
moter Bob Thcker posted the year's advanced to second spot after start· Marathon ,
Gene
Simmons
(irst modified special that paid one ing 5th. By lap 5, Jo' •son was with- Chevrolet, and Banks Construction
Q~iver $600 to win . That driver hap- in the realms of passing Stotts but with dad Tom Smith adding the
~ned to be ·Chris Stotts (ex-L. ate continued to go high as Stotts stayed mechanical duties. .
Mndel Driver?) from Darwin. Stotts low.
Smith seemed to be comfortably
~iarted on the pole at 15 ~econds ·
The top two raced. for the lead in charge and had some smooth sail-,
e~en.
·
position ut Stotts always claimed the ing as lapped traffic came into play
. ·stotts
is
sponsored
by lead across the start/finish line.
on lap 10. This forced the driver to
McDonalds, Malec, Louis Antorietto
Tim Walters finished in second use what he had learned, to do all he
Racing Engines, American Soils place at the finish line after starting could, to stay ahead of all that horse-.
~x~avating and Construction, R &amp; (1: lOth and was followed by Donnie power chomping on his rear end.
A\uo
Glass
and
Precision Rhyne. Mark Dickson, Ted Webb,
.Several caution periods did threatAutomotive.
Johnson, Rod Sayre, Jim Hysell, en the lead Smith has as Larry and
" ,With additional track preparation Mark McDonald and Leonard Baker. . Andy Bond and Jeff Burdette battled
ptior to Sa!urday night racing, the
After an exciting time with the hard for second position. Smith just
1rack was hard, slick and definitely a Modifieds il was ti111e· for the Late kept his sights on the track ahead of
~ptface _to be alert on. A violent flip Model division to take to the track him and let these three decide on the
by Chns D1cks.on saw t~e Double and show the fans what these high" follow up spot behind him as he
~~o car get on t.op of the backstrech horsepowered cars could do under a claimed tlw checker nag llnish at the
a)'\d nip three times over the back- full moon and clear skies.
end. Larry Bond, Andy Bond, Jeff
!ide. Dickson was unhurt but out for
todd Smith started in the pole B.urqette and Jeff Wood completed
~~~~ even ing as his car suflered major position of the 25-lap feature event the top five.
sheet
and held off fierce from the likes of
Pat Gillian kept up the momentum
,., metal damage.

of winning from the pole starting
position as he led his field of competitors through 20 laps of un-contested racing. Competition did come
from fellow racer Ted Dille as Dille
threatened Gillian with a few
attempted passes.
Gillian won the Dash event as
Tony Roush and Frankie Roush each
claimed heat wins and Fast Time
went to Ted Dille at .16 seconds.
As it was appare.nt the top two
positions were being held fast by
Gillian and Dille, the remaining top
five positions saw Steve Bigley,
George Adkins, John Powell and
Tony Roush swapping spots in their
attempts to advance .
.
With a hard,shck and challengmg
track, the show was great for the fans
and was only three cauuon penod for
the entire event. At the end, John
P?well , ~ony Ro.ush and Steve
Bigley fintshed the Top fiye poSI·
lions.
Mike Miutin, ex-demolition driver. drove to a feature hmsh •n the
Pure SJTeet class a.s Matt McAtee
claimed the win in the special showing of the mini-Wedge class.
Skylme Speedway w1ll be closed

Cleaves says he plans to stay at Michigan State
; LANSING, Mich . (AP) Michigan State point guard Mateen
eJeaves has opted to close out his
c'ollegiate career next season and not
lfeclare himself eligible for the NBA
. ~raft as im underclassman, according
ll! published report.
·," '"I'm happy with the decision," ·
Cleaves told the Lansing State
Jburnal for a story today. "I'd been
leaning 'that way all along." ·
:' The 6-foot-2, 190-pound allAmerican was to discuss his decision
it a news conference scheduled for 4
p!ll). today at the Breslin Center.

a

Cleaves met for roughly two
hours Wednes!lay in Breslin with his
mother, Fran Cleaves, Spartans basketball coach Tom Jzzo, and longtime friend and adviser Charles
Tucker, the newspaper reported.
·
During that meeting, Cleaves and
his• advisers discussed all options,
including his NBA opportunities and
the Spartans' prospects for a third
consecutive Big Ten title and their
bid for the first NCAA championship
of the 21st century.
" It was a good meeting," Cleaves
told the State Journal. "Everyone

heard what the others were thin kin~ .
And I'll . t~lk about all the factors m
my dectston at the press conference."
. .
Cleaves had refused to IIJY hiS
hand on whtch path he rna~ take.
though . his mother has sa td she
would h~e her son to return to the
Spartans next season tn pursUit ofhts
degree.
·
Michigan State athletics qfficials
had ~aid Cleaves was to reveal hts
dectston Tuesday, though that bnefing was canceled when Cleaves'
mother couldn't make the trip from

Flint to East Lansing to attend. ..
She satd she spent that day talkmg
to NBA general managers, scouts
and other counselors, trymg to .•~elp
her son evaluate hiS llfospects. W,~ .
sllll have some mvesugall ng to do •
she told the State Journal for a story
Wednesday. .
.
.
The ~wo-ttme All-Amencan pomt
guard this year helped M1ch1gan
State get to its first NCAA Fmal Four
appearance tn 20 years, where the
Spartans were downed by . Duke m
the national semifinals.

Saturday in obse rvance of the
Skyline will resume the 1999 rac"Mountain Momma 100" race at ing schedule on Saturday May 15 .
West Virginia Motor Speedway For more information, call the
Friday and Saturday.
Speedway office at 740-662-4111.

WIN$ LATE MOO~L FEA~URE -Todd Smith (left), standing with
his father, Tom Smith, clatmed the Late Model feature Saturday
night in his Taz's Marathon T-7 Late Model. The younger Smith also
claimed1he fast car dash.

Pine Hills Golf Course sets starting dates for league play
'· The· Pine Hills Golf Course, for- ·
Thesday and Wednesday evenings
pially Meigs County Golf Course, . are men's leagues which will start
Y{ill be soon starting league play.
play on Tuesday, May 11 . S1gn-up at
•· On Monday, May 10, the the golf course. .
·
}Yemen's t:eague is starting with an · . The Summer Youth League will
of&amp;anization;d meeting at 5 p.m ., fol- start the first of ~une. Ages for that
~owed by a nine hole scramble. league are 8-16 year olds. Play
~e~gue play hegins Monday, May 17
l\! 5 pm.
.
. ' Tuesday mornings . there is a
Senior Women's League which starts
at 9 a.m every week through the
summer.

beings . at 9. a.m. e~ch Wednesday
morning.
There will be a Men's Scratch
League starting soon on Thursday
evenings.
. '
Every .Friday morning is a senior
scramble with tee-off at 9 a.m .

Registration is from 8-8:30 a.m. each
Friday.
For more infomiation on any of
the leagues· or upcoming tournaments, call the golf course at (7 40)
992-6312.
.

lndians ... .o

MidW«st Division

Tuday's gam..

? : .l~

.460

••

',
2

J',

6

Wedni!Sday's stores
Philadelphia II. San Dlcgo l
Milwaukee 2, Aorida 0
Atlanta 12. St: Louis.J
Colorado 13, Chk:ago 6
Los Angeles 8, Montreal 2
Arizona S, CINCINNATI I
Houuon S, New York 4

Pittsburgh 4. San Francisco J ( 12)

Tonight's game
P.iusbur&amp;h (Ritchie 1-1) a1 St. Louis (Osborne J.
·2), 8:10p.m.

Friday's games '
Chicaso (Tapini 2-1) at CINCINNATI (Harnisch
2·11. 7.0l p.m.
·
Montreal (Bati!lll 2-0) at Houston (lima 4· 1),
8:05p.m.
Pillsburgh (Schmidt 4;,1) at St. Louis (Oliver 2· 1).
8:10p.m.
Philadelphia (Schilling ·4·1 1 at Co lorado
(Thomson 0-3), 9:05p.m.
·
New York {Hershi&amp;er 1-2) at Ariionn (StOIIIemyre

3· 11. JO:Ol p.m.

AtlaniiO {Millwood 2·2) at San Diego (Clement 0·

American Lope
SEATTLE MARINERS: Recalled LHP Sean
Spencer from Tacoma oftbe PCL. Placed LHP Buech
Henry on the 15-day diaabled liu. Transfe~ RHP
Mark Leiter from the I ~ - day to the 60-day dinbled
list.

.

TEXAS RANGERS: Recalled INF Kelly
Dransfeld't from Oklahoma of the PCL.
TOkONTO BLUE lAYS: Purchased !he con·
tract or RHP Billy Koch from Syracuse of the
International League. C&gt;~J:doned LHP Steve Sioclair
to Syracu1e. TransfcrmfRHP Bill Risley from the
IS·day to the 60-day disabled liu.
National luau~
· FLORIDA MARLINS: Optioned LHP Kirt
Ojala to Cal&amp;ary or the PCL. Recalled RHP Ryan
OempSitr from Calgary.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLJES: Traded LHP Paul
Spoljari c to the Toronto Blue Ja;s for RHP Robert
Person. Purchased the contract o RHP Joel Bennett
from Sc'ranton-Wilkes-Binc of the International
!--tague . Oet ioncd RHP Stevt: Montgomery 10
Scranton·Wt1kcs- 8ll1'e

Bukolbalt
Nalional BMketblll AuodiUon
BOSTON CELTICS: Acdvoted 0 Kenny
Anderson and G Br'qce Bowell from the lnjumllist
Placed C OreJ Minor on the injured list. Waiv~~- 0
Marl on Garneu. Signed G Damon J o~s for the
remainder or,ihe 5etuon.
. .
'
·MIAMI HEA1' : Placed C Alonzo Mourn1ns on
injurall~st. Activated FTerry Mills rrom injured list.

.ll. tO:Ol p.m.

Milwaukee &lt;Roque 0..2) at San Francisco (Brock
2-2), 10:05 p.m.
·
'
florldD (Springer 0·4) at los Angele s {Dreifon4·
1), IO:IOp,m.

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

Football
.

National Football LtiiiUt
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Signed G Zock
Wiegen.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Named Tum Botta
tight ends cooch.

Hockey
N•tlon.l Hoc:kty 1Aa1111:
NASHVILLE PREDATORS: Signed C Danny ·
Ri\'a.
SAN JOSE SHARKS: Assigned 0 Andy Sutton
' to K~ritucky of the AHL

(Continued from Page 4)
proud of him."
Mesa was unavailable after the
game, choosing to let his 18-pitch
performance serve as his only com'91 C.EVV Cl500
ment of the night.
.
.
Sltlfll.-. '"'
"I'm sure he was fired up,'' said
su•.,...
catcher Dan Wilson, whose two-run
homer in the sixth inning gave
WAS $26,950
Seattle a 6-5 lead. "He came in and
peqple were booing and stuff. You
could tell he was fired up."
For Hargrove, watching Mesa' l:'l"'lo"""""'""''"!!'~.;..;,..__
beat the Indians brought back memo- .
ries - some goo\1, some bad.
"I was hoping we'd beat him,"
Hargrove said. "I didn 't necessarily
· have· fond thoughts when he came
into the game, but I've always liked
and heen a big booster of Jose Mesa.
I'm just not happy to see him successful tonight."
Bell and J.ohn Mabry also hit tworun homers for the Mariners and Jose
-Paniagua provided 2 2/3 scoreless
innings.
'99 FORI EXPLORER IlLS
'
Bell, whose nine homers are one
why of hiscareer-high, was traded to
414
the Mariners last year for Joey Cora.
•.... fall,...,
. "I really didn't think about any of
WAS $2USO
that," said Bell. "I'm just trying to
concentraie on winning the game."
Travis Fryman homered twice and
JRatched a career-high with five
RBis for the Indians, who were without starters Jim Thome and Omar
Vizquel.
Wilson's homer in the sixth -his
first this season ·- came after
,Fryman had single-handedly brought
'the Indians back from a four-run
deficit with his second homer of the
game, a two-run shot in the fifth off
'Jeff Passero (1-3).
.
· Fryman hit a three-run homer in
the first · off Passero after the
Mariners had . jumped · on Indians
starter Dave Burba (2-1) for four
runs in the first on two-run homers
-~y Bell and John Mabry.
.
• Sandy Alomar had three hits and
Robeno Alomar had two hits and
·three stolen bases for Cleveland.
~ Passero allowed nine hits in 5 1/3
'innings, and was replaced in the sixth
after giving up two one-out singles
.and hitting Lofton. Paniagua, whose
ERA dropped to 1.04 in I 3 appe~r­
ances, got Enrique Wilson to line out
to third and Lofton got doubled off
'first to end the threat. ·
· "We got some great plays in the
field and some line drive outs," said
Fassero. "It's all supposed t'? eve~
.gut in the long run and tontght tt

'97 CHEVY TAH
LT PKC

U.Jt 8111r tll•ttt, MIOfttHf,
Cll •~••t"• lut~tt. f•ll p.Wtt
WAS $17,950

Lut•er
WAS $27,950

""' $J1, 950

_,-..J

aid."

~

Trailing 4-3, Cleveland appeared .
Ill tie It in 'the fourth, but Ennque

Wilson was thrown out pn a close
play at the plate by center fielder
Ken Griffey Jr. Wilson's foot
~ppeared to sneak in ahead of
Wilson's tag, but he was called out
liy umpire Dale Scott.

'.

•

'97 CHEVROLET
ASTRO COMVERSI~M

S1ptt11•• 414, UT, 111t,
fttll , ••.,
WAS $t7,950

fall , ••.,
WAS $11,950

tlo\11 $17 1 950
'

'97 TAURUS SHO

'96 tORP TAURUS

CD Chat"• ,.,.nrool,

A111, tlr

amy tplltn

fttll ~·"
WAS $11,950

WAS $19,950

tlo\11 •10, 950

tlo\11

$17.950

'95 DODGE CARAVAN

'94 CHEVY C tSOO
S1ptr11., Sllwer1 ...
. A1tt, AC

Sperl ptc••t•
full ptwer

WAS $11,950

WAS $9,950

tlo\11 · $8,950
'94 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CIERRA
V6, FULL POWER

'98 FORD TAURUS
AUTO,
FULL POWER

' WAS $7,950

950

177 · EXIT 132
RIPLEY, WV
304) 372~3673
·800) 96.4-3673

�· Page 6 • l',he Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 6,1999

NOTHING RUNS
UKEADEERE"

Carmlchael~s

'L.......

I

11 WM ... I

e68 Plneereat Drive

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

(740) 446-2412

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

.

olherw ise, I would like to hear their
reasoning.
Dear Ann Landers: You nave
printed several · letter' froni lonely
grandparents who wonder why they
never hear from their grandchildren.
I'm a man who has 1he reverse of
_ Dear Ann Landers: I am a 26 and I assured him it was not That that problem.
I've been happily married for 21
year-old woman with a problem . boyfriend i·s now happiiy married
years
and have a 1eenage daughter
When I was in high school, I cheat- and· has chi ldren. I have been marand
son.
o;d on my steady boyfriend with an ried to a wonderful man for almost
Since the day our children were
&lt;!lder man. I discovered I was preg- six years, and he wants to adopt my
born,
my widowed mother has
nant and was sure the older man was daughter.
shown
absolutely
no interest in lhem
,
Should I try to contact my old
the father of the baby.
whatsoever.
I
cannol
understand
Lasl December, afler eight years boyfriend and disrupl his life by
of paying child support , the man · telling him he has a daughter? Pan this. Our children are every parent's
requested a DNA test to detennine of me feels he is enlilled to know, dream. They are brigh1 , well- manpaternity. I was stunned when il but another part worries 1hat I would nered , respeclful and a joy to be
turned oulthal my daughter isn't his only mess up more lives. Ple.Se lell around.
When 1he kids were young, my
~r~l.
mew~m~-~m~K£ .
mother
made it dear she did ·not
Here 's the real problem . Whenl
DEAR KIITY IN K.C.: I'm
wanl
to
baby
-sil , so we never asked
found out I was pregnant, my with 1he part of you thai says leave it
her.
boyfriend asked if the baby. was his, alone. If any· of iny readers 1hink
When we make the 200-mile trip

.

992-2825 .

740 992·2196

Hills

Citgo

__
• lhilcoh_,,..,.._..

SR 124
Racine, Ohio

..

... IV

aoo

12:30 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
• Truck hriM, Mompllla 200
3 p.m. • Saturday • ESPN

-QIWIDNATIOIIAL

CemlnC up: Grand National
1.058&lt;nlle track,
200 laps, 211.6 miles
- : Saturday, May 8
Louden,

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

... -pion:
Buckshot Jones

L.,.

Jelf Bwton.1.544

TriCIIqiUI~r-:

·".. Dill
BOIIO't- t.lbOntt, 1.390

1/iiiHJ,;
........
AccessOries

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

c-., up: Memphis 200
Whore: Memphis (MIIIinllton, Tenn.) Motorsports Parle,
.7!&gt;mlle track. 200 laps. 150
miles

Wilen: Saturday, May 8
-~~~~ ch.-plon: Ron

Hornaday

GrOll
BWne, Ford, 119.792 mph,
Sept 1~. 1998
--:Ron
Hornaday, Chevrolet, 84 .204
mph, Sept. 13, 1998
Qullll')~tC

~: 'This
SuporTruck~'

is on~ the

I

Your1Urn
lallln ,_ 0. ....

Tricia. Davis has been selected as
a .1999 winner of the Ohio Valley
Bank .4-H Scholarship Program.
Winners were detenttined by select
committees of 4·H officials, and will
receive $2,000 in scholarship money
over four years, according lo James
L. Dailey, chainnan and chief executive officer at OVB.
Tricia is lhe daughler of Gregory
and Janice Davis of Pomeroy. She is
a member of the Meigs Counly 4-H
Dairy Club with eight years of experience in 4-H. She has held the
offices of president, secrerary, treasurer, news reporter, recreation
leader, and he~th· and safety officer.
In 1998, she earned lhe awards of
Orand .Champion Dairy Cows and
Managemenl, Grand l:hampion
Writing and Reporting for Teens,
· Grand Champion for· The Outdoor
Chef, first place in the Dairy Sweepstakes, Grand Champion Holslein
Junior Female and Third Altemale 10

In

Dear NASCAR This Week,
· 1 was watchina the
Primestar SOO from TeKal!l
when NASCAR waved lhe

• weekly rankin&amp;S by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week's rankin&amp; Ia In parentheses.

1. (3.1 Jolllllrton
2. 141 loll Gordon

11H11J Lllloonte

Dolo-

Mork M.....,
,..,,
Ruoty WIII.C.
Dole Ellnh•dt
Word Bllrton
Terry Lllloonte

•-•rf

yell.,. flaa after )0 laps. The

yellow was _eKplained to be
mandatory since rain pre~
vented any practice the day
before. Why didn't the cars
eKit the pits in the order in
which they entered?

Just won'tlet up
Slloncl!lll tho crttics
Also third at California
But 11111 no wins
En&amp;lne failed him
Gettln&amp; oetter every week
Just SG-80 at Fontana
ThOuehl he'd do better
Just missed top.flve
Slipped Into top.10

Pete Sexton
Shelltyvllle, Ind.

Such requiremenls are
dtlertnlned by NASCAR on

an Jr~dividlllll basis. We can
rica/1 only on~t lncid~tnl, tJI
Rockingham In rht fall of
/99S, In wloich NASCAR
matrdt~ttd that cars return·to
the truck In '"' samt' orri~tr
tll~ty

txited. In

g~n~tral,

DEAR N.C.: You mighLas well
kids are invisible. She talks inces- try to wann up Siberia. Have you
santly about her friends and social 10ld her how much it would mean to
aclivities but never directs any con- you if sbe took an interest in your
versation toward our children . The children'
only acknowledgmenl she has ever
..If she is wi lling to discuss it, you
given them is an annual birthday might be able to turn things around.
If not, leave the family al home
ciud.
The one time she came to our when you visit your molher, and
home, she sat on the edge of the sofa spare everyone 1he aggravation .
and kepi saying she needed to leave
Dear Ann Landers: That letter
as soon as possible. She went home from "Jack Sprat II" really irked me. ·
the next morning.
He said his wife's exir a poundage
Am I expecling too much? My turned him off. If this guy hasn ' t
mother is in her 70s and is an intelli- made love 10 his wife in four years,
gent woman. My children would there's more wrong with him than
love 'to have a caring grandmother. diabetes and an obese wife.
and I wish I could find a stand-in for
I am also diabeti c, and my wife is
them.
I00 pound s heavier than she should
AI lhis poim, I no longer want to be, bul I love her with all my heart .
visi l my. mother and subject my chil - Does Jack se riously think he is as
dre.n to her . indifference . Do you attractive as he was w~en the)' ·marhave any ideas on how to gel her to ri ed? l,' ll bel he isn 't I know I'm not
His wife may need counsding to
warmup?--SAD SON IN NC.

,10 her 1own, it's as if my wife and

Tricia Davis receives
OVB ·4-H scholarship

Memphis.... Che&gt;ys finished

1·21ast year;wltn Jay Sauter
following Hornaday.

TOP TEN

(II
(2)
(3)
(7)
(81
(81
1-1
1-l.

949-3099

second vis~ to

~ ""' ...... 1.1t!

3.
4.
I.
8.
7.
8.
8..
J.D.

_,,

••••••••••••

PROfiH

Aui()"WIIIeot. 1.217
1M)' ....... 1.217
'#IIWd Burton, l ,lie

uwuaa.~

See us forYour Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;

c---

former winners .•.. Tommy
Ellis won the first BGN race
here In 1~ . ... Since 1993,

,

,;
••

anly one race a year has
been held here.

Bessey, Clle\lrolet,
127.701 mph, May 8, 1998
R- riCorcl: Chll&lt;l Uttle,
Ford, 104.972 mph, May 13,
1995
Not.ble: No one has won
twice In 12 races at Loudon.
... Randy LaJoie and Mike
MclaugJllln are amonc the

Joe

..
.. ,Iff·..... W.tln,'·""'
1.3311
Y.

Fast, Friendly
Service
.

ON THE- SCHEDULE

.200
Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway,

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

1.

·

Page7
Thursday, May 6, 1999

Should reader tell former boyfriend he is a father? Ann says .no

Gllllpolla

Across from Golia Auto Soles on old lit. 35 West

By The Bend

I 1L

Farm &amp; Lawn ·

The Daily Sentinel

pU

siOPI are COifiidered ll part of
tilt competltior~, regardless of
tltt ctrcutrmances lnvolvf!d.

Nalional Dairy Conference. In addition, her yrand Champion Writing
and Reporting fo'r Teens project won ·
Outstanding of the Day honors at the
Ohio State Fair.
Tricia is ~ graduating senior at
Meigs High School where she has
been a member of Drama Club, varsity volleyball, varsily basketball,
varsity track, senior spirits, La Sociele Honoraire, student council, and
senior play. She has been president
of the NationaL Honor Society and·
has received various honorS includ·
ing the Daughters of the American
Revolution Good Citizen Award,
honor roll, 1he Danforth Leadership
Award, Who's Who Aplong Ameri· .
can High School Students, County
Ac~demic Award, and the All-TVC
academic award in both basketball
and volleyball.
She plans to attend Marietta College with a major in business communicalions.

cu rb her overeating. but Jack could
use some counseling to improve hi s
lousy attitude and learn 10 appreciate
the woman he has. A good woman ,
of any SIZe, ts hard to find. I am profoundly grateful for mine. -- TOM
lN MIAMI
DEAR TOM: Beautifully -said.
And now. I hope your wife appreco- .
ate~

you .

When planning a wedding, who
pays for what? Who stands where' •
"The Ann L-anders Guide for Bndes"
has all lhc answers . Send a se lfaddressed. long, business-size envc -,
lope and a chec k or money order for ,
$3.75 (thi s includes postage and :::
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Lan- •
ders, P.O. Box 11562. Chicago. Ill.
60611-0562. (In Canada, sencl
$4 .55 .) To lind out more aboul Ann,
Landers and read her pasl colu'mns. ~
visil the Crealors Syndicate '!'Cb.,
page at www.creators.com .

Show Her Just How Special
She Is .With A Gift · From .••
MASON FURNITURE CO.'S
One or The
Largest

or
'"... ltERS

In The
~~ Tri.Coonty flrtGI
.

Startlac At

'1Z9°0

2 &amp; 3 Piece Living Room Suites

Dear NftSCAR This Week,
· I just boUght •ome racing
cards .and came across a driver named Ri(:hie E!vilns. It

32" ZENITH FLOOR MODEL
-2 Tuner Picture In Picture
-Closed Captioned-Soundrite
A321384R
2 PIP w/Audio Swap
10 Jacks
2 S·Vtdeo In Jacks
Comb Finer

SEq Front Surround
530 Unes of r/Aesolution

Universal Remote Control

IIYt he= (wu) the kina of

Reg. 117Q900

tftodif'fed racina. winniria
nine NASCAR ·modified
titles before his dealh in

iiW I

.1985.'
Whal is 'NASCAR

modified rae ina? How come
you don't see his name printed· in any aporta almanac or
the Quinnell' book? He beat
Richard Peny and Dale
Earnhardt in title wina.
Lori Bau•ann
Madl101, Ml11.

A50M91W
Digital 3-Une Comb Filter

Th~ tat~ Rid~e

Ewms,
kllltd a/ Martiruvilf• Jn
/98,, ~~ ind~t~td tonsld~red
one of NASCAR i a/1-rlmt
greau. Howtver. whal is now
kllow11 as tlte Futlttrlite
Modlftq/ Serin is a regional,

18 JackS·

2 S-Video In Jacks·

Bedroom Groups' By ASHLEY·IASSEn·
SINGER·RIYERSIDE·AMERICAN DREW
AND MANY OTHERS•••

not nQI/onDI, 1er/t1 and does

1101 carry tire pn1tlge Gssociated .wi/11 Wiluto11 Cup.
\ ... .

••••••••••••

. VJho'allotYJhdsNot
• 110'11 Jeff Burton, 11th or

better In ni()S of 10 raCes.

••••••••••••

'ds'l\4;..
1. What father-and-son combination tlnllhed
·t-2 In the Oaytona 5001' .
2.. Where d6d RlchMd Petty's first road-Course ~ry
occur?
· ·
· 3. What coinpany sponsored Bobby laaac's
champlorishlpwlnnlna Dod&amp;e?

Fan Tips

-

••••••••••••
AROUND THE GARAGE

By Monte Dunon

N.-,SCAR Thio Week
FONTANA, Calif. ~ Who
will be the driver next year

.Leo s Cruise
1

when ohe new McDonald~

Moore, ia also thought to be

commitment with Bill Elliott

interested in joining the Cal

at lhe Winston Cup level for

Wells-owned team that will
probably become a Winston
Cup rq:ular in 2001 ..But how

one more year.

team beaina ptrticipation in
rioin&amp; 1111n pouibly ponder a
t~e Busch Grand National
. · yai of BUJ&lt;h O&lt;ond Nalional
series?
racina on the way io Wi01ton
The early favorite in pnae· Cup? At lhe very leaal, the
area aouip is Juon Lemer.
1witch promi~n a severe
the Uniled States Aulo Club
PlY cut.
champion who smna on the
Another l1pofled puosibilily
verge of aec:urina either a
i• Robby Oonlon, who ronnerty
CART or ~ Indy Racina
drove for Weill' CART ieal1'·
Leaaue ride. One of the cUr~
McDonald 'I will honor its
rent CART standouts. Grea

&amp; IJ'ra:uel
740-992-4233

SQ0-795-1110
202 W. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45 769

X

ANOTHER TEXAS
can one of open~wheel racine's TRACKl Where Is NASCAR
golna ne1u? Houst.on. Mark it

down.

'

Lna Kennedy, dauahter of
William C. France, wu part of
a delegation that cased lhe

join&lt; (the naoloni fif\h laraest market) ref;ently. Apparently,
Texas will be the latest ikir·
mi1h in the cold war between
Jnternation~l

Speedway C~rp.

,_

(lhe fl'lllce family land
Speedway Motorspono Inc.
(Bruton Smith I for (NASCAR)
world domination.
A Houalon inc..,.jon miaht
be seen u an invuiOn of
Smith 'I turf, aeeina •• how the
Charlotte tycoon built the
:speed poliCe nonh of Fon

'549"
To

~Z99"

- . •· TIII-IIIIYal-ln

IOftaMr- MBII'IA&gt;IIshlrWCo. .
ol-1\lo., l01d ... be

warnors p11 slOP.

~

slump end make the

Clllfomla 500 hla third
victory ot the season.

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

HoUJton lnteretl mlaht explain
why it hu not been ,ranted.

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, O.E.S., Middleport
Masonic Temple, Thursday, 7:30
p.m.
RACINE - Racine . Grange,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m at the ' hall .
. Inspection, .second degree. ,

ATtENTION

Advertise on this page

Call 992-2155
· Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information
,,
•

totai~Web
... ................. - n l

Call Now And Sign·Upl ·
675·3398 or 1·800.766-0553
'

/

TUPPERS PLAINS meeling with Allorney
Hunter. 7 p.m.

ADVERTISERS!!
·_,Advertise on this page

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
Modems!

CABLEVISION
COMMUNICATIONS

•

Including A 26 Cu. Ft.
GIBSON Side By Side
. And
~~22 Cu. Ft.
Top Freezer Model

.

'

~community

~.andon

heavily from HOUlton and

9f you Have 'l'he Need for ·s peed•••
we've got ltlll

Refrigerators

ty .4-H Youth Development exten•lon •gent, James L. O.lley, OVa
chairman and CEO, her mother, J•n Davia, and Jeffrey E. Smith,
OVa pr..ldent and Chief Operating Officer.
.

I

ADVERTISERS!!

We' Also Have GIBSON·FRIGIDAIR£ &amp; MAGIC CHEF

cemented the

other parta ofTexu. Smith hu

ATtENTION

'1699

SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - Trlc.. Dilvl•, -ted receiVed a
$2,000 •chol•r.ttlp from the Ohio V•lley Bank 4-H Scholarahlp pro- ·
gram. She II pictured, left. to right, with Chip Haggerty, Melgl Coun-

• A lat1H'8Ce·Ralnbpw

Wonh and that lfiOk dnwt

date at hia Texu IriCk. ISC'I

Reg.'219!r"

-for$14.951r(COII~
(800)~.or..-.....lho

Sunday at cilllfon1IJ
Speedway, that was
more than,........, to
er1d Jeif G0rd011't

..peal&lt;dly IOUJht I second

tOOO Unes of Rosolutlon

00

lr'Mmet•aauuMEI 1 ...,

Leffler early favorite for McDonald's Busch team
Call us for all your
trave.l needs

·---·-"""

Inventory!!

BBE
MBA Trakball Remote

Mom's Price

-C..O-KomyWIIIIICO
• end hla 1998 team Mel wn;Alll
booi1111Jod •lit.Mio Bk Sldow.,.'

OOUOJntUI W'r\1 'I :€96t Ul "A'N 'UOidWIIIIiiJI&gt;tJII 'Z
'896t Ul UOIIIIIf olal.o(J ""' !qQcltl''l

• IIIOT: JOhnny Benson, last
at CaiWomla, no top.10s.

' I

La1r11e

2 PIP W/AudiO Swap,
Commercial Surf to PIP
&amp; PIP Snapsnot

Towit
Garry

Calendar-

SATURDAY
· BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen Camp 7230
Mother's Day potluck din.ner Salurday, S p.m . at the Woodmen Hall.
Meat, salad, rolls, pop, coffee and
tea provided. Each molher to receive
·a flower.
RACINE - Return · Jonathan
Meigs Chapte!, Daughters of the
American Revolulion, Racine
Library, 10 a.m. Program by Mary
Kay Yosl, speaking on the lives of.
first ladies of Ohio's U.S. presidents.
Hostesses, Elisha Young, Bernice
Carpenter and Paul~pe Aikins.
·
'

POMEROY- i+Jarkel hog registralion, 4-H and FFA, e·xhibitors,
FRIDAY
Saturday 9 to II a.m. at lhe fair- .
CHESTER - l:lymn sing, 7 p.m . grounds grange hall . Members must
Friday, Harvest Outreach Church, register lheir animals al tnal lime.
Riebel Road, Chester, featuring .For more information call Chip
Gabriel Quartel, Harvesl Time Haggerty, 992-6696.
Singers from Wei Jefferson , and
local singers.
MONDAY
1
POMEROY - Molher-daughter
POMEROY
Righi to Life
banquet, Zion Church of Christ, · meeting, Pomeroy Library, 7:30
State Route 143, 6:30 p.m. Friday. p.m. Monday.
Potluck, progrllJIItO follow.

Call 992-2.155
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

I

•·
'

,

. f

TAPPAN
Double Oven

TAPPAN 36"
GAS UNGE

Self Cleaning Oven

Clock'· 7i"'er, ~lectronic
Ignition, Griddle With Optional
Fifth Burner

..........

.

..

Mom'•
Price

With Latch l,.ock
clock &amp; Timer
Reg. '1199""

==·.,,,..

*I'REE DEUVERT.SET UP AND ~OVAL FOR OVER

/

·---.

�'
•.

•
Page

..

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

6, 1999

40

Girls Scouts Big Bend $ervice Unit holds annual spring banque~_
Me ig~ County Girl Scouts held

(74&lt;)) 367·5031
Fru

m0111£1l'S fJA1J
SAl£

BIIKRUP7CY

Es.:Wd• •

.

XLT, AUTO, AIR
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
llll'~~

$24,615

011~$19

,.950°

Childrer1 &amp;
Grandchildren

0
\Ill.

$1 J

110

all~

t1E~999 TAURUS LX

SUNROOF, LEATHER, LOADED

STEREO

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE OISCOUMTS

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

$41,010

$12,295

333_ P..,e Street, ·

In Lovmg Memory
of

Middleport
has part time
positions for
LPN's available
for all •hifte and
weekends.
Anyone interested
pleue &amp;top by &amp;
fill out an
application..

Co~bet

(Corby) Cleek
177 EXIT 132 .
RIPLEY, W~

MONDAY·FRIDAY
9" AM • 7°' PM
SATURDAY

) 372·3673 ·
73.

9" AM • S•.• PM

SUN~AY' CLOSED

Help Wanted

516/28-12114198

this hit
birthday. ·

Oil

Sadly Mil1ed by
tho1e who
loved him.

EOE

REMOVAL

Lo"ilbouom, Ohio

Landscape Material,

(740) 985-3677

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
up to 8 ton

•

992·5455

WJOS
TV27

Local
Television
For Free
Program Cuide
CaU 992-2727
..

'

PARft

All Makes Tractor &amp;
· ' Equipment Parll
.Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers .
I
1000 Sf. Rf. 7 South
••
•

....

,.....,

CooMn., OH if/S723

I

CONCRETE
CONIIICfiON
-.
.

P~rking Lots

25 yrs experience
Free Esfimotes

~ 740.742-8608

•

Good Times

9-1

:TRUCKING
, . DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE .
: AgrlcuHural Lime,
: Umeatone • Gravel
'
Dirt • S8f1d

9:30 ·1:30
Sat.. May eth D.J . Music

AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A SPECIAL ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS flff nUl AN AGA IDENTIFIED
. CAP nUl THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS Jl SJIVI.fll
OF UP JO $ r00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLI\ASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE . . THIS SPRING SPECIAL WILL
END JUNE 21, 1999.
.
POMIIOY lUCillE SlOP

250 COIDOI n.
POMIIOY, OliO 45769
·
PIOII-740.992·2406 01 304-415·3555

fi're• E•timnta
"Professional Routine lAwn
Maintenance and Mank:urlng
'Resldenllal &amp; Comme&lt;eiBJ
'Serving Meigs and Galif COUnties
In Ohio and Mason County in WI/

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING ·
NEW•REPAIR

•o.r .... ls'lt . . . W..LMr.e..r
1·740.742·2803 or
1-740-446-3822

. Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning •
Painting

. HILL'S

.

SELF STORAGE

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

211870 Beahan Road

&lt;12TFN

. Racine, Ohio 45n1
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
.Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

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

TRI·UATE MOBILE
POWER WASH
Tn~ckl-lrlclor

Trolltra..fiQUIOI·moblll
Hamt~-doclla-drlvowayo

Equlpmlnl Clffllfll I O.,rtletd

JEFF STETHEII
PHONE: ('140) MS-4218

HORSES
Buy, SeU, Tmin or Board·
AIIO Riding IAIIO!It

,......

HooiHoUow

EMAIL:

STETHEM@EURI!KANET.COII

FREE ESTIMATES

=.--· .

'

•Cillo 4517W

740-698-3290

BlSSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
!'lew HOmes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacemenl Windows ·
• Room Additions
· • Roofing
COMMEIOAL and IESIDEHTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

New Conatructlon l

Romodtllng-KIIchen Cablnor.
Vln~l Sldlno-Roofi.Dteklo
Qoragea

Free E•limales
'740..742·3411
Bryan lfeeveo
Su•an Reeve•

Bt Prtlcltn Aavanco.

Roush
949-1701
.'

'

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068

.

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, _Inc
Rutland, Ohio

Summer u•guo
Begins tat WHk
In M8y
lbesday • No lip
Wednesday • Mea'• League

Marty's
Po:wer
Washt•g

WICKS
HfiOLinG InC.

Homes, Decks
&amp;Mobile Hom99

Sand, FiU Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil

9811 4422

Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
15 y,.., Ezperience

Chaster, Ohio

742·1701

We Deliver
Limeston*l, Gravel,

(Low Rates)

740·992·3470

I'

We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
fragranceslll
•Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

"THE COUNTRY

CANDLE SHOP"

Tutt• FrldiY 1M
Set 1()..4
Rt. 124' Mlntrtvlllt, 011

892-4558

Want To Sell Your Stuff? Call FUv·
erslde Auction And Let Us Sell It

For\\&gt;u. 740-256-6989.
wanted 1111 Oln and Rodtl Let me ·
Pay you i n stt:~ad ol Dumping over
Ohio River B.ilnksl 2 112 mll ea

Lower 7 S. (74&lt;JJ446-1! 27

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

SSSMake Mon.eyiSSS Wo rk A1

Garage Sa le May 7 &amp; 9. 9:00·

Homa • Asaembta Products .
Easy Work . E•cellent Pa~. Fret
Detail s! Sen d S.A.S.E. To : Nat'!
Homeowrker's Associati on, P.O.

,;:...

ill!!! .

.

.Salting Out Sattl May 7 and 6 Inaide &amp;· Oull At 7 NOrth Crown
•

Thursday- Friday-Sat . Corner of
Roure 141 &amp; Ne ighborh ood Rd .
Couch, Queen MAnress. Cellllng
Fan, and Lots Mici.l

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
All Yerd satea Uust Be Paid In
Advtnce. Ot1dllne: 1:OOpm lht
cl•r before lht 1d 11. lo run,
SundiV l Mondey edition·

I :OOpm Fl'ldly.
·Community yard Sale- Saturday.
May 8. 9am -4pm . Mil e Hil l Rd.,
Racine. ONo. .

Lost Puppy

Linda's Painting ·
.'lllke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985-4180
Free Estimates

le-rll lor Her laturn.
ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

YOUNG'S

Pert1onals

tho Stale Highway Garage.

Star t Da ti ng Ton l ghll Ha ~ e lun
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1·

BOO-ROMANCE. 01&lt;1eo!lon 9681 .

New To You Thrift Shoppe

•Room llddlllona &amp; RamOdtllng

Quall.ty clothing and househ old
ltema . $1 .0 0 bag &amp;ale every
Thuradav. Monday lhru Saturdav

•Roofing &amp;Guttora
•VInyl Sldlnlll Painting
•PIIIO l Porclt Dtclta
FrN EIUIIIIIfl
V.C. YOUNG Ill
lt2-t215
P-oy, Ohlo
22 Y"'· Local

I

9:()1).5:30.

.

,

~=~~~~~:=~I
~
1 Female Celllco Kitten , Black &amp;

Orange, 7.00.2!56-6253:
2 Free Pupp tea Aust Shephafd/

Chow mi&gt;&lt;Od. (74&lt;ll446-aS.5 .
· Sc rap · WoOd a nd Yard
Items. (304)882- ~

Ralner/Hud&amp;On huge garage saleMay 6 . 7 &amp; 8 , Te ck er vllle Rd .,
Racine. Tools, dolls, collectibles,

misc.

9 west Stimson, Athens
740-592·1842

·~G•agea

Glgentlc 11tel Hundrtdl of
lttmal Muat 111 to bellevt1
Glassware, woman·s piUs sizes.
househo ld mt sc .. an ti qu es,
records. appliances, books, jewel·
ry, (2) riding lawn mowers, sport s
equipment, Must seet Muat sell!
Ma y 7th , 8th. &amp; 9th , Fr!dav thru
Routt 7 North . Pomeroy acrou
from the Skate ·a· way 5 beside

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Eitclrlcall Plumbing

Friday· t3 3 Bu tttr hut Avenue .
Cblle clibles, lamps, tablea , tuggage. clocks, cabinet, old dishes.
linens. much muct1 more.

Sunday. aam -5pm . 34820 State

•

s a18

AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or Sell .

Shllley Spears. 304-67!&gt;-1429.
.Computer Users Needed . Work
Own Hr&amp;. $2SK ·SBOKI Yt. ' ·600·
476-6653 x
www.~ cwp.com

nn.

Coo ks &amp; W8ilren . Apply at
Country Corner Ca1e, In Letart.
Cosmetolog ist Netdld, Buall'lesa
Gr owing, Guaranteed Wages
Plus MOfe. 740-44&amp;-12e7
DRIVI~G

POSITIONS •
AVAILABLE:

C~ssAOTR :
~Ingle

Dri ver. Late Model Ken worth&amp; With Reefers . west Coast
Carrier.
'
Te am Straight-TruCk, Late Mode!
Frl!lighrtiners With Sleepers . Must
Have Air Brake End orsementS,
800 Mile Rad ius, Homi Deliver -

Route 325 South . Househol d
Items. Nice Clothes, Baby Items.

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

Attention!!
Work from hOme

May 7th 8th, 9-? 7909 State Ro·
uta 7. Rear, Cheshire, Nice Cloth·
Jng, Household Items , Misc.

Porc h Sale: Friday May 7th , S-4;

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

alter

CtassBOTR:

Saturday May 9th, 8· ' . 44ao Stale

~ · 28 yra. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
;...
Phone 740-992-3987
.
111!!1
John Dean: Owner

Call

May 7 &amp; 8 Past Caldwell .Trucking
1!2 ~lie , Out Leh Fork Rd . Baby
Cklthes.

Mui11 Family Yard Sale : Adu lts
and Chlldrens· Clothing, Mat•rnlty,
Toys, Shoes, Home Interior, Lon.oanb uger . Lots of Moret Friday,
Saturday. 9:am -s :pm Located In
l ot Beside DO.

· ''Specioli~ing In [.,vg 1-l omes"
Commc rciul &amp; Rcs hlc ntinl

17401·446·4333
5:00P.M.

www.stattanomeblz.com

Off Lltt~ Bullskln &amp; Hwy 218.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~ Garages, Pole Builpings, Roofing , Siding

93 Year o!d ·Female Needs Dally
Compan ion 8:30.A .M. : 6:30 P.M.

432 Hedgawood Drive, GaHipoll&amp;.

Movin g Sale: Thuraday 5/ Sth &amp;
Friday 517th. Tools. Equipment ,
Houuholl:t Items, Follow Signs

!FA

Box 675, Ripley, WV 2527 1.

Earn $500-S4000 PTIFT
1·800-1163-1635 or

Men . Wonen: Chi ldren' s clothes .
Mfsc . Items 550 Jay Dr. Friday
Mat 7th-8th.

740 742-8888

Help Wanled

Ga rage S~le : tools, Good Lawn
Mower;·2 Air Conditioners, Le-.1's
Etc . May 6th, 7th, &amp; 8th, 9 To 5,

Ing. Mls&lt;: .. Baby.

Mon· Frl 8:30 • 5:00
· Over 40 yr8 experience

lbtmlby . Milled l.eape
Sttrtlll n.. 7:10 P.l.

CANDLE· MAKERS

74&lt;J.-446- 1379.

446-1211 Or (7~01·256-9134

May 6th, 7th, 8th, 5971 S.A. 141 ,
Rai n /S hine. 9 -? Mlcrowa..,e .
Washer, Weddli'lg Dress, Cloth-

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

:1/11/99 TFN

77H300

11 yoU don 't f'lave time or w1nt to
Vard Sale. l will buy your misc .
Items &amp; dothel . 7Ml-...e-33!2 or

110

Huge Yard Sale Thur&amp;day May
6th &amp; 7th. (Kerwood&amp; Reaidenta);
33 Smithers St. stratgnt Across
!rom The W&amp;I-Mart. Gold hOuse
on left Lots of nice clean cklthing
for the wh ole fam lly ;( Brand
Names) . Bed Clothing , Curtains ,
glass ware . Sh o e~, Pictures
·Home Int. Mud') much more it you
we r e here lor the Auction you
won:t 'f"&amp;nt to miss this Yard Huge
Salel 9am ti ll ? No Early Salea
Please!

~~l~~~y_.L.

740·742·2138

Rooflog • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
. • Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

arn .t.voflue, Galllpol~.

ceeds for Somme r Fulks South
Gallla High School kH all State
Cheerleadlng In Australia , all Do·
nation Appreciated! Cal l: (740)·

Ga'rage Sale: May 1st. 3rd. Thru
7 th , 1.2 Miles Out Rout e 2te ,
Variety Olltems.

·LawaC.e·llellgn
·llalatuena ~ Planting
·Mulching
• a.talnlng WaD a Brick
PatlD Conabacllon
Degr•Cwllfled
· Landlttfr.J'-eclallat,

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

Laaea

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, ·
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1~0 Eall-

May 8. 9-3 .. Foodland Rl 160 Pro-

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Mason Bowlla&amp;

Antiques, top pr ic• • paid, Rlv•r·
Ina Ant!qu es , Po meroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740· 992·
2526.

Bake Sale : Hot Dogs, Cornbread
and Beans, Cakes, Pies. Saturday

clly.

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

,•

•

AlJ. Yool Soln lluot

HJUPW,SuruelHome.com

Sunset lome
ConstrucUon
•

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
A....enue, GalllpOils , 7-t0-4-46-2&amp;.42.

·10:00 o.m. Sotunloy.

"Shrubbery Maintenance

(

•

At OM our lnuln•11 Is

30 Announcement•

R. L. HOLLON

Place
Fri. May 7th
Music by Kaman Went

Larry's Lawa
Care

.JVft IN TIME JI'OR SPRING REPAIRS

740.949-2217

...

DIPOYIAI

'

Fri. May 7th D.J. Music 9-1
Sat. May 8th
Music by Kaman Went

I
I

Light H~uling .

'·

..

lealor DIHoUIItl
, .... Eldalates

bRIVEWlY SlONE

Driveways,
' ·Quality
Sidewalka, Patios

Overbrook
Center

t999 EX.PEDITION
EDDIE BAUER

TREE AND STUMP

IN$UUD OWNER

Sadly Mused by

$16,200

1-800-967-4774

Gar age Sale :. 167 Wood land
Drive, S14th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9 A.M. •
5 P.M. Lots Goodies!

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

Need A Bi8 One
CaU A U11le One

tftlf6

MSRP TOTAL BEFORE OISCOUMTS

Sale: 973 Everoraen Ad . Bidwell
May 61h &amp;7th. C lo1hlng-Adult .
Girls . Toya , dishes , Beanie Ba bies and Moral

• :00 . e La Salle St. Gallip olis.
Prom Dressea!
·

. Cont. 'IWV00350ti

Don~

:~~$18,950° 0

AUTO, AIR, STEREO, ANO MORE

4 Famii.Y Ya rd Sa le! 72 5 Firat
Ave. Friday and saturday

No Embarra~ement •••
You're Treated with Reapectl

· Cell Pllone
FREE ESTIMATES

KEITH MYERS.

t1E~999

~ELOW ORIGINALMSR~t999 CONTOUR SPORT

3 Families At 1939
May 5, 6, &amp; 7th. Furniture,
rens Clothing, AntiQues.

.wiiiYINGU!.

(304) 674·3311

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

(304) 675-28.28

llt:r 8t~t!ta'~

2 family , Sat. 8:00 RalnJShlne 6.
miles out 21 8; 112 mile~ Perklna
Rd . Fowler s and M.a ige'a G irl&amp;
.clothes Ukt new, bike and more

.(304) .675·2457

RUILIND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
.GUN SHOOI
.
SUH., 1:00 PM

Wanted to Buy

Stelling. Etc. Acquisitions Jowolry

114 Mile Ou t Bulavlll e Pike ,

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

•Parking Lots
•Baaketball Courts
•Driveways
•Grading Work
. •Hauling Stone

90

Ring• . Pro -1 930 U.S. Curro ncy .

odldon • 2:00 p.m. ·
Frlclly. lloncloy odlllon

We Do• ..

GalllpoHs. Ohio 7&lt;0-379-272il.

Thursday &amp; Friday.

Office

·Health line.

ed,.b,elui

Ga Ill po II a
6 Vicinity

bo-

Henderson,

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN

Wed emeye r's Auction Ser'III CI .

QfAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
tht clly
tho od
It to run . Sundly
·

PAVING
WV

2623.

Every Sa turday Night 7 P.M.,
Crown City. 740-25e-e989
'

MYERS

: Pomeroy Eagles
.
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 11:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
1500.00 Starbul'lt
, P~relllve top line.
Uc. II 00.50 ~~~-

Brll Moodlspaugh AucUontering.
Complete .Auctioneering Slr&gt;Jices. Cont lgnment auction - Mill
Street , Middltport , Thuradeyl .
Ohro License t78U. r • O· t8 9·

7=0===Y,=ar=d=·=S=al='==='l ver
Absolute Top Dollar: All u.s. Sll·
And Gold Coins. Proolut a,
=
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

CALL TODAY 10 BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

nua, Gall rpO ll l . Large LOid Of

Found: Minlal ura Pinotler Terrier
Mb , Sliver Cha in , VIcinity : Third
A11enue , 740·44 1·0583 . 740.44 1·

Raclne area, child's pet, 740.9493!28.

owned ctllllpony wilh over 28 yrs
hilS novi exlended our coverage area to
oil of Golllo Co. and po1lions of Meigs,
Vinton &amp; Lawrence counties.

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

Night 6:00 P.M. 2•1 Thltd Avo ·

Riel Pearaon Auction Compan';'.
tu!t tlmi a ucllonttr, comp lete
aucllon
service . . Ltcenaed ·
le&amp;,Ohlo &amp; Well 1/lrglnia, 304·
n!l-5785 Dr 304· 773-5-447.

Lost: female Siberian Husky, blue
ey e s, one bl i'n d. Tanner 's Ru n.

Refuse ·Service

local~
le~:perience

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

912·5776

Pleasant Valley H ·ospital

'--"

. FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, PO~EROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
II MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 1I

SY/1.4CUSE

~--- -----

:~~$12., 950°

QUAtlTY WINDOW SYST~MS

Auct ion: May 7 , 1898. Friday,

Foun d · Fe male Brown &amp; Bla ck
Dog. Long Body, Short Logs. Very
Friendly Vlcin•ty: Crown City Area.
740-256-1311.

0385.

·To.The Residents
of
Gallia County!

Auction
and Flea Mar1cet

Dig.

60 Lo$t and Found

7/22/lfn

c.,.,.Uu,..

HUIIIID'S
GIEEIHOUSE ·

992-5627

/, tfurd,.! df

Yo u

742·249S

985-44.73

WEI lOVED

$5.75 &amp;Up

Shoe Place

'41$16 ·950°

-Complete Auto Seroice-

1740) 992•3131

•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

• Eastland • Dexter • Hush Puppies
• Nike • Reeboks • Ked's • Asics

RATES
AS LOW
·AS 0.9%

-

Houu trailer frlme and metal 10
be cut up and towed away, 7•0·

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
' ESTIMATEES

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

U1ililie1 .

: Hanging Baskets
• 'Blooming &amp; Foliage ·

Choose From

:~~ $21,750°

0~16

Fonner-"Velvet Harnnaer"
52954 State Rt . 124
Raci'ne, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

'I

N,.., Open For
Spring Seaoon
Ccmplate Une Of
IJegelable &amp; Bedding PlaniS
All Fiala ·se.!IO

off all

$9 ,.sooo

•trp

Se"'icet
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
· Grading
. Sepllc Sy11e1111 &amp;

WiDiam Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Atberis, Ohio

Womens Sfzoes for
Mother's rrJay

The

.....
!

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Dave's ·Garag~

BuUdo•er &amp; Backhoe

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

1'1?/}; J'EWU$.'Y

..

•••

keep ••exempttt property for hi a or her personal
Y&amp;e. Thi&amp;may include a car, l:l house, cluthea, and
~ouaehold goode.

• Gold Chabis
• Gold Braeelets
• Gold Crosses
• Gold Hearts
• Diantond Je Nelry

~CQUISitii09{S

ean relieve a

debtor of finan cial obligations and arrange a fair
di11ribution of a ooeto . Debtoro in bankruptcy may

12. Days Only

Dal'l Senti'nel

HOWARD
EXClYlTINI CO.

9

Moochand;oo Ao&lt;n Indiana.

Daffodil&amp;

(30&lt;1)895-3703.

Lowest Price Policy"

Get the latest in sports news from the

80

. Giveaway

5 monlf'll Old Mi lt Doberman,
Hou . . tra ined , Te ll and Ea r~
Cropped ! Good Temptramet l

.9tCQ11 151'1109{.$ ,j'f!J{'E J'EWEL '1?3

Brownie Girl Scouts Tiffany Tuppe" Plains Brownie Troop 13 16
Field Director Deb Dowler rectheir annual Spnng Gala on May 2 at Simpson and Breanna Mitchell Claudeue Parsons, Amanda og nized the service learn consisting
the Middl eport Church of Christ received cerlificates for e&gt;tra Young, Kim J. Fetty and Deborah of Brenda Neutzling, Anna Nonnan,
· Famtly Life Center.
thoughtful ness during the recent Wiggins: Riverview Brownie Troop Denise Holman, Debbi e Cooke,
1067 - Jodi Bissell, Tami Putman; Pam Johnson and Shirley Cogar.
· The theme for this year 's event sleepover.'
was Girl Scouts are "Beary" Special.
Receiving "Beary" Speci.al awards Eas ter~ Junior Troop I039 - Robin Dowler ~ I so announced that Brenda
'Ieddy bears were used in the dccora· for dedication and service beyond Dorst;
Neutzling has taken the position of
tions and the din ner cons isted of pic· their positions were Debbie Cooke.
•
Service Unit Administrator.
ole-style foods.
Denise Holman . Shirley Cogar, Pam
Syracuse Brownie Troop 11 20 Dowler also recognized those
Special Lower Prices
. Awards and drawings for door John son, Joyce Romines, Michele Shirley Cogar, Rebecca Durham , that went beyond. their position to
prizes foll owed the dinner. Ce rtifi- Dickerson and Anna Norman.
Mary Freeman and Kim Vierhe ller; assist with various. events and acti vFrom Our Already
.
ciues of appreciation were give n to
Receiving certificate s of apprecia- Raci ne Brown ie Troop 1.004 - Anne it.ies. These included adults Debbie
"Guarante~d
Michae l Dickerson and John Cooke lion for thei r leadership and volunteer Alley; Racine Brownie Troop· 11 00 Cooke, Denise Holman, Brenda
- Joyce Romines, Dawn Romines: Neutzling, Michele Dickerson,
for assisting at the Juliene [.ow Birth- services were the following :
day Bonfire and Sing-Along in Octo·
Eastern Daisy Troop 1334 - Southern Cadeue Troop 111 5 Joyce Romines, James Holman,
•F-ri.d.oy
her.
.
Crystal Ridgeway, H&lt;j,e n L. Heaton; . Anna Norinan and Sharon Cleland;
Bethany Cooke, and Sen ior Girl
•Saturday
Salisbury Daisy Troop 1259 - · Scouts Meli ssa Holman and Andrea
Michele Dickerson, Linda L. Powell , Ncutzli ng.
Michelle Werry: Salisbu ry Brownie
Entertainment for the event was
Troop 1220 - Gloria VanReeth, a Teddy Bear Fashion Show. The
·
Stacey L. Dodson. Janice Grimm: girl s made costumes for their bears
.Middleport Brownie Troop 10 15 using pl astic bags as the labric, late,
Jerrena M. Ebersbac h,_Tammy J. beads; flo wers and various other ·
Thomas, Lisa E. Mi tchell , Teri D. supplies on hand. Twenty-fi ve girls
Hockman, Tracy. L. Lawson, Donna and their bears participated in the
Meadows:. Kollcta Frcdley: Rutland fashi on show. First and second Brow nie Troop 1308 ~ Jane l Steven-· place certi ficates were given as fo lson and Stacey R. Cleland ; Rutl and lows: casual wear - Megan Tripp
l o'" of 5 Mothers recewe firi.e Jewelry oli Mother't
Juni or Troop 1196 and Cadettc'Troop and Tara Norman ; sports wear _
105 1 ~ Brenda Kennedy and Chery l Meli ssa Holm an (with a golfing
Day Bift•lo.e.yeor-lfiill your mom be _o:ne ofelfe,
King ; Mtdd leporl Senior Troop 1208 hear) and Jordan Anderson (cheer·
'
. •luc one• thi.a ear? . .
:
- Pam Johnson and Carol Brewer: leader bear):
· •formal we ar ~ Megan
Pomeroy Senior Troop 11 80 - Bren· Day (a bridesmaid) and Veronica
da Neutzling, Be thany Cooke: Meigs Grimm (spring fonnal). The most
Professional
County Senior Troop 1261 - Deni se creati ve costume was a JOint effort
Holman, James Holman and Jan of Jordan Haynes, first pl ace with ·
Jewelry
McKee.
~er bride bear, and Rebecca DonoRepair
Two Locations · ·
.
hue. second place with her groom
Adults rece ive five-year pins were.
bear.
151 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH 446-;!842
Kim J. Felly and Bre nda Kenn edy.
.
Form'er Simpson .~ co-producer and
91 Mill.St., Middleport, OH 992·6~50
Rece ivin g 10-year pin s were An na .
Kin g of. th e Hill co-creator Greg
Nonnan and Pam John son. .
Free Gift Wrapping
Daniels is the husband of WB Net- '
Outstandin g Leader awards were
work e•ecutive Susanne Daniels,
given to Shirley Cogar and lcrrena - - - - Ebershac h. The girls and parent s
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
from . within th eir troop nominate
Public Notice
rec ipients for thi s award.
The iollowlng reel aatoto of Ohio to-wit:
land preeorilly owned by
IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
Outstandin g Voluntee r awards
oltulllad In the County of
Parcel No. t: Bolng a Dayton Hayman, which t2
COURT OF COMMON
were gi ven 10 Denise Holman and
PLEAS PROBATE DIVISION Mllge, In tho Stato of Ohio, part of Soctlon 27, Town 3, iocro tract of land Ia Parcel
on the Townahlp of Salem, Range 11, of the Ohio No. Onoln a deed rocorded
In the Matter of the
Michel e Dickerson. A troop, service
and
bonded and d..c.rlbld Company•a
P urchall : In Vol. 138, Page 351, Melga
Adoption of:
team , nommating committee or other
aa fotlowa:
Beginning at the Northoaat Co. D11d Recorda; thanco
Tyler
J. Goble
individuals in the service unit can
The following deecrtbad corner of a llvo acre lot South 50 feet' to ·a cron cut ·
CASE NO. 30668
nomin ate recipient.s for this award.
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE real ...tate allulled In formerly owned by John In a rock; thence In I
Marllneburg, and com- Morgan, later by David Northoutarly cour11,
NOTICE TO THE·
A new award given by the service
mencing
at the Southeaat Jonn; thence South to the croaalng two croana aut ln.
UNKNOWN
FATHER
unit this year was the Appreciation .
comer of Lot No. 1 and run- Southaaat cornor of aald a rock, about1345 fMI ala·
You
are
hereby
notified
!'in. This award is given to recognize· that on tho 15th day of ning three hundred and live acre· lot; thence . waat uniform dlatanca of 50 faet:
o utstanding service to at least one
December, 1998, Raymond eighty faot to a place of four feet to 1 ataka;·thance from the aoutherly llrie of,
geographic/service unit area or audi- Lea Goble raaldlng at 2399 beginning, running Weal South to Long Ruri; thence aald 12 acre tract to a point
ninety 1111; lhonce .South follo.wlng tho meandering• 50 feat ·South of 1he .
. · ence. Rectpients were Brenda N.eut- Water Street, Syracuaa, ono
hundred and ten feat; of eald rlin to Iande own.d Northeut corner of Aid 12
Ohio 45779, and Charyl Ann .
zliQg and Pam Johnson. Debbie
by Jonaa; thence following acre tract; thenCe North 50
Goble reoldlng at 2398 thanco Eaat · nlnoty feet;
Cook.e, who presenJed the. awards, Water Street, Syracuse, thence North one hundred the aald llrie Will to the feat;
and
thence
Ohio 45778, flied In thla and tan feat to the place of place of boglnnlng , Southwoatorly along the
sponsored them.
Middleport
N. 2nd Ave
Court of PaUUon to adopt beginning, being all of Iota containing twelve acraa, aoutherly llna of aald '12
Tyler J. Goble, d.o.b. July No. Nine ·(8) and Tan (10) 11 moro or 1111.
acre tract to the placo of
-"-·Parcel No. 2: Alao the beginning, containing 1 1/2
27, 1993, born In Orlando, recorded In plat of
Florida, and that hearing of Martlntlburg.
following premla11 altuatad acre, mora or le11.
aald Petition will be had· Reference Deod: Volume In the Ame Section. 8elng
Excoptlng and raaervlng
before the Probata C~urt at 313, Page 151, Malga of • live acre lot aold by to Iormor grantora, Charlaa
Court and Second• Stroota, County Recorda.
Mary Jane Settler and John H. Stalnaker anct Orpha M.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, on · AudHor'a PIII'CII Noe.: 13- Settlet to Dltfld Jonea, and Stalnaker, tholr· helra and
the 19th day of July, 1999, 00403.000 and 13-00404.000 containing one half acre, aulg!ll forever,
an
PROPERTY ADDRESS: mora or 1111. Beginning It undivided one-half lnteraat
at 1:30 o'clock P.M.
WITNESS my algnature and 35281 Dextet Road, Dexter, the northnat cornor of aald In all tho oil gaa and all
aeal of aald Court, thla 4th Ohlo45728
ftvo acre _lot near 1 popl~r other mlnorala lying under
REAL ESTATE APPRAISED tr11; , thence Wall to the and within the prem1111,
day of May, 1999.
,
AT: $5,000.00. The real road;· thence. following the hereby conveyed bolng
Robart E. Buck, Judge
By: Judith R. Slaeon, 111111 cannot Ill aold for raad to where tho line percole No. 1 to No. 4\
le11 than two·lhlrdo tha comoa to the road; ·
Deputy Clerk/Notary Public
lncluelve, above ct..crl~,
appralaed VIIIUI.
. 'iiorth to the ·place
(5) 6, 13, 20, 27
with the right to enter ealct
TERMS OF SALE:
10% beginning.
(8) 3,10 6TC
pramlaaa, to proaP.ct anc(
down day of aalo, belanca
Parcel No. 3: The drill for, davolbp, produce
on delivery of !llld· Sold following roal 11tato and removo tho aame, wltlr
Publ:c Notice
aublect to ncond hall 111M altuated In tha Townahlp of tho neciieiry · machlne.Y,
-- ·- ------- -----·- .' ~---· -- · -- and accrued 1989 real Lebanon, county of Malga, therefore and .thl right to:
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Ordor of oatata taxae.
and atato of Ohio: Baing In uao 10 mw:h or lht aurlace.
Sale laaued out of the Jainaa M. Soulaby
Section
No. 27, Town No. 3, aa may be naceuary for theCommon Ploao Court of (4) 22, 28 (5) 8
and Range No. It: purpo-aforanld.
:
'
3TC
Malgo County, Ohio, In the
Beginning on tha North Uno
Current Diad Rocordld n
can of tho Home. Notional
,of aald Section at a point 11/23/M In Volume 111, P11111,
Public Notice
Bank, PlalniiH, va. Linda
•
rode Ent of the 369.
Boover oka L,lnda D. Baavor, ShoriH'a Sole of Rlflliatata 160
Northweat
corner;
thence
Property
commonly·
at al., Dafendanta, upon •
tiE~
weal following aald North knowa 11: . 337M Long Run:
The Stata of Ohio,
tiE~
Judgement lhoraln ron· .
WINDSTAR LX
Line of aald Action about Road, Long Bottom, OH.
Melga
County.
.
ESCORT LX 4 DR · . .t999
dertd, being Can No. 911. t999 F150 4X4
The
Bank
of New York, I I Eighty roda to the center of . 45743.
•
ALL
POWER,
LOAOEO
CV-8 In ..ld Court, I will Truatae, under the Pooling ·the public roact; thence
4 CYL, AIR COHO, STEREO
Parco!
f:
0&amp;-000112.000,:
lo1SRP TOTA~ BEFORE DISCOUNTS
AIR, AM/FM, AUTO
· oHor for 111• at the front and Sorvlclng Agr11ment 'following the cantar of the 08·00053.000 and 01· ·
lo1SRP :TOTAL BEFORE OISCOUNTS
$25,780
door of the Courthouae In doted •• of May 31, tHe, public road South to the 00051.000.
MSRP
TOTAL
BEFORE
DISCOUNTS
•
$12,665
Pomeroy, Melga County, So rill t He-B va. Gregory SDuth Una of Ianda deeded
$22,545
Said
Premlaaa
Apprallld:
0
Ohio, on tho 28th day of A. Buah, ake Gregory Buah, by John F. Torrence and It $27,000.00 lind cannot be·
110'41
May, 11199, at 10:00 a.m., tho
Elizabeth Torrence to aold for-laaathan two-thlrda'
al., No. 88 CV 0211.
oil\.~
I
.
follow!ng Ianda and lane- et In
Gwanllyan
Jon.. by d11d ofthatamouni.
·
:
purauanca
of
an
Order
menta, located at 35281 of Sale In the abovo entitled dated November
18,
1882;
TERMS
OF
SALE:
Ten•
Daxtor Road, Daxtet, Ohio
:'\\
I will offer for aale II thence followlnglht aouth percent (toi!.) down It tha:
45726. A complete logol action,
of Hid Ianda deeded by time tho bid Ia accepted. ·
public auction, In lhl above
deacrlptlon of tho raol named
on
tho
28th Torrence to aald Jonaa Balance 'to ba paid Within
County,
eatatata aa fcillowa:
day of May, 11199, ot 10:00 lbout Eighty rode to the thirty (30) dap. Ally aum
o'clock A.M., the following aoutheaat corner thereof; not paid within aald thirty
tiE~
.
In Memory
t~EW
deacrlbed rill oetllla TO BE thence North parallel with (30) daye ,lhall bear lntarut'
t999
ESCORT
ZX
2
SOLD
AS A. UNIT, altuated the Will line of aald II the rate of 11.75% per
t999 RANCER SUPERCAB
In tha Townatilp :of.Lebanon, Section to the place of annum from dele otaale. ·
HOT
PKB,
AIR,
AMIFM
CASS,
4X4, AUTO, AIR, V6 ,4 WD, SPORT PkG - •
County of Melge end Stale beginning; containing about Jamaa M. Soulaby, 8hariH,
In :Memory Of
AUTO, ALL POWER
MSRP TOTAl BEFORE DISCOUNTS
43 act'la, more or Ina.
• Melga County, OH
' :My 'Fattier
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
$20,280
Parcel
No.
4:
The
C~rllale, McNeill a &amp; Rlnl
In Memory
following
rill
oatata
Co.,
L.P.A. BY: Harbert J. ,
$15r820
Wm. '13. Capefiart
0
altuated In the townahlp ot Kramet
110
Lebanon, County of Melga, 25200 Chagrin Blvd., Sulta :
oil\.~
r
.wfio passed 1 yr.
0
Stato of Ohio, bounded and 240
ago today
daacrlbad aa followa: Cleveland, OH 44122
Situate
In oectlon 27, Town Phone: (218) 380-7200
LARGE SELEOION
:May 6, 1998
3, Range 11, of the Ohio .Fu: (218) 380-7210.
Company•• Purchaaa and (4) 22,28
OF FACTORY REPURCHAS~
Sadly :Missed.beginning at the eouthwaat (5) 6 3TC
---~
corner of a 12 acre tract of
dl(
VEHICLES AT THOUSANDS t~E'H
. :Nancy &amp; 'Family
1.
. - .,
t999 FtSO SC

20%

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ies.

Bolh

Positions:

Atleast 25 vtars Ok1
Atleast 2 Years Experience

GoQd MVA
Week~

Pay

Health Insurance Available

Woll&lt; Well With Tha Pulll~
FOr More l niormaitlol'l Call 800·

437-8&lt;64. Hrs. 8:30A.M. ·5 P.M.
Drummer looking lor lead, bassist
and fema le vocalist with one in·
strument capab'll.lty, cal! 740·699·
6212. John Pacl&lt;.
Eas y Work ! Excell ent Payl Assemble Products 11 Home. Call
Toll Free. 1-800·467· 5586 Ext

12170
Htnng·
HEAVY EQUIP OPERATORS
' AND CARPENTERS

2 .,..,. Experionae

Nece~ry.

Call 1-1100-339-65' 6,
S.IW8en s:oo ~.M . ·5:00 f&gt;M.

~n

Equal Opportunll)l Employe•

Holzer Home Care Of Oak H ill
CommUnity Mectlcat Center Seek·
lng Full Time RN To Provide
Sld lled Nurs in g Cart To Home
Care Clients. Hour~ : Monday -Frl-

day, 6-4. Some Weekond AnO On
Call Work. Previous Home Haalth
Experien ce Prefe rred . 2 Yea rs
Med ·Surg Experience ~eq ulred .
Send Resume To: Oak Hlll Com·
muntty Medical Center. " nentlon :
·erenda McKenzie. 350 Ch arlotte
A~r.Je. Oak Hill, OH 45656,

In Store Food Demo nstrato ri
Needed, All Aru a Of Ohio a

WVA.-330-535·1749.
Jewelry Sates Retail Sales and
Computer Experience Req uired.
Acq uls llions FinI Jewelr y. 1Sl
Seco nd Ave . Galli po li s. Apply
Monday lhru Friday.
LinLEc CAESARS 11 Now Hiring
All Positio ns; Orlvers , In -Store
And Ass ista nt ·Managa,r Posllions A11ailable ..Drivers Earn
Hourly Wage -t Tipa &amp; Comm issions! Please Apply At The Gallipolis l ittle Ca868rs.

,.._

Rapidly axpandintil clnarna circuit
haa Immediate opening. tf you
have foOd service o, r11111 management experiences th ll would
Big Big Yard Sale: Partial Estate be a natural lit. Relocetlon to
Items. Ouilta , •Dishes , Pot s. Pittsburgh Pa . required . Previous
Pans, Glass, Clothes . Antique mo¥18 theatre managemenVPro·
Items. Furniture, Office lttms. Frl . lectlon booth txptrltnctt 1 b ig
and Sat ~ay. 7-8. 8am until 4pm. pluS! Exc411ont llartlng &amp;alary and
benefits packtgt lftctudld . ReloLocust
. North
ScnwartzAd
ll'aller
ParkPt. Pleasant. cation teas w ill be reimbursed..
Stert Nowl Car11r growth Is un·
Friday Only. Nlc:e Pl us Si ze llmlladl Training will be provided.
Womens Clothing. Odas &amp; Ends. Please fax resume to Joseph 0 .
Oft Sanel'llll Road.
Angllolll (9141!569-9802

Pt. Plaaunt
a. VIcinity

Friday/Saturday.

Treadmill,

To ol s, Nic e Soya &amp; Glrl a
Cloth es , Mi sc. SAM, 281• Birch

AYO.

Medical Procenor FT IPT No

Exp. Neo. Wlllllaln PC Floq. Elm
401&lt; COIIIIOIH!63-744ll.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 6, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER
Local Truel&lt;lng Company Seeking
Quallt ltd Truck Drivers Good
Pay An d B&amp;nefita S.nd Reaume
To Driver, PO Sox 109 Jack
ton, Oh10 45S40, Or Call 1·140
288-1463 To Schedule An inter·

vieW
NEEDED IIIIIEOIATELYIII

Holzer Medical Center Is Seeking
A ~nud Boiler Operator Can·
dldatet Mull Have A High Prn·
sure Boiler Operato(a License In
Thl Stata Of Onio
Excellent Wage And Benelll
PaGUgo

HInterested Please COntaCI
Rosie Willll
Director Of Human Resoun::es

HOLZER MEDICAL CE!(TER
tOOJacltsonPike
Gal!&gt;olls OH 4563t t563
PhOne

7~

5105

Fa• ITDD 740-«6-5106

Nood 7 ladle&amp; TO SOl AYOII, 740..o&amp;-:m&amp;

Wll d111o Jobs $21 80/Hr Inc
Benatns Game Wardens Securl·
ty Maintenan ce Park Ra ngers
No Exp Needed For App /Ex4m

ln1o Call 1·800·813 3585
E•l 8827 . 8AM·9PM 1 Dayo
fdi ii'IC

Pomeroy. 740-98!5-3.565

140

O.INpolla ea-

(Careers ClaM To Horne)

Sian 740-446-9872

can

Todoyl 740-oUB·4367. 1·80021 • .0052 Reg ·~!5-1274B

180

Approved Master llcenHd Elec
tr lclan, WV025956 Free Esll·
mates for Residential Serv~ces
(~)675-7927

Carpentry Decks Porches .Addl·
t10ns Remodels 740 441 · 1318

Greg Milhoan 3041675-8

Come And Apply Again Or Con-

tact Pam Caldwell 8 30 AM To
4 30 PM Wednnday Thru Friday At 74()-446-7150

PART TillE LPN POSITION
Holzer: Sen 1or Care Center, A
ProgressiVe Long Term Care
Company IS Currenlly Taking Ap
pllcatlons For Part Time LPN Po
sillons The Faclllly Is Located In
The Southern Reg 1on Of Ohio
We Are Seeking Individuals Who
Will Ensure The Highest Stan·
dard Of Resident Care The Ap·
pllcant Must Have An Ohio Nurs
lng license Holzer Senior Care
Offers Excellent Benefits (Paid
Vacation Pa1d Hol1days Etc ) II
Interested In A Challengmg Posi
lion Apply In Person AI 380 Cello
nial Drive Bidwell Ohio 45614

EOE

Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring Breaker Boxes Light Fix·
lure, Heating Systems, and Re·

modeling (74())44t 14()1

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

304-675 1957

813 3585 E&lt;1 8826 BAM 9PM.
1 Days lds,lnc

REGISTERED NURSE Jackson
General Hospital, Ripley WV
Needs fulltlfT'\8 RNs IOf CCU or
MediSUrg Current WV State U
cense PrevtOus feievant experl
ence Reply to JaCkSOn General

Hospital PO Box 720 Atpley
WV 25271 EOE
Aestuarent Managers Radiology
Tachs STNA.'s • lPNs·AN a Stop
by 995 Jackson Pike 1201, or
Call {7o40}·o448·4188 lor more 1n·
tormatlon Global Recrukers

RESUMES UNLIMITED 011ors
Pirsonallzed Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Matenals
To Get You Prepared 740 388
3800

SaJea

Represen~atlve

$12 billion
company with 100+ years of sol·
ld performance seeks energetic
professional for sales career In
the life Insurance and llnanclaJ
services Industry Two·year train·
lng program, aggruslve com·
pansatlon and benefits package
and tuition assistance lor prores
slonal d8\'elopmant Opportuni'Y
for promotion to sales manage·
ment For more Information, con·
tact Linda Dunlap 740·446·0372

EOE
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Acceptmg Appllal!ona For
The Poslllon Of Social Services
Director, LSW Please Send Re
sume And Salary Requirements
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hills
Nursing Center 311 Buckrldge

Road. Bidwell. OH 45614
(Member Of EOE)

740.388-8041
Need sitter for the summer? Day·
care with a pool Open Monday
thru Friday, ask for Kelly 740
667-6460 Tuppers Plains area
Power washing, mowing, deck
treatment call Jim or ShaWn 740-

985 3772 74()·949-2844
Wilt Mow Weedeat Any Size
Yard, O•tches, Hillsides. 74G-441
0682

Holzer Senior Care Center IS
Currently Taking Appllcallons For
Slate Tested Nursing Assistants
Exce'llent Working Environment
And Benefits No Phone Calls
Please Apply In Person At 330
Colonial Drive Bidwell Otllo

Girls" Middle School Volleyball
Coach Glrll' At.al&amp;tant Middle
School Volle~ball Coach Girls
Middle School Basketball Coach,
High School Cheerleader Advl
sor, Middle School Cheerleader
Advisor, Student COuncil Advisor
and Ouiz Team Advisor lor the
1999·2000 school year Appllc·
ants muat hold a walld Ohio
teaching- certificate and for
coaching positiOns must meet
cerUflcatlon requirements of Ohio
fot sports medicine and CPA
Persons Interested should con
tact Bill Bucli:ley, Superintendent,

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Town Hall, 2t8 Fifth S"aeL
Were Growing Again! Comfort Air

Sys181111 of Qalllpolle 15 lool&lt;lng for
Serl!'ice Techl and qualified In·

otalloro Mull 110

~

and will·

lng to learn new eapecta of

HVAC Top pay, lnouranco. Unl·
forma and Advancements Mull

bo nta1 In appaarance Apply
betWeen 9am and 12 noon at .07
Tltlrd lwoooooaHI&gt;ofil Oh

Wildlife Jobo 10 $21 60/HI Inc
Beneflta Game Wardens Secur·
lty Maintenance, Park, Rangers

No E•p Noodod For App And
E•am Info Callt·1100·8t3·3585.
Ell 8827 8AM·VPM, 1 Day&amp; fds

House For Sale 2219 Oak St

PI Ploaoan1 $28,000 (304)895·
3082
House
Street
blocks
rooms

In Mason, WY· Adams
like new, one and 1f2
from grade school, 7
and bath, call Sue Hall,

after~

Largo lamlly homo tor oale on 10n
lovely acte1 Four bedrooms, 1wo
and one hd blllho two li!Op1aeH
formal living room and tamlly
room, tour- car garage and two
1torage buildings Two apart·
menta which are completely fur

nlsheC Please call 740·992
2292
Nice two bedroom home with
basement, Mulberry Helghtl, Po
meroy, $50 000 tlrm, 7•0·992·
2186 I
,
Pomeroy one bedro-om home
needs cosmetic repairs $12,000
make offer, Syracu... double
wkle, • bedrooms, block founda·
lion newly remodeled carpet

ad 740 992 4514 ask for Chris
Martin
Reatorad Victorian home situated
on t2 acres, Village Middleport
secluded and private. appoint

230

Rocksprings. Ranch, 3 bedroom,
t 112 baths. large kitchen, new
roof newry water proofed finished
basement heat pump, large patio,
paved dri\leway, 900 squire faet
detached garage. for aala by own-

Profe11lonal
Services

Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned
without "Steam• or Absorbent
Compounds Soaplen Antt· Re·
soil Detergents used exclusive·
ly Safe for all Iabrie&amp; Fast dry·
mg (1·2 hours) Elim+nates over
wetting Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675·4040
for Free Estimates!

COPPICK LANDSCAPING
50556 SA 124

men1. call740-992 5696

er $79.500 740-992·3864

Spring Valley 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Satha,

Living Room. Dining Room EBI·In
Kitchen lg Family Room 740·

2.!5-9337
Three bedroom home whh Iota of
closet space close to schOol, on
corner lot storage building one
bedroom rental home lncruded,

Racine, Ohio
Free estimates, de&amp;lgn planning
complete landscape service res
ldentlal and commercial fountain
and garden display 15 years ax
perle nee

74()·992·6154

740-843-5159

Now serving Gatlla and
surrounding areas
Does Vour House Siding, Deck,
or Driveway need a cleanmg? U
so, Pressure Washing Is the an
swerl Call Clearl~ Clean at
(304)675 4040 lor a Free Es·
tlmate

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL S~CURilY 1&amp;817
; -888·562·3345
PERTLY Saves on repainting In·
definitely We use lhe tltcluslve
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall
Cleaning System Protects paint
leaves glass. retards chalking
Anti Mildew no odor sanitizes
Free estimates Call Clearly

Clean al (~)67!5-404()

Mobile Home•
lor Sale

•••·Amazing·--· 5 Bedrooms 2
112 baths O'Jer 2.000 sq n tor
less than 1"'00 mo Free Delivery

&amp;sat t·B00-948·5678

10x50 trailer, South Second Ave·
nue, Middleport Unlahed building,
large lot with goldfish ponds,

t2x65 U86ter Craft, two bedroom,
one bath, gas heat, $4000 negotl·

able 740.992·1042
16x80 Vinyl Shingle, Anume

Loan 1·800-383-6882
1969 Schultz Mobile Home

Needs Work Asking $800
(304)675·7883, Ahor 8PM
1973 Hlllcresl two bedroom mo-

bile home 740-992·5039

All real estate advertising 1n
this new5paper Is subJect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertiSe "any preference
llmttatton or diScriminatiOn
based on race color, reflglon
seM familial status or national
origin, or any ihtent10n to
make any such preference
llmltatkm or dlscrmUnatlon •

Collago Viow Dr
(74())·245·11687

1980. t4&lt;65, elec"lc, 2 bedroom.
2 tull baths, very good condition,
$11 000, call evenings 740·949·

2452
t98t 14X65. Trallor 2BA
A C t Ba1h. Appllanceo, 2

3 Beclrooma 2 Bath Ranch Houl8'

1 Yoara Old, 28&lt;30 Anachad Oa·

raga, 12•2• Bulldfng. Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed. 89 112 Acreo Or
Will SOli HouH &amp; loll Meigs Co
740-992·3537
By Owner 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath

Wrap Around Dockl Now Wind
ows. Sic!lng, lob of upgreda6 10
Minutes from town Call anytime

740-992·3194
Your Home 11 Juat A Phone Call

AW«t. 304-138-7295

Make 2 Payments No Payment
After 4 Yaara. 304-736-1295

New 1999 14•70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent

1ncludoo walhe&lt; &amp; dryer, aklrtlng
deluxe steps and setup Onlt
$200 1 o4 per month wllh $ l '~;'

down Call 1-800-831-3238

Nice Home Set Up On Lot Make

2 Pa~ments, Move In o4 Years
LeftOn Loan (~)122·714()
Please Help! 3 Bedroorn, 2
Baths, just take over Paymenttl

1 800-736-3332

420

t 14 Condor Slreot, $250/Mo ,
$150 Deposl1. 2 Bedrooms. 304
833-8937. 740-388-859t

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

WV $499 Down Single Wide.
S999 Down Double Wide, 30-4

water and trash included 740·
2 Bedroom Trailer In Hartford

1or $150; Freuar $150 Waoher

MldCiepon, Ott no pets 740-992·
5656

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed and unfurnished, 11curlty
deposit required, no pels, 740·

992-2218
1 Bdrm . Exira Nice. Flra1 Monlh
Free With One Vear Lease
$279 00 Per Month, Plus Utllltlea

Apt lor Rent, Water And Trash
Paid No Pets In Gallipolis 1-lO·

38lH 100
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, we pay water sewer a truh
you pay goa I electric $200 per

mon1h. $100 Copoall, 740·e92·

1806

Commercial Building In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease Call

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Unlve1111y Of RIO GranCa

Lots

&amp; Acreage

2

$32.000 More Acreage Available
740-388-8878
Apple Grove Memorial Garden Is
now oHerlng a ilmlled time spa
clal on Cemetery Lots from .April

740-2~

Bedroom

Apartment,

Rio

2bdrm apts , total electric ap.
pllancea lurnlahed, laundry r®m
taclllllea close to achool Jn town
Applications ava1lable at VIllage
Green Apia 149 or call 74()-992·

37t1 EOH

Apartment, 2 Bedrooms, Dining
1, t999 lo July 1 1999 Buy 3 Room, Kl1chen, U1illty Room, No
Iota, get the 4th tree Spacial Pels. Deposll. $400/Mo , Aefar·
Sale Companlon and I ndlvldual ences 740-245-5053
GnMt Markera (304)576-2779
Buullful Home Shea 1Acre, 5
Acres, and 8 Acres 10 miles
from Pt PI , Public water Prl
V818 (304)675 59t11.58-1542

B-ERLAND
7~1-1412

Ad, 11 Acres S1o4 000 or 9 Acret
$12 000 public water Danville,

Briar Rd,·7 Acros $t3000 On SR
32!5 nice 5 Acres SIB 000, public
water

Apartment, Gallipolis Farry Deposit Required
No Pats

(304)675-2548
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Weuwood Drlva

Sou1h off SA 218· Williams Hollow
Ad 68 wooded Acres with stream,
$45.500 public waler Frlandly
Aldga Ad 15 Acres St4,00, city
schools, Teena Run 1o Acres

StO.OOO pulliW: water

Its not a Farmers Farm, Ita a
Large Beautllul Home In ttle Mid
die of Lots of Acreage Good
Huntlf)O, Fishing Lots or Privacy!

graal building alt11

()f

use as hunting

laod Starting 019500 County water

....

Double wide• are Permitted 5% down

UnO Contrtct lree Mllp.l 1-(8001·213Rl~r Lot For Sale, West Colum·

bit Cal (304)89!5-3902

(304)173-5319./flpm-11pm

Sha~d

1990 Royal Cove. 1•x1•.
2Balho, Skyllgh11 1n Kl1chen II·
land Slovo, Underpinning &amp;
Porth $t4,000 (~)882·2246.

Home Three Ballrooms. Two
Bathroom•. Walk·ln CtoHII Ultll·
1y Room. Electric H..t PUOl&gt; A•
frlg•rator And Stove Included,

Cal Aft.- HM 740-Z45-1302
3BR /2BA Vinyl&amp; Shingle Roof,
Garden-Tub, C/Air,-To1al Eitel
Kl1chen·llland, Wolk·ln CloHI,&amp;
More Very Nloo11(304)671H055,
1996 14 Fl x?2 Fl 2 Bedrootnl, 2
Full Baths Total Electric May

leaYO On lo1, $21 900. 080 74024!5-993-4

Campollo by 1he River

Boating, Fishing and Private!

$400 00 Down 173 00 monlh
(7411)258-1218
Ten Acres, Partly Woodt, 200

FNI plus Rd lrOnlago on e bloCk
lop ld Graen lWp , City IChOOIO,
minutia from town, Hospllal,

etoroa, etc . Alklng $110,000 Will
Hliioas land (14())·2"5-9033

360

Wa Buy Land 30 · 500 Acres.
We Pay Cash 1·800·2t3 8385.
Anthony Land eo,

Rent
2 Bedroom HOUH In Galllpollo
~57&amp;-2438
2 Boclroom Housaln Now H8Von
$225 00 a month pluo ullll11oo,
p1ua ctepoon (304J675-165t
2 Bedroom, w/Ba••m•n- &amp; Ga·
raga Dapooll &amp; Roforonc11 No

1'111 (304)675-5t62

Hou~ l'&lt;lr F*tl (304)67M720

Hol?.a lor A•nl. 5 roomo. anc
1&gt;11111 full basamonr PhOM (74())·
•46·2850 By Appolnlmorn1 Onlyl

1996 1•xeo Dutch MObile Home
3 Bedroom 2 Full Bath Shingle

E~Mfllngs

Roo11ng. Vinyl Siding, Porchts

N•w Haven 2Bedroom Home,

and

landscaping

Included

$29,000 OBO Call (304)175·
8821

18 Ft Gooaanock Slalk Trallar

John llMro MT Tr8C1or Willi Cui·
tlvetor• Turning Plow, Good

Shap8,740-445-35t4

AMAZINO

MITAIOLISM

Breakthrough!!! Lose 10 200
Pounds Easy, Quick
Fast
Drame.tle Re1u11s, tOO% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

plea Call 740-441·1982
Beige Tweed Sola /Lo'Je Seat,
Nice S200, Refrigerator /Almond,

Commercial culvert, 20' long, 12

gouge. coR 740-992·5823
COOLDQWN
Central .\lr .Conditioning Added
Tq Your Furnace 3 Ton lnatalled

$1,500, 2 112 Ton $1,350, 2 Ton
$1,250, Tha Above Includes Nor·
mal lne1alla11on II You Oon·r Cs/1
Ul Wa Botti LOSQ/ 74()..44&amp;-6308,
Or 1-800-291.()096·'

Dlacounl Mobile Homo
Pam &amp; Supply
Huge 1nvon10ry
Vinyl Sklnlng KilO $299 95 5 Gal·
lon Aluminum Flbered Roof Paint

$25 21 5 Gal While Roof Paln1
$57 69. Ancholl 15; Dooro &amp;

Wlnclow1 Gas &amp; Electric Walar
Htattra, Plumbing 6 Electrical
Parla, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Supply. 74D-448·9•te Gallipolis.
01110
Firewood In diHet~nt length• and

630

,

4·Arablan Mar.. , 1·Walklng
Mare 1·10 year old Mare1/2
Quater and 1/2 Morgan Dried
Hon Manure $5 00 per bag In·

11allmonl P1an for HoiHI IO Good
Homeol 25% Down Affordable
RataS (74()) 388-8:1511
Fair Pigl 585 Cured Pork USDA
lnspecteij. $2 25 Per Lb 740·
24!5-9557
Fri• Plge lor SOlei Excetion1 Blood
Unesl For more Information Call

(7401·245·5872 or (7•01 367·
0!183

TRAN S PORTATION

71 0

Autos for Sale

1973 Old&amp; Omega 49,000 Actual
Mllea. Original Pelnt. Good
Shepel $3,800. 740-367·5031
11110 ·t990 CAliS fAOII $100
Pollee lmpoun d:.. And Tax
Aepo•a For Lllllngs Call 1·800·
3t9-3323 Ext 4420
198• Plymoulh Orand Fury 318
CU IN 4DA Full Power. $600
080 (304)875·5570. Afttr 5PM/
UIVOMe&amp;Hge
t985 Pontiac Flaro, Serloue In

qulrles Only 740-448-3243, Aftar
5PM
t987 Chevona. Good BOdy. Ea1y
on Gui UHI No 0111 Call (74())•
399-8472

evenlnga,

work· 740·992·8677 woekdfYI
ask for Siophaitlo
•
1979 Chevy t/2 10n 4WD. PS Pfl,
au1omat1c. 100 many naw parll10
1111 asking $5500, prloo Ia nogo1ll
able, 740-992·75S1

1998 Yamaha Blaster 4--Wnteltr,

Low Hours $2 •so (304)175·
11 oe. Allor 6PM
'

740

740·992·4514 apanmenla avail
able, furnished &amp; unturnlltled

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartmenll
Middle

New Haven I bedroom. lurnlahld
apeu1ment, deposll &amp; references

740-992.0165
Newly Rtmo,deled 1 BR Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis Loca·
lion NQ Pols $300 + Ullll11as
Reference Required 740·448·

Joop CJ7 1985. 6 cyl 5op
$3 400 Upright Freezer $50.00
(74()) 446-8093

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repalrad, New &amp; RlbtJIII In Stock
Call Ron Evano, t-800-5379528
Johnson s UHd Furniture /Ap·

pllancto 140·448·4038. 74()-448·
t 00•. 8 Milll Ou1 Bulavlllo Pika
Off 3li Righi On KMitr Rood. Blue
HouaeOnUft
Kenmore Washer I Dryer, Tod

dler Car Bed. All In GOOd Condl·
lloni (74())-446-3849

0008

PRIMIITAR

Nloo 2 bedroom apartmonl In Syr·

~orth

3rd Ave , Middleport, 2

bedroom unfurnished apattment
deposit &amp; reterencu, 740·992·

FrooDirlclflplallf

cau ,_ 1-800-2113-211-40

PRO. 1.1. IUPPLY
We Art Protesalonal Installation

And Service Supply We Sell
Wholesale To The Public We

Runs

Grea1 Call 7•0·4•8·2107, r•O·
245-9184
1988 Dodge Oyna1ty 4 Doors

Au10maUC $1.500, 74()-446-9582
1988 Pontiac Grand Prix, two
door automatic, air very good

condition. 116,000 mlioo $2000
7'!0-992·7889
1989 Dodo• Shadow 4 Doors
Automatic, Manv New Parts

-

$2,000, Aloo • Cyllr&lt;l.- Au1omel·
lc Trano &amp; Rear End Drive Shah
For Ford Rangar StOO 7•0·215&amp;·

t997 Harley Davldoon

Good Condition. One Owner
Clean Excellent Oaa Mileage

87.000 Mlloo Alarm Syolam.
ABS, S5500 (304)67!5-7814
1990 GEO PrlomExcollenl COndl·
lion Auno Greall $2,500 00 (740)
446-4794

Furnl!lh A Ull Of Dealers To

- · 740-742·2803
1994 Plymoulh Sundance, 4 Cy-

One Bedroom Apartment In Pt
Pleasant Furnished Verv Nice
and Cleen No Peta Pt\ont

0098
lWo Galo Poll, l'tlo 8 x6 ChtlnLink Oatos Wllh Hardware Best
Ol1or Cai30-W7'8-31i1!

(~)67!1-1388

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dleport, avallabla lmrntdlalely,

740-992·8133

UHd 2 112 Ton Heai·Pump &amp; Air
Condlllonlng
Unll
$400
(~)675-2475

One bldroom Jiplrtment In Mid·
dleport, bne bedroom furnlehed
Spacious New Apartment With
Attached Garage, 2 Bedrooms
Nice Lawn, References Required

Ciosa To Holltrs. 1385/Mo , Pluo
Dtpooll 740-446-2801

r.:; 11 !'"D~~i':clu~ ~
448-3461 740-446-0101
TWin R1Ye11 Tower now accepting

appilca11ono lor t BR HUD oub·
aldiZod •Pir for tldorly and hand·
k:app8d 1!011 304-t75-ee7e

Walar Pump With 4 Sprinklers
And Ho101 For lrrlga11ons 1200.
Home Buill Spinning Whaa11,
Small Size 1200 (Walnut) Weed
Ealar &amp; Buoh Wacker Wllh Saw
Blade $100.740-446·t319
Wo1t1ilno Spoclol 314 200 PSI
S2t 95 Par 100 1" 2CO PSI
$37 oo Par 100. All Brass coni
preaalon Fl111ngo In S10Ck
RON EVANS lNTERPRISES
Jacltson, Ohio, 1-800-537·9528
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
f1on Allison, 1210 Second Ave·
nue 1 GaUipOIII, OhiO, 740·448·

4338

550

Upstairs Three Room Apartr(ltnt

AI 851 S.-;ond Avtnuo, Galllpo·
lit, No•1 'to Library $350/Mo ,
Plus Dapooll. No fttlo, Call Dab·
bit Or Judi Al740-44e-7323 ,

460 sp.c. for Rent
Mobilo hOf"t olio ovailabla bat·

ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

Garage Rlvor Fronllge. ~~);';'tj Ntw Mobile Homo Park at Oolll·
oo. Dtpooll, &amp; Ltooo (l
polio Ferry. Now occap11ng aopll·
7462
catk&gt;no for toto on
(304)875·
61108

•ft•

Bullcjlng
Supplies

15' Aluminum Boll, 20 H P Mil(·

cury Lest than aottra 'DaU•r. 2
swivel chairs. carpet, live WtU,
Trolling Motor, Battery Exctlltfit
Condlllon (304)675-2895
' ·,

8~1780. 95H~

Sale

rr·~

VERY

COI11'\0N FOR COI'IIC
CHA1ti'ICTER5 TO
CHAIII{,E Ill ~I'I'EARIINCE

2

01/EII.. "THE YEI'III..S 1•

seatar, 1 Owner, LOw Hours, Ex1
c:ellenl Condition, lnctudla Trail•

FAVOitiTE I
IN FI\.C.T,
POP EVE
I~

MY

PARENT!.
&gt;IIC !&lt;.NAME

.. $3,800 (304)895·3080/895·
3237
'

CI\N

I'.EALLV'
I.IELL, LET
rtE A.SI&lt;.
YOU ~011E­
THINC.,

WHAT THE

HECK DO
'I'OU SEE
IN OLIVE"&gt;

FOR 11E 1

..... .,

~ .........lf,_lf

ll

For rent· family type river g;~
site for full hook·up. tor cam
trailer water, eleCtric &amp; IIWtl, ~
740-992·5956

780

Auto Parte&amp; '
Acceasorles

•

.,

•

Budget Priced Trenamiiii&lt;N\11
and Engines, All ryp.. Acceu
To Over , 0,000 TranamltakJna..

eve Joln1S, 740-2.,-1177.

call740-ellfl.0502.

ROBOTMAN

1995 Nomad Dtluxo, 30' flflh
Wheel wllh slide ou1 room, oon~rt~
air &amp; heat, microwave 0\'lln,
eo. aalf contalnad, hokllng tanka·
, water, 3 waste 5th wheel h"'*,

••r·

llzor )acko 51h whlol &amp;land arilf
vary 111114-

·,
'

SERVICES

1995 Buick LtSabra Cu11om 4
7512
1997 Cavalier. PS. PB. •2,000
Mlleo, Crulla, Jill. CD Player,
Aoldng $t0,500, 740-44&amp;-40t8
1997 Ford E•Pioror XLT Loadad
28 000 Mlleo. Bal Fact Warr E•
CBIIen1 Condlllon 740-446-849t
19e&amp; Pontiac Tran1·Am, Navy

Blue Mo1alllc, 8 1 Ll1ar, LS t En·
glne, Loalhlr lnlarlor. 10 Spaaklr
Monsoon Sltreo, 12 Olac CO

Changer. Fully l.-1 WMI Taka
Pay orr. 740-44&amp;-&lt;1548
89 Plymou1h Horl:don. sop. 88K
8c:ly, $1,300 00 (740)446-3889
87 Ford EliP- XLT, ltolhor In·
181)01', '"" roof,
ployor, $22.000. 740-1192·7312

co

810

Home
Improvement.: ~

448·0870. 1·800·287·0578 Rog·
... Weltrprooflng
Appliance Par11 And Strvico. All
Name Branda
28 Ytooro Es-

o-

perltnce All Work Gutranttld,

French Clly Maytag, 7•0·4•8·
7195
CIC Oonarof Homo Main·
tonaoco- Pointing, vinyl aiding
oarponlry,
t.lndOwa, - · ·
,..,..
and ....
""'
frH
oo11ma1a
call Chll,
1411·992·

oooro.

.,

8323

Livingston a Sattmen1 Waler
Proofing, all blltm•nt repalra
don•. free ••llmatll, lifetime

guoronloo. 12yre on )ob .. Pt,l·
once. (~)895-3887

840
(~)69!5-318t

1988 GMC 112 Ton, Full Slu,
5 AKC Bo•ar pupo 140·742· Pickup TruCk for lilt Auto. Low
_81_0'.-.:·----'--~~ 1 Mllao, (304)678-1880

ASTRO-GRAPH

I'IIIIINT

WATIRPROOI'IIO
Uncondltlonalllfttlmo guaron100
Local references turnfahtd Et·
tabllohtd t975 Call 24 th (14())

ElectriCIII and
Refrigeration

Aooldontlol or commarclil Wjrlng,
now oorv1ce or ropelro. Mo-IJ.
ctn11d tleclrtclan

Ridenour

Eloclrlcal, WV000308, 304-178·
t788

of

'30 Mor11

created one
31 Organo ol
olght
37 "- Kaplllll '

38 Come out

40 Mlooloolppl

quartet
41 Stuff

42 Put on the
payroll
43 Yale students

45

C~llnto

cubes

46 Words of
denial
47 No llo, - or
l&gt;uto
49 - Alamos,
NM
50 Ungulotlc
ending
52 Unit of
energy
53 L.ong IIIII

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograme are created !tom quota!iOM by tamout people pa!l l and p! aH01
Each Mrtter '" the o.._ stands b anolher Todly• dl.w Hequttt. K

·s

CNY ' L.

B K

B

L R BY

L.RSYH

OVPKNY.

S'J
S'J

F W K L

VTKV

BYZNYV

MYPZ

B L

D N NT

E VLt VP

BDL.SYI

DNNT
F N R Y
LPBMNTLB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The vtohntst IS lhal
human phenomenon dtsltlled
to a rare potency- halt t1ger half

poet " -

Yehudt Menuhtn

C. fiiQ
P\!o:i

TIIAT DAllY
PUULII

WOlD

••••

------·-~,
li!eorrange l.tters of
0 four
scrambled words

loW to form four words

l!RALP

GU J E D

r' I

-rT_E-r:--il._=~·,

r

"'"-rK_0.,.-5
6

.--

At an

1 er overheard one woman say JOktngly
to her fnend 'Behind ev ery
,.....,,.....,-Y:--::R:--::R-:A--,Isuccessfut man there 1s a ·--5 0
• • • · - woman "

l:.a,-"1-.,rt:""""TI-..1-.,Ir--1 0

1.

•

_

•

•

•

Complete

~~-

ch udde quoted

~Y lrlhng rn lhe mrnmg words

L...-L-..L.-.1.--'--'-'--' you de'V'elop rrom step No 3 below

8

!THURSDAY

'.

- f o r ... _ . -

Doors, Blue Loaded 740·182·

Wnh the d1amond kmg a dehat
able value , Seres ' four-spa&lt;le ra1se
was opumrsuc bullhey pay extra for
, rt\akmg a game
Declarer slarted w11h h•s c lub
kmg, a club to dummy 's a ce and a
club ruff m hand He contmued wtth
a heart to dummy 's queen and the
heart ace, borh opponents followmg
hrgh·low 10 show an even number o f
c ards Trusung therr plays . declarer
deduced lhal Wesl had begun wuh 2·
2·6·3 shape And he spoiled a beau ·
uful ru~e Seres called for the spade
two, and when Easl played the seven, he covered wilh the etght 1
After West won wnh the I 0, he
had to open up the dramonds, concedtng a tnck to declarer's krng
Seres won three spades, three hearts,
one dramond, two clubs and a heart
ruff rn the dummy
Of co urse, It IS easy to say thai
East should have played hrs krng on
the firs( round of !rumps, or lhat West
should have won wrlh the ace, not the
10 But honestly now, would you
have found erther ofthose plays' I' m
sure I wouldn ' t have

Sltop the c""'•fitd lt&lt;IIOft

1978 Chevy mo10r hOmo, 23', llir
condl~on, everything work1, ol,fl
74Q.698.0502

29 In the center

By Phillip Alder
T•m Seres rs one o f the world's
most g1f1ed players He was born m
Vtenna, Austna, m 1925 ( a great year
for bndge players) to Hunganan par·
ents They Oed Europe before World
War II, evenlually arnvmg mSydney,
Australia , m 194 7 Eleven months
later, Seres won hrs first nat1onal
champ10nsh1p
Playmg m hJS usual game at the
Double Bay Bndge Centre, Seres was
m four spades However, g1ven that
West had the dramond ace-queen
hovenng over the kmg, he seemed
destmed 10 lose four tr1cks lwo
spades and two dtamonds Do yo u
see any chanc e 10 mrslead lhe oppo·

Don 1 gt1 Slung by hig~ P"&lt;tt 1

MotorHomea

1994 Pontiac Sunblrd LE 87 000
Milol, $4,000, 740-441.Qt32

Pass

carter
27 Idol

A
V

PRINT NUMBERED

LETifiS

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

I'.

FORI

.

1· I, r I' I' I~ I' I' I
II I II II II

SCitAM-t.ITS ANSWIIlS

Cempera ..

$12.900. 740-742·20015

Pass

•

New gu 18'*1 II body P"'l I} •
R Aulo Ripley, WV (304)372f
3933 or 1-800-273-1321.
_.:.,.

conditioned, avtry1hlng works

-

at U.bo•
office
22 Actreao
L.ouiM
23 Relroln !rom
noticing
24 Panacea
25 Greek peak
26 Actreoa

Pass
Pass
Pass

AND A SEVEN-TEN
SPL.Ii IN TJ.IE
TCNiH FRAME !

...

etectrtc levelera, back rear atelii·

1877 3/4 Ton Truck, $700

Pete for

"YUP'

1995 24' SunTracklr Pon1oon ad
HP Mercury 740·245·9258 Qr AI
GailpoHI Boat Club.
,

Mlleo, 12.400 OBD, 740·2581233

Block, brick, HWtr pipes. wind·
owa lintels. etc Claude Wlntara,
Rio Grandt OH Call 740·245·

560

UP lit:~, MIT TQOI(..
l..OOK OOWt-.im' FW2lE 11

t2Fl FlshMaotar John·Boal wilt!
a Mlnnko1er 32 lb Tlvul1 $&lt;4511.
(304)895-316t

linder, Automatic, AC, 87 ,ooo

All S1ool Building Worohou11 I
Arano BIOW·Qu1 80X100. 70Xt00,
10•128 100xieo ao so% Off
0 B 0 • 800-3711-37~

5t21

DOII'IC:&gt;UP I~\\'.~

for Sale

96 Plorla Jt1

3.

I •

con
5 Port of • ptey
6 WIM counoolor tO Coolc"a olllple
7 Quoted 80 1
11 Plalno Indian
source
8 Suaan Hayward 12 Tolled
movie
amphibian
9 Aunt or uncle 19 Concl..obbr
21 Did horrll&gt;ly

East

nents"

750 Boatl &amp; Motors '

1978 Chevy mo1or hOmo, 23'. ~'

1992 Nlsaan Stanza, o4 door

For. You, U You Don't Call

I

\\I '

1998 Honda CBR 800 53. Lgjt
Mllaege 740-387.()222
..,

1990 Chryolar 5th Avonuo Vary

latera. And Related Materlall For
You To Install Your Own Or We

Us, Wo Both Lotti 553 Jackson
Pika, 740148·8308, 800·291·

&gt;

1-tf\I&gt;.,T ~ ~0CO.DS CJ\ICLifo\&amp;.0

Sporlol~

883 with t200 kit, Iota or extr11,
8,000 mlln, 740-992·5875
''

790

Now Taking Appllca11ons- 35
Sewage, Truh, $31 S/Mo , 7•0·

'··

19116- aoo ex Hondo w11~ Eldllll
1985·200 SX Hondo for Porltl
(740) 387·12t0

IHO Chevy Lumina Euro·Sport,
• door Looks Good. Runs GOOd
High Mlletga 12.200 (304)87!5165t

Ot65

ol4&amp;«ll8

TO-NO"
LIST.

\

®

•t~ffl&gt;·

Ollll

'•

Baja 218, like New, Garage

Stock JaniUol Heating And Cool·
lng Equlpmtnl, Duct Work Reg·

Wtat 2 Bedroom Townnouae
Apartments Includes Wettr

'~

178 Triumph Mo1o1cycle NHd~
Lillie Work $t 000 (304)895•
318t

BaJa 2t6 Llkl Now garage l_&lt;i!l!.
Phona740-258-1318a1ior- •

Christy s Family llw-lng, apart·
menta home &amp; trailer rentals

NAMf yiA$ 014

•

Motorcyclel

Kopt 740-256-1378'. Allor 9 00""""

Problema? Neod Tunad? Coil 1111
plono Dr 740-448-4525

7~t-1178

so•v. rur vov~

~

ff:\.

Oo~

1993 Jotp Wrangilr 37
Mloa, $8.000. 7~1.0132

A/C, Sun Roof, P S , P B

Oeposll, Non Smoktra, In Clly

740-38!5-4367

~I

Llveatock

2•

J.::;.f!:'-17:+7-

3 Chicken
chow4 Oppooilo of

34 Thick ollcea

37 Mocka
39 Don OUIIOte,

I 6

1 RotiOMrle pllrl

2 Oporo by Verdi

35 Ruat, • g.

• K8
• K2

North
PIIS

DOWN

coator
35 Paooaue
ba-n

Weat

ouav.,.

44 Compus pt.
45 Genetk:
m~W~el 48 Moon valleyo
51 Area
54 Melodic
55 Eml&gt;elflohed
56 Slol&gt;'o !Uvlnga I-':-I-::'-I-:'-1Rc=l!'!'!
57 E•ll

Greek gift from
an Austr(al)ian

ed excellent condition, $13,000j

mon1t Call (304)773·8835, Ahor
5PM

goal

11 Got! peg
20 Saulhuat
Aalan lloflday
21 Dagwood'a
wWe
25 In o ohlp
21 Frozen do11art
32 Junctureo
33 Shat-·a

- t o p,..louo Puzzle

Operung lead • Q

•&gt;4:

Gravely Tractor with four attach·

17 Sunba-'o

• K 10 3 2

South

••

'94 Grand Chlr- Larado,
aU10maUC. 12.000 rrtlleo, CD. load-

1987 Toyota Calico GT e Sj)Hd

view, Aoferences, No Polo, Lean,

}i;4.RNEY

"92 Pl)'moUih Voyagar van. good
conctl1ion, 13000, 740-M:l-5159 , •

•

u

And Compare Thl1 11 An Exc-+

home· 740·317·61 19

• 9 3
•9 J 5f3

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: West

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI • '

am 1oaoopm Sunday1001o
6 00 p m 7•0·992·2526. Ru11
Moore owner
f

Air Conditioner, Up·rlght Fr•e;zer.

1985 GMC Jimmy, LOIS Of EPI;I
Alking Sts ,ooo. Shop Around

For sale, $8 Ranger club cib,
good motor I bod)&lt; need 1 110~11'
minion repair. phone 1•0· 7~2 1
2931
t I

tt24 E Main sueet. on Rl t24.

7Ft Chrlatmu TIH. Old Radio &amp;
C B 8861 Offer (304)882 3173

·,

199e Chevy S·tO, LS. 2WD, ,.
Speed, Air, Alum Whtolo, 4Cyt
5,000 mll11 $9800 OBO:
(304)675-4383
'

Antiques

Ml1cellaneous
Merchandise

Modified, New Parts, Auto 4xo4,.

$6.500 090

E11l
• K7
• J 9 7 5

Soulb
• QJ 8 H

1995 Ford Ft50 XL. 4•4 5SQMO,
AC 300 8 Cyl (304)675· 115••
$9.500 OBO 1979 Fore nt
(~)67!5-1754.

5.

A 8 6

Weal
• A 10
• 8 6
a A Q 10 7 6 2
• Q J 10

lent Vohlclo. A1 An E•c-'lonl
Prlool740-4*7289.
• •

Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 00

540

•

6055

Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs

Beaulllul Modern t Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Utilities Inter·

Floorl. CA. 1 1/2 Belh. Fully Car·

410 Hou- for

Farm Equipment

• J

t995 Ford Explorer, 4DR. 42K ,.,
Loadad. Mini Cond • SanC·Colot
In &amp; 0u1 By Owner (304)878·

1987 Plymouth Reliant Wagon
Very Good Shape Run ENt Lots
Of New Parts, Asking $1 ,500

Tara Townhouse Apartme.f'IS
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

RENTALS

610

-.vt

• 8 6 3 2
• A Qf

1995 Dodge Ram ShoriBod.
•X4 , 380, Au1omat1c. Loa~o~
80 000 miles Hard Roll Dvtr,
AlrBago. Aadillor Good, $&lt;4,700
(304)89!5-3011011195 3237

Graco Opan Top Baby S"lng,
Takea 'D' Batterloo, Oood Cond
Gave $85 00 Wan1 $30 00 1•0)
245-5074

houuln G'alll&gt;ofil, 740-992·9191

R._l Estate
Wanted

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE';TOCK

N

,

Equal Hou~ng Opponunlty

1,

Aooml &amp;400 oo Down $1•5 oo
mon1h (14()) 25&amp;-1216

1705

t Chi,... 11oe1
7 LAno"o
predK111or
13 Stell
14 Think thlngo up
15 Doll&amp;
1a candle

1119.-dlenl

Needl Atpalra,

alzH. 740-949-2087

port From $249·$313 Coil 740·
Call NOW For Free Maps +
992·5084 Equal Housing Oppor·
Owner Financing Info Take 10%
tunltle1
Off Ll81 Prloo On Caah Buys1
Home·Site Mobil Homea Wei
coma Lots or Woods ·Plenty or

Mother 1 Day Splclall Siamest

and Himalayan Kll1tno Wormoc
and Llt1a1 Tralnod (740)·387·

OoubleBunk

lrom $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movlos Call 740·448·2588

74D-448-3e84

Golllo CO:

(~)675-2063

11onor 1• 000 BTU'o, 220 $250.
Skaggo Applloncos 78 Vine
SUM~, Galipoio, 740-446-7398

Excellon1 Condition, $200, 740·
388·9416 After 5 P.M.

Grande Alaa, Close To College.
2 Building Silos lefl oil Aouta 33 1350/Mo Includes All Ulili11ea,
In Mason $15,000 an Acre Dep'oalt Required, 1·888· 840·
(304)882·3772
0521
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew Gallla County

Jackaon Avenue/Point Pleaaant

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,

Martin

350

$10 000 080 (304)675-8570

$205 1 Year Warranty, Dryer
$205 t Year warranty Air Condl·

530

Apartments
for Rent

campua,

Sun 1·4PM Mon ·SI1 11AM·
8PM Fish Tank/Pot Shop 2•13

Range $95, Frost Free Rafrlgera·

month (74())-387-De11

(803)366 8438

New And Ulld Furniture Store

Waoher $85, Dryer $95, Eloculc

340

bulldmg Asking price $89.500,
make offar, Income $1620 month,
call 740,.992-4514. ask for Chris

more Washer $75 00 Kenmore

992·2167

t·Bedroom Parlley Furniture
Apartment Utllltiea P-aldl $300 00

nue, Mlddlepofl Four 2 bedroom
apanmentl, two commercLal units,
39 5xt t 6', brick. old Firestone

Konmoro Washer $75 oo. Whirl·
pool Dryar $70 oo •• Maylag
Wuhor $65 oo All 3 While
Whirlpool Waoher $75 0/l, Ken·

Below Holiday Inn. Kanauga Stop
And sao Us.740-448-4782.

440

1989 Kenworth T-1100 •25H ~ WI
Jake Brake &amp;Spood •oo Raoro

Washers dryers. refrigerators ,

2 I 3 bedroom mobile homes air
condl11o~ed $260 $300. sewar.

140-446·2951

Christy s Family Living· property
for sale, 202·204 N Second Ave-

QOOD USED APPLIANCES

Dryor $70 00 AH 3 llllmondl Call
al1or 5:30 (74())-446-9086

736·3409

Bualne•• and
Building•

GE
Rogrlgora1or.
20 8
Cub ft (good) Couch &amp; Love Seal
(nloo) (304)675-81M

t4&lt;70 tw&lt;i bedroom "alierln Mid
diopon. $300 per mon1ft. 740-992
50a9

Nice 3 bedroom mobile home In

· - 1·80IJ.696.1763
U•ec SlngloWida, Around $tOO
per """1ft can 1-800-948-5678

Fronch Ci1y Maylag 740·••8·
7795

1985 Chtv\' Bllztr Good S ' -,
lOWMIIoegt, 740-258-t102

Flah, Blrda, Pond Supplies

Hl88·8t8.Q128

Delivery and Set Up. Call 1-800
948·5678
On The Purchase Of A New
Fleetwood Or Dutch Home And
~ecetve Award Winning Custom
er ServiCe CALL For FREE Liter·

Goods

AKC R•glstertd LJb Puppi.. ,

Ready To Oo May 16th. 740-379·
2883.

VIne Street Call 7,.0·4.t6·7398

Mobile Homea
for Rent

$200 00 monlh, plus u111111oa
plus dopoa~ (~)675-1651

SAVE THOUSANDS

Houaehold

rongeo Skaggs Appllancu, 78

Rent Buster New 1998 1o4x70 2
or 3 Bedrooms Only $99~ 00
Down, $185 00 per month Free

Porches 1OX24 PI PI , $8 000

1994 Skylln•!Suprema 1o4x74·

$33,000 00

Three bedroom home In Middle·
port, $350 month plus deposit,

In The Counir)' Meigs CO!IIty nut Rutland Making oea11 on CoMbination
Lots, !5 to 1!5 Acn!l of rolllnQ woodt,

1994 18•80 Sunshine Mobile

3 Bedroom Farmhouse on 1 ecr•

614-75HV59

6 00 PM For Appolnlmen1. 740·
245-9a92

1992 COMMODORE
t4,.0 3 Bedroom• 2 Batha, Vinyl
Sldlnq And Shlnglo Roof. Now
Carpel vo Financing Available
Wllh St 000 Down And $217 Par
Month Coi1-IIOD-500-3fl!i7

after 5PM

SectlJed larm hoo11 1neat Dex~·
er, depotlt and least n(qulred,

cludeC, $200 deposit, H0·887·
31i18

opponunlty basis

(~)675-5t43

385·982t

Appl iances
Reconditioned
Washers Oryert, Ranges, Retrl·
gra1or1, 90 Day Guarantee!

acuae $215 a month trash In

1992 14&lt;70 Oakwood 2 Bod·
room1, 2 Full Ba1ha, All Eloclrlc
Wllh Heal Pump, 740·441-0959.
74()·319·2198

2910 Mewdowbrook Drive 3 BR
Ranch LR FA w/Gas Flreplac•
Newly Remodeled In 1998 Ex·
tenalve Land1captngj S7• 500

Gopd 111ecuon of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call UO·

$325/Mo , Pluo Dopooll, No In·
sloo Patol r4()-682-i032

LAND

which 11 In vkllatlon ot the
law Our readers ~re hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

Home~ for Sale

(74()~256-9382

510

Ck&gt;M IO Town $175K (740) 258·
1216

!99t t4ftx72ft Shingle Roof. Vinyl
knowingly acup1
Siding, Excallonl Condlllon
advertisements for real es•ne II ' $t6,500 00 (7411) 4*8tt3

310

w• lake Payoftl

HANOI&gt;E

House Nur Centerville IThur·
man, Gallle Sehools County Wa·
ter Included , Plant A Garden ,

1973 Ral'l!ada 12x80 Mobile
Home, 2 Bedrooms, Central Air,
Range Top Oven And Refrigerator, Good Condition, Call After

This ll8W!PBper Will not

REAL ESTATE

t985 t4172 Ft Flee1WOOd 2 Bad

MIIOI Co· Rutland While Hill

$22,000, ren1al unl1, 740·992·
45t4 ask torChrl' Martin

No Fee Uhless We Wlnl

Nlco Small 2 Bedroom. 5 floom

2 bedroom mobile home lotal
- · t2JIII5. 740-742 2803
Low lnter.sl Rates For t st Time
Buyers, limited Ttme Ava ilable
8Q0.383-e882

Three bedroom, bailment, two
car garage 20 acres, $75,000,

320

740-949-3130

80t&lt; (74())381-75$4

Inc

$199,999 (803)366·9436

recommends that you do busl
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering

Melgo Local School Dlotrlct P 0
eo. 272, PomerQY. Ohio
The Town of New Ha\len Is ac·
ceptlng applicaHons for th8' posl
Ilona of pool manager and life·
guards for the summer Appllca
tiona may be obtained at the

For Sate By Owner 4BR 3000
Squafe Foot House 4 Car Ga·
rage, 5 Acres Very Secluded

$52.000 beau11ful 50•201 fo1 all

45614
Thu Meigs Local School District
Is currently seeking applications
from cerlilled applicants lor As
Si&amp;lant Varsity Football Coach
Freshman Football Coach (2 po·
sltlons), 7th &amp; 8th Grade FootbiaN
Coach Boy&amp; Assistant Varslly
Basketball Coach Boys· Rese:~e
Basketball Coach Boys Middle
School Basketball Coach (2 posl
tiona) Aaalstant High School
Track Coach, Wrestling Coach,
Girls Asa•stant Volleyball Coach

chino

appliances &amp; dishwasher lnclud·

WALL·CE1L1NO CLEANED EX·

STATE TESTED NURSINO
ASSISTANT POSITIONS

For Sale By Owner 3BR 1 t/
2BA , large family room &amp; office,
upstairs totally remodeled. new
roof gunerlng, water aottner &amp;
lots of extras 2912 Anniston
Drive Pt Plllllnt, (30")87&amp;·
2608 Leave Musage on Ma·

304 675 0860 ., 7.0 742·2022

Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Ex·
perlenced , References Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate

Pari time olrlce work, part time
cashier well establisheo busl
ness Send resume to The Da lly
Sentinel PO Box 12.g75 Pomer·
"" OH 4~769
Postal Jobs 10 S18 35/Hr tnc
Benefits, No Experience For
.App And E•am lntor Call 1·800

Excellent start·up hom• Owner
pay cloaing coat 39R w/Baae·
ment Electric Heave A $32,000

(304)882 3772

Wanted To Do

Site At Scenic Hills Nur~ng Cen·
plated An Application Please

2

Story, 3 Bedrooms 2 1/2 Baths
Near Holzer, lmmediat• Pot~es·

eot~~ge

M~RC

rooms, 2 Full Batha, all Electric!

EXCELLENT CONDITION

Buslne11
Training

Nur&amp;e Aide Tramlng Classes On

ter If You Have Previously Com

2104, 740-992 5696
By owner ltlree bedroom coun~
home , lull buement approx ~
acres doubt.e garage, Texa1 Ad

E &amp; S Lawn Service Design. lm·
plementallon
and Service
Available to r Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planting Fres esll·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed

Nurse Aide Training Classes
Come Join Our Team That Makes
A Difference We Are Offering

By ownar 125 Page Slrtet. Middleport, hOuse &amp; 3 lOti, must HI
to appreciate will 1811 t'IOoui without loll lor $89 000. 7•0· 892·

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

lor ono
4 I Revolutionary

ACROSS

,;:
"'

Friday, May 7, 1999
Ahhoush you mrahl find yourself
luckier in lhc year ahead than you've
expenenced in !he past, thra does not
·,,., aive you a trcket to taking uncalcu" lated nsks Continue lo use common

•~ · sense.

. •• TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
- Slick to manasing your own person"' II tnletesiS lod8y in51ead Of altempl·
~~ ing 10 do lhings you beheve would
. - please others Your effons could ao
" unapprectated Oet a jump on life by
underslanding lhe influences thot'll
• aovern you in !he year ahead Send
.&lt;'•l the required tefund form and for you~
·•-Astro·Oroph predictions by maihn1
• • ' S2 lo Astro-O~h. r;/o thio newspa- per, P.O Box 1758, Murny Hill Ste·
uon, New York, NY 10156. Be sure
to Ollie yoi.r Zod1ac sian.
OEMINI (May 21-June 20)
P:1nslead of d111:usolna whll'o bolhot·
, ~ 1ii1 you w1th othen todoy1 find 1
.. r&gt;caceful co.-- and sort lhina• out
yourself In qu1e1 places, reaoon
abounds
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don't
depend on the s~me people who let
'I

you down 1n rhe past for suppon of
one of your 1dcas today These lypes
arc usually looking out for lhem·
selves You don't need them anyway'
LEO (July 23-Aua 22) Conduct
yourself m a manner so lhal what you
say conveys the type of 1mpre&lt;s1on
you' rc onx1ous to make today Oth·
ers are hkely lobe payms very close
attenlloll to you
VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpl 22) Too
had your Judgmenl regarding heohh
mailers doesn'l malch your clever·
ness al mnk 1ng or savmg 111oney
today Don't letthe urge to overindul·
aence usurp your eommon sense
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cr 23) To
solve 1 problemoticalslluauon loday,
foc:111 your mind on lunnehng beneath
!he surfoceoflhlnas•d you'll get to
!he core cauoca of !he rsoue, bnngtng
oboul a IOiution.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov 22)
Wlten k comatopeople your •pause
dltlikes, make your plans with lhem
in ways whete your mate doesn 'I
have to set involved. It's not smart ro
fotst them on your partner
SAOmARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

21) JuSI because you mrghl etnne up
w11h a way 10 make your JOh easmr
al work roday, don't think thinss have
eased up for your co-workers as well
Be COJnlzanl of lherr burdens
CAPRI&lt;;ORN (Dec 22-lan 19)
You mrghl discover today that afler
dlltgently tmhns IO achteve some·
thmg you' vc been very amuous to

accomphsh, the v1c1ory wasn'l wo'lh
rhe pnce you had to pay Don 'I dwell
on tt

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-l'ch 19)
Today mr&amp;ht s1gnal1he end of a pas1
mv61 vemenl and Ihe sran of a new
one Shtft all your auenllon 10 lay ms
oul a good bluepnnl for your new
endeavor

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Don' 1 be so concerned os to how your
coun1crpan will perfonn m a JOtnl
elTon 1oday lhal you'll fBI! IO carry
your shate of lhe load Concenlrale
only on your own job.
ARIES (Marth 21 -Apnl 19) ll"s
true your judgment IS very· keen, hul

when 11 comes to fnends or money,
you'd . be wtse lo be exira cauttous
lodl)l Your 'ommon sense could
desert you 1n e11her area

League - Vouch -Motor- Notary- YOU VE GOT
My ne1ghbor had a bumper st1cker that read "IRS_
They Have What It Takes To Take What YOU VE GOT '

MAY61

�Page 12 •.The Dally Sentinel

Wez.thcr

Garth Brooks named country
music's 'artist of decade'
UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. (AP)
-. Garth Brooks was the story of the
night , the year and the decade.
The Academy of Country Music
bestowed its top award for the 1990s,
- artist of the decade - and branded the Oklahoma native its entertainer of the year during its 34th
awards prese ntation s Wednesday
night. Faith Hill was a big winner,
too, taking home four awards.
The : Universal Amphitheatre
audience leaped to its feet and cowboys took off their Stetsons when
Jay Lena announced Brooks won
the decade's top honor. Marty Robbin s, Loretta· Lynn and Alabama
woO in previous decades .
· Brook s, the best-selling male
singer -in music history who has sold
more than 95 million albums, said
he wasn't deserving of the recognition .
"For me there's two artists in our
· industry that I think we have very
much taken for granted - I don ' t.

mean to offend anybody, I'm just
telling you like it is," Brooks said.
Brooks left the stage to hand the
award to Reba McEntire, but to his
surprise she wasn 't in her seat. The
gesture drew wild cheers anyway.
Brooks recently completed a 33month concert tour that sold more
than 5.3 million tickets, the most
successful tour ever by a singer.
For pure excitement, it was the
jubilant wins by Hill that stole the
evening. She hauled off more
.awards .than anyon~ . including
female vocalist, si ngle record and
video for "This Kiss" and vocal
event of the year for her duet " Just
to Hear You Say That You Love
Me" with husband Tim McGraw.
McGraw also won the top male
singer award.
It was a replay for McGraw and
his wife. Last year, they walked
away with four academy trophies for
their duet " It's Your Love."

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA
Camp 3730~ Tuppers plains, Ohio ·
It Sponsor~ns A Matching Fund
For The Benefit Of

TUPPE·RS PLA.I.NS VOLUNTEER
FIRE DEPARTMENT
_

. Sander, Mar 9, 1999
11:00 A•.M: to 4:00 P.M. (Or Until Sold Outl)
Tuppm Plaint Fire Houte '
Route 681 &amp;Mein Street
Tupper• Plain•, Ohio
$S.OO • Per Plate
Barhecued Rih1 or Chicken; Beked BeaiiJ
Cole1law, Roll &amp;Coffee or Tea .
.Cake &amp;Pie Extre
·
/j

May7, 1M

Eastern b.eats Miller in semis, P·age 4
Forced medi.cation, Page 6
Mother's Day Ser~onette, Page 6

Today:P.Sunny
High: 80s; Low: eo.

Meigs County Girl Scout Troop news
Syracuse Brownie Troop 1120- fire trUck. Girls received a sticker
Two third-grade members attended from the fire chief.
the Brownie/Junior lock-in and
As part of Earth Day/Ohio River
worked on Bridging to Juniors activ- Sweep the girls cleaned up Middle11Jes.
port Park. Meigs County Litter ConPomeroy Senior Troop 1180 - . trol provided gloves, hats and trash
The troop planned a leader apprecia- bags. The troop decided to do this on
lion dmner that was to he held April a monthly basis as a community ser22 but has been rescheduled to May vice project.
13. Girls may chocolate strawberrie~
Eastern Brownie Troop 1316 had
as ·refreshments for their meeting on eight third grade Brownies and one
the eighth. ·
Junior attend the Brownie/Junior
The troop painted ceramic bears Lock-ln.
at their meeting on the 15th. A new
Salisbury/Pomeroy Daisy Troop
girl (Cadette level) was also taken 1259 invited girls from the Salisbury
into the troop in April. Girls in ·Brownie Troop to visit as part of the
Bridging to Brownies activities.
grades six and up can join. .
The girls made their own person- Girls made Friendship Necklaces as
al cooker/grill (charcoal) and fixed part of that meeting.
steak and hot dogs at the meeting on
The group also visited the
the 30th. The girls also spent time Pomeroy Fire Station and invited the
cuuing out nametags for the Spring Salisbury Brow'nies to joi n them at
Gala. For recreation \hey played a this activity .also. Girls are continu20-minute game of Monopoly.
ing work towards Bridging to
Cainpi ng was discussed and an Brownies.
.
overnight has been planned for May
_The troop joined the Salisbury
14- 15 with the Pomeroy Brownie Brownies in making outfits f&lt;lr their
Troop bei ng invited. The troop wil l . teddy bears for the fashio n show at
help them work on the Outdoor Fun the Spring Gala. ·
Try -It Badge.
Eastern Juni or Troop 1039
The new Cadeltc will be worki ng attended the Brownie/Junior Lockwith the Pomeroy Brownie Troop as In and helped the Brownies work on
part of the work ·on earning the their Bridgi ng to Juniors.
Pomeroy Brownie- Troop 127 1
Leadership Award .
The troop assisted with the Girl has'completed work on the Play TryScout di splay and activities at the lt. .They le~rned about and played
Family Fu nFest held Apri l 23 at games from England (Kim 's Game ),
Eastern Elementary.
·Japan (Jan-Ken-Pon), United States
Meigs Se nior Troop 126 1 - The (Red Light/Green Light), and Zimg irl s made Easter favors for Car- babwe (Hawks and Hens). ·
leton Schoo l, Overbrook Center,
The girls have been busy learning
Extended Care, The Maples and the Girl Scout Promise and Law,
.church. The girls d1 stributed the Girl Scout Signs, the Mollo, and the
favors to each person_
Slogan in preparation for their
Girls also assisted with the Easter investiture.
Girls decorated bears for the
Egg Hunt for grandchildren and
great-grandchildren of the residents Teddy Bear Fashion Show.
al The Maples. Senior girls helped
Racine Brownie Troop 1100 held
the Cadette with work toward the an Easter party on April 3. The SafeCadette Challenge.
ty, Animals, Play and My Body TryFour of the girl s completed Girl Its.
Scouts Against Smoking and also
Anyone interested in learning
made outfits for their bears for the · more about Girl Scouting as a valTeddy Bear Fashion Show held at unteer or a girl can call Denise Hoi the Spring Gala.
.
· man at 992-3895 or Brenda NeutFour girls and five adults attend- zling ai 992-6679.
- ed the annual meetin~. The leader, as
well as one of the mothers,' were Big Bend Service Unit activities
Day Camp direc tor Jerrena
there as delegates.
Senior Girl Scout Melissa Hoi- Ebersbach and other leaders in the
man assists with Brownie Troops iri Big Bend Service Unit have been
. the area as needed.
busy making plans for Summer Day
Salisbury .Brownie Troop 1220 Camp 'to be held June 11-13 at Royal
- The troop dressed bears for the . Oak Re sort. A Hawaiian theme will
Teddy Bear Fashion Show held at be carried out in the activities for the
the Spring Gala.
weekend .
The troop held a swimming party
Girls will make leis, 'hula skirts,
at Royal Oak Resort for its mem- and other tropical-type crafts. Along
bers . Seni or Girl Scout Andrea with the tropical activities, girls will
do the usual camp activities includNeullling provided lifeguarding.
Middleport Brownie Troop 1015 ing fishing, hiking, sw imming,
planted flowers at the Hope Baptist campfire-cooking, so ngs and skits.
Church in appreciation of their Cooking training was held at the
sponsorship of the troop.
.
Rock Springs Fairgrounds recently.
The troop began working on the Trainers were Shirley Cogar and
Earth and Sky Try-lt. Girls in the Brenda Neutzling. Adults from the
troop earned the Careers Try -It.
Big Bend Service Unit attending
A visit to the Middleport Fire Sta- were Jodi · Bissell, Jerrena Eberslion was pan of the work on the bach , Michele Di ckerson, and ·
Safety Try -lt. The girls and leader Denise Holman: The group will be
got to ride around Middleport in the completing Sleeping Out and C.ainw

Friday

Thursday, May 6, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ing Training in May.
April's Service Unit meeling was
held at the Trinity Church in
Pomeray. Upcoming event dates
were given . ' May 22 will be a
recruitment day to be held at the
stage area on the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy. Summer Day Camp as
previous set. July 15 will be a pool
party. Girls will have their choice of
attending either the ·Syracuse or
Middleport Pool from 7-9 p.m. An
outdoor skill day is planned for Aug.
28. Girls will learn the eight basic
outdoor skills and then put what
they learn to the test as they compete
in a skills relay.
The need for leaders in the area
was discussed. People who want to
be a leader or help with a troop
should contact Deb Dowler, lield
director, at (740) 797-480 1 or Brenda Neutzling at 992-6679.
Dowler an nounced Brenda Neutzli.ng as new Service Unit Administrator at the Spring Gala held on
May' 2.
·
Finance repons were reviewed
and the proper method of keeping
records discussed . Anyone needing
.
'
detail cash records should contact
ARBOR DAY PLANTING -A celebration of Earth Day and Arbor Day took place recently at the Rut,
the SUA.
land Elementary School. Students participated In an Arbor Day assembly and planted a pink dogwood
The finance report and troop pro- ·tree donated by the Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Office. Fifth grade students, pictured'
gram report are due at the ne&lt;t Ser- here ·with their teachar, Donna JeDklns, recycled aluminum cans, cleaned the playgrounds, and diS•
vice Unit Meeting to be held at the tributed pine seedlings,.donated by the recycling office, Kenneth Wiggins, director, to the students and
~
Trinity Church in Pomeroy on May staff. Stevl! Jenkins and Dave Davis also aasl"ted with the school projlict. ·
27.

~~ouaAio

. _.

~o .

.........,~
lfllllltJ.

~-...

'

~~ --

-~ ·

With The Best
From

~~ -

..,..,.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Meigs County's

v,;.,,, ..

l' 1

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Mix &amp;·Match ·

$}0!~

.

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OR

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Includes: New Guinea Hybrid Impatiens, Ivy Geraniums, Zonal Geritniums, Verbena, ·
Standard Boston Fems, Wave Petunias, Non-Stop Begonias, Portulaca and Morel
ALL YOUR FAVORI,TE SUMMER BEDDING ANNUALS FROM AGERATUM TO ZINNIAS.
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Over 150 Varieties
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• Climbi.tlg Roses
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Colorsf

ForYour .
Busy Mom _
READY MADE PLANTERS

., A Variety of

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each

Bob's Also Has A Wide Selection Of
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• Bradford Pear
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• _Weeping Cherry
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• Vegetable Plants • Herbs • Potting Soils • Creeping Phlox
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***GIVEAWAY

***

Stop in and register to win a HANGING BASKET... Lots of
chance8 to win (1 Every Hour All Day Saturday, May 8th
at both locations •.•••••.• ~ ••••••••• , .......... .

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Caah (No
PUJChau
Necesuryl

Two Locations To Serve You

1/4 MILE NORTH OF POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE,
.
MASON, WV . '
·
.
. PHONE (304) 773·5721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

2400 EASTERN AVENL
GALUPOU$, OHIO
PHONE (740) 446-1171
OPEN_7 DAYS A WEEK

Sate Prlce• 1!1 Effect ,
Thuraday, May 6th
Sunday, M1y 8, 1IIIMI

Songle Copy- 35 Cent s

Differences on .peacekeepers are narrowed

. Bonn, Germany,. co~ntered. wuh :·deployment . in
.
.
Kosovo of effe~uve tnternau onal CIVI l and secunty
WAS~INGTON (AP) - W1th the United States presences," whach NATO says means a well·armed
aod Russaa closing ranks on ll peacekeeping force for military force .with NATO at its core.
.
There ~as no mention ~f NATO troops'!' the~&lt;&gt;~Kosovo,:, President ~linton ~ys "a real f:lCICC
proces~ hu be'un With the Umted Nations asstgned munlque Issued by the Umted States, Russ1a, Brnaan,
a role m al'Pravmg any plan.
.• _
Canada, France, ~erma~y, Italy and Japar~.
U.N. Secrctuy-General Kofl Annan arranged .t&lt;&gt;
Bul U.S. officialS sa1d they wauld be part of the
meet. here tooay with Secretary of State Madeleine ~ntingent that would shield returning ethnic Alban.
1an. ref~gees. .
.
.
Albrtght on ~he newjf energized diplomacy.
. • How far ,1t g~s cou.Jd depend on- .Y~goslav Pr~s1Whtle awaltmg a mo~e from Mllosevtc,_the Pentaden! Slobodan M1losevtc, whose prehmanary reactaan gon announced that Defense Secretary Wilham Cohen
w~. cautious.
.
.
ordered as man~ ~ 176 more Air Force and Marine
We believe !hat a JUSt solu~i?n on all open a~ues Corps planes to JOID t_he Yugoslav effort.
can ~.reached thraug_h the po!atacal pr~ of darect
The deploy~ent ancludes I~ .more A-10 attack '
tal~, state·run Serbaan medta q~ated Malosevjc as planes, 18 add11ianal F·}6CJ Jets, 36 more _F;ISE
aaytn~ Thu!"'ay, without elaborataan.
, planes, 24 more l'fA, J8 Jets and up ta 80 addlltonal
· Mllosev1c also demanded "an end of the aagr~~· tanker planes. .
.
.
.
sian and return of peace and return of Yugoslav c1t1. The .Hungaraan government saad earher th1s week
_~ens to their homes." .
.
.
_
the 24 F/A-18s wil~ be based on its t~rrit_ory; the Pe~ -- ln.ltlally dead sel a_gamst any mternat1onal f~rce on lagon has n~t conftrmed that bu1 satd e1g~t 1!-S. Alf
Serb.tan terrlt~ry, ~1losevlc had already offered to Force r~fuehng planes are scheduled to arnve m Hun.
.
ad'!'1t som~ lightly or unarmed observers under the gary this week.
Umted Nations.
" I think you'll find when it's together and
Eight .foreign ministeno who met Thursday in announced that we wlll have basically a 360·degrce

By BARRY 8CHWEID
~P _,Diplomatlc Writer

attack . capability . against Yugoslavia," Pentagon ·
Thai guarantees the Clinton administration will not
spokesman Kenneth Bacon said Thursday, referring to . budge from its insistence that the American troops be
the widening circle or bases from which NATO attack under the control of Ameriun commanders.
planes will launch their missions against Yugoslavia_· · Sandy Beiger, the president's national security
Th~ new_peacekeeping plan is designed to win adviser, described the security force approved Thursover Mllosevac whtle ensuring the tormented ethnic day by the Group of Eight foreign ministers as a
Albanian ·refugees can _return to their harries in safety. "robust presence that would not only be able to
It also cauld give Russia China or other U.N. defend itself but maintain civil order. "
Security Council members a ~ay in the troops' misTroops from Russia, Ukraine and oth~r countries
sion and possibly limit the weapons and force they friendly to Yugoslavia are likely to be included, and
can employ to protect returned refugees·.
possibly from such NATO nations as Greece and Por·
Even though Sen.- Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, tugal, w hich have not actively engaged In the 6-week·
said Thursday after a briefing by State Department old NATO attacks on the Serbs.
'
~nd Pentagon officials lhe force "could well not .. The United States gave ground, as President Olnmclude Americans," there seems to be little doubt ton signaled he was willing to do when he declared
ther~ will be a sizable U.S. contingent, as there is before going to Germany that he was open ta negotihelpmg to keep the peace next door in Bosnia.
ate the composition of the force.
The ~8,000-mem~er force initially planned for
. So did Russia, which had opposed armed peaceKosavo 1s now cons1dered too small to monitai the keepers.
·
postwar resentment that could boiJ ·over into violence
U.S. officials depicted the agreement as one iti
ev~n after most of the Serb troops and paramilitary which Moscow mostly moved closer to Washington.
umts depart the province.
Sergey Lavrov, Russia's ambassador to the United
The force could expand to 60,000, with a propor• Nations, said the agreement reflected Russia's longlionally larger U.S. share thian the 4,()()() considered at held call for an international presence for Kosovo
the outset.
authorized by the Security Council.

National Day of Prayer activities concluded
pilot

Appraximately 380 people of all
ages, from retirees to school children,
gathered i~ front of the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy late Thursday
morning for the annual National Day of
Pray~r observance.
·
The !heme of this year's event was
"Ught the Nation ... With Prayer."
More than a dozen speakers offered
prayers ranging from prayers for elected
officials, U.S. Service members overseas. the media, and the Litdeton, Colo.
school massacre.
In addidon, songs were performed by
JoAnn Robinson, Bill Crane and Rejoic·
ing Ute Christian School students, Car·
leton School students and Meigs Industries clienll, Laura Guthrie, and Sheriff
Jim· SOulsby.
_·
" ' Welconlnnd openlq remarks w~ •
by Steve Beha while George Hams of
the Drew Webtltcr ·Poet of the American
Legion led lhe PI~ of Allegianee.
The Star Spangled Binner was sung by

rn
lied In training mission

. MASSILLON (AP) - The family af a U.S. serviceman who died
while training for the NATO action against _Yugoslavi~ !topes to know
today ibout funeral arrangements.
. The family was waiting to hear from the widow of Army helicop!er
David A. Gibbs, 38, to find out when his body will be returned to the
ti.Jnit4=d States, said his mather, .Dorolhy Gibbs of Massillan.
.
Her daughter-in-law. in Oermany called at ibout 3 a-m. wednesday
With news that Gibbs hid been killed when an Apache helicopter crashed
clurina nipl training exercises in AlbaniaAlso killed was Chief Warrant Officer Kevin Reichert, 28, of Chippewa Fallt, Wia,
,
The Musillon soldier's widow, Jean Delancy Gibbs, and their children,
Alii~. 10, Meaan, 8, and Davill, 'tmonths, were e;~~ lo go to hef
pirellts' ilbin~ in Potomac, Md., DoiOiliy'GibJ,ll'lllid. '
·.
• A mlli,tary spokesman, Lt. Col. Garrle Do!Aan, said the Apache
In ~·remote, ruaaed, mountainous terrain." nie cause of the acddent was
under inveatigation, but the Army said there was no lndieatJons of hostile
fire.
.
•

l

crashed

Miranda Beha.
AI Hartson of the Middleport Church
of Christ issued a call for repentance.
Commission President Janel Howard
and Commissioner Mick · Davenport
read Day of Prayer proclamations from
the Meigs County Board of Commissione~ and Ohio Governor Bob Taft,
respectively.
The National Day of Prayer was ·
originally instilu\ed by the Continental
·Congress in 1775 and revived again in
1952 by President Harry S. Truman. In
1988, President Ronald Reagan signed
an act passed by Congress establishing a
National Day of Prayer on lhe first
Thursday of May each year.
In years pas~ the local event was cuiminated .by the release of balloons. This
year__. however, ~cipants placed their
special prayer requests on slips of paper
which were set on fire, allow in&amp; the
smoke from the . requests to ascend
towards Heaven.

Leader of multlstate fake
credit card ring gets .18 years
.

JOHN SEEWEA

~Aaaoclst.d

p,.... Writer

TOUIDO (AP) - Federal authorities are ti'jllng to determine whether
the leader of a nllionwide' counterfeit Credit card ring was working for oth·
ers and where the money was going. ·.
.
Ali Abtdul Narallah, 31, of Detroit, was sentenced to 18 years in prison
on Thullday and fined SS.l million for his rale In the scam that operated in
at ICMIIS stales and netted millions of dollars. ·
Secret Service officials called N111allah the &lt;ll)anizcr and operator of the
credit card scheme, but added that he
may have been working for others.
"We have a hard time saying wha's
the mastertnind of the whole thing,"
said Michael S. Young, special agent
in charge of the Secret Service in
Oeveland.
'
sectk1ns • 12 Pqea
So far, auihorities have calculated
-the group netted at least $1 .7 million
C.!ep41r
I
since 199S.'Some of that money has
9A1Q
gone overseas, but the -total figw-e
Comb .
11
taken may never be determined.
"If we cOuld actually find the true
Ec!Jtadall
l
amoun~ it would dwarf that figure, "
.
Youna said.
· Nurallah, who was sentenced In
3
Lucas County Common Pleas Court,
earlier pleaded gui!ty 10 engaging In
LoltPt tr"-;
a pc\em of corrupt acdvity, two
counts of money laundering. and
omo
two counts ot receiving stolen propPkk3: 6·2-7; PkU: 'O-J.8-!1
eny.
lltldteye 5: 12-IS-21 -31-37
He hesded ~ group that obtained
·w.YA,
credit card accounts from foreian
D1111J Ji 3-2-4; O.lly 4: 8-S-2·1
·banks in 25 countries across
Europe, Asia, South America and
, o t999 010o lil•r
ea.
the Pacific Rim.

'

..

.
/

Good Afternoon

•u'• Sentinel

PRAYERS TO
Emrlc~ and the Rev. Father
Wl!lter Heinz are ahown h - directing the burning of prayer requeata
· during the- National Day of Prayer ob. .rvance In j:lomaroy Thuraday.
Prayer requnta wera written on allps of paper and . .t on ftre with
lncenu _to aymbollzl the prayera rising to Heaven.

REJIOIC:JNG THROUGH SOJ'IIG
Sc.h ool and Meigs Industries participated In Th&amp;ndlry's
National Day of Prayer actlvltlea In Pomeroy. lbey .-.
1hown here singing a trio of popular children's Sundq
School lOngs: "Standing In the N~ ot Prayer", M(He'a
the) Whole World In His Handa", and "Whlaper a Prayer •

!r"

Meigs High School students
&amp; faculty attend health fair

,,.,

,...,llil.,

Each

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•.-1

Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses

Beautiful Hanging
&amp; Quality Bedding Plants ·

8-4

•
•

.

''For Twenty-Nine Years 'We've BeeJ~. Working Hard to Produce the
Best Quality Plants Available. "Bob's retail locations are stocked
daily with plants and hanging baskets fresh from the greenhouse.
Bob's still offers the fuO size Jlat... no mini or partialflats.

Sports
Indians top
Seattle Mariners

,,.

H ·G arden Center to
hold grand opening
D&amp;H Garden Center, . Portland,
will hold its grand openlna Saturday,.
? a-m. to 8 p.m. and with a ribbon·
cuttln8 ceremony alnQOn.
The garden center is located on
ala~ Route 338 a mlle-and·•-half
below the Ravenswood Bridae- The
· business is owned by Ed Hupp and
Gcorae Davia. ·
The business will carry ahrut)s,
hanaing baskchl and Oall, herbs,
trees, f111it \fOes, specimen plants for
landscaping. iandaeape dmbeq, and
fibers, waterpond materlaiJ, . and
mulch sold by the baa or IICOOJI· The
prclcn center will also a variety of
6ulk atone sold by the baa or by the
acoop.
.
Reaular bUJineu hours are Monday thraugh Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8
p.m., and Sunday, noon to 8 p.m.

The garden~nter Is also the new

headquarters for Hupp Landscaping
which has bee~ providing Meip
County and sui(Qundina communities wl1h landsl:ape cleaian alnce

1982.
'
~
The &amp;arden nter ilso .carries
crafts, · birdh · s, mailboxes,
Amish clocka llld ftimitt~re, 1nd
other landscape illeml for jlo.iJ.you·r·
selfe111. New Items are beina added
included an ~nmenl of Rocky
Boots~
Delivery can ·be arranged ·for
lafJC orders as can the installation of
trees, waterpands and other items.
~ refreshments and entertain·
ment will be on hand throughout the
d&amp;y. Local artist Michelle Garrison
will be painting lhe garden center
sian Saturday.

1

I

'

HEALTH FAIR- Studentl and faculty at Melg1 High
School attended tha 1oth Annual MT•n• 1t Rlak for
Heart Dl-•" H1alth Fair, praunted by the Nuralng
Alalatant clan on Thursday. According to Margla
Blake, the program'a teachar, the goal of .t he fair waa
to preaent Information about heart dlsaa. . 1nd llow to
reduce the rlaka. Partlclpanta · received Information
about how to alter thalr· ur,swlaa In order to redilce
!he rlak of developing hHrt·related dluasei. The htlr
Included blood cholasterol, blood prauura and blood
augar acraenlnga, 1nt1-1moklng displays, nutritions!
counullng and . .mplea of h•rt-healthy foods, and
uv.ral other educational dlaplaye. Abova, Lea Ann
Cunningham end !(Iran Clark of '\Iitie! ans Mamorlal
Hoapltal are pictured performing blood choleatarol .
acraenlnga for Lester Manual and Tim Slmpaon, llelga
High School teachers. At left, nuralng studant Lacy 1
Banka Ia aeen axplalnlng atran control tec:hnlquea to ·
Amanda Coates, Kim Plerc~ u.. Bias and Jt.nny
Mayle. VMH •nd Holzer Med~l Center aHiated with
tha program.

·'

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·-

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-A
__,:;;.

"

~
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