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                  <text>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

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~o .

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lfllllltJ.

~-...

'

~~ --

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With The Best
From

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

Meigs County's

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• Vegetable Plants • Herbs • Potting Soils • Creeping Phlox
• Sprays &amp; ~usts • Garden Seed • Much More!

***GIVEAWAY

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Stop in and register to win a HANGING BASKET... Lots of
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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.

'

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/

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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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:Commentary

. PegeA2

•

The Daily Sentinel Koop .s tresses health care for kids
'Esta68sfutf illl948

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740 11112·21H • Fax: 11112-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc,
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
DIANE HILL

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

o..............

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•- ,..,._ .,, 0No 4DII; -, FAX ID 7.fO..a..Zf67.

~Do we thrive today

.b y a new set of rules?
lly JOHN CUNN.IFF
.
.,.,. Bueln- Analy..
• NEW YORK (AP)- It was only a short while ago that the economic
iworld was much, much different from what it is today. In fact, no more than
perhaps five or six years ago.
·
lt'was all very understandable too. Everyone knew that inflation
was a constant threat
~ KIOS Sf'IJP.IIIE.l&gt; WEAF.t"'EI
and .that there was a
natural level of unem·
fLUE. JEA~S, 8e.~SE 1\\EIIC
ployment, perhaps 6
tAAENTS WOftE. ~. ~ow
peicent. below which
L£-fs SEE W.V.T AAf'f'E"'~· inflation would ignite
due to labor shortages.
\
Federal Reserve chief
Alan Greenspan . was
among. thoSe who worried most about· the
inflation threat. He and
insightful economists
.at. big·name schools
could even explain the
threat by means of
equations.
·
·
It went like this:
You can push the job·.
less rate to a level
beyond which it just

.Berry's World

..

----

&lt;;)cr.·

By J8Ck Ander8011
•nd J•n Moller
Seven years after Bill
Clinton rode to office on a
promise of universal health
care. more Americans than
ever are without insurance.
One big reason, of course, is
politics: Elected officials .
love handing out favors, but they can 'I stand tak·
ing anything away from the voters who put them
in office.
And in the case of health-care reform, the poi·
son pill that holds up everything is "rati911ing."
Giving basic health benefits to the underscrved
inevitably means taking choices away from some·
one else.
So says Dr. C. Everett Koop, the former sur·
geen general of the United States, who, at 82, has
lost none of his fervor, wit, plain-speaking or cru·
sading spirit.
·
That was evident .in an interview with our
associate Dale Van Alta. after a speech the good
doctor gave in California.
Even though he was surgeon general during
the conservative Reagan administration from
1981 to 1989, Dr. Koop is a
staunch advocate of increased gov·
ernment assistance for the 40 mil·
lion· plus Americans who lack
'
health insurance.
Included in that figure are mil·
lions of children, who reiiJain of
particular interest to a man whose
specialty · was once pedjatric
surgery. He hlls lauded Clinton·
administration efforts to shore up
children's' medical care, but
remains concerned that too many
kids are still falling through cracks
in the system. ·
One of his campaigns has been
"to marry health-care education
and pre·SChOOI children."
. This became a focus, he
explained, after seeing a statistic
years ago that startled him. "Thir·
ty·three percent of kids who go to .
kindergarten do not know what the
teacher means when she says;
'Let's form a circle.' Nor do they
· know their left from their right
hand, or. ied from green. Most of
those children were too sick to
Jearn:
"And so it goes back to one of
the ethical questions about health.

today In History

By Jan Shoalaa .
"Listening to a Ricky Martin CD is like buy·
ing a soda at the movi.es .. You .ask for (he small,
but when the guy behind the counter says, 'Hey,
the medium is only a quarter more,' you realize
how thirsty you are. So you ·go for it. Then the
guy says, 'How about the jumbo?' and you keep
tradin~ up until you end up with a vat of soda
large enough to have an undertow. That drink is
Ricky Martin. He Iures you with his charisma. his
outsize energy,... and soon enough ... oops, you've
got a big ole cup of Ricky in your hands .... " ..
TIME Magazine, May· 10, 1999
Watching Britney Spears prance on the stage
is like watching a ham sandwich in the making.
Her dancers are like the surly guys · behind the
counter who slap the ingredients together and
charge you:extra for cheese. The music is like the
slicer, which cuts everything just as thin or as
thick as you like it. Slap on the mayonna.ise of
stage presence, and by golly, you've got yourself
a Britney on rye.
What about the Spice 'Girls? Well, they're
more like a Caesar Salad, tossed together by professional hands. They're crispy leaves of lettuce,
lightly .seasoned, with just a sprinkling of talent,
aka croutons.
TLC? They're a BLT, as far as we're con·
cerned' Tasty, ~utritious, and toasted to perfection! Monica? Brandy? Madonna? Tasty bonbons
of perfection! Natalie lmbruglia is a seafood sam·

: ·• ToCiay is Friday, May 7,the 127th day of 1999. There are 238 days left in

.

Q&amp;n_O!I_!f~]~·187:J

•

.

pier from Down Under! .Yum, like a bird, but we're willing to look at the food
mate! And the oakish aftertaste you want to. devour, and tell you whether you
of Lauryn Hill makes us hip- want to eat it or not. .
hop happy. Try some now!
Trust us, Even though our idea of a good time
This week's specials include is listening to "Send in the Clowns" over and
the BackStreet Boys, N Synch over again, while eating Chinese take-out, we can
and 98 Degrees, together at recommend some excellent rap music to you. It's
last in orie bitc;·sized package. black! It's angry in an acceptable way! And .. big
Are the Rolling Stones just plus .. it won't interfere with your digestion.
So sit back, relax and enjoy our reviews. For
gray meat under red lights, or
the finest grade of good Eng· your convenience, our prose styles · are inter·
·
·
lish beef? Look to us to find out. We can tell you changeable!
which entertainers are salty, and whic~ are sugar
Think of us as salt-free popeorn with a butterfree. We'll cram "Star Wars" down your throat substitute you'd·almost swear wa5 the real· thing:
until you can't stand the taste any more, even Think of us as decaffeinated espresso. Because·
before 'the movie has opened. That's what we do. we know you like your entertainment the way you
We're here for you.
· like your coffee .. on the go and in a cardboar.d
Television is an all·you·can-eat 24-hour buffet, cup. It's no good cold!
movies are a come-as-you-are barbecue, and the
Consume it now before it goes away!
theater is a nice breast of duck, washed down with
Yes, come with us on a gluttonous expedition.
Merlot. Radio? A nutritious snack that leaves you Pamper yourself, Wc'lllet you devour everything·
in sight, and al't it wlll cost you' 'is a little bit of
wanting more!
· The Internet? Whoa! Don't get us started! It's time and .a little slice of your disposable income.
·
·
the biggest threat the world has ever known, and And the beauty part
the umpteenth wonder of the 'world, all wrapped
An hour from now you'll be hungry again!
up in a virtual tortilla! And who's your waiter? We
Sit down, tic on the feed bag, then get out.
are. We· re the media.
Because here in the media, the customer comes
Nope, we don't cook. We don't even eat much, first.
We spend most of our time glanCing sideways at
And thank you for using The Media. We chew, .
so
you
won't have to. ·
·
'
major cultural events, applying the same bemused
attitude to opera and country singers alike. We eat C~yrlght1008 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. '

_ __.__ _ _ Editorial opinions;_ ____. _ _
Akron Beacon Journal, April 29
A step forward

, Inc.

\.. ~~
.... ~ ~ .. ~
')

Sumy Pl. CloUcty

Showers

T.a~

puts

~ -

-~
A8ln

*.·.·

~

on p

for death of her infant daughter
CI.EVEU\ND{AP)-Ateen·age
girl who admitted burying her dead
newborn in a park last summer- has
been put on Jllcl!ation and ordered to
perform community service.
The !?,year-old from suburban
Rocky River sobbed in her mother's
arms Thursday after CuyahOga Coun·
ty Juvenile Court Judge Peter Sikora
spared her a sentence in a state juve·
nile center.
· She pleaded guilty last month to
delinquency by reason of involuntary
manslaughter, en9angering children
and abuse of a corpse.

The Daily Sentinel
(IJSPS 213-NI)

C-Hill' 11-Pft' Holdlllp,ID&lt;. .
Publiatied every ·afternoon. Mondly through
Fiiday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohto V.lley Publilhing Company. Second clas~
II Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
• The Alloc~tod Preu and tbe Ohio ·

C"..:r:.:"'id

"-per Allociallon. .

SUBSCRimON RATES

The Ironton Tribune, April 28

One W..k ..... ,...........................$2.00

The (Findlay) (:ourier, April30

Signs should have been taken seriously

•

Cloudy

By Canitr cw Motor Route

free lunch

•

.Jii&amp;... . ,

The record high temperature for this date at the Colurpbus weather sta·
was 87 degrees in 1936. The record low temperature was 31 degrees
in 1974. Sunset will be at 8:31 p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be. at 6:24 a.m.
Weather forecast:
.
Tonight. .. A chance of showers until nlidnight, otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the .lower 50s. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent. ·
·
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Hig~s in the mid 70s.
Saturday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Exteaded forecast:
Sunday...Partly'cloudy. Highs in the mid 70s.
.
·
Moriday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the upper
70s.
Tuesday... Partly 'cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 50s and
in the mid 70s.

•

Southern Senior Play
The Southern High School Senior Play, "Eastmont Evermore", will be
held tonight at 7, at the· high school in Racine . The play was written by
students in the drama class.

lmmunlzatiO!JS offered

The Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine's Childhood
Immunization Program (CHIP), a mobile health program, will provide
free immunizations for all area children fro~ birth through 18 years of
age on May 21 from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Racine Volunteer Fire Department

One lllomh ............................... l8.70

Richard E. Proffitt, 46, Belpre, died Thursday, May 6, 1999, at his resi·
dence.
•
·
He was born at Great Bend and retired from Stork Baking Co., Parkers,
burg. W.Va., after 17 years of service. He was a member of Belpre High
School Athletic and Band ·Boosters, a member of the Reorganized.Church of
Latter Day Saints, attended Belpre Heights United Methodist Church and
was a daily volunteer at Harmar Place Nursing Home.
.
He is survived !Jy his wife of23 years, Dianna Proffitt of Belpre; a daugh·
ter, Elizabeth Ann Proffitt of Belpre; a brother, Robert K. "Toed" Proffitt of
Little Hocking; a sister, Rebecca Ann Kaczmerek of Lithopolis; and his
mother, Elizabeth "Faye" Proffitt of Belpre.
·
He was preceded in death by his father, Robert W. Proffitt.
Services will be Saturday, I ·p.m . at Leavitt Funeral Home, Belpre, with
the Rev. Paul McGuire officiating. Burial will be in Rockland Cemetery.
Friends may call today, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. and Saturday, 12·1 p.m. at the
funeral home.
.
•
Memorial contributions may be made to the Belpre High School Athlet·
ic and Band Boosters, Stone Road, Belpre OH 45714.

Rev. Kenneth ·S. Smith .
Rev. Kenneth S. Smith, 77, Rock Run Road, Coolville, died Thursday,
May 6, 1999, at Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born Dec. 17, 1921, at Port Homer, son of the late Joe and Emma
Shultz Smith. He was a member of the Carpenters Local in Parkersburg, an
Army veteran of World War II, a member of the Faith Chapel Church in
Coolville, and a former pastor in the Reedsville area.
He is survived by his wife of 58 years, Jean Bowman Smith; three sons
and daughters-in-law, Thomas and Loretta Smith of Reedsville, Delbert and
Sherlin Smith of Hockingport, and James and Charlotte Smith of Coolville;
a daughter and son-in-law, Patty a·nd Arden Stewart of Coolville; 13.grand·
children and 17 great-grandchildren; a sister, Joann Carpenter of East Liver·
pool.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. .
He was preceded in death by his parents; a son Kenneth E. Smith; two
brothers, Leo and Clinton Smith; a sister, Betty Smith.
Services will be held Sunday, 3 p.m. at the White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Dan Tucker officiating. Burial .will follow in Stew·
art Cemetery, Hockingport.
Friends may ·call Saturday, 2·4 and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

.Police try to head off party tr.o uble
AKRON, Ohio (AP) ·- Police are expected to celebrate tonight in
officers have been warning Univer· the Spicertown area, a residential
sity of Akron students to either keep area just south of campus, where
their annual May party spree under many students live.
Police and university officials
control or face jail.
The police visits to more than hope to avoid the May mayhem of
300 residences south of..campus are past years when . revelers threw
part of an effort to head off a repeat rocks .and set fires.
of past off-campus May parties that
Police also again hope for rain,
turned into riots.
which subdued the celebrations last
The parties mark the end of year and in 1997, when there was no
classes before final exams. '
rioting . .
"We're going to have a small
The reason for the in-person vis·
party, nothing major," student Brad its is. "to let them know we mean
Ternes, 23, told Sgt. Cindy Christ· business and to get to know the peo·
man and officer Stephanie Hollis pie," Hollis said.
.
when they stopped by his house this
If the parties get out of hand, the
week.
·
· students "may be more coope~tive
Thousands ofstudents and .oihers . because they know us," she said:

Sikora said therapy and communi·
ty servic;e would do more for the girl
than·being kept in state detention.
. He said that if s~e violates probil·
lion or !loesn 'I comple.te I ,040 hours
of community service before she is
21, she would have to serve a one·
year sentence in ~ state youth institu· ·
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
lion.
gency
Medical Service recorded
"The county prosecutor's office is
seven
calls
for assistance Thursday.
disappointed with the court'~ disposi·
Units
responding
included:
lion of this case," said Douglas S.
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
Weiner, chief of the criminal division
4:11 a.m., Overbrool&lt; Nursing
in the county . prosecutor's office.
Center, Middleport, Betnada Boney,
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
8:59 a.m .. state Route 338,
Vetetaos Memorial
Racine, Crystal Turley, VMH;
Thursday admissions - Myrtl~ . 8:08 p.m., Seventh Street, Mid·
Haning, Pomeroy.
·
:~~~· Robert Davis, treated at the .
Thursday discharges - none.
Holzer Medial Center
RACINE
Discharges May 6 - Sybi I
5:40 p.m., volunteer fire depart·
Miller, James Knight, Charles ment and squad to state Route 338,
Albright, Bobby Reavis, ~rs. automobile fire, Pam Richards
• Robert Allen and son, Patricia owner, no injuries reported.
Helms, Darlene Carter.
Rtrri..AND
Birth - Mr. and Mrs: John
6:44 a.m.; Beech Grove Road, .
Haggy, 8on, Middleport.
Frank Molden, VMH. Central Dis·
{Published with permission)
patch squad assisted;

in;Racine.

Hospital news

.

The program also offers the Hepatitis B vaccine free of charge to all
children through age 18. The vaccine is a three-shot series over a .mini· ·
mum of six months. The child's previous shot records should be provid· ·

.

~·

Immunization clinic

·

~

Auxiliary to meet

Th.e Ladies Auxiliary VFW ~53 will have a bake sa l~ Saturday morn·
ing at Quality Furniture in Tuppers Plains, 8:30 a.m.
·
:

..

PTO sets session

Portland PTO will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the school. Letart ElemelJ·.
tary parents are invited.·

Commission to address minori
community's health ·problems .
TOLEDO(AP)-Anewcommis· than twice the l'ate of that of white$
sion aimed at improving minorities' (7.3).
•
heallh is ready to look beyond statis·
- The county cancer rate amons
tics as it attempts lo find programs blacks is 200 per 100,000 death~
that can make a difference.
compared to 140.9 per 100,QOO for
The Mayor's Commission on · whites. The death rate for blacks wit&amp;
Minority Health is focused on diabetes is 29.4 per 100,000 death~
improving health-eare access for the which .is higher than both the rate for
city's blacks, Latinos and other whites (13.3) and the slate average
~~~

(!~.

The cbmmission is targeting six
. health issue.s: infant mortality, cancer, .
· cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV
. infections/AIDS, and immunizations.
Doni Miller and Mary Gregory,
co-chairs of the commission, said new
. programs will be developed as need·
ed to fill the gap not provided by
existing programs.
The Toledo Minority Health
Strategic Plan, unveiled Thursday,
cited statistics highlighting some dis·
parities between whites and minori·
ties.
Among the statistics:
- ·The infant inortalily rate of
blacks in Lucas County (15 .7) is more

.

.

· SINGLE COPY PRICE

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Subecribers 110t desirin&amp; to pay the carrier may
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1 three, ai• or 12 momh buia. Credit will be

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perw~itled

In •reu

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Publisher reserve~. llle ript to adj~ n.tes dur·
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chlnpo may ·be lmptemenled by cllanatnatlle
duration of the aabacriJJ'ion.

MAIL SUBSCRimON
llllideMelpc-lf

I J W..U. ......................... S27.JO
Z6 - b ..................... :..... .$53.8Z
Sl llloeu .............:...........SI05.3&lt;5
-~M

.... c-,

ll W..b ......................... .Sl9.25

u -u...........................m.68
ll w..u ......,................. Jt09.7l

Stocks
Am Ela Po-r .....................:41 );o
Akzo ...................................... 47~
Amr'J'ech ............................... 66/Aah 011 .................................. 42 ~
AT&amp;T .....,.................................61
Bank One .... :........................597/w
Bob.Even• ........................... ~ 18,,
Borg-Warn• .........................57'1.
Broughton ............................. 15'4

THE MATRIX (A)
7:00 &amp; 1:30 DAILY
MATINEES 8AT/8UN I :00 &amp; 3:30
NO PASSES, NO 8ARGAIII NIGHT

THE MUMMY (PQ13)
7:00 &amp; 1:30 DAILY .

NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 11:20 DAILY
MATINEES BAT/SUN I :00 &amp; 3:20

Landa End .......... :.:...............39'1.

Con'ectlon Polley

_.,.... It ' " lulow ef •• .,.,..r In 1

one Vel..y.............................3&amp;\

. ..• .,• ..tl liM - - •• (740) 992-

cl!eck ,_ tar.. .. o..S ..~~.o .... . -.tr warnalld.
21!5. Wo wll

N-• Depertmente

J11e •ala 1110bor lo !192-21!5. Dt..,n.
MHt tXtalllell 81'C:

.

GeMIOI M .....................:.......ExL 1101

New•··················-··········
...........or.EIIL
,...Ext. 1102
.
1106
Ol~r~rvtc•

..

Advtrtloto, .............:...................EsL 1104
Clrnladoo ......:......:....................ExL 1103
Ca.ffted _, ................................ Ext. 1100

Family Practice, Lab, and X-Ray
Have .Extended Hours Past6:00 PM

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday

Chanm Shpi .................:..........3'7.
City Holding ............................ 27
Faderel Mogul ....................... 46'.1
Gannatt.................................72'!.
Kmart .......................................17
Krogt:r ...................,...............52'"

Ltd .........................................48'0ak Hill Flnl .......................... 18~

.

Turbo 22000

Champion ...............................&amp;~•

Reader Servtces
Oar ..11 _ , . II Ill slorln lo lo be

,,,,,.,, lligh ,,.,,,.
· 1t~nning B•tl
Most Advanced Tanning

To ..chedule an appointment or
for more details, call

992·0060.

ova ............,..........................42'1.

Peoplea .............................. ~. 28'·
Pram Flnt ............................... 14'A.
Roc,kwell ............................... sst,~.
RDJB,heii ..........................~ .... &amp;O-,_
S.ra....................................48'ShoMy'a ............................... 2'FirttStar .: ............................. 29/.Wancty'J ............................... 27 '!.
Worthlngton
14 ,_
. ........................
...
Stock report• are today'•
10:30 a.m. quot81 provided by
Adveet of Galllpolll.
·

__._

:Jv(otfier's q)ay Special
B~y 3 Seuions At Regular Price
l;et ·second 3 Se11sion11

112 Price

COUNTRY TANN
992·5756
'

r

.,-- In AIDS cases, blacks in Lucas
County make up 24 per 100,000
cases; Hispanics 9 of every 100,~
and whites 6 of ever.y 100,000.
•
"II was. easy to find the statistic!
showing the disparities," said M!{
Miller. chief executive officer of th'
Neighborhood Heallh Association!
'' Now we want to develop and coort
dinate programs that will specificall~
address these disparities. We 're goina
to set goals where our success can bf
measured."
,

To get a currel')t weather
report, Check. the

sentineI

;.
·-t

The MeiSs County Health Department.will offer an im~unization cli').i
icon Tuesday, 9·11 a.m. and 1·3 p.m. at the Meigs Mull1purpose Centei'
in Pomeroy. Every child must be accompanied by a parent · or le8!11
guardian with child's shot record. For more information, call the healtJll
department at 992·6626.
·

EMS logs 7 calls ·
10:44 p.m., Dexter Road, Sam
Williams, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Central Dispatch squad assisted.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS
7:27 p.m., Blake Road, Betty
McOung, Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital.
,__ _ _ _ _ _..;._..To~...,

.

One Year•.••••.•.•••..•.•••••..••••••.•••.• $104.00

The .Cincinnati Enquirer, May 3

.

-

45769.

Partners in education

Announ·c ements:

Richard E. Proffitt

~

: Today'a Highlight in HistOry:
·
: On May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Aflied
!taclquarters in Rheims, France, to take effet:t the following day, ending the
George Voinovich wasn't pleased last fall when Mary Boyle received
American parents have not always deserved to be kept in the loop when . .
~ropean conflict of World War II.
·
help from the Ohio Democratic Party in the form of television ads that dis· it comes to their children's schools, education and the discipline of other stu·
: · On this date:
torted his record as governor.
.
dents.
: : In 1789, the first inaugural ball was held in New York in honor of Presi· ·
Boyle opposed "soft money," the unlimited campaign contributions that
Some parents simply won 'I listen, wo11 't cooperate and do not act with the:
!iCnt and Mrs. George .Washington.
. ·
·corporations, unions and wealthy individuals give to political parties, sup· discretion that is necessary.
.
·
· : In 1847, the American Medical Association was founded in Philadelphia. posedly for party-building purpose5. Yet soft money fueled the party ad. .
So, it is no wonder that most school d~stricts want to keep information·
, • In 1915, nearly 1,200 people died when a German torpedo sank the
Candidate Voinovich left the strong impression that as a senator, he would about problem.s to·themselves as long as pdssible.
·
:
Biitilh liner l..usitania off the Irish coast.
·
.
support effortS to close the soft-money loophole that allows parties to route
But it is tinie to rethink that policy.
.
· ·
: : In 1939, Germany and Italy announced a military and political alliance money indirectly into the coffers of campaigns. He will soon get the chance
Silence just won'rwork anymore.
.
,
·
known as the Rome-Berlin Axis.
· ·
· to prove the impression true:
.
If the events .!lf Littleton, Colo., have taught us anything, it would proba·
. · In 1941, Glenn Miller and His Orchestra recorded "Chattanooga Choo
In th~ Senate, John McCain, an Arizona Republican, and Russell Fein· bly be that communication is the key fo helping our children. .
:
Otoo" for RCA Victor.
gold, a Wisconsin Democrat, have revived their proposal to ban unlimited · If we are going to ·COnquer what is ailing our children, we have to work·
: : In 1954, the 55-day Battle .of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam ended with Viet· 8oft-money contributions. A similar bill, proposed by Christopher Shays, a
together. Schools have to make sure parents know as much as possible as:
ilamese insurgents overrunning French forces.
Connecticut Republican, and Martin Meehan, a Massachusetts Democrit, quickly as possible, and parents have to be prepared to be partners·in their:
; In 1975, President Ford formally declared an end to the "Vietnam era." has resurfaced in the House.
child's education.
In Ho Chi Minh Oty, formerly Saigon, the Viet Cong staged a rally to cele·
Neither McCain-Feingold nor Shays-Meehan is perfect. Neither is a
linte their takeover.
·
.
panacea for whar ails the financing of ~arnpaigns : Each would amount to a
: In 1984, a $180 million out-of-court settlement w.S announced in the step forward.
r
~o
~Agent Orange" class-action suit brought by Vietnam veterans who charged·
ijtey'd IUffered injury from exposure to the defoliant.
The state giveth, the state taketh away, then the state changeth itS mind·
· In '!992, tile space shuttle Endeavour blasted off on its maiden voyage.
and saith that, yea, verily, it just may giveth back.
:
, : Ten years ago: Both sides claimed victory in Panama's national elections,
Ohio Ja_.\makers now say taxpayers- many of whom 'vote '-may get a:
with the opposition also charging a pattern of fraud.
.
.
tax cut next year, after all. ·
; Five years ago: Norway's most famous painting. "The Scream," by
Nothing makes complete ~ensc about why two young men in Littleton,
House Republicans submitted a state budget plan that dOesn't devote· the·
ijdvard Munch, was recovered .almost three months after it was stolen from Colo., in what should have been the best days of their lives would slaughter entire budget surplus to school construction and cofl)puters..
.
en Olio mu~eum. Oo For Gin won the 120th J{e~tucky Derby.
.
12 high school classmates, a teacher and then kill themselves.
· That plan defies Gov. Bob Taf~ who early this year announced that he;
In the attempts so far to understand, a couple of patterns are emerging wanted the whol~ surplus to go to schools, in an effort to satisfy court orders·
: One year ago: The parent company of. MerCedes-Benz agreed to buy
.on public educatio.n fundi•!!·
.
·
·
Chryaler Corp. for more than $37 billion. Londoners voted overwhelmingly which make as mu.ch sense as anything.
.
.
·
One is that we may have cues of mental illness.
Their challenge is good news for Ohio taxpayers, who seem overtaxed
,0 elect their own mayor for tile first time in history. The mayoral election
And the other pattern, on~ that several commen!"tors have discussed, is compared to other states.
Wi1118ke place in May 2000. · .
.
.
. • Tbclay'1 Birlhclay.: Actor Darnen McGavin is 77. Singer Teresa Brewer.is the aloneness, separateness, and sense of not belongmg, not ·loved, that these
For proof, look to New Hampshire, which last week managed to craft a
plan
to fund schools, even though the state still imposes no state income tax
611. Senate Budget chairman Pete Domenici, R·N.M., is 67. Football Hall· children felt.
.
.
·
or
sales
tax.
·
Fortunately, mental illness can .be detected ear~y in mosi people if those
Of-farner Johl)ny Unital is 66. Singer Jimmy Ruffin is 60. Singer Johnny
New Hampshire's motto, of course, remains "Live Free or Die." Ohio's
loftellrD II 60. Actress Robin Strasser is 54. Singer-songwriter Bill Danoff is around them are sensitive to thetr emotional pam. There were plenty of
·
warning signs that these young people had problems, and in hindsight we must be "Hey, There's No Free Lunch.''
53. NBC new~man 11m RliSsert is 49. Actor Robert Hegycs is 48.
.
..

'

•

~·

,..._
a. Send addreu c:orrec:tions 10 1be
Daily S1!11-tiN!I, 111 Coort St., Pomeroy, OhiQ

now know that the signs should have been taken more seriously.

Pomeroy residents of Spring Avenue and Fisher Street from the junction of Rock Street are under a water boil advisory until further notice fol·
lowing the repair and replacement of waterlines and the repair of a slip.
That section of road wiU be closed and reopen sometime in the middle of
ne~t week. Traffic is being rerouted by way of Fisher Street and Wolfe
Drive.

David R. Murphy, 56, Reedsville,.died Thursday, May 6, 1999, at work
in Little Hocking.
He was born July 2, 1942, in Glouster, son of Hv;el Winn Murphy of
Reedsville and the late Mavine Murphy. He was a machine operator for the
Thermo(orm Plastics Inc. plant in Little Hocking.
.
He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Mark and Dara Murphy of .
Northville, Mich;; three brothers and ~isters-in-law, Edward and Loretta
Murphy of Tuppers Plains. Gary and Roberta Murphy, and Robert and Sina
Murphy, all of Reedsville; a sister an&lt;l brother-in-law, Marty and Ronald
Williams of Coolville; several nieces.and nephews.
·
He was preceded in death by one brother, Martin Murphy.
Services will be held Monday, 11 a.m. at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Sharon Hausman officiating. Burial will follow in
Maplewood Cemetery, Glouster.
·
Friends may call Sunday, 5·8 p.m. at the funeral home.

Saturday, May 8

By The A•oc:letad Pr••
The National Weather Service say~ the threat of showers will persist
into the weekend in Ohio.
A low pressure system centered in Wisconsin this morning will slowly
push eastward across the upper Great Lakes tonight and Saturday.
Some moisture associated with the low will enter the state, as· will a
ltrout!h approaching from the west. This will produce scattered showers or
th~lnd&lt;erStornts, especially· across the north. Lows tonight will be around
with highs Saturday in the upper 60s and lower 70s under partly to
mostly cloudy skies.
A cold front which produced damaging winds in parts of the state
r~~~~~:~ afternoon has pushed to the east. Some clouds and a few light
1:
lingered in the east while ski.es had cleared in the west early this
l · m1o~~~!LTemperatures were. in the low to tnid 50s.
I
· gusting hs high as 66 mph knocked down trees and power Hnes
l.ac1ross the Sl)ulhwest and central p,arts of the state.
A semi-trailer truck overturned on Interstate 75 in Shelby County, north
of Dayton. A person was injured in Warren County by a wind-propelled
.
while a roof was blown off a gre~nhouse in Fairfield County near

I AOLINITSUI'E.Ctllll

Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:

lily Tile Aeeocl..ad P-.

'lie year.

.

Boil advisory, street closing reported·

David R. Murphy

Ohio weather

Partly·cloudy skies forecast
for region through weekend

A',..,. ·_ t~:~~~:fe~~E~~~ c. onsume. it now. before it ·goes away!
...........

live workers hold jobs,
and skilled workers
.
demand more money.
·- As a mull, output per staff-hour slows and may even turn negative. Costs
:tlic and so do pri~. Rising prices lead to higher interest rates. And then to
la)lofti. And then recession.
. : '' That was then. Not today. Today, we have low. unemployment, low costs,
otpw prices and no great threat of inflation or recession. And, you might add,
ping ~isrespect for the old notions.
·
·
- - Do these curious commandments from the early 1990s that were suppoled to be good for all time- do they apply anymore?
. Ah, that's the question.- Really, lots of questions. For example, can we
mlintain a savinga rate below 5 percent without running into trouble? Well,
consider: We now have a zero rate, Worse, below zero.
. · Below zero means we not only spend our paychecks, but borrow to spend
more. And we defend the new way; learned theses explain that we know
w~'ll earn more next year so why not spend it today?
Not long ago we believed that federal budget deficits were perhaps eter·
nil. We had reason to .think so after 25 straight years that the government ·
apent more than its revenues. But now we have surpluses.
; What happened? Lots of ex-post facto explanations are offered, but
,.tm01t noone anticipated surpluses e.ven.a year before they arrived. And the
~ns why they developed are still disputed.
· · .
· · The trade imbalance continues. A few years ago we were warned that
(mbalancca could bring down the economy. Now, creative academics defend
!Jie swell of cheaper imports as anti-inflationary.
~ So mUch has changed in a few years. Economic theory, financial behav·
lOr, shopping habits, w()rkplace goals, the stock market, communications,
ente!lainment, ool!ege courses, sports, values.....
·
; Okay, economists, you· who were so quick and smart with your answers
. just a decade ago: Let's see you mold this into one credible, .understandable
Oteory that will last into the new millennium.
·
• . Or at least tell us: Are we living well with reality? Is our behavior aber·
iant? Arc the old rules of the game about to.come down on our heads with a
of&lt;allop that will send us back to the past?

.

· care. People say, 'How much health care is all . Koop won't say how ·· or 1f a~ all ··.those
right?' If we demand the kids have compulsory resources should be all~ated. That s the kmd ~r.
education then 1 think you've got to demand that decision that commumt1es must ~each on lh~lr ·
they have' enough health care to be able to learn own. Nor is it likely to happen any lime ~n; w.'th
what they're taught. And we don't have that a healthy economy, government has.no mcenhve
across he board."
to limit health care to the elderly. It'~ »:hen ll_le
He knows it's controversial to suggest that the ectinomy nosedives that talks of rationmg Will
elderly are hogging. health-care dollars at the reappear in the. politicall!ialogue.
. .
expense 'Of the young. But it's a subject that must .
Yet K~p has stron~ pe,r;;onal !eservat1ons .
be discussed if the system's finite resources are about adoptmg.a system 1n whtch patients_ are left
ever to benefit the largest possible cross-section. · with few choices when they rea~h a ~e~n age.
"You have to make the COfTlparison," he says,
"In 1986, I woke up quadnpleg1c tn a hotel
of taxpayer money spent on older Americans ver· bed in San Antonio," he told us. "I was flown by
sus children. "I think it has to be talked about, but the Air Force bac~ to Beth.esda. ~ was operated
it tends to get shoved under the rug."
upon. Had I been In the Umted Kingdom whe.n I
Speaking before groups of oWer Americans; had that quadriplegia, I was too old for that kind
Dr. Koop said he has found many who arc quite of expensive and risky spine ~nd spi~al c~ord
concerned about the disproportionate share of tlie surgery, and I would either be still quadnpleg1c or
government-assisted medical pie that is going to dead. .
·
· them instead of children.
"Yet my best years, as y.our surgeon general,
••They all fcel .that .children are getting a bad were after that surgery. The ~hings that I did that
. shake, and that some of the money that's going .to people approved of most, I d1d after I ~as ~eated
the care of older people should go to-them," l(oop and recovered. So I am not one who.'• mchncd to
said. "We're a country that gives marvelous lip 'say, 'He's too old, and the sur~ery's too ex~n­
service to children, and we do very little about sive. Therefore, just don't do 11.' The questiOn
it."
comes down, 'Who makes the decision?"'
·

Local briets:

Death Notices

Friday, M•Y 7, 1'81111

Hober Meigs Clinic ·
88 Eaar Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-0060

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Page4
Friday, May 7, 1991!,.

Eastern ·earns 13-9 .victory over Miller

some more and I hnd to look for 1hc

"(all and I was ahlc lu make the
catch."
Colon (4- 1) d1dn 't h.tvc hiS best
stuff, hut the 23-ycm -old llght -handcr worked both Sides nl the plate
and sculcd down after Ius throw m11
led to three Seattle run s tn the

th1rd . He allowed four runs and srx

counts."

luts m s1x rnnings.
" He 's been battling a hhster on
his finger," Alomar sa1d. "B ut I
thought he spotted hos fa stball real
well and that other than hanging that
p1tch to Gnffey he had a good out-

Alomar hit his third homer off
rookie Enc Weaver (0-1 ), who d1dn 't
appear to he pleased when Seattle
manager Lou Pinoelta summoned
htm from the bullpen after on ly a few
warmup tosses
It 's not that Weaver was mad , he
said he d1dn't know he was supposed

Ing ~··

Moyer took a 4-3 lead mto the
bottom of the six th but gave up a

By JAIME ARON
IRVING, Texas (AP) -. Mark
Tuinci was headed home to Hawaii,
hopmg to teach youngsters the same
s~ill s that · helped htm become a
three -ttme Super Bowl champion
with the Dallas Cowboys
A meeting with Kale Ane, the
football coach at Punahou School in
.Honolulu, was scheduled for today
Ane was going to offer Toinei a JOb
as an assistant coac h and Toinei told
friends he was gomg to take it.
. But early Thursday, tragedy
s~ck. A fnend found Tomei unconscious m a car at his home and
immediately called for help. By the
time paramedics arrived, it was too
late. The 39-year-old Tuineo was
d.e~d.

Saunders ol Eleanur, W Va sent hi s
1968 GTX to voctory over Wayne
Adkins of Syracuse and hts 1972
Demon .
.
In the Pro DIVIston, Jeff Cox of
Coolville used hi s 1994 Lumina to
defeat Roger Womack of St. Albans,
W.Va. and hts 1967·Camaro.
Andy Baer of Racme recorded the
first hole-tn-one of

Baseball

Federal Hocking
tallies 14-10 bas·e ball
victory over Southern

Chll'11gu I I·•P·•m 2·1 l
2-1 ) 105 p 111

:AL standings

M io iJi rc,lf

Ho5 r

to:a5tem Division

.fum

ll:

·New York
Tampa Bay
"Toronto ,
' Bosror1

w.

L

lA

661

9

"" "14
14

10

500

.1'
4' .

4AI

5

llO

11

"

Untral llt\ision
·CLEVELAND

" ' . 500
1'
""
,.

•Chicago
'Oclrmt
:Kansas C11y
. Mmnesota

104

]1

]1

5' .

14
II
II

-•Te:..as

We~un

1Jakltmd

·se:mle .
:1\nahe1m

483
41'
J9J

11

Division
15 I 1
, I ~ ll

b

2 IJ

.11

CfNCINNAfl fNc.t,!!k

Baseball

Arl,mta tGI:tvme 1- ' ) al S~11 D1cgo !Ashby .-. 11
IO Oii rm
Flondn {Herna ndc7. I ~~ .tt LosAn!!elc~ (lhnwn
2 21 10 101110
•

Sunday's gaml's
t'h!utgo at CINCINNATI I IS p m
Pm ~burgh .11 Sr Lo1.11s 2 10 p m
Monfre:• I ~11 Houston, 2 J:'i p 111
l'hil.•dclphm ill Culomdo, ) .OS p m
New York at Anzqr~a , 4 OS p m
Allantu ar San D1ego, 4 OS p m
Mrl wnukee 01 San·Francisco. 4 05 p m
Aonda at Los Angeles, 4 10 p m

'-0)

NEW YORK METS' NamW Paul Tashen grn·

em I mana~t r of Por1 St l.ut;le of tht' Flll!'tda Stale
l...taguc
'

Football

Basketball

) ·Ol pm

Kansas CHy (1\Pf!•er 2 2) at Mmnc~ota IM1h011 0-

,.,

Anaheam (Btkher 1-2) ar Boston (Wakdield l-

Saturday '• games

Jlpm

(Haynes I 4) a1 Chtcago (Snyder 4-1),

J. Oakland

?u.5pm
~ Kansas Cuy (Rolado 1· 1) 11t M•nnesota (Perkins
I!" I). 8.05 p m

lOr m
Mumesora a! San Antnnlo , l p m
Houslon at L A !..allen 5 "0 p n1

r::·-··· ...........................................................
~

·

Ballnnore at Detroit I 05 p m
Seanle' at New York I 35 p m
Oakland at Ch1cago, 2 05 p m
Kansas Cuy ut Mtnotsota, 2 05 p m
Teu1 at ToJOmo. 8:05pm

NL standings
•

Eastun Dhilskm

ll: I.

19
11
14
8

New York .
Phlladelph•a ...
Monrre ol

Florida

6

'
"
22
II

18

~

104
(fJ1

ll9

JO'
214

Ct-nlr•l D•viiHm
., 17 10
. '· 15 12
, ll 12
......... 14 I\
I) 14
. ...
. II 15

520
519
4HI
421

Wttttrn Dlvl1inn
S11n FrMCIJCO .. .
17 12

586

L
HOUston

it. I...Qull
Ch1cago
Pimbur!h
Mllwau -=~
pNCINNATI

. , ..

lOs A.111eles.
Colorudo .
~411 Diego

6~

556

. 16 12 .571
: J:li lol .517

Anzona .

II 1.1
.. .10 17

.

Thursday's scorr
Pitrsbursh ll, St. Louis .1 •

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'

: : The deadline for filing the Middleport
: ' Village Income Return is passed!
: ' · If you are a Middleport RESIDENT
•
!.ill : • With earned income and have not filed
2': : • the retur'n
•
10''
11 '
: • YOU MUST DO SO IMMEDIATELY.
' •• To avoid legal action and further
2. '
'
' charges contact the
l
4
S'
INCOME TAX OFFICE
'
992-2827
2
• File your return and pay the taxes due.
.1
6
•
: ' Plus the p~nalty and interest.

~

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•

•

• AMIFM Stereo
• Trilctlon Control
• Nicely Equipped!

~1,950*

Bra!J(I New 1999
Pontiac Sunflre SE Coupe

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakea

..

''

.

• Dual Alrbags
• Rur Spoiler
• wen Equipped!

50-foot shot
"Thornton JUmps on the air, it hits
his stick and goes on the net. That can
go in any direction, " Buffalo coach
Lindy Ruff sa1d.
Woolley made the score 3-2 at
9.37 of the thnd penod with a 50. fo01 shot, and Buffalo kept the pressure on the rest of the way. But with
Hasek out for an extra skatet,
Khnstoch scored into an empty net
with 12 seconds remaining .
"Thos was a very important game
psycholog1cally for us. to know we
can get three goals on him," Dafoe
sa1d.
Still , the Bruins learned a lesson
that could come '" handy il\ Game 2
of the best-of-seven series on
Sunday: Don't sit on a lead.
"' You can't afford to blow a game
when you're up two goals ltke that
and we were norung w1th that,"
Alhson saod.

· Boston scored on two of ols five
power plays and on two of its four
shots in the second period. And ol
faced a team that hadn ' t played a
game the prev1ous e1ght days and
was missing top goal scorer Miroslav
Satan with an ankle injury.
"It takes a wh1le for the engines
to get going," Buffalo captain Mike
Peca said.
Scoring first was significant
ag~inst a stingy goalie like Hasek.
Boston's third goal was en tical, since
ot came just 1.27 after Buffalo broke
Dafoe's shutout streak at 134 minutes, 49 seconds and sent Boston mto
the second intermission leading 3-1
"It was huge," Bourque said
But despite beatmg Hasek three
times . the Brums expect him to be
very tough on Sunday.
"He's •the hest goaltender in the
world," Thornton said . " If you' re
not thmkmg about him . I thmk

you're a little bll trazy."
Elsewhere in the NHL playoffs,
Dallas beat St. LouiS 3-0 in a
Western Conference semifinal opener.
Stars 3, Blues 0
Brett Hull and Pat Verbeek scored
their first goals of the playoffs and .
Ed Belfour stopped 23 shots as
Dallas beat visiung St. Louis.
Belfour earned hos fifth ~utout .
and 50th career playoff victory by
shutting down the Blues, JUSt off an
e"'haustwg seven-game series with
Phoenix
Verbeek. who m1ssed the firstround Edmonton seroes because of a
knee InJUry. scored a first-period goal
m hts ret urn . Hull scored 49 seconds
into the second perood and Mike
Modano scored on the th~rd for the
Stars, who had the best record in the
NHL th'is season

coroner

RBI singles to Boso and W111iams, a
Josh Davis walk, and error on Norris'
hit scored the runs. 10-8. Southern
couldn't hold the potent Lancers,
however, as Federal scored two in
the fourt!J for a 12-8 lead.
The Tornadoes pulled close at 1210 in the sixth when with one .put,
Davis and Norris had back-to-back
doubles and Wilhams and Cumings
each had sacriftce flies . Federal
negated the runs with two of their
own m the seventh.
Jason McCumber picked up ' th,e
win m relief of Brian Poston ,4;ith
Ke1lh Carroll getting the save. They
fanned three, gave up 13 hits, 10
runs, and walked five. Federal made
three errors
Ervin suffered the loss with relief
from Manuel m the th1rd . They gave
up ) 2 hits, fanned just three, walked
six, and had three errors behind
them.
Southern hillers were led by
Willtams 3-3 and Norris who was 34. Boso was 2-3, while Davis and
Baker each doubled, and Ervin,
Cummgs, and Manuel each smgled.
McCumber, Sechkar, Edwards,
and Poston each had two hits for
Federal while Carroll was 4-5.

lnplnal!!llll
Federal ..............505-200-2= 14-12-3
Southern ............ I 10-602 (): 10-13-3
Batteries
(Continued from Page 4)
WP-Poston~ McCumber (4th),
Bolyard in the f1fth. They fanned· Carroll and Edwards
eight and walked six.
·
LP-Ervin, ~anuel and Cumings.
Eastern hitters were led by Dillon
3-4 and Holter 2-3. Other hitters 'Mountain Momma
were Lyons a double, Broderick a
smgle, Coleman a single and Will 100' to run today
two singles.
West Viriginia Motor Speedway
Miller hillers were Nelson '3-3
with a tnple and home run, .Toth a will open its gates again in 1999, but
triple, Bolyard a singl'e, Lanning a only for special race events, begmsingle, Spencer a single, Billy ning with this weekend's Mountain
Lanning a single and Keller two sin· Momma 100 paying $!5,000 to win
for Super Late Models today and
gles.
Saturday.
Eastern goes to Trimble on
The event is part of the "Big
Tl!Csday, May II for the Division IV
Johnson"
Racing series and Will feasectional championship.
ture
cars
from
both the STARS and
IgOjpg 1n111i
Hav-a-Tampa
series.
Miller ............004-021 -2= 13-10-6
' The winner will be guaranteed a
Eastern .......... ...... 062-311-x=9-I 0-4
spot
, in the Din Track World
,
Batteries
Championship
which will also be run
WP-Lyons, Putman (3rd/WP), Will
at
the
speedway
in October. That race
(save) and Brodenck
pays $50,000 to win.
Lli-Nelson (L), Bolyard 5th and
Racing begins at 7 p.m. each mght
Bdlyard, Nelson
w1lh warm-ups at 6 p.m.

uniform. He was one of those guys games . Coaches later decided his
future was on offense, and by 1987
everybody loved."
Growing up in the town of he became a starter.
Tuineo eventually settled mat left
Nanakuli, the 6-foot-5, 32cJ-pound
Tuinei threw his fists more often tackle, the most vital spot on the line
than blocRs. He tried for a fresh stan because it protects the quarterback's
by going to UCLA , but two years blind side. Beginning m !989, that
quarterback was
and several fights
Aikman. A. year
later he tran slater,
Toinei's
ferred to Hawaii .
dulles included
Suspended
opening holes for
one year and
running
back
injured the next,
Emmitt Smtih.
Toinei
wasn ' t
W i I h
drafted by the
NFL. The best he
Tome• !lnchoring
the line in front
could get was an
of Aikman and
invitation
to
Smith,
the
Cowboys training
Cowboys
won
camp in 1983 ,
Super Bowls .in
along with 84
1993, '94 and
other hopefuls.
'96.
Toinet
Tuinei, who
mtssed only nine
played defensive
games
from
line in those days,
1989-96.
defied the odds
Injurie s'
and made t~e
eventually caught
team, even seeing
MAAKTUINEI
up to Tuinei,
action in
I0

slowing him in 1997 and causong the
team to release hom in Apnl 1998
He wanted to come back one more
year to set the team record for
longevity, but hos body wouldn't
allow it.
Tumeo appeared ready to turn hiS
life in a new directton by gomg
home.
" He was hopmg to return to go
back to sc hool at the (University of
Hawaii ) and 11 looked like a good
mix ," said Ane, who in past years
worked several climes in Hawaio
with Tuinei.
Bill Bates, Toine1's teammate all
15 years in Dallas, markmg the second-longest tandem in NFL history,
said Tume1 would've been a great
coach.
"He had great pride w1th me '"
saying he was a coach, too, now,"
sa1d Bates, who became a Cowboys
assistant last season. "I think he's
definitely going to be up m heaven
coaching."
Bates was one of several former
teammates who said Tuinei was like
a brother to them.

" He was one guy who Jived life
to the fullest ," Bates sa1d. "l"ve
never met a person who spoke negatively of Mark Tuineo We're all
gomg to miss hom so. so very much.'
Daryl Johnston sa1 d he saw
Tume1 sm1hng agaon on tetevosion
Thursday afternoon
" Th at's the way we want to
remember Mark," he said "That's
how he' II alway s be to me- a teammate , a friend ... someone who
helped me through times when I
needed somebody to look to, someone who showed me the right way to
do things and what.it took to be sue·
cessful1n life."
Roch Miano, who played at
Hawaii w1th Tume1 before an NFL
career with the New York Jets,
Philadelphoa Eagles and Atlanta
Falcons, said Tumei had begun
teaching others those same lessons.
"He really cared about young
people," saod Miano, who ran a
week-long clinic with Toinei in
American Samoa. "He just wanted
to•give back "

~
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JE~~y

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It's the Dealer BelJJnd The Deal
'
That Makes The BEAL Dirrerencel

1998 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

1998 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS

V-8, Auto, Climate Control, Tilt, Cruise,
All Power Equipmenl, Leather, Loaded

V-8, Auto, Air Cond., AM!FM Cass., Tilt, cruise,
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1998 FORD FISO

1997 FORD F150

V-6, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM, Bedliner, Ground Effects,
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4X4, V-8, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt,
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Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE Coupe

~

NOTICE

••
•••
•

An1Vlc1m al Boston I 05 p m

Ta'-"a Ba)' 11 CLEVELAND, I 03 p m

:t...
.AIIanta

&amp;

•

Sunday's games

0

4

•Automatic
• Air CondiiiQnlng
• Power Door Locks .

"'"""

Philadelphia •(Orlando, 12

•

~4,850*

1'
N111ional HockcJ Ltaaue •
i\11.ANTA THRASHI~RS Na~d Rob Koch
manngfr of med1:a relnt1ons
CALGARY FLAME.~ Exttnded their afrilint•on
With Johnstown of the ECHL through the 1999-2000

Sunday's games

TtlaJ {MQrJan 4-2) at Toromo (Wells 4·1), 4 OS

•

Hockey

New York at Mutn-. , 1210pm
l'bot:mx al PQrtland, J p m
sac,amcmo at Utah, 5 30 p m
lklfoh at Athmta, 8 30 p m

1'm
•

• AMIFM Caalllta
• Delay Wlpera ·
• Fully Loededl
.,.

KI\NSAS CfiY CI-IIEFS S•gned C r:.nc King to
a lhrcc-ycar comrncl. Q U11l · Lmdqutsr and FB
Venhan Jackwn

NBA first-round playoffs

• Tampa Bay (Van I 0) ru CLEVELAND (Nagy J.
oil), l.Ol p.m.
• Bakifnore (Kam~t!mtckl 0-0) 111 Dt:trtnt (Bia1r 0
'II), l Ol p m.
: Seonte (Gan:ja l -1) al Ntw York (Mendoza J-2).
•

• V-6 Power
• Power WlndowaiLacka
• nit/Cruise

(

"He's human He 's gomg to let
goals in," Brums coach Pat Bums
said of Hasek. "Everybody seems to
be surprised when we score. I'm not
surpnsed."
Allison's first playoff goal, on a
power play at 13:59 of the first penod, was the only one Hasek could
reasonably be expected to stop so nee
he had a good view of the shot
"~didn 't think they had too many
goal-scoring chances," Hasek said .
"We were always one or two goals
behind and it's tough to come back
from a deficit hke that_"
The second Boston goal came
when no one boxed out Dmitro
Khnstich, who scored at I 5.21 of the
second period after taking a pass
across the crease . Alexei Zhitn1k
made the score 2- f at I K: 19, but Joe
Thornton restored the Bruins· twogoal lead when he got m front of
Hasek and deflected Ray Bourque's

Eagles .•.

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Saturday's games

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B(ti:TON REO SOX Sl}l:lll'd I.HP J..: s u ~
M.rrtlll..:7 10 a mmur leili!Ue l OntraLt
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I lone 1.-; .J.1y d1)able-d hst l&gt;e s1grlmed RHP M~.:l
RoJolS •fOt I:USignlllrlll
,
TAMPA DAY DEVIL RAYS l'lun~d lB Wuile
D ugJo!~ on 1he di sabled hst Cal led up 1U Herbert
Perry from Durham of the lnternauonnl J .~.·ague
rransferred RHP R1rk Gorerk1 frn m the 1.5- 1o the
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. National Leaaue

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Transactions

21Hl 0 pm

Tuas(Clarkl 2to tl omnlo! Hentgt:"u 1- IJ 70S

:

~9,950*

Sunday's games
lluff.1lo &lt;11 Boslo n 1 p m
Oet ru n al C•1lorado 2 p m
J 1 11t ~b ur~ lr .11 romnto, 7 pIll

·
!Wnod ••rd 2 1) at S :.~ u h,1nu scu
IRuetl't' II II 4 0'\ p 111
M u nr re~il
( H e 1ma11 ~ll fl
2 11 at Hou sw n
tRqn,lltl~ "i l) H O:'i p.m
I'I!!Shur!lh 1Aerrso11 1-2 ) m St Lo u •~ t)1nlCIICl 2

~ Tampa B11y (Wilt
ill CLEVELAN[) (Gooden
.. 1-0), 7OS p n1
~ Balmnort (Muuma 4- 11atl)etron (fhornpso n .J
.2)70Spm
• Stattle (Suzuki 0-0) at New York (Jrabu 0-0J
"'1 lSp,m
• Oakland cCandiOitl 2 ~ , !II Omngo (Parque J-2)

•

Saturday's game~
S! Lmu ~ 111 Dallas 7 ~0 p m

Mllw,,uk e~

An~m1 (Olivares l -2) at Boston IMamnez 'i- 1)

ym

'tonight's games
Pittsburgh ;,t lnroruo 7 p 111
Detro11 .tr l'o lm.•do 7 10 p m

40~ pln

·1 OS p m
•

Thursday's scores

Rn5ton 4 Uuffalo 2 lloston letuh ~ ne~ 1-0
D,tllas 1 S1 LoUI S 0 Dallas leads ser1e~ 1-0

PhllaJelplua IB~n ••ett 0-UJ at Colt1udu
lnuhanon 'i OJ. ·' 0'\ p m
New 'I ork !Yo~ h1 1 I·' J .11 Anlllllil (l:&gt;c nn vs 2 11

l
l'

Tonight's games

•

NHL conference semifinals

Saturday's games

Tamp,! Bay S K,msa5 Ctty ~
New York 4 M1nne501a 1 (10 )
Baltimore: 4 0Ulll@O 1
·Boston 3 lexns 1
Oakland"\ roro1\lo 2
CLEVELAND R Seanle -1
lktron 4 An11tK.'I rn 2

•

Hockey

4 , 1}.

Phtladelph1a (Sch1lhn! 4·1) at Colorado
(rllomson 0 3), 9 05 p m
New York (Hcrshm: r 2· 2) at Anzo1U1
(Stoulemyrc 3-1 ), 10 OS p m
Allanla (Millwood 2-2) .11 S.m Diego ICiemcm
O- H. 1005p m
M•f)V, Iulcet (Roque 0-2) .u S1m l:r.mmCf) (Uroclt
2-2JIOO:'ipm
!:'fonda CSprm gcr 0-41 .u Los Angeles (D reJfol1
4-I J 10 IOpm

I

" ""
"
Thursday's scores
11

(Lima

HI HOUSIOil

m

Clu ~:.~go (Lieber
0 I l I IIi p m

5]6
500
46-1

]1

HlaiUIII 2- 0)

Piu~burgh ISchmtdl 4- 1l til St l ouiS COI1 vcr 21) 8 IO'prh

!.ill

,5' 1

]]

)laiUfTl(lft:

CINC INNATI

.u

lllarm s~.: h

. Federal Hocking took an upper·
hand in the Tri-Valley Conference.
Hocking Division by defeating
Southern 14-10 in a good old-fash•oned slugfest in Racine.
Federal combined three walks, an
error and hits by Jason McCumber, a
thr~-ru~ ~ouble by Keitl\ Carroll
and a two-run Man Edwards double
for a 5-0 first inning lead.
Southern came back w1th one on
an Adam Williams single, a fielder's
chpice by Ervin and singles by Adam
Cumings and Benji Manuel. The
Tornadoes got out of the second
ulj_Scathed, wh1le scoring one of their
own, 5-2. The walls came tumbling
dawn m the third when Federal plat·
ed· five more runs for a I 0-2 tally,
knocking Ervin out of the box.
: Carroll doubted, Edwards had an
RBI single, Poston singled. Tthen '
BanJi Manuel came on to potch for
SQuthern . Jason Putman walked ,
Casey Jones reached on an error
MCCumber smgled home a run.
· Trailong 10-2, Southern came
· back w1th st• runs. Kyle Norris smgled, Adam Williams singled, Ervin
re~ched on an error, and' Cull)ings
and Manuel walked to force home
runs. A fielder's choice by Baker,

Milwaukee at ln(finna. 8 30 p m

Tonight's games

The Collin County medi cal
examiner said the cause of death
won't be known until Monday or
Tuesday at the earliest, once an
autopsy and toxicology tests are
fonalized.
There was no word about memonat or funeral services.
Friends and former teammates
remembered "Tut" (TWO-ee) as a
fun-loving man who cared deeply
about others. They also admired hi s
toughness and how he overcame
adversity to become a two-time Pro
Bowler
" He was such a great friend, a
great teammate and a wonderful person," quarterback Troy Aikman said.
"He was one of the most-hked guys
who has ever played m a Cowboys

'•

Local sports briefs
In Saturday's auto racmg at
Kanawha Valley Dragway near
Southside, W Va ., Mark French of
Moddleport drove hts 1971 Capncc
to v1ctory '" the Pure Street Dtvision
over Charles Lockhart of Proctorvolle
·and h1s 1991 Mustang.
. Adam Snowden of Rutland beat
·Tyler French of Middleport in the
:Junior Dragster Divosion
In

The playoffS continue ton~ght
w1th Pittsburgh opening at Toronto in
the E3.1t and Detroit at Colorado in
the West.
·
Dafoe led the league with I0
shutouts. Hasek was second with
nine. Hasek also was second with a
1.87 goals-against average. Dafoe
was third at I 99.
And both were on a roll .
Hasek won four straight games '"
Buffalo's 4-0 sweep of Ottawa, while
Dafoe won his previous three in
Boston's 4-2 first-round victory over
Carohna.
"I came in the league with 'Dafoe
He continues to get beller and better," Buffalo's Jason Woolley saod.
"He has a little bit of Domin him the
way he is so acroballc."
But he doesn't have the same
pressure to live up to expectations
since h1s reputatiOn isn't as Impressive as Hasek's.

Cause of Tuinei's death won't be known until next week

0

" He hll lt good," saod Gnlfey. ' I
looked up and ll was gctt mg knocked
down hy the wmd. ll1cn 11 can ICd

CtTUt

By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Brums heard the question over and
over again: How could they ever
score against Buffalo's Dominok
Hasek, the best goalie in the NHL?
After all, he won the league 's last
two MVP awards , led the Czech
~epublic to the Olymp1c gold medal
last year and was tops m the NHL in
save percentage this season.
But after Boston's 4-2 win in
Thursday mght's opener of its sec ond-round Eastern Conference playoff series, the Sabres face a simtlar
q11estion . How can they ·score
enough against Bruons goalie Byron
Dafoe to wm Game 2 on Sunday?
"We have one of the best goalie!&gt;
m the league, too, " said Jason
A)Iison, whose shot off Hasek's left
shoulder gave Boston a 1-0 lead in
the first period . "I thmk they pretty
much equa l each other out."

The Eastern Eagles took advan- the fourth . Eastern came book to
tage of Miller errors and received plate three more run~ on walks to ·
some timely hitttng to post a 13-9 Brodenck and Eric Smith and uif.
D1vis1on IV sectional tournament RBI Jeremy Coleman single .'
semifinal won over the ' Miller Another run came home on a balk
Falcons Thursday mght at Eastern and Dillon had an RBI songle.
High School
Putman struck out two. batters '"
Eastern (7-14) breezed to a 6-0 the fifth, but Nelson tripled and stole '
lead on the second inning after Eagle home before Dave Lannmg and
starting pitcher, freshman Chns Mike Spencer each walked a1\(
Lyons . breezed through the lineup scored on an error at short to mak~ ;
fanmng t~ree of the stx batters he the score 11 -6.
faced.
Holter led off the Eastern soxth
Joe Dillon led off1he Eastern sec- woth Ius second hot. Josh Brodendc
ond mning w1th a one out single, walked before Josh Will reached un
. GOTCHAI - Cleveland catcher Sandy Alomar Jr. tags out then With two outs Dusttn Huffman an infield songle to load the bases.'
Seattle's. Edgar Martinez at the plate In the third Inning of Thursday and Ben Holter eac h walked. Chris Holter stole home and Eric Smtth'
night's American League game In Cleveland, where the Indians won Lyons slammed a two-run double for walked to load the bases, but allthrct '
8-4. Martinez tried to ac,ore on David Segui's double. (AP)
a 2-0 score . Consecutive passed balls runners were stranded, 12-6. Moller
leadoff walk and was pulled by Famer Johnn y Mtze.
allowed Holter to score. Jo sh pla1ed a ~i ng le run in the soxth on a
Pinoella after gettmg one out
" I don' t pay any attention to Boodenck hit an RBI smgle and Nelson home run to deep center, 12•.:
7.
Weaver, ~ r~ g ht - hander recen tl y details about what other people do or scored on a passed ball.
recall ed !rom Tnple-A Tacoma, what otl1crs d1d,' ' Gr~Jfcy said " I
Josh W11J smglcd. Eric Smuh
Dillon Jed olf the EHS soxth w1th
SIIUck out Rochoc SeKSon, but qutck- don't look at people I have to pass. walked and· Will too scored on a a song'te, hos third of the mght.'
ly tell hchmd 2-0 to ltlomar, who That's just not me."
passed hall Eastern led 6-Uafter two Putman reached on an error, Bradley
homered onto the Icft -foeld seats to
Notes: Muyet gave up Jour runs mnm gs
Brannon laid down a great sacnficc
make 11 5-4.
and live hlls m 5 113 mnmgs wlth
In the top of the third the sky bunt, the on the nc.l play D1IIon was '
" I had enough lime to warm up, " hv~ v.alks Seatt le pitchers gave up began to fall m for Eastern, or so it picked off. HQiter then reached on an
Weaver sa1d .."1 can 't say I didn't nme walks .. Ind1 ans shortstop , seemed The Eagle startin g shortstop error to d11v'c home the nc&gt;t •un , .13have enough ume when I struck out Omar Vtzquel nm sed hiS thtrd fell 111 and had to he removed from 7.
Sexson on lour pllches. I had great stra~g ht ·game With a sore thogh mus- the game. then Lyons was muled by a
Miller came qack wlth two
stull I JUst !ell behmd wtth tw o slid- cle. Hargrove saod Vizquel ts tcelong line drive Lyons went to the ground stra oght songlcs '" the seventh'
crs Maybe I should have thrown better and 'could he hack m the linc- for about ten nunute s. but returned to promptin g Josh Will to hrought on in
anothel one. If I locate a Jastball up by Sunday .... More than three puc h.
relocf. Will gave up a two-•un so nglc
maybe he pops ll up I threw ll r~ ght hours before the game, Gr~lfey was
Lyons struck eut the ne•t batter m to Dennos Keller, a play that was
down the middle •·
photographed hittong tennis balls into a gutsy COIUeback, but then the aided by an Eastern throwmg error.
The lnd~ans added three runs in the backstop for a posSible Sports Eagles defen se collapsed around Woll fanned the nc&gt;t batter then got
the seventh on Cordero's two-run Illustrated cover.... lnd1ans lirst some solid Moller htttmg. Three Humphrey to hit into a 6-5-3 reverse
double and a run -sco r~ng groundout baseman J1m lltome sat out Game 2 enors and a Jcremtah Toth triple double play to end the game.
Gnffcy snapped a 3-3 lie in the of his three-game suspenSion lor brought home a run . Randy Nelson
Eastern coach Scott Wolfe saod,
Sixth by hlltmg Colon's 1-1, pltch charging the mound "' Boston last hammered a sky shot to left center "This was a great win for our kod,s ·
over the wall on center lield for hi s ntonth. ... Seattle · potche1 Scan that was misplayed. D.l. Bolyard :They've battled all yearlong. We lost
360th career homer The shot moved Spencer made ht s maJ Or Ieu~ ue debut walked, and Dave Lanmng singled four games while Jeadong goong into
him tnto 46th place on the career in the seve nth
home a run
the last innmg and two others we led
homer list, one ahead of Hall of
Lyons walked horne a batter as his onto the fifth . That 7- I 4 record could
knee stiffened. Another ,freshman, well have been 11 -1 0 or better of We
Jimmie Putman, came IIllO the game ,could hold a lea~ . Maybe we caii
recently at the Pone Holls Golf Course
For more tournament inform ation to stnke out the last batter to com- have a good outmg agaonst Tnmble
(formally Meogs County Golf and applications, see directors Jim plete the inning and make the score and make up for those losses wtth :1'
win. "
:
Course) Baer aced the par 3, 135 Crace (949-9023), Dave Walk er 6-4.
Eastern
rallted
back.
D1llon
sm'
Putman
p1cked
up
hi~
first
varsity
yard number seven with a p1tchmg (446-3402) or Dan Edwards (742gled for the second ttme, ,then after win with e1ght strikeouts and twa
wedge. The hole-in -one was wit- 2359).
nessed by Andy's brother Chns.
The tournament will run from July two called third strikes, freshman walks, while giving up just five hiti
I 6 to July 25 at the Kyger Creek Be" Holter doubled to deep center Lyons fanned four and walked two,
The directors &lt;Jf the ,Ky.ger Creek Employees Club fi eld on State Route a~C: came around to score on the mis- while Wtll got the save wtth a stnke
played ball for an 8-4 lead Putman out, no walks and one hit. Nelson
Ltttle
ue Tournament w1ll 7 between Addison and Cheshire.
fanned two of the next three batters suffered the loss with relief from D J
~~~:~~:~~~~~:~~t~o dtstributc for
to retire the sodc m order in the top of
(See EAGLES on PageS)

mg catch ncar the wallm 'enter

.

Bruins defeat Sabres 4-2; Stars notch 3-0 victory over Blues

Eagles advance to D-IV sectional finals

to be on the mound. Ho had been
throwing for JUSt a few monutes when
Piniella came out to remove starter
Jamie Moyer.
Obliv1ous to PJniclla's s•gnal,
Weaver contonucd warmmg up when
he heard first base ump1re Derry!
Cousins shouting. .
" He was yellmg at me to come
in ," Weaver sa1d. "Being a rookie I
didn 't know what was going on . I
was like, what's this guy's deal ..
That's when rehevcr Ken Cloude
explamed to Weaver that he 'd bener
get his glove and get goo ng .
''I'm ' warnung up and Cloud1e
says, 'Hey, Weaver, you ' re on the
game .' I wasn ' t even sure Lou gave
the signa l "
.
Ken Groffcy Jr hlllllS lOth homer
and scored twice for Seattle.
Cordero we nt 2-for-3 Wi th a walk
and was robbed ol ex tra bases 111 the
second hy Grolfcy. who made a Jung -

The D•lly Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NHL begins second-round playoff action

. .

lndi·a ns notch 8-4
win over Mariners
By TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) The
Indians are . only starting to realm;
what they got when they SJgned Wit
Cordero
Cordero, who missed SIX starts
w1th a bruised right wrist, drove in
three runs Thursday night and Sandy
Alomar h1t a two-run homer to lead
Cleveland to an 8-4 win over the
Seattle Manners.
After he was hit by a p1tch '" a
game at Oakland last week ,
Cordero's wnst got so bad the
Indians nearly put him on the disabled list. But they decided to be
pallent, just like Cordero IS for every
at-bat.
"The most important thing IS we
won," Cordero sa1d. " I got some
good pitches to hit, that was the key.
But I don 't know about bemg patient
I'm lcadmg the team in strikeouts."
When few teams showed 1nterest
in Cordero dunng the off-season,
poss1bly hecausc of some of his oftfield problems, the Indians decided
to g1ve the outf1eldcr/DH a chance .
Cleveland manager M1ke Hargrove
sa1d Cordero has done everythmg he
has hcerr asked, and on ly now IS the
team learmng about Cordero's potcnllal.
" I don ' t think we ' ve seen h" best'
years as a h1tter yet," Hargrove said
" But we've seen him hit 1n big sll uat•ons and be patient to hit Ill good

Friday, May 7, 1999

•

~

;Ii;~~~AC&amp;C&amp;oll; ~

••
•
_•
•

..

Phone
740-992-2196

461 S. Third
Ave .
Middleport

,.

•

�The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Friday, May 7, 1999

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page&amp;
Friday, May 7, 1999.

,... •••..-on, I mus1 respond to the
leuer from "Sad SISter in N.C.,"
whose schizophrenic brother refused
to take his medication. My hean
goes OUIIO tier.
In your response, you said those
who refuse to take medication might
have to be forced to have their condtllon monitored by a doctor.
My son was struck with ·this illness at age 24. He was newly married, with hts own business and a
beauuful home-- and he lost it all. I
was told he was an adult and I could
not hospttalize him without his permission He refuse&lt;! to get help
because he didn't think he was sick.

In desperation. I called the police
and said my son had threatened me
with bodily hann. They put htm in a
mental facility that did nothing but
hold htm for a few weeks and then
let him go
After four long years. I filed a
conservator ship for my son and
turned htm over to the state so he
could recetve the medical attention
he needed.
· He was put in a state facility for
six months. where he was .taught
about schtzophrenia and the need for
lifelong medtcauon. I bless the doctors and nurses at that hospttal fur
gtving me back my son.

assist mentally ttl 1ndtviduals an4
their families. For information , read·
.ers should oontact the National
Alltance for the Mentally Ill. 200 N.
Glebe Rd., Suite 1015, Arlington.
Va. 22203. The phone number is r800-9501NAMI ( 1-800-950-6264);
and the web Site •is www.nami org.
An alcohol problem? how can
you help yourself or someone you
love? "Alcoholism: How to Recog·
nizc It, How to Deal with It, How to
Conquer It" will give you t~
answers. Send a self-addressed,
long, business-size envelope and a
check or money older for $3.75 (this
includes postage and handling) to ..
Alcotml, c/o Ann Landers: P.O. Boll
1562, Chicago, Ill. 606 11 -0562. (In ·
Canada, send $4.55. ) To fmd out
more about Ann Landers and read
her past co lumns, viSit the Creators
Syndicate web page at www.creators.com .

Kerrville, Texas: I work for the
Canfield, Ohio: When I was
married, my husband had me hospi - Assertive Commumty TreaJment
talized and forced me to undergo team. which assists people wuh
shock treatments for alleged post- severe, persistent mental illness. The
partum psychosis. As it turned out. majority of our clients have had
my problem was multiple sclerosis. I multiple hospitalizations, and most
have suffered bram damage as a of them have failed after numerous
result of the drugs I was forced to attempts to stay well.
Our team's goal is to keep these
.take . How many other husbands
would do this to their wives tf they ,individuals m the least restrictive
environment requ1red to maintain
could get away with it?
San Jose, Calif.: Schizophrenia their independence.
Case managers .dellvcr and monis a man-made diagnosis, and doctors make mistakes. A lifetime of itor . medications to assure compll ~
received :
From Chesapeake, Ohio: I suf- bei ng warehoused with people you ance.
We also provide assistance for
fer from depressiOn and went volun- don't like (and who might be danhousmg
and emp loyment. as well as
could
be
a
disaster.
gernus)
tarily for help when I was in my late
classes
on
socialization, anger, stress
The old man you sec on the street
teens . I was bullied and threatened
management
and symptoms manby the very staff that was supposed whose tongue twttches dtdn 't get
to help me. Forced medication IS not that way because he .was given com- agement. We have a 24 -hour cnsis
the answer It will only leave v1cl tms pasSion . He probably was restrained, hotltne people can call when thtngs
dehumanized hy it hccome too stressful.
more vulnerab le, and the number of drugged and
Tell your readers there are
deaths attributable to over m~dtca­ system that was supposed to help
him
resources within each Community to
tion w1ll mcrcasc.

The laws need to be changed to
get these young adults the help they
need. They are often not able to
· make this decision on their own. I
hope your column will trigger a
move m the right dtrection. -- SAN
MARCOS, CALIF.
DEAR SAN MARCOS: You
deserve a medal for being so persistent and pulling your son on the road
to recovery. That column created
quite a fircstunn among my readers.
Here are some of . the responses I

'

d:

'

Assembly of God

Scrapbook!

Program on advanced directives scheduled
A program on advanced
dtrecuves - livtng wtlls and
durable power of attorney · · will be held at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Skilled Nursing,
dining room at 2 p.m. on Monday.
Meigs County Prosecutor
John Lentes will be the speaker
for the program which is open
to the public. Refreshments will
be served.
Nurses will be at.the Racine
Home National Bank on Tuesday and at the Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy on Friday from 9 a.m.
to noon to distribute literature
on the advanced directives.

.

.

of Bashan ; Bob and Janice
Pullins. Guysville.

Della Kappa Gamma
Alpha Omicron Chapter,
Della Kappa Gamma, met at the
Presbyterian Church tn Wellston on April 26.
Ida Mae Crabtree of the hostess committee gave grace
before the steak dinner served
by women of St. Peter and Paul
Church. Tables were decorated
in a spring motif Favors were
book markers.
· After dinner, Prestdent Marjorie Felly thanked members of
the hostess committee and the
cooks for their work. The society enjoyed violin selections by
Lynne Kitchen, accompanied by
Anniversary to be observed
Rev. and Mrs. Aoyd Ross of Mary Elizabeth Billman on the
3769 Peach Fork Road, p1ano.
Research commillee: CrabPomeroy, will observe their
46th wedding anniversary Sat- tree, chainnan. Nancy Ktbler
urday. While no celebration is and Margaret Benson presented
betng planned, the couple the Founder's Day program.
Crabtree introduced the speaker,
would enjoy cards.
·
David Furbee, a stockbroker,
who spoke on the two evils of
Alrred news
Alfred United Methodtst the marketplace: mnatton and
Church will have a family taxes. He gave examples of varcarry-m dinner on May I ~. tou s .investments and showed
12:30 p.m. The public is invited. how the two evils took most of
Pastor Sharon Hausman and the gains made on them. To
Thelma Henderson visited combat inHatton, he suggested
Lloyd Dillinger who is recover- buying real estate and spreading
ing from recent surgery at investment.• "Do not expect to
Riverside Hospttal in Cohlm- be made rich but keep from getting poorer," he said . He distnbbus.
Boy Scout Troop 235 ce le- uted leanets for further study.
During the business meeting
brated the Eagle Scout rank
earned by Matthew Keaton at secretary and treasurer reports
Allred UMC on May 2. Rela- were given and April birthdays
tives of Matthew who attended announced . President Felly,
were his parents, Pat and Bob Pam Toon, Viola Gettles, Teresa
Keaton ; brothers, Bobby and · Snider-Bonng and Sandra
Kevin; grandparents, Imogene Walker told of their attendance
and Lester Keaton, all local; his at state conventton on April 24.
great-aunt, Glenna Buchanan ; Alpha Omicron received an
his cousin and husband , Mary honorable mention award there.
Scholarship chairman Walkand Jim Hale, all of Barlow.
Refreshments were enjoyed er read a membership application and the society approved it
later by the family and friends.
Visitors of Mattie Pullins and Donna Jenkins arid Walker
Don were Wilbur Pullins, Mari· gave a,n amusing skit, "Teachers
ella; Inez Windland, Athens; Alphabet". Society members
Freda Carsey, Albany; Theodore told of vacations they would
and Becky Pullins, Toni and like to take. Snider-Boring disStacie Pullins and children, all tnbuted Apnl newsletters.

Bilpt1st
'M.....,oeha lloplllll;luardl
Burlm&amp;ham • 742-7606
Putor: John Swan100
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.

Delta Kappa_Gamma meets
Alpha Omicron Chapter, . Delta
Kappa Gamma, met at the Presbyterian Church in Wellston on Apnl 26.
Ida Mae Crabtree of the hostess
committee gave grace before the
steak dinner served by women of St.
Peter and Paul Church. Tables were
decorated in a spring mottf. Favors
were book markers.
After dmner, President Marjorie
Fetty thanked members of the host·
• ess committee and the cooks for their
work. The society . enjoyed violin
selections by Lynne Kitchen, accompanied by Mary Ehzabeth Billman
on the piano.
Research committee: Crabtree,
chairman, Nancy Kibler and Mar'
garet
Benson presenied the
Founder's Day program. Crabtree
introduced the speaker, David
Furbee, a stockbroker, who spoke on
·the two evils of the marketplace:
inflation and taxes. He gave exampies of various investments and
showed how the two evils took most
of the gains made on them. To combat in nation, he suggested buying
real estate and spreadmg mvest -

Brewer takes heat
for gay-oriented ad

ments. "Do not expect to be made
rich but keep from getting poorer,"
ST. LOUIS (A P) - A "beer
he said. He dislrlbuted leanets for
advertisement
m a free magazine
further study.
During the business meeting sec- . for gays and lesbians that shows
retary and treas.urer reports were two men holding hands has drawn
given
and
April
birthdays so muc~ response that Anheuserannounced. President Felly, Pam Busch Inc . set up special hot lines
Toon, Viola Gettles, Teresa Snider- to handle calls. .
1lte . ad for Bud Light in the
Boring and Sandra Wal,ker told' of
their attendance at state convention April 22 ISsue of EXP magazine
on t\pril 24. Alpha Omicron received says " Be Yourself and Make It a
Bud Light," and carries a tagline
an honorable mention award there.
say
ing "Proud Sponsor of the St.
Scholarship chairman Walker
Louis Pride Fest '99." PrideFest is a
read a membership applicatiOn and
the society,approved it. Donna Jenk- gay and lesbian festtval held in
ins and Walker gave an amusing June.
Leaders in the gay_cormnunity
sktt, "Teachers 'Alphabet". Soctety
urged people to call Anheusermembers . told of vacations the.Y
Busch in support of the ad. Conserwould like to take. Snider-Borjng
vative Christian leader Jerry Faldistributed Apnl newsletters.
well urged his followers to call
Members present from Meigs
Anheuser- Busch, too.
County were Mar;one Fetty, Fern
"Let's keep the heat on
Grimm. Donna Jenkins, Nellie Park- Anheuser-llusch so that they
er, Gay Perrin. and Sandra Walker.
understand that pro-family Amcri·
Executive planning meeting will
cans are terribly concerned about
be held at the home of President homosexual tmages coming into
Fetty on June II , I0 a.m. with a our homes through reckless adverpotluck lunoheon to follow.
tising campaigns," Falwell wrote in
his Falwell Confidential.
"It's surprising to us that one
news
ad placed in select gay-orientprint
to
our
an
ship with current news, the Sunday articlcos in the soctety sectio11 must be ed magazines has attracted attenTimes-Sentinel will not accept wed- submitted within '60 days of occur- tion," the St. Louis brewer said in a
dings after 60 days from the date of rence. All birthdays must be submit· written statement. "Today's con·
ted within 60 days of tile occurrence. sumer is not one of a speCific genthe event.
Only black and white or color der, race, geography ot orientation,
Weddings submitted afler the 60glossy
prints will be accepted.
We appreciate and respect the
day deadline will appear· during the
views of all our customers ...
All·. matenal submitted for. publi·
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
cation is subject to editing.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

reaiief-

•

Hope llor.llt Churdt (SotUIItrol

. Cltln:b ofChrlol
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I"3)

utor: Jim Diur.
.570 Orant St., Midd eport
Sunday school • 9.30 a.m.
Wonhlp - I I a.m and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7 p.m.

l'ulor: Roan Wallon

Sundoy Sohool - ~:30 o.m.
WOBhlp- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.

To ppm Plolo Cburdlol Chrlll

r.-.. wma.petot Churdl

lnslrumenltl
PlllOr' Terrr Stewart
Worship Serv1c:e • 9 a.m.
Co~munion • 10 a.m.
Sunday School- lO:lS a.m.
Youth· .5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Ash Scrcet. Middtepon
Putor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service. 7:00p.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Strvice-7:00 p.m.

Rutlaod Flnt Boplloe Clua....,
Sundoy School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 o.m.

lind'Putor:
""" Churdl
el Clarlll
Tom
Runyon

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
wonhlp - 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnt llllplltl
Eut Main St.
Sundoy S.hool - 9:30 o.m.

Rotllud Cbordlof Clarllc
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wo11Hip - t0:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Fine Soutllem Bopeltl
4t872 Pomeroy Plke
Putor: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship- lO."S am., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ServiQ:s- 7:00p.m.

Laall'ltle Chriotioa churcb
Pallor- Tim Ihie
Sundoy S.hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Worship - t0:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedntldoy S.rvlccs - 7:00 p.m.

Wednetday Service 7:30p.m.

Silver Ruo Bo~lsc ·
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday Sohool- tOa.m.

Htlllo&lt;k Cro•e Cburdl
Putor: Oene lapp

Worship · llt.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ~rvloes· 6.30 p.m.

Sunday ~ehool· 10:30.a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt. Uolott Ballllot

R-•ltte Church or Chrllc

Psstor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
Evcninj - 6:30 p.m.

Teach A child how he should live. and he will remember It all his lite

Wednesday S.rvlceo - 6:30p.m.

Pr011erh&gt; 22.6

lldhtehem Btplltl Chun:h
Oreal Bend, Route 124, Racin(l, OH

•

Harcford Cburdl of Clarlollo
CbriottuUaloo
Hortlord, W.Va. ·
· Putor:Jim Hu&amp;hes
. Sunday School- 11 a.m.
WorWp - 9:30a.m., 7.30 p.m.
Wedneo.doy Scrvic:ea· 7:30p.m.

Old-.. Fne Wut Budll Cloardl
2860t St. Rt 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
. !venin&amp; ~ 700 p.m.
Tllursdoy Servk:ol - 7:30

823'950

Extended Cab 4x4 Pickup

820 950
'

.

Faith Bapclot Cburdl
Railroad St., Muon

&gt; .

FonoC Rua Boptlsl

Socrecl Heart Ctdoollc Clourdl

Brand New 1999 Chevy
XTREME S.Series Pickup
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo'
• Sport Suapenalon

112
•1 50*
'
1

• Air Conditioning
• LS Paeklgt .
• AMIFM Cneette

BrandNew1999C"-vy
S.Saries LS Extendld Cab
• Aluminum Wheeli
• 4 Wheel Anti·Lock•Brakn
• Nicely Equlppedl

• XTREM! Appearance Pkg.
If&amp;" ~lumlnum Whiela
• Well Equlppedl

Chllt ell of Chn st

liM•. . Hoi'- Cllurdl
31'"7 SIOIO Houle 325, unpvlle
Pucor: Dr. J.D. Youaa

, _ . , Cllordt ofCIIrlol
·a12 w. Moin St.
· Mlnltter: Danny BJu

Suaday Khool · 9:30a .m.

Sullday Sch09t- 9:30a.m.
Wonblp- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Sullday WOIIhlp - IO:llla.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse
992-3987

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-378!$

Briggs &amp; Str(lttOn
Master Service Technlc:;lan
KEROSENE HEATER· REPAIR

·BHI

841-2804

.

l

Place an ad In this space

NEW HAVEN
FUNERAL HOME
"W• Aee..., ,.,__., 'Jnu.V•n"

,_,.n

UH200

Lundy erown
Dl......

Ill own

174Liynellnlt

Albury (SyncUH)
Putor: Chad Emrick

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

..

Mkldltpor1 Cburdl orthe Naurene
Pastor. Oreaorr A Cundiff
Sunday Schoo ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Rl 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
PHior: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m
Wednesday Service · 1 P·~·
Full G01ptl U&amp;hlhouse
33045 Htland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday Sc hool· 10 a.m
Evening 1:30 pin
Tuesday &amp; ! hursday • 7 30 p m

Pastor: Ketth Rader

to'

Worship • 9 a.m.

Flolwoodo

Portland Flnl Churtlll Or lhe Nuanne

ForntRua

Paslor: Mark Matson
Sunday School -10 30 a m
• Mornma Worship· I 1.15 a m.
Sunday Sel'\licc • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursdoy Services - 6:30p.m.

Other Churches

Kealia (Mkldleporl)
Pastor; VemtJayc $ulllvan
. Sunday Sohool- 9:30 o.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Hanni Outnac• Ml1111trin
47439 Re ibel Rd., Cheater
P.aslors: Rev. Mary.and Harold Cook
Sunday Serv1ccs· 10 a.m &amp; 6 p.m
Wednesday Scr\licts . 7 p.m.

Wonh,lp- 11 a.m.
Paslor: Chad Emrick
Sunday S&lt;:hool- 10 a.m .

7~141

~ 11t OH 45700

llnrce R. Flwr - Dlnlclor
1110 Ellt Main lltNol• Pa••&lt;&gt;Y· OH ol67811

Time to clean house?

Full Gospel Church or tht Uda&amp; S•wlor
Rl 338, Ant1qu1ty
Putor. Jn5e Morris
AstH. Pastors: Jim Morns
ServiceJt: SaJurday 7·30p.m

Pentecostal
PtnttCOStal Asstmbly
St. Rt 124, Ra~;me

Pastor: Willtam Hobaclo':
Sunday School · 10 am
E\lenmg • 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Services - 7 p.m.
Mlddlepon P~n lteOStal
Thnd Av~.
Pastor Rev Clark Baker
Sunday Sthool · 10 a.m.
E\lening . 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7·00 p m

Presbylenan
Syncust Flnt U•lled Prnbytuf••
Pastor. Re.., Knsana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
WOrsl'up · II a m

•
Han1sonvllle Prtsbylerian Churcll
Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9·45 a.m.

Middleport P,.obycerton
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worsh1p • 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
~vtntb·Diy Adventist
Mulberry Hts Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor· Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Strv1ces
Sabbalh School • 2 p m.
Worship · 3 p.rn

United Brethren
ML Htnnon United Brtthrm
In Christ Church
Texas Community off CR S2
Pastor: RobcM Sanders
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m
Worship · 10·30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnestia~ Services · 7:30p.m.
Eden Ualled Brttluu I• Otrit1

2 1/2 m1les north of Reedsville
on ~ollie R9u1e 124
Pastor : Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · I 1 a.m.
Sunday Wotsh1p - 10·00 a.m '&amp; 7 00 p.m
Wednesday Scrvk~s • 7·30 p m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7·30 p.m.

Sou1h Bethel New t'tstament
Silver R1dge
Pastor· Roben Barber
Sunday School · 9 am.
Sun Worship· 10·10 a.m ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7 p m.

White'• Chapel Wesleyan
Cool\lille Road
Pas1or: Rev Philhp Ridenour
Sunday Schoo l · 9:30a.m.
wol-.(hip · IO:JO a m
Wednesday Serv1ce • 7 p.m.
Falnlew Bible Church

Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pu.lor· John Hart
Sunday School - 9.30 am
Wors hip · 7:00pm
WedneSday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Faith t'e:llowshlp Cnuade ror ChrlJI
Pastor: Rev Frankhn D1cken1
Serv1ce: Friday, 7 p m.
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd
Pasror Rev Blackwood
Sumhty School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant

nme

to clean house?

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Buy, Sell or Trade

CLASSIFIED SECnONI
,1"rancis FLORIST

PHARMACY

in the

Meilf• Counry\ Okhlf l'lorur

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Sentinel
CLASSIFIEDS!

EWING FUNERAL HOME
C»Qnlty and Service A/Ways
Established 1913

Searching for a
local church?

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-2121

Check the Sentinel
evety Friday!

992-7075 •
172 North Second Ave.

106 Mulberry Ave.

New Urt Victory Ct~~Jtr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Galllpolr&amp;, OH
Paslor. BJII Staten
Sunda)' Services · 10 un. &amp; 7 p.m.
~
Wednesda) · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p m.

CLASSIRED SECTION!

R. - · Jt.- Dlnlclor

214E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

Clifton Tabtrnule Cburcll
Clifton, W Va.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p m .
Wednesday Service. 1 p.m .

Clean out your basement "Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken' Clean out ·vour ~sement
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy or attic w~h the help of the

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Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

1/4 m1lc past fort Me1p on New L1m1 Rd.
P;tstor Wilham Van Meter
Sunday-7 00 p.m
Wed~esday - 7 :00 p.m.
Fnday -7:00 p.m.

Cohory Bible Chun:h

~i•~er ~uneral ~ ~m.
2114 Saullt SeoandAYII.&gt;!Md I

J""'foltll
CbriJ~

Apo~tolk

Freedom Gotpel Mlulon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor Re.., Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m
Worship· 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a. m , 6·J(J'p m.
Wednesday ServJces. 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Chun:h or

Car1t1on lnterdtnomlnatloaal Chun:h
Kmgsbury Road
Pastor Clyde Henderson
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m
. Worshi p Service 10·30 a m.
No Su nday or Wednesday Naght Services

Rutl1nd Church or the Nar.anne
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W Basye

Ent~lt

Pomeroy

l
'

Nazarene

Mt. Olin Community Church
Pas1or: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m
Evemng- 7 p.m.
Wedne~y Serv 1ce • 7 p '"·

Cheder Chun:h or the Nazarene
Putor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School· 9·30 a.m.
Worship· I I a.m, 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Ctnlnl Clutter

-

RACINE
MOWER CUNIC

Support your
. local
churches

Worship- 10 a.m.

Wt:dneiday prayer tcrvice • 7 p.m.

Wednetdt)' Service• • 7 p.m.

Wedne!lday 7·30 p.m.

Pomeroy Churc:h or the N1zarent
Pas1or: Rev lloyd 0 Gnmm,h.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servtccs - 7 p m

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

C..•.. NyChurdl
Putor: Rev. Amos Tillls
Mtia Streel, Rutland
Sullday wonhlp--10:00 o.m.
Sunday ServiQ:-7 p.m.

Sun. Con. -8:45-9:15 o.m.,
Sun. M111 - 9:30a.m.
Dailey M. . • 8:30 o.m.

Goapel Cllurth

Long Bottom
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m.
Worship· 10:4~ a m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10·30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p m.
Wednesday Kids for Cbrist· 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services-7:30p.m.

Holiness

Putor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
• Sat. Con. 4:43-!S:lSp.m.; Mau- !5:30p.m.

l&lt;~alth

wJOS-TV 27-3:30 p.m. Sunday
4-4:30 Saturday

Pas1or: Keuh Rader

161 Mulberry Avt.;Pomeroy, 992-5898

Sunday school - 10 a.m
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p m.

SyraCUR Church or the Nuarene
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
WBOS Radto-10 )0 am. da1ly 9 a.m. Sunday

Ptslor: Sh1ron Hausman
Sunday School- 9 a.m

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bc:mackl, Rev. Kalhtrin FoSler
Rev. Deborsh Rookin, Otrty
Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.
www.froa,net.net/--deanery

Mo.,. Chopet Cbumo

Churcb ortbe Nuartne
Pastu'r: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 11.m.
Worship · J0:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedntsday SeN1ces- 7 p m.

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Cr~&lt;t ~pal Churdl

Dyttvllle Communlly Church
Sunday School . 9·30 a m.
Worship~ 10.30 am., 7 p m.

Rttcbvllle Fellowship

Trtall)' Cia-

EpiSCOpill

Sunday School · 9·30 l.m.
· 10:30 a.m., 7.30 p.m

Sund11y School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m·.

Tuppers Pl1lnt St. Paul

Rejoldn1 ur. Cltamo
500 N. 2n4 Ave., Middltpon
Pasior' l..awrenee foreman
Sunday School · 9 30 a m.
Worship· 10·30 am
Wedne~ay Sc:r\liCCI · 7 p.m.

Won~hip

Co Rd. 63

LoaJ Bollom

Rndnllle
Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School. 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Firsl Sunday of Month-7:30p.m. service

CiltllOIIC

.

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship -9:30a. m.
Sundly School· 10:30 a.m.

Wednesdoy Scrvlc:eo ·6:30p.m.

Rutlaad J1rtt WUllloplllt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Scndo7 School- 10 o.m.
Evenln&amp; · 7 p.m.
Wednadoy S.rvk:ol· 7 p.m.

Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han

Uollrd Fatlh Churclt

Putor: Ron Heath

E\ltnin&amp; · 7 p.m.

S~racuse. Minion

HoddniPOfl Church

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sohool 9:30a.m.

Ftllh Valley Tabcmade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev . Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evemn g 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p m.

Huel Co mmunity Church

Torch Church

Second 4 Lynn, Pomeroy
P'as1ot-: Rev. Rolond Wlldmon
Sullday ldlooland wor1hip 10:25

575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO a.m
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service .. 7:30p.m.

Bethel Cbun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worthip - 10 a.m
Wednesday S.el'\ltCCs ~ 10 a.m.

Off 124 behind Wilke1valle
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor!hip. 10:30 a.m.

Alillqulty Bopliol
Sullday School - 9:30 o.m.
W011hlp - 10:45 o.m.
Sundoy Evenl"l -6:00p.m.

Middltport Community Churt'h

Cool¥ine UnUrd Metllodlll hrtsh
Pastor: Helen Kline

ML 011,. United Methodlsl

Word of F!Udl
Pi!Jtor David Dailey

Harrisonville Comm unity Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9 30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday . 7 p.m .

14ll Bndgeman St., Syracuse
Rev Mtkt Thompsoo,Pastor
Sunday Sc hool · 10 am.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Grand Street
Sunday School· IU am.
• Worship· 11 a.m.
Wednesday .Services- 8 p.m.

Sundoy Wor1hlp · tO a.m., 6 p.m.

Cong regillt o n&lt;ll

Pastor : Rev Margare1 J. Robinson
Serv1ces : Wednesday. 7:30p.m
Sunday, 2·30 p m.

Radnt
Pastor Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

7:30p.m. (3rd .1: 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service • 7.30 p.m.

Clleoter
PallOr: Sharon Hausman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

.r

The Ddleven' Ftllowahlp Mlnlstl')'
New lime Rd., Rutland

Main &amp; fi(lh Si.
Sunday School· 10 a.m
WoDhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Gnlu!m Uolbd Mtlbodlol

Pastor: Brice Utt

Ch- God or Proplltey
OJ. White Rd. ort St. Rt. 160
Paalor: PJ . Olapman
Sunday S~;hOol - 10 a.m.
Wonhip . 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servicet • 7 t» m.

Pu1or. Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9·30 a.m.
Worship · 9·30 a.m and 7 p m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Fnday · fellowship ~rvice 7 p.m.

Cool•lllt Church

SL Paul J.Aiabel'lllll Chun:h
Corner Sycamore &amp; Se&lt;:ond St, Pomeroy
Rev. Ootlld C. Fritz
Sunda)' School - 9:4$ a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

PMIOr: Rev. Dlvld Ruuell
Sundat School and Worahip· 10 a.m.
EYenlnJ Services- 6:30 p.m.

Me. Motiah Bolllltl

• Air Conditioning
• Power Window• &amp; Locka
• High Glou Walnut WOOd • Ground Elfecll
• Rear SOfa Bed
• Fully Loadedl

Our S.v'our Lulhtru c•urcb
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va
.
Pu.lor: David Russell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m .
Worship· 11. a.m.

S y - Ftnt Churdl of God
Apple and Second s..

Founh IL Main St, Middleport
Putor: Rev. Gilbert Crala. Jr.
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
!~ip • 10:4.5 a.m.

Astro Conversion ~~n

Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C Fritz
Worship • 9 00 a m.
Sunday School- 10·00 a.m.

School • 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Worst'llp • 11 a.m.

* Brand New1999Chevy

Lutheran
Sl. John Lulbena Churcll

Church of God
ML Mortoll Cll'""' ot God

7 p.m.

Ftllh Full G01pol Church
Lon&amp; Bottom

EIICLewc
Putor Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m
Won~hip • 9 a.m
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Sacrament Ser'i'i« 9-10;1.5 a.m.
.Homemaking meettna. lstThun.- 7 p.m.

Putor: Sbtron Hausman
Sunday ScOOol· 9:30a m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Wednetday · ~rvlces-

Pallor : Arlus Hurt

• Vortec 4300 High Output V-6 • Remote .Keyleaa Entry
• Aluminum Wheela
•Automatic
• AMIFM CD/ caaune System • Tolllly Loadedl

Sunday School10:20-ll a.m.

Rcsllud Cburdl of God

Putor: Jtme1 E. Keesee
Worship · tOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce1 • 7 p.m.

Wednesday service, 7·00 p m

Momi•&amp;Slar
Pastor· Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School · 11 1,1'1'1 .
Worship- JO a.m.

The Churcllor JHUJ
Chrid or Lotltr·l&gt;oy Sainta

Sullday School - 9:45 o.m.
Evenin1· 6 p.m.
Wodnesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Sunda~

* BrandNew1999Chevy'ZR2

Pastor• Jerry Sin&amp;er
Sunday School-9:30am
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

Mite Hltl Rd., Racine

Youth Fel lowship Sunday, 7·00 p.m.

Carmel &amp; Basban Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor· Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10.45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Aifrod

Victory llopllotlodepndaat
525 N. 2nd Sl. Middleport

Hoboon ChriJUoo Fetlowslllp Chum.
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Cannef·Sutton

Roorpolfid Churcti of Jald Chr!Jc
. of Lotter Oay Salnb
Ponland-Raclne Rd.

1'1-.... a .....-

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rutlaad
Sunday School· 9.30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m
•Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

llechlny

Melli Coopenu.. Partoh ...

Hllltldolloplllt Clourdl
St. Rt t43 juSI off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Aerec, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship . lla m., 6 p.m.

Christian Ftllowtlllp Cenler
, Salem Sl ., Rutland
Pastor: (toben E. MusKr
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship · 11:1Sa.m , 7p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m

Pastor. Qewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 911 .m.
Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

W0r1hlp - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2ftd Sun).

Clmslliln Unton

Pattor : Oene Morria
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Sunday WorshiP. • 10:30 a.m . .t 7 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Stud~ ·6:00p.m.

••

Putor: Da\lid DeWitt
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~- 7:00p.m.

Bible Sillily, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Roc:k Sfrlnp
Pas1or: Keuh Rader
Sunday School • 9.: 1s a tn.
Wor11hip · 10 a m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

s.owt-lllt
Sund11y School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.

uarei curr rree Mtlbodtn Church

United Methodist

923 S Thlrd St, M1ddlepor1
Pastor Ernie Wen&amp;erd
Sunday ~ervici, 101m
Wednesday service, 7 p.m

Pastor: Ron Fieri%
Sunday School- 9:1!5 a.m.
Wor1hip • JO:JS a.m.

Sunda)l School . 9·30 • m
Worship · 10:45 am., 7 p m
Thursday Service. 7:30p.m,

Putor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Faith Chopel

Co nnie Fiarei
Sund•y School . 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10.30 a.m.
Bible StUdy Tuesday · 10 am

S.lt:m Ctnter

Hyotll Run Hollnea C~urdl

Worship- 10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Father IS always there to help us God's
unconditional love is exemplified by the
love a mother has for her children A mothe(s love and loyalty to her
children are surpassed only by God's love for us.

Sunday Worship· 9:30p.m., 7·30 p.m.
We,dneada~ Service-7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 9 a.m.

Racine Flnt 8opdoc
Putor: Rick Rule

sin and fall short of His glory. God our

Good News Bible

Evanaellst Mike Moore

Worship· 10:1.5t.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Service,· 7:00p.m

75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Re\1. Doug Cox

Relief Society/Priesthood J1:0.5·12:00 noon

lllclcory HUts ChardlofCIIrtoc

Sunday School- 9:1$ a.m.

Wnle}a• Bible HollntR Churdl

Minlater: Ooua Shamblin
Sundty School - 9:30 t.m
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SeNicca • 7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Mttll: Morrow
6th and Palmer St , Middleport

sometlllng that may be harmful to J1em.
As children grow. the nurturing and the
lessons leamed from their mother will be
carried with them Into adulthood .
Somehow, chlltten seem to know that
their mother"s love for them ts everlasting
and etemal
God's love for us is also everlasting and
eternaL We are all God's children. and we
are able to love because He first loved us.
and no matter how many times we may

·Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:.30 p m
Wednelday Service· 7.30 p.m.

St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486

Service time : Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm,

Pomeroy

Sunday Sohool - 9:30a.m.

'

773-5017

P~tstor.

Plat Cron Bible Hollaeu Churd1
1n.m1le off Rt 32S
Paator: Rev. O'Dell Manley

Bradford Ctnsn:b or Chrllc
Corner of St. Rl. 124 &amp;: Bradbury Rd.
Youch Mlnisler: Bill Amberaer

Ftnt Bopcttc Cb•n:ll

Alfred news

.

EvenlltJ Service. 6:00p.m
WednCiSdty Service -7.30 p.m.

llarwollow Rklp CburdlofCitrllc
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday School ·9:30 'a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m, 6.30 p.m.
Wedne!ldty Services· 6:30p.m.

Momlns S.rvlc:e 11:00 o.m.

warried them many times about

Alfred Umted Methodtst Church
will have a family carry -tn dinner on
May 16, 12:30 p.m The publto IS
invited.
Pastor Sharon Hau sman and
Thelma Henderson visited Ll oyd
Dtlltnger wHo ts recovcnng from
recent surgery at Rtvcrstde Hospttal
·m Columbus.
Boy Scout Troop 235 oelebrated
the Eagle Scout rank earned by
Matthew Keaton at Alfred UMC on
May 2. Relatives of Matthew whg·
attended were his parents, Pat and
Bob Keaton ; brothers. Bobby and
Kevm ; grandpaw11s, Imogene and
Lester Keaton , all looal, h" greataunt, Glenna Buchanan ; hiS cousin.
and husband, Mary and Jun Hale, all
of Barlow. Refreshm ents were
enjoyed later by the family ana
friends.
VISitors of Mattie Pullins and
Don were Wilbur Pullins, Marietta;
Inez Windland, Athens; Freda
Carsey, Albany ; Theodore and
Bc10 ky Pullins, Tom and Stacie
Pullins and chtldren, all of Bashan;
Bob and Janice Pullins, Guysville.

KIM Cb1rdl of Cllrlot
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sundoy Sohool- 10:30 o.m.
Pascor-Jeffrey Wallace
tat and 3rd Sunday

.sunday Servlcca- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Whenever a ch ild ftllls down and gets
hur:t, the person they run to for help
most often Is the!r mother: A chtld knows
that their mother will always be there to
help them. even though she may have

PROJECT COMPLETED A special partnership between the
Vocational Agriculture class at Meigs High School and the Meigs
County Humane Society will help needy Individuals provide new
dog_ houses lor their canine companions.
Earl Young, a retired math teacher In the Meigs Local School Dla·
trlct, who al1o serves as vice president of the Humane Society,
coordinated the program with Superintendent Bill Buckley and High
School Principal Dennis Eichinger, and Tim Slmpaon, Vo·Ag
ln1tructor.
· Materials for the project were donated by Baum Lum~r. O'Dell
Lumber and Valley Lumber. The Humane Society also contributed
to the project. The students have spent the past three monthl
working on the dog houses, and built a total of 11, which are being
provided lo loving pel owners who are una.ble to build houses or
unable to alford to have them built.
Pictured are ·atudents Nathan Eskew, Dave Staats, Dusty Haning
and Adam Sorrell .

Sullday Scllool - 9:30 o.m.
WoBhlp- 8:15, t0:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedoeldly Services - 7 p.m.

Ullcrt7 Aooolnbl7 of God
P.O. Bo1 ol67, Dudd!nJ Lone
Muon, W.Va,
P111or: Neil Tennant

A Mother's
Love

Leadin&amp; Creek Rd., Rulland
Putor: Rev. Dewey Kine
Sunda~ school-9:30a.m.
Sundly wonhip ~7 p.m.
Wednclday prayer mcclin&amp;· 7 p.m.

Sllvn'lvil~

Pilslors John &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Seeond Ave. Mason

Ptart Chapt.l
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

R... ofShanlo Holt... Chon:b

Youth Mlnlater: Bill Frazier

Appeut.c..cer
"Full-Gospel Church"

P~tor·

Htrrison\lllle Road
Pas10r: Rev. Viaor Roush
Sunday Sci'KIOI 9:30a.m
Wor~hlp · I ta.m., 7:3Q p.m.
Wcdneaday Scrvk:e · 7:30p.m.

M'd lhport Chuda of (.1u·flt
S1h and Main
Puwr: AI HatUOn

Evenlna· 7:30p.m.

Mlatrnlllt
Chad E.mnck
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wurship - JO a.m.

Cai•ory Pllarlm Chapol

Sullday Sd-ool - II o.m.
Wonlllp'· IO..m. 6 p.m.
w.-y Services - 7 p.m.

Cllurdl of J - Cllriol ~
VanZandt tnd ward
Pu10r: lama Miller
Sullday Sohooi-10:30o.m.

•

I Society

Pl&amp;ltnyW_..OIIIGtiCUilt
33226 Children'• Horne Rd.

ApostoliC

Middl

rt, Oh

IRIIIt IIIII P

OJ,
740-992-2644
740-992-6298

Advertise your
business each week
In this space
and support local
churches

-.

�•

•

..

..
P-ae 8.• The Dally Sentinel

Friday, May

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May

7, 1999 · .

___,..._,

40

Three 1999 Meigs County graduates are among the 200 top ranked
high school seniors recently honored
in the WSAZ NewsChannel 3 salute
to the "Best of the Class, 1999.
Top scholars from the WSAZ
NewsChannel, 3 viewing area are
being featured in public service
announce ments that were videotaped during a luncheo n held at the
Huntington Museum of An on April
19. The announcements will air on
WSAZ during May and June.
The local honorees are ·stephanie
Evans, daughter of John Evans ,
Ponland , and Teresa Evans,
Reedsv ille ; Bridget Marie Vaughan,
daughter of Linda and Roy Vaughan ,
Salem Cenrer; and Jesse Little, son .
• of Connie and Doug Little, Racine.

Scrap Wood and Yard Sale

I&amp; DAuto Upllolstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

Marty's

·Power
Washing

L---:::==="'='====----'
STEPHANIE EVANS

FRIDAY
CHESTER- Hymn sing, 7 p.m .
:F,riday, Harvest Outreach Church,
.Riebel Road, . Chester, featuring
,Oabriel · Quartet, Harvest Time
Singers from Wet Jefferson, and
local singers.

RACINE - Return . Jonathan
Meigs . Chapter, Daughters of th~
American Revolution, Racine
Library, I 0 a.m. Program by Mary
Kay Yost, speaking on the . lives of
firstladiesof Ohio's U.S·. presidents.
Hostesses; Elisha You'ng. Bernice
Carpenter and Pauline Atkins.

RUTLAND - Special service,
'Rose of Sharon Holiness Church,
Rutlan'l!, Friday through May 16, 7
p.m. Evangelist, Larry Warren,
·
:Washington, Ind.

POMEROY- Market hog regi stration , 4-H and FFA, exhibitors ,
Saturday 9 to II a.m. at !he fairgrounds grange hall . Members must
register their animals at that time 1'
POMEROY - Mother-daughter . For more information ca ll Chip
banquet, . Zion Church of Christ, Haggerty, 992-6696.
State Route 143, 6:30 p.m. Friday.
Potluck. program to follow.
MONDAY .

JESSE LITTLE

Fonner-"Velvet HalnnU!r" ·
52954 State Rt. 124

a

-NOTICE-

Military News

~otes

.U1ilU~a

(740) 992·3131

r4GII7-al

DUMPTRUCI&lt;
SERVICE

-- Baby boomers grew up with
the Jedi and are now calling the
shots in many offices. The "Star
Wars " lexicon is already part of
the workplace culture . in many
places, particularly in high-tech
fields. "May the Force be with
y~u!" co-workers say. "Try no!.
Do ... or do not. There is no try."
Ric Edelman, head of Edelman
Financial Services in Fairfax , Va.,
is having the three earlier "Star
Wars ' ' films shown at his firm twice- having di scovered that 7
percent of his 90 employees hadn 'I seen any of them. He also ·
hopes to take his entire staff to

Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

25 yrs experiente

~ee the new movie .

"Those of us who've seen ·
them find it hard to believe
rKere's anybody in America who
hasn't," Edelman says.
. · Sheree Franklin, a human
resources director at GoldMine
Software of Pacific Palisades,
~!II if.. watches the trilogy at least

. I

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA
Camp 3730, Tuppers plains, Ohio
Is Sponsoring A Matching Fund
For The Benefit Of

TUPPERS PLAINS VOLUNTEER
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Sunday, May 9, 1999
11:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. (Or Until Sold Out!)
· Tuppers Plaint fire House
Route 681 &amp; Main Street
. Tuppert Plains, Ohio
$S.OO • Per Plate
Barbecued Ribs or Chicken, Baked Bms
Col.eslaw, Roll .&amp; Coffee or Tea
Cake &amp; Pie Extr•

~~W'I

(

RUTLAND, OH.
'AMERICAN
lEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
.. SUN., I :00 PM

..
.

General Refuse Service
A locally owned ·coinpony with .over 28 yn
experience has now extended our coverage oreo to
indude oil of Guilla Co. and porlions of Meigs, .
Vinton &amp; Lawrence counties.

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

1-800-967-4774

~'L

WJOS ·
.T¥27
Local .

lema~

Siberian Husky, blue

eyes, on8 blind, Tanner's Run .
Racine area, child's pet, 740-..9·
3128.

70

Yard Sale
&amp; VIcinity

120• Second Ave. Sal . 9:00·?
Little Tlkee ·toys, car stat, pla~ ­
pen , walker, clolhes. name·
brands, boys inlant·8, girts Infant·
women 12· 1-4, household,
misc. handmadt candleS', rain or
shine!

e.

2 LocaHona: sat. 8:00 Rain/Shine
e mil"" out 2t8; 112 mile up Poll&lt;·
Ins Rd . Fowl8rs and Mea lge·s
Girls cloth'es like new. bike and
morel
-4 Flmlly Vard Sale! 725 Fiflt
Avo. Fr'day and Satunlay

Auction

and Flea Market

;

----·

Auction: Moy 7. 1IH. Frldov.
Night 6·00 P.M 241 Third Av•
nue. Galllpolla. Urgt Load

qr

IIIYERSIOE AIICI10N- :'
Every Satu rdly Night 1 P.Mt,

Coown City, 740-251H1819

'

Wedemeyer's At,Jctlon Servle~ ,
'

Galllpolil. ONo 740-379-2720.

_90_:-:::-::-W-;a.,n-;led~--to-:7.B"7u~y;-:-:::i'
A'bsc&gt;lute Top Ooltar: All U.S: 511·
vtr And Gold Coins. Proofllt~ .
Dtamonda, Antque Jewelry, GoY1
Rings, Prt-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisition&amp; Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1~1 Seconp
AYOilUO, Galiioalis. 7·~2842 .

•

Anllquea, top prices paid, Rive •
Ina Ant iques , Pomerov. Ohht.
Ruu Moore owner, 740·993·
2526.
I
Cl ean Late Model · Carw dr
Trucks , 1990 Model&amp; Or Nawet.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern Awtnue. Gallipolis.
;
If you don't have time or want tiJ ·
YarCJ Sa te. 1 will buy vou r m la~ . .
Items &amp; cloth es. 740·U8·3352 qr
740..446-1379.
:

Want To Sell Your Sluff? Call R~·
erside Auction Ana .Let Us Sell ~t
FotVou. 74D-25&amp;-a9a9. .
' .

Wanted fil! Dirt and Rock! Let rrit
Pay you instead of Oumpln'o ovfr
Oh!o River Bankat 2 1/2 mile!&amp;
!·
Lower 7 s. (7401446-1 127

'

: Landscape Material,

ALL OREENROUSEII OPEN TO THE PUBUC:

Topsoil
•.

Pink &amp; Purple Wave Petunias are going fast, hurry In to get yours ·
.
Winners of our Op.n Houn $50.00 1Ift certlflcattl wtll:
lo. Johnson, lave!IIWood, WJ,.Ieckr Wtllll, Loaan, Ohio COIIGUTUUt!ONSI
, REMEMBER WE HAVE MOVED back 1o our Racil•e location.

.

,

&amp; Mushroom

Compost .

Light Hauling
up to Bton

'1lring tfie li.ids over to see our miniature fiorses, pigmy goats and sfieep in our petting zoo.
Hours: Mon.-sat. 9·6 Sunday Noon-6
.-,.

I

I

992·5455

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Blngo'On
Thuredays ·
AT8:30 p.M.
'
Main St.,
Pomtroy,OH
Paving
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stsrburlt
Progreaalve top line.
Uc. II OO.SO

Thke the pain out
of pain~g, and let
me do it for you.

CREDit
Ct'ldlt • Slow Credit • Bankruptey
'
Repo • Divorced
'

You're Treated with Respactl

seo.oo

,,n...,

·WORRYING!!!
'No Emberraasment ...

CANDLE· MAKERS

CANDLE SHOP"

"H you don't leam •
are you .
to know whit kind of work you'll out ot?"

II Til CLaSSIFIED$
Alii! THAT11D
IUI.ll
.

Public Notice
.

Begins July 5th at
Gallipolis Career College
Call Today
For More lnformatlonl
446-4367 or 1-800-214-0452

.

Real Elute Generel

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
· Mulch, Top Soil ·

30 · Announcements

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

WICKS
ttfiULIHG IHC.
We Deliver

(5) 7

. PIRGAME

Garagee
Free Ea1ima1ea.

R""""'

Bryan
Suaan Reeve•

MuonBowllq
· ·l.anea·

SAYRE
TRUCKING

'77H300
Summer League
B. .lna 1st w..k
In May
1\lcsday • No 'Illp

.

Hauling

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740-742-2131

· Saturday

Weber's ·

(!-ow Rates)

Main St.,Rutland

740-992-3470

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
·Room addftlon1 &amp; Remodeling

•Ntw GariiJII
•EIIc:trlcll &amp; Pfumblng
•Aooftng • Gultltl

May 7-8·9

VIctorian 1Wo Story ·
This very well cared for home on Main Straal
leaturas outstanding oak woodwork. Very
layout allows for 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, living
·
dining room, eat·ln kitchen. Also a 1 car
attached garage. If you like character, this .Is a
must see. $57,500 1219 ..

Mason CQ. Falrg(ourds,
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Inside Outside Space
Available .
Call 304-675·5463
304-773·5696
Used Furn"ure, Antiques
&amp;More
R 62 North .of Point Pleasant

. WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446~3644

BlS.SELL BUILDERS,
IN(.
New Hames • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
'• Room Additions
• Roofing

Equ/pmlllr c - ao.,,.,..
JEFF STETHEM

FREE ESTIMATES

STETHE~UREKANET.COM

Fret &amp;I/JMIN
V.C. YOUNG Ill
8124215
Pomeroy, Ohio

22 Y"· Local

lack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
ROOflflg • Repelre
•Coatings ~ .
Sldlnga • PalnHng
• Drywall &amp;
, Plumbing

Fraa Estimates·

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068
MYERS TREE
SERVICE
TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

KEITH MYERS
INSUUD UWNEI

FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

PHONE: (740) 985-4218.

EMAIL:

949-2168-

FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

ANNOUNCEMENTS

31782 S..modload,
' Ot&gt;o 454789

•VInyl Skiing &amp; Painting
•Pitlo &amp; Porch Dtckl

COMMEICW. ond RESIDENTIAL

814·9e2-7843

Trudel-tractor
Tlllllq..ho!l'"·mobllt
.Homoo-dtckl-&lt;lrivtwlya

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

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

985 44737

No111 Open For
Spnn. Seiuon.
Complete Une Of
V8gotable &amp; Bedding PlaniS
All FIMI $6.50
E.c:i.c~•• ~c.,.,.""""

Flea Market

POWER WISH

Lo'Ylbollom, Ohio
(74()) 985-3677

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foilage
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees~
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open

9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

Pet'lonala

005

Slart Ca11ng Tonlghll Have fun
playing lhe Ohio eating Game, 1·
BOO-ROMANCE, monston a681 . .

9:00.5:30.
No Hunling or Tretpaning on
Medora Locuai .Rktglll'el Farm.

40

.Giveaway

2 Free Pupptes Aust. Sheph~rdl
ChOw- (740) ~ ,
6

montna

Old Malt Doberman ,

Houh trained, Tall and Elr.s
Cropped! Good Temperamell
(700)38N03t
Four Klitena, • 8 Weeks Old.
(304)875-10114.

Garage Sale May 7 &amp; 8. 9:004:00. 8 La Salle St. Gallipolis.
Prom Dresses!

Coi'nputer Users Needed . Wo(k
Own Hrs. $2SK ·$801&lt;/ Yr. 1-&amp;G0476-8653 X
www.1cwp.com

..

.

GoodMVR

.,

HouseCats. Spayed 1 Rabl&amp;
Shota. · 8 monlhl old &amp; up. Free
10 good ....... (304)B82·3aao.

SYIIACUS!

Houtt trailer frame and ·metal' to
be cut up and towid away, 7~0-

tt:t-1776

74,H495.

WeoiiJvPay
Health ln&amp;Urarice Available

.
•

lng, Hou- lttmo, Misc.

Woll&lt; Well Wilh Tho Public

Men, Wonen ; Children 's clothes.
Misc . Items 550 Jay Or. Frldav

For More InformatiOn Call aoq-437-87&amp;1, HIS. 8:30A.M. ·5 P.M.'

Mal 7tti-alh.
Multi Family Yard Sale : Adults
and Children&amp; Clolling, Maternity,
Toys, Shoes. Home Interior, Longanbuger • Lois of Morel Frldav.
Saturday, 9:am·5 :pm Located In
LotBo-00.
Porch Sale: Frklay May 7th, 8-.t;
Salulday May Blh, 8-1 , 4-480 State
Aoute 32~ South. Household
Items. Nleo CIOI!IU, Baby Homt.

Soling OoA Seltl May 7 and 8 Inaide &amp; Outl Rt 7 North Crown
dty.

'

Thursday- Friday-Sat. Corner of
Route U1 &amp; Neighborhood Rd.
CouCh, Queen MAt1resa. Cellllng
·Fan, and lots Mlcl.!

Pomeroy,
&amp; VIcinitY
All Yotd S.IH Mull Bo Pold In

Advo-. Dndllno: 1:OOpm the
day before the. ad 11 to run ,
Sunday
Mond1y edltlon1:OOpln Fl1day.

a

Community yard ule· Saturday.
May 8 , 9am-olpm. Mile Hill Rd ..
Racine, ONo.
Qlg1ntlc eal•l Hundredt of
.lramal Muet 111 to believe!
Glassware, woman's plus sizes.
household misc., alillques,
recorda. appllancll, DOOks. jewel·
ry, (2) riding lawn mowers. sportS:
equipment, Mu&amp;t see1 Must sell!
May 7th , 8ttl &amp; 9th. Friday thru
Sunday, 8am·5pm , 3~820 State
Route 7 North, Pomeroy across
rrom It'll Skate·&amp;·way &amp; beside
tho Slate Highway Garage.
RainerfHudson huge garage aile·
May ·s. 7 &amp; 8. TackervHII Rd .,
Racine . Tools, dolls, collectibles .

misc.

Pt. Plea81nt
&amp;VIcinity
Big Big Yard Sale. Partial Eatata
1tem1. Quilts , Olshes, Pots.
Pans. Glan, Clolhes. Antique
Items. Furniture, Olllee 11ems. Fri.
and Sal May 7·8, Sam unlll 4pm.
Locust Ad . North Pt. Pleasant.
Schwartz Trellot Park·

F1lday Only. Nlco Plus Size
Women&amp; Ciolning. O&lt;lds &amp; Ends.
Oft Sandhi! Road. •
·

FrldayfSaturday.

Treadmill,
Nlt:e Boy1 &amp; Girl•
Ctolhts. Misc . lAM , 281• 81tcn
Tool&amp;.

Avo.

Sal. May 8th ., 7AM-? 2515 Jtl·
flraon ,/Pt. Pl., BedFrames. Kids
Items &amp; · ~ol&amp; mora . Everything
CfiMp.

80

I

.

Auction
end Flee Market

' &amp; !Igor. 8 wko. Old, 740-M9·2893.

IIUIIAID'S
.IIIIIIIOISE

nn.

Giani Sale: Wagoner Road, Off Of
Cooks &amp; Waitress . Apply 'at
141 To 233, SJ:turday 8th, 9· ? COuntry Corner cafe, in Letart
Alol Of Things!
.
.
Cosmelotog!sl ~eedad . Busln8~s
Hug&amp; Yard Sale Thursday May
Growing , Guara nteed Waa-s
6th &amp; 7th. {Kerwooda Residents);
PIU6 More. 740·446-7267
,'
33 Smithers St. straight Across
DRIVING POSITIONS .. '
from The Wai·Mart. Gold Muse
AVAILABLE:
on left. Lots of niCe clean Clothing
for the Wt'loie ' family ;( Brand
Nam11). Bed 'Ciolhlng, Curtains, Clas&amp;AOTR:
glass ware, Shoes, Plc1ures· Single Crlver, Late Model Ken·
Home Int. Much mud1 more If you
worths With R8elers. West qoaft
ware here ror thl Auct ion you
Ca"ief'.
•
won;t want to mi&amp;S this Yard Huge
•
Sale! 9am Ull ·? No Early Sales
CtassBOTR:
..
Please!
Team Straight, Truck, Late ModJ,t
Frelghtliners With Sleepers. MO\t
May 61h , 71h, 8th, 5971 S.R. U1 ,
Have Air Brake Endors emenls ,
Rain !Shinto 9~ ? Microwa&lt;Je,
800 Mile Radius. Ho.me Deliver·
Washlf. Wedding Dress. Cloth·
los.
lng. Misc., Baby.
Both Positions:
. May 7 &amp; 8 Pa~l C81dwell Trucking
Atleast 25 Years Old
'
112 Mile, Out Loft Fork Ro .. Babv
Allooal 2 ...... Exporlot'co
•
CiotMI.
.
.

FrM kittens to good home. black
Fr~ Kittens , Long Helrtd , Black
&amp; White, In Eureka. On Route 1.
Pnono: 740-256-67110 .
•

··'

AnOntionll

Wort&lt; flom home
Earn 5500-$4000 PT/FT
t ·800-863- t 635 or ,
www.startahOmebiz.com ·' '

AVON I All Areas! To Buy or 5811.
Sl'urley Spears, 3)4~675-1429 . ··,

30 Announcements
New To 'I'Ou Thilft Slloppo
9 West Stimson, Athens
740-592·1842
au.,.tlty clothing and n.ousehold
Items. S1 .00 bag salt every
Thurlday. Mon~ay thru Sa1uroay

SSSMake Money!$$$ Work..,.,t
Home - Assemble Produ cts .
Easy Work . Excellent Pay. Ffn
Details I Send S.A.S.E. To: Nat'!
Homeowrker's Associ ation. P.O.
Bo• 675. A!&gt;loy. WV 25271.

446-1211 or (7001·256-9134 ·

3111/911 TFN

TRI,STITE MDIILI

Help Wanted

Cogs, Cornbread

May 7th stn. 9-1 7909 State Ro·
ule 7, Rear, Chelhlre, Nlee Cloth·

740-742-3411

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

T\tea-.Frtday 1o.tl
Sat 1().4
Rt. 124 Mlnlrlvlllt, Oh
892-4558

MON. ·&amp; WED.
6:30P.M. ·
RUTLAND
POST 467'
STAR BURST
$800.00
$,0.00 01 MOll

· Now Conttructlcn &amp;
Romodellng-Knchan Clblnets
VInyl Slclng-Raofi.Diclii-

Howard. L. Writesel

"THE COUNTRY ·

BINGO

Sunset Home
Construction

740-985-4180

Men's Lcape
•
Thunday • Mixed Lcape
Slerfl•• n•• 7:11 ••••

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

ProUioCourl.

Bake Sale: Hot

110

and Beans, Cakes, Pies. Saturday
May B. 9-3. Fo&lt;xland .RI 180 Proceeds tor Sommar Fulks ·South

Mlddlaport

··~;:~..!" ••..,•.

S.ld 1ppllc111on will be
helrd In Nld Cour1, 11 1:30
P.M., on 11M nli dly Cll June, ·
1999, 11 Melgo County

www.Sun..e1Horrt6.com

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
.message. Alter 6 pm

~y.

'

Df!Pb!NE: 2:00p.m.
tho day - . . tho ld
lito NO. Sunday
edition· 2:00 p.m.
Fl1day. llondoy odi11on
• 10:00 a.m. Satunlly.

can relieve a

debtpr of financial obligation• and arrange a fair
diolributiou of aooeto. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for his or her peroonal
use . This may incl~de a car,- a h~use, clothes, and
houoehold good•·

Free Estimates

'

ALL Ytid Sileo Mutt
Bo Pilei In Advonce.

Galila High Stroot for al Slalt
Cheerleadlng In Australia. all Do. nation Appreclaled l Call: (7.tO)·

BAIIRUPrCY

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

5.

Electric &amp; Water and or .Full Hook-Up
Across from Forked Run State Park and
close to Fork Run Boat Ramp

FORIIIIIERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, POIIIIIEIOY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUT£ 33
1
6 IIIIIILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD II

, On Fiatwooas !{d.,
· Lab/Mix, Black, with
I •White markings on each
paw, tip ofrail, and ·
as:toss chest

'

1-740-667-3083
1-740-667-33 16
$550.00 Year
$12.00Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

Linda's Painting

Lost P•ppy

'

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

QUAUTY WINDOW SYSTEMS

CaU 992-2727

Matches

Family: Babv Items . Prom
Dresaea, Kitchen Booth, Wind·
ows, Stiel Stove Pipe, Misc .
llems, 2208 SA 588, Saturday 9·

Agomey At Law
(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACJORY DIRECf PRICES

ProfP'am Guide

Slug &amp; Shot

·DRIVEWAY STOllE

Fresh mpply of bedding planla and veptab... coming on
Cucumber, squash, cantaloupe, &amp; watermelon plants are upll

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTV, OHIO
In the Matter ol
Mirande Swiney
C.u No. 301100
NOTICE
Ravllld Code, Sec.
2717.01(A)
NollCIII hereby given thll
Melllll Ann Swiney lor
Mirande Hellen Ponder,
CaM No. 30800 ol 3876~
Carpentor·D)'IIVUII
Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45788, hoe
applied to the Common
Pl111
Court, · Probate
Dlv!alon ol Melge County,
Ohio, lor ·an ord1r to
chang• her nama to
Mlrandll Swiney.

Lost:

.\Vjlliam Sa&amp;anek,

992-41190R 800-291-5600

For Free

Need A BiB One
,
CaU A Unle One

New shipment of shrubs &amp; perennials

P"bllc No.t lca

Found: Mlniatu•o Plnchor To11io•
MIIC , SltVtr Chain, VIcinity: Third
Avenue, U0 -~~ 1·0583. 7~0· ~~ 1 0385.

For Information Regarding Ban.kruptcy contact:

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

Television

Don~

Color bowls, pltnlm, porch bom, herbal porch boxes-give MOM some color for Mother's Dty

lEI

1

.

I.
\

To The Residents
of
Gallia County!

Free Estimates 1 c..
740-742-8608

Chester, Ohio

COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER

Log11
Notice
to
Contrlcloro:
Sollobury
Townohlp It taking bldo on
Hezerd Mll!getlon work.
ProjiCt conelet ol ei8V11IIon
ol etructur.., flood proof·
lng end retrollntng. For
more lnlormlllon on bid·
ding cell (740) 992-6839.
(5) 7, 10, 11 3TC

............ lrlcll
..... c..tncllea .

-Complete Auto Service- .

Sidewalks, l'atioo
Parking Lou

98S 4422

In honor of Mother~ Day, thu weelu.nd we are ping a FREE planllo aU mothenl
Special of the week: Wide selection pf Clematis only $7.99 each.
Beautiful10" Fern bask!ltS only $9.99
12" Fern Baskets only $19.99

LEGAL NOTICE

740-~1311.

Near the 338 &amp; 124 spli! in the Great Bend

Re Le HOLLON CONCRETE
TRUCKING CONNECFION
f)uality Driveways,

Guard awarded Vreeland 's unit the
accolade because of the crew ' s
efforts in assisting \'onland, Mainebased Coast Guard cutters with preventive maintenance and filling mission-critical billets for Coast Guard
deployments. to the &lt;;:aribbean and
Europe .
He joined the Navy in Jun~ •.
1989.

a

Public Notice

Frltndfy Vldntt: Crown City Area,

Phone: .740-843-5572

The Computer System For .The Offlnt Of Meigs
Co•.Clerk Of Courts Will Be Off Line And
Unavailable On Tuesday May 11, 1999
Sorry For Any Inconvenience

Dog. Long Body, Shor1 Lego, Very

Racine; Ohio

All Makes Tr11ctnr &amp; '
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Par~s
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 Soulll
Coolvlllfl, OH 45723

MARIE VAUGHAN

KAREN'S ·GREENHOUSES

·

SELF STORAGE

DIPDYIAG
PARft

Bu/ldo•er &amp;: Bai:lcho•
Service•
Houae· &amp; Trailer Siteo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading .
Seplic Sya1e1111 &amp;:

POMEROY
"Advanced
Directives" including living wills
and durable power of ·auorney, Veterans Memorial Hospital, ski lled·
POMEROY - Bedford TownHarold Vreeland
nursin g dining room, John Lentes, ship Trustees, Tuesday, ?.p.m. at the
Navy Peuy Officer 2nd Class
speaker. Public invited, refresh- town hall.
Harold E. Vreeland, a 1989 graduate
ments.
of Kyger Creek High School in
· SYRACUSE . Meigs County . Cheshire, recently received !he
POMEROY - Organizational Chamber of Commerce, luncheon Coast Guard Meritorious Unit Commeeting of the Monday evenin g meeting, Tuesday noon, Carleton mendation while assigned to the
ladies league at the Meigs County School. Renee Cacchillo of Ohio Precommissioning Unit Higgins,
Golf course, Monday, 5 p.m. A short Works to speal\.
· soon to be commissioned as-- ahe
business meeting will be followed
Navy 's newest destroyer.
by a nine hole scramble. All substiThe Commandant of the Coast
tutes are also invited to participate in
the scramble. Teams ·who want io
participate or anyone. who wants to
play on a substitute basis may sign
up at the clubhouse or call 99237 10. 992-6 130, 'or 949-2530.

·By MAGGIE JACKSON
twice a ma i11h . During opening encouraging . the staff to work in
AP Business Writer
week. she and her co- workers costume that day.
NEW YORK (AP) - Come will see the movie when th ei r
Challenger, Gray &amp; Christmas
~ay 19, Seth Miller and his staff . boss rents a theater.
Inc. , an employment agency, estl ·
hope to be far, far away from
When 'Wil Schreier heard the mnte s 2.2 million employees
work , kicking back with popcorn, movie was coming , he quickly could sk ip work to sec the mov ie
'a-soda and a.big screen full of the r'ented a 500-seat theat er in on opening day.
·re!Urn of "Star Wars ."
Columbus , Ohio, for emp loyees
Won'1 that hurt productivity ''
Don 't loo~ for many !'Star . at his Int ern et q msulting firm , Economi st Sung Won Sohn of
Wars" buffs ai work on the day NGDA Interactive Communica- Well s Fargo in Minneapoli s says
the latest installment in the galac- tion s, and th ei r gue sts . But 'their ·any dip will be offset by a boost
eNen in spending on thing s such as
tic epic is released . They're clos- enthusiasm
surprjsed
ing down offices, .renting out the- Schroter, a diehard fan.
tickets , toy s or popco rn .
He got requests for I 00 tickets
aters and taking weeks· of vacaStill. you won't catch him tak lion lo stand in line for tickets .
in I 0 minute s - the bigg es t Ing the day off or s,tanding in line
~ By one estimate, more than 2 response he has ever gonen. to a to sec the movie. He ' s a "Star
:million workers could skip work company e-mail.
Wars" fan' but says he will wait a
·for the movie's opening. A
To complet!' t!1e May 21 fes- week or I wo .
tivi(ies. he is throwi ng a prenational holtday is taking shape.
" My tim e is more val uable, "
&gt;&lt;
"Nothing's thai important that screening o ffice _. party and h ~ says with a ch uckl e.
we can't skip work for the day ,"
says Miller, president of Bostonbased Miller Systems. an Internet
consulting company with a staf~
of seven. "As soon as the date
was announced for the. movie, I
decided that had to be a company
holiday."
·
Brand()n Herman told his parents that. he won't be 'working at
his family's video production
company most of this month
because of the movie, the first
release of a "Star Wars" fi'lm
: since 1983 . Ticke!S go on sale
May 12 . .
This Applies To Legal Department Only
"I've wailed 16 years," he
says, standing his groun&lt;l in"the
·ticket line outside
New York
theater as fellow fans around him
''dueled with light-sabers. "I can't
·wait any longer."

Dave's Garage

_., .......

...

TUESDAY
RACINE -' The Southern Junior
High Boosters, Tuesday, 6 p.m. New
officers to be elected.

Star Wars' fanatics will be taking the day off

HILL'S

Sizes ::• x 1O'
to =to· x 30'
Hours
7:00AM·· 8 PM'

HOWARD
EICAYATIIIG CO.
:u -

se'rvcd at6:30 p.m.

CHESHIRE - Disabled Ameri·
can Veterans meeting Monday, 7 ·
p.m. at the hall. Dinner will be

Found; Female Brown I Black

~

80

~

-~-----Community Calendar'-------=---~
SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen Camp 7230
Mother's Day potluc;k dinner Satur-day, 5 p.m. at the Woodmen Hall .
Meat, salad, rolls, pop, coffee and
tea provided. Each mother to receive
a fl ower.

'I•

Lo•t and Found

Galllpolll

740-949-2217

742·1701

..........
....
.....He.

· (304IM2·3T/3.

80

740 742-8888

29670 B81han Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

15 y,.., E"perumce

-

Mon· Frl 8:30 • $:00
Over 40 yl'l experience

c~~f;!)~lt)f;l!~f;l!~~ft

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
PalnUng, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior

POMEROY - Right to Life
meeting, Pomeroy Libracy. 7:30
p.m. Monday.

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

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
"SpecUJ
· ·t··
rz:1ns ILoH
f'
g omet "
Commercial &amp; ReBide nlial
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
· Phone 740·992·3987
· John Dean; . Owner

FLINTKNAPPING - Portland's Danny Roush gave a presentation on the anc lent art of flintknapplng lit the
·URG/RGCC Meigs Center Pow Wow Preview. He makes ·a
wide variety of stone implements, including arrowheads,
spear points or knife blades.
·

GIYttWIY

Klt1en1 : 7 weeki did to good
home. (7401 Ht -111 1 Ono to

An'" '

The Community Calendar is pub' lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce l]leetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type . Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days. ·

The Dally Sentinel e

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Three Meigs students honoreq:
by WSAZ as 'Best of the Class':

URG Meig~ Center holds Pow Wow Preview
The University of Riq
Grande/Rio Grande Community College Meigs Center recently held a preview
of the Pow Wow, an annual
celebration organized by
the office for multi-ethnic
affairs, located on the main
campus at Rio Grande .
Storytelling, music and
dance , face painting, and
nintknapping were . partic i·. patory activities for M e igs
Center students.
Gina Pines, director of
the Meigs Center, said Sara
Sow, director of multi -eth nic affairs, has been to the
Meigs Center three times in
the past year with special
presentations.
"The Pow Wow preview
PANTHER WOMAN' A
event offered great c ultural . woman
who identified herself
· · diversity for approximately only as "Panther Woman;' led
30 Meigs Center students song and ·dance for the Pow
and their families ," Pines Wow Preview at the URG/RGCC
Meigs Center In Middleport.
said.

7, 1999-

8111 Moootopeugn Auctlon.. rlng.
Complell Aucllonaerlng Ser~tl c·
ea . Conalgnment aucllon· M111
Street, Mldd1epor1 , Tl'lur&amp;days .
Ohio Llcanoo 17693. H0·989·

2823.

,

Rick Pe1rson Auction Company,
full ttme auctioneer, compltlt
auct ion service.
llcenud
t66,0hlo &amp; Wilt Virginia , 30ol773-5785 Of 304-773-5407.

•

.

Drummer loottlng lor lead, bassist
and female vocalls1 with one II)·
strument capability, call 740-698·
· 8212, John Peck.
:
Easy Work! Ell:cel len t Pay! ASsemble Products at Home. Call
Toll Fret . 1·800·467·5566 E1t
12170
.
-

Hiring:

1

.

HEAVY EOUIP OPERATOR$"

.

AND CARPENTERS
.. :
2 ....... ~ .....
Necessary, Call 1-600-339-651 • ••
Be._n B:oo A.M. ·5:00 ~M. '

.

'~

An Equal Opportunity

E~ ,

LITTLE CAESARS Is Now Hiring
All Posittons ; Drivers. ln·Sune

And Ass is tant Manager Po.sl·
lions Available Drivers E1~
Hourly Wage + Tfps &amp; Commf~ .
slonsl Please Apply At The Galt1·
polis little Caesars.
.1
Local Trucking Company Seekthg
Qualified Truck Drivers . GQOn
Pay AM Benetits. Sand Resume
To : Drive r, P.O. Box 109 Ja~lt­
son. Ohio 45640. Or can 1· 7f().
2.86· 1-'63 To Schedule An lnte ~­
~~'IIW.

lltnogor:

,

Rapidly e~epanding clnarna clrc'ull
has immediate openll'!g . 11 you
have food service or retail man,·
agemenl experiences thi s wo ul ~
be a natural fit . Reloc1Uon to
Plt1aburgh, Pa. required. Prevto.us
movie theatre managemenVpro·
jecllon booth ell:periences a bl6
plul!ll &amp;xoeuent starting salary and
benefits package included. Aelo·
Cltlon fees will be re imbursect.
Stln Now l Career growth is un- ·
llmlted1 Training will be provided .
Please tax resume to Joseph ,D
Mgolotll (9141569-9802
Medical Process o1 FT IPT N9
E•p. Nee. Will Ttaln PC Raq. Eain
&gt;lllK CaJII!llD-663-7400.
'
Nlld 7 Ladle&amp; To Sell A\/On, 74'b·

406·3356. .

NEEDED IMMEOIATELYIII , , ,
Holzer Medical C~nter Is Seekiftt
A Licensed Boiler Operator CMt
d ldates Must Have A High Pres-.
sure Boiler Operator s license ,n
The State Ot Ohlo.
: ,
E~ecellent

PICI&lt;age.

Wa ge And Be nel ll
.·'

It lntlireste&lt;~, Please Contact:

'

Rosie Ward
' ·•
Oifeclor 01 Human Flesources •
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
100 Jac~~;son Plke
.,
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563 , ;
Phone: 740-446-5105
• .~
Fax !TOO : 740... &lt;6·5106 .
Now hiring ll!eguards lor Middle,:
port Pool. pick up applications at
Middleport PoUce Department

··

Nurse A ld t Training Clas ses :
Come Join Our Team That Makes
A Olflerence . We Are OfferinG'
Nurse Aide Training Classes Ofl.
Site At SCenic Hills Nursing CeO·
ter. It You Have Prevto uslv Cofht.
pleted An Applicat ion Pleaae
Come And Apply Agai n Or Con-...
tact Pam Caldwell, 8:30A.M. TO
4:30 P.M. Wednasday Thru Ftll.
day At740-&lt;U6-7150.
•J

�•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 7, 1999

•

Pomeroy • Mlddleport~hlo

Friday, May 7,1999
#-LEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

BRIDOI:

'WHA.T I

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

"IWU&gt; Wl&gt;:o

MOO Gar
nf WOAIST

40 tt.llen poor!

ACROSS

PHILLIP

OF IT'

ALDER

13~

180
In Store Food Demonstrators
Needed , Al l Areas 01 Ohio &amp;

lure HeaUng Sy11tems and Re·
modeNng 1740f4'1 1 1401

Jewelry Salas Retail Salas and
Computer Experience Required
Acqufslllona Fine Jewelry 1 51
Second A11e Galltpoils Apply
Monday '""' Friday

FINANCI AL

210

1'1\Rr TIME LPN POSITION

Opportunity

Holzer Senior Care CentAr A
Progreaslva Long Term Care
Company 11 Currenlly Taking Ap·
pllcallons For Pari Time LPN Positions The Facility Is Located In
The Southern Region Of Ohio
We Are Seeking Individuals Who
Will Enaure The Highest Stan
dard Or Resident Care The Ap·
pllcant Must Have Art Ohio NursIng License Holzer Senior Care
Offers Excellent Benefits (Paid
vacation. Paid liolktays. Ere ) If
lntereated In A ChaAenglng Posl
lion Appty tn ParSon At 380 Colonial Drive, Bidwell, Ohio 45614

INDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that vou do busr·
ness with people you llnow, and
NOT lo send money through the
mail unlit you ha111 Investigated
lho offering

230

Carpel and Upholstery Cleaned
wllhout "Steam• or Absorbent
Compounds Soapleas Anti At ·
soil Delergenls used e~eclu1lve ·
ty Sate lor all fabrics Fast dry
tng (1 ·2 hours) Eliminates ovar
welling Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675-4040
lor Free EsHmatest

Part lime ofllce work part lime
cashier well eatabllshed bustness Send resume to The Datly
Sentinel, PO Box 72·975, Pomer·
&lt;11 OH 45769

COPPICK LANDSCAPING
50556 SA 124
RaCine Ohio

Postal Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc
Benall ts No Expertence For
App And Exam infor , CaN 1 800.
813 3585 E•l 8826 8AM 9PM ,
7 Days Ids Inc

Free esltmates tlestgn planmng,
complete landliCape service. res
ldenual and commercial, founlatn
and garden display 15 years ex·
parlance

REGISTERED NURSE Jackson
General Hospllai R!&gt;loy wv
Needs lull ti1111j RNs lor CCU 0&lt;
MetVSurg Cooent WV Stale Ll
cense Previous retevanr exper._
ence Reply to Jackson General
Hospllal PO Box 120 Ripley
WV 25271 EOE

741).1149-3130
Now seMIYIJ GaiDa ana
surrounding areas
Does Your House Siding, Deck,
or Driveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing Is the ar)swert Call Clearly Clean at
(304)675 4040 far a Free Es·
llmate

RESUMES 'UNLIMITED Oilers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Matenals
To Get You Prepared 740·388·

3800

TURNED DOWN DN
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-1188-562·3345

Rooter needed some carpenter
ellj)8rlerce hej&gt;lul 740·378-6349
Sates Representative $12 btlllon
company wilh 100+ years of solId performance seeks entJgetlc
professional lor sale&amp; career In
the nre Insurance and financial
services Industry Two year 1ra1n·
lng program aggress1ve com pensation and benefits package,
and lulllon asslalance for profes·

WALL·CEILINO CLEANED EX·
PERTLY Saves on repatnting tn
definitely We use the exclusive
Von Schrader 'J53 Power Walt
Cieamng System Protects paint
leaves glass retards chalking
Anti Mtldew no odor aanilizes
Free estimates Call Clearly
Clean atl304'1B75·4040

slonal development Opportunity 1,
for promotion to sates manage r
ment For mora Information con·
ract Unda Dunlap 740·446 0372
EOE

II'""--------..
All real estate advertising tn
this newspaper Is sublect to
lhe Federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which makes tt utogat
to adver11se "any preference,
Umftalton or diSCrlmlnatiOO
based on race color, rehgKm,
se)( ramiUat status or nauonat
ofigtn or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dlsc:flm•natton •

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS
Holzer Senior Care Center Is
Currently Taking Applications For
State Tested Nursing Assistants
Exc:enent Working Environment
And Beneflls No Pl'tone Calis
Pleaae Apply In Person At 330
Colonial Drive Bidwell Ohio
45614
Tl'te Town of New Haven Is accepting appllcattons lor the post·
tions ol pool manage~ and llle
guards for the summer Applies
Ilona may be obtatned at !he
Town Hall 218 Afth Street
Wer.e Growing Again! Comfort Air
Syllems of Gallipolis IS loo~ng for
Service TeeM and qualified lnatailera Muat be certified and will·
lng to learn new aspects of
HVAC Top pay, Insurance, Uni
forms and Advancements Must
be near In appearance Apply
between 9am and 12 noon at 407
Third Avenue GallipoliS Oh
Wlldlllo Jobs 10 $21 60/Hr Inc
Benellls Game Wardens SecurIty, Maintenance, Parle Rangers
No Exp Needed For App And
Exam Info Call HOO 813·3585,
Exl 8827 8AM·9PM, 1 Days Ids
Inc
Wlldllle Jobs $21 80/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardens Securl
ly Matnrenance.Park Rangers
No EKp Needed For App /Exam
lnlo
Call
1·800·813· 3585
Exl 8827, 8AM·9PM, 7 Days
Ids Inc
Buslnel8
Training

Th1s newspaper w•ll not
knowingly accept
advenlsements for real estale
which Is In violation of lhe
taw Our readers are hereby

Homes for Sale

2910 Mewdowbrook Orlve 3 BR
Ranch LR, FA w/Gas Fireplace
Newly Remodeled In 1998 Exlensi'ile Landscaping $74 500
(304 )675-5143 after SPM
3 Bedroom Farmhouse on t acre
Collage View Or $33 000 00
(740)·245-9667
3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Years Old, 28x30 Attached Ga
rage 12x24 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed 69 1/2 Acres Or
Will Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs Co
741).992·3537
By owner 725 Page Street, Mkt
dleporl house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate, will sell house wllh
out lot&amp; for $89 000 7.40 992
2704, 740 992 5696

EXCELLENT CONDITION: 2
Story, 3 Bedrooms, 2 112 Baths,
Near Holzer, Immediate Passes·
slon, 740-44e-9672

Do

Approved Master Licensed Elec
trlclan, WV025956 Free Estl
males tor Resldenlial Ser11ices
(304)675 78'1.7

Excellent start-up home Owner
pay closing cost 38R w/Base·
menl Eleelrlc Heave A 532.000
(304)882 3772

Carpentry Oecks Porches Addi·
llano Ramoclels. 741).441 1316
CI&lt;IA With 20 Y&lt;s Exp And E•
cell References Has Pri11ate
Room And FIJII Care In He&lt; Homo
For The Elderly For More Info
7C0· 258·6342, Also Nutritious
Meat Planning And Wheel Chair
Access life
E &amp; S Lawn Service Design, lm·
plementalion, and Service
A11allable lor Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free estt
ma111. Sattsfaotion guaranteed
Greg Mll"&lt;&gt;an 304/875-4628

For Sale By Owner 3BR. 1 1/
2BA • large famlty room &amp; ofllce,
upstairs lotally remodeled new
roof guttering water soltner &amp;
lots of extras 2912 Anniston
Drive PI Pleasanl, (304)67~
2608 Leave Mesaage on Ma·
cfllno
For Sale By Owner 4BR 3000
Square Foot House 4 Car Ga
rage, !5 Acres Very S•cludad
$199.999 (803)366-9438
For sale· Du~x apanmem. each
unit l'las two bedrooms, one lull
bath etectrlc heat, SR 1 Tuppers
Plains publk aewer Installed
Great Income potential 740·687·
3074

Georgea Portable Sawmill don't
haul vour loga to !he m111 just call
30«175-1957
Houle Cleaning Service! Will
Clean at your Convenience Ref·
erenc:e avallllble Call (740)9388·
8872

House For Sale 21Z19 Oak Sl
PI Pleuanl $28,000 (304)895·

3062

lnlerJor I E.llterlor Painllng, Ex·
perltnced, References ~eaaon·
able Ratti For Free Estimate,
741).3fii-8Qol1

House In Mason WV· Adams
Street, like ntw, ont and 112~
block• from grade school 7
rooms and balh call Sue Hall,
304· 675 0860 or 7~0-742·2022
after 5pm

Need sllter lor lhe surnrner? Day·
care wllh a pool Open Monday
lhru Frld~. ask lor Kelly, 740·
887-84eO, llqlerl Plalno ni

urge family home lor sale on len
lovely acres Fo"' bedrooms, 1wo
and one haW balhl, two lirlplaCeO,
d r 11
I
I II 1
orma
v ng room an am Y
room, four car garage and two
storage buildings Two apart·
ments which are complete!~ lur
nlshed Preaae call 740· 992·
22m

Power weahlng, mowing, deck
~ call Jim or Shawn, 741).
1185-3n2,741).949-2844
Will Mow Weedeat Any Size
Yord, D-ches, Hllsldes. 741).441

0882

Pomeroy· one bedroom home
needs C06fTletlc repa irs 112 000
ma~e olfer, Syracuse double
wide -4 bedrooma, block lounda·
!Jon newly remode led carpet
$52 000. beau11ful 50x201 lot, all
appliances &amp; d•shwasher tnclud
ad, 140-992 · 4~14 ask lor Chris

Marlin
Restored VIctorian home sflualed
on t2 BCfll , VIllage Middleport,
secluded and prlvalt. appoint
men~ cal741).992 51196
Rockaprlng&amp; , Ranch , 3 bedroom,
1· 1/2 baths, large kitchen , new
roof, newly water proofed ftniShed
basement heat pump, large patio,
paved driveway 900 squint feel
delacl1ed garaoe. for sate by .owner $79 500, 741).992·3884
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom, 2 1!2 Baths,
L~ing Room Dining Room, Eal·ln
Kitchen Lg Family Room 740
245·9337
Three bedroom home wtth lots of
closet apace, close lo school on
corner lot, storage building, one
bedroom rental home included
741).992-6154
Three bedroom , basement, two
car garage 20 acres $75 ,000
741).843-5159

.

320

Mobile Homas
for Sale

"'""Amazing•• •• 5 Bedrooms, 2
1/2 baths, over 2 000 sq It. for
tess than $400 mo Free Delivery
&amp; Sal 1-600 948 51178
1Ox50 trailer South Second Ave
nue. Middleport, finished building
large lot wlfh goldllsl't ponds
$22 000 rental unit, 740·9924514 ask for Chris Martin
12x55 Master Craft two bedroom
one bath gas heat $4000 negoll·
Bbte 740-992· 1042
16x80&gt; Vinyl Shingle Assume
Loan 1 800 383-6862
1969 Schultz Mobile Home
Asking $800
Needs Work
1394)67!&gt;7883 After 6PM
1973 H11tcrest two bedroom mobile home 740·992·5039

1980 14x65, electric, 2 bedroom.
2 full baths very good condition
$11 000 call evenings 740 949
2452
1981, 14X65 Trallo 2BR,
A C , 1 Bath,
Porches 10)(24
(304)113-5319/Spm 11 pm
1988 Dan11llle 14x70 With E~e
panda 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$11,500, 080 Mull Movel 740
386 9567
1990 Royal Co11e, 14X74
2Baths, Skylights In Kitchen Island Stove Underpinning &amp;
Porch $14 000 (304)882 224(j

Ctutaty'a Family Uvtng properly
lor sale 202 204 N Second AYO·
nue , Middleport Four 2 bedroom

apanmenta, two commercial units,
39 5x116' brick otd Firesto ne
building Asking price $69,500,
melee otler Income S1520 montn.
call U0·992·4514, ask lor Chris

Marlin
Commercj al Building In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease Call
(803)366-11436

350

Lota

111i2 COMMODORE
14x80 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Vinyl
Siding AM Sl'ttngle Roof New
Carpel llo Financing Available
Wllh $1 000 Down And $217 Par
Monlh Cal f.ll00.500-3~7
1994 16x80 Sunshine Mobtle
Home Three Bedrooms Two
Bathrooms. Walle In Closets. Utili
ty Room. Electric Heat Pump Refrigerator And Stove Included,
Can After4 PM 741).2%· 1302

&amp;

Melge Co: "Rutland Wl'tlle Hili
Ad 11 Acres $14000 or 9 Acres
$12 000, public water Danville
Briar Rd, 7 Acres $13 000 On SR
325 nice 5 Acres $16 000 publiC
water
G•llle Co.: Soulh off SR 218·
Williams Hollow Rd 68 wooded
Acre&amp; with stream $45,500 pub·
lie water Fnendly Ridge Ad , 15
Acrn $14,000 cl1y SChOOlS
Teens Run 10 Acres $10 000
pubic water
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing lnlo Take 10%
Of! Ust Price On Cash Buys!
Home· SIIe Mobil Homes Wei·
come lots ol Woods -Plenty of
Aooml &amp;400 00 Down, $145 00
mooth (740) 256 1216
Ita not a Farmers Farm, lis a
Large Beauttfui Home In the Mid
die ol Lois of Acreage Good
Hunting Fishing Lo1s or Prtvacyr
Close to Town $175K (740) 258·
12t6
LAND
In The Country Me1gs County
near Rutland Making deals on
Comblnalton lots 5 to 15 Acres
of rolhng woods, great bulldrng
sites. or use as hunting land
Starting 0 $9 500 County water
Double wld_,a are PermUted So/.
down Land Contract Free Mapsl
1·(800)·213-8365
River Lot For Sate West Columbia Cail(304)895-3902
Shaded Campslle by the River
Boating, Fishing and Prl11atel
$400 00 Down $73 00 month
(740) 256-1218
Ten Acres, Partly Woods, 200
Feet plus Rd frontage on a black
lop rd Green Twp , ctty schools,
minutes from town Hospital.
stores etc • Asking $40 ooo Will
sell less Land (7401·245-9033

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 · 500 -.eras
We Pay Cash 1 800·213 8365
Anlhony LanrJ Co

RENTALS

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
include&amp; 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes waaher &amp; dryer, skirting
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 7• per monlh wllh $1150
down Calli 800-831·3236
Nice Home Sel Up On Lol Maka
2 Paymenra. Move In, 4 Years
Lell On Loon (304)722·7140
Please Help! 3 Bedroom 2
Baths. jusr take o11er Paymenl&amp;l
1-81J0.7J6.3332
Rent Buster New 1999 14:c70 2
or 3 Bedrooms Only 1995 oo
Down. $195 00 per month Free
Oall')lry and Set Up Call f.BOO·
948-5678
SAVE THOUSANDS
On Tha Purchase Of A New
Fleetwood Or Dutch Home And
Receive Award Winning Custom·
or Service CALL For FREE Lller
alln 1 800-688 1763
Uted SingleWide, Around $100

· ~~~~C~a~l2.1-6~00~-114~e-:;511!7~8~
Oakwood Homaa Barboursville
WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Oown Doublo Wl~e. 304·

738-3409

330

Farm• fcir Sale

Small farm (~2 aCJeo) with mobile
home. soli oufflclent with nattKal
water springs, 2 gas wetlt, aoma
limber, 20 mtnures from Alhana
10 minutes rrom Pomeroy, tots ol
pmacy, 1or $66.~00. may spill ""·
740·992·3584

2 Bedroom, wfBasement &amp; Ga
rage Deposit &amp; References No
PelS (304)675 5162
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, 4 Miles
From Gallipolis Great Location
$400/Mo • Oepostt &amp; References
can 740-448-9649
House For Renl (304)675-6720

EYOnlngo

Nice Small 2 Bedroom, 5 Room
House, Near Centerville /Thurman, Gallla Schools Count)' Wa
ter Included Planl A Garden,
$325/Mo , Plus Deposit, No In·
Side Pelll740-662-9032

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES ~2 Westwood Orlve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446· 2588
Equal Housing Oppo~ooHy
Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Ut11itlea Inter
view Raferences, No Pets, Lease
Depostt, Non Smoker&amp;, In C1ty
741).441)-3664
C hrtsty s Family Living, apart
menls, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·4514, apartments avail·
abM, furnished &amp; unfurniShed
Fu rnished Studio Apartment
$350fMo Include~ All Utilities!
Trash PtckUp &amp; Primestarl No
Pet&amp; Or Smokers Please Call
Dolly 740 448 1603 Or 740 446
1721
Gracious l111lng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Aparlments In Middleport From $:249 $373 Call 740·
992· 5064 E~ual Housing Opporb.mllles
New Haven. 1 bec1room, furnished
apartment deposit S references,
740 992·0165
Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt
Prtme Downtown Gallipolis Loca·
lion No Pets S300 + Ulilltle&amp;
Reference Required 740 4460008
Nloe 2 bedroom apartment In S)'T
acuse $285 a month trash In
eluded $200 deposit. 740 667
3516
North 3rd Ave , Middleport. 2
bedroom, unfurnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references 740·992·
0165
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage Trash , $315/Mo, 740·
446 0008

One bedroOm apartment In Mid·
dleport, one bedroom furnished
house In Galllpohs, 740·992 9191
Spacious New Apartmenl , With
Attached Garage, 2 Bedrooms
Nice LBWJl References Required
Close To Hofzer's S3851Mo, Plus
Deposit 740 446-2801
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors, CA I 1/2 Balh, Fully Car·
pe1&amp;CI, PallO, No Pels Lease Plut
Security Deposit Required 740·
448-3481 741).446 0101 •
"TWin Rivers Tower now accepting
appllcalion!l for 1BR HUO sub·
sldlzed apt lor elderly and hand
~appe&lt;J EOH 304-675·6879
Upstaira Three Room Apartment
AI 651 Second Avenue Gallipolis Next To library, $350/Mo
Plus Dapoall, No PelS. Call Deb·
ble Or JIJI!y At 740 448-7323

460

Space for Rant

Secluded farm nouse near Dexter, depoau and lease required
614-759·1959

Mobile home site available between Athens and Pomeroy, call
741).365-4367

Three bedroom hOme In Middle·
port , $350 month plus deposit
741).992·31114

New Mobile Home Park al Gallipolis Ferry Now acctpltng applications tor
on slle (304}675-6908

Your Home Ia Jusl A Phone Call
AW"f 304·736·7295

420

Mobile Homea
for Rent

114 Condor Street $250/Mo
$150 DeposH. 2 Bedrooms 304
633-8937. 741).386-8591
14x80 2 bedroom, new carpel
all electric, trash paid, 1300 plus
daposll (304)576·2929
14x70 two bedroom trailer in Mid
d•port. S300 par wonlh, 740·992·
~39

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homea air
conditioned, $260·$300 sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·
992-2167
2 Bedroom Trailer In Hartford
$200 00 month, plus utllllle&amp;,
plua deporl• (304)875-1e~l
Mobil* home for rent In Racine,
00 pets, 740·992·5858

440

Apartment•
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartnwnts, fur·
nlshed and unfurnished, ucurlty
depoall r•qulred , no pets, 740992 2218
1 l!drm • E"ra Nice Flrll Monlfl
Free Wllh One Year Laesa
$279 00 Per Month Plus UIIHIIes

741l-44f-m7

.'
•

Aparlmenl, Gallipolis Ferry, De
posH Required
No Peta
(304)675-2548

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dleport available Immediately,
740·992 9133

Houses for Rent

New Haven 2Bedroom Home
Garage Rtver Frontage references, Deposit, &amp; Lease (304}9347482

Make 2 Payments No Payment
Arter 4l Year&amp;, J04. 736-7295

Apartment 2 Bedrooms. Dining
Room, Kitchen, Ulfltty Room. No
Pets Deposit 1400/Mo • Refer
ences 740 245-5053

"''a

470

Wanted to Rent

Couple want to rani 3 bedroom
trailer or house with yard, have
PIJS, between Middleport and
740·992·8710

r,lE RC HANDISE

51 0

HOU118hold

Qooda
Appllancaa
~econdllloned
washers Drvers Aang11, Refrl·
gralora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740-•46
7795
GE
Regrigeralor,
20 8
Cub II (good) Couch &amp; Lovo Seal
(nlcol (:!04)87~·8165
OODD USED APPLIANCES
Waahera, dryers refrlgeratora,
rangea Skaggs Appllanc;l81, 78
VIne Slrel!tt, Call?-40·448·7398,
1·886!618.0128

8101.
AKC Aegtatered Lab Puppies,
Ready To Go May 161h 740· 379·
2883.
Mother a Day Splclail Slamt~e ,
and Himalayan t&lt;lttena Wormed
and Litter Tratned (740 )· 367·

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Anllquea ,
1124 E Main Srreet, on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W t 0 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday t 00 to
6 00 p m 740·992·2528 , Russ
Moore owner

540

770~

FAn~1

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Mlacellaneoua

2 walk behind Gravely&amp;· one
runs. exoeuenl conctmon, one tor
parts, $400, 740-742-2373 after

18Ft Gooseneck Stalk Trailer,
John Deere MT Tractor Wllh Cui·
llvators Turning Plow Good
Shape, 740·446-3!114

4pm

4 000 PSI Pressure Washer Hot
/Cold Unit, Honda Engine, 740·
386·8803

1988 GMC 2 Ton TruCk 300 Gal
ton Wheel Spray, 717 Field
Chopper (304)675·1858

Air Conditioner, Up rtghl Freezer
7Ft Christmas nee, Qld Radio &amp;
c B Best Offer (304)882·3773
AMAZING
METABOLISM
Brealcthroughlll loae t0-200
Pounda Easy, Quick, Faa!
Dramalk: Results 100% Natural,
l&gt;octor Recommended Free Samples Coi1741).44H962
Beige Tw•ed Sofa !Love Seat,
Nlt:e 1200. Refrigerator /Almond,
Excellent Condition, $200. 740·
388·11416 Aher 6 ~M
Commercial culvert, 20' long, 12
gauge, call 741).992-~3
Complete Set 9 t Encyclopedia
Brlltanlca Including Reference
Books, Nover Use&lt;J, $200 OBO,
Mini Condlllon 741).448-71 06

Fair Lambs For Sale (304)6755492 $7~
Fair P1gs $65. Cure&lt;J Pork. USDA
Inspected $2 25 Per Lb 740·
245-9557
Fair Pigs tor Sate! Exeeltenr Blood
Llnesl For more Information Call
(740)·24~·5672 or (740) 367·
0583

TRAN SPO RTATI ON

24~· ~74

=:---:--~-:--:--- , I

Grevley W.alk Behind with 38'
Mower $550 00 Also some ac·
ceuoriea for sale (7-40) 441 ·
0972 after 7 pm

710

Grubb's Plano · luning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446 4525
Jeep CJ7 1985, 8 cyl ~sp
$3,400 Uprlghl Freezer $60 00
(740) 446 8093
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rabull11n Slock
Cali Ron Evans 1 800-537 9528
Johnson s Used Furniture /Ap
pllances, 740·448 4039 740 4461004, 5 Miles Our Bul.a'llllie Pflce
Off 35 Algi"&lt; On Keeler lload Bl1111
House On Lett
Kenmore Washer I Dryer Tod·
dlar Car Bed All in Good Condlllonl (740)·446-3849
Lincoln Ranger 8 Porreble Weld·
er, Has Own Engine Used 128
Hours Alklng $2 200 740 367·

0260

Ohio Valley Bank Will Olfer For
Sale By Public Auclion A 1998
Toro Z255 Mower 1891864/
891951 &amp; A 1989 Mercury Sable
1628410 AI 10 00 AM AI The
OVB Annex , 143 Third Avenue,
Gallipolis OH Tho Above Will Sa
Sold To HlghaSI Bidder 'As IsWhere ts• Without Expreaaed Or
Implied Warrant~ And May Be
Seen By Calling Tha Collection
Oepartmenl At 740·441·1038
OVB Reserves The Right To Ac·
cepl Or Rejecl Any And All Bids,
And Withdraw Property From
Sale Prior To Sale Terms 01 Sale
CASH OR CERriFJED CHECK
PAIMESTAR
Flft Dl- 8poclll
. can now 1 800 28:&gt;2640
pRO I &amp; SUPPLy

We Are Professional Installation
And Service Supply We sen
Wholesale To the Public we
Sroc:tc Janltrol Healing And Cool·
tng Equipment, Duct Work" Reg~
lsters, And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furnish A List 01 Dealers To
lnarall For You If You Don'! Call
Us, We Both Loael 553 Jackson
Pike, 7•0·448 ·8308, 600 291·

Auloa for Sale

19111·11110 CARS FROM MOO
Pollee Impounds
And Tu
Repo's For Listings Call 1·800319-3323 E" 4420
1984 Plymoulh Grand Fury 318
cu IN 4DR Full Power, $600
080 (304)675·5570. Allar 5PMI
La~ Message
1985 Pontiac Fiero, Serious In·
qulrlas On~. 740 446- 3243 Allor

~PM
1987 Chevelle Good Body.. Easy
on Gasl Uaes No 0111 Call (740)
388·8472
1987 Plymouth Reliant Wagon,
Very Good Shape, Run Exl lbls
Of New Paris Asking $1 500
741).441-1176
1987 Toyota Cellca GT, 5 Speed,
A/C, Sun Roof P S • P B Runs
Great Call740 446·2107 740·
245-9164
1988 Dodge Dynasty 4 Doors.
AuiOmallc. $1 500 740 448-9582
1988 Ford Tempo $1,000, 1992
Topaz, aulo, wllh air. $2,000, 1992
Olda Clena e ely, auto, with air,
$2.200. 741).742·Zl57
1988 Pontiac Grand Prix. two
door, automatic. air, very good
condition , 118,000 muea, $2000
741).992·7689
1990 Chevy Lumina Euro Sport.
4 door, Looks GOOd Runs Good
High Mlleege $2,200 (3041675·
1851
1990 Chrysler 5th Avenue Very
GoOd Condition, One Owner
Clean, Excellent Gas Mileage
87,000 Mllea Alarm Sytlem.
ASS, $!5~.(304)675-761~
1990 GEO PrlsmExcellen1 Condl·
lion Runs Greall $2,~00 00 (7~0)

4oW!;4794
1fit2 Nlsaan Stanza, 4l door.
-

1233

0098
Rainbow Sweeper with attach·
menls, for ssle (304)675·1725
Us ad 2 112 Ton Heat-Pump &amp; Air
Condllloning
Unit
1400
(304)675 2475
Waler Pump With 4 Sprinklers
And Hosea For lrrlgatlona $200,
Home Built Spinning Wheels,
Smell Size $200 {Walnut) Weed
Eater &amp; Buah Wac~er With Saw
Blade $100 741).446-1319
Waterline Special 314l 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
137 00 Per 100 All Brase Com
pression Fillings In SIOck
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jack&amp;oo Ohio 1 fl00.~7 9~8
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison, 1210 Second Avenue, Gallipolis Ohio, 740 446-

4336

1995 Buick LeSabre Custom 4
Doors Blue Loaded, 740~682·
7512
1995 Neon $4.500 1990 Grand
AM New Motor 12 200, 1996 Ea·
cort $2,500, 741).448-7278
(997 Ford Explorer )(LT Loaded
28 000 MIIOI, Sal Facl Warr .£•
cellen1 Condition. 74il-444HI491
1998 Buick Century Custom, -4
Doors Loaded, 18,000 Mllea
$15,000 00 741).367.0157
1998 Ponllao Trans·.Am, Navy
BIIHI Molelllc. ~ 1 Lller, LS 1 En·
gine LNiher Interior, 10 Spealt;er
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Oisc CO
Changer, Fully Loadedl Will Take
Pay 011, 74().448-4548.
89 Plymoulh Horlzlon, 5sp, 89K,

New And U11d Furnllure Slort
Below Holiday loo, Kanouga StOll
And Sao Us 740-44f-4762

550

Washer $9~ Dryer $95, Eloctr!C
Range $85, l'iost FrH Rtfrlgara·
lor $150, Frotzer $1~0. Waohtr
120~ 1 Yoar Warranly, Dryer
1205 1 Year Warranly, Air Condlllonsr 14,000 BTU't, 220 1250,
Skaggo Appllanc01, 76 VIne
Slreel, Galllpois, 741).446-7396

All Steel Building Warehouse I
Arena BIDw·Out 60x100. 70X100,
80•125 100.,~0 30· 50% 011
B a • fl00.379·3754

Building
Suppllea

o

Block, brick, sewer plpel, winD·
owa, lintels, etc Claude Wtnters
Alo Grande OH Call 140·245·
~121

199-4 Pontiac Sunblrd LE 67 000
Milos $4.000 741).441-&lt;1132

6cly, $1.30000 (740) 446·3889
87 Ford E.llplorer XLT leather In·
terfor, sun roof, CO player, power,
$22,000, 741).992·7312

720

Trucka for Sale

s

oo ·n-·

1972 CJ5 Jeep 1 500
Chevrolel Truck $500 00 •111" Pull
Along Lark Camper wl!h air con·
d111orler $1 000 (740)·448-8945

3t NotloM

26 lrfehGMlk:

Jl:ul

28bnooll

Pas&amp;

mlrKle

Pa81

29 ShOI'IIy
3Q S.ld lo

Q

31
37

42 NlclwllUOt
Aleonder
43 Loogtlmo

MfANII'IG Of
Ttle yJOttl&gt;
"5POttTIMAN5tiiP:

•

tncks lost from lhy hand when no
worthy counung rs done
Take today ' s deal as an example

48

Desp1te West's takeout double, you

52Bouft--

same m bndge Track the

try

to

•

~

should he do that? Attacking With the

•

beart sequence " more natural.

~

1998 Yamaha Blaster 4 Wheeler, •
Low Hours $2 4.50 (304)675·
1105, After 6PM

'"t 1\e&gt;SOWTaY

L~T:,UI'\01&gt;.'(7

I..OVE{) IT! \o.IAAT

t \oJt&gt;..TC.riE{) 1'\

DO '1'00 ffiiNKa' II'.-,...
~1-Jt., (1\IEF,

~~m£_1

,.

nme SIX spades, two hearts and one

RS

I&gt;J ITf\ t.l'\\.:&gt;1 ""''"' :

club So, where IS tn ck
from?

10

loser.
Wesl wms woth the queen and
cashes a club tnck, but you have the
You can enter dummy with a

trump to diScard your heart loser on
the established d1amond
Once agam,

96 Plorls JOI Ski 780 95HP. 2Sealer 1 Owner Low Houra Ei '
cellent Condilion Includes Tral1
er $3 ,800 (304)895· 308018915 ~
3237

the

C H

LUZ

UGOUDZ

PUULII

rest

AHCM

10

..••••

.,

Rearrange letters of
0 four
Krombled wordt
low to form four words

.

I

PRIWE

I

place And rf you fa1l to count your
wmners and losers, you ' ll (almost)
never hit on the best hne

PEANUTS

ANSWER

&amp;

MotorHomea
1978 Chevy motor home 23 , air ~
conditioned everything worka 'I'
call14o-698-{)502
:

•

.· ·~

Pt/lar- Judge - Stoke · Rosary · SURPRISED

Don 1p1 ""'C by hit/~ P&lt;~&lt;ts r
Shop the clonrfled 1«1..,

I FRIDAY

.ROBOTMAN
1'¥ IIJ\L"W' ~ ~III'IR·O\Ril!.
ll:e~1E MI.RM ClOC!('

'

•

=a-:1-:0---:-:-----~,:
v

Improvements

•

--:....;==;,;.;.;,:~
'I
IIASEMENT
WATERPADDFINO
-'
Unconditional lllellme guarantee
local references furnished Ea·
labllshod 1975 Call 24 Hra (740)
446·0870, 1-800·287-0~78 Rog'
era Waterproofing
Appllance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years 611:·
perlence All Work Guaranteed,
French Clly Meylag. 740·446·
119~

C&amp;C General Home Main·
lenence· Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, dOora, windows, baths,
mobile home repah' end more Por
lree eattrr'lele call Chet, 740..992
8323

~ll~v~tn~g~.,~o-n•~s-=ue_s_e_m_o_n~1-:W~a-l~ar 1
Proofing, all baaement repair•
done, free esllm8tea lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on Job expert·
once (304)895 3867
Proleaalonal, 20yrs experience
wUI't all masonery, brick, block &amp;
stone Also room addtllona, oa·
ragea, etc Free esllmates
(304 )173 9550
Electricaland
Refrigeration
Reildentlal or commercial wiring,
new serviCe or repalra Muter Ucensed electrician Ridenour
Eleclrlcal WV000308. 304·675·
1768

SCIIAM-UTS ANSWIIS
At an awards d1nner

1978 Chevy molor home 23 , air
condition, everything worl&lt;a, call '
740-G98-o502
~

Home

II

UNSCRAMBlE

New Wholesale Wlndahleld &amp;I
Body Ftartt A'ilallabfe 740 446· ~
7278 740 388-9062

PZDUUZ.'

FIOOJDK

&amp;

=::...:...::.:.=.:...:=::::...__,

ZFU

loser-on-loser

Acceaeorlea

New gas tanks &amp; body paris D &amp; •
R Aulo Ripley, WY (304 )372·:
3633 or 1 800.273-9329

EFJDJEZUD

play saves the day The hardesl part
IS seemg the poss1b1hty m the first

Bale 216, Like New. Garag• '
Kept740256-1378 Afler900Prt1 ,
:-'----::-------::-- ' - '
Baja 218 L~e Now garage K81&gt;1 '
Phone 740·256 1378 aftM 9PM •

Budget Priced Transmissions~
and Enginea, All Types. Acceu•
To Over 10,000 Transmtaatof'ls,'
eve Jolnl&amp;, 741).245-5677

FRP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "1 don't think I m very cool as a person I'm )Ust better
than anyone else a1 acting cool"- John Travolta

TIIAT DAILY

ace, then lead the d1amond jack, and
when 111sn '1 covered, drscard a club

1995 24 SunTracker Pontoon 60 '
HP Mercury 740 245 9258 Or At
GaHipoHs Boat CkJb.

Z F U 8

draw trumps usmg honors from hand,

es to a low club Wm wnh dummy's

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

HCZ

monds
After wmmng w1th the heart ace,
then exrt wnh the d1amond king to
Wes1's ace Let's suppose he switch-

8Jt:; NATE

DUW1ZJZRCH

LJH'P

commg

If you study all the sur IS, you 'II see
that there ' s only one cand1date d1a·

.1

840

J

etLLeOt&gt;..~S

!740) 367-721o
•
1997 Harley Oa•ldson Sporlsler ,
883 wllh 1200 kit lots of extras, 1
6.000 m1les 741).992·5675
:

Campers

'L J H 8

There are
IICIGK

1996- 3oo EX Honda with Extras!
1985· 200 SX Honda for Paf!sl •

For rent~ tamliy type river camp
aile for full hook-up, for camping ~
fraMer, water, eleclrtc &amp; sewer, call '
740 992·5956
:

by Lula Campos
c.lebrlty Ciphtr ~.,.. ctM.tlld from quotationa by tamou. peapea !)lUI and~
Elich llriafill'l N cipher lllndl tor~ Todly'J CIW W «JU81t P

four one heart , one dramond and two
clubs Count your winners There are

Motorcycle•

1998 Honda CBR 600 53 low
Mileage 740·367 0222

CELEBRITY CIPHER

get home?

Check those losers

THE BORN LOSER
,.~ Wri~T t 010 .,.....:.'--~--,

........

54 lluncllel

losers do you have? How many wmners are there? How wdl you

t'~negun

50Pu-'

crUise mlo four spades How many

::t~~ ~~:~!6677

:

1993 Jeep Wrangler 37,000
Miles. $8.000, 741).441-0132

COIM

Hollllltrocllon
48 Ancient
lhltlen

It IS the

;

1979 Chevy 1/2 IO~WD PS PB. •
automatiC, too many new parts tq
list asking 15500, pr~ee Is negotl ~
able 741).992-7551

45 . . . . 01'
471~r1Ce

If West leads a club, the defenders have the step on declarer But why

790

-

44 Flol'enc.'a

done " ,

&amp; 4·WDs

AUto Parta

supreme
CGurtJBIIc:k

fro111 1hy hand no worthy acuon

~~ l&gt;0~5N'T
~NOvJ T~t

Royol

31Compuopl
41Cho!M

whose l o w descendmg sun, Vtews

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Skinny notoea
omployeo

By Phillip Alder
Somebody had the nght1dea when
(s)he wrolc , " Count that day losl

SERVICES

1994 Plymoulh Sundance, • Cy·
IInder, Automatic, AC 87 ,000
Miles, S2 400 OBO, 740 · 2~6-

-·ding

311flllmltlonll

Keep counting
those tricks

MORN INs

un-.llly
19 Dutch town

21 Be ..,....tot
lncllln
8111.....1~ 22 Nuroeo boby
23 Motion
10 Jeollr
picture
11 Skeleton
24a.t--llle
port
ground floor
12 W•'k
25 Green, In
Grenoble

fled

'94 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4:c4
aulomallc, 72,000 "'les CO. load
ed. excellenr condition. $13 000
home 740-367 0119 eveninga,

760

a Stoo.-n

35 Hummock

Opening lead: •

'92 Ptymouth Voyager van, good "'
condltlon.l3000. 740-8-4)-5159
':

'750

7 Ctolllfled

33~···
croft

• K
•B43

Pass

1995 GMC JlmiTr)'. LoiS 01 E•lfll&amp;l
As-Ing $15.000, Shop Aro•nd
And Corr'lpare, Tl'lla Ia An Excel·
tent Vehicle, AI An Excellent
Prlcel74().448-7289

weelcdaya,

I

•AK6

Obi

TH' WEODIN'
IN TH' •

1995 Ford F1~0 XL , 4x4 ~Speod '
AC, 300 8 Cyl (304)875 · 11~4 :
$9.500 080 1979 Ford 3~t
Modified New Parts, Auto 4x4,,
(304)675-1754 $6,500 0B0
I

Vena

k®wledgoto

32 llotlort'l

34 UuErtcllle

Weal

BARNEY

DOWN

271mporf

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

I'LL TELL YOU

60~5

740-742·2803

1983 Chevy Corsica. V·8, A/C,
3 1 Liter, New Tlrea, Asking
12,900. 741).388&gt;0413

a7

Coolidge

23 c.tllu onlmal

• A K Q 10 ~ 7

1995 Dodge Ram , Sh ortsed7"'
4)(4 360, Automatic Loaded.
SO,OOO mllea Hard Roll Over,
AlrBaga, Radiator Good, $4 700
(304)895-3080/895 3237

740

Graco Open Top Baby Swing,
Takes "D" Batlerlea, Good Cond
Ga•• $85 00 Wanl $30 00 740)

• 8 2
• 9 7 4
t98532
• Q 10 9

Celvln

21 DINdecl
moequlto

South

630

4·Arablan Mare&amp;, 1~Walklng
Mare, 1· 10 year old Many 112
Quater and 112 Morean Dried
Hose Manure $~ 00 par bag In·
stallment Plan lor Horses to Good
Homesl 25% Down Affordable
Rala• (740) 389-8358

• 4

• Q J 10 8

55 OUiol(•uurod)
57 Lodger
55 Adleellve for

-Jene Aueten
-

Eul

• K J 52

Mi.

..,.,_

11 Haru cloctO&lt;,
tor e11ort
:10 lerwll olrflne

Weot

1989 Kanwortn T-600 ~25H P W/
Jake Brake 9Speed 400 Rears
OoubleBunk Needs Repa irs
$10 000 080 (304)675-~70

730

17

• A 7 6

• A Q

For sate, 86 Ranger club cab •
good motor &amp; body, needs trans· :
mission (epalr, phone 740 742 •
2931
•

Livestock

05-0?.ft

• J 10 4

1985 Chevy Blazer GOOd Sha;:wi':"
Low Mileage 741).256-1102

1998 Chevy S IQ, LS 2WO 5·1
Speed, Air Alum Wheels, 4CY.I ~
5 000 miles
$9800 oe(l ,
(304)675-4363

8-

Discount Mobile Homo
Parts &amp; SIIPfliY.
Huge Inventory
VInyl Sklrllng Kilo $299 9~ 5 Gal
!on Aluminum Fibered Roof Paint
S25 21 5 Gal While Roof Paint
$57 69 Ancl'ton $5 : Doors &amp;
Windows, Gaa &amp; Ele.ctrlc Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Eleclrlcat
Parts, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Coleman Air Condltlonera &amp; Heal
Pumps Bennen a Mobile Home
Supply 740·446·9416 Gallipolis,
Ohio

Norih
• J 6 53
• 53 2

1978 Ford 1 Ton Flatbect Tru ck
Wllh Racks. Rebuilt 360 Engine:
New Pari-s &amp; Tires 4 Speed .
$2 !500 Firm , Or Trade For 3/ 4.
Ton Or 4 Wheel Drive Plck· Up,
741).25e-1624

Ford new Holland Tractor Sate
39~ 4WD, 4~PTO HP, 192 Tur•
bo, SynchO 8X8 Trans F And R
Shuttle Large Pump 2 Remotes 4
outlets
2yr Full WaHanty
$20.$00 00 4630 ~~PTO HP
sr , e specs 22,900 3010 2WO
4.1 PTO H P, 1 Remote We I
Brake lnd PTO 1UOO oo 301 o
&lt;4WO ~ Same Specs 18 500 00
como See Tile New TNM, 85, 75
4Wt1'm0dels wiJh Super Steer,
will lurn shorter than a 2WO
Keefer• Service Center Sl At
81, PI Pleaaanl &amp; Ripley Road
Phone (304)695-3674

2 Registered Angus Bulls For
Sale
Cui Slone Sando,
'741).388-8756

COOLDQWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed
$1 !00. 2 112 Ton $1 350, 2 Ton
$1 250, The Above lndudea Nor·
mal lnalell.aUon II You Don't Call
Us Wo Bolh Loso/741).448-8308,
Or HI00-291-C098

1968 Ford Ranger Fa ctory 390
(740)379-2196
•

1995 Ford Ellj)loror, 4DR, 42K
Loaded, Mint Cond , Sand-Color
In &amp; 0•1 By Ownerj304 )675·

YMt"

15 II Oil o...gtng 53 An.._, nap
biDl
.
55 PIWnllly
11 Decololeel
.......,

1988 GMC 112 Ton. Full Sl&lt;f,
P.ickup Truck for sale Auto • Low
Milos, (304)1!75-8980

Merchandl~~e

0!&gt;21

One Bedroom Apartment In PI
Pleasant Furnished ~ery Nice
and Clean No Peta Phone
(304)875 1386

1995 14x72 F1 Fleetwood, 2 811&lt;J·
rooms 2 Full Baths, all Electricl
Will lake PayoWI (740~256 9382

Good selection or uSed homes
wllh 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Oulck delivery Call 740
365 9621

530

2 Bedroom Apartment Rio
Grande Area Close To College,
$350/Mo , Includes All Utilities,
Deposit Requ ired 1·888 840 ·

Apartment for rent In Mlddlepon
no pets 74&lt;Ht92 5858

House for Rent , 5 rooms and
bath lull basemen! Fthone (740)446·2650 By Appointmernt Only!

Low lnrerest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers Llmlled Time Available
fl00.363-6882

2 b6droom apartment In Middle·
port we pay water &amp;ewer &amp; trash
you pay gaa &amp; erecrr to $200 per
monlh. $100 deposit, 740·992·
7806

BRUNER LAND
741).441-1492

5 AK C Boxer pup s, 740· 742·

oo.

Ap t l or Rent , Water And Trash
Paid No Pets In Gallipolis 740·
368· 1100

Beautiful Home Sltet 1Acre, 5
Acres, and 6 Acres 10 miles
from Pt PI , Public waler PrJ
vote.(304)675 59111458-1542

1994 Skyline/SUpreme 14~e74 ·
3BA /28A Vinyl&amp; Shingle Roof
Garden· Tub C/Air,· Total Elect
Kitchen-Island, Waik·ln Closet,&amp;
More Very Nlcoll(304)675 6055

2 bedroom mobUe home, total
eleclr~ 12x6~ 741).742·2803

wonlh (740)·367 0611

2bdrm apta , lotal electric, ap·
pliances furnished laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Applica!lons available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·992·
3711 EOH

992 5949

Kenmore Washer $7 5 00 Wh irl ·
pool Dfyer $70 00, Maylag
Washer $6~ 00 , All 3 White
Wh trlpoot Washer 175
Ken
more Washer $75 DO Kenmore
Dryer S70 00 All 3 Alrnbndl Call
aftM 5 30 (740)·446-9068

Acreage

2 Grave Lots and Vaults at Ohio
Valley Memory Gardena In
Crrls!y Soc11011 (740)-686 8506

41 0

2 Cochte Us $50 lor both , 740·

1-Bedroom Partley Furnilure
Apartment, UtUIHes Paldl $300,00

2 Bedroom Aparrmanl Adjacent
To UnlversUy Of Rio Grande
ca_,, 740 245-5858

2 Building Sileo lell off Roulo 33
In Mason Sl!S,OOO an Acre
l304l882·3n2.

360

F...-

Apartmenta
lor Rent

Building•

1

By owner- three bedroom cguntry
home, full basement approx 2
acres doubte garage Te•as Rd
Pomerf11. 741).985-3565

CliiHpolls Career Colfete
~Careers Close To Home) CaR
Todeyl 740·448-4367 l ·fiOO.
214-0452, Reg 191).05 12748

N• ce two bedroom home wUh
basement, Mulberry Heights Po
meroy, $~ 0 000 l lrm . 14 0 992
2186

Informed lhal all dwellings
1991 14fbr72ft Slllngle Roof. VInyl
adventsed In this newspaper
Siding
Excellent CondiUon
are available on an equal
$16.500 00 (740) 44&amp;8113
opponunlty basis
- - - - - - - - - • 1 1 9 9 2 14x70 Oakwood 2 Bad
rooms. 2 Full Baths All Electric
Wllh Heat Pump 740 441-0959
REAL ESTATE
740 379·2796 .

31 0

440

340 Bullneaa and

1973 Flamada 12x60 Mobile
Home, 2 Bedrooms Central Air
Range Top, Oven And Refrigera
tor Good Condllfon .Call After
6 00 PM For Appointment 740245 9392

Scenic Hills Nurstng Cenler ts
Now Accepting Appllattons For
The Position 01 Social Serv1ces
Director LSW Please Send Re·
sume And Salary Requtre.ments
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hills
Nursing Center 311 Buckrldge
Road, Bidwell OH 45614
(Member 01 EOE)

Wanted To

Profes•lonal
Services

EOE

180

Buelneas

Annlword
51-

14 -ot·My

Do

Electric Ma intenance Service
Wiring Breaker Boxes. Light Fix

WVA 330-5$1749.

140

Wanted To

"'*-" 10 PiCitiOIM Puz1it

o12 •- Toudo ol
1 .,. ...
Mink"
Loet" IIUihor ... Body ol 7 Yellow lllment 47 ~CIMmy

Salurday, May 8, 1999
•
Although you m1ght dec1de to
, steer a drfferent course m lhe yell"
ahead from where you were prev1·
ously headmg, you'll diScover It 11
1he r~ght one •• full of &amp;ood thinss and
happenrngs
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) You
r:Ould be ralher lucky today m thmss
that are of nonmalenahsltc realms, so
concentrate m those areas where
you're hkely to be lhe luckieSt.
Leave moneymaking for another day.
Trymg 10 palch up a broken
romance? The Aslro-Graph Malch·
maker can help you understand what
10 do to make lhe relattonshlp work.
Ma1l $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o lhiS
newspaper, IW. Bo• 1758, Murray
H1ll S1a11on, New York, NY 10156
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Leave
sensutvtty out of a busmess arrangemen I you're working on today, but
don ' l hold out for a one-Sided deal
ather The be&lt;l deal IS a fair, OO•ftOD·
~ensc deal
• CANCER [June 21 -July 22)
Favors you do for people 1oday wnh
111&lt; m1en1 ofhcmg helpful will end up

heneliung you more, while hard·
halhng 1actics could turn lhmgs
ngam&lt;t you
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You may
hnve 10 give a lmle hll more of your· •
self 1nday '" order lo cover Olhe11&lt;. bul
do so wllh a sm1le Lady Luck w11l
::;htne on you for your umelfishne~s;
VIRGO (Aug
21- Sepl
22J
Although you m1ghl woke •P seeing
only 1hc dnrlt !Ide of a cnndilion thai
prescndy cnnfroniS you , roinbr.1ws
w11h polS of goal a1 !heir base could
replace lhe @lOOm before the day IS
OUI
LIBRA [Sep1 23-0cl 23J Take
the "1 don '1 care" approach lodny
wllh an lldversary who has heen leSI·
1ng your pauence lately. If you don ' t
take 1he bail, she or he can't play lhe
game, and m realuy, you w1n
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov. 22)
Through someone who has been
mdebted 10 you but from whom you
never expec1ed repaymenl, some·
thmg qu11e fonuuous could develop
for you todoy, even though il m1ah1
not come d1rcc1ly fronl thiS pe11&lt;on
SAGil'fARIUS [Nov. 23-Dec.
21 ) Chllrlces arc the reason a goal of

yours has been denied rs because you
have rcstncted your oullook Broad·
en your perspective loday and walch
what happens
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-lan 191
Unttl you have aU lhe faciS,II w1U be
counterproductive 10 preJUdge a sll·
uauon 15 dtrc today Wnh aU lhe
mformatoon on hand, you'll 1hen diS·
cover the p1cturc IS actually quatc
bnaht
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
You could be selling yourself up for
~1sappotn1men1 and loss today 1f you
depend on others to do something for
you On lhe other hand, when you do
11 on your own, you'll he extremely
lucky
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Don'l 8.,0 "P 1[your m111alcfforts do
nnl prod•celh&lt; resulls you"n: hopmg
Jnr If you 'Imply regroup nnd 1ry
agam, Lady Luck w1ll cnler 111&lt; piC·
lure and lend you a hand
ARIES (March 21-Aprrl 19) No
matter af othen believe you arc pur
sumg: nn unrcni1~IIC hhJCCIIYC, follow
your own 1nstmcls on thas one The~
can 1 ~cc 1he maucr from your per·

spcchvc

I overheard one woman

say )Ok·

1ngly to her !rtend " Behrnd every successfu l man there
IS a SURPRISED woman '
_ _ _
_
_

MAY?(

�•

P912 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

For older stores, Limited development poses threat
By MARK WILLIAMS
AP Butlneu Wrhlr
COLUMBUS - It's not another
mall: it's multiplex multiplied.
In a blank spot on the map in
northeast Columbus sits a giant con. struction site whose developers are
promising the next generation of
shopping concepts, a small town
with huge, glitzy stores, trendy
restaurants and family entertainment.
About two miles down the road
sits David ·Dierberger, a restaurant
owner who has watched two major
tenants of the .strip center where he
operates, T.J, Maxx and Michaels
Ans &amp; Crafts, leave for the new
development, called E8$ton.
"If! had the money, I'd get up and
move too," Dierberger said as a
sparse lunch crowd began filing into
Pizza Play, a restaurant where customers watch sports on big TV
screens and play video games.
Like many of the strip shopping
~enters among the car dealerships and
apartments along Morse R~ad in the
three miles between Easton and
Northland Mall, the Northtown Center has plenty of available space.
" The chances of getting a major
hitter are slim to none because why
come here when you can go to Easton," Dierberger said.
He opened his $1.5 million restaurant in December 1997 after com-

milling to the site before plans for last year to break ground on. and a
Easton became known.
30-screen movie theater that is a joint
Easton is one of the last prime, venture of Planet Hollywood and
undeveloped spots left inside 1-270, AMC Entertainment. Another aurae: .
the Outer Bell that circ les'the city.
tion , the high-tech, interactive Game· The I ,200-acre site is owned by Works play area, has Steven SpielThe Limited Inc ., an 8.000-store berg among its backers.
chain founded by Les We~ner that
"Wh~t we wanted to do was put
. has its headquarters just across 1-270. together a merchandise profile that
The company that. kept Victoria's had extremely broad appeal tu the
Secret and spun off Abercrombie &amp; largest groups of consumers we could
Fitch began buying the land in the reach. " Rollins said.
mid-.1980s, but realized later that
Rollins said he doesn 't believe the
there was a better use for it than addi- development will threaten· the estahtiona!
office space, Easton lished stores in the areaand, in fact ,
SpPkesman Tim Rollins said.
could help because it will bring more
When finished in 2005, the $1.5 traffic to the area.
billion development will have ~tores
"There i.s nothing more we'd like
ranging from an already open and to see than a vibrant city of Columbustling Wai-Mart 10 a promised bus," he said.
Nordstrom, office buildings, soccer
The city provided tax breaks for
fields, a residential area and an enter- Easton development, but officials
acknowledge they have some damage
· tainment district .
Opening this summer is Easton contro1 ahead .
"When the newer conce pt comes
· Town Center, the development's hub.
" The whole thing is 10 be along, it impacts the o.lder one," said
designed as a functioning town cen- Gary Gug I.tern J'1, economt·c develop ter" from the early .l900s, with real ment manager of the city's Departstreets. play areas for children, festi- ment of Trade and Development.
vals and street vendors surrounded by
Retail experts say it is not uncom. blocks of stores, 'restaurants and mon for new retail developments to
entertainment, Rollins said.
·put nearby stores out of business or
The entertainment district will turn them into eyesores.
include a Planet Hollywood restau"This is the sad story of competirant, which part-owner Arnold tion ," said Wendy Liebmann, presiSchwarzenegger came to Columbus dent of WSL Strategic Retail , a

newsletter in New York.
If Easton weren't enough to worry about, the_Northland area also has
to contend with the new Tuttle Mall
that opened -on the city 's northwest
side nearly two years ago and the
$200 million upscale mall planned
for Polaris, an office-retail area a few :
miles north of Easton, that will open
in 2001. The first stores have begun
to open at Polaris for a related development , Polaris Towne Center.
"Easton alone . probably would
have been damaging, " but the other
new malls along'the Outer Belt make
things worse for an area that has a
crime-plagued reputation, said Hazel
Morrow-Jones. an associate professor
of city and regional planning at the
Austin E. Knowlton School'ofArchilecture at Ohio State University.
"Our preference would be to
operate without Easton there," said
Robert Hepler. · vice president .o(
Lamar Cos., owner of North town and
a strip center across the ~tree! called
the Morse Center.
· ,
But Hepler said the area can continue to be viable, simply because of
the demographics and the traflic. .
" In the long term, we don't thin.k
Easton is a knoc kout punch to the
area," he .said.
Dierberger agrees with Rollins
that Easton could bring more tr~flic

to the area. But what hurts, is the
empty stores in the strip centers, he
said.
"A lot of these places are going
vacant and they're going down to
Easton, " he said.
Hepler said Lamar wants to redo
the facades of the ce nte,rs to make
them more attractive. The strategy
would be 10 find tenants that can
draw customers from the surrounding
neighborhoods and .let Easton be a
regi onal attraction.
If Northland Mall or neighboring
stores fold, perhaps the space could
be used for some other purpose, such

Larry Wayne Goble, Vinton:
Doris S. Carder, Middleport: Gregory Alan Bush, Long Bottom; Ralph
N. Haning, Pomeroy: Bonnie C.
Whittington, Rutland : Melva L. Tracy, Pomeroy ; Wayne L. Adams, Rutland: Lisa May Lilley, Pomeroy:
Dewayne Gray Stutler, Racine: Timothy R. McMillian, Albany; Richard
Curtis, Pomeroy ; Emilee Lou Merinar, Reedsville; Catherine Mae Stacy, Pomeroy: Clyde Gregory Perrine,
Reedsvil\e,; Franklin Earnest Shihz,
Albany: 'Tanya Sue Holter, Racine:
Tracey Renee Grueser, Middleport:
John David Bechtle, Middleport:
Matthew T. Brown, Pomeroy: Candy
Sue Riffle, Racine : William Henry
Middleswarth, Racine: Earle D.
Schultz, Reedsville: Steven D. Craig,
Middleport: Mary' E. Andrew, Long
Bottom:
William B. Slack, Middleport:

'

Linda F. Campbell, Middleport : Michael Allen Sanders, Reedsville:
David W..Copley, Pomeroy: Chester Thomas J. Coy, Reedsville; Brian L.
Junior Combs, Racine: Georgia J. Rutherford , Middleport: Ellen Cobb
Ward, Racine: Cynthia D. Stewart, Shelburne, Reedsville: Peggy Snyder,
Middleport; Bartholomew S. Boggs, Pomerqy ; Earl W. Cleek, Racine:
Pomeroy: Stefanic L. Deem, Richard Paul Nease, Pomeroy ; ScotPomeroy;
Diane · K.
Jones , tic H. Smith, Long Bottom: Roy. T.
Reedsville: Avenell A. Evans, Brunty, Racine: Gary L. MtKnight,
Racine; Roland E. Landaker, Long Middleport; Margie Jo Skidmore,
Bottom: · Maryrose Blair Darst, Middleport : Garry L. Smith, Racine:
Alliany: Peggy P. Barton, Pomeroy: lame• Robert Skidmore, Middleport;
Paula Kay Hall, Middleport: Glendon Troy Allen Rife, Racine: Edward W.
Michael Sharp, Reedsville: Roberta Durst , Middleport: Misty Ann ParRae Brady, Albany: Ryan Lee sons. Pomeroy: Belinda Kay Nease,
Bareswilt, Pomeroy : Alice M. Ratliff- Portland; Mattie Florence Lawrence,
. Wooten, Albany: Betty Jean May- Portland : Kathy · Lynn Sargent,
·nard, Pomeroy ; Carla J. Shuler, Long Reedsville: Mickie S. Hollon, Long
Bottom;, Pamela K. Sellers·, Middle- Bottom: Rebecca Ann Ward,
port: Dolores F. Hysell. Pomeroy; Pomeroy: Virginia E. Hoyt, Pomeroy:
RGbert
Eugene · Sanders,
. Amanda.L. Brinker, Pomeroy: Todd
Reedsville;
Christopher
Aaron Bish-.
.
L. Bissell, Long Bottom:
·
op,
Langsville:
Richard
Lee
Merlin Harold Tracy, Pomeroy:
Audrey Marie Clark, Tuppers Plains: Williamson, Pomeroy : Patricia
Louise Harris, Pomeroy; , Icy Belle

Along the River

Inside

. The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk Qf Courts Larry Spencer·.
·Dissolution s asked - Amber
McLain, Reedsvi lle, and Jeremy
McLain, New Marshfield, May 3:
Angela Sue Maynard, Middleport ,
and Stephen Maynard, Middleport,
April 28: Nadia Bush , Racine, and
Martin Bush, Racine, April 22.
Divorce asked- Harold A. Person, Portland, from Chrystal D. Person, Ravenswood, W.Va., May 3.
Dissolutions granted -Jessica Q.
Robb and Walter J. 'Robb IH, April

$1

•

as offices , Guglielmi satd.
"They clearly need to do something, " Morrow-Jones said. " I'm not _
sure what it is."
The Jacobs Group, which owns
Northland and two other Columbus
malls, did not return calls seeking

'/tfoms
m
{ouch'

comnlent .

to
bombing
,
of
•mbauy

Details on
pageA3

'P•ge·~

•

•

tmts

~-

Dailey, Racine; Richard W. Mason, Midd leport: Kenneth Michael Mat;'
Pomeroy;· Mary K. Grueser, son, Racine: Joy Roberta Stewarlj
Pomeroy: Rhonda June Rife, Dexter: Middleport: Thomas David .Nichol·
Randy J. Wachter, Reedsville; Robert son I. Pomeroy : Roselyn A. Tucker,
A. Venoy Jr.. Pomeroy; Dixie R. Tuppers Plains; Sandra Sue Little,
Knotts, Reedsville: Thomas D. Middleport: Shirley M. Wilson, SyraMcDowell, Pomeroy: Daniel D. cuse: Benjamin M. Buchanan Jr.~
Thomas Jr. , Pomeroy: Terri Lee Reedsville; Steven Vance, Albany;
Carsey, Racine: Beatrice Elenor Jennifer L. Smallwood, Langsville:
Williamson, Pomeroy; Dawid Loyd Roher! Mitchel Curry, Pomeroy : Jon
Tyree, Middleport; Mark' W. Hall, W. Kloes, Middleport: Terry Lynii
Long Bottom: Linda Lee Schultz, Smith, Tuppers Plains; John E. Part&lt;
Pomeroy : Caleb T. Shuler, Middle - low, Langsville: Ernest E. Whitehead,
port: Virginia Irene' Kennedy, Rut- Reedsville : Donald R. Smith,
land: Michael Wayne Price, Rutland: Pomeroy; Kathy E. Bolin, Syracuse:
Nicholas Wade Fitch, Portland: Lori Jeremy Shain Grimm, Pomeroy :
Lynn Pierce, Middleport; · Ruth M.
Charlene Ruth Doczi, MiddleWhitaker, Albany ;
Michael L. Bissell, Long Bottom ; port; Brian Keith Hupp, Pomeroy:
Russell Len Marshall Singleton, Port- Cheryl Lynn Jewell, Pomeroy: Debland ; Brenda K. Darst, Pomeroy: orah Sue Qrockert, Pome~oy: KimElaine Louise Ellis, Rutland: Frances berly Michelle McKenz,e, Pomeroy:
Jeanne Eskew, Pomeroy: Garry L. Shannon Spaun, Racine.
Creme~ns, Rutland; Ida Mae Martin,

Low: 508

NATO

For now, Dierberger said he is .
commiited to the .area and hopes that
Lamar follows through on its promise
to make the cent~r more attractive . ·,
"We ' re doing OK," he said. " Bill;
we thought we'd be doing a lo.t better...

announced~

HI: 70s

rNCt•

FMIUNCI on Ptge C1

21: Cloist Teaford and Mary Teaford.!
April 26: ·Rachelle E. Diddle_aniJ;
Chad R. Diddle, April 26: Phtlltp ~.,
Grueser Jr. and Renee D. Grueser,
May 3: Frederick A. Wooten Jr. and
Alice Ratliff-Wooten, May 3.
Di vorces granted - Lois Gail
. Riggs and Jason A. Riggs, April 21;
Lisa Lynette Day from Patrick O;
Day, Apdl 26: Brandy Ann HyseU
from Jason S. Hyse ll. April26 : Da~ ;
ny Lloyd Hoffman from Lisa
Machcle Hoffm an. April 30: Tony
Connolly from Jeanna Connolly, May
3; linn Keith Darst and Carolyn S~
Ellen Darst , May 4.

oo

ChlfM

Act"lons to end mar'rl"ages fl"led : :

Prospective jurors for Me.igs County Court
The following Meigs County citi7.ens were named as prospective
jurors for the May term of the Meigs
County Court:
Rhonda S. Casey, Pomeroy; Kenneth Lee Slone, Albany: Clinton
Randall Faulk, Rutland: Sean M.
Montgomery, · Racine: Cindy Kay
Wolfe, Racine: Roger William
Hysell, Racine; Martha Joanne Dill,
long Bottom: .John E. Hankla, Rutland: Larry A. Rutter, pomeroy: Betty J. Ross, Racine: Kelley Coleen
Weddle, Portland: Carl E. Searls, .
Mi-ddleport: Faith Jeanna Wells,
Reedsville: Tracy Ann Hall,
Pomeroy: Jan Ann
Knapp,
Langsville: John K. Riley Sr., Long
Bottom: Joseph A. Anderson, Rutland: Sandra E. Morris, Racine:
Cloist E. Teaford, Shade: Deborah
lo~ise Wbite, Pomeroy : James A.
Thomas, Middleport: Robert W. Filar,
Albany: Jane A. Stewart, Pomeroy:

•'
•
•
•
•

•

Friday, May 7, 1999

Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • May 9, 1999

Carey sees 'pluses and ·minuses' for
·. area schools in state.education budget
· ·· GALLIPOUS- With a nod lo a pending court case, ·
the Ohio House of Represcnl!ltives overwhelmingly
approved an $18.2 billion education budget last Wcdnesday that calls for a record amount of money for primary
aild secondary schools over the next two years.
,. The reason: ,the ongoing Ohio Supreme Court chal· 1enge of the slate's school-funding system.
Lawmakers voted 87-11 in favor of _the spending
package, which contains $13.2 billion for public schools
and about $5 billion for colleges and universities.
· House members also added language opening seven
more school districts to charter schools- privately-run
public schools freed . from some state regulations- and
placed restrictions on a federal sex education training .
program.
Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston, said there are "pluses and minuses" in the bill for his southern Ohio district

One positive the 94th District Republican pointed to was ·
the inclusion of the "Expedited Local Partnership" for
local building assistance.
,
This provision allows school districts that are projccted 10 be more than three years away from- receiving
~)tool building assistance to proceed with a levy with·
out having to pay thejr slate match twice.
"For example," Carey said Friday, "if a school district.
such as Gallipolis decided to pass a levy to build a high
scltool, the levy will wunt toward their local match
when their tum does occur on school building-assislance."
The budget also includes an additional $417 million
for school building assistance, which Carey said would
"help Oak Hill Unicm and the Meigs Local ~hools with
their facilities,"
The Wellston Republican said he was disappointed in

~.

·

Vol. 34, No. 12

94th District Rep. John Csrey on .
provisions of the educstlon budget
. "If. ~elt!Joldistrld """ .. GIJI!lpollllf«id:1/dto , _ • ln7 to litdl4 • ldf• rclwol, tlu /ny

will COIIIII ro-N tlwiT loNI llldt&lt; II wltfll thrir
,.,,. don oct:ur 011 rcltool bflildblr MSlstattce,"
1be budglt Jnc1Ud11 mllddltlon~~l $417
million tor •~hool bUilding -.latance, which .
"-Po C..., Mid would
Oak Hill Union'
and the llalgfuo.J ~ with their fllcllt.:

some of the increases area school districts are receiving.
·
"Many were hit by the costly combi!lation of declining enrollments and
~
.
higher property tax valuations," he
said. ~I hope the increases we doing
i!l rural transportation, special educalion and equity will help to offset these factois."
The $18.2 billion education b'udget approved by the
Ohio House Wednesday includes:
• The basic per-student- subsidy increases from
$3,851 this year to $4,052 next year, and to $4,276 in the
second year of the budget.
•TheOitioRCidsprCJSillln.designedtomakesureallslu·
dents can read by fourth grade, gets $25 million- including
money for background checks for 20,000 volunteer tutots.
• High school seniors who pass the 12th grade profi-

;:t

.....

.

ciency .test would 'get a $500 scholarship to a state col •
lege oruniversity. Price tag: $17.5 million annually.
• Schools can qualify for grants, totaling $10 mill ion;
for improving proficiency test scores, attendance anc:l
graduation rat.es.
• Lawmakers.set.aside $325 million from the expected
budget surplus for school-building construction. Anothec
$90 million would be used for school technology.
,
• The college tuition reimbursement for Ohio Nation al Guard recruits increases to 100 percent, from 60 percent.

;

'

Cfot .Y[[[ You ·rno ~
••

-

In :Memory
of our :Motfier on :Motfier's 'Day

!Audrey
Jeffers
Love,
Susie Casto, 'Delores 'Beacfi,
'Bill Jeffers, I'J3ea 'Davis,
'Ron

:Nancy
ack.ennan
Love,
'Todd &amp; Jess,
'BeeRy &amp; 'Eric,
Sammy, :/flex &amp; :Xara

~arlene
"

Stobart
Love,
'Darrell, Jan, &lt;Tracy, 'Bill,
'Ryan &amp;

In Memory
. of

arnet'P

•

1)onna
J-fill
Love,
'Debbie, Jan, Yfrt, 'Dean

uq tl~trt Lt lltidlllotuJI M'lftUI O'IIT

arid bfyolfd w#u11 thiiHulftl commls·
slo11 NJi atltrtatetl, it won't bt aNU"
able lllllil '1117/au ill , , y.ar.,
lll8lp County,.,.._... Howlrd Frank

Cindy
'facemyer
Love,
'Dascfile &amp;

Jvfarcia
Morris
Love,
'"Fred, Sabrina, M
&amp;Megan

~utfi ·

Xaren
Milner

Canter

Love,
JVatlidn; rr'immy

· Love,
Cfiarles 6o Jennie Canter

'Pugfi
Love,
:Xate, 'Pat, Judy, Peggy,
Martfia, 'Brenda &amp;

sionen may be able to WIC proceeds from the

~'I invcstment proaram to complete tbo
i111~ents, but Frank slid Friday that the
CQIIIftllsaloners should plan to I,IIC ronnula
funds · from t~ Community Devclopmat
Blol:k Or111t pt'(l8rlril. illll08tl. ThOtC fundt are
administered by the _..ty to aid in completinl public worltl projectl, and we usually dis·
tributcd to villigel and township&amp;, water districts 111d lire de~ents, ·rather than beinJ
uHci at the wunty level.
According to Frank, the wunty budatt
commission projected St7S,OOO in proocccla
from the county's investment of i,nllelivc funcla
for the year. and that so far, those invatments
have only paid $66,1XX1 into the pne(ll fund.
"I don't anticipate any new money this
year," Frank said, notina th•t !lillY inlcrest pro-

•

Good Mot ning

Yfge-IOI

riJ....btl

Tod~
•••
14'
lons·l

Love,
M my :Xatfiryn Jfolter,
Clyde
'Ronald
'Robert
'

Clllend•n

C2&amp;6

!;;lllllfleds

~-z ·

~-EJIItorllll

M

Qlllllllda

At
"111·1

Alooalbs Bi~S[

•

~

v

~etty

9lada _M.
1Javis

~DOI'U

laud
~I

0 t99901oio.Volley l'lobtloloi.Co.

~~

•

)

"•

•

If

ceeds from the county's investmenll will be
certified to' the- wmmiMioners. "If there is
additional revenue over and beyond what the
budiet commission has estimated, it won't be
av•ilable until very late in the year."
"(The commissioners) need to consider
~ng tltose formula fundS for that projec~
inatcad of diatribu~ng •II of the money to
theM villages and &amp;ownships,' F~nk said.
Howard said Friday that she liJ'CCS that the
CDBG proaram is the most likely source of
fundina for any improvementa to the courtboule, but said that commitments to subdivisions will likely po5tpclllc any courthouse
improvements until2000 if formula dollars are
to be !!sod.
.
Howard said that she would like to sec even
more improvements than just cosmetic ones, .
notina 'that new 'windows and -entry doors are
al10 needed, not only for aesthetic reasons, but
(or cncfiy savina COI\Sider.ations as well,
Fr111k said that he was especially concerned
WEAR AND TEAR about the sandstone illong the street level of Melt* County Courth011•• might
•· ·'
the buildin&amp;, which has bc&amp;un to show signs of nHded f-1111, but will ltkllly haw to Wilt
until 2000 due to flnanct•l restr8lnl8.
serious deterioration.
I

•

,I

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26065">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26064">
              <text>May 7, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="87">
      <name>murphy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="297">
      <name>proffitt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
