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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel '-

•

Thursday

Wednesday, May 12, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Try Salsa Chicken

Today: Showera
High: 70a; Low: 50s

Shortcakes for an
easy, tasty meal

edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Communication is the
key to good health care
(Reader's Note: I' in going to do something a bit different for this
week 's column. Instead of answering a specific question. I'm going
to combine several different questions· that I've received recently
1hat myolve a common core issue - the importance of communi "'uin g clearly with your physician.)
Alm ost. every week I get a letter that includes a statement ''I'm
embarrassed to ask my doctor, so I'm asking you'' or a similar.
phrase. Often these questions involve some aspect of the person's
sexuality, although other problems such as urine leakage or flatu ·
lence are also common , Regardless " f the question. you should feel
free .to ask your doctor about anything. Believe me, even though you
have angst over sharing your story. it is unlikely to cause your doctor any embarrassment. He or she has "heard it all" before. You may
fea r that your doctor is too busy or too arrogant to listen to your
prob lems, but if you explain ttie importance the problem pos~s for
you. I'm sure that he or she will make time to help you.
Communication is the foundation of quality health care. You
must share your concerns with your doctor. I' II wager that once you
start tcliing ~ your "embarrass ing story"that your doctor will put you
at ease.
An~ther important pan of communication is understanding your
doctor's explan~tion of your condition and the treatment plan. We
physicians need to communicate with nurses, pharmaCists, insurance companies and others \vho are ,fluent in the jargon of the
health-care trade. This is essential for us· to communicate complex
. concepts accurately and efficiently. You and your doctor must
"communicate," too, not just talk at one another. Although this
sounds simple, it actually isn 't. It is very easy for us to lapse into
"doctor lingo" or to assume you understand a concept that is com·
man knowledge to the h~alth-care team. I'll share a story from my
practice with you that illustrates my point.
My patient, a waitress, relayed the following story to me about
an incident that happened at the restaurant where she works. Every
Friday evening she serves a certain couple. Typically, they both
order steaks. This --:eek the gentleman ordered his. usual. steak but
paused for an unusually long time when she asked him how he
wanted the stea~ cooked. He finally responded, "Well done, I
guess,." Because she had waited on them a number of times, she.ask
him why he had trouble deciding how he wanted his steak cooked,
and why he changed from his customary preference' of "rare." He
responded, "My doctor said I have trouble with my cholesterol. He
told me 1 shouldn't eill red meat."
I hope you chuckled when you heard this as much as I did. Obvi·
ously. the gentleman doesn 't u.nderstand that his cholesterol problem i.s aggravated by consumption of saturated fats. ·lnis is the type
of fat found in beef and pork, the common "red" meats. Turkey and
chicken - white meat - when prepared without the skin or the
·addition of fat, arc low in saturated fats. The doctor understood.this,
but hi s or her explanation failed to convey this information to the
. pati ent who only heard that meat that looks red in color was bad for
· his heallh. Communication isn't as easy as it seems.
·Therefore, I suggest that you unabashedly take any health concern to your doctor. Once you've asked the quesiion. and your doc·
lor has responded, it's .a good idea to repeat the instruCtions in your
own \\'Ords to .make sure that you fully understand them. Also,
hc fore you leave, ask to clarify any "n~gging doubts" you might
have. This includes asking apparently simple questions such as,
"What do you mean by 'red' meat?"

ART SHOW- Meigs Middle School students will have an art show at the Rlverbend Art Council, Saturday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 2 to 5 p,m. Approximately 30 plecea of art work created by the students of Melanie Quillen will be on display. Shown finishing up their projects are from the left, Ashii'Y
Buckley, Rachel Baylor, Pam· Rupe; and Jereml Swann. ·
.

..

New Smithsonian·theater to feature
year in the life of elephant family
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
angry elephant. to'wers six stories
above you , ears flared as she
charges, her bellowing so loud you
can feel it.
That heart-stopping moment
awaits visitors to the new giantscreen IMAX theater, opening next
week at the. Smithsonian ' lnstitu·
lion's National Museum of Natural
· History.
Opening the new theater is
" Africa's Elephant Kingdom," a
Discovery Channel film docum,ent·
ing a year in the life of a family of
elephants in Kenya.
A matriarch leads · the' group.
They depend on her memory to find
food and water in different seasons,
and she guides life in tbe family.
And it's she who defends them,
her life to threaten ·

- - -- - - - - G:::LtD &lt;Si LJ

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Veterans Admin·
istration Medical Center, Chillicothe,
health care enrollment at Veterans .
Service Office, I I 7 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. ·10 a.m. to noon, I to 3
p.m. Proof or military service
required.

SATURDAY
DEXTER -. Songfest at the old
Dexter Church Saturday, 7 p.m.
Singers are invited to come and take
part in the·service.
'
POMEROY - Closed AA Big
Book .study meeting, non-smoking.
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.
. POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers meeting Saturday;
noon at Trinity Church. Speaker will
be pharmacist·Tammy Grueser.
REEDSVILLE - Forked Run
Sportsman -Club, annual fishing
derby for children. Saturd~y. 9 a.m.
to noon. Lunch served.

Meigs County's ·
Volume 49, Number 243

Memorial Hospital
SS Hospital Drive. Athens.OH 4S70l ·234S

.(740) 593-5551
www.obleness.org

.; .

"

Hometown Newspaper
Single Copy - 35 Cents

•

~udge denies TP residents' request. for review of sewer board
•
•
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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnll New• St.ff
. Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has denied a motion filed
bY. residents of Tuppers Plains, asking that board members of the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District be removed and the activities of the board
be reviewed.
·Athens Attorney Garry Hunter filed a motion in the original TPRSD
court case in February, on behalf of over 100 property ow·ners in the district.
The motion asked Crow, who appointed the origina.l members of the
hoard, to review the qualifications of board members Marvin Keebaugh,
Homer Cole, Sue Maison, and Joe Boyles. Hunter's motion alleged that ·
COle was ineligible to serve on the board because he has moved out of the
district, that Boyles was ineligible hecause he was never sworn into office,
and that the terms of Keebaugh and Maison had expired.
Also included in Hunter's original .molion was a request that Crow
examine the cost of service to customers, connection· fees, and other operational policies of the district's board.
·
Residents in the community have l!een meeting mqnthly to diseu'ss lhelr
·complaints about the system, which became operational this spring.
·
The county commissioners have provided funding through their Community Development Block Grant formula prqgnm to help low and moderate-income residents in connecting to the system..

Ill his deeision, on Hunter's motion, which was filed on Tuesday after·
noon, Crow said that he has no jurisdiction in overseeing the' daily operation 9f the sewer district.
"Occasionally, the public, including attorneys, misperceivc the role of
the judiciary, including its authority to ~dress issues arisingfrom lhe ·conduct of agencies and political subdivisions," Crow wrote.
"The (residents) and their counsel . have greatly overestimated the
authority of the Court to &lt;Jversee the District's aCtivities."
AC90rding to Crow, lhe TPRSD is an independent political subdivision,
"broadly empowered to take actions necessary to achieve the statutorily
mandated purposes of a regional sewer district."
While lhe Ohio Revised Code allows Crow to govern the creation of a
regional sewer district, it "provides no authority for court review of oper·
_ations occurring after a regional sewer district is 'finally and completely
·
organized,'" Crow said.
"This is not to say that a district's discretion is unbridled, or that courts
have no role whatsoever in distri.ct affairs," Crow stated, noting that~ district niay, petition the court for authority to amend its staled. purposes.
Other instances whciit the court may become involved in the district's operation arc limes when holders of water resource bonds ptay bring suit, when
the board must apply to the court for a jury to determine damages caused
by construction, or to enforce a lien for special assessments, Crow said.
"Especially troubling is the prOcedural method chosen by the (resi-

dents), namely a· motion filed in the context of the original action creal· ·
ingthedistrict::crowsaid,notingthatanygrievancesagainstthedistrict
should be filed on a separate court case. ·
"Although a number of persons have signed the ~titions attached to
the motion, there is little indication that they mean toilndertake the burdens and obligations borne by plainliffs in civil actions, including mustering evidence to satisfy applicable burdens of proof, submitting to
potential countersuits, and payirig filing fees and other costs related to
·
their claims."
"The Court is not turning a deaf ear," Crow said. "The sheer numher
of those signing ·the petitions attached to the motion evidences apparent
widespread dissatisfaction with the stale of sewer developments in Tuppers Plains."
"In sum," Crow wrote, "the district is an independent political subdi- .
vision and th~re is no authority enabling the Court Jo undertake the broad,
unguided review of the District's conduct.
,If the (residents) perceive lhe District to be acting contrary to law, their
recourse is to sue the District in a separate civil proceeding ... "
Crow's decision is in ke.eping· with an answer to Hunter's original
motion, in which TPRSD attorney Frank Lavelle said there was no legal
precedent for a review like that suggested by Hunter and the sewer dis·
tricl customers who joined in the motion.
"The board-based,. open-ended request for some type of comprehen·
sive 'review' filed byAttomey Hunter has no basis in law," Lavelle wrote
in February.
Hunter was not available for comment on Wednesday.

Mason firm to donate sternwheel profile for Pomeroy display
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
also suggested that the trash cans be emptied more often .
Sentinel New1 Staff
.
.
..
· A delegation of Fisher and Chapman will go to Counci l
A profile in steel of a large stemwheeler is being ereto discuss issues which affect the merchants.
ated by a Mason county fabricator for installation along
The group noted 'the work of Beth Schneider in paint·
the Ohio River bank in Pomeroy. .
ing the downtown guard railing and containers at each
George Nichol.s . of Nichols Metals, a fabricating
end in red, white and blue, and extended appreciati on to
operatiQrt in Mason County, met with the Pomeroy Mer-'·
everyone contributing to village beautification .
chants Association Wednesday to discuss the stem-.
The. recent' senior citizens tour . from Marietta to
wheeler outline to which lights can he' attached.
Meigs County was described as successful. The Ohio
The dimensions ofthe framework will be 40 feet long
University tour was canceled due to lack of interest but
and 21 1/2 feet high and Nichols said he anticipates havanolher one is scheduled for the week of the Sternwheel
ing it completed in October, perhaps 'before Pomeroy's
. Festival in October - this time to include the entire
Stemwheel Festival.
,county, not just Pomeroy, with visits to Chester, the Ohio
He also affirmed for lhe group his plan at some
River Bear Co. in Middleport, and some greenhouses.
· future time to create Christmas designs in steel which
" Musser reported that the contract on the mural to be
can be lighted during lhe holiday season not only for lhe
painted on the City National Bank building has been
enjoyment of Bend area residents but as a way of attractreceived and is being reviewed. He anticipates .that the
·ing visi19f5 to lhe comm11nilies.
·
·
·~ ""
work will begin sometime next week .
· The Mason candidate for mayor is volunteering his .
He also reported that the Rev. Roland Wildman, pas·
services as well as supplying the materials for the eretor of Trinity Cburch, is moving 10 Springfield next
atioits as a contribution to Ihe villa"e's extensive restotatnonlli. A card of appreciation for his work in the com·
tion·and beaulificalion program. AI WednesdaY's meetmunity and ,his cooperation with the merchants in use of
ing, Nichols said that he envisions the holiday season
lhe church will be sent Io him. ·
with lighted displays down-the Pomeroy side and up the
101'1
Alumni weekend was noted and merchants were
Mason side of the Ohio.
tlve, the flower~ 1re blooming,
Sll'lh Fllhtlr, chlllrman of the project,
John asked to display their purple and white flags, and deco·
He .al5o suggested to t~e Association that contacts be 1re gone, but the work ·gc)el on
downtown MIIIMr who helpl In the dilly m•lntenance, rate windows with school memorabilia.
madewiththeOhioDepartmenlofTransportalionabout Pomeroy.H-AnnleChapmlln,preeltJentofthl look owr one of th1 m•ny bNutlful planting
The concert with Squire Parsons on the parking lot
the possibility of electrically ' equipping the proposed Pomeroy MII'Chantl Allocl.uon which IPOII- arMI.
.
stage was reported successful with about 300 people
new bridge across the river so _that decorative lights can
The program is administered through ·lhe ·Federal
Downtown beautification was discussed and Sarah attending. Bill Quickel was commended for his work in
be attached.
Highway Administration and the Ohio Department of Fisher wa5 commended for her work in designing. plant· arranging the concert which was sponsored by the First
Annie Chapman, president, and Karin Johnson, Transportation. The' Ohio S~:Cnic route, according to ing and mainlliining lhe area, wilh assistance from sev- Southern Baptist Cburch of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Village Council's move to change the auditourism director, reported on the recent Ohio River Johnson, extends 452 miles along the Ohio River. About .eral merchants and other volunteers.
Sccnic Route, a part of the Nalional Scenic Byways dis- . $25 million is available each year for projects.
,
John Musser noted thatlhc cost is about $1,500 and torium into the police station was discussed. Musser,
cretionary grant pr~gram. Ei~t from Meigs Cou~ty . Johnson said lhat the goal is to apply for "one project that a substantial donation has been com'mitted by the president o( Council, noted.that there..will be no strucattended a recc~t reg~onal me~tmg where the d1scussron for Meigs County and lhat the most .feuible is water Fumers Banlc, with olher contributions being solicited. tur.al changes and that the move is necesSary because of
centered on prOJects and fundt~g.
~ .
.
. · front development. She noted·that Carol Layh who Jives He said the lictual cost to the merchants association will inadequate space in the quarters now occupied by the
It was reported that lher_e ts $_148 mtlhon avBJiable in Meigs County and has been serving as a tourism be about $200.
.
. police.
·
from now to 2003 for scemc proJects through a match director in Washington County, has been retained as a
Fi~her again asked that Village Council erect signs
In other business, action on a donation request from
fund .of .80 percent federal, 20 percent local.
consultant on the project.
about trash disposal and set .a penalty for littering. She the' Pomeroy Little League was tabled.

I

Kosovo, Yeltsin's troubles, create U.S.-Russia hurdles
By TOM RAUM.
AIIOCiatld Prell Writer

ace ·
ra
woman
lured through Internet chat

WASHINGTON(AP)-The rift in U.S.- Russian relations caused by the NATO bombing of
Yugoslavia, now .complicated by political turmoil
in Moscow, is raising fresh questions about longterm coopenlion between Moscow and Washington.
"It is obviOI!S that all Is not well 111 the U.S.Russian telalionship- or American foreign poli·
cy towards Russia;" said Rep. Benjamin Gilman,
R-N.Y., chairtiWI of the HoUJC lntemalional Rela·
lions Cotnmittee, after Russian President Boris
Yeltsin dismissed yel another prime minister. '
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, R-Md., one of a group of
11 Ht?use members trying to broker a separate
peace deal on KOIIOVO .with members of Russia's
parliament. said .lhe tldministration was wrong in
"tying its planning only to Ycltsin."
.
"They are inaking a big mistake, becaUJC
Yeltsin is not Russia's future. He'll be lucky if he
holds on to the next election," said Bartlett
That nonbindins peace plan by Bartlett and
othera- diiiCOurlpl Wcdncaday by Secrelary of
State Madeleine Albright- was heine considered
today by the International RelationS panel.
It contains many features sought. by NATO,
including withdrawal of Serb forces froni Kosovo
111d 111 aimed international peacekeeping pres-

AKRON (AP) - Police have charged a 39-ycar-old man with using
Internet to lure. ,a I 9-year-old ment~ly handicapped woman from
IPc~nn:svl•,ania and 'then' raping her.
~
.
:
believe the Avoca, Pa., woman -met the Akron man through an
Qnline disabled persons' chat room, a computer site the young womiln's
parents felt was safe for their daughter.
: The accused man, Leslie Hall, allegedly logged into the chat room and
(lOSed as a 17-year-old who told her that he loves her atid inviled her to
visit.
·
• Hall was arrested iate Tuesday.
: He is charged with kidnapping and rape and is being held in the Sum·
J!iil County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bail.
·
• The parents began a frantic, three-day search for their daughter- who
lite father said has il mental age of about 8 - when lhey awakened Saturday morning and found she was gone.
•The parents lcncw their daughter
loveil 'tp chat on the wmputer, so
they began searchil!g for mcs5ages
that might tip lhcm off to where she
was . .
Police believe Hall directed the
· 2 Sections • 12 Pagrs
woman - step by step - to his
home.
·
6
Calendar
Tile W()lllan was reunited with her
memb~r
9110
C!ass!!leds
parents Tuesday in Pen.nsylvani~ .
By MICHAEL J; SNIFFEN
"She is devastated," said the
11
Comlq
AIIOCIIted
Pn11 Writer
young woman's f&amp;lher. "She thinks
EdJtori•l•
WASHINGTON
(AP)-Another member of a
Ibis is her fault. She doesn't underJ
Loql
notorious
Nazi-sponsored
· killing battalion,
stand."
blamed
for
the
.
murder
of
19,000
Jewish men,
Sports .
4&amp;5
They said lheir daughter, whl).is a
women
and
children
during
World
War II, has
volunteer wilh Alzheimer's patients
.t. • \ I'
been
UI'CII~ pennancntly from the United
at a nursing home·ln their area, Is
Stalel.
Lotteries
normally a happy person, and they
Kazys Ciurinskas, 81, who lived in Oown
will seek llounseling to help her
OHIO
Point, lnd:, left lhe country 'Yednesday a~cmO?n
· deal wilh the brdcal.
Pkk 3: 2-9-S; Pkk 4: 7·2·7-S
by
plane from Ollcago on h1s way to L1thuan1a,
"She had a child's-eye view of .
Stiper Lotto: 11-19-29·3.2-34·37
the
Justice Deputment announced.
this whole thing," said Akron
On
April 15, U.S. Immigration Judge Anthony
Kicker: 0..5·1·7-6-4
police Sgt-. Jerry Hushes.
Pelrone
in Olicago had ordered C~urinskas
w.yA.
••1 lhink she thought abe was
removed
from
Ibis country after he admtlted·par,
Dally 3: 2-6·3; Dally 4: 3-4-4-4... .
going some place to meet this swell
·
0 1999 Otllo Valley Publi~ .
ticipating
In
Nazi-sponsored
persecution.
boyfriend:'' .
Eli M. Rosenbaum, director .of the depan-'

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

•

O'BLENESS

outlast Cincinnati
Reds 8-7
-Page 5

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Another

SUNDAY
ATHENS - A retirement party
.CHESTER - S~a&lt;Je River Lodge will be held for Eugene Willoughby
453 F&amp;AM regular meeting Thurs· at the Hocking Valley Sportsman
day, 8 p.m. In recognition and iri Club on .Radfond· Road; Route SO
honor ·pf Masonic veterans and ' south of Athens to County Road 19.
· Armed Forces Day a special dinner All Meigs County friends are invited
will be held at 6:30 p.m, Master to attend.
Masons and all',members invited . .
POMEROY- Poplar Ridge Free
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Will Baptist Church, · Sunday
Plains VFW Post 9053' meeting for evening service with The Gabriels
all officers will be held Thursday, Quartet 10 sing. John Elswick, pas·
5:30 p.m. with dinner at 6:30 p.m. tor, invites public.
Regular meeting will follow at 7:30

Milwaukee Brewers

31

.

older, we've got an excit- .
ing new program for you.
It's called SeniorBEAT (Be
Educated and Active Together).
. It's free! And it offers you a
variety of health services, discounts, educational classes and .
social events clesigned to help
you be active, enjoy life and get
together with people who want
do the same.
As a.member, you'll receive .
nevvsle~tte1rs and announcements.
ou 'II be invited to special
1ealtb and lifestyle seminarseven enjoy a 20% discount at ·
the hospital gift shop and a 25%
discount in the cafeteria on
certain days. You'll get special
· help in filling out insurance and
hospital for1ns and special information and referral services.
So sign up today. It won't
cost you a dime, and it could
make a real difference in helping you stay active andeducated. We .can't'promise that
.
.SeniorBEATwill add more .
years to your life, but ,chances
are we can add more life to
yonr years.

The Community Calendar is pub· p.m.
lishcd as a free service to non-_profit
SYRACUSE - . Syracuse PTO
groups wishing to announce meetmeeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. Election of
ings an~ special events. The calendar
is.nol designed to pr9mote sales or officers will be held.
fund raisers or any type . Items are
POMEROY-. AA open meeting,
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num." Sacred Heart Catliolic Clitirch, Mulberry Avenue, noon. Also Al-Anon,
ber of' days.
·
non-smoking.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees regular meeting Beta meeting Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at the town· with Jane Walton and Clarice Kraut·
ter, hostess. Hal Kneen wi II l)e guest
ship garage on Joppa Road.
speaker.
POMEROY - Point Pleasant
B iblc School Choir Wednesday, 7 FRIDAY
POMEROY - Women's AA,
.p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim Chap,el, state
Route 143 •. Pomeroy. Rev. Victor , 1607 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, open discussion.
Rou sh, pastor, .invites the .public.

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney-Ben·
nett Post 128, American Legien,
. 7:30 p.m. Weqnes~ay. NollJ'ination
of officers.

.

Lady Marauders win sectional, Page 4 .
Cutting the apron strings, Page 6
George Jones pleads guilty to 'DUI, Page 8

••

f you're 60 years of age or .

---Community Calendar·--,---

POMEROY - Revival Wednes·
day through Sunday at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene with Rev . .
imd Mrs. Jerry Boggs of South Point.
Services nightly . at 7 p.m. except
Sunday when ·services will be at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. All welcome.

in the film , the annual rains came
late, and drought means famine .
Adults use their own huge bodies
to shade the babies as the family ·
trudges along in search of suste·
nance.
Wjlen an elephant collapses from
starvation, the others try and pull it
to its feet, struggling to help, know·
ing that to stop means to die.
The mother of a dead baby ele·
phant tries to lift her tiny offspring,
as though to massage life back to its
small body. When that fails, her
companions come by, rubbing, the
mother with their trunks as if in con·
solation.
Finally the rains return, the ele·
phants wallow in cool mud, and
plants grow quickly, providing food.
Once again life is good.

This rec ipe for Sal sa Chicken
ShorJcakes comes with a detail that
makes a tasty difference without
complicating its preparation.
The detail? Chocolate chips added
to the chicken mi xture. That's an idea
borrowed from Mexican mole, the
traditional spicy sauce fo r meal and
poultry that is made by combining
onions, garlic. c.hi le and chocolate.
Salsa Chicken Shortcakes
I0.8 ounce can large refrigerated
tlaky bisc uits
I tablespoon oi l
4 boneless skinless chicken breast
halves (about I pound) cut into thin
strips
I garlic clove, minced
1 3/4 cups garden pepper or ·
· ·
chunky -style salsa
I cup frozen corn
2 1/4-ounce can sliced ripe olives,
drained
.
I tablespoon semisweet chocolate
chips
I teaspoon cumin
4 ounces sliced hot pepper Mon·
terey Jack cheese, ctit into thin strips
5 tablespoons sour cream
Fresh cil antro sprigs, if desired
Heat oven to 350 F. Bake biscuits
according to directions on can.
Meanwhile, heat oil in large skillet
over medium-high heat until hot. Add
chicken and garlic; cook and stir 5 to
7 minutes or until · chicken is no
longer pink. Add salsa, com; &lt;Jiives, .
chocolate chips and cumi 0 ; mixwell.
Reduce heat to medium; cook 10
minutes or until mixture . thickens
slightly.
To serve, split each warm biscuit.
Place · bottom halves on individual ·
serving plates. Spoon half of chit ken
mixture over biscuits. Cover with
biscuit tops, remaining chicken mix·
ture, cheese and sour cream. ·Gam is~
with cilantro. Makes 5 servings.

It's.about Being
Educated ·and ·.
Active Together.

"Family Medicine" is a weekly column. To submit questio.ns,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteo·
_pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Ohio 45701.

t

as she charges to drive them off.
"It was a charge to end all
charges: : said film consultant lain
Douglas-Hamilton, driving a truck
with the film crew in the back as the
elephant &lt;:harged.
She was quicker than DouglasHamilton expected and caught the
truck with her tusks on either side of
the camera before he was able to
spe~d up and escape.
.
.
· Eventually, however, the crew
was accepted by an elephant family.
"The greatest compliment they
would pay was to ignore us," said
Douglas-Hamilton. "We seldom
walked with elephants because
that's dangerous, but we did a lot of .
very close-up work from cars and
they seemed to· recognize ·our
smell."
:For the elephaitt family featured

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

Sports

MIIV 13, 1000

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cncc.
,
Buta main difference is that it leaves the coniposition of the peacekeeping force up lo the five ·
permanent memhers of the U.N. Security Cooncil- on which Russia ilnJYCbina sit and hold a
veto.
Both have insisted on a first-siep etlll to the
bombing.
President Ointon ,has' invested a huge amount
. of political capital iit supporting Yeltsin 's gov· erilment. And with a rising tide of anti-Ameri·
canism in Russia, lhntakes have seldom been so
high, suggest members of Congress involved in
foreign policy.
·
"We're in chaos and we have to find our way
out. We need to find a way to engage lhe Russians, and not just as old Cold War enemies,"
said Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D-Conn., senior
Democr~t on lhe International Relations panel.
Yeltsin named a close ally, Interior Minister
Sergei Slepashin, as acting prime minister.
. The . upbeaval sharpened Ycltsin's collision
course with the parliament and threatened to dis·
ruplthc Kosovo pe~ process, political stability
and efforts .at economic recovery. .
AI a House hearing on Wednesday, senior
State Department adviser Steven R. Sestanovich
said he did not anticipate the upheaval would
affect the status of Viktor Chernomyrdin, Rus·

sia's envoy to Yugoslavia
Sestanovich said it was still "rather. hard to
.tell" the consequences of lhe sacking of Primakov.
IfYeltsin'schoiceisapproved,thatcouldstrength·
en Yeltsin's mandate, Sestanovich suggested.
The U.S. official said Stepashin was someone
the U.nited States could work with.
.
His appqinlment as Primakov's permarietit·
replacement appeared to have little chance of
approval in the Duma. .
Sestimovich suggested lhe move was a plpy by
Yeltsin to detract attention from next week's
impeachment ...ole by the Dul)'la.
·
Rep. James Leach, R-lowa, said the adminis·
tration had precipitated both a "hot war" against
Yugoslavia, which was not going wdl; and .. two
new cold wm" with Russia and China after the
accidental bombing of the Chinese Embassy· in
Belgrade.
Bartlett and I 0 colleagues we·re trying to do an
end-run around the administration with their sepa·
rate peaa: plan, drawn up two weeks ago with
Duma memhel'$ at a meeting in Vienna. .
Albright met the delegation, led by Rep. Curl
Weldon,. R-Pa., on Wednesday.
~
Bartlett said Albright seemed .. prepared to con·
vipce us that we were sending mixed signals, that
it would be counterproductive. We emphasized
that we were trying to help."

of Nazi-sponsored killing battalion deported ·
mcnt's Nazi·hunting Office of Special lnvestiga• Jewish men, women and children in t~e fall of
tions, said lhe removal ~rder was part of a settle-. 1941. The court concluded that Ciurinskas partie·
·men! agreement in which Ciurinskas admitted he ipated in at least one such action.
was an armed member of the 2nd Lithuanian
Ciurinskas is one of several members of the
· Schutzrn~nnschaft (Protective Detachment) Bat- 2nd Battalion that the special investigations office
tal ion 111d concealed that service when he applied has ousted from this country. TWo other members
· for a visa to enter the United States in 1949.
of. the 2nd Battalion have been ordered deported
Ciurinskas also conceded he was subject to to Lithuania.
·
removal under a provision of U.S. law that · · Juozu Naujaiis was ordered deported to
requires .removal of lilY alien .who assisted Nazi Lithuania by the immigration court in Chicago .in
peiiCCubon, the department wd.
1997, but is appealing his case to the U.S. Board
After a trial, a federal judge in Indiana revoked of Immigration Appeals.
Ciurinskas' naturalized U.S. citizenship in 1997
Another 2nd Battalion member, Antanas
becauiC of his service in the 2nd Battalion.
Mineikis of Gulfport, Fla., was deported to
The court noted lhe battalion assisted the Nazis Uthuania in 1992 after admitting he drove (nulti·
in 10 killing actions in Lithuania and Byelorussia, pie truckloads of civilian victims to mass shoot·
now Belarus, that murdered more th111 19,000 ing sites and observed their murders.

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'£st11Dfiska 111 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
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Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. ·
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher

OtANI: HILL

Ge.,...IMan~ger

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Controller

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. ·

Chinese reaction
inflames Congress
ByTOMRAUM
Anoclatad Preaa WrHer .
· WASHINGTON (AP) - Images from Beijing of U.S. Ambassador
James Sasser "looking forlornly out the embassy window didn't bclp," suggests Sen. Max Baucus, who has been !rying to keep trade relat,ions with
China on track.
'
·
As the intensity of violent anti-American demonstrations and attacks on
American property in Beijing seemed to ebb Tuesday, the backlash in Congress was getting stronger - particularly in the Senate, where many members arc friends of Sasser, a personable former Democratic senator from Tenhessee.
·
• . Sasser -was holed up for four days as virtual prisoner in the U.S.
Embassy in China in the aftermath of NATO's mistaken bombing of the Chinese Embassy -in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. He finally left early today.
: · "We all know Jim very much and respect him very much," said Baucus,
a Montana Democrat, ·a major advocate of having China admitted to the
World Trade Organization.
· China is a major market for Montana wheat. Baucus is a high-ranking
Democrat on the Senate Finance trade subcommittee and has been a leader
in the annual congressional battle to preserve China's normal trade status.
"It's important that neither.side overreact," Baucus said 'in an interview.
"Let the reaclion calm down. We have to remain clearheaded-and calm."
· . Senators are known for taking particular interest in the welfare of their
own. Thus, the plight of Jim Sasser and his colleagues in the U.S. Embassy
in Beijing generated expre5sions of anger Tuesday as Defense secretary
William Cohen and Gen. Henry H. Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, appeared before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee.
·
• Even the usually soft-spoken Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, reac'ted witli·
passion.
When the United Stales learned of alleged Chinese espionage at a U.S,
nuclear weapons plant, Inouye said, "We did not urge our citizens to throw
rocks at the O.inese Embassy. ·
·, "Now they condemn us witb inflammatory rhetoric," . Inouye said.
~·Everybody's apologized. I hope the Chinese don't misinterpret this. But
~nough is enough."
.
And Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., complained of reports that the adminis·
tration is prepared to allow China to launch another U.S. telecommul)ica. lions satellite - even as Chinese President Jiang Zemin rejects President
Clinton's phone calls.
·
· Specter wondered "whether this is an appropriate time to ·be transf~rring,
technology to the Chinese, at a time when they won't' even take a tclephohe
. call from the president."
·
.. · Cohen cautioned, "I think we should cool down the passions t!ult have
been inflamed."
·
But the defense secretary added: "I would urge the Chinese·to acoept the
president's statement (of apology) and answer his phone calls."
China already had its share of detractors in Congress, which caused a
huge fight each ·June, largely over human rights, when Beijing's normal
trade status came up for renewal. Until recently, normal trade status was
known as most-favored-nation status.
Even before the Chinese Embassy was bombed, U.S.-Chinese relations
.were complicated by reports of Chinese political contributions to Democrats
in 1996 and a continuing furor over technology transfers and espionage that
might have helped p!ina's nuclear-weapons program.
·
The bitter reaction of Chinese leaders .to the bombing may harden the
position of China's critics in Congress.
·
· · "A lot of people, including those who favor more normal relations
between the two countries, were really put off" by the intensity of the
~emonstrations and demands of Chinese leaders, said Tom Mann, director of
governmental studies at the Brookings Institution. ~'It's given at least in the
short term the rhetorical advantage to critics of O.ina."
: But an appeal for moderation came Tuesday from one of the strongest
~ritics, Senate Majority Leader Trent Loti, R-Miss., who opposes China's
entry into the World Trade Organization at this time.
: While ra!tling off obstacles to improved U.S.-&lt;;hinese relations, Lott said
Chma remams "a country that's impo_rtant to our future."
: "We're going to bave to keep working together," Loll said.

a

A computer-based system
enables famed British physicist
Stephen Hawking to work and
"talk" despite tbc devastating
effects of Lou Gehrig's disease,
but if Hawking- were an American, Medicare wouldn't pay for
the device.
Unless, of course, he hired a lawyer and went
through years of appeals. He'd probably win if he
persisted, but that wouldn 't affect the next victim
of ALS, cerebral palsy or throat cancer who needed an assistive communication device. He or she
would be refused and would have to appe~. too.
The federal Health Care Financing Administration, which runs Medicare, has decided that
machines like Hawking's are a "convenience," not a necessity. The same
applies to stair-lifts, which enable disabled people .to get from one floor to
another, and a host of other medical
devices.
A targeted campaign is under way
by several members of Congress and
disability groups· to change HCFA ·
policy on voice machines, but mean·
whilcdisabled seniors face a daunting
process of navigating the Medicar.e
appeals process.
At an April 2.2 House hearing
chaired by Rep. Bill Thomas, RCalif., witnesses cited HCFA's own
studie• to show that it takes an average ot ~3 days to get through various
layers of governments to appeal a
decision by an administrative law
judge.
Thomas said that while Democrats
want a law passed to make it easier for
private patients to sue their HMOs,
judicial review in the private sector
actually works faster than it does for
Medicare.
Clinton administration spokesmen
claim HCFA is fully compliant with
the 1996 Medicare reform law requiring "timely" processing of appeals
and the administration wants private insurance
. plans to process complaints within 15 days.
"Thei~ hypocrisy is simply breathtaking," said
Rep. Nancy Johnson, R-Conn., a member of
Thomas's _Ways and Means subcommittee on
health.
·
Under HCFA. appeals must be filed by Seniors .
who have be~n refused reimbursement for
devices or procedures judged not"reasonable and
necessary." Ma.nufacturers of rejected devices
can 'tllppell. · .
Moreover, said Johnson, an appeal can be filed
.only after a senior has already paid for a product
or procedure. "Lower-income people who can't
pay IU'e just out of luck," she said.
Yet, for those who can appeal, HCFA's original
rejections arc.overturned 72 percent of the time.

radical

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Gladys Harris, 90, Logan; died on Wednesday, May 12, 1999, at her residence. She was born on Sept. 1, 1908, in Calhoun County, W.Va .. daughter of
the late Marion and Rusha Laughlin Boatwright.
·
She ·Was a homemaker and attended the New Hope United Metho,:list
Church in Gore.
Surviving are si.x sons and five daughters-in-law: Kenneth and lletty Harris
. of ~mcrsct, James and Elizabeth Harris of Elyria, Delmer and Jo Harris oC
Bremen, Rog~r and ~rilyn Harris of Logan, Elwood Harris of Logan, and
Dean and Robm Hams of langsville; seven daughters and sons-in-law: Audrey
and Ray Chute of Logan, Jean and Roger, Moore of Haydenville, Rose and
Donald Hubbard of lakeland, Fla., Katherine and Donald \k&gt;llmer of Haydenville, S8rah and Ronald Eberts of Columbus, Teresa and Carey Glenn of
Logan, and ~elma· and Ronald Morgan of Groveport; 52 grandchildren, 84
great . ~dch1idren and 23 great-great grandchildren; a brother, Robert
Boatwnght of Elkins, W.Va., and a sister, Blanche Bonnett of Arthurdale, W.Va.
· Besides her parents, she was preceded by her husband, Leonard D. Harris;
a daughter, Phyllis Holcomb, two great grandchildren, great-great grandchild; .
four brothers: Bruce, Brooks, Harold and Lovell Boatwright; and two sisters,
. ~I Metts and·Florence Coberly.
. .
Funeral services will 'be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday," May 15, 1999 at the
Carda~ Funeral Home in Logan, with Rev. Carolyn Hoskinson officiating.
Bunal wdl follow at Greenlawn Memory Gardens in Nelsonville.
·
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 2 to 4 am! 6 to 8
p.m.,.and on Friday from 2 to 4-and 6 to 8 p.m.
Memorial contributiof!S may be made to the New Hope United Me1hodist
Church Building Fund.

..
Cloudy

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T·Obms

. R~o

FIUrilos

Soow

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Chance of rain continues
Marion
Lawrence
Rife
for area until Friday night Marion Lawrence Rife, 80, of Hamilton Meadows, formerly of Rutland, died
By The Associated Pres•

.

It would '~· Hard to cOnceive of a
.mpre chillh!a depiction of eternity
than thai. "We wpuld go home in a
cold sweat," Petre says in her book.
One can imagine many a nefarious
· scheme being scuttled in the face of
such a dismal, horrifying prospect
·for the sinner.
But hell no longer holds the terror
for us that it once did. •
There was a time when feat of
going to hell was enough to keep
many a person on the straight and
narrow and away from a life of
crime and evil.
.
But a recent survey has showedthat the fear of hell occupies the
· thinking of only a relatively few
today. Once a central Christian doctrine, the belief in hell has been los.
ing ground for the last 300 years,
some theologians contend.
·There are still people, of course,
who believe in a literal hell. Bible
fundamentalists quote from the
visions of tbe end of the world in the
book of Revelation which speak of
"the lake that bums with fire and
brimstone . (sulphur)" as the last

abode of the wicked.
Fundamentalists also ·point out
that Jesus said evil-doers will go to a
place of ."everlasting fire prepared
for the devil and his angels."
The idea of hell that is perhaps
mist widely held today is the "hell
on earth" theory. Instead of being a
place in the next world, hell is
looked· upon as a condition in this
world. It is viewed as "separation
from God" which may result in anxiety, loneliness and frustration. .
The orthodox churches historically have taught that an elemity in
hell is God's punishment for sin, But
scholars have pointed out that Adam
and Eve's punishment for sinning
was simply a life of hard work ending in death.
"Dust thou art and unto dust thou
shalt return" was God'sjudgmcnt on
the human race in Genesis. This
implied that physical death was
going to be the end of it for each
individual.
. The idea of a resurrection from
the dead appeared much later, at the ·
time of the prophets. Daniel first

foresaw ·the righteous who had died.
rising from their graves to share in a
new golden age for Israel.
. Then the thought occurred .:
what about the unrighteous? Shouldn't they get their just deserts? Thus
emerged the idea of hell as a pla~e of ·
torment and suffering for the.
wicked.
·
Many who find such ideas &lt;lf
eternal punishment to be barbaric
and unworthy of a loving, forgiving ·.
God feel neverthelesS that modem
religion has unduly weakened the
demands God makes on us and softened the c.onsequences that follow
from offending him.
A God who makes us shake in
our boots and cringe in fear when we
have pointed our lives. in the wrong
direction offers a better hope for a
kinder, gentler and happier world
than a God who sets no boundaries
for us.
If only Dylan and Eric had
believed in a God like that. If only
they could have been "scared
straight" by this God who loved
them.

million Americans are now in DC
since 1982. The rise in market values has made
plans. Forty million have IRAs,
·Americans wealthier, given American business .the
alSo contributory .in nature. (lbcre
capital to expand, created a "wealth effect" which
is some overlap.)
spurs consumer spending. all oC which yields
Imponant? The contribution
.greater profits, which make stockholders still
revolution is changing the nature of
wealthier, cn:ating a "virtuous circle."
aging. changing our politics, our
3. The contribution revolution is leading to some
most important laws, our economso~ of a ~ajor change in Social Security, the preics and the code by which we think.
m1cr Amencan safety net program. By offering lax .
Thusly:
credits (i.e., governmental cash), the new "U.S.A.
1. Only a few dccsdes ago, a statistician seeking· Ac6ounts," and similar plans, are the functional
to find a high incidence of poverty in America ·equivalent of tho partial privati:Wion of Social
would look under the.hcading "Over~." Stories in Security. .Those are contribution plans, not benefit
newspapers, exaggerated in scope but not false, told plans.
·
.
·
of elderly people scavenging through garbage bins
. 4. The contribution revolution is changing our
for scraps of food. Tragically, there are still plenty politia. The typical American voter today is a
of elderly poor people in AmeriCa. But now, thanks stockholder. Much of our politics has been based on
to increases in Social Security and tlic early results class . distinctions. Franklin Roosevelt portrayed
of the contribution revolution, Americans over age Democrats as the party of the "little guy" (workers)
6S have somewhat higher incomes than the Arncri- versus the Republicans, the party of the "fat cats''
can median. (!be bumper stickers on those big RVs ' (owncl'S). That tight will continue. But might not",;
tell a story: "We're spending our kids inhcri- · stockholder society lake some of the edge off of the
tance!")
•
politics of "us versus them?" Might ihe next politAs the years roll on, as compound interest com· ical era, with most Americans owning shares of.
pounds, retirement income and wealth will grow, oj\merican businesses, be one where the party that·
enormously.· An American , aged 22 earning can best envision a "we" society will have the clec$30,000 per ye!"', receiving a I percent ~r year real toral head start?
wage increase, puUing 10 percent of e&amp;rl!ings "into
· 5, In 1848 Karl Marx wrote, "Workers of the
retiremen4 ends up with $1.2 million at age 6S.
world unite I You have nothing to Jose but your
Because of·increascd life expectancy, an Amcri~ chains." These words generated one of the great.
can today aged 6S ~an expect 111 ~ive to ah?ut age arguments of Western civilization: Who will own·,
83, up from age 19m 1950. That hfespan will keep the ~ans of production? Great philosophers and·
going up. While death and illness will continue political leaders debated the issue. Wars were
(flash!), the economic dimension of growing old fought about it. It seems bizarre that something as
will be much cased.
·
arcane as the defined contribution plan could dra2. The demand for equities for DCs has helped . matically help change all !flat. But isn't that hap-·
push up the stoek market by about 1,300 percent penin&amp; now?
.
.·.

.

'

"

School board meeting

Gladys Harris

\IJIIAucldl'-4'~

hundreds of private insurance plans do cover the . HCFA in 1996 -- except that most individual
devioes, he said.
·
appeals have succeeded. .
·
.
At the -April hearing before Thomas' subcomTestifying on behalf of the Arrierican Medical
mittee, HCFA unvejled new procedures for allow- Association, Dr. William Plested told Thomas that
ing the publjc open access to its initial decision- "HCFA seems to approach every is5ue as a case
making process, of\Cn criticized y a "black of waste, fraud and abuse" rather than clinical
box." .
·
effectiveness.
·
Various witneSses said that the new procedures . Actually, a case can be made that, pressed by
are an improvemen4 but do not guarantee review rising_costs, Medicare is acting like a low-rent .'
of previous Medicare disapprovals or swifter health insurance company .that routinely rejects
appeals.
·
·
claims, hoping that policyholders won't fight.
The witnesses cited various administnltive
Democrats want patients protected against pri"horror stories" not quite as heart-rending as vate health plans. Republicans want them protectthose publicized by backers of "patient protec- ed against Medicare. Congress. ought to make
tion" legislation covering private HMOs, but still sure they are protected against both.
persuasive · enough to show that reform of
(Morton Konclracka Ia executive editor or
Roll
Can, the n-apaper of Capitol Hill.)
Medicare proc'edures is necessary.

The May meeting of the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services will be held on Monday at 7 p.m.
at the Board offices in Gallipolis. The board usually meets on the third
Monday of each month at the same location.

Thomas E. Anderson of Salem Street, Rutland, died Thursday, May 13,
1999 at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Arrangements will be announced by
Birchfield Funeral Home at Rutland.

•I Columbua 183~

·
·
There will be a .chance of showers across Ohio for the rest of the week,
the National Weather Service said.
• Thursday night will be partly cloudy to clear in the northern part of the
. Showers are likely in southern Ohio. Low temperatures will be in the
and upper 40s in the north to the mid 50s in the far south.
..
On Friday, there will be a chance of a morning shower in the far 5outh
and southeast. Skies will become partly cloudy as the day goes on. High
temperatures will range from the 60s to lower 70s.
.
Friday night will be fair with low :emperatures in the mid 40s to mid
50s.
'
•
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 88 degrees in 1982. The record low temperature was 34 degrees
in 1996. Sunset will be at 8:37p.m. Sunrise Friday will be at 6:18a.m.
· ..
Weather forecast:
.
·
Tonight. ..Showers and thunderstorms likely. LOws in lhe mid 50s. Light
easl winu. Chance of rain 60 percenl.
.
.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a chance.of showers. Highs in the lower
70s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Friday night_... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s.
Extended forecast: .
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs from the upper 70s to the lower·80s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the lower and
mid 80s.
·
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the 50s and
in ill lower 80s.

Meigs ·

HOSpi~al

on 1\Jesday, May 11, 1999, al Mt. Carmel Hospital in Columbus.
He was a self-!'mployed interior decorator and owner of Rife Decorating. He
was a member of Paintm Local Union 1215, and was a lifetime member of the
Indian Molorcycle Oub.
Surviving are !hree daughters and two sons-in-law: Marilyn Joan and Tom
'\Volfe of Racine, Judy McClelland of Columbus, and Linda and Gilbe.rt Ratliff
Ashville; thr~ sons and daughters-in-law: Gary and Carolyn Rife and Marip~
L and Deb!&gt;ie R1fe, Jr., all of Columbus, and Ken and Susan Rife, Charles, IlL;
IS gra~dchil~en, 11 gmndchildren and a sister, Mary Wells, Middleport.
Bes1des hJS parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Ruby Lucille Rife.
Services will beheld on Saturday, May 15, 1999 at the Myers Funeral Home
in Groveport, with Rev. Samuel Kirk officiating. Burial will follow in Franklin
Hills Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Hazel Ruth Stobart Wills

. Hazel Ruth Stobart Wills, 70, of Eureka SprinSS: Ark, fo~rly of Racine,
died on Sunday, May 9, 1999.
She was bo.m on Aug. 31, 1928 in Racine, the daughter of the late John R.
and Ida Sayre Stobart. She was a 1946 graduate of Racine High SChool and
attended Rio Grande College. She taught sch90l in Letart Falls and Palatine,
. Ill. She ~:"' a charter member of the Dove Circle Baptist Church.
Sumvmg are her husband, Ralph; a daughter, Susan Kuhl of Pierce City,
. Mo., two sons and daughters-in-law, John and Marianne Wills, Naperville, 111.,
and Russell and Barbara Wills, Rogers, Ark.; seven grandchildren; a brother
and sister-in-law, John and Naomi Stobart, Racine; a sister-in-law, Ola Hysell,
Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, sbe was preceded in death by two brothers, Lewis and
Charles Stobart.
.
man, Veterans Memorial.
Services
will
be
held
at
the
Dove
Baptist
Church
in Eurkeka Springs, Ark.,
SYRACUSE
on
Friday,
May
14.
.
.
·I :22 p.m., John .St., Florence Tadloek, Veterans M'emorial.
·

makes five runs

Units of Meigs Emergency Servip:s answered five calls foi assistance on Wednesday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:11 a.m., Overbrook Center, Mil·
dred Terry, Veterans Memorial Hospital; '
'
.
7:59 p.m., Baum Addition Rd ..
Bettie 'rurey, Veterans Memoriid.
RACINE
· 12:15 p.m., from Racine station,
Earl Cleek, Jackson General Hospital;
9:26 p.m., Broadway and Vine,
with Central Dispatch, Vicky Nor-

news

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions -Albert
Roush, Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center·
Discharges May 12 - Lucille
Parsons, Leona Myers, Ellen Matney.
(Publlsbed with permission)

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................... 41 't.
Akzo ............................... ;...... 45~.

AmrTech ...............:••• ~ ..... ~ .....66 7!.

Aah 011.: ............................... 42.,.
AT&amp;T ..... :.................... ..........So"'.
Bank One ..............................61 '!.
Bob Evans ,...........................1~',\

Borg-Warner ........................597•
Broughton............................. 15'A.
Champion ................... ~ ...........:.8

THE MATRIX tRl
7:110 &amp; 8:30 DAILY

Charm Shps ............................. :4

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:OU 3:30

City Holdlng .......................... 26,_,

NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

Federal Mogul ....................... 44~.

••

Meeting changed

Thomas E. Anderson

Friday, May 14

Pl. Cloudy

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Announcement

Death Notices

!Y !D

Ohio weather

\) ·~
Sumy

A little fear of God goes a long way:

By The A~soclatad P1esa
· By Ban Wattenberg
.
· ~oday IS Thursday, May 13, the 133rd day of 1999. There are 232 days
Looking back from the year 2030,_what will be
left'" the, year. . . . .
seen as the most imponant change.in the American
Today s H1ghhght m H1story:
·
condition from 1970 to 2000? There are plenly of
On M.ay 13th, 1607, the English colony at Jamestown, Va., was settled.
candidates: Computers, more fote~ trade, biD. On th1s date:
tech, the stock market boom, the eild of the Cold
: l~ 184~, co'!'poSC:r. Sir Arthur Sullivan, who collaborated with Sir War, the control of inflation.
~lham Gilbert'" wntmg 14 comic operas, was bom'in London.
Or consi!ler something less sexy: the replace. · I.n 1846, !he Umted States declared that a state of war already existed mcnt of the "defined benefit plan" by the "defined
~gamst Mex•co."
contribution plan."lt sounds nerdy and wordy. All
: , ~n 1917, three .peasant children neiU' Fatima, Portugal, reported seeing a . it means is that a person's accumulation of retire,
~1s1on of the Virgm Mary. .
.
·
ment assets is owned, and directed, by the person
. In _1918, the first U.S: aumrul stamps, featuring a picture of an airplane, and not by the company or institution he or she
~c~ mtr~ucedil (The, ru~plane was printed upside-down on some stamps~ works for. 'l)lpically that money is directed into the
!"a ng t em~ ~ctor s Items.)
stock market. When the value of invested pension
· In 1_940, m hiS .first speech as prime minister of ·Britain, Winston funds goes up in the market -- as over the course of
P_Jurchlll told the H?,use of Commons, "I have nothing to offer but bloOd, · decades it always has -- the appreciation _in value
lo•l, tears and s~eat. . .
.
.
goes to tile person not the company. This is impor• In 1954, Pres1dent Eisenhower Signed mto law the St. Lawre.ncc Seaway tant; Albert Einstein said that the (11061 powerful
Development Act. .
.
.
flirce in the world is compound interest. The contri: · In 1954, the mus•c.al play ."Th~ P~Jama. Game" opened on Broadway.
bution revolution has been driven by a public say• In ~958, Vice Prcs1dent r:&lt;•xon s hmousmc was battered by rocks thrown ing: "Show me the money!"
by ant1-U.S. demonstrators 1n Caracas, Venezuela.
.
Of course Americans could always invest their
: In 1981, ~John ~aulll was shot ~nd seriously wounded in St. Peler's· own money, for retirement or anything else. But
~uare by Turkish ass&amp;~!ant Mehmet AI.• Agca. .
now, lluough lax and employer policy, enabled by
energetic and creative· investment companies, .·
• In 1985, a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the
&amp;roup "MOVE" ended ~ Jl?lice dropped an explosive onto the group's Americans are being subsidized, seduoed, encour~cadquarters; 11 people d1ed 11'1 the resulting fire.
·
aged and even enjoined to be particip&amp;«lry and con·
· , Ten years ago: In unusually strong language, President Busb called on the tributory, ill order to own a slice of the big Ameri·
!Jeople of Panama and the coun!J1's d~fense forces to overthrow their mili- can pizza. .
.
·
.
!ary !cader, Gen. Manuel ~ton1o !'!onega. .
.
·
In 196S, about I~ percent .or ~encans owned
• F1ve yean ago: President Omton nommated federal appeals Judge stocks and bonds, directly or mdircctly. By 1990 ••
Stephen G. Breyer to the U.S. Supreme Court to replace retiring Justice over the course of 25 years-- the rate had doubled
fiarry A. mackmun.
·
..
to 24 percent. By 1998 ··eight years later- the rate
• One year 1110: President Ointon ordered harsh sanctions agailllt an had doubled ~gain, to about 52 percent. II can only
!inapologttic India, which undertook a second round of nuclear teats despite double one more time. The contribution m'Oiution
global criticism.
· .
has beCn the major driver of this trend. Almost 50

IALe
· .-· B-··

· The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

a

The financial contribution revolution

:J'"oday In History

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

Walter Rosebrough, CEO of a company manufacturing specialized hospital beds for bum vi"tims, said that HCFA actually approved his
device, but regional Medicare contractors routinely deny payment, ·necessitating "thousands" of
appeals since 1990, of which 95 percent have ultimately been successful.
Another witness testify,ing on behalf of the
Health Industry Manufacturers Association said
80 percent of private insurers cover a device that
allows borne monitoring of blood clotting time,
but Medicare's regional carriers won 't.
Similarly, an ultrasound device. proven to has- ·
ten the healing of bone fractures was approved by
the Food and Drug Administration as safe and
effective in 1994 and has been approved by 800
private health pi21JlS, but was disapproved by

'

By George R. Plaganz
If Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris
had had the same Sunday school
teacher as Maude Petre, would they
have carried out their deadly mission al Columbine High School in
Littleton, Colo., knowing what was
in store for them?
In her 1937 book, "My Way of
Faith," British author Petre relates
how . the priest at the Roman
Catholic church she attended would
impress on the children in his
instruction class the sense of hell's
unending time.
"Picture to yourself," he would
say, "a solid iron globe 10 million
tim~ larger than the Earth. Suppose
a swallow flies over the globe once
every 10 million years, touching the
globe sligh\ly at one point with the
tip of his wing."
Then the priest would say, "Now
if one were to wait the millions upon
millions of years it would take for
this globe to be worn away by the
friction of the bird's wing, would the
' sufferings .of the damned at last by
,. EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum covera nlltlonal ·and lntematlonal then have an end? No!"
affairs lor The Aaaoclatad Praaa.

"•"

"It's an outrage," said Johnson.
In the case of voice synthesizers, Ithaca, N.Y.,
attorney Lewis Golinkcr says that each of the four
disabled seniors whose cases he has taken to the
administrative judge level have won, but many .
give up heforc~and and some die before their
cases can be adjudicated.
·
"There is no sense to this," he said in an interview. "If somebody develops throat cancer,
Medicare will pay for a speech pathologist. If the
larynx has to be removed, it will pay for an artificial larynx. But if the person can't speak at all,
Medicare says a (synthesizer) is just a 'convenience.'"
·
Meantime, other federal medical programs ·Medicaid, the CHAMPUS program for military
families, the Department of Veterans Affairs and

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,,..1. ,; :the·
' -· ' ' . - J r

Thur8day, MIY 1S; 111110

'Patient
Protection'
needed
for
Medicare
The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFucH

Thursday, May 13, 1999

Thank You
Voters ol
Middleport,
who supported
me in the.May
Primary.
Sam Eblen
Paid For By C.ndtdale, 38 Hudson St ..
Middleport

Gannett •••••••••••••• ~ .........,. ••••••... 71 ~

. ~c Easte.m ~I Board ~r Education will meet on Monday at the distnct s admJ~IStratJve offices 1n Tuppers Plains. A work session will begin
at 6 p.m., wuh the regular school board meeting to follow.
·

Hymn Sing scheduled
. The Northeast Cluster Unit~ Melhodist Churches will hold a hymn
smg at the Long Bottom United Methodist Church on Sunday at 7 p.m.

Racine Village Council to meet .
. . Racine Village Council will meet in recessed ·session Monday 7 p.m.
at tbc municipal building.
·
·

Post to host dance . ·

·

'

The-Tuppers Plai~s Post will hold a round and square dance Saturday
from 8 to 11 p.m. w1th True Country. Jim Brown will be the caller. The
public is invited.

Official count set
The Meigs County Board of Elections will hold its official count Monday at9 a.m.
·
·

Hymn sing planned
A hymn sin~ win be held at the Faith Full Gospel Church, Long Bottom, 7 p.m. Fr~day. J1m Bla1r and the Gospclai re' will sing.
.

4-H Club to meet

·

I

The K-9 Konnect.ion 4-H Club wil! hold ils first meeting Wednesday,:
6:30 ~. m . ?tthe Me1gs upper level farrgrounds. All inltrested in joining _
the phmanly dog club should attend. For further information, call 9853975 or 667-3545.
·

Finan: PUCO can best judge costs
By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS~~)- Determinmg how m~ch uti hiles can get back
f~m thelf mvestments once compe:
t1~10n comes to the ~II billion elecInc power md~stry IS best left to the
state's ~rofess1~nal regulators, Senate Pres1dent R1chard Fman says.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee sche~uled a vote today
on a substitute bill that would give
that power to the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, not lawmak.ers.
.
. .
At issue are the "strand~d costs"
that Ohio's investor-owned utilities
now pass on to customers in their
bills, but would be. ~nable to recover
under true competition.
"The Public Utilities Commis- ..
sion of Ohio has the expertise to deal
with the issue of stranded costs,"
· Finan, · ~-Cincinnati, said Wednesday.
.
The comm1ttee has held hearings
on the bill for weeks, but sponsoring
Sen. Bruce Johnson, R-~lumbu.s.
planned to mtroduce a substitute b1ll
today. A morning committee hearing
was postponed whHe private talks
co.n.ti.nued among lawmakers, _the
ut•ht1es, cuslomers,energy suppliers
and other interested groups,
Gov. !Wb Taft Wid PUCO ,Chairman Alan Schnber to help the
groups rea~h a Consensus.
·
· Othe~ t~an th~ change fo~ utility
compames, the bill also prov1des a 5
percent rate reduction on the electric
generation portion of residential
customers' bills, an overall reduction of about 2 percent.
·
The bill. is being pushed by com:
mercia! and industrial users that say
competition will mean cheaper
power. Backers believe Ohio is
being hurt as other states that have

.deregulat io n attract businessei
because of lower rates.
The utilities, . now regulated as
monopolies, have opposed· the bill
beca use it limits· their ability · to
recover · investments · they made ·
decades ago in nuclear power plants
and ot her expensive projecls. The
recovery, in the form of a customer
lax, would last from three to five
years, depending on tile utility,
under the original bill.
The biggest change in Johnson 's
substitute is the way utilities can
claim stranded costs. Instead of fol, .
lowing a set of conditions determined by the Legislature, utilities
would leave it to the PUCO to rule
on what each utility could ·collect,
using the following guidelines:
- The investments were pru•
dent.
. .
.
- The costs can bt verified as a
legiti m'ate res111t of restructuring o(
the industry.
- The utilities cannot recovef
the costs in a competitive marlr.et. ·
- The costs are directly assigned
to the generation of retail electric
power provided to consumers ill
Ohio.
·
The responsibility of proving tb&amp;
costs should be recovered would be'·
·up to the utilities. The utilities•
recovery period would begin when
competition starts, on Jan. 1, 2001,
and end i.n 2005.' But the PUCO
could extend the recovery period up
to five years if Ihe utility could show
that it had not recovered legitimate
costs.

NICHOLAS CAGE

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Sports

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.

Pistons, Kings, Knlcks tally first-round victories, lead 2-1

Thursday,

Thuraday, May 13, 1999

Milwaukee gets
.p ast Cincinnati 8-7

May .13, 1999·

·

Blazers down Suns 103-93·, win series
NBA playoffs
By The Aaoclated Press
It was payback time for the Detroit
Pistons. For the Portland Trail
Blazers, it was just time.
Having suffered consecutive 20point defeats and on the verge of
elimination froin tbe NBA playoffs,
the Pistons handed the Arlanta Hawks
a
near-record
79-63
defeat
Wednesday night.
Portland ' snapped a six-year
drought and fi nally got to the second
round of ,the playoffs. completing a
three-game sweep of the Phoenix
Suns, 103-93. The Blazers had not
won a playoff series si nce they went
to tbe NBA Finals in 1992.
The 142-point .Atlanta-Detroit
game set an NBA playoff record for
fewest points by both teams. The pre-

vious low was 143 when Chicago
beat Miami 75-68 two years ago.
The 63 points were the fewest ever
scored by the Hawks in a playoff
game and the second-lowest in NBA
history, eclipsed only by the-54 points
scored by Utah against the Chicago
Bulls in last year 's finals .
The Hawks' previous .low was 71
in 1950 when they were the Tri-Cities
Black Hawks,' Still, the Hawks, with
a 2- 1 lead, can ·fi nish off Detroit in
Game 4 at The Palace on Friday
night.
·
Bison Dele had 12 points and nine
rebounds. Lindsey Hunter and Grant
Hill scored 12 points, and Joe
Dumars had 11.
Ty Corbin led Atlanta with 16
points. Hawks center Dikembe
Mutombo, who dominated the first
two games, was held to eight points
by Dele and the rest of Detroit's
defense .

" With that team and all the
weapons they have, you have to
choose xour poison, .. Detroit coach
Alvin Gentry said. "We knew that if
we doubied Dikembe, they were
going to hit some three-pointers, but
that· was the chance we decided to
take."
In other games ·Wednesday,
Sacramento took a surprising 2-1 lead
by nipping Utah 84-81 in overtime,
and New York routed Miami 97-73to
lead their series 2-1.
Tonight,
Orlando
is
at
Philadelphia, San Antonio · at
Minnesota, Indiana at Milwaukee and·
the Los Angeles Lakers at Houston.
The Pacers and Lakers lead their
best-of-five series 2-0, and tonight's
other two series are tied 1- I.
Trail Blazers 103, Suns 93
At Phoenix, Brian Grant scored
six.of his 20 points and Greg Anthony
scored all eight of his points in the

·Menifee draws 5-2 odds

final four minutes, when Portland
outscored the Suns 24-10.
" I think this is a good testament of
our character. I think this was a
growth game for us, •·growth series,"
Anthony said.
Isaiah Rider added 18 points and
Arvydas Sabonis had 14 points and
II rebounds for the Pacific Division
champions, who will play the winner
of the Utah-Sacramento series in the
Western Conference semifinals.
Cliff Robin.son, who played eight
seasons with Portland, led the Suns
with' 24 points, but had three
turnovers and missed two free throws
in the final 2 1/2 minutes. Jason Kidd ·
had 16 points and 12 assists.
Kinas 84,
81..0T
Vlade Divac hit two key shots in
the final 47 seconds of overtime.
Sacramento can wrap up the series
with another win at h.o me Friday
MILLER SCORES - The Meigs Marauders' Tonya Miller alleles
(See PLAYOFFS on Page 5)
· home to score during Wednesday's Division II aactlonal title softball
game against WeiiStl)n at Meigs High School, Where the Marauders
·w.o n 18-1. (Sentinel photo .by Dave Harris)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By JOE KAY
: CINCINNATI (AP) - lt took the
Milwa~kee Brewers until the la.•t day
o{ the1r road trip to find some
offense. The next challenge is not to
lose it on the way home.
. Dave Nilsson hit two of the
.Brewers ' season-high four homers
Wednesday night in · an 8-7 victory

f!IBA playoffs...

Jazz

to win Preakne.s s

~

fourth two-game
·
strepk of
the season and dropped them back
mto last place in !he NL Ce ntral for ·
~ 2~d~
.

:1

Meigs win Division II sectional final

By RICHARD ROSENBLATI
The biggest jolt was reserved for was the 5-2 favorite, while the fillies been laid back all spring. He ran a
BALTIMORE (AP) - As he trainer Bob Baffert, who was hoping were next - Silverbulletday at 7-2 good Derby, never turned a hair. I
think he's ready to run. "
crossed the street and walked toward hi s star fillies would draw favorable · and Excellent Meeting at 5- I .
hi s waiting car, D. Wayne Lukas posts. Exce llent Meeting did and is
The 14-horse field, which· includes
The Preakness draw was handled
_couldn't help but flash a huge smile . . definitely in; Silverbulletday didn't a record· 10 Derby horses, matches the same way as the Derby draw - a
The Hall of Fame trainer had just and may be out.
the largest In the I 3-16th-mile draft order was selected and trainers
anended the post-position draw for
Excellent Meeting, fifth in the Preakness s ince 1993.
picked their spots based on that order.
Saturd aY's Preakness, and hi s Derby after a strong finish, ended up
Winning Colors, 'Lukas ' 1988 Baffert had the 13th pick with
Kentucky Derby winner Charismatic with the No.' 7 post, while Derby winner, was the last filly to run · Silverbulletday and . trainer Carl
ended up in a perfect spot - No.6 in Silvcrbulletday, a winner in I 0 of I I in the Preakness, finishing third. Four Nafzger had the 14th pic k., When it By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs added a single run in th,e .
u full 14-horse field.
career starts - none against males- fillies have won the Preakness, but came time for them to make their Sentinel Correspondent
third inning on a walk to L~udermilt. ·;,
" We' re in .the zone," Lukas said got the outside No. 14 ·spot. . ·
none since Nellie Morse in lcJ24.
picks , they held an impromptu coin
Mciigs broke open a ·close game an&lt;! a single by Williams': to make it ·
Wednesday night "I' m tickled to
~· we' ll just mull it over and comLukas may have a little history on toss. and Nafzger won, taking the with eight runs in the second ipning . a 12- 1 game.
· .death with the draw. Things are mittee-icize over crabcakes and 'lite his side, too, as he shoots for his fifth 13th post.
and went on to defeat Wellston in
Meigs closed out the scoring wilt(:
falling into place."
beer," ,Baffen said. " I'm not angry, Preakness win - the No. 6 gate has ·
" II was Bob 's idea ," Nafzger said. Division II Sectional softball finals . a pair of runs in each of the fourth:;
Cat Thief, Luk as' other three-year- just disappointed. "
produced 13 winners of the second "I ain' tthat smart."
·
played Wednesday afternoon at and fifth inning~. In the fourth Meigs ::
old colt. fared well, too, with the
Silverbulletday drew the rail for leg of the Triple Crown, the most of
The 10 Derby horses running Meigs High School.
· used singles by Shannon · Pr.ice, Saturday are Charismatic, Menifee,
Meigs is now 19-3 overall and Wigal and Laudermilt,to malie itl4· "!
trainer selecting the No.3 slot for his Friday's Black-Eyed Susan, and . any post position.
third-place Derby finisher.
Baffert has until the day of the race to
He 's also got the only Triple Cat Thief, Excellent Meeting, will now advance to district [ourna- I. Meigs closed out the scoring in the
" I feel great about Charismatic. I decide where to send the Mike Crown contender in Charasmatic.
Kimberlite Pipe, Worldly Manner, ment action next week Zane Trace on fifth inning on a pair of walks and a "
think he's. peaked at the right tiine," Pegram-owned filly. He ·said if
Charismatic might be the one, Stephen Got Even, Valhol, Adonis Thesday at Waverly High . School. single by Boyles. ·
Lukas said, even though the Derby Silverbulletday drew anywhere from even though his reputation suffers and Vicar. The .newcomers are Badge, Zane Trace defeated Sheridan 9-0 . Amy Hysell ran her record to II · ··
winner was fo urth choice at .6-l in the posts 4-10, or the No . I slot, she's be because he was put in claiming races Patience Game, Silverbulletday and Wednesday to earn their district 3 ~ith the win on a two hitter. Hysell
twice - the last on' Feb, II - and Torrid Sand.
berth.
walked one and struck out four:
early-morning line. " And I expect a definite Preakness starter.
Cat Thief to keep everyone honest. It
Menifee, runner-up ·in the Derby could have been purchased for
The last Preakness winner who did
Meigs jumped out on top 3-0 in Laudennilt and Wigal each had three ,
won 't surpri se me if he wins."
by neck to the 31-1 shot Charismatic, $62,500 after either.
not run in the Derby was Deputed the first. Bethany Boyles walked, singles to lead Meigs. Williams
know the story all week will be · Testamony in 1983.
Stephanie . Wigal · and
Tangy added a triple and i' single·, Hysell
he' s .a claimer, and everything . went . The field, from the rail out, is · Laudermilt both singled. ~o stolen had a triple, and Price and Boyles
his way in the Derby," Lukas said. Torrid Sand (Tim Duhey, 60-1); bases and a fielder 's chmce plated each had singles.
•
"But don 't discredit the horse Kimberlite Pipe (Shane Sellers, 20- the three runs .
Higginbotham was the starter and ,:
Meigs scored a run in the top of loser for Wellston with help from
because I was foolish enough to run I ); Cat Thief (Mike Smith, 8-1);
Badge (Mike Luzzi, 50-I); Menifee the second inning on a walk, a Meigs Robinette.
Robinette
and
him in a claiming race."
Charismatic, owned by Bob and (Pat Day, 5-2); Charismatic (Chris error and .a single off the bat of Cougenhour had the Wellston hits, .
By DAVE HARRIS
ond inning in a row: The other nln Beverly Lewis, might be light on vic- Antley, 6- I); Excellent Meeting Cougenhour.
both singles.
·
J.T. Humphreys and Adam plated on singles hy Vanlnwagen, tories, but he's the most seasoned (Kent Desormeaux , 5-1); Patience
But Meigs bounced right back in Inpjng llllab
Bullington both hit a pair of home Martin and Eric Richmond .
Preares~ s~~r ?fall. ~e' ll rae- G~me. (C~rey N~~tani , 3lo
the second inning and sentl4 batters Wellston .....................010-00=1 -2·0
runs and Meigs scored runs in all five
Miller added two inore in the botmhg
Sor
t
eA
.
DltmrbeAourt_
l
3smce
AW
olndiiS
M(
orge
(J
aBve~l·
12I);
to the plate. Broolce Williams and Meigs .... ................. 381, 22=16·11·3
innings as the Meigs Marauders tom of the fourth inning, but Meigs t e anta nata e Y on pn .
or Y anner erry· aJ ey, • ; Amy Hysell each had a triple in the
Batteries
trounced Mille r 28-4 last week ended the game with nine more in the
" He seems to be a two-week Stephen Got Even (to he riamed, 10- inning, Wigal, and Laudermilt each
Higginbothan (LP), Robinette (2)
top of the fifth . Two walks, three hit horse," Lukas said. "I think he's had I) ; Valhol (Edgar Prado, 99-1); Vicar had singles to' go along with seven and Justice ·
Friday in TVC baseball action.
. The win gives the Marauders a · batters, a pair of errors and a pair of a little attitude adjustment from the (Robby Albarado, 30·1); and walks.
Hysell (WP) and Laudermih
12-9 record heading into Sectional singles by Vanlnwagen, and a single Derby. ·He's kind of focused. He's . Silverbulletday-(Gary Stevens, 7-2).
by Ramsburg made it 28-4.
play Thursday afternoon at Athens.
, Meigs jumped out to an early 4-0
RiChmond was the winning pitch- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
lead with · Bullington' s home run er on a three hitte~. He walked three ,
being the big blqw. Ryan Ramsburg,· hit one and struck out fiv e.
Humphreys and Aaron Vanlnwagen Humphreys and Vanlnwagen each
added singles.
had four hit s for Meigs . Humphreys
Meigs made it 11-0 in the second doubled and singled in addition to his
inning . ' by plating seven runs. home runs. Vanlnwagen had three
.Jeremiah
Bentley
tripled , singled and a double . Bullington
Humphreys doubled and Nick added his home run s. Ramsburg,
Dettwiller and Pat Martin added sin- Martin and Smiddie each had two
gles to go along with three waiks.
si n~les . Bentley had a triple .
After Miller scored a . pair in the Ricl\mond and Dettwiller added a . ·
bottom of · the second, Meigs single each.
Keller picked up the loss for
bounced back with six . more runs in
. the third . Humphreys led off the Miller. Other pitching ~tatistic.s were
.inning with a home run. After unavailable . Toth, Laning and
• ""IZI!
T1CKIT8
TICKETS
AMOUNT
Vanlnwagen doubled, Dcttwiller and Humphreys had the Miller hits ·all
AMOUNT
RIM'NNO
Kyle Smiddie walked and Bentley singles.
Ring Up The Cash
,. Window Of Opportunity
WlldBintW ,
reached on an error. Bullington then .nninsl2lab
$5,000 :............................ 1
$2,000
.......
,
..........
:
..
:
.......
3
$20,000
............................
3
. hit. his second. round tripper of the Meigs .... ........ ...... .. 476-29=28-18- 1
game.
Miller ......................... 020-20=4-3-4
$100 ............................ 486
$500 ...........,.................... 7$1 ,500 ................. :........... '2
"
Meigs added a pair of runs in the
Batteries
$100 ......... :.......... :..... 1,026
$50 ......................... 10,645
$1,000 .......... :.................. 6
!,
•
fourth as Humphreys led off the
WP-Richmond
s50 ·... ::.. ·.................... 4;732
· ~ .............................. 98
Bulletbllll
inning with a home run for the sec·
LP- Keller

Soft.b all Marauders
whip w.~llston · 16-1

·Meigs diamond men
mercy-rule Miller 28-4

:·1

w

::0

--

.9LCQ'UISI'I1O:J{S ![19{'£ J'E/WEL!R3

·Your

GRADUATE
is SPECIAL!

v
~our

Giftfrom ·
~CQf{llSirri09{S

WiU Be Also!

· •Crou Pens
•14K Gold Chains
&amp; Bracelets
•Gold Crosses
•Pulsar &amp; Seiko Watches

9uara7Jteed Lowest 'Prices,!
C'free f}ift Wrapping!
7lc7o Locatiom
Corner 2nd &amp; Grape, GalPpolls
92 MIH St., Middleport

9:30-5 Daily .
9:30-7r30 Friday

Expert Jewelry Repair

'

j

$1,000 ............................. 5
$500 ................................. 4
$150 ......................... ..... 39
$100 ....... ;.................... 289
$50 ........................... 2,319
$30 ........................,.. 1,600

$100 ............................ 29()
.' $75 .............................. 323
$50 ....... :................... 9,250
PO .................:....... 13,271
· Double Greenb.lcka

$900 ........................ ,....... 3
$300 ........................... ;.. 71

$10,000 ............................ '3
$3,000 .......... :.................. 7
$1,000 ............................. 7
. $300 .............................. 91
$100 ............................ '988
$50 ............. :........... 14,688
$30 ......................... 57.830

$100 .....'....... :............ 1,890
$60 .............................. 829
$50 ......... :. ............... 4,538

$30 ....... ,................... 3,006

$10,000 ........................... 1
$500 .............................. 44
$100 [·····: ....................... 67
$50 ................ ~ .......... 1.178
$25 ....................:...... 4, 723

$9CJ(J ................................ 9
$300 '''!" ''' : ..... ......... ...... ~30 '
$50 ........................... 9:279

$25 .............. :.....:.... '37,321

MOney Mine

I

Colorado ............................... IJ

t~
5~

San DieJO ............................. I4

6

Los Angcles ...... .................... l9

AL standings
.

naaa

:w

.

New YOlk ............................20
Boston ................. ,., .............. 18
Toronto ................. :............... l7
Tampa Bay ............ :.............. 17
· BPitimore :............................. l2

.621
.545
.486
.486
.364

2'~
4 1~
4~

Wnttm Di• lsktn ·

..54.5
.l l4
.441

l
3'/t

Anaheim .........

.441

3'b

Wednesday's scores
Min..eiOta 9. Tampa Bay 4
CLEVELAND 6, Ballimcre 5 ·
Oakland 2. Oerroic I

' ~oston 9, Seln~ .2

Anaheim I, New York 0 ·
Texas at Chicago, ppd ., rain
Kansas
7, Toronto 1 ·

qty

Friday's games

7,:85 p.m.

.

• Ballimort (Kamieniecki ~ I ) atTtiM IMotJnn .5·
21j8:3Sp.m.
.

•
~ Bos too

~ CLEVELAND

(Nagy l-l) JI·Deuoil CMoehler J .
3J1 7:0.5 p.m.
,
~Chi ~lljO(Parque 4-2) at New Voik (0. Hernnnciei

*9,950

~t."4

$150,000 .. :........ ,............: 3
$50,000 ........................... 3
$5,000 ............................. 8
$1,000 ........................... 40
. $500 ......:···:............... ~ ~10
$100 ..... :. .................. 9,000
$50 ..................... ,... 7~,701 '
$25 ..... ...... .. .. .... ... . 188,823
"'$1,800 .........................,::.•. 1
r ,

$60Q .. :........ :.................... ..
.
. •
.'I .
$60 .• ••••···"'""""~""'''
'P '' 30
$30 .! ... ............ . . ... .'.. · ~2;7'77

Tonight's games

: Kansas City (Suppan 2-J) nt Seattle (Fanero 1·-4).
10:05 p.m.
·
' Minnesota (Lincoln 1·.5) at: Oakland ICundioUI 2·
41~ IO:J5 p.m.
'

'

NL standings

1

Orlando al Philadelphia, 6:.lO.p.m.
San Antonio 'ar M!~m. 1 p.m.
lndiQa at.Milwau"-, 9 p.m.
LA ~ l.Mer• at Hoes1011, 9:30p.m.

:W L

I2
14
IS
22
2S

Ctntnl Dlvlslon
HOUJIOf\ .. .. ............................ 21 12
Sl, Louis ...................... :........ l1 16
Piluburgh ............................. l6 11
Ckicag o ............................. .... l.5 16
Milwaukee ... ......................... ! ~ 17
C!NCINNATL ................... 14 17

' .

- ~~9

.m

.26.5
.636
.liS
.48S
.484
.469
.4l~

.

2
2':
tO\

1 2'~

.ti.ISE, TILT' WlltRAI'I'f

~t.~999 WI"DSTAR LX
"'-""'

NHL conference semifinals

AUTO, AIR, POWER EltiP
CRUISE, TILT,. WARRAITY

~~"'~ 10 IN STOCIC
0
c:i •'
~

$1 1980°

o't\'- $201950°0

.

1999 F150 FLARESitE
.414, All, CIIISE, TILT
ISRP TOTAL BEFORE tiSCIOIIIfll ;;

Tonight's games
TOI'onto at PituburxiJ, 7:30p.m.
Colorado at Detroit, 7:)0 p.m.

.0,o't\'- $161950°

~t...f9tt ESCORT LX 4tR

7:30p.m.

*21,450"

4CYL, AIR CON •• STEREO
MIRP TOTAL IIFORI IIICOUITI

f.~ t9t9

$1,500 ............................. 6
$100 ............................ 171
sso ........................... 2,139
s~~ ~
17,798

•

... ..:.:.,, ........... ;.

~

We Salute You·
'For Your .Jfard
··work

Colo~Of~sh

0

~t.,. 1999 FtSO 4W4

•

AIR, IMM, 1"0
MIIP TOTAL I IFill IIICO.ITt

~o'

MONDAY·FRIDAY
goo All.· 700 Pl.

e

CLOSED SUNDAY!

Place
N2nd

..
•

lOT '::r.~~:il:.~rss,
MIIP TOTIL IIFORI IIICOI.TI

~0..

*15,820"

0¥'-"'$12195000

•

,.

:;

~~

..,.

1999 CONTOUR SPORT

All, ITIIEO, Alt HI£
ISRP TOTAL BEFORE tiSCIOU.ITE

.0.'. *15,540"

o~"$121950° 0

177 EXIT 132
RIPLEY, WV
(304) 372-3673
(800) 964 3673

SA11JRDAY

~~ Shoe

:

0

~t.,. 1999 ESCORT ZX2

-=

goo All.·500 PM .

"

ti2,545" .

o~'- $181950°

llr/eOFF

' ' '

•

''1i~1Wit tll0

•tiP TOTAl IIFOII tiiCIIllfl

Storei{Jide For
All graduating Seniors .

· ColciCah
$1,000 .. ........................... .1
$590 ................................ 1'
$1"-' ....... .........................., 85
$50 ........................... 1,780
$25 ............................. 4,556

TOTAL BEFORE tiSCOUIIT~

~.,

~~~$9~l1i••

.$1,700 ... :.....................:.... '
$100 ............................ 174
$50 ....... , ...................... 476
$25 ..........~ ...•:........... 8,177

AIR, PIWEI ElitP

*25,24o••

WodnHclay's scores

Bu~alo,

-.

.~
1999 EXPLORER SPORT

o't\'-$19 1950°0

Buffalo 3, Boston 2; Buffato lelds leriet 2-1
St. Louis 3, Dlllu l-OT; seriu tied 2-2

Do&amp;lan at

-

.0~ *21,57010

$121980

AU ~OWER., LOAtEI
· MIRP TOTAL IEFORE IISCOUITI

Hockey

SABLE I'-----=~--,..J

6 111 stot~ 0

.

Fr')day's games
.6QO

.

Atlanta at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Minmi at New York, 8 p.,m.
Utah at Sa~m;ntq. 10:30 p.m.

!ill.

1'&lt;1.

.IH6
, ..576

~

Friday's games .

~asttrn. Ditlslon

Atlanta .................................. l l
Philadelphia .......................... l9
N~York ............................. l9t"'
~nueal.. ........................... 10
Aorida ............................ :....... 9

ltfO, AIR, MWlllQIIIf

1t

PROIRAM CARS

, 998 c~MTOOR tt
tii'ISTIQOl

tROIUI CAlS

Luck Of Ttlelrlsh

A l l - --QMIII-11111 Mil Ill .... -.no. The Of1lo lotllly rarnlndoyou toP~ PleyR~. Ait-.y~
_....,.to.,.-~~~~~ rwgo-dlleONo ~ Comm-. loll Toft. Govomor· MltGIIIII ~ •. , _, ~.
·
The Olio Lallry II., Equol ~tty Et1!Pio7« ond Se!vioo PIO'IIdet · .0 18811 Olilo L~ Comll I ian

1998 TAURUS

h), 7.35 p.m.

• Ballimore (Enck~on 1·-51 at TeXa~ (Clnrk 2·:4),
p.m.
•
' Tnmpa Bay (Witt .l-0) at AMheim (Belcher 1-3),
10:0.5 p.m.

o~" $111450°0

1 24,6ts~

.
PMitnd 103. Phoeni x 9~ : Portland wins Rries

BatForCuh
$1,000 ............ ~ ................ 3
$500 ................................ 7
. $300 L ......................... .19 .
$100 .............................. 52
$30 ......................... 13,409

·-

ltl ' *14 I 495°0

~O '( •

3.0
Xr1t~~mentq' 84. Utllh 81-0T; Sacramento leads

8 : ~5

19.99 ESCG
AUI••. All, Cl CIAIIII
TOTAL BEFORE tiSCOUIITS

o~""' $19 1950°0 ~

·

Detroit 79, Atllfila ~~ ; Atlanta leads uries 2· 1
New YO{k 9?. Miami 73: New York leads Krit1

..,.

1999 F150 SC

.0.,.

Wodauday's scores
~I

re
HOT!

'

llT, ~ITO, AIR
•tiP TOTAL IEFOIE tliCOU.TI

NBA first-round playoffs

p.m.

•
~
rtm

o•""'

~

1999 RAIIOER

•tiP TOTAL IIFOII IIICOIIITS
~ 111,29$" .
00
0¥~

Basketball

Friday's games
(Pena 1-0). at To'tomo (Wells 4-21. 7:0.5

.

Atlarlll (Giavirse 2-3) at Olicqo (Lie.ber 1-3).
3:20p.m.
'
.
New YOfk (Yosl\il2-3) 11 PhUadelphia &lt;Oaea 2l), 17:0.5 p.m.
Monneal (Hermanson 3-3) at Piltsburah
(Benson 2-l), 7:&lt;l.5 p.m.
San Diego (Ashby 4--2) at CINCINNATI
(Neosle 0-2), 7,05 p.m.
.
·
Florida (Sanchez 0-4) a1 Milwaukee (Roque o3), 8~S p.m.
..
San fr.,cisco (R~ter 2-1) • HQ\Iston
(Reyooldl S.2). 8:0S p.m.
•
Los Anaeles (8rown..3-2) at S1. Louis (Jimenez
2-3). 8:10 p.....
Colorado (Balwlon ,. , ~ at Arizona (Benes 2-3),
IO:OS p.m.
·

Today's games
, Toronto (Hentgen 2- 1) at Knnsas C1ty ~ R osado 21J. 2:05 p.m
• AMheim (Olivl'll'es 3·3) at Ntw York (lrabu 1-0),

't\t...

No games today

9'tJ

Te•as.............. :..•...... :.......... .18 1.5
O•kland ....... ,.................... 18 1·1
Seattle .........
. ......... 1.5 19
19

Lot An&amp;eles 3, OticaJo 2
San Dieeo 8, Florida 7

7
711:!
11 ~4 ·

••uto"

~ilwaukee 8, C1NCINNATI7
Houston ~. Pituburlh 2
Arizona 8, Mon~al 6
.

8'4

Central Dlwhlon
Cl.EVELI\ND.·..................... 24 9 .727
Oiicago ................................ l6 I ~ ..516
Kan1111 City ................ :......... 16 16 ' ..500
Deunil .................................. 1.5 19 .«1
Minne101a ............................. JJ 21 .312

. .......... IS

. .o,.

while

PhihodelpiUo 8, St loui1 4
New York 10, Colondo S·
Sao Francisco 5, Adanta I

~a

L 1'&lt;1.

12
'15
18
18
21

II.IOOF , lEAflll, LOAtlt
•tiP TotAl IEFIII tiiCO ..II

Wednesday's IICoreo

Eutem Dh'lslon

•
Western Olwl1km
San FranciscO ............... ,...... 21 14

"AS OF MAY 5, 111t8. There are owr 153,et7 tlcketa ltlll out theN with • prlze of $25 or IliON. If
you "*tllll the priDe on WI theM tlcketa, It cornea to.niore than $2-4 mllllonl 1111. UJCKY TODAY?

'

Arizona .................................20

.,

MoneySIOnn

.
. Jobr'aWIId
·.'' $1,Q!&gt;P·.....,..... !. ..... :.......... 9 '
$100 .; ...:.: .................... 398
$25 .......: ................. 40,090

·-

..

.
.,.
Get'em

"" EXPEDITIOII EttiE BAIER

CaehAnclhlrt

Spring Fling

Ten Gnrnd Hand

Coffw BJUk Cah
$599 ................ :............. 25
$100 ............................ 292
$50 .....,..................... 6;843
$25 ....... ................ .. 40,711a

•

Fat Cat

$20,000 ,. ......................... 3
$10,000 ....... :....................4
$5,000 ............................. 6
$100 :.. :..................... 8,4'20
$50 ......................... 36,948

-

.....

Great .Selection on
New &amp; Used Cars
to choose from

�•

By The Bend

Thuraday, May 13, 1999

The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

NOTHJNG RUNS
UKEADEERee

Page&amp;
Thursday, May 13, 1999

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
Gallipolis
AaDIS frt1tt &amp;ala Autti Salis on old Rlt. 3S West

668 Pinecrest Drive
ship where I could be'No. I?-- SEC- tude and proceeded to remove the
OND BANANA IN OKLAHOMA
ihtruder from the chair. After I took
Dear Second Banana: From my seat back, he came af1er me li~
where I Sit, illooks as ,if those apron a raging bull. I grabbed his arm and
strings are mighty tight A 39-year- · .twisted il behind his back. He lefl
old man who is.still living in l)is the room, sulking , and did · not
mother's house does not sound lik~ a relurn.
.
lively candidale for marriage, .al
My uncle came over 10 me during
least not in the foreseeable fmure.
the commercial break and said, "I
Be hones! with Charlie, and let give only one warning, so consider
him know you plan lo date mhers. !his yours. It is muc~ ~asiet to pick
Then, lei your friend s know you're · on someone smaller than you are,
"available".
/
and if I ever see you do this to my
This takes courage, bul il 's .!he son again, I will stomp a mud hole in
wise thing 10 do. Trusl,ine.
your back."
Dear Ann Landers: I was mind- . Was I wrong to defend myself7
ing my own business watching TV · Was I wrong 10 want my chair back?
with my • uncle and ·a 15-year-old
Please !ell me so I will know ·
cousin when !he _phone rang. The whal lo do ne&lt;l time.-- NEEDING
call was for me. I didn'l wam lo dis- AN ANSWER IN AMARILLO,
·
lutb their TV watching, so I look the TEXAS
call in !he kitchen. When I came
fiEAR AMARILLO: Granted,
back, my cousin was siuing in my you should have been given your
chair.
seal back when you returned from
I asked for my place back, and his taking !he phone call. However, il
response was ."Move your,meat, lose appears you were not "defending
your seat." I was upsel wilh his ani- yourself' bultrying lo get back whal

De;lr Ann Landers: I have been constamly calling her from his cell
dating my boyfriend for over four phone to check in, remind her to take
years. "Charlie'' is 39, and I am 40. her medicine, or ask if she is watch. He is a great guy. and I always ing anything good on TV. I know he
· asS&lt;Jmcd ·we would get married some is concerned aboul her, but these
day.
calls often take place out of the blue,
Charlie takes care of his 76-year- in the middle of our cmiversalions,
old mother: who has a variety of and many limes, he calls her afler
medical problems. most of '!hem we've been gone less !han an hour.
related to being grossly overweight This seems excessive to me.
i-lis mo1her is a sweel woman bu1 ' Charlie is a kind man ' and lreals
virlually helpless. Her husband died . me well, bul ourrelalionship doesn 'I
I 0 years ago, a,nd Charlie could see m -to be going anywhere. and I'm
never bring himself lo move out of beginning to wonder if I'm was1ing
the house.
my time . I know he will never leave
Our dating revol ves around car- his molher, and frankly, I don'lthink
in g for -hi s molher, which I under- I could live wilh her.
Siand. but somelimes, it really gels
Should I settle for whatever hapw me.
piness I can have wilh !his man, or is
When we are oul logether, he is it time to stan looking for a reliuion-

List
Shawnee
Sherri L. Ramsburg of Middlepori and Jennifer R. Friend and '
Richiud E. Friend of Syracuse were .
rcccnlly named to the Dean 's Lis!
. lor !he winter quarter at Shawnee
. Sla!e University.
.
·
To be named lo the list, studenls
musl have been enrolled on a full time basis and have achieved a
grade point average of3.5 or beUer. ·

•

Honored at Berea College
·Brandi N. Reeves of Chester was ·
one of the outstanding students hon. ored a1 BereaCollege in Berea, Ky.
during scholarship programs held
recently.
She was iilducled into the .Bela
Beta Beta Honor S'ociely and
received the Underwood-Alger
Biology Scholarship.
• Tri Beta is a national honor sociCiy open to persons making biological sciences one of their major studies. Organized in 1922, the sociely
llas three major aims: the development of sound scholarships, the dis·
semination of scientific trulh, and
the promotion of research.
The Underwood-Alger Scholarshi p is awarded to s!Udents who
have declared a major · in biology

and who have exhibiled excellence
in scholarship as well as financial
need.
Reeve s is the daughler of Roben
and Marjorie Reeves of Chesler and
graduale of Eastern High School .

pon; Lori Russell, Middlepon; Walter Williams, Middleport; Amy
Smith, Pomeroy; Ann.t" Wolf,
Pomeroy;
Brandon
Buckley,
Pomeroy; Chad Mason, . Pomeroy;
Charles Legilr, Pomeroy; ,Corey
· Darst, Pomeroy; Cortney Haley,
Receives degree
Pomeroy; Edward Bach-Davis,
Michael Dale Edwards, son of Pomeroy; Rayan Young, Pomeroy;
Larry and Margare1 Edwards, Sabrina Smith, Pomeroy; Sarah
received his MAT degree on Sunday Anderson, Pomeroy; Aaron Drumfrom Jacksonville University._ He mer, Racine; Brian Anderson,
Racine; Cynthia Caldwell, Racine;
earned his degree in compuler.
More than 500 JU students Jennifer. Roush, Racine; Nicholas
received their degrees in ceremonies · Smith, Racine; Paul Jhle, Racine;
which included U.S. Rep. H.L. Betty Kuhn, Reedsville; Jennifer
"Sonny" Callahan of Alabama as the Gibbs, Shade; Joelene Sellock,
commencement speaker.
Shade; Andrew. Fields, Syracuse; ·
Jacksonville Universily is a pri- and Russell Aagg,.Syracuse.
vate, independenl, liberal arts insli- ·
·
tution.
Ohio announces graduates ·
Several local students were ·.
OU Dean's List
among the candidates. for degrees al
The following local Ohio Univer- · Ohio University at-the end of winter
sity sludenls were named 10 the quaner. '
•
Dean's Lis! at Ohio University for
They were: Jeremy · Putney,
the winler quaner, having earned a Pomeroy; Chrislina Cooper, Racihe;
·grade point average of 3.3 or better Andrew Fields, Syracuse; Jennifer
on a 4.0 scale:
Roush, Racine; John Swarr,
~athryn Ndnhup, Cheshire; Jes- Reedsville; and Caiy Hepper, Shade.
sica Chevalier, Chesler; Jennifer
Caldwell, Coolville; Cindi Stewan, ·
Receives nursing license
Middlcpon; Jay Cremeans, 'Middle- Siacie Reed, a 1997 graduate of

a

Community
The Communily Calendar is published as a free service to non-profil
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not designed to promole sales
or fund raisers of any 1ype. Items are
primed as space permits and cannot
he guaranleed to run a specific numhcr of days.

ing, Sacred Hean Cmholic Church,
Mulberry Avenue, noon. Also At Anon. non-smoking.

you considered · your turf. You
should not have gotten physical with
your.cousin, who apparenlly is a lot
smaller !han you are. I'm siding with
your uncle.
Gem of the Day: (Credit George
Washington Carver) "How far you
go,in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate
. wi.lh !he aged, sympathetic with the
striving and 10lerant of those who

are weaker !han you -- because
someday, you will be all of these."
Do you have questions aboul sex,
but no one to talk to? Ann Landers'·
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager," is
frimk and to !he point. Send a self,
addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money order for .
$3.75 (!his' includes postage and '
handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann LaQders, P.O. Box I 1562, t:;:hicago, Ill.

(740) 446-2412

RUTLAND Bicentennial
Committee meeling, 7 p.m., Civic
Cen1er.

Meigs High School, and a March ·
graduate of Hocking College, has
received her LPN license from the ·
State of Ohio.
She will continue her education
in the fall , pursuing an RN degree at
Hocking College.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Barrett and Dave
Reed.

See us for Your Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories.
...

·The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department cordially
invites you to their
open-house located.·
on the corner of
5th &amp; Pearl On
May 16th from _1-4 p~m.
Brief ceremony to
begin at 1 p.m.

STACIE REED

a

MONDAY
RACINE - Planning meeting
for Ju.ly 4 celebralion, Monday, 7
p.m. Racine firehouse.

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Leo's Cruist.

·&amp;·~Tr.*t
740-982..4233
800-795-1110

202 w. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

'

NASCAR Winston

-..v.r....,. .

Aug. 15 - Frontier at the Glen, Watkins
(Jeff Gordon).
.·
:
Olen, N.Y.
.
Feb. 21- Dura:Lube 4QO, ~ockingham, N.C.
Aug. 22- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
.(Mark Martin). · ·
' I
.
Aug. 28- Goody's 500, Bristol, Tenn.
March 7 - Las Vegas 400 (Jeff Burton).
Sept. 5- Southern 500, Darlington; S.C.
March 14 -·. Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton;
Sept. 11- Exide NASCAR 400, Richmond,
Ga.
Gordon) •
·
·
Va.·
M11tch 21 - TranSouth 400, Darlington, S.C. ·
Sept. 19- New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
~ ._.,.... Bunon).
~
·
·
. Sept. 26- MBNA Gold 400_, Dover, De
. I.
"" March 28.- Prlinestar 500, Fort Worth; Texas • • Oct. 3'- NAPA Autocare 500, Martinsville,
(ferry Labonte).
..
,
· Va.
·
.
April 11 .- Food City Soo, Brislol, Tenn.
Oct. 10·- UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord,
(Rusty Wallace).
N.C.
.
April 18 ~ Goody's 500, Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 17- Winston 500, Talladega, Ala.
(John Amlr'etti)..
'
.!
Oct. 24- Pop Secret 400, Rockingham, N.C.
April· 25 - ' Diehard 500, Talladega, Ala. .
Nov. 7- Dura-Lube 500, Phoenix.
(Dale Earnhardt). ••
Nov. l4- Pennzoil 400, Home~tead, Fla.
May 2 - · California 500, Fontana (Jeff
. Nov. 21- NAPA SOO, Hampton, Ga.
Gordon).
.
. May 15 Pontiac Excitement 400, Driver Standings
Richmond, V~~.; ;·.,
,
·
:
1. Jeff Burton, 1,544.
May 30- Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
2. Dale Jarrell, 1,489.
June 6'-""MBNA Pl~tinnm....OO, Dover; Del..
3. Bobby Labonte, 1,390.
June 13 - Kmirt' 400, Brooklyn, Mi'ch.
4.. Jeff Gordon, 1,344.
June 20 ..:::. Porono 500, Long Pond, Pa'.
5. Mark Martin, 1,339.
June 27- Save Mart 3SOk, Sonoma, Calif.
6. Tony Stewart, 1,247.
July 3- Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
1. Rusty Wallace, 1,217.
July 11- Jiffy Lube 300, Loudon, N.H. '
8. Terry Labonte, 1,217
July 2S- Pennsylvania 500, tong PoQd.
9. Ward Burton, 1,196.
Aug. 7- Brickyard 400, Indianapolis. .
·10. Mike Skinner, 1,193.

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AITENTION

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C,ll':-992~21. 55
LD&amp;va £xt~ 1D4 • · .
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11. Dale ·Earnhardt, 1,186.
12. Jeremy Mayfield, 1,166.
13. Ken Schrader, 1,142.
14. John Andretti, 1,138:
15. Michael Waltrip, 1,096.
16. Sterling Marlin, 1,057.
17. Chad Little, 1,047.
18. Bill Elliott, 1,002.
19. Wally Dallenbach, 984.
20. Bobby Hamilton, 970.
21. Kenny Irwin, 941.
22. Rick Mast, 914.
2:t Kenny Wallace, 913.
24. Jimmy Spencer, 909.
2S. Darrell Waltrip, 903.
26. Kevin Lepage, 898.
27. Ernie lrvan, 873.
28. Johnny Benson, 853.
29. Steve Park, ~S2.
30. Brett Bodine, 851.
31. Jerry Nadeau, 83S.
32. Kyle Petty 774.
33. Geoffrey Bodine, 768.
. 34. Elliott Sadler, 760.
35 .. Ted Musgrave, 747.
36. Robert Pressley, 733.
37. Ricky Rudd, 732.
38. Joe Nemechek, 716.
39. David Green, 714.
40. Rich Bickle, 676.

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')~,t~y 'r:xt. 105
For··more 'Information

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ATI'ENTION

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A~vert~•-on.~tel~p~ge :.

992-~955

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ADXERTISERS!!

:SWISHER· LOHSE
PHARMACY
POMEROY, OH.
Kenneth-McCullough, R. Ph.
· Charlet Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Fri. B;OO a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Sat.: 8:00am to 8:00pm; Sun. 10:00 l.m. to 4:00p.m. ·
Preacrlptlons • Friendly Service • Open WHknlghta 'til 8

Cup schedule, winners In parentheses, and driver point standings:

· Feb. 14- Daytona~. DaytOna Beach, Fla.

•

TllllEE REGISTERED
Pllt\RMA(;JSTS
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travel needs

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· Fast, Friendly
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949-3099

Riaen·our

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~~~~

am."

SR 124
Racine, Ohio

His Winston Cup debut is schedu.led for May 30,.•at Lowe's Motor
Speedway in the Coca-Cola 600, followe~ by four other races on the tour
•·
this
year.
Supply
o.l#l Earnhardt Jr. '• racing background Wll•ln 'Ia modal atocb on ahort traclc• nur hi• horrN. Wlrhout
The week of events leading ,up to much Input from hi• fllthflr, 0./e Jr. won •orrN ,._, Htl t:tmtlnued hi• aduclltlon w/111 eight Bu•ch •tJJrt•
St. Rt. 248
· the race in Concord, N.C., not far In 11187.
Chester 985-3308 ·
from Earnhardt-'s Kannapolis home,
Earnhardl admits his prewill be full of pressure. He says his first NASCAR Busch.Series event in the steel that has helped his father win
1996,
driving
for
stepmolher
Teresa
72
races
and
seven
Winston
Cup
NASCAR
life wasn 'I that of a budbiggest fear is letting people down.'
Earnhardt
·
championships.
ding
role
model,
"It's going to be like a sev~n-day
His racing llackground was in late
Dale Jr., known as LiUle E, the
"I was just' doing a lot of partying,_
road .trip for a basketball te~." he
model
stocks
on
short
tracks
near
his
Imitator
a
takeoff
on
his
fatber's
a
lot
of drinking and messing around
· said. "There's a lot that goes on at
home.
Without
much
input
from
his
·
The
Intimidator
-or
simply
Junior,
·
with
my friends," he said. :'Now, I'm
Charlotte; a lot of distractions before
father,
Dale
Jr.
won
some
races.
He
hasn't
won
!his
year,
but
he.
has
run
going
in the right direction and the
111e race. I cim'tletthat stuff gel in the
·
continued
his
education
with
eight
well
-enough
to
lead
in
the
points
things
I've got I've earned instead of
way of my: job." •
,
·
Busch
starts
in
1997.
standings
again
afler
'the
·
first
11
having
them handed to me."
· Because his Winston Cup tea!ll is
Then'hiS father surprised many by races.
That's good training, because
new - the first· time he ran in its
Before I his year, Earnhardt faced a nobody will hand him anything on
chevrolet was in,-testing earlier·this hiring liis inexperienced son last year
month - it has no series points to fall as th~ ~ Buseh . driver for Dale decision similar to the one made by the track- not even Dad.
many college basback on. To make the field, Earnhardt Earnhardt Inc.
What
followed
was
"There's
a
lot
tluit
ketball
stars who
musi qualify arnon~ the top 36:
"I have to go there and make the sOmething few expect- goes on a1 Cluulotte, a stay in si:hool or
lot of distractions
jump to the NBA.
race," he said. ·~I'm still worried ed: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
•L
I
't He chose to stay in
about that. Nobody else will admit it, blossomed into a star, b .1:
winning _seven races eJore t..e race. can
the Busch Series for
L
but l'":,c .hact ~ ~.R!~ of ~~
about nOt rnaktngfiad lettii!IJ~ and the Busch Series let that stuff get in the one more year,
He
way of my job."
while
exploring
down - my team, my sponsors, niy championship.
then
signed
a
contact
·
Winston
Cup
racing
family."
'
wilh
Budweiser
for
reported
$10
with
five
projected
starts.
Don Jlawk, preaidenl of Dale
Mc;anwhile, .things have already
Earnhardt Inc.,, isn 'I concerned a\,lo~l million - · unheard of for an
unproven talent still to make his first changed considerably for the driver
of that. ' ·
who still lives in a mobile home on
---·- !!.l~IUI-.wl:lil about a!IJ!•.1llb'l!:ie Winslon Cup race.
"He
surprised
a
lot
of
people,
his father's property.
who didn't have a1tttle trepidation,''
including
me;"
his
father
said.
"We
."The biggest difference is I can go ·
r----:::-----:r--r-"-'1 Hawk said. "A lot of people have bet
knew
he
could
drive
a
race
car,
but
shop
anytime I want, and I don 'I have
.. • •
a lot of money on the kid. But I've
~
,
told him in private ~ot to worry about until you start winning on the race- to kj:ep a $200 balance in my checktrack and 'see how you react to the ing account anymore," he said.
~"' o • ~(I
it."
,
daily
pressure, it's hard to kmiw what "Change is difficult for anybody,
!I 1
Earnhardt, the younger of Dale
you've
got inside you."
especially when it happens in such a
-~ !ii "' § ~
~ Sr.'s two racing sons, was virtually
Apparently,
the
kid
has
some
of
short
time."
1::! ~
v unknown in the sport until he raii·his

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• FEDERAL EMPLOYEES, COMPENSATION
•BO ILERMAKERS
• CLAIMS PRO
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.

Citgo

, . By MIKE HA1UUS
AP MoJonporta Writer
Dale Earnhardt ·Jr. should be
excused if he's nervous. After all, his
jump to NASCAR 's top series is the
~igg~ step.of his young career.
Like many 24-year-olds, he's'been
. - knOwn to party with friends and act a
. ..little erazy at times. Bul !he third'.. generatio~t. ~tock car driver says he's
· ready . fQr all the_responsibilities of ·
Winston Cup racing.
"I know I have a lot of people
watching me and wondering if I'm
going to make it or flop," he said,,a
serious expression clouding his opep,
friendly face. "Some people want me
to be a big star because they pull for
my dad and want me to be like hi~
"Some people want 111e t!l (lfil
becauile my dad's had so much success. But, I'm Dale Earnhardt Jr. l'in
not my dad, and I have to· be, wh~ I

51JHJ:,
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· WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND bO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
POMEROY - Closed AA Big
Plains VFW Post 9053 meeling for Book study meeting, non-smoking.
all officers will be held Thursday, Catholic Church,
Mulberry Avenue.
.
5:30 p.m. wilh dinner al 6:30 p.m.
Regular meeting will follow a1 7:30 ·
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers meeting Saturday,
P·f!l·
noon.at Trinity Church. Speaker will
·sYRACUSE - Syracuse PTO be phannacist Tammy Grueser.
mee1ing Thursday, 1 p.m. Eleclion
of officers will be held.
REEDSVIT..LE - Forked Run
Sportsman Club, anriual · fishing
'POMEROY - AA open meet- derby for children. Saturday, 9 a.m.

Hills

Little E knows next step·.is big one

POMEROY - Preceptor Bela
Bela meeting Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
with Jane Walton and Clarice Kraul- SUNDAY
Local School Board, regular session,
lcr, hoSiess. Hal Kneen will be guesl
ATHENS __;_ A retirement parly Monday, 6 p.m . followed by work
speaker.
'will be held for Eugene Willoughby SeSSIOn.
al the Hocking Valley Sponsman
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Club on Radford Road, Route 50
POMEROY - Meeting of local
POMEROY - Vet,erans AdminPOMEROY - Women's AA, south of Athen~ lo County Road 19. .crafters interes1ed in county's
isuation Medical Cenlcr, Chilli- 1607 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, open dis- · All Meigs Coun1y friends are inviled brochure, Monday, 6 to 7 p.m.
cothe , heallh care enrollment at Yel- , CUSSIOO.
to attend.
Meigs Coun1y Common Pleas
crans Service Office, 117 Memorial
Counroom in courthouse, Pomeroy.
Drive, Pomeroy, I to 3 p.m. Proof
RUTLAND - Rutland BicenPOME!i.OY - Poplar Ridge
of mililary service required.
tennial Committee, Friday, 7. p.m. Free Will Baplist Church, Sunday
POMEROY - Meigs County
Civic Center. Anyone interested evening service with The Gabriels Commissioners, first public hearing ·
CHESTER Shade River come.
Quartet lo sing. John Elswick, pas- on Community Development Block
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting
tor, invites public. ·
Grant formula program, Meigs
Thursday, 8 p.m. In recognition and SATURDAY
County Courthouse, 7 to 8 p.m.
in honor of Masonic veterans and
DEXTER - Songfest at the old
Armed Forces Day a special dinner Dexter Church Saturday, 7 p.m.
will be held at 6:30 p.m. Master Singers are invited to come and take
Masons and all members invited.
part in the service.

..

992-2825

740 992·2196

Calenda~"--------.::.-__

lo noon. Lunch served.

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

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COMMUNICATIONS

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Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 1OS
For more information
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992~2155

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�Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page~ :
..:..40:.__G=:I..:..-:..:.:;;.:8y.:....__ :
Three AdOrable Klntnl witl'l t.ona :
Hair. 6 Week i Old. 2 Btac:k&amp; ,.
Wh1t e , 1 Ye llo w, Uttlf·Traln•d . t

By JIM PATTERSON

Franklin home March 6. It took utes before the crash and the
Associated Press Writer
emergency workers about two hours motorist noticed no sign of intoxication . Several emergency workers
FRANKL!N. Tenn. (AP) - S11y- to fr~e him from the vehicle.
. ing "I did wrong," country singer
· Hls liver was severely lacerated who responded to the crash, includGeorge Jones pleaded guilty today and his right lung was .punctured, ing a Oight nurse , also said they did
· Real bad luck for Stephanie and Ronnie Keyes and their family who lost to a drunken dri~ing charge for an but he made a remarkable recovery not detect alcohol on Jones , Davis
everything-and no insurance- when fire struck their residence near·Port- accident that nearly killed him in and went home from Vanderbilt Uni- said.
laHd last Friday.
JQnes, who has a well-documentMarch . He will not have to do jail versity Medical Center after I 3
As a result, the family needs everything- household goods, clothing, fur- time.
days.
ed history of alcohol and drug abuse ,
niture. And, incidentally, if you have any furniture you can contribute it will
Jones, who was ·rndicted Monday,
Williamson Count y Di strict pleading guilty to two drunken dri~·· picked up.
pleaded guilty to charges of driving Attorney General Ron Davis said ving charges in 1982. He was given
Currently. the family is living in a camper at the home of a friend, Pam while impaired and violating the prosecutors negotiated a plea agree- a "30-day suspended jail sentence on
Pierce.
state's open container law. A reck- ment because ·it ·would have been one charge and ordered 10 perform a
Most urgently needed is dothing for the Keyes children, all junior high · less driving charge will be dismi ssed diffieult to get a conviction ·at trial. benefit concert for the other.
'
age. Needed are clothing items for a boy, age 12, who wears 32-32 trousers in a year if he completes alcohol The grand jury had a choice between .
Jones .said he had been sober for
and a medium or large shirt ; clothi ng for a boy, age 14, who w~ars 34-32 counseling and is not arrested again. bringing a driving while· impaired 12 years prior to the March 6 accitrousers and medium or large shirts; and for a girl, 13, who wears size 14 in
Jones was lined $500 on the DWI charge or driving under the influ- dent.
garments, slacks, 32-32 and medium to large tops.
George Jones
charge and $50 for the open contai n- ence and chose the less· serious
"Truthfully, the struggle · never
If you can help the fami ly get back on its feet would you please give Pam er violat ion . The driving while count , Davis said .
ends and I wi ll get treatment to help A DWI charge is for drivers with a
at_ call at 843-5540? I'm sure any help you can provide will be appreciated. ·impaired charge, which in Tenness~
"It was a very difficult -case fac - me cope better," he said.
blood-alcohol level of at least 0.08 ,
is a less serious charge than "driving . tually because the investigation
"I came very close to death and I who haven 't been convicted . of
· It iS with interest that I noted that a group in Athen s is auempting to estab- under the influence," does not carry from the Highway Patrol contained know the Lord works in mysterious
drunken driving for, at least I0 years . .
lish some criteria that will make it impossible for a Wai-Mart Store to be · any jail time. Jones will keep . his a lot of contradictory evidence and ways and he spared me," Jones said.
Jones is considered one of. the :
built in that city. Seems strange to me . Whatever happened to free enter- driver's license.
information," he said.
" I can only believe that he sti ll has greatest. si ngers in country music :
prise?
"I don't remember much about
A half-empty pint of vodka . was work for me to do here." He said he history. He has chaned more than .
I' m sure yo u recall that there is another group in Athens opposing the the day of the accident, but I do found in Jones ' vehicle ,· but the was eager to get back to singing.
140 ·records during his nearly 40- :
improvement of Route. 33 frqm Darwin to Athens . Am I missi ng the point know that I was drinking and obvi- trooper who in vestigated the crash
Among the ev.idence consi dered · year career, including classics lik,': :
on these things- beyond me .
ously my . driving cwas impaired," said there was no indication alcohol by grand jurors was the blood-alco- " He Stopped Loving Her Today .
Jones said at a news conference after played a role. Trooper Michae l hoi test done on Jo.nes at Vanderbilt and ·" A Good Year for the Roses." :
.. · Maxine Griffith is working hard to lay plans for the annuai .Relay For Life · !he court hearing . " I did wrong that Sprawling said Jones crashed University . Medical Center. The
He was married to duet panner •
to. be held at the "Rock Springs Fairgrounds on Friday and Saturday, June 18 · day and !.take full responsibility for because he was talking on a cell ular result s of the test were not di sclosed.
Tammy Wynette for six years, and :
and 19, as a fund-raiser for the American Cancer Soci.ety.
what happened ."
telephone and not paying attention
Under Tennessee law, a driving · the pair were known as " The K,ing
The big hurdle now is getting teams organized and each team composed
Jones was alone when he to the road .
under the influence charge cau be and · Queen of Country Music. " .
of -about 10 people will be asked to rai se at least $ 100 tlu:ough pledges. smashed his sport utility vehicle into
Also, Davis said, Jones stopped brought when a motorist's blood- Wynette died last year.
B.usi nesses, -organizations, churc h groups and families are being asked to a concrete bridge a mile from his to assist a motorist at a rest area min- alcohol level is above 0. 10 percent.
organize teams for the June event. T-shirt s and "goody" bass are given to
aD team mrmbers and there are incentive pri zes offered to those raising
m·ore money. Cancer surviv,ors wi ll be on hand to remind everyone that can- .
·
cer is not always a death sentenfOe.
· If you can get together a team, give Maxine a ring and get your group
By JEFF DONN
bia and Dartmouth College identi- and its diseases.
logged in for the relay which is not only a practical event but it looks like
AJsociated Pnlss Writer
fied an enzyme 'known 'l' a cytosolic
The worm gene "should give
A cell-protecting enzyme needed catalase that seems to act as a central impetus to people working on the
it 's going to be fun time for participants. ·
·"
for long life in worms may help in agent in allowing some worms to human genes \o try to look for things
finding better treatments for live longer. ·
: ; A lot of you will remember Glenna Rummel, so active and dedicated to
like this," Chalfie said. It may eventht local Salvation .Army for many, many years.
Alzheimer' s and other human disWhen the normal gene that tually be possible to protect human
eases associated with aging, makes the enzyme, ctl-1, is nerve cells by boosting catalase with
· · Glenna has been having some health problems and has been hospitalized.
However, she's doing well at the present time . Although living in New Jerresearchers reported today in the removed, the worms die sooner.
a drug, McCormick suggested.
~ey, her heart, of course, is in Meigs County. A lot of you remembered Glenjournal Nature.
The . next step is to determine
Siegfried Hakimi, a McGill Uni,
The finding "gets us closer to whether a similar enzyme exists in versity biologist who also studies :
na at Christmas time and on her birthday and she appreclaJes that. By the
understanding what's involved in humans.
Way, Glenna was 86 on January 14.
life span . in roundworms, said :
. In case you want to get "in touch, her addr.ess is Major Glenna Rummel,
th~ aging process and where we can
The researchers argue that researchers should now seek lo ·.
intervene," said Anna McCormick, a cytosolic cat~lase allows longer life es.tablish if higher levels ofcytosolic :
Salyation Army R.O.R. , 2.10 Fifth Ave., Asbury Park, New Jersey, 07712.
biochemist at the National Institute by performing a function it was . calalase alone will make worms live :
on Aging.
already known to serve: blocking longer, not j ust block cell damage.
; The nation 'seems obsessed in getting ready for the arrival .of the year ".
2000. And I don 'r even have my celebration champagne, do you? Do keep
Resear~hers led by biologist Mar- cell damage caused by.oxygen comTom Johnson, a University of
tin Chalfie at Columbia University pounds.
· Colorado geneticist who also works , ·
Sl!liling.
studied a nearly microscopic roundSuch oxidative damage- analo- with roundworms, cautioned that
worin known as Caenorhabditis ele.- gous to metal rusting - .has ·been their life-extending mechanisms
.
.
.
gans.
implicated in human aging and dis- may ultimately have limited releWhen it is well fed, it· survives . eases like Alzheimer' s, Lou vance 10 human di sease.
only about three weeks, but it can · Gehrig 's and Parkinson's. Vitamin
Danny Bias is new pastor of the include pack-a-pew Sunday to be
.But he said researchers have'.
P¢meroy C!mrch of Christ.
.withstand
food
shortages
in
a
larval
E."
an
antioxidant,
is
now
used
to
made
roundworms live five limes ·
observed this .weekend, super SnnELDER CHARLES BROWN
state
for
at
least
two
months.
Severpreveni
heart
attacks
and
treat
The mini ster received a degree , day school Sunday on June 13," and
longer with genetic manipulations . ..
GUEST SPEAKE.R - Elder
from the Summit Theological Semi- old-fashioned day on Juhe 27. From Charles E. Brown of Columbus a! genes in this worm were already Alzheime(s in some patients.
Johnson thinks such work suggests
. · . nary in Peru , Ind. and is currently May through August a penny drive · will be guest speaker at the linked to the larva's longer life, but · The discovery of the catalase . that people can also li ve longer witli ;
gene bolsters the theory that oxida- the right drug - or mix of drugs -.
working in the master's program is being condutted and a 35-gallon 102nd anniversary celebration their mechanism wasn't known. .
The research team from Colum- tive damage is central to both aging in the future.
there . The Pomeroy church is his drum has been placed at the church of the Naomi Baptist Church in
first to pastor.
for the deposit of pennies.
Pomeroy Sunday.
He and hi s family reside in the
The goal is to fill the drum and
The minister will be speaking
. I
Lincoln Heights church parsonage.
then send the money to an overseas at the 2:30 p.m. afternoon sec; Services at the church include mi ssionary.
vice. The 11 a.m. mo~ning ser·
Sunday schoo l at 9:30 a.m .; and
The church also has a web page, vice will be followed by a dinner.
worship at I0:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
http://www.Angelfire.com/oh2/Chri ,
Brown is the son of Mae _B elle
- Several special services have stianity 2000/index.html.
. Brown, and grand~on of the late
Gentle and Beatrice Brown of
b~e11- planned at the church. These
Pomeroy. He attended Pomeroy
elementary schools before moving to Columbus and graduated
from Llnden~Mcklnley High
School In Columbus In 1967.
After spending three years in
BOSTON (AP) -Accidental electrical siimulation of the brain during the U. S. Army Which .Included a
m~dical treatment can trigger bouts of deep depression that come and go tour In Vlatnem and being honalmost instantly, researchers reported' today in the New England Journal of orably discharged In 1971, he
married Ethel Jean Falls, who is
.Medicine . .
French doctors made the disco very while treating a woman with Parkin- now the pastor of Abundant
son 's disease . They implanted electrodes deep in her brain .in an attempt to Faith Church of God In which he
sheres the ministry.
stimulate the parts that malfunction in her disease.
.
Bro~n works for the U. S.
' ·· To their surprise, they found that turning on one of these electrodes made
the woman profoundly sad. She ·leaned to the right, started to cry and told of Government In the Department r========::-t-==~::::;:=.===-r==:;::::;::::;;:;:===rt:~;;;;ko;;;;;;:;;;!;';;;i;:;
of Defense In the financial
N
Public Notice
Pu· bile Notice
to environmental rovltwt,
feeling of sad, guilty and useless.
.
He 1
Public ot1ce
declolon -maklng, _ and
11
1
a curaction; and that thOle
· " I no longer wish to live, to see anything, hear anything, feel anything," accoun ng serv ce.
rantly enrolled In the Anderson·
IN THE MEIGS courriv
Cranston Gonzales National propoaed to be conducted, .roaponolbttltloa have been
she told doclors. Asked if she felt pain, she replied, "No, I'm fed up w.ith ville
Baptist Seminary In Cemi·l·
COURT OF COMMON
Affordable Housing Act, eo Prior to th• requoat lor. oatlalled.
life. I've had enough.'~
The legal effect 01 ·the
Ia, Ga. He haa. completed his PLEAS PROBATE OIVISION amended; and/or Title IV of reloaoe of Fedora.! lunda.
. Ninety seconds after the. doctors stopped the . electrical stimulation, the essoclate degree In theology
In tho Matter ollhe
the Stewart B. McKinney The
Molgo
Coanty certification Ia .that upon 114
Homeless Assistance Act, Commlaalonen plan to
Adoption of·
. WQman 's derrression disappeared. Stimulating another electrode implanted and Ia.now working on a bache'·
a a amended·, to be used for
·
approval, tho Molga County
I th 1
Tyler J. Goble
undertake the project(a) Comml..tonera may ua~
nearby dramatically relieved the woman 's Parkinson's disease, enabling her I , de
or s
gree n eo ogy.
CASE NO. 30668
the following pro)ect(s):
ducrlbod with tho Federal tho Fad oral Iunde, and the
to give up taking her medicine.
·
PUBUCATION OF NOTICE
Dexter Rural Wetor Line
!undo clttd above. Any Stile of Ohio will have
:The doctors asked if they could repeal their stimulation of the depression
NOTICE TO THE
Extension
peroon, agencltl, and/or oatlolltd Ita roaponalbttltloa
UNKNOWN FATHER
CDeG FV 1998 Funds
groupo, who have any under the National
electrode while they videotaped her. The woman agreed, and twice more
y,
Rut-land and Salem
comments
regarding the Environmental Act of 1969,
ou are ht re bY notill ed
·
they triggered profound sadness
.
.that on the 15th day of
Townshlpa-.MEIGS County, environment or who 11 emended.
. Dr. Boulos- Paul Bejjan1 ,and others from !NSERM, the French research
Of oecember, 1998, Raymond
· Ohio
disagree with this finding or · The State 01 Ohio will
organization. published the report.
' ·
·
· Lea Goble rtaldlng at 2399 Waterline Extension ProJect No Significant Impact accept an obJection 10 !Ia
Water Slrtol, Syracuat,
Single veer project
· decision, are Invited to approval of tho roloaae of
In an accompanying editorial , Dr. Stuart Yudofsky of Baylor College of
Eatlmated total coot of the submit written com menta lunda and acceptance of
Ohlo 45779, I nd Ch oryt Ann
Medicine in Houston wrote that the repon "raises fundamental and farMIDDLETOWN, Conn. (AP) Goble reeldtng at 2399,
Project
lor conaldoratlon to the tht cortlllcallon only Jilt Ia
reaching questions about depression" and the use of electrical treatments. The president of Wesleyan Universi- Water Street, Syracu111
' 609•400
Me I g 0 "
C 0 u n 1 Y on ona of the two following
1
S30,ooo. CDBG FV 1998
Commtaolonora,
b.a. au: (a) tho canlltcatlon
A(nong them:
.
ty has ordered a review of a class Ohio 45778, ltled In thlo
,
Formula Allocation Funds
Courthouat, Pomeroy, Ohio
·- Is depres sion .. hard-wired into the brain?
thal he says may be too liberal for Cou rt 0 p1 1111 0.n 10 1 d0pt
$I50,000 • ARc Funds
waa not , In fact, oxtcutod
Tyler J. Goble, d.o.b. July
45769 by 4:30 P.M. on May by tho Count"y of M•lga
-Does depression carry some evolutionary advantage, such as intensify- the liberal arts college.
27, 1983, born In Orlando,
$256,400 . OWDA Funds
27," 1999, which Is at least chief executive olltcar or
ing grief in a way that helps hold families together?
.
·
· /,
The course, " Pornography : Writ, Florlda,andthalllta~"'ol
$181.700-CDiiGWaler&amp;
15 days olter tho otherolll
llh C
·sewer Funds
publication of thla
cor 0 1 oun1Y
: --Can brain stimulation also trigger symptoms of mania, and would this ing· of Pros titutes,"" examines · aald Potltlon will bt had
It has boon determined that
bl d 11
of Metga· approved by tho
com no no co.
.state 01 Ohio; or (b) that tho
be a possible treatment for depression?
pornography as a cultural and politi- btlort tho Probate court at ·
8
and Seconds StrHtl, auch Requeat tor Release ·-----·······-·---···--··-··· envlronmeRtal review
. --Could stimulation of other parts of the brain treat such disorders as cal practice. Its reading li st includes Court
Pomeroy, .Ohio 45769, on of Funds will not constitute
' CORRECTED
rocord lor lh.e proJect
al~oholism, drug abuse, aggression and violence?
the Marquis de Sade and academic the 19th day of July, 1999, an action · significantly .
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
lndlcotet omliltlon of 1
•
affecting tho quality or tho
REQUEST RELEASE OF
required docl.a. Jon, ltndlllg,
critiques of Hustler magazine. As a at 1:30 o'clock P.M. .
.gna t"wre and
human environment and FUNDS. (NO"RROF)TO
ALL or atop appllcablo to the
WITNESS
t
my
•
.
•
final project, stud~nts must produce
INTERESTED PERSONS,
proJect In the environmental
oeal of ..ld .court, thla 4th accordingly lht Melga
their own work of pornography.
day of May,1999.
County Commlulonera
AGENCIES, AND/OR
review procoaa.
One student in . Professor Hope Robert E. Buck, Judi:
have decided not to prepare
GROUPS:
.
Written objei:llona niutl be
In Environmental tm.pa•t On or about" but not borore
Judith R
IliOn
Weissman 's class submitted a short By: tyCI
kiN;_ p bll' Statement undar th•e
'
' prepared and aubmlttod In
Dopu
tr
o~ry u c
May 28 199 ~ tho Molga accordonco with . the
film that focused on a man 's eyes (5)
National
Environmental
Countu
Commiii.IC1nora,
will
8 13 20 27
~ NEW YORK (AP) - Less than
•
• tho Stott of Ohio to Part
required
procedure
(24 CFR
spokesman, said the book easily while he masturbated. In another, a· (II) 3,• 10• !lTC
Polley Act of 1969 , •• raqutat
SIO,
and muat
ba
three months after the release of sold out its initial printing of female student acted out a scene of
amended.
roltaat Federal lunda utldtr
Pl!bllc Notlct
E·nvlronmontal Review Section 104(g) of Tille 1 of iddreaHd to: Stale of Ohio'
" Monica's Story, " the former White 350,000 and has now sold about sexual bondage.
Record(s) (ERR) tor 'each of tho
·Houalng
and Environmental Olltcar;.
House intern 's best seller has joined half a million copies in the United
Ms . Weissman ,· a self-described
CPRRECTED
tho project(s) listed above Community Development Cof!lmuntty Development
the ranks of the " remaindered;" States alone .
.
feminist Who . helped develop the NOTICE To PUBLIC OF No have been conducted bu the A 1 01 1874 11
d1 d Olvlalon; P.O. Box 1001 ;,
Mo I Q I
c o u n' I Y Section
c • 218 •of Tille
amen
Ohio 43266-.
books offered at a big discount.
" We ' re Very pleased with. how women's studies program at the
StGNIFICANT IMPACT ON
II of the; Cotumbuo,
.
0101
• " It 's a common approach that the book did ," Murphy said. He school, told The Hartford Courant
THE ENVIRONMENT
Cdo "!muismol onne ra . Tht ER Rh(s ) Cranaton Gonzolu National Ob(ectlona to tho Rttouo o(
0•
0
11
1 0 Allordablt H0 uelng Act .
(FONSI)
p&lt;I)Jiishers use to try 10 boost sales added that the publi sher is hoping to that she puts no constraints on her
~
environmental reviews of (NAHA) , 11 amended ·, Funda on baala other than
M
12
I
· of. a hardcover that's lagging," said clear the· way for the n\ass market students' project ideas.
alated above
willState
not
• J.g •0 · c 0 u n 1 y the proJtct(o) .and more fully and/or Tille IV ollht Stewart thoat
be conaldered
bu tho
May
Jim Milliot, business and news edi- paperback,.to come out thi s summer
"I .push people over the line, Comml..lontra, .
aitls forth tho rtllona why ·e . McKinney Homtlua 01 Ohio. Ho ~bjecllonl'
tor for the trade magazine Publish- with a first printing of 500,000.
whatever their line is, but only when M.tg. Count " Courthouse ouch olalemonl lo not Aaalotanca Act , u
,
• required. The EAR(a) are on amondtd·, to bo uaed fo• the received alter June 15,'
ers Weelcly.
·
St. Martin's is urging stores to I think they can go there and come · Pomeroy• Ohio 45789
"lilt ,and avallabla lor the proloct(t) deicrlbed abovo. .. 11199, (which Ia 15 daue
• aHtr
(740) 992 28• "Monica's Story," easil-y ihe sell the hardcover at half its $24. 9S back," she said.
.
•
""
It
Ia
anllclpaltd
that
tho'
ubllc
'a
examination
and
:rho
Melga
Countu
INTERESTED
To
ALL
P
year 's most-publicized book, came list price.
State
will
receive
a
raquoa~
The projects caught !he attention PERSONS, AGENCIES, AND copying, upon requut , Commlaalontra.la certifying• lor
,.10111 of lunda); will be
out in early March, the day after
Written by Princess Diana biog- of university ·President Douglas GROUPS:
•
bttweo~ the houra of 9:00 to the Stott Of Ohio, that conotdorod by tho Stole o(
Barbara Walters interviewed Ms . · rapher Andrew Morton, Ms. Lewin - Bennett, who in a memo dated Tues- The
Metga
County A.M. to 4:00P.M.
Meigs County and Janet Ohio.
Lewinsky on national television .
sky's memoir about her affair with day and distributed to faculty ques- Commlulonora, propoaoa ·Monday thru Friday (except Howard, tn hla/hor olllctal Tht addrtal of tho chief ; Although hated by reviewers, it President . Clinton immediately tioned "the appropriateness of this to requoat tho State of Ohio hotldayo) altho office of tho capacity u President, executive oHicor Ia:
to raltaae Ftdorot lunda M t 1g· a .
c 0 u n 1u Mt I g a
C o u n I Y'
J 1 H · · d p ld
was hardly a commercial flop . John topped best-seller lists and soon course in the. Wesleyan curriculum." Under Sec"tlon 104 ·(g) of
'
Co. mmlaalonera, conaent to
a·ne Malga
owarCounty
,· rea ent
Commlutonero,Counhoust
Murphy, a St. Martin's ' Press faded .
He ordered a: review of the course.
Tltla t of the .Houotng and 100 Ell! Second Street, accept tho Jurladlctton of
Commlulonora
'
Federal Courta II an action
Motgo Co.unty Courthouat
Community Dtvtlopmont Pomeroy, Ohio 457et.
·p
Ohl0 457~"
Act of 1974, ao amended ; No further envtronmtntol lo brought to tnlorco
Section 288 of Title II of tho rovltw or auch pro)tcl .la roapontlbllltlta tn rotation (5) 13omeroy,
vo

t»41773-5787

tl~~~~~ftft~~~~
f!;r J.D. CONSTRUCTION ~
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
1fA
llli•J Garages, Pole Buildings. Roofing. Siding lilfu
lin.
"StJeciali:zing In Log Horne• "
Iii:\
~
~~
Com rm:r cial &amp; Residential
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ~

1/A

C

.,
lillioJ

John Dean; Owner

Marty's

·HILL'S·

Power
.

SELF STORAGE

Washing

Rutland, Ohio

Truok seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon· Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

742·1701

-~

.......

750

East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

740-843-5572

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

-Complete Auto Seroice-

Buy,.Sll.lOf Trade
'"v: L:t~ooe·

,

ctxgsfFIEDSI
Public Notice
NOTICE OF AVAILABILITY
· FOR PUBUC INSPECTION
The Carleton College
Board of Trutteet hat flied
·Ita annual return of 1 privata
foundation, Form 990-PF,
with the Internal Revenue
Strvlce lor caten~ar year
1998. In accordance wllh
Internal Revenue Code
Stctton 6104(b), thlalorm Ia
available lor ' publ!c
lntpectlon .11 the homt of
Robert WtngeH, Prtetdent
and P~nalp.ot Manager, 1387
College Road, Syracuae;
Ohio, durl"' 1M 180 day
period btt~lnnlng May 15,
1999.
"(6p3, 1TC

992-2156

Pleasant Valley Hospital

: Card ofThanks

Thank you for
your kindness to
!ne in my time of
sorrow. The cards,
flowers, donations,
food · a: prayers
were
deeply
appreciated. ·
Alfred Wol(e

Health line

(304) 675~2828

Wanted

FOund: Chow C how Gol(len Retriever Mlr , In Bal li Road ,Area,

Has Collar. 7o00-.. I .0370.

Found . Saturd ay, May ltn. near
cle o1 Jewolty. t304)67-..esa.

Light Haulin g
up to 8 ton

949·1701

992·5455

WJOS
TV 27
Local
Television

Lost· lemale Siberian Huaky. bluit

eves , on e bli nd, Tanner's Run. ·
Racif'\8 area, child's pet , 7.40-9-4~
3129.

Yard Sale

70 ·

· Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family Yard Sale, Frklay &amp; Sar:.
urday &amp; Su nday, 1117' TheOdora

A'Ve. Big Selection- Great PrieM! •

&amp;J. Yard S.IOO Mutt

-the

·•

BePaldlnAdvonca.

DEADLINE: 2:00p.m. .

lhe day

For Free
Program Guide

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL
.

1-740-667-3083
1-740-667-3316
$550.00 Year

$12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping
Electric &amp; Water and or FuR Hook-Up
Ac.-o88 from Forked Run State Park and
cloee to Fork Run Boat Ramp

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

1-800-967-4774

St. Rt. 7 B.ewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray ·
• Vegetables • Corn
SHADE RIVER
.
• Soybeans .

At 0111 our hsfn•" Is

.

D ealers .
1000 St. Rt:'7 Sou Ill.

, ..,.....

CoD/1(11/t, OH 45723

AG SI!IMCJIV

.

RUTLAND, OH,
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEE~H 'GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN,, 1:00 PM

Ill

II 10 run. Sundly
edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondoy• 10:00 e.m. S.turdly.
Furniture , Clothi ng And Asaorttd

Ya1d Sale , Ra in Or' Slllnel 4881'
State Ate 850. May 13,1• .15, 9:00 ·

·?

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AU Yerd Sale• Muat Be ·Pakl In
Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm the
day belore tne ad Ia to run, .

Matches

Sunday &amp; Mondey tdltlon·
I :OOpm Frtday.

Sunsat Home
Construction
New Construction &amp;
Rtmodollng-Kitchan C.blnots
VInyl Sldlng-Roofo-Deeko-

Geroges

Call 985·3831

Otl Lake Dnve In Rio Grande.
Satu rd ay, 5/15 , 9· 5. King Slit
Bed Saxo pno he. Girls' + Boyr ·
CIOU'les. BicyCle s. Toys , Etc.
.

Slug &amp; Shot

www.Suruet.Home.com

Garage sale- May 13-I.C,
Well , Riggscrest Manor.
4:00. Patio tabJe/ cha irs ,
cha ir, wall units . doors .

Der.yl
9:00·'
deskt
many

items .

Garage sale· Thursday &amp; Fri day,
May I 3th· I'Ih. 9am·5pm. On lop
of Chellor Hill (S A 248), third
hous• from left. Baby furniture,
baby &amp; todd ler ck&gt;ttllng. women's
&amp; , me:n 's ctott\ lnO'. maternity

Free Eatbnale8

clothes. shoea, household Items:

740-742-3411
Bryan Reeves

lot's more.

Su.a11 Reeves

1 mo .

Til, goOd carpet and pad , and

·

past;

May 14· 15, tum flr1t road left
WMPO from Middleport Hill, ftfth•

house. kns of items.

Yard sale- Betty Sayre r111denct, •

QUAUTY WINDOW SYSTEMS
· FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MIL£5 NORTH OF POMEROY AlCOUNTY ROAD 18
VISIT QUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

STAFF
SIGN-ON DU.l ,'-''' I
INCLUDED

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
. FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

M

PREFCE PAVING ·

_A

~.Experienced1'aVIng You'tan Rely On~
,· 'Paving ·
•Lots
•sealing
' Drives
•Striping
'Private
•P1itching
'Business
'New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

Csll For Free Estimates
Jerry L. Preace
Crown Ci OH 45623

Various specialties and
·shifts available.
Full-time and part-time
employment.
Competitive wages and
benefits.
Please apply or send

Phone:
740-256-6147

Linda's Painting
1llke the pain out
ofpainting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740-985-4180
Free Estimates

5th Street. .Racine. Friday &amp; St1·
urday. Clothing, quiU tapa, p ictur es. jewelry &amp; dlahea (aom• ·

oldI

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
.. '.
---=...;::,::;.;..:..::...._
'
B1g varel Sale, At. 2, Jet 87 Oft
li llie Mill Crk . Rd. M1~ 13-t• .
Electr k Organ , Wooden Table &amp; ·.
Cl) airs , Big China Cablnel, Li nens ~ Lamps . Olsf'es. Pota&amp;_
Pan s. Home Inte rior, Beda.,. ·
Dresse r Chest. Quilts, Picture•.
Desk, Some Antiques.
Ma y 14th, 15th. Gallipolis Ferry, •
.A cross fro m Beale School. Lot•
of EVerything. 8:00am.-3:00pm. • •

•

MuonBowDna
No Credit ' Slow Credit , Bankruptcy

WORvniiGU!

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with RMpect!

resumes' to:
PLEASANT VALLEY

for!!!!_!!~ ADDr,t)valll**

HOSPITAL
"C/0 Penonnel ·
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasan!, WV 25s:sol
Fax (304) 675-(1975.
AA!EOE

Lanes

77H300
SummerLe•gue
legln•1nW"k

lnM8r
.lbesday- No lip
Wednesday • !lien's League ·
Tbunday- Mhed ,League

ltatH11

n., 7:10 P.M.

SAYRE .

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
·~

..""'"•

•JT• a

BrJJdo~er

&amp; Baelcltoe
Se,ics•
House &amp; 'I'I-ailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplie Syllenu &amp;

YOUNG'S
CARPEIOR SEIYICE
•Room lddHiont &amp; RentodtllniJ
•Htw Gal'tlllfl
•Eitctrlcal&amp; Plumbing
•Roottng • Gutterl
•VInyl Skiing aPllntlng
•Pallo &amp; Parcii Dtcb
. FI'H ElllrNitl

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Ressonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11/99 TFN

8112-t215
· Pomeroy, Ohio

22 yro. Loeal

Jack's ~too lng
&amp; Co•structlo•

We Deliver

Roofing • Repairs

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, FiU Dirt,
AgriCultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

740-992-3470

~coatings·

·FrBe Estimates

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Sahnek, Attorney At lAw
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete
RemOdell.ng
Stop &amp; Compare,
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473·
7

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Wlndowt1 ,
• Room Addltlona
• Roofing

COMMUOAL !ltd HSIDEIITIAL
FREE ESTIMA1ES

814·992·7843
!No Sulidav Calls)

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

TREE ANP STUMP

REMOVAL

KEITH
MYERS
_,...,OWND.
....... DIMeuata
...... Eedmattl
Lort«l&gt;imom, OhU.
'. (740) 985-3677

Howard

L Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

4/2 TFN

TRI,SrATE MOBILE
POWER WASH
TruckJ ..tractor

Trallers· houlto-moblle
Homes· decks· drliiOWoyo
Equipment C/01f110 &amp; Dfgroasl&lt;l

JEFF STETHEM
. PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKAHET.COM.

FRff fST/MATfS
38782 SumnBI RoaCI,
P
, Olio 454769

Pomeroy Eagle•
· Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M . .
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Cove11111
$500.00 Starburst
Progi'IISSive top line.
Uc. II G0-50 11ntftm

Complete Une Of .
Vegetllble &amp; Bedding Plants
All Flatt $11.50

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Pe111onala

Start Dating Tonl ghU Have tu n
playing tho Ohlo Oa~ng Game, 1-

IIO().ROMANCE, -.slon 9681.
30 Announcements
Lonely? Call Tonlghll 1·900-226·
4882, Ext. 1657. $2.99 per. min.
18 yrs. s.,.,.u (619)645-

Must be

&amp;:Cl0-5:30.

c.,.,.,.,.,

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
ts.75&amp;Up
•Geranlume, Azaleas
•shnubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

HIIIAID'S

IIII•IIOUSI
SYRACUSE

Hl-1776

. 40

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
AgrlcuHural Lime,

Umtaton• • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
915 4422
Chester, Ohio
10/2

80

-.J

Auction
and Flea Mlrket

·'

Bill Moo di spa ugh Au&lt;:tlonurtng. ·'

Complete Au c llon eerl~ Sarvlo- •
es. Consig nmen t aucUon- MIH t
Stteet. Middleport, Thursdays .
Oh •o license: 17693. 740·881·
2623 .
i• '
R1ck Pearson Auction Company, I·
lull t im&amp; a·uctlo netr, complete

auctio n

service.
Llctnll~ ,
t 66.0 hlo &amp; west Virginia, 304· , J
773-5795 Or 300·773-54-t7.
-

RIVERSIOE AUCTION IIAIIN
Every Saturday Night 7 P.M: ,1
Crown City, 140-2~
, ,;

.

Giveaway

AK C English Setter, No Papers,
10 Month&amp; Old, To A G ood
Home. 740.245-5697.
Female Aottweller to good home.
740-985·3362.

Found: cow, Salem Cehter vlclnl-

ly, can 740.69e~SP2.

Found : German shepherd pup,
appro111 . S months old , SA 681 vi·
clnlty. call 740-992-6282.

. Gatago Door. (~)675-6118.

Small POmeranian Chow MIX. Red,
7.a-256·6703.

..

Wederneyer'a Auction Service ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 740-37'9-2720.

90 . Wanted to Buy

'• I

t

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold ,
Rings, Pre· 1930 U.S. Currency, .
Sterling. Elc. AcqulaiUona
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, Ill Second
AYOnue, Gallipolis, 7~:1M2 .

JewelrY '

..

.

Antiques, top prices Plid, River-

Ine Antiques, Pomeroy. Ohio, .
Russ· Moore owner, 740-992'- ·

2526 .

.,~

Clean Late Model Cars Or''
Tru cks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smittl Buick Po.n llac, 1900 Elll·
ern A"'nue, GaNipolla,
·

,,

.

Now To 'lbu Thrift 511oppe
9 West Stimson, Athens ·
7&lt;10-592·1842
Quality clolt'ling and househol d
Items . $1.00 bag sate every
Thursday. Monrtev lhru Saturday

!VoU! Open For
Spring s.;a•on

Mt:

Atto,WV. May 13.14,15.

11434.

BacltuN• B...U...

B.LSSELL BUILDERS,
. INC,

can relieve a

debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fair .
distribution of asaels, Debtol'l! in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" pr.operty for his Qr her personal
use. Thie may include a car, a house, clothes, and .
household goods.
.

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

On Chestnut Aldge Road, June- I
lion ol State Route ·2 &amp; 87 ,

TRUCKING

BAIKRUP7CY

WICKS
HfiOLIJtQ lrtC.

Produce Workers Needed ·~,;•AI'I
740-843·5280 daytime
740-949-2439 ~u~n:n~•~ I

LtiiiiR-=d•llet,

'

Case-IH Parts

Tye Brinager &amp; Sons

••••• Ca ll"ad

Found· bl ack &amp; brown Germ•n
Shepherd ty pe pup , 2· 3 montnl""
old, Hemlock Gro\lt area , 7.. 0·
992-7295

Basketball Cour t In P1. Pl., Artl·'

Compost

CaU. 992-272 7

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

A bestseller no more ...:._ 'Monica's
Story' has been 'remaindered'

..... C.atrwu:a.

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE !MEDIATELY

' All Makes Tractor &amp;

Pleasant Valley Hospital
is currently accepting .
application/resumes • for
the following position:

Landscape Material, '
Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

59~1-66,71

A locally owned company wilh over 28 yrs
experience has now exlended OUI (overage area IO
include all of Gallio Co. and por~ons of Meigs,
Vinton &amp; Lawre!Ke counties.

UliUW.o
(7401 99N131

•

(740)

Refuse Service

Gen ·

PAR71

Medl.cal Asslstant1 Trained, Quick,
Diligent Intelligent, and f1ellable.
Needed f()r a busy Internal Medicine
Practice In Athens. Immediate Full
Time Opening, Competitive Salary
and Benefits.
·
. c;o The Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729-n
Ohio 45769

Wesleyan president
initiateS revieW
pornography COUrSe

Phone

.of
Gallia County!

DIPOYSAG

110 . Help Wanted

DRIVEWAY STONE

.• ..."•1*1 Wd I lldclr

'7;t.•rn

To The Residents

Former-"Velver Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Phone:

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

Lost and Found

Items Te ens Run Road , One Mi!,t ·
Off Route 7, Startli Monday 5110Jr
99 Thru Saturday.

Dave's Garage
Racine, Ohio

Call A Uule. One

Larry Schey

740-949·2217

15 Yro. Experience

..............-,,I

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative

Racine, Ohio 45771
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 1o· x 30'
Hours
7:00AM·8PM

Dort '1 Need A BiB One

•loawaC..•III' »

.Jeremy .L Roush

40 742-8888

29670 Bashan Road

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

Pomeroy church ·has new pastor

Ooctors find. stimulation of spot in
brain triggers depression in patient

.,
fll.!!l

I&amp; D4uto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

~CJ~f&amp;~~~~~ft~~

------------------~--~----------------.Scientists
find a worm enzyme that helps extend life

·Sentinel News Hotline

Phone 740·992·3987

60

'

Want To

Soli \'our Sluff? Call Riverside Auction And Let Ua Sell 11 •
Forl'ou, 7&lt;().256-6989.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

---~~--..,--. ·,
110 HelpWanted '
$$$Make Monoyl$$$ Work· ~I '.
Home • 4ssemble Products.
Easy Work , E•cellent Pay. Fret ·
Details! Send S.A.S.E. To: Nal'l .
Homeawrker'i Association, P.O: · •
ao, 675. Ripley, wv 21211 .
·

r

Applicati ons are being accepted I
lor Home Healtt'l Aides. Appllc-- ·;
ants liihould have 1 high school .
diploma or Q.E.D., reliable trans: '
portauon, te lephOne In ll'le home ·
aM willing to work weekends &amp; ...
l'lolldays. Must bt motivated and
lleldble . EJ:perlenct In providing ·'
dlr.ect care or working with older , '
adulls a plus . Will train . Stall ,.
tasted nursing ua1111nts en ~
oou raged lo apply. Application• r
are avallab~ at the Melga Multi·
purpose Senior Center, Mulberry
Heights . Pomeroy, Ohio. An EOf ' '
Empk:ly&amp;r.
'' •
Neeel 7 Ladles To sell

446-3358.

Avon,

.. .....

1~

~

.~

Now Hiring A Fuii·Time Cake .
Oee;oralor, PoS&amp;Iblt 30 ·35 Hrf VJ
Per Week, Diy Shill Only, Cak~ ·:
Decorating Experience Required .
Wilh Resume. Call Gaillpoila Dairy
Oueen, 74~3278 .

�P~~ge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 13, 1999

Pomeroy • MlddlePQrt, Ohio

540
Appllca110no FO&lt; lifo Guard Pool·

tiona At London Pool For The
19ft Swimming Season Are Be·
lng Acc,.pted . Submit applllca·
Ilona In Writing, Wllh Training

And Experlonco, To Janice ZWIH·
lng, Cieri&lt; •Treuurt&lt;, AI Tho Syr·
IICUM Municipal Building Or Mal
To P.O. Box 286, Syracuoe, OH
45779.
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or Sell.
Shkloy Spears, 30W75-1428.
Babyalnar N"ded For 4 Year
Old, Prefer In My Home. Trans·
portaUon I Aeterencu Required,

740-387-7120.

Babysitter needed In my home, ~

daya per week, 9am-Spm. Call

Medical Processor FT /PT No
EICp. Noc Will Train PC Roq. Elm

1il4 Skyllne/Suprome. 14K74·

Treasurer/Chief School Business
Official. Degree In Accounting,
CPA prafened . Send resume' be·

lore 5-24·99 to: Dr. Larry Parsons,
Mason County School&amp;, 307
Eighth Street, Pt. Pleasant, WV
25550. For Information c::all

(304)875..s.IO, Ext. 28.

140

Bualne. .
Training

'GoNipolll- CoHogo
(Cilfll8r6 Ctoae To Home) Cal
TOday 740-146-4367, t-800·
214.()452, Reg 190-05-12748.

180 Wanted To Do

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hro. $25K · leOK/ Yr. 1·600·

Christian Woman Will Pro~ l de
Daycare In My Home Only.

Cosmetofoglat Naeded, Business
Growing, Guaranteed W1gas

Day For 2. Etc. CPR Certlllad,
EMT Cert, Pending . Ralrancas.

47f-8653 Xm7, -

.1cwp.com

PtusMO&lt;o 740-448-7267

DAMNO POSITIONS
· AVAILABLE:

ClaaoAom:
Single Driver, Late M9dal Kenworth&amp; With Reefers. Weal COast
~-

CtasaBom:
Team Stratgn1lhJck. La1o Modal
Frelgh111nera With Sleepers. Must
Have Air Brake Endorsement&amp;,
800 Mile Radius, t1ome Deliver-

Ies.

·

BothPoottionl:

Atloaot 25 ""'" Old
Atloast 2'111anr Experience
Good M11R
Wettdy Pay
tnouranoe Avai\Nor1c Wttl1 Tho Public
For

More

tnformallon Call

eoo-

437-8764, Hrs.6:30 AM. -5 PM. '

Ful· tlme Tll.ldr; Driver Needed lor
Retail Business. Call. Carolina
Lumber &amp; Supply Co. (304)675·
1160, or bring resume m at: 312
SiJdl\
Pt. Pleasant. WV.

s-.

General Ofllce. Part-Tim e A"s
Needed, CLAt471 , c/oGalllpo!ls
Dally Tt'lbune, 825 Third Avenue,
Gatlpotil,
4563 t .

'li

Immediate

Opanmg s

For

STHA'S, LPN'S, RADIOlOGY
TECH'S, RESTAURANT MAN·
AGERS, CALl 740.446-4186, Or
Stop By, 995 Jackson P1ke, Suite

201, Gall&gt;ols.
Jewelry Sales Aetall Sales and
Computer E~r:perlence Required .
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry. t 51'
Second Ave. Gallipolis. Apply
Monday tl1ru Fr&lt;Jay.
Keebler Co. Is now accepttnV
resumes for the position of Wee·
kand Merchandiser. Grocery ex·
perlence preferred. Send resume
to: keeb'l er Co., 3959 BeechWOOd, ona. wv 25545.
Labors Start $7 An Hour, Car;.·
pantry, Roofing &amp; Masonry, Full-

Time, In
1722

Gall~lls

$12.00 Day For 1 Child, $20.00 ·
7&gt;40-245-9582.
CNA With 20 Yrs. Exp. And Ex·
cell. References Has Private
Room And Full Care In Her Home
For The Elderly. For Mora Info
7.(0-2!56·6342 , Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wheel Chair

Accasslllo
Connie's Ch1ld Care has openIngs, s R 7, Tuppers Plains. CertHied In Meigs and A.thens Coun·
lies. Reasonable rates, open 24
hOurs, seven days per week, 740-

667-6329.

Medical Prooeasor

FTIPT No oxpertenee necaasary
WID rain. PC requwed. Eorn &lt;WI&lt;
catt 80().663-7440
Medical Procesaor FT /PT No
E&gt;q&gt; Not WHI Train PC Roq. Earn

&lt;WI&lt; Callaoo-663-7440.
Nurse Aide Training Clasaes:
Come Join Our Team That Makes
A Difference. We Ara Offering
Nurse Aide Training Cla&amp;ses On
Site At Scenic Hilla Nursing Can.
tar. If You Ha~• Previously Com·
plated An Application Plaaae

Coma And Apply Agatn Or Contact Par1) c,tdwoll, 8:30 A.M. To
4:30 P.M. Wednesday Thru Friday At 740-448-7150.

Electric Marntenance ·s,ntlce .
Wlrmg. Breaker Boxes. L~ght Fix·
ture, Heating Systems. aM Ae·
rmdellng (740)441·1401.

REGISTERED NURSE
Jactcaon Gener!O Hosp&lt;tal, R!&gt;·
toy, WV, Naedslul time RN lor
CCU. ED. Med/Surg. Current WV
Sta18 t.Jcanse, RetevMt Exper"
enee. Reply To. Jaclcacn General
Hoepftal, PO Box 720. Alptay,
WV 25271 . (304)372·2731 EXT
313. EOE.
REIUMES UNliMITED Oltira
Per1onallzed Resumes And
Muc::h Moral Interview Malarial&amp;

To Got You Prepared, 740·366·
3800.

._..,tet

Roofer needed, soma carpenlar

Tho Pooltlon Of Social Services
Dlrac10r. lSW. Pleaoa Sand Aasume And Salary Requirements
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hilla
Nursing Canter, 311 Buckrldga

Rood, Bltlwott, OH 45814.
(MirrtlerOIEOE)

Security Quards- muat be able to
work any shift Including wee ·
kends. Must l'la~a. clean pollee

IOCO&lt;d, good work history, rotleble
tranaportatlan, valid driver's II·
canae, home phone and muat
have black tttti loe aaft1y

shooo. 15.75 par hour, 32·40

rtoura per week. Call 740 ·889-

2874 Monday· Friday, llam·4pm
tor _.tttlll•tt.

Sunset Home Construction- ei·

perloroca a ptuo, full ama poolttcn,
741&gt;-742·3411 .
,The Town of New Haven II IC•

cllj)Ung owilcattono tor tha post·

tiona of pOol manager and lift·
QUIIrda tor fit 1ummer. Appllca·

.

8Q0.38:He62.

origin, 01 any tntonlkln to
make any such prefet"ence,
limitation or ctiscriminaUon.•

knowingly accept
advertisements tor Mal es1ate
wllleh iS In viOlatiOn of the

740-386·8041.
'Mary's Daycare, low rates, flexible
hours, 18 years e~eperlence , call

740-742-!J506 anytime

Nl« 4 ....... 304-736-7295.

310 Home• for Sale

Mobltt Home For Sale Centrfll

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue. 3BR
1 ti2BA., Family Room, Garage,
CentraiAir, Patio, Porch,

New 1999 14x70 thr•• bedroom,
lnc:h.ldls 8 months FREE tor rent.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, lklrUng,
deluxe ateps and setup. Onfy

Atr. 740 446 0685

For Sale By Ownar: 3BA. 1 11

Drive, Pl. Pleasant, (304)675·
2608. Leave Message on MaCitlne
For Sale Bv Owner : 4BR, 3000
Square Foot House 4 Car Ga·
rage , 5 Acres, Very Secluded.

$199.999 (803)368-9436.

Will Care For Elderly Or Handl·
capped Persons In My Home,

740-14Hl000
Will De

House For Sale: 2219 Oak St.

Pt Pleasant $28,000. (304)8953062.
.

(304)675-6763

Large 8 Rooms, 2 t/2 Baths, Well
Equipped Kitchen, Appliances
stay. 2 Woodburlng Flreplacea,
Hot Water &amp; electric Heat. AC.

Wilt do odd jobs, haujlng,
(304)675-4536.

1112 mil In city of Galllpolla. Alk·
lng &amp;169,000.001 Shown by AppotntmoniSt (740)446-1558

Babyllitlng In my Hornet Arrf
Age, SmOke·Freo House hOld,

Will Haul Anything! Clean Up arrr
tf1lngl WOrk tor $5.00 hOurt (740)
368-()140 Plus Try·Servlce

FINANCIAL

210

INOTICEI
OHIO V~llEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends that vou do busl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering

230

Open House, May 16th, 2·.6PM .
Modern All -Brick Home, 4.85

Profanlonal
Service•

COPPICK LANDSCAPING
50556 SA 124
Aaclna, Ohio

740·949·3130

1-11118· 736-3332
Aent Buller. New 1899 14x70 2
or 3 Bedrooms. Only $995.00

Down, $195.00 por month . Free
Dollvory and Set Up. Call 1-600·
1148-5878.
Used SlnglaWido. Around $1 oo
per month. Call 1-8011-1148-5878.
Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

Restored Vlctor~n home situated
on 12 acres, 'llllage Middleport,
secluded and priVate, appoint·

home, self auHiclent with natural
water SP.rlngs. 2 gaa wells, some
limber, 20 minutes 1rom Athena,
10 minutes trom Pomeroy, ~ta of

privacy, tor $88,500. may spill up,

740-992·3564.

340

lira damage. $2000, 304·882·

modeled. $2.000. (304)675-e149.

(304)675·4040, tor a Free Estimate.

1972 ACADEioiY
12x80 3 Bedrooms,· 1 Bath, Nlc::e
Shape, Includes

Dall~ery

Only

$2,995.00 CAll 1-740-828-8019.
1973 t1111crest two bedroom mo-

bile hOmo, 740-892-5039.

1
19n Windsor, 14170, 3 bed~.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI7
No Fee Unleso Wa )'llnl

1 &amp; 112 baths, price to sell, call

1-888·582·3345'

740.992·2783 ~ 740-892-t313.

WALl·CEtLING CLEANED EX·
PERTlY:Savea on ropeln1fng In·
deflnllely. We U&amp;l the eJCIUIIYe
Von Schrader V!ia Power Wall·
Cleaning System. Protects paint,
leaves glass. retards chalking.
Anti-Mildew, no odor, sanitizes.
Free estimates . Call Clearly

Clean at (304)875-4040.

ba1ho, Fireplace. New Carpt1.
(740)448-3483

310 Homes for Sale
1769 Addison Pika- Enloy the
Tranquility of the Wonderful Set•
llngl 3 Bedrooms , 1 full bath,
Large LIVIng Room, Dinning
Room·, Kitchen , all Cathedral
Ctlllngsl Laundry Room, Large
Deck, Down stairs Possible Famil y Aoom . Free Gasl 12, Acres .

$89,900.00 (740)·384·0063 for
Data list
3 Bedroom. Spilt Entry, Brick·
Home on Route 2 , at Mt Alto
Bullt·ln Kitchen, Dlnlngroom. lA,
3 Baths, FP, Woodburnlng atove,

on neerty 5 ocros land. (304)895·
3861.
3 Bedrooms, 2 Ba1h Ranch HoUao
7 Years Old, 28130 Attached Garage , t2x24 Building, Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 89 112 Acre1 Or

co.

By owner, 725 Page Street, Mkjdleport, houae &amp; 3 loiS, muot -

Glboon 20,000 BTU window air
condtlloner,
new, 220 -trlc,
$200ftrm, 7&gt;40-892-7212.

Beaullful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apanment Rant &amp; Utilities, Inter·
view, References, No Pel&amp;, Ltall,

0972ahlr7:pm
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.
p b'- ? N ed ~ d? C 11 th
ro ~mo e oune
• e

Deposit, Non Smokers, In City,
740-448-3684.

Chrlsty's Family Living , apart·
ments , home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·4514; apartmonla avail·
able, tumtshed &amp; unfumlohod.

Gracious Nvlng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments 11 Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle··

port. From 1249-1373. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal tiouslng Oppor·
tunltila.
New Haven, 1 bedroom, fumlahad

apartment, deposit &amp; references,

2 Grave Lots and Vauns at Ohio
Valley Memory Gardena. In

Cnlaty Stctton. (740)-688-6506

5 Acrea Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallia County,
$32,000 More Acreage A~allabla,

740-386·11878.

One Bedroom Apar,tment In Pt.
Pleasant. Furnished Vary Nice
and Clean. No Pets. Phone

Lincoln Ranger 8 Port,bta Wold·
er. Has OWn Engine, Used 128

Hours Alklng $2,200. 7•0·3670280.

Used LIH Truck Forkl For Sale,

Various Slzea S75.oo -S100.oo,
Par" Sol. Wilt Trado For wood
Burner. 740-379-2757.

720

2 Raglatered Angus Bulla For

Sando; 740-386-6758.

Paclcanl eo• 83 Pentium, 56.6 "'"'
modem, 36X CD Rom, 8MB Ram,
1 GB han! drive, monHor Included.
$500, 740-992-5035, ask tor Josh
at1or4pm.

PR.ESTAR
Fnoo DlroctltJoclat
call now 1·800-263-2640.

PRO, LS. SUPPLY
We Are Protesslonallnstallatlon
And Service Supply. We Sell
Wholesale To The Public. We

We Bur land : 30 · 500 Acres.
We Pay Cash. 1-800-213-838~.
Anthony lind Co

RENTALS

2 Bedroom, w/B111ment &amp; Ga-

Peta. (304)875-5162.
2 BR furnished home In Maaon
No pata. Ralartnc.ea required .

(304)773-5881 .

YQRE DESSERT I I

.

1995 Ford F· 150 XL 5 Speed, :
AM/FM Radio, Air Conditioner...
300 8 Cylinder, 8,500 Mile&amp;, 740-

Col: (740)669-4535
Appalooaa qeldlng, 15 years
old/1 S.2hh, excellent trail horse,/

448-9637 CoH After 5 P.M.

:

great dlsposHkln, shown In 4H tor . 1995 'GMC JJmmy, loiS 01 Extrasr'
Asking $15.000. Shop Around ~

9 years, loads easily, good ba·

ginner horae, Includes 1s• sad -

And Compare, TNI II An Excel-- ~
lent' V•hlcle, At An Excellent ~

dle, bridle, blanket, $1400 (firm)
or horse ooly $1200. email (dear·

Prlcal740-44f-7289.

onoac:cesa.mountaln,net) Phone

.,'

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDI

304-578-2126.

-:_::

.Fair Plga tor sOlei Excolenl BjOod
Lineal For mofo lnlorroation Call:
(7401·245-5172 or (740) 367-

.~

~~

:

Plgo- ready 5/15, $40 oacn. grain
led. 7&gt;40-94i-9027.
~glstered

..

•

Llmoualn Bulla· Red,,

Black, Polled, 9 l!on1ha To 2
....... 740-367-7800.

pMotor, C.D, Player, Rease Hitch,

'90 Mazda RX7. blaclt, PSR, 91 K.
aecurlty systery~, 5 speed, nice
stereo system, $4500, 740·742·

:..:37_46;;..- - - - - - - '•
1996 Ford Conversion Van, E·. ::

INO ·111111 CARS FROM $500

1999 350 Ford Pick-Up, 12.000 , •
Mlloa, Dleaet, 6 Speed, 740.367-

Tax

,I

750 Boate &amp; Motore
~poeCl' ·"-1- -- • • -for Sale

BJ~

"'18~',.,bca-,.,t,..,.1"'15"hp-,.,
. mo-,.;tor-.-wH..,.,.h-trat'""t: :
er. $975. 740·992-3539.
· •

1965 Pontiac Fiero. $2.000. OBO.
1740)4411-3243. anar 5PM.

1995 Kawasaki 1100 ZXt Jet Skt,

t-

19~8 Bu!~ ~~marce1 Ali, Auto,

Security Deposit Required, 740·
446-3481, 740-446{1101.

Con Furnish A lilt 01 Oaalera To
tnetall For You. tl You Don't Call
Us, We Bo1h lose I 553. Jackson
Pika, 740-448·6308, 600·291·
0088.

740-387·

800-860-4272 Ex.t 5 Ask For
ly.

t98t Chrysler New Yorker, good
shape; also need motor for 1987

GOOD . USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryer&amp;, rafrlgeratou,
ranges . Skagga Appllancea, 76

Pete for Sale

560

1 112 yr. otd AKC Registered Female Black lab. Housebroken.

Very Loving. loves Kid a. S100.
To good noms only. (304)77357!!0.

.

Kt~

j

'

son Tilt And Trim Trailer Excel-

lent Condl11on, $2,400, 740·258·
1093.

Astro Van; 740-742·2278.

sldlztd apt. lor elderly ond hand· Wantad To Sell: Wedding Dreao. 1987 Plymouth Reliant Wagon.
lcapped. EOH 304-675-6679.
Stza 8. $275.00. 740-441.()432
·vary GoOd' Shape, Aun Ext. lots
"460'"'"-"""s;;;:pa;;.;.;ce.;..;..;fo;;.r;;..Re;;:.;,;n;;.l__ l Waterline Spoclat: 3/4 ·2oo PSI Of New Parts, Asking $1,500,
$21.95 Par 100; 1' 200 PSI 740-141·1176.
Mobile home site available bat· $37.00 Per 100; All Brass Com· 1967 Toyota Cotlce GT, 5 Speed,
wean Athens and Pomeroy, call pmalon Flttlngaln Stock
AIC, Sun Roof, P.S .. P.B., Runs
740-385-4387.
RON &amp;VANS ENTERPRISES Great. Call 740-446·2107. 740·
Jactsdn. Ohio, 1-8011-537·9526
245-9164
MERCHAND ISE
550
Building
1988 Toyota Corolla 148,000
~1111, $1,350 ; 1988 Ford lTD
Suppllee
Station Wagon 139,000 $1
510 Houeehold
Btoclt, brlcl&lt;, aower pipe&amp;, wind- 740-441·98011.

French City Maytag, 740·441·
7795.

trallar, water, electric a aawer;~
also dock site ~lth cement patio
lor rent; cal740-892·5958.

Auto Pert• &amp;

. -.

Acceuorln

1990 CheYy Cavattor. $895,· twp

"""by

Don'r ,.,
high pr;cos!
Shoj&gt; rhe clouJ(Iod section.

&gt;

1991 Cutlass Clerra, 4 door, Y·8,
air. 74,000 miles. $2600, 740-9492045.

5597.

520

6101.
Adorable, Intelligent White Fe·

7694.

$325/Mo .. Plus Dapost1, No InlidO ~1740-611NI032.

State Route 141, 2 ·3 Bedrooms,

.420 Mobile Home•
for Rent
14x70 traillr, thrH bedroom&amp;, total electric,
per month pial

sm

5 AKC Boxer pupa, 740-742·

Goode

· mate Malton. 3 Months, AKC All
Wlncheatar Mad. 70 Super Shoto, Wormad, Welgho 1 112
Grado .270 Caliber $650.00 ; Pounds Tapa Will Be 3 -4
Wlncheo1or Mod. 70 '50Th Annl· Poiindo, 740-448-1000.
versary .300. Magnum Caliber

$1 ,000.00 ; Smtih&amp; We..., Mod.
t 500 .270 Caliber $350.00; For
MO&lt;a ln1ormatlon 740-37i-2801.

Miniature
Dachahund PUPIIISI, nod &amp; dap·
pie, 740-892-9989.

530

AKC Siberian Huoky Pupplea.
Blue Eyes, $150.00 To $200.00.
Automotive Paint, 15 ·20 $25 Got·
ton. 740 448 11627.

Antlquee

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antlquaa,

541) Mlacelle1110u•

(304)875-2063.

8Q0.77H194.

1991 141tx721t Sf1llltitt Root, Vtnyt
Siding, Excolfont Condition
$16,500.00 (7«1) 44Y113

er Area. No Peta. You Pay All
Utilllal, Depoalt I RaftrlnCII

1992 14x70 'Oakwood 2 Bod·
roomo, 2 Full 811111, All l:teculc
With Heat Pump, 740-441-ot5t;
740-379-2796

'Mobile home for rent In Racine,

4pm.

no peto, 741).892·68811.

Air Condltlonora. Usod 0111orent
Slzoo, Qusrantoodt 740·868·

440

Apartmentl
·for Rant

1 and 2 bodtOOift -'"'"""' fur•

nill10d ond unturntohorl, ...,..rlty
dopoolt noqutnod, no polS, 740·
ttrl-8218.

1h80 Sunohlno Mobile
Home: T-hree Bedrooma, two
Bathroomo, Wstk·tn Ctoaeta, Uttnty Room, Eloctric Heal· ~ Re-

Frat Wlll'l One Year Lea.. j

Coil Altaf4 P.M. 740-246-1302.

"741).448-2887.

1 lklrm.. Eilra Nlco. Firat Month
$271.00 .... lol!&gt;nfh, Ptul Uti-.

8PM. Flah Tank/Pel Shop, 2413
Jaokaon AvanuafPolnt Pleasant.

MerchandiH

mlng. Llmlltd time ofrer, cal1 1·

~ - 740-3118-91112.

Reglltered

Floh, .Birdo, Pond Suppllu.
Sun. t ·4PM. Mon.-Sot. 11AM·

II' DlrocTV latottlll Byotoma·
$89.00, one month trH ptOgram-

2 lledrobm Mobile Home In Port·

AKC

1124 E. Motn StrH1, on At t24.
Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
o.m. 10 6:00 p.m.• Sundty 1:00 10
8:00 p.m. 740•992·2521, RUII
Moore owner.

condlllonad, $280-1300, sewtr.
water aM trash Included, 740·

892·2187.

$3.695. (304)875·4893, or 675·

2 walk

bt~lnd

Gravelya- one
runs, txc»tllnt condition, one lor

porto, $400, 740·742·2373 oftor

CKC Jack Russell Terrier.' 9

weeks old. $225.00 (304)875·

4879.

$100 Eoch, 740·258-11895.
one yell Old full bklodtd Garman
ahtphtrd, papers, all ahoto. dog
taQs, Inquire• within . 7-40-992·
3321 , lea~ name. and number If

not homo.

FAHM SUI' PLIE S
~

LIVEST OCK

0047.

AMAZING
MITA.OLIBII ·
Brosk1nroughttt loao 10· 200
Poundo Eaoy. Qulcl&lt;, Foot
Dl'llnltlc Rltultl, 100% Natural,
Doclor - -: FrM
pte&amp; Coii7-H882.

so ...

~-----------------· '.
810
Home

1893 S~adow ES V·6, loadtd,
740-446·2247.

225 balaa of clo~er orchard·
great, $1 50 a bait; modal640
New t1ollend round baler, net
wrap and twine wrap, leu than
1500 balaa beltd through it,

·cuo Window; Air Condl11onot;
Workt Good! .150, Coli After 5 $13,000,. 740· 742·7403 dayo,
P.M.7-ZM.
740-742·2068 evaningl.

•

lmprovementl

1993 Toyota Toroet, 4 opeod.
90 ,000 mlloa, $3400, 740' 742·
2495

BASEII!NT

"

VMTIIIPIIOOI'IHG

' ''

Unconditional llfltlma guarantee.
Local ratarencea turnlahad E•·

1994 Cavalier 2 Doors, AJC, Au·

1975. Col 24 Hra, (740)
446·0t70. 1-601).287-&lt;1571. Rog· 0&lt;8 Wl18rpaoftng.

toma11c, $3.495, 1•92 Cavalier 2
Dooro. A/C, Au1oma1fc, $2.495,
Cook Motors, 7oltl-44&amp;0103.

1994 Plymouth Sundenct, 4 Cy- AppJianco Parta And Sorvlco: All .
linder, Alj1om .. AC, 87,000 Miles, Name Branda Over 25 Years ExHas Spoiler, $2.200 .00 OBO. perlanc::e All Work Guaranteed ·
740-251H 233.
French City Msy1ag, 740·448:
n~.

1995 Eagle Talon, 43,000 mlloot
Excell. Condition. $10,500.00

C&amp;C

Gtnotal Homo Matn-

tentnce - Paln,tlng, vinyl Biding; ,

carpentry, esooro, windOWs, bathl,
mobllt homo rapalr and MO&lt;O. For
~.. eotlmate cal Chtt, 7&gt;40-99l!·

1995 ~eon $4 .500; 1980 Grand
AM Now Motor S2,200; 1998 Eocarl 12.500. 740-446-7218.

e323.

19tHI Goo Metro. '2 CoOt. 4 Cyttn-' llvtngoton•o Baument Wat6r
dar. Autom., A(C, Castettt.

53,000 Mlfeo $3,1 00.00, OBq
7&gt;40-258-8487, 7&gt;40-2511-9163.
1998 ~utck Century Custom,' 4
·Dooro. loaded, ·18,000 Milos.
115,000.00. 741).387-()157.'
1998 Pontiac Tran•·Am. Navy

810 Farm Equipment

_,

SERVICE S

(740) &lt;141 ·1785 •

Full Blooded Himalayan Kittens,

1

PI'OoUng all btllment repelrt '

dono, tr•• oaUmotoo, tf1o1tma
guarantao, t2yra on Job export•
- · (304)895-31187.
.
Pro1111tona1 ~ 20yra. experjenei

wun all meoont&lt;y, brick, blocl&lt; 1

o•·

stone. Alao room addillona,
ragaa, etc. Free esttmate1 . .

Blue Me1a1Nc. 5.7 liter, lS 1 En·
gtno, l.asthtr tn10rtor, 1o Speakor
Monsoon Sltrto, 12 Disc CD
Changer. Fully loadtdl Will Take
Pay 011, 740-4411-4541.

840

89 Plymouth Hor~ton, Sop, 89,000
mtlea, gOOd condition. 11.500.00
(740) 448·31169, leave mesosgo

Raalden11al or commercial wiring
new Mt'Vk:e or repatrl. Malter L~ '
cenaad tlectrlclan. Aldenouf·P

pioMo.

I THURSDAY

2602.

1993 Dodge con; 5 Sptad, Good
COndltloo. 109,000 Mlteo,l$2.900,
OBO 740.256-1233. ·

(304)n3-9550.

.. '

Electrtcaland

Refrigeration

EleC1rlcol, WV000301, 304-171·
t788.
.,.,,

\ .

27Thtoaame
28 SOiomonlc
28 Horulood
31 ReciUH
33 lab cunure
medium
38 Dakota
Indian
40 "Lit'a

Make - - " ·
41 Loyal
42Mideohole
43 Arrow polson
44 Bomb
shelter
46 Canal pari
47 Tlny particle
46- -bftay
50 In !he pal1
52 Ora. summer
time
53 -de Janeiro

tt:'r+-+-+--+-1 ,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campos
c..brity CIP* cryplogram. ar. crwt.ct from quolltiont by llmout peopte , pu11nd present
EICh lillw ~ tht ~r ltandllor ~ Tt:dty .. clw:'K MjU111r l
.

'XTS

WDWGOPTCO

LYAXSAXfiiE
PWKAWDW

SGMESE

LWTLKW

PM S

.·

LRTSTNGYLRE. '

YXEWK
Y C VIE
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ; "The only immorality is not to do what one has 1o do
when one has to do It' - Jean Anoutlh

1'UJ IIAit.Y
PIIIUI

WOII

lAM I

0 lour
Roarra- lotton of rile
tcramblod words be-

"

I f•
I I~ I~ I.
low

to form lour wards

KATREM'

I I I 12
ME R

5

I.

I.AZMIE
r_ I• I .1::,'
CL I p E5

"I won't be an optimist, the
not so smart man told hts
friend , "unttl I can smtle ·and
whisileatthe---- .... "

IO

Complete the chuckle quoted •

..
•

SCIAM LI'I'S ANSWERS

New Whotonlo Windshield &amp;
Body Poria Available, 740·446·
:::72;;..78~•.;..740-~38;;;:8;,;;9062=;..
· --....,.... ·· .
790 Camper~ &amp;
~.
MotorHomn . ,..

1890 Cougar, high miles, runs

of

•'

3833 .or 1·80().273-9329.

groa1. looks good. V-6. $2100.
740-949·2636 or740-ll49·204'

¥::lila
Riley

by f1lling m the m1uing words
L-.L.-.1.1-...L.-.L.-.J.l......J.
. you develop from step No 3 below.

Now gu tanka &amp; body parta. D &amp;
R Auto, Rlplay, WV. (304)372· •'

740-742-4510 or 740-386·9883.

25

I

eve Jotnta, 740-2&lt;s-58n.

door aport c::oupa, 5 speed, runs
excellent, e•celllnt condition.

rwfUAI
12ProcMd
13 Prwfl togey.
11 Future blta.
20 Go - (klela'
v.hlcM)
21 Plrl of a
trouHrleg
22 Goad
23 Buddy
24W-er•he
Wlntl, .tMI

6AAS51r..

Budget Priced Tranamltalons . :
and Engines, All Types, Accaia •
To Over 10.000 Tranamlsslona,

New And Used Furniture Store
Balow Holtdoy IM, Kanauga. Stop

Sportln(l

By Phillip Alder
This is the em of competitive bidding. The idea is to lry to consume
valuable bidding space. Ho wever,
sometimes the intervention helps lhe
opponents. Perhaps tt pinpoints the
winning line of play, or maybe •• as
tn lhis deal -- it tells the opposition
that their cards fit well.
Befote looking at the auction.
though , how would you plan the play
in six hearts? West leads a spade.
West's raise to three spades was
pre-emptive, in the 'modern style.
With a high-card raise , he would have
cue-bid three diamonds or three
hearts. When East continued with
four spades, South jumped boldly to
the slam because he expected his
partner to have all hi s values o utside
spades.
Afler winning with the spade a~e.
declarer made the critical play : a club
to dummy's ace . He continued wilh
the club queen , won by Easl 's king.
So~lh ruffed the spade return ,
trumped a club with dummy's beart
10, returned lo hand 'wilh a trump,
and ruffed anothe r club with dummy's heart ace The diamond ace and
a diamond ruff allowed South to
return to hand to draw the missing
trumps and clatm his contract.
Did you notice that fine ssing the
c!ub queen at trtck two would have
been dangerous ? After ruffing the
spade return , you cross to the club
ace. cash the dtamond ace, ruff a diamond, ruff a club with the bean 10,
cross back to hand with a trump, and
ruff a club with the heart ace. Yet now
you are slranded in lhe dummy. If you
ruff a diamond low, West overruffs;
if you ruff high, he scores the setting
'
trick with the hel!f( nine.

AND W~EN T~E PELICAN
SEES A FISI-I,~E SWOOP5
C?OWN ON THE WATER

' '

780

elUded. Low Deposit Required.
HUD Apprvvod. (304)875-2063.

And Sea Ua. 740-448 4762.

I.

••
Paas

t:7;-T,-,,r-"T,-T,-.,,r:8-l

1885 Airstream 31 Ft Travtl ;••
Tralltr1 Rear Twin Beds. Center _·
1992 Nlssan Stanza, 4 door, Bath With snowar, A/C, Ml ~ ... '
crowave, Lota or Clo111 Spaca 1 ;
· 740-742·2803.
1992 Olds Cutlasa Sierra, V-8, With Cedar Line, Large Side 1
Awning. Electric:: Jack, Garage
4dr., AM·FM' Cassettt, Cold Air, · Kept,
Purchased Naw, 7.(0.,..68· .1

Nice Small 2 Bedroom, 5 Room
t1ou11, Near Centerville fThurman, Gallla SChools, County Wa·
tar tncludtd, Plant A Garden.

Pass

I e
••
Paas

sRo. tor lull hook·up, tor cemptng-

Vine S1raet, Call 740·448·7398.
1-11118-11111-0128.

Wook• Old, Had Shoto, Boon
Wormed, $250 Each, 740·245-

36

For rent· family type river camp

Apartments, House, Duplaaaa. 1
&amp; 2 Bedroom. Soma utlllllas In-

3 Mal' Jack Ruaaetl Pupplal, 7

NATE

Trailer Included, 2 Seater, V...
Low Hour,. E~ecelltnt Condition, ,..
$5,200. con 140-448-1741, Or 1 •. ,

t966 Olds Cutla&amp;o, Good Work Bola 218, llko Now, Garage
Cart Aoklng S1.200. (740)·441· , Kopt,740-256-1378, After 9:00Pm , '
1765
Bomber ea.. Boat 85 HP John· .:

Rto Grande, OH can 740·245·
5121 .

rrQW:&gt;

IN~TWC.To~l

latera, And Related Material&amp; For

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryera, Ranges, Aafrl·
orators, eo Day Gutranteel

""'
l-IEU.~',(.
(R u::otQJo\6 ~ LIKE. (l(PI-JoiOCJ( I

7539.

Automatic, S.W.
4989.

w~~ $2 .000,

OJ1fiT L(X)JC) eN TI"'-H:X~I~

.rWHEtH

Caaaette, $15,800. 1740)-387· :

Rally Wheels, AWL Tries.

7187

Good

~T &lt;.001'. flOW r:IY.P TMl ~

150, V·8, Rear Air Conditioner, "
TV, VCR, 59,300 mltot. Ami'Fm '

$t,995. 7&gt;40-256-1093.
And

..

:"1

mD OlolE N-.ID T\40 mD Tf\~...

Runs Goodl $2,400, 740·446·

Impounds,

•

M-ID t-Il t-lt:. /o.JoiD n::t-~ N&gt;ID N',Nt-1 I

1989 Ford Ranger XlT 4x4, 2.9

Autos for Sale

Very Spoclouo. 2 Bedrooms, 2

ows, l!nt~s; ate::. Claude Wlntel'l,

•• •

THE BORN LOSER

0241 .

You To Install Your Own Or We

.

"
710

IS.r
8 AI Gore's
home st.
11 Relchslag

It may hinder,
but it can help

Loaded, Mint Cond., Sand·Cotor ·:

In a Ou1. By Qwner.(304)675· ;,
60515
. .,

4-H Goata. Alphlne and Nubian.

IOiaffy

Opening lead: • 5

.

lng Equipment, Duct Work, Reg-

Goode

410 Hou- for Rent

Dr.. 8 F1 Bed. V-t. 5 Spd., 147,000 .,

Tara Townhouse Apartments,

applications for 1BR . HUD aub·

Real Eetata

NOW YOU CAN HAVE

.2-·
6•

Mlloa. $4,200.00 080. 740·258· ::
1233.
.
=----~
1995 FO&lt;d Elq&gt;toror, 4DR, 42K MI. ·'

Rales. (740)388-835!

7 Conaume

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Soutb
West North Eut

.,

Stock Janttrot.Haaung And Coo~

Tll!ln Rivers Tower now accepting

360

-

houH In Gollpol&amp;, 740-892·9 191.
Floorl, CA, 1 1(2 Bartl, Fully car.
peted, Pallo, No - · llaso Ptua

.. 98542

::,

1995 Dod go Dako1a SlT. 4 wn~'

4· Arablan Mares , 1-Walklng
Mare, 1· 10 year old Mare 112
Quater and 1/2 Morgan. Dried
Hose Manure $!5.00 per bag. lnatalln)lnl Plan tor Horses to Good
Homaal 25% Down Attordabte

4 Pllrt of the
D.pl. a!HHS
5Vie!NimeM
holklloy
• French
noblem.on

6A
•KQJ854
• 5

truck wllh Tralleze trl axle heavy.
equipment trailer, saooo: 740- .
742-2675.
.:

740-888·32110.

......

10 1 t
• K 10

Soulb

$2000; 1Q80 Ch"Y 2 ton dump.

4 year old kid broke Appaloosa
pony; 10 year old mare, kid broke;
also riding lessons, 'Ruth ~eevea,

• 3

·• I&lt;

.. J 8 7 3

'72 Maek. truck, day cab, 237 en- 1
glne, runs good, good tlrea, _!.

Sale, Bloodline, Touchslona and

z

· • .,

Truck a for Sale

1 EuropMn fl...
2Circutta
3WOO'*'-n

• K 10 8 4 3 2

• ~ 9

...

OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

Llveetock

• 9 7

TRANSPORTATION

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dteport; one bedroom furnished

$85; 741l-44&amp;-38011.

frigerator And Sto~a Included.

1004; 5 Miles Out Bulavllle Pika
011 35 Righi On K8otOI Rood. Blue
House On loft.

,(304)675-13811.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom molrllt homos, air

19~4

pllancti, 7&gt;40-446·4039, 740·4411-

87, P) . Pleasan1 &amp; Ripley Road.
Phone (304)895-3874.

Eut

• Q 8. 5

1

Keefera Service Center St. Rt.

o~

• A 10 8
eAQ3132
•AQ

w...t

10:00 A.M. On 5/29/98 At The :
OVB Annex, 143 Third Avenue,, '
Gallipolis, OH . Sold To t11ghest +
Bidder "As ts - Where II" With·
out Expr11aed Or Implied Wa rranty &amp; May Be Seen By Calling ·+
The Collection Dept AI 740·«1 · ~
1038. OVB Reserves The Right ,.
To Accept /Reject Any &amp; AH Bldl.•
&amp; Withdraw Items From Sale Prt~~
or To Salt. Terms Of 5ala: CA1f1 1"'\

4WD model&amp; with Super Sleer,
will turn shorter than a 2WD.

116-13-fl

• J"?

Sale Br Public ~uctton A 1986
Chryater New Yortcot 1141257 At

4WD Soma Speco 1e,500.00.
Como Sea The Now TN!il5, 65. 75

"!985 Horl2on 4
Cylinder, $585;

1988 Skyllno Plnecruk 14X70,
2Bodroom, I Bath. 3 Ton Hoot·
Pump/Central Air, Shlngtod Roo1,

owo a hut pump Included. 740·
742-2795.

Johnson's U11d Furniture lAp·

Norlll

Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For "

Brake, lnd PTO 13,500.00. 30t0

Tu~.

.40 Automatic Plo1ol. SU. Now In
Box; And 5' l&gt;ortobte Color T.V.

home , iJ bedrooms, ttotm Wind·

J"

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rabultt In Stock.
Call Ron Evano, 1-801).537·9528.
.'

$20,800 00 . 4830 55PTO HP
same specs 22 ,900. 3010 2WD
42 PTO HP. 1 Romola Wei

630

'

1997 Plymouth 8rttZI, Loaded'~

1972 GMC V-8, Au1o, New Dual

pooK, no peta; 740-742·2714.

i982 14x70 Aodman moblfo

plano Or. 740-446-4525

· 50,000

$7,900; 1992 Get&gt; SIO&lt;m, $2.000,
:.740-::..::25:.:8..:.60:..:1:..:2·_ _ _ _ _ •

2303.

368-9587.

Excellent Condition . (304)875 -

Gravley Walk Behind with 38'
Mower. $550.00 Also oomo ·ac·
ceasorlea tor sale. (140)-441-

1897 Grand Am GT; -

mllel, $11 ,500. 740-IMi-1701.

Warranty

1 Acre + with 14•70, 3BA. 1 11

1988 Dan~ma , 14x10 With Expando, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, ' $150 depoolt, no po11; 12x60
two bedroom, $250 per
411 .500, OBO Mua1 Mow! 740· trailer,
month, total a1octr1c ptua $150 da-

7045.

U""

Full

350 Lolf &amp; Acreage

1978 Schuliz t4•60 2 Bedrooms, Elt·fn Kitchen, LMng Room, Balh,
Very Good Condltk&gt;nl Air Condll- 2 Car Garage, Porchia. Stortge
llonlng, Underpinning, Extrasl llulldlngl, $4251Mo., Plua DepoaH,
740-367-1)583, 740-245-5872.
Phone After 5 P.M. 740-448-4254,
Fax: 740-446·1177 EMail :
1980 Trailer t2x85 Good Condl· JAWOEUREKANETCOM
tlon, New Corpet, CIA, Anady On
Rented lot, $6,000, 740-256- Your t1oma Is Just A Phone Call
M«t. 304-71111-7295.
.
1&lt;72.
1985 Naueha, 14x70 with ax20
Expando, 2 Bedrooms, 2 full

REAL ESTATE

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Wa81woad Drive
from $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 740·446·2568.
E 1Hklu&amp;lng ..,__,,nl
qua
..,.,.... •• ty.

,2yr

Rapo'a. For llstlnga Call 1·800·
31i-3323 Ext. 4420.

rage. Deposit &amp; Ralerancea, No

Hi~r:80 VInyl Shingle , Assume
Loan, 1·8lXJ.383-6862.

6693.

OU11AII,

"POllet

Wanted

241!6 anytime.

Dlohwoaher, $100 . (304)675·

Ford new Holland Tractor Salt
3930 4WO, 45PTO HP, 182 Turbo, Syneho 8X8 Trona F. And R.
Stwttie l.arvo Pump 2 - . 4

(803)366-9438.

320 Mobile Homn

12x60 two bedroom,- total atectrk:,
with central air, Interior living room

Polo .

Commtrclll Building In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease. Can

.

••••Amazmg• ••• 5 Bedrooms, 2
1/2 baths, o~er 2,000 sq. ft. , lor
less than $400 mo. Free Delivery

No

Buelnne and
Buildings ,

home. 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,
LiVIng Room, Olnlng Room, Eat-In
Kitchen. Lg Family Room. 740·

for $111e

poolt Required .
(304)875-2548.

740-992-0t65.

Spring Valley, 2 story 1amlly

740-992-8154.

Ohio.

Apartment, Gallipolis Ferry, De·

26 Acraa MIL. 6 Stall HorH Bam.

Small tanm (!52 Berti) WHh mobile

Pumps. Bannotl'o Mobtla Home
Supply. 740·448·9418 GaiHpotla,

Big Screen TV, $600. Kenmore
Dryer, $80. Kenmore Counter Top

no peta, 740-992-5858.

References, Deposit $325/Mo .,
7 -·8235, 740-446{1577.

388 8504

Wlndowl, Gas 6 Electric Water
Heaters. Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntenherrn, Millar &amp; Coli·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat

Apartment lor reflt In Middleport,

Green Apts. 149 or call 740·992·
3711. EOH.

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apanrnenl,
AerosJ From .Park, AC, No Patio

3 Bedrooin House, Fence, 740·

Hugo 1-*&gt;ty

Electric Hoapttallled, Manrass &amp;
Bed Skit Tabla. Wheel Chair Lilt
For Van. Call After 8.00 PM. 740.
256-1! 41 .
For Sate: 50 • RCA Horne Theatre

330 Farm• for Sale

men~ cal740-992·5896.

Three bedroom home with Iota of
clOset space, close to schOOl, on
corner lot, storage building, one
bedroom rental home Included,

2bdrm. apts .. toll) electric, ap·
pllancea furnls:hed, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town.
• tl tl
it bt
t VIII
,.,pp ca ons ava a e a :
age

WV. $499 Down Single Wide,
First Avenue, One And Two Bed·
$999 Down Double Wide, 304· rooms, From $275 ·S35M.1o.. So738-3409.
' curlty ~H. 740-441-0952.

28A Trailer with 3 porch.aa.

1971. 12x80 Oatroiler, NaiL¥
Plumbing, Wiring Recently Rt·

Does Your H9usa Siding, Deck,
or Driveway need a c::leanlng? If
so, Pressure Washing I&amp; the answart Call Clearly Clean at

740-992-3537.

Please Help! 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, juat take o~er Payment&amp;!

&amp;SOt 1-8011-948-5878.

Now serving GaJI11 and

Will Sell House &amp; lorl Malgl

finoneo col304·722-7148

$22.500.1304)5711-2890.

Clearly Clean at (304)675-4040
for Free Estlma18sl

New Bank repos only 2 left we

Acres Off Jim Hilt Road. 3-5 Bed-

245-~7

Carpet and Upholalery Cleaned
without ·steam• or Absorbent
Compounds . Soapleaa An!lwRI·
soil Detergents used exclusl~a­
ly. Sale lor aU fabrics Fast dryIng (t -2 hourst. Eliminates overwetting Guaranteed Work: Call

$200.74 per month wtth $1150
down. Coll1-80o-837-3238.

rooms, 2Baths, 2 Car Garage with
Workbench, Large Family Room,
Deck, Porch, Brick OutbuiiOing,
All Electric with HeatPump, Clly

Water, Satoltlie Dish. (3041875·
8159.

Buelneae
Opportunity

$~ 7 89; Anchor&amp; $5; Doors &amp;

Make 2 Payments No Payment

ston, 740-44e-6672.

Parla a S~

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To Unl~erslly Of Rio Grandi
Campus, 7&lt;t0-245-5858.
2 Bedroom, 78 Vine Street, Galli·
Oht.... 7... "'-367 7a!)Olio, M ~ • - ·

80().3957.

EXCELLENT COND1T10N: 2

2 bedroom apanment In Mlddlt·
port. WI pay water, IOWO&lt; a tra,,

Ul Wt 9olh Loso/740-146-6308,
Or HI00·281-0Q98.
OitcOunl Moblkt t-bme

-:-:---:---::-::--1 $25.21; 5 Gal Whtto Root Paint

Stt·Up On Your lot. CAll 1-1100-

Corner Lot, 2605 Garfield Ave.,
PI PI , $69,900. (304)875-3379

Paid, No PaiS In Gallipolis. 740·
388-1100

mal lnstaHatlon. tf M&gt;u Don't CsJI

365-9821 .

Condition lncludta Delivery And

For Sale By Owner: Well Maintained 4BA Bl·lavet, 3BA, Larga
FamllyRoom wfflreplace, Livingroom , Kitchen (All Appliances

Apt for Rent: Water And Trash

$1 ,500; 2 112 Ton $1 ,350; 2 Ton
$1 .250; Tho Above lncludeo Nor·

Vinyl Skirting Kill $28995; 5 Ga~

Informed that all dwell~

2BA., large family room &amp; oHice,
,upstairs totally remodeled, new
roof, guttering, waler softner &amp;
lots or extras . 2912 Anniston

Interior &amp; E~~;terlor Painting, Experienced , References, Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate ,

CQOLQQWN

Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace. 3 Ton Installed

ton Aluminum Flbtred Roof Paint

law. Our reader&amp; are hereby

Sn.ooo.

Books, N,._or Usod, $200 OBO.
Mini Condition 740-44&amp;--7106.

7806.

12xf0 Wt1h 7•21 Expondo. 3
Bedrooms. 1 Both, Very Nlca

opportunity basis

Srutantca Including Ref• re nce

yOU pay gas a eiec1rlc, $200 per
month. $100 deposit. 740·992·

MARLETTE MOBILE HOllE

advertised In this newspaper
are a~allable on an equal

Complate Set 91 Encyclopedia

Good selection of Ulld homea
whh 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

$3995 . Quick delivery. Calt 7•0·

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

to appreciate, wll oaN house willUono moy bo obtolned at 1he' out tots f9r $89,000, 740-992·
Town Hat1, 218 FKtt 2704, 740-892-5898.

.

Low Interest Rate a For 1st Time
Buyerl, LlmUtd Time Available,

Story, 3 Bedrooms, 2 1f2 Bat hi,
Near Holzer, Immediate Posaea·

fte~IIA. 740-378-8349.

Scenic Hilla Nursing Canter Is
Now Accepting Appliallons For

Windows. Deck, 118,000. 740-

258 8980.

Ellm Home· care tor elderly or
handrcapped. Everything furnished, e~ecapt doctor and medicine, call'740·992·3360 :

304-675-1957.

(304)736-5554.

Doors, 2x6 Walla. Thtrmop1yne

ago. $180,000 ohown by oppt.
(304)675-5403.

surrounding areas.

7 Days kls,lnc.

the Federal Fair HOUSing Al::t
o11968 which makes ltlllega.l
to advertiM Many ptttference,
llmitat1011 or diScriminatiOn
based on race. coiOf', relglon,
sex familial status or national

(304)875-2533.

1 Bedroom Ap t. Unfurnished.
·$275 month, ullllt'-1 paid. VIand
Street, Pt. Pleasant, WV.

1895 Dutch Mobile Home. 14K70
Vinyl Siding, Shingle Root, Stool

Greg Milhoan 3041675-4828.

Gallpotls Dally lllbuno, 825 Third
Avo.. Gatltpotla, 011.45831

613·35115, Ext. 8826, 8AM·9PM,

All rvalestato -ISing In
this -pet Is subject to

Central Alr!Haat Pump. Large Lot
at corner of Belle &amp; SandHill, 3.$
miles out. 2 Car Attached Garage. separate garage, 21SX60.
3doors, paint room. Lots of &amp;tor·

Free estimates, design planning,
complete landscape sel'\llce, res·
ldentlal and commercial, fountain
and garden display. 1!5 years ••·
perle nee

benefits, No Experience For
App. And Exam Into Call 1·600·

Kttchtn·tsland, Watk·ln Cloae1.&amp;
MO&lt;a. Vrly Nfoefl(~)875-11055.

Stay). DtnlngRoom, Utility Room,

Person wllh poslllve at11tudes and
excellent work ethiC. Ablll'V to apply aarvlce techi11QU8s, telephone
skis and COfl1tuttr skill&amp;, to work
wall with cNenl8 1·011· 1 and com.
plete mu"l·tatkl with attention to
detail. Complete benefits pta·
gr11m.Sand Resume · ClA- 472, %

Pos1af Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc .

Glrdan·Tub, ClAir,· Total Elect

E &amp; S Lawn Service: Design, Implementation , and Se r~lce .
Available tor Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planting. Free estimates Sahsfactlon guaranteed.

Area. 740-256-

Local Trucking Company
Qualified Truck Drivers .
Pay And Benefits. Send Reaume
To: Dfiver, P 0 . Box t 09 Jac~ ·
son, Ohio 45640, Or Call 1·740·
286·1483 To Schedule An Inter·
vieW.

3BR,/2BA. Vinyl&amp; Snlnglo Roo1,

This newspaper will not

7&gt;40-892·2508 ot1or 5pm.

Ml•cei..MOUI
MerchandiH

•

401( Clllaoo-663-7440.

•

1

,,, ASTRO·ORAPH
' when you can't be' too conare times
Friday, May I 4, I999
servative involvint new endeavors
Usually you ' n: a lone worker, but
.and today might be orte of them. Be
the year ahead it might behoove
hopeful and.positive, but also be n:aly&lt;)u to get involved in ajoinl venture
istic over your projections.
that hns long lenn objectives. Your
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Victory is
perseverance will be worth it.
.
achievable
loday if you ' re tenacious
. TAURUS (April 20.~ay 20) You
and
courageous.
No mallcr how
possess enormous strenglh ' and
many
difficul1
qb~t\"'Jes
conlront
~iliency, and nb one likes a tough
you,
when
pursuing
an
Important
· challenge more than yo~ in order to
objective, slick with it.
sh·ow off these attributes. However,
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Keep
. today you could chew,off,more tha~ ,
nn
open mind today and be tplcrant
Yt1u can bite. c:lct a jump on ·life by ·
,,
10wards
!hose who you 1hink ,might
l{nderslandinl .•the innuences lhat'll
not
be
as
smart or clever as you. A
go,vcrn you in the year oheod. Send
bad
·
attitude
could severely limit
the required refurid'Torm 8nd for your
your
opportunities.
.
AStro-Groph prcdlctio!IS by mailing
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) There.,
12 to Astro-Oraph, c/o this newspa·
a stton~ possibility you could get in
per, P.O. Box' l758, Murray Hill Sla·
way over your head ltefore you renl·
tion, New York, NY 10~56. Bo 1uro
lze it ttiday; if yQii 'volunteer 1o do
to ctate your Zodiat siJn.
something for anolhcr widtout first
•
GEMINI (Moy21-June 20) We all
asoessin1 what i1'1 about.
need time to.w~-~ bu1 today, if
SCORPIO (Oct 2~·Nov. 22) Try·
you withdraw, or bcc&lt;1m~ lop introing to win the suppon today of some·
spective, there 's· a 10od chance
one who diametrically opposes your
depression m•y .sel In without .-y
position could be a no-win situation.
warning. Moke plan\ to Jo out with
Work around this person and seek
pals.
·
sllionces elsewhere.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) There

m.

•

"

\'

'

~

SAOIITARIU~ (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Don't look for any free rides
't~oy. Depend only on !he motto, "a
day's work for a day's pay" to s•!
whal you wan1 in Jife.and you won't
be disappoinlcd.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)'
You miaht be forced lo deal wilh a
person you're nol quite ready to forgive for a past grievance today. Do
your bcSI to be hannonious for the
sake of th~ o1hcrs involved .
AQUARIUS · (Jan. 20-Ft!b .. 19)
Because you might nol be too receptive to advice from others 1oday, your
own mtlhods and procedures could
be relj&gt;onsible for not being able to
ac.compllsh what you Jet out to do
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) A Iii·
tie positive thinkinJ on your behalf
could take a heap qf weighl off your
shoulders today. It's amazing how
&amp;ood thou&amp;h1S make ~urdo:nsome
developments easier 10 handle .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) II
yuu allow yourself to dwell only on
life's material aspects, you could miss
ou1 on the finer things 1hat will be
available for ynu 1oday.

~

'

·z;pper-'Aglow ·Rusty· Future- GET.OUT
My sister is a true optimist She thtnks that a common housefly is looktng for a way to GET OUT

MAY13I

..•
•

�.
Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

.~-

...

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 13,

The Daily Se~tinel @
Southern High·.School
•
•

'MRS. P/'RKER' - Suzanne Evans, who portrayed Mrs. Park·
. er, In the annual SHS senior play, Is shown here getting Into char: acter.
•
I

'

.

•

•

.
.
SENIOR PLAY - The Senior ·Drama class at SHS performed
the annual senior play Friday. The play, called "Eastmont Now a.
Then." was written and pet1ormed by the Senior Drama class and
. consists of two acts, one from 1980 an.d the other 20 years later.
Both acts take place In the lobby of the dormitory of the Eastmont Academy for Girls. Here, from left, Jaremiah Johnson
(Trevor), Julia Hensler (Cindy/Angle), Je$slca Smith (Molly), and
Suzanne Evans (Mrs. Parker), get ready to perform before a high
·
school audience.
'

'

By HEATHER DAILEY
As the 1998-99 school year is
coming to an end, students at Southern High School are planning out
their summer vacations. Senior
Mitchell Walker states that he is
going to work this summer and he
also plans to start college. His fellow
senior, Kim Sayre, has the feminine
point of view and, like Mitchell , she
also intends to get a job but she will
be getting ready to start college this
fall. She is also planning to spend
time with her fellow seniors and to
swim in her pool.
Most of the juniors are starting to
gel serious about college and are taki~g responsibility to go out and get ·a
job to help pay for the expe.nses.
Being a junior myself, I can see my
friends changing and growing up.
When school takes up next fall , I
. think my fellow classmates and I will
. have grown lip over the summer.
Classmate Jamie Baker is planning to
work for JTPA, he also plans to have
fun when he goes to Texas on vacation. Jamie is also going to lift
weights all summer to get ready for
his ~enior year of football. Lena
Yoacham is also a junior, and she is
going to work at the Middleport Pool
where she has worked for the past
two summers. She intends to stay
with friends and hang out.
Sophomore Macyn Ervi,n is plan·
ning to show a market ·steer in the
Meigs County Fair. This will take up
most of her summer. S'he is also pla~­
ning to work at Mom's Smorgasbord
in Ravenswood, W.Va. She is also
going to Myrtle Beach on vacation,
Her fellow classmate, Chad Hubbard,
states that he is idso going to work for
a couple of different i&gt;eople this summer. He intends to take market hogs
to the fair.
'
Some ofthe freshmen are going to
work but most are not. Freshman Stacy Mills says she is going to work
some but her main summer project is
riding .horses and taking them to the
fair. Lindsey Smith said that she is ·
planning to go to the beach and to
stay at home.
Most of the students at Southern
are planning to work this summer and
go on vacation. Few are going to
pools and malls. Most of the students
at Southern High School are looking
to have a good time this summer. I
hope' they are all successful.

By JENNI HOWERTON
So do se 0iors at Southern High
School plan to go to Myrtle Beach?
Sixty-one percent of the seniors surveyed answered "yes'' and 29 percent
'SPEAK UP!' - SHS Senior Prama teacher Don Dudding Ia
said that they planned to go to some
shown here encouraging the school's senior play cast to "speak
other places or just stay home. ·
up" before the group'!! performance at SHS Friday afternoon. The
. Most planning on taking a senior
Senior Drama class wrote and pet1ormed the two-act play called
trip said .tbey plan to go during the
"Eastmont Now &amp; Then."
first week of June. Some people said
they are planning to lay on the beach
and get a tan, swim, go parasailing,
go to the pavilion, dance clubs and
. party.
·
.They .are staying in a variety of
NEW YORK (AP) - IBM Corp. will supply the processor ·for Ninten- motels, everything from North Myrdo's next-generation video game system, enabling the device to display more tle to South Mynle. Most of these ·
lifelike •mages.
Nintendo Co. disclosed those plans today in Tokyo as it announced it will
be developing its next game console in partnership with Japan's Matsushita Electric J'ndustrial Co.
. · Under the alliance, Mat~ushita will provide digiial video disc drives for
the new Nintendo game machine, which wi I! go on sale worldwide at the
end of 2000.
,
IBM will make a custom computer chip for the new console based on its
Power PC processor. That will allow the machine to display better images than
Jhe Nintendo 64 system now on the market.
·

IBM to supply Nintendo
with process for images

•

By MAGGIE SMITH
•'

Maybe I'm wrong
Maybe I'm right
I swear the stars arc brighter tonight
There ·Was a difference in manner
'rhe voices tonight, were as sweet as honey
In the evening, still it was so sunny
·

The shinirg knives
In broken hearts
Show us how it always falls apart
Just act natural they all say
In my auempts to say what I mean
I get so nervous I just want to scream
. I can never hear the comforting words
Just· be who You are
B~cause You are lleautiful by far
Tell me I'm wrong
Tell rile I'm right
I know 'the stars are brighter tonight.

'

Vaughan's
Superma~ket

Volume 49, Number 244

742-2211

-Page5

County's ·

Hometown

Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Wisconsin firm acquires Pamida stores
p

FLOWERY FIELD TRIP - SHS 1tuden18 In
the Biology 2 claaa recently took a field trip to
Lake Katharine In Jackaon County to vleYi wild-

tlowera. StUdanta ani shown here negotiating
,t he trail a of the state park.

Biology 2 class gets up·close
with nature ·during field trip. ·
By SHAUNA MANUEL
· When asked if they enjoyed the commcm answer was, yes, they
On Thursday, April22, the South- trip one person replied with this enjoyed the trip. The reason why was
ern High School Biology 2 class took answer, "While we were on .the trip because it got them out of school.
a field trip to Lake Katherine. Lake we were given the freedom of walk- .
The students were also asked
Katherine is located in Jackson Coun- ing at our own pace, which most of what their favorite nower they saw
ty. It contains many trails where it is the time was behind the supervisors. on the trip was. The replies were Jack
possible to· vi~w many djfferenl This made the trip much more enjoy· In The Pulpit, Fire Pink, Dutchman's
species of native wild flowers as well able."
Breeches, and the Large White Trilwildlife.
Soqie students enjoyed the trip lium.
The Biology 2 class has been · because of the walking while others
Overall; the trip 'was ·a success
studying ecology for the past couple totally disagreed and hated the trip especially for the teachers, because
of weeks, so we decided 'to go so we because of the walking ' Anmher even though we are high school stu- .
could check out the wildflowers. ~nswer was that they enjoyed look- dents, when we use too much energy ·
Here is what some of the students mg at the flowers and they also liked all at once, we gel really sleepy.
thought about the trip:
the idea of being outside. The most Needless to say, it was ·a quiet ride
home.

a•

Experts issue .tanning bed advisory
By BRENNA SISSON
•"'ii hllfll\fu[ ultra-:iolel rays call
'In recent years, dennatologists all ,UVA rays, and UVB rays. It was preover the world have been cautioning viously believed that UVA rays were
consumers of the harmful ·effects of much less harmful than UVB rays
artificial tanning, and tanning in gen~ mos.tly because UVB rays cause suneraI.
bum and blisters,-while UVA rays tan
· Both tanning beds and the sun the skin. Researchers are now finding
that UVA rays are indeed hartnful,
h01els are close to the ·pavilion •Ad • even more so than UVB rays in fact.
the strip. Senior Janey Hill s.aid, 'T !tis lru~ t1lat UVA rays are less likeplan to stay with my boyfriend, Josie · ly to burn the skin, but UVA has been
Jarrell and Sarah Roels at the Sea linked to melanoma (the deadliest of
Crest Resort"; and Suzanne Evans, the skin cancers), immune system
Bridget Cross, and Jeremiah Johnson damage, and damage ld the blood .
plan. to stay at the Poinde,xter.
~essels.
Students estimate they wjll take
' ~cc,or~lng to Dr. Cluistopher Nel·
anywhere from $200 to $300 with. . son of.St. Petersburg, Fla., UVA is the
them on the trip. The hotels cost any· . major c~use of all types of skin canwhere from $50 a night for two peo- cet, 'but most significantly melanoma.
pie to $115 a night for four people. Melano!l!a is increasing faster than
Then they will need money to eaJ on, any othet cancer an~ is the most comget into clubs with, and of course to . mon can.cer found !0 people age 25shop or buy souvenirs. Well, I hop,- ' 2~- · .
·'
.
every one makes it there and back' ''. 'Mal!gtW,nt mela~oma seems to be
safely
·
· •· .tnggered .by short, mtense penods of
·
.exposure to UVA, just li~e those

found in tanning beds. So ·why do
people continue lb use tanning beds? .
People sometimes associate a suntan
with good health, but only a small
amount of sunlight is needed for the
body to produce vitamin D, far less ·
than it takes to get a su~tan. Since
cancer and skin aging do not occur
until later in life, many people do not
realize the effects UV radiation is
having on their bodies until it is too
late.
Tanning beds emit 4·10 times the
amount of UV rays !hat the sun does,
meaning that 30 minutes in the tanning bed is equivalenl to 4-5 days·in
the sun. An estimated 2.5 million
people 'use tanning beds every day,
and the skin cancer foundation estimates over 700j\mericans will develop skin cancer this year.
·
Tanning beds have also been
Iinke&lt;! to various cases involving
photosensitivity
photo..dtug reactions
common med-

school·field trip to northeast Ohio's Amish
country was cut short when the class size
to grow by one.
The group of 13 students, studying German at Marion Franklin High
School in Columbus, planned to visit a ch~ factory, furniture business
and, eventualfy, the Amish town of Sugarcreek in western Tuscarawas
County.
They made it as far as breakfast and a quick tour of a house tun by the
Amish before a senior reported feeling ill.
"She silid nothing was wrong, she just fell sick,'' said Jamika Link, a
sophomore who was sitting next ·to the other girl.
·
Th.~ student asked the teacher, who was driving a·van, lo pull over.
"She was bending down in the grass," Link said. "Her stomach was
huning. She said, 'I can't take it anymore."'
. The teacher, Paul Bartles, ran to call 911 at a n~arby business wbile two
Amish women, watching from .their home, offered the student a chair and
other assistance as she tried to deal with the pain, which turned out 10 be
labor.
·
..
The mother-to-be was taken by ambulance to Joel Pomerene Hospital in
Millersburg, Ohio, where she gave birth to a boy, who was immediately
transferred to Children's Hospital in Akron. The baby, born about 13 weeks
early, was in stable condition this morning.

Fourteen students arrested In drug search
BRUNSWICK (AP)- Ten minutes into the school day, a police task
force entered Brunswick High School and started searching lockers and cars
of students suspected of selling drug~~.
Fourteen students were arrested on drug·related Charges. The arrests
~ursday capped a fiye-month investigation. An undercover diug agent
posed as a female student who had transferred into the district as a senior.
· "We hear a lot of rumors ltboul drug~~ in the high .school and increased
drug usage by students," Brunswick High Principal Kimberley Tomashefslci said. "We wanted to determine what was going on in our school."
.
.Police did not enter classrooms or randomly seilrch . lockers. Instead,
:romashefsfci,.assistant principals and guidance counselors escorted students
wanted by police from class to waiting officers, who searched their loclker.; I
and can;.
· The six who are 18 years old orolder will be arraigned in Medina Municipal Coun. Those under 18 will face charges in Medina County Juvenile
Court.
'
'
Three are accused of trafficking LSD on school grounds. Police said all
possessed or sold eot:aine, marijuan~ or ·LSD, either on school property or
in the communities of Brunswick, Hinckley and Brun5wick Hills Township.
The task force involved "Hawk," .police dog trained by Brunswick
Hills officer Heather Stask to detect druga.
.
,
The in'l!estigalion.marked ~third lime in 10 ye.fs·that the Bnulswick
Sc.hool District has employed a police agent posing as a student to ferret out
traffickers in the high school, Superintendent James Hayas said.
Hay·as, formerly the high school -principal, said most of the 2,007 students at Brunswick High are good pupils who deserve credit for activities
including a dance marathon last winter that raised $35,000 for community
charities.
· "I think we're a pretty typical suburban high school," he.said.

a

COOLSPOT

'HOME .
NATI.ONAL

CONVENIENCE STORE
1:1111
Elmll~ B1•taumo1

EUII • $irOCI[IU •

off

Coolvlile Exit
Rt. 7
667-6100 Store
667-6101 Rutaurant
OWner: Bryan White

333 Page Street

BARK

Middleport, Ohio ·
45760
(740) 992~6472

Racine 949·221 0
Syrl!ICUISe 992-6333

'

Oliio !Rjver
R&amp;O
'lJear
Feed Supply_
Compang
·JO.
"Stuff" for Pete

Farm Anlmala • Stable
Evens, Owner

992·2164

.

------.

___ ,

~------·

992-4055 '

"

·Downing Childs·
Mullen Musser
Insurance
111 E. 2nd,,Pomeroy
982-3381

--,~~ .1-_
-= - ,~

---

OMIO UIUUTY UOIP

By BRIAN J .. REED
Sentinel Newt Staff
Parnida Holdings Corporation, owner of Pamida discount stores, has been .
acquired by a Green Bay, Wisc.lirm:
·
.
·
. ShopKo'Stores, Inc. announced Tuesday that the two firms had signed an
agreement finalizing the acquisition.
·
ShopKo Stores, Inc.,..is a Fortqne 500 company which operates 158 .
"upscale speciality" discount stores in 19 slates primarily in the Midwest,
Western Mountain and Pacific Northwest regions. The company also operates a health be~fit company known as Pro Vantage, which provides healtlt
benefit management services, pharmacy mail services, vision benefit ·man•
agement services and health information and clinical support services.
Pamida operates 147 stores in 15 Midwestern, North Central and Rocky
Mountain states. Approximately 92 perce_nt of the stores operate in markets
with trade populations of less than 20,000, a concept that attracted ShopKo ·
to the company, according to a ShopKo news release.
·
·.
The Partlida stores will continue to operate under that name, and will still
.be based In Omaha, Neb. They will operate as a "small-town".version of the ·
ShopKo stores; which operate in larger markets.
"Pamida is a· small-town rural retail concept that offers great growth
potential across the country," ShopKo president William J. Podany said.
"ShopKo's financial strength, effeQive business practices and proven ~re
competencies will enable Pamida to improve its performance and grow while
retaining its ideQtily."
''Pamida is an excellent complement to ShopKo's upscale specialty discount retail strategy, which has proven very successful in mid-size and suburban markets," Podany said. "We have identified more than 500 small rural
markeiS that could support a Pam ida retail store: 'These markets are too small

for ShopKo's upscale specialty discount format, but customers in these small
towns have a strong desire for a broad array of discount merchandise. The
Pamida retail strategy of conv.enience is a natural fit for these rural markets."
Last year, Pamida recorded sales of $672 milli&lt;;m. The sale values the company at $375, including $265 million in debt and lease obligations. Under the
terms of the transaction, a subsidiary of ShopKo will commence a tender
offer for all of Pamida's outstanding voting common shares at a price of
S11.50 per share.

SOLD - P1mlda Holdings Corporation, which operltH 147
atores Including one (n Pomeroy, hu been purchased by ShopKo. Tha Pamlda atorea will retain the Pamlda name and home
office In Omahe, Neb.
·

Evangelist named for Millennium Crusade for Christ
Evangelisl for lhe MilleMial Crusade for Christ to be held
June 1-5 at 7 p.m. each evening in the Meip High School gymnasium will be the· Rev. Charles Swigger.
Swigger .has a long history as a teacher of God's word; a
church pastor; and an evangelist.
.
He was called to be the Crusade evangelist by the more than
20 churches involved in the interdenominational effort to. bring
Meig~~ cOutilians to Christ.
·
For over 40 years Swigger has been involved in Christian
work as a hi-vocational minister. He has paslored eight church. es in West Virginia one in. Michigan •. and several in Ohio. While
employed with the.Amencan Electnc Power Corp. at the Cook
Nuclear Plant in Brid11111an, Mich., he pastored the Niles
Nazarene Church for seven years.

Partisan battle. over gun
Byl.AURlE·KEH-MAN
Aeeocllll8d Prele Wrn.r

After his retirement, he and his wife, Janel Louise, moved
.to the .Aatwoods are~ ·of Meig~~ County.
.
"It ts my firm behef that God sent me to Metg~~ Cou~ty and
surrounding area to minister fol the remainder of my life," said
Swigger. After moving here he became .affiliated with the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, first as mmtster of outreach, and
then as interim pastor. During his ministry there, there was an
increase of 10 percent in the services, 47 decisions for Christ
were inade, and a new parsonage was built and paid for.
He said that through prayer and study, he felt that God was
leading .him in I? the ministry of .evang~lism. Be~een August
and November m.1998, he held mne revtvals at vanous churches in Meig~~ and Mason Counties with over 40 conversions and
Cherltl R. Swlgger many rededications laking place.

~ontrol

continues in Washington

t · · proposal aftd 10 pass real legislation that requires the sputtered from the floor late Thursday.

background checks necessary to prevent criminals
WASHING'roN (AP) - With Republicans in from buy guns at gun shOws which ll)ey cannot buy
full retreat, President dinton today prodded the 11 gun stores," he said.·
Senate to approve new restrictions on firearm sales
The Republicans' a!Jrupt U·turn underscored the .
at gun shows and to reject a "phony proposal" that ·shift in ·the gun- control debate following last
he said was "riddled with high-c8.liber.JoopboJes,"
month's shooting.spree in l..inleton, Colo., that left
The president turned ,up the heat after Republi- 14 high school students,and a teacher dead.
cans, Slung by public criticism, agreed Th~y to
On 'Iljursday, the Senate agreed to prohibit the
reconsider a Senile vote a day earlier that had reject- import of high-capacity ar'nmunition clips not
ed a Democratic-proposed crackdown on private included in a 1994 assault weapons ban. An effort to
s&amp;les
at gun shows.
kill the measure was rejected, 59-39, with almost all
· CINONNATI (AP)-Ajudge has ruled that t~e city has the right to stop
The
Senate
today
was
expected
to
lake
up
a
provotes in opposition cast by Republicans.
·
the opening of a juvenile jail planned by Hamilton County officials.
posa1
by
Sen.
Larry
Craig.
R-ldaho,
that
essentially
Democrats
called
it
a
victory
over
the
National
The county sued in December 1994 because the city changed the zoning
would undo Wednesday's vote on gun-show sales. RiDe Association.
·
in the area to stop the former .MillCf(lek Psychiatric Hospital for Children
Still,
some
Democrats
complained
that
the
amend"The
NRAsaid
no
and it·passed anyway," Sen.
qom being turned into a 60-bed, juvenile jail.
menl
wasn't
all
that
it
appeared
to
be.
Ointon
Dianne
Feinstein,
D-Calif.,
said.
The lawsuit tiled in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court said the
endorsed
the
Democrats'
view.
The
Senate
also
agreed
10 a proposal l&gt;y Sen.
county is an extension of sr.te govemment ·and isn't subject to city zoning
"The
new
Senate
Republic.bill
i~
still
riddled
John
Ashcroft,
R-Mo.,
to
ban
juvenile possession of
laws. Judge Thomas Crush disagreed. He ruled Thursday in favor of the
with
high-caliber
loopholes,"
the
president
said
at
semiautomatic
weapons
and
high-capacity
ammunicity's home rule powers.
the
White
House.
"II
won'lstopcriminals
from
buytion
clips.
That
vote
was
96-2.
.
The state transferred ownership of th~ property to Hamilton County for
·
ing
guns
11
gun
shows.
At
the
Sante
lime,
it
will
open
Despite
this
week's
action,
a
big
backlog
of
$1.5 million, and is now willing to pay for refud&gt;ishlng the facility and for
up
a
new
pawnshop
loophole
that
lets
convicted
amendments
threatened
to
derail
Sen.
Orrin
Hatch's
maintenance costs.
·
·
felons gel guns at a local pawnsl!op. That's actually underlying blll, which would stiffen prosecution
Residents, Supported by a majority of the nine·member eily council, said
worse
lhan current law. I simply can't believe the standards for juvenile offenders.
they don't want a jail in their neighborhood. County officials said the site is
Senate
will make the same mistake twice. ·
"We're in such a doggone log jam here that we
ideal for a juvenile jail because its campus setting could support edpcation
"sd,
once
again,
I
ask
them
to
reject
this
phony
might
have to pull this bill down," Hatch, R-Utah,
and rehabiJjtation.
·
The city suggested several other sites for the jail, but all of the suggestions were rejected by county officials.
By ANNE GEARAN
;
·
At least one classified assessmeni of peaceHamilton County commissioners ',Viii meet Monday to decide their next
·
Allocllltad
Prell
.Writer
keeping
needs circulated at the Pentagon this week,
siep.
·
'
WASHINGTON
(AP)
The
Pentagon
is
one
official
said, but the document did not include
· "We can either go to the court of appeals or file a motion nicely sugrevising
its.
plans
for
a
peaJekeeping
force
to
be
specific
numbers.
.
.
gesting to the judge thai he erred," said county Commissioner John Dowldeployed
in
~ovo
once
the
lighting
ends,
Also
Thursday,
Undersecretary of Slate Thomas
in.
because Ointon administrllion officials have con- · Pickering told the House International Relations
eluded the original estimate of 28,000 ~won't Committee a force of "30,000 plus:· would be
be enough.
·
needed to guarantee the safe relum of refugees to
"Everybody now believes that that force is Kosovo.
_
OXFORD (AP) - 'TWo former Miami University students will stand
probably too small and that a larger force will be
Pickering also said the political aisis in Russia
trial beginning Aug. 23 on charges that they posted racist fliers in a campus
required to go in as a peacekeeping force," Penta~ would have an impact bn the peace ~·
.center for black cultural study.
•
·
gon spukcsman Kenneth. Bacon told reporters "Thing~~ will move more slowly and be more dtffiNatlianiel Snow, 22.- of Cincinnati, and Brad Allen, 21, of suburban Thursday.
· cui~" he said.
.
aeveland, are each charged with one count of aiminal mischief and one
About 4 000 of the 28 000 were to have been
Both Olina and Rtissia have insisted that NATO
count of aiminal trespassing.
.
. . · · Americans.' Bacon said ne;., figures have not been must stop bombing Yugoslavia as a precondition
Judge Robert Lyons, of Buder County Area I Court, set the trial date
nailed down, either for the total planned force or for resolving the Kosovo crisis. U.S. -Chinese rei aThursday on ihe lili~meanor charges.
for U.S. partic;ipatio~. .
·
lions were damaged last week when NATO. forces
If convicted, Snow and Allen face
"We don't know whether it'll be twice as large ·mistakenly bombed the Olinese Embassy tn Belup to 90 days in jail and $650 in
or three·times as large or 50 percent as large as we grade, Yugoslavia.
.
.
fines.
initially planned," Bacon said. . ·
But President Ointon and Chinese President.
' MiamiUnivf,l1ity J'Oiice arrested
Snow and Allen on Jan. 21, charging
that
the men's fingerprints· were
By ALAN FRAM
item with the strongest political appeal.
2 Sections - 12 Pages · ·
found on the fliers. ·
Anoclatad Preae Writer
The measure also contains nearly $1 billion
.
Tile diseovery oflhe Diers on Oct.
WASHINGTON
(AP)
:_
House'Senate
nego•
he
sought to help HonduraS and other Central
7
_,l,C&lt;IIawleilndii!JIIiLr_.' -----L-..,..--1
31 inside the cultural center prompltiators want to give President Oinlon nearly American countries rebuild from last fall's Hur-l.C:I.IIISIIIIIWI:I.IGcdS!!IIi.----'Z!&amp;i!i'.~:lO~t-1 ed two campus demonstrations; dur- twice the money he wants for the bombardment ricane Milch, plus $566.million to aid U.S. farm._l.C;l!OBJmwl",._~,----j.illl-_1 ing which seven students- includof Yugoslavia, but the package has grown into a ers struggling ~om low commodities ~ri~.
Edltorlals
2
ing Allen - were arrested on
hodgepodge of provisions dealing with tobacco,
. But by l~e hme an often surly ba_rg~tnt~g ses._Locli&lt;I!WaUIllll'-----&amp;- - I charges of disorderly conduct. After
steel
and
other
issues
thai
is
raising
doubts
about
ston
e"ded JUSI before 1 a.m .• the btll s pnce tag ..
3
_..,_~!!l.L------"--~1 their arrests in January. $now and
its immediate fate.
·
had surged toward $15 billion ,and confusion
_ ...
sillao:.trhiJil.
. _...;.._ _ _ _4::r.&amp;a.J5-I Allen, who are black, withdrew
Saraainers from the two ~hambers expec~ed reigned. Lawmake~ ~dde~ tobacco language
_Wmeal!ltwhiiler~:,__ _ _~l__ from Miami.
to meet again today amid fadmg hopes of sink,- opposed by the admmtstratlon, a oew loan pro1
. Both say they are .innocent and that
lng a compromise bill, whipping it through Con- gram for small~r steel companies unpopular with
the university singled them out
Lotteries
aress and shipping it to Clinton for his signature ·conservatives, and still faced ~uesti?ns about
because they spoke ·out aboi.ti racial 'by w~l!'s end.
how parts of the package would be patd for.
QJJIO
problems on the southwest Ohio
Wednesday afternoon, lawmakers agreed to
Senile Appropriations Committee Chairman
campus. University officials have spend $11.7billion for the fightina over Kosovo, · Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said he did not know
Pkk 3: S-6-1; Pk:k 4: 3-7·1-4
denied those accusations.
Buckeye 5: 2-14-18-22-'26
the refUJeet and Balkan states thai have accept- what would happen next beyond a meeting of
· Snow was president of Miami's ed them, and to strengthen a slew of Pentaaon GOP leaders "to figure out what we're going to
W.VA.
Black Student Action Aasocillion, proarams · dwarfing the $6 billion Oinlon do."
Dally 3: 3-0-9; Dally 4: 1-0-S-2
·
which
orpnized the campus demonrequeated:
"Sure it's in trouble," said Rep. David Obey
c 11199 ow.; Val tor Publllhh• eo.
strations.
That iathe b!aieat chunk of the bill, and the of Wisconsin, lop Democrat on the House

Hamilton County judge rules In favor
of city in lawsuit over juvenile jail

The Senate on Wednesday approved an amend·
menl by Craig to make instant background checks of
private sales at gun shows volu~tary. But a halfdozen Republicans later complamed to Cratg, a
member of the NRA's board of directors, that his
amendment should go funher to ensure that background checks are performed·even in private sales at
gun shows.
.
.
· ~Thursday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a 2000
prestdennal contender, told Qrug the ·.amendment
needed to be fixed Sen. Go1don Smtih, R-Ore.,
threatened to change his vote on Qaig's amend·
ment.
Several GOP sources, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said private polling in recent weeks has
shown very strong suppon for gun control, even
among potential voters in Republican presidential
primaries. That 'is a marked shift from the past, in
which base GOP voters were less supportive of gun
control than the nation as a whole.
The Ointon administration also pounced on
Wednesday's vote: Ointon, joined by Attorney General Janet Reno in some of the harshest terms she's
used on congressional action, accused the Senate of
ignoring the threat highlighted less than a month ear·
lier by l}le shooting~~ at Columbine High·School.

Planned peacekeeping force enlarged; Apaches may fly· soon

Trial date set for pair accused . of
posting racist fliers at university

992~3471

Supporting Ill the area
achoola &amp; youth.
Stop In lind say "HI"
to Dave or Herb.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 70e; Low: sos

~eigs

408 General
Ha~tlnger Parkway

RUTLAND
.BOTTLI GAS

Athens beats Meigs in sectional final, Page 4
Overweight traveler troubles, Page 7
Advancement in farming, Page 12

Sports
Pacers roll over
Bucks to sweep
series; 99-91

•

The Writer's Block
Brighter Tonight

Mly 14, 1111111

Weather
Today: Mostly Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: SOl

Summer
spells fun,
working

•
•

Friday

1999

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

Jiang Zemin agreed Thursday to talk, as tens tons
with China over the embassy boml&gt;mg appeared to
·be easing.
.
.
.
.
Ji~g had .avot~ed talking to Omton smce the
bombmg, whtch killed three people. It was unclear
when the call would take place.
The NATO allies began bon; bing in Yugoslavia
~ore than seven wee.ks ago wtlh the atm of st?r;
pmg Yugoslav . Prest de~ I Slobodan . Mtlosevt.c s
internal ~ampatgn agamsl a~ ethmc Alb~man
mmonty m the Balkan country ~ Kosovo provm"7,
and 1o allow the retum of ethntc refugees to thetr
homes there.
.
..
.
.
At the Pentagon, a semor mthtary planner wd
U.S. Apache auack h.elicopters stationed in Albania
for more than three weeks are now ready for combat.
"The Apaches are ready to go right. now.
They've been ready for a couple of days," Air
Force Maj. Gen. Charles Wald said. • •
.

SpeQding bill for K;osovo complicated by tobacco, other prov1s1ons
Appropriations Commillee. "It's a mess."
Despite an earlier veto threat from White
~ouse officials, the bargainers apl'roved a provi·
ston by Sen. Kay Batley Hutch1son, R·Texas,
that would bar the federal government from lay·
ing claim,to any of the $246 billion from settle· ·
~enls that s!ales have fl'ached ~tth the .tobacco
tndustry. Chnton planned to btlltons of those
funds for federal programs, but governors backed by many members of Congress - want
to keep tt for the states.
"He won't veto," predicted Hutchison in an .
interview, .saying it wo.uld j~o~rd!ze ::money :
for troops m Kosovo dmng hts m1sston.
.
But White House budget office spokeswoman .
Linda Ricci chided Congress for ••trying to take ·
advantage of emergency needs in Kosovo and
Central America by loading up this bill with .
everybody's pet proj'ecls."
She added, "We've warned them not to load .
up this legislation" with unnecessary provisions.

·

-·-----

·----;------ - --...,..____.::..;_-----+--------------,---=----,------- -- ----- -

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