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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.

·

-·-----

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

�Friday, May 14, 1999
•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Prectse language also Kosovo casualty

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correapondent
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ In the language of
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
the air war that NATO does not call a war, "eth·
740-992·2158 • Fax: W2·2157
me cleansong" is a strangely antiseptic phrase for
repression and kollmg, coined by perpetrators,
now used by their foes
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
It sounds better than the reahly of ruined,
torched
homes and people dnven from them,
ROBERT L WINGETT
some
killed,
some exoled Not quote genocode, but
Publisher
related But the Balkan phrase routinely is used
by NATO and U.S. officials.
CHARlENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
"The ethmc cleansing of Kosovo, wh1ch has
General Manager
Controller
led to th e killing of thousands of people and the
relocatoon of hundreds of thousands, is a deliber·
ate
and systematoc cnme," President Clinton said
Tlv Senti nei!HkotMa ,.,.,._ lo til• ~/tor ffOIIt
on •
oft~
lc. Shott wt•r• (3DO tttOrCJ. OT Mu} h•w Itt- ~~ cha~ ot Nlng publfM«&lt;
on apolog1zmg for the m1staken NATO bombing
1fpK
all nM)' M «&lt;lt«&lt; Each .Jfould lnclud• •
of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade
Hd,..., and Hytltrw phoM num.bw. S~lfr 1 data "th.,.'a 1 ~to 1 pr.
That was a tragoc error, he said It could not be
~~ Mfkla or lett•. IMII to Utr.,.. to 1M HltfH, Til• Sentinel, Iff COurt St..
Potrwoy, Ottlo fSla; or, FAX ro 740-•2-2r57.
wntten off in the usual NATO euphemiSm for the
.
onadvertent killing of covihans or off-target
destruction because m thos case, the embassy was
targeted by blunder, when the bombs were meant
for a weapons dorectorate
The CIA got the address nght, but gave the
mohtary the wrong dorectlons on where it was
"It was a b1g mostake," SecreEditor's Note: In response to the question about a requirement to tary of Defense Wolliam Cohen
pay claaa dues before a student can participate In graduation, Meigs
Local Supt. Bill Buckley said: Participation In the graduation cer• saod at a Senate heanng. "It was
monies Is not a right, but a privilege. In circumstances of hardship, not a polot error, it was not a
mechan1cal error It was an mtelh·
either the atudent or the parents can requeat a waiver of lees.•
gence failure "
I
That accountong has one advan·
I
tage over much of the jargon used
1.Dear Echtor
i Its a sorry world we hve m when a child goes through 12 years of school on the NATO a1r campaign against
1 and makes the grades to graduate and IS told by the school they would be Yugoslav Serbs - "campaogn"
: denied the nght to walk across the stage w1th thelf classmates to rece1ve being the word for bombing and
moss1le raods. Cohen used terms
: their diploma if they d1d not pay tne class dues
that
meant what he saod
: Thos money os supposed to go for a g1ft to the school, a banner for the
"Ethmc
cleansong" does not It
: stage, color pictures m the year book (whoch is so expensive most students
IS a Serboan term for dnving out
: can't afford them) and a pocture of them receovmg thelf doploma
1 I feel any student that made the grades earned the nght to walk that stage' other people, m the current case
the Albamans of Kosovo, the
1They now say ols a pnvolege wh1ch they must pay for not a right
: I to was a graduate of Me1gs Hogh School There were no such thongs as province the Yugoslav regome
: sen1or dues. Everyone walked the stage even the poorest child I feel as a wants rid of them. While variations
' parent of two senoors who worked very hard on order to graduate has earned of the usage date to the earliest
! the right to walk that stage I'm sure there are other parents who feel the days of World War II, 11 is a 1990s
i same way It's tome school pohcy was changed so that every chold not JUSt usage, by Serbs and Croatians, for
what they were domg and some·
: 1hose who can afford it can walk that stage again.
·
! The supenntendent says they always come up With the money I'm sure times, for what they saod was bemg
! they do JUSt as 1 woll so my children can be w1th theor class mates, byt it done to them
Slobodan Molosevoc said on
: doesn't make 11 nght Its h1gh tome th1ngs were put back on track at our
1987that
the Albanoan maJoflty
' schools
A very upset mother was seeking to "ethmcally clean
Kathy lhle Kosovo " NATO began bombmg
Pomeroy Serb targets because Molosevoc
refused to accept a settlement woth

,_,..,..,.,.,.mid and

bTOIId,..,.

...,_,u,..,

Letter to the editor
The right to walk across the stage

an internatoonal peacekeepmg fo[ce to prevent the
Serbs from doing violence agamst the ethnic
Albanoans.
The Serbian word "ciscenJe" gams somethmg
m the translatoon to "ethnic cleansmg" in Eng·
!ish To cleanse is a good thing- defined by the
doctoonary as " to release, deliver or absolve from
sin or guilt." Or to wash clean.
What really has happened, by U.S. and inde·
pendent accounts, os ethmc repression, destruption and murder
NATO bas its own vocabUlary in the conflict
over Kosovo The declared mission is to,
"degrade" Serb forces and thetr ability, to drive
the Albanians from Kosovo. That means to
destroy their command posts, weapons, supplies
and supply hnes and, obviously, to kill some of
them in the process.
The &amp;m os to force Molosevic to accept a set·
tlement including NATO peackeepong.forces, who
then could go into Kosovo in a "permissive environment," meamng they wouldn't have to fight
the Serbs to make way for the return of the Kosovo Alban1ans who sufYJve "ethnic cleansmg."
"In our tome" George Orwell wrote in !946
"pohtocal spee~h and wrihng are largely th~

STAR

WARS!

.II

Editorial views:

Here are excerpts from edJtorials on newspapers in the Uno ted States and
; abroad

! May 11• The New York Tfmes, on V.S.·China:

i

As 1f the war 10 Yugoslavia were not complicated enough, President Chn·

i ton musl now deal w1th an mfunated Chma as he lnes to fash1on a pohllcal

: settlement m the Balkans Thatos JUSt one of'several senous problems fac, mg Mr Chnton m the aftermath of last week 's mostaken bombmg of the Cho·
; nese Embassy m Belgrade Another os Chma itself, wh1ch showed an om1·
nously volatile sode 10 1ts response to the accodental attack. In hos six years
as Presodent, Mr Chnton has not faced a more dofficult set of foreogn pohcy
challenges ..

'May 11 • The Bradenton (Fla.) Herald,
on China embassy bombing:
Fears of a w1den10g war on a regoon woth a history for such unontended
escalatoo n spnng from the mistaken bombmg of the Chonese embassy m Belgrade by NATO aenal forces Fnday noght
China' The last thong NATO needs os a confrontation woth the world's
most populous natoon Hush w1th newly acquired mihtary technology and
anx1ous to prove its status as a maJor player 10 global polo toes
Hopefully,
President Cion ton and hos NATO alhes will do all in theor power to reassure
the angry Ch mese leaders that 11 was, 10deed, only an "osolated, tragic mos·
, take "

They should start by level1ng on the reasons for the mostake. Military
adv1sers sa1d 11 was due to "analytical mosjudgment," rather than an errant
•moss1le gu1dance system or polot error
It os doubly sad that th1s error comes just as there were sogns of a break
1n the Kosovo war Yugoslavia's ally, Russoa, had s1gnaled wolhngness to
consoder an mler!latoonal security force m Kpsovo to protect ethnoc Albano•ans whom Yugoslav Presodenl Slobodan Molosevoc has forcobly dnven ?Ul ...
Th1s "error" could tip the balance back in Milosevic's favor if he sees
Chona as a new all y standong agaonst the NATO forces. And then who knows
·where thos war w1lllead as the world faces a chilling rem10der of Sarajevo
' In 1914

May 11 • The Santa Fe New Mexican,
on Chinese Embassy bombing:
Dr Fu Manchu, that cv1l·gemus character cteated by author Sax Rohmer,
has made fools of the CIA agam
lmag•ne lh1s scenano.
Sneakong 1nto the NATO war room, the clever Chinese stole the bomb·
,target map of Belgrade In ots place he left a fake map showong the Chonese
:Embassy as the s1te of a Yugoslav arms-procurement office A U S stealth
-bomber blew up the target w1th three bombs.
; "We hot what we were aiming for," a NATO officoal saod "But we dod
:not mean to h1l the Chmese Embassy"
• Fu Manchu, however, had a much grander purpose For 10 years, he had
:been steahng nuclear bomb secrets from Los Alamos Nallonal Laboratory.
:He had been found out U S public opmmn had turned agamst hom . He was
'threatened woth subpoenas to tesllfy before U.S. Congressoonal committees
~IS top-secret secunty clearance had been canceled
: But, suddenly, Fu Manchu turned the tables Today angry Chonese mobs
:Ciol around U S government off1ces in Beijing.
: Amencan tounsts photographmg the Great Wall of Chma face contisca.toon ol lheor cameras. ..

:May 8 • The Oregonian, Pottland, on Kosovo:
: W1th the possoble exception of Slobodan Molosevoc, we doubt there is
;anyone in the world more eager to seize on a reasonable peace proposal for
-the Balkan conHoct than Bill Clmltm
'
: But th~ presodent should not leap too soon, and Amenean policymakers
:and polltocoans should not settle for a peace agreement that os too amboguous
-or compromoses too much.
: Clinton should not, for example, accept any agreement that does not
:exphc1tly demand the removal of all Serboan and Yugoslav government
'forces from Kosovo.
: Any peace agreement also must avoid the trap m which the international
:Commumty became snared m neighboring Bosma There, onternatoonal rival·
;roes sabotaged the U N peacekeepmg miSSIOn early on.
' Now, the Uno ted States IS doscussing a force "woth NATO at its core." As
:We have seen already, the phrase means dofferent thmgs to dofferent people.
: The central Oaw m all of th1s - the peace plan and the war that requ~res
.;1- os the fact that Milosevic still w1ll be there when the war IS over.
: That suggests that, when all1s saod and done, thos war woll have accom:Piished a lot less than we might have hoped for But the original, stated goal
:or NATO was to put an oppressed, dospossessed mmority back into positoon
.to build its own future.
: The Uno ted States and NATO can stoll achieve that, but they must take
care in making peace not to fritter away what they earned by making war.

defence of the indefensible . ...
"Thus political language has o consiSt largely
of euphemism, questoon·beggong and sheer
cloudy vagueness "
· • In "Pohtlcs and the Enghsh Language,"
Orwell told- and foretold·
·
"Defenceless villages are bombarded from the
air, the Inhabitants driven out into the countrys1de,
the cattle machme·gunned, the huts set on fire
with incendiary bullets: This is called pacofication.
"Millions of peasants are rObbed of their farms
and sent trUdging along the roads woth no more
than they can carry ThiS is called transfer of pop.ulation or recti~cati~n of frontiers
.
.
"People are unprosoned for years wnhout tnal,
or shot in the back of the head or sent to doe of
scurvy in Arctic lumber camps This is called
ehmmatoon of unreliable elements.
.
.,.. "Such phraseology is needed if one wants to
name things without calhng up mental pictures of
them," Orwell wrote.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Walter R. Meara, vice
prealdant and apeclal correspondent lor The
Aaeoclat~ Prase, has reported on Washing·
ton and national politics lor more than 30
years.

DEFLECTOR
SCREEN?

;

STAR

'

WARS!

-

I

Thomas Ellsworth Anderson

Ohio weather

Thomas Ellsworth Anderson, 68, Salem Street, Rutland, doed Thursday,
May 13; 1999, al Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy
He was born Nov. $, 1930, in Rutland, son of the late Thomas Frankhn
Anderson and Jessamine Rawhngs Anderson Lyons. He was a retired roofer
and painter, and affihated with the Rutland Church of Chrost He was a
peacetome Army veteran and a member of Meigs Chapter 53 D1sabled American Veterans.
He is survived by his wofe of 48 years, Martha Frances Fisher Anderson
of Rutla~: three sons, Thomas F Anderson of Pomeroy, James E Anderson
of Jackson and Joseph A. Anderson of Rutland; a daughter, loy A. Anderson
of Rutland, sox grandcholdren; four great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by a son, John Wesley Anderson.
Servoces woll be held Monday, 10:30 a.m. at Birchfield Funeral Home,
Rutland, with the Rev. Amos Tillis officiatong. Buroal woll be in Standosh
Cemetery, Dexter.
Froends may call Sunday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Saturday, May 15
foracast

[ iiiin.iiiili" [••;171;

~

1 •

-

0

• I COiumbuo 1112'/W I
•

~

,.

0

C1

Raymond H. Fields

0

Raymond H. Foelds, 77, New Haven, W.Va., doed thos momong at Pleasant Valley Hospotal, Poont Pleasant, W.Va. Arrangements woll be announced
by the New Haven Funeral Home.

.,.WVA.

K'l

Guatemalan refugee loses
initial bid for political asylum

Inc

By The Aaeoclatad Preas
Rain across Ohoo should clear up in lime for the weekend, the National
Weather Service said.
There will be a cbance of an evemng shower Fnday noght across central
Ohoo, but sk1es should begin to clear across the north and south.
Saturday woll be pleasant woth partly to mostly sunny skies. High temperatures woll range from the upper 60s in the northeast to the mid 70s in the
south
.
Saturday mght woll be fair woth low temperatures on the mid 40s to mod
The record high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station
was 91 degrees in 1991. The record low temperature was 34 degrees on 1996.
Sunset woll be at 8·38 p.m. Sunrise Saturday will be at 6:17a.m.
Weather foretast:
Tomght... Partly cloudy. Lows 50 to 55. East wond around 10 mph
Saturday. Mostly sunny. Highs 70 to 75.
Saturday mght ...Mostly clear. Lows 55 to 60.
Extended forecast:
sunny. Hoghs near 80.
sunny. Lows 10 the upper 50s and hoghs near 80.

beautiful sunny day, talking to my
gorlfriend working many blocks
away
But how necessary are they?
After all, we already have.answenng
machmes, answering services, email and fax machines Do we real·
Iy need pagers and cell phones as
well? The answer is probably moot
Once we have the .technology, it
must be used. That's an ironclad
' rule. Whether we need it or not is
beside the point Will it make
money? That's the pomt.
So I've come up with a theory. I
thonk that the cell phone os the
cocaine of the millenniu"!. My evidence IS purely aneodotal, based on
the kind of people I've seen who use
cell phones, but they seem to be (by
and large) the same exact kinds of
people who used cocaine on a regular
basis back in the '80s ••• self·impor·
tant, aggressove and consp1cuous.
The difference is that cocaine
was a token offered by those who
had it to those they deemed special
enough to be worthy of the gesture
of being offered cocaine. The
cocaine itself was superfluous Having ot and offerong it were the impor·

tant factors This penod, thankfully,
did not last long
Addoctoon put the damper on the
glamour of cocaine consumption
But the cell phone has the glam·
our without the danger If you have a
cell phone, you are immediately
marked by those around you as the
kind of person who has a cell phone
There's no scrambling around at
three in the momong trying to find a
connection •• connections are
always open There are no jitters, no
d1smtegratmg nasal membranes and·
no expensive rehabilitatoons • You
get the high-rolling 1mage without
actually having to roll.
But this won't last forever. Soon·
er or later, we woll all havs cell
phones
I've already seen a housewofe tn
sweat pants talking on a cell phone
while looking at racks of discounted
sweat pants at my local Salvation
Army store
·
Sooner or later, the movers and
shakers will find some other symbol
to indicate their movmg and shaki·
ness. My prediction? Two words
talking shoes .
Copyrtgh11'*' NEA.

DOE should keep closer eye on contractors
and the loss of classo tied documents" •• I 0,000 at
Lawrence Livermore alone.
The evodence suggests that the onmates wete
running the asylum In one instance, the university wanted permission to lease some additional
security "czar" at the agency
vehicles for official use But the DOE turned
who woll report d~rectly to the
down the request, sayong the university wasn't
secretary. Good news, per·
even using the cars it already had. But the univer.·
haps •• but 11 will only work if
sity, using an obscure clause in the contract,
the newly appointed czar has the power to crack ignored the protests and proceeded to lease 58
down on the agency 's contractors.
new ca.s, sendong the boll to the government
As we've reported recently, the secunty prob·
Time and again, the DOE tned to make tbe
!ems at our nuclear labs go far deeper than a few umversity more accountable. When a new con·
renegade scoentosts who shared cnllcal onforma· tract was bemg negotiated m 1992, a negotiator
toon w1th the Chmese At the root of the problem for the unoversity said he would only agree to
os a management structure that's woefully lackin$ "clauses (which) preserved the unovers1ty's 'no·
on eve11 the most basic safeguards Until that gets rosk, no-reward' position, in which the unoversity
fixed, it won't do much good to admimster belat· does not accept eother financial risks or benefits."
ed lie-detector tests to scientists suspected of In other words, the school wanted ots money wilhout strings attached.
feedong secrets to the enemy.
Apparently the universoty's negottator man·
A major problem, we've learned, 1s a lack of
basic ove("Sight by the department over its many aged to outsmart the government. The new consubcontractors The DOE doesn't actually per· tract was $17 mollion a year richer than the old
form most of the hands-on nuclear research; that one •• and included no new performance guaranwork gets done by outsode contractors. Congress tees.
UNDER THE DOME •· As we suspected ••
essentially writes a blank check to the unove.s1ties
and
reported •• two· weeks ago, Congress could
and companies that perform this top-secret
weapons research, with little regard for delays or not resost 16ildong up the "emergency" rehef bill
in Kosovo with pork-barrel spending for the folks
cost-overruns. It's corporate welfare, writ large
,
Several years ago, for example, the General back home.
Included in the $13 billion lard·bucket of a bill
Accounting Office examined the contract
between DOE and the University of Calofornoa is $1 billion in special credit for.('financoally
The umvemty was getting about $2 5 bilhon a strapped steel companies, at the request of Sen
year to run three weapons labs •• Los Alamos Robert C. Byrd, D-WVa; $500 million in loans
National Laboratory, the Lawrence L1vermore for oil and gas interests, and a measure to keep the
National Laboratory and the Lawrence Berkeley Alabama sturgeon from being hsted as an endan·
gered species. There's also billions included for
Laboratory.
According to the GAO, lhc eon tracts contained military needs that have nothing to do with Koso;
many "nonstandard" clauses that contnbuted to vo, such as construction projects and money for
"the loss of millio~s of dollars' worth of govern· spare parts that otherwise wouldn't get included
men! property, excessive subcontracting costs, in the regular budget.
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
Energy Secretary Boll
Richardson made news this
week by promosong to create a

The new spending os especially unseemly
because it comes on the heels of a vote m which
Congress declined to support the NATO actoon in
Kosovo. Lawmakers who don 'I have the guts to
support the war against Slobodan Milosevic are
finding nothing wrong woth voting to !me their
.own pockets while paying for the war.
There ts a simple but unlikely solutoon to all
this· Pass an amendment that would require all
new, non-war-related spending to be offset by
cuts in existing programs. This way, big-spending
. lawmakers would be forced to choose among
c;ompeting priorities, like the rest of us do What 's
more important •• mihtary housing, or federal aid
to education? Steel-industry subsi4ies or highwar
construction? Sturgeon protection or price-supports for cotton farmers?
Don't expect such a measure to pass. The
gem us of "emergency" spendmg bills is that the
money doesn't have to fit under any pre-arranged
budget caps, wh1ch os why members can't resist
adding their own pet projects If anyone can rc;p.
ognize a free lunc'h, it's the members df the U.S.
Congress.
•
Copyrlgh11'*', Un~ld Fellure Syndicate, Inc.

-Today In History--;+
By The AIIOCiated Preaa
Today is Fnday, May 14, the !34th day of
1999. There are 23~ days left in the year
• :'
Today's HighliaJ!! in History: _"
On May 14, 194$, the independent state of
Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv as Britosh rule
in Palestine came to an end.
On this date:
In 1643, Louis the 14th became King of
France at age 4 upon the death of hos father, Louo$
the I 3th.
In t 796, English physician edward Jenner
administered the first vaccination against small·
pox to an 8-year-old boy

onsumer p ces leap
0. 7 percent in Apri I
By AUCE ANN LOVE
Aaaoclated p,_ Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Oinsumer pnces JUmped in April by an
unexpectedly sharp 0.7 percent, the
IIIJ8t"'l monthly gain in nearly nine
years, the Labor Department saod
today
A record 6.1 percent 5p1ke on energy
pnces, including a 15 percent leap in
the pnce of g;tSOhne, led the upward
swmg. However, prices for many other
products and services, from food and
clothmg to housing and medocal care,
also rose
Core pnces, which exclude the
volatile energy and food categories and
are the most closely watched by economists rose 0.4 percent, lhe most smce
January of 1995.
"Thos might be seen as purely a
nuke, but in the context of a very strong
economy led by spending, thiS could he
seen as the beginning of broad bQsed
mHatoon growth," said Poerre Elh&amp;.
; senior economist with Primack Deco·
•sion Econorrucs in New York.
Wall Street investors, sensitive that

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13 W..l&lt;l .... •••• ......... ••• .$29 25
26 w..u.................. ...... .&amp;5668
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Correction Polley
Oor ••I• coec:era

to Ill stories II to be

aecontc. If 101 keo"' tf u enw to o
llocy, Colli 1M HWinHIII ot (740) "l·

1155. We .. m chck yoor lolol'llolloo
1M 111ke • cerredloa 1r warnettd.

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New• Department.
lltport:
•nt edt till r•• en::
Geoenl Mooapt:. .. .. .. ... .ExL 1101
NtwL ... ... .... .... ... . • . . ExL 1101
Tile "'"'" •••bor II 991-1155.

or ExL 1106

Other Service•
Ad..,tlol........................ ......... Ext. 1106

Clmll- ..... .... . .... ... ... . ....ExL 1103
~ ..... Ad&amp; .............................Ext.

signs of inflation could prompt the Fed·
eral Rese_rve to raise onterest rates,
reacted qu1ckly, pulling the Dow Jones
average of mdustnal stocks down 150
points at the start of trading today.
However, stocks were recovering some
ground by midmorrung.
Most analysts said they still don't
expect an mterest rate hoke when Fed
officials meet next Tuesday.
"But ot is a much closer call," said
Bruce SteinbeJg, choef economist for
Merrill 4'nch &amp; Co
Spending by American consumers,
who are enjoying the lowest unemploy·
mcnt rate in nearly three decades and
big stock market gains, has helped keep
the U.S. e&lt;:anomy growong on the mulst
of international economic tunnoil that
has thrown a third of the world's coun·
tries onto recess1on dunng the pas1 two
years.
U.S. manllfucturers have f~lt the
pain of falling world llemand. A sepa·
rate report today from the Fed showed
signs that may be easing.
Producbon at the nahan's factories,
mines Md utilities rose 0 6 percent in
April, the Fed said, the most smce
August 1998. That followed a 0.5 per·
cent Man:h 1ncrease, revised to reflect
much stronger industrial aciivity than
, prevoously reported.
Output of consumer products rose
0.6 percent on Apnl. Productoon of
durable goods, including cars, furniture
and home electromcs jumped 2.1 percent in Apnl. Productoon of nondurables, such as food and fuel,
increased 0.2 percent with increases for
chemicals and clothing offsetting dJSo
ruptions at refineries.

CINCINNATI (AP) A
Guatemalan man who sa1d he is a
journalist has lost hos initial attempt
for pohhcal asylum in the Umted
States.
Judge Robert Newberry ruled on
Thursday that Luos Alberto de Leon
did not prove his life would be m
danger of he returned to the Central
American country.
Newberry co ted U.S State
Department reports tbat the nsks
Guatemalan journalists face has
decreased sonce the government and
guerrilla rebels signed a peace
agreement on 1996.
The judge also said de Leon
failed to produce artocles or press
releases to corroborate the cla1m that
he was a JOurnalist.

1100

AKRON (AP) - Two young
adults have pleaded guolty to rob·
bery and participating in a criminal
gang, the first crimtnal convtchon
resulting from Oh1o's new anti-gang
law.
Torrey Swain, 19, and Jason Cottrell, 18, face three to 10 years in
prison for aggravated robbery when
they are sentenced June 15 by Sum·
mil County Common Pleas Judge
James R. Williams.
Each of them also must serve a
mandatory additional year in prison
for their guilty pleas to gang activi·
ty, based on the state law that took

effect Jan I.
Swain faces addotoonal prison
time for hos gutlty plea to felomous
assault and using a gun while com·
mining the crime.
The convictions Thursday "'send
a clear signal that th1s actiVIty woll
not be tolerated," Ohio Attorney
General Betty Montgomery said in a
joint news release with Summit
County Prosecutor Michael Callahan.
Swain, Cottrell and a 15-year-old
were charged with robbmg two other
teen-agern of their jackets and jewel·
ry on Feb. 18.

By JOHN DIAMOND
Aaaoc:latecl Preu Wrlblr
WASHINGTON (AP) - Spendmg on intelli·
gence gathering and analysis would increase under
a plan passed by the House, although overall fund·
ing for intelligence would drop slightly. Lawmak·
ers warned that tight budgels on the past have hurt
U.S. mtelligence operallons.
The House approved the largely classofied
spendmg plan for the CIA and 10 other intelligence-related agencies Thursday on a voice vote
after overwhelmingly defeatmg a measure that
would have frozen the mtelligence budget at 1998
levels.
The amount of the bill is classified. But Rep.
Juhan D1xon, D·Cahf~ ra~king Democrat on the
House Intelligence Committee, saod the total
amount is actually slightly less than th1s year's
level. Based on previously released figures and
intervoews woth knowledgeable U.S. officoals, tfie
amount sought for next year is believed to be
about $27 bollion.
"We have to reverse a very serious trend of
decline and atrophy" in mtelhgence spending,
Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fia., chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee, told colleagues.
Later, m a telephone interview, Goss said that
this year's spending on intelligence marked a
sharp increase over 1998 and that the legoslatoon
authorozmg money for next year calls for shghtly
lower spendong levels, it largely sustains the
increase.

Am Ele Powar .....................41 "t.
Akzo ........................................44
AmrTech ..•...........•...••...........65'7.
Ash 011 .................................. 42'·
AT&amp;T ....................................59"1.
Bank One ......•...................•...61 'J.
Bob Evans............................18'/•
Borg·Warner ...........................59
Broughton ...........................15"1.
Champion ..................... " ..........&amp;
Charm Shpa ..........................3"1.
City Holdlng .......................... 26',1,
Federal Mogul .......................43'lo
Gannett .................................69'4
Kmart ..............•...................... 16'•
Kroger ................................... 55\1
Landa End ....•...................••

By ANICK JESDANUN
Aa•oclated Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
federal government will use genetic
testing to determme whether all offi·
cially dead fish species is still alive.
Blue poke, believed to be nat1ve
only to the Great Lakes, numbered
as many as 50 million on the mid1930s. The specoes was virtually
wiped out by lhe late 1950s. because
ot over-fishing and was declared
1 • extinct in 1983.
In the past few years, however, a
blue-colored fish closely resembhng
Ltd .........................................47'- the blue pike started showing up in
0ik Hlli·Finl ....••••....... ., ......... t 8'.t
OVB ..........•..•...........................34
One Valley •...........•....•.........37"1.
Peoplea ....•....•......••.............. 28'.t
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
Prem Flnl ............................... 13'h
Rockwell .•...........................•60"1. gency Medical Service recorded
RD/Shell ....••....••....•.................58 three calls for assistance Thursday.
. . , . ''""1"'""""''''""""''''''''''''''''""
Units responding included:
Shoney'a .................................. 2
RACINE
FlratStar ............................... 28'7.
4:56 p.m., volunteer fire depart·
Wendy'• .•.....•...•................... 2~
ment to East Letart Road, structure
Worthlngton ......................... 13~
fire at Robin Nance residence, no
Stock reports ara today'• mJuries reported, Syracuse squad
0:30 a.m. quotea provided by assisted.
1Ad\'e1t of Galllpolla.
RUfUND
7:35 a.m ., Salem Street, Tom

smaller inland lakes, leadong to
speculation that the extinction decla·
ration was premature.
Rep. John Peterson, R-Pa., sa1d
Thursday that the U.S. Geological
Survey has agreed to complete DNA
tests within four months He said the
results could help declare once and
for all whether the blue pike or a
close relative IS mdeed alive.
"It os impossible to speculate
about posSible implicatiOns or
restoration efforts until we have SCI·
entltic proof about whether the blue
pike or a direct descendant exists,"
Peterson saod.

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls

!

Suspect released on bond
A Rutland man arrested Apnl 28 on drug-related charges was released
on bond earher this week
Fred Proddy, 47, was released Monday after postong 10 percent of a
$500,000 bond on Meogs County Court
Prosecutors handhng the case were unavailable for comment thos
morn mg. but Ass1stant Prosecutor Chns Tenogha smd earher that a future
grand JUry would consoder the matter and sa1d a large amount of ev1dence
IS beong held at the Rock Spnngs Faorgrounds.

None injured in trailer fire
No mjunes were reported followong a traoler fire Thursday evemng on
East Letart Road near Lelart Falls
F~retighters from the Rac1ne Volunteer Fore Department were sum·
moned to the Rabon Nance resodence around 4 56 p m where flames were
showmg on amval The res•dence, a trader w1th an add-on was destroyed
in the tire, accordong to a Racone Volunteer Fife Department spokesman.
Cause of the fire was undetermoned
The Syracuse squad of the Me1gs County Emergency Medocal Servoce
responded to the scene.

Clothing Shop opening Saturday
A new Me•gs County Un1ted Methodost Cooperative Parosh clothmg
store w1ll be ded1cated dunng a bnef ceremony Saturday mommg.
God's Clothong Parish, located on Third Street, Rac1ne, will be opened
w1th a nbbon-cuttong ceremony at 11 a.m. The new shop w1ll operate
under the auspoces of the Cooperative Parosh.

Announcements:
Log Jam tickets available
A hmoted number of tickets for the June 18 Log Jam Festoval m Portland featunng Dav1d Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney and Toby Ke1th woll be
available startong Monday, 9·11 a.m and 1·3 p m at th e Me1gs County
Chamber of Commerce on Pomeroy. Tickets are S20

Decorating date set
Decorating of the Meogs Moddle School for the Moddleport Alumm
Assoc•atoon reumon on May 29, woll be held on the Fnday precedmg,
May 28, at 7 p m. All local alumm are invited to help

MusicFest set
The Alexander Spartan Booster Club will host MusicFest '99 at the
Athens County Fa~rgrounds, May 22 Gates open at noon for the day long
extravaganza wh1ch woll fca)ure a spnng and summer busmess expo, art
and cratt show, performances by local bands and country musoc star, Joe
Doffie at 7 30 p m T1ckets are $12 on advance, $15 on show day, and are
available at severallocatoons, or by calhng 740-698-6306

Reunion planned
Second reunion of the Brush College School woll be held Saturday,
May 29, from 11 a m. to 4 p m. at the Provodence Bapllst Church on Teens
Run Road, Galha County. The affaor os for all former students, staff and
fa moly Those attendmg are to take a &lt;;overed dosh

Volunteers to be honored
The Meogs Cooperalive Pansh woll honor volunteers at a banquet to be
held at 6 p m Monday at the Racme Umted MethodiSt Church. Recogm·
lion of volunteers w1ll be held and the guest speaker woll be the Rev.
Roger Grace.

Sing planned
A hymn sing woll be held at the Chfton Tabernacle Fnday, May 21, at
7p.m.

Boil advisory lifted
A boo I adv1sory for the Sprong Avenue area of Pomeroy has been lift·
ed, VIllage off(l:ials announced today

Trustees to meet
The Letart Townsh1p trustees woll meet Monday, 6 p.m. at the office
buoldmg.
~-7--~----~~~~~------~

In addotion, changes in wh1ch government at the nahonal secunty omphcatoons of Chmese
accounts are mcluded m the onlelhgence boll esp10nage.
means that a lower total stoll could mean more
- Includes a "substantial oncrease" for CIA
spendong on core intelligence pnonhes.
analysis of fore1gn nuclear weapons programs, par·
The bill provides spending authority and policy tocularly in China and Russoa.
guidance for the CIA, National Secunty Agency,
- Decreases the space launch and hardware
Nahonal Reconnaossance Office, Defense Intelh· budget for the NRO whole adding money on the
gence Agency and FBI, among other agencoes. analysos s1de of the ontelhgence commumty so thfl
Much of the money on the boll goes to costly tech· reams of raw ontelligence - from satellite data to
nical intelligence programs involvmg satelhtes the change m address of a foreogn embassy- can
and other hardware managed by the NRO and be better managed.
NSA.
Rep M1chael Castle, R-Del., saod there 1s more
Despole some part1san queshonmg of Pres1dent spy ~tefhte omagery Howong onto U.S. intelhgence
Chnton's commitment to omprovmg ontelhgence, cente.s than analysts can handle More money is
·the measure adds less than 1 percent to the admon· needed for technology to mtercept fore1gn commu·
JStration's request. Debate came amod congress10 - mcalions and electromc sognals, he said
al attentoon lo alleged Chinese esp1onage at U.
"We are at nsk of gomg deaf to the worldwide
nuclear weapons labs and a hogh·profile CIA blun- explosoon of commumcalions technology," Castle
der that led to the NATO bombong of the Chinese
1d
Embassy on Belgrade, Yugoslavoa.
ocrals reJected the argument that the Cho·
The bill, whoch awaits Senate consideration, nese Embassy bombmg stemmed from underfundadds money m several ontelhgence areas to address mg of ontelhgence programs Rep. Peter DeFazio,
concern over these issues The measure:
D-Ore., queslloned how the CIA could have erred
-Increases money for FBI countenntelhgence on plannmg the bombong taiget when his own staff
investogatoons and traonmg
was able to pull down from the Internet the correct
- Accepts Clinton's proposal to boost the address of the Chmese _Embassy.
Department of Energy's secunty and countenntelA U.S mtelhgence officoal, speakmg on condo·
ligence program.
'
lion of anonymoty, saod that because the CIA was
- Adds money for computer security at moh- not looking for the Chmese Embassy but was try·
tary, mtelligence and nuclear weapons cente.s
ong to pmpomt a Yugoslav government fac1lity, the
-Boosts spendmg for foreogn language tram· · .error was not simply the result of out-of-date
ing, a problem cited by a CIA revoew team lookmg maps

DNA will help determine fate
of 'extinct' Great Lakes fish

Stocks

Local briefs:

House passes intelligence budget with eye to China reports

-·-·-

\

•

The lmmograllon and Naturaloza·
lion Servoce saod there were doscrepancies in dates and sources of onfor·
mahon that de Leon provoded.
Douglas Weigle, de leon's attorney, prom1sed an appeal, wh1ch
could take a year or two De Leon
can stay in the United States dunng
the process.
De leon, 43, said he fears that he
would be tortured and kolled by the
Guatemalan military as retaliation
for information he dostnbuted about
the oppressoon of poor farmers during his country's civol war
· He left his home on Guatemala
City in 1990 and arrived on Cmcm·
nato m 1991. He saod Thursday that
he has not seen hos four children and
hos former wofe smce he left.

Two Akron adults convicted
of violating Ohio gang law

40-,.

Reader Services

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•

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50s

Let's talk about cellular phones
credot
protection
By Jan Shoales
Many people are annoyed by eel· plans, or a free trop to
lular phones Of cou.se, those who Las Vegas 1f I attend
own cellular phones are not a real estate semonar
annoyed But they're all Jerks any· at a hotel near the
way, according to those who are &amp;rpoFI I do possess a
annoyed by cellular phones Why certaon amount of
are people so annoyed? I'm not sure cell phone envy, it's
I can tell you specofoc locat10ns true I would like to
where cell phones have the greatest be the kind of person with whom
annoyance factor. in cars, in restau· other persons must speak ommedi·
rants and in theaters. I can tell you ately, nb matter where I am, or what
that my daughter and I have the I'm doong I'd hke to be able to bark
habit, whenever we see someone commands into a receiver, with
dnvmg and talking on a cell phone cordless convemence, as I weave
at the same time, of Shouting, "Get effortlessly m and out of freeway
traffic in my, little red roadster. But
off the phone!"
Well, we don't really shout alas, a cell phone and a 1988 Ford
Rather, we mutter m unison. It's Escort just don't go together
kond of a ritual, hke shouting Besodes, even 1f somebody of
"Punch Buggy," and hotting one omportance or intimate acquaintance
another on the arm, every time one should call, the chances are very
sees a Volkswagen bug (old or new). good that they can waot four hours or
To a degree, the annoyance of so before I respond.
Many in my circle, such as it is,
those who are annoyed by cell
phones offers a degree of comfort, have cell phones. I think none the
hke complaonong about the post worse of them for it As a matter of
fact, I borrowed my employer's cell
off1ce, or hatong Presodent Clinton.
I should confess here that, no, I phone once, while walking down the
do not have a cell phone. Nobody street. It gave me a rush, I must say,
calls me anyway, except to offer me to be walking down the street on a

Death Notices

Weather

Mostly clear skies forecast
throughout the weekend

WH~Sitf{
:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

2

friday, May 1'• tiiiKI

•

'£sta6fufltl in 1948

f'N.,._

P~~ge

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Anderson, Veterans Memoroal Hos·
pital. Central Dispatch squad assisted;
9:39 a.m., Me1gs Mine 2, Darrell
Bechtel, VMH
FRI-SAT•SUN
NICHOLAS CACII!
8MM (R)

AND
CRUEL INTENTIONS

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r

Bulldogs win Division II sectional title

Jacobs places
'for sale' sign on
Cleveland Indians

Ath.e ns tops Meigs
diamondmen 3-2
., i

By DAVE HAR.RIS
Sentinel Correspondent
A bases loaded walk, scored the
winning run with two outs in the se.venth inning to give Athens a hard
fought 3-2 win over Meigs in the
Division II sectional baseball finals
Thursday at Athens High School's
Rannow Field.
A 3-2 pitch. to Greg Gibson by
Jeremiah Bentley just mi ssed the
inside comer, allowing Asa Eslocker
to score the winning run , sending the
Bulldogs to the district.
The Bulldogs took an early 2-0
lead in the first inning. Eslocker
wa lked, one out later Devin
Chapma1 singled. .Gibson then
walked ·with two outs and Jason
Sparhawk singled to put Athens on
top 2-0.
Athens loaded the bases it eac h of
the next two innings. but Bentley
was able to work out of trouble. In
the second, he was aided by a 6-4-3
doubl e play turned by Steve Beha,
Ky le Sm1ddie and Ryan Ramsburg .
Goi ng into the sixt h, Les
Champ lin had a no hitter, allowing
only three base runners l o walks. But
Aaron Vanlnwagen hit a nubber
· down the third base line and heat the
throw to end the no-hitler.
·
Two outs later, Adam Bullington

walked. Rusty Stewart then hit a
smash to short Slop, his only play
was at second but BullingtQn went in
under the tag . and the . bases were
loaded.
J.T. Humphreys then launched a
drive to the deepest part of the field,
that bounced over the right-center
field fence to tie the ·game at· 2-2.
Athens received a break when the
ball left the park, as the go ahead run
woold have eas ily scored on the play.
In the seventh, Bentley, who battled his control all evening walked
the bases . .loaded . Gibson then
walked on the close 3-2 pitch with
two outs· to score Eslocker with the
go ahead run .
Nick Dettwiller singled with one
out '" the top of the seventh '""' ng.
But Vanlnwagen hu a smash to short .
and Athens turned the -6-4-3 double
play and send the Bulldogs to the dos-·

tnc~oth

pitchers pitched well giving
up four hits each: Champlin ran his
record to 7-0 with the win. He struck
. out six and ~lked three. ·Brooks
Purdy, Devin~ Chapman, Jason
Sparhawk, Andrew Coble had the
Bulldogs hit s all singles.
B entley picked up the loss, the
sen ior struck ou t four. . wal·kcd IO.

BRINGING IT HOME _ Meigs pitcher Jeremiah Bentley fires a
pitch to the plate during Thursday's Division II sectional title game
against Athens at Rannow Field, where the host Bulldogs weathered
the Marauders' slxth·lnnlng challenge and won·3·2. (S.ntlnel photo
by Dave Harris) ·
·
·
~
Humphreys led the Marauders with
his double, Stewart, Dettwiller and
Vanlnwagen all had .singles. .
Meigs (12,- 10) will end its season
at home Saturday against Waterford
at II a.m. Athens (15 -7) will play
Gallia Academy - the Blue Devils
upset Warren Local 5-2 Thursday in
the sectional fi nals - at Lucasville
Valley next week.

lnnjng ll!lBb
Metgs .... .. .............. 000-002-0=2-4-1
Athens................ .. .. 2()()..000- 1-3-4-0
·
Batteries
Les Champlin (W) and Devin
Chapman
Jeremiah Bentley .. (L) and J.T.
Humphreys

Angels blan·k Yankees 2-o, · sweep series·
American League
roundup

I
I

By JOSH DUBOW
NEW YORK (AP) - .The New
York Yankees kne\\' this year wouldn't be as easy as their record-setting
1998 season. They couldn ' t have
expected it to be this hard.
·The Yankees haven't scored a run
in 19 'innings and were swept by the
Anaheim Angels in a three-gani~
series at Yankee Stadium for the first
time ·in 15 years after losing 2-0
Thursday night.

Just 33 games into thi s season, the
Yankees have been shut out at home
one more time than last season,
they ' ve been swept in a three-game
series for the first time since 1997
and have as ma!ly home ·losses as
they had by June 22 last year.
"There is no way we could win
126 games thi s season," interim
manager [)on Zimmer said before
the game. " We want to win the
Eastern Division, and 1 don ' t care if
it is by .one game, 18 games or 19
games. We have to start playing better. This is a better team than the.way
· we have beenp.laying."
The Yanltees ~idn ' t show it.

Scoreboard
5~ 1 ), 8:10p.m.

Baseball

Sunday's games

AL standings
Eastern Oivision

1!:

fum

L

11
15
18 18
11 t8

New YQrk ....

20
li

Rnslon ..... : _,.,
Torm:1u ............

Tampa tJ ay ...
Bahimore.

"

1'&lt;1.

G.ll

.606

.545
.500
.486 ·

22

2

·''·,

San Diego at CINCINNATI, 1·· 1.5 p.m.
New York nt Philadelphia. 1::\5 p.m,
Montreal at Pill ~burgh , 1 :J.5 p m
Aorida at Milwauk« , 2:0.5 p m.
Lo3 Angek~ at ~t . Louis. 2: 10 p.m.
Allnntn at Cllicago, 2:20p.m.
~an Frail~isco at Houston. 8:0.5 p.m.
Colorado at An zona. 8: 05p.m.

4
8' :·

J 5~

Omar Olivares allowed five hits
in 6 2-3 innings and Mo Vaughn hit a .
solo homer. as the Yankees were
blanked in consecutive home games
for the first time since 1991 and in
back-to-hack games overall for the
first time since 1996.
" You don' t shut the ·Yankees out
two limes in a season, let alone two
limes in a series," Angels manager
Terry Collins said. "We have to
enjoy this. It won't happen often,"
After Chuck Finley and Troy
Percival combined on a 1-0 shutout
of the Yankees on Wednesday night,
the players called an impromptu
team meeting. Zimmer broke up that
meeting and called 9ne of his own
before Thursday 's game to address
the team's mental approach.
The results were not apparent as
Jorge Posada appeared to miss a hitand-run sign in the fifth inning that
could have led to a double play. The

9 727
16 15 .5 16
16 17 .485
15
441
1.1 21 J82

2.

C{!i cago ......
!41nsas Ci1y ....

7

8

"

Drtruit .. ·
Minnesota

Thursday's scores

,.

W•sl•rn Division

T~lliU· ... ,

O;..k land
Aaahcun ..
Sct~ ltl c ...........

19 15
18 17
16 19

.. 1 ~

,.

559

I '·

514
.4-57
.441

' '.(I Homto"
102. LA l...akers R8 : L A L1lu'! rS lt&gt;ads
2· 1
~ric: ~

Thursday's scores
: Toronto 8. Kansns Cny 2
.An:1hcim 2. New York 0
• Te .~ :• s I,'\ , BallitnQre 7

.

Tonight's games

1onight's game&amp;

. , IJ o~ l on

NBA first-round playoffs
Ph1lade lphia 97. Orlando 8S: Phila&lt;Se lpllia leads
series 2- 1
San Antonio 8.5. Minne~ot.a 71. S01n Antonio
leads scrit-• 2-1
lndi nna 99 . Milwaukee 9 1: Indi ana wi ns ~ ri es

.

1\tlantn at IA'!troit. 7 p.m.·
Miami at New York:. 8 p.m.
Umh at Sacranlento. !O:,lO p.m.

(Pcna 1-0) 011 Toromu t WC'Ib .&amp; -2). 7:05

Sunday's games
Boston at Toronto. I :QS p.m.
CLEVELA ND mDetroit. I :OS p.m.

Hockey
NHL confel'l!nce semifinals
Thursday's stores
Colorado 6, Detroit 2; series tied 2-2
Toromo ), Pltuburgh 2-0T; series tied 2-2

Today 's games

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Tonight's game
Saturday's games

Buffalo at Bo1ton, 2 p.m.
Detroit at Colorado, 2 p.m.

Transactions
Baseball
Amerlaln Lea1ut
.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Acaivated 38 Cal
Ripken from die 1.5-day disabled lilt. Optioned IS
Cal11in Pickerina to Roc:helter of the 'ntemational

l&lt;ogue.
·
,
TAMPA SAY DEVIL lAYS: Placed RHP Jim
Mecir on the 15·day di~abled lilt. Optioned RHP
, New York. (YSH~hii 2-J) 11
Eddie Gaillard to Durham of 1~ Inte rnational
2), 7'0l p.m.
· Mo.ntrul (Herrrw~son J-)) at PittJburgh {Benton leaaue. Recalled LHP Tony Saunden and LHP Alan
Newman from Durham.
2·1), 7'0l p.m.
Nallontll Laaue
·San Die.so 'Ashby 4-2) ac 'CINCINNATI (Neaale
NEW YORK METS: Optioned OF Tenenct
0.2), 7'0l p.m.
' FIOOda (Sandlet 0.&lt;4) at Milwaukee (Roque 0- .~ ~ - l...ong to Norfolk or the International Lt:t~gue
fliiTSBURG H PIRATES : Placed SS Pac
g,O, p.m.
.
. San Francisco { R~~elcr 2·1 ) ac Houuon (Reynolds · Meares rind LHP JasOn Christianse n on the 15-day
disabled list. Recalled SS Abraham Nu nez !'rom
l ·l). s,os p.m.
·
l..ol Anaelcs (K. BroYy"n 3·2) a1 S1 Louis (Jimene" Noshvillc of the PCL.
2·~). 8:10p.m.
Colorado (Bohanon .5-1) at Ari.1ona CAndy Ben~~
· Football
2-;\). 10 :0~ p.m.
National Foocbatl Leaaue
· GREEN BAY PACKERS: Signed C dram

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Piusburgh at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
St. Loui• 111 Dallas, 7:30 p.m.

• Sunday's games

AND

19

Bonon at Buffalo, 7:30p.m.

, Chicago· at New York, 1:3.5 p.m.
. Baltimore at Tell.as: 3:0S p.m.
· Mlnnesot11 at OWdand. 4:0.5 p.m.
' Kansu Ci ty 3l Scatll e. 4:3.5 p.m.
:Tampa Ba)lat Anaheim , 8:0.5 p.m.

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Sunday's games
Philadelphia at Orlando. TBA. if. ncce5Silly
New York at Miami. TBA. if ncceswy
Detroit at Atlanta. TB A. if necessary
Sacramento a1 Utah. TBA. if necessary

·3), 1:35 p.m.

· Boslan (Ponugal 3- 1) at Toronto (Halladay 2-2),
4:05p.m.
· Minnel!Ota (Haw lcin5 1-6) at Oakland ( Haynes I51; 4:05p.m.
, Baltimore (Guzmari 1-4) at Tet:a~ (He lling J-4),
8:)5 p.m.
· Kanw City (Witaskk !"~2) at Seattle (Garcia 411: 9ill p.m.
'Tampa Bay (Yan 1-0) at Anaheim (Hill 1-2).
10,:0.5 p.m.
·
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·

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Philadelphia (Oaea 2.

·Saturday's pmes

Gnrrtu.

•

Atlanta (Maddux 4-2) ot Chicago (Trachsel 1--iJ,

KANSAS CITY . CHI EFS : Signed GB Cri1
2:20p.m.
. Dishman to a tlwr-c-year contract.
,
,Colorado (Klle 2-2) at Arizona (R. Johnson .l -11.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Si~nc:d QB SCott
4:Qj: p.m.
.
Mutryn, RB Brinn Alciris . CR Corey Ivy and FB
New York (Leiter 1-4) 111 PhU3delphl3 (loewer 2- Jnmie Bowen.
.lt. 7:0!5 p.m.
NEW YORK GIANTS: Named Joe: Skiba and
t.;iontrcal IPnano l-4) at Piusburgh (Silv;al-2 1. J-A Skibn auistant equip~nl ~onagers ..
7 :0~ p.m.
TENNESSEE 'riTANS: Sianed OL Brut"C
~an Die1o (Hhchcoc:k. .l - 1) at CrNCINNATI
Mauhews to 11 four-year contract Sitned Don
l P1m1 0.0). 7:05p.m.
_ Maclachlnn. cxeculi\'e vice president. to a three-:
Florida (Meadows ~-3) at Milwaukee tWc&gt;Odard year contmct ex tension. through 2002.
1-l), 8:Q"i p.m.
WASHINGTON REDS KINS : S1gnrd WR
San Frandacu (Gardner O·l) af Houston Jomu Thrash and DT David HOelscher to. Orle-)'em
fHampton "-I), 8j0.5 p.m.
·
contracts.
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'

Friday, May 14, 1999

Pac.e rs beat Bucks
99-91, claim sweep
of first-round series
only three points and was 0-for· 7 on
field-goal attempts in Game, 2. ··1
just tried to be aggressive. I knew
that I could post up ' " those guys .''
By The Associated Preas
Pippen was 5-for-20 from the
Reggi~ Miller led the Indiana
field,
including 0-for-6 from threePa.cers to a first-round s~eep of
Mtlwaukee, wh1le.Scottie Pippen and point range, as Houston lost the first
Charles Barkley helped the Houston two games ofthe series. But with the
Rockets . avoid that early exit from Rockets facing elimination in Game
3, he was 12-for-27 from the field ,
the playoffs.
including 3-for-5 from long range. ·
Miller scor~d 33 points, includ.ing
" I don ' t have anything to prove,"
five of lnd1ana s 13 three-pointers, as
told reporters. " My slats
Pippen
the Pacers beat the Bucks 99-9 1
speak
for
themselves. When I have a
Thursday night in Milwaukee to finbad
game,
you jump on me."
ish a three-game S\\'Cep of their bestPippen
and Barkley helped · the
of-five series.
Rockets
overcome
a subpar game by
··we came in here thinking about
Hakeem
Olajuwon,
who went 2-fora sweep, but we did it quietly," said ·
12 ·from the field and scored only
Sam Perkins, who hit two key three- five points . Shaq uille O'Neal led the
pointers for Indiana in the second Lakers with 26 po·ints and fo
half. "'V!fedidn 'I talk about it. We just
rebounds.
came in here an d tried to do it. "
. In othe r playoff action, the
The Pacers were I J-of-33 from Philadelphia
·16ers and San Antonio
long range , breaking the team play- Spurs took 2- 1 leads .in their openol:f record · of II against Atlanta in ing-round series. The Si xers beat the
1994.
Orlando Magic 97-85, and the Spurs
" Ind iana is one of those teams topped tile Minnesota Timberwolves
that demorali zes you with smart bas- 85-71.
.
ketball ," Milwau kee coach George
The playoffs .conti nue tonight ,
Karl said, "Sometimes you can hus- with Atlanta at Detroit, Mi ami at
tle al l you want and work all you New York, and Utah at Sacramento.
want and they make a smart play that Atlanta, New York and Sacramento
just frustrates you.··
lead their series 2- 1, and can advance
. Pippen broke out of a playoff to the nex t round ·With a victory.
slump wi th 37 . points and 13
Sixers 97, Magic 85
rebo unds, and Barkley added 30
Allen Iverson scored 33 points
points and 23 rebounds as the and set an NBA playoff record ,with
Rockets stayed ali ve with a 102-88 10 steals in Philadelphia's first home
win over the Los Angeles Lakers in playoff game in eight years.
Houston.
Iverson, 14-for-28 from the field,
" I had so much energy and also had five assists, five rebounds ,
willpower, I was just not going to be and only lWQ turnovers for
denied," . said Pippen, who scored Philadelphia. George Lynch added

NBA playoffs

Indians for sale ...
Cablevision Systems, unsuccessfully
bid for the Browns. The Dolans also
h;~ve tried to buy the Cincinnati
Reds, New · York Yankees and the
NFL's Washington Redski ns.
'' While I was certainly very inter- .
csted to learn about his decision, it is
· premature to say whether or not I am
a prospecti ve buyer," Larry Dolan
said.
Toy
manufacturer Thomas
Murdough, who briefly allied with
Jacobs in a Browns bid, did not
return call s.
" The Browns were eventually purchased for $530 million by billiona,i&gt;e suburban Cleveland banker AI
Lerner. The Browns issued a statemcnt saying they were certain Jacobs
'' wi ll make the right qecision for the
Cle veland community and the

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pit ch and that.'s not tHe way it
works.".
O' Nei ll is not the only Yankee in
" slu mp. Chuck Knoblauch is hitless
in hi s last 2 1 at- bats and Tino
~·artinez is 3-for' l7.
.
. · " We might be pressing too
much," Bernie Williams said. "One
q(. the th ings that made us good last
y~ar was that people would pick up
the slack when somebody else fell.
·rnat's just not happening right
' n ~w."
·
: . Shigctoshi Hasegawa came on
wit h two on and one out in the
oighth. but retired Shane Spencer
•ind Scott Brosius. Percival. who ·has
·

(Continued from Page 4)

Indians fans."
New York developer Howard
Milstein, another would-be Browns
and Redskins buyer, declined comment. .
Jacobs said the team's board of
directors hired. two investment firms,
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and
McDonald Investments Inc., to identify potential buyers.'
Jacobs said he wants any prospective owner to be "somebody committed to baseball and committed to
Cleveland" and that any sale would
not be finalized until after this .season.
.
.
He would prefer any potential
owner or ownership group !O be from
the Cleveland area, and insisted that
if the right offer didn 't come along,
he would take the Indians off the

not allowed a run in 21 ',, career
innings against New York , pitched
the ninth for his eighth save of the
·season and third in the series.
" Playi ng the best team and playing them here with all the tradi tion
and ever.y thing gets our intensity
. level up to where it should be,"
Percival said. "Who can deny that's
not the most talented team in baseball ?"
Vaughn broke a scoreless tie in
the sixth inning .with a418-foot blast
to center field off H1dek1 lr~bu (1 - l)
for his sixth homer. Andy Sheets,
who drove in the only -. run
Wednesday, added a sacnfice fly tn
the seventh.
· The Angels salvaged their road
trip with the sweep of tbe World
Series champions after losing five o.f
six in Detroit and Boston. .
lrabu allowed seven hits and one
walk
in seven innings, striking out
.
five.
In the only other AL games
: : There will be a mixed three-onthree basketball tournament this Thursday, Texas beat Baltimore 15-7
1¥eekend, beginning Saturday at 9 and Toronto topped Kansas City ll-2.
Ra111ers 15, Orioles 7
~t. in . at Southern high school for ages
Cal Ripken's return from his first
nine through adult. The event is
,.Ponsored by the Southern girls" var- stay on the disabled list was spoiled
sity basketball team. The .tournament
io for both-boys and girls, men and
women. Entry fee per team is ·$20.
• Start times are ages 9-10 at9 a.m.;
~1 - 1•2 at 10 a.m.; 13-14at II a.m.;
~5- 16 atl2 noon ; 17-18 al I p.m.;
and 19 and over a 2 p.m.
.
! · T-shirts will · be awarded to the
........ U ' I U I . . . .
tournament champs and the second
nlace teams. For more information
l!lease call 992-5270 or 740-949- .
't009 or contact coach Alan Crisp at
liortland Elementary
· School.
. I

Southern H.S.
to host basketball
Saturday
t9urney
.

Sarazen dies at 97
By DOUG FERGUSON
PGA three times, the U.S. Open
AP Golf Writer
twice and the Masters and British
The golf ball and the 4-wood he Open once.
used for the " shot heard ' round the
Only Ben Hogan, Gary Player,
world '~ are in a trophy case at aod Nicklaus have managed to win
Augusta National. The sand wedge the career Grand Slam the &gt;
,he invented can be found in the bag Masters, U.S . Open, British Open
of touring professionals and c~s ual and PGA .
.
,
If not for Sarazen: the Masters :
golfers alike .
I
Gene Sarazen meant more to golf may have never been a major.
than becoming the first player to win
It was called the Augusta
all four majors.
National Invitation Tournament in
In ·a career that stretched from 1935 when Sarazen .made hi s debut.
Harry Vardon to Jack Nicklaus and He trailed Craig WOOd by three
included such victims as Bobby strokes with four holes to go when ,
Jones and Walter Hagen , Sarazen Jones came out to the 15th fairway to ,
was the very essence of the gam~ .
watch the end.
·
His caddie wanted Sarazen to hit .
"When you discuss or research
the history of golf, the name Gene a 3-wood over the pond from 235 .
Sarazen is unavoidable ," Nic klau s yards away to the par-5, but Sarazen .
said. " He was the cornerstone of the insisted on a 4-wood. It hit the pin .
and dropped for a double -eagle 2,
game we all enjoy today.''·
· Sarazen , the , - - -- - - - - - - - - - the rarest shot in .
golf. He tied·..
knic kered
·· squire" whose
Wood in reg ula- ,
elegan t
style
tion and beat him ·
defined the game,
in a playoff.
. died Thursday at
age 97 in Naples,
·· Nowaday s ,
Fla., from comwhere ver I go ,
Of
people
say,
plicati ons
pneumonia, said
'That 's the man
his lawyer, John
who got the dou-,
Cardillo. He had
ble
eagle.· .
been hospitalized
Actuall y, it was
for several days.
just a piece of .
MOVIN'
- The Indiana Pacers' Mark Jackson moves on
" He will be
luck .'' Sarazen
toward the basket after knocking down the Mllwaukr ' Bucks' Dell remembered for
once said . ' They .
Curry in the second hall of Thursday night's NBA first-round playoff as long as the
forget the cham - .
game In Milwaukee, where the Pacers' 99·91 win moved the guests game is played."
pionships I won.·· ··
Into the conference semlllnal round . (AP)
Byron
Nelson L _ ____:.::.
,__...._ _ _ _...J
" It was a
. GENE SARAZEN
spectacular shot.
17 pointiforthe 76ers.
David Robinson had 17 poi nts said.
Even
though
the one every -. ·
Nick Anderson led the Magic with and . 18 rebounds for tpe visiting
,
body ·talks about,;
23 p oi nts, and Penny Hardaway Spurs, while Tim Duncan added 15 he li ved for nearly
a
century,
hi
s
death
was
surprisbull
ta~e
my
greatest
pride in having ·
added 18.
points. seven rebounds and . seven
ing.
He
remained
acti
ve
wHile
li
vi
ng
won
the
U.S.
and
British
Open's in.:
assists.
·
Spurs 85, Timberwolves 71
in
an
oceanfront
condomin
ium
in
the
same
year,
1932.''
·i ·
Avery John son scored 24 points
Kevin Garnett had 23 points and
Marco
Island,
Aa.
Since
1981.
he
He
stopped
playing
golf
in
1
973,.~
as San Antonio, the top seed in th(JI2 rebounds for the Timberwolves,
West, held eighth-seeded Minnesota .who scored only 28 points in the first returned to the Masters - the maj or but went out in fashion with a hole-:.
he put on the map -to join Nelson in-one at the famous Postage Stamp · ~
to its lowest playoff total eve{.
half.
·
and Sam Snead · in hitting the cere- hole at Royal Troon in the British ·
Open.
monial first tee shot.
"The game has lost one of · its
"Gene told me the year he was 90
that he was nevergoing to go back," great heroes," PGA Tour commishealthy prOfit from his initial invest- Nelson said . " He was 97 this year, sioner Tim Finchem . said. "Gene'
market.
Jacobs said his deci sion was not ment in the team and that the Indians, and he was still doing it. It's ki nd of Sarazen dedicated his life to golf and '
prompted by any hea lth or fin ancial · whose net revenues in 1998 were like an old fire horse. He was ready became one of the game's legendary ·
figures." ·
-:
problems. With the price for maj or $144.6 million, are "making money, to go, all the time.''
sports teams skyrocketing - . the very goo!! money."
He was ready when he burst onto
When Mark O' Meara retur.ned to ' .
The
te.am 's stock · closed the scerie in 1922 to win the U.S. Augusta National this spring as the
Redsk.ins' price tag, pending NFL
approval, is $800 milli on - Jacobs Wednesday at $9.94 but soared to .Open, a former caddie who was defendin g · champion , he saw his '
understands thal now might be the $16.25 by the ertd of Thursday on the inspired by Francis Ouimet wi nning name on the same locker with
perfect time to sell.
.stre ngth of the announcement. .
the Opeit nine. years earlier. He won · Sarazen in the Champions Room . ·~
Jacobs, who· made his fortune in the second of hi s seven majors later
"If the Redsk.iris can command
"I thought that was the greatest:~
$800 million, the . Indi ans should real estate, has kept a low-profile as that year in the PGA Championship. thing ," O' Meara said. " He was class :~
owner, deferring to general manager
bask in that also," he said.
Asked what he thought about personified ''
.
-'
Last June, the ln!)ians became the John Hart. Like everyone else, Hart Tiger Woods winning the Masters at
Sarazen ·s· best year was 1932,. third P.ro sports. team , along with the was caught off guard.
age 21, Sarazen quipped, "I won two when he won the British Open with a: ~
"From a personal standpoint , my majors when I was 20."
NHL's Florida Panthers and NBA's
then-record 283 and captured the
Boston Celtics, to offer stocks to the reacti on was one of surpri se and a
He added his third a year later U.S. Open by shooting a final-round
public. The club sold about four mil - feeling of sadness." Hart said . "But when he repeated as PGA champion 66. Jones called Sarazen 's late
lion shares at $15 per share , amove as Dick ex plained them to me , hi s with a 38-hole victory over Hagen , charge, "the finest comp.etitive •
which raised about $60 million for reasons were good, and it made sense hi s bi ggest ri val. There were seven round ever played .''
for him and the franchise."
Jacobs.
major championships in all - the
Jacobs sa id he has turned a

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as Texas got a grand Slam from
Roberto Kelly, a three- run homer
from Rusty Greer and .a solo homer
from Rafael Palmeiro in the fourth
inning at the Ballpark in Arlington.
Ripken , out si nce April 18
because of a nerve problem in hi s
lower back, went 1-for-4 with an
RBI single and a run scored. He also
I'~
· led a slop a hard-hit grounder
b e~n his legs for his sixth error in
. ni.ne g ~t hi s season.
.
Palmeiro, playing his: first. game
against Baltimore after .tl ve seasons
with the Orioles; was 2- for-2 with
three walks and his seve nth homer.
Mike Morgan (6-2) beat
Baltimore for the first time since
May 30, 1987, and became the AL's
second six-game winner. •
Scott Kaminiecki (0- 2) lost his
eighth straight decision.
·
Blue Jays 8, Royals l
At Kansas City, Carlos Delgado
went 4-for-5 with two hits and two
RBis in Toronto's six-run· second
inning off Jose Rosado (2-2).
Pat Hentgen (3- 1) gave up six hits
and two runs in 6), innings to beat the
Royals for the first time in eig ht
career starts.

HAPPENED TO
N GROUND" RADIO
PROGRAM ON WMPO????

SE Ohio Senior
~lympics set

~or

.

May 21-22
.

:: The Southeast Ohio . Senior
0 1ympics is plaimed 'for May 21 -22
:ii·Ohio University in Athens.
' : In order to be eligible to compete,
p4rticiapants tliust be ~0-years old by
~ay 21 of. thi s yo;ar. RegistratiO!l
· tbims and fees are due by May 17.
Toe registration fee is $10. There are
additional fees for some events such
as golf ($6), bowling ($4) and eightball pool ($2).
.
All events will be ~eld at Peden
Stadi um and the Ping Center on the
· Ohio campus.
For more information, call Debbie ·
Schmieding at 740-592-5983.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AL' games ... '(Continued fr~m ~age 4)

Orlarulo at Philoddphia. 12:JO p.m
Sal\ AntOnio at Minnc:sota. J:OO p.m.
I. A Lakc:n n1 Hous1on . ~ : 30 p.m_

Saturday's games
' CLEVELAND (Burba ~- I) at Oetroh (Miicld I·
21; 1:05 p m.
. Chicago (S nyder 5:11 at New York (Mendoz.a ~ ­

GALLIPOLIS

Saturday's games

p .QI

•CLEVELAND I N a ~) ' -l) r:~ 1 Detroit IM ~Xhk·r , _
.H:- 105 p.m.
' Chl(ago ll'ilrquc 4-2 1at Nrw York 10 Ut'rnandel.
.l - ~J. 7 :.'~ p.m
. Bultirnorl' fl:: nd.;sun 1 - ~J "' Te11.as rM. Clark 2·-'l1:1 :35 p m
. Ta.mpa Bay !Will -' ·01 nt l\nahei m C8 dcher 1-.' ).
!O:O.'i p.m.
• Knnsa5 City !SUJlpan 2-.lrat Seaule 1Fassero 1-4 ).
10':05 p.m.
: Mirme ~a (Li n~o ln 1-51 at Oakland (Candioui 24\.. IO:.l S p.m.

(See AL on Page 5).

to Baltimore. Only now is the sportsBy TOM WITHERS
CLEVELAND (AP) First crazed city recovering from that as it
baseman Jim Thome, surprised as welcomes back the new Browns.
Early in his news conference at
anyone to hear that Cleveland owner
the
ballpark that bears his name,
Richard Jacobs is putting the Indians
Jacobs
sought to reassure Indians
up for sale, figures one radical idea
fans
.
deserves another.
" Don ' t worry." he said... This
"Hopefully . we can get about I0
players and get enough money to buy team 's not going anywhere. We have
this team," Thome said Thursday a lease .for 15 more years. And any- ·
night at Jacobs Field. " We were talk - way, who would want to move a
ing about it coming out here, me and .team like this? We' re in a ballpark
Mark Langston. We were saying, that has sold out 308 straight games.
•Let 's get some money and buy this Moving is out of the realm of specuthing.' It would be great.''
lation."
Mana ger
Thome
was
Mike Hargrove
kidding ,
of
said he wou ld
course. But as .
explain ·the situaC level an der s
tion to the playfound out early
ers before they
Thursday morning, Jacobs was
flew to Detroit
for
tonight 's
not.
game against the
In a move that
stunned the city,
Tigers . He did
not think the
Jacobs put his
Ind ians on the
announ ce me nt
would distract
market Thursday,
the team from its
hoping to find · ,
someo ne · willing
. goal of trying to
to keep the team
win its first
World Series title
in town and its
reputati on · intact
sin ce 1948.
'' We ' ve
as one of baseball's
hottest
got
a
job
to do on
RICHARD JACOBS
properties.
the
fi eld,"
"Lel.'s put it
.
Hargrove said.
this way: I want to have a say in· "We've got to keep our focus. And
passing the torch," the 73-year-old to do that you need a certain amount
Jacobs said. " l don't want an execu- of tunnel vision, which I think we ' ve
tor of mine to say, 'Well, Jacobs, he been able to do. I don't see thatlesshas no hand from the grav~.' he can't en'ing."
do anything on this. Let's maf(e up
The team is in first place in the
our decision, who should be the AL Central with the best record in
owner of this team.'"
baseball at 24-9 - Cleveland's best
Jacobs, the Indians' chairman, start in its 99-year history.
president, CEO and controlling.
Several local candidates .were
stockholder since buying the · team among the bidders for the new
with his late brother, David, for $45 Browns last year, and their names
million in 1986, said he· decided a immediately came up as speculation
few weeks· ago ~ was the right time began about who could buy the
to sell.
·
Indians.
But even potential suitors were
· "It's shocking," ~aid Indians fan
Selwyn Powell of Cleveland. "I caught off guard by the Indians' sud'
never; ever, ever thought this would den availability.
happen. Not with the run they 've
The sale "is a real surprise," said
local lawyer Larry Dolan, who with
had."
.
Just 3 1/2 years ago, Browns his brother, Charles, chairman of
owner · Art
Modell
moved
Cleveland's beloved NFL franchise
(See S~LE on Page 5)

%'

Basketball

9':
I I '·

Yankees stranded II runners .
"I guess I didp't talk about hitting," Zimmer said. "We' re in a rut.
Maybe we 'll score nine runs tomorrow. That's the way this game is."
Olivares (4-3 ), who entered the
game with an 8.15 ERA against the
Yankees, fell behind 2-0 in the count
to I0 batters and walked si~. But he
held New York to 1-for-9 with men
on base.
Olivares got out of a ' bases- ·
loaded, one-out jam in the fifth when
he got Paul O'Ne.ill to ground intp an
inning-ending double play. O'Neill
went 0-for-4 and has two hits in his
last 25 at-bats. ·
"No one is going to feel sorry for
the Yankees," O'Neill said. " When
you' re not playing well and not scoring runs, S(lmetimes you have the
tendency · to try to do it all at once.
You try to make it all happen on one

ONE DAY ONLY!

c;entral Divi sion

C.1.EVELAN O..

Page4
Friday, May 14, 1999

l

"Co~on Ground" radio program beard for ~y
years on Sut1day inorning!WMPO with Mark Morrow
and Les HayJilan was discontinued earlier this year
with changes in ownership/management of WMPO.
Mark and Les have started two new ministries.
Pastor Les Hayman of tb,e Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Church bas a Sundar. morning 1V ministry called:
"Common Ground". This program can be seen on
ctiimnel n at 11 AM Sunday mofnings. Pastor Mark
Morrow of the First B~tist Church of Middleport
bas ·a tadio ministry called: "Holy Ground". This
program is on WBGS,on Sunday mornings at 8 AM.
WBGS is an AM station at 1030 on the dial. This program can als6 be heard by turning to cbannel19 on
your1V.

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Turn Your OLD Furniture &amp; Appl1.a1nces

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842 2nd Ave.

Gllllpollt, Oh

446-1405

�•

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I

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--·

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•

Friday1May 141 1999

Pomeroy • ~lddleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

_",~ By T~e ,Bend

- ..·-· ··..•..
~

p_.., Wtlllldt Clltom ofCltrlol

Apostolic

33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worship · 10t.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chordl ol J.,.. Cbrbt Apolloll&lt;
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Paitor: James Miller
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Churdlol Chrill

Assembly of God
Ubmy Alitmbly ol God

P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 P·JTI·

Baptist

K'ao Chvrdl or Cllrist
Wurship ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pas1or-Jcffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Mal'lntlba Baptist Cburth
Burlingham - 742-7606
Paslor: John Swanson
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Evening Service~ 6:00p.m.
Wed~sday Service- 7:30 p,. m.

Bearwallow JUd&amp;t Church or Christ
Pastor:Terry Stcwarl
Sunday Scho0\-9:30 o~. m _..
Wotsbip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

HolM Baptist C hurth (Southern)

Zion Churrlui Chrlst

Pastor: Jim Ditty
570 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Worship - ll a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (R1.143)
'Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m. ·

Rutland Flnt Baptist € burch

Tupptn Plein C hurch of ChriSt
Instrume nta l
'
Pastor: Terry Stewart
Worship Service· 9 a.m.
. Communiun · 10 a.m.
Sunday School -. 10: 15 a.m.
Youth-5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

8ndbury Cbun:h ol Christ

Frtt Will B~pUst Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service - 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

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

Pomeroy First Baptist

East Main St.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wo!lhlp. 10:30 a.m.

RuUand Chur&lt;ll or Cbrlst

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

Fint Southern Baptl~~ot
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne.sda~ Serv ices· 7:00p.m.

Bndlord Chun:h ofChilst
CoTner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
· Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p-8:00a. m.. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sr=rviccs - 7:00p.m.

First Baptist Chun:h

Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middlepon
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Worship . 10:15 a:m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Churcb of Christ
EvanJelist Mike Moore
Sun~ School- 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6:30p. m.
·• Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Racln.e Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:40 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services , 7:00p.m.

UnpvUie ChristiiD Church
Pastor-Tim lhlc
Sunday School • 9:30 a. m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsda~

Silver Run Ba ptiSt
Pastor: Bill i.,.1llli::

Servlce 7:30p.m.

Hemlock Grote Church

Sunday School • lOa.m.
Worship - lli.m., 6:3Q p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p .m.

.

5th and Main
Petor: AJ Hartson
Youth Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Pastor: Gene Zopp
.
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship -9:30a.m., 7 P· ~ ·

'Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : J~ N. Sayre
Sunday Scboo\-9:45 a.m.
Evening· 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Reed" lilt Chur&lt;h of Cbrlst
· Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30-a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday,6:30 p.m.

Betlllehem Baptise Chun:b
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Gene Monis
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Wor$11iP. · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p:m.
Wednesday Bible ~tudy ·6:00 p.m.

DeiiUr Churdl ol Cbrlot

Old Bethel Fret Wlli Boptlst Ch•n:b
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a: m.
Evening. 7:30p.m.
Thursday SerVices · _7:30

Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Norman Will, superintendent
Sunday worship· 10:30 a.m.

Chnstian Un1on
Hartford Chun:h oiChrlstln
Christian Union

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday S~hool-11 a.m. ,_

'Hillside Baptist Church
St·. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School -.10 a.m.
Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.

Wednesday Services -7:30p.m. ,

Vidory Baptist ladepeDClut
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- lOa.m., 7 p.m..
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pulor: Brice Uu
Sunday School • 9:4.5 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 6 p.m.
'Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

F1llh Baptist Church
Railroad Sl., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wo rship~ 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rutland Ch•n:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ·Services· 7 p.m.

Mt. Morioh Baptlot '

S!Jnday School· 9:30 a. m. ·
Worst1ip- 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00,p.m.

Congregational
Trlalty c•urdo .

Rutland Free WOI Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Se1'1t"icts • 7 p.m.

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Paator: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Episcopal
Greet Eptacopal Chun:h

Catholic
. Sacred Heart Cllhollc Church

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
· Pas10r: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 ~45-5 : 15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m.
Sur1. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m., '
Sun. Mass · 9:JO a.m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30a.m.

Church of Chrrst
Pomeroy Chlll'Ch or Cit riot
212 W. Main Sl.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

.Rooe of Slulrvn Hollneu Church

326'E, Main Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Rev, Ocborth Rankin, O ergy
Holy Eucharist lnd
Sunday Schoolll:OO a.m.
www. frognet. nell-deanery

Holiness
Coaamanlty Church ·
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
Sunday Worshii;10:00 a.m.
Sunday ServJce-7 p.m.

Forest itun
Putor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship- 9a.m.
·Thursday Services-6:30p.m.
Pastor: Vcrnaaaye Sullivan
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
,. Worship - '10:30 a.m.

Weds;tesdly Services • 1 p.m.

SlhenvUie Wonl of Faith

ApptUieCoeter
"full-Gospel Church"

Evening· 7 p.m.

Pint Grvvt Bible Hollnea C..rch

Pastor: Connie Fiares
Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Woohip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeNice · 7:30p.m.
Waleyaa I;Uble Hollnea Cburih
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
·
Pastor: Rev . Doug Cox
Sunda~ Worship - 9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'lce ·7:30p.m.
..

Hysell Run Hollnm Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Thursday Service ·7:30p.m.
Lao,.l Cllfl Fl'ft Mtthodlot Cburc:h
Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday School" 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:00 p,m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorpabed Clnirch of Jen.a Cbrist '
of Latter Day Salnta
Ponland-Raci ne Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer

Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.

Wofship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
The Church of Jesus
Chri1t·ofl.atter·Day Saints
St. Rt 160, 446-62~7 or 446-7486
Sunday Sc00oll0:20-ll a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood ll :OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, lsi Thurs. • 7 p.m.

••

773·5017

Scrvlce time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
, Wednesday 7 pffl

Pearl Clulpel

Faith Clulpel
923 S. Thin! Sl., Middleport
Pastor Ernie Wen,aerd
Sunday servic:e, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 1 p.m.

Pomeroy
Worship· 10:30 a:m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.

(;hrlatlan

Lutheran

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

Our Saviour Lulberan Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday S.chool- 10:00 a.m·.
Worship • 11 a.m.

· St. Paul Lutheran Cbu"'•

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday ScPool • 9:45 a.m.
Worship· ll a.m.

United Methodist
·Graltam Uolttd Methodist
7o30 p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun)

Worship . 9:30 a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd: Sun),
·Wednesday Service-7 :30p.m.

MI. OUve Uolttd Methodlot

Nordleut CIUJter

Allred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday 54;:hool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Cb..ter

Pastor: Sharon Hausman ·
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thu~ay Services· 7 p.m.

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

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Lona Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Retdsvlll~

Worship .- 9:30a.m.
SU nday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month · 7:30p.m. service

T•ppen PlalDI St Paal

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m. .
Tuesda.y Services· 7:30p.m.

Roc:k Sprtnp

Pastor: Keith Rader
· Sundliy School • 9: J5 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m.
Youth Fel\owshap, Sunday • 6 p.m.

Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Salem Cealer
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship • 10:15 a.m.

LongBottom
Pas1or: Ste\'e Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.ll)l.
Worship • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
·
Wedne!da~ • 7 P ·~ ·
Friday • fellowship service 7 p.m.

Fallh Foil Gooptl Chun:h

SaowvUie
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m •.

BelhODy

Pastor: Dewayne ~tutler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a. m.
..
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

·

Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
·
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Ente'l""H

Pastor: Kenh Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
'
vtorship • 9 a.m.

FlatwoodS ,
Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday S&lt;hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

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

~ol&lt;lna Ule Church
.500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence foreman,
Sunday School · 9:·30 a.m.
Worship·10:30am ·
Wednesday Service!i • 7 p.m:

Chun:h ol Jeaua Chrio~
.......toll&lt; Faith

1/4 mile pas! Fon..Meip on New lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
·
·Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wed~esday · 7:00 p.m.
Fnday·7;00 p.m.

Clifton TabOmade ChQn:b
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

, New Ute Victory Centtr
3773 Georees Creek. Road, Gallipolis, OH
'
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Full (loopel Church of lbe U•lnl Savior

Tbt BtlleYOn' Felo,..blp Mlalatry

Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst . Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

New Ume Rd., Rutlllld
Pastor: Rev. Mar&amp;aret ·J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 p.m.

Pentecostal

Harrllonvllle Commanlty Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
.

Carmei·Suuoa
' Carmel &amp; Bishan ·Rds. ·
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewafne Stutler
Sunday Schoo ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible Stud~ Wed. 7:00p.m.

Mlcldltport Coml1J111Jity Chun:h

Pentecostal Allembly ·
St. 1RI. 124, Racine·
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m.

515 Pearl St., MiddJeport

Mlddltport PentttOIItlil '
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Qark s ·aker
Sunday School· 10 a.m."
Eveni ng · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scf'\lice~ • 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson
· Sunday School10 a. m.
Evening~ 7:30p.m. ·,
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Momla1Slar
Pas1or: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 11 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m;

Faltb Valley Tabemade Chur&lt;tl
Bailey Run Road
Pulor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p. m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian HarknesS
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Presbytenan
Syro&lt;- Flnt United Prtsbyterian

. ·SyncuH Million
1411·Bridgemin St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor ..
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
·
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Radar
Pastor: Brian Harkneu
Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship ·llt.m.

P1stor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday Sf;hool- 10 a.m.
Worship -11 a. m.

Horrl,.nYIIle PmbyttriOD Church

Hutl Communlly Churc:b
Off Rt. 12&lt;1

Coolvlllelialttd Mtthodl•t Parittb

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9 :~5 a.m.

· Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School• 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Helen Kline
CoolvRie Church
Main &amp; Fifth St
Sunday School '. 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

Dy.,viUe Commua1!1 Cbtui:h

Middleport PI'Oibyttrion
Sunday S.chool • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:JO·a.m., 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Mont Clulpel Cbur&lt;tl

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Service•:
Sabbath S~hool ·~ p. m.
Worshtp • 3 p.m.

'&amp;ethel Cburcb

Township.Rd .• 468C
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m. ·
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Sntoth·Day Aclnotlat

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

Faith G.,pel Churdo

Hocklnaport Cburcb

Long Bottom ·
Sunday School· 9:30·a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Grand Street
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship·· II a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.·

United Brethren
ML Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Cburch
Tc~~:u Comml!nity off CR 82
Pastor: Robert S~nders
Sunday School·- 9:30a.m.

w,dnesday 7:30 P·'l'·

ML Olin Commualt)' Church
Pastor: Lawrence Buih ·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedneday Servke • 1 p.m.

Tordl Charc:h
Co. Rd. 63

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
W ors ll~p · 10:30 a:m.

.

.

Uolted Flltb Chur&lt;ll

Nazarene

Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass .
Putor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Middleport Chun:h of tile Nua,...
Pa!illn: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 11,m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Ful Goopel IJahtbouae

Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7:30 p..m.
Edt• United Brtthrnln c•rtsl
2 1/2 miles north of Re«hvil!e
·
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley ·
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship· 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth SC!rvicc ·7:30p.m.

3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
. Evening 7:30p.m.
1
Tuesday &amp; Thursday'- 7:30p.m. ·

RetdJYIIIe Fellowttblp

Cllun:h of lht Nturene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sund~y

Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Hoboon Chrlstlao Ftllowablp &lt;':hun:h

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

School -9:30a.m.

Synu:ute Church of the NUil'ftle
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

... ,

Spring . planting~ topic
of garden club meeting
Perennials, daffodils and daylilies were among the progra111 topics al.a recent meeti ng of the Rutland Garden 'Club held recenrly .at
the ho!Jie·of Dorotb'y Woo(Jaril: '
Joy Combs used as her topic, "Power,J;'erc!Walf n()ting that
they pf!en' put annual 10 shame in lhat !bey bloom from spring.to fall
and come back year after year. they also• come in an array of
heights, widths, and shapes. She lisled some of lhe mosl popl!,lar·
including Russian sage, blue geraniums, Dal'rnaliSII bell flowers;
sunflowers, chrysanthemums, phlox. and cornnowers.
She said they can be used as borders, in rock gardens, spilling
over a well, under roses, or near shrubs providing a variely of color
and beauty all year long.
·
As for daffodils, Woodard said, they bloom in the spring jusl as
!he' day lily· foliage begins. to;emerge as a lu{ted filler between the
daffodils bulbs. When the daffodils quite flowering and stan 10 die
b'ack, the' daylilies spring (ortti'~and cover the daffodils yellowing
foliage. Grown in landem, the two planrs furnish a single space
with two seasons of beauly, she reported.
.
Cloiine Blackwood talked about back yard nesting siles noting
that spring is the rime many birds start the process.of couning,.mating, and nesling, They like areas that are clean, and have adequate
protection from predators. Some of their favorite nesting areas are
in evergreens, shrubs, man-made boxes or in grasses.
After the nesting season is over, residents .should clean out the
bird house, .sterilize and paint 10 prevent parasires lice and mires
from inhabiting the place.
,
.
Pauline Atkins, presidenl, welcomed the group and Woodard
gave devotions using several 1readings. Fro roll call members bough!
a plant for e.change. ·
·
. ·
It wa~ reponed · that three members from the club anended rhe
. regional m~ling held ar .C he s le~. l! was noted that !here are now nine
garden clubs in Region II , and each region was given money for
planting a IJ'ee.
A regional director and olber officers were eleded to lake office
in lhe fall . An open meeting by rhe Rutland Friendly Gardeners was
announced and a reporl was given on !he spring regional meeling
held at Alhen s. Gardeners Day Our ·was announced for June 24 al
Dresden.
·
The traveling prize furni shed by Blackwood and Marcia Denison
was won by Eva Robson andAnn Webster. Joy Combs is to furnish
the May meeting traveling pri ze.
The him for lhe month deal! with rooling slem cuuings. Cut lhe
stems in water, add a yellow willow branch or rwo to the container
because it contains natural hormone !hal speeds the rooting process.
Plans which can be ~ tarted this was are coleus, petunia, jasmine, and
salvea.
·
·
Blackwood won the hoste s~ gift. Next meeting was set for May
3 1 at the Blackwood home.

·

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.L ~~";',: •· Briggs &amp; Stratton
-.:GENc:ES'= KEROSENE
Master Service Technician
HEATER REPAIR

Bill Quickel 992..e677

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local
ChUrCheS
Place an ad in this space

$49-2804

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy ·

HOME
EWING
Give unto tbe Lord
tbe glory due unto
Dignity and Service Always
bls name; worsbtp tbe
Established 1913
Lord In tbe beauty
992-2121
of bolt ness.
Pomeroy.
Psalm 29:2 106 Mulberry Ave.

•'

RUTLAND- Rulland Bicenlennial Commi!tee, Friday, 7 p.m. Civic
Cenrer. Anyone interested come.

LONG BOTIOM - A hymn
sing, Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bonom, 7 p.m Friday. Jim Blair and
the Grispelaires.

Calendar·-~----

preceded by work session. Monday.
6p.m.
MONDAY
RACINE - Planning meeti ng for
POMEROY - Meetin g of local
July 4 celebration, Monday,. 7 p.m. ·
crafters
interested in · county ·s
Racine firehouse .
broc hure , Monday. 6 lo 7 p.m. Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern County Common Pleas Counroom
Local School Board, regular session, in courthot:J.se, Pomeroy.

SATURDAY
· DEXTER - . Songfest a! the old
Dexter Church Saturday, 7 p.m.
Singers are invited to come and lake
.part in the service.

SUNDAY
ATHENS - A retirement PartY
will be held for Eugene Willoughby
at. tbe Hocking Valley .Sportsman
Club on Radford Road, Roure 50
· south of Athens to County Road 19.
POMEROY - Closed AA Big All Meigs County friends are invited
Book study meeting, non-smoking. lo altend.
Catholic Church, M4lberry Ave~ue.
POMEROY- Poplar Ridge Free
Will
Baptist Church, Sunday evenirig
POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers meeting Saturday, service with The 'Gabriels Quartet to
noon at Trinity Church. Speaker will sing. John Elswick, pastor, invites
public.
be phannacist Tammy Grueser.
.
.
LONG BOTIOM - Northeast
REEDSVILLE - Forked Run
Sportsman Club, annual fishing . Cluster United Methodist Churches
derby for children. Saturday, 9 a.m. will hold a hymn sing at the Long
Bouom United Methodist Church,
to noon. Lunch served.
. Sunday, 7 p.m.

Hear Ye!
Hear Ye!
The old orange and black
Is caiUng aU Yellow Jackets
back to the Hive on May 29th.
U you haven't made your
reservations, give us a buzz
at 99Z.S7SS or 992-5438·
1999 Alumni Officers

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

JERRY BIBBEE
...
..1- '

..... .

:It's the Dealer Behmd The Deal
T.lJat Ma.Jres The BEAL DJJf!!"e~~~

1999 FORD F350
Supercab 4x4, Turbo diesel, auto, all power trailer tow, camper
pkg, on-line conversion

.•.

Klnpbury Road

Putor: Oydc Hendenon

Bald Knob, Qtl Co. Rd. 31

Puior: Rev. Roae~ Willford.
~unday Sch~l· 9:30a.m.
Worshtp· 1 p.m . .

Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30a.m.

~

Rud.nd Church or the Nazarene
Pasion Rev. SamUel W. Basye
SundaY School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

1997 LINCOLN.MARK VIII

1997 FORD EXPEDITION 4X4

White'• C~opel Weoleyon

Wo:rship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednc5day Services • 7 p.m.

. Coolville Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday Servlt:O ·1 p.m.

VB, auto, Climate Control, all power equipment,

XLT, 5.4L VB, auto, A/C, titt, cruise, all power, 3rd seat, low miles

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Folrvlew Bible Cburdl
l.ellrt, W.Vo. Rt I

Pallor: Brian May
Sunday Sehoul , 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip •. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7:00p.m.

Pottlud Flnt Chur&lt;tl of theN.......
Putor: Mark Matson
Sunday Scllool·10:30 a.m.
Mornina Worship · 1f:1~ a.m.
Sunday Service- 6.p.m.
Wednesday Scr.'ices • 7 p.m.

'

'Faldt Ftollowablp c.-de for Cbrlot
Putor: Rev. Fraaklln Dicken•
Service: Fridoy, 7 p.m.

.. "-""'-• . •• .

The·Racine

264 SOuth Second kle.•Middleport, UH4571101

7ol0-992-5 141

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Bruce R. Flshor • DI(8C!or

992-5432

590 Elllt Main Stroot .• Pomoroy, OH 45769

Advertise your
PHARMACY~ ·buslneaa each week
. We Fili Dottelts''
,
In this space
. Prescriptions . . . .
and support l.ocal
992·2955
Pomeroy

7oi0-~·5-M4

._ _

FUNERAL HOME
"We accept Preneed Tramfero"

Lundy Brown
Director

cussion.

detail.
Also. I try to shu! up once m a
while. It 's called conversation. I
talk, you talk . I talk, you ralk . In
between, there is some lislening.
Wilhoul listening, there can be no
(;:Onversalion.
You laugh at yourself more. Be
grateful you can. Some people can't
If you are unable !O ' find the humor
in yourself, chances are, you won't
find il anywhere else.
The alternative is anger and
despair. As Mary Peu ibone Poole .
once rem1nded us, "He who laughs;
lasts." -- L.L.F.. OCEAN PARK,
WASH.
.
DEAR L.L.F.: I don'l know
when I've seen so much wisdom
packed into,so few y.oords.

Fntdom Gooptl Mlaalooa ·

Cheoter Chun:h of'the Nuartllt

ll2o1200

RUTLAND
Bicentennial
Commiuee meeting, 7 p.m. , Civic
Center.

Soliday S&lt;hool • 9:30 o.m.
W011hlp Service 10:30 !.m.
:No Sunday or Wedn.....y Nlaht Servit:Os

PomtroJ Church of the Naur'!ae
Pascor: Rev, Lloyd D. Grimm,Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

SWISHER ~

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Women.'s AA,
1607 Nye Ave., Pomeroy, open dis-

cartet. lnterdenomlulloul Cburdl

'Featuring .Kentucky Fn9d Chicken'.

BrOgan-Warner

Community

XLT, 4x4, 5.4L VB, auto, front &amp; rear A/C, M,
cruise, all power trailer tow ell).

Crow's Family Restaurant Jlfisqer Jlf umral ~ome

.

when lunch was served and ate on
her lap with her elbow~ in fronl of
my husband'~ face.
Was ir uncomfortable for us? You
note.
can be ~ure it was. In addition !o the
While flying home, our sea! mate discomfon. it would • have been
lurned out 10 be an e&lt;tremely heavy impossible for U~ !O leave our seals
WOman Who should have had IWO quickly in case of an emergency.
~eats in coach or one in first class.
After liftoff, we complained 10
This woman must have weighed the flight anendant, who said there
over 350 pounds and could nol fit was nothing she could do about it
ihto her aisle seat withoul raising rhe since every · seat was occupied. The
ann rest. She took up pan of my hus- airline's customer service also
band's seat, and .he was pushed pari· lurned a deaf ear. saying it is again~t
way inlo mi[\e.
the law., to , discriminate again&amp;~ fat
·
She could nor ·put rhe tray down people.

however, are expensive. They can go and find it later under I he sofa.
firs! class, which is roomier, or buy
You slip your wallet in your
two· coach class sears. Or they can purse, and the next morning, itis on
ask to be put on a later nigh! on lhe front seat of your car.
which there is more space and the ' You can't imagine how these
possibility of a vacanl seat.
strange lhings occur. Relax, lhey are
Dear Ann Landers: By the year all part of lhe twilight zone of aging:
2030, de.mographers say 69 million
You do al01 of arithmetic. "Let'~
of us will' be 65 .or older, nearly dou- see, he died, and he was ·- and I ~m
ble the number currently rhat age. ·four years younger; so, !hal means
Nine millioh will Pe 8~ or older; · she is --and I'm-· no way ' Nor pos·
compared w!rh 4 million today. Bul sible."
I say you are as 9ld as you feel.
exactly who is "old"? Here is the
way I see it:
The numbers don'l mean anyrhing.
You Know '(ou're Old When :
If you slart doing arilhmelic, you
The magic begins. You put your will never risk anything again ,
keys on rhe dresser, and they myste- .. You develop TMI (Too Much
nously wind up on lop of lhe
Information). A sure sign of old age.
fridge.
I remind myself thai every happenYou lay the remote on the TV
ing need nor be reported in endless

1999 FORD EXPEDITION

ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR c ·HOIC.E

·INSURANCE

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I returned 10 Den vet last week
after visiling· family in Florida. The
trip was great, but il ended on a sour

.'

.

Friday, May 14, 1999

Meanwhile, our needs were certainly not met. We felt discriminated
against since we were unable 10 use
tbe entire space for which we had
paid.
Don't you agree !hal obese people who cannot afford a roomier first
class seal should be required to pur~hase two seats so normal-sized passengers can have !he comfortable
flighl lo· which they are enlitled?
DISCRIMINATED AGAINST IN
DENVER
DEAR DENVER1 I sympathize
wilh your complaints -- !hey are
valid but please be aware that obese
people who fly are equally uncomfortable about inconveniencing olh·
ers. I feel sorry for them .
The options for obese people;

South Bethel New. Tutament
Silver Ridge
Pulor: Robert Barber
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship . 10:1 0 a.m., 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pas1or: Rev. Herbert Grate

Centnl cr ......

Ftllow•blp Ctottr

Salem St., RUtland
Putor: Robert E. Musser
Sundily Sdlool • 10 a.m.
. Worship ·ll :lS a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service~ 7 p.m.

EatLetort

St Jobn Lutheran Chlin:h

Albury (SyncUH)

Sunday S...lces: 10 Lm. .t 6 p.m.

Pastors John &amp;: Patty Wade
603 Scoond Ave. Mason

Page7

'

Worship 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Service- 7:3:0 p.m.

MlaenTillt
Pastor: Chad Emrick:
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m .

.,

•

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m:

Putors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook

Sunday School · 9a.m.
Wor1hip- 10 a.m.

1/2 mile ofl Rl. 325

o...- Mlolotriot
47439 Relbtl Rd., Chester

llanat

'

·

CaiYAI')' Blblt Cb•r&lt;tl

Ot11er CIHirches

Huth (Middltport)

L.eadinS; Creek .Rd., Rutllnd
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship .7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer rne:tting· 7 p.m .

Melp Coopendn Parish

O.J. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship -11 a.m.
Wedne!iday Services· 7 p.m.

Antiquity BaptlJt

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev . Vietor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship ~ ll a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Church of God

Chur&lt;h ol God ol Prophecy .

Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Poster: Rev. Gilben.Craig, Jr.
Su nday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - l 0:45 a.m.

Calvll')' Ptlarim Clulpel

ML Morlob Cb.r&lt;to of God

Apple and Second S!s.
Putor: Rev. David Russell
·Sunday School and Worship· 10 a.m.
•Evening Services· 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m. ,

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship. l l a.m.

Pastor: Or. J.D. Young
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Suncby worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
· Wednesday prayer service • 7 p.m.

Off 124 bohlnd Wilkesville
·Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Worship -9:30a.m .. 7:30p.m. ·

Syracuse First Chortb of God

Forest Run Baptist

-•Uie Hoi- CltiU'da
310S7 Stale Route 325, Lanpvlle

•

The Daily Sentinel

.

Regan Brown
174

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE ·
992·7075
112 North Second Ave.
'
Oh

M•is• County~ Olde11 Flor&amp;.t

-

111111111 , Ill),
740·992·2644
740-992-6298
!Ar u. s..d y..,, ~,. "'·~

Searching for a
local church?
Check the Sentinel
every Friday!

-'"'

Depatlment.cQ~i~lj· .. ;
invites you to ~the&amp; :~. · ·
open-house located ·.:. ·_·
•

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.,.

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••

1996 FORD EXPLORER 4X4

Eddi" Bauer Pkg, V6, auto, climate control, all power eq~1iprrrent
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5th. &amp; , ~»eairoh : .

May 16th fro~· t-4 P.~~.
Brie( cereo;tony tQ. ...
begin ~t . l. ~.m~
•

\,

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Phone
•
7 40-992-2196
.,

46i S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

~-1•--~"--------~--~----~~~~---------h~-----------!'------------~------~----~----------------~.~-~-

�- -•
Page

•

8 • The Dally $entlnel

Friday, May

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

9

!he Dally Sentinel • Page

14, 19~9.

Auction

80

and FIN Martcet
8JU Moodiopough Aucttonoortno.
Complete Aucttonurlng S.rvlc·

11. Consignment auct loft- ' Mih "

~~~~ftft~ft~~~~~~~&amp;~D~h~~~u~,.~lst~.~~-"~u-s,~lnc~

ft J.D. CONSftiUCftON t:l
ft G New Homes &amp; Remodeling
;...

Why Should We
Go To Church
Attending churth on a regular basis can
be a blessed and worthwhile experience,
and many people 1..1the presence of the
Holy Spirit as tile)' warship and pray to

~

f;j

and time consuming.

GRADUATES- Rosanne McDaniel, fo.r merly of Pomeroy, graduated May 8 from the Jane Addams College of Social Work at the~nl­
versity of Illinois in Chicago with a masters of social work degree.
Attending were-her parents, Bill and Carolyn McDaniel of Pomeroy.
Ms. Mcl)aniel i~ a graduate of Meigs High School and Ohio Univer- ·
sity. She is n"'.rried to Sean O'Malley of Chicago.

Everyone Is different. and therefore we
all n·eed to look into our hearts to find our
own unique relationship with Cod and
wl'lat we should do to honor our hi'!avenly '
Father. It is so imporont for parents to
attend and participate In a religious service
on a regular basis because it sets a good
eXilmple for their children. and teaches
them to know and love God.
Uke any wortllwhl~ activity. the benefit&gt;
· we receive from going to church are
dependent upon how much we are
Involved and participate In the ceremooy. It Is on ly right that we should
conti nually recommit oUr lives to God and thank Him for the many
bJessirigs He bestOws upon us and our family.

Mother-daughter banquet held
•

. WINNER - Hoola, the drug-free hippo of Health Recovery SerVIces, Inc. conducted a drug-free coloring contest in Salem Center's
fifth grade class. !"ntries were judged by the Meigs High School
teen · Institute members. Winner was Christine Neal. She was pre~ented a DARE t-shirt sponsored by the DARE officer· Mony Wood
and DARE pencil holder. Michelle Kennedy as Hoola Hippo is pictured with the wj nner and Julie Wandling, progra111 special with
Health Recovery · Services. Winner of the contest at Pomeroy Elementar)' was Miranda Young.
SON BORN - Joe and Jamie
.Humphrey,
Pomeroy,
are
announcing the birth of their
third. child, a son, Luke Josiah, born April 8 at Holzer Medical Center.
•
The infant weighed seven
pounds, seven ounces and
was 21 inch'es long.
· Maternal grandparents are
James and Betty Acree and
the paternal grandparents are
Gene and Pat Humphrey, all of
Pomeroy. .
Paternal great-grandmother
is Myrtle Grover, Pomeroy,
and . materoal great-grandmother Is Mae Roach of West
Columbia.
·
'
The Humphreys also have a
daughter, Kandis, 11, and a
son, Joe 10.
LUKE JOSIAH HUMPHREY

'

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' Ttllles, Tags, Tile Fees txtrl. Aebale lr(IJded " sale price t~new vtNcie bled where a~. "On 11JP1MC1 credl. On llieded inodela.
Prices Good May i41h l1ru May 161h. Not "''J(lllSibbe b iypOgllphlc:al

o

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital
is currently accepting
application/resumes' for
t~e following position:

30

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST467
STAR BURST
$900.00
$50.00 OR MORE

C/0 Personnel
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

· Fax (304) 675·6975.
AA/EOE

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM.THERE

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
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BEECH GROVE
. ROAD

No Credit • Slow Credh • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

.

$12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

No Embarra11ment ...
You're Treated whh Respect!

~·

. HOWARD
YOUNG'S
EXCAVATING CO. · · CARPENTER SERVICE

ln .... .
1besday. No lltp
Wcdn~y ·Men's League
1bunday • Mixed League
St~rtllt n.., 7:10 P.M.

u

OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAY. MAY 16TH

fT,

lfepJ!nl

g

•Roornddlllond Rtmaclttlng
•New Gll'lgtl
•Eieclrtcll l Plumbing
•Roofing &amp;Guttm .
•VInyl Siding l Ptlnllng
•Pilla a Parch Dtc:U
FIN EIIIIIIIIN
V.C. YOUNG Ill
81M2ts

BuUdo•er &amp; Backhoe
Se,.,ice•
Houle &amp; Trailer Site•
land Clearing &amp;
.
Grading
Septic Sy•le,.. &amp;
Ulililie•

Medical Assistant, Trained, Quick,
· Diligent Intelligent, and Reliable. ·

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. Local

I

Practice In Athens. Immediate Full

I'

Ao6flng • Aepalre

,We Deliver

Time Qpenlng, Competitive Salary
and Benefits.
·

:

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

WICKS
HAOLIHGIHC.

Needed for a busy Internal Medicine

2:00 ·5:00PM

$

(740)992•3131

Real Eatatir General -,.
{

•Coatings •

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, FiU Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,

•to The Dally Sentinel
Box 729-n
Pomero , Ohio 45769
P.O.

Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing
Fr88 Estimates

. Mulch ; Top Soil

Joseph Jacks .

(Low Rates)

.. '

740·992·2061

74o-992-3470

Veterans Memorial Hospital

,UNBEUEVABLE VIEW- Sitting atop Riverview Drive .is this one story home that.
has a sunken living room with a big beautiful white stona fireplace and glass all the
w_ay to the top of the cathedral ceiling. Has 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room;.
dintng area, and a beautiful kitchen . There is lots of storage, a 2 car garage, and a
security system.
·
·
·
A MUST SEE AT $199,1100.00

DOiTIE TURNER REALTY
205 .N. 2ND. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

(740) 992·2886

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

·B,I~,SELl BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Addhlons
• Ropltng

.

.,

HO

SSS~ake

Lonely? Call Tonight! t-900-2264862 , Ext. 1657 . $2.99 per. min.
Must be 18 yrs. Serv·U (619)645·

8434.

TREE AND STUM!'
REMOV~

KEITIIMYERS

(740) 992-~104 ' Ext. 213

FREE ESTIMATES

E!=O

814·992·7843

LoftBbottom, OhiD

(No Sunda~ Callsl

740) 985-3677
'

·.

9:00-5:30.

on

CONCRETE

(304)675-6494.

CONNECTION

wtth Childreni

Kinens, also

Mother cat ,
disposition! {740)-388-9824

QUIJ/ily Driveways,

JEFF $TETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218 ·
EMAIL:

Sidewalks, Patios ·
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

STETHEM@EUREIIANET.COM .

FREE ESTI/IAATES
38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

.

Free lor Removal . Garden Tiller,
Lawn Mowe r Body. Call After
4PM. (3041675-2718.
Purrfeclly Healthy 5 Month Kit ·
tens. Outside Durin g Day, liner
Trained! Nlte, To Good Homes.

740-24S.5104.
740-256·6703.
Three Adorabkt KIMens with Long
Hair. 6 Weeks Old , 2 Black&amp;
Wh ite. 1 Ye llow , Uttar-Trai ned .

(304Jn3·5787.

relieve a

Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progre.-lve top line.

;New Homes
•Garagea
• CompIete
Remodeling
Stop ·&amp; Compare ,
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473·

:

L.................~7~~· ' ~~~U~C~-~~~~~50~1t~M=MM~

I

Now Open For
Sprlnlf Seaoon

Bo Pold In A-...

Df!DUNE: 2:00p.m.
.... cloy bol&lt;n tho lid

Ia to nm. Sundly
edtuon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. lllondow lldiUon
• tO:OO a.m. S.turdoy.
Furniture, Clothing And -AiisOrted
Items. Teens Run Road. One Mile
Off Route 7. Starts Monday 5/10/
99 Thru Saturday. ·
Off Lake Dr ive In Rio Grande,
'Saturday. 5/15, 9•5 . King Size
Bed , Saxopho ne, Girls ' + Boys'

Clothes. Bicydes. TO'/S. Etc.

Yard Sale , Rain Or Shine! •es7
State Ate 850 . May 13,14.15, 9:00

All

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
AgrlcuHural Lime,
Umiatone • Gravel ·
Dirt • Sind

SYRACUSE

• 985 4422 .

H2•1776

Cheater, Ohio
TFN

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

Ciass80TR:
Team Straight Truck. Late Mod;l
Frtlghtliners With SIMpers . Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements,
BOO Mile Radius, Home Deliver-

Ies.

•

Both Posllions:
Aneast 25 Years Old
Atleast 2 Years Experience
Good MVR
Week~

Pay

Qak Hill Communt~ Mi!diCat Cen-

nme

cal Center. Must be AAAT eertt·
tied. Ohio License required . If 1~­
terested , please ltnd resume to:
Qatc Hill Community Mldk:ai Cell·
tar. Attention : Brenda McKenzie,
350 Charlotte Avenue , Oak Hill,

.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

•

Single Driver, Late Mode l KM·
worths With ~eefers . West Coni
Carrier.

Gallipolis

lli Yo.U S.leiMuot

All Ftata $8.110
Hanging BaSkets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
15.75 &amp; Up .
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden ·
Buckeye Card
Open
9·5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

'ClaSS AOTR:

ter Full·
and PRN Aadlotogtcai Technologla\ poS itions ....au-

·?

C.mftiwMI

DRIVING PO&amp;mONS
AVAILABLE:

Yard Sale

6 -Sa te AT 7s . Righi Detore Clay
Sch ool on Ri ght. Baby. Todd ler
Clothes, Household hems. Satur·
day On~t 9:()().1

Complete Una Of
Vtgetable &amp;Bedding Plants
8~

CosmetolOgist Needed, Business
Growing , Guaranteed. Wagb
Plus More, 74Q.446.7267

For More Information Call BOD -'37--87&amp;4. Hrs. 8:XI A.M. ·5 P.M. •

l,lrday &amp; · Sunde~. 111 7 Theodora
Ave. Big Selection- Great Prices!

i

Own Hrs. S25K ·SBOKI Yr. 1-800·
47&amp;8653 X 7n7, www .1cwju:am

Fou nd : German shepherd pup ,
approK. 6 monlhs old, SA 681 v i·
c!niry, can 740-992-6282.

3 Family Yard Sale, Friday &amp; Sat-

sao.oo

74[).992·2508 alter 5pm.

Health 11'\Sl.lranca Avallable

&amp; VIcinity

Pomeroy Eagles .

Babysmer needed in my h~. 4
days pe r week , 9am·5pm. Call

Work Well Wlth Thi f'IJt)Jtc

'

William Sa&amp;anek, Auorney At Law
(7 40) 592:-5025 Athens, Ohio

Babysi tte r Needed Fo r • Year .
O ld, Prefer In My Home. Trana portatlon &amp; References Required .

60 Lost and Found

70

For Information Regardiog Bankrupt cy contact :

AVON! All Areas! To Bur or Sell.
Slllrtey Spe.... 304-$75-1429.

·

Small Pomeranian Chow Mix, Red,

debtor orfinancial obligation• and arrange a fair
distribution of aooets. Debtors in bankrup1cy may
keep "exempt" property for his or her personal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothes \ and
household goods.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

sweet

AKC English Sauer. No PaPers .
10 Months Old, To A Good
Home, 740-245-5697.

Equipment Cleaned &amp; Oegreased

45n9.

Computer Uaera Needed. Work

2 year old tem~le Hima!,ayan
Siah1eu House cat. Not Good

'Trucks - tractor
Trailer~ - decks - driveways

Applications For life Guard Posi·
tion&amp; At London Po ol For The
1999 Swl;nmtng Season .l.rt BeIng Accepted . Submit applllcali9ns In W!lling , With Training
And Experience, To J~nice Zwlll•
lng, Clerk ·Treasurer. At The Syr·
acuse Municipal Building Or Mall
To P.O. Bo• 266 , Syracuse, OH

740-367-7120

Giveaway

2 Eight Week Old Female Pup·
pies. German Sheppard &amp; Weimaraner, To GoQC . Home .

TRI·STATE MOBILE
POWER WASH

YOUR

HUIIARD'S
IIIINIOUSI

COMMERCIAL and miDIIIIIAL

740-592-1842
Qua lity clothing and household
It ems . St .OOd bag sale every
Thursday. Monday ttuu Saturday

40

Applications a re being accepted
for Home Health Aldea . ~pplic ·
anta -should have a high sch901
diploma or G.E.O., reliable trans·
portatlon, telephone In the home
and willing to work weekends I
holidays . Must be motivated and
lle•lble. Experience In pro.,.idlng
direct care or working with o!d+r
adults a plus. Will train . State
tested nurs ing ass istants en·
cour.aged to apply. Applications
are available at the Meigs Multi·
purpose Santor Cante~. Mubeny
Heights , PomerO)', Ohio . An EOE

Empioyor.

30 Announcements

-Locust Ridge Tree Farm .

Monty!$$$ Work At

Box 875, Ripley, WV 25271 .

Personals

No Hunting or Trespassing

Help Wanted

Home · Anemb le Producta .
Easy Wark , Excellent Par. Fret ·
Details! send S.A.S.E. To: Narl
Homeowrker's ~uoclet l on , P.O .

4-6 week old Beautiful long hair

l•eludfl

115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ·
A69 bed not-for-profit rural hospital Is seeking
an Internal .Medicine o~ Family . Practice
Physician to develop a practice In a Rural
HeaHh Clinic and a hospital facility loca!ed in
beautiful Southeastern .Ohio.
Salary and benefits commensurate . with
position.
Fodurther Information, please contact

SERVICES

BOO-ROMANCE. extension 9681 .

Phone:
740-256-6147

.

110 Help Wanted
Real Estate General

EMPLOYMENT

Slafl Da1 1ng Tonighti Have tun
· playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1•

Call For Free Estimates ·

BAIKRU..,.CY c~n

7'7M300

3/lt/99 TF~

005

•Paving
• Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•f'rivate
•Patching
•Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing . •Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

740-742-8608

Lanea

740-742·2138

Want To Sell Your Stuff? Call ~lv·
ers ide Auct1on And L., Ul Sllllt

ANNOUNCEMENTS

4Expaf6~~£;~ ~~¥l~~y On~

CREDrr PROBLEMS
WORRYIIDII!

Jo.e N. Sayre

Produce Workers Needed
740-843-~280 daytime
740-949•2439 &lt;&gt;\loninru&gt;l"'"

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

Jerry L. Preece
Crown Ci OH 45623

$550.00 Year

Reasonable Rates

SIGN-ON BONUS
INCLUDED

resumes' to:
PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL ·

FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, POMEROY
IS NOWLOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

•um!ller L. . .ue
· Betlna 1at Week .

STAFF NURSES
Various specialties and
shifts available.
Full-time and part-time
employment.
Competitive wages ~nd
benefits.
Please apply or send

-'lllke the pain,out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Clean La te Model Cer·l . Or .
Trucks, 1990 Models 0~ Newlr.
Smith Bulclt Pontiac, 1900 El-'·
ern Avenue . Ga.Hipolli.

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athen&amp;

QUALITl'WINDOW SYSTEMS

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Tye ·Brinager &amp; Sons

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

.

Linda's Painting

Masoa ~liD&amp;

2!!26.

Slug~ Shot
Matches

'

Call 985·3831
.

..

BINGO

Antiques, top prices paid . ~ lvei·
ln e AnliCjues, Pomeroy, OhiO,
A us&amp; Moore owner, 7•0·99:il·

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
· GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00PM

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray
•Vegetables •Corn
•Soybeans -

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

Announcements

· M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 1e1 Socond
A...nue. GaUlpojia, 7-2142.

ForYoo, 740-258-698jl.

,.....,-0111

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

Wanted to Buy

Ab&amp;OIUII Tog Dollar : All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins, Proo faell ,
Diamonda, Ant ique Jewelry, GOfd
Rings, Pre-1 930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. A,cquiiitions Jtwelql

. For Free
Program Guide
CaU 992-2727

Coo/VII~; OH 45723

1-740-667-3083
1-740·667-3316

90

Local
Television

'
At GRS our lnuiMP
is

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
~allabury Townalllp will
meat at tlle:rownallip Hallin
Rockaprl~gs on May 2t,
1999 at 6:30 PM, to open
bids on hazard mitigation
and to addraaa any other
matter brought beloro the
board of trulleea.
(5) 14 lTC

Wedemeyer' s Auction Service •

Gallipojis, Ohio 740-379-2720.

TV27

1-800-967-4774

740-985-4180

Sruan ReevB•

Crown City, 740-2S&amp;,!m89

WJOS

Dealers.
IOOIJ St. Rt. i Scuth

Painting

Licensed

RIVEIISIOE AUCTION IAIIN

992·5455

949-1701 .

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

; All Makes Tractor &amp;
· Equipment Parts
•'
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

. .rviCe .

up to 8 ton

Phone (740) 593-6671

owned company with over 28 yrs
leJiperlelice has now ulended our coverage area lo
indude all of Gallia Co. and portions of Meigs,
Vinton &amp; Lawrence counties.

'

Gutters .

Company,

Every Saturday Night 7 P.M.,

Light Hauling

local~

DIPOYSAG
. ·PUt$ .

Howard L Wrltesel

· REMEMBER WE HAVE MOVED back to our Raei11e locatio11.

FISHING DERB)'
May 23rd, 7 cnn llll1aon

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

Auction

Pe1r1on

166,0hio &amp; Wilt Vifginlo, 30 ..
n:H7e5 er 304-n:J-5«7.

Compost

General R•fuse Service

-Complete Auto Seroice-

auction

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

To The Residents
of
·Gallia Countyl

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

·Grand Opening Of Hew Garden Center: Jane 5

Racine.Gun Club

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

'

DRIVEWAY STONE

Rtck

full lime aucuonltr, eoml)lttl

Landscape Material,

Sales Representative
Larry Schey

740-949-2217

I
I

2823.

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel

Racine, Ohio 45n1

I

Don'l Need A B~ One
CaU A LUtk One

•••• C.lllllll
. . . . . . . .clzllsl,

40 742-8888

29670 Bashan Road

Fo~r--"Velvef Harrurwr"
52954 State Rt . 124
Racine, Ohio
• Phone: 740-843-5572

. ALL GREENHOUSES OPEN TO THE PUBUC

30 Announcements

Jeremy .L. Roush

Dave's Garage

Fresh supply of bedding p1ants and vegetables coming on .
Cucumber, squash, cantaloupe, &amp; watermelon plants are up! I
Vine Ripened Tomatoes-Red or While New Potatoes

~~~

P.ower · Washing

742•1701 .

Now: $14.00
*Swset Potato Plants Arriving noon on Thursday
New sbipm~nt of shrubs &amp; perennials

-9 92-2156

Over 40 yra experience

Mon- Frl a:30 _ s:oo

li'!i

HILL'S

15 Yra. E"perience

Special of the week: Azaleas Reg: $19.99 ·

~

............... Brlcll
PalloC..tnctloll

;...

Marty's

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

KAREN'S GREENHOUSES
8
·COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER

News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

f:j

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

Truck seats, car seats; headliners,
truck tarpS, convertible &amp; vinyl tOpS,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
. boat covers, carpets, etC.

ftCiftt:ll'~~~~~~~~

Let us not_give. up the habit of meeting together, as some a~ doing.
Instead. let us encourage o~ another all the more.

The
Laurel
Cliff
Free man, Cindy Johnston , Jean
Mclhod isl Church held its [\llnual Wri ght , Pam and Erin Glaze, JanM oth er-Dau ghter Banqucl l as t ice Haggy, Deanna and Drewiyn
week a l rhc c hurc h sm.:ia l roo m .
Lemley, Alicia a~d Brandon Fyffe,
Special mu sic was given by Judy Wolfe; -Donn a Gilmore,
Bell y Sayre who sang " M y Moth- Cindy and Carissa Wolfe. Joyce
er 's Old Bibl e I s True". Praye r ·and S1acy Hy sell , Rh onda and .
~as give n by Kathy Pullin s. Spc Kayanna Sayre, Dreama Braley,
dal speaker for the ev ening was Mar y Bentz and M ary .Braley:
Jan ,Swigger.'.
Door .prizes were won by Aladine Baker, Eula Odegard , Sue
Pullin s, Jan Swiggcr. Jessica ·.
1
Wri ght and Kay Clark. Others ·
allending besi de th ose named
above were Clara Jane Pullins,
Brenda and Kim Haggy, Marie
Weaver, Sharon Smith, Katie and
Katelyn Hy se ll , ~ara h Curry,
Martha .Hall , Wanda ana Becky
Eblin, Joyce Haggy, Shirley
Meadows, Jean Norton, Linda and .
Bo-Dara Powell , Betty L. Curf-

arages, ·Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding liJ.!.t:
"Speciali~ing /11 Log Hom~•"
A
Comm er ci al &amp; Residenliol
lili!J

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

our Heavenly Father. However. foro~ .
going to ctlurch may ~mply seem t&gt;oring

Rutland, Ohio

Street , Middl eport. Thursdtya.
Oh io Lic tnn 17813. 7•0·118·

Yon! Slltl Mull Bo Paid in

Advance. Dod line: 1:OOpm the
dey before the ed Ia to run,

Sunday I

Monday odlllon-

I:OOpmF-,.

Pt. Plea11nt
&amp; Vicinity
May 1•th, 15th. Gallipolis Ftrry
Across ham Beale School. Lots

ol E&gt;'lf'/lhlng. 8 :CIOam.-3:~m.

On Chestnut Aldg• Road, June·
tlon ol State Route 2 &amp; 87. MI .
Ano,wv. ~

t3,1 4,15.

Sol. .8·?, I 1/4 MliOS cut Jtrrtcho
Road . • Family. Hulch 6Ttble ,

Cto,...s. Waterted. Mi&amp;c .

able at

Oak

Hili Community Mttdl·

Oh. 45656. EOE

Full·tlme Truett Orl\llr Needed tOr
Reta il Business . Call: Carollrta
Lumber &amp; Supply Co. (304 )67S 1160, or bring resume In at: 3{2

Si•lh SlrHI. Pt. Pleasant, WV.

•

General 6111ce, Part~Time As
Needed, CLAt471 . cJaGall lpolts
Dally Tribune, 825 Th ird Avenut• .

Gaiiipojts, OH 45631 .
Need 7 Ladle&amp;
446-3358.

To

Sell AVon, 740-

Now Hiring A Full -Time Ca~
Oacorator . Possible 30 ·35 Hca
Per WeekJ Day Shift Only, Caltl
Decorating E.Kperlence Required

Wlth Aesumo: Call GaHipoiia Dally

Ouoen. 740-446-3278.
Nur se Aide Tra!nlr'!g Classes:
Come Jokl Our·Team That Makes
A Differen ce . We Art Offer ing
Nurse Aide .Training Classes Q'n
Slte At Scenic Hills Nursing Ceater. If You Haw Prt.,.lously Com·
pl ated An Appl ication Plean

Como ~nd APPlY Again

Or

Con-

tact Pam Caldwell, 8 :30 "A.M. to
• :30 P.M . Wednesday lhru Frl·

day At 740-«6·71!50.
oa~ Hlll Commun~

Medtcol Coil-

tar Full· Time and Pan· Tirn1 RIO·
lsterld Nurst . Licensed Practk:al
Nurse, and .State Ttlltd Nurlt
Aide pos l~lons avallabll at 0~~ ­
HIII Community Medical Cantil,
Ohio Ltc.n11r required, If lnttr•
tsted, pltue ltnd rtlumt to:

oak

Hilt Community - . 1 ~

tar, Al1entlon: Brenda-McKen11t,

350 Chartollo ~vonuo, Ook Hill,
Oh. 4!1856 EOE
,•
OVOrtnook Contir. 333 Pogo 81.1
Middleport , tlaa part ume po~
tiona for LPN's .available tor aO

shiho &amp; -•ndo, onyono lnllr'
oStad pteaso stop tty &amp; 1111 aut on
oppllcatton. E.O.E.

•.

�•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, May ·14, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 14, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

I

ALLEYOOP

..

NEA Cro88word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

-------------------------------------------------------".••.
In one
ACROSS
•
4t Proltt on •

1 Whiten

bank IICCI

7 Ouldoor12-muddy

42 Full-ftgured

44 Dyllll!ll18
al18matlve
14 Actrao llacall 45 T1f111801chla,
13~to

Immediate

Openings

For

STNA'&amp;, LPN'S, RADIOLOGY
TECH'S. AES"tAURANT MAN·
AOEAS, CALL 74o.44~1118, Of
Stop By 995 Jackson Ptke Suite
GallpOI~

201

Jewelry Sales Retell Sal•s and
Computer Experience Required
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry 151
Second Ave Gallipolis Apply
Monday llvu Friday
Keebler Co 1s now accepting
resumes tor the position of Wee
kend Merchandiser Grocery ex.
parlance Pf&amp;lerred Sand resume
to Keebler Co 3959 Beech
wood Ona wv 25545

E &amp; S Lawn Service OtS!Qn lm·
plementation
and Service
Avatlable for Spring Clean up
ferttllztng and planttng Free estl

mates Satisfaction guaranteed

Greg Milhoan 3041675 4628
Electric Maintenan ce Service
W•rlng Breaker Boxes, light F•~~:­
ture Heating Sy&amp;tems and Re

modeing (740)441 1401
Et1m Home care tor elde•ty or
handicapped Everything fur·
nlshed except doctor and medl
CI08 call7~992-3360

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your k&gt;gs to the mtft just call

30&lt;675-1957

For Sale By Owner W•tl Main·
talned 4BR Bllevel, 3BA , Large
f:amtlyRoom w/Fireplace Living
room Kitchen (All Appliances
Slay), OlnlngRoom, Utility Room
Gentral Air/Heal Pump Large Lot
at corner ol Belle &amp; sandHill 3 5
miles out 2 Car Attached Ga

rage aeparate gara.ge 26X60
3doors patnl room Lots of stor·

ago $160,000 ahown by appl
(304)e75-S403
Corner lot 2805 Gartleld Ave
PI PI, $69 900 (30ol)675 3379
For Sale By Owner 4BR 3000
SQuare Foot House 4"Car Ga
rage 5 Acres Ve ry Secluded
1199 999 (803)366-9436

labors Start $7 An Hour Carpentry Boohng &amp; Masonry Full ~
Time In Gallipolis Area 740 256-

Lawn Care you fNitke the otter
Call J D Sm1th at 740 992·5930

House For Sale 2219 Oak St,

1722

"'Colr1 Rouoh al 741)-992 2521

3082

Local Trucking Company Seeldng
Qual1f1ed Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benehts Sana Resume
To Duver PO Bo x 109 Jack·
son Ohio 45640 01 Call 1 740
286 1463 To Schedule An t r~tar-

-

Marys Daycarv tow rates flexl)le
hours 18 years experience call
1.a. 1~-o506 any1ime
W1!1 Care For Elderly Or Handl·
capped Persons In My Home
7..o-441-0000

Mo&lt;lcal Processor
FTIPT No exper~ence necessary
Wtll train PC lltCJ.IIred Earn 40K
Call8~7440

Medical Processor FT JPT No
Erp Nee Win Train PC Req Earn

401&lt; C.ll800-663-7440
Med1cal Processor FT /P T No
Exp Nee Will Train PC Req Earn
40K Call 800-663 7440
Person w1th positive attitudes ahd
tKcellenl work ethic Ability 10 apply service techniques telephone
skUis and computer skills to work
well with clients 1 on-1 and complete multi tasks with attention to
delall Comt:~lete beneflls program Send Resume CLA 472 cy,
Gallipolis Dally Tnbune 825 Third

Ave Gallipolis Oh 45631
Postal Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc
baneflls No Expenence For
App And Exam Into Call 1 800~

813 3585 EKI 8826 8AM 9PM

W1NOo
Babysilting In my Homel Any
Age Smoke-Free House hOld
Clo

ley WV Needs tulltlme AN for
CCU, EO MEKVSurg Current WV
State License Relevant EKJ)erlenca Reply To Jackson General
Hosp1tal PO Box 720 A1ptey

W'/25271 (304)372 2731 EXT
313 EOE
RESUMES UNLIMITED Otters
Pers onalized Resumes And
Much Morel lnter'w'lew Materials
To Get You Prepared 740-388

3800""'
ScfniC Hills Nursing Cenllr Is
Now Acceptmg App11at1ons For
The PosiUon Ot Social Services
Director lSW Please Send Ae
sume And Salary Requ1rements
To Charla Brown A.t Scenic Hills
Nursing Center, 311 Buckrldge

Road Bidwell, OH 45814
(Member Of EOE)
Security Guards must ba able to
work any shill Including wee
kends Must have clean pol1ce
record goOd work hisiOry reliable
transportallon valid drl'w'er s II·
cense home phone and must
have black steel toe safely
shoes $5 75 per hour 32-,.0
hours per week Call 740 669
2874 Monday. Friday 8am 4pm
lor appointment
Service Tectlmclan Needed by
Netlonal leader In Mobile Home
Sales. Prefer Related Experience
Bene11ts Included 401K Call

(740)446·7156
The Soulhern Local School Dis·
trlct has an mtermediate level
teaching positiOn for developmen
tally handicapped students avail·
able for the 1999 2000 school
year All applicants must possess
the appropriate cerllflcatlon and
background checks Phone 740
949 2669 for further mlormat1on
Send Inquiries to James La
wrence Supenntendent Southern
Local Schools Box 176, Racine

Ohio 45771 SLSO Is an Equal
Opponu~ly ErnpiOylr
The Southern Local School Dis·
lrlct has the tollowmg coaching
positions available tor the 1999
2000 schOol year ass1stant loot·
ball, junior high football reserve
volleyball junior high volleyball
eighth grade boys basketball, Ju·
nlor high girls basketball reserve
boys basketball reserve girls
basketball reserve softball varsl·
ty cheerleadlng advisor and Ju
nlor nigh cheerleadlng advisor
All applicants must possess or
acquire a sports medicine certlfl·
cate and a CPR card Ftrst con
sideration must be given to ap
pllcants possessing a teach1ng
certificate Phone 740 949·2669
lor 1urther Information Please
s~nd Inquiries to Mr James La·
wrence Superintendent Southern
Local Schools Box 176 Racine
Ohio 45771 SlSD Is an Equal

To Work on Trash Truck Send
Resume to Happy Hippy Hauling
2049 Friendly R•dge Rd , Crown

CllyOh 45623

140

Business
Training

OllllpoHI C•- College

(Ca-. Clooe To Home) Cal
TOdayl 7&lt;0-448-&lt;387 1·800·
214.0452 Reg •90-05-1274B

180 Wanted To Do
Christian Woman Will Provide
Oaycare In My Home Only

$12 00 Day For 1 Child, $20 00
Day For 2, Elc CPR Cerlllled,
EMT Cart Pending Aefrencea

740·245·9582
CNA Wllh 20 Yra EKp And EK·
cell

References Haa Private

ha uling

W•ll Haul Anyth1ng! Clean Up any
thutg! Work tor $5 00 hour! (7 40)

368 0140 Pluslly-SoNico

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

recommends that you do busl
ness Wllh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you have Investigated
!he offenng

230

Connie s Child Care hat open

lnga S R 7, T_. Plolna Cor
lllled In Melgo and Alhano Coun·
ties Reasonable rate&amp;, open 24
hours ,_n daya per 740-

887-8329

rng &amp;189 000 001 Shown by Ap
po•nmonrsl (140)446-4559

Open House May 16th 2 4PM
Modern All Brick Home 4 65
Acres Off J1m Hill Road 3 5 Bed
rooms 28aJhs 2 car Garage with
Workbench Large Family Room
Deck Porch Brick Outbu1tdmg
All Electric with HeatPump City
Water Satellite D1sh (304)675Restored VICtorian home situated
on 12 acres V111age Middleport
secluded and private appomtment caii74Q-992 5696
Spring Valley 2 story tamlty
home 4 Bedroom 2 1/2 Baths
Llvu1g Room, Dining Room, Eat in
Kitchen lg Family Room 740

245-9337
Three bedroom home 1n Pomeroy
w1ll land contract or less for cash
needs work can 740 992·9039

Professional
Sarvlces

Carpet and Upholstery &lt;::leaned
without •steam' or Absorbent
Compounds Soapless Ant•·Re
soil Detergents used exclusive
1y Sate lor au fabr~cs Fast drymg (1 2 hours) Ehmmates over
wetllng Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675-4040
for Free Est1mates•

COPPICK LANDSCAPING

Three bedroom home with lots of
clOset space close to school on
corne( lot storage bulldmg one
bedroom rental home Included
740.992-6154

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
.. .. Amazing' ... 5 Bedrooms 2
1/2 baths over 2,000 sq rt lor
less than $400 mo Free- Delivery
&amp; Sol 1 800·948-5671!

50556 SA 124
Racine Ohio
Free est1mates design planning,
complete landscape service res
ldenllal and commercial fountain
and garden display 15- years ex·
perle nee

t2x60 two bedroom total electric
with central a~r 1nterkx living room
Ure damage $2000 304 8B2·
2466 anytime,

741)-949 3130

16xBO VInyl Shingle, Assume

Does Yollf House S1dlng Deck,
or Driveway need a cleaning? It
so Pressure Washing Is the answer! Call Clearly Clean at
(304)675 4040 tor a F.ree Es
II mate

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
1·888·582·3345
WALL-CEILING CLEANED EXPERTLY Saves on repainting m
definitely We use lhe exch,1slve
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall
Cleaning Syslem Protects pa1nt,
leaves glass relards chalking
Anti-Mildew no odor sanitizes
Free estimates Call Clearly
Clean at (304)675-4040

1'1"""-llllllliilllil----•

388-8504

Chrlsry s Family Living apart
ments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·4514, apartments avail·
abla, lumlshod &amp; unlurnlshOd

340 Business aod
Buildings

First Avenue, One And 1\vo Bed
rooms From S27!5 ·S3501Mo • security Dopos~. 74().441.()952

26 Acr.. Mil. 6 Sloll Hor&amp;e Barn
3 Bedroom Hous• Fence 7•0·

Commetcial Building in Mender
son For Sale or lease Call

(803)366·9436

FurniihiMf 2 Bedroom Apar1ment,
Across From Park. AC No Pets.
Referencea, Deposit $325/Mo ,

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

7-10-446·8235 74().446.0577

1 Acre + wllh 14x70 3BA 1 11
2BA Trailer wllh 3 porches
2 Grave Lots and Vaults at Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens In
Crrtsly SectiOn (740)-886-8506
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
lake VIew Gallla County,
$32._~

740J3Bt! 8678

H

Th1s newspaper w111 not
know•ngly accept
advertisements tor real estate
which 1s In violation ot the
law Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised In th1s newspaper
are ava~able on an equal
opportunity bas1s

REAL ESTATE

1978 Schultz t4x60 2 Bedmom$
Very Good Condition! Air Condil
tlonlng, Underpinning 6xtras1
740-367.0583 740-245 5672
t980 Trailer 12x65 Good Condl
tlon, New carpet CIA Already On
Rented Lot $6 000, 740 2561472
1985 Nausha 14x70 with 8x20
Expando 2 Bedrooms 2 full
battls Flrepiac~. New Carpet

(740)448-3493

1988 Skyline Plnecreek 14X70
2Bedroom 1Bath 3 Ton Heat
Pump/Central Air, Shingled Roof
Excellent Condition (304)675

7045
1991 141tx72ft Shingle Roof, Vinyl
Siding, Excellent Condition
$16 500 00 (740)446-8113
t992 t 4x70 Oakwood 2 Bedrooms, 2 Full Baths, All Electric

Wllh Heal Pump 740
740 379 2798

441~959

1992 14x70 Redman mobile
home 3 bedrooms storm wind
ow&amp; &amp; heat pump Included, 740
742 2795
1994 SkyllnafSupreme, 14x74·

3BR 12BA VInyl&amp; Shingle Rool
Garden Tub ClAir Total Elect
Kilchen- ls!and Walk-In Closet,&amp;

More Very Nlcell(304)675-6055
1995 Dutch Mobile Home 14x70
VInyl Siding, Shingle Root Steel
Doora 2x8 Walla, Thermopayne
Wlndow1:1 Deck $19,000 740256-6980

1789 Addison Pike Enjoy the
Tranqwllty of the Wonderful SetUngl 3 Bedrooms. 1 luH bath
Large living RoOm Dinning
Room Kitchen all Cathedral
Ceilings I laundry Room Large
Deck Down stairs Poas1ble Faml
ly Room Free Gas! 12 Acres

800-383-e862

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 8BR
1 1/2BA , Family Room Garage
CentraiAir Patio Porch $77,000

(304)675-2533
3 Bedroom Spill Entry Brick
Home on Route 2 at Mt Alto
Built-In Kitchen, Dlningroom LR
3 Balha FP, Woodburnlng stove
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895

3861
3 Bedrooms 2 Balh Ranch Houoe
7 Years Old 2Bx30 Allached Ga
rage, 12•2&lt;6 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 69 112 Acres Or
Will Sell House &amp; loll Meigs Co

By owner 725 Page S1reo1, Mid
dleport, house &amp; 3 loll must see
to appreciate wtll sell house with

oul lola lor $89,000 740·992·
2704, 7&lt;0-992-5696
By Owner Sandhill Road Point
Pleasant Brick/Ranch, 3Bed·
rooms, 2Baths Basement Two
~-Car
Garages
Acre

325 nlco 5 Acres $18 000 public
warer
Gallla Co South off SR 218
Williams Hollow Ad 68 wooded
Acres with stream, $45 500 pub·
lie water Friendly Ridge Ad 15
Acres $U 000 city schools
Teens Run 10 Acres $10 000.
public water
Call HOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Into Take 10%
Off Ust Price On Cash Buys!

LAND
In The Country Meigs County
near Rutland Making deals on
Combination Lola, 5 to 15 Acres
of rolling woods, great building
sties or use as hunting land
Starting 0 $9 500 County water
Double wides are Permitted 5%
down land Contract, Free Maps!

1 (800)213-8365

360

Real Eatale
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres

Wa Pay Cash 1·800 213 8365
Anthony Land CO

Good selection ot used homaa
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740
385-9621
MARLETIE MOBILE HOME
12x60 With 7x2t Expando 3
Bedroome 1 Bath, Very Nice
Condilion Includes Delivery And

5ei·Up•On Ybur Lol CALL 1·90Q50Q.3957
Make 2 Payments No Payment

Allar Hears 304 738-7295
Mobile Home For Sale Central

Air, 740·441H1885

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
Includes months FREE lot rent
lncludea washer &amp; dryer. skirting
deluxe steps and setup Only

e

S200 74 por mon1h wllh $1150
dOwn Call 1-800-837 3238
New Bank repoa only 2 left we

Nice Small 2 Bedroom, 5 Room
House, Near Centerville IThur
man Gallla Schools, County water Included, Plant A Garden

S3251Mo Plus Oeposll No In

North 3rd Ave • Mlddleporl, 2
bedroom unfurnished apartment
deposit &amp; references 740 992~
Now Taklng 1 Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Aparlments, Includes Water
Sewage Trash S3 15/Mo 740

446 0008

Problems? Naed '1\Jned? CaU lhe
plano Dr 741)-446.4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabulll In Slocl&lt;
Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537·9528
Johnson s Used Furniture fAp~llances,

740·448--4039, 740-448-

1004 5 Miles Out Bulavllle Pike

One Bedroom Apartment In PI
Pleasant Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No Pets Phone

OH 35 Righi On Keller Road Blue
House On Left

(304)675·1386

uncotn Ranger 8 Portable Weld~
er, Has Own Engine Used 128

One bedroom aP.artment in Middleport, one bedroom furnished
house In Gallipolis 7&lt;0-992 9191
One Bedroom Apanment for Rent
In Rio Granda Call {740)·2459082 After 6 pm
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors, CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car·

Hours Aaklng S2 200. 740 367·

appllcallons lor 1BR HUD sub
sldlzed apt tor elderly and hand
Upstairs Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second A't'enue, Gallipo
lis, Nut To Library, $350/Mo
Plus Deposit No Pets Call Deb·
ble Of Judy AI 740.446·7323

MERCHANDISE

510

Hou111hold
Goods

Mazda RX7 black, PSA 91K

security system 5 speed nice
stereo system $4500 740-742·

'94 Grand Cherokee Laredo Cx4
automatk:, 72 000 miles, CO, load·
ed, uceJient condlllon home740 -367 0119 evenings, work
740 992 6677 wHkdays, ask lor

319 3323 EKI 4420
1!185 Honzon 4 Doors 5 Speed 4
Cylinder, $585 1978 Buick V-8

mile&amp; Aulo, PS, PB, PW, PL All

1980 ·11MIOCARS FROM SSOO
Police Impounds
And Tax
Repo s For Listings Call t-800·

Aulomallc S W $385 740·446
4999

1986 Buick Summerset Air Auto

1986 GMC Safari Van 33 000

1988 Ford 150 Custom •x4, 300
six cylinder. 4 speed, PS. PB
cruise air good 6 ply tires lopper towing package, $4500, 7CO·

Aslro Van 740·742 2279
1987 Plymouth Reliant Wagon
Very Good Shape Run Ext Lots
Of New Parts, Asking $1 500

1996 Ford Conversion van e ...
150 V 8 Rear Air Conditioner,

~

740·446·6308 800-291 ·

Want~d

To Sell Wadding Dress

Slze8,$27500 740·441&gt;0432

1987 Toyola Cellca GT 5 Spaed
AJC Sun Roo1 PS. PB, Runs

Grear Call 740·448·2107, 740·
245 9164
1988 Toyo1a Corolla 146,000
Miles $1 350 1988 Ford LTD

Slallon Wagon 139,000 11.900
740-441-9808
1989 2 WD 1f2 ton Suburban Sit
verado Pacl(age Custom Paint

(740)-448-1810

Walerllno Special 3/4 200 PSI
S21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com·

pression Fillings In Slocl&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1-liOQ-537·9528

550

Building
Supplies

949-2490
1989 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4 2 9

$5 800 (304)875·

aher 5 30 (740) 446 9088

5121

740·!M!I-2836 or 7&lt;0-949·20&gt;15

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Refrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740 446

560

Beds Complete lull and Twin,
Couch Desk Ll'w'lng Room Suit,
Refrigerator and Girls Bicycle

mala Black Lab Housebroken
Vary Loving, lovea Kids $100

1992 Nlssan Slanza

To good hOme orfly (304)773
5730

whilo, 741)-7~·2803

2 Chow Puppies, 8 weeks, Fe·
male , Blue. 1 Cream &amp; Blue

4dr, AM FM Casselle Cold Air
$3 695 (304)875·4893, or 675
7894

(740)44Hl118

Washers dryers retrlgerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76

3 Male Jack Russell Puppies, 7
Weeks Old Mad Shols Been

VIne Slrea1. Call 740 446 7398,
I 888 818.0128

Wormed, $250 Each. 740 2455597

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauoa Stop

5 AKC Boxer pupa 1•0 742

And see us 7&lt;0-446--4782

520

mole Mal1ose, 3 Monlha AKC All

Mod

70

Super

Grada 270 Caliber S650 oo ,

1992 Olds Cullass Sierra V·6,

1993 Oodga Coli 5 Spood, Good
Condl11on 109.000 Milas 12 900
OBO 7&lt;10-256-1233
1993 Shadow ES V·S Loaded
740 446 2247
1993 Toyota Tercel

Shots, Wormed, Weighs 1 112
Pounds Topa Will Be 3 ·4

Good1
Winches ter

8101
Adorable, Intelligent White Fe·

Sporting

4 door,

Pounds 740 446 1000.

4 speed,

90,000 miles $3400, 740 742
2495
1994 Cavalier 2 Doors AJC Au·
tomatlc $3 495, 1992 Cavalier 2
Doors, A/C Automatic $2 495

AKC
Registered
Miniature
Oaohshund puppies red &amp; dap-

Cook Molar&gt; 7&lt;0-448-0103

ple 740-992-9989

llndar, Aulom AC 87 000 Miles,

ly
Bara 216

Bomber Bass Boat 85 HP John·
son Till And Trim Trall8f E~ecel
lent Condition $2 400 740 256

790

Apartments
for Rent

, and 2 bedroom apal'1ments fur
nished and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets, 740·

992 2218

AKC Miniature Collies Male, Female, 4 months old, $150 00 each
or S250 00 Bol:h 740-256 6182

e oo p m 740 992·2526 Rusa

FlJII Blooded Himalayan Klnens

Moore owner

$100 Each, 7&lt;0-258-6995

14 000 miles I Like Newl (740)
259-1417 or (740)256-6228

540 Mlacellsneoua

1 Bdrm Extra Nice First Month
Free With One Year Laue
$279 00 Par Monlh, Plua Ullllllea

740-446 2957
1 Bedroom Apt Unfurnished
$275 month, ullhtles paid Viand
Street
Pt
Plnsant, WV

(304)736-5554
1 Room &amp; Bath Rio Grenda Area,

$200/Mo , All Ulllllao Included,
Deposit Required, Call Toll Free.

1·888-841)-(J521

Merchandl111
40 Automatic Pistol, 185, New In
Box. And 5" Portable Color T \I
$957&lt;10-~

1II" DlrtcTV SetaiUie 8ytltlml
$89 00 one month free programming Llmiled Ume offer, calif·

800-779-8194
2 walk behind Gravelya· one
runs excellsnt condition one for

paris, $400, 740·742·2373 after

Apt tor Rent, Water And Trash

Paid, No Polo In Gallipolis 740·
388-1100
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
pon we pay water, sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per
month $100 deposit 740-892·
7806
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Uolverslty Of Rio Grande

Air Conditioners. Used Different
Sizes. Guaranteed! 740-886 ·
0047

AMAZING
METABOLISM
Braaklhroughlll losa 10·200
fl'ounds Easy Quick, Fast
Dramatic Reaults, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

pl08 can 7&lt;0-441 1982

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtllwood Drive
from $279 10 $358 Walk 10 shop
a movlu Call 740·448·2568
Equal Housing Opporlunlly

$13 ooo. 740 742 7405 days,
7&lt;0-742 2088 .....,lngs
Ford new Holland Tractor Sate

3930 4WD, 45PTO HP, 192 Tur•
bo, Syncho 8)(8 Trana F And A
Shuttle Large Pump 2 Remotes 4
outlets. 2yr Full Warranty

$20 900 00 4630 55PTO HP
same specs 22 900 3010 2WD

42 PTO HP 1 Remole Wei
Brake. lnd PTO 13 500 00 3010
4WD Same Specs 18 500 00
Como Soo The Now TN55, 65 75

Ustd LHt Truck Forka For Sale,

Verloua Slzoo $75 Op ·$1 00 00,
Per Set Will Trade For Wood

Olscounl Mobile Home
Porto &amp; Supply
Hugoi,_,IO!Y

EOH

(304~78-2648

225 bales of cto~er orchard
gran, $1 50 a bale, model 640
New Holland round baler net
wrap and twine wrap less than
t 500 ba les baled through It,

Phone (3041895-3874

2bdrm apta , total electric. appNancea turnlshed, laundry room
laclllll11 close to schoo~ In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apt&amp; 149 or cell 7.W-992·

Rent Buster New 1999 14x70 2

610 Fll!'m Equipment

4WD models Wilh Super Steer,
will turn shorter than a 2WO
Keef~ra Servin Center St Rt
87 Pt Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road

2 Bedroom, 76 VIne SlrHI Galli
polS, OhiO 740 387-7888

VInyl Slclrllng Kill $2119 95 5 Gal•
lon Aluminum Flbtftd Roof Paln1
$25 21 , 5 Gal While Rool Paln1
$57 69, Anchors $5 Ooora &amp;
Wlndowa, Gat &amp; Electric Waler
Heaters PILimblng a. Electrical
Parts, lntarthtrm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conc:tllloners &amp;- Heat
Pumpa Bennett'l Mobile Home

Ford Explorer, Actual

1997 Ford Explorer XlT Loaded
28,000 Miles, Bai Fact Warr Ex
ceiJent Condition Prk:e Raducedll

740·446 8491

Burner 7&lt;0-379-2757

830
4

~ear

Livestock
old kid broke Appaloosa

pony, 10 year old ma11, kid broke.
also rldtng tauona, Ruth RHVes,

740-898·3290

Supply, 740·448 9418 Gelllpolla,

4 Arabian Mares 1~Walklng
Mare, 1 10 year old Mare 112
Quater and 112 Morgan Dried
Hose Manure $5 00 per bag In
slailment Plan for Horses to GOOd
Homeat 25% Down Affordable

Ohio.

Ralao (740)388-8358

·A ''1-!API''( BIRTHDA'(P '?

19.97 Plymouth

~relze,

loaded

1998 Pontiac Trans Am Navy
Blue Metallic 5 7 liter, LS 1 En·
gina, Leather Interior 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo 12 Disc co

Changer, Fully Loadedl Will Take
Pay 0(1, 7&gt;10-44HM8

'

Tho Collocllon Dopr At 740·441·
1038 OVB Reotrvu The Righi
To Accopl /Rt)o&lt;l Any &amp; All BldB
&amp; Withdraw Items From Salt Pri·
or To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH

Home
lmprovementa

------BA~S-EM_E_NT~~---

'1FRIDAY

WATEAPAOOFINO
1975 Cell 24 Hr1 (7-40) •
448·0870, 1-800·287 0578 Rog
911 Weletproallng

C&amp;C Generet Home Main·
tanence- Painting, vinyl aiding
carpentry, doors windows. baths
mobl~ home repair and more For
lree estimate call Chet, 7~D-992

8323
livingston'&amp; Basement Water
Proofing all basement repairs
done, rree estimates, lifeume
guarantee 12yra on job tlplrl·

720 Truckalor Sala

Professional 20yra experience
wtth all maaonery, brick, blocll a
atone Also room addition• ga·
rage• etc Fr11 eatlmates

2875

1995 Dodge Dako1e SLT 4 Whl
Dr 8 FIBad, V-8, 5 Spd 147,000
Milos U 200 00 OBO 740 258·
1233

ASTRO·GRAPH

labl~

once (304)885-3887

7~

..

••

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es·

OR CERTIRED CHECK.

72 Mack truck, day cab 237 en
gina, runs gooCI good tires.
$2000 1980 Chevy 2 ton dump
truck with Trallaze trl axle heavy
equipment trailer, $8000, 740·

32 Charlton
Heoton'e org
34 Middle
e..tern
notion
35 Makemo,.
noloy
3t Waterlogged
43 Wa1ared·
allk
45 Central polnta
47 Tangle
48 UK ,

(3CM)773-IMS50

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master ll
~ansed electrician Ridenour

Eltclrlcel, WV000308 304-875
1786

annoyance

broadcaster•

49 Nondlocrlmlnatlon In
hiring: abbr
50 "For Me and

M

52

"

H~Ta

eucceeeor

53 Gul18rllt Paul
54 Suparlltlve
ending

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptog111mf a111 cr..l.cl fn:rn quolal10115 by lamou• ~ p~~sl and presenl
Each letter 1-1 ttw cipher slandllor another Todllly'J dut~ M flq!J/s Y

'G

X N A' 0

TWOPNX .

VHWOWRX

LYW
G'T

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VCHOGDLKCH

CAM
U H NT

YOPNNK

OPW
N U

K W 0 'Y

CDOGRA

PCHHGYNA
UNH X
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Nol everybody 1rus1s parn11ngs bu1 people believe
photographs " - Ansel Adams

....

WOlD

or h ts second SUit

r•'

SERVICES

n95

10 00 A M On 5129199 AI The

Pass

Don 1 stunr by high pr"•''
Shop lhe clrJs11(ied seer/on

2502

Sale By PObllc Aucllon A 1988
0V8 Annex. 143 Third A't'tnue
Gallipolis OH Sold To Hlgheat
Bidder "AI Is- Where Ia" With~
oul Exprened Or Implied War
ranty &amp; May Be Sean By ClUing

27 Prlnceao'

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS

I'

Market. Femur- Marze - Sp/rce • SAME TiME

Balh Wl1h Showar, AIC, Ml·

Oh•o Valley Bank W1ll Ollar For
Chrysler New Yorker 1141257 At

Pass

SCIIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS

erowave lots Of Closet Space
With Cedar l•ne, large Side
Awning Electric Jaek Garage
Kept Purchased New 740 446-

810

25 Moot
up-1&lt;Hiate

8

1985 Alratream 31 Ft Tra'w'el
Trailer Aeat Twin Beds, Center

Appliance Parts And Servtce All
Name Branda Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag 740 4C8

pleasa

Pass

Pass

town
18 Like
Plnocchlo
20 Bemoan
22 VOice bo•
23 Chocoholic,
tor one
24 Like aome

•

Cam!)l!rs &amp;
Motor Homes

99 Plymoulh Horlzlon Sop 89 000
miles, good condition $1 500 oo
(740) 446·3869 leave message

3•

THAT?

mlloo, $11 500, 7&lt;10-949-1701
S7'.800, 1992 Goo Slorm $2,000
7&lt;0-258-6012

3.

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Access
·To Over 10 000 Transmi&amp;alons,

1997 Grand Am GT whitt 50 000

&lt;lpm

Campua, 740 245-5658

am

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1997

repantanco

8Atad!lllnce

WI-IICH 6RAMPA

eve Jolnll 7&lt;10-245-5677.

53,000 Miles $3 100 00 OBO
740·256 8487 741)-258 9183

Buy or sell Riverine .Anliquea.
1124 E Main Street on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to

Eaat

team
ln 1h1s roo m , Wes1 passed, probably because he was 100 good for three
dramonds couldn'l open four dra
monds (It would have shown a strong
spade pre emp1) and drdn '1 fancy
lrve dramonds North opened one no
lrUmp, promrsrng n 16 pomts Barrell (Soulh) srgned ofl m 1wo beans,
bu1 when Norlh rar&gt;ed rn compe11tron,
SoUih bravely wem on 10 game

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorles

1996 Gto Metro 2 Door. 4 Cylin·
der, Autom , A/C Cassette

440

I-IAI'P'( SIRTHDA'(
6RAMPA ..'f'OOrRE
WELCOME .. AAVE
A NICE DA'f..

6RAMPA'5 ON THE PHONE ..
DO '(OV WANT TO WI SI-t !liM

For rent• family type river camp
site for full hook up tor camping
trailer water electric &amp; sewer
also dock aile with cement patio
for rent cal1740 992 5956

9

9 Actor Hunter
10 Uncler the
wolther
11 Spantah cheer
13 1141 careful of
18 Saint Francia'

menner

5 Salad g-n
6 Puppeteer Jim
7 Acl or

The Barrell team gamed II rnternauonal match pomts on thts deal and
won by erght

PEANUTS

1093

weeks old 1225 oo (304)6754679

CKC Jack Ru11ell Terrier

Fllghlleoo bird
Prelontloua

620

Like New. Garage

Kep174Q-258 1378 Afte&lt; 9 00 Pm

760

Mtodow

Wesl led Ihe spade I0 Ban ell
called lo. dummy 's ace and played on
trumps. WeSI wmnrng the second
round NeXI came the club five Not
prclunng Wesl wnh two srnglclons,
East pul rn hrs Jack Now, though,
declarer won wr1h the kmg, pulled the •
mrssmg trump and drove ou11he club
ace to land the vulnerable game plus

800 850·•1272 E• I 5 Ask For Kel

New gas lanks &amp; body par1B 0 a
R Aulo Ripley, WV (304)372·
3933 or 1-800·273-9329

Seal Burgundy, 1800 a $950 00
(740)·256-9309

North
!NT

Yesterday, I gave a de~l rn whrch
compeutrve brddmg helped the oppo,
nen1s 10 brd a slam Here rs the other srde of the corn when n01 brddmg
makes hfe easy for the opponents and
drfficult for partner
The deal occurred dunng 1he final
of the knockoulleams at the Bermuda Regronallas1 January 11 helped ihe
underdogs , Elhel Brmbaum, Chnstme Canmchael, Anne Hoffman and
Jade Barrell , defeat the hot favontes,
Mark Molson, Bob Moms, Mrke
Passel!, George Rosenkran' and
Eddrc Woltl
A11he first table, Hoffman openeJ
1ha1 Wes1 hand wrlh trve dramonds,
whrch was passed out (Although
partner has passed, I 1hrnk I would
have gambled a double wrlh thai
Nonh hand ) The contracl fimshed
one down 100 10 1he Rosenkranz

because

1995 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jet Ski,
Trailer Included, 2 Seater Very
low Hours Excellent Condition
$5200, Caii74Q-446·1W Of 1·

1995 Eaglo Talon, 43,000 mllesl
EKCell Conlflllon $10 500 00
(740)44H71l5

.Antique Victorian Style love

BIG NATE

(304)675-2329

AutomotiVe Paint, 15 ·20 $25 Gal-

Mobile home for rent In Racine
no pets 740-992~5858

~~~==~j!~~~~+-~

1987 ChrlsCratt Cuddy Cabin
19, V8, Mere , Excelleht Condi·
17 ooo
tlon
New Cover

lon 741)-448-8827

Antiques

Has Spoiler $2,200 00 OBO.

i&amp;-

18' tiDal, 115 hp motor with trail

530

R&amp;qulred 741)-38&amp;-9162

AKC Siberian Husky Puppies,

1994 Plymouth Sundance 4 Cy

~~~Od~ ·~~~----~i

OBO (304)173-5103 After 5PM

Rio Grande, OH Call 740 245·

$2800 741)-949-

~~~Rll

1994 Marley Davldsqn Sponsler
883 Black, Low Miles. Excellent

or $975 740-992·3539

mi~B

I

(740) 387 7253

A Polaris 2x4, 4 Wheeter Auto •
Very Good Condlllon $ t 700

air 74,000
20&gt;15

THE BORN LOSER

1988 Honda 70 4 l'lhae-.r good
condition S1,000 call .After 5 pm

740 742--4510 or 7&lt;10-388 9693

1 112 yr old AKC Regla1ered Fe

.

Motorcycles

Condlllon
3824

1991 Cutlass Clerra • door V 8

S'U~PLU6.
... ,.

..

7539

1990 Cougar, high- miles, runs
great, looks goOd, V-6 $2100

Pets for Sale

Tttf IVI&gt;GfT

..

1999 350 Ford Pick Up, 12,000

740

AIOUT

~,,.,,,,,

Miles Diesel, 6 Speed, 7-40 367-

(304)e75·1891, (304)675-7614

Block brick sewer pipes windows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,

WONI&gt;t~

TV VCR 59 300 mllea AmiFm
Casseuo $15 900 (740)·367·
7187

1990 Chavy Cavalier. $895 two
door sport coupe 5 speed, runs
excellent, excellent condition,
1990 Chrysler 5th Ave Clean
One Owner 87 000 miles good
(las mileage Price Reduced to
$4700 Mu•• Sell, Will Negotiate

/

.l FOUHI&gt; OUT AIOUT S'AHTA
Atll&gt; Ttlf TOOTtl FAI~Y. Atll&gt;
HOW .l'M lf61tiNING TO

(740)446-8141

750 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sale

Almond Whirlpool wastler·$75 00
White Kenmore Washer $75 00
White Whi rlpool Dryer $65 00 AI
mond Kenmore Oryer-$70 0:0 Call

n9s

..FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1996 Chevy Asto Ext High Top •
Deluxe Conver&amp;lon Van loadedl
Only 15,800. miles, Like New

Wholosalo To The Public Wa

Danlila anew
Porl..:t!y
Irritate
R.p.'o
counlerpan
38VutiiiiU
40 Slloota a hole

31
33
38
37

OPECabbr

By Phillip Alder

AM/FM cassettes Runs Greatl

1987 Chr~sler New Yorker good
shape also need motor for 1987

Stock Janltrol Heating And Cool
lng Equipment, Duct Work Rag·
tsters. And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furnish A List Of Dealers To
Install For Yo1,1 If You Don t Call
Us We Both Lose! 553 Jackson

Evening"

t
2
3
4

The other side
of the dime

Runs Goodl $2,400 , 740·448·
3746

740441-1176

antelope

30 ' - Enc""nted

DOWN

Opening lead: • 10

Carl Asking 11 200 (740)·441 ·
1785

PRO lA suppLy
We Are Professional Installation
And Ser't'lca Supply We Sell

West

Pass

C1595000B0(740)-441.0118

1985 PonUac Fiero, $2 000 080
(740)446-3243 allor SPM

eg

48 Alt&lt;ONIUII' "aU
right"
48 Scat
51 s.t on flre
55 Lighting device
5&amp; W11roaway
57 General Pow.ll
5&amp; Abhor

SCirYH

Pass

Sllphanle
1192 Cha~y Astro van I EXT) 5
door 66 152 miles, blue w~ue In·
larlor, CL Trim pacl&lt;age, air arri1m
cassette clean, rear doors damaged by collision, askmg $3.. 00
as is 740 992 1506 days or 740
949-2644 evenings

2303

1fDmlegcy.
17 Metor
hotltllltleo
18 Leather punch
21 Seabird
23 Plant brlllle
H You get ~ In
b8ro
2f AnUdrug
oftlcer
2t Fomale

Vulnerable 8oth
Dealer. South

BARNEY

Motor CD Player, Reese Hitch

PRIIIESTAR
FIOO DIIOCI Spoclal
Call now 1·90Q-263-2640

• K 10 9 3 2

'90 Chevy Astro van all wheel&lt;
drive, PW, Pl good condition ~

1988 Olds Cutlass Good Work

poled, Pallo No Pats, Loase Plus

Twin F'lvers Tower now accepting

• 9

Packar&lt;l Ball 83 Panllum 58 6 taxi
modem 38X CD Rom 8MB Ram,
1 GB hlr&lt;l drive, monhor InclUded,
allor4pm

• 8 4
.. Q 10 7 5 2

, •

P280 ,

Security Deposit Required 740·

- 1 740·446-0101

Prlcel740--446 7289

Good WoO&lt; car $2 000 7&lt;0-367·
0241

$500 740-992·6035 ask for Josh

South

And Compare ThiS Is An E11cet-~ "
lent Veh fc te, At An Excellent- :

15000 742-2675

710 Autos for Sale
90

1995 GMC Jimmy Lola 01 EK1rasl
Asking $15 000. Shop Around. •

7&lt;0-258-1233

Apartment Gallipolis Farry De
posit Required
No Pets

Used SlngltWido. Around $100
por monlh C8111·800-945678

Grubbs Plano· tuning &amp; repairs

AKJ9? 5
"A 9 3
.. 8.
tKQ876432 • J 5
• 5
• A J 8 6

730 Vans &amp; 4-WOa

TRANSPORTATION

llrm, 7&lt;10-992-7212

• Q1 4
Easl

West
• 10

AM/FM Radio Air Conditioner
300 6 CyUndar 9 500 MI"B 7&lt;0-

Blue Eyea, $150 00 To S200 00

1·8118-736·3332

948 5678

7&lt;0-992 0165

$200

1995 Ford f·150 XL 5 Spood

1500 270 Caliber $350 00, For
Mo"' lnlormallon 7&lt;10-379-2601

Ploaeo

Down, $195 00 per month Free
Delivery and Set Up Call 1·8Q0-

Pigs· "'adY 5115, $40 oacll grain

led 741)-949-9027

os.H 99

aAQ632
"K J 6
t A 10

In &amp; Oul By Owner (304)875
8055

2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Porter Area, No Pets, You Pay All
Utlltles Deposit &amp; Aeterencas

Apartment for rent In Middleport,

or 3 Bedroom• Only $995 00

For se-. ser ol Mons Righi Hand

North

1995 Ford hpiOrer, ..DR 42K Mt • ""
Loaded Mint Cond Sand·Color "

992 2167

no poll, 740 992·5856

Htlpl 3 Bodroom 2

(740) 245 5672 or (740) 367
0563

15893.

Turbo Rally Wheels, RWL Tlrea •

$1,995 7&lt;0-256-1093 _ _ :
:.;.:.:::.:::..:...:.::..:::..=:.:..

Winchester Mod 70 50Th Annl·
versary 300 Magnum Caliber
$1 coo oo Smith&amp; wesson Mod

finance cal30ol·722-7148
Baths just take O't'lr Payments!

New Haven 1 bedroom, turntshed
apartment, deposit &amp; references

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned S260·S300 sewer,
water and trash Included 740-

L1nest For more information Call

Gibson 20 000 BTU window air
conditioner like new 220 electric

Your Home Is Just A Phone Call

14x70 trailer three bedrooms total electric $300 per month plus
$150 deposit, no pets 12x60
trailer two bedroom $250 per
month, total electrk: plus $150 de
posit no pets 7.ta 7,.2 2714

For Sale 50' RCA Home Thoalro
Big Screen TV $600 Kenmore
Dryer $80 Kenmore COunter Top

Dlohwaoher, $100 (304)675·

1972 GMC V-8, Aulo New Dual :

446-9637 Cal After 5 ~M

Fair Plgo lor sa-.1 Excollon1 BlOOd

tunlties

741)-446 9742

420 Mobile Horms
for Rent

256-IW

304·576-2126

pasluro. Call (740)-446-0924

side Pets! 740-682-9032

Away, 304 736-7295

Bod Side Table Whaol C~alr Llll
For Van Cell Attar 6 00 PM 740

pori From $249·$373 .Call 740·
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor

2 Bedroom. w/Basement &amp; Ga
rage Deposit a. References, No

Apartments, House Duplexes 1
&amp; 2 Bedroom Some utilities jn
eluded low Deposit Required
HUD Approved (304)675-2053

EHtctrlc Hoapltal Bed Mattress &amp;

Years, 740-31!7-7800

7&lt;10-385-4367

Buidlng (304)675-2484

DR Trlmmer!Mower Electric Start
Used 6 times, Paid $800 00 A:sk
lng $800 00 (740)-446--4722

Appaloosa Gelding, 15 years
old./15 2hh, excellent trail horu,l
great disposition shOwn In 4M for
9 years, loads easily good be·
ginner horse Includes ts• sad
die, bridle blanl(et $1400 !firm)
or horse only $1200 email (daar·
onOaccess mountain net) Phone

Free Hey and u11 of Pasture in
Exchange for Brush Hogging

Mobile home slle availabJe bet
ween Athans and Pomeroy, call

410 HOUIIII for Rent

~M7&lt;10-446-2398

CaH (740) &amp;69 ~5

Graetous llv1ng 1 end 2 bedroom
apartments a1 VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartmenta In Middle-

460 Space for Rent

RENTALS

4 H Goats Alphine and Nubian

Case Window Air Conditioner.
works Goodt $150, Call Alter 5

Registered Llmousin Bulls Red
Black Pollec;f, 9 Months To 2

lcapped EOH 304 875-8879

3 Bedroom 2 112 Bath with Ga·
rage. beside Hartford Community

310 Homes for Sale

~

Meigs Co Rutland While Hill
Rd , 11 Acres $14 000 or 9 Acres
S12 000 public water Danville
Bnar Ad 7 Acres $13 000 On SA

15Em~

Golf Club&amp; $125 (304)675-6988

0165

1t72 ACADEMY

Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers t.lmlted Time Available

$89 900 00 (740) 384-0063 lor

BRUNER LAND
74o.441·14H

(304)773 5881

388 9567
All real estate advertising In
th1s newspaper is subject to
the Federal F.atr Housing Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes It Illegal
to advert1se "any preterence,
llmi1atlon or d1scrlmlnat1on
based on race color religion
sex fam1ilal status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or discriminatiOn

More Acreage Available

roodelod $2.000 (304)675-6149

1988 Danville, 14x70 With EK
pando 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths
$1 1 500 OBO Must Move! 740·

Lo1 (740)44HI818

330 Farma for Sale

2 BR lurnlshed home In Mason
No pats References required

12x60 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Nice
Shape Includes Delivery Only
$2 995 00 CAU 1·740 628 9019

Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Utllllles I
view References No Pets uase,
Deposit, Non Smoker1, In City,

740446-

197,. 12x60 OetroitQr New
Plumbing Wiring Recently Ae·

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo
bl" home 740 992 5039

No Fee Unless We Winl

Details!

1999 Down Doublo Wide 304·
736 3409

PelS (30ol)675-5162

Loan, 1·800 383-e882.

Now serving Galtla anct
surrounding areas

Room And Full Ca"' In Her Hor!lO
For The Elderly For More Info
740 256 8342, Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wh11l Chair
Accessible

Large 8 Rooms 21/2 Baths Wall
Equipped Kitchen Appliances
stay 2 Woodburlng Fireplaces
Hot Water &amp; electric Heat AC
1t f2 1M In city of GalllpOh&amp; Ask-

8159

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Oppor1unlly Employer
The Town of New Haven ls ac
ceptlng applications for the posi·
tlons o~ pool manager and lifeguards for the summer Applica
lions may be obtained at the
Town Hall 218 Fifth Street

jobs

WV $'499 Down Slflgle Wide,

Garget Apl Albany 7 M1les 0 U
Meigs Mine 74Q-698-7150

(304)675-4538

7 Days fds Inc

REGISTERED NURSE
Jackson Genetal Hospllal Rip

odd

Oall;wood Homes Barboursville

$22 500 (304)578-2890

Family Home With Pool 2 Car

(3041675-6763
Will

PI Pleasanl 128 000 (304)895

540 Mlacellaneoua
Marchandlee

• Saturday, May IS, 1999
The grea1est opportunities you'll
gel rn ~ year ahead wrll 1come
' through people wuh whom you'll
associa1e and the new contacll you 'II
es1abhsh Culuva10 as many as you
can
TAURUS (Aprrl 20-May 20)
Make managenal changes today if
, you haven'! been 100 Impressed lately w11h 1he way an assocra1e has been
handhng a JOin1 endeavor However,
do so drploma1rcally. Trymg to pa1ch
up a broken romance? The Astrt&gt;' Graph Ma1chmaker can help you
undets1and wha1 to. do 10 make 1be
relatronshrp work. M11l $2 73 to
Malchmaker, c/o 1h15 newspaper,
1'0 Box 1758, Murray Hill Slatron,
New York, NY 10156
GEMINI (May i 1-June 20) You
have a chance1oday 1o reap 1 harves1
rn an ruea you haven't sown rfyou'll
now Wl1h events Lady Luck lsttylng 10 pu1 you In lhe riplllflOI a11he
righttrme. Let her
CANCER (lune 21-luly 22) The
only 1hrns 1hat can hold ypu back
lodny IS 1he limh1110n of your own

I
)•

1hmkmg Stnve 10 be optimistic,
expocw11, and don't be afraid to think
brg
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Continue
1o operale 1oday rn ways 1ha1 add Ius·
1er to your rmage, because you're
presen11y under aocxl mfluences 1ha1

cnuld enhance your status and popularity wuh your peers
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) The
aspects mdrca1e that you have profned from your expenences in lhe
pasl, so while o1hers mraht make
some mrsllkes in a cenam rnvolvemcn1, you're nor hkely 10 do the

same.

LIBRA (Sept 23'0.:t. 23) EI\Piore
all1he options a1 your disposal today
as to how 10 better y0111' rinancral
wherewuhal. You could scnerlle I
profll from somewhere beardes YOII1'
USUIIIOIIICCI.
SCORPIO (O.:t 24-Nov 22)
F!WI1hinldOJ on a manerlhelaffe&lt;11
bolh you and your maiO could yield
an oxceJl..a IOIU1i011 To ftntl I DeW
pellp&lt;Cii.,., don't concentniO on lhe
problem, hut on lhe 1011 or J1111P0M
SA011TARIUS (Nov 23-Dec

I, )

2J) llovrng several goals for WhJCh LO
arm won'1 put you at any d1SadvanUISC1oday lnslead, 11 could make you
more flurd tn your 1hrnkrng in figurIng out ways 10 fulfill your ambmons
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan 19)
This rs an excellen1 day to re"'ianrze
your affairs rf 1hrngs haven'! been
runnrng1oo smoo1hly for you la10ly
By puttmg your house rn order, you
le1 m fresh arr
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Keeprn mrnd 1ha11t ts 1he bottom hnc
thai counts and you should rind
yourself ra1her lucky once ag11n
today, especially where favorable
end resulll ..., conce,.,..t
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Allhoup rdeas may take trme 10 be
properly developed, because you're
an as1ute 1hrnker 1oday, you can con
cerve some good 1hough1s 1ha1 wrll
have a areater chance for success

ARIES (MIIItb 21 -Apnl 19) Even
rf you 1hrnk some1hrng should be
yreldrns a larser tncome 1han 11
poesenlly 11, before oiiOI\'Iptrng to alter
11, make aure you con rmprove upon
11 Don't br..k wha1's ,runn1n1
smoothly

•••

1 won't be an opt1m1St 'lhe not so smart man told h 1s
fnend unt1ll can sm11e and wh1stle at the SAME TIME •

MAY 141

�Friday, May 14, 1999

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

P-oe 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Farming experts look forward to tec~nical advancements
By JOHN ROGERS
A81oellttd Prell Writer
SPRINGFIELD. Mo. - When !he history of 21st cenmry farming is·writ·
ten, one of the milestones noted might be the day the farmer himself joined
his mule in the march to obsolescence, replaced by a robot.
Or maybe not
"I don't know whether we'll have robots out there on our tractors or not
That's maybe far-fetched," Eldon Cole of the University of Missouri said.
laughing.
·
·
" But," the livestock specialist continued, "I think anything 1hat can take
the labor oul of agricultural production, that's ·what we' ll be looking at"
. Thus, he and other experts say to expect more breakthroughs in high-tech
fields involving satellites and computers.
Satellites already can tell farmers exactly how much manure or pesticide
to use on a field to obtaan the best results. And in the future, they will prob.
ably do a better job of forecasting the weather as well, said Dan Cassidy of
the Missouri Fann Bureau.
Another area where breakthroughs are expected is in genetics.

"Research will lead the way with specialized varieties of crops.:· Cole tialto keep~n producing more food," Cole said. "But we want to quickly
said. "Crops that can withstand different types of environment."
add that we also want to get paid for it."
They'll also be able to resist diseases and pests. Cassidy said, and th~~·
"Right now," he continued, " agricultu~e is kind of in the pits, as far as
on fewer nutrients.
.
farmen; gelling adequate relurns fonheir food ."
. ·
Cassidy also sees genetics playing a big role in livestock production', ·
That could betcorrected, he said, if more foreign markets for Amencan
although Cole is more cautious in trying to guess what will happen there. • · food open up in ~he years .ahead.
•.
"We' ve had a good bit of debate, and I sure don't know where tfiis is head·
"Certainly, t~re are hungry p,eopldn this world who need our food ," he
ed. but we have the cloning thing in livestock," he said.
said. "Sometimes we Cll!l gi~c i(to them.but by and large it has to be a finan·
While he added that he does expect cloning to be used to at least some .cial reward for the per~on producing it"
.
degree. he suspects it will be done " with some self control. "
Which brings up o~e of the biggest questiQns on the minds of those tn
Even without it, farmers are already breeding leaner. meatier animals, and Mi~souri aj!riculture, and that is just who that producer will be. Cassidy said he expects 1ha1 to continue.
J .·, ' '1'1!~ .~~ years of the'iOth century saw the rise of huge co.rporate hog and
· All of this. the exp~rts say. should result in a 21st century farm that pro- poultry·farms in Missouri, a trend Cole said has many small canle a~d dairy
duces more lood tha~ Its 201h century counlerpart .
•
farmers worried that they might eventually be squeezed out of busmess by
In 1930, one Amen can farmer was producmg enough food to fF&lt;'
peo- · big O]!Witors pr!Jilucing more food at a lower price.
.
.
pie, a figure that had nsen to 128 people by 1988. Expect that to nse even
"One concern that the farmers I ru~ into all seem to have ... IS who Will
more in the years .ahead, Cole andCassidy said.
, .
., , •
be a farmer," Cole said. "Agriculture does hitve a very bright future. The
"People an agraculture fcelthalan the 21st century we do have the paten- , que5tioo i.s who is going to fpnlt;OI agricult!Jie.''
,
,
..
• ' . • t•, \·

pensri.tory amounl.

"The U.S. Supreme Court said.
there are limits .'' Multnomah
· County Circui! Judge Anna Brown
: said. " By no .means is my person·
al poinl of view substituted for that
of the jury."
Jurors said they were infuriated

by documents showing that Philip
Morris .executives had lied for
decades about the link between
smoking and cancer.
William Gaylord, who repre·
senled the Williams family, said
during the hearing over damages
that any reduction would be a pub·
lie relations coup for the company.
U.S. juries have awarded damages in smoking liability cases only
five times - twice in Florida and
once in New Jersey, Oregon and
California. The Florida and New
Jersey verdicts were overturned on
appeal, while the $51.5 million
award in California was halved by
a judge.
In Kansas City, Mo., on Thurs·
day, a federal jury handed Brown
&amp; Williamson Tobacco Corp. its
second victory in four days, deciding the company was not at fault in
the case of a .smoker who died of
lun cancer in 1995.

_J.

Driver in fatal bus crash had

jury ~.d ·ata..in Hiss case

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Rtrri,AND -Literally dozens upon dozens of ears
md fi~e1 ~s were a~ong the items seized by officeJS
nvesbgatling an ongomg Meags County drug case.
The it ;ems are allegedly owned by Fred Priddy, 47, of
. ~6103 L.oop Road, .Rutland, .who ~as .arrested April 28, .
lte . res~lt of a multt·agency.mvesttgalio~ .
An 10 ventory of Items se1zed at that t1me as the result
&gt;f searclt warrants was filed Thursday in Meigs COunty
Probate ,Court. The areas searched included Priddy's ·

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RIO PRANDE - A two-year
labor II reeme(tl between Buckeye
Rural E1 t:ctr~c Cooperative Inc. and
the Jntetmalional Brotherhood of
Electric&amp; I Workers Local 2359 has
been aco ~pled by the local's membel·
ship, E ~REC General Manager
Michael Bullock said.
The 1&lt; ~ voted 33-9 to accept the
new agrc :ement last Tuesday, and the
'&lt;:ontract :was to have been siped
. Thursda~ i, Bullock said
The I BREC Board of Trustees
~Wfi:CPted !the contract during a special
meeting last Saturday, one day .rter
n~gotiato 1-s for both sides had reached
tentative ~ccord.
·
• . The cc.ln~act calls for employ- to
receive a 2.5 percent pay increase for
the next IIWO years. Employees repre·
sented b;l' the local will receive indi·
vidual ho.' ialth insurance benefits for
those belr.l.veen the ages of 62 ~ 65
who are lctirlng. Bullock said.
· "This ·new labor agreement allows
us tO cqncentrate on providing our
member· 'OWIICJS with the quality of
~ice d jtey expect and deserve from
Buckeye ! Rural Electric," Bullock
said.
1
•
• • Negot tiations on the new contract
began in IMit'ch. The previous agree·
ment ex~ ;ired on May t.
'BRE&lt; ~. headquartered near · Rio
drimde,: 10rves niore than 17,000con: sumers ia .t a nine-QOunty area of southem Ohio , including Gallia l!ld Meigs.

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EPA: Release of ·
toxic chemicals
increases in state

By KEVIN KELLY
limn-Sentinel Stitt

Simon, wife of Rotary
Dlatrlct 1111110 Governor Mel P.
Simon, ~pe ..,;. ........ I
Polynell n Jueu, which w.. ·hetcl
.. the G lllpolll City Perk Frldly
evening, ... pe!l of the "Rotary BY'
The Rl• V.r" conference. Meny
tltteildM. fe llpol'led .....w hltl-1t1d
llowerecl I clothing; and, were •ch
given • lei by young ledle• w•r·
fng gra• 1111t1rta. The lulU Wll 101·
luwed I iy Polynntan entertainment end 1 hul• conte.... the
Ariel Th• ~N~ter. Clo.. to 400 R011rt,
alii tror nthe dlltrlct are In 011111
County ~o attend the conference
trom 54 1re1 clubl. .

Vol. 34, No. 13

home and
The items are beins kepi under
and other locations including Ritchie's Auto Sales in .racuda and a . Mustang. Numerous Cllr IJ8l'U, power t~qUipPomeroy and Meigs Auto Sales in Rutland where some pickup trucks, four-wheelers and sev- ment end bUilding me,._
guard al the Rock Springs Fair·
grounds.
of Priddy's belonaings were allegedly stored.
· eral Harley-Davidson motorcycles _, ,
1 1/lrS.
·
·
.
· Priddy was released from the
The inventory shows poge after page of classic cars, were also: listed on the inventory as
Meigs
County Jail last !&gt;Veek after
firearms, moto~ycles and sl!llpected drugs, along with · having been confiscated from the
.
posting
to percent of a $500,000
more mundane, day-to-day items including tools, car various locations.
bond
in
Meigs
County
Court.
Prosecuting Allomey John
. One of the items listed was device suspected of
parts, power equipment and buildins materials. ·
· Many of the cars are cl.assic 1960s "muscle cars• being a hal\dsun silencer and two night vision deviceS. R. Lentes was not available for comment Friday. ·

out reduction
in state
. railroad
crossing accidents

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r--;---.----------, ·Several pages of the inventory are
• Thelf!ventory MOM devoted to Jistins tires and wheels,
p8gellfter psge of cis•
car parts and tools.
lie Ctii'S, fii'Mftl1•, motor• At one residence, offioe11 seized
t:l. . and •us...,ted
.
136 firearms; at another location
..-39 handguns were seized. At Pridalong With more
dy's home, ascots found duffel
mundane, dtly-to-dsy
bags allesedly containing bags of
marijuana.
·
·
former residences, garaaes and outbuildings, including Carnaros, Corvettes, a Bar· Items Including tools, ·

======•Lws Watph I Local
stats bear.·
.

'
.. It was not cl~ar how long before ver .for suburban buses ..H~ ,f!a!~.-casino. .
J •
•
focused Thul'sd~y on a report that
the crash Bedell maght have smoked mariJUana drug test the li~xl Y~i!f,:,: :.•...,C.dstom
prestdent
Donna Bedell checked mto a hospital emer- ·
mariJuana or whether the drug con- Suydam said. BedeJI·:spent two " Begj)vich'Satd in a siatement Thurs- gency room 12 hours before Sun·
tributed to the accident, said NTSB months in a drug rehabilitation pro- •da~,.)!lat she was shocked to learn day's crash for treatment of dehy·
inv~st!gator Ken Suydam .
gram,but tested positive agai~ fo~_d,le, .. B~l tested positive. for:ii\atijuana dration and extremely low blood
Its an01her paece of the puzzle · drug m 1996 and was termtn!lti:ift ..afier.the ~rash.
.,
· pressure .
.
we have to put together," Suydam week later: .
.
·. •·· .... .' · ''" 'Of course, c.ustom'h~ no way
The cause of the crash has yet to
saad.
.
.
. Authonues prevtO)JSIY. . sat~ ~e gf,knowmg Frank s drug usage arany be determined. Bedell remains in a
. BedeU teste~ positive for mari· tested positiv~ for cocaine. in 1997 time," B~govich said. ."'Frank Bedell ~ospilal and is unavailable for com:
JUana whale employed as a city bus af1er apply mg .for a jOb wtfu. G~t , ·i ~~ ~[$.pre-emplo~ntdrug t~st, . JPent
.
dnver 10 New Orleans and 10 subur- hound.
. . ''
. ttiii ,City $! drug testl\'1! R!lltce .bJICk•
Bedell's medical history has not
ban Jefferson Parish.
But Bedell passed .at \e.ast three ground check and three subsequent been iinked to the accident by the
Sometime after being hired in drug tests while workingfu{'Cust\l!l:t/i'f~tioom "Jdtug tests!§,'ithin ;an ,18- NTSB investigators. However, inves·
New Orleans 10 1976, Bedell was Bus Charters. the company that pFD- · month pertod. What, else coijld lll(e · tigators say the case shows gaps in
gaven a drug tes1 because he had been vided the bus for the M~ther:s ~·a~ : ,)jave done?" .
·;.;
the system to make sure.bus drivers
absent for work for erght da~s, Suy· gambhng excurston to ·a Mtsstsstppl · · S,uy,dam saad inl'estigators also· are medically sound.
dam saad. After testmg poSitive for
·
manJuana, Bedell spent s~veral
months attending classes 10 an
employee assiSiancc program.
. But he. later tested posilave again
for the drug and was fired m March
1989, Suydam saad.
In 1992. Bedell was hired as a dri-

ATLANTA (AP)- Even though there are now about 215 million vehicles on ·the roads ; cruising down the highway today is far safer than it was
d(\ring the early part of the century, according to statistics on traffic deaths.
Safety measures·such as seat belts, bumpers and the yellow center line
·have contributed to a 90 percent drop in U.S. motor vehicle deaths ·per miles
traveled since 1925, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said
Thursday.
"The sum of those is what has helped to reduce the·motor vehicle fatal·
ity rate - things that we really take for graOied," said Dr. Bruce Jones of
the CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and .Control.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 16, 1999

· ln~ientory of items seized duri.ng ongoing
in~iestigation filed with Meigs Co. court .

'llisfo.fy of.:marijuana use

0c

Details on

ttdnte

Auto safety better today: CDC

e A:re

Entonolnm.m • Pogo C8

•

.

.

FMiured on P9 C1

HI: 80s
Low: 50s

'j

...

·
•
inevitably enhances (he accuracy of 1imony secret. Marvin Smilon, . ~ • !n,. staieinenl 'Thu'rsday. White · monism.
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
spokesman
for
U.S
.
Attorney
Mary
calle&lt;(
the
rules
safeguarding
the
Tony
Hi~s,
a
visiting
scholar
at
history and undermines the false
Associated Press Writer
conspiracy
theories and revisionism Jo \Vhite, said prosecull)rs ~~AOJ: ' · ·~y of ,grand Jury . priJ!'!"'dings. New York U~ i;~ersity's Taub Urban .
NEW YORK- Citing their his·
torical relevance aild the public's that tend to arise when information deca&lt;led whether to apJ?C:al."' ·~ 'iot','l'~;i,.~'J'g .the .most amJiortant 10 our Rese~rch Cenler, saad ~·s fathe.r was
Hass, a former S1Jire Departmen • .:J!;Ibtna)iustace system."
not bmer about Naxon s role 10 has
right to know. a judge ordered the· remains secret," U.S. District Judge
aide,
was
convicted
of
perjurf
for
,
;',
''i:'tie
rules
do
not
contai~ l\11 ~J&lt;~ep- prosecution or ·about his years rn
Peter
Leisure
·
s
aid
in
his
ruling
Thursrelease of thousands of secret grand
lying to the grand jury in a &gt;a.se that tion fpr historical jntef~~t.~sh~.aid. pnson.
.
jury papers in the Cold War-era per· day.
lifted
a
Communist-hunting
Richard
..
p'avi&lt;J,~~VIadeck,
.dir~.~~or
of
!he
'
"
He
alway~
th?ught
of Nixon as
llte decision could give historians
jury case agai nSI Alger Hiss.
•
Naxon,
!hen
a
young
congressm.~n.
to
Pu~llc
Ctttzen
Ltllgatton
Group.
the
,a
young
pohllcran
oil
then~.
He dtd·
1
The 50-year-old papers are a legal precedent to open grand jury
national
prominence.
,
.)...;.!~aal"'
a
tm
of
Ralph
Nailer's
organin't
think
Nixon
had
anyrhing
per1
thought to reveal key informalion records in other significant cases.
ln
challenging
the
release
of
the
zation
!hat
fought
•for
the
·papers
·
sonal
against·
him,
that
he
just
saw
an ·
about one of the most disputed Grand jury proceedings are normal·
papers. the government arg~e4Jiqqrr~~ said,Leisul(l's,tulipg ');parks opportunity to advance," Hiss said. .
episodes of the era. Hiss, a key gov· . ly ·secret.
there
was no legal precedent to make the fiJSt real inroads into !he idea that
·
Hiss'
son.
Tony,
praised
1he
ernment aide, was accused of spying
such material· public and that grand grarld ]iiry •records''iJUght to be kePI . · He. ·said ('rison ...Jife taught his
judge's
ruling,
saying
his
father
for the Soviet Union in 1948. but was
juries are less inhibited when.they act se~t . fore9er." . ~ •
father•to ai&gt;preciate ordinary aspects
tiied on perjury charges when the hoped "the full truth would be dis· in secret. .
·
.
.
,
1\!ll,ong,t)lose
backing
th~
ope'\i~g·
of l,~fe'. ' · . . ' . ~·.~: ·
statute of limitations for espio~age closed and people coulil sec for
But
Leisure
said
he
found
the
govof
the
files
were
conservauve
eduor
. He used to h!&lt;;e to s.ay to me that
themselves that he had always been
expired.
.
ernment.
'
s
opposition,1
ilfq&gt;l,~~~ng
William
F.
.Buckley
.and
John
1;arl
,
1hree
years in,plison i~ .a good co~;·
He was sen! to prison for three an honorable and patriotic public ser- .
because no natwnal secunt~~!1!f1est ~~Y.n~s,,a Labrary of1Congress ha~to; : recttve to three ye.ars m Harvard,
years in 1951 anddied.in 1996atage vant."
was asserted and barely .ally p'ilv.jlcy ,(l~)l, l~~d, ~9-'author &lt;lf several books H1ss sa ad.
The
federal
government
fought
92, st.ill maintaining his innocence.
concerns
were raised . . '· .·t·.;; '"~~·' • fail·thbi€o1d War and 'American Comhard
to
keep
the
3,500
pages
of
tes·
" Access to such information

By ALAN SAYRE
.
Assocleted Press Wnter
NEW ORLEANS- The driver
of charter bus that crashed on Moth·
er 's Day. killing 22 people, had been
fired twice in the last decade for mar·
ijuana use and tested positive for the
drug shortly afler I he deadly wreck,
federal investigators said.
Custom Bus Charlers driver Frank
Bedell, 46, lost bus driving jobs in
1989 and 1996 after tests showed he
had used marijuana. !he National
Transportation Safety Board said
Thursday.
·
A federal investigator also con·
ftrmed that Bedell, who has conges·
tive heart disease, kidney problems
and diabetes. tested ·positive for marijuana when he was hospitalized
Sunday after the bus ·veered off a
highway and · plunged down an
embankment
·

cult
survivors

.Wars:
Episode 1The
Phantom
Menace'

?·8

.IJIIissouri Judge r~leases secret grand
tobacco
lawsuit
loses out
'
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) ,Cigarelle makers have defeated a
Mi ssouri lawsuit seeking millions
of dollars and had the largest judgment ever entereil in a tobacco tri·
al cut by more than half in Oregon .
An Oregon judge on Thursday
slashed a $79.5 million punitive
damages verdict against Philip
Morris to$32 million. which still
remains the largest award ever
· againSI a tobac~o company.
The jury had awarded !he fam·
ily of Jesse Williams the pumtive
damages plus $821.485 in com·
pensatory damages for medical
costs and pain and suffering .
Williams, was a former school janitor who . died of lung cancer in
1997 al age 67 after smoking
Marlboro cigareites for 42 years.
The judge did no I cut the com·

~star

flretding·

I

GALUPOUS -The overall decrease
in injury accidents ~aused by car-train cOl·
lisions is borne out by statistics from the
local State Highway Patrol post, which
hasn't investigated a rail crash in at least
two years.
Neverthless, as the patrol ,ond safety
. officials last week trumpeted a ~uction
in railrQad crossing accidents durlni 1998
both in Ohio and nationally, rail employ·
ees believe the probability remains hish
for more crashes.
"You can-say tho number of OC?llisions
are going dollth, but you don'flcnoW' bow
many near-collisions you have out there,n .
said. John Bentley, a spokesman for the
Brotherhood of Locomotive ·Engineers, a
58,000-member union based in Clevellincl
"You still have a Jot of that."
The patrol reported that 14 fatalities
and 37 injuries arose (rom aossins·related
crashes last year, down from 26 killed and
46 injured in 1997.
·
The statistics were released as the
patrol, Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio, Department of Public Sofety and. a
nonprofit group c:alled Operllion Ufe·
saver introduced the third and final part of
an education and enforcement c:unpaisn
called "Hishways·or Dieways."
. Th~ program includes graphic public
service ads for radio and television, t1lldc
up of crash re-enactments and footage
from accidents.
· A train ride from Cleveland to Crestline
allowed media and others to observe from
a camera mounted on the front of the locomotive .how traffic races tliroush CI'O!I·
ings.
'
"At any time you see a train apprOIICh,
. good sense will dictate that you stop," said
Lt. Richard Grau, commander of the
patrol's Gallia·Meigs Post. "A car is not
soing to win a battle with • train. Tryins to
beat that train is not worth the risk."
A reduction in rail traffic through Gallia and Meigs counties in the past decade
may account for the decrease in . local
crossing accidents, although they still

PROMOTING AWARENE88 -While the number of flltlllty end InJury ICCklentl
· .. rallroed cronlnge le dclwn In Ohio and throughout the U.S., lll.ty olllclel!l ere
lUI promoting ew•ren••• ot the denger• that ul.... ~np. Above, motort..•
ere peulng through the croulng .. Georgu Creek Roed neer.Ke111uge on
Frldlr.
·
occasionally occur. In the last few years, at killed 11 and injured over 100.
least one accident at !he State Route 7
But even with more knowledge and
crossing at Cheshire were investigated by ·increased funding for rail safety, half of
local authorities, but neither resulted in the accidents in Ohio occur at crossings
injury.
whh lights and g~tes. said Dick Kimmins
•Judains from our statisiics, I don't of the PUCO, which regulates their place·
believe we've had any in the Jist couple of me~.
.
·
·
years that included anything at a rail cross·
"Even though these safety · devices
ing," Grau said.
work, they 1fC not foolproof," he said.
He added that Operation Lifesover was "That's troubling. •
created to increase awareness of the dan·
Col. Kenneth B. Marshall, the patrol's
ger arisina from trYing to p- ·throush a superintendent, said the patrol is working
crossiniJ while a moving train approaches. with Operation Lifesaver to reduce fatali·
The pniblem has been .more prevalent in . ties and injuries at crossings .
the central and northern areas of Ohio, and
Drivers who disobey signals at crossawareness was heightened following this ings are subject to fines of $2.50 and up to
year's cruh at Bourbonnais,. 111., which 30 days in jail, he said.
'

GALLIPOLIS - A 1.5 percent ·increase in the
amount of toxic chemicals released in Clhio may be
slight but is far from sood news, accord,ins to a .
statewide environmental group.
"We're still talking·
• The Ohio Public
about millions and
mill.ions of pounds," Interest Research
said Amy Simpson, Group's Inventory
state director of the reports S, 735 pound•
Ohio Public Interest
of toxic chemlt:llll
Research Group.
released
by Gallla
Manufacturers
released a total of County facilities In
186.6 million pounds 1997- up sub$tsnof chemicals in 1997, tlally 'from the 3,005
the most recent report·
ing year, according to pounds reportedly
the annual Ohio Toxic released In 1996.
Release Inventory.
The i996 total was 183.8 million pounds.
The group's inventory reports 5,735 pounds of toxic
chemicals ·released by Gallia County facilities in 1997 ·
- up substantially from the 3,00:5 pounds reportedly
released in 1996.
. Gallia's 1997 figure includes 500 pounds released
into the air, 5 pounds of discl!arge from publicly owned
treatment plants, and 5,230 pounds for disposal and
treatment off-site.
The only private facility in Gallia County included
in the report was Borg-Warner Automotive in Gallipolis. "Nickel and compounds" was listed as the form of
chemical discharged in the county.
Ranked 84th among Ohio counties, Gallia County
stands toward the bottom of the state in terms of toxic
chemical release. The research group's report did not
include data from Meigs County.
The inventory ·doesn 't measure all toxic chemicals
released in Ohio. Instead, it compiles reports from com·
panics that ·meet such criteria as size, number of
employees and amounts produced.
"The population has increased, the number of blllli·
nesses, we're a growing state," Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency spok'eswoman Lynn Barst said
Thursday. "When the population goes up, you have
more jobs, more people driving cars, using ·gas, wanti·
ng computeJS."
·
· The state has come a long way in tolling pollutants
since 1987, when the TRI besan. Barst said. The total
release in that year was 4.53 million pounds, or 61 per·
cent higher than 1997.
"Ohio is a heavily industrialized state." Barst said.
"We have a lot of factories, we produce a lot of prod·
ucts .. Jf you're producing things, you're making waste.
'Ohio remains one of the most heavily polluting
states in the country, after Texas and Louisiana, according to state-by-state inv~ntory figures released by the
U.S. EPA Thursday.
·

Commissio·n, veterans ·
discuss construction
of Meigs war memorial
.POMEROY- A memorial hon·
oring Meigs County Wit' veterans
could become a reality in the year
2000 if plans discussed by the Meip
County Commissioners with repre·
sentatives of veterans groups Fridoy
morning materialize.
.
Funds for the memorial - probably to ~e constructed near the ·
Meigs County Courthouse - will
come from donations and whatever
grant monies might be available,

IJCC9rdins to the commissioners.
A fund raisins campaign will
kick off at a \t:tcrans' Appreciation
Day dinner scheduled for June 2.5 at
the Mill Street homo of Feeney-Ben·
nett Post 128, American legion,
Middleport. The public dinner will
beain at·$ p.m. and will be served
for a donolion. ·
Meanwhile, contributions ·are
beins accepted towonl the coat of
. the project at local banb, Farmers
~k in . Pomeroy .and Tuppers
Pla10s
1 Homo National Bank in
Fund• for the m.morl·.
RI!Qne and Syracuse, and Peoples
al- pro,.bly to be con- Bank in Pomerqy, Middleport and
structtd nur thfllllelp Rutland.
A secoi!d plonnins aeasion was
County CourthouN- act for June 4 at 10 a.m. Ill which
will come from do,.tloM time final plans will be made for lhe
MI!MOAIAL D.ISCUSSED ;_ ~aprntntatlvee of the county'• wter1n1groupa met Frlclay wtlh the .....
dinner, ond disculsi0111 will be con1nd wh1"ver grant tinued on the delisn, coot ind loct1· County Commtul- to dlacuM building 1 wer memort1t. From .the left, Hlted, Joining Commlntoners,
.Jell Thomton, Jttn.. Huw...t.l'llokett holding her eon, Trivia, end Mlck Davenport, were·Rueelllozlno, Orlrln·
lion of the monument.
monl•• might,.
lVIII·
.
'
· \t:teron orsonization:._ representa• do An*Mnt, llld a- Mllll, lnd ltlndlng, Bruce ft'yerl, Victor Bahr, lnd Jamel lngela.
sble, IOCOrdlng to thi · tivca attcndlna the injllal meeting were Eupe Fink, Eli Denison Post, Middleport Feeney-Bennett Post Myers, Victor Bahr·, and James
commluion.,.. with Commissioners Janet Howard, American lepoo, Rutland; Russ 128, American Legion; Gene Mills, Ingels, all of the VFW Post !IOS3,
Jeff ThOrnton and Mitk Davenport, Mozino and Orlando Andreoni, Racine . Post 602, Racine; Bruce · Tuppe!S Plains.

.'

I

•

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