<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8048" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8048?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T03:23:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18461">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/91604a16eafc5271b3a3840f5d86c903.pdf</src>
      <authentication>76b7ee363f35e17ef097bb49e92f0322</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26093">
                  <text>Wednesday
Page 10 • The Dally sentinel

Tuesday, May 18, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Old documents on Alcatraz inmates remain elusive
By DAVID KLIGMAN
Associated Press Writer
SAN BRUNO, Calif. - AI
Caponc may have been one of Aleatraz's most infamous prisoners, but so
liulc i&lt; known about his time the re
1thm historians aren't even sure which
wa s his cell .
Just as mysterious is the fate of
prison records on so'me .of the most
"'' torious criminals who did time on
"The Rock," the island prison just off
San Francisco's shore.

wealth of facts- and frustration .
The file on George "Machine
Gun" Kelly is missing key documents. Records on " Birdman ol
Alcatraz" Roben Stroud are all photoco~ies. There al so are gaps in
inmate files on escapes and virtually
nothing on Capone.
1
"The records have ei ther been '
purged, cu lled or stolen for people's
personal gains. I'd say all of the
above. They're probabl y siu in g in

.

someone's aui,c righ1 now," says

Most of the existing federal documcnts on Alcatraz are stofed at the
Pacific regional National Archives, a

Jolene Babyak. the daughter of a rorincr Alcatraz admin istrator, who is
wrjung a book on th e 1962 escape

portrayed in Clint EastwrlOd's
"Escape From Alcatraz.''
One lheory is that records wcr~
when the ~nvcrnmcnt dosed the
prison in 1963 wit hout ony mJjor

ll lSI

inventory. Others speculate that documents may have disappeared when
· American Indian s took over the
island from 1969 to 1971. ·
A number of hi storians hlmnc the
U.S. Bureau of Prison.-; ·for loan in g
the entire collection to David Ward.
a· Minnesota criminol ogy profe ssor
who was given the papers in the late
1970s for research.
Some say the agreeme nt was out-

Recorder posts Meigs land transfers

.I

The follow ing land transfers were Rutland;
Easement, Charles C. and Ruby
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Marshall to GTE North Inc.; Bedford;
. Deed, Shirley A. Stephensqn to
Ham,i llon:
Deed, Arthur W. an&lt;j Ada L Nease Don Andrew Stephenson, Sutton;
to t dward Dill, Sal.isbury ;
Deed, Ronald and Joyce Quillen
Deed, Donald and Velva Peters to . to Jason Sean Quillen, Sutton;·
Timothy C. and Amy M. Howard,
·Deed, Bruner Land Company Inc.
Col umbi,a;
.
to Robert C. and Patricia A. Adkins,
Right of way, Jud ith A. and John Salem;
T. Williams to National Gas CooperDeed, William R. and Betty G.
at ivc;
Knig ht to Charlotte K. and Roger
Deed, Phyllis Gainer to Lee Gain- Dillard , Vincent E. Knight to Raycr. Orange;
mond L. and Megan L. Andrews,
Deed, Ruth H. Schultz to Earle D. Pomeroy ;
Schultz, Olive;
Dee d, Dorothy S. Thomas to
Deed, Earle b. Schultz to Ruth H. Dorothy S. Thomas Family, Orange;
Schultz, Olive;
Deed, Lee Roy Simpkins Sr., Jane
Deed, Bobby Joe Jr. and Belinda Doe to Homeside Lending Inc., Rut. K. Adams to Bobby Joe Jr: and Belin- land;
da K. Adams, Suuon;
.
Deed, Mildred M. Jacobs to David ·
Deed, Gardner L. and Patricia L. E: and Eileen F. G.:ueser, Salisbury ;
Wchrung to Michael and ·Vi ctoria
Deed , Eula E. Jeffers to Charles
Jackson. Pomeroy;
Dayid and Richard Keith Jeffers,
Deed, Federal NatiO nal Mortgage Middleport ;
to John R. and Debra A. Davidson,
Deed, Candace Elaine imd Harry
Sali sbu ry;
Michae l Carleton, Lester M.H awk to
Deed, A. Todd and Christina K. Jason Lee Carleton. Orange;
Wolfe to Philli p A. Moon. Bed ford; · Easement. Tim B. and Donna M.
Deed , Jim mie D. Allman to Roy Wolf to Monongahela Power Comand Judy K. Wolford . Sulton parcels; pany. Olive;
Deed. Mary Ellen Homan to LavEasement. Therill Randolph Sr. to
n ne and Mary Jordan. Columbia:
Mon Power, Olive ;
' Deed , Dorothy Thomas to Lav Easement. Forked Run Sponsman
c· mc and Mary J&lt;lrdan . Colunibi a; · Club to Mon Power, Olive;
Deed. Jud y Miller to Lave rn·e and
Easement, Robert E. and Tammy
Mary Jordan . Col umbi a;
L. Ball to Mon Power, Olive;
llecd. Anna Mari e Fmk: deceased. · Easement, George W. and Amy
t" Koger and Gcorgann Fink, Mid- Sue Hall to Mon Power, Olive; ·
cllc port:
Easement, Chester W. and Nancy
Right of way. Nancy R. and Rollin Buckley to Mon Power, Olive;
ll . Radl"ord to Columbus Southern
Easement, Marjorie H. Drake to
l'nwcr. Salishury ;
. Mon Power, Olive;
Right of way. Robert and Tamara
Easement, Jay Jr. and Lillian Marl. . Mash to CSP. Salisbury;
lene Hall, Jon P.. Tamra L., Emmett
Right of way. R.oscoe and Sandra R.. Pamela J., Donna and Donna
.1 . Mills to CSP, Sutton;
Thompson to Mon Power, Olive;
Ri ght of wa y, Robert R.· and
· Easement, Larry Cowdery to Man
('amcla K. Cunningham to CSP, Sut.. Power, Olive ; ,
.
'
ton:
Right of way, Dwight){. and Mark
Easeme nt , Bohby Joe Jr. and Haley Sr. to leading Creek Conserll cl inJa K. Admns to Maxine Seller~ . vancy District, Rutland;
Sull&lt;~ n ;
Right of way, ~nlhony Land
Deed. J.B . and Roberta C. O'Brien Company LTD to LCCD, Salem;
to Heidi F Nelso n. Olive;
Right of way, Pamela Persons to
Deed. Elby Nyc to Crage Brown, LCCD, Salisbury; .

Pomeroy mayor's court
Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
processed 33 cases in Mayor's Coun
last week.
Ftned were : Robert Curry,
Pomeroy, DU!, $395 and costs; Chris
Wallace, Pol)leroy, no eye protection ,
$43 and costs; Melinda Justi s,
Midldeport, $83, failure to control ,
$133, public intoxication, $83, disorderly conduct; Eli sha Dickens ,
$2 33 and costs , assault; Ryan J.
Lemley, Raci ne, $53, excessive window tint; Wanda Rizer, speed. $64
and costs; Carl Bobb, Pomeroy,
improper backing , $63 and costs;.
Melanie Brown, Wadsworth , $64
and costs. speed; Pamela Lunsford,
Bidwcll , $83 and costs, failure to .
. control ; Kenny Lunsford, Bidwell,
· $H3 and costs, railure to control; Brett
Co unts.. Middleport, $63 and costs,
stop sign violation; Janice Roush,
Letart. W.Va ., $83 ·and cogts, expired
tags; .Vernon Dallon , possession of
marijuana. $133 and costs; Danny
Bias, Milton, W.Va., failure to' yied,
$63 and costs; Mariah Herndon ,
Orleans, Mo., speed , $61! and costs;
Eric Tabler. Athens, speed, $66 and
cosls; George Rei1mire, Pomeroy,
~onsuming alcohol in a f!10tor vehidc, $83 and costs; Jeffrey Hayes,

Clifton , W.Va., failure to control, $83
and costs, providtng false informati on, $1.8 3 and costs. open container,
$133 and costs , possession of marijuana. $133 and costs
Christopher Smith, Middleport,
DUI, $395 and eosts, squealing tire s.
$83 and costs; Stephen Hysell, DUI,
$395 and cos ts, left of center, $63 and
costs; James Varian. Clifton, underage consumption, $108 and costs.
open container, $83 and costs; Connie Davi s. Mason, W.Va., expired
registration , $50 and costs; Connie
Davis. Mason, W.Va., expired registrati on, $50 and costs; Jonathan Avis ,
Pomeroy, failure to coimol, $50 and
costs; Sean Braley, Pomeroy, wrongful entrustment, $95 and costs; Jon
Hill, Racine, DUI, $395 and costs,
rapid accelleration, $83 and costs ;
Heromi Swann, Pomeroy, no operalor's license, $83 and cost.s, stop sign
violation, $63 and costs; Carolyn
Robinson , Racine, speed, $64 and
costs; William South, Pomeroy, $133
and costs, public intoxication, $170,
criminal trespassing, $108, underage ·
consumption; Gregory Becker, Mid dleport, DUI, $395 and costs, failure
to yield, $63 and costs.

Middleport mayor's court
. Sandy Iannarelli, acting mayor of
Middleport, processed 13 cases during Mayor's Court hist week.
Fined were : Gregory S. Wall,
Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly by intox ication, $! 00, possession of marijuana; Alyssa Hoffm'an,
Middleport, $1 00 and. costs, disorderly manlier; James E. Kennedy,
Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly manner; Douglas Mowery,
Middleport, $1'00 and· costs, disor. derly by intoxication; Steven D.
Miller, Racine, $'100 and costs, possession of controlled substance; Sherry Little, Middleport, $25 and costs,
running stop sign; Patricia S. Smith,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, no child
restraint , $25, no child restraint:
Cynthia R. H~wkins , Middleport,
$25 and costs, failure 'Ia yield; John
R. Rey nolds, Middleport, $300 and
costs on three counts, contributing to
the delinquency of a minor; Cheryl
Bumgardner, $100 and cos1s, contempt.

· Forfeiting bonds were: Gary Lee
Acree, Middleport, $250, underage
consumption ; Teresa J. Price, Gallipolis, $49, speed;. · Bertha J.
Williams, Ray, $60, wrong way on
one-way street .

Balances listed by
Rutland Village
Rutland Clerkffreasurer Rosemary Snowden-Eskew discussed
accoun,t balances for the' village at
Tuesday's regular meeting of Ruthind
Village Council.
Balances, by line-item account, ·
were: cash book balance, $63,344.35;
general fund , $14,969 .98; police
fund, $528. I 4; law enforcement,
$487.33; street fund, $6,466.73; highway, $688.55; water department,
S8,350.!1; sewer department,
$4,618.23; sewer debt, $17,063.85;
utility deposits, $4,220.85; replace,
meql, $7,194.61 ; FEMA, $5,950.58:
I .

I

. -·-····-·- -- - -··-~·-

Right of way, Shirley Fillinger to
LCCD, Salisbury;
Judgment entry, .Gary Jordan to
Kathy Ritchie, Sulton;
Deed, Kathy Ritchie to Debra.La
Shaye Wam sley, Sutton;
Deed, Bruner Land Company Inc.
to Walter E. and Vickie L. Smyers,
Salem:
Deed, Pamela Jane and James H.
Jenkins to Village of Rutland , Rut land;
Deed, James W. Smith Lumber
Company to Midwest Timer and
Land 'Company, Meigs parcels:
Deed, John R. and Pally Ann Calaway to James L and Sandra L
Cowdery, Olive;
Ri gt]t of way, Leonard E. and Fay
E. Amos to Columbus Southern Pow-'
er. Orange ,
Right of way. Ronni e D. anti
Tanowa McGrath to CSP. Orange;
Right of way. Gary and Jani e
Stanley to Oh10 Power Company.
Rutl ,tnd;
·
Right of way, Fam ily Homes Inc. .
to OPC, Salisbury ;
Deed , Mi chael A and Kell y A
Kinnison to Daniellc and F. Euge ne
Althouse, Columbia;
Deed, Diana K. Chaney. Diana
Chaney to City Nati onal Bank , Sal ~·
isbury ;
Deed, Steven P. and Charlene
Kay Chaney to City National Bank,
Sali sbury ;
Deed, James P., Beverly X and
Rhonda L. Conde to Barbara· K.
Dolan, Salisbury;
Deed, lames P. and Beverly A.
Conde to Barbara K. Dolan , Salisbury..

rageous- and ·unconscionablc.
''You've got hundreds of
researchers who needed these things
over the years, " says Linda McGregor Scott. a Memphis, Tenn., author
who is writing a hook on " Machine
Gun " Kelly.
" AII of this. is American history
that helongs to the citizens of this
country. and it's just not fai r," she
adds. " It tlabl)ergasts me that they
would JUSt let someone lceep original
documents for 15 years."
Scutt was so exasperated that she

wrote to Janet Reno and lawmakers,
including U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein ;
urging them 10 look into the mailer.
A Feinstein aide' called Scott to tell
her they would investigate.
In 1996, Ward began to gradually
return the documents to the Bureau of
Prisons, which in turn sent them to
the arch ives in Northern California.
Ol"fi cials beli eve the government
now has most of the papers. but can't
he sure.
Wnrd claims if it wasn't for him
there wouldn 't even .be· an Alcatraz
collection. He says a research clerk
ga rhe red most of the Iiles from U.S.
priso ns after the Department of Just i~.:c com mi ssioned him to in vestigate
th e inmates' post -Aicatrazlivcs .

The files we re mcomplcte from

the

tim ~

he got them, Ward says.

"There had been souvenir hunting, "
he adds.
Clarence Lyons of the National
Archives headqu arters in College
Park, Md .. would only say that the
records "should not have been outside of federal custody." 'Bureau of
Prisons officials did not return phone
calls. .
Historians say there's no way to
know if the missing papers wi ll ever
resurface.
Of the 50 or so pages in Capone's
fi le, only one relates to Alcmraz - a
copy of a typed Western Union message of an exchange between Mae
Capone to warden James A. Johnston , about her hosband, who was
going insane from syphilis.
· "Due to the rumors (I) would I ike
to leave at once so I could be near my
husband if anything should happen ,"
Mrs. Capone wrote on Feb. 9, 1938,
from her Florida home.
Johnston wrote back that the gangster; imprisoned for tax evasion, was
"quiet, communicative, cooperative"
and "apparently comprehends .hi s
condition." He advised Mrs. Capone
to wait for further notice.
Joel Gazis-Sax, who runs an Alca.traz Web site from his Palo Alto
home, says the Wes tern Union docu ment isn't·as informati ve as it seems.
" It 's important. but it's second-

· rate." Gazis-Sax says. " It doesn't
reveal any new inrormation on AI
Capone. And it's. not even the origi nal document ; it's a typed copy."
What's mi ssing , Gazis-Sax says,
are mug shots, original signatures,
leiters, neuropsychiatric reports and
warden's notebook s that would reveal
the overall scope ofCapo n~ · s life as
seen through the eyes of hi s jailers.
The document s - · however
incomplete - offer a window· into
Alcatraz. Every inmate had a file that
incl uded court documents, n\edieal ,
parole and disci pimary records.
No detail relating to prison life
was deemed too insignifi cant to preserve; the archives even include a
memo fro m a warden giving his permiss ion to orde r small er softballs at
the prisoners' request.
" It was that arcane, " says Babyak.
" Wh~n you see that that's the level
of·minutiae, you begin to realize that
when they don 't ,have any escape
files, something' s happened to
them."
.
.
As for his complaining colleagues,
Ward says: "They.don:t know how
lucky they are to have a collection as
intact as thi s is. We did this work all
so that a bunch of bozos can have it
and say they were shortchanged, and
I resent that."

Nebraska poised to impose
moratorium on executions
the death penalty be applied fairly,
By KEVIN O'HANLON
uniformly and "scrupulously." But
Associated Press Writer
LI NCOLN, Neb. - Nebraska's · he says many of the 15) murderers
one- house Legislature is on the verge serving life sen tences committed
of hccoming the first in the nation to c rimes just as heinous as those of the
10 men now on Nebraska 's death
vote for a moratorium on execution s.
row.
But whyhere? Why now?
"People are beginning to · underNebraska, al"ter all, has long been
a conserVati ve Republican bastion stand the difference between believpopulated by hard-working , law-and- ing in the death penalty, but not wantorder Midwesterners. As many of 80 ing it don e in a way that does not
percent .of registered voters have huno.r and uphold the law,". he said . .
In an Assoc iated Press survey this
indi cated support for the death penalty in polls, a sentiment echoed in a year, more than three-fourths of the
Nebraska .senators who responded
sur vey of state lawmakers.
Even ·the moratorium suggestion · said they were again st abolishing the
ca me from a surprising source: death penalty. Now, more than half of
Rcpuhli can Se n. Kermit Brashear, the the 49 members of the nonpartisan
conse rvat ive chairman of the Judi- Leg1slature embrace the .idea of a
ciary Commiitcc and a longtime cap- · two-year moratorium on executions.
Other states have considered such
il al puni shment supporter.
Bras hear say s state law requires moratoriums but have not adopted

legislation, according to the Death
Penalty Information Center, a Washington-based group critical of how
capital. punishment is applied.
Florida officials stopped executions for a year after a fire started during a 1997 electrocution. In March,
the Illinois House Judiciary Comll)i(tee voted for a measure that .
would halt executions for one year
while a study is done.
The Amerii:an Bar :Association
and· the National Conference of
Catholic Bishops have called for
such moratoriums.
or 38 states with the death penalty, Nebraska is among the six that
have the electric chair as their sole
mean s of execution. Sen . Ernie
Chambers, an independent, has iptroduced a measure to abohsh the death
penalty nearly every year

Weather
Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Sports

May 111, 1111111

Meigs softballers lose, Page 4
Net surfing a sign of depression? Page 6
For your health, insert today

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Cincinnati stJetches
winning sb eak to four
games with 5-3 victory

-Page4

.

Middleport • Pomeroy. OhiO

Volume 49 NumbN 24/

Smgle Copy- 35 Cents

Mining at Civil War battlefiel~ may begin this summer
Mining could begin as · early as this · summer on
. Ohio's only Civil War battlefield, located here in
Meigs County, which will ·be turned mostly into gravel
pits under an agreement that was signed Tuesday by a
mining company and federal and state officials:
According to an article in The Columbus Dispatch,
the Meigs County Historical Society and the Ohio Sons
of Union Veterans. of the Civil War refused to sign the
agreement, which would allow mining on the Buffing- ·
ton Island Balllefield at Poriland, saying that the historic land would be desecrated.
The agreement was signed in Columbus by 'Shelly,
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Ohio Historic Preservation Office.
Shelly Materials of Thornville want to mine gravel
· on more than 400 acres · of land associated with the
Buffington Island battlefield; the site. of a July, 1863,
bailie. in which Conftderale raiders under Gen. John
Hunt Morgan were routed by Union 1troops and gun·
boats. ·
.
Morgan's men were hrassed by . Union troops anll
local militia·during their trek across Meigs County.
The battlefield, located near the head of Buffington
Island, is where Morgan made a failed attempt to cross
the Ohio River into West Virginia.

Under the agreement, Shelly will set aside the 40
acres known as the Bloody Ground, where some of the
heaviest fighting reput.edly occurred, and give it to
Ohio for preservation.
But that could be 30 years down the road because
Shelly will haul gravel to barges over those 4() acres.
"We're very unhappy;" Margaret Parker, director of
the Meigs County Historical Society, told the Dispatch.
"It looks as if they arc going to· save 40 acres and
destroy the rest of the battlefield.'.' .
Parker said she i's upset that a detailed archaeological study of the entire battlefield has not bee it conduct~
ed with metal detectors.
.
Without such a study, there is no proof that the 40
acres to be turned over to the state are any more sig·
nificanl than other parts of the battlefield, she said.
She also fears that heavy equipment will destroy
"the lay of the land" of the 40 acres.
In addition, Jhe maintains the 40 acres was never
going to be mhl'ed since that is where the gravel plant
will be located.
"My vision of the future of Buffington Island is
acres of gravel pits filled wiih water," said allqmey
William Barton of Jackson, who represetiled the Meigs
County Historical Society during negotiations.

Keith Ashley ~f Rock Springs, representing the
Ohio Sons of Union Veterans, also refused to sign the .
agreement.
The SUV and other groups including the Sons Qf
Confederate Veterans have expressed concerns over
unmarked graves of Civil War soldiers at the si te.
·
The agreeme.nt now goes to the Advisory Council' on
Historic Preservation in Washington, D.C. for its consideration.
However, even if the council objects, the Corps of
Engineers can issue a permit allowing Shelly to build
an Ohio River barge-loading facility.
The company has also applied for a mining permit
with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources and
has ,agreed to do the mining in stages.
"This will give proponents of preservation the
opportunity to seek funding to purchase parts of the
property that will not be mined for m~rli," said
Amos Loveday, the state's historic preservation officer.
In the agreement, the company agreed to pay for an
archaeological study of the property before mining
begins.
·
An archaeologist from Heidelberg College in'Tiffin
has been funded by a private foundation to study parts
of the battlefield ·outside the Shelly property.

· Tt]e agreement also calls for the company to give ·
$100,000 to be matched by the state for educational
purposes - such as historical markers - on the battlefield.
But the company can lise up to $60,000 of the
money to defend itself from lawsuits if it is sued.
The Meigs County Historical Society has said it 'Viii
contest the mining permits .
Paul D, Rice, an attorney for Shelly, said mining
could begin as early as this summer.
"I think it.needs to be understood that the company
recognized the concerns (of preservationists) and tried
to negotiate a just settleme nt," he said.
Loveday said the agreement culminated more than
two years of arduous negotiations.
"The plan is not perfect, n he said. "Some will be
dissatisfi~d. but given the federal regulations, it's the
best agreement that could be arrived at.
"It's never good to lose a historic site."
· Meanwhile, the Meigs County Historical Society is
continuing to appeal the gravel mining ,permit.
"We might as well go down fighting," said Parker. ·
"We WQ,n't lose anything by holding out."
She -hid she feels betrayed by the stale of Ohio
since it did not do more to protect the battlefield.

Meigs board handles substitijte matters
The Meigs Local Board of Education, meeting
in regular session Monday night, handled personnel matters primarily involving substitute employees.
The following were hired as substitute teacher.;
for the 1999-2000 school year to be used on an asneeded basis: Robert Austin, John Barcus, Ed Bar- ·
tels, Chiistoph~f Byron, Oarence Ed. Ev!IJIS, Ken·neth Farmer, John Fleming; Michelle Gillilan,
Kathleen Goins, Melinda Hayman, Mary Hill,
Marsha King, Rita lewis, Mary Ann Neal, Janice
New, Kim Ol.iphant, Gay Perrin, Wtinda Ray, Herbert Redman, Nathan Robinette, Aaron Schetter,
Abbie Stratton, Siephanie Hysmith, Randall
Kempton, Teresa Vasco and Mary Whan.
The following were' hired as substitutes in the
classifications listed foi the 1999-2000 school
year to be used on an as-needed baSis: aides Melissa Conde, Nancy Freeman, Kim Oliphant,
Teresa PaUen;on, .Wanda Shank, Connie Soulsby• .
leah Rose and Jeanie Allen; bus drivers • Kevin
Jewell, David Williams, Carla Milhoan, Janet. .
Hartley, Lou Hemsley, Linda Morris, O!eryl Seller5, Rhett Milhoan, Donald Richmond, John Tillis

and Marlene Barrett; mechanics - ·Dennis Tillis,
Ronald Mullins, Joseph Gilkey Jr. and Earley Hill;
cooks- Tammy Jarvis, Tana Kennedy, Debbie Riffie, Diane Hendricks, Sharon ·Jewell, Ellora Patterson, R&lt;isemary Preast and Crystal Roush; cus- .
todians - Nancy,Barrett, Marvin Roush, Kyle Sinclair, Leland Parker, Robert Moore and William
Morris; secretaries.- Julia Sayre and Cindy Shull.
The contracts of the follewing substitutes were
not renewed due 'to other employment reasons:
Del)bie Cundiff, aide; Oliver Norris, Ben Upton
Jr., Dec Willis, Carlos McKnight, 'James Jones
and Sherri Billings, bus drivers; Gary King Jr. and
Rollie D. Stewart II, mechaniai; Kay Dodson,
Charlene O!aney, Paula Hicks and Mary Tobin,
cooks; Lester Stewart and, Mike Gilmore, custodians; and Patricia Clark, secretary.
In other business, the board:
- Accepted the resignation of Marsha Radabaugh as head teacher at Middleport Elementary
School for the 1999-2000 school year due. to her
transfer to the middle school.
·
- Granted maternity leave to Sara M. Hanis
for the 1999-2000school year.

- Approved a contract .with Hackett Enterprises Inc. of Columbus in Jhe amount of $24,000
to repair perimeter roof flashing at the high
school.
·
·
- Approved a contract with the Educational
Media Resource Center to provide media services to the district for the 1999-2000 school year
at a cost of $2.20 per student for a total of $5,170.
-· Approved the 1999-2000 school allendar.
- Approved a contract with Local Government Service.s for GAAP consultant services in
the amount of $30 an hour not to exceed $3,900.
Following an executive session to discuss personnel matters, the board hired Heather
Humphreys as EMIS/Iechnology coordinator on
a two-year contract effective June 1, 1999. Board
member Randy Humphreys abstained.
The board also created an additional English
position at Meigs High School pending the neeessary funding.
Also present were Superintendent Bill Buckley, Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus, board President
John Hood and board members Scott Walton,
Roger Abbott a~d Wayne Davis.

By TIM PUET
Aaaoclated Prtaa Writer
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP)- "Star Wars" fans gathered at a suburban
theater said they weren't too concerned that the latest movie in the series was
being greeted.lly a lukewarm c;ritiall reception nationwide. ·
"I didn'tlike to see all of the criticism, but l9ever expected the movie to
be perfect anyway," said Olris Snow, 28.
.
Snow and his fiancee, Stacy Kennedy, 28, were standing at the head of a
line of about 1,000 persons at the Marcus Crosswoods Cinemas in Worthington an hour before the first showing of "Star Wars, Episode I - The
Phantom Menace," 8112:01 a.m. today.
They had been in line since 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Snow had stood in .line
last Wednesday for 12 hours, beginning at 3 a.m., to get so
the first tick·
ets on sale:
,
.
"'The Return of the Jedi' (the last movie in the ori nal 'Star ars'lrilogy) had a lot offtaWs, too; but thai didn't bothefrDe, - fdon' ex ·- anything with this movie will be enough !o tum me off," S w said.
He said he also had rickets for a showing of the movie ater today. As
what
him coming back, Snow said, "It's the only'm em-day myth. It
lelll~·~a~;~~~~i~~ and you can see il over and oyer again an never get tired."
in back of him was 14·year-old Jeff Regc berger. ·
tllrC:e w~vs," said the student at Dominio Middle School
in Columbus. "I've been excited
quets.
·
of Mrs. Carole B~sh; lenJesse Oayton Little and
ever since friend. of mine surprised
In athletics, he participated in football,
nifer Lynn Carleton, daughKara Ruth King will lead
me with tickets."
weightlifting and baseball and was a four-year
tcr of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
the Southern High School
His friend. - Pete Bondurant, 32,
footballellennan, two-year football captain, first
Carleton; Christa Nichole
and RQry and Susan Mcintyre; who aass of 1999, as valedicto3 Sections - 44 Pages
·team
All
Tri-Valley
Conference
football,
special
Circle,
daughter of Mr. and
rian and salutatorian,
both gave their age as the mid-JQ;
mention
All-District
football
and
baseball
letterMrs.
Jeff
Circle; Joshua
- had been in line since about 7 respectively, during a comCraig Ervin, son of Mr. and
man.
Calendar
6
p.m. "We just wanted to be here hi ned baccalaureate and
Mrs.
Herbert
Ervin;
His
future
plans
include
atlending
the
Ohio
commencement
exercise
to
_.!.C11
1ass!H!I11
0ed.,..s'----~'"'&amp;Oll!l0._ early to get the best seats - in the
Suzanne
Michelle
Evans,
State
University
in
Columbus.
be
held
Sunday,
8
p.m.
jn
middle about two-thirds of the way
Comics
11
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
King is the daughter of Diana S. Carpenter of
the Charles W. Hayman
back," Rory Mcintyre said.
· Edl!orials
:z
Rollie Stewart; Virginia
Gymnasium.
.
·
Racine.
"It doesn't really matter whaUome
Los:al l
3
Marie Howerton, daughter
She
is
president
of
the
Southern
High
School
Little is the son of Doug
of the writers might think,'' RegensMrs. Phyllis Howerton;
of
chapter of die National Honor Society and has
and Connie Little of Racine.
Soorts
4&amp;5
berger s3id. "We're the neal critiai."
Jeremiah Ryan Johnson,
Megan Goldman, 13, and her 11· . He is a member of the L---== - - - played volleyball and softball. She received the L-~h:.!
Weather
3
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
District
Honorable
Mention
award
.for
her
Jean
Clayton
Uttla
Carmei-Sutton
United
Klrl
Ruth
King
year-old brother, Eric, were about
Johnson;
Tara Michelle
junior
year
in
softball
.
As
a
senior
she
played
·
Methodist
Church
where
he
halfway back in the line that
Lotteries
Norman,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Daniel Norvarsity
volleyball
and
received
the
District
Honoris
active
in
the
church's
youth
programs.
He
is
vice
stretched the length of the theater.
man;
Jason
Pa.ul
Roush,
son
of
Mr.
Daniel
Roush;
able
Mention
award.
·
.
president of the school's National Honor Society.
Megan 'wane bright red lipstick and
OHIO
She is also a four-year member of Who 's Who and Kimberly Lynn Sayre, daughter of Mr. and
His academic and athletic honors include Who's
two red spotS on her cheeks because
Pick 3: 2-3-2; Pick 4: 8-4-4-S
Among
American High School Students and has Mrs. Pete Sayre.
Who
Among
American
High
:&gt;chool
Students:
she said she wanted to look like
Buckeye 5: 9-13.-lS-31-34
The Rev. Rick Rule, pastor of the Racine First
been
accepted
to Shawnee State University in
nomination
for
Congressional
Youth
leadership
Queen Amidala. That's the characler
w.yA.
Baptist
Church, will give the baccalaureate
Portsmouth
whene
she
plans
to
major
in
athletic
Schedule,
All-Academic
Tri-Valley
Athletic
Conwho in future movies will become
Dally 3; 7-7-0; Dally 4: 0-9-7-7
address
following
the processional and musiall
trai~ing
and
play
softball
for
the
Shawnee
State
ference,
Ohio
University
Outstanding
Juriior
the mother of Luke Skywalker, the
c tm Ohio """' PubUII&gt;l•a eo.
Bears.
·
selections
b)'
the
choir
under the direction of Greg
Award, Southeast Ohio Regional Scholllf!l and
central character of the saga.
Vance,
choir
director.
Honorarians are Teresa Dawn Blish, daughter
Southern local and Meigs County Academic Ban&gt;

•

•

Little, King to head Southern Class of '99

Band enjoys an evening of recogniti9n and reflection
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
S,ntlne! Nawa Sta~ ·
.
The annual banquet of the Meigs Marauder Band
Tuesday at Meigs High School was an evening of recognition 'and reflection.
With more than 200 family members and friends
attending, the band members heard glowing reports
about their perfonnance from Toney Dingess, director.
· He congratulated them on their competition results
and the number of trophies brought home from contests,
he noted that superior ratings had be~n won in solo and
ensemble compelition by four band members this year,
and that two had been good enough to make the district's
honor band.
"But," commented Dingess, "band is .more than learning to plax instruments well and winning trophies." . ·
"ll's abO-ui learning to work together for a common
goal, it's about dedication, it's about hard work, it's about
lifting up the banner and carrying it well."
In special recognition of seniors he presented the
Arion trophy to Dwight Icenhower, the director's trophy
to B. J. Smith, the 110 percent awards to Bridgf t Vaughan and Jennifer Lambert; the outstanding music.ians trophies to Jessica J~nson, Alyson Patterson, and Stefani
Pickens. Other senaors recognized and pmented awards
wert- Ben Crane, Jennifer Heck, Melissa Holman, and
Jason Young.
·
Certificates were awarded to the junior band members,
with Marauder letters going to the freshman and sopho-.
more members.
· Given special_recogniiion and a plaque of appreciation by the bind director was Linda Vaughan, longtime
secretary of the Meigs Band Qoosters. · . ·
Dingess also presented a plaque lo Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American legion, for a oontribution to the

band program earlier this year.
A second contribution of $1,000 was then presented
by the Post to the Band Boosters.
Each of the seniors spoke briefly about their experi- ,
ena:s in band. They gave tributes to the director, they
reflected on events, some humorous, and they shared
special memories about their years in band.
several gifts were presented to the popular director
during the

ARION AWARD- Dwight Icenhower waa the
recipient of the top mualclan'aiWIIrd, the Arion
troplly, at TUHday nlght'a Melga Mar1uclar
Band nnquet. Ha waa prnented the trophy by
Toney Dlngau, director.
·
'

'

TAI~iV WINNERS - Racalvlng trophlaa In
*IOC!n!tlon for their outatltndlng work In the
band ware from the left, Jennlfw Lambert, 110
percent award; Alyaon Pa~raon, outatltndlng

mullclan; Bridget Vaughan, 110 percent award; .
B. J. Smith, dlractor'a award; Jaaalce Johnaon,.
outatandlng mualclan, and Stefani Plckana,
outatandlng muatclan.

�/

Wedneaday, May 19, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Cotnmentarr
.

Death NOtices

By WIHIMI A. Aullller

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
7~·2158

• Fu: 002-21117

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
DIANE ..LL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeMI'III Manager

•*&lt;&amp;'llmH,.,.,.

•l!lt't»d,..,. .,,...

-ld

'7'r.. Sentinel
to fN .tlflll' l'nlrm ,....,_on
• · Shott ,.,..,.. (3fXJ wordt or ,._) h.w tlw bMf cltMH» at , . , pu••rtt.d.
!)'pod--~'"- Olld •II moy,.
E~~~o~utN•IIIfiM'UIO,
..,.._,.llndaytlme phoM nLYrtbw. Sprwlf'y • del• ff tiMft'• • ,.,.,.,..,. to •,..
to: utt.,. to 1M .clltor, , . Sentinel, 111 Cl!url St.,
' PoiiMO), Oltlo 46711; or, FAX to 7«J.. . .24167.

...,.. .,.,. , .,.,,'*"

-od.

·Editorial views
· · Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and n,ational interest from Ohio
newspapers:·
. .

.Intelligence sometimes falls short •
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer; May U
NATO's accidental bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade is proof
that while th" 20th century has produced "smart" bo~, the human intelli.
gence that guides. them sometimes falls short.
.
The embassy strike was 'not so much "collateral damage" - NATO's
euphemism for unintended fatalities arising from an attack op a military tar·
get. Officials .admit it was the result of a misidentification of a building by
CIA analysts, and other bungling that .should reinforce calls for a thorough
investigation into the soundness of the intelligence system that supports
. NATO operations.
We hope NATO's folly has not blown up the prospects for peace that the
world .saw arising from Russia's agreement last week to support efforts to
find ·a solution.

Flynt case ended in a draw
The Cincinnati Post, May 13
~
. .
It was supposed to be the Gunfight at the Cincinnati Corral, Part II. Good
vs. Evil . The people of Hamilton. County vs. Pornographer Larry Flynt.
But it didn't happen that way. On Wednesday, Good and Evil decided to
sidestep the fight. Each declared·victory and went home.
, There can't be too many people in Greater Cincinnati who are upset about
avoiding a disgusting, month-long trial centering on X·rated videos sold at
Flynt's Hustler News &amp; Gifts store in the heart of downtown Cincinnati.
" Still, we ' re not wild about the outcome, and not quite sure what princi·
·pie, if any, was established in the plea !Jargain which brought the trial to a
sudden halt before a jury had even been seated.
·
By our calcula!ions, this one ended in a draw.
.

Jacobs wants to keep making good news

Right now there is a battle
royal going on in the country
over when the United States is
justified in committing its
armed forces to battle, at risk of
their lives. Some of us are stick·
ing to the old rule: only when an
American "vital interest" is at
stake. Recently, however -- in
Somalia and Haiti, in Bosnia and Kosovo -· PresIdent Clinton hu committed U.S. forces to highly
risky militlry operations that no acnaible person
would argue involve a vital American interest. He
has done so, moreover, with the support (at least
In the case of Kosovo) of a good many Republi·
cans, such as Sens. John McCain
and Richard Lugar and commentator William Kristol, as well as
impressive foreign conserva·
tives, including Lady Thatcher.
Occasionally. one of these, .
and even Mr. Ointon· himself,
has tried to argue that there is
some vital American interest at .
stake in Kosovo, but their hearts
plainly aren't in it. Far more
often they say bluntly (as Lady
Thatcher did recently) that pow·
erful civilized nayons simply
cannot stand by and let Milose·
vic succeed in his barbaric cam. paign of "ethnic cleansing"
against the Muslim Kosovars.
Now Mr. Clinton, in the
course of an informal talk at the
~ational . Defense University in
Washington, has spelled out his
own new test for what justifies
risking the lives of American
soldiers, sailors, airmen and
Marines. it was not a formal
address, but it was the considered utterance of the president of
the United States, and as long as
Mr. Clinton occupies the Oval
Office we are obliged to regard it
as the newly prqclaimed foreign
policy of this country.
Here is a verbatim transcript of his declaration:
"(People say) ioo", there are a lot of ethnic
problems in the world. Russia has dealt with
· Chechnya and you've got... all these ethnic prob·
lems everywhere, and religious problems, you've
got, that's. what the Middle East is about. You 've
got Northern Ireland. You've got the . horrible,
'horrible genocide in Rwanda. You 've got the, the .
war now between Eritrea and Ethiopia. '

" They say, oh, we've got al l these problems.
And, and therefore, why do you care about this? I
say to them, there is a huge difference between
people who can't resolve their problems peaceful·
ly and fi ght about it and people who resort to sys·
tematic ethnic cleansing and slaughter of people
because of their rel igious or ethnic background.
"There is a difference. There is a difference.
And that is the difference thai NATO, that our
allies have tried to recognize and act on. I believe
that is what we saw in Bosnia and Kosovo. lt)link
the ,only thin&amp; we have ~n ~~tat really rivals thai
rooted in eth11.lc or reliaioill deatruc:tion in tbe,
this decade is what happened in Rwanda, and I
regret very much that the world community was
not organized· and able to act quickly ihere as

Ohio weather
forecast for
MICH.

0
0

l48'!7e'

'

I•

•I Columbu• 148'178" I

ANP~SSURE

(S.NPUNTING
~ 1HEM..~

w.W..

/
KV.

~.1WrLL
BE~Eo ·

'TOSIGNA

... .,.., •

o -..,~

!'fACE DEAL!

......, Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

T... ooro

-

R'"'

........
...

F1unioo

17, 1999, at his residence.
·
He was born Nov. 30, 1954, in Pomeroy, son of Connie Walkup Hoffman
of Middleport and the late Perry F. Hoffman Sr, He WliS a graduate of Meigs
High School and was employed as a millwright at Midwest Steel.
He is also survived by a former wife, Cindy Hoffman of 9Jeshire; two
sons, Bradley Hoffman and John Hoffman, both of Cheshire; two brothers
and a sister-in-law, Kenneth Hoffman of Chambersburg, Pa., and Ronald and
Tina Hoffman of Jacksonville; three sisters and two brothers-in-law•.Debbie
and Rick Hatfield of Pomeroy, Patty Hunter of Cheshire and Frances and
Ronald Hawkins of Middleport; several ni e~es, nephews and cousins.
He wa5 preceded in death by two brothers-in,law.
Services will be held Thursday, 2 p.m . at Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. James Ditty' officiating. Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Cheshire.
·
Friends may call tonight, 6·9 at the funeral home.

Gradual warmup slated
before weekend arrives Dorothy Young

well."
hi short, the United States won't risk its light·
ers' lives to ·stop the war between Eritrea and
Ethiopia, or to keep Russia from imposing its will
on the rebellious province of Chechnya, or to
. pacify the Middle East, or to stop the tit·for·tat
killings of Protestants and Catholics in Northern
Ireland. But it will intervene militarily to stop
"ethnic cleansing" i~ first Bosnia an(! then Koso·

By The A..ocialed Press
A high pressure system moving across the Great Lakes wi.ll bring cooler and drier air to Ohio, the National Weather Service said .
High temperatures on Thursday will be in the 70s under mostly sunny
skies. It may be a little cooler along the La~e Erie shoreli~e. the forecast·
ers said.
·
Looking ahead, the tool and dry conditions are likely to continue
through the weekend. With the clear skies, overnight temperatures will dip
into the 40s in some areas.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
lion was 92 degrees in 1964 while the record low was 37 in 1894. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:42 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 6:13 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Ciear. Lows SO to 55. Variable windS to 10 mph.
Thursday...Sunny.Highs 75 to 80.
Thursday night...Ciear. Lows in the mid and upper SOs.Extended forecast:
Friday... Partly sunny. Highs 80 to 85. ·
Saturday... Partly sunny. Lows 55 to 60 and highs near 80.

essential •• in the snake-infested jungles of equa·
torial Africa.
That, then, is the Ointon Doctrine; which the
president bitterly regrets we didn't have time to
invoke in Rwanda. 'Ethnic cleansers, beware!
Copyrlght1Dit NEWIIPA.PEA ENTERPRISE ASSN•

•t ' · • ·

William A. Au IIIIer Ia.a Dlallngula~ Fellow
of the Claremont lnaiiMe lor tile . Study ol ·
Stllteamanahlp and Political Phlloaophy.

l Ua J,

r

·g·

.

· Eastern Star se rvices for DorothyYoung, 85, Middleport, who died Sun·
day, May 16, 1999, will be held tonight at 8 at Fisher Funeral Home, Mid-

dS~nS

:

The Meigs County Board of Mental Reta rdation/Dcvelopmen;
tal Disabi lities will ,meet in regul ar sessio n Thursday, 4 p.m. at
Ca rl.eto n Schoo l in Syracu se .
·
·
•

Association to meet

:

The Meigs Area Holin ess Assoc iali on, yearly si ng spiration Ill
th e Laurel Cliff Free Meth\)dis t Church, 7 p.m. Tuesday.
. :;

Alumni completing planning

·

The Cheste r Alu mni Association is finalizing plans for a ban qu et on Jun e 5, 6:30 p.m. in the new Eastern Elemenlary Cafete:
ri um . Rese rvatio ns are 10 be in by May 20.
·
.
··:
Reumo n classes arc 1924 , 1929, 1934 . 1939, 1944, 1949, and.
1954. To make reservations call Rober! Wood, 985-3978 or Ros~ :
mary Keller, 985-4434 .

Literary Club to meet

&lt;

The Middleport Literary Club will meet al 12:30 p.m. May 26
at the iron Gat e Res tauranl in Poi nt Pleasant.
This will be the last meeti ng before summ er break .
.

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls .

of the American Revolution
Units of
to honor 5 .at awards banquet
Emergency

·

..

1 1

Storewide For
All graduating Seniors

' r - - - - --

---,

The Daily Sentinel Area school board ends ban on Hospital News
pants for female graduates

(liSPS JIJ-KO)
c.._lly N_,.,. H\Jidlnp.lnc.
Publilhcd CVFJY afternoon. Moaday th rOlJah
Friday, Ill Cour1 St, Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio 'Alley Publishing Company. Second cl•

1

pomp pood It Pomeooy, Ohio.
Mn~~ben The Allocilted Pma aitd the Ohio
Newtpaper Allocla1ion.

'

nen Stnd tddreu cometio111 to The

Pwt

Daily Stntirttl, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
.
SU88CRIPI'ION RATES
a, Clrrter or M'Oior Route
One \lloek ...................:........,...J2.00
One M.,.h ..............................,.$8,70
One Yeor................................... $104.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Oail~ ........~ .............................. 3S Cenia.
Sublaibers 1101 ~rinJ to PlYtbe carrier may
·remit in adviDce dited to Tile Dally Sentinel on
1 three, Jil or 12 month. bllis. Credit will be
pn c:urier each week.
No ~t~hlalptk»n by mail pennitted in arm
where home carrit!lservice is available.
Publishn nae~m tbc ri&amp;bl to adjuJt ntill durl•a the aublaipdoa period. Sublc:ription ntc
. diiDPf IDI)' be Implemented by chlaJina the
duration ot'the aubaiptlon. ~

Today In History

'

A spaghetti dinner to benefil Special Olympics will be held
Salu rda y, l1 a.m. to 6 p.m . al C::a rl e!on School in Syracuse;
Adul ts , $4, child ren, $2 .50 , $15 max im um p.er family. .
·

20 /oOFF

We haven't heard the last from Primakov

•

Special Olympics spaghetti din nee

We Salute You
'For Your J{ard
Work

a

·- ..

A Rutland youth was slightly injured in a one-vehicle accident Tues~
day on State Route 124 near Pomeroy, the Gallia- Meigs Post of the Stat(
Highway Patrol reported .
.
•
Aaron T. Bowersock, 16, was transponed by the Meigs EMS to Holz;
er Medical Center foll owing the 4:44 p.m. accidenl, according to th&lt;i·
patrol. He was later treated. and released, a hospital spokespe rson said. ;
Troopers said Bowersock was westbound when the pickup truck htt
drove hydroplaned, causing him 10 lose con trol of the vehicle, whictO
went off the left side of the road .and struck a pole.
;
The pickup was slightly damaged, according to the report .
·
:

~-~=-~~~
l~~~~~~;~~~;~§r~IO='*="'~-~-:=ft~
·n ·a axl"ne .WI"sem· an

Put aside the ridiculous legislation

·, ··-···--· , ,_;
.
.,

L-----------------------------~·

One-vehicle accident Injures Rutland teel')

the Meigs Co unty ment lo Ki ngsbury Road, tree fiie,
Medical Service no inju ries reported;
•
6:27 p. m., VFD and squad to
The Ewings Chapter of the Sons Enterprise, Rock Springs and Flat· recorded 11 calls for assistance
Tuesday. Units responding includ· West Main Stree t, motor-vehiple
of the American Revolution will host woods United Methodist Churches.
its annual' awards banquet May 27,
acci dent, Connie Dodson and
The Medal for Heroism will be ed:
Tiffa ny Barnes, VMH.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
6:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Muse- awarded to Sgt. Paul A. Pride of the
9:26a.m., state Route 7, Tuppers
um in Pomeroy.
.
RACIN E
Ohio .Highway Patrol. On July 27,
4:28 p,m., Mi le Hill Road, K,yle
The awards being given this year 1998, Pride was with another trooper .Plains, Mildred Wilson, Veterans
Lemley, VM H.
include the Law Enforcement Com- in a restaurant in Marietta when a Memorial Hospital;
11:31 a.m ., Overbrook Nursing
mendation Award. This award will be gentleman began to choke on a piece
. RUTLAND
..
presented to Richard Crossen of of food. Several people in the restau- Center, Middleport, Lynn Boston,
4:30 p.m., VFD and. squad . kJ
Athens. Crossen began his career rant tried unsucessfully . to dislodge Pleasant Valley Hospital, Middle· slate Route 124, motor-veh icle
with the Athens Police Department in the food before Sgt. Pride ll)ade three port squad assisted;·
'
acci dept, Aaron Bowersock, Ho\&lt;4lr
· 7:54 p.m., Sycamore Street, Medical Center.
1987, currently seryes as crime pre· to four attempts and was successful
"
SYRACUSE
vention officer, and writes as many as · in using the Heimlich Maneuver to Middleport , Opie Cobb, VMH,
12:52 p.m., VFD io stale Roule
99 articles a year in the local newspa· force the.food out. Pride joined the Middleport squad assisted;
9:46
p.m
.,
OBNC,
Ray
mond
124,
brush fi re, no· injuries repOrt'" " l e s -.- . - - · l per on crime prevention. He also calls patrol in May, 1989, and was previed.
'
Conley,
YMH
,
j
on 4tl) and 8th graders concerning·the ously assigned to the Marietta post.
POMEROY
TUPPERS PLAJNS
&lt;4
Drug Abuse Resistance ·Education He joined the Gallia-Meigs Post in
3:24 a.m., Hiland Road, Zelma
1:27 p.m., VFD to Kecbaugh1997, and as one of their sergeants
:;:::-.::
du~tno ~ lnlormallonllwl
He was officer of the year in 1996, serves as assistant ·post commander. Gilmore, VMH;
Foll rod Road, brush fi re, no inj uries
program.
· ,,
4:24 p.m., volunteer fire depart· teoorted.
Fraternal Order of Police man of the · He resides in Jackson.
There
will
he
two
flag
certificates
yearin1988andagainin1995. Aiso
,.
..
in 1995 he received the good citizen- given this year. This certificate is·pre·
·,Virginia Maxine Wiseman, 78,'a 60·year resident of Cliillicothe, passed ship award from the Veterans of For· aented to a person who flies their Oag
from this life Tuesday morning, May 18, 1999 in Mt. Carmel Medical Cen- eign Wars. In 1998 he was named the every day, and maintains it through
Kiwanian of the year. .
.
out the year for everyone to see, illuter, ColumbQs, following an extended illness.
The Rev. Keith. Rader, Pomeroy, minating it at night.
·
She was born April 13, 1921 in Columbus, Ohio to Benton Ray and
will
receive
the
Bronze
Good
CitiThe
litst
goes
to
Mickey
Williams
Gladys Victoria Gibson Jordan and was raised in Meigs County. On January
zenship
Medal
for
his
work
with
the
of
Syracuse
who
has
be.
e
n
flying
hi~
18, 1945, she married Damon T. Wiseman who preceded her in death Januyouth
of
our
commynity.
flag
for
six
years.
He
has
held
severary 28, 1972.
·
He is the director of Gods N.E.T. ., offices in the American Legion
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Rachel E. and Richard Vance,
Erlanger, Ky.; a son and daughter-in-law, Noel and Pam Wiseman, Chilli· which stands for Neighborhood including Commander of the 8th Dis·
· cothe; grandchildren, Erik and Jason Wiseman, Stephanie and· Elizabeth Escape for Teens, in Pomeroy, a ~lace trict American Legion, Commander
where teens can go to get off of the of the Drew Webster Post 39, and at
Vance, and many good friends.
streets,
get a good n\eal, arid find a . present he is vice chairman of the
. Mrs. Wiseman was a member of Trinity United Methpdist Church and
friend.
There are also programs National Americanism Committee.
was a 56 year member of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Alpha Xi Master. She
where
kids
can get tutoring help in Mickey is also a Korean War Veteran.
was an employee of the Chillicothe Veterans Affairs Medical Center for
He started Barber College jn 1950
many years, retiring in 1982. During World War II she served in Chillicothe many areas.
Rev. Rader is also a member of the arid is the owner of Mick's Barber
as &amp;·commodities clerk for the Ration Board.
8
Funeral services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Friday, May 21, 1999 in the ecumenical Meigs Ministerial Asso· Shop in Pomeroy.
ciation
where
he
was
in
charge
of
a
The
other
Flag
Certificate
goes
to
Fawcett Oliver Glass and Palmer Funeral Home with Reverend David
Brown officiating. Burial will follow in Greenlawn Cemetery. The family flood di~ter relief fund. He is the Beverly 51:humaker of the Nabby
will receive friends at the funeral home . from 4 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday. assistant director of the Meigs United Lee Ames Chapter of the Daughters
Memorial contributions may be made to the American Heart Association or Methodist 'Cooperative Parish. His of the Ameriean Revolution from
regular duties is as minister of the Athens.
the American Diabetes Association.
·

Both
. sides dumped their principles .·

'

Local briefs:

•

Perry Franklin 'Frank' Hoffman Jr. MR!DD Board meeting
Perry Franklin "Frank" Hoffman Jr., 44, Middleport, died Monday, May

•

Jackson's tree grows into new millenniu-m··

•

I Molnone~d

INO.

I

Juliaetta C. Bentley, 80, Syracuse, died Monday, May 17, 1999, at Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital Extended Care in Pomeroy.
She was born Aug. 3, 1918, in Charleston, W.Va., daughter of the late
Arthur and Lucy Burdette Cavender. She was retired from the West Virginia
State General Service Department, and was a member of the Ad&gt;1ent Chris·
tian Church.
She is survived by two sons, John f!entiey of Syracuse and Randy Bent·
ley of Charleston; six grandchildren; eight great-grandchildre n; seven sisters, Juanita Nunley, Pansy Lee Underwood, Jewell Loy and Marion Duncan, all of Charleston, Nancy Lou Marion of Ripley, W.Va., Anna Marie
White of Kenna, W.Va., and Carolyn Kay Halstead of El.view, W.Va.; several nieces and nephews.
·
Services will be held Thursday, 11 a.m. at Bartlett-Burdette-Cox Funeral
Home Chapel in Charleston with the Rev. John Prichard officiating. Buria l
will follow in Sunset Memorial Park, Charleston.
Friends may call today, 5-8 p.in. at the funeral home.

Thur.day, May 20

vo. And it would have done so in Rwanda (where
the Hutu killed nearly a million Tutsi in whai
amounted to an effort to wipe out .the whole tribe)
if only the " world community" had been orga·
nized and able to act quickl y there.
Mr. O inton 's last statement is positively chill·
ing in its implications. What other forces would
American fighting men and women have joined
to stop the slaughter in Rwanda, if only there had
been time? NATO? A United Nations coalition7
Or France (the previous. colonial power) and
some neipborin1 Am can states?
·
And exactly how would we have IIIOpped it?
Bombing Rwanda's infrastructure would hardly
suffice; for all practical purposes, it has no infra.
~tructure. Ground forces, then, would have bee~

The (Canton) Repository, May 16
Dick Jacobs has been a friend to baseball, Cleveland and sports fans of
.northeast Ohio. His ownership of the Cleveland Indians since October 1986
has been a steady good-news stllry. That he wants to keep maki.ng good news By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
There's a touch of irony in that. shelters it from the worst winte.r the rubber owl and it didri't bother th~
by selling the team is understandable.
.
Auoclated Pr... Writer
After a campaign in which she and her storms, a factor Williams said was cril· starlings either," he said. "They were .
Jacobs explained his decision clearly when he announced late last week ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ever· husband had been accused of adultery, ical when .it was newly planted.
not scamL They still cOme back."
that lie was putting the Indians up for sale. He wants to control who the n.W green and graceful, the tree has sur· bigamy and other offenses, Rachel
Thirty-four presidents have lived at .
Trees and the White House have
owner is because he wants to ensure a commitment to Cleveland. And that vived the branch-whipping .blast of Jackson was not looking forward Ill the White House since Jac)&lt;son and his always been linked. "Trees shOuld be
he cannot do if he is owner until his death.
countless helicopters, stubborn star- moving to the capital.
magnolia has been there with all of planted at once so as 10 make it an
. If we could choose, the next owner would be trying to win a second con· . lings, a suicide airplane and 17 decades
"I would rather be a doorkeeper.in . them. Reporters turn .their backs agreeable place to walk in,'' a govern·
se¢utive World Series in the baseball season of 2000, for we hope Jacobs of presidential history. Andrew Jack· the house of God than ·live in that against the prop blast when the presi· ment official said in 1800.
ends his ownership of'the Indians this year with the long-worked-for cham- son would be proud.
·palace in Washington," she had cried. dential beiicopter takes off and lands,
An American elm, believed to have
pionship. . .
·
It is a stately Southern tree, a Mag·
Irvin Williams, who began working and they watch the magnolia shake and ·been planted in John Adams' time,
nolia grandiflora with glossy dark' at the White House a half-century ago shiver.
.
hung on until 1991: J;m lady Ba,rbara
green leaves, supported in its old age and is now chief gardener, says the
· When the White House interior was Bush replllllCCI it with a young tree
The Middletown Journal, May 16
by a web of steel wires and a 30-foot· Jackson magnolia "creates an atrrios- rebuilt in the 19Siil, Jackson's tree was propagated from the old one.
Hamilton County' prosecutors ai)d smut peddler Larry Flynt reached a · tall, telescopic iron pOle sunk seven phere, a structure of something living" moved carefully to safety, then
Of the SOO.plus trees on the 18-acrc
plea bargain last week that ended Flynt's trial before it really got started. feet into the ground.
..S it reaches up Ill screen the private returned.
White House grdunds, more than 40
· " Who won?" was the question on everyone's lips.
It is the oldest tree on the White family quarters.
On ,Sept. 12, 1995, a pilot, appar- are commemorative., including a scarThose of us who think these trials are useless exercises are the winners. House grounds, so rooted in the histoThere's a reasonable chance the endy bent on suicide, aimed a stolen let oak planted by Benjamin Harrison
We have been spared the misery of watching this· trial unfold on a national ry of the plaa: that it appears on the venerable magnolia will live well into Cessna 150 at the White House. in 1889 and a Japanese Tluadleaf
stage, bringing more embarrassment and media hype to Cincinnati and back of older $20 bills, rising to the the next century, even with a hollow Falling just short, the plane cut a maple planted by first lady Frances
SQuthwestem Ohio.
roofline just about where Jackson and center and evident signs of decay on its groove in the South Lawn and barked Folsom aeveiand in 1893. Bill and
· The clear io~ers are the Flynts and the Hamilton County Prosecutor's his gardeners planted it to the left of the lower limbs.
against~ magnolia's trunk. .
Hillary ainton have planted eight,
Office. After all the macho posturing and talk about standing on principles, long-columned South Portico· facing
"I'm hoping for another 50 years
· "There's still a scar on the tree," including white dogwoods and a little~
bOth sides dumped their principles and took the easy way out. · .
the Potomac.
myself," Williams said. "These old Williams said
leaf linden.
.
· When the 111agnolia blooms in late trees, they look bad on the surface, but
Persistent birds are a more common
In "The White House Garden,"
June or early July it produces creamy on the inside they're determined to problem.
published in 1996 by the White House
T!Je Uma News, May 16
'
and fragrant white blossoms, ei$bt Ill keep going. Uke anyth!ng old, it wants
"The
tree
is
haven
in
winter
for
·
Historical
Association; William · Seale
· · Ohio Sens. George Voinovich and Michael DeWine voted with Democ· nine inches across.
·
to
stay
alive."
the
starlings;
flocks
of
hundreds
and
calls
the
.pr"'idents'
trees "an 110111111
rats last week in a failed attempt to impose more restrictions on private cit·
While
House
lore,
passed on
glory" thai help expaa !'llle IXllllinu" We're doing everything we can to hundreds of them," Williams said.
. izens wishing to sell private property to other private citizens when that
through
a
long
line
of
presidential
gar·
keep
it
as
healthy
·as
possible,"
The
starlings
are
noisy,
and
not
very
ity of this place through time."
prpperty is a gun at a gun show. A second atiempt a day later succeeded:
deners, cherishes .the Jackson magno- Williams said. "it's declined some. considerate. "They plaster the patio
"Generations of trees have been
· · · Put aside the ridiculous legislation for a moment. The most amazing thing lia as the rough-hewn, battle-wiming.
But
not
a
whole
lot"
with
droppings,"
the
gardener
said.
planted,
grown and died," . ~e
aoout the votes is the arrogance of the two senatllrs. They admitted the whip-tongued president's tribute to his
In
a
way
that's
a
bit
surprising.
The
Williams
placed
a
rubber
owl
and
writes.
"New
generations always
majority of electronic mail, postal mail and telephone calls from constituents
gardening wife, Rachel Donelson Jackson magnolia is north of its usual rubber snakes in the magnolia's high replace them."
ciP.JlOSed further restrictions on Americans' constitutional right to own Jac)cson, who died before he reached
range. Harsh winters are a worry. ·But branches to scare them off.
So far, the Jackson magnolia is the
firearms.
·
Washington in 1829.
the White House wall at the tree's back
"The crows took to sitting on top of · exception.
:The whole idea behind tlie Constitution's 17th Amendment, allowing
senators to be elected by the people instead of appointed by state govern,
ments, was to make them more accountable to the needs of a state's resi·
dents.
·
·
disparate administrations dating bacl! to Niki~
By Jack Andereon
Had Yeltsin tried a third
• and Jan Moller
Kruschev.
time · without success, he
The firing of Yevgeny Primakov as Russian could have disbanded the
Yet these same survival instincts suggest tO
prime
minister
last
week
by
President
Boris
some
that he's an unprincipled courtier who lacks;
parliament
and
called
for
By The AHoclated Preas
Yeltsin
was
a
good
thing
for
the
United
States
••
strong
fundamental beliefs of his own. Our inves··
new
elections.
Anticipatin1
Today is Wednesday, May 19, the 139th day of 1999. There are 226 days
but
it's
too
early
to
discount
this.
savvy,
anti·
West·
ligation
found him to be a man of soul-deep, anti-:
such
action,
anti·
Yi:ltsin
left in the year.
em
survivor.
Western
beliefs that he hides beneath a.disarming:
Communist deputies and
· .Today's Highlight in History:
When
he
was
offered
the
job
last
September,
.
charm.
others prepared to vole·
' On May 19, 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England's King
Primakov.was reluctant to leave his secure job as impeachment, which would
Primakov does not believe in Western free-'
Henry ,Viii, was beheaded after she was convicted of adultery.
foreign minister because he knew that Yeltsin have preserved the Duma.
doms, foreign policy objectives or economica.'
·On this date:
Into the breach arose a candidate who was His admiration is reserved for dictatorial Arab'
: In 1588, the Spanish Armada set sail for England; it was soundly defeat·· liked using his prime ministers as scapegoats in
tough
times.
·
'leaders and Asian "democracies" led by autocrat··
nobody's first choice.
ed by' the English fleet the following August.
Scapegoat
he
becune:
Primakov
committed
. First' proposed l&gt;y a liberal. reformist leader, .ic strongmen. It is a belief he pushed hard when
In 1643, delegates from four New England colonies met in Boston to
the ultimate sin for a Yeltsin hireling: He had and then hailed by the Communists, Primakov he headed up the Yeltsin-era successor to the
form a confederation.
.
·
In 1906, the Federated Boys' Oubs, forerunner of the Boys' Oubs of become more popular than the ailing, often in vis· was elevated via a landslide 317·63 vote in the KGB, and pressed even more vociferously aa for·
ible president. Though Primakov was never dis- normally divided Duma.
eign minister.
.
·
America, were organized.
·
loyal,
this
was
enough
to
sink
him
with
the
He
is
"a
politician
of
no
small
skill
and
cunThe
dour
68-year-old
Primakov
••
bespecta·
·In 1921, Congress passed the Emergency Quota Act, which established
ning,''
former
Secretary
of
State
James
Baker
told '
power-hungry
Yeltsin.
~led,
short
and
jowly
with
Brezhnev-style
eye·
nJtional quotas for immigrants.
Primakov
was
also
a
favorite
with
the
Duma,
our
associate
Dale
Van
AUa.
brows
••
was
a
familiar
figure
to
Russian
viewers.
In 1935, T.E. Lawrence, also known as Lawrence of Arallia, died in Eng·
"One of the most insidiously dangerous men
which had threitened impeachment hearings last But most of his work had occurred behind the
illl)d from injuries sustained in a motorcycle crash.
on
earth,'' concluded Frank Gaffney, director of
·In 1943, in an address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime Minister Win· fall unless Yeltsin chose him as the compromise scenes, not front-and-center. ·
the
Center for Security Policy and a former assiscandidate. So Yelisin was forced to hire him,
Primakov felt' the heal, the sense of urgency. ln·
ston Churc:hill pledged his country's full·support in the war against Japan.
·1n 1958, the United States and Omada formally established the North which no doubt worked to Primakov's disadvan· a voice deeper than a Siberian coal mine, he tant defense secretary.
"The most avmyed enemy the United States
intoned: "With the country. in suc:h a state, we
!age.
.
American Air Defense Command. ·
·
currently
has," adds longtime ·Primakov-watcher
It
was
a
time
when
Russia
faced
its
worst
post·
will
do
everything
to
stop
its
decline.
We
must
In 1964, the State Department disclosed that.40 llidden microphones had
Yuri
Raanan,
head of the Boston-based Institute
Soviet
crisis
••
greater
even
than
the
current
orte.
carry
out
reform,
(but)
the
state
must
intervene
in
·been found in the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
. .
· .
for
the
Study
of
Conflict, Ideology and Policy.
In
less
than
a
month
last
summer,
the
stock
mar·
many aspects of the economy. Don'texpect quick
. ;In 1967, the Soviet Union ratified a treaty with the United States and .
So,
despite
stories paintin~ Primakov aa ·
ket
and
ruble
crashed,
'banks
closed,
and
Russia
results. I am no magician."
aritain banning nuclear weapons from ooter space.
.
Yeltsin's
humble
servant, don't be fooled into
It wasn't his magic skills, but rather his inabil·
·'In 1992, the 27th Amendment to the Constitution, which prohibits Con· defaulted on its·domestic debt. A moratorium was
called on foreign debt, and the threat of civil dis- ity to change the Russian economy that Yeltsin thinking the firing will sideline him long. His
gi~ from giving itself mid-term pay. raisea, went into effect.
: Ten yean ago: The NCAA announced aanctions. against the University of order was everywhere. Police and military units used as an excuse to lire him. In reality, however, levers of power are everywhere, including with
Kentucky's basketball program for recruiting and academic violations. On around Moscow were placed on heightened alert. Primakov is far more popular with the Russians the c.urrent prime minister, Sergei Stepaahin.
Stepashin, who oversaw the intelligence acr·
The political leadership was in chaos as well. than Yeitsin himself, and a potentially serious
Wall Street, the Pow Jones Industrial Average passed the 2500 mark, ending
vi~
as well, is a Primakov protege and friend.
contender
Yeltsin
blamed,
and
then
fired,
his
prime
minister,
for
the
presidency
in
next
year's
electlie day at 2,501.10.
·
·
As long aa he's prime minister, Primakov still hli
; ·Five yean ago: Former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy On~is died in then put forward another previously fired prime tions.
power -- and is not too old for a comeback that
He
cannot
be
counted
out
simply
because
there
minister
as
a
replacement.
Unsatisfied,
the
oppoNew York at age 64. President Ointon held a news conference in which he
would
eclipse the sick and sluggish Ycltsin.
is
no
match
in
modern
Russian
history
for
his
sition-dominated
State
Duma
(lower
house
of
defended his foreign policy against suggestions he imptovisesi t from crisis
Copyrtght1-, unnect fNturalynclt ...., tnc.
ability
to
survive
and
thrive
through
successive,
,
parliament)
twice
rejected
the
nomination.
to crisis, saying, "I c;ontinu~ to look for new solutions."

'"

I
Juliaetta C. Bentley

'

The·Daily Sentinel The 'Clinton Doctrine' on risking U.S. lives
'EJtdfisklf·ln 1948

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

.

ALBANY (AP) ·- Girls in this for the policy change after her
year 's graduating class at Alexander daughter was told she couldn't parHigh 51:hool will be allowed to wear ticipate in the June 5 commen~ement
slacks under th~ir gowns.
.unless she followed the rule.
The district school board voted
Several board· members said they
Tuesday night to change i.ts no-pants thought the issue had been blown out
policy after the mother of a senior of proportion by the news media.
complained.
"Values are turned aro"nd, "
It· also eased the rules for boys, board member Willard Love said.
making the wearing of ties for the " What to me was a straightforward
cerem.ony·optional.
issue has become a sideshow."
The district had required girls to
A major eanhquake in Erzincan,
wear skirts and blouses or dresses to Turkey, on Dec. 26, 1939 took the
the ceremony. But Dawn Arnold, lives of 30,000 people.
mother of senior Kristy King, asked

Tuindliy
Admitted: Raymond Lambert, Rutland.
Discharged: None

·Sentinel
KAREN'S GREENHOUSE'S
COUNTRY GARDEN·CENTER

1.,

Watch for our GRAND OPENING of the rtew Garden Center, }wte 5th!

,..... Me~pc....,.

13 WeekL ....... ,.................. .S27.3Q
26 w.eu ..........:................ -"3.82
!52 Ylecb ..........................Jt05.56
Rota O...W. Mtlp Cou..,.
13 \\Mkl ........................... .$29.25
26 Weekl........................... .$,.,68
52 \\lotU ......................... $109.72

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK: Roses. retular $19. 9.9·

.
;

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

· Profttt your pl,ntt from the loeuttt-nettlng-$.19 foot
AU greenhouses open to the public
Hrs. Mon·Sat 9:00·6:00 Sun·Noon·6:00

Newa Dep1rtments ·

.

•••loor II !19Z·l155. Deport·

NIW. ...................................~ .........ExL UOl ·
or'ExL U06 ·

Olher S.rvlcea
Allftrdttot. ..........................;......ExL 11!14
~ ................................. .ExL1103
=
'W 1\da.............................bt. UOO

limit 3 per cutomer please.

Fresh line of beddiqg plants. Italian Large Leaf Bas il is ready!
AU 4" pots 99~t (but does not includ~ perer111inls or herbs)

O.r ulo .....,... hi oil IIOrltl II 1o bo •
........ ·If ,.. tuo... of u emor Ia •
....,, al .... !'"'I.... II (740) 992- ,
U5ll. We, wll c... k J ..r totlonolllloa .
•.. ~...a • telftctioa ltwuraaled.

GeMnl Mo-i .....:..................Exl UOl

-

. now only $to.oo each
Jree fertlllzeri bring flO"' own container,

Reade! Services

TIM ....

992-5627

get a current weather
report, check the

u

MAIL SU88CRI1'110N

Corractlol'l Polley

Middlep~rt

N2nd

The largest county in the United
States;. excluding · Alaska, is San
Bernardir o. Calif., with a total cov,
ering 20,106 square miles .
•

Place

IPGI3) 1:4S. 4:35, 7:JO,fiSS
(PGt3)

,..,.,_7•1~1111

JitotMt!IIIIW--- -

Brlna the kids over to enjoy the pettlna zoo .

Remember we
location. Follow 124
. moved back to the Racine
.
East, 4 miles out of Racine, we 're on the right.

Phone: 74G-949-Z68I

All TilliS $4.00
I ~~

..

�•
I

-S ports

The Daily Sentin.!l
Wednesday, May 19, _1999

Pioneers advance to Division II district softball finals

Zane Trace outlasts Marauders 7-5
•

8\1 DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Zane Trace scored its runs in the
fourth and fifth innings and held off
a Meigs come back auemptto post a
7-5 victory over Meigs in Division II
districl softball tournament action
Tuesday evening at Waverly.
· The loss ends the Marauders regular season with a very goOd 'I 9-5
mark for the season, Zane Trace will
now advance to district finals with a
22-1 record.
Meigs scored first in the first
inlli ng, Stephanie Wigal singled and
moved up • on a Zane Trace error.
Tangy Laudermilt then followed
with a single.
The Pioneers took a 4-1 lead in
the fourth inning. With two outs

Tabby Sheets singled, Sharrie Bells
and Katie Holbrook hit back-to- back
doubles and Tara Seymour and Tasha
Turner both singled.
Meigs came back and tied the
game at 4-all in the bottom of the
inning. Abby Harris walked and
Tony a Miller fo llowed with a single.
Brandy Tobin walked ·and Shannon
. Price followed with a clutch single.
The Pioneers came back in the top
of the fifth inning and took a 7-4
lead. Shannon Goff singled with .one
out, Melissa Butler reached on 'a
fielders choice. Tabby Sheets .singled, Betts doubled, and Holbrook
singled and the Pioneers hel.d a three
run lea:d.
Meigs tried to climb back into the
game in the ·top of the sixth inning.

Price tripled and. scored on a double
by Wigal, but the Marauders couldn't
get any closer.
Crissy Beck ran her record to a
sparkling 20-1 with the win, making
her the first ZO game winner in Zane
Trace history. Beck gave up 12 hits
and struck· out six, all five runs were
earned.
Sheets had a pair of singles and a
double to lead Zane. Trace, Betts
added. two doubles, Holbrook a double and a single, and Groff two singles.
Laudermilt, who picked up the
loss, struck out three, walked one
and scattered 12 hits.
Price had a triple and a si ngle to
: lead Meigs. Brooke Williams added
two doubles. Wigal and Laudermilt

had a double and a single. Miller had
two singles, while Harris and Boyles
had a single each.
·
"Both learns player preuy well,"
Meigs coach Darin Logan said.
"Wigal played a good game defensive, Price had a big hit for us with
the bases loaded, and Tangy pitched
well. Zane Trace had the big hits .
when they needed them, and we left
some girls on base.
lnqins 'l!Wib
Zane Trace ..........000-430-0=7-12-4
Meigs ................. I00-301-0-5=1-2-0
.
Batteries
·
Crissy Beck (WP) and Sharrie
Bells
' Tangy Laudermilt (LP) and Abby
Harris
.

some runS."

· The Indians' offense, the best in
the American League, has pounded
· Chicago's pitching staff for two
games, even though the White Sox
·entered the three-game series with
the AL's lowest ERA.
· Cleveland won for the ninth time
in II games Tuesday night, routing
the White Sox 13-0 and ruiming its·

two-game· total to 26 run&gt; and 30
hits.
"This is a hOI club, probably the
best team ·in the American League.
At least offensively," White Sox
manager Jerry Manuel said. "When
they get the pitching, they're ·very
dangerous."
That pitching Tuesday night came
from Di¥ight Gooden, who allowed
just . one hit in seven innings.· Two
relievers followed and co mbined
wtth Gooden .on a two-hiller.
Manny Ramirez hit his club- ·
record .tying ninth career grand slam
for the Indians, who scored early and
often. After pulling up I 2 runs in the
first three innings Monday, they had
eight runs by the third Tuesday night. .

Scoreboard
Baseball

Basketball
NBA conference semifinals

AL standings ·
~astern

lUm

,Tues.day's sCores

Dh·lsloo

»:

I. r&lt;J.

Boston ..........

........22

16

NeW York ......

. .21

16

Tampa Day ,,.,,,..

. .21

19

.579
.568

.m

~1

2

488

Baltimore ..., . ................. . 14

.368

8,

.TJ7
.514

8'o

24

Central Division
..... 28 10

CLEVELAND...

Kansas Cit)' . ............. .. ... ... I 9

18

~~~.::::·:::::::::::: . :;:::::::.::::: ~: i~

.500
.421
.JJJ

Minnesota . ................... ....... .13 26

•

3'~

Toronto .... .. .., . ............... .20 21

9
12
IS '~

Wnltm Oi\'lsion

. Oaltland .............. ....... ........... 21
Te"u ............... ......................21

Seaule ....... ... ............... .......... l8
Anaheim ........................... ... . l7

18
21
22

.!138
.462
.436

i

Thursday's games
New York at Atlanta, 8 p.m.
Portland a• Utah, 10:30 p.m.

Hockey

'Mr. Irrelevant'
CHICAGO (AP)-'- Penn fullback
Jim .Finn became "Mr. Irrelevant, "
the last pick in the 1999 NFL draft,
when he was chosen No. 253 by the
Chicago Bears.
·
The distinction earned Finn a shot
at Chicago's roster, as well as a trip
to Disneyland and.a parade.
.
Finn, a 255-pounder known as a
solid blocker, was fourth on Penn's
career list with 2,277 yards rushing,

·and fifth with 180 points scored.

NASCAR execs
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
·_ Bill France Sr., who founded the
NASCAR circuit in 1947, was an
auto racing executive until he retired
·in 1972.
His son, NASCAR president Bill
France Jr., turned over operational
control in 1999 to Mike Helton, the
vice president of competition.

THERE IT GOES! - The Cincinnati Reds' Seen Casey watches
the flight of hla ninth-Inning double during Tueaday night's National ·
League game against the host Colorado Rockies, who lost 5-3. (AP)

Reds down Rockies :·
5•3, win fou~ straight:
By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP) - It's a mostly
nondescript cast, but that hasn' t kept
the Cincinnati Reds bullpen from
becoming one of the NI:.'s best this
season, ranking among the league
leaders in ERA and opponents' batting average.
Tuesday night, Reds relievers
were called on to be workhorses after
starter Jason Bere was yanked in the
second inning. They were up to the
task.
·
Four relievers combined to retire
24 of the last 28 batters they faced
and allowed only one run, and the
Reds posted their fourth straight win ,
a 5-3 decision over the Colorado
Rockies .
Sean Casey provided the key hit,
a two-run double in the ninth that

~~~~~~

NHL playoffs
Thesday's ftrst-round ftnales

Thesday's scores

Buffalo 3, Boston 2; Buffalo wins series 4-2
.Colorado~- Ottroit 2; Colorado wins serie$ 4-2

s;

Conference finals
.
Saturday
Colorado nt Dallas. 7:30p .m
Sunday, May 23
Buffalo at Toronto, 2 p.m.

Today 's games
p.m.

Tonight's games
Ptliladelphio.at·lndiiUia. 7 p.m.
·
L.A. Lakers at San Antonio, 9:30p.m

said Gooden, who left after seven
when his shoulder stiffened up.
Chicago's only hits were Chris
Singleton 's single off Gooden in the
third and Mike Caruso's single . off
Paul Assenmacher in the ninth.
"We didn't get too many quality
· at-bats." Manuel said.
Ramirez homered to right in the
second after Chicago starter James
Baldwin walked the bases loaded.
The Indians scored three run s in
the first on two walks, two wild
pitches, RBI doubles from Robbie
Alomar and David Justice and • ·sacrifice Oy from Jim Thome. Richie
Sexson had a sacrifice ny in 'the
third, Kenny Lofton hit a solo homer '
in the fourth, and Justice and Travis
Fryman deliv.ered RBI singles in the
sixth'.' Fryman's two-run double in
the eighth inade it 13-0.
Baldwin (2-4) failed for a fifth
straight stariiQ pick up his third viclory, lasting just two innings.

18 .538

Bo11o11 6, New York .l
Baltimore Anaheim 3
Toronto 7, Detroit S
ClE"ELAND IJ, 0\ic~goO
Kansu City I], O:Ul"'nd J
· Ta!tfa Bay 5, Texas 4
Seanle 10, Minnesota I
Tamp~ ·

Nr=w York 100. Atlanta 92: New York leads
series 1·0
· Utah 9], Portland 83: lllah leads serie§ 1:0

Ramirez tied AI Rosen's club
record for slams and increased his
major league RBI lead to 53, pulling
him ahead of Juan Gonzalez's pace
last season . After 38 games last season, Gonzalez had 49 : He was up to
101 RBis by the All-Star break and
finished with 157.
Co uld Ramirez 'threaten Hack
Wilson 's hallowed record of '190
RBis''
" I don't think Mann y is keying in
on that," Hargrove &gt;atd.
"A lot of people sa id 60 homers
wouldn't be broken. The record that
comes close to impossible is
biMaggio's 56-game hitting streak."
The 34-year-old Gooden walked
one and struck out two before giving
way to Ricardo Rincon to start the
bottom of t~e eighth. By that time,
the Indians were cruising.
"When you go out with that type
of run support, you can relax and
know you can make some mistakes,"

Bay (W_iu J-1) at Texo.s (Clark

.

~ - 3),

2:JS

New York (lrabu 1- 1) 111 Boston (Rose 0·0), 7 : ~5
p.m.
Anaheim (Olivares 4-3) at Baltimore (Eri ckson 1~) . 7:0!1 p.m.
.
Detroit (MQt'hler ~-)~at Toronto(Wdls 4-3). 7:05
p.m.
. CLEVELAND (Nagy 3-J) at Chicago (Pa1que 5·
2). 8:0.5 p.rh
Oakh,nd (Cmndioltt 2-4) at KaMtas City (Rosado
2-2). 8:05p.m.
Minnesolo (lmcoln I·M tu Seonle 1Fa5sero 1·5).
10 :.\~ p.m.

Transactions
Baseball

..57!!

.550

18

18 .526
Colorado ........ :................ ,..... l5 20 .429
San Dieao ......... .................... IS 22 .40S

I

2
5',
6'':

Thesday's score$

court advantage from the fourth point past Chris Osgood.
seeded Hawks. Game 2 in the bestDrury's third goal. at 5:46, went :
of-seven series is Thursday night at
under Osgood 's stick. Sakic's sec~n.d ·
the Georgia Dome.
.
goal , at 8: 14, only added to DetrOit s
· ATLANTA (AP)
Allan
Maybe then , the · .peeled duel of
By HARRY ATKINS
humiliation, because the Avalanche .
Houston didn't make just one big former Georgetown centers Patrick
DETROIT (AP) - After the were shorthanded.
shot. He made a whole bunch of Ewing and Dikembe Mutombo will
Colorado Avalanche lost the first two
Still, the Red Wings managed .to
them.
·
finally materialize.
games of their playoff series a1 home bring the partisan crowd back to ..llft.
Throw in a superb effort by
Ewing, playing with myriad
to the Detroit Red Wings. it didn't with two goals in a 29-second spag ··
Lat&lt;ell Sprewell, and th~ Atlanta injuries, picked up hi s fourth foul
look like a good omen .
late in the period.
·•
Hawks never had a chance.
early in the 'third quarter, then got a.
It wasn't - for the Red Wings.
Lidslrom scored his second goal:
: Houston set a career playoff-high technical for arguing the call . He
"I don' t kn ow how we dtd it, but on a power play at 17:24, ending a
with 34 points and Sprewell did the played on ly 17 minutes, scoring 12
we found a confidence after the first scoreless streak of98 minutes, seven .
same by scoring 31, propelling the ·points and grabbing six rebounds
two games ." Colorado defenseman seconds, dating back to the third
Adam Foote satd aft er the Avalanche period of Game 3. McCarty made U·
surprising New York Knicks to a after his courageous performance m
100-92 victory Tuesday night over .Game 5 agai nst the Heat.
beat Dwoit 5-2 Tuesday night and 4-2 with his first of the playoffs at.
.'\tlanta in Game I of the Eastern
But Ewing came through with two
eliminated the defending Stanley 17:53 .
Conference semifinals.
big baskets in the final I :28 after the
Cup champi'ons from th~ play offs.
"' It seemed like when Nick got th~ ·
"' Maybe in the first two games, we goal , 1t ga ve us a jump," Shanahan,
"Those guys were shooti ng 10 Hawks twice cut their deficit to
were afraid of losing . After that , we said. "Then, · after Mac scored, l:
well, it didn't matter who was guard- seven points.
ing them," Atlanta's Steve Smith
"I would rather have been out
played to' win ."
thought it was really going to hap~.
said. "Unfortunately, they were there playing," he said. "It was frus The result ended the Red Wings' pen ." .
.
.· .
dream of a third straight champi In the Avalanche dressmg roorn.;
shooting well together. Usually, it's trating to sit - especially for calls
jllst one guy shooting that well'." · 'that! didn'tthink were good calls.".
onship.
. ·
they were thinking the same thing.
After struggling during the reguMutombo had 14 ·points, 13
" I honestly · believed we were
" We were gl ad to see that scc.ond ,
tar season, Houston hit a last-second rebounds and two blocks, but he
going to win this ." De.troit forward peri od end. " Sakic said . "They wer~ :
basket that gave New York an upset wasn't able to dominaie in the midBrendan Shanahan said . " Even reall y comtng at us at that point. "
of Miami in the first round,. He die as the Knicks · kept· culling
heing ct'own 3-2.'"
But it seemed to take all the ener-,.
burned the Hawks by going 13-of-20 through the lane and creating open
Peter
Forsberg
scored
twice
and
gy
the Red Win gs had . They ne~~r .
1
from the field, with three of hi s mi ss- ·looks. New York shot 51 percent (39goaltender Patrick Roy continued his got much going tn the third penod ·
es coming beyond the three-point uf-77) from the field, igniting a
FINDS THE SEAM- The New Ytork Knicks' Latrell Sprewell finds outstanding play as the Avalanche and Forsberg clinched it with an.
line.
crowd that included thousands of the seam In the defense offered b) I' Atlanta's Grant. \.on.g (Jeff) and advanced to the· Western .Conference unassisted goal wrlh 6:29 remaining.
"I wanted to stay hun gry out Knicks fan s.
Steve Smith in the first hall of Game 1 of the NBA Eastern final against the Stars, starting
·' It's tough to come back from
there ," said Houston, who scored 15 · "They stole one from us, but we Conference semfinal series in Allan Ia, where the Knicks won 100"92 • Saturday in Dallas.
such a big lead." Roy said . "The¥:,
·
points in the third quarter alone. " [ know we can win in New York," said (API
Roy had to be at hi s best, with the had 10 be tired . too...
.
1
didn't want to stop until I left the Sm ith who added 25'points for the a 93-83 loss Tuesday mght.
I ourth quarter, the previOus low Red
Wings outshooting
the
Since 1996. Colorado is 6-1 in ..
floor."
·
Hawk~ despite foul trouble of his
"We just did everything wrong, " be in g six by Detr,oi t against Orlando Avalanche 37·3 1.
·
Game 6 when leadmg a series 3-2 _:
. Houston and Sprewell gave the own. "We ' ve done it before." ·
Portland guard Damon Stoudamirc t,n 1993 .
·
·
" Bas icall v, what we did was take going in .
.
Crawford, playing for the . first said . " I guarantee it won't happen
· The ,Jow for fourth-quarter points it one game" at a time, " Roy sa id .
In the East, Buffalo heat Bnston
Knicks a youthful, !ightning·quick
duo that made the older Hawks time since separating his ri.ght shout- again, but we have,lo execute down
a playoff game was eight, by New "And we' played some great hockey. 3-2 to win that series in six games ..
appear to be just standing around. der in Game 2 of Atlanta's five-game -the stretch if we're going to go fur- .fersey 111 1993 and Houston in 1994 · Winning three games in Detroit, it's and move into the conference fin~!.
Suddenly, a team that was one of the victory over Detroit in the first ther."
'
.
Portland's previous franchise-low in not everv team that can do that ."
agains t the Maple Leafs. startin~
NBA's biggest disappointments prior round, led the Hawks with 26 points.
The Blazers have the league's 1 he fourth quarter was !3, in 1993
Mila~ Hejduk , Chris Drury and Sunday at Toronto.
~~
to the playoffs seems intent on mak- He scored 17 in tbe .second quarter, deepest roster, so fittingly , ·their · il.gainst San Antonio, and its low in Joe Sakic also scored for Co lqrado.
Sabres 3, Bruins 2
~_,
12
ing an impact.
·· hitting consecutive 3s that capped a fourth-quarter collapse was a learn any .quarter was
in the second Nicklas Lidstrom and Darfen
At Buffalo. Dominik Hasek rna~
"We didn ' t want to have a let- 13-0 run .
effort. Some of the low lights:
J:reriod ·against Houston in 19 87.
McCarty scored for the Red Wings,. 25 saves as the Sabre s wrapped uP,.~
down after Miami," Sprewell said.
But Hawks coach Lenny Wilkens
-The Blazers missed their first
"Their defense was excellent,"
It was only the fourth time in team their series with the Bruins.
··:•
" We're playing well right now. kept Crawford on the bench for the eight shots an&lt;l12 of their fitst 13 in lf'ortland coach Mike Dunleavy said . history the Red Wings lost three
Michael Peca, Wayne Primea~
Regardless of all that's been said, we first seven minutes of the second the period. Portland was 2-of- 16 ' 'They defended well and made it home games in a p'Jayoff series. and and Curtis Brown scored and Geoff.
can play together. "
half. By the time the second-year for- from the field, including 0-of-7 on I ough for us 10 get good shots and the fir st since 1966 agai nst the Sanderson had two assists for the"
I
looks at the basket."
Montreal Canadiens.
Sabres, who made it a relatively easy
Sprewell scored 17 points in the ward got back on the court, the three-pointers.
first half, then helped put the game momentum had swung to New York.
-Stoudamire, who outplayed
Karl Malone had 25 points and 12
"I think this team played hard, night for their all-star goalie. Hasek ,•,
away with a tO-point effort in the
"He had a great hand off the John Stockton during the first three rebounds for Utah. The Jazz won the and
we're
very
fortunate ," showed no ill effects of an old groin "&gt;
fourth quarter.
bene~," Wilkens said. "We .wanted . quarters and finished with 15 points, opening game in their fifth straight Avalanche coach Bob Hartley said . injury that flared up in Buffalo's los. ·
The Hawks went nearly seven to hav,e something coming off the 'made four turnovers and missed two series a streak thatdates back to last ."Onoe again we faced adversity and in Game 5.
:;· .
minutes without a field goal in the bench. That's why we did it."
shots.
year'; conference semifinals against the veterans showed great leaderSteve · Heinze tied the game 1-1
third period and New York rebound·Jazz 93, Trail BI~~Zers 83
· -Seven Blazers missed shots in San Antomo.
'
ship."
·
. f~r Boston in the ftrsl period and Joe . ,
ed from an eight-point deficit to lead
At Salt Lake City, the Portland the quarter, and . layups by
The Blazers played their first
And once again, home ice didn ' t Thornton threw a scare into Buffalo ·
Trail Blazers started something they Stoudamire and Brian Grant were the game in a week after sweeping mean anything to the Avalanche. with a tip-in with a minute to play. · ..
80-73 by the end of the period.
Then, Atlanta .failed to make a couldn 't 'finish.
only field goals. Even in the fin~l !Phoenix in the first round . The Jazz They' re 6-0 on the road and 2-4 at
Byron Dafoe made 18 saves fat :
· For three quarters in Game I of minute, when Utah had the game '" •!liminated Sacramento in Game 5 on home after two rounds of play.
Boston, which lost three stratght
basket for the first 6:33 of the final
Forsberg broke open the scoring after winning. the first game·at home.,
quarter. By the time Ed Gray hit a the Western Conference semifinals, hand, Stoudamire and Arvydas :S unday. Portland 's rest apvantage
jumper for the Hawks, New York had the Blazers looked younger, tougher Sabonis missed wide-open shots that was obvious in the first half, as the in a tight first period, sending a hush The Sabres have won their last two . ·
put the game away with a. 12-3 spurt . . and more rested than the Utah ,Jazz. could have saved the Blazers from Blazers took a IS-point · lead and over Joe Louis Arena, with his fif'h playoff series against Boston. ioclud" ·
The Knicks tightened thei~ de fen- They led 78-74 entering the fqurth, infamy.
.
threatened to blow the game open.
goa l at 16:15.
·
ing a sweep in 1993 .
sive noose around the Hawks after and the .sold-out Delta Center was
- Wtth 10:35 to play. Rasheed
But Malone and Russell, who had
The Avalanche, who eliminated
Chris Crawford ignited Atlanta with buzzing with apprehension .
Wallace clobbered Brypn Russell on 18 pomts, kept the Jazz close. Utah Detroit in the 1996 conference finals
20 points in the first half, eclipsing
That's when Portland's wheels a layup attempt and then drew·a tech- · took the lead wtth etght mmutes. left on their way to winning the Cup.
· For winning the inaugural'
his C'!fl'er high before the .learns went . fell off- no, make that the wheels, nical foul for argutng the flagrant and then watched the Blazers self- . broke it open with a powerful outDaytona 500 in 1959, auto .
to the locker room. Atlanta hit II of the 'doors, the bu'mpers and the wind- foul called against him. Utah scored destruct.
.
burst in a 4·02 span of the second
36 shots in the second half.
shield \Vipers. The. Blazers scored four points on the possesston, tying
'7hey missed ~ lot of s~.ots. I· period.
·
·
racer Lee Petty earned what
New York, only the second No.8- five points in the fourth quarter, the the game at 78-78 and shifting the · don I thtnk II was ourde~~nse, Utah
Hejduk scored his tifth goal at ' was constdered a good payseeded team to' beat a No. I in the fewest in NBA history, on the way 10 momentum back to the Jazz.
coach Jerry Sloan. ~atd . They were 4' 12 when he got hi s stick down to o ff for that lime - $ 19,050. I
opening round, has stolen the homeThough the Jazz played so lid takmg 11 to us unttl they started 10 ·deflect Aaron Mill er s shot from the
defense in the fourth quarter, they did mi ss ...
little else to deserve the une xpec
" '
.• • • · (Continued from Page 4)
15 1·tedly easy win. Utah was 4-uf- · rom
tonight. Anybody who got the ball S&lt;ime hits off him . That kid could get the field in the fourth , and JUSI II -ofhad to~ ready to throw two or three hits off anyone."
19. on free throws after the Blazcrs
Roc kies manager Jim Leyland began fouling intentionally.
innings."
Rockies manager Jim Leyland agreed. "He can really hit," Leyland
"We'll take it. I don ' t know if we
said the Reds bullpen "shut us down said. "Actually, it was a pretty good earned it, " Stockton said. "! think
pretty .good."
pitch. and he hit it."
you'll see both of these teams play
In the ninth , pinch, hitter Hal
Casey ·said Wainhouse's pitch was better basketball in this series than
Morris led off with a single off Curtis "low and away. It was just a pitch they did tonightWe can't take a
Leskanic (0-1 ), and Mike Cameron that I was fortunate enough to drop whole lot from tlu s game. because
'Walked. Leskanic 's first pitch tu the head of ihe bat on. t 'think he was hoth team s didn't play too well down
Barry Larkin bounced in front of the trying to get to an area, but I hit the the stretch ."'
. plate, and Chris Stynes, pinch-run- low pitch well .
·
In Tuesday night 's other playoff
ning for Morris, was caught between
"You should want to be in that sit- gaine, New York beat Atlanta 100-92
second and third trying to advance . uation - hitting in the ninth inning in Game I of the Eastern Conference
Dave
Wainhouse
replaced with a chance to win the game. I was semifinals.
Leskanic and walked Larkin . Casey ready to hit the ball hard someThe other conference semifinals
then doubled off the base of the wall where.·:
resume tonight with Philadelphia at
in left-center, raising his average to
The Rockies ·scored once in each -Indiana in the East and the Los
.381.
of the first three innings, but the Angeles Lakcrs ai San Aiuonio in the
"He's the kind of guy you hope Reds minimized the damage.
West . Both home teams won the ·
comes to bat every inning, " McKeon
Colorado starter Mark Brownson, opening games of the series.
· ·
said. "You know something is going making his first appearance of the
The Blazers' five. points were one
to happen. He is really something, season after .heing called up from fewer than the Atlanta Hawks scored
isn't he?
· Tnpi~ ,A. · pttched ftve shutout ill the third quarter of ·a 1986 playoff
"It wouldn't have mattered if they innings, but the Reds got to h1m for game against Boston . They also were
had changed to '(left: hander Chuck) three runs in the sixth.
fewer than. in any regu)'ar-season
McElroy, because ·Sean has gotten ·

broke a 3-3 tie as the Reds reached ·
.500 for the first time since May 16: ·.
·.
IW8.
Danny Graves (3-3) pitched thre~ ·
innings to earn the win, and Scott
Williamson pitched the ninth for his
fourth save.
." Our bullpen was the differ.
ence," Reds manager Jack McKeon '
said. "I don 't know where we would .
be without them. They 've been this
way all year e~cept for the first three ·
games.''
Graves said he and his colleagues
knew they had to be ready. ·
·
"It's tough when your starter goeS&lt; '
otit in the second inning," Graves '
said, "but I think all of us were pret' '
ty fresh. Jason has been struggling '
lately, and they had a quick hook
. I
(See REDS on Page 5)

li n

The Daily

PICKENS
HARDWARE

WE'~E HAVItiG Ati

OPEti HOOSE!!!

RACINE PLANT
Shelly Materials invites you to join us on May 21st

in celebrating our "&lt;l:ctP1lDilD1QZ&amp;dgy wrrta:dagdgpzn ][})lily~~

Montreal
(Hermaaaon 3-4), 7:05p.m.
·
.
Milwaukee (Abbon 0-4) at New York (Yashii 3·
at

lJ. 7:10p.m.

•
. Houaton (Reynolds 6·2) a1 Los AnJeles (Brown
4-2!, 10:!5 p.m.
Sr. Louis (Jimenet2--4) ar San Diego (Ashby S2), IO:JS p.m.
'

Thursday'sgames

$1. Louis (Bottenfield 6- 1) ~~ San Die1o

(Hitchock J.2). S:O.S p.m.
.
Piltsburab (&amp;nson 3·2) at florida (Meadow• J.
&lt;4t, 7:0.5 p.m.
.
·
Milwaukee (Woodard 2-.l) nt New York (Leiter
1·4). 7:10p.m.
Chka1o (Tracb.el 2·4) 01 Atlanro (Maddua 4· .~).

·

Arir:ona Hohnson 4·1) 41 Co!Ofadp (Kile 2-3).
9:05p.m. ·
Houston (Ha"li:llon 4-1 I 11 Los Angeles fPark .l-~J . IO: IOp.m.

9

There will be lots ollun lor the entire lamiiY'

dtt~elel' 2·2), 4:~ p.m. ·
ChiCIJO (Ueber 4-1) II Aorida (Sanchez 1-4),

7:40p.m.

L-----~·J

·

In

Today'• games . .

2·3)

_.

To be
published
Friday,
May 28, 1999

Pinsbur&amp;h (Cordova 0·1) at Atlanta (Oiavine 24), 1:10 p.m.
•
'CIN'CINNAJ'I (tieaslt: 0·3 ) at Colorado
(Bohanon 6-1), 3:05p.m.
Ariz.ona (Andy Eknca 2-4) al . San .Frandtco

(0Jea

NHL playoffs

ente1noer your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples,etc.

Arb:ooa 7, San Francisco 3
Holiston II, lo• Anzeles 3

7:35p.m.
Philadelphia

••

A special section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"

Monueal 7, Philadelphia 4
Chicago 4, Aorida I (I I)
Mllwaukee 4, New York 2
Allan11 12, Pimburgh 4
·
CINCINNATI !1, Colorado 3
St. Louis· 3, San Diego 2

.

Avalanche bury
Red Wings' repeat
title bid with 5-2 win·

Re01ember When?

NL standings

San Franc:i•co ............ ~·······-· 22
Lot Anaeln ...... ....... ......... 20

Knicks ground
Hawks 100-92; Jazz
beat Trail Blazers

Reds

American leacuc
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Purchased the contract of
IF Steve Decker from Edmonton of the Pacific Coast
leoa,uc:. Recoiled I B Chris Pritchett from Edmonton .
Optioned OF Regs;ie Wtllinms to Edmonton and des·
i@nnted 38 Dave Stlvestri for osstgnment.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Sent RHP Scou
Kamieniecki to Rochester of the lntern:uion:.l
league . Recalled RHP Jaso n Johnson from
Rochestet.
BOSTON RED SOX: Placed C Scou Haueberg
Thursday's games
New York (Hermmdei J-4) m Boston (Portugal .\. on 15-day disabled list .. Rc~·:i llcd C Mandy Romero
ti·om Pawtucket of thr lnternati onaLI:.cague
II. 7:0.S p.m
SEATTLE MARINE~S : Pluced OF Raullbaru:z
Anaheim (BI~cht-r 1-.l) at Bllltimore (Guzman I·
on 15-day di5abl ed list. Recalled RHP Rllfuel
41. 7:0.S p.m
Detroit (Miicld 1-J) at Toronto ! Hallndny 2-2). Carmona fiom Tncomn of the PCL
National l-eague
7:05p.m. ,
·
CHICAGO CUBS: Placed RHP Rod Beci on
Oaklnnd (Oquist 4-2. ) ;11 Kanstu City (Suppan 2. the 15-day disabled list. Recalled LHP Ray King
]). 8:05_p.m.
frorri Iowa of the Amencan Association.
COLORADO ROCKIES : Recalled RHP Mnrk.
Brownson from Colorado Spnngs of the PCL.
Optioned OF Derrick Gibson to Colorado Springs.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Recalled OF
Eastrrn Divi!ion ·
Hubbard and C Angel Pena from
lUll
»: I. r&lt;J. !ill Trenidad
Albuquerque of the Pocific Coast League:. Optlone&lt;l '
Atlanta .......
.... 24 14 .632
C Pnul LoDucn to Albuquerque. Plnced RHPAntonio
Philadelphia
.......... 21 17 _55 .\
3
Osuna on the IS-day disabled list, retroactive to May
New York .......,.... ,........ :.... 21 18 .5]8
3' ~
17.
Monlftal .............. .
..... . 11 26 . 2.97
12' :
1
Aorida ... .... .............
... II 28 .2.82
1.1 ~
Football
National Foolball League
Central Division
ATLANTA FALCONS : Signed OT Cornell
Houllon .... ................. ........ ...24 13 .649
Green.
,
St. Louis ............ ...................20 17 .54 1
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS : Signed DT
Chicago ................................ J9 17 .528
Kevin Landolt, CB Jason Craft " lnd CB Dee
Pinlburgh ............................. . l9 19 .500
Moronkola to three-year comracts.
.
CINCINNATI.. ...... ............... I8 18 .500
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS: Agreed to.tmns
Mllwaukee ........................ ... . l8 19 .486
with FB Landon Smith on a two-year comract.

We1tem 01\'lslon
Arizona ........... .................. .... 23 17

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

NBA playoffs

Indians thrash Chicago. White Sox 13-0
By RICKQANO
CHICAGO (AP)- No breathers,
n&lt;l easy outs, no soft touches in the
Cleveland Indians' lineup.
"We have good hitters," Indians
manager Mike Hargrove said in what
might be the understatement of the
se'ason. "W~enever we are patient
·and get good counts, we can put up

Wedneaday, May 19, 1999

bieludlniP
Your
Line Dutch
Standard Dealer

Plant Tours-Towboat Rides-Hot Dogs, Hamburgers, Snacks
&amp; Driqks-Activitiesfor the kids-Door PrizesAnd Much More!!!
·WHEN: Friday, May 21, 1999
FROM 9:00A.M. to 7:00P.M.
WHERE: Shelly Materials, Inc. 49947
St. Rt. 338, Racine, Ohio ·

PICKENS
'HARDWARE
103 South 2nd, Mason, WV

Phone: 773·5583

6 miles out of Racine on 338 along the .OhiO River. Signs will be posted.)
Please R.S.V.P. at 740-247-2311
7:30·4 M-F

,,

__
...

,.

..

Sentinel
Stephania Ann Banks
Malgs High School
Ctaaa of 1991

.

Held! Netso.n
Eastarn High School
Class of 1995
.

Special recognition for 50th, 25th &amp; lOth yef!r. .·
(1949 1974 1989) ·· $6~00 per photo or $10/couple.
Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
The Daily Sentinel
111 .Court St. .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Name
School
Year

'

Nickname
Deadline Fri. May 21· 4 pm

�~

•

.

.

.. ..

Wednesday, May 19, 1999

ByThe·Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page6

.. ..

Wednesday, May 19, 1999

-

Too much time on Internet couhj be signs of clinical depression
Ann
1991,
Dear Ann Landers: l read the
leuer you printed about .thc man who
esc;aped boredom by spenging lime
on the Internet. l would like to tell
your readers that too much time on.
the computer can indicate a ·serious
problem. •
Our son , "John ," killed himself
one year after graduating frnm Col·
orado University. He was a brilliant
young man and a loVIng son. I feel
tremendous guilt over his suicide.
Fr&lt;Jm the time John was 9 years old.
he spent a great deal of time on the
computer. l encouraged this. believ-

ing he would benefit from it.
He sailed through school without
drugs or alcohol and had no disci . pline problems, but there were signs
of too much withdrawal. John had a
beautiful
smile
and
gentle
demeanor; which l took to indicate
he' was OK. He was not OK.
l now know that depression can
be fueled by a lack of meaningful
hliman contact.
Excessive computer. activities,
on-line communiCati on, video
games and role playing need to be
added to the li st of symptoms of

clinical depression for the benefit of
people like my son.
Please warn your readers to look
for these symptoms, Ann. 1, wish .
someone had noticed John had a
problem and mentioned it to us. We
could have used some help. Perhaps
if you print my letter, it wi\1 help
other parents .-- D.A. IN COLCiRADO SPRINGS. COLO.
DEAR D.A.: My heart goes out
to you on the loss of your wonderfu l
son. While a computer does not
cause depression, any person who
spends an inordinate amount of time
online, 10 the exclusion of normal
social contact, may be at nsk.
Your heartbreaking story will
undoubtedly ale11 other parents to
the dangers. It was good of you to
wntc.
Dear Ann Landers: This is for
"Enlightened tn Norman , Okla."

who wrote about his electricity bill.
He quoted someone at General Elec·
tric ~¥ho said turning off a 100-watt
bulb for two hours a day would save
1·0 cents a week.
"E nlightened" scoffed, saying,
"That's sma\1 potatoes. Save. on the
big stuff like air conditioners, bathroom heaters and fumace blowers."
· Please remind "Norman" that we
a\1 have more than one light bulb in .
our hcw,tes. I counted 40 in mine,
tn.cluding the garage and basement.
Figuring the two-hour •avings at 10
cents a week, 40 bulbs would save
$4 a week or $208 per year. That
would pay his $114 electricity bill
for near1y ·t:.vo months. Small potatoes indeed' Enough sma\1 potatoes
can fi\1 a truck. Please turn off the ·
lt ghts, fo lks. --SHICKLEY, NEB .
DEAR SHICKLEY: Don't
depend on other folks
. to turn off the

DEAR HURTING: How d~s
Steffi feel about commuting to
school from New Jersey and spend·
ing weekends in New York with
friends or relatives? Her welfare
should be your top priority. An angry
step-daughter could make your marriage_he\1.
Is life passing you by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lonely." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for $4.25 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Friends. c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11~62, Chicago, Ill. 6()61 1-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.15.)
To find out more about Ann Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page
at www.creators.com.

lights. Tum 'em off yourself. Sounds
as if it would be worth the effort.
Dear Ann Landen: I have been
dating my fiancee for \6 months. We
are both looking. forward to sharing
a new life together. The only prob\em is her 15-year-o\d daughter,
"Steffi."
·
My fiancee lives in New York,
and I live in New Jersey. Steffi
refuses ID move here. She doesn ' t
want to leave her friends or her high
school. So far; the solution has been
.for us to live apart.
I miss my fiancee, and she misses
me. I don't want to force Steffi 10
leave her home because that would
make her terribly unhappy. and she
might take it Out on me.
I don 't want to· be separated anymore, Ann. What are we supposed to
do about this situation? -·HURTING
BETWEEN
. . THE MILES

It's all natural:, but sassafras tea can cause liver cancer

. ·~milp

~~dk:ine

Class reunions are h·eJd every year at the various high school alumni gc ttugethers arid probably the most supported for some reason are the 50 year
class reunions. I guess it marks a mi les.tone or one sort or another ro reali ze
that 50 years have passed since graduation.
·
•.
Often these 50 year reunion classes have spec tal parties dunng the afterJohn C. Wolf, D.O.
noon pf the ent ire alumni assoetat10n reunion so that members of the Class· ·
Associ ate Professor
es can really catch upon the activities of their classmates.
of Fan1ily Medicine
And so it is with the Middleport High School Class of 1949. The mem- ,. --·-·-····- ----··-··· . bers and their spouses are having a special get-toget her on Saturday, May
Question: I recently heard that but its concentration is highest in the
29, at the Middleport Church of Christ, beginning at II :30 a.m., and running
sassafras causes cancer. Is this true? roots of the plant.
into the afternoon.
My parents, grandparents and I have
When I was a child, my grandfaall
enjoyed
sassafras
tea.
What
type
ther
would take me to the woods to
Former Pomeroy resident, Madalyn Markham; was inducted tnto the
of
cancer
shou
ld
we
watch
out
for?
di
g
up
sassafras roots, sol have also
Broward County Senior Hall. of fame in ·Florida on May 6.
Answer:
Sassafras
·(Sassafra
s
had
a
long history of association
Madalyn, now ·82, was chosen for the honor due to her vo lunteer contria\bidum)
is
a
tree
common
in
the
sassafras
tea.
with
butions to the comm unity of Broward County at large. The Area Agency on
forests
of
Oh10
and
ot
her
northern
Animals ~i ven high doses of safAging selected her from 343.333 year round seniors. The agency 's prime
regwn
s.
ro\e
developed difficulty walking,
focus includes planning, coordinating and fundmg numerous programs that
Its lumber has a brown color and
"gns of nervousness and confusion.
benefit the needs of Broward seniors.
'
·
She is a 40 year reside nt of Plantation, Florida, and her late husband, C. distinct grain pattern similar to oak, and difficulty with body temperature
Robert Markham served as tax assessor in Broward County from f964 to but it is more familiar to most people regulation.
Long-term exposure produced
1966 when he passed away only two years after having been named to the as the source of sassafras tea.
All
parts
of
the
tree
contain
some
liver tumors, including li·ver cancer.
elected position. Markham Park was named for her late husband in 1967 as
safrole. the chemical ingredient Because of these health risks, the
well as the Markham Elementary School.
· Madalyn remains active at the school and enjoys mteracting with the
children as president of the C. Robert Markham Foundation, fnc . She has
been active in the business and professional women's club and served for 30
years on the Republican executive committee. Madalyn is also a past president of the .·.B roward County Women's Federated Club and founded the
Broward County Senior Citizen Art Auqion . ·
She was the owner of her own business in downtown Fort Lauderdale for
jo years and is the moth.er of two so ns. Bill and Mark, and has four grandchildren. Son, Bill , foll owed in hi s father's footsteps and has served as the
Brow'ard County prope rty appraiser. ·
· ·
~--

adaptab le. We survive threats to our
existence from things we consume
as well as from attacks from plants,
anima)s and other substances in our
environment.
The health threat associated with
one cup of sassafras tea is quite
small.
On the 01her hand; daily consumption of it is more of a concern,
whtle.drinking 10 cups daily should
certainly be avotded. Nervousness
and sweating are the Stgns of
overuse, while liver cancer is the
long-tenn risk.
l suggest that you treat your cultured taste buds to sassafras tea ori
rare occasions only. Drink other
things i'nstead, but do this in moderation, too. Large amounts of green
tea, black ·tea, soft drinks or other
products can also be detrimental to
your health.
·
"Family Medicine" is a weekly·
column. . To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Uoivenity College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor. Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

Food and Drug Administration has
banned safrole-containing food
additives. Sassafras tea, because of
its so-called "natural" status, is still
available.
Scientific studies done . on animals are generally a very good. indi cator of what will happen to humans
in a similar situation.
When safrole was studied in animals, the amount of liver injury was
directly proportional to the amount
of safrole that was consumed. That
is, the more you use, the higher the
degree of liver irritation.
The real risk of drinking sassafras
tea is difficult to measure. It has
been in use since before European
immigrants came to this continent.
Despite this, the medical literature
isn't filled with cases of those with
liver cancer due to the use of sassafras.
This tends to reduce my _sense of
urgency about this topic. There are,
however, many reported cases of
profuse sweating caused by the consumption of sassafras· tea.
The human body .is amazingly

"Good Night, Mrs. Calabash, wherever you are".
Some of you will remember these cntenainment sign off words uttered
for years by the late Jtmmy Durante.
Oris Hubbard of Syrac use sends along an explanation of where Durante's
· '.
comment came from in case you're curious.
· It is claimed that Mrs . Calabash was Lucille Coleman who was operati ng
a restaurant in Calabash, N.C. , in I Y40. Durante and hi s to~ring troupe
stopped at the restaurant and Durante was impressed with the friendliness of
Coleman in the operation of her restaurant. As Durante left the restaurant he
comm e nt~d: "Good ntght, Mrs. Calabash and it wasn't long afterward that
he began signing off hi s radio shows with hi s now famous line:
"Good night , Mrs. Calabash-wherever you are".
So that' s the way the &gt;tory is told th ese days.

,,'

We 've come a long -.ay. Baby. Looking back, l can remember when
church ministers in Middleport used to come to classes i·n the Middleport
schools and speak to the students. Would you believe they even talked
·
about God? Do keep smiling .

Community Calenda,._rThe Com_munity Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wtshmg to announce meetings_and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are printed as space permtts and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
dQS .

·

..

·+

'

Weekends

.i

i'

..../

.

..

until

..: t.'

November

1999 h9er

WEQNESDAY
. POMEROY .-:- K-9 Konnectio?t 4-H Club, W~dnesday, 6:30 p.m. at
fatrgrounds. Pnmanly dog club. For more information call 985-3975 or
667-35.45.

on rate plans $20 and

CHESTER- Shade River Lodge 45~. F&amp;AM, , 7 p.m. Wednesday,
special meeting. Work in E.A. degree.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Rock Springs Better Health Club, Thursday, I p.m. at
the home of Helen Blackstone.
J
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship for teen s. Friday, 6
W !0;30 p.m at God·'s Neighborhood Escape for Teens in Pomeroy. Non VIOlent Vtdeo games, computer programs, pool tables and Cards free in
game room. The cenier is also open Saturday night.

i
I.

!.

''

Phones ,
'

••.•

!'

start at

SYRACUSE .- The Tony Brothers, at ihe Syracuse Nazarene Church,
7 p.m. Friday. Free will offering will be taken .
RACINE - Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medi ci ne's
Chtldhood _lmmuntzauon Program (CHIP), a mobile health program, will
provide free immuni zations for all area children from birth through 18
years of age on May 21 from 3 to 5 p.m . at the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department in Racine .. The prograin also offers theHepatitts B vaccine
tree of charge to all chtldren through age 18. The vaccine is a three-shot
se ries over a minimum of six months. The chi.ld' s previous shot records
should be prov ided. ·
·
.
·
. CLIFTON, W.Va . .:..... A h)min SJng ·wi\1 be held at the Clifton.Tabernatle l='riday. 7 p.m.
.
· ·
SATURDAY
. POMJ;:ROY - Civil War M'cmona l Day ceremo ny wtll be held at the
CIVI l War statue at the Me.igs County Co urthouse, II a.m. Satu~day.

'.
.

.

I

/

~

·:

J

!
I' ,
'i
'

ce...tn-aw..

I

.

·d

$4.9f piiJnes .,.rec:oudllioood.

~'.

ll.te plan ~ ... toe&amp; pool&lt; mi....._
lolllnd
not lrdudod.

"""*"

CELLULAR

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172. OES. in spection , Saturday night , Middleport Masonic Temple.
·

.

.
.. ~

•

'

wireless
that works.••
for you

·The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Biography of wives of U.S. presidents from Ohio presented at DAR meeting
A biography of the wives of the
seven United States presidents from
Ohio was given by Mary Yost at a
recent meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
.American Revolution.
Yost noted that Ohio has produced more U.S. presidents than any
other state in the Union. Ohio residents serving as U. S. Presidents
included the eighteenth president,
Ulysses S. Grant (1&amp;69-77); the 19th,
Rutherford Hayes (1877-81); the
20th was James Garfield ( 1881 ); the
23rd. Benjamin Harrison (\889-93);
the 25th, William McKinley (190913); the 27th, William Howard Taft ~
( 1909- 13); and Warren G. Harding
(1921-23)
Julta Dent Grant was born in St.
Louis, M'!. and grew up on a plantation near St. LoutS in a typically
Southern atmosphere. She met
"Ulys" at her home where her fami·
ly welcomed him as a West Poi nt
classmate of her brother Frederick.
They. .fe\1 in love and !\lle soon
agreed to wear hi s Westpoint pin .
The Mexi can War deferred their
married until 1848. He resigned his
Commission two years later bul was
later called to a soldier's duty when
the Civil War began. The Grants
entered the White House in !869. In
1984, Ulysses S. Grant wro te his
famous personal memoirs. in 1997,
Julia attended the dedication of
Grant's monumental tomb m New
York City where she was also laid to
rest in 1902.
Lucy Wa:re Webb Hayes was born
m Chi\licothe, and graduated from
Wesleyan Female College in Cincin. natt. She and Rutherford Hayes were
married in 1852 and had eight chi\·
dren. She won the affectionate name
of "Mother l ucy" from men of the
23rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry who
·served under her husband's com-·
mand in the war for her visits to
camp to minister to the wounded
and cheer the homesick.
She was a temperance advocate
and liquor was banned at the mansion during this administration .
After she left the White House, she
was nicknamed "Lemonade Lady".
Lucy died at their home in Fremont,
Ohio in 1889.
. Lucretia Rudolph Garfield and·
her husband, President James A.
Garfield, had five children; two of
whom died in infancy. Thi: couple
shared intellectual interests, read
together, made soc ial calls together
and traveled together.
In May Mrs. Garfield fell gravely ill, apparently from malaria and
nervo us ex haustion, and was sti\1 a
convalescent at a seaside resort ln
New Jersey, when Garfield was shot
bv a demented assassi n on July 2.
· She returned to the White House
and durin g the three months her husband t'ought for his life, her grief,
devotion and fortitude won the '
respect and sympathy of the country.
After Garfield's death the family
went home to their farm in Ohio.
Lucretia Ga rfi eld died on March \4,
1918.
In 1890. Caroline Scott Harri son,
wife . of President Benjamin Harri son, lent her prestige as First Lady to
the foundtng of the National Society
Daughters of the American ~evolu­
ti on. She served as its first President
General. ,The First Lady was sucCessful in an extcns1ve renovation of
the White House. She helped raise
funds for the Johns Hopkins Universi ty medical school on condition that
it admit women, and died in Octo·
ber, 1892 of Caroline Hamson died
of tuberculosis at the White House
m October !892. When the official.

mourning for Caroline ended, Mrs.
McKee acted as hostess for her
father in the last months of his tenn.
Ida SaxtOn and William McKin ley were married in January 1871 ,
and when they moved into the White
House in 1897, Ida was an invalid.
As a former Congressman and then
governor of Ohio, William McKinley was never far from the side of his
wife and at the White House, he
acted as if her health were no great
handicap to her role as First Lady.
When the President was shot by
an assassin in September 1901 , after
his second inauguration , he thought
·

primarily of her and inurmured to social oril ltanc e. Her own book,
his secretary, "Be careful how you "Recollect ivns of Full Years", gives
tell my wife." After his death, she her account of a varied life . Her pubreturned to Canton, the place where lic role did not end when she left the
she was born,
White House. In 1921 her hu&gt;band
Born in 1861 and reared in was appoi nted Chief Justice of the
Cincinnati , Helen Herron Taft was United States. Wi\liam H. Taft died
married to William H. Taft in 1886. 'in 1930; ·his wife on May 22. \943.
Florence Kling Harding was born
Travel with her hu sband. who
became Secretary of War in 1904, in Marion in I 860 and grew up
brought widened interest in world there. She married Warren B. Haldpolitics and a cosmopolitan circle of ing in I891. As he rose through Ohio
fri'ends. His election to the Presiden- politics and became a U.S. Senator.
cy gav.e her a position she had' long she directed a\1 her acumen to his ·
desired. As First Lady her emphasis career. When Mrs. Harding moved
was on giving the administration a into the White House, she opened

the mansion and ground&lt; to the pub- offtcer for the 1999-2001 term.
lic again - both had been closed Elected to serve were Mary Kay
through President Wilson 's dines~. Rose . regent; Peggy Moore, vice
Mrs . Harding always liked to travel ' regent ; Anna Cleland, recording secwith her husband and was with him retary ; Patricia Holter, assistant
in the summer of 1923. when he died recording secretary; Donna Jenkins.
unexpectedly in Californt a, shot1\y corresponding secretary; Abbie
before the public learned of the Stratton, treasurer; Rae Reynolds,
major ~candals facing his adminis- registrar; Bernice Carpenter, historitratilln . Florence Harding d1cd in ~ an: and Emma Ashley. librarian.
Marion. Ohio on November 23,
The next meeting will be held on
\924.
June 12 at 5 p.m. hosted by Anna
During the busineS&gt; meeting.con- Circle Cleland at the Cleland Farm·
ducted by Pauhne Adtkins, rege,nt , in Langsville . Spouses and guests
Eleanor Smith. nomtnating commi t- are mviled
tee chairman. presented a slate ·elf

PEPSI &amp;
PEPSI
·PRODUCTS

P 0 WE Ll 'S
STORE HOURS

Moaday thru
Sunday
8AM·IO PM

6 PK. 24 OZ. NR

2/$4''

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts ·c redit Cards

THE .RI&amp;HT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU May 22, 1999

LAY'S POTATO
CHIPS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

•

(ASST. VAR.)
'

2/$)49
BONELESS PORI

LB.

$15 9

Sirloin
Chops
.•.•••.•••••••.
.
.
FRESH PORK ·
.

LB.

$1.99

·Cube Steak ••• ~••••••••.• .·
USDA BEEF
$
Stew Meat ...~.....L!·..
FRESH BEEF

... .

Cube Steak ••• ~:·...
'

SJ99
··

·

1.
C
Frank1es ••••••• ~~ol• 99

SUPERIOR'!

.

79

. .

USDA EYE OF ROUND

14.5·18 oz.
CHIPS AHOY OR
14.5·16 oz.
RITZ CRACKERS

2/$5
ARMOUR
TREEl

$249
Steak •••••••••••••!!.

89

USDA BONELESS BEEF .

$159
Blad·e Steak ......••!!~

C

4

120Z.

ck Roas ••••••••,. 99c

USDA BONELESS

ll

.

(REG. OR
50% LESS FAT)

STOKELY'S
.SQUEEZE
CATSUP

.

28~.

.

Bradford VBS slated
Vacation Bible school was
announced for June 14 to 18, 9 to
n:30 a.m. at the Bradford Church of
Christ when ttie 'Lydia Council met '
recently at the . home of Carolyn
Nicholson. Diane Bing_ was co-host-ess for the meeting which opened
with prayer by Paula Pickens.
Officer reports ·were given.
Nicholson gave devotions using Titus
·2 with the. theme being on a mentor
for Christ. Bing read poems, "A
Mother's Beatitudes" and ''The
Mother's Way."
Sunshine baskets were given to
Elenora Hoover. Robert and Betty
Swift and Vicki Tipton. Suzie Will
wi\1 handle communion for June.
Pantry supplies to be broughi in for
June include beverages and for July, .
peanut butter and jelly. Needed for
the kitchen in June are five ounce
paper cups and for July. dishwashing
·Jiquid.
A donation was given by Eliza.beth _Duffy to tHe council \O be used
for the mother-daughter banquQ_t.
The church picnic was announced
for Sunday, July II at 12;30 p.m. at
Lake Alma in Wellston.
Refreshments were · served by the
hostesses to Cherie Williamson, ·
Sherry Shamblin , Sabra Ash, Paula
Pickens. Jackie Reed, Charlotte Van
·Meter, Sherry Smith, ~adelinc
Painter, Suzie and Christi Will, Gerry
Lightfoot Nancy Morris. Becky
Amberger, Tracy Davidson, and
Brenda Bolin. Hanning and Wi\1 will
host the June meeting.

5.5 oz.

$

#1 IDAHO

e

p

10LBS.

.

Ia k1ng otatoes ••••••• .
SHEDD'S SPREAD COUNTRY CROCK

199

$ 179

Margarine •••••••• :;::.

89 c

AUNT JANE'S
ICEBERG
KOSHER
$SPEARS

..... 139

.

$219
•
640Z.
· Ju1ce........
0 range
·

MINUTE MAID

$4''
••••••••••••••••
34.501.

1/2GAL

PEPPERIDGE FARM (ASST. ~~~~~.

&amp; BEANS

LIMIT 4 PLEASE. ADD. PUFICH. 3/$t

2/$ 4·

Ice. cream ................~. . .
BROUGHTON PREMIUM IASST. FLAY.)

.

$

139

Cakes•••••••••••• .
JIF . NUT. .JACK FROST
STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES
.BUnER
SUGAR

,,.,.oz ' SJ6'LBS

LIMIT 2 PLEASE. ADD. PURCH. $1 .&gt;411

(ASSl. VAR.)

3~~
.

·9 C

5.5 oz.

Win A

BANKROLL
This Week.
·Powell's Super
Value

$300
Free Cash!

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 19, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedneeda~,

Mat.!_9, 1999 .

Pomeroy • Mlddle,fort, Ohio

The

Daily

'

Page.9.

Sentinel •

·SocietY.. Scrapbook
DofA honors mothers, ·
Mothers were honored at a
recent meeting of th e Past
Councilors Club of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
Goldie Frederick Betty
Young and Erma Cleland read
Mother's Day. poem s.
· Recognized and presented
potted plants were Mary Jo
Barringer. the youngest moth er present. and Marcia Keller,
the oldest m other there·. All
other mot hers atte nding .were
.
also presented potted· flowers .
•
Erma C leland pre sided at
. : t~e meeting u.pened by reading
:: • .Re·v. 2 1. The Lord 's Prayer
• • arid· pledge to th e flag were
-: . given in unison. For roll ca l l
.: • me~bers ,named a lrec in their
·; • . ya rd .
·
:. ; { Door prizes we nt to Eliza.:; beth Haye s Thel ma White and
::
Mary K . Hol-t er. Refreshments

··
were serve d lO ' th ose nam ed
' . and Dolores Wolfe. Margaret
'·
•

Amberge r. Jean We l sh, Char lo tte Gran!, Opa l H oll on, and
Laura Mac N ice.

Dino1er planned
The annua l matchin g fund
project of the Modern Wood -·
men of Ame n ca n. Camp 7230,
Burlingham, this year to benefit the Meigs EMS and the
Che ster Fire Department, w ill
be held on May 3 1.
There w11r be .a smorgasbord dinner along w ith a bake
sa le and a flow er and plant
sa le.

Dinners to eat in or carry
out will be ·available from
II :30 a.m. to 6:30p.m . at the
hail in Burlingham . Free· will
donations will be accepted .
There will be a variety of
meats al ong with other foods
and desserts .
The proceeds up to $2,500
will be matched by the home
office of Modern Woodmen .
The fi re dep~rtment will
use .their portion of the money

Program presented
"Helping Others" was the
theme of the program presented at a recent meeting of the
Syracuse
Asbury
Unlled
Methodist Women at the
church.
The program was given by .
Elma Louks and Jean Stout ·
and. pertained to God 's calling
to be neighborly. Scriptur~
was taken from Matthew 22.
The leaders; commen ted on
to purchase an automati-c .the two great comman dments
defibulator.
in the scripture "to love God
and to love your neighboFs. "
They talked about seeki ng
Mothers honored at banquet understanding through listen The annual mother-daugh - ing and talking: toge ther tn
ter banquet was · held at the harmony as part of God's fam Springs
United ily.
Rock
Methodist Church re.cc ntly.
Ruth Crouch had the o.penDebra Rader wclcome\1 55
ing prayer ~nd gave a reading ,
mot hers and .guests to the din - " A Gift of Love. '.' Hope Moore
ner. The program was· con- . pres ided at the meeting and
du cted by · Helen B l ackston
led in the UMW purpos~ . It
with Louise Radford · at the
wa s noted that Moore , Jea n
piano for group singing. Stout ·and Freda Wjlson
Nancy Radford read a poem, attended the retrea t of the
"Dan deli ons "
and
Stacey
UMW in April.
Smeck gave "The Mom I'd
S~o ut gave the secretary's
Like to Be ."
report and 19 sick calls were
Taking part in a skit were noted. A free will offe ring was
Norma Baker, Martha King , taken . Moore read a letter
Sally Ingels , Stephanie Ash , from Good Works in app rec i aLee Codner, Thelma Jeffers , tion for help.
Lou Ann Smeck, Dedra Rader,
De \!O li ons were · given by
and Michelle Day.
Marie. Houda shel( who used
Thelma Jeffers co nducted fa mous mi ssiona ri es in the '
drawings .for door
prizes. Bible, gave a list of 48 words
Flowe rs and other items were 'used only once in the Bibl e,
· donated for the pccasio n:" The and read a Bible verse .
·
. benedictio n was goive n by
Prayer was given by Louks
Blackston.
and the group· repeated The
Lord 's Payer in uni so n. Also
attending was Mary Lisle.

SON BORN • James. and ,
, Becky Williams Snodgrass of
Langsville announce the ~irth of
their second child, a son, Wesley Mitchell.
The infant was born April 23
and weighed seven pounds, one
ounce. Mr. and Mrs. Snodgrass
have a daughter. Megan.
Paternal grandparents are ·
James and Lois Snodgrass of ·
Rutland, and maternal grandpar- .
ents . are Randy and Denise
Williams of Langsville. Greatgrandparents are , James and
Ruth Snodgrass of Racine,
Helen Bailey of Racine, and
Ronald and Wanda Williams of
Langsvi114!.
WESLEY SNODGRASS

News policy
. In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel wi ll not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submitted after the 60day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
AI.I club meetings and uther.news .
articles in the society section mu st ,
be s4bmitted wi thin 60 days of
occurrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

•tr\1'\'\

SELF STORAGE

CELEB.RATING - Meigs co.;;tli;ns· joined senior citizens 11cross the nation Tuesday to celebrate Senior Citizens Day. Theme this year Is· " Honor the Past, Imagine the Future: Towards a
Society for All Ages;'
·
Preceding a luncheon ser-ved on placemats colored by Pomeroy Elementary ·students, Suaari
Oliver, director, extended a. welcome to the seniors, " our reason for opening the doors", nicc;~g·
nized· volunteers for the time and talent they give, and introduced Kathy Stevena, ombudsman
from the Area Agency on Aging, who spoke briefly about the role whlcll seniors fill in society: .
As a. part of " honoring the past", Annie C::hapman and Scou Dillon, appeared in the period
costuming they wear as Pomeroy to11r guides. Chapman, president of the Pomeroy Merchaots
Association, talked about Pomeroy's downtown revitalization,
·
·
Also on the program were Gerald and Mary Powell, pictured above left, who gave a history of
dance and ttien did a waltz. Dorothy Downie read an original poem, Gerald Kelly sang several
songs, and there was group singing to round out the program.
'
·

Proposal would make infidelity a crime
LOS ANGELES (AP) - · A
woman fed · up with unfaithful
spouses wa·nt s to mak e infid.eli - .
ty it cr ime i n California, which
has a no-fau lt divorce policy.
Adulierers
111
California ·
co uld be forced to mak e a public
apo l ogy an d pay fo r therapy if
voters appr ove th e .ballot proposal fr~m Laura Onatc-Pala-

.

'

cios.
He'll say, 'Yo u 're cr azy,"' Mrs.
The twice-married 52-year- Onate-Palacios said Tuesday.
old woman wrote . the iriiliative
She ha s been married to her
beca use of · the sufferin g she current husband for SIX ·years.
believes infidelity has caused
The presidential se.x scandal
people - · int'luding herse lf. Sh e had "just a little bit" to do with
has n't told her husband about it , th e proposa l , ·said the mother o f .
though .
' iwo . ].nfid elity ha s been an i ss ue
" I have plan s to tell him . But for her in .th e past , but she
how am I going to tell him ? woul·dn 't elaborate.

·'

. . Ciifts for The Graduate
&gt;-~Si)
· ~'S
/Q)· G) . ' .....
'--0

.

..

·~ .

•

.

"'d

.·

.

,

.

..·

/'d' 0r;;)~
. .• . l4~ 9Df4

We remember those . who have passed
away
.
and are especially dear to us.

Andrew&amp;, Dovid C

May God's angels
guide you a~d .
protect you
throughout time. ·
Always in 'oUr hearts,
John and Mona·Andrew• and
Family

-m-

.

.

· 14. We send this message with it loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
15. May the LO~d bless you with ·His.graccs and war~ , loving· heart .

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER tiSTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·

·

·

. DEADLINE: FRIDAY, MAV21, NOON

.•

r-----:----------,------:----~------------------,

1 ·

·Please publish my tribute in the special Memorial·Day Page on Friday, May

28 . ·

I*~~~~
· I Relationship to me
I
.
1 Date of birth

'I

.Number

I

I
I

of selected verse _ _...,..

· Date of passing _ _ _....,..._ _

Veteran

Yes

Rank

No,_ _
Branch of service _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:--__;_ _

I .
I Print your name here-~.:...;.._ _ _ _ _ __,;,._ _..,..._ _...__-:--:------:-1 Address
1
Phone·number _ _ _ _ __

I

City

1·

State

·

Make Check Payable To Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Zip _ _ __
..

,

'L-------~------~~------------~-~-----------~
.·

(740) 992·2635

Credit Terms • Layaway~ • VIsa • Mastercard

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE .
NOTICE le hereby glvt1n
the.t on Soturday, May •28,
1899, at1 0:00 li.m., a public
eale wll' be held at 26
Rallrood Street, Middleport,
Ohio to eell 101' c..h tho
following colleterel:
.
1984CAROUNAMOBILE ·
HOME 14X85
CMHRKNC14384
The Ferm•r• Bank and
aavlnga
Compony,
Pomeroy, Ohio, leHrv" the
right to bid atlhle oele, end
to wllhdrow .the ebove
collateral prior to oole.
Further, The Farmer• Bank
ond. Sevlnge C:ompony
rlttrvee the right to reject
eny or ell bide aubmltted. ·
Furthtr; the
above.
collot•rel will bo eold ·In the
condition II 11 In, wtth no
exprtea or Implied
warranll11 given.
For lurtherlnlorniatlon, or
lor on eppolntmant to view
prior to Hie contact Sholla
11 lt2·2136.
(5) le, 20;21 , 26, 27,28 6TC
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BiDDERS
leeled propoeele .will be
rec:ellltlll tithe:
DIVISION OF MINES AND
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT
, o ·F
NATURAL RESOURCES,
1855 FOUNTAIN SQUARE·
THIRD FLOOR,
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224
until MONDAY, JUNE 14,
1818 AT 11 :00 A.M. end
opened th•reefler lor
lurnlehlng the meterlole end
performing the lebor tor the
execution 1nd conetructlon

o.r:

J ··

Publ.l c Notice

Public Notice

ol Noturol Reoourcia. THE
RE·BID
DOWLER/FAIRLANE DRIVE DIVISION CAN NOT
RECLAMATION PROJECT; ACCEPT CASH. Plena and
M.EIGS COUNTY, OHIO, epeclllcellone become the
RECLAMATION PROJECT property of the proepecllve
bidder• end no relunde will
NUMBER MG·SI-48
AddiUonal
In eccordance with lht be · mede.
plene and apeclllcetlone lntormetlon · moy be
prepered
.by . the obllllned from the Dlvlelon
DEPARTMENT
OF · of Min•• end Reclemollon,
NATURAL RESOURCES, Deporlmenf · ot Neturol
ReeouroM, 1855 Fountain
~~"ci~~AT?JN~INES ANo .Squere, Building HC3,
COLUMBUS, OHIO. BIDS Columbuo, Ohio 43224
WILL BE OPENED IN THE (Telephone Number: (814)
.
THIRD
FL.OOR 2815 8833).
.CONFERENCE ROOM OF . Eeoh bid muet b•
1855 (BU!LDtNG H·3) OF accompenled by • BID
THE FOUNTAIN SQUARE GUARANTY, meeting the
OFFICES OF THE OHIO requlremonte of Section
DEPARTM .ENT .
OF t 53.54 of the Ohio Revleed
·
NATURAL RESOURCES . Code.
ARE
The United Stet• Olllce ol . CONTRACTO AS
Surface Ml'llng Reclamation ADVISED THAT EQUAL
and Enforcement 11 EMPLOYMENT
eupplylng tOO% ol tho OPPORTUNITY
·ARE
Iunde lor thle proieol- THE CONDITIONS
ESTIMATE . FOR THIS APPLICABLE TO .THIS BID
PROJECT AS DETERMINED IN ACCORDANCE WITH
BY THE DIVISION OF MINES THE · PROVISIO.NS OF
AND RECLAMATION II SECTIONS 153.51 AND
128.11 OF THE OHIO.
$83,707.40.
A pre-bid meeting will be REVISED CODE. WAGE
held on WEDNESDAY, MAY RATES ESTABLISHED IN
WITH
211, 1889 AT 11 A.M. at the ACCORDANCE
Felrlane Drive Site. . NO SECTION 1513.11 AND
PLANS
· OR
1813•37 OF THE REVISED
ARE
ALSO
SPECIFICATIONS WILL BE CODE
SOLD AT THE PRE-BID APPLICABLE TO THIS BID.
MEETING.
Bldl ere eetled end
Copf81 ol the .plone, addreeaed
to :
OF .
epacrttcet lone,
end DEPARTMENT
propoeal forme will ba .NATURAL, RESOURCES,
,forwerdtd from the Dlvlelon DIVISION OF MINES AND
1855
of Mineo end Reclemellon, RECLAMATION,
SQUARE,
Department . ol Netur~l FOUNTAIN
Reeourceo, upon receipt ot BUILDING H, COLUMBUS,
1 check or money order In OHIO 43224. No blddere
the emount of $13.00 mede moy withdrow hlo bid within
j)ayoblt to the Deportment tlxty (80) doye otter the

.I

Public Notice
.· actuel dele ol the opening
the'"'·
.
The Director ol Neturel
Reeourcee reeervee the
right to relect any ·or ell
bide, or to eccept the bid
which embraoea euch
comblnetlon ellerneta
propoeola •• may promote
the beet lntereat ol thli
Stille.
, ·
APPROVED . FOR
PUBLICATION IN THE
DAILY SEN'I'INEL, 111
COURT
STREET,
POMEROY, OHIO 45718 ON
WED. MAY Ill, 191111 AND ON
WED., MAY 28, 191111.
RECOMMENDED: RUSS
SCHOLL, Acting Chief,
of Mlnee end

Neturel
(li) 19,28

Stop

I

!

=.__.,: 'L-------:1:

DIPOYSAG

. pun

We Deliver

Equipment Parts

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, FiUDirt,
Agricultural Lime, .
Mulch, TQp Soil
(Low Rates)

Dealers.
10QQ St•.Rr. 7 Sourh

,...,,..

15 Yra. 'Esperlence

Coolville, OH .46723

742·1701
Public Notice

~ IN THE cciMillati PLeA's ·

P.O. Box 711
Pomeroy,
OH 45769
;·
~40) lt2·5730
.
ETAL, .
Attorney tor Plalntllle
PLAINTIFFS,
Defendant mey obtain a
VS. ··
copy ol the Complain) file
EDITH E. BURNELL,
herein form the omce ot
ETAL,
Ler.ry Spencer, Clerk ol
DEFENDANTS
Court,
Meigs
County
f CASE NO. 98-CV.o34
Courth~»Uee, Pomeroy, OH .
LEGAL NOTICE
45789
. Detendente
Edith
E.. (4) t4, 2t, 28
BurrltlH, et 11., whoM lett (5) 5, 12, 19 6TC ·
.
1cnown pl•c• o_treelden~.!!. ·. . ' Eelt Side St., S.R. 124,
Public Notice
··· . Mlneravllle, Ohio •nd the
Unknown Helre o1 Edith E.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Burnell eddr••• unknown,
The E11tern Locai ·Board
ere hereby notified that on
of Education will accept
the 14th dey ot April, 191111, .bide for the contlructlon ol i
Jerry J. Gruenr end Norrne ' tw0 motel/pole structure ,
J. · Gruel8r, Plelnlltt., flied
building• located at 348900 •
their complelnl and other
SR 7, RHCievllle, OhiO. bide
relfer . fn .. ihl Coiiif ·-oT will be openid In the Office '
·Cqmmon PI••• · ot Melge of the Tie81urer ot th• ·
Counw. Ohio, bearing
Eeetarn · Local School
No. 98-CV-o34
Oletrlct Wedneeday, June 9,
Thle noUoe will run orie i 1999 at 12:00 p.m.
Wllk for IIX IUCC8111VI
Buttdlnge ere 11' tottowe:
1. 40 loot by 80 loot
.- · · the l81t publication
being on the 18th. doy o1 · metal/pole ttructure to be
· Mey, 1999. The Delendente
ueed •• • multi-purpose
will hiVe twenty-eight deye etorage/recreetlonal bulldfrom the dey of leal publica· .lng. ,.... .. .
.
tlon In wlll.ch to answer uld · 2. 40 loot by 58 loot mellll
complelnt
/pole atructure to be ·uHd
-otniH L 8unce
11 •
melntenance/bue
. Supreme
Court
R... gar.... .
.
10042141
Both. bulldlnga will have
DeniH Bunce Law Office
concrlte alabe, plumbing
105 E. Second St.
and electrical wort&lt;. MuiU·
building ahlll le to
Annou~cementa ·, urpon
• by "Golden Glsnt. •
HVAC. contract witt · be
awarded eeperately on the
day. Speclllcatlone
lor building eyetem are
FISHING DERBY available et the admlntatratllltl olllcte located at 50008 .
May 23rd, 7am tiD SR 681, RHdtvllle, Ohio.
Each bid ehall be accom· ·
lor alld!ildren up lo 1Syrs. ·.
pen led· by I I 0% bid bond
Bait supplied
·eupported by a Power of
P,ttorney, tor the · bonding
Member may bring
agent, and a certlllcetetrom
, guest
ol
the
Department
lneurence. Bide aro to .,.
Prize• &amp; Money
111led and eddreeeed ·lo
Food&amp;
Ll• M. Ritchie, TreMurer,
E111arn Local School
· Relre•hm•nts
District, 50008 SR 881,
RHCievllle, Ohio 45772 and
plainly marked on the outPAIITICIPANTS NEEDED
tide "Bide lor Building" and
FOfl A CI,INICAL
"Bide
lor
HAVC.''
SUcceeetul bidder will be
METABOLISM
required to acquire a ptrlor·
. STUDY
mence bond acceptable to
owner.
STATE OF THE AAT
The board ·reeei'Yea tho
TECHNOLOGY FOR
right to reliCt all bide or any
RAPID LOSs OF
portion o1 a blct. For additional
Information, piMae
WEI GifT &amp; INCHES
contact
Deryl E; Well,
CALL DAIIENPORT IND.
Superintendent, at (740)

o~J::~J~g~~E~~Io

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
· DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agl'lcultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dlrt • Sand

ASI(JqATr!

1-100-352·3218 IXT. 3000

.

.

uaa M. Ritchie, Treaeurer
(5) 5, 12, 19, 26. 4TC

NOTICE TO CHESTER
TOWNSHIP RESIDENTs
Pl8118 bt ldVIHd thJII.
eny Ruldent/Property·
Ownlr who wlehee to have·
extre duet control (II!Ort
then the normol opplllllltltin)
epplled to • portion ot the
townehlp roed olong their·
property mey do ao ot tht'
Reeldent/Property Ownero
For further
expenee.
lnlormetlon conteot 1ny.
Cheettr Townehlp TruetMbeloreMey21et.
llelr Windon 11112-etl'l
Alan Hollllr lt2~1010
Elmer N-111118 3837
(8)18 1TC

Tye Brinager &amp; Sons
ProduceWorker.s Needed
740-843·5280 daytime
Summer 0\larler
Begins July 5th a!
. Gallipolis Career College
Cali Today For More Information!
446-4367 or 1·800·214·0452
Reg . II90-05-1274B

Se"'ice•

Sepiic Syllema &amp;
Utililie• .

17401992·3UI

wiiiiYIIGU!.

No Embar111asment •••
You're Treated with Respect! ·

St. Rt. 7

5!11 1 mo.

740·985·3813 .

4.. thru 48'' Plalltlc Culvert In Stock
.'

l

Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks·
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanka . .
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; ·
· Regulators
OPEN:
9:0D-4:30 Weekdays . 9:D0-12:00 Saturday

H&amp;H

Pomeroy Eagles

Constr,ctlon
Ujjht Commercial &amp;.
· · Residential
·New Construction &amp;
Remodeling

FREE ESTIMATES ·

17401.667·6992 .

.;'

Club

Bingo

par game

TRI·STAIE MOBILE

pricet tleru

uc. 1 oo-so ,n..,..

.1 FUBN.!IUBE I
2 pc. Early American L.A. sulle, like new, 3 pc. cherry
collee table &amp; end table set, recliners, RCA XL 100
color console TV, Goldstar 13" color ·TV, pr. nice LA
chairs, Broyhill sofa, 3 pc. glass top end table set, 4
pc. BA sulle, 5 pc. Basset Queen Size BR sulle, 2 bilr
stools, 5 pc. DR suite, Emerson microwave, Gibson
refrigerator, Magic· Chef 30" gas range, Frigidaire
aJ,Jio. washer· &amp; dryer· like· new &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
Carnival glass, !g. pitcher, compote, cracker jar, hand
painted Nippon handled dish, vases, !g. selection Blue
Fenton pieces. !g. set of Correlware, Stoneware lea
pot, Stemware, pr. eagle lamps, Iris &amp; Herringbone
~lad tx)wt, sev. pes, of unmarked Heisey, iev. pc.s
Grape pattem Carnival glass, pr. ol Bleeding heart
. cai-KIIeholders, Occupied Japan Figurines, Coboll
water set, Humpty Dumpty cookl,e Jar, Vlslonware &amp;
more.
· '

I

H~o:-:-u:=s=EH~O:-:-L-:=D--::M:::ISC:::-1,I

•

Auction Conduct•~ by
Rick Pear1o" Auction Co.l66
,
MaaonW.VI
Rtl. 773--5785 or Auction C1ntar 773-5447
Executor: El11nor Sue Hall
Tan111: Cuh or check w/ID •.
Not 1'111 Jlllble for accidlnta or lou of

~~. ·

Auto Upholstery • Plus,
Rutland, ·ohio

l

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

· \VE~E :IOVED

'

992·5455

Matches

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room tddHione l Rtmodtllng
•New Garllgll
•Eiectllcll l PIUtllblng
•Rooftng &amp;Guttn
•Vinyl Siding l Pllntlng
•PIIIo l Porch Dlckt
Frtt E1ff11111f1 :
V.C. YOUNG Ill

VISIT OUR OFFICE(SHOWROOM THERE

992~4119

OR 800-291-5600

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
FACfORY DIRECf PRICES

•

YOUR

CONCRETE
.CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,

Howard

L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
. Gutters
Down•pouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

112-41215

FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY ~
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18

3/11/99 TFN

Slug &amp; Shot

Compost .

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

740·742·2138

up to 8 ton

Landscape Material,
.Topsoil &amp; Mushroom

742•8888

ruon•

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

Light Hauling

DRIVEWAY STONE

•

..

RUtLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
lEECH GROVE,
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

Don't Need A Big One
CaU A Lillie One

949-2168

· Pomenoy, Ohio
ZZ yn. Lacol

4/2TF!I

Sidewalks, Patio~
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

To The Residents

of
Gallla County!

Refuse Service

A local~ owned compony wllh over 28 yrs
txpetlence has now exlended our coverllgll urea·to

include all of GaRla Co. and Porlions of Meigs, .
Vinlon &amp; Lawrerice countieS.

CALl TODAY TO IEGIN YOUR
. GARUGI SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

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

1-800-967-4774
,
At

A\

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

s

•

Personals

Free Internet Access!
•
, ·900-226·5889 Ext.2706. $2.99 :
Per. Min. Must be 18 Vrs Old,

••

Sorv·U(619)'&lt;)45·8434

Start Oattng To mght ! Have fu .9.
·playing. the Ohio Dating GafT'le,
800-ROMA.NCE.. eX1ension 968t . ~

tt

· 30

740-742~8608

Announcements

A

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson . Athens

•
:

74().592· 1B42
•
Qual ity clothing and househo1 4l

· wu!W•.Su111etllonae.com

Sunset lama
CanstrucUan .
New Conotrucllon &amp;
Cabinet•
Vlnyt Slding.Roofs-Decko· · .

RII!Dode!l~tchen
G11a~s

.

· Swan . ·. Down cake &amp; flour pan, Sliver Bridge
memorbllla's, 1950's . &amp; 60's look, Life &amp; Posl
maga;lnes of J.F.D's death &amp; more, Home Interior,
Maible &amp; Ivory Onyx chess sat, Kirby sweeper &amp;
attachments, pots &amp; pans, fans, billls, Insulator,
kitchen !)ems, old \Yat11r ·can, garden tools, brand new
Masonic Sible, Glider, weed eater, 20" lawn moyier. .
AUC:noN NOTE: Good quality furniture, nice
glassware &amp; small. Bring a lawn chair &amp; spend the
day. Don't miss this sale!!

~~~~

. .

99a47D 99a-tJOJ .

Rare wicker shoe shine box, antique slag glass lamp,
antique mah. ·corner chair, the Little Dancer prlnl with
large fancy picture frame must see!! Dated 190~.

Roush
I I
70

·tRUCKING .

Quality Is Job One

I

t

Equip!Dont Cleaned &amp;Degroased
JEFF STETHEM
Pt!ONE: (740) 9B5-421S
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM
FREE ESnMATES
38782 Sumner Road ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

SAYRE

Quality Buill H ou.e•
Remember

l-ocated at 2 Adama St., Mason, WV. Watch for
ligna. Will be selling the eitata of Dorothy S.
CartwriQht.
[~IT=E=-=M::-:S:-::0::-:F:-::S::-:P:::E=ci:-:-A-:-L-::-IN:::t=ER::E:::S::-tT

Dagr-. Certlllad

·

POWER WASH

Jut.,· 011

Pallo Construction
Landecap1 lpeclallet,
0111-Aft

. · .Trucks - tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways ·

Local
··Television

.,.

·

WJOS
.TV27

*Additions
*Remodeling
CaU today abow opocU.I . ·

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 19,9
.
10:00 A.M.

'

$500.00 Starbul'lt
Progressive top llfle.

*New Homes

AUCTION

llalchlag
..
1· · ·Retaining W.U I Brick
.

Quilty Craftsl!llnt~lp .
Guer11teed

·coNSTRUCI'IO

·ESTATE

;llallltenaaca • Plaatlng

$300.11,0 Coverall

SMITII'S

Public Sale and Auction

• Linna Care • Dalgn

On .

Thursdays
AT 6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying ~.00 .

f

.

r-:1

..

"A Better

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

For Free
ProfP'am Guide
CaU 992-2727

•

Public Notice

·

House &amp; Trailer Sites
land Clearing &amp;
Grading ·

I!I90IIfn

I

. SPECK:
ot

Hepll.
Bulldooer &amp; Backho!l

Credit • Slow Credit • BanJ.auptcy

•m•

587~78.

JJ . . .deafl. . . .l ,

·CREDIT

C

MIT V11101N1A OFFICE

HOWARD ·
EXCAVATING CO.

Cheiter, Ohio
,

~hone (740) 593-6671

750 .East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

740·992·3470

985-4422
.

Larry Schey

r--~W~I:-:C:-:-:K~s-.--, . ~~~~~C!)~~ftftftft
J.D. CONS.T.RDCTION ~
. ·
ttfiOLIHG IJtC. •,·,
[i!!)
ii!•J

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Factory Authorized
· Caee-IH Parte

Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior

985-4473·

1 •

.I... ~.;:;.:. ;;;;,;;
....;_'-..
· - ·--·.. ··- .

992-str•

&amp; Compare

FREE
ESTIMATEES

j

I

· Homes, Decks
· &amp; Mobile Homes

Racine Gun Club

1 06 North Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio

.

i;

Sales Representativ·e

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY .

ROIERY BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

New Homes ··Vinyl
· ; •New Homes
Siding •New Garages · , . •Garages
• Replacement Windows
•C.o mplete
· • Room Additions
Remodeling

SYJ«CUSE

Public Notice

740-258-6147

BUILDERS,

Mike Drehel

Electric &amp; Water and or FuU Hook-Up
Across from Forked Run State Park and
close to Fork Run Boat Ramp
n AA..t ... l\Mn

Phone:

INC. ·

HillARD'S
IREENHOUSE

Power
Washing

/30

·"Congratulations Class ol1999"
.
Ingels
F.u rnlture ·&amp; Jewvelry . Inc.

On Friday, May 28, we
page devoted to those who are gone but not forgotten.
. will publish a special
.
They will be similar to the sample below:

Marty's

· Vegetable &amp; iledding Plants
All Flats $6.50
Eaelud•• B.ddlrw C•nutlum~
Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
. Buckeye Card
Open
·
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

B~ELL

C.••

c!Umtrs ·d'
!Jlof/m .

· July 10, 1961- May 5, 1980

Slz" 5'·x 10'
to 10' X 30'
. Hours

""'t mo.

'

If you wish, select on of the following FREE venes below to accompany
your tribute. . .
.
1: We hold you in our thoughts and rnenlories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His arms, now and forever. .
.
3. Forever missed, never forgotten. May God hold you in the palm of His
·hand,
4.·Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers will be
Wirh you .until we meet again.
·
5. The day·s we shared were sweet. I IonS to see you again in GQd ~s.
heavenly glory.
'
·
.
6.-Your courage a~d bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your ,
. smile fills us with joy and laUghter.
7. Though out of sight; you 'll forever be in. !DY heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the light of peace shine ori your face for eternity.
10. May God's angles guide you and protect you througho.ut time . .
11 . You were a light in our life that burns forever in our hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to 'night and from

740.949•2217

7:00AM ·&amp;PM

Day
.

1

I

Only black· and white or color
glossy prints will be accepted, ·

.

1,

29870 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

Jerry L. Preec•
Crown c· OH 45623

An Old Friend

$I 2.00 Night
.$10.00 Primitive Camping

Call For Free Estimates

Now Open For
Spring Sea1on
Co!Dplele Une 01

"ILL'S

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

•Lots
• Drives
•Private
•Business

•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ina. Owne.r : Ronnie Jones

occurrence.

@JlDorlal

•Paving
•Sealing
•Striping
•Patchiog

Stop In And See

Free EJtirnafe.t

740-742-3411
Bryon R eeve• .
Su.tan Reev~•

Items . $.l .OO bag sate everf
Thursday. Monday. thru Sarurdat
9:0Q-5:30
'.
'

s1'

12 :p.m. to 2:p.m. II Need to kno
any details, Contract Jane Har~
et ; Carol FerQuson Bush (740)..:,
379·2~96
~

40 . . Giveaway
Give Away MIKed Brted

• ~

Pup· ~

To Good Home! 740.-"6-44 12. ~

Lind_t~'s Painting
'Illke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it (or you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985-4180
Free Estimates

"

'

"Qbblns &amp; Myers, Retirees, Employees, Spouses or· .Guests, wh~
worked with each other for thi· .
flrst 10 years. Polluek will be hat•
' In Shetter House Grounds on
McCormlct Rei . ·May 29 , 199 .

-it

Beautltul.· small. long · halr-&amp;d~
black cat, to good nome. t y:ea

old.·good mousor ..1304)675-60~. ~

Cooking Stove. Need t~flli
door. May be seen at t062 Sec•..
ond Ave. Gallipolis.
• ~

Gas

Kittens to a good home. Can!b

seen at 302 3rd Street, Masont
WV. (304)773-5357. .

•

9

Llllies of the Valley, Pennie Roy '1

at He rb , Japanese Lant•r
, .Plants, (304)882-2436.

old Calico Cat. :ll:·klt
tens 1·8 Calico tht other ont l
Vollow and W.hltel {740H•8
2487
.
...

One year

'

�Page 10 • Ttie Dally Sentinel

Wedneeday, May 19, 1iKKI

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...

•

The DaJ!Y Sentinel • Page 1:

PomerO) f • Middleport, Ohio
'

BRIDGE
PHILLIP

ALDER

1 ... flog 111111
1rtcolot

3 Bodroomo. 2 Both Ranch7 Yearo Old. 28x30 Anachod Go·
rage, t b2-4 Building, Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 69 1/2 Aerts Or

cell . References H11 Private
Room And Full Coro In Hor Homo
For The Elderly. Fer More Info
740-258·83.2, AIIO NutrltiOUI

Young Roootor, (304)458-1 81 5, Toll Frtt. 1·800·487·5586 Ext
12170 .

Accelollio

Will Sell House &amp; Loll Meigs Co.
740-1192-3537

E &amp; S Lawn Strvk»: Otoign, lm-

By owner, 725 Page Str..t, Mid·

--·

Experienced Carpenter Wanted,
Mual Have Own Hand To ols &amp;

80 Loet end Found

a

labt · 1 Adult, t daughter,

v.ry

Frlondlyl Good Home Oniyl

Phone ca llt only In Mornings!

r'40l+211H419
Found Prescription Sunglautll
Rayburn' t Market , State At. 7

(740)448-8247

ltanlpOI'tadon. (304}117!-2478.

Help Wanted:
Hou aekeeper for Buay House hOld, One day Per WHk, Preferall~ Friday Stnd Rtoumt, Roftr·
eneea and Hourly WIQI Require·
menta lo: ClA P.O. Box 474,

%Galllpollo Dolly llit&gt;lma. Gallpo·
Found : 1 8tag lt , Adu11/t.talt , lo, 011.45631
with cotter, In Meadowbrook

om.. aroa. (304)675·4222, after
5PM.

Found : Copper No aed Beagle ,

Vory Friendly. Malo. (740)·256·
Mfe
Found: Femele Dog, Mixed, Solid
Brown , Found on Anniston Drive.

(304)87!-3893.
Loot Blue Tlckl Broku Fork Rd .
GIIYIWI TWP (740~258-1739
Lot i . 2 Chihuahua Tenters ar·
ound Point Pltaaant High

School. 1 Llghl Brown fomolol
answers to Klny : 1 Reddish
mele/answera
to
Buddy.

(304)675-3888.
Lost: child's black nylon Adldos
jac:Ut, Star t.tiH Park FlOwer fes·
ttval, calf 740·241·8701 or 140·

Jewelry Salta Retail Salt a and
Computer Experience Rtquired .
Acquititlon a Fine Jewelry. 151

Second Avo. Galllpoll o. Apply
Monday IIVu F11day. .

Kitchen htlp wanttd· 30 to 40
nours per week, i ven lng work
4pm ID I 0 Of 11 pm, apply Monday
or Tu11day aftec 4pm at O&amp;M
Pizzu &amp; Subs, Syracuoo, Oh.

Local Trucking Company Sooklng
Qualllled Trucll; Drlvtrt Good
Pay And Benefits. Send Reaume
To: Driver, P.O. BoK 109 Jack·

son, Ohio 45640, Or Call 1-740·
286· 1463 To Schedule An Inter·
view.

w~

949-3077.
Male Blue Point Siamese, Greatly
Mltsed. Please If you find her

call (740)-446-4412

7Q

--

FTIPTNo~-ry

""ln. PC roqulred. Eern 40K
con 81»663-7440

Medical Proceasor FT /PT No
Exp. Nee. Will Train PC Roq. Earn

40K Call eoo-ee3-7440

Medical Processor FT /PT No
Exp. Nee Will Train PC Raq. Earn

Yard Sale'

40K Call 800-ea:J. 7440

Gallipolis
·• VIcinity

--s

1069 Second Ave. May 20·21 ,
1:00am-5:00pm, Adult &amp; Children

Clothing. Nordic Track . and

. 5 family Tllur. /Friday, LOta ol

IMI·

ry thing. 9:00-?( No Early Birdal
Lower Garfield Exl Guns, Knifes,
lata Nice Clothtl, Household

llomll

Overbrook Center, 333 Page St. ,
Middleport, has part time pos l·
lions tor LPN 's available fqr all
shifts &amp; weekends, anyone Inter·
asted please stop by &amp; 1111 out an

application. E.O.E.
axcellent work elhlc. Ability 10 apply service techniques, telephone
akilla and computer skills, to work
well with clients 1·on·1 and com·
plate multl-taakt wfth attention to
detail . Complete beneiJta pro·

Qf•QUNE: 2:00p.m.
the doy -the ad
• to run. &amp;undly

- 2:00p.m.

Frtcloy. llondoy ~lion

Houle Sate! May 21 , 22 recently

mc:w.ct, must down size, antiques,
antiques Furniture, washer &amp; dry·
er, refrigerator, air conditioners,
microwave , jars. old books
clothel, misc. _. mllet out, -4409
~Ia Pika.
Verd Salell 1618 Jackaon Pike.

Claiii&gt;OIIt.Tllu; Frl; Sat..

Gallipolis Dally TrtDune, 825 Third
Avo .. Gelipollo, Oh. 45631

Poalal Jobs to 118.35/Hr. Inc .
benellta , No E11perltnce. For
App. And Exam Into. Cttl 1·800-

813-3585,. Ext. 8628, 8AM·9PM,
7 Oayo fdll,lnc.
Service Technician Needed by
National leader In Mobile Home
Sales, Prefer Related E~~:perlence .

Beneflta Included 401 K. Call:
(740)-446·7156

Pomeroy,
Middleport
l VIcinity

Someone to spend the night with

4 miles out SR 143 on Friday &amp;
Saturday, 9-4, Iota at mise old &amp;

now
All Ylnl IIIII llu11 Be Plld In
A.dvlince. De•dllne: 1:OOpm the
dey before the ed 11 to run ,
lundey I Monday edition·

1:00pm Frtdor.
AACO yard sate- Star Mill Park,

Moy 20-21 . 9·ooam. Clothing,
dlshet, pant, houaehold water
softener, Chrlttmas decorations,
lamps. end tables. TV. jewelry,
appliances. linens, cunalna, golf
caddy, candtaa , oil lamps, baspuraea, mlac Proceedt go
to SHS acholarahlpl. All dona·
tlont appreciated. To donate call

k'*'·

Dave Zirkle, 740·949·2031, Dale

-1

Hart, 7-t0-948-2658 or Frank Cle-

land, 740·949·2071 . Wholhtr do-

nttlflil or buying· thanks for your

lht elderly, 4pm·8am. 5 daya per
weak, $10 per day. 740·992·5039
or 740-992-4410 ·
The Saulhern Local School Dis·
trlct has an lntermediall level

teaching position lor tlovtfopmtn·
tally handicapped student&amp; avail·
able lor lho 1999·2000 achool'
year. "-11 appllcanta muat PDIIIII
the appropriate certification and
background checks. Phone 740·
9o49·2669 tor further Information.
Send lnqulrlea to Jamea La·
wrence, Superintendent, Southern
Local Schoola, Boll 178, Racine,

Auction
end Flea Market
4

OhiO Llconoo 17693. 740·989·

IlliZI.

Wiring, Breaker Boxes,

L~t

Fix·
tu re. Heatln, Systems, and At·
rr&lt;&gt;dttllng (740)"1-1401.
Ellm Home· care tor elderly or

hand icapped.

~verytftl ng

fur·

nlahad, ex cept doctor and medl·
cine, call740-992·3380.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your lOgs to the miR juat call

304-675-1957
Jlms Drywall &amp; Cont tru clfon.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
Drywall, Siding, Roots, Addl·
tio na, Painti ng, etc (304)674·

4e23 0&lt; (304)874-0t 5S.
Lawn Care - you make the offer.

Call J.D. Smith al 740·992·5930

The Southern Local School Dla·
trlct has the following coaching
poaltlont available lor the 1999·
2000 school year: aSBiatant foot·

ball, junior high foot1lall, raaervo
volleyball, Junior high volleyball ,

olghlh grade boys baokelball, ju·
basketball,
reserve
softball.and
varsl·
ry chetrleadlng
advl&amp;or,
junior high eheerteadlng advisor
All applicants mual posaeaa or
acquire a aporta medlckle cer1ltl·
cate and a CPR card. Firat conlideretlon muat be given to applicants poaaesalng a teaching

773-5785 Or 304·nH447.
' IIIVEIIBIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 7 P.M.,
Crown City, 740-256-e989

for further Information. Please
tend lnquirlel to Mr. James La·
wrence, Superintendent. SOUihlm
Local Schools, Box 178, Racine , ·

Ohio (5771 SLSD lo en Equal
Opponunl1)' Ernpiol'er.

ver And Gold Coins, Proolseta,

Pro.ulng.tlodlctl
AoconloAIIIllan1,.._
- A..IIoblt
Fui~Ume poo111on ·Excellem ~loge
banent ptdtage. Roqulremontl.
Aosoc18ta1 or Blcheloradtgrel:
oomprehonaluo kr1owledgt of
tormlnology; lyplng okilo;
oomputer okllla; prior ·~oory
oxporianCt doll-.

Olamondo. Anllque Jewelry, Gold
Ringo. Prt-1830 U.S. Currency,
Stafllng, EIC. Aoqu~~lono Jewtoy
• M.T.S. COin ShOp, 151 Stcond
- · Gtllpol~. 740-448-2842.

1'11111 11M reltJmO 10 Holzer
Clink:, Humen Rtlotlono Oopanmont; 90 Jackaon Pike, Gatllpolla,
Ohio 415831-1682 or Fax ID (740)·
448-1!532. Equal Opponunity Em-

Wtdameyar'a Auction Service,
~.Ohio 740-379·2720

Wanted to Buy

AbOoiUII Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·

Antiques, top prieta paid, River·
tnt Anllquta, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ruu Moore owner, 7•0·992·

-·

Cleen late Model Cars Or

llucko, 1990 Models Or Ntwor,
8mllll Buick Pontiac, 1800 Etll·

•n .......,.,Gtllpollo.

Wont To Sell Your Stuff? Cell Rlv·
troldo Aucllon And Lol Uo Soli II
For'lt&gt;U, 740-~ .

140

BuelnTrelnlng

Gelllpolla Calllgo
(Carttro Cloot To Home) Coli
TOday!

741)..448-4361, 1-80().

214-0452, Reg fiiiHI!-12748.

180 Wanted To Do

--~­

Sunday May 23, 1999. 10.00 t&gt;

L '.1PL ovr.1ErH
'·f HVICES

3:00 Hoilday·lnn Routa 71 Route
36: Gatllpollo. Currtn1, Rotlrtn.
Pillow Pllt and Allie Tlrtoouroo
Slartlng At $!l.OO, Plrlono12&gt;1d

-·

~-.FrMAimllilonll

HllpWented

Fk1t,....,. In Artt v.ry Llrgt

...... _,"' ____

By Owner, Sandhill Road, Point
Pleaunt. Brick/Ranch, 3Bed·
rooms, 2Balha, 'Basement, Two
2-Ca r
Garages.
Acre

Commerclel Building In Hender·
son For Sale or Lease. Call

(803)366-9438.

350 Loti l Acreage
1 Aero • with 14x70, 3BR , 1 11
2BA Trallor with 3 porchoa.
$22,500. (304)578-2890.
1 Acre Land wanled to build onl

Lot (740)"H)II18.

(740}24!-5682

For Sale -By Owner . Well Main·
talned _.BR Bl·level, 38A, large

1 Acre Lot For Sale In Ma son.

$1 5.000. (304)882·3772.

Famii)'Room w/Fireplace. Living·
ro om, Kllchen :I All Appllancea

~ Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

Slay), DlnlngAoom. Utility Room,
central AlrMeat Pump. large lot
at corner or Belle &amp; SandHill, 3.5
mllea out . 2 Car Anached Ga·
rage , separate garage, 26X80 .
3doors, paint' room. Lata of ator·

age . $180.000 shown by appl.
(304)875-5403
•

CheShire Area: 1500 Sq. «.. Can·
te r Air, Gas/Heat, 3 Bedrooms.
Kitchen and Dining Room. (740)·

Lake

VIew,

Gallla

County,

'-12.000 'More Acreage AvallatMe,
740-388-M78. .

6 Mile a lrom Town State Route
14 1 Road Frontage, Co. Water.

===·- .

41 ....,.
,q

Jim Hill Fld. In Mason County.
Septic Tank, City Water Access.
Cave On Back Of Property Mult

Lawn mowing and Odd Jobal Big
Small! Call: SttiVO Conley H~h
SOhool, (740) 446·2158

LAND
In The Country, Melga County
neer Rutland. Making dealt on
ComblnaUon Lola, 5 to 15 Ac:rts
of rolling woods, great build ing
s11es, or u 1e as hunllng land .
Starting 0 19,500. County water.
Double wldll are Permilted. 5%
down land Contract, Free Mapa!

Mary't Oaycare, low ratea, fteK6ble
hours , 18 years experience.
Open 24 hours per day, 7 days
per - k Openings for luH lime 0&lt;
par1 time Children, or If you need a
day, evening or night out CPR
and first aid certified, certified
nursing assistant, all meals and
snacks provided, now accepting
any age ch ildren Call 7-t0-7.42-

0506 any11me.
Need sitter for the summer? Daycare with a pool. Open Monday
thru Friday, ask tor Kelly, 7_.0·
667-6460,'TupperJ Plalna area.
Will Care For Elderly Or Handicapped Persona In My Home,

7 40-441-0000,
Will

do

odd Joba , hauling ,

(304)875-4538.

Will Haul Anything! Clean Up any
thing I Work for $5 00 hOuri (7401
367-0140 Plually·StNico

Don't Walt To Bu~. 3 Sadroom
Home In New Maven, Good Condition , $32,000. Appraised
$39,000 (304)882·3772

EXCELLENT ' CONDITION : 2
Story, 3 Bedrooms, 2 112 Baths,
Neir Hotzer, lmn'\adlate Posses·

slon, 740-44&amp;-9672. .

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bull ness with people you know, lind
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated

lho offering.

230

Profeealonal
. Servlcee

.Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned
without "Steam" or Absorbent
Compounds . Soapleas Anti -Resoil Detergents used exclusively. Safe for all fabrics . Fast dryIng (1·2 hours) Eliminates over·
wetting. Guaranteed Work Call

410 HOUIII for Rent

Pleuanl. (304)675· 1368 or
(304)19!-3184.
Large 8 Rooms, 2112 Baths, Well
Equipped Kitchen, Applian ces
Stay. 2 Woodburlng Fireplaces,
Hot Water &amp; electric Meat. AC .

Gallipolis. Aok·
Shown by Ap·

Restored VIctorian home alluated
on 12 acres, VIllage Mlddtaport,
secluded and private, appotnl-

mem. caii740-1192·!169B.
Spring Valley, 2 story fami ly
hOmt . .t Bedroom,. 2 1/2 Battis,

living Room, Dining Room, Eat·ln
Kllchen . Lg Fa111lly'Room. 740·
24!-9337

for Sale
••••Amazing' """ 5 Bedrooms , 2
112 bath&amp;, over 2,000 sq. tt , for
tell than $400 mo. Free Delivery
&amp; Sol. HI00·948-!l678.

1965;14185 ft. 2 Bedrooms, CIA
Furnace, New AppMancu. (740)·

Does Your Houae Siding, Deck,
or Drlvewey need a cleaning? U
so, Pressure Washing Is the an-

14x70 Oakwood Mobile Homo, 3

446-2751

PERTLY:Savea on repainting In·
definitely. We use the u cluslve
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall·
Cleaning System. Protects paint,
'leaves glass, retards chalking .
Anti -Mildew, no odor, sanltiZe!l.·
Free estimates. Call Clearly

Clean at (304)875-4040.

1971, 12x60 Detrolter, New
Plumbing ~ Wiring . Flecenlly Re·

rr&lt;&gt;dtt..,, $2,000. (304)875-6149.

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

1978 Schultz 14x80 2 Bedrooms,
Very Good Condition! Air Condll·
tlonlng. Underpinning, Extrasl

740-367-0563, 740-24!-5672.

1990 Royal Cove. 1~X7.t ,
2Batha, Skylights In KitChen . II·
land Stove, Underpinning 6

which loin violation af the
taw. OUr readers are hereby

Informed that al tlwelllngo
advertlsad In INS new&amp;paper
are available on an equal

Porch. $14,000. (304)662-2248.
1992 1.t11TO Redman mobile
home, 3 bedrooms, storm wind·
owa &amp; heat purttp Included, 740·

742·2795.
199~

-

Dutch Mobile Home, 14x70

Vinyl Siding, Shingle Rool, Sleol
Doors, 2x6 Walta, Thermopayne
Windows, Dick, $19,000, 740·

268-6900.
1997 14x70 Trailer: 2 Bodroomo.
2 Batht, Mull Solll $19 ,500 .
(740)·368-0434
1997. f4,70 'nailer, 2 Bedroomo.
2 Baths, Muot Selll With Cleared
Loll $25,000. (740~368-0434
Low lntertlt Rates For 1st Time
Bu~era , limited Time Available.

II00-38:HI682.

310 Homes for Sale

$3995 QuiCk delivery. Coli 740·
36!-9821.
Make 2 Paymepta No Payment

A!ftr 4 Yttra, 304-738-7295.

1189 Addloon Plko· En)or tho

Mobile Home For Sale Central

Tranquility of the Wonderfu Stt·

Air. 740 448 0885.

Ungl 3 Bedrooms . 1 full both,
Lorge Living Room, Dinning
Room , Kit chen , au Calhedral
Ceilings! laundry floom.. Urge
Deck, Down tta6rs Poulblt FamJ..
IV Room. Free Gat! 12, Acrtt .

$69,900 .00 (740)·384·0013 for
Otlalal

2 BR lurnlahad home In Mason.
No pets . Ralerencea required .

3 Bedroom House In Henderaon
Clean. Aeferencea &amp; Deposit Re-

Available· secluded farm home
near Outer, deposit and teate

required, 814-759-7959.

Rent: R1180 Near North Galla,

Your Home 11 Jutt A Phone Call

Away, 304-738-7295.

Hou11hold
Gooda

Sale: 9 wooden Kitchen Cabinets.

Needs roflnlohlng . Ball Oflorl
(740)-4411·3807 anytime on Weokando, allar6:pm onWHkda)'sl
Apptt ancea : · Recond itioned
Washers. Dryera, Flanges, Rtfrlgratorl , 90 Dey Guarantee!
J:rench City Maytag , 7•0·o448·

7795.
, Beds Complete lull and Twin ,
Couch, Desk, ll~lng Room Suit,
Refrigerator and Glrla Bicycle .

740-446-9742.

1·888-818-0126.

1124 E. Main Street on Rl. t24.

Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. to:oo
am to e·oo p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

8:00 p.m. 740 · 992 ·2~26, Ruoa
Moore owner.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlee

$69 00 , one month free programmlng. Limited time offer, call 1·
eoo-n.8194.
·

1987 VOyager Van, Choir Boolho,

China Cabinet, Hoover Wathtr,

Air Conditioners, Uaed Different
Slz11, Guaranteadl 740 ·888·

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobllli homes, air
conditioned, $260·$300, sewer,
water and trash InclUded, 740·

Dramatic

. 100% Natural,

Doctor Recommended. Free Sam-

ples Ctll740-441·11162.

New 1899 1•b70 thrH bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent.

lncludoo weohor • dryer, skirting,
deluxe ttepa and 11tup. Only

$200.74 p,er month with $1150
·oown.Csii1 ·800·837·3238.
New Bank rapoa onl~ 2
linlnCtl call304-722·7148

.

er Area, No Pets, You Pay .All

Mobile home lor rani In Aaclne,

Apartment• .
for Rent

1 ond 2 bedroom apanmants, 1ur·
nlahld and unlurntahtd, aecurlty
depo11t required , no pett, 1•0·

1192·2218.
t Bdrm., Extra Nk:e, Firat Month
Fret With One Year Leue.

l•lt we

Plea11 Helpl 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, )u11 take over Paymental

1·888-7311-3332
Rent Bueter. New 1981 14170 2

or 3 Btdroomo. Only $995.00
Down, 1185.00 por moolh. Frtt
Dallvory and Stt Up. Coli 1·800·
948-5871.
Uoed SlngltWidt, Around 1100
""montlt.Cal h800-848-!l678. .
Oakwood Hom11 Borbourovlllo,
WV. 1489 Down Single Wldo,
U18 Down Ooublo Wldo, 304·
738-3109.

~

COQL OCltttN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace. 3 Ton Installed

5 AKC Boxer pups, 740· 742·
8101 .

93 Marctdtl 190 ·E, 72 , 00~

AKC German Sheppard Female,

(304)(58·10901458·1044 , oflor
5PM.
AKC registered Golden Retriever
pupplll, excellent family pel t,
$2!50, 740-992·7682 after Bpm.
Miniature
1 Ru st.

(304)773-5360.
AKC

Rog loterod

Miniature

Dachshund puppies, red &amp; dap·

miles, sun rool, tealher, alwaye
garaged, $13,500. 740-9411-29n. :

720 Trucks for Sale ·

~

1988 Ford Rariger Factory 3QO,

Cal· (740)379·2196

;

1972 GMC V-6. Auto. Now Dual:
TUrbO, Reily Wholll, RWL Tltel,o
$1,995,740-258-1093.
• :

AKC. Wh ile Gorman Shepherd
Pups, PICI&lt;: !·Male and 1-Famalo,
Laftl (740)·245-9213.

$3.500.110. firm.
~
1985 Dodge Pickup. Runo Goyd;
.;;
1900=·.:.;&lt;304,.;;.;,)8~95;;.385...:.;.9;;.,~
Nrfd~mt-:. __..,
1988 Ooclgt Dakota Pickup, 5:
Spd, Charcoel Grey-Red Strlp1o
And Red Topper. Nk»l $1,500.00.•

mala, 4 monlhs old; 1150.00 each
0&lt; $250.00 8oth 740.258-f182.
Pet Sitting In Your Home I Aunt

'

- - - ·-- -·-·

~

1 Row tobacco Setter, 2 preem,

1,000 Sllcko. Priced Cheap! Plus
800 Lba. Base to Rent. Call a«er
5:00pm (740)..t4HJ541
Trailer

(304)458-1958.

For

Sale.

Ford new Holland Tractor Salt

3930 4WO, 45PTO HP, 192 TUr·
bo, Syncho 8X8 Trano F. And R.
Shunla Largo Pump 2 Romotto 4
outtetli,

2yr

Full

Warranty

$20,900.00 . 4630 55PTO HP
aamo specs 22,900. 301Q 2WD
42 PTO HP, 1 Romole Wot
Brake. lnd PTO 13,500.00. 3010
4WD Same Specs 18,500.00 .
COma Ste Tlto New TN55, 65, 75
4WD models with Super St11r,
will turn shorter than a 2WO.
Keefer&amp; Service Center Sl. R1.

87. Pl. Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road .
PhOno (304)89!-3870. .

Uoed Lift Truck Forks For Sale,
Various Slzea $75.00 ·$100.00,
Per Set, Will Trade For Wood

Llveetock

4 year old kid broke Appalooaa
pony; 10 yoar old maro, kid broke;
also riding leuona, Ruth Reeve1,

740-e98-3290.

DIBcou~t

lineal ""For more Information Call:

(740)·245·5672 or (740) 387·
.

Mobil Home

Part&amp; &amp; Supply
Hugo lnvtniDry
Vlnyt Skirting Kltl $2i9.95; 5 Gal·

TRANSPORTATION

ton Aluminum Flbtrtd Root Paint

710 Autoe for Sale ·

Partt, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·

Rider. like ntw, peld $500

aaklng SlOO; electric range, l ! k·
1ng $50; cei 740-9411-2401

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Rtptlred, Ntw &amp; Rebuilt In SIDclc.
Cell Ron Evins. 1·1100-!37-11526.

TOOK UP

&lt;I

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

WOODWORIUN'

Openin g lead:

'h., .
~,

'

m

lJi

/! !U

~

~~~

~ ~

.........
I

' ..

.. ,,

.,~,.....

~
.IV,,

"1-..~,._v f-

s

THE BORN LOSER
~

·.wv'ru.
~~~"'
~ r t-~t;W TO
0..U.

'94 Grand Chtrokoo Laredo. 4x1.
auJomatlc. 72,000 mlltl, CO. load-

~~

""'

~ FEU.1""'5 1l.Ci
ME DffEI1=. YOO 11\15
ClD fN'\\L.'(

I

~YOU

lR\P

I
i

740·9Q2·6877 wookdayo, aok foo'
'

~D

.--~FN..l- flJ..\

~~"foolo..'(
1\I.E. (:!'{)('.[) 1:.1~
UP TO mi"YOO... I

ed, excellent condition, hom ~
740·367-0119 evenings, work..

0~

YOUIZ:

!-&lt;05f.l

:£~If . . . . . . .

1998 Chevy Aslo Ext. High To;.
Deluxe Conversion Van, LoadedP
Only 15,800 , mllea, Like N•~

. '

•

1998 Ford Conversion va,., £.1
150, V-9, Rear 'Air Conditioner..;

TV, VCR , 59,300 mllto. Aml,m
Caoltlle , It 5,900. (740)'3.&amp;7'

NATE

1

- - ·- r--~--~..,

'I'ES!
OH,'(ES!

94 Jimmy, ( door, SLT Loadodl
Laathar lniorlor'; 82,000 Mlleo.•
(740)-245·5589
'

740

9

~

THE6RASS

730 Vane l 4-WDe .

7167

woooo!

..moo Hoooo!

Motorcyclll

A 1991 350 ~ Wheeler, Auto .•:

Vary Good Condlllon . 11,700.
080. (304)773-5103, Allar 5PM. •

1987 Chri&amp;Cratt, Cuddy Cabin'
19', VB, Mere., E~ecellent ConcU·\

tlon, Now Cover,
(304)87!-2329.

S7,0Q.CU

'90 Mazda RX7, black, PSR, 91K,
securlly ayatem, 5 apltd, nice

otoroo

·~•tom ,

14500, 740·742·

'

1985 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jol Ski,''
Trailer Included, 2 Seater, Very'
Low Hours. Excellent ConCIIUon,

t
$5,200, cau 740·448-1741 , Or t· t
600·880...&amp;272 Ex t 5 Alk For Kel· 1
~
,'

The Ame rican Bridge Teachers '
As socialton puts out a quan erl y mag·
az i.ne lhat contains a miXed bag: most
g( ood, some not so. Today 's de al is a
modification of o ne in a recenl issue
Yo u gel in1o fo ur spades. West
cashes h1s lop c lubs, East echo ing by
pLaying firs! the jack, the n lhe two.
W est s w1tche5 1o the hearLJaCk, Easl
co ve ring with the queen. Yo u wi n
wi, lh the ace and cash two rounds o f
trumps , Wesl di•c arding a lo w club
on the second. How would you continue?·
SoUih o pened with a strong, artifid al and forcing lwo cl ubs . A ft e r
g• v ing the neg ati ve two-d iamo nd
re ·; po nse, Nonh had an aw kward
re b 1d. Wa ntmg to show so me e nthusi asm wilh five po mts, he bid his
stll'o ng fo ur-carde r. T hen, on the ne&lt;t
ro •und. North was happy 10 g ive
p1 efere nce to spad es because he had
almost de nied ho ldmg lhree 5pad es
b:1 lailmg lo· raise o n the previous
TC! UOd

Yo u seem destin ed lo lose lwo
ht!arts and two clubs because you
cu nn01 'get inlo the dumm y. H owevel ', East appears to be shon in both
ht! a n s and clubs Maybe yo u can ·c all
0110 him to revive lhe dummy. Cash a
lh oird !OP spade . unbloc k the diamond
ace, a nd continue wilh the hean king.
If Easl IS s1:ll alive, he will di5·
C&lt;urd, nm ruff. Yet no w you lead the
sp a de four. If Easl is forced 10 win lhe'
lri d . he must bring the dummy back
10 life with a diamond. Ye1 if East saw
wlhoat w as coming, he wo uld have
unbloc ked the spade s ix , seve n and
ni n e, retaining lhe lhree lo unde rplay
yo ur fo ur. The n you would have to
lo se those four rounded-suit tric ks.

NO, ALL T~EV' CARE A50UT
15 CAN YOU REACH TJ.IE
PAR FIVE51N TWO?

Pollee

Impounds,

And

Tax

Auto Parte l
AcceSiorlee

1985 Olda Frltnza station wagon,
low mlloegt, some ruot, good work

Budget Priced Tranamllll&lt;~n,,

1&amp;186 Buick

Grand

National

73,000 mllta, Asking $8,500.00
(740)-446·4819

verado Packagt, Cualom Paint.

(740)-448-181 0

1990 ChrYJior 5th Ava. Cltan,
Ono Ow nor, 87,000 milt I, good
~·· mileage. Price Reduced to

$4700. Muot Soli, Will NfiiOtllte.
(304}117!-1861. (JO.I)87!-7814.

•
•

by Luis Campos

·

Celebrity Cipt'Mtr ~ .,. ct...a from QUOI: Uoi• ~ t.rnoul plq:JIIJ, pullllld preMOt
Each klttei In lfMt dpher llandllor ltiOihtr Todty'l

'LALPF

w

T H

YXJL

NL L
X

DXRFROL ,

CLNEWXP

Y KL

X

S T P

ctu.· D ~ 8

YKL

KZJWH , P.WRL .' '

WCZOY
H T

OTHVLP

SZYZPL

T S

K . V .

MLOON .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If I could glve young people one piece of advoce, H
would be read, read, read." - Dear Abby
·

S~ll~1A-L£t-!fs·

TUTUaY
WGIG
PI IlLII
- - - - - - - - - - loll9ool .., ClAY I. P«&lt;AN ....;;,__ _ __

O four
Rearrange leHert of
acramb*l word1
low 10 form four . words
ILUTAR

GUN E D
3

I

I~

I

My friend was datmg a cute
but not so smart fellow She
told me that he had taken an
r---:-i-:-:-::-::-::-:----, IQ test and 1t came back -- - - -

~~l..v_,ui,_7_R-ri..:Q~EI.,.8.:..1rl--ll ·e !
vou

by l1lhng m th1 '!\tSStng words
develop trom step No 3 below

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
Afloat . Lmer - Whole - Typ1fy • OFF NOW
When Sitting around doing nothing Granny wo uld
scold , "hard work pays off later but 1az1ness pays OFF
NOW "

HM~]'GI&gt;7!

'

\

~~--~------~·
810
Home
. ::
lmprovemente . '

=

.•

.....''

. '
IIAIEIIENT
WATENPIIOOFING
Uncondlllonal llfotlmo guaronttt.

Local reftrencu furnfshed. El·
tlblllhtd 1975. Ctl 24 Hra. (7401"'

448·0670, l-800·287·057e. Rogers Wet.. proofing. ·

'

,

1893 Dodge Coli, 5 Speed, Good
Condition, 109,000'MIIto, $2,000,
080740-258-1233.
.

CIC • Oo~orol Homo Mol~·
tonenct· Pointing, vinyl tldltlg,
carpontry, dooro.
bo....

wl-.
-homo_......,
......,.
frio lltlmats cal Chit, 740·M

8323.

•

Llvln5Jtton•s Basement WatW

Proo11ng, on booomont ropljl&lt;l
dono, frot ottlmotoi, llfttlmt
ouar•ntte. 12yra' on Job

ohOt. (304l8V5-3887.

•••rv.• 4

ProftiOIOnal. 20yre. oxptrltnc''
wMh an mooonlf)', brtclt, bloali •
otono. Alao room lddltlono, o-regll,

etc. Frtt 1111mat..,

(304)713-e!l60.

11198 Goo Mtlro, 2 Door, 4 Cylln·
dor. Autom.. A/0, Caouuo.
53,000 Mllll 13,100 .00 , OBO
740-25H487, 740-258-9163.

840 .Electrical end "
Refrigeration · '

1i97 Ford Aoplrt, Aclual 14,000
mlleol Uko Ntw1 Sll.400.00. (740)·
258-1417"' (740)-256-8228

torvk» or ropeirl. - I ] .
ctnaod altctrlclon. Rldonotll
Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304·871·

Rlllden~al or com,..,dlt

1788.

wtrna.

'u

ASTRO-ORAPH
.- 'l11undly, M1y 20. 1999

Use your im11inalive, inveRiive
rifts In lhe ytar wid oncl you tould
-conceive some1hi11J rather revolu·
llonll)llhat mi&amp;hl have 1 beneficlol

Influence bodt In your home oncl
wort place.
, TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) ll's
like you, but todoy you could
'pock It in bef01e you 1aCh ,your
·ohjec:dve: Coli upon duit wondetful
l llyina power dial eltill wilhill you 10
finloh lhe job. Know where to look
fOr IOIIWice oncl you'D find it The
f.llfO.Onph Malchmaker lnsllnlly
reveols which sian• are romanlicolly
perfec~ for you. Mill $2.75to Molchaker, c/o this newapoper, P.O. Box
758, Murray Hill S111lon, New
Ork, NY 10156.
· · OBMJNI (May 21 ·June 20) Don '1
trust 111ythin1 imwnant 1o memory
todoy even lhouJh recoil miaht be
your sUOnJsuit. Unfortunalely, ydur
mind could be wanderina ond nor
OOI!centratina on what you need 1o

p01

~

fFmember.

., ·CANCER (lune 21 -July 22) The
finonclol realm lo pretty nebulous for

you todoy; so 11 miih• be wtse 10
leave those kinds of mauers for
another day. If handlina funds for
another Is y - job, be extro careful.
LEO (July 23·Aua. 22) One-on·
, one neJOIIIIIiona could h&lt; quite lricky
oncl will need lhe most delicate
Ina. Wilhou1A!IY womin1. odis·
ruption could upse11h&lt; tronsacllon.
VIRGO (Au1. 23-Sept. 22) Monitor your comments judiciously 1odoy,
because lh&lt;re could be olis~ener who
is jus1 wlltin1 for you 10 say iome' thins she or he can use lpinst you .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) When
.you 111r1 beulna money on oomeone
other than younelf, !here's a 111'0111
poHiblllty you could end up bacltina
lhe wro111 hOJ'IIJ loday becouse of
lll:k of Jt-ledp.
·
c~. -14-Nov. 22) If
)'011 filii to lite a linn J;IOIIdm when
Involved in a buslneu tillllllon today.
those with whom you'~e invoh·od
could lose conrldcn&lt;e in you. Don"t
let fear cloud your judament.
SAOIITARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) A ioud sen10 of liminJ could be

:::::i(

· 'S:Co!tfilo

everything 1oday when making an
imponant presen1adon. Don'1 be so
anxious do make your points tho1 you
, presenl them out of sync.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You could fall heir todoy lo the
lJf'OIICt' portion of expenses when
involved In ajointacdvilf if you are
. lu1bout wi!Chinj how everythiiiJ is
divided up. Be on your loes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If
you don't plan to consider someone
else's odvice, don'tseck it in !he first
place . Your counselor could get
miffed ;r 's he feels you have linle
.
respect for her advice.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Don '1 stan to look fot shortcut• for
usicnmenls you know mJUire con·
dnulty and patience, especially when
deolina wilh mechanical ~evices.
Bunallaa con cause accidents. . ,
ARIES (March 21 -Aprill9) Firs!
y011 mullll'Cit your friends and asso-

ciates in a pnerous. wann manner
before you cllli expect them to treat
you in lhot fuhion. If you don '1
deliver today, neither wi111h&lt;y.

\,

'·

••••

....
""'

I
I

SERVICES

perltnct ~II Work GuoraniHd.
French City Moylag, 740·441·
778G.
'I

111114 Chevy BertHa. 3.1V, AuiO,
AC. PW, POL , 71,000 mllu.
15,300.00 080 (740)..t41.Q223

CELEBRITY CIPHER

&amp; body Plrtt. D I:
R Auto, Ripley, WV. (304)372· 1
3833 or 1·1100-273-9329.
.'

189f Cut1a10 Clerro, 4 door, V•6,
air, 14,000 mllto, $2100, 740-9492045.

1883 Toyota Torcol, 4 opood,
90,000 mlloa, $3~00,, 740· 742·
2495.

Reidt

New gas tanka

Name Brahda OVer 2S V.art Ex·

19U3 Pontloc (lrond AM, Till,
Loaded! $3,900.00 (740)-8408 .

from W.O.

~MIT'l\f. '.

&lt;I
I

1990 Cougar, high mlloo, runo
groat, looks good. V·8, $2100,
740-948-2638 or 740-948-2045.
. Apptlanco Ports And StNfoe: o\11

door, very good oondlllon, Good
Mlluge 100,800 Asking $3,100.
(740) H8 1!5011 '

Don't g&lt;t Sl"'g by hifh priers!
Shop th• closslfltd stt:flon.

and 11nglnto, Alll'ypoo, Acetol!
To Qvor 10,000 Tranomlatlonol.
eve Jolnlo, 740-24!-5877.
:

.

1983 Mercury Topat Bleck, 2

know . .•"

50 VMiw
52 Slick lblrter
53c-men1

. , UNSCRAMBLE 'FOR
ANSWER

'\

.,

780

lngs).

.

49 "Aelor - -.

~ _,

Ropo's. For Llotlngo Call 1·800·
3111-3323 Ext. 4420.

car, $700, 740·949·2680 (even·

Edblrg, for ·

onl

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

aon Tilt And Trim Trailer Excel· :
tent Condition, $2,400, 7il0·2&amp;e.-,
1()93.
I

-

2303.

... x:n

..
_
_
_
•
1...-1--...L--"-.....S-..L--'

~----------------·
Bomber
Ball Boat 85 HP John· •

.11110 -UJIOCARS F-pOO

42~ol

Complele "'• chuckle quoted

DO VOU Tf.IINK VOO'LL
NEED A 600D 6RADE
POINT AVERA6E ?

.

1alldng
'
28 Gfw
•
mldlclneto •
30 Uriall Hllp
lrllt
34 Pllld, . . .
bill
35 Group of nine
36 Dlmlnutl..
. being
31 Monkey
39Laea!NIIh
40 Fuming

aA

..

$8000, 740-742·2301 .

12~

B }I Phillip Alder

Pic~-·

(740)-448-8141

11 Going by

I .. Norm• - ·

l'he modified
tt!!achers' deal

,

Sttphonlt.

10a-up

compol111on

7 HNrtll

.. ...

??

"' rK:-:e=e-=-p
. 0-F-j:-.,

Brakoo, CB. Joints and UnlvorNI'
Join II. Runo Groou $ t ,100. ~·
(7401 992·1978 or (740)·388·
8481

a

1

2 Bedroom Garage Apt In Clifton. For SOle· Set of Mono Right Hend 1988 Toyota CQrolla 146,000
Mlloo, $1 ,350; 1888 Ford LTD
$250 .oo.per month plus $100.00 Go11 Clubs, l125. (304)875-6968.
. Station Wagon f39,000 11.900;
depool1.1304)773-li040.
Grubb's Pleno· tuning &amp; ropalro. 740-441-11806.
2bdrm. apts •• total electric, ap· Problomo? N- TUntd? Clljl tho
1869 2 WO, 112 ton Buburban Silpllancea furnllhed, laundry room plano Dr. 740-448-4525
Hea~h

3a

'

cover, fully rigged and gar.;ge'
kept, all In excellent cqndltlon,:

0563

Pass
Pass

30

:1 •

1992 GMC, Extended Cab. New,

Fair PIQs for SOlei ExOtllanl Blood

Us We Solh Loltl140.446-6308,
Or HOD-291.Q098.

:! •

750 Boats l Motort
for Sale

Burner. 740-379·2757.

830

Loweezy

Up, 4cly, 4tp, amlpm AI Whula;
33' Tires. 4'1nch llfl, new: Blloekl 1

810 Farm Equipment

Flatbed

Pass

Leather Seal Covers: Tool Box .•

88 Toyota 4 Whool Drfvo,

-

I ChlrlleLamb

tine
3 Lucky chlrm
'TV.-ork

26 Smooth·

2+

I

1233.

&amp; LIVE STOCK

a o.omw1c:11

c.-

Pass

' 1985 OodgiOakota SLT, 4 W~
Or.. I Fl Bod. v-8, 6 Spd .. 147,0000
Milos, $4,200.00 OBO. 740·2~8-:

FARM SLJPPLIE S

. ..Baby. .•
Cold Ou1alde"

5 Hln1

I Devil

22F..,..Iel
24 AINP
Eut

.:

Easy on Gaal (740) 446 4385

depl.

31 Comedian
Dll.ulu
32 SUndlll
numeral
33 Porononnol

1 9 R i t n -.

Norlb

ago, Now Tiroo. Now Bodllnor.•
12,000.00 firm_
:

740r379-2566.

52

West

1917 International 485 Diesel'
Dump Truck Engine-Low Mite-:
Hooper Equipment Trailer Trl- 1
Axle, New Tlrea, Pantel Hitch,•

AKC Mlnllture Colll11, Male, Fe·

Q J tO 4

; south
:! a

1983 ~ord Short Whatl Bast 4;
WhOtl DriVe (740)-388-9183 .

pte, 740-1192·9989.

Blue ·Point ~lamooe Kittens.
1150.00 (740)9446-4412

A

•J 76532

• J 2

24 Futd, .,.,...... 5e Wlllrlpool1
25 u-~
57 "PI!( 11 agoln,
moll
111m
%7 Roll opur
28 Unclllmld m•ll
DOWN

Vulnerable : Both
De aler: Sou t h

$1,250; The AbOve IncludeS' Normal lna.,llatton. If You Don't Call

pon. "" pay water. oewer &amp; traah, For Sale: 15x30 Above-ground,
you pey gao &amp; eleCirlc, $200 per Oval Swimming Pool with pump
montt'l , $100 Clepoall, 7o40-992 - &amp;accuoorlu. (304)675-t702 or
(304)87!-6482. Groat Daall
7808.

no petl, 74Q.992-!II!l6. •

t

8 9763

.• Q

23 Word o f - 55 Expt'MIId

• Q5

$1 ,500; 2 112 Ton $1 ,350; 2 Ton

2 bedroom apartment In Middle·

3711. EOH.

cq

1991 Stratos baSI bolt, UO;
Evlnrudo wl SS prop, 12/24 Ellln· 1
rude lrolllng motor, Slratoo trailer, I

$275 monlh, utllltleo paid. Vlond man Air Cond itioners &amp; Heat
Street, Pt. Pleasant, WV. Pumpa. BenneU'a Mobile Home
Supply, 740·448·9416 Galllpollo.
(304)736·5554.
Ohio.
I Room &amp; Both Rio Grande Anta,
$200/Mo., All Utlltltl Included, For ana Price, .J.variety Store
Oepooll Roqulrod, Call Toll Free, CIONOUt Items, tihOWCIIII, Ta·
blot, Craft Suppllao And Mloc.
1-888·84Q.0521.
(740)·258-8200

raclllttet, ciOae to school In town.
AppNcatlona available at: VIllage
Grttn Apta. U9 or cell 740·992·

Mon soo n Starto, 12 DIIC

Baby Goata for aalt. (304)675·
1870.

$25.21 : 6 Gal White Roof Palnl
; Anchoro $5 ; Oooro &amp;
$279.00 Por Month, Plus Utllllloa. 157.89
WlnCIOWI, Gal &amp; EIICiriC Water
740-446-2857.
Haatera, Plumbing &amp; Eteetricet
t Bedroom 'Apt . Unfurnished .

Changer, Fully Loaded! WIH TaUr
Pay Ofl, 740-(46 4548.
'

Power King tractor, 14 hp., 48•
METABOLISM deck, scraper blade, plow, culti Loll 10·200 vators, potato plow, runa end
Quick, Fast . looka good, $2000, 740·949·2248.

Babybod. Playpen. Swlog. Car
2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Por1· Set!, Strolllr. (304)87!-4548.

440

1 Year Old Black Lab .. 1100 .•
(304}117!-1 972, After 6PM.

Antlquee

AMAZING

740-446-1279.

Pets for Sale

IIVo Croat..... 740-24!-551111.

Buy or sell . Rive rine Ant iques,

I•

1998 Pontiac Trano·Am, N o~
Blua Metallic. 5.7 U1er, LS 1 En.
ginO, Llathtr lntarlor. 10 Sj&gt;tokll

5121.

Bilow Holiday Inn, Kanauga. Slop
And Ste Us. 740-446-4762.

420 Mobile Homee
for Rent

Trailer For Rent &amp; lol For Rent,

Rio Gra nda, OH Call 740·245·

AKC
Aegialered
Pinschers, Black'

\l'eot
• 8
• J 10 9 7 3
• 8 4
a A K 10 9 4
South
a AK
• A K

1998 Ot op Purple Chevy Clvllll~
or. (304}117!-7071.
.r

New And Used Fur niture Store

530

111117 Grond Am GT, - · 50.1101l
mlltl, $1 1,500, 740-9411-1 701 .

7PM.

Block, brick, tewer plpea, Wi nd·
owa, lintels, etc. Claude Wlnlert,

580

Norl
05·111-W
• 5 2
• 8 6 4
t K Q 10 9
• 8 7 6 3
Eliot

'

114,500. (304)682·2823, Alter

MERCHANDISE

510

740-448-8481 .

Edition. 2 Door. Fully Loadtpd 1

Building
Suppllea

550

28,000 MUt l , Bal fact Wlff E.r.:
collollt COncltlon, Prk:o R-~

1897 Honda. Coupe, Spocttf

AKC Aeg latered Doberman Pup·
pies, Black &amp; Rust . $275 .

740-385-4367.

0047.

no pets, 740-1192·56158.

.-...Ohio. 1'800-!37-~5211

Six Monlho Oldl BtauHful, $75 00
to Good Homol

quired . $300 monlh . (304)875· 18 HP Slmplcny Lawn Mower. 44'
1972.
Deck, Low Hours, Good' Condl·
lion . Call after 5 pm 1740)-4463 Bedroom. 2 112 Bath, wHh Ga· 3430
rage, beoldo Hanlord COmmunity
Building. (304)87!-2484.
11" DlrecTV Bllolllto Syotoma-

Apartment tor rtnl In Middleport,

Good selection ot u11d homtt
with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

REAL ESTATE

PelS. (304)876-5162.

bile hOme, 740-992·5039.

7o.l5.

advertiSements tor real estate

2 Bedroom, w/Baaement &amp; Ga·
rage . Deposit &amp; References, No

Wolorllno Special: 3/( 200 PSI
$21 .95 Por 100; 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Bran Com·
prtlllon Attlnglln S«&gt;t*
RON EVANS ENTER,RIIE8

Mobile home site available bit·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

U11111oo, Deposit &amp;. Reforanceo Caae Window; Air Condltlootr ;
Works Goocll $150. Call After 5
Required. 740-388-9182.
P.M. 740-446-2398.

Excellent Condition (30.t)875·

This newspeper will not
k(IOWingly accept

460 Space for Rent

Call (304)773·9107 or (304)773·
515S.
.

2Bedroorry, 1Balh, 3 Ton Heat·
Pump/Central Air, Shlng"" Rool,

or 1968 which makes ~ Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
llm~atlon or discrimination
based on race. color, l'ellg!on,
sex famMial status or national
origin, or any tmentlon to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrim ination . ~

Pluo Oepoolt, No Pill. Call Deb·
ble Or J\Ri At 740-448·7323

1192·2187.

~1~-~~~~------· 1988 Skyline Plnocraok 14X70,

All real aotata -Ising In
this newspaper IS subject to
the Fede'ral Fair Housing Act

Upsta irs Three Room Apartment
At 8S1 Second Avenue, Galllpo·
111, Next To Library, $3!0/Mo..

bedrooms, 2 Bathe, Like New.
Must be moved, Includes 2
porches. 114,400 or bill offer.

16x60 Vinyl Shingle, Assume
Loon, 1-81J0.38~
WALL-CEILING CLEANED EX·

lldlzed opt. for elderly and hend·
k:apped. EOH 304-87!-8679.

$400 .00/month; Deposit $400 . J . ~~!_KIItch•on Cabloot. (740)·258·
No Porol Refttance. After 8.00pm
(740) 448 8495 •

320 Mqblle Hom•

for Free Ettlmaleal

(30.t)875-4040 , tor a Free Ea tlmate.

$325 .00 Month, lncludll Walor
and Garbage. OtPOalt, Reference,
No Potol (740)·643·0122 8:00·
4:00. Al1or 6pm (740}643-2918 .

(304)773-586f .
Gergo( Apt. Albany, 7 Milas o.u.
Mo~a Mine, 740-6911-7150.

Twin Rl'4ra Tower now accepting
appllcallone for 1BR. HUD sub·

Waahers, dryers , refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appllancea, 78
VIne Street, Call 740·446 -7398,

PI Ploosont 126,000 (304)895House For ·sale: Centrally Located, 2321 Jellerson Avenue , Pt.

FioOro, CA, 1 1f2 Bllh, Fully Car·
ptled. Pado, No Pet&amp;, Loaoo Pluo
·s ecurll)' Oepoolt Required, 740·
«8-3481 , 740-448-0101.

GOOD USED . APPLIANCES

House For Sale· 221 9 Oak St.,

Clearly Clean at (304)675·4040

swer! Call Clearly Clean at

Rill Eatate
Wanted

$199,999 (803)366-9436

Family Home, With : Pool, 2 Car

Buelneas
Opportunity

360

Square Foot House. o4 Car Ga- •
raga , 5 Acres, Very Secluded .

FINANCIAL

210

1.-(800)·213-8385

FOr Sale By Owner : 4BR. 3000

3062.

Tara Townhouu Apartme nt•.
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Almosl 5 Acrto On Blackloppod

Corner Lot. 2605 Garfield Ava ..
Pt. Pt. $69,900. (304)87!-3379.

0&lt;

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dltport: one bedroom furnlahed
houot 1n Gaillpollt, 740-m""l .

41 Aenann"• eon

11 u..
41 Ooa. for E.ott17 Nothing
Fllcona
11 GrMIIMjl : 1 47 cr- cry
20 SUndly ICIIDol 41 " Attention!"
loplc
c:ancellr
21 Fight wl1h
51 0... ~
.54 Fluflothe Mlr

...a

. ·'

'111111 Ford ExpiorOr XLT LOidotll!

. (740}379·2830 Al1or 5:00pm

or Coltln Roush at 7~-2.521 .

2 Yoar Old Frame Homo; 2 Bid·
rooms, Kitchen/Living Room. Utili·
. IUMoko MontyiiU Work AI Chlldcare provider, OHS conWiad, ty, Balh, Baooboard Hta1, 112
Home • AINMblt Productt . 18 ytart exper..nce, have three Aru, 112 mile from 36 Thurmon.
Eaay Work , EJicelltnt Pay. Frtt openlngo, Middleport· Rutland $39,500.00. (740)·882·0032 ·or
OttoMof Sond S.A.B.E. To: Nat'l· araa. col7o4Q.892-8718.
(7~)-882-63&lt;17
Homoowrkofl AIIOCI&amp;tlon, P.O.
Box 875, Rlplo'f. W'i 25271 .
Chrlotlan Lady will babyoll In my 2103 Moun1 V.111on Avenue. 311R
homo (wookdoya). 12 Yeoro Ex· 1 1/2BA.. Family Room. Garage,
AVON! AH Aroul To Buy or 8111. perlenct. Good Reftrtnceal controiAir, Polio. Porch, 1n.ooo.
&amp;llilay
30&lt;H7!-142Q.
(304)67!-2533.
(740)-441.0~9
Corpot cleaner/htlptr. Mlcflanlc Chrlotlan Woman Will Provide 3 Bedroom, Spill Entry, Brick
oplltudo hlfpful. Vllld drl~o II·
Oaycaro In My Homo Only. Home on Route 2, at MI. Alto.
$12.00 Day For 1 Child, $20.00 Bullt·ln Kitchen , Olnlngroom, LR,
bo obit 10 .,_ Mnlluro. RttJiy ID Dly For 2, Elc. CPR Corllflad, 3 litho, FP, Woodburnlng stove,
PO lox 453, Pomoroy, Ohio EMT'Ctrt, Pending. Ralrtncu. on f!Oarly 5 acrto lond. (304)88!487llllor7-.f781.
3881.
740-245 IHI82.

s-o.

out Iota to r $89,000 , 740-992·
2704, 7o10-1192·569B.

340 Bu11n- end
Building•

SIN. Call 313-294- 2448.

opportunity bilsls.

piDytr.

dlepon. houee &amp; 3 lots, muot to 8Jlllf8Ciatt . will 1111 houot with·

388-8504.

367.Q241

cortlflcato. Phono 740.949·2689

Rick Pearaon Auction Company,
full time auctlonetr, complete
auction
11rv1ce.
Lleenaed
f88,0hlo &amp; Woot Vlrglhlo, 304·

110

Electrh:: J,4alntenanc:e Serv ice.

Ohio 45771. SLSO Ia an Equal
Opponunlty limptoyer.

nlor high glrlt basketball, reaerve
boya baakelball, reserve girls

Bill t.tooellapaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctioneering Servlc
••- Conalgnment auction · t.tUI
Str1et , Middleport , Thursdayt.

10

J)Itmenta tton, and Ser~lce
Available for Sprin g Clean up,
fertilizing and planflng. frH II~·
mates.· Satlaractlon guaranteed.
Greg MihOan: 304167!-4828.

gram Stnd Resume : CLA· 472, 'Yo

·1 0:00 Lm. Slturdty.

80

WHh Rtoumt, Call Gall~lla Dairy
Queen, 740-446-3278.

Person wllh positive attitudes and

ALl. Yonl &amp;IIH Muol
BePokllnAdwo-.

-

Now Hiring A Full-Time Cake
Decorator, Possible 30 -35 Hrs
Per Week, Day Shill Only, Cake
Oecorallng E~eperlen ce Required

Meal Planning And Wheel Chair

28 Acreo MIL. 8 Stall HorN 111in.
3 Bedroom Hou11. Ftnco. 740·

.

40 Cllarpd

1~ =-

CNA With 20 Yro. Exp. And Ex·

•
•
•

.tHIIIy: lbbr.
34W37 Shldl-

ACR0$8

14 Of medicine
15 Draw8 out

I Pumoctly Hoppy Heolthy K~
r,nt : Bllckl 1· Melt 1· Female. 478-8653X 7777, www.lcwp.oom
.5 Month
LIUtr Trained! To
Ea1y World Excellent Pay t At·
- - . 740-24!-5104.
aemblt Producta at Horne. Call

·.••

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle

'

�.
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

P~~ge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, May 19, 1999

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

-

- -- -

---

.u..
e WD'nM UNION

407 Pearl Stree:t Middleport, 01:1
(740) 992.. 3471

·

v

Prices Good M

.PUIIUC fAX
. . . . . . ., IIXPUS.
ew•o UN'I'AL

20 .. 2"1 and 22
.

u.s.~

I

1•10 pound beg .

Genuine Idaho
Potatoa

.

lldllpc

. Dllldousl

1MIIb.MI'If&amp;

WholI ..,

··Icy Fralh
Broccoli

Watea111elon

"'
••• •

I

J
J

'

..

..

.

'.

.

,•

. .

.. Hulk

Goldin .Ripe
Bananas·

•

. Yellow or White
Sweet
Com
'

(

.

I

.

.

lb.·

II
I

G1rdlnFrah

·· Green
Bans ·

loll
. ltl.. ns-

RlpciiKy

RidSkln .
Potatoes

·Honeydew .

Melons ·

.
Mldllpli 3 pGIIId bls
Rid Delicious .
Apples
.

'

'

1

I'

.

.

~

5 pcMIId bls

G1rdln Ft:ah

·· Genuine·
VIdalia Onions

Gran·
Cabbage.

SupJ,Iem4tnt to:..

~bt ~alltpoli~

•

Qtribune .
The Daily
Sentinel
.
t)otnt ,JJitasant.l\tgt~ter
.

19, 1
{

~

'

-

.. '"·

.. . ..

'

'

.. ,

'

.......

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="426">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9856">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26095">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26094">
              <text>May 19, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2299">
      <name>bentley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5797">
      <name>cavender</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="109">
      <name>young</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
