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                  <text>Thursday
M•y 20, 100D

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Eastern girls lose to Green, Page 4
Friend in need of help, Page 7
Blurring of cultures, Page 6·

Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40s

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

•
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vol ume 49. Numb er 248

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Agreement clears way for mining on Civil War battlefield·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A central Ohio com·
pany has won the right to mine gravel in a Civil War
battlefield, despite the protests of preservationists. · .
· The Army Corps of Engineers and the Ohio Hiil·
toric Preservation Office signed an agreemeni Tues. llay with Shelly Materials Inc., of Thornville, allowIng the company to mine gravel on about 400 acres
along the Ohio River in Meigs County. Its land
includes much of the Buffington Island Battlefield,
where Union troops cl.ashed with Confederate raider
lohn Hunt Morgan in July 1863.
· The company agreed to allow archaeolqgical study,
supervised by the Ohio Historic Preservation Office,
on 19 spots identified as historically significant
before mining begins. Shelly also agreed to set aside
40 acres for preservation, Franco Ruffini, a de))uty

state historic preservation officer, said Wednesday.
Union Veterans of the Civil War, said between 54 and Ruffini said. ·
.
. Mrs. Parker said she is upset that a detailed archae"We're very unhappy," .said Margaret Parker, lOS soldiers ate buried at the site, but their graves are
director of the Meigs County Historical Society. "It unmarked.
ological study of the battlefield has not been done. ·
looks as if they are aoing to $ave 40 acres and destroy
"To us, that is like someone goi'ng into your local with metal detectors. Without such a study, 'there is ~o.
the rest of the battlefield.".
cemetery and starting to dig," group commander proof that the 40 acres to be turned over to the state
But Paul D. Rice, an attorney for Shelly, said the Mark Eckley, of Cleveland, told The Columbus Dis- are any more significant than other parts of the battle·
company recognized ·the concerns of preservation ists patch.
field, she said.
and tried to negotiate a just settlement.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources
The hist~Jrical ,society h~ appealed Shelly's min·.
Ruffini said the Ohio Historic Preservation Office already granted Shelly a permit to mine the land. The ing permit. A hearing is scheduled for June 'I in Meigs
signed the agreement because Shelly agreed to mine mining could begin as early u this summer, but County Common Pleas Court, Mrs. Parker said.
.
in stages over several years, meaning preservationists because of the difficulty of trucking the gravel out,
State law doesn 't1allow the Department of Natural
could work to protect idle areas.
Shelly has applied to the Corps for a permit to build a Resources to take historical preservation into account
"That will give someone a chance who is interest- barge-loading dock first.
when issuing mini'ng permits. Preservationists hope
ed in preserving the field to do some fund raising in
Before the Corps of Engineers will consider the the hearing will produce a legal ruling on ·that, she.
an effort to purchase the battlefield," he .said.
re•,•est, the agreement must be approved by the Advi- said .
Keith Ashley of the Ohio Department, Sons of sory Collncil on Historic Preserv.ation in Washington,
"We still have some hope there," she said.

Racine village council holds meeting

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Muon, ·11i1p HMittt eire Edition

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Purchases for the street department were dis- to contact the village clerk.
.
availability of Appalachian Regional Commission
cussed when Racine Village Council met in
The village Marshall was instructed to watch ·funds for· a water line project to tie in Vine Street·
recessed session.
for children who ride bicycles on sidewalks and and Yellowbush Road to increase water pressure
Council 'discussed the purchase of a new fin- public streets. Children have also been failing to in that area of the village.
ishing mower and agreed to obtain prices for the stop at stop signs and have been going into the
Council members commended members of the ·
mower. Street Commissioner John Holman street in front of traffic, it was-reported.
Volunteer Fire Department for their open house
.reported the current King Kutter mower's frame
Offender,; will now be taken home and will be on 'Sunday. It was noted that an estimated savings ·
is not strong enough and the belts are being cut on cited to Juvenile Court if problems persist.
of $145,000 was made possible by the men doing
the pulleys.
An ordinance which sets fonh rules and poli- the work themselves, because a contractor would.
·
Holman will obtain prices on other mowers, as cies governing water service and due process have been required to pay prevailing wage.
well as a weed trimmer.
prior to terminating service was adopted after its . . Present were council members Robert Beegle;
Holman also requested purchasing a trailer to third reading. The ordinance, according to Oerk Henry Bentz, John Dudding, Joe Evans and·
enable him to haul the riding mower to Green- . Karen Lyons, does not change water deP!Iflment Henry Lyons, was well as Marshall Dion Jones,
wood Cemetery. Council tabled action on the pur- policies, but merely ,records them on the village Street Commissioner John Holman, and QerkTreasurer Lyons. .
chase, hoping to be able to obtain a used trailer. books.
.
Mayor Scott Hill was authorized to check the
Council adjourned until June 1 at 7 p.m.
Residents with a trailer for sale have been asked
.
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Va. (AP)- An Army helicopter pilot · Ohio killed
while training for NATO action against Yugoslavia was buried with full
military honors in Arlington National Cemetery.
Wi:dnesday, the body of Chief Warrant Officer David A. Gibbs of
Massillon, Ohio, was carried by horse-drawn caisson from Memorial
Chapel at Fort Myer to the grave site, said Barbara Owens, public affairs
specialist with the Military District of Washington. •
·
. The private, gravesite service included a military band, rifle volley
~ bugler playing "Taps."
. Abo~t I 00 mourners attended.
Gibbs and another chief warrant officer, Kevin L. Reichert of Chetek,
Wis., were killed May 5 in an Apache helicopter crash in Albania during
a training ·mission. They were NATO's.flrst.fatalities in its air campaign
against Yugoslavia.
Army ,Vice Chief pf Staff ()en. Eric K. Shinseki and Maj: Gen.
By BAlAN J. REE!)
therapy.
Thomas Garrett were ainong the Army's representatives at the funeral.
Sentinel
New1
Stlltf
Throughout his career at Eastern, Proffitt has been
Civilian officials included Rep. Ralph Regula, R-Ohio, the congressStephanie Evans has been named valedictorian of the active in Concert Blind, Marching Band and Varsity
from Gibbs· home town.
·
· Before the chapel service, Gibbs' widow, Jean, and mother, Eastern High School Class of 1999, and John Heath Track.
·
He has also rC:ceived many academic and Fine Arts
Dorothy, met with Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, who recently vis- · Daniel Proffitt has been named salutatorian.
These
top
students
will
·
honors, including the 1997 DisIted with Gibbs' colleagues at an air base in Aviano, Italy.
address
their
classmates
during
trict
XVII Honor Band, 1999
Spokesman Mike Dawson sai4 the senator "had the opportunity to
combined
baccaulaureate
and
Ohio
University
Honor Band, the
c:Onvey how ·loved and respected he was by his colleagues."
·
commencement
exercises
on
.
International
Fore.ign
Lan_guage
- Voinovich "was really struck by the' outpouring of affection .from
May 30 at 2 p.m. in lite Eastern
Award, the National English
David's colleagues and he wanted them to know that."
Merit Award, the National HistoIn Ohio, Gov. Bob Taft ordered state office buildings to fly .flags at High School gymansium. .
Evans
is
the
daughter
of
John
ry and Government Award, the
.
half-staff in Gibbs' memory.
Evans
of
Long
Bottom
and
TereNational Science and MathematA public memorial service for the 38-year-old aviator was sched·
sa
Evans
of
Long
Bottom
and
ics Award and the 1998 Gover·
uled for Tuesday in Massillon.
,
Proffitt the son of Danny Proffitt
nor's Scholar Award, among oth·
Review board says shooting not justified of Lancaster and Bob and Pam
ers.
aNONNt'Jl(AP)-AdviliMreviewboardhMrecornrnendrdthalapdiceofliBurdine of Long Bottom.
He also participated in the
cer be dis;ipiincd in the shooting death of an WlllllltCd motQrist Wring a traffic stop. , · Evans is a member of the
1995 Free Enterprise and LeaderThe city's Offioe of Municipal lnvestigaliorB n:port releMcd v.b;lncada)' said
Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy, and has been
ship Conference, .1995 Kent State
Officer
,........,___Brent Mc&lt;ltdey was n&lt;1 jll;li6ed in shooting Midtad Catpenkt, 30, tt active in both school and the community. She is the presTrombone Choir, ·the 1996 Ohio
'
ident of the National Honor Society and secretary of the University Trombone Choir and tire 1999 Ohio UniverGty oflidals said no actiat would be tal&lt;al until invcstipiats by the·pdice inll:r- National Art Honor Society.
, · sity Trombone Choir, and the Capital Regiment Drum
nal allitirs division and the Hlmilton OJunty proscc:utar wet!' axnplcted inkl the
She is alsO a member of the French Oub, the Varsity · and Bugle Corps.
Mardll9 shooting.
"E" Oub and .has been named in Who's Who Among
Proffitt plans to attend the College of Engineering at
"It's important we wait unlil all the intlxmalion is in before jumping to oonduAmerican High School Students.
Ohio University, and also plans to try out for the Marchsions," said City Councilman Phil
She is employed at the Arcadia Nursing and Rehabil- ing 110, the Ohio University Marching Band.
.
Heimlich. "Right now, we're missing itation Center in Coolville, where she has been working
The names of the remaining Top 10 students in the
two of the essential pieces. Historicalfor a year and a half. She plans to attend Ohio Universi- class wiJI be announced at the school's award cerely, OM! and inremal affain have not ty this fall, where she will pursue a career in physical monies, which wiJI be held on May 28.
always reached the same cqnclu·
sions."
'
Civil rights groups have called the
The State Department repof!ed at least 500 Serb solBy BARRY SCHWEID
shooting racially motivated.;·
.diers had deserted in Kosovo province. and said it was a
AP
Dlplom1t1c
Writer
The Rev. Damon Lynch Jr.,
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton, defend- sign that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was
president of the Baptist Ministers
ing
his strategy in Kosovo, says the U.S.·Ied NATO "feeling the heat."
Conference, said' OMI's report is a
Spokesman James P. Rubin exhibited videotape taken
bombing
campaign is the only alternative to letting Serb .
bright spot, but he also is awaiting
with a horne camera by an ethnic Albanian villager pur·
troops
butcher
ethnic
Albanian
civilians.
.
results of the investigations by the
With British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook on his porting to show that Serbs had inter,cepted a group of
prosecutor's office and the ·police way.
here for a show of solidarity, Qinton was at pains elderly men atlzbica in mid-April and massacred them.
internal affairs division.
Rubin said the tape conclusively confirmed U.S. surWednesday
to explain his course of action in the Balka"The city manager, the chief of
veillance photographs t,hat the Yugoslav government had
ns
conflict.
"All
I
can
tell
you
is
I'm
convinced
I''ve
police and the safety director ought to
dismissed as forgeries. He said the tape would be sub.
· ·
.
·
come
out and get in unison, and if this done the right thing," he said.
Lotteries
Cook, who was due to meet with Secretary of State mitted as evidence to an international war crimes trinian (McCurley) Js guilty, then he
..
Madeleine Albright late today, said all the NATO allies bunal at The Hague.
QBIQ
should be prosecuted ... like any
He
pointed
to
three
rows
of graves and said they had
had
agreed
not
to
send
ground
troops
into
Kosovo
until
Pick 3: 7-6-S; Pick 4: 2-4-0-0
citizen," Lynch said
been
dug
by
the
villagers
to.
bury the dead. Rubin also
"the
endgame"
to
secure
a
cease-fire.
.
Saper Lotto: 3-19-40-27-38-44
McCurley, 27,.who is white, and
said
there
were
eyewitnesses
to the atrocities and more
"My
visit
to
Washington
is
designed
to
demonstrate
Kkke"' 2-8-S-4-9-8
Officer Michael Miller II, 24, who is the solidarity of the alliance," he said Wednesday night graphic video that he did not show to reporters .
W.VA
black, stopped Carpenter, who is
On Sunday, Serbian state television had denounced
DaUy 3: 6-6-8; Dally 4: 8-2-8·1
black, for driving a car with expired in London.
the
videotape as U.S. propaganda. "It was jilst another
While
Britain
has
advocated
preparations
for
a
· c tm Ohio "'lley 1\abllsbina OJ.
ta$s, according to police records.
lie
orchestrated
by separatist Kosovo rebels and their
ground wlfr in case the air attacks fail to produce results,
U.S. mentors," a COIJITJientator on the network said
another NATO ally, Germany, is dead set against it. ·
.
. "I am against any chaltge in NtUO strategy because while CNN broadcast the footage.
Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott said there
.1 believe it is beginning to take effect," German Chan- ·
cellor Gerbard Schroeder told a news conference in was "really no fundamental . difference" between the
United States and Russia on how to settle the conflict in
Brussels, Bel!Pum.
.
Kosovo.
._
Ointon stirred speculation about U.S. policy Tuesday.
"The problem is that there is somebody else who is
when he said no option should be ruled out on t11e use of
ground troops, although he alsd said NATO should con· not participating in the meetings, of course, and that's
tinue on its present course of airstrikes. Previously, Oin- Mr: Milosevic and the leaders~ip in Belgrade," Talbott
ton had said he had n.o intention of introducing ground said. "They understand, I think, clearly what is necessary to bring about a suspension of hostilities." ·
troops into Kosovo.
. .
·
Talbott spoke in Helsinki, Finland, after two days of
Albright faced quizzing before a Senate subcommit· .
talks wit~ the Russian mediator Viktor S. Cherlee today before her meeting with Cook. ·
Congress is divided on the administration's strategy noytnyrdin. They were due to resume their discussions
.
in the conflict, now in its ninth week. Some members in Moscow toda,.
Rubin gave a more mixed account. "We·do believe
question U.S. involvemen~ others would send in ground
troops, and still others are critical of Ointon's tactics that we continue .to make headway, that we are moving
towards agreemen~ not away from agreement," he said.
against the Serb-led Yugoslav government.
The State Department spokesman also said "clearly
11iere is also consi!lerable backing for the president.
there
are major gaps that remain."
Oin~n, speaking at a Democratic fund-raiser in New
Russia vehemently oWa&lt;es the NATO bombing cam-.
York on Wednesd4y, said "a lot of people have quesBUYING 11CKETS
for th• June 18 Log .18m FMIIval tioned what I have done and how I have done it in Koso- paign and has urged a suspension while Milosevic considers demands by the U.S. and its allies that he withIn Portland fMturtno
1M Murphy, Kenny Cheaney lfld vo."
draw virtually all of hit troops from Kosovo and permit
He
said
the
NATO
airstrikes
were
"the
best
available
Toby K•lth we,rt on •I• Mondl!y momlng Ill 1M lhlp County
refugees to return home under NATO protection.
·
way"to
retaliate
aaainst
the
Serbs
for
massacres
against
Ch1mber of Commerce In ·Pomeroy. Here, ona of the llrly tick·
Pentagon
spokesman
Kenneth
Bacon
said
Wednesethnic
Albaniana
in
the
Kovoso
province
of
Serbia,
the
et-buyW8, Mlrldy ltrlnk•r, left, 11 •hown buying eight tlclma from
day that the U.S. miliiary could move its ponion of a
·
chlmblr employ"' BlrnHI Brumtllld 1nd Brendl JonM. dominant Yuplav republic.
The alternative would have been "sitting on my peacekeeping force into the area "in days." He said
Bn!mtl81d •ld the oftlce IIOid 110 tlcklle . . of about 2 p.m. lion. JiiY. Tlokltl n IYIIIIble It the otnoe frOm ..11 1.111. lnd 1-3 hands, lettina those people be buiChered and thrown out 6,000 U.S. troops already are in Albania and NATO has
about 13,000 troops in Macedonia.
of their homes and plundered,'' Ointon aaid.
p.m. and ccm SZO apleqe.
.

Eastern names Evans valedictorian, Proffitt salutatorian Report: Fewer

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Good Afternoon

Cook visit.underscores British solidarity on Kosovo

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Inspectors, larger·
workload.cause for
concern
DAYfON (AP)- A reduction in

the number of nursing home inspectors
in Ohio and an increase in the inspec·

lion workload are causing some roncern about patient care, the Dayton
Daily News·reported today..
Federal ftulding cutbacks and state
hiring freezes have reduced the number of health care surveyor,; in Ohio .
from 182 in 1995 to 129 this year,
according to the Ohio Department of
Health.
Gerson Silver, who supervised the
nursing home complaint section of the
Ohio Department of Human Services .
until 1996, said the state's inspection
staff has been declining for nearly a
decade.

"It's devastating for protection.
These people are the front line;" he
said. "By dropping the number ·of
inspectors, it allows bad nursing . .
homes to continue huning people
without being charged."
Health department officials have
promised to fill 22 positions as quick·
ly as possible. But in the meantime,
inspector,; are being required to work
overtime and the intervals betweeh
inspections are lengthening - practices that some inspectors say jeopardize the health and safety of nursing
home residents, the newspaper said.
"These people are into overlOad,"
said Usa Hetrick, state coordinator for
'the union that represents the inspectors, Local 1199 of the Service
Employees International Union in
Columbus.
·
State bealth department officials
acknowledge that the number of
inspector,; is down significantly, but
say .they·are working hard to minim ill=
the risks to patients while they look for
new recruits~
"Is this having an impact on the
safety and health of patients? At this
point, I would .say no," said Randy
Hertzer, a state health department ·
spokesman. "Wi: just have to·do.a very
good job of prioritizing our workforce
and what they're inspecting."
-Health department officials say
they are still operating within federal
guidelines that require inspections of
nursing homes every 12 to IS months.
But state surveyors remain con· ·
cemed about the growing demands of
their jo"'. including tougher federal
guidelines starting this month that ·
require nun;ing home insJli!Ctions at
night and on weekends, when staffing .
and safety problems often occur,
State surveyor,; conduct regular
safety and health inspections of some
1,000 homes around the state. They .
also investigate complaints from :
patients and their guardians and, under;
federal law, ·must respond to seven: •
health threats in less than 48 hours. ·
Surveyors also are responsible for·
inspecting a growing list of other
health and long-term care facilitie~~.
including assisted-living faciliti.-,
home health agencies, hospitalS,
homes for the mentally retarded, liboratories and day-care centers.
·

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Commentary

Thursday, May 20, 1999

P11111e A2

Thureday, May 20, 1IKIV

Death Notices

The .Daily Sentinel Bush, McCain offer 'Th'i rd Way' policy
By Morton

'Esta6fislid in 1948
111 Cour1 St., Pomeroy, Ohio

7•0.1102-21511 • Fax: 8e2·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

DIANE HILL
Controller

1JwStntinelwe' OtiNC,.,.,_ lo ttt...ntor ,,...,.. on•brottd,.. offCJP-"

«.. Shott ,.,.,._ (300 ...,. or ,..., tt•n tM bMt ot~Mto. or Hlng fl4tbiW•'*'·
'ln&gt;«f lfttotO.,. pro-ltiHIIU miY H-od. ~ .,ould lncJIHH III(IIIIIUN,
IHidlww, MKI dayrttrw pltoM numbM. Sp«::ty • dare It lhMw'• • ,..l'alitnot to • ,._
wow MUcl• or,.,.,.. llaU ro: urr.... 1o Ill• ~ltor, n.. Sentinrl, 111 Cout1 sr.,
PoiMroy, Ohio fSlS;

Gl', FAX

to 7«J-181-2167.

:A
home is a
.
:work in progress
.

The "third way" coneept is all
the rage, and the United States
needs it in Cbina policy -- something between 'President Clinton's
notion that Cbina is a "strateglc
partner" and some Republicans'
conviction that Cbina is a "strate·
gic adversary" or
"enemy."

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener11 M1nagtr

Kondr~~eke

.

· By JOHN CUNNIFF

AP Bu11n- Analy.t
. NEW YORK (AP) -A homeowner's work is never done. You can obtain
: evidence from any homeowner, or you may refer to statistics that demon. strate the point.
·
·
: . Or you can just ask the folks at The Home Depot or Lowe's or at any
.; number of regional home improvement outlets that have benefited from
: helping homeowners spend their money.
Around $86 billion is likely to be spent this year maintaining, repairing
: and improving hom~s •.or an average of aboq' $1,300 for each single,-family
· house, of which there were 66.3 million in 1995.
: · And the spending is growing. Remodeling is one of the economy's most'
: consistent, reliable growth industries, tending to resist (but not totally) reces: sions, and growing 5 percent year after year.
·
. · The story of that growth blends, among other things, elements of myth,
: human nature, pride and sound financial reasoning.
: The myth, to which homeowners can att~st, is that you can buy the home
· of your dreams on Sunny Street and live there content for the rest of your
·
: life. Seldom does it work out that way. ·
. Dreams beget dreams and soon the homeowner is restless. People like to
· keep up with the times, and in these times, houses are bigger and bigger. The
: typical new home of 1985 measured 1,785 square feet, but .new homebuyers
; today seek more than 2,300 square feet.
Keeping up with the Joneses, therefore, means a bigger house, but you've
grown accustomed to the one you 've been living in. You add a half bath and
• a home office, and you modernize the kitchen.
· · It js easy to rationalize the expenditure. The market value of y_our house
has risen 30 percent in a dozen years, you've paid down the' mortgage and
. an equity loan may be tax-deductible.
Besides, the contractor has assured you it really isn't costing at all
because you've increased the property's value. What ambitious contractor
. wouldn 'I use that argument? What homeowner eager to get on with the job
wouldn 'I buy it?
To an extent, they're correct. The National Association of Home Builders
· says the new kitchen might.more than pay for itself, ttie bath nearly. so, and
. the home office by perhaps 70 percent of cost.
·
But there are perhaps' even bigger numbers involved in this decision.
· Matched against today's houses, your 1985 house was bought at a bargain.
·.It just couldn't be matched at the price today.
· One of the biggest single price increases over that time span was not in
the house itself but.in the land. The average price of a 10,000' square foot lot
in 1985 was $25,817, but $48,689 in 1995.
And that's for a roughly finished lot, hardly a fair comparison with the
· existing home's lawn and shrubs, the result of a decade or so of hard work
every hot summer weekend.
- The though is sufficient to turn the dream to a nightmare. Enough to dis. abuse one of any lingering notions about a home of your own being a place
· of rest and repose.
· Enough to concede, finally, that a home is a work in progress.

even

an

In fact, as Los Angeles Ttmes· writer James
Mann describes in his new book, the United
States did have such a policy during the Reagan
administration.
And there are indications that Republican presidential candidates George W. Bush and Sen. John
· McCain (Ariz.) want to bring it back.
In an interview, Texas Gov. Bush
told me, "I would look at China
from a wary perspective. We ought
to deal with China, but in a way that
recognizes success and blows t~e
whistle oil activity that will destabilize the world." .
The Clinton word "engagement," Bush said, ·" has got this
sense of embracing them. It's when
you're about ready to head down to
tlie altar. I'm not sure we're at the
embracing stage.''
Bush, though he lacks experience
in foreign policy, has as top advisers
two of the people Mann credits with
making and managing Roqald Rea:
gan's Olina policy: then-Secretary
of State George Shultz and thenAssistant Secretary (and later
Undersecretary of Defenst&gt;} Paul
Wolfowitz.
Mann's book, " About Face; A
History of America's Curious Relationship with China, From Nixon to
Clinton," is especially scathing in
describing the "wild swing" that
took place in Clinton policy.
Clinton campaigned for president
in 1992, of course, accusing his predecessor, President George Eush, of
"coddling" the "dictators" and
"butchers" in Beijing.
Clinton began his presidency by issuing an ·
executive order tying annual renewal of China's
most-favored-nation trade status to progress in
human rights.
In 1994, however, after Qlina had put Ointon
under intense commercial and diplomatic pressure -- at one juncture, totally humiliating his secretary of State -- Clinton · reversed himself on
MFN and started trying to make Cbina's leaders
into "friends."

'

Meantime, China has made no progress toward
internal democracy, has expanded its military
arsenal and ·presence in Southeast Asia and. has
menaeed Taiwan wjth troop movementa and ballistic missile shots.
Twice, Clinton has briefly demonstrated that
he knows how to respond to Chinese provocation.

In 1995 and 1996, when China made threatenine
moves against Taiwan -- and told the United
States there could be war if the U.S. intervened-Clinton moved U.S. naval forces to the region.
But, eager to satisfy U.S. businesses anxious to
serve the Chinese market, ·Ointon overall has
given China what it wanted, culminating in his
1998 "three. no's" statement publicly ruling out
U.S. support for democratic Taiwan's desire to be
independent.
Ointon calls China a "strategic partner" even though it manifestly is siding with dictator Slobodan Milosevic on Kosovo.
Clinton appropriateJy aPQiogi~X:d for the mistaken U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in
Belgrade, but by. now has done so excessively and
is in danger of being put on the defensive when

Friday, May 21
AcctJWeath~ forecast

for da

I ....,.ne~c~

100.

•

148'/81'

.You at:own 41',..

I•

0
¥/.VA.

"'""-...---..,-~t::--:c:;-;:-;:f.;;;;;;;o
KY.

C t889 AccuWoether, lfiC.

_

~-·- ~····
.....
Clear conditions continuing
in wake of high pressure
...

Showers

T·alorma

Rain

FlurTIM

Snow

lei

· By The Aseoclated Preae

China helps draft United Nations terms for an
international troop presence in Kosovo.
Chinese efforts to steal U.S. military secrets
and influence U.S. elections have led former Reagan administration official Robert Kagan tG
declare that China is treating the United States as
an "enemy," the implication being that the United States should treat China the same way.
There is a third alternative, which "Mann
describes as the "pan-Asian" perspective of Wolfowitz and Shultz in the Reagan years.
Their attitude was that China "needed the U.S.
as much as the U.S. needed China" and was not
necessarily the most important country in Asia.
They f~vored strengthening U.S. relations with
Japan, South Korea and Taiwan as a counter·
weight to China.

·
Skies were clear across Ohio overnight thanks to high pressure stretching from cen'tral Canada through the Ohio Valley into.the Gulf of Mexico.
Patchy fog developed .over east-central Ohio, particularly around New
Philadelphia, as well as in the river valleys near Cincinnati.
Plenty of sunshine was to be expected across the state today as the high
pressure moves slowly east. Temperatures were to rise into the mid 69s to
low 70s across the northern part of the state and into the mid to upper 70s
south. Low 60s were likely near Lake Erie.
Fair weather will contihue tonight with temperatures falling into the
upper 40s.
.
Clouds will increase across western Ohio during the day Friday with
showers possible late as a cold front approaches from the west. Central and
eastern Ohio can expect mostly sunny to sunny skies become mostly
I clou&lt;ly across Fri#Jay evening.
.
· Daytime temperatures Friday will range from :15 to 80 north and 80 to
85 south falling into the 50s F.riday night.
Showers and thunderstorms return Saturday as the cold front moves
across the state.
'
·

their regime, who will do whatever is necessary;
no matter how inhumane or offensive to us, to
pursue their own interests. And they lead a nation
of extraordinary po_tential that is ... becoming a
great power." . · .
.
McCain added, "I agree that America mu~t'
engage China" with open trade and diplomatic
co-operation to curb weapons proliferation, but he
said, "we must also prepare for the other contingency, that China emerges as the primary threat to

Weather forecast:
Tonight...Ciear. Lows 45 to 50. Winds nearly calm.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs 80 to 85.
Friday night ...Ciear. Lows 50 to 55.

Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly sunny with a small chance for an afternoon thundershower. Highs in the lower 80s.
·
Sunday...Pai'lly sunny. Lows in the upper 50s and highs 80 to 85.
· Monday... Partly sunny. A chance of showers late. Lows 55 to 60 and
highs in the upper 70s.
·
Friday...Partly sunny west. Mostly sunny east. Highs 75 to 80 north and
80 to 85 south.
'

American interests and values."

The bottom line is that the next U.S. adminis;
!ration needs to be the manager in the U.S.-Chimi
relationship, ~ot the managed.
.
(Morton Kondrlcke Ia executive S&lt;lltor of
Roll Call, the newspaper ol Capitol Hill.)
Copyrtght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

·

An AP New1 An•JY•I•
can be changed.
we cannot know whether political would permit the line item veto, a
By WALTER R. MEARS
By their standards, the amend- dissidents will have the slight~st power granted presidents by the last
AP Speclll Correapondent
ment up next, to permit CongresS to interest in this gesture generations Congress but overturned by the
WASJllNGTON (AP) - As a ban desecration of the American from now."
court.
soapbox for a pet issue, proposing an flag, shouldn't be approved.
Actually, they don 'I seem to have
. There's also an amendment to
amendment to the Constitution has
The flag-burning amendment has much interest now, except in spo- make future amendments easier to
become a political habit - more become a regular exercise in Con· radic episodes meant to irritate spon· adopt, by opening a route that ·
often for can 't-win changes than for gress. Senate Republican leaders sors of the amendment.
wouldn't depend on Congress. That
real ones.
plan a vote on it this month; it has
The flag and balanced budget would allow two-thirds of the state
But a foundation study of the narrowly failed there before and, by amendments are two that have come legislatures to approve an ~mend­
amendment proce.ss suggests that current estimates, may again.
· By The A81oclatad Preas
close to clearing Congress to go to men!, subject to congressional disap· · Today is -Thursday, May 20, the !40th day of 1999. There are 225 days there is more political tinkering than
It takes two-thirds votes in both the states. The equal rights for proval by two-thirds votes. The final
before, and it could make unwarrant- houses of Congress to approve an . women amendment got to that point, step still would be ratification by
- left in 'the year.
. ed changes more likely.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
amendment and put it up for action by but wasn't ratified. The last amend- three-fourths of the ·states. One
The hard questions are, of course, the states; three-fourths of them must ment adopted, in 1971, gave 18-- amendment would write into the
On May 20, 1927, Charles Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt Field in
Long Island, N.Y., aboard the Spirit of St. Louis on his historic solo flight to what is warranted, and should consti- ratify tG change the Constitution.
year-olds the iight to vote.
Constitution a provision to put the
. France.
tutional amendments be used to deal
The flag-burning amendment was
So the foundation study that SQcial Security and Medicare trust
with social policy issues that seem written to overturn a Supreme Court warns against liltering the .Constitu- funds outside the federal budget.
On this date;
surmounting
now but may not last.
In 1506, Christopher Columbus died in poverty in Spain.
decision that invalidated laws tion with constant changes would
The House already has killed one
Citizens
for
the Constitution, a against desecration, on First Amend· seem to overstate the c.ase.
In 1799, French author Honore de Balzac was born in Tours, France.
just-for-show amendment this sesStill, introducing constitutional sion, the annual income tax day
In 1861, North Carolina . bipartisan organization of former ment grounds. The case stemmed
voted to secede from the members of Congress, federal offi . . from a demonstrator 's burning of a amendments is a growth business in measure to require two-thirds votes
cials, lawyers and scholars, suggests flag outside the Republican National Congress, and in the last session, in Congress to approve tax increasUnion.
In 1861, the capital of the the process should be restrained by Convention hall in 1984.
nine moved past the poini of just talk es. That Republican fixture failed, as
Confederacy was moved guidelines to determine whether an
Opponents of the. amendment to committee ·or floor consideration. usual, by 57 votes.
argue that while they are as opposed
from Montgomery, Ala., to amendment should be considered.
This year's crop is already growMore than 11,000 amendments to
They say constitutional amend· to flag-burning as anyone on the . ing. There are the perennials, among the Constitution 'have been introRichmond, Va.
In 1902, the United States ments should deal with topics of other side, it is not a menace that them flag-burning bans, an amend- duced since 1.789, but only · 33
ended its occupation of lasting importance, not only imme- warranis changing the Bill of Rights. ment to permit prayer in ~ublic clellt'ed Congress and only 27 were
diate political concerns, and then
Cuba.
.
"Such particularized amend- schools, to overturn the Supreme ratified.
In 1932, Amelia Earhart only when it can't be done by other ments may ... be perceived as the Court decision legalizing abortion,
EDITOR'S NOTE - Welter R.
took off from Newfound- means. They also want a firm dead· political victory of one faction in a for a balanced budget, for congres- Meara, vtce preeldent and apaclll
land for Ireland to become line set for ratification of amend· particular historical moment," the · sional term limits, and for to end the correspondent lor Thl A81ocl1ted
the first woman to fly solo ments that Congress does approve. Citizens for the Constitution study electoral college system in favor of Pree1, hee reportS&lt;! on Waehlngton and national politics lor more
In pcactice, most amendments now says. "Flag desecration is not an the popular election of presidents.
across the Atlantic.
than 30 y11ra.
·
include
a
seven-year
limit,
but
that
In 1939, regular transat·
immortal form of political protest;
Another proposed afRendment
. -Tacitus, Roman senator lantic air service began as a
and historian (A.D. c. 56-c. 115) Pan American Airways
•
plane, the Yankee Oipper,
look off from Port Washington, N.Y., bound .for Europe.
.
"stress sap" was that men
: 1n 1961, a white mob attacked a busload of Freedom Riders in Mont- By George R. P'-slenz
Getting married is a stressful experience with
After she was laid off from her job, Marie
often have a .better "support most people, strange as that may seem. According
fOmery, Ala., prompting the federal _government to send in U.S. marshals to
restore order.
.
.
developed tension headaches. She went to the
system" going for them in to two psychiatrista who have drawn up ~ seal'
doctor,
but
he
could
find
nothing
physically
such
situations.
: In 1969, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces captured Apbia Mountain,
indicating which changes cause the most stre&amp;S,
· When a man is ,laid off, he getting married is No, 7 from the top ~ just
rfe~d to as "Hamburger Hill" by the Americans, following one of the wrong with her. He suggested that her symptoms
·aJoodtest battles of the Vietnam War.
might be caused by stress resulting from the Joss
geta sympathy from his wife, above getting fired or retiring! A happy·marriage,
co-workers and neighbors ·:· In 1970, some 100,000 people demonstrated in New York's Wall Stree; of her job.
on the other hand, can go a long way toward
When Marie told this to her husband, he poohand the boys at the corner bar. reducing stress in our Jives.
·~istrict in support of U.S. policy in Vietnam and Cambodia.
Less than half the women
; Ten years ago; During China's pro-democracy protests, Beijing officials poohed the idea. Tom reminded his wife that he
I tell people who come to me for counseling
had
a
good
job
and
that
she
!&lt;new
as
well
as
he
did
Interviewed
reported that they that stress is li"e a martini.
grdered CBS and CNN to end their live on-scene reports. Comedian Gilda
;
ltadner died in Los Angeles at age 42.
that they could manage very well on the money he
could count on their husbands
Let's say you walk into a bar and sit down next
·
for emotional support in times of stress.
• Five years ago; Tributes poured in following the death of Jacqueline made.
to someone who has a martini in front of him.
What he was doing, Marie carne to see after
In the.old days; a woman might have been able
kennedy Onassis. President Clinton said of the former first lady: "She capIf he asks you, "Will this martini make me
(iv-jlted our nation and the world with her intelligence, her elegance and her she went for counseling, was consoling her with to cry on the shoulder of her next-door neighbor drunk?" you would first have to know how many
arace.·'
the idea that her job wasn't important.
and receive solace, but most neighborhoods today martinis he has had before this one.
·
Tom's response to his wife's problem may be are not so close-knit. ·
; One year ago: The House voted pyerwhelmingly to block future satellite
. On~ martini is like any other. (Experienced
Men set considerable comfort by falling infu dnnkers may want !O challenge that.) Whether a
exporta to China. The g_?vernment unyeiled the design for the new $20 bill, "one reason why women experience nearly four· ·
the arms of a sympathetic and loving wife. They particular one is soing to make you drunk
featuring a larger and shghtly off-center portrait Of Andrew Jackson. In Bev- timCII as much tension as men.
A University of Mi.chigan survey, taken during must learn to provide the same comfort and depends oh how many you have already downed.
erly Hills, Calif.; Hollywood royalty bid farewell to Frank Sinatra who had
·died almilst a week earlier at age 82, in a private, invitation-only funeral. · a time of heavy layoffs in Detroit, showed that, of . understanding for their wives.
It's the same with stress. We have to 'keep
Of course, a certain degree of stress won't hurt count, and at a ceJ'!ain point say, "No more for
: Today's Birthdays: Actor James McEachin is 69. Actor Anthony Zerbe is all those who had lost their jobs, fewer than 10
,.
me."
63. Singer Joe C&lt;x:ker is 55. Singer-actress Cher is 53. Actor-comedian Dave pereent of the men reported symptoms of stress, any of us.
But this degree Is different for different people, . Living as we do in a world of rapid change and
thomas is 50. Musician Warren Cann is 4/. Actor Dean Butler is 43. Ron compared to 33 percent of the women - even
though
most
of
the
women
had
working
husand
because we can never be sure where we are stressful situations, stress-watching can keep us
Iteagan is 41. Rock musician Jane Wiedlin (The Go-Go's) is 41. Actor Bronbands,
while
the
men
were
the
principal
breadon
our
own personal ~s scale, we would all be busy for the rest of our lives'. But it will be well
'son Pinchot is 40. Actor Tony Goldwyn is 39. Singer Susan Cowsill (The
winners
in
their
families.
.
wise.
to
keep a w~lch on the stress·produoers in worth the effort.
Cowsills) iii 39. Singer Nick Heyward is 38. Actress Mindy 'Cohn is 33 ..
The
reason
given
hy
the
researchers
for
this
our
lives.
Copyrtght1- NEWSPAPER !NTERPRISE ASSN, ~
Rock mu~ician Tom Gdrman (Belly) is 33. Rapper Buster Rhymes is 27.

Muskingum_County schools
evacuated after phoned threat

·I

ZANESVILLE (AP) - Schools
throughout Muskingum County were
·.evacuated because of a threatening
telephone call, authorities said.
Wednesday, an anonymous caller
told the Zanesville Ttrnes Recorder
at around 10 a.m. that a school in _the
county would "go up in smoke."
Workers at the newspaper called
authorities and local school district
· officials, who ordered the buildings
.' to be evacuated.
No explosive or threatening
devices were found in searches of the
county's 41 schools, said sheriff's Lt.
; Matt Lutz.
The county has about 17,000 stu;: dents. They returned to class as the

Today In History

:· The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 113-...)

_;Thought for Today:

C~ liewlpopot' Haldlnp,lnc.

:: "The more corr,upt the state,
the more
numerous the .

NeWiplpct Allociatio~

SUBllctuPrlON RATEs

By Canter or Motor Route

One \Yeeii: ................................. J2.00
One MOfldi................................ SS.70
One Ye~~................................... I!04.00

•

Kathryn Mitch Reeves, 78, Cincinnati, died Friday, May 14, 1999, at
Hospice Hospital. .
She was born in Minersville on April21, 1921, daughter of the late Freda
and Ray Mitch.
·
Survivors include her husband, Allan Reeves; a 5\)n and daughter-in-law,
John Allan and Pam Reeves; and by two grandchildren, all of Cincinnati.
She was preceded in death by a brother, John Mitch.
A memorial seriiice was held Monday, 1 p.m. at the Norman Chapel,
. Spring Grove Cemetery.
·
·

NASA spendi'ng bill eliminates
Gore earth~viewing satellite
By JIM ABRAMS
AIIOCiated Preas WrHer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice
President AI Gore's vision of putting
~n Earth-viewing satellite in orbit has
been brought down to Earth by House
Republicans who say the idea is
wasteful and unnecessary.
The House on Wednesday
approved a three-year $42 billion
NASA authorization bill that, over the
protests of Democrats, · effectively
kills a Gore-inspired plan to launch a
satellite that would put 24-hour views
of the Earth on television and the
Internet.
The $32 · million origin'ally set
aside for theTriaria project is less than
I percent of .the_proposed National ·
Aeronautics and Space Administration budget, but Democrats and the
White House suggested the legisla·
lion might be subject to a presidential
veto if the money is not restored when
the Senate takes up the matter.
Democrata said it was part of the
GOP campaign to trip up Gore's run
for the presidency next year. "I can
think of no reason for the elimination
of this particular program except partisan politics," sald Rep. Joe Moakley, D-Mass.
.·
The Triana spacecraft, named for
the sailor who first spotted the New
World on the journey with Christopher Columbus, was to have been
launched by NASA in December next
year.
But the House Science Committee, on a party-line 21-18 vote last
Thursday, transferred all the money
for the program to life and microgravity research.
Rep. David Weldon, R-Aa., chief
sponsor of the amendment, argued
that views of the Earth are already
available on-the Weather Channel and
NASA-TV and he considered it an
"insult" that some 600 people were
being laid off at tbe Kennedy Space
Center at the same lime the agency
was "finding tens of millions of dollars to fulfill a vision for the vice pres·
ident .."
.
"Just because the new Star Wars
movie is opening today doesn't mean
we have to spend $30 million on a farout boondoggle," said House Majority
Lel!der DickArmey, R·Texas.
But NASA and the White House

argued that the satellite would transmit
an image twice as clear as new high·
resolution television sets and would be
unique in presenting a full-Earth view.
Triana was subject to rigorous peer
review, the White House said, and
would provjde the scientific commu·
nity with valuable data on the Earth's
climate and solar flares.
The ranking Democrat on the Science panel, Rep. Bart Gordon of Tennessee, said NASA had alrea&lt;!y spent
$40 million on the $75 million project,
and the government would lose more
by killing it than by completing it
Democrats did not propose an
amendment to revive the program,
saying they would press the Senate lo
do so when it takes up tbe bill.
"We hope they will change their
mind," said Dave Steitz, spokesman
for NASA. "We would like them to
base their decision op the science of
the mission."
The bill also provides $7 billion for
the U.S. portion of the international
space station, $7.8 billion for space
shuttle operations and $4.2 billion for
earth science programs."
As in past years, Rep. Ttm Roemer,
D·lnd., led a move against the space
station, but with that program moving
into the construction phase he got little
support for amendments that would
have capped funding, killed the program altogether or removed Russia as
a partner.
•
The House defeated, . 313-117,
Roemer's amendment that would
have ended Russian participation, relegating the Russians to subcontractors
in future work on the 16-nation project.

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical' Service recorded
seven calls for assistance Wednesday. Units responding included:
· CENTRAL DISPA:rCH
5:55 a.m., Oliver Street, Middle-

SINGLE COP'j: PRICE
O.II~....................................... J!J

Ctnts
Sublaibe11 no1 duirinJ to pay the carrier may
remit in adYaDCe direct to The O.ily Sentinel on
a lbrte, sis. or 12 mondl bull. Credit will be
afvtn c:arrier ed week. ·
No IUtllcriptklll by mail permintd In arcu
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: Publiaha mcrves the ri&amp;bt to ldjlllt rata dut·
ina tha sublaiption pertocl. Sublc:riptla. qlc
dw1pa ny be implemcnled by WnP~aahe
darailon of u~ RlbsaipliQII,

Keep an eye on stressful situations

•

Friday, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
Obio Yllley hbl~htna Company. Secood d.,. '
postaae paid a1 Pomeroy. Ohio.
·
Member. Tbc Auociltcd PJCM and the Ohio ,

Pultl utcr: Sc,KI addreu corredions to The
... . O.ily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4$'169.

lQWS• ''

•

buildings were declared safe.
Zanesville school Superintendent
Michael Pockl said all buildings in
his district, the largest in the county,
were evacuated, as were buildings in
the East and West Muskingum,
Franklin Local, Maysville and Tri·
Valley districts. The county also
includes Rosecranl=5 High School
and St. Nicholas and St. ·Thomas ~le­
mentary schools.
Students were not sent home for
the day.
Pocl&lt;l said last month's deadly
shootings and bombings at
Columbine High School in Littleton,
Colo., have Jed to several similar
threats.
·
"Littleton almost certainly leads
to copycat type activities," he 511id.
"This type of thing certainly sends
shock waves through the community.
, People are very worried."

Publislwd every afternoon, Monday through

,...

Isabel C. Pickens, 81, of Shelby, N.C., formerly of Racine, died Wednesday, May 19, 1999 at her home.
She was a member of the Racine Baptist Church and retired from Universal Mfg. Co. where she worked as a seamstress.
She is survived by a sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Paul McMurray
. of Columbus; a brother and sister-in-law, Bill and Jane Cleland of Racine;
two daughters and sons-in-law, Isabel and John Rippy and Patsy and Steve
Canipe, all of Shelby, four grandchildr~n and nine great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Jed C. Pickens.
Graveside services will be held at Rose Hill Cemetery in Lawndale at 7
p.m. on Friday. A private viewing for the family will be held at the Stamey
Funeral Home in Fallson, N.C. on hour before the service to be conducted
by the Rev. Reed Jones of Shell;ly New Bethel Church of the Nazarene.
Memorials may be made to Shelby New Bethel Church of the Nazarene,
706 Hamrick St., Shelby, N. C. Flowers may be sent to 111 Greene Lake
Drive, Shelby, N. C. or Stamey Funeral Home 846 E. Stage Coach Rd., Fall·
ston, N.C.
.

Kathryn Mitch Reeves

0

Constitutional·tinkering can be dangerous

•

Isabel C. Pickens

Ohio weather

Also, Shultz was refreshingly resistant to pres·
sure from U.S. business.
Once; when U.S. businessmen in Beijing told
him that U.S. policy was allowing Europe and
Japan to get the upper hand in trade with China,
Shultz retorted, "Why don't you move to Japan or
Western Europe?" .
McCain, in a speech this March, said that Ginton's Cbina reversals were evidence of "strategic
incoherence ... a mystifying uncertainty about how
to act in a world where we are the only superpower."
"Virtually at the speed of light," McCain
charged, "the president's view of Cbina changed
from 'bloody butchers of Beijing' to our 'strategic
partners.' They are neither.
"They are determined, ruthless defenders of

port, Sharon Smith, treated at the
scene;
7:18 a.ni., East Second Street,
Pomeroy, Patty Laudermilt, treated
at the scene;
8:24 a.m., state Route 7, Tuppers
Plains, James Pellegrino, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
6:45 p.m., Sixth Street, Racine,
Sherry Johnson, treated at the scene,
Racine squad assisted: '
7:57 p.m., Middleport Police
Department, William Zeigler, treated at the scene, Middleport squad
assisted.
,

MAIL SUBSCJIIImON
lnoklo Mtlp c..\niJ
t3 W.eks........................... J27.30
26 \Yeekl ........................... J$3.82 '
52 -ks .......................... .SI0$..!6

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..............,...... 42 "I•
Akzo •....•..........•.............••••....43~~

AmrTech,.,, .. ,.,. .... ,. ..............ss:~.
Ash 011 .. ,. .......... ,. .................. 43'1.
AT&amp;T ...... ...............................58'1.
Bank One...., ... ., ..... ,. ............60"1•
Bob Evans ............................18~~
Borg-Werner ........................ 56~•

Broughton ...........................15"1.
Champion ................ ,. ............7"1•
Charm Shps.,.,.,.,,.,,.,.,. .....,.....4'.1
·City Holdlng,......................... 28'1,
Fadilnll Mogul .............. ,. ....,..44'.1
Gannatt.................................75'•

Sears .................................... 48~.

Shohay's ................................ 2\

FlratSIIr .,...........................,.29Y.
Wendy' a .,............................. 21'1.
Worthington .......................... 13'·

-•-•....:..

Stock reports 1re loday's
10:30 a.m. quotes provided by
Adveat of Galllpolla.

A two-vehicle accident in Pomeroy early Tuesday evenmg resulted in:
minor injuries to the drivers and light damage to t!)eir vehicles.
•
According to Pqmeroy Police a vehicle driven by Connie Dodson, 48,:
of Middleport, was struck in the rear by one driven by Tiffany Barnes, I~,~
of Racine. Dodson was stopped in traffic when the accident occurred.;
Barnes was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance. Both were•
traveling west on West Main Street.
:
The drivers were transported by emergency units to Veterans Memor-;
ial Hospi!3l. They were both treated and released.
:

••

- Announcements: r.
•
•

·Marketing plan class slated
· The Small Business Development Center, Athens, and the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce are co-sponsoring a workshop "Develop~
. i~g A Marketing Plan" to be held Tuesday, 1·4 p.m. at the Pomeroy Public Library. Workshop participants will determine target market, set goills;
select annual marketing strategies and develop a timeline. Cost is $15. To
preregister call 992-5005.

Commission to meet

•

The Veterans Service Commission will meet at 7:30 p.m . Monday at
the 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy office .

•

Diabetic screening offered

Veterans Memorial Medical Clinic will offer free dia9etic screening
Wednesday, 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. In addition to the screening test, nutri•
lion and medication education information will be available, To preregis~
ter, residents may call 992-3632.
.

Class sets reunion

.

COrrection Polley

Tournament planned

The Parkersburg summer sectional duplicate bridge~ournament will lie
held at the Jefferson School, June 5 and 6. This is an ACBL sanctioned
event and partnership tables or other information may be obtained by call,
ing Betty Lutz, 304-428-0822.
:

RACOtomeet
RACO will meet Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at Stat Mill Park.

(740) !1!12·

1155. We .wm ebet:k yoar lnlorm1llon
111d •ko • comclloa If w1rnnlcd.

By MARTIN CRUTSJNGER ·
AP Economics WrHar
WASHINGTON (AP) -. America's trade deficit soared to a record
high for the third straight month in
March as the politically sensitive
deficit with Japan shot up to the highest level in more than four years.
The Commerce Department said
t0day that the March deficit of $19.7
billion was 2.9 percent higher than
the previous record of $19.1 billion
in February.
So far this year, the U.S. trade
deficit is running at an annual r•te of
$222.6 billion, nearly one-third higher than the all-time high of $169.3
billion set last year as the global
financial crisis continues to wreck
havoc with America's trade perfor-.
mance.
There ,were some glimmers of
hope in the· March report. U.S.
exJ)IlrtS, which had fallen for four
straight ·months, staged a small
rebound in March, climbing by 0.9
percent to $77.5 billion as exports of
farm goods were up 2.5 'percent, led
by rising sales of soybeans and com.
. Strong consumer demand in the
United States caused imports to rise
even faster, climbing 1.3 percent to a
record $97.2 billion: Imports of for·
eign cars and parts hit an all-time
high of $14.9 billion, a 2.5 percent
increase over the previous month.

A separate 'report on steel imports
showed that they fell by 14 percent tn
April, based on preliminary data, .a
good sign for the country's beltaguered steel industry, which has been
battered by a flood of cheap imports
the past two years.
The ·Labor Department issued· a
report showing that America's strong
economy was continuing. The nomber of Americans filing new claims
for unemployment benefits fell by
12,000 last week to 299,000, a sign
that tight labor market conditioils
were continuing.
The Clinton administration argues
that the overall deficit represents .a
sign of American strength. As the
only major world economy doing
well at the present, the United States
is playing a valuable role by provid·
ing a market for crisis 'countries who
are struggling to emerge from deep
recessions triggered by the currency
crisis that began in July 1997.
The administration is also worritd
that if the deficit rises too high, it will
spawn unstoppable protectionist
preSSUf\!S in Congress from industries
who have been severely hurt by the
comP,etition from cheaper imports. :
The steel industry has already
. won a lopsided vote in the House to
impose global quotas on steel
imports into the United Slates despite,
a threatened
·
veto.

5tCQiliSirri09{S :JI9{l£J'E'Ulf££

Tour
GRADUATE
v
JOUr

is SPECIAL!
.

Gift from
~CQ'UISitJI Ol).{S

Be Also!

Newa Departments
Hl-2155. Deport-

; Tile •1lo o. .ber II
~ •nt exle1aloa1 are:
~

l

Gntl'll Moooiet .......... ,....,....... .ExL 1101
, Now,, ..,......:..................................Exl. 1102
'
or Ext. 1106

'
,

0.,.

Other Services

' ........-._.................................ExL 1104
arc.tiiii·~"'''·' .. ''"''""'""''"'..EJL 1103
~
..............................ExL 1100

(!'({'

~·~·

·~~~'\~·""7

.A~

'"

•

•

520 W. Main St. •
Pomeroy,
Phone 992·2588
VInton • 388 8803
Gallipolis • 44J-Q852

'

.

•

NE~R

BEEN KISSED (PG13)

7:00 l 8:20 OAILV
IIATIIIfES IAT/IUN 1:00 l 3:20

•

Trade deficit hits record high in March

9uaranteed Lowest rprices!
'free 9ift·Wrapping!

llortoo II 1o be '
. - - If,... aow ef ........,. ta 1

• I

A gathering of the Pomeroy High School class of 1954 will be held on
May 27 from noon to 4 p.m. at t~e Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry.
Heig~ts. Those attending are asked to memorabilia for display and those.
unable to attend to send a note for sharing with classmates. There will be
,
a luncheon, snacks and beverages.

•Gold c·rossu
. · •Pulsar &amp; Seiko Watchu

O.r .... _ , . 18 Ill

,

, :'

Pomeroy accident Investigated

&amp; Bracelets

Reader Servtces

lloi'J; all lllc ............ II

.

The Fourth District Coun of Appeals will convene June 3, 9:30a.m. in;
the Meigs County Common Pleas Courtroom to consider cases from
Highland, Meigs and Pickaway counties. The court is comprised of Presiding Judge Roger L. Kline of Circleville, Judge Peter B. Abele of
Athens and Judge David T. Evans of Gallipolis.
The court of appeals directly reviews all cases heard or tried in lower
courts in which a decision is being appealed. They may be either civil or:
criminal cases. The Fourth District Court of Appeals serves 14 southern:
Ohio counties.
•

Will
•Cross Pens
•t4K Gold Chains

...

J56.68

-

Appeals court to visit Meigs County

Pram Flnl ..., .•. .,•...,..,,.., ..........13%
Rockwell ...., .............. ., ..........61 \
RD/Shell .., .......,........ ., .. .,., .... ,5s~.

RUTLAND ·

-.u...............:...........
52\YecU ......................... .$109.72

Local briefs: .

Peoples ................................ 27.'!.

2:32/ p.m., state _ Route · 124,
Donna Stacy, VMH;
7:43 p.m., state Route 124, Crys· .
tal
Holzer Medical Center.

R a t a - Molp c....,

-

Kmart ..................................... 17~

Kroger ........:.........................52'1•
Linda End .........................,...45'.\
Ltd ........................................ 46'%.
Oak Hill Flnl ,..,.,,..,,. .. .,.,.., ....... 18
OVB ......:,. ................................34
One Valley .,..........................38'1•

t3 -ks ..............;............ J:z9.25

26

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ttvo Locatiom
Corner 2nd &amp; Grape, Gallipolis ·
92 Mill St., Middleport

9:30-5 Daily
9:30-7:3o Frida~

'

�•

Sports

The Daily Sentin~!

Thursday, May 20, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, May 20, 1999

Spur-s &amp; Pacers win, take 2-0 series leads
victory.
Bryant. who led the Lakers in
scoring with 28 points, made a tough
three-pointer with 37 seconds left as
the shot clock e•pired to give them
the 76-75 lead. But he missed two
f(Jul shots with 18 seconds left that
could have given the Lakers a threepoint advantage.
, "I missed them because my
release was horrible," Bryant said.
" I think the last time that happened I
was in the eighth grade."
·The Lakers had two more chances
to score, but couldn't conven.
" We got some good shots,"
Lakers coach Kun Rambis said. "I
thought as a whole we did a lot more
good things than bad."
O'Neal scored 16 points for the
Lakers - well helow his 28-poit t
playoff average going into the game
- and shot 2-for-10 from the foul
line.
"We had 1t and we fell again ,"
O'Neal said. "We JUS! have 10 go
home and try to wjn two to even up

NBA playoffs

By KELLEY SHANNON
SAN ANTONIO (AP) -After a
poor second half, Tim Duncan was
seeking redemption.
-He found it on a pass from Mario
Elie.
With San Antonio trailing 76-75,
Duncan scored on a jump hook over
the Lakers ' J.R. Reid to give the
Spurs the lead with 8.4 seconds left.
San Antonio went on to defeat Los
Angeles 79-76 Wednesday night for
a 2-0 lead in their Western
Conference semifinal series.
" I waiued the ball, but the play
wasn ' t exactly called for me. It was a
teain play, " Duncan said. "I wanted
to take the shot from the get-go."
" I wanied w redeem myself,"
added Duncan, who scored only six
points in the seco.nd half he fore makin~ the go-ahead basket.
lluncan led the Spurs with 2 I
potnts and eight rebounds.
Game 3 in the best-of-severi series this se ries."
O'Neal, who comp lained about
is .Saturday at the Great Western
the
officiati ng after Game I when he
Forum.
went
to the foul line 14 times, sh01
~ n the East. Indiana held off
four
Jess
thi s ti me.
Philadelphia 85-82 for a 2-0 lead in
Hi
s
complaints
were milder
their ~eries.
Wednesday
night.
The New York-At lanta and
"!'was in fo ul trouble with some
Po!'tland-Utah series resume tonight
questionable
calls." O' Neal said. " I
with the Knick s and Jazz leading I-0.
don'
t
want
to
talk about th'at."
The Spurs again slowed down
Earlier
Wednesday,
the NBA
Shaquille O'Neal with double-teamfined
O'Neal
$7,500
for
failing to
in g and an asson nwnt of players
!dave
the
court·
in
a
timely
fashion
.guard in g him , but Kobe Bryant
and
verbally
abusi'ng
.
offici
als
after
almost orche st rated· a Los Angeles

the Lakers' loss in Game I. O'Neal
ran after referee Steve Javic after that
game, but Rambis kept him from getting too close.
The rowdy" Alamodome crowd of
33,293 went wild when Duncan
made his go-ahead shot. One of the
spectators was Duncan 's father. who
was visiting San Antonio and watching in delight.
"It's huge," Duncoo said, describing the rnoment. "It's bigger because
my Dad's here, because he saw a
great game."
Popovich said Duncan keeps his
cool in clutch situations.
"He's not the kind of guy to get
nustercd, " Popovich said. " He just
competes and goes home."
The Spurs again used a squad of
players against the powerful O'Neal,
assig ning Dav1d Robinson, Duncan,
Malik Rose and Will Perdue to guard
him al various poinls .
O'Neal was held to just four
points in the first half. I'le began to
find his game in the third, scoring I0
points i.n the period on 5,- lor-5 shootIng .

.

.

·-'You just try to keep him from
gelling the ball where he wa.nts it,..
Robinson sa id. "All you can do is
work hard and ~ope he doesn ' t go
crazy.

The Spurs and L'akcrs predicted
the best-of-seve n series wo uld
hecomc increasing ly physical. and
Wednesday's game got off to an
aggress ive starl in the first lwo min -

u(.;:, as O' Neal was called for an
offensive foul that left Robinson on

the noor beneath the 315-pound
'•'
O'Neal.
There was lots more banging
under the basket to come, bui the
officials tried to keep a tight grip on
the game.
Pacers 85, 76ers 82
At Indianapolis, another final minute rally by . Philadelphia fell
short.
After Derrick McKey made one
of two free throws, Indiana was
called for goaltending on Matt
Geiger's shot to make it 84-82 with
12 seconds to go.
With a chance to restore the lead
to four, Jalen Rose missed the first
and then made the second of two free
throws to give' the Sixers one last
chance.
Out of timeo'uts and inbounding
under their own basket, the Sixers
got the ball into Allen .Iverson's
hands over midcourt, but he passed
to LatTy Hughes and the rookie's
jumper was long. Geiger tipped the
ball back out, and all Iverson could
do was manage an 'awkward, off-target attempt as the buzzer sounded.
" I thought I would save the day,
but I couldh ' t," Iverson said, summing up both hi s last shot and his. 7for-28 shoo ti ~g. "It was jusl one of
those nights.I tried to bring it. But I
just cou ldn 't bri ng my ' A' game."
Ind iana's Rik Smits finally found
his offense for the Pacers, scoring 25
SHOOTS THE THREE - Indiana's Reggie Miller (31) pulls up to
points. Iverson led the Sixers with 23
shoot the three-pointer in front of Philadelphia's Eric Snow In th ·
- 13 in the final.period .
Game · 3 Is Friday night at fourth quarter of Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal
series Wednesday night In ·Indianapolis, where the Pace,r s' 85·82
Philadelphia .
win gave them a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven ••rles. (AP)

National League
roundup

The Reds, who won their fifth
straight, scored in six of the first
seve n innings, balled around four
times . and · matched _a 97-year-old
team record wiih 28 hit s.
" I was wondering how many days
are like that here," said Casey, who
)Went 8-for- !.5 in the series. "T)le ball
was jumping. Not only was it jump- .
ing, but guys were hitting the hall
everywhere. It's pretty amazing."
Hammonds , who entered the
game hitting .132 With no homers,
went 4-for-6 with a career-best five
RB!s and scored five times
"I've heen waiting for this day all
year," he said. "Over the last week, I
started seeing the ball a lot beuer, but

.

I

\

At the district level, perfection is
the name of the game.
A little less than perfect play
resulted in a hard-fought 2- I Green
Lady Bobcat softball victory over the
Eastern Eagles Wednesday night in
the Division III district championship game at the University of Rio
Grande.
Eas tern bows out with an excellent 15-9 overall record. In the district semi -finals both Easter1.1 hurler
and her opponent pitched noChitters.
Wednesday's game was not much
different as hoth pitchers, Stephanie
Evans .for Eastern and Green's Amy ·
Butler each pitched two-hitters.
Overall, Green committed fjve
errors and Eastern just four, however, three or those miscues came in a
bungled .second inning. Eastern had
threatened with two runners on base
in the first, whiie Evans had blanked
the 'Cats. Eastern left one runner on
in the second, then Green came to bat
and did their damage for the evening.
A routine ny ball was lost in the
sun in the_. Eastern outfield allowing
Barrett to reach base on what was
ruled a single. Liles then reached on ,
an error in the infield. Eastern had
the runner Barrett picked off at third
on the tail end of that same play, but
dropped the ball as it s~irted into the
EHS outfield.
A hard-hit baH off the glove o( an
Eastern fielder then pushed Barrell
and Liles ac ross the plate with

you can never say you're going to hit shot as San Francisco avoided get- ·Francisco Cordova (0-2) as the ·
the ball the way we did today. "
ting swept by Arizona in the three- Braves swept the three-game series.
Steve Parris (2-0) pitched 3 I/3 gamt;,series.
Tom Glavine (3-4) allowed three
innings in relief or Denny Neagle,
Gonzalez, who had the longest runs and five hits in seven innings for
who didn't make it out of the second.' hitting streak in the NL since Jerome the Braves, who won their fourth in a
Jerry Dipoto (0-2) took the loss.
Walton of the Cubs also hit in 30 row.
In other NL games. it was Atlanta games in 1989, hecaine the 12th ·
Cubs 8, Ma~Iiris 7
7, Pittsburgh]; Chicago 8, Florida·?; player 10 have a hilling streak end at
. Henry Rodriguez hit a · two-run
Mon\real 10, Philadelphia 9; Los · 30 games.
home run in the 'ninth inning, his secAngeles 5, Houston 2; . and San
"I ' m not disappointed at all, I had ond homer of the game, to spoil John
Diego 7, St.. Louis 6.
.
a great run ·. It was fun," Gonzalez Boles ' surprise return as Florida
The-Brewers and the Mets were said. " I got to 30 games. J. finally got manager.
rained out iri New ·York and sched- into an elite group with a bunch of
Chicago blew a 5-0 lead before
uled a doubleheader today.
· great ballplayers."
rallying in the ninth off Marlins closGiants 8, Diamondbacks 3
-Kirk Rueter (3-2) earned the win. er Matt,Mantei (0- I) to hand Florida
Jeff Kent hit a tiebreaking homer
Braves 7, Pirates 3
its team-record II th straight loss at
in the sixth off Andy Benes (2-5),
At Atlanta, Brian Jordan hit a
and Rich Aurilia . added a two-run sixth-inning grand slam off
(See NL on Page S)

O.icago 8. Florida 7
Montreal 10, Phil[t(!elphia 9
lp5 Angdes 5. Hbuslon 2
San Diego 7. St Lcmi5 6

AL standings

Today'!!i games

Easttrn Dh·lsion

luJJi

.. ,...

llosrQn

lYI.~

.

N~w .'r'o•L.

rilmpu B;•)'

Turomo

. 2J
21

16
17

. 21
20

20
22
z:e;

r"

ll;ilri~m·

590
55J
512
476
w~

Clumgu .

"

[)~!I rOll

17
.. I .'

\1•nn~ s nt,1

~\ 'este rn

0 ;1kland

19

.J.l.l

526
A86

~1

·B6

..n~

l7

.ur

An~l~1111

4'

•

Wedne~day's
7 T.lmpa Bay 6
HOMOrl 6. New York 0
1\1\ahcun ~ - llahimore 4

8',

10

.550
.525

I

475

)

12

.450

4

scores

Kan sas Cll y I~ -. Oak land l
S!lflUie 7. Mimu.:SOIII 0

'

'

Houslou (Hampton 5- I 1 at Los ;\ngelcs (Pork.J.
.II. IO: Hipm

Friday's games ·
Milwaukee tNorno 1- IJ.ru Momrcill fl'a\11no 25). 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh tSchourck 2-JI 111 Fl ori d11 tL
Hcrnilndcz 2-4) . 7 : 0~ p.m.
·
Philildelphio (Locwl!r 1-J) at New York
CHm hi scr 2-4 ). 7· 10 p.m •
Chicago (Farnswonh 2-0) :u Atl:mta tChen 0-0J.
7.40 p.m.
Arizonn (Daal .\ -4) at Colorado t/\stacio 4·.\}.

CINCINNATI (Ton1ko 1- 1) at San Diego
CWi llia'm§ 1-2 ). 10:05 p.m.
Sl. Louis (At:evt:du 2·11 at Los Angele~ (V:.~ I des
4-1). !O:lOp.m
.
Houst on (Bergman 2- 1) al San Frilncisco
(Gardner 0-4). 10:35 p.m

7. Toronto J
•

Tonight's games -

Ne"A' York 1H l!rn;w~ez. ·' ·41 at Boston (Portugl\1 J-

Basketball

11. 7:05 pm

All:d1c1m (8ekher 2-J) ~~ Bnhimorc (Johnson.00). 7:05 pin
~11 0 11 (Miickl 1-3) a\ Toronto ( Halladny 2-l J.
7OS jJ.m
'
Oakland (Oqu1st 4-2) m Knnsas City !Suppan 2.1), 8:05 p m.

·

'NBA conference semifinals
Wednesday's scores

•

Indiana 85, Philade.lphia 82: lndiamt leads

~
Friday's gam~
T!Jonta (l?:w llmT J . )) at Roston (Rapp 1-2), 7:05
p.m.
.
.
Tca.as i Hellmg 4-4) ill Baltimore {Ponson J-3).
7:05 p.m
.
Adahe1m (Saunders J-JJ;tt Tampa Bay (Hilll-J),
7:05
Detroit (Blair 1-4) at CLEVELAND (Burba 4-1 ),

o.rn

7:05p.m.
New York (Clt:mem 2-0) at Chit.::ap.o (S nyder 61). 8:0l p.m.
"
01\]cland (Haynes 2-5) at Mmnesota (Hawkins 1-

San Antonio 79, L.A , LakE:n 76; San Antonio
leads serieJ 2-0
·

Friday's games
Indiana 111 Philadelphia, 8 p.m.

Transactions
Amer.lcan Lal&amp;ue

BOSTON RED SOX: Recalled RHP Brian Rose

lY L 1'&lt;1.
14

.641

!ill

18

. ~38

•4

18

.5]8

4
12'&lt;:
14\

Al lanta ...
... 25
New York .............. ........ 21
Phlladelpllia ...
.. ...... 2'1
Montltal.. ...... ...
....... 12
Flori~ .; ............................... II

26

-~ 16

29

115

Ctnlnl Divl!ion
Houston· ................................ 24 14

.632

,

17
18

. ~4 1
.~26

CINCINNATI ................ ·..... 19 18
l'iusbUrgh .......... ., ........... ..... l9 20
/l.litwaukee ............................ l8 19

.514
487
.486

Chica1o ......................... , ...... 20
StLouis ...................... ....... 20

Westtrn Dh•b:lon
Ariwna ... ., ............ .... ......... ... 2J

San Francisco
l..os Angeles ......
S[Jn Diego.... .

•,

New York 111 Atlnnta. 8 p,m.
Portland nt Utah . 10:]0 p.m.

Baseball

Ealiltrn Di"l~ lon

18 .56 1
.... 2.1 18 .56 1
.. ........ 21 18 - ~-'8
...'..... 16 22 . 411

&lt;..:ollJri'ldo ...

..IS· 2 1

Al7

Wednesday's score!!i
Allnntu 7. Pittsburgh -'
CINCINNATI 24. Colqrado I 2

S:ln Fraocisco 8. Arizona .l
Milwnukte a1 Ntw York. ppd .. rain

•

l '~

••

4',
.s';
5':

~

DISTRICT MEET SCENES - In the upper 'photo, Meigs' Zach
Meadows crosses the first hurdle in the first preliminary heat of the
110-meter high hurdles in the Division II di;strict meet at Ironton High
School. With a 17.9-second finish , Meadows took second to South ..
Point's Jesse Johnson, who won the heat and joined Meadows as I! .•
qualifier for the semifinals with a 15.6-second finish. In the lower . ,
photo, Meigs' Irena Zaneva take's flight in the long jump semifinals.
The Bulgarian exchange student's leap measured 11 feet, eight ,
inches. (OVP photos by G. Spencf!r Osborne)
· '

tunity tn nine tricb. Troy Gl&lt;.~us hn a

outs in the fifth .oiT Bryan Wan.L hi s nne-out sin gle and Orlando Palmeiro
seventh homer of the st:a!-.on.
"Because we score allthhsc run s singled hcforc Mau \Valbcc k struck
out. Sheets lhcn hit a liner to center
doe s n ' t !ncan we "II do i1 every . to put the Angels ahcJd.

ni ght. ..

Indians

manager

Mik e

Hargrove said. ··our goa l is to s~.:orc

onc mot:e than the other guys .... We
'don ' t go out looking 10 scor~ 1~
run s."
had an RBI single and hit
Gree_n's only two runs. Eastern later hi.s·Justice
I Oth homer of the season lor the
came up with some good fielding
plays to remain close the rest of the Indian s. who have won II of their
way.
last 12 games.
Charles Nagy ( 4-3) gave up onl y
Eastern stranded a runner in the
one
run and fo ur hits in eight innings.
third and left the bases loaded in the · but the
White Sox scored six runs in
fourth, still without the benefit of a the ninth off Mike. Jack son on Jeff
hit. Meanwhile, · Evans set Green
down in order in each the third , Liefer's RBI single, a three-run
fourth, and fifth innings with just one homer by Carl os Lee and a tw.o- run
runner reaching on an error in the shot by Brook Fordyce.
In 01her AL games, it was Texas 7,
sixth.
Eastern tallied a single run in the I~~h~\!a~_ 6 k~ ~;,~~~r~' ~e;cYr~~~-~:
sixth when Angi Wolfe lool'"d a smgle over second base, Evans sacri- Toronto 3; Kansas City 14, Oakland
ficed her to second, and Cha~atie 3; and Seattle 7, Minnesota 0.
Rangers 7;Devil Rays 6
Hollon had a line single to right to
Rafael
Palmciro hit two home
knock home .the run . Hollon was left
runs,
and
Texas
hit three consecut ive
stranded at first after a strike out.
homers
for
the
'second
time in club
Eastern then went down 1-2-3 in
the seventh despite some hard hits history.
With the game ti ed 6-6 in the
that were gobbled up by an aggreseighth
inning, Lee Stevens singled
sive Green defense.
off
Scott
Aldred (2- l) and moved to
It was a great game overall; but a
second
when
reliever Rick White
game that was unkind to the feisty
walked Roberto Kelly. One out. later.
Eastern gals.
·
Hollon and Wolfe .were the lone Tom Goodwin hit an RBI si ngle to
Eastern 'hitters. Barrett and Liles had snap the tie and end the Rangers'
three-game skid , all at home.
the lone Green hits .
The two tca.ms combined for ,
Evans fanned four and walked
none. Butler walked two and fanned seven home runs, including Jose
Canseco's I6th or the &lt;eason for
two.
Tampa Bay. Canscco is tied for th e
Inning mlllb
Eastern .................. 000-001 -0= 1-2-5 major league 'lead with Scaule's Ken
Green .................... 020-000-x=2-2-4 Griffey Jr.. who also hit one
Wednesday ni ght.
Batteries
Red Sox 6, Yankees 0
WP-Butler and Bailey
Emergency start er Brian Rose
LP-Evans and Karr
pitched seven shmou1 innings and
.
.

1

Tigers 7, Blue Jays 3
Juan Encarnac ion hit a tichrc.aking, .three-run hOme qm in the scvcnih inning. one of three Detroit
hotnCrs off st ru ggli ng Davit! Well s in
h T
•
T
1 c igcrs victo ry at oronto.
Bobby Higginson added a tworun shot and Dean Palmer hit a &gt;o lo
homer off Wells (4-4), who has los t
hi s last three starts.

from Pawtucket of the International League . Pl ac~d
RHP Kip Grou on 15-day disabled list, ret roactive to
May 17.

"

SEATTLE MARlN ERS: Plnced OF Jay Buhner
an t~ 15-day disabled list. Recalled OF Charles
Gipson from Tacoma of the= Pacific Coast League.
National Lta&amp;ue
·
LOS ANGELES OODGEh.S: Acquired RHP
Doug Bochtler from Toronco for cash considerations
and purchased his comracl from Albuquerque of !he
PCL. Placed INF l ose Vizcaino on the IS-day dis abled list. Transferred INF Ale11 Corn from the IS day 10 the 60-day disabled list .
PJTISBURGH PIRATES : Ac'livau;~d RHP
Francisco CordO\'a (rom lhe I 5-day disabled lilt
Sent OF Adrian Brown to Nashville of the PCL,

.,

Football
~tlon•l

Foolball Lugue
NEW ORLEANS . SAINTS: Named Charles
Bruley a.uistant 1-eneral monagtr-vite presidenl of
foolbnll operations.

Hockey
Nallonal Hoekty Lraaut
WASH INGTON CAfiTALS: Nomcd Glen
Hm1lon coac h of 11\c Pordund Pirales· of the AHL

•

,.

'

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•

.

. rilice ny as the Expos scored 'four son.
runs in the ninth off Jeff Brantley (IPadres 7, Cardinals 6
. 2).
.
At San Diego, Dave Magadan 's
Mike. Lieberthal homered twice, two-run double capped a four-run,
including a grand sl.am, and went 3- . ninth-inning rally that was aided by
for-4 with a career-high six .RBis for ·five walks.
' ·
Philadelphia.
With St: Louis leading 6-3, reliev-·
Steve Kline (1-1), who struck out er Scott Radinsky walked pinch-hitone, allowed one hit In two innings ter Jo~n- Vander Wal to open the
of relief for the win.
inning. Ricky Bottalico ( 1-1) came
Dodgers 5, Astros 2
on and walked the next two batters
At Los Angeles, Kevin Brown l;&gt;efore uncorking a wild pitch that
scattered four hits in eight ·innings, scored Vander Wal.
'
and Eric Karros hit his first home run
Bottalico then walked Reggie
in 3 1/2 weeks as the Dodgers Sanders to load the bases a second
snapped a three-game losing strea_k. time before Rick: Croushorc relieved
Brown (5-2)' walked two and and allowed Tony Gwynn 's sacrifice
struck out eight before being relieved ny, making it 6-5. Croushorc walked
by Jeff Shaw to start thi: ninth inning. Phil . Nevin on li 3-2 pitch and
Brown, who signed a seven-year. Magadan followed witl\ a line s))ot to
$105 million contract with the team right-center field that scored Quilvio
lttit December, won his third straight Veras and Sanders.
start .
M.ark McGwire went 3-for-4 with
The Astros, who brsught an NL- a two-run homer and three RBI.s for
Ieading .298· batting average into the St. Louis: Gwynn singled in t~c secgame, lost for just the fifth time in I8 ond to move .within 25 hus of
games. Jeff J!agwell hit two homers hecoming the nod player to reach
for Houston,- giving him I3.this sea- the 3,000-mark.

""'

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·Wells gave up six runs and nine
hits in seven - innings, raising his
ERA to 6 .00 for Toronto, which has
lost nine of its last 12 games.
Royals 14, Aihletics 3
Chad Kreuter drove .10 fi've runs ,
spoiling Tom Candiotti 's bia for his
I50th victory, as Kansas City won its
first home se ries of the year.
The Athl~tics lost their second ~
straight and fell one game behind
Texas in the AL West.
Kreuter, 7-for-9 the past rwo
games with three doubles and seve n
RBis, hit reliever Brad Rigby's first
pitch for a two-run double in the
fifth . He also had an RBI double in
the third and a two-run si ngle in the
sixth.
·
Marine..S 7, Twins 0
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his fifth home
run in six games and Jeff Fassero
pi tched eight s huto~t innings in
Scaule.
Alex Rodriguez hit two homers to
help the _Mariners sweep their ftrst
series of the season and win their
fourth game In a row. The Twins lost .
their sixth straight.
Seattle's Edgar Martinez, who
tied a major league record with five
homers in the first two games of the
series. _we nt I: for-4 wn· h a Sl·ng 1c.

Karr sacrificed and Steve Bcha sin- Bullington, Ramsburg and 'Marlin lnnin~ totals
. Bentley then tripled
'
Jeremiah
si ngled:
Waterford ............. 003-300-3=9-7.-3
and Adam Bullington singled, a
Jones was the srartcr for Meigs ................ 406-02 I-x= I3-9- I
Waterforp error made it 10-3.
Waterford , he · gave up eight hils.
D. Jones (LP) and Jones
The Wildcats , scored three more walked six and didn't' strike out a
Humphreys (WP) and Dettwiller
in the top of the fourth on a pair of batter. Crock had a triple ami a·sinwalks and singled by Moore ·and .glc to lead the Wildcat ))ilters, Jones
Jones, to pull to within I0-6.
added two singles.
Meigs made it 12-6 in the fourth
of the inning on -a pair of walks and
a Kyle Smiddie double. Meigs added
another run in the .sixth inning, on a
single by. Pat Martin , a walk, a hit
batter and a sacritice.
The Wildcats scored three in the
top of the seventh to make the fimil
score I3-7. CrOck tripled, Thomas .
walked, ·an error and a double by
Jones plated the runs.
.
Humphreys, who picked up the '
win , scattered seven hits, struck out ·
12, walked seven and hit a couple of
baiters. Healso led Meigs at the plate i'
with a single and ,a double.
Bentley added a triple, while ,
Martin had a double. Be~a .

~ gled.

NL contests .•. (Continued from Page 4)

Tonight's aames

~

NI:; standings
Ium'

Stri~s

l-0

6). 8 :~ p.m.
·
Seatlle ( Moytr J-4) at K:msas Cil)' (Witasick 12). K:IB p.m.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs scored four runs in the first
inning and went on 10 defoat
Waterford 13 -9 in a Tri- Valley
Conference make-up game last
Saturday morning at Meigs High
School.
Meigs· ends its season ~ith a 1310. record overall and I I -5 in the
Ohio Division, good enough for a
third place finish in the conference.
Meigs in the first inning used a
hit batter, a walk, a balk, a Waterford
error and .a JT. Humphreys triple to
take a 4-0 lead.
The Wildcats came back in the
. top of tKC'ihird inning and pulled to
within 4-3. A hit· batter, two walks, a
sacrifice ny and a single by Crock
plated the runs. Meigs broke the g~me open in the
bottom of the thtrd_wtth StK btg runs.
Ryan Ramsburg smgled, moved to
second on a balk, Pat Martin and
Nick Deuwlller bpth walked, Odie

9:05p .m.

. C(.EVELI\NIJ l .l . Chit ago 7

.

.

() :05 p .111

Jason Varitck .wem 4-fur-4 with two
homers as Bos ton beat slumping
New York at Fenway Park.
The Red Sox, who . replaced the
Yankees
as the AL East leader with a
By The Associated Press
Thirteen was the Cleveland 6-3 win Tuesday night, increased
their lead to I ,1/2 games with their
Indians' lucky numher against the 1lth win in l3 games.
Chicago White Sox.
The Indians scored 13 runs for the
New York is 1-7 in its last eigh t
games and 0-2 si nce manager Joe
third strai gh t game, routing the Torre returned from -a two-month
White Sox 13-7 \Yedncsday ni ght to absence following surgery for
complclc a series S'wccp.
Richie Sexson led Cleveland's 18- prostate cancer.
·
Rose ( 1-0), reca lled Wednesday
hit attack, driving
in a career-high
five runs with his &lt;econd caree r from Triple-A Pawtucket to fill in for
ailing rookie Juan Pena. held the
grand slam and an RBI single.
Yankees to six hits.
" Really, I'm not that amazed, "
sai d Sexson. who went 3-fur-5. ''On
Angels 5, Orioles 4
At Baltimore . Andy Sheets hit a
paper, this tc~m can do it any night. " two-out. two-run double off Mtkc
David Justice. Jim Thome and Timlin as Anaheim rallied to win in
M 11n~y Ramirez each drove in two
runs for the 'Indi ans , whq outs~;;orcd the ninth. for on ly the second 11mc
the White Sox 39- I6 and nuthi l them thi s sea~ on.
'
Raodv· Velarde homered fm the
4g.23 in the series .
"Look at their numbers.·· los in\} Ante•ds. who were J ~ 20 When trailing
,
e after eight inni ngs'.
pit,hcr Jim P:.m .JUC said. "Everyone
Anahicm trailed 4~3 before corn~
is halting above .100. The nnco,; whn ing back i'n the ninth against Timlin
arcti ' t arc hitting .299_:· ·
.
sexs·on hit a ~rand shun Witl1 1wo ( I-3). who blew his third save oppur-

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Meigs downs Waterford 13·9 in ·baseball season finale

Ch i ra~o cTr:~ch~el 2-4) lit Allanl:l (Maddux 4-.'J.

ll
lb '

T~aJ

~1 1 01 1

4~1.Mp~

9

Di,•ision

19 21

St·~tt k:

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Ariwna Ouhnson -' · t ) at Co lorlklo (Kite 2·.'), '

. .. 21 18
...... 21 19

Tt·l:ti .

1'·

DH: Milw11uket CAbbolt 0-4 and Woodard J-J I
31 New York 1Le11er 1--1 ond Yoshn .H ). 4:40p.m. ·
St . Louis . !Bonenfield 6- l l '" San Diego
(Hit chcod: ·' ·2). 5:05pm
Pm sbur~h !Benson ·'·2'1 at Florida 1Meadow5 J7:40j! .ltl

Central Oilision
.. 29 10
20 18

CI-EVEI.AND
Kai1511s t:ny

!ill

,

PREPARES TO CONNECT - Eastern's Angi Wolfe prepares to
take a swing at'an Amy Butler pitch during Wednesday's Division Ill
dlsl!'ict championship softball game against Franklin Furance Green
on the University of Rio Grande's field, wtiere the Bobcats won 2-1 . ·

Green tops Eastern
2-1 in Division Ill
district title game

Scoreboard
Baseball

Indians shell White
Sox 13-7, record
three-game sweep
American League
roundup

Reds thrash Rockies 24-12, claim series sweep; Pirates lose·
the Giants beat Arizona 8-3 to move
back into a tic atop the NL »'est with
the Diamondbacks.
··somelim~s as a hirtcr you ' re no1
comfortable in the box, and it was
By JOSH DUBOW
one of those ·days, " Gonzalez Said.
AP Sports Writer
That's how the Rockies' pitching
Luis Gonzalez fin ally struggJCd at staff must have felt after . geuing
the. plate. _Maybe he should have pounded for a team-record 28 hits
played at Coqrs Field, where Jeffrey and the most run s si nce the Cubs
Hammonds and the Cincinnati Reds scored 26 against Colorado Aug. I 8,
hact· no such trouble.
1995.
:Hammonds had his first three" It was unbelievable," . Rockies
homer game and Scan Casey added reliever Chuck McElroy said. " It
IWO' homers and a career- high SiX Seemed Jike perything you'd throw
RBis as Cincinnati beat the Colorado up there - high, low, inside, outside
Ro.;kies 24-!2 Wednesday to com- -it was hit. Casey hit a ball at his
plet!''a three-game sweep.
chin. You could roll the ball up there
•:[t was batting practice for both and they were hiuing it."
clubs," Reds manager Jack McKeon
The outburst was Cincinnati's
said of the highest-scoring .game ever biggest since ·scoring a team-record
at -Coors. " We had a football score 26 runs against the Boston Braves on
her~."
June 4, 1911 .
In San Francisco, Gonzalez went
" In a park like this, things can get
0-for-4 with three strikeouts, ending out of hand," Rockies manager Jim
hi s ;h;iting ·streak at 30 games, and Leyland said.
·

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

··Thumlay, May 20, 1999

By The Bend

As Mexican as American, cultures mix in blurring border
third-largest trading partner, behind Canada and Japan, according to the U.S. permeates the airwaves to the south. The San Diego Pad1es sold 40,000 tickcis in Tijuana during the 1998 season .
Commerce Department.
ASioeiated Press Writer
Thousands of Tijuana residents are expected to cross the border this week
"There's no place else in the world th'at has as many people participatSAN DIEGO- Each morning, Pedro LaFarga leaves his t1dy Southern .
just
to see " Star Wars; Episode I 7 The Phantom Menace," said Kevin Coting
in
a
transnational
society,''
Martinez
said.
California suburb, crosses th" world's busiest border, drives through the
trell,
who studies relations between the two countries as associate director
Nearly
94
million
people
legally
crossed
the
border
into
Californta
m
1998,
squalid fringe of Me~ico 's sixth-largest city and arrives for work at a factoup
from
91
million
a
year
earlier,
the
U.S.
Customs
Service
said.
of San Diego Dialogue, a public policy organization.
ry as modern a~ any in the world.
The mixing extends to high culture. Howard Cohen, president of an Amer·
They come to shop, work, v1sit relatiycs, attend business meetings or just
"I'm probably as binational and bicultural as you get," said LaFarga, 32,
a dual national who lives in Chula Vista, Calif., and works at an electronics to go to the movies . And they come despite the well-publicized U.S. effort ican furniture manufacturer with a plant in Me•ico, said he often sees acquainto stanch the now of illegal immigrants and drug smugglers by tightening tances at the San Diego Symphony one night and at a Tijuana art e&lt;hibit the
assembly plant a half-hour away in Tijuana, Mexico.
its border.
next.
.
He is also 1ncreasrngly common.
"I
almost
feel
like
I'm
in
Mex
ico
here,"
Silvia
Castillo,
a
high
school
day,
some
58,000
vehicles
enter
San
Diego
&lt;;ounty
through
the
San
Each
Sociai 'scicntists call them transnat10nals or, in Spanish, transfronterizos.
teacher
from
the
Mexican
state
of
Nayarit,
satd
at
a
Kmart
in
San
Ysidro,
and
nearby
Otay
Mesa
checkpoints.
Northbound
traffic
snarls
in
the
Ysidro
They are the millions of Mexicans and Americans who traverse the border ·
Calif.
"Everyone
speaks
SpaniSh."
·
. morning, southb9und in the afternoon .
so frequently and casually that they have cross-pollinated the cultures into
Evidence
of
thiS
trend
i&gt;
every
where
in
the
four
U.S.
statesCalifor" Definitely there are more controls at the border, for the drugs and
a region with its own identity.
nia.
Arizona;
New
Mexico
and
Texas
and
SIX Mexican states along the
migrants,
but I've never had any problems," said Jesus Limon, an accounThe growing interdependence - highlighted by Mexican President
2,000-mile
border.
tant
from
Tijuana
who crosses two or three times a month, mostly to shop.
Ernesto Zedillo's. visit t&lt;X!ay to businesses in San Diego - is a phenomeBillboards
in
Spanish
urg~ rcmlcnts of the northca.&lt;tern Mexican city of "I feel very comfortable here."
non that started 150 years ago. But it rece1ved a powerful boost from the 1994
Monterrey to shop at malls in Texas Signs in English along the h1ghway of
North American Free Trade Agreement, said Oscar J. Maninez, a history proMexico's Baja peninsula hawk beachfront getaways.
fessor at the University of Arizona.
Radio and television stations on both sides of the border include the wait
The value of goods and serv1ces traded between the two countries has more
tune at checkpomts in thetr traffic reports . Spanish-language pop music IS
than doublal to $173.7 billion since 1993. Mexico ranks as the Un1ted Sta(es'
increasingly heard in the Un1ted State&gt; , and American pop music, as always,

By BEN, FOX

Judge will examine death sentence for Lee
UTILE ROCK , Ark . (AP) -A
federal judge wants to take a closer
look at the process that resulted in a
death sentence for white supremacist
Danny Lee, convicted of murder in a
J)lot to set up a whites-only nation.
The jury that convicted' Lee later
recommended that he be executed,
though it had already decided to spare
the l1fe of co-defendant Chev1e
Kehoe, said by prosecutors to be the
leader of the scheme.
Kehoe and hi s brother, Cheyne,
became outl aws after a shootout with
police near Wilmington, Ohio, on
. Feb. 15, 1997. The gunplay was
caught on videotape and broadcast
around the· nation No officers ~ere
hurt, but a passerby was wounded.
U.S. District Judge G Thomas
Etsele sa1d Wednesday that Lee's se n-

Eisele said Wednesday that. 111 pntencing may have been botched
vate
meetings with lawyers between
because of confUSIOn over Attorney
General Janet Reno's role in deciding the two sentcm.: mg hearings, 'tedcral
prosecutors said th ey didn ' 1 plan to
what sentence to seek.
" I am very troubled, " Eise le told pursue the death penalty agai nst Lee
lawyers '" the case. '" We are deali~g if Kehoe got a li fe se ntence. and if
with what may have been a fatal fail- Reno's office approved that change in
ure in communication .','
plans . Prosecutors had earlier said
Lee, of Yukon, Okla., and Kehoe they would seek the death pe nalty for
of Colvi lle, Wash .. both 26, were both both m
.
convicted of rackcteen ng, conspiraAccording fo Eisele, prosecutors
cy and murder. The two were found told him that Reno ·wasn't available
guilty of kilhng Tilly, Ark ., gun deal- to consult on the deciS ion, but that ·
er Wi lli am Mueller, his wife Nancy, Deputy Attorney General Enc Holdand her 8-ycar-old daughter. 'Sara h er said a death penalty for Lee should
Powel l.
be pursued regardless of Kehoe's senThe JUry considered a se ntence for tence .
Kehoe first, and recomme nded·lifc in
But 11 now appears that the final
pnson Without parole, later deciding decision should have come from
on a re~o mmendat i on of death for Reno after getting a recommendation
Lee.
from a committee appointed by her,

the judge said.
Eisele took "strong exception" to
prosecutor Robert De La Cruz' claim
in a Tuesday letter that the government was under time constramts
imposed by the judge.
An attorney for Lee, Cathleen
Compton, told the judge that after the
jury decided Kehoe 's sentence, she
spoke with Lee about accepting a
plea agreeme nt offered by U.S. Attorney Paula Casey in which Lee would
get life sentences. Lee was willing to
Jo that, but never got the chance
bccau1e of Holder's decis~on , .
Another possib1hty- having the
Judge, ratherthan the jury, dec1tle hts
~c nt ence was never brought lo
Lee 's attention, Compton said.

Cases concluded in Meigs County Co~rt
"I'

Mary A. Parsons, Long Bottom,
costs; left of ce nter, costs onl y:
scat be lt, $25 plus costs; stop 'sign,
taillights, costs onl y;
.
$20 plus costs; Roger A. Michael ,
Stanley M. Trout, Albany, DU
$1 ,000 pluscosts. six months jail &gt;U. · Syracuse, speed, $30 plus costs; Lev1
pended to.90 days ja il and six months Partl ow, Pome roy, fa ilure to yield ,
house arrest, two years probation; dri- $20 plus costs; John D. Cleland, Vinving under suspension, $200 plus ton , scat belt, $15 plus costs; Bryan
costs, SIX months jail suspended to 90 D. D1llard, Scottown, seat belt, $15
days concurrent, two years probation. plus costs; Steven i. Martin, Patriot,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; fa• lure to speed, $30 plus costs; Michael J.
control , costs only ; unsafe vehicle, Frymyer, -S hade , speed, $50 plus
costs only; falsification, costs, 30 "osts; Ronald D. RoiJerts, Portland,
days jail conc urrent , two years pro- seat belt, $25 plus costs; Deborah D.
bation; Charles E. Boso, Portland, Clay, Pomeroy, failure to maintain
speed, $30 plus costs; David Ker- assured clear distance, $20 plus costs;
Wood, Gallipolis, seat belt, $15 plus Karla A. Smith, Columbus, speed,
.
costs; Thomas J. Lynch, Middleport, $30 plus costs; •
Michael R. Ratlif, MaMhester,
speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; Jeremy D. Metheney, speed, $30 plus costs; James E. Cox,
Vinton, seat belt, $15 plus costs; Vic- Little Hocking, speed; $30 plus costs;
tor J. Morris Jr., Langsville, failure.to Carolyn S. Henderson, Athens, speed,
yield, $20 plus costs; Gary R. Coop- $30 plus costs; Derek E. Mannon,
er, Portland, seat belt. $25 plus costs; Proc torville;· speed, $30 plus costs;
.
Carrie L. Rou sh, Mason, W.Va., Paul D. Clay, Middleport, seat belt,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Mi chael J. $25 plus costs; Stephanie N. Mayes,
Brown, Racine, failure to maintain Gallipolis, ~eat belt, $25 plus costs;
assured clear·distance, ~20 plus costs; M1chael A. Bolin, Racine, allowing
Kimberly D. Roush , Mason, seat belt, passe nger in· cargo area of straight
$15 plus costs; Cheryl L. Comer, truck, $20 plus costs; Michael A.
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;' Julie Waterhouse, Mentor, speed, $3.0 plus
A. McGuire, Langsville, speed, $30 cos ts; Chris Jude, Vinton, seat belt,
plus costs; M1chae l D. Pratt, $25 plus costs;
Tiffany M. Savage; Langsville,
Pomeroy, failure to yield, $20 plus
costs; PamelaS . Pitts, Belpre, speed, scat belt, $15 plus costs; Danny L.
$30 plus costs; Carrie A. Shafer, Bonec utier, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
Marengo, speed, $30 plus costs; speed, $30 plus costs; Brett Turner,
John son, Racine , dri vlni!' under the ·
Amy N. Lynch, Moundsville, W.Va .. l ax Beach, Fla., stop Sign, $20 plus
tnllucncc. $850 plus co~t s, 10 days
speed, $30 plus costs;. Paul R. . costs; Maggie Justis, Hockingport,
Jail suspended t&lt;&gt; three days , 90-day
Heinicke, Canton ,' speed, $30 plus speed, $30 plws costs; Jason E. CirOL ~uspcns1on, om: year p1 obation.
costs; Samantha A. Jackson, Iron ton , . cle, Racine, reckless operation, $100
Jail and $550 suspended upon comseat belt , $15 plus costs; Scott A. plus costs; Kyle Sinclair, Racine,
p l c t ~on of rcsadcnual treatment pro.Elschlager, Vienna, W.Va., speed, making false alanns, costs, 30 days
$30 plus costs: Joey A. Walker, Park- jail suspended, one year probation;
ersburg, W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus Bobby Dill , Pomeroy, domestic viocosts; Wendy H. Hushak, Cincinnati, lence, $100 plus costs, 30 days jail
The following land transfers were and Patricia A. Payne, Pomeroy par- speed , $30 pl.us costs;
suspended to thre~ days, one year
recorded· recently in the office of ee l;
probation, restraining order issued.
('.1eigs County Recorder Emmogene
Easement, Leonard E. and Fay E.
Hamilton :
Amos to Ronnte D. and Tanowa J.
Deed, Warren D. Clay to Mei'J ssa McGrath, sewage easement;
s: Lumbatis, Rutland;
Deed, William B. and Junetta
A foreclos ure suit was ·filed May
Divorces and dissolutions
Deed, Mamn H. and Susan R. Ann Maynard to Ryan Adams, SutDivorce actions have been grant- 12 by Residential Funding ·Corp.,
YoJer to Edwin L and Rhonda J. ton;
ed in Meigs County Common Pleas .doing business as Common Point
Wherry, Olive,
Deed, Meryl F. and Madeline Court to Cynthta A. Burke lrom Mortgage, San Diego, Calif., against
' . Deed, Haro ld A. and Crystal D. Houdashelt, Melody L. RobertS, Matthew Burke, to Angela I. Delong Debra Boring, Middleport.
P!!rson to Timothy and Brenda Ball, Delores Hawk, Lela Delores Hawk,
A foreclosure suit was filed May
from Jeffrey A. DeLong, to Carl HubLebanon parcel:
Mary and Robert Bowles , Charles bard from Mildred Hubbard, to Tim- 17 by Beneficial Mortgage Campa: Deed, Joseph D. and Cora A. and Margaret Sinclair, James, Mary my Ray Hood and Elizabeth Jean . ny of Ohio, Elmhurst, Ill., against
L;oftis to Mark A. and Sherri A. and Wilma Lee Midkiff, Rebecca, Welsh Hood, Melissa A. Barrett from Delbert and Elsi~ Roush, Middleport.
Hal ey,"Rutland;
Carl R. and Carl Caudill to Charles Timothy J.'Barrett,
Judgments granted
· Deed, Henry and Beverly Hensley E. and Margaret A Sinclair, Bedford;
Dissolution actions granted were
A judgment has been issued in
td Village of Pomeroy, Pomeroy ;
· Deed, Patricia A. and Dennis R.
Rita Colleen Chapman and Robert Meigs County Common Pleas Court
. Deed, Jessica Hensley to Village Oxyer to Mid State Trust VI , Scipio; Keith Chap'"an, Frederick E. Werry to the Bank of New York against
of Pomeroy, Pomeroy;
Deed, Polly Bowland to Warren and Michelle A. Werry, and Laura L. Mike Wills, for a delinquent mort· Deed, Cand y and Perrick D. and iudy M. Hart , Rutland;
Spears and Harold Spears Jr.
gage agreement in the amount of
1'.1cCioud to Village of Pomeroy,
Easement, Randall G. and Darla J.
Dissolution acti ons was filed ·by $25,847.01.
Ppmeroy;
Hawley to American Electric Power, Megan C. Manuel, Racine, and John
EquiCredit Corp of America
· Deed, Darnck McC loud to James Chester;
W. Manuel, Rac ine; Lisa R. Ulbrich, received a judgment decree of
(-{ens ley, Pomeroy ,
Ease ment, Leona Hysell to AEP, Athens, and Jon . B. Ulbrich, Shade; $47,892.80 and $11 ,919.28 from
: Deed, Arney Mari e and Wilham Salisbury;
Christi Dawn Bartimus, Portland, Paul Clay, et al .
Allen Nutter to Russe ll L. Nutter,
Easement, Ronald L., Jean and and James Clinton Bartimus,
In 9 foreclosure suit, City NationMe1gs parce l;
Norma Wood to AEP, Bedford ;
Reedsville;
al Bank )lias awarded a judgment of
', Deed. Helen Lorramc Hart to
Right of ·way, Randall and Darla
~divorce action was filed in the $62,477.84 from Thomas R. Spencer
Charl es D. and Deborah J. Hart, Hawley . to Tuppers Plains-Chester court by Susan R. Dodson, Middle- and Ruth L. Spencer.
Co lumbia;
Water District, Chester;
port, against Daniel M. Dodson.
The United States of America was
Ri ght of way, Charles T. and Car: Deed, Nora R. and Robert H.
SuUs flied
awarded a $17,304.76 judgment in a
E~son to Ernest E. and Co nni e S. ol J. Myers to TPCWD, Sutton;·
(Editor's note: A lawaun outlines foreclosure suit against Brian Lee
H~lley, Chester;
. Right of way, Charles Chaffin to the grievances of one parly agalnat Hunt.
. peed, Joseph W. and Betty I. TPCWD Bedford ·
another. It doea not eatabllah guilt
\\;ync to Lon Ann McDaniel and ~ Right ' of way Robert Allan and or Innocence.)
The following couples were
A forec losure suit was filed May
She ryl I. Sendral , Scipio parcel ;
ora E. Elberfe ld to TPCWD,
12 in the Meigs County Court of issued marriage licenses recently in
, Deed, E.T. Broadcastmg !nc. w Orange;
Postt1ve Rad1o Group Inc, Salisbury ;
Right of way, Albert and Marilyn Common Pleas by Unitad Companies ' the Meigs County Probate Court of
Lending Corp., Baton Rouge, La., Judge Robert Buck: Joshua Job Dun·
. Deed , Brenda . Sue Harns to L. Pooler to TPCWD, Chester;
Right of way, Gilbert A. and Vic- against Martin L Woodand , Rutland, kle, 24, and Mary Elizabeth Darst,
Ronald Bryan Ham s, Leban on;
et 'al.
20, both of tangsville; Chad Allen
Deed, Bruner land Company Inc. .ki V. Woods to TPCWD, Chester;
foreclosur~
suit
·wa•
filed
)'vfay
A
Folmer, 19, and Amber Dawn Hudt ~ Wayne B ay h~, Columbia ;
Right of way, Kay Epling, Lauric
·12
by
Firstar
Bank,
doing-business
as
dleston, 17, Pomeroy; WilHam C.
, D~ed, CynthJaA. M!lls to Patrieta and Kevin L. Barber to TPCWD,
Star Bank,' Owensboro, Ky.. against Quickel, 46, Pomeroy, and Lesa C.
and James Bla~kenship, Middleport; Olive.
Edmund T. Giles, Pomeroy.
Deed, Jeanmc Malloy to Way ne S.
Grimm, 37, Letltrt, W.Va.
The following cases were resolved
recently in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Janetta R. \'{hlte.
Rutland, speed, $15 plus cos ts; scat
belt, $25 plus costs; Ronnie Hyse ll,
P~ meroy, no operator's license (two
licenses ), six months jail suspended
to 10 days, $200 plus costs, one year
probation, fal si lication, $100 plus
costs, 30 days jatl suspended to I0
days·concurrent ; Harold Will, Racine,
domesttc violence, costs, 30 days jatl .
suspended to three, one year probatiOn, restrainmg order issued ; Ron'aid
Keyes, Long Bottom, driving under
fin ancial responsibil ity action suspension, $100pluscosts, !Odaysjatl
suspended to three days, one year
probation; Mi sty R. Hayman, Syracuse, reckless operation, $100 plus
costs; Adam Barton, RaCine , seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Sabrina St. Clair,
Pomeroy, passmg bad checks, $25
plus costs, restitution:
Jeffrey J. Unruh, Pomeroy, dtsordcrly co nduct, $50 plus costs ;·Tammy J. Wright, Rutland, passing bad
checks, $25 plus costs, restit ution ;
Michael F. Free man,·syracuse , drug
paraphernalia. $75 plus costs; possess ion , $50 plus cos ts; Jane
McCloud , New Have n, W.Va ., passing bad checks, $25 plus costs, rest I·
tut1on; Penny K. Vanoy, Galli polts ,
stop stg n. $ 15 plus costs; Robert L

gram within 90 days, dnvm g under
FRA suspenSi on. $100 plus costs, 10
days jail suspended to three days con·current , one year probation ; left of
ce nter, cost&gt; 0niy;
Virginia Scarberry, Pomeroy, passing ,bad checks, $25 plus costs, three
days jail suspended 1f restitution
made withm 30 days; John G. Hill,
Pomeroy, speed, $27 plus costs; Sue
Darst, Middleport, passing bad
checks, $25 plus costs, 30 days jail
suspende,d, restitution, one year probation; lphn A. Parsons, Lancaster,
reckless operation, $100 plus costs;
.marked lanes, $30 plus costs; Ruth A.
Priddy, Middleport. reckless operati on, $roo plus costs, three da'ys res1denttal treatment program; James R.
Blackwell, Middleport, criminal
damagmg, $100 plus costs, 30 days
jail suspended to 14 days house
arrest, one year probation, restitutiOn;
Joann R. Holliday, Ravenswood,
W.Va. , DUI, $850 plus costs, 10 days
jail suspended to three days, 90-day
OL suspension, one year probation,
Jatl and $550 suspended upon complction of residential treatment program within 90 days; Danny Justice,
Racine, reckless operation, $100 plus
costs, $400 forfeiture; Raymond H.
Haught, Rac ine, reckless operation,
$100 plus costs; possesswn. $50
plus costs; M1chael J. Hill II, Raci ne,
DUI, $850 plus costs, 10 days 1a1l
suspe nded to thr~c Jays, 90-day OL
suspension, one year probation, jail
and $550 suspended upon compl etion
of re5tde nti al treAtment program
within 90 days ; seat 'be lt. $25 plus

t

Land transfers posted

Meigs County court news

Marriage licenses .

"''...

'

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.

•

The Daily Sentinel
Page7

Thursday, May 20, 1999

Friend who constantly unloads problems is in need of professional help
sense in talking about her problems with a stranger when she '• an
call up a friend apd unload. Ann, I
want to help her, but she is driving
me crazy with all the drama in her
ltfc. What can I do? -- NAMELESS AND WEARY IN THE
UNITED STATES
Dear Ann Landers: I have a feels betrayed by fnends, IS dissatDEAR WEARY: You can co nfriend who IS driving me nut s. . isfied with schoor and is worried tinue to let Kara kvetch to a point,
"Kara" unloads her problems on about her health.
but then, insist that she talk to a
'!'e, and they are the same probWhen I asked why she feels professional who can give her
lems she's been having for the past betrayed, she has no answer. I sug· some guidance. Perhaps she needs
two years. I try to be understand- gested she cha nge her maj or or an antidepressant. There are some.
i!'g, but the gtrl is beginning to get take a semc~ter break, but she very effective medicines available
on· my nei'Ves .
refuses .
that have proven to be a godsend to
· : When I first met Kara, she was
I offered to get her a puppy, but depressed people. Tell her.
~ lively, fun -loving person . Now: she wouldn ' t hear of it. She won't
Dear Ann Landers : This IS my.
she is in a constant depression , and even try simple relaxation tech - response to "Suddenly Smart in
ii worries me .
niqucs like yoga or taking a bubble M1ddle America. " Did th at person
. She has a relative ly good life bath.
ever stop to think why his chi ldren
with no financial problems whatShe talk s my ear of( complain - and grandchildren don ' t come to
soever. When I ask her why s~e 's ing about her life . I've suggested visit? I may hav e the answer.
~o unhappy. she says she 's lonely,
counseli ng, but she doesn ' t sec any
I was rai sed l&gt;y a father who
1Uicd everyone, 'includin g my

:;, ·
•

Saalet~~
~~~ap'larJ/f.;',:&gt;~: -~'
""''
,J :'}'" •,, ld

. Lelte.r cai-riei-~ ' deliver 1,679
pounds otfood
Meigs County residents donated I ,679 pounds of non-perish~b l e food items during the recent
National Association of Letter
Carriers Food Drive .
Although the total was down
slightly from last year's record of
1,822 pound s, the food will help
stamp out hun ger for many people located in Meigs County,
according to NALC member Jim
Pullms, a Pomeroy letter carrier.
The Meigs United Methodist
(:oope rati vc Parish will dtstribute
the food to need y families.
The Pomeroy City carriers'
motto for next year ts "2 ,000
pounds in Y2K. "
~--

Alfred news
: Alfred
United · Methodist
(:hurch held a fam 1ly dmner after
mornmg services on May 16. Pasior Sharon Hausman gave grace
before the meal.
Present were Nina Robmson,
Wilma Henderson, Thelm a Henderson, Victor Bahr, Rtchard,
Florence and Tim Spencer, Dave
and Mary Jo Barringer, Russell
Archer,
Marilyn
Robin so n,
Gertrude and Melvin Tracy,
· u oyd and Doris Dillinger, John
Taylor, Dan , Sheila , Kirk,
Dantclle and Tiffany Spencer,
Lauric, Matt , and Janac Boyles,
Warren and Charlotte Van Meter,
Phtlip Boyics, Marl e ne and
Mitchclle Donova n, Pat and Joe
Mayhew, Katie Hoxsie, and Nellie Parker, all local; Randy S
Koehl er Sr., and Rand y S.
Koehler II, Grove City, Ryan and
John Bai ley, Doug, Susan and
. ~ich ae l Trout, all of Cn ld
SprinJl. Ky .; Mary Lou Lute ,
Washington , W.Va .; Eleanor
Boy les, Belpre; Eric, Jackie, ·Erin
and Jody Brooks. New Marshfie ld .
Nellie Parker· attended a birthday party on May 15 for Howard,
Hom er and Edson Parker at
Howard's home. Others att endin g
were Wilma Parker, Mildred
Caldwell, Iren e Parker and Sarah

''')&lt;

,,

&gt;'

\

vage our· marriage, I granted her

request I have asked her to return
to me some &gt;pecial gifts that have
se n1im cma l meaning , including a
fancy wrtstwatch and some letters.
My w1fe said my behavim ts stin gy
and stupid ..
I Jo not care about the vq luc of
these ite ms . but s1ncc th ey no
longer mean anyth1ng to her. I

would like to have them back . Am
I wrong to ask? - MR. X IN BEl·
liNG
MR. X: The gifts and letters
belong to your wife .. While you are
not "w rong" to ask her to return
them , they are rightfully hers , and
she is under no obligation to give
them back.
Forget to save some of yo ur
favorite Ann Landers columns'
"Nuggets and Doozies " i• the
answer Send a self addressed,
long, bus&lt;ness size envel ope and a
chec k or money order for $5.25
!tillS includes postage and han dling) to: Nug gets, c/o Ann Lan- .
ders. P.O. Box '11 562, Chicago, Ill •
606 11 - 0~62 . iln Canada. send
$6.25. 1
To find llUI more about Ann
landers and read h~r past
l.'olumns. visit the Creators Syndica te
wch
page
at
www .l· rcators.com .

"

Albany; and. Wi lli s Parker, Park ersburg, W. Va
- - - - - - -'- Molher-daughler banquet held
.
The Bradford
,. Church of Christ
.
mother-daughter banquet was
held recently at the church using
the theme "Seeds of Love ."
'Scrip tur e was taken from I ·
Corinthians 3. For the occasion,
the soc ial room was decorated
with watering cans fill ed with
bouquets of hve fl owers. Favors
were clay pots with flower seeds.
Caro ly n Nicholson had the
prayer before the dinner, and th e
program followed in the sa nctuary. Paula Picken s extended the
we lcome and the congregation
sang "Make Me a Blessing ." A_
rea din g titled "A Stranj!e Old
Lady Has Mo~ed Into My House "
was given by 'icholson and ther.e
was special music by Bonnie and
Kathy Arnold.• and Sherry Sham'blin. Poems read by Tracy Davidson were "A Mother's Love" and
"A Thought for Mother 's Day."
Prese ntation of gifts was handl ed by Sherry Smith and Nicholson, assisted by Kalllen Williams
' and Olivia D'l:vis. A devotion on
"S ow tng
. See dso
' f Love " was prese nted by Paula Pickens.
Recog nition of .service .was
given by Sherry Shamblin and the
banquet conc lud ed w1 th muSic
"Thank You" py Ray Bolt7,.
The 1999 ~yd i a Coun c1 l office rs are Nichol so n, pres ident ;
Pickens, vice president; Charlotte
Haning, sec retary; Diana Bing,
Lydia treasurer; missions treasurer, Sherry Shambhn; Suzie Will,
mother-daughter treasurer; Nancy
Morns , news ·rcpon er; and Char lotte Van Meter, card secretary.
Com mittee~. for the banquet
Were Paul a Pickens, c hairm a n;
Madeline Pai nte r and " Brenda
Bolin, favors ; Caroly n Nicholson.
Paul a Pi ckens and Sherry Shamblin. program; Becky Amberger
and Diana Bing, program book lets; Charlotte Van Meter and
Sherry Smith, d\!coration s, and
men of the church, cleanup.

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

Get 'em
while

~t.~

EV.ERYDAYI
4" Doublet

99 $ 99
Any

Any

E•P·
' E•P·
From erltlnal ttO .,. tJS,. C·4t ~roilh relle.

Set One Of Our Clerke 'Fer Detalle o; The FuJI
Tru Colli 'Film Cl•• Ctt4 ·::
Have 6 Rolle Devele~ An41 Get The
Se11enth Ro~l De11iloped FREI

Try Ut Out For All.
Your Photoflnlshlnt Needs
SWISHER LOHSE

1999 RAIIOER

ITIIII .
..., TDfAL IIFOIE tiiCOUIITI

~Q~

•tz,tts•

~t.-.

1999 FtsO SC

o~" $9,950° 0

AlTO, All, Ct CIAIIII
TOTAL BEFORE IIS~~OUIITSI

~o~
o~"

ILT, AUTO, All
•tiP TOTAL IIFOII tiSCOUITI

~~

· •zuts•

o~"~ $19 ,950°0' ~

1991 TAURUS tr SABLE

~~(\~10 IN STOCK
00
'$ tl.

•

IL...----=:----------.-1

.

~t.~

-•
.

- ..
~
~

1999 EXPLORER SPORT

$1J ,980

•s•r•

All, NIEI EGIIP
TOTAL BEFORE IIU:OUIIT~

~0~ *2J,57010

~~~999 WINDSTAR LX

o~"$19,950 00

ALL POWIR, LOAm
IIRP. totAL IIFORl tiiCOUMTI

~'(

i14,49501

$t1 ,45000 .

PROIRAI CARS
AUIO, AIR, POWER EOIIP
CR"IE, TILT, WARRAMTY

0~"

2··n d Set Free

$

I assume your ill tempered
father is sttll around and you don ' t
feel like visiting him that often .
It 's your ca ll. my dear. ThiS comes
under the heading of "As you sow.
so shall you reap."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I live
1n Be1j1ng and read your co lumn
on the Internet. You have helped
me With my Eng lish, and now, I
hope you can help me wnh my
problem.
· My w1fe told me she wanted a
divorce. This breaks my heart , but
after trymg unsuccessfully to sal-

''j'l~rker, all l~c~l, H~~~ J&gt;~rke .':

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Ph-• to Center

JYa" Doublet

mother with fear a.nd intimidation.
The minute I could leave home, I
did I never asked for anything and
rarely accepted what was offered
because invariab ly there were too
many strings attached.
My visits home were a nightmare. I contin ued to visit on a reg ular basis until my mother died .
Since her death. I don 't go as
often. Dealing with my father's
nasty .temper and· general unpleasantness for 35 years was long
,
enough for me.
As for an inheritance, if there is
one, I recall with a smi le my late
mother's advice . She said , "You
might as well take the money and
enjoy It , dear. You have certainly
earned it." - CAN'T BUY MY
LOVE IN MEMPHIS
DEAR MEM.l'HIS : Your late
mother sounds as 11 she was the
victim of some close-range family
unplea santn~ss. Too bad .

*25,240"

$20 195000
~l~99 ·cROWII VIC Lll tROUP
.
FULL POWER
IURP tOTAL IEFORE tiiCOUII11
lfl

~t.~ tffl ESCORT LX 41R

$2$,SJD

~. ,22,
.
950°0

411YL, AIR COllt, 11lRIO
IIRP101AL llFORl tiiCOUllll

~~~·9:91b00
,,-..... RAIIIER SUPERCAI ~t.~ 1999 ESCORT ZX2

.

~'!:,~ ' " ' 'dii.'Wit m•
•tiP TOTAL IIFOII tiiCOim

•zo.zao•
IIONDAY·FRIDAY
900 AM·?00 Pll
SATURDAY

goo

AM·500 P11

CLOSED SUNDAY!

1001 IOOf, All, Cl CIAMIER,
AlTO, AlL POWEI
•tiP TOTAL IIFDIE IIICOIIITI

SPORT

•••

•tiP TOTAL IEfOII IIICOIIITI
If!
$ti,IIO

~'l1S,45000

.

: .J
0...

$16,761

.~~.,~ •1 J' 750

.
00

~t.~

1999 CONTOUR SPORT
All, STEREO, All IDlE
ISRP TOTAL BEFORE IIICOI
~0~ *15,54001
00
0~"

$12,950

177 EXIT 132
RIPLEY~WV ·
•

(304} 372-3673
(BOO) 964 3673 :

Pharmacy

----~---

�20i,i1i~ii- iiiiii

•

~qe

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 20,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1991J_.

Tihuiriadialyi,iMiay
..
i

~~--~--------·P·o·m·e·ro;y···M·I·d·dl·e~po·rt~,·O·h·lo;;;;;;;;.--..-

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

Th·e--Dall~ly;Se=;,n;ti;n;ei;•;P;a;g;e~9:

..........

30 Announcenw•ta

Chocolate cake gets barbecue look for Memorial dessert
By The Assoeiated Press
Complete with sweet little burgers and kebabs ;eemingly cooking
on a peanut-frosting striped grill , a
Chocolate "Barbecue" Cake is cast
to type to round off a Memorial Day
meal:
Using un swee tened cocoa powder can simplify the cake's prepaqtion for the party provider. Cocoa
doesn't need to be melted and can be
added directly to other dry ingredients. Melted peanut butter chips
f0 nn the grids of the rack on top of
the cake, on which yqu may place
the optiona l accc~sorie ~: fudgc-covered burger shapes and fruit -jelly
·candies skewered' 1nto kebabs.
. Chocolate Barbecue Cake
1 cup water
I cup (2 stick&gt;) huller m margarine

, _ TO 'lbu Tlrifl 6/'oapPI

9:D0-5:30.

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL ·
•Paving
•Lots
· •Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Business
•Patching
'New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

•

PROBLEMS

The Com munity Calendar is pub·
li shed as a free serv ice tO no n-profit
CHOCOLATE BARBECUE CAKE adds a festive groups wishing to announce mee ttouch to hQiiday entertaining .
ings and special ,events. The calen· For "S hish Kchahs": Place red . ing:-390 cal., 19 g tnwHat ( 1:1 g sat - dar is not designed to promote sales
green. an d tan colored Jel ly candies uratcJ J'at ). · RO mg cho l.. 330 mg or fund rai sers of any typ_e. Items arc
on plastic decorati ve skewe rs and sodium . 47 g carbo. , g g pro. ·
printed as space permits and cannot
.place on top of "grill ."
be guaranteed to run a specifi c numNutrition facts per I ·slice sen •·
Recipe from: Hershey's.
ber of days.

• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions

You're Treated with Respectl
•

------,---,

series over a m inimum of six- :
months. The chi ld's prev ious shot :

i·ecord s should be provided.

Phone:
740-256-6147

• MalnhtaaCII • Plullag
•,Malclllng

CLIFTON, W.Va. - A hymn
sing wi ll be held at · the Clifton
Tabcrnas:lc Friday. 7 p.m.

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Civ il War Memo·
cia! Day ceremony will be held at the
Civil War statue at the Meigs Coun·
ty Courthouse, II a.m. Saturday.

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation/De vel·
opmental Disabilities, regular ses-,
sian, Thursday, 4 p.m. Carleton
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
School.
Chapter 172. OES. inspect ion, Sat·
A report on the observance of steps.
urday night, ·Middleport Masoni c
National Day of Prayer on the
Florence Ann Spencer hail the
FRIDAY
Temple.
Mei gs County Courthouse steps prayer cal ender and chose Claire
POMEROY - · Friday'·s Fun,
'was given by Thelma Henderso n at Lovelace, Knoxville, Tenn., leader
Famous people born in Utah
Food
and Fellowship for teens, Fri-· includ e: Maude Adams , Merlin
a recent meeti ng of the Alfred in laity. The group signed a birthday, 6 to 10:30 p.m at God 's Neigh· Olsen, the Osmond Family, Loretta
United Methodist Women at the day card for her. Nina Robi nson
borhood Escape for Teens in Young and Brigham Young.
church.
•reported on her visit with Alma
Pomeroy. Non-v iolent video games,
Henderson noted that Steve Swartz. a former member. .
computer programs, pool tables and
Beha was the leader and she told of
Rqbinson led the _program,
cards free m game room. The ce i1ter
how prayer reque sts were gathered · "Bent-over Wom&lt;ln Rises' Up". The
. Public Notice
is also open Saturday nignt.
and burned in a dedication service. worship table featured a cross surIN THE MEIGS COUNTY
Continuous prayer and Bible read- rounded by white candles. RobinCOURT OF COMMON
SYRACUSE - The Tony Broth·
ings· were held during the week.
son read scriptu're from Luke about
PLEAS
PROBATE DIVISION
ers, at the Syracuse Nazarene
The meeting opened with the bent-over woman whom Christ
In the Matter of the
Church, 7 p.m. Friday. Free will
prayer by Henderson ;~nd uni son healed. All members joined- in
Adoption of: ·
offering will be taken.
Tyler J. Goble
reading of the purpose. Secretary reading and responding to the
.
CASE NO. 30668
Martha Poole and treasurer Osie litany. Sarah Caldwell read
PUBLICATION
OF NOTICE
RACINE - Ohio University
Mac Follrod gave 'their reports. "Nobody Knows but Mother"; and
NOTICE TO THE
College of Osteopathic Medicine's
Fnendship call s reported were 23.
Mary Jo Barringer read "A Moth·
UNKNOWN FATHER
Childhood Immunization · Program
During · the business meetin g cr's Way is Love".
You ar.e hereby notified
ihat on tho 15th day of
(CHIP), a mobile health program.
UMW books. for reading, changin g
Follrod was hostess and sc!Ved
December, 1998, Raymond
will
provide
free
'immunizations
for
meeling times for spec ial occa- sandwiches, !lUIS, and fruit JeiJo 10
Lee
Goble realdlng at 2399
•all area children from birth through
sions. and special giving were dis- those menti oned and Charloue
Water Street, Syracu1e, .
l8 years of age on May 21 from 3 to·
cussed.
Ohio 45779, and Cheryl Ann
VanMeter and Nellie ·Parker. Cald5 p.m. at the Racme Volunteer Fire
Goblt rtaldlng at 2399
He nderson gave the miss ion well gave ·gritcc. The ne~ t meeting
Water Street, Syracuae,
Department in Racine. The pro gram
report on Mei gs ,County 's obser- wil l b.c held June S with Henderson ·
Ohio 45779, flied In thla
also offers the Hepatitis B vaccine
vance of National Day nf Praye r as program leader. and Barringer as
Court of Petition to adopt
free of charge to all children through
which was held on the Gourthousc · hostess.
·
Tyler J. Goble, d.o.b. July
age 18. The vacc ine is .a three-shot
27, 1993,. born In Orlando,
Florida, and that hearing of
aald Petition will be had
Rosie O'Donnell and Tom Selleck slug it out
over gun .control
before th• Probatt Court 11
.
Court
ond Saconda Streati,
NEW YORK (A PJ - So much ha ve a debate," he said. " I c·amc on ,said. " Look at the audience, laugh - .
Pomeroy, ·Ohio 45789, on
for a peace ful discussio n ahout g" un yo ur show tO plu g a. movi e That's in g and having a great old time."
lha 19th day of July, 1999,
co ntro l.
what i ' ni doing here. If you think
Conced1ng the debate hadn ' t
all :30 o'clock P.M.
WITNESS my algnalurt and
Rosie O' Donnell and Tom Sell- it 's proper to have a de hate ahout gone well , O'Donnell apologized to
aaal of •Jd Court, thla 4th
ec k got into a ve rbal tussle over the the NRA, I'm trying to be fair with Selleck, saying she wasn' t making
day of May, 1999.
issue on her show Wednesday. The yo u. This is absu rd ."
· a personal attack. Selleck , looking
Robert E. Buck, Judge
actor has filmed a commercial for
An exasperated S.elleck looked down at the noor, didn ' t,accep! it.
By: Judith R. Slaaon,
the Nati onal Rifl e Assoc iation , . out on the silent audience .
·" It 's your show," he said, "and
Deputy Clerk/Notary Public
(5) 6, 13, 20, 27
•.
while O'Donnell has been a fre" It 's ce rtainly entertainin g,''. he you ca n talk about it after I leave ."
(6) 3, 10 6TC
quent criti c of the NRA since the
Columbine Hi gh School massacre.
Se lle ck said he belie ved gun
co ntrol leg islation wouldn ' t ha ve
·done anything to prevent th e
tragedy.
W'hen
0 ' Donnell complained ' about NRA
opposition to efforts to ban assault
weapons , Selleck said he_couldn ' t
speak for the organization .
••' • ••• •••
Selleck sa id 11 was "an act of .
mora l vanity " for O'Donnell to
assume that someone · who dis·
.
3grees Wirh her q ucs any less about
\'
gun control. He said he felt
\ l' '.
' ' \. ' ' . ~ '. ; . ·,
·
auacked.
.
" I didn 't come on your show to

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES
949·2168
4/2TFN

In Memory

$550.00 Yeor
$12.00 Nighl
$10.00 Primi live Camping

D

'

'"

Aobb1n1 I Mytlfl. RaflfHI, EM·

p&amp;oyees, SpouMI or Guests, who •
worked with uch oth•r for the ,
llfll 10 yoaro. Po~uc:l&lt; wHI bo hold
1n Shetter Houae Groundl on Bob

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

McCormick Rd . May 21f. 199QI
t2 :p.m. to 2:p.m. If N.-cs to know,
any details, Contract Jane Harper ; Carol Ferguson Bus h (7-40t··

Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

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

379·2496
40
Giveaway

Give Away Mlxtd Breed Pups ;'
To Good Homet7.a-446-4412. •

985 4422
Cheater, Ohio

,".. ,~

Ol.in

Biautlful, small , long-haired.
black cat , to good home. 1 year

Tuppers Plains, Ohio ~5783
740.985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert. In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks·
Septic &amp; Clatern Tsnk!l
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp;
Regulators
• OPEN :.
9:D0-4:30 Weekdays
9:oo-12:00 Saturday

~fj;j~~~~- ~~~~~~
J.D. CONS,.RDCTION ~

Roush

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

A&amp; Dluto Upholste-:y • Plus, Inc

· P-ublic Notice · ",
been 3 yea,.
bul it 1eenu
like yeolerday
You •ere in my arm..
If only it were
yeolerday,

So once more we
could aU _leU you
how much we
love and mil• you.

Bur ..,•

.,uz aU

bo rowerher asain.

· ·We aU lo•e &amp; 'mil•
you)eremy. ·

Sadly Muoed By,
Mom, Mury, BUly,

Anthony, Nannie,
PaPa, Aunl Sherry &amp;

Family, Aunl Shawraa
&amp; Family
&amp; Many Friend.
In Loving Meniory
(:hal'les G. DIU .
: Wllo Passed Away 6
years ago today.
May ~o. 1993 ·

Healthlin.e

Though his smile
Is gooe forever,
:
And his harid
we cannot touch.
StUI we hf!Ve
• so many memorle~
the one we loved
· so much.
• · This memory Is
our keepsake
Wit!! which
we'll never part.
God hashlm
In his keeping.
Wehavehlm
In our hearts.

(304) 675-2828
..

. or

,-

Sadly Missed by
Your Loving Family

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Staled blda lor lha cttanlng ·~d palnttna ot 111e ....
·rlor ol a ground water ator·
age tank will bt racl.ved by'
tho VIllage Admlnlatrator Ill
tho • Otnco
of
the
Dtptrtm•nt of Public
Worko, Pomeroy Municipal
Building, 320 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789, until
12:00 o'clock noon, local
tlml, May 28, 19911 and then
at nld olllco publicly opan•d an~ read aloud.
The work· ~ovarld by the
plana and ep•clllcatlona
lncluctoa aend bleating and
painting ot """ 500,000 gal·
lorn w•lded aiHI ground
water IIOrogl tank 50 IHI
In diameter ,nd 3;'IIHI In
height.
· Tho plana end opaclllcatlona rtiay N examined II
the acldroaa lilted abOve,
Monday through Friday
8:00 AM to 5:00 PM .or
copl11 may bo obtotnad
upon poym•nt of $25.00,
· nont of which will b•
relund'l!.
Tho Vlllag• of P.omaroy
·reaervaa the right to fillet
any or oil blda and to wolve
lrr-oulorllill By order of
the VIll-a• ot Pomeroy thlo
10th dey of May, 199t.
John A. Andoraon
VIllage Adl'!llnlatrotor

Truck seats, _car seats, headliners,
'truck tarps, convenible &amp;vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc .
Mon· Frl 8:30 • 5:00
OVer 40 yra e~q~erlence

H&amp;H

" Bait supplied ·
Member may -bring
guest
Pr/zee &amp; Money

Food&amp; ·

WJOS

TV 27

Local
Television
For Free
Program Guide

Call 992-2727

"I'm Back"
Krll Younq former owner nf
KEm·s Applliltlcc Smvtw
Now TH E APPLIANCE MAN

CONSTRUCTION
*New Homes
*Additions
*Remod eling

98 5-3561
Parts- All Mi1kt&gt;s Sc:rvtcc - A11y

~mvmbvr

Applti1rlco we sr;llttsr;rl i1pfllt;mcr;
!J1ti·l~l !1HJI!·v H1dq1· fU llliHJl~n·t'Hn U!w1

OCICIIIty Is Job One
992-S7D 992-110.1:
Don~ Need

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

.

EXCAVATING
••• ......tr. dl

.w~•••g
Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior

15 y,.,

E:~rperienc"-

742•1701

PhOne (740) 593-6671

ANDERSON'S
FURNITURE, APPLIANCE &amp;FLOOR COVERING
OHIO
992-3671

•

..

Found : 1 Beaglt. AduttJMale ..
wilh collar, In Mtadowbroo"Orive area . (304)67!&gt;·4222 . after"
5PM.
•
Fo und: Copper Nosed Btag~;

Very Friendly. Malo. (740)·25f,
6419

Found: Female Dog. Mlxl!&lt;l. So(}&lt;r
Found: Rouwelltr Pup at Elk's.
Farm. Took to Animal Sheller
.•

Lost Blue TICk! Biakts Fork ftct.
Guyon TWP (740)-256-8739
Lo st: 2 Chlhua.hua Terr iers ar,
ounc Poi nt Plaasanl HIQ.h
School. 1 Llghl Brown rema.letanswers lo Kltly ; 1 , Reddl1h,
male/a"nswers
io
Buddv.
(304)675-3886.
.

Lost: child's black nylon AdldOs
jaCket. Star Mill Park Flower Fes--·
tlval , can 740-247-8701 or 74G~
949-3077.

Linda's Painting
Thke the pain out

Lost: Small City National Banll
Change Purse with Keys, In lW~
River Foodland Tuesday Even~.

of painting, and let
me do it for you.

740-985-4180

lng. 1304]675-3625 or (304)675·
1936, or mall to Twin River Tow·

er, · 200 2M St.,. Pt . Pl .. W.V, .
25550.

~efore

38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy,' Ohio 45769

1

Brown. Found on Annlaton OriYI ~
(304)675-:1693 . .

740-742-8608

FREE ESTIIAIATES

Male Blue Point Siamese. GteatJY_
Miss ed . Please If you tlnd her

cai: (740)·441!-4-412

70

Free Estimates

Yard Sale

CoU A Uule One

bRIVEWAY nONE
Landscape Material,
'lbpsoll &amp; Mushroom
Compost
Light Hquling

992·5455

N. Sayre
740·742·2138
3/11/99TFN

Now Open For·

Spring Seaaon
Complele Uno Of
Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
. All Flete $8.50 ·
f.:adad•1 8 • dtiin6 c.,..,liMfiU

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

29870 Baahtn Road
ftaclne, Ohio 4Sn1

•Roofing &amp; Gutttrt
•Vinyl Siding I Pointing
•Ptdlo &amp; Porch Dtclta
,,.. Etllllllln

HUIIAID'S

:1130 TFN

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

V.C. YOU.NG Ill
.

.Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Y"· Local

992-4119 OR 800·291-5600 .
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACTOR)" DIRECT l!RICES

Equipme111 Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Dealers.

~oe

992·5776

Gen

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

1""""':~-::~-':':'"--.,

1182-t215

8:00am-5:00pm, Adult &amp; Children·

Clothing . NordiC Tra ck, and

·

•Ntw Goreg"
•Eltctrlcll &amp; Plumbing

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
· Houra ·
7:00AM ·8PM

·

DIPOYS AG • 1069 saco~ctv;~~n~:Y 20.2.1:
1110...
r;
I •
.

SAYRE
TRUCKING

.ELF $TORA8E

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

,,

(740) 446-8247

QIUlllty Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Eatlmates

E~AIL:

SYIUCUSE

FORMERLY OF II 0 COURT SDEET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STAn ROUTE $.1
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 18 ·

740-84~-5280 daytime

Found Prescrlpt1on Sungtauei~
Rayburn's Market. State Rt. 7

CONNECTION

STETHEM@EUREKAHET.COM

Loat and Found

2 Labs· 1 Adult, 1 daughter.
Very friendly! GOOd Home Only!
Ph one calls only In Mornings(
(740)+256-6419

CONCRETE

INTERI0!'1
6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

•Room lddlllona &amp;'Rtmodltlng

.QUA.Ll'IT WINDOW SYSTEMS
Produce Workers Ne•edetd

60

~===:::::!
YOUR

Trailers - decks - driveways
Eq~pment Cleaned &amp; Dsgreased
.
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218

740-245·51114.

Young RoOster. (3 04)4e8~1&amp;15 .,
Affer 5PM.

Sunset Bonae
Construction

Trucks .. tractor

CU.:SSDREDSI

Gallia Counlyl

Tye Brlnager &amp; Sons·

WU1W.Sun•etllome.cum

TRI·STAIE MOBILE
POWER WISH

of

All Sofas, Loveseats, Sleepers and
Recliners are on sale!

2 Purrfectly Happy Healthy Ki·
tens : Black! 1· Male· 1· Female.
5 Month
Litter Trained! To

, . . . . . . . . . . ; - - - - - -.... : GoodHo.,.•.

17401691·9407
11401 691·6029

IREENHOUSE

740-949-2217

Lantern

2~7

SJQ£ AN..0W N Tt-£ 'MACh
,_..,., P'IOCl.S. 5HD' :n-E CLA.SSfEDS

Seplic Sy•lenu '&amp; Uliliti.e•

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

..HILL'S .

Japanese

One year old Calico Cat. 2·KII·
ttns t ·a Calico the other one is
Yellow and White ! (H0)·4o48·

. Bep•w

To The Residents

s1139 Flexsteel Sofa ........................_ .............- ..........5 79~
5
· 53009 flexstetl Sectlln~l ••••••• ~...................................... 797
sas9 erathnaster Sofa.-............~............................... 5599
$1419 CralttiiiiSier Sofa &amp; chair.;......................:............5899

Herb,

Planll, (3041882-2436.

Bulldooer &amp;: Badrhoe
Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
· Grading

A Bl&amp;' One

up to 8 ton

Power

''

at

Hauling

Cull today abuu• •pecial
price• thru .July on
Qualhy BuUt Houte•

Marty's
}·

Lillie&amp; of the Valley, Pennie Roy·

Gallipolis

"A

fiSHING DERBY
May 23rtl. 71M tlllioatl
lor all children up lo 1Syn.

FULlY

Construction

· SMITH'S

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Racine Gun Qub

wv.(3041773-5357.

40 742-8888

(5) 18, 20 2TC

c30 Announcements

Kittens to a good Mme. Can be .
seen at 302 3rd Street , MI$On.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Now Co!lllructlon &amp;
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing. Siding
Romodollng-Kltchen Cablntta '
..Special.i:;ins I'' Log Homes"
Vinyl Sldlng-Rools-oockaCommerciul &amp; Residential
Gar;gq
28 yrs. exp.
Li censed &amp; Insured ~ Free. E11Unate1
Phone 740·992·3987
740-742-3411
'f.!)·
John Dean ; Owner
Bryan Reeve•
Sutan Reeve•
Cft~ftfill~ftCJf;lJCJtt;rfJJ

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia haroby glv•n
Landsr:r.........•
that 9n S•turd•Y· May 21,
19911, at10:00 a.m., • public
aale will be, hald at 26
.I..
Railroad Street, Middleport,
949-1701
Ohio to
lor caeh the
following cotlatar•l:
.
=::;__,J . · - - - - - - - - ,
1984 CAROUNA MOBILE ~----~~~u.-..-.~
HOME 14X&amp;S
CMHRKNC14384
Th• Farm•re Bank •nd
eavlnga
Company,
Light Qommercial &amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio, reeerveathe
St. Rt: 7 Bewteen Five
Residential
right to bid llthle nit, and
to withdraw th• above
Points &amp; Chester
New Construction &amp;
collateral' prior to aal,,
FurtNr, Th• Fermera. Benk
We Custom Spray
Remodeling
end S.vlnga Company
FREE ESTIMATES
reeervta tht right to r•JICI
• Vegetables a Corn
17401667·6992
any or all bide aubmltlld. .
Further, tht ebov•
S~E RIVER ,
• Soybeans . ·
Qualltr Cra,lsmmhlp
collateral will bt told In tho .
Ao sEJMav
Guaruteed
condition 11. It In, with no
expraae or Implied
1
mo.
wuront111 glv•n.
For lurth•r Information, clr
lor en oppolntm•nt to viiiW
prior to .aol• contect Sheila
at 912·2138.
·
Rutland; Ohio
(5) 19, 20, 21, 26, 27,28 5T!:

••II

(741))-446-3693

St. Rt • .7

c

• Relalnlag Wall I Briel&amp;
hUG Caallnlctlaa
. D!JIIr• Certllled

.Je•reenay

Freo qog SpayO&lt;l Male. ~an Ger·
man , ,ovely, sweet dispollton l

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

CaD 985•3831.

Pleasant Valley Hospital 24-Hour
Ava iIabiIity
..

•

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
.
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stlrburat
Progrealve top 1111•·
Uc. II D0-50 11n"""

.. • Lawa car. • Dnlp

·

NOW
1999
Fle~steel Florai ·SDfa...........................................5699.
51729 Berkhne Sedlonal wI reclnars.........""...............s1199 ·
.. '1 059 Flexsteel Sofa .............................,.......................5741

I

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages

--Community Calenda~'--1'-

REG.

8:30T05:00

INC.

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrasament ...

• DONATION TO BAND- At Tuesday night's Meigs Marauder Band
banquet, several members of Feeney•Bennetl Post 128, American
Legion, were guests end presented a $1,000 check to the Meigs
Band Boosters. They were presented a plaque by Toney· Dingess,
band director, for a contribution made earlier this year. Accepting
the check was Mark Michael; treasurer, from Russ Mozingo, Jerry
Haw_ley, and Joe Anc!reonl, legionnaires, _left to right.

SON'SS

STORE HOURS
t.'ON·SAT

BI$.SELL BUILDERS,

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

I

·,

Jerry L. Preece
Crown Cltv. OH 45623 .

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

1·740·667·3083
1·740-667·3316

old. good """'"r, (30o&lt;)e7!1-1!022. •

.

Daily Sep.tinel

Call For Free Estimates

20 Yrs. Exp .. • Ins. Owner: Ronn ie Jones

Local student , speak on UMW members hear about
Day of Prayer observance
issue of school violence

Get the latest in "sports news from the

•

Ou1Uty clothing end hou11notd•
ft1ms. $1.00 bag nle every
Thurlday. Monday thru Saturday

Squeeze mixture onto c&lt;Jkc. maktng

the things they cannot understand
By AMBER MAYNARD
without os traciz ing nnyone?
Sentinel Student Writer
Several Southern High Sc hool .
Once aga in , anoth er hi gh
school has had to endure another · st ud e" nts- voi ced the ir op im ons Qn
shooting. Parents, teac hers, polit· th e sitUati on:
ical leaders, and man y others. are
Senior Da ve Nance sa1d, "I
now sc ramblin g to -try and find would say th at my opi nion on the
the warning sign s you, as a ·par- whole situati on is th at the boys
e~t . can look 'for in . the kid s of · were probably han\ssed and made
your community.
. . fun of while they were younger
· Are there actual warning and they had all the peopl~ pi cked
·, out who they wanted to kill. ·
signs?
What is ·happe nin g to cau se
And as for the bl a[ll in g of the
students to become so de sperate two bands, Marilyn Manson and
they reach for a gun instead of a Ramstein , is tota lly idiotic,
helpin g hand ' 'What can we do to beca use the whole world bl ames
keep this from happeni ng in our . the mu s ic. There is no .music in.
cOmmUnity?
the world that will influ ence you
Students s houldn ' t co me to 10 do ' s uch things as kill an other
school afraid that someone will' pcrso"n "
st&lt;~rt opening fi re at ra nd om. A
Juni or · Ca rl y Crow said , "In
school should be a place for edu - my opini on. I fee l th at !he media ,
catlon, not violence.
parc'nt s , and s tud e nts who
·. But , on the other hand , stu- harasse d th e two gunmen are t"o
_dents shouldn ' t co me to schoo l bl ame. Of cou rse, as always, yo u
with the feelin g of dread· of being ar c · rCspunsihle for your · own
ridiculed for loo kin g or act in g actions , but I hcl icvc thi s inc id ent
different. Wh o has · tau ght ·is special.
teenage rs to j udge th emse lves
.Sure if: th e two ot he r te ens had
solel y on appearanc e"'
not tnkcn their ow n It vcs a ft er
: Why are those ridiculed st u- killin g the others. the y should
dent s resorting to such n viole nt ha ve rece ived a ju stifi ab le pun·
. r"c sol uti on?
i s hm ~fl t which ·in my eyes.
: Why have all of these ques- W(·1uld be ei th e r impri so nm ent or
tions and problems been ignored th e nc x. t poss ible c ll o icc . the
for so lon g' Ignorin g the se proh- death pe nalt y."
lems ·in our sc hools wi ll not make
Said ju nior Tara Rose. "I thin k
'
. tliem di sappear.
if o ur soc ie ty took 1cens ser ious ly
Should parents have a part in that thi s may not have happened ."
the blame , or should soc iety. as a ·
Rc.aders everywhere are probawhol e, be to blame for spotli ght · bl y tired of hearing/readin g about
· ing all of the prc v10u,s acts of VIO· th is. but thi s prob lem is not going
len ce in sc hools· and then show- to leave o n it s ow n. It 's titne we
i_ng the shooters who don't com- take a~.:tiun and reach out to our
mit suicide walking 'away from tee ns before it 's to o late .
tire sce ne with hardly any punishment at all'
Toleran ce plays a ke y role in
the probl ems we are just now
(Editor's note: Amber May·
beginnin g to recog nize .
nard, a junior at Southern High
Why ha ve n' t pare nt s taug ht School, was a, regular contribu·
their children to tolerate the dif- tor~s year to the monthly
ferences in each other, to accept Southern School Page.)
·

~·

7-10-592·11'2

um heal , stirring occasionally. until
mixture boils : boil I minute.
Remove from heat; set a'ide.
Stir together sugar, flour, baking
soda and salt in large bowl. Add
eggs, sour cream and cocoa mixture;
beat just until blended (bauer will be
thin). Pour into prepared pan.
• Bake 45 to 50 minutes or until
wooden pick inserted in ce nter
comes out clean: Cool cake complete ly in pan on wire rack. Carcfu lly invert cake onto serving tray : peel
off foil.
Place peanut butter chip s and
shortening in small mi crowave-safe
bowl. Microwave at hi gh (100 per·
cent) 30 to 45 seconds or until mixlure is melted when stitTed. Place
mixture in rcdoseable small plastic
hag; cui off tiny sec tion of corne r.

" 1/2 cup unswcctcm:d ~.:m;oa pow ~. li nCs to look \ike a grill 's grid: allow
der
· to firm up before cullin g. Top with
· 2cups sugar
"burgers'' and "shish kebabs,"
. I 3/4 cups all-purpo&gt;C !lour
desired .
: I teaspoon haki ng :-;oda
Makes I 5 scrv mgs.
1/2 teaspoo n sa lt
Cocoa f'udge " llurge rs "
3 eggs
· 1/4 .r.: up :-.oft~ n cd hultc r or nfar 3/4 cup dairy sour cream
gann c
2/3 cup peanut hu!!cl·chips
1 ~ups powdered sug;w
I tca~poon solid vq~c tahk !'.hurt1/2 cup I.:OL"\)~1
·
cning
2 tahk~poon s milk
Cocoa Fudge "Burgers·· {t\."•,:q)c
1/2 tc a:-.poon vanilla cx trad
follow s). opti onal
BciJI huuer or m argari n~ in m cdi ~
- Fruit-jelly cund tes fo r "kebabs_... um howl until crc;.uny: add sugar.
optional
coco". milk and vani lla t..:xt racJ. B~at
Heal oven to 350 F. Lin e 13 -hy- un1ll all in gredient s arc rnoi s r Cn~d
9: by-2-i nch baking pan with alu - and _Df J consistency to hold its
minum fo il ; grease and ll our sides shape : add addi ti onal mil k or sugar.
and bol!om.
if neces sary. to get suit nble cons isPlace wa ter. buucr and cm:oLt in tency. Fonn .pa!!y shapes: place on ·
medium saucepan. Cook over mcdi - top of .. grill. ·· ·

•

'WMIStk'nlon, ~

1000 Sl. Rt. 7 Soulh
Coo/viii•, 01:1 46723

1

.....
WICKS.
HaULinG
InC.
J1l

We Deliver

Mulch , Top'Soil
(Low Rates) .

74()..992·3470

1-800-967-4774
AtOU

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

ond
Avenue. May 21 &amp; 22 Galli··
::;::PDIOl=s·~---5 family Thur. /Fridii'J, Lola of

ry lhing. 9:00-7.

M '

No Early Blrd&amp;L
Lower Garfield Ext. Guns, Knit~.

~~~51Nice Clothes. Househol~.
AL.L Yard S.lll MUll

t!o Pold In Advonc:e.
OfAQLINf: 2:00 p.m.
the rilly .. the od
11 10 run. Sundlly
odltlon • 2:00p.m.
F&lt;*Y. llondoy od!tlon
• 10:00 o.m. S.tunloy.
Friday &amp; Sa tu felay 1112 ,miles out
Lincoln Pike. Adult, Girls, Boys'
Clot hes , Knick Knack&amp;, Glass-:.
ware. , Antique Dres ser. Lots
Morel
Friday-Saturday 8·2 . Infant . Kids.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985 4473

Lost Puppy
On FlatwoOOs lld.,
Lab/Mix Black, with
White maikings on each
paw, tip of rail, .and
across chett

lewerll far Iter letu••· •

Mull clothes . Formal Wea r,
Toys. Mucl'l More .. 57 Amby
Lane. VInton
House Salat May 21 , 22 re"centty ;
moved, must dOwn size, antiques, 1

antiques Furniture, washer &amp; dry·,..!
er, refrigerator, ai r. condlllontrs~ ~~ ·

microwave, jars. Old bookt

erotMs. ml&amp;c.
Bulaville Pike.

4 mllea out , 4401
1
.
~ ,

Yard Sale!! 16 16 JaCkson Pike: :
Gall~is . Thu : Fti; 5at.,
•,
I

Pomeroy, .

'

Middleport .
.i
• VIcinity
.;
..,.4-m.,lle_s_o_u"'lS::R::-:-14"'3-o.::n"'F-rld_a_yt I
Saturdav. 9·4. kUs of misc. otd &amp;, 1

new.

•

All Y1rd SIIH Mutt Be Pekl .ll' :
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
d1y betore the ed Ia to run, ,
Sun dey I. Mondey edltlon or
1:IIOprn Frldoy. ·
•' ,

1

Garage &amp;ale· Friday (5121). 8-( :
on top ol Chollor hill (Sr. 24~ '
baDV &amp; toeldlar ctolhlng,

womo""'
houtf ~

&amp; rnttn'l CIOtn lng, lhOII,
hold ~-. 'l'y t!oanto Babies.
RACO yard salt· Star Mill

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Vlnlon &amp; l.awleiKe co~nlieS .

CALL TODAY TO IEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

tarior. Yard Ornaments. and misc.'
Household Items. 8.-4pm Rain or

Limest011e, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,

Refuse Service

A loatlty tompany with over .28 YJS
axperle"'e has now extended our coverage area to
Include .all of Gallio Co. and portions of Meigs,

Saturday. 2t,22,291h, a mtlao oul
55&lt; lrom Cha&amp;hlre just'pall OU\back Csrryout. Ch ildren&amp; clolhn,
lays. bikes. Sweepers. Home '"'

'
. Shine!
I 3 Family Yard Sale at 535 Sec-

='~·~;1~1~7~..-a~~~~

~

Housai'MiiC """"· •
2 Family Garage Silt Friday~

005

Peraoilala
FrM lnttmo&lt; Accos&amp;l
1-!100·226-5889 Ext.2708, $2.99
Pltr. Min. Must bo 18 YrJ Old.
Serv·U(6I 91·6&lt;1S-8434
Star·! Dall ng Tonlghll Have lun
playtl)(l !ht Ohio Dating Garno, I·
IJOO.ROMANCE, extenSion &amp;eat .

.,

Pat ~

May 20·21. 9:00am. Cloth Ina: ;

dishes, pan1, hou ..hold WI'*·
softener. Chrl1tn\aa decoretl~ •.
lamps, and tlblll , TV, Jewelr,, •
appllaneaa , llntf'll, curttlns. gDM '
'ctdd~. CBf'ldlta, olllampa,
keta, purna. mlac. Procttda

b-.1

fii • ·

to SHS oehOtarsnlps. AI! cton_l-·

tr ona appreciated. TO donate citt'

Da•• Zirkle, 740·949·2031, Oat.;!
740·949·2858 or Frank Cto-,o
lan&lt;t. 7~·949-2071. w"""'-' do-1nallnO or IIUytng- tllanka lOr youi"

Hart.

~I

~

• ••

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'thursday, May 20, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 1 ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
------------~---------------- .

PHILLIP
ALDER

320 Mobile Homaa

Pt. Pleaaant

•

&amp;VIcinity
May 20 21 22 Household &amp;
Baby llama Mens/Womens,
Girls Clothlng(slzes 12mo 6yrs)

Nllen ~ GaiNpolls Ferry
Sidewalk and Porch Sale Friday
and Saturday May 21s1 &amp; 22nd
lOAM 5PM 100 Chestnut S!
Henderson WV Glassware
New/Old, lots of Mise llems

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering
Complete Auctioneering Servic
es Cons1gnment auction Mill
Street Middleport Thursdays
OhtO Lice nse t7693 740 989

2623
Rick Pearson Auction Company
full lima auctioneer comple te
aucllon serlflce
Licensed
166 Ohio &amp; West Virglma 304·

773-5785 Or 304 773-5447
RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 7 PM

Crown City 740-2-98!
Wedemeyer s "uclion Service
Gall1po~s

90

Ohio 7&lt;0-379-2720

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar A.ll U S Sll
ver And Gold Coins Proofsets
Diamonds Antique Jewelry Gold
Rings Pre 1930 US Currency
Sterl ng Ere Acqulslllons Jewelry
MTS Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740-446-2842
Ant•ques top prices paid Rwer
ina Anl!quss Pomeroy Ohio
Au ss Mo ore owne r 740 992

2526
Cl ean late Model Cars Or
Trucks t990 Models Or Newer
Smith Buick Pontiac t900 East
ern Avenue Gal~pohs
Want To Sell Your Stuf1? Call Atv
erslde Auction And let Us Sell It

For You 74().2-989
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 0

Help Wanted

SSIMake Moneyl$$$ Work At
Home

Now laking applications lor e11·
perlencod grill &amp; prep cook Apply

at Han's Kounlr)' Kllehen Aaelno
OP\lo between tna hours of 2·4

Compounds Soaplau Anti Re·
SOli Detergents ustd exclusive·

Overbrook Canter -333 Page St

ly Safe for all fabrics Fasl dry

aJl!lllcation E 0 E
~rson

with positive attitudes and
excellent work ethic: Ability to ap·
ply serv1ce techniques, telephone
sktlls and computer sk1ls to work
well wlth clients 1 on 1 and com
plele multi tasks Wilh aHenUon to
detail Complete benefits pro·
gram Send Resume CLA 472 %

Postal Jobs to $t8 35/Hr Inc
benellts No Experience For
App And Exam Info Call 1 eoo813 3585 Ext 8826 8AM·9PM
7 Days Ids Inc
RoCksprings Rehabllitatlon Center
ls now accepting applications lor
part time hou!iekeeplngf la undry
and dietary aide positio ns Must
be able to work all shins and weekends Apply In person to fill ou t
an application or send resume to
Rocksprings Rehab/Illation Cen~
ter 36759 Rockspring s Rd Po

mercy OH 45769 EOE
Scenic Hills Nursing canter Is
currently accepting applications
For a Day Shift Treatment Nur.se
(Weekends Only) Please apply at
3 I 1 Buck rid ge Ad Bidwell Oh

456t4

Seeking Certt!le d Nurse. Aides
Part Ttme Rotattng Shifts West
VIrginia certification req uired
Appl~ at Poi nt Pleas ant Center/
Genesis E!dercare State Route
62 Route 1 Box 326 Point
Pleasant WV 25550 EOE
SerYice Technician Needed by
National leader In Mobile Home
Sates Prerer Related Experience
Benefits Included 401K Call

(740)-446 7156

Someone to spend the nlgnt with
the

elder/~

4pm Bam 5 days per

week $10 par day 140·992-5039
or 7-40-992 4410

180

Wanted To Do

Beanie Baby Show
Sunday May 23 1999 10 00 to
3 00 Holiday Inn Route 71 Route
35 Gallipolis Current Retirees
P1llow Pals anft Anlc Ttreasures

Starting At $5 00

Homeowrker s AssOCiation P 0

First Time In Area Very large
ASQrtmentl

Oatallsl Send S AS E To Nat I Display Boxes Free

AVON! Al l Areasl To Buy or Sell
Shirley Spears, 304 675-1429
Avon Products Start your own In
Home Business Work Flexible
Hours Enjoy Unlimited Earmngs

I 688 561 2866
Carpel cleaner/helper Mechanic:
aptitude helpful Valid drivers II
cense &amp; ability to read map Must
be atE to move turnlture Reply to
PO Sox 453 Pomeroy OhiO
45769 or 7.CO 992 6788
Computer Users Needed Worlc
Own Hrs $25K $80KI Yr 1 800
476-8653 X 7771 www 1cwp oom
Eas~

Work/ Exce llent Payl As
semble Products at Home Call
Toll Free 1·600·467·5566 Ext

12170
Excellent opportunity to join the
long te rm heallh care fi eld Ll
consed Practical Nurses Rotat
lng shifts lntBrm.edlate care can
ter West VIrginia license re·
qulred Apply al Point Pleasant
Center/Genesis Eldercare State
Route 62 Route 1 Box 326
Point Pleasant WV 25550 EOE
Excellent opportunity to join the
long term health care lletd Director ol Nursing Intermediate care
center Have lour or more years
of nurs ing exJ?erlence and pos
sass a "Valid We st Virg inia Reg
!s terad Nurse Ucense Compre
henslve bene fit package avail able Apply by torwardlnQ reaume
to Point Pleasant CenterfGenesls
Eldercare State Route 62 Route
1 Box 328 Point Pleasant WV

I

Chlldcare provider DHS certified
18 years experience have three
openings Mtddleport- Rutland
area call740-992 6718
Christian Lady wll! babysit In my
home (weekdays) 12 Years Ex
parlance Good Reterancasl

(740) 441.0359

CNA With 20 Yrs Exp And Ex
cell Aelerences Has Private
Room And FuJI C818 tn Her Home
For The Elderly For More Info
740 256·6342 Also Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wheel Chair
Accessible
E &amp; S Lawn Service Design 1m
and Service
plementatlon
Available lor Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free esu ..
mates Satisfaction guaranteed

Greg Milhoan 3041675 4628
Electri c Maintenance Service
Wiring Breaker Boxes Llghl Fix
tu re Heating Systems and Re

modeling (7A0)441 1401

Georges Portable Sa wmill don t
haul your togs to the mill just call

304 675 1957
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construction &amp; Remodel!
Drywall Sidin g Roofs Add l

%Gallipolis Dally Tribune Galllpo
Jewelry Sales Retail Sales and
Computer Experience Required
Ac quisitions Fine Jewelry 151
Seco nd Ave Gall\polls Apply

Monday thru Fridll'!
Kit chen help wanted 30 to 40
hours pe r week evening work
4pm 1o 10 or 11pm appy Mond11'/
or Tuesd ay after -4pm at D&amp;M
Pluas &amp; Subs S~racuse Oli
Local Trucking Company Seeking
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits Send Resume
To Driver P 0 Box 109 Jack

-

son Ohio 45640 Or Call 1 740

286 1463 To Schedule An Inter

40K CBI 80().863-7440
Medical Procttea or FT fPT No

Exp Nac Wlllllrtln PC Aeq Earn

40K C81110().863-744()

Multi Ollict WOlker· part tlma
general office experience com~

puler/ keyboard knowledga pur·
c:hastng, corr~tpondence billing,

porcl'les $14 400 or b&amp;sl offer

Call (304)773-9107 or (304)773
5155
16x80 Vln~l ShlnOie

Assume

Loon 1·800-383-6682

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

bile holM 7&lt;0-992 5039

Need sitter for the summer? Gay
care wllh a pool Open Monday
thru Friday ask for Kp lly 740
667-6460 Tuppers Plains area

Painting, lawn IIMce &amp; plumbing
Low rates Call740 591 9617

Will do odd lobs, hauling
(304)675-4538
Will Haul Anything! Clean Up any
thing' Work lor $5 00 houri (740)
367-D140 Pkts Try 5arvlee
Yard work mowing hedges wind
ows gutters, painting call 740·
992 3193 or 7.C0·992·7821 ask
tor Dana or leava a message

Buslnaas
Opportunity

INDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO
rec ommends thai you do busl·
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have trwesugated

the ollarlng

230

Prof111lonal
Services

tiona accepted until 5pm June 4

WALL·CEIUNG CLEANED E¥·

TURNED DOWN ON

1-888-!112·3345
PERTLY Savta on repainting In
dellnltely We Ult the IICCI\.I&amp;Ive
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall
Cleaning System Protects palnl
leaves glaaa, retards chalking
AnU· MIIdew, no odor, aenltlzea

Per Weak, Day Shill Only, Cake
Dacoratlng E•porlonce Required
Wllh Reaume, Coli Gallpolla Dairy Froo ootlmatol Oalt Clearly
Queen, 740-446-3278
Cllan 11 (304)675-40&lt;10

Apartments
for Rent

'i;itii!i·l
•
740.387.0563 7&lt;0-245-5672

1n Clifton

$100 00

This newspaper will not
knoWingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is tn vlolatton of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised 1n this newspaper
are avaMable on an equal
opportuntty bas1s

~lll!...!"!'ll!lf!lilll!.--..llil
R EAL ESTATE

31 0 Homes for Sale
2 Year Old Frame Home 2 Bed
rooms Kitchen/Living Room Utili·
ty Bath Baseboard Heat 1/2
Area 112 mile from 35 Thwman

$39 500 00 (740) 682 9032 or
(740) 682-6347
2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 3BA
1 1/2 BA Family Room Gara ge
Centra/Air Patio Porch $77 000

(304)675-2533
3 Bedroom Split Entryr Qrlck
Home on Route 2 81 Mt Alto
BUilt In Kitchen, Dlnlngroom, LA
3 Baths FP: Woodburnlng stove
on rmarly 5 acres land (304)895

388t

3 Bedrooms 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Vears Old 28x30 Anacned Ga
rage 12x24 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed 69 1/2 Acres Or

Will Sell House &amp; Loti Malgs Co
740 992 3537
By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate will sell house with
out lo ts lor $89 000 740-992·

2704, 740-992 5698
By Owner Sandhill Road Point
Pleasant Brick/Aanch 3Bed
rooms 2Baths 8asemen1 Two
2 Car
Garages
Acre

Lo1{740)44HI618
Cheshire Area 1500 Sq ft Cen
ter Air Gas/Heat 3 Bedrooms
Kitchen and Dining Room (740)

367-D241
Corner Lot 2605 Garfield Ave

Pt P1 , $69,900 (304)675 3379
Don t Walt To Buy 3 Bedroom
Home In New Haven, Good Con
dttlon
$32 000
Appra ised

$39 000 (304)882 3772

EXCELLENT CONDITION · 2
Story 3 Bedrooms 2 1/2 Baths
Near Holzer Immediate Posses
SIOR 740-446-9672

Good selection of used homes
wllh 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting al
'3995 Oulc:k del1very Call 740

3082
House For Sale Centrally Locat
ed 2321 Jellerson Avenue . PI
Pleasant
(304)675~1368
or

(304)895-3184
Large 8 Rooms 2112 Baths Well
Equ1pped Kitchen Appliance&amp;
stay 2 Woodburlng Fireplaces
Hot Water &amp; ele ctric Heat AC
1t /2 ml1 In City of GallipoliS Ask·
lng &amp;169 000 001 Shown by Ap·

polntmanl&amp;l (740) 446-4559

Fam11y Home With Pool 2 Car

Garge/ Apl Albany 7 Miles 0 U
Ma~s Mine 740.698 7150
Restored VIctorian home sttuated
on t2 acres. Village Middleport
secluded and private appoint
ment cal 740-992 5698
Spring Valley 2 story famlry
home 4 Bedroom 2 112 Baths
Living Room Dining Room, Eat In
Kitchen Lg Family Room 740·

Mob ile Home For Sale Ce ntral

(304)738 5554

Air 740 441Hl885

t997 14x70 Trailer 2 Bedrooms

WV $499 Down Si ngle Wide
$999 Down D.ouble Wide 304·
738-3409

330 Farms for Sille
26 Acres MIL, 6 Stall Horse Barn
3 Becroom House Fence 740·

38lHI504

340 Business and
Commercial Building In Hender
son For Sale or Lease Call

(803)366 9436

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 Acre + wllh 14K70 38R 1 1/
2BA Tra iler with 3 porches
$22 500 (304)576 2890

1 Ac re Land wanted to build onl

(740) 245 5662
$15 000 (304)682 3772
5 Acres Blackto p Fro ntage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallla County
$32 000 More Acreage Available

74().388 8876

6 Miles from Town State Route
141 Road Frontage Co Water

(740) 379 2830 Aftar 5 00 pm

Almost 5 Acres On Blacktopped
Jim Hil l Rd 17 500 In Mason
County Septic Tank, Cit~ Water
Access Cave On Back Of Prop

erly Must Sell Call 313 294
24411
LAND

In The Country Meigs Count~
near Rutland Making deals on
Combination Lots 5 to 15 Acres
ot rolling woods, great bulldklg
sites or use as hunting land
Starting 0 $9 500 County water
Double wide&amp; are Permitted 5o/o
down L8'nd Contract Free Maps!

1 (900) 213-8365

360

B~e
kthrough !ll

Lose 10 200
P
Easy Quick
Fast
Ora aile Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended FrM Sam-

7806
2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To University OJ Rio Grande

,

2bdrm apts total etectrlc ep
pUances lurnlshed laundry room
facilities cloaa to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts t49 or call 740 992

3711 EOH
4 Bedroom Apartments tor Low
Income Families Call for Income
Limits Available now to qualified

lam•lles Call (740)-446 0251
Apartment for rent In Middleport
no pets 740 992 5858

ESTAT.ES 52 Westwood Dtlve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2!568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Christy s Family Living, apartments home &amp; trailer rentals,
740 992 4514 apartments avail
able furniShed &amp; unfurnished.
First Ave,nue One .And Two Bed
rooms From $275 $3!501Mo Sa
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Across From Park AC, No Pet&amp;
References Deposit $325/Mo

740 446-6235 74().446.0517
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tuniUes.
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment

(740)-446-o390
Now Taking Applications- 35
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage, Trash $3151Mo , 740

4411 00011;
One bedroom apartment In Mid
dteporl one bedroom furnished
house In Gallipolis 740-992.g191

seal Slnlller (304)675 4548

Wo Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 6385
Anlhony Land Co
RENTA LS

Case Wind ow Air Con ditioner

$1 500 2 112 Ton $1 350 2 ton

$1 250 The Above lnc: luder; Nor
mal InstalLation If You Don t Cafl
Us W• Both Lose/740 446-6308

Or t 80().291 0096

Discount Mob41e Home

Parts &amp; s""*'
Huge Inventory
VInyl Sklrllng Klls $299 95 5 Gal
!on Aluminum Flbered Roof Paint

Supply 740 4411-9416 Galllpoll•
Ohio

For

one Price varie ty Store
Closeout li~ms Showcases Ta·
bias Craft Supplies And Mise

(740)·258-8206

460 Space for Rent

MER C HANDI S E

Goods

2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis

304-576-2438
2 Bedroom w/Basemant &amp; Ga
rage Deposit &amp; References No

Po18 (304)875-5162
2 BR lurnlahed home In Mason
No pats References required

qulred $300 monlh (304)875·
1972
3 Bedroom 2 112 Batf1 wUh Ga·
rage beside Hartford Co mmuni!~

Buldlng (304)67!5-2484

5 Rooms and Bath full size Ba se
ment New Carpel/ {740) o( 46·

required, 614 7597959
Beautiful River View Nice Two
Bedroom 1 1/2 Balhroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp;
Refrigerator Baument One Car
Garage washer /D~r Hook Up
Oepotlt I References Required ,

No Poll, Atnl Discount Call 7&lt;0-

992·5502
Rent R1190 Naar North Ga~a
$400 00/monlh, Oapoalt $400
No Petsl Aoloraooa Alter 8 DOpm
(740)-446-8495
Your Home 11 Just A Phone Call

IIOQ.383-e862

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

15C F Frettzer New Quilting Ma·
chine 4 Collector Barbie Dolls
ACA VIdeo Camera Heavy Duty
Kit chen Mixer Nlkkon 6008·
35mm Camera w/acceuorlee
BTC Computer w/t 7* Monitor &amp;

Epson Printer (740)33!H 602
Sale 9 wooden Kltchert Cabinets
Needs refin ishing Best Offer/
(7-40) 446 3607 anytime on Wee
kends. aner e p m on W8ek days!
A.ppllancea
Recondit ioned
washers Dryers Ranges, Refrl
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446

530

Antique•,

$20 900 00 4630 55PTO HP
same specs 22 900 301 0 2WD
42 PTO HP

1 Remote Wet

Braka lnd PTO 13 500 00 3010
4WD Same Specs 18 500 oo
Come 5ee The New TN55 65 75
4WD models with Super Steer
will turn shorter than a 2WD
Keefers Service Center St At
87 Pt PleBSant &amp; Ripley Road

Phone (304)895-3874

• Q 9 5

•A107532
• 8 52
Eaal
Weol
• 10 8 6 3
• KQ975
• J 7
• 8 32
• K Q J
• 6
• 10 6 4 3
• K J 9 7
South

CD Title and Crulll PW Pl'l
Sunrool Sap, Excel! Condlllon
New transmission and clulch Tur·

bo $UOO OBO (740) 992·6871
(740) 38H461
93 Mercedes 190·E. 72,000

• A 4 2

miles aun root, leather, always '

garaged $13 500, 740-9492677

• A K 10 6 4

Ohio valley Bank will oftor lor ......
by Public Auction t990 Pontla~
Grand Am 1322836 at 10 00 AM ,

•AQ

on 6/51'99 at the

ova Annex

Third Avenue. GoHipolls Oh

• 9 8 4

to Highest tMddtr•aa la·whtrl ta•
without expressed or Implied war
ranty &amp; may be sean by calling,
the Collection dept at (740)·44h
1038 OVB r~&amp;erves the right to
accepllreject from &amp; all bids &amp; •
withdraw Items trom ule prior to

sale Torma or Sale . CASH OR
CERTIFIEO CHECK

looks goOd $2000 740-9492246

Storage Bulldoro 8paca
30'll40 x8, Pa"&gt;led Stael Siding
Galwluma Steel AOQIIng t5:x8
track door 3 walk door $6,888

1987 International 468 Dle aeC'
Dump Truck £nglnt· Low Mill•..:..
age New Ttrea, New Beclllner :"
12 000 00 ftrm
111
Hooper Equlpmenl Trailer Trl - 11
Axle New Tires Pantel Hitch "
$350000 firm
.;
1985 Dodge Pickup Runs Good ,.,
1988 Dodgt Dakota Pickup, 5~
Spd, Charcoa l Gre~ Red Slrlpe,.
And Red Topper Nice! $1 !500 00
740-379 2566
~

"

1992 GMC Eklended Cab No,..

;:

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problema ? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Dr 74().446-4525

Health Rider like new paid $500
asking S100 electric range ask

1ng $50 cal 740-949-2401

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Aapalrld Na~ &amp; AebuHt In SIOCk
Con Ron Evans t-800.537·9528

740 698 3290
Baby Goals lor sale [304)675·
1870
Fair Pigs for S&amp;lel Excellent Blood
llnesl For more Informal/on Call

0" 35 Righi On Kaelef Road

Blue

HouaaOhLell

Plus End Tobias Included! Call

years old $700 001 (740)·387
7227

71 0 Autos for Sale

F,.. DINCt Spec ..l
Call now 1·800-263-2640

liat.~~~f.:~:::
Installation
And Service Supply We Sell
Wholesale To Tht Public Wa
Stock Janltrot Heating And Coot
lng Equipment Duct Work Reg·
lsters, And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Furnish A List Of Dealers To
Install For Vou If You Don t Call
Us We Both Lose! 553 Jackson

0098
Schoolbus, Pallet Dolly Snow
Blower, Elactrlc Sewer Cleaner,
used Gas Weed Eaters vacuum

Pumpa (740) 4411-4762

Poll ee Impounds
And Tax
Repo s For Lie lings Call 1·800

319-3323 Ext 4420
1985 Olds FrJenza statton wagon

low mileage some ruel goOd work
car S700 740 949 2660 (even
lngs )

1985 4 door 6 Cl Runs U50 00
(740) -1568
1966 Buick Grand Nallonal
73 ooo mile • Asking S6,500 oo
(740)-448-41119
1988 Toyora Corolla 146 000
Ulles $1 350, 1988 Ford LTC
Slallon Wagon 139,000 $1 900
'14().441 9$06
1989 2 we 112 ton Suburban Sll·
verado Package, Cu1tom Paint

740

314 200 PSI

$21 95 Par ioo t' 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 All Brass Com·
pras~on Fittings In Slock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio HI00.537·9528

550

Building
Supplies

85 Polar/us Tral1ball 4·Whaeltr

Good
Condition 109 000 Miles, S2 300

oeo 740-2sa.t233
t993 Dodge Splr\t, 4 Cylinder
loaded U 500 (30jl)875-3773
Mllaaga 100,500 Alklng $3,100
(740)-446-8508
1 ~93 Pontiac Grand AM Teal,

L - $3 BOO 00 (740)-8408

1994 Chevy Beretta 3 1V Auto

Pets for Sale

1 Year Old Black Lab
(304)875-1972 Alter6PM

$100

Jack Russell Terrier Puppltl ,

$ZOO Each (740) 245-5597
AKC
Regla tered
Miniature
Dachshund puppies red &amp; dap~

pll 74().992 9969

Buy or sell Riverine Anllqun

AKC Whlta German Shophord
1124 E Main Stroot on At 124 Pups Pick t ·Male and t·Fomara
Pomeroy Houri M T W 1 o 00 Loft! (740)·245·9213
•
em to 600 pm, Sunctty 100 to

B 00 p m 740·992·2528 Ru11 Floh atrds Pond Suppllll
Sun 1 4PM Mon ·Sat 11 AM
Moorltownor
6PM Fish Tank/Pel Shop, 2413
Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant
540 Miscellaneous
(304)675 2063
Merchandise
1 year old Deep Freaze Cheat

Blu e Point Siamese Kittens

'TYPoj740) 44111566

150 oo (740)9446-4412

&amp;ROLJ~i,HT

AC, PW POL 75 000 mllet
S5 309 00 OBO (740)-441-0223

1996 Goo Me1ro 2 Door 4 Cylln
dtr, Autorn

AIC, Oa•aene

53 000 Milot $3,100 00 OBO
740-256-64e7, 740-256-9183.
1991 Font Atpiro, Actual 14,000
mlloll Uko Nowl $1,400 00 (740~
256·1417 or (740)·256-8226
1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded,

28,000 Milos, Bal Faot W1rr h·
oolllnl Condlllon P1lco Roduoodll
740-446-64111
1997 Hondo, Coupe Special
Edition 2 Door. Fully Loaded
$14 500 (304)882 2823, 1\ller
7PM

1998 Ooap Purple Chevy Covill·
.. (304)675-7071

YOU THE.

wHOA, WAIT
A t11NVTE'
IPEA 1
&amp;ltlLLIANT
IOEA 1

HERE
5 NEE1.E

INTO
THIS

c. up

OK/W

CO ME A
l-ITTLE.

CLO~Eft

1

250 AlES $1 500 00 (304)-e75·
5612
A 1991 3!50 4 Wheeler Auto ,

Vory Good Condition S1 700
OBO (304)773-5103 Aflor ~PM

South
1.

w..l
,.

North
2.

for Sale

•

~19:::8::7~C=-h~r-:-ls"!C~ra~r'"t~c""u-d~d~y-:C:-1-:-b,-ln ~

19 VB Marc 'Excellent Condf. ~
tlon
New Cover
$7,000 o..

(304)675·2329

4•

Pass

Pass

38 Earth'•

By Phillip Alder
Do you hke deals m whtch world
champ10ns mtsplay contracts you 're
sure you would have made? I do ••
but 1t JUSt goes (o sho"' that no o ne
ts perfect (Sounds hke a comment on
spouses too )
Well how would you play m four
heans afler WeSI has led the spade
ktng?
If West had known hts partner
held four-card support, he would
have been tempted to save m fo ur
spades Note that four spades doubled
costs at most 500, tf the defense gets
tts club ruff
The stmple route ho me m four
hearts ts lo ruff your two spade losers
m the dummy . eventually losmg two
dt amonds and one club There arc
some commumcat10n proble ms bul
wtth the actual trump posn 10n, you
should survtve
The world champiOn perhaps had
ovennc ks m mmd After "mnmg
rnck one he played a dtamond to
dummy s ace and anotl1e1 dtamond,
West dtscard mg an encourag mg club
Declarer fm essed on the club sw ttch,
Wesl wmmng wnh the kmg and e"l·
mg w1th a club Now, w hen declarer
led ht s last dtamond Wcsl threw ht s
final club
On East s club I 0 co ntmuatwn,
declarer co uld have succeeded by
ruffmg wtlh lhe he an I 0 Then he
could have drawn trumps endtng tn
the dummy and run the d tamo nds
However. he Iell West was more IJ ke
ly to ha'e the hcan Jack So South
rulfed wn h the hear! kmg . cashed the
heart ace, and played a he.mw dum
my's mnc
Dtsastert East produced 1he Jack
and led a spade, forcmg dummy to
ruff Now declarer couldn ' t stop
Wes l s hean etght from bemg pro
moted Suddenly the contract was
two down
Everyone ts human occasionally

HE'(, CJ.IUCKr DO
YOU EVER THINK

ABOUT COLLE6E 7

""''

41 Polotoble
42 Noun endl"9
43 Giant ot talry
talel
44 Skeleton
parts

45 Booty
47 Sileo
46 Alghonlotan
neighbor
49 Homo,
tlguratlvely
50 Low cord
52 Bullri"ll cry
54'--Ctear
Day

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
created from QuotatiOns by tamous people pa&amp;l and preM!lt
Each let11Jr 11'1 thfl cipher stands lor aoothe• Todlty 1 d ue S equ.ls Y

Celet:)l'it~ C!ptler crvPtOQI&amp;ms are

T

REPTCK

WELL , NOT
REALL'f' .

THERE'S 'f'OIIR
YOUR LIFE DOESN'T
!-lAVE AN'r' DIRECTION.

A LIFe SllOULD

BE PLANNED
LIKE INNIN6
8'1' INNIN6..

I TRIED THAT ..
TflE V151TOR5
ARE STILL
AT eAr..

'::!:~' S@'\\~lA-ltt.trs·

0 lour

R.orrang•

letters

of

Doll t I" Slung by h•gh prrces t
Shop rhe clom(lrd s.crron

lent Condlllon $2,400, 740.2511- J
1093

==-~--=-----:-~··
760 Aut9 Parts &amp;
••

=~-=A~cce--:s-:s,...o_rlel~....,...·.... 1~

Budget Priced Tranamlaalona '

All ~pas Acotoa ,

To over 10 ooo Tranamlulo'ns. ~

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN
Tl'S Kii'IOk cm!'V.Htl&lt;'t IT
\S, NIGt\\il~~.~,t~O YCIJR
"~lm IS Sl\ll WI 1\\ER~,
WR~IN\i ~Rll\IN1l

,'

gaa tanka &amp; body par11 0 1 :
A Auto, Ripley WV (304)372· •
3933 "' t-110().273-9329
•

.•

•
•

--------~--------~·
'
810
Home
'
Improvements

.

.

' •

~--~~~~~-----·""
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINCI
Uneondltklnal lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished Es·

-Shad 1975

Col 24 H11 (740) ~

446·0670 1·800.267-11576 Aog
era Watarprooftng
Appliance Parlo And Strvlct All
Name Bronilo Ovar 25 Ytlrl Ex·

perlenee All Work Guarantted,

French Clly Maytag 740 44t·
7785
CIO Genera l Home Main·
t,nonce· P1lnllng, vinyl siding,
carpoiJirY,'WOrO, WI- batlll,
mobile llome repair and mora ~
lree ea11m11o call Chal, 74D-tl2·
6323
Llvlngalon 1 B111ment Watecr
Proofing, all basemenl repalra
done, fret eallmatea, lltetlme

guaronloo 12yro on Jbb uperl·
IJICI (304)888.3887

Proltlalontl, 20yra axparlence

with all m11onory brlolc, bloclt I

atone Allo room additions, p~
ragea etc Frea eat1met11.

(304)773-9550

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commerolal wiring,
new Slltrvfce or repatrl: Mll11r 1.1cenaed altc&amp;rlclan Rldlnour

ElootriCII, I"(V000306, 304·818·
1786

~-.........,;..--....,,--......

the

I

VAGLER

I

ARGIC

low to form four words

I

..
,..~-N__,.B....,U..,....,...L....,T,....-.,1 ~,
I I .:~

I

4

GILENJ

I

•

.

.

•

~asy

It
Ia restram anger tl
the Offfer person IS • • • • • •

IO

Complele lho chuckle quoted
by l rll•ng 1n the mrnrng words

PAINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
lETTERS

I III III

SCitAM..J.ETS ANSWERS

'

'

WOlD
llMI

,.rambled wo•d• bo

6 UNT~R~~B~N~~~E

~

SEflVICES

UJHN

- - - - - - - - - - 141to4 loy CUY I POWUI

~

J

'

BDHGX

T .
WDCVTHN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Every lime I see an adult on a b1cyc1e I no longer
despatr for the future of the human race " - H G Wells

A

..1

Bomber Bass Boat 65 HP John· ~
son Tilt And Trim Trailer Excel- ,

Engln~a

•

L..--L--..L-.1.-.....1--....L......I vou develop from s1ep No 3 below

Evlnruda wl SS prop, 12/24 EYin- •

and

N P K

(OHRNRO)

1991 Stratos baa&amp; boat, 120 "'
rude trollng motor SlraiOI trallfi,
cover tu lly rigged and garage
kept all In excellent condition.

REND

KLPTCKG

X P K

N P K E

TEG

CSHRO
CRWK

UHKTNPK

N D

CKTHEKG

AOHTK

'OTHAKE

~..,..,,...,5....,...,..,..,1..,.6....,...,--.,--i

'

$8000 7&lt;0-742·2301

Tight"blnd
21 College
couroeunH
22 Dolour
oround
23 B-all's
RoM
24 Pour down
25 Circular tent
26Ri-ln
Germany
28 Arid
2fl Pronounced
30 Dltlwont
31 Rl- ln
llllgium
37 End oil

10 A - s Bonet
11 Firat prden
12 Copone'o
nemeato
19 "Hold On

Eaol
2•
Pass

PEANUTS

•

750 Boats &amp; MotQrs

$4700 Must Soli, Will Nagotiata
( 304)67~ 1891 (304)675-7814

t993 Mercury Topaz Black, 2
door very good condition Good

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows llnlels etc Claude Wlnlers
Rio Grande OH Call 740 2o15-

r

-,-.,-------.

New

1893 DOdge Colt 5 Speed

NOTICE IT 's ALWAYS
Kii&gt;S Wl-\0 GET SIC!&lt;.. 7
HOW COME. r1RS C.OD·
F..:EY CANT COI1E ~N
WITH SOI'IETHIN&amp;
ONCE IN A WHILE 1

HE RE.

Motorcycles

1990 Hondo Gold Wing S.E Tr!ka

2045

waterline Special

•

BIG NATE

94 Jimmy 4 door SLT Loaded!
Leather Interior 82 000 Miles
(740~245·~~9

1980 Chrysler 5th Ave Clean
One Owner, 87 000 miles, good
gas mllea~e Price Reduced to

great looks good V 8 $2100

OOWJ'.l T~~~~~

(740f-Ull-6141

eve Jolnlt 7&lt;0-245-5677

wanted To Soli 11 Is Not Naadad , 740·949 2836 or 740·949-2045
Any Moral Magnificent Wedding
Droll, Slza 8, $275 oo, 740-441· 1991 Cutlass Clerra, • door 1 V s
air 74 000 mileS; $2800 740-949
0432

~\et-U

~

Deluxe CIJrwer.lon Van LOics.dl
Only 15 800 mllea Like Ne~

(740f-Ull·t610

1990 Cougar high mllas runs

r
1'\'t f.XJbiM. ~0 1\lt ~

Jolnla Runs Great! $1 800 OBO
(740) 992·8978 or (140)·388·
8461

Llghtl $15 500 00 (8151 387
7444 Evo Weekends (740)·448·
7371

1ll60·111i0 CARS FAOII a&amp;IO

PRIIIESTAR

'~ 11'1

Brakes CB Joints and Ur'ilwrSII

Performance Tested Potted Here·
torCI Bulls 1 3 yra old Above
averaga EPD s and guaranteed
to Breed Certified &amp;Accredited
Small Ouart&amp;r Mare Sorrel 8

u:,1m 10 ~~ ~~ voc.~'t

.,

WIL.~ ffiN.L.E~ '0:£ \fiE
~if.:&gt;·~ k-It&gt;

66 Toyota 4 Wheel Drive, Pick·
Up, 4cly, 4sp, omlpm AI Wheels
33 Tlroa 41nch lin, now shocks

with • 1998 California Sidecar
Sport trike Cover Conversion Ktt r
46 000 miles Extra Chrome and

TRA NSPOR TAT IO N

One two-piece Uvlng room Suit
Has Couch and Love11at Chair

r

(740)·24 5 5672 or (740) 367
0563

Herd (304)675-18861675-3367
Johnson a Used Furniture lAp
pllancea 740·446...039, 7.CO,..C46·
1004 5 Mllea Out Sulavllle Pike

THE BORN LOSER

1995 Dodge Dakota SLT • Whl

Or 8 R Bod V-6 5 Spd 147,000
Milos, $4 200 00 OBO 740·258·
1233

also riding Ieason&amp; Ruth Reeves

pony 1o year old ""'ro kid brokB

....

11

For 5ale 5at ol Mans Right Hand
Go1l Clubs $125 (304)675-6986

4 year old kid broke Appaloosa

vlfLi,, TtttY'It~ Ct,TAINLY A L.OT
MO,t ~NTtltT AI NII-I~ I INC~ YOV
GAVt Tt4eM F~et WIL.L.!

•

630

Livestock

:
•
·
•

Base'

Easy on Gaol (740) 4411-4385

ufl
7 Common
51 Dome homH
ollergen
53 Wllkll"ll vow
13 Style of ty~
word
14 Ty~ olotrolght 55 Brightly
15 sliunk telluro
eolorod bird
18 Mokeo fun of
56 1t
17 Flrot-roto
57 More orderly
18 Bunerfly
58 Foaddloua
collector a
equipment
DOWN
20 Proceaau
1 Loonlng Tower
leather
oHe
21 VIP
2 Director
23 Comedian
"'-Inger
Rlehord
3 Alarm
27 LO"illournoy
4 Author 32 - - Colollne
Wieoel
33 Bill aouncfo
s T..r
34 WNry
6 Eplaodl
35 Como up
7 Full of holeo
36 Doorwoyo
8 91"91e
38
PNaover '""' 9 Futu,. lllyl
40 Support
exam
42 LabOr mlghllly

Winners' wobble

Wheel Drive (740)·3811-9163

$900 (304)695-3859 Anytlrre

~
11J1';'ttton

47

S~onle

~nell

I

Turbo, Rally Wheels RWL Tirol,
$1 995, 740-256-1 093
•
~--~----~-------"1978 Chavy Silverado, 4•4. 112
Ton $1500 (304)675-e121
Whee~

1 ActrHo

Operung lead • K

720 Trucks for Sale

1983 Ford Short

Ana- to Provlouo PUD!e

46 Collection ol

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer South

1.c3 J

1014

leather Seat Covers Tool Box

Power King tractor 14 hp .ca•
deek scraper blade plow cuiU·
vators potato plow, runs and

05 20 til

• J

82 Mllsublshl Eclipse, GFX AllWheel DriYal Turbo. amllm Sterno

1996 Ch.,y Asto ht High Top

Mobile home for rent In Racine,

l

Monsoon Stereo 12 Disc CD ...

730 Vans &amp; .,.WDI

so·

no pell; 7&lt;0-99215858

•

North

•

Changer Fully Loadodl WI! Tau
Pay Off 740 446 4546

For Sale
RCA Home Theatre
Big Screen TV $600 Kenmore
Dryer $80 Kenmore Counter Top
Dishwasher $100 (304 )675
8693

560

Below Holiday Inn, Klnauga Stop
And 5ae Ul 740 4411 4782

Bluo MetalliC 57 Utr, LS 1 En-

gine Leather tntarlor 10 Spullll

Various Sizes $75 00 $100 00
Per Set Will Trade For Wood
Burner 740-379-2757

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

New And Used Furniture Store

bo Syncho 8X8 Trans F And ~
Shunle Large Pump 2 Remotes 4
2yr Full WJ,rranty
ourlets

Used Lift Truc:k Forks For Sate

740 446-9742

1 888-818 0128

Ford new Holland Tractor Sale

3930 4WO 45PTO HP, 192 Tur

&amp;accessories (304)675 1702 or
(304)67!i-6462 Great Deall

5121

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 740 446 7398

Sale

(600) 352·1045

7795
Beds Complete full and Twin
Couch De sk l.lvlng Room Suit
Refrige rator and Girls B lc ~cle

(304)4511-t856

for

Erected/Iron Horse Builders 1-

Pike , 740· 446 6306 600 291·
Household

Trailer

For Sale 15x30 Above- ground
Oval SWimming Pool with pump

Power Wheals Barbie Car Like
New! Only rode 5 times! $10000
(304) n3-5t69

lis
To Library,
Plus Nakl
Deposit
No Pets $350/Mo
Call Deb
ble Or .kJdy At740-446 7323

----------~--~
1898 Pon11ac Tr1ns Am, NIYf ·.

1968 Ford Ranger Factory 390 ,
CoN (740)37921!HI
.,

2902

TWin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications for 1BA HUD sub
st(tlzed apt for elderly and hand·

510

610 Farm Equipment

Heaters Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts lntertherm Miller &amp; Col•
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Securlly Oepoall Aequtred, 740
446-3481 740-4411-0101

$325 00 Month Include• Water

FARM SUPPUES
&amp; LlVE S TOCK

Hay Wagon, $450 00 Wood Cat
lie Racks Fits Chevy $100 oo
Firm Both Vary GoOd (304)675·

Pool Slide, $Z50 00, Diving Board,
$50 00 Topper Ills Ranger
$50 oo 611 Scrapper Blade,
$60 00 (740)-448·2075

7&lt;0-385 4367

and Garbage Deposll Reloraoce
No Petsl (740) 843 0122 6 oo
4 00 A~er epm (740) 643 2916

1740~379-11061

$25 21 5 Gal White Root Paint
$57 69, Anchors S5, Doors &amp;
Windows Gaa &amp; Electric Waler

Floors, CA. 1 112 Bath Fully Car·

Mobtle home site available bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

41 0 Houses for Rent

Poodloo (Toy), While. Aagla

Flatbed

(740) 448--4274

Upstairs Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second Avenue Galllpo·

We B4y Land ~o 500 Acres

oo Boll 740-258-6182

;,..

1972 GMC V·8 Auto New Dual

Tara Townhouse Apartment a
very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

paled, Patlo, No Peta Loaoa Plus

Real Eatate
Wanted

~=tuat

plio Call 740-441 1982

lcappad EOH 304-675-6879

Awr(, 304-7:!11-7295

land 1:11ove, Undlrplnn/ng I
.,4 000 (304}6112-22~

1 Bedroom Apt utiiiUes Included
Furnished or un furnished! $300
mo 2 Bedoom s all Electric Trail

curity DeposR 740-44Hl952

1 Acre Lot For Sale tn Mason

I

Babybed Playp en Swtng Car

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Buildings

Miniature

IIETABOLISII

Ple ase Help! 3 Bed room 2
Baths just take over Payments!

low lntertlt Ra1t1 For , It Time
Buyera, Limited Time Avalllible

1990 Royal Cove, 14X74
2Bitha, Skyllghll In Kllchan Is·

AMAZING

COOLQQWN
Central AJr Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed

Oakwood Homes Barboursville

S~50

0047

2 bedroom apartment In Middle
port we pay water sewer &amp; trash
you pay gas &amp; electric, $200 per
month $100 deposit, 7.CO 992·

Used SlngleWide, Around $100
per month CaH1~800-948-5678

AKC
Registered
Pinschers
Black

tared Approx 5 Lb1 Full Grown

Work; Goodl $150 Call Aller 5
PM 740·4411-2399

Available· secluded fa rm home
near Dexter deposit and lease

2 Baths Muat Sotll With Cleared
l.oll 125,000 (740)·388 0434

WV

1 888-841).0521

Campus, 740 245-5B5B

U50 740.992·7562 aftor6pm

2 Racing Go Kans One 2 Stroke
$1 000 One 4 Stroke $800 1
Set ladder Racks for Ford Van,

er $300 mo (740)-367 0611

948·5678

AKC registered Gok:len Retriever
puppies excellent family pets

or

New Bank repos only 2 Jell we
finance call 304 722 7148

1992 14x70 Redman mobile
home 1 3 bedrooms storm wind·
ows &amp; heal pump Included 740·

18i7 Ooublewkll on 2 112 Acres
3BA 2BA. Storage Bldg Olract
TV Salllllta, 167 000 Will show
batwoen 5PM 8pM (304)458
1033

Ple asant

1 Room &amp; Balh Rio Grande Araa

Rent Buster New 1999 14x70 2
or 3 Bedrooms Only $995 00
Down S195 00 per month Free
Delivery and Set Up Call 1-800

plea Black &amp; AUII 1275
(304)458 1090/456 1044 1ttol
5PM

6206

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

1 888-736 3332

A.KC Registered Doberman Pup·

AKC Miniature Comes Male Fe
mate 4 months old S1SOOO each

New 1999 1-4x70 three bedroom
Includes e months FREE 101 rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer skirti ng
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per mont h with $1150
dOWn Cal1 800 837 3238

2650

2 Bathl, Must Solll $19 500
(740)-388-Q434

Pt

10 Good Home!

$100 (304)675-3773

S275 month ulllllles paid VIand
Street

AKC German Sheppard Female

Sl• Months Oldl Saautllul $75 00

China Cabinet,

1 Bedroom Apt Unfurnished

4411-2751

1997 to4x70 Trailer 2 Bedrooms

1 Bdrm Extra Nice First
Free With One Year

5 AKC Bo•or pups, 740·H2·
8101

(304)n3-5380

1987 Voyager Van Chair Booth1

Hoover Washer
Old Kllcnan Cabinet (740) 256·

Aflar 4 'lears 304 738-7295

320 Mobile Homes

742 2795

800-719 8194

Make 2 Payments No Payment

3 Bedroom House In Henderson
Olean References &amp; Deposit Re

Furnace New Appliances {740)

tlon Call after 5.;pm (740) 446·
3430
•

S279 00 Per Month Plus Utilities. I Air Conditioners Used Olllerent
740 446-2957
Slzas Guaranteed! 7-40 "886

245-9337

••••Amazing .. •• 5 Bedrooms 2
1/2 baths over 2,000 sq tt , tor
less than $400 mo Free Delivery
&amp; SOl 1·80().9411-5678

1e HP Slqlllclty Lawn Mower 44'
Deck Lo!IIJ Hours, Good Condl·

385-9821

(3041173-5881

for Sale

(740)·245·5128 or (740)·379·
9456 LHve Message

18" Olrec:TV Sotolllto Syotomo·

7045

All real estate actvftrtlslng In
th1~ newspaper s sub1ect to
the F~eral Fair Housing Ac:1
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ~any preference
llmttation or dtscrlmlnatiOn
based on race color rehg1on
sex ram 1llal status or national
ongln or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference
llm1tatton or d scriminatlon •

er box loaded with 1·12" JL and

$69 00, one month free programming Limited time oHar call 1-

1988 Skyline Pinecreek 14X70
2Bedroom 1Bath 3 Ton Heat
Pump/Central Air Shingled Roof
Excellent Condition (304)875

1985 14k65 11 2 Bedrooms CIA

210

740-4461219

1978 Schultz 14x60 2 Bedrooms
Very Good Condition! Air Condli
tlonlng Underplnnlt)g Extras/

7634

0506 any1ine

RequlrO&lt;I 7&lt;0-361H182

440

Trailer Lot For Rentl (740) 4-46

Lawn mowmg and Odd Jobst Big
or Smalll Call Sieve Conley High

2 Bedroom Mobl'e Home tn Port
er 4rea No Pets You Pay All
UU!tles Deposit &amp; Aeltrences
Trailer For Rent &amp; Lot For Rent

mo

PI Pleasant S28 000 (304 )695

&amp;OCtAL liECURITY 188t7
No Feo UnioN Wo Wlnl

Now Hiring A Full Time Cake
Deeorator Poaalbt' 30 ·35 Hrs

4 to• Jl s two(2) 1" Tweeters
also Included $900 00 080

House For Sale 2219 Oak St

payableo reoelvablea caah handling dopoaltl IIIKible hours,
bOndlblt Pick up appltCB11Cna at
Middleport Ulllty Olllco 237 Race
Stroot, Mlddloporl, OH Appllca
EEOE~

992 2167

tncludel 2

Pari&lt; (740) 441 0150

can IIOQ.88J.7440
Medical Procenor FT fPT No
Exp Nee Will Tra in PC Req Earn

Mull be moved

$199 999 (803)3611-9438

FINAN C IA L

Medical Processor
FTIPT No experience necessary
Win train PC required Earn 40K

Cronovar also Includes Speak

Lawn Care you make the offer
Call J D Smith at 740 992 5930
or Colin Roush at 740.992 2521

Mary's Daycare low rates llexlble
hour s 18 years experience
Open 24 hours per day 1 days
per week Openmgs lor lui! lime or
part time childf'an or If you need a
day evening or night out CPR
and fi rst aid cert1fled certified
nursing assistant all meals and
snacks provided now accepting
an~ age c:hl1dren Call 740·742

liS Oh 45631

bedrooms 2 Baths, Like New

Trailer Lot For RenU State Route
175 one mila from 00 Me Intyre

Experienced Carpe,nter Wanted
Must Have Own Hand To ols &amp;

Housekeepe r lor Bu sy House
hold One day Per Week Prefer
abty Friday Send Resume Refer
ences and Hourly Wage Re quire
menls to CLA PO Box 474

Does Your House Siding Deck
or Driveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing Is the an
swerl Call Clearly Clean at
(304)675 ol040 lor a Free Es
tlmate

350 Watt Ampllllor with built In

conddlonad! $260 $300 sewer
water and rash Included 1•0·

For Sale By Owner 4BA 3000
Square Foo t House 4 Car Ga
rage, 5 Acres Very Secluded

School (740) 4411 2156

He!JWante&lt;l

Clearly Clean at (304)675 4040
br Free Estunatesl

Merchlndlse

2 1 3 bedrOOfll mobile hOmto air
1•x70 Oakwood Mobile Home, 3

71 o Autoa for Sale

540 Miscellaneous

for Rent

•

tlons Painting etc (304)674
4623 or (304)674-0155

25550 EOE
Transportallon (304)675 2478

lng (I 2 hours) Eliminates ovar
wetting Guaranteed Work Call

Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Avo Galllpol~ Oh 45631

Assemb le Produ cts
Easy Work Excellent Pay Free

Box 675 R!Jiey WV 25271

Carpet and Upholrnery Cleaned
without •steam• or Absorbent

No phone cat~ please
Middleport has part time posl·
Uons tor LPN a available for all
shills &amp; weekends anyone Inter
estecl please stop by &amp; 1111 out en

420 Mobile Homes

for Sale

ACROSS

1

ASTRO·GRAPH
, Friday, May 21, 1999
Dl!l'e to establish several obJeC·
ttves tn the year ahead for yourself
whtch you felt were beyond your
reach Your chances are eKcellent,
and growth tn both character and
materta\ ctrcumstances ore ltkely
OEMINI (May 21-June 20) The
tesulls of your efforts aren't apt to be
loo grattfYtn8 today 1n tnstances
whe~e you behave tmpulstvely or

mddTerent Conversely, sober evalulbono will produce desirable results
Get a JUmp on life by understanding
the tnfluences that wlllsovem you tn
the year ahead Send for your AstroOroph predtcUons by molltng $2 1o
Astro-Oroph, c/o lhls newspaper,
P 0 Box 17~8. Murray Hill Stauon.
New York, NY IOIS6 Be sure to
state your Zodiac •tan
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Uso
your head tnatead of your helrt when
constdenna money lssueotoday wnh
people who are already Indebted to
you If lhe .,;countl pt too out ofbrtlance, you' II be Ihe one who 'II sutTer
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Success
will be dependent upun 110111ns real·

tsltc targets for yourself roday Don 1
waste valuable ume pursuma an elu·
~ve or unattamable B""l
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Be
sure all tnfonnatton relayed to you
today ts accurate before you pass
anylhtng onto olhers ThiS w1ll be
espectally true when deal1ng wuh

rumors or gossip

mampulattve and crafty Keep your
guard up at an ttmes. espectally
when soctahztng wt1h people you
don't know
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
What should be a wonderful day
spent wtth those you love could tum
tnto somellung dt•agreeable, Simply

LIBRA (Sepl
23-0ct 23)
Although yoo're lucky when deahng
wtth others today, your Judgment
may leave a little to be destred If you
link Up Wt1h lhc wton&amp; types, YOU
could negate what yoo hove pnJ for
yoo
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) If
yoo're not careful today, you could
get drawn mlo somethtnJ where
you'D be sltshdy ovennatched. When
11 comes to compeciti.ve ocUvitlel, use
d1ocreuon
SAOJTTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.
21) 1be harder you work today, the
luclder yoo are likely to be Howev·
er, don't expect Lady Luck to suck
around sf you're simply being lazy
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jon 19)
Don't let yourself be uoed u a pawn
1oday by someone who ts both

hts or her own way Don't let It be
you
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) It's
best not to say anythtn&amp; about a pal
who tsn't present when talkmg w1th
fnends today Unless your words are
carefully chosen, somethmg could be
mtstnterpreted and repeated
ARJES(MIII'Ch21 · Apn119) Bo1h
advantageous and adverso linanctal
effects could come through some
changes you're contemplanng mak
in&amp; today Be ccna1n the good out
wetghs the bad before proceedtng
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) lr's
nght to be cogmzont or lhe atms of
your usO&lt;:Iales and try to accommo·
date thetr m1eresta today, but nol a1
the e•pense of restnctmg YO!'' own
mobtltty of purpose Be senSible

because someone mststs upon havmg

R1tual- Nudge ·Bevel • Qwver NEGATIVE
My fnend was dating a cute but not so smart fellow
She told me that he had taken an IQ lest and tt came
back NEGATIVE!

MAY 20 I

�Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

N011UNG RUNS
UKEADEERE"

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: soa

JL

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

.friday
M•y 21, 1000
Meigs sports banquet, Page 4
Violent sleep patterns, Page 8
Presenting the classes of '99, inside today

Thursday, May 20, 1999

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: SOa

Galllpolla

kross flam Galli. Auto Sties on old tie. 35 Wtst

Sports
Jazz - Trailblazers
series even; Knlcks
down Atlanta
-Page 5

106 North Second Ave. •·Middleport, OH

(740) 446-2412

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

'

992-2825

740 992-2196
•

Meigs County's

'·

,

AliT--tom
2

p.m. • Saturday •

ON THE SCHEDULE
OOfllliU of ttne llpt. wtth • fl'IIOo
datory-plt .... _ ,

WNdJON CUP IEIIID

• Truck Urleo, O'Rallr'o 200

• Wlnoton Cup, Tile Wlnoton
7:30 p.m. • Saturday • TNN
• Buoch Sorln, First Union 200
.1 .p.m. • Sundal • ESPNi

~oy.

C&lt;lnco&lt;d, N.C..

1 . 5-ml~

track, 70 laps (seaments of 30, '
30 and 10),

· 105 miles ·

_,......._,M...

Whln: SaturdliJ)', May 22
Martin

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

QU8IIf)inc,

-·

D P J 4 ulNa: /

Quiii'Jt!C Bill EJHoti wm the

POle in eac:n of the last two ~ars .
The tormatls li'IIQue In mat It

wr.r.: ~70 Speedway, Odeua.

c~

Tim

Qulllf)ll• .....e: Elliott Sidler.
Chlw04et. 129.87 4 ,..,., (Moy 18,
'
.
1997)
RMe reeoM: Chuclc sown.
Ponti8c, 10...172 mph, MIV 11,

.

--.-..-

IUSCIIDRAMINJIIIDIIAL

·

200

-=~. Moy23

,......._ The winner of thl
Winston Open .will Ua'ICO IntO
The Winston. That 50-laD race wtll
be P&lt;eceded b!' a ,.. of 2!1-IIP

1991

ComiftC up: Arst Union 200
~

Naz:ereth (Pe.)
Speedway. 1-rnlle track, 200

was not aiming tlle 'rifle at
for all transactions at gun
By DAN SEWELL
one particular person," Wig·
shows and for anyone seekAsaoclatiMI Prau Writer
ing to reclaim a weapon at a
CONYERS, Ga. (AP)~ The firsl bell hadn't sounded ington said.
After the shooting, Assis·
pa\Yn shop.
yet and the students in the commons area a! Heritage High
Meanwhile, tlle Heritage
School were gabbing and munching on cinnam~n rolls. It tant Principal Cuil Brinkley
followed
the
student
outside
High
Oass of '99 was left
was the last day of class for tlle senion;.
with these indelible mental
Suddenly came a loud, startling " pop," then another, toward the football field and
snapshots:
another and still another. Some figured it was a prank- . asked the suspect to hand
Hundreds of teens, scream·
maybe firecracken; - . until !hey heard shouts of "he's got over the ·handeun, which was
raised at him.
ing, crying, jamming
· a gun!"
through doors to escape.
- "I stepped back a couple
Then came the panic, screams, lean; - and blood. ,
Some yanking up fallen
On the day Heritage High senion; were looking for- of steps_and I turned to him
friends, othen; jumping over
ward to picking up their yearbooks, their suburban com· again and I said, 'Give me
th~m.
munity became the new focus for a nation on edge after the gun,' and I said again,
A girl, lying on the floor,
months of fear and concern about violence in America's 'Give me the gun,'" Brinkley
said today. "I saw him lower
VlcnM -InJured Heritage High screaming " I'm shot! " and
schools.
· Six students were wounded in ·Thursday morning's the barrel of the gun and I School atudant Drake Hoy, 1:7, walla for medical begging fot her mother.
kept getting closer and cl08er au.ntlon In Conyara, Ga. Thuradly after • tenth Another moaning after
attack, rione critically.
to
him. Then I held out my grade .Wdent with two guna. opened flre .t the banging her head diving
The suspect. a 15·year·old sophomore friends said was
hands
and he laid the gun in high Khool. Hoy, one of •lx InJured atudents, under a table.
·
upset over a failed romance, dropped to his knees, pulled ·
my
hands.
WH
ti'Mted
lrtd
releaaecl
.t
a
Mlrby
hoapltlll.
A
teacher
s~epherdthe gun away from his mouth and, witnesses said, surren·
. ."Then he gave me a real big bear hug and he said, 'I'm ing studentS into a closet, and calming th~m by quoting
dered with a tearful: "Oh.my God, I'm sO seated! ~ '
from the Book of Psalms.
The gunman was identified by ,friends as Thomas scared, I'm scared,'' he said. ·
Classes were can~led far today, though students were
oUtside, helicopters, sirens, milling knots of dazed stuSolomon Jr., nicknamed T.J. He was charaed with aggra·
vated assault and other charges were being considered. eKpected to return to Heritaae High on Monday. School dents, panicked parents searching the groups and tearful,
Solomon must appear in juvenile court before he can be officials said graduation would go on as scheduled May hugging reunions.
Many of these same students and parents had watched
charged as an adult, some(hing not.expocted before Mon· 28.
The
attack
was
the
sixth
mass
shooting
at
an
American
television
coverage of the Littleton shooting a month ago.
day.
Rockdale County Sheriff Jeff Wigington said today high school or middle school since October 1997. Presi· That horror lasted for houn;; (he assault here was over in
that the suspect broke into a locked gun cabinet in his dent Ointon received word of Thursday's shooting before minutes.
"You, like, watch it on TV and it's not yout school and
family's basement to get tlle weapons- a .357 Magnum he left for Littleton, Colo., for the one·montll anniversary
it's not like this," said Scottie Sanders, an 11th-grader
and a 'rille. The suspect fired 14 shots, 11 from the rifle of the deaths of 15 people at Columbine High School.
The news "is deeply troubling tp . me, as it is to all strul!&amp;ling to. reconstruct the morning's events. " It was
and three from the revolver, according to a preliminary
.Americans," Ointop said. As he spoke, the U.S. Senate like a blur."
investigation.
Heritage, 20 miles east of Atlanta, is a' mostly white,
"Apparently he was shooting at the hip, basi~ly. He was approving a proposal requiring background checks ,

Cal992·2155

llipt/mllet

the toUtltllpHd tml .

ComlnC up: The WlnstOI'I
WlteM: lowe's Motor

ESPN

page

' Cooolol up: O'Rell~ Auto Ports

Mo .. 0.!143-mlle trod&lt;, 400 laps.
200 miles
·
_ , s.turdoy, Moy 22

DtfiiMIIW . . . .IDR: Tony
Rllntl

Qullfl~ll reoonl: Tony Reines.
Font, 114.269 mjln, Moy 22,
19911
...,. recont: Tony Raines,

Dave Ext. 104·
·Kathy Ext. 1OS
for mare
infarmation

Oodfe, 82.725 mph , May 24.
1997

••••••• ••••••

·to..Tum
Lltlln fii.O•It. ..,n

BI/H/,;
www.at1bJ\ua,COCD

See us for Your StihJPower Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248

Chester

985-3308

·

Dear NASCAR This Week,
What wis the lui year thllt •
car .other than Ford, Cllevy ..Podtiac ran the cin::uit? Siilce
~ has In)' driv« woo o race
in Ill three em? Is lUI)' driver
other than Ernie lrvan "currently
in a position to do so? · ·
11modty S. Sterhe

TOP TEN

·• weekly ranklnp by NASCAR This week writer Josh Stewart.
Last week's rankin&amp; Is In parentheses.

1. (41 O.le Jarratt
2. (31 Bobby Lollonte
3. (21 Jill Goodon
4. (11 Jill Burton
5. (51 Mark Mortln ·
8 . (71 Ruotr Wolloco
7. (81 Tonr Stewart
8. (81 O.lo brnhardt
9. (91 Word Burton
10. (101 Torry Lobonto

·

Title Just like Ned?
Stayed safe at Richmond
Top Good1ear casualty
Led most laps at Richmond

HUkton,PL

~&gt;!most

pulled WC/BGN double
Another Richmond top-five
CaQ focus on lndi/ChMotte

'

Ntnedijftmltmakuporl/clpalfd In th• 11!111""' 0.,.
sine&lt; 1971. l"M ltut nm.
tNm lh¥ thfft you
mentioned 'omit a met lM2.f in
/99}, ,.,.. Htury Gont dtw.

S.,..

•"''otMr

Flnlslied el&amp;hth at Richmond
Ninth at Richmond
Close to droppln&amp; out

arr Oldsmobif~ to 1'\w) vlclorlu.

Bulci I /.,1 win """ 1111990.
'/'M
time a cloamp/Oilthlp

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

F'

·wru lKlll by another~ KW In
1983, wilfn Bobby Aill.ron """
. ill II

Dale Jarrett captured the Wlr:t$10n Cup points lead from Jeff

Button wlth .his wtn at Richmond. Burton led 104 lapi durlrc the
r~. mo(e than any other driver, but ended Up h8YI"' mechanical
trouble and had to @ behind the pit wall foJ 38 laps.
,
Jarrett and the other top.fiVe finishers did a SOOd job of awldlf'1:
wrecks caused by a freak occurrence In which right front tires Were
bllsterln&amp; and breakln&amp; up. As many as 15 drivers experienced
some tire trot.ble dufina the race. The sealer that was put on the
track before R6chmond may have caused the decay of the
Goodyear tires.

NASCARdriva.

.JoirMy A!l•nl maUing ad·
dn.r.r u JOI llDdmont Groen,
vUk, S.C 2961 l. Bom on S&lt;pt.
17. 1934, Allm .m 011t m.ce
oNI thiW poks willie driving In
NASCARfrorn 1955 throug/1
1967. He Q/.ro root the chedem:l flag In tl,t firstmce ~r
""'or Bri.riDI. TtM .. In 1961.
wltlk serving a.ro ,.liefdrl..,.
for .kJd&lt; Smith.

.Mark Martln's victory In the Hardee's 250 was his 37th win In

hlstOf)' or tne series.

CRAmMAN . TRUCK SERIES
Mike wauace t&gt;eat Jack Sprague In the thlrCK:Iosest flnlsn In
Truck Series history. Wallace won by a mere .013 seco!'Kis.

••••••••••••

••••••••••••
Y.llldatlot-

YJitdsNot

• IIOTz Dale Jarrett Is now tne
man to beat In the Winston Cup
points race after winning the

Pontiac Ellckemem 400.

1.

Calto/'un?

·

.

•IIICIIMMTFNICWI

Rory
·

AMIUAL DID: $24.95
wwrli&amp;: Dlsc:ountA on

3. W.DM'\nake or car WH AI Keller drtYitW Mien 1\e won
the first NASCAR road~ In 1954?

'

- · 74Nrt, tapot ...
ADMWI iiWD IV: SNnnon
~I MAIJNI AGDADI: P.O. b
1:1~2. RocK Hill, S.C. 20.731

--

:.IUitOJII:) U l - . '1: 't&lt;elll Ul UIIIV .lo1"'

-1~242·34e

!I•••········
Park tries new look to spark some luck
AROUND THE GARAGE

Lto 1S Cruist.
&amp; tz'ra.fJt.l
740-992-4233

BOG-795-1110
202 W. Second·Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

By Josh Stewart
NASCAR Thia Week

RICHMOND, Va. -The
usually clean~sbaven Ste'fe
Park was sponina some facial
hair wt'len he got to Richmond
International Raceway for last
Saturday'l Po"ntiac Excitement

400.
Park was participating in
Kyle Petty's Moton:yele Ride
Acro11·America. The ride
raised more than half·&amp;·
million dollars rOr charity,'
and Park h~ped the new look

. .

would raise his perfOrmance
my mom would feel about it,"
level.
. Park said . .. She's ·supportive of
"AHcr I cot home (from the it. This' is what you call
motorcycle ride), a lot of pc:o· pull in&amp; out all atring.s to act
pie commented on how they
our luck turned around."'
like the beard," Park said. "'I
Maybe Put should try a
decided to leave it on for
a- noxt time. He finilhed
Richmond. If my luck turns
34th. Satunlay~...., ,..his
·around here, it's going to stay. firsa with Steve Hmielu inter·
If not, I'll be back to that
im .,_chief. Hmiel\ 1111111
clean-cut guy that I was before position is u .tecbnk:al director
th_e motorcycle ride."
for Dale Earnhardt Inc:.
Park did need to get one
X
opinion befor~ deciding not to ,
·
shove.
RACE RECAP: JefTOOrdoo
"I was worried about ho:-y
won the pole for t~e Pontiac

merchln-

dse, hat, membership c.-d. raclrc

.....,..,,

IIUI.: rtckmasteiOCIIJ)rldlt.ne1

Excitement 400 in 1 welther·
postponed ain&amp;IO round or
qualifyina. He lapped the 314·
mile Richmond lnternltional
Racewl)' in. 2L34o4 aecontk
foro opeed of 126:499 mph.
He bn&gt;lte blo own tnck-quoli,
fyini roeord orl2l.l58 mph,
teton June 4, 1998. Michael
Waltrip auhed on hio IOCond
quilifyinalap Saturday after~
noon. AHhouah he received
the 38th stutinJ pot.ition aa a
provisional entry, he wu
fo"'ed to drop 10 the b_,k of ,.. ,
tbe field whea the I'ICO bq:an. ~~~

.

.

.•

math, science and language arts programs to offer
additional college-preparatory course work.
Tyler Oine, Craig Jones, Amanda McKnight,
Casey McKnight, Michelle O'Nail, Marsha. Per·
sons, 'Iia Pratt, Hannah Pratt, Brayden Prat~ Jesse
Price, Krista Roach and Amanda Smrek ·were
approved as students in open enrollment for the
1999-2000 school year.
,
Tina Kelley reported on supplies need for the
elementary school neltl year. Lola Sanden; reported
o~ FEMA payments to replace itei1J5 lost in last
year 's flood, and Sheryl Roush discussed a senior
lrip package and concerns regarding next year's
lrip.
The board also approved rules and regulations
for this year's senior lrip, which begins on Friday.
The board also:
%JApproved_student accident insurance for
1999-2000. with Brogan-Warner Insurance of
Pomeroy;
%JApproved memben;hip in the Ohio High
School Athletic Association for tlle 1999-2000
school year;
.
%JApproved calamity days for tlle 1998-1999
school year;
%JAfiproved a contract with J.A Miller Realty
Co., for the exclusive rights to market the Riverview
property in Reedsville for 120 days.

By AMY GEIER
Auo&lt;:lated.Prau Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) -A small plane tllatlost power and was on fire man·
aged to avoid houses and cars as it crashed on a street in a residential neigh·
borhood. . ·
·
.
The only j:Jeople hurt in the crash near Ohio S~. lloiversity Airport on the
city's northwest side Thursda)"ottight were the two people-in the plane, a twostat 1974 Beechcraft Bonzana.
• The plane la.t electrical power and the pilot called 911 with a cell phoi1e to
gel the telephone.number for tlle airport tower, said Sgl Gary Lewis of the State
Highway Patrol.
The plane then lost contact with the emergency dispatcher and as the dis·
patcher was contacting tlle airport tower, tower officials could see the plane
crashing, Lewis said
·
·
·
The pilot, D. Michael FISCher, 49, of Dublin, was in serious condition at
Ohio Statli Univen;ity Medical Center with an injured right leg, said Ken
Phillips. the hospital administrator.
The passenger, Gilbert F. Holcomb Jr., 45, of Columbus, was in aitical condition today at RJvetside Metllodist Hospitals with a broken back and broken
rib6, said hospital secwity U &lt;luis Verrilli.
Both victims also were burned, Lewis said.
.
The plane was crumpled in the front and the ~kpit and one wing were
charred as it came to rest next to a trash can and a mailbox. Fuel from the plane
leaked down the street and caught fire as the plane crashed, ·but tlle fire was put
out quickly, acoording to autllorities .
Neighbors rushed to tlle scene to hdp the victims.
Tom Lowder, 34, who lives on a street behind where the plane crashed, said
he heard metal scratching againSt the road and then a big booin.
By BRIAN J. REED
.When he got to the plane, the ~kpit door was open, the plane was on fire Sentlllll Nlwa Staff
'
and he heard two men screaming. "Get us ouL Get us ouL.".
The flood hazard mitigation program in RuUand is nearing its end, but an antic· ·
. He said (here also was a fire beneath tlle plane and a trail of fire behind the ipaled exlenSion on the project will allow the village to include residenls who still
plane.
wish to participate.
He walked on·a wing to pull Holcomb out and someone else grabbed f'JS·
The pogl&amp;il was set to end early this summer, but 8IX:OI'IIing to Boyd Ruth,
cher.
· who has adminislered the fEMA.funded program for Buckeye Hillsll;locldng Val,
The m~n were takeri away from the plane and neighbon brought blankets ley Regional ~lopment Dislrict, M extension has been requested and is antic·
and treated them until help arrived, said Slate Ribic, 27,
in an apart- ipaled so that all interested residents can be included.
meilt near whete.the plane crashed,
Thai extension will take the project through the end of tlle summer, Rutll said.
Meanwhile, almalt $600,000 has been spent in elevating homes out of the vii·
taae's flood plain,IU!d in pwdi&amp;Sing homes oulrighl
.
. .
Residents who qualified for the program were given options of elevation, buy, outs, relocation within the village and retrofitting their homes, whicll included ele·
vation of water tanks and other preventative measures. ·'
·
Ruth said that only two homes, including the histotk Harder cabin on Main
Street, have been subject to moving. Preparations are now underway for the reloANOTHER ELEVATION - Tlle
. 111111 home on Main Street la the
cation of that cabin to a site on the RuUand Qvic Center property, and altllough latelt home to be elevated out
of the flood plain through lha Rut·
several pmposels have bcen made for the building, including use as a meeting cen· land A~ Huard Mitigation program. Crawa from .Huaton Broth· ter, no final decision lw bt!en made as to how the cabin will be used.onoe it hl'IS era of Wellaton .,e pictured wortdng under the home on Tllurad•y.
been relocated.
.
,
Ma.t other participlllts in the program have c:ha5en to have their homes ele· . paper. Those properties which are subject to buy-out by the village are turned over
valc;:l'or have opled to sell their homes to the village and move out of town.
to the village for use as "green space." ·
·
The village will be prohibited from building pennanent structures on the land
Ma.t of the work on the project has been performed by Huston Brothers Coo·
Pll•••nger.
struction of Wellston. ·
··
·
acquired lhrough tlle mitigation program, but will be able to use the land as porks
RuUand Mayor JoAnn Eads and some members of the village council have and other ~blic fat.ilities.
·
Bond set at $1 million
ellpt ed concern Over the lllfB" number of residents who chose to mave out of
Eads said tllat b;~Sketball couns, ll:nnis couns, and picnic shelten; arc among the
for accused murderer the commwlity, because of the financial hardships mticipeted with paying sewer improvements which are pennittOO under the prograni; The village has already
' CANTON .(AP) - Pollee say a debt and meetinB other village obligations.
·
transfonned a small plot in the downtown area into a park, and Eads said at last
man in cuslody in the stabbing death
The propam offered a cash incentive for residents who chose to remain resi· week's council meeting:tllat other lands could also be developed for public use.
Debfa Parsons admitted the dents of the villaae.
Sections· 32 Pages
·
Property owners living adjacent to properties pUrchased by the village have .
atti\Ck.
Ruth also rtQicd that none of the particip111ts chose to go With retrofitting.
also been given tlle option of leasing the lands from the village in exchange for · :
"He remembers stabbing her, but
he doesn't remember how many
times and how baclit was,'' said a
Canton pollee detective, Capt. James
Qting the need to equip schools With tools tope· orado high school and Thursday's shooting incident flexible grants would go to schools to help them
Myers.
vent
violence, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D· in Conyers, GiL - are making the issue one of the carry out comprehensive programs.
. ·
Bond was set Thursday at s1 mil·
Lucasville, joined his House colleagues Thursday in nation's pressing needs.
• The addition of 20,1KXJ police officers through
"And yet, many school districts in southern Ohio the COPS program, half of which woui'd be placed
lion ·forwith
. David
I charg•KI
killinilL.hbParsons,
wife . 42, introducing the Scooal Anti· Violence Empower- .
ment
(SAVE)
Act.
are
struggling to make ends meet now," he said. in the schools.
said the 37-year-old mother
. • After-school ~ams. The majority of juvenile
four repeatedly was stabbejl The bill provtdos needed funds to school distiicts for "They cannot afford Ill hire prevention counsc:lors or
violence pnlYC!Ition activities, Strickland said.
Jaw ento,cement personnel. The SAVE Act w11l help en me takts place dunng the late afternoon and early
\Vednesday morning in the Republic
Lotteries
"Violence 101ong young people is incredibly di~- ~Is nation~ide_to alford professional assistance . evenin~ houn;. The SAVE Act would provide fundStorage System&amp; parking lot as she
turbing
and dillicult to understand," the Cilllgrr:ss· m v1olence preveniJOn."
.
mg to mcrease the number of after-sChool programs
arrived for her third day on a new job. mm said.
QHIO
"WD need to help our ochool personnel
The four main provisions of tlle SAVE Act like the one recently awarded to Scioto County,
Mrs. Parsons, a residenl of Carroll develop ways to pRVCnl this tragic violenoe,llld we · addressing the needs of school districts are:
Pick 3: xxx.; Pick 4: xxxx
• Model violence prevl'rtrion program clearingCounty,
was granted a civil proiec· need to employ professionlls who can n!C08J1ize
Buckeye 5: xuxx
• Oisis prevention counselors. About half of tlle house. The bill would create a clearinghouse at the
lion order May 12. The order potentially dangerous behavior and help students funds from the bill would go to helping school dis· U.S. Department of Education that would serve as a
w.yA.
I demar1ded that David Parsons keep deal with conOict constructively and non·vlolently." lricts hire SO,IKXJ crisis preventioh counselon; who library of proven anti-violence education programs.
Dally 3: Xl!J(; DaUy 4: xnx
1,000 feet lway from his Str\cklandsaid thll reminders of school safety needs would recognize potentially dangerous situations This would help school districts find existing proII
o 1m Ohio Vllky r.bllohlna eo.
wife.
-:-highlighted by last month '• killing IIJINCII a Col· and counsel students on connict management. Also, grams to use as models for their own. .

.

Good Afternoon

.
~-·
~ .t.999TM Glttoti(N.C.)Guet\1 • Dlltrlluted byUnivet'lll Prut ~·1(8001 :266-e734 • ForrtJI. . wttt&lt;tJfM-r17, 1881 • .,...,1 ~ tnc .. SlriiOtl.~.
·'

trict's tllreefonnerelementaiy school buildings. The
dislrict nened approximately $20,000 from the sale ·
of those items, which inCluded two school b\ISCS,
and Superin(endent Deryl Well said Friday that the
board's action this week will allow tlle district to
establish the fund and to process necessary paper·
work.
The board held a discussion with Eastern High
School Principal Rick Edwards about a need for ·
additional classroom space in the high school, which .
·was fully renovated prior to the beginning of the
current school year.
Edwards suggested that the board consider converting the hiilh school media center, which is in
space fonnerly occupied by three c'assrooms, back
into classroom space.
.
The · media center offen; reference materials,
periodicals ""d computer access to high school stu·
dents, while Jhose students are referred to the elementary school and public library for works of fielion and most other bound materials.
Well said tllat tlle board will only consider the
possibility of converting the space, and will neces·
sarily examine tlle expense involved in restoring the
space for classroom use.
Well said that the need for classroom space has
arisen because of requirements set forth in Senate
Bill 55, which will require tlle district to expand its

Autland mitigation program· may be extended

.Fan Tip&amp;

wno was tile 11111 n10111e to win tile

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2. What ftlm about stock car roclnl started

• NOT: Kenny Wallace hod
er«Jne problems and finished
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BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
BGN events, more than anyone else In the

By BRIAN J. REED
·
,$enllnel Hewll Staff
The Eastern local School District Board ofEdu·
cation took action on personnel items and approved
a new scholarship fund when they met in regular
session on Monday.
'lbe board approved the following supplemental
contracts for tlle 1999-2000 school ·year: Saltt
Otristman. head football' ooach; Bryan Durst and.
Danny Thomas, assisla(lt football CQI!Ches; AI
· Green, junior !Ugh football ooach; Howie Caldwell,
boys' head basketball coach; Pam Douthitt, athletic
diiCC!or and head softball co.:h; Arch Rose, head
varsity track coach, senior class advisor and stUdent
council advisor; Don Jackson, head volleyball coach
lind assistant softball coach; and Paul Brannon, head
girls'basketball and assistant volleyball coach.
Brian Bowen, David Hawthorne and Patrick
Newland were approved as volunteer assistant fool·
ball ooaches. Carolyn Ritchie was approved as a bus
driver for Career Camp in June, and the board
approved posting of a bus driver position for tlle
. Summer lnatruction ~·
Professional Growth reimbursement was
approved for two teachers.
.
The board voted to establish a new schol~m~hip
fund derived from ptoceeds from the sale of person·
al property - desks otller contents- from the dis-

Dear NASCAR This Week,
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tome information on one of the
American driven, o crew chief
10 be exa&lt;~ who tell-drove three
196l Meii'W')' Comet C.lienles
(on the Cape Hom 10 Fairbanks
Durability Run, 1964)1
His nune Will Joluuiy Allen,
It tlw time livin&amp; in Piedmon~
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l .met him that he \W.

WINSTON CUP lliRIU

suburban school, like Columbine 'High. About 80 percent
of graduates go on to·college.
Even before the massacre in Colorado, Heritage had
video surveillance .cameras in the hallways and an armed
sheriff's deputy on duty during school houn;. On NBC's
"Today" show this morning, Wigington said the attack
happened before (he deputy had arrived.
Chris Dunn, a sophomore, said he had seen " lots of
guns" at the·suspect's home. Solomon was described as
quiet, and several students said his grades had slipped
lately and he had been heard making ambiguous comments about shooting someone. One said he didn't take
Solomon seriously.
A day earlier, someone had brought in a paper bag
· filled with crickets and left them to hop out across Her·
itage High. There were rumon; tllat a possum or another
critter would be (umed loose Thursday. ·
.
"I walked into tlle commons area and heard tlle pops,"
said Michael Mellitto, an 18-year-old junior. "I though~
'Ha, ha, .very funny! • Then these girls come running past
me, crying, saying, '' ! can't believe they shot him!'"
Nathaniel Deeter, 15, a friend of the gunman, said
Solomon was depressed· after a girlfriend broke off their
relationship this week.
He was there as the attack began. ·
"I yelled ·to him, 'Hey, what're you doing?' But he just
kept shooting. And then the kid next to me got shot in the
foot. Then I started to run," Deeter said.
•
Se,venteen-year-old Drake Hoy tried to run, too, but ·
realized. something was wrong with his foot: "I took off ..
my boot and· there w.S blood and stuff everywhere."
He was one of two students who were treated for
minor wounds and releasCd Thursday,
Witnesses said the gunman was shooting at no one in
panicular, firing at students below the waist.

.Eastern board acts on supplemental contracts

Bi.dck. AI best~ CQII

jlgurr. lrvan ls the only driver
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 249

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