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I
Page 08 • .fm•ha Ct--.f •lui

Tuesday

Sunday, May 30,1989

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,
WV
I

Weather

•

Today: Cloudy

Hlgh:BOa;L~:eoa

.

Tomorrow: Cloudy

m
.

.

High: 80a; Low: eoa

•

June1, 1M

Girls AAU Basketball results, Page 5
Homosexual marriages, Page 6
Area alumni banquets, Page 6 &amp;10

Sports

~fl --4

Kenny Brack
takes the 1999
Indy 500
-Pag~S

.,:_.-·

······
.··::.:.:-·
....

;.;,,

Mei$8 County's
Vo lunw 4'l Number 2~5

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ol1i0

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Memorial Day: A time for remembering .the price of freedom
'

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH .
Sentinel N-• Sttfl
"The hei!J'I-of America is freedom, Jhe price
is high, but freedom is worth the price."
That was the message of LL Mark Swann, U.
S. Navy '(retired), speaker at the Meigs County
Memorial Day service held in Pomeroy.
He .called on his listeners to "remember the
cost of bringing America tQ this point, and to
honor the millions who paid the price of liber·
ty."
The retired naval officer spoke of the dedica·
lion of men and women who serve their country'
CALL TO REIIEM·
with dignity, and called on Americans every· BER Lt. Mark
where to remember with pride those who serve. SWIInn, U. S. Navy
He asked that patriotism be practiced and the (retired) called on
GUN SALUTE- A gun II lute to thOH who gave thllr IIVH for
debt owed to those who have fought for their Meigs Countlan• . to
their country wa1 given by the firing aquad of Drew Webllter Poet
country be JU;knowledged. ·
· tfke a clear look lit the
30, American Legion a• a part or the Memorial Day Hrvlce•. ·
In conclusion ·he led in a silent prayer of Jlst, to think about the
THE.WATER- Traditionally at the Melg• County . the.government's responsibility for veterans ' health, oftbe Poppy Day sal~s,
remembrance for those who made the ultimate future and .freedom,
sacrifice for their country.
an.d to acknowledge Memorial Day service~ In Pomtroy a wreath Ia. Iaid on the Ohio and then concluded by reading "In Flanders Fields."
Recognition was given to the Crow family, Rick, Carson and Linda, for
Swann, who served 21 years in the Navy, in the debt owed to thoH River In trlbull to thoaa who died defending their country. Hera
the
tribute to World War II veterans in The Daily Sentinel, Sunday edition,
John
Weeke,
lift,
end
Jim
Gilmore,
place
the
wreath
on
the
water.
both the Atlantic and Pacific fleets, returned to whO hiMt eerved and
and
the scholarship fund which has been established by them in the names
a Meigs Marauder brass ensemble.
Meigs County prior to his retirement on May 1 now HI'VI America.
of
the
late Fred and Eleanor Crow for descendants of veterans.
Among those introduced were Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan who
and now resides in the Darwin community. He ·
Preceding
the program, a parade led by the Legion ~s honor guard moved
attended Meigs High School, joined the Navy in 1978, and traveled the extended gree.tings, Pomeroy Councilman George Wright, Meigs County
down
Main
Street.
Fire and emergency vehicles from several communities
world, while earning degrees from the Univer:Sity of Maryland and the Uni· Commissioner Mick Davenport, County Treasurer Howard Frank, and
participated
along
with
Middleport ·Brownie Troop 1015, Vaughan's Cater·
·Mickey Williams, Ohio Legion sergeant at arms, and the Rev. William Mid·
versity of the State of New York.
ing
Service
truck,
the
parade
chairman, Howard Mullen, in his antique car,
.
George Harris, Drew·Webster Post commander, introduced the speaker dleswarth.
·
·
Gladys Cummings of the American Legion Auxiliary spoke briefly about a~d a vehicle of Auxiliary members.
following the opening flag ceremony and playing of the National Anthem by
j

Eastern graduates 50 in Sun~ay comrn·encement
........,~~~ntr

of school shooting
victim. praises gun buyback

APRIL SMITH .
Gallla Academy H. S. ·
Ohio
Foodland

TOMMY DILLON
Gallla Academy/Buckeye

TRENT FELLURE
Gallla ACademy H.S.
Ohio Valley Foodland

MICHAEL MCCARTNEY
Gallla Academy H. S.
Galllpolle Foodland

KELLY HARLESS
River Valley High School
Buckeye Foodland

JOSH RICHARDS
Gallla Academy H. S.
Food land

DAYTON (AP) - Gun buyback programs sponsored by comm,unities
might help reduce violence, says the father of a student killed in the Columbine
High School shootings in Uttleton, Colo.
Michael and~ Shoell\, whose son, Isaiah, WI!$ gunned down in the April
20 massacre, hugged and shook hands with the people who were in tine Mon·
· to sell their
to be destroyed.
now Is if we can ~ ~!II thac Jlinds o{ aqwds,
make a ctw.ge," Mll:hael Shoelsiaid ...,. ·. , •
.
·
said about ISO weapons were purchased during the four-hour buyback. Officials paid $SO for 'each operable gun.
·
The Shoelses and Martin Luther King III, son of the fained civil rights leader,
also spoke at a Stop the Violence rally.
·
·
\bnda Shoels recalled how Isaiah asked his pan:niS shortly before the shoot·
ing, ."What would you do if someone shot and killed all of yoor kids? \\l:luld
you buy a gun and kill the people who killed us?"
.
· "I said no," Mrs. Shoels said "I told him the Lord says vengeance is mine.
I said I would speak out (against violence) if someone kiUed my kids."
King, president of the Southern Quistian leadership Conference, said violence can no longer be tolerated.
"God didn't make human beings to kill each other," he said. "We can stamp
out violence and hatred. We can and
we must, because enough is enough
and we can't take it anymore."

JEREMY SKIDMORE
Gtlllt ACidtmy/Buckeye Hlllt
Galllpolla Foodland

COIJFrrNEY MAYNARD
AMY GRADY
IPilil1nt
Pleaaant High School
Point Plaaaant High Sehool
'IWin Rivera Foodland
1\vln Rivera Foodland

I

Good Afternoon

BRIAN PATTERSON
IPolnt PIIBIBnt High School I
:tWin Rtvara Food ..nd

odaly's

Sentinel

&amp;dlons • 10 Pages

-

"

No
· .~:Picture
'

•

Available

Weather

3

Lottcncs
'

omo
Pick 3: 9-3-0; Plek 4: 6-0.2-9
Bu~keye 5: 3-7-17·25·26

~

BOGGS
ROBBY NEAL
Point Pleasant High Scl~oc•• IPoolnt Pleasant High School
1\vln Rivera Foodland
1\vln Rivers Foodland

COREY HART
Gallla Academy H.
1\vln Rivers Foodland

s.

AMANDA DEAN
I Pc1lnt Pleasant High Scl1ooU
1\vlli Rivers Foodland

w.yA.

c

''"'JEREMY RQWE
Melga High School
Big Bend Foodland

JEREMY JORDAN
Trimble High Scl1ool
Burr Oak Foodland

Dally 3: 2-2-8; Dall)' 4: 8-8-3-8
01999 Olilo Volley hb!lshl., Co.

WILLOUGHBY (AP) - A
man was arrested minutes after
his father was shot to death and
his mother was· wounded, police
said.
Mark Lovsiri, 47, of nearby
Willoughby Hills, surrendered
Sunday outside the home of his
parents, Anthony Lovsin, 75, and
Elizabeth Lovsin, 72.
Lovsin was held in the c:lty jail
in this Cleveland suburb to await
a court hearing today, assistant
police Chief David J. Austen said.
He said the filing of charges
might be announced at that time.
Mrs. Lovsin was reported in
serious condition today at Metro·
Health Medical Center in Cleve·
land with four wounds.

,.

nately. this feeling was replaoed shortly after the fi"t few ·
days of school. We all began 10 wonder where all the
years had gone, especially now that we were counting
down school in weeks' and days instead of years. The
annual oommencement exercises.
moot oommon thought among us is now, 'what do you
Valedictorian Stcp~ie Evans and Saiutatorian Heath
mean that I should know what do with the rest of nl'y
ProffiU addressed their classmates during the ceremony,
life?"'
·
and the school's concert band and choir pcdormed sever·
''Through it all, I feel we've worked han! and exceed·
al numbers.
·
ed most, if not all, of our goals set before us. I am proud
Evans titled her speech, "Follow Your Dreams," and
to include myself in this Eastern High School aass of
noled that as she and her dassmaleS began their adult
1999. This school has touched us all. I think I can sum up
lives, they would find both obstacles and enoourogement.
our thoughts in this last. sentimental closing: "When. I
'1bere is an important dimension to hanging tough
fuSI came to Eastern, I cuuldn 't even spell 'gnduate,' but
that you cannot miss. It is the thing that keeps you going.
now.. .I are one."'
I call it a dreant· lam IIlli talking about tiKioe thi"!!S you
EvU15 and Proffitt were introduced by aass VICe Pres·
·~at night while you are sleepifts. By i dream,"
ident ~ori Putman, apd Class Chaplain Valerie Karr gave
., meon Ill ~ a plan, agenda or goal thlt 1ebds to honor· ·
the invocation arid benediction. aw Prrsident Wesley
iilg results."
·
.
Karr led the Pledge of Allegiance, and aass Treasurer .
''The path to a dream is paved with sacrifices and lined
Mary Styer, Secretary l.acey Bunting and Historian
with determination. And though it has many blocks along
Michelle Buckley led the class in the turning of the tassel.
the way, and may go in more than one direction, it is
1bc ·class officers also led the singing of the Alma
marked with faith. It is traveled by bet~ef and courage,
Matet 11 the close of the ceremony.
pctsistenoc and hard work. It is conquered with a willing·
1bc Eastern High School Concert Band pcdormed
,.... to face challenges and take chances, to fail and try
Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance, the recessional "Coast
again and AP,in. Along with the way, you may have to
Guanl's Marcil" as well as a numbel during the exercisconhont doubts, setbad&lt;s and unfairness. But when the
PROUD MOMENT - Lacey Bunting,
of es, which included scnioi band members.
path comes to an end, you will find that there is no greater the Ealtlm High School gt'lldultlng clua, llhow• 1bc school choir pedonned ''Candle on the 'Miter,"
joy than making your dream come true. •
her dlplol'!ll to IMr ..,.me, Willie and Jtna Bulka of from the Disney Motion Picture "Pete's Dragon," and
"Always aim higher than you believe you can reach. ll!ppere Plllnl. Bunting ptrtlclpated In Sunday'a "Friends Forever," by Cristi Cary Millet lbe senior girls'
You w~l disoover that when yoor talents are set free by co!TIIIIIIICe!IMn exercl- on Sundly.
· . choir performed "Wide: Open Spaces," a song made popyoor imagination. you can achieve any goal. Never ,be
ular by the Dixie Chicks.
afraid or hesitant to step off the patch and head in your
Rick Edwards, high school principal, reoognized the
own direction no matter what other! believe, Dream• can
class' Top Ten Sdlolars: Evans. Proffitt, and Jessica. Mar·
eas~y appear to othe" as extreme and illogicaf."
~m. Jennifer Starcher, Aaron W~l. Valerie Karr, Jessica
. "People wlki excel are those who refuse to sit back
Brannon, Sari Putman, Radley Faulk and Jessica Burchard.
and wait for things to change because they have courage
Edwards also pre5&lt;nted the class to Superintendent
to follow their hearts, live their own lives and settle for
Deryl Well, who aaxpted the class for graduation. School
nothing less than the best. Courage is thinkong big, aiming
lloanl Prrsidc:nt John Rict ronfened diplomas to the fol·
high,lnd shooting far. It is taking a dream and doing any·
lowing gradualcs: frron Cain Aldridge, Beau Jarrod Bai·
thing, risking everything and stopping at 'nothing to make
ley, Jessica Kalherine Elaine Brannon, Michelle Dawn
it a reality."
Buckley, l.acey Nia&gt;le. Bunting, Jessica Jane Burchard.
"It is not enough to have a dream unless you are will·
Gregory 'Miyne Burke, Jeremy C. Casto..Jm:my Ralph
ing to pursue il."
Olleman, Geotge Thomas Olram U, Jooepb Bradley Oil·
In his wmments, Protlin noted the changes and many
!on, Stephanie Ann Evam. Radley Chartin Faulk, J...ica
experiences that he and his classmates had experienced
4nn Grimbtaff, Joshua AMon Hager, Juliana Michelle
· together as they went through schooltogethe~ including
Hayman, Dustin Taber Huffman, Angela C. Jolmson,
drivers'licenscs, proms and school tripo.
Valerie S. Karr. Wesley Tyler Km. Robert Kauff, Matthew
"We first came here in seventh gnde," Proffitt said.
La: King. Jason l..ce Landes, Melody Lomine LAwrence, .
"No longer were we elementary 'kids,' but junior high
Shawn Amos Marcinko, Jessica Chantcc Marcum.
'students. • Then came the eighth grade. We could now
Jason E. McCartney, Suzanne Jane Milhoan, Jason
lookdownupontheloWiyscventhgndof!. 'otftcial'bigh
Nathaniel Mora, Jaymie M. Osborne, Sari Elimhelh
school was only one year away and moot of us were finalOlllccn Putman, John Heath Daniel Proffit~ David
ly teenaaers- sorry, parents."
GIRLS CHO
E
HI h School Michael Putntan, Uslie Renee Richard. Nikki Jean
"Next, wu ninth gnde, but now we had a name: we
· IR - The alltem, II
Roberts, Heather Nicole . Rockhold, Adam Bryant
were freshmen. Yes, we were finally in high !chool, too Senior • Glrle Choir performed Wide Open Sanders, William A·. Sdlultz, Jr.• Jennifer Rose Starcher,
bad we were at the bottom of the 'high school hieran:hy.' SpaCII for their claaamatH and thOH attend· Mary L Styer, Angelia Dawn Taylor, Soon M. Tuttle.
"In tenth grade, most us 'had our 'sweet 16' and for lng the IIChool'• 4~nd Annual Commencement ·Heather Dawn Westfall, Ann Marie Wiggim, Jamie Nicsome - . parents seemed to start ~ins less than ExerciiiS, held Sunday.
hole White, Joho Thomas White. lynene Renee White,
we did, I dOn't know, maybe it wu just us."
only one year from the ultimlle, the elite, seniors!"
Steve Michael Whitlock, William Aaron Will. and
"1be cOuntdown continued to 11th grade. We were
"At last, we 're on top. Yes, we are seniors. Unf011u· . Angela Marie Wolfe.

..•'

You've seen the~·rorkin~ in our stores, when
they weren't itt qjir classrooQlS. Now they're .
graduating &amp;om $gh school'or.: college. To each ••
one ofyou·, CON~RATULATIONS and.BEST . . '.
WISHES.as you .4ib.usiasticaiJ.y
go &amp;om one
.
phase of your lives
to the next...
.
.GOOD GOING GRADS!!i
•
•

'

'

'

s

Son arrested after
shooting parents

By BRIAN J. REED
SentiMI ,._. Sr.ll
Diplomas were conCerted to SO gnduating seniors at
Eastern High Sdlool on Sunday, during the school's 42nd

••• Locally Owned
· and
Community--Minded

.

'

Awards presented to Eastern underclassmeij
Robert A. Klein, 18, 32035 Welch·
town Road, Pomeroy.
Post ~d Day were each treated
and released from Veterans Memor·
ial J-lospillll, while . McGuire was
transferred from VMH to Holzer
Medical Center. An
HMC
spokesperson said McGuire was
admitted with multiple lacerations
and is in stable condition today.
Klein was initially taken to VMH
. and later transferred to Ohio State
University Hospitals in Columbus,
where he was listed in fair condi·
lion today.. .
·
·Troopers said McGuire was east·
bound when she lost control of the ·
car, went off the right side of the
road and struck ·a house. The car
continued on, struck a·JIIlrked car
in a driveway owned by Frances
L. Haggy, 43252 SR 124, Racine,
then ~truck ·a tree, and came to rest
on its top.
CHECKING THE
-ltate, Highway Plltroll'l'ooJ*' larry Dama&amp;e to both Mc;Guire's car
Call of the Qallla-Melge Poet ohecilled the ecene of an aocldent and the parked vehicle was severe,
early Monday on State Route 124 near Racine thlt InJured four peo- according to the report. The patrol
pie and reeulted In cttatlona tor the dm.r, Julie A. McGuire, 20, cited McGuire for unsafe speed
31805 SR 325, Langsville, whOM car Ia-n att.r It overtul'ned.
and a sea\belt violation.
· An accident early Monday on
State Route 124 near Racine sent
four people to area hospitals for
'treatment of injuries, the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the State Highway
,Patr\)1 reported.
.
Transported from . the scene of

the 6:35 a:m. crash by the Meigs .
EMS were driver Julie A. McGuire,
20, 31805 SR 325, Langsville, and
the following passengers in the car
she drove - John W. Post, 19,
40079 Landaker Road, Pomeroy;
Tiffany L. Day, 15, Racine; and

Academic awards were present·
Oark, Sarah Sexton; World Histo·
ed to underclassmen at Eastern
ry: Adaln Moore, Amber Church,
High School during the school's
Juli Bailey, Brandon Browning,
awards assembly held on Friday.
J&lt;;&gt;sh Clark, Kim Godwin, Josh
The Danforth "I Dare You"
Kehl, Amanda Northrup, and Joey
Award was' presented to Aaron
Thylor; Geography: Jason Barber,
Schaekel and Leah Sanders, both
Stephanie Pullins, BJ. Blackburn,
juniors. Schaekel and Sanders also
Andrew Rollins, Josh Will,. Beau
received the Ohio University
Bailey and Aaron Will; Histol')':
Alumni Association award.
·
Sarah Mansfield.
English 1: Tammy Bissell,
Biology 1:' Tammy Bissell,
Bradley Brannon, Holly Broderick,
Ben Holter, Garrett Karr, Chris
Kayla Gibb$, Ben Holter, Gam:u
lyons,. Kim .Marcinko, Bradley
KarT, Otris Lyons, Danielle Ruclm',
Brannon, and Sarah Mansfield;
Whitney Karr, Kimberly MarcinkO,
Biology II: Josh aark, Josh Kehl,
Billie Jo Welsh, Jimmy Putman,
John Cooke, and Juli Bailey; lnte·
Jessica Bartimus and Andrew
grated Science: Sarah Sexton;
Reed; En$lish II: Juli Bailey, Josh
DANFORTH AWARD Chemistry: Jessica Pore, Josh
Oark, Wes Oow, Josh Kehl, Mar· Sanderl and Aaron Scheekel, both Broderick. Matt Caldwell, · Molly
cia Perions, Brandon Browning, Junlore at Eastern High School, t:leines, Chastity Ht~llon, Scott
Joey 'Iaylor, John Cooke, Amber received the Danforth "I Dare You" Needs, Aaron Schaekel; Steve
Oturch, Nat~ Marcinko, and award and the Ohio University Alum- Weeks, Josh Will.
Justin DeLaCruz; An: Janet Rlde. nl A. .oclatlon award . ilt Friday'•
Yearbook awards were pre·
nour, Tina DeLaCruz, Kim awards a-mbly. •
sented to Je101ica Grueser aild Onda
Marcinko, Qnda Oifford, Thmmy
Oifford.
Bissell, Bradley Brannon, Danielle Rucker, Olristie Ri.ley,
Amber Olurch received the word ptocessing awlrd, Ud
Kim Godwin, Nancy Pickens and lack Collins.
.
Josh Broderick, Josh Kehl, and Sarah Mansfield mceiv~
Psychology: Josh Broderick, Jessica Pore, Molly . the keyboarding award.
•
Heines, Chao;tity Hollon, Scott Needs and Cassie Rose;
Perfect Attendance awards were presented to Bradley
World Events: Aaron Schaekel, Brooke Nichols, Josh Brannon, Evan Needs, Brad Willford and Josh Weaver.

�Tuelday,June1,1999

Commentary

Death Notices·

·.-The·Daily Sentinel Web-site sp9of has Bush seeing red;
'E.sta!J(is/Utf in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fex: 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G~l

DIANE HILL

M1n11111r

1M Serftinelwatcamu,.,.,..

7W*I-.,. ,._

Controller
eo the tdltor from,_.,. on • brud ,.,._of top-

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llflclo . , IIIII ro. Llllwo to 1M-. n.. Sendnel, 111 Coulf St,
Jlu:::•GJ, OIJio 461el, or, FAX fo 7~·2167.

;Are Chief Wahoo's days numbered?·
New owner will have to make choice
By JOHN AFFLECK
AlliOCIIted Pree1 WrHer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Walter Goldbach d1dn't mean to anger anyone
when he first sketched out the cancature of a gnnnmg, b1g-nosed Ind1art
brave.
• It was 1946. Goldbach was a 17-year-old work10g at h•s uncle 's emblem
company, trying to come up With a snazzy logo for the Cleveland Indians
baseball team.
But more than 50 years s10ce Goldbach's hand1work became Ch1efWahoo
-the face stitched 10 to every Cleveland player 's cap- the symbol has
become a source of tens1on, loved by fans but rev1led by Amencan lnd1an
activists who cons1der 1t degrad10g and rac1st
Sports marketers beheve the logo w1ll present a tough problem 1f lnd1ans
owner Richard Jacobs follows through on his plan to sell the team
The owner will face thiS ch01ce. g•ve m to protesters' demands and change
the team logo - even its name - and take the resulting heat from fans, or
keep the logo and be seen m some clfcles as msens1t1ve.
"The new ewner will be m a huge pressure cooker with regard to how
loud people will scream about th1s," sa1d Brandon Siemer, who heads a sports
marketing company 10 New York.
Goldbach, now a retired s1gn des1gner who hves 10 the outer Cleveland
suburbs, said he was probably mfluenced by the cartoon style of the day when
he first drew Wahoo for then-new lnd1ans owner B1ll Veeck.
"The last thing on my mind was try10g to offend anybody," Goldbach
sa1d.
Through the years, h1s ong10al design has been fine-tuned.
Wahoo's face- ongmally a sort of orange-brown - IS now red. A pony
tail has been shorn, and Wahoo's nose has been shortened ~nd straightened.
The lnd1ans use JUS! the Wahoo head m promotiOnal matenal now, not a fullbody figure that was sometimes shown through the years.
Goldbach sa1d he never heard any complamts about the logo until about
1'5 years ago
More recently, anti-Wahoo protests have become a fixture outs1de Jacobs
Field on opening day and dunng the playoffs.
Last year and 10 1997, demonstrators were arrested for burnmg Wahoo m
:effigy. Protesters have sued the c1ty, charging that pohce harassed them and
violated their nght to free speech.
Jacobs has oonsistently said he won't change the logo, but a new owner
may have a harder time holdmg that pos111on.
Vernon Bellecourt, president of the National Coalihon on Racism m
Sports and Med1a and one of those who has been arrested, sa1d the ownership
c~ange would be a perfect time "to cleanse the national pashme of msututional rac1sm."
Bellecourt wants major league baseball to hold a nat1onw1de contest to
give the Cleveland team a new mckname and logo. He thmks the mterest
from that would mcrease sales of clothmg and other 1tems with the Cleveland
logo, wh1le malung Wahoo a collectors' 1tem.
· But the profits from apparel sales are spht among all the maJor league
•clubs, and nght now the Indians rank fifth among baseball's 30 teams. Only
the New York Yankees, St. Lotus Cardmals, Atlanta Braves and Ch1cago
&lt;;:ubs sell more.
"You have a hot market in Cleveland," Steiner sa1d.
Complicating matters further, the lnd1ans also are performing well on the
field. They have the best record m baseball, and sales of Wahoo-related gear
probably would get even better 1f Cleveland won •Is first World Senes smce
1948, shortly after it adopted the logo.
"From a sports market10g standpomt, th1s 1s what you hve and d1e for,"
Steiner said. "You wa1t for the big win, then you take that logo and you go
•crazy w1th it."
Steiner has a hard t1me 1mag1mng maJor league baseball allowmg the Indians to change logos even for a few years.
Fans also would be unhappy.
, Louis Colombo, a local attorney, may have stated their pos111on best m a
. letter he wrote m The Pla10 Dealer.
"The beauty of the game of baseball•~ 1ts timelessness and trad1hon, and
the way those elements connect generations," he sa1d. "The name and the
· logo are at the heart of that trad1hon 10 Cleveland."
But Lee Berke, a Cleveland native and the semor vice president of marketiOg for The Marquee Group, sa1d he can st1II1magme a new owner usmg
• the scnpt "Indians" exclusively and dump10g Wahoo.
He noted the mfluence of a trademark panel's recent deciSIOn to revoke the
• Washington Redskms' federal trademark protection, and schools dropp10g
' thC1r lnd1ans-related mclcnames.
"It's an 1ssue that's not going away," he said.
Meanwhile, Wahoo's creator says he doesn't care 1fthe logo stays or goes.
TQ Goldbach, 1t's JUSt a drawing he made as a teen-ager
~ "If they have a problem w1th 11, why don't they get a bunch of Nat1ve
!merican artists and have a contest between them to come up w1th a new
R¥to?" he asked. "Does that sound fa~r?"

'fl'oday In History

IJY The AlliOCiatad Pt'881

: Today is Tuesday, June 1, the 152nd day of 1999. There are 213
4ays left in the year.
~ Today's Highlight in History.
i On June 1, 1813, the U.S. Navy gained its motto as Capt. James
tawrence, commander of the U.S. frigate "Chesapeake," said
·~Don't give up tbe ship" during a losmg battle with a British frigate.
; On tbis date:
. In 1792, Kentucky became the 15th state of the union.
f ·In 1796, Tennessee became the 16th state.
In 1868, James Buchanan, the 15th president of the United States,
qied near Lancaster, Pa.
: In 1943, a civilian flight from Lisbon to London was shot down
by the Germans during World War II, killing all aboard, including
·
actor Leslie Howard.
l .In 1958, Charles de Gaulle became premier of France.
: In 1968, author-lecturer Helen Keller, who earned a college
degree despite being blind and deaf almost all of ber life, died ir.
Westport, Cono.
In 1980, Cable News Network made its debut.
In 1997, Betty Shabazz, the widow of Malcolm X, was fatally
tiumed in a fire set by her 12-year-old grandson in her apartment in
Yonkers, N.Y.
; Teo years ago: Fotmer Sunday schoolteacher John E. List, sought
fPr. 18 ycus in the slayings of his mother, wife and three children in
Westfield, N. J., was arrested in Richmond, Va. List was later sentenced to life in prison.

J

By J1ck Anderson
name. Exley told us he wanted to create a s•te space may forever look d1fferent.
,
1nd Jan Moller
that spoofed the governor But he never found
Ray Thomas of RTMark insists that only
To many m the outthe lime, so 1nstead he lent the name "someone who doesn 't know much about any.s•de world, Texas Gov
(www gwbush com) to an anti -corporate thmg" would have confused the first site wit~
George W Bush •s JUSt
group named RTMark (pronounced artmark) the real thmg. Recogmzmg the potential for
another
aw-shucks
that's resp,ons•ble for farcical proJects, includ- embarrassment, RTM ark told Bush 's people
mg the Barb1e LiberatiOn Army.
they ' d shut down the s1te for $350,000 -- ap
Southern boy who 's
being drawn mto a ron
At first, RTMark used the new domain offer that was later lowered to $80,000 But
for pres1dent at the urgname to create a s1te condemmng all manner Bush 's team would not be blackma•led, and
mg of his friends But a
of corporate wrongdoing, usmg a rough blue- RTMark sh1fted gears
Thomas changed the graph1cs to be in
closer look reveals a sophiSticated campaign pnnt of Bush 's off•c•al Web s1te. "The f1rst
operation that's spent the past year making version of our site didn'• even mention Bush accordance with fair use laws with the FEO,
sure nothing is left to chance.
at all," one of the site's designers told our and recast the s•te as a dmct parody of the
Almost a full year before Bush created his assoc1ate Kathryn Wallace "The point was t'o governor. It talks at length about the rumor;
presidential exploratory comm1ttee, one of his expose how tamted the electoral process has surrounding Bush's adm1ttedly "wild" youth
a1des had a shrewd Jdea to prevent the k•nd of become. We JUSt used Bush's campaign as a Tucker complams that 11 shll b~ars a sinking
high-tech pranks that can plague high -profile springboard."
and Jntenhonal resemblance to the officii( I
cand1dates. Qu•etly, the a1de bought up every
Bush's spokeswoman says the s1te looked site
Internet "domam name" he could thmk of exactly hke the official campa1gn Internet
Condemning Exley as a " garbage man,"
involvmg the governor and h1s w1fe It was all headquarters, w1th the same pictures of Bush Bush f1led another complamt w1th the FEC,
part of a plan to prevent the governor's pohh- and his w1fe and the banner "Official Pres•· wh1ch 1s still pend1ng, that w•ll determme
cal opponents from makmg merry r;:::;:;:::::===========-======:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::;;;;;;;;;::~::=:=====:::::::;=~
m1sCh1ef at h1s expense.
Thanks to Karl Rove, who
rece1ved a promotiOn for h1s foresight, the Texas governor now

owns the rights to "www bushsux.com," "bushblows.org" and
"bushbltes com" along with a
host of other addresses. Anyone
who dials up these sites will now
be hoked d~rectly to the governor's official exploratory committee. In all, more than 60
doma1n names were bought up by
the Bush campaign and are now
hnked to the off•c•al s1te.
W1th that s1mple act, Bush
seemed po1sed to explOit the
power of the Internet to further
h1s campa1gn. W1th more and
more money chasmg fewer and
fewer voters, every candidate
wants a strong presence in cyberspace, espec1ally s1nce those who
care enough to look up a candidate's Web page are probably
more hkely to vote m the fall
"It was a very smart way to
control the flow of Information
about the cand1date," Mmdy
Tucker, spokesperson for Bush's

Wilham Eugene Cundiff, 67, Nelsonville, d1ed Sunday, May 30, 1999, at
h1s residence.
A rehred laborer, he was born Sept. 2, 1931, 10 Hunt10gton, W.Va., son of
the late Robert Wesley and Hazel Gertrude Nelson Cundiff
He IS sumved by a son, W111iam Eugene Cund•ff; four brothers, Robert
Cund1ff Jr. of Middleport, Charles Wesley Cundiff of Nelsonville, Ralph
Edward Cundiff of Rutland and Gregory Ke1th Cundiff of Middleport; three
sisters, JoAnn Whaley of Delaware, Betty Olarles of Columbus and lack1e
Sue Blackburn of Columbus; and two grandchildren
Serv1ces wll( be held Wednesday, 10 am . at Ew10g Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev Woodrow Call officiating. Bunal will be 10 Gravel
H1ll O:metery m Cheshire
Friends may call Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Wedneectay, June 2
foreeutlor
IIICH,

I • · - ftii-;WJ • ,

Leonard J. Fields

•I Columbuo 118•,w• I

Inc

0~--~-·
PI.Cioudy

~

so-n To-

A...

Flo6!leo

Warm, wet conditions set
:for area through Thu'rsday
' By The Aalocleted PreH
Ohio will continue to feel the effects of bemg on the backside of a high
pressure system that's moving slowly toward the east, pumping warm,
moist air into the state.
For the next couple of days, skies Will be mostly cloudy with a chance
of showers or thunderstorms. H1ghs will be mostly m the 80s.
Overnight lows will be in the 60s.
The record-high temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather station was 96 degrees in 1934 wh1le the record low was 41 m 1894. Sunset
toQight will be at 8:53 p.m. and sunnse Wednesday at 6:05 a.m.

campa•gn,
told us. None of the ll=================~==============-..:..::::::=:::====~
Smart mdeed
other presJdenllal exploratory committees we denllal Exploratory Committee."
whether folks who post anll-cand•date Web
spoke to had even thought of reserv10g domam
Tucker says she f1rst learned of the faux s1tes w1ll have to disclos~ sources and funding
names -- mcludmg the man who says he creat- s1te when a reporter of a "large, national" much like a political act1on comm/'ttee.
ed the Internet -- V1ce Pres1dent AI Gore
magazme called before runnmg to press with
For h1s part, Exley is JUSt thrll ed w1th~
But hke all great plans, th1s one had a flaw information posted on RTMark's site
attention h1s site is rece1vmg and beheves h•s
For all h1s good work, there were a few
Bush's campa1gn pehlloned RTMark's expenence JUSt aff~rms the lafger vo1ce th~t
domain names that Rove fa1led to acquire. server to shut down the site and fired off a ordmary people can gam through the Internet.
Instead they were bought for $210 by a young, cease and des1st order to both Exley and the "So far &lt;&gt;ver a m1lhon people have read" the
enterprismg computer consultant m Boston.
Federal Electlons Commission.
Internet site, Exley wrote us v1a e-ma1l "We
Recognizing value when he saw 11, Zack
Th1s is when thmgs took a nasty turn, and are hav1ng as b1g an effe&lt;;! ~~ ,m1lhpns of dolExley bought up three combmat10ns of Bush's when the dust settles the pohhcs of cyber- lars worth of TV ads "

Assaulted by the press
I often th10k of a pubhc-school teacher who also demanded h1s dJsmJssal because of Zogby's
was arrested for a particularly reprehensible "vicious anti-Israel wntings, " including his
cnme. For weeks, the press m her town focused descnphon of Israel as "an ahen oppressor."
on those charges, limitmg her demals to the very
Z•on noted that Malcolm Honlein -- executive
end of the story. After she was acqu•tted, she sa1d d1rector of the Conference ofPres1dents of Amerthat she, felt as though she had been run over by ican Jewish orgamzations ' -- had descnbed
a truck
Zogby's appOintment to the State Department as
Joseph Zogby, recently a spec1al ass1stant for "obscene."
Near Eastern affairs to the secretary of state, IS
In two outraged editonals, the New York Post
recovenng from a Similar expenence. After he repeated the purported quotatiOns from Zogby's
graduated from the Univers1ty of Vlfg101a Law articles, addmg that Zogby had called the Oslo
School, he founded the Palestine Peace Corps accords "a cap•tulahon, a VIrtually unconditional
and, living in the West Bank of Israel from 1996 surrender to an occupier... Thi&amp; guy shouldn 't be
to 1998, he was also 1ts d~rector. He res1gned work10g as a dog-catcher."
from the Corps before Join10g the State DepartAs the press attacks spread, even the usually
men!
JUdiCIOUS Abraham Foxman, d1rector of the AnhH1s organization brought 40 young lawyers DefamatiOn League, sa1d of Zogby that there
and law students to the West Bank to work as should have been no room m the State Depart10terns w1th vanous Palestmian human-nghts ment for "individuals who pubhcly advocate
organizatiOns and other legal groups They also antagonistic v1ews of Israel "
met w1th Paleshman and lsraeh leaders across
With regard to Zogby writ10g that Israel is "a
the political spectrum
monster," he actually wrote: "How could l1denTh1s year, while Zogby was at the State tlfy with the people who oppress the PalestimDepartment, he was the target of a broads1de by ans? Maybe 11 was because we have a lot 10 comMorton KleiO, nahonal president of the Z•omst mon" Zogby Cited "our genocidal treatment of
Organization of Amenca, who urged that he be the Native Amencans and enslavement of
f~red from the State Department for havmg wntAfncan Amencans . After grappling w1th the
ten of Israel as a "colomzer," a "monster" and s•m•lanhes between lsraehs and Amencans for a
an "abuser of Palestinians "
while, I recognized that the only way out was to
Kle1n's charges were based, he sa1d, on two adm1t that the big, bad lsraehs are just like me ."
articles Zogby had written 10 the Arab, Amencan
As for the Oslo peace accords, Zogby actually
literary Journal AIJad•d and 10 the Washmgton wrote: "Most Paleshmans v1ew Oslo as a cap1tuReport on M1ddle East Affairs
lat10n, a virtually unconditiOnal surrender to an
Alerted by the Klem attack on Zogby, S1dney occup1er... Most Palesllmans, mcludmg h1ghZion, a columnist for the New York Dally News, ran~ing Paleshn)an Authonty officials, have not

By Nat Hento"

read the dense, legalistic accords."
Zogby added that he )lad corrected aPalestmian offiCial who had falsely charged an Israeli
violat•on of part of the accords
In a letter tq the Forward, a Jewish weekly
newspaper in New York C1ty, Brad Rubm, who
ldenhfleS himself as "a proudly rehgiOuS Jew,"
wrote that he had spent a summer wjth Zogby's
Palestmian Peace Corps 10 (he West Bank.
"Never d1d Zogby demand that we believe m, or
subscnbe to, any one view." And graduates of
that program, Rub10 went on, "haye educated
Palestintans about Amencans, and Jews and
lsraehs about Palestlmans; and Americans about
each s1de "
Joseph Zogby IS now a trial attorney m the
Special Lit1gat1on section of the CIVIl R1ghts
DIVIsiOn of the Justice Department. H1s job
involves 10vestigatmg and prosecut10g "systemic
civ1l nghts violallons by state and local law
enforcement and in state and local prisons."
H1s JOb descnphon cannot, of course, 10clude
violations of fa~rness by members of the preS$.
Zogby's only recourse IS to cont10ue to be the
kmd of person we used to call "a mensch" in our
neighborhood.
'
Zogby also wrote that so long as "Israel occup1es another people and nation ... neither people
will be truly free "That is exactly what I heard m
Israel from lsraeh colonels-- ~II of whom foug~t
in the wars of surv1val -- when they started the
Peaco Now movement to keep their country free.
Nat Hentoff IS a natiOnally renowned authority on the Flfst Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of R1ghts

Make dull candidates duller BylsnShoales
The pres•dentlal elections are over a year away, but our hyperact1ve
med1a are already chewing up losers and sp1tt1ng them out AI Gore, for
example, IS 10 trouble.
It seems he's JUSt not as exc1ting as B1ll Bradley. I don't know what
mcrements of dullness the med1a used to factor mto that conclusiOn. To
my mmd, B1II Bradley and AI Gore would both make equally attractive
doorstops, except that Mr Gore has the unfortunate habit of domg the
macarena at the drop of a hat. (His advisers, I understand, are urgmg h1m
to take up the jitterbug instead.) Mr. Bradley, I've heard, used to be a
basketball player. Maybe 1f he played a httle one-on-one w1th reporters
while givmg speeches, it m1ght spruce up h1s Image a httle b1t.
Cunously, Bob Dole has also been wntten off, even though he's not
running. Always cand1d -- except when he's trymg to get elected -- Mr.
Dole had expressed the opinion that John McCam was a pretty good
chmce for president, even though his Wife, Ehzabeth Dole, IS also considered a candidate. This led to dozens of Viagra jokes, of wh1ch there
are never enough, espec1ally nbw that Monica Lewinsky no longer occupies our full national attention.
Ms. Dole herself has come under fire, sort of, for not being an
impromptu person. Even her ad hbs are scripted 1s the complamt. Do the
media want her to let her half down, do the macarena, and wolf down
Jello shooters? Yes. But I doubt that her numbers would soar.
For no reason that I can tell, Texas Gov. George W. Bush is the
Repubhcan front-runner. He IS considered the embodiment of tht latest
Republican makeover, the "compassmnate conservative." I'm not sure
what a compassionate conservative is. Does one call oneself a compassionate conservative to set oneself apart from the droves of vicious conservatives, dispassionate conservatives and heartless conservatives out
there? Other than h1s careful embrace of compassiOn, I'm not too sure
what exactly Gov. Bush stands for. Oh, nght. He's for children.

William Eugene Cundiff

Ohio weather

~

Are there any compassiOnate liberals? No. Except for Jesse Jackson.
Nobody's even a plain old hberal any more, except m the mmds of righ,1
wmg talk show hosts, many of whom cons1der Elizabeth Dole a hberal.
To wh1ch a pundit such as myself can only mutter, " Whatever." All can~
didates everywhere, however, are m favor of ch1ldren They are the
future. We must get them all on the Internet immediately.
'
As1de from their support of ch1ldren, so long as they don't have to talk
to them, the cand1dates don't seem to stand for much of anythitt:g, reall~
ney all seem to be standing around, like boys at a prom.' And in th~
wake of two terms of Pres• dent Feelgood's feehng our pam and (alleged•
ly) the body parts of any woman within bis grasp, AmerU:a. might be
ready for ungamly awkward polihclal)s, pe,gple who ]l!st.Aoli't know
what to do w1th their hands.
l
,
As a matter of fact, If I were to ~ffer adVICe to candidates, it would be
th1s: Get stiffer. If I w~re. you, 1 would pr~ctice walking without bending
the knees. I would ehmmate all mtonatLon y;h~n sp~ai•ng: cultivate $
low drone that can barely be heard. Lard your speeches w1th words lilt~
"non~starter," "cha11enge," ufuture," and ~'prionUes.'" If you have
charisma, get rid of II. It Will just lead to trouble later.
A~cord1~!l to The New Republic, AI Gore has recruited Donna Brazil~
as h1s poht1cal d~rector A Southern black Catholic froJII LSU she
"helped engineer the House Democrats' upset in '98." Regardmg Gore''
staff, she says, "We have a lot of adv•sers -·we're saturated with advis'
ers. I' m looking for the activists. We've got to return AI Gore to the
streets." See, now that's exactly what I'm talkmg about
:
How can you return AI Gore to the streets, when he's never been t&lt;)
the streets before? Take my advice Coat the guy with shellac and lug
h1m around on a hand cart.
Get him good and shiny, but for heaven 's sake, don't try to loosen him
up. The world as we know it might end.
1' •

Weather forecast:
Tonighl ... Warm and muggy with a chance of showers Lows only 65 to
70. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday...flumid With scattered showers and gusty thunderstorms.
Highs in the mid 80s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday mght ... Muggy w1th scattered showers or thunderstorms.
Lows in the m1d !)Os.
Extended forecast:
Thursday...:Lingering showers poss1ble in the morning, part1al cleanng
dunng the afternoon or evening. H1ghs 75 to 80.
Friday... Mostly clear. 'M:ornmg lows near 60. Highs m the lower 80s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Mornmg lows 60 to 65 H1ghs in the mid 80s.

ogs

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-MO)
C......tt, New ; lflr Hukllnp.lnc.

tit"'bJ ""'

Ohio

calls

Memorial Hospital,
4 18 p.m. Monday, Maples Apartments, Pomeroy, Charles Kiser, VMH;
5 50 p.m Monday, South Seventh
Avenue, Middleport, Robert Dav1s,
VMH;
7.46 p.m. Monday, Broadway Street,
Middleport, Charles Yol\llg, VMH;
10·22 p.m. Monday, Uncoln
Heights, Pomeroy, Gary Johnson, VMH
POMEROY
5:11 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
department to Pomeroy Parkmg l..ct, car
fire, Joe Tillis owner.
RACINE
12.42 am. Sunday, Fifth Street,
Bnan Sweanngen, treated at the scene.
REEDSVILLE
1:47 p.m. Sunday, VFD and squad to
Joppa Road, motor-vehicle accident,
Robin Bamnger, St. Joseph's Hospital;
12 16 a.m. Monday, B1gley Ridge
Road, Rick Murphy, VMH.
RUTLAND
9:49 p m Sunday, New Uma Road,
George Murdock, HMC;
1:04 p.m. Monday, Lasher Road,
Steven Layne, VMH.
SYRACUSE
7:06 a.m. Saturday, Worchester
Street, Martha Jean Graham, HMC,
Central D1spatch squad ass1sted,
6:33 a.m. Monday, state Route 124,
motor-vehicle accident, Robert Klein,
Juhe McQu1re, Tiffany Day, and John
Post Jr., VMH, Pomeroy, Racine and
Central Dispatch squads assisted.
TUPPERS PLAINS
2:19 p m. Monday, Chester Cemetery, Robert Burton, VMH

Umts of the MeiS' County Emergency Med•cal Serv•ce reoorded 22 calls
for assistance over the Memorial Day
weekend. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:59 a.m. Saturday, North Second
Avenue, Middleport, W111lam Dav1s,
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
12 26 p.m. Saturday, Broadway
Street, Racine, Vicki Norman, treated at
the scene, Racine squad assisted;
12.59 p.m. Saturday, U.S. 33,
Pomeroy, Martha Greenaway, VMH,
Pomeroy squad assisted;
4'11 p.m. Saturday, state Route 124,
Pomeroy, Tammy Charles;
9:48p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy Parking
Lot, Eddie Patrick, VMH;
10.34 p.m. Saturday, Barringer Ridge
Road, Ponland, Kathline Evans, treated
'at the seen~;
3.01 a.m. Sunday, state Route 7,
Pomeroy, Juli Kipg, treated at the scene;
6:21 p.m. Sunday, Broadway Street,
Middleport, Charles Young, VMH,
, 8:11 p.m. Sunday, Broadway Street,
,Racine, Vicki Norman, O'Bleness

Pltblllllool ""'Y aile.-, Mondly
fnday, J11 C..• 54 , Pomeroy, Ohto,

!he

w•ey Pltblillt..ac..-r Seoood d . .

C"..:t::'"'
.. l'omoroy, Ohio.
• 'n.
Prell aDd the 011110
~eel

N--lo!l

po.t=essen Send lddreu comdaons to Tbe
Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun St , Pomeroy, Oh1o
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Dati]&lt;....- ...... ... '"" '" ....... 35 cSublaibcra not dNnna to pi)' tile c:arrier may
rtmll in adva.ce dartet lo The Dlaly Scnlinel on
a tlute, li1 or 12 morO bu11. Credit wlll be I
f!Vcn e~mer OlCh woet
Na llllllcriplioll by mail pemuued m ucu
where home earner serv.oe • 1vallable
Pltbltohn ,...,_ the riafJIIO odjUII clotr·
llll the 1Ublai)tt1011 ~riod S.blcripition flit
" ' - 1111)' bo lmplemoiiOd by dllnlitlll 1M
du1111lon of tM sublcripuon.

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26 w..a ..................... ,J56 68
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AmrTech ...............................84~

Alh 011 ...................... ,...........40'1.
ATIT .....................................55't.

Bank One .............................. 55"-

Cherriplon .............................,.7\
Cherm Shpl ........................... 5~
City Holding ..........................27'1.
Federal M9SJUI .........................46

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Bra.aghton ............................11'•

13 -...... ........ ,_ .. ,,.$27.30
26 \YoeU ................. """""J$3 82
SZ Woelll .. - ........ ,,_,_,JUI5.56

IICCirolo.

Stocks

BOb Evena ......................T.....19'k
Borg·W*"er ........................55'1.

MAILSUI8CRJP110N

13 -~~~ ... ·-.. ••• ...... .$29

The Daily Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••ber .. fn.215.5. o.,.rt-

.............re:

Gotrot ........................ ..EI&lt;L 1101
N...... ... ... ...... ............ ·- , ...ElL 1102
orEaL Utili

Other Service•
Ad¥1111111:1-.................................E:II:&amp;. 1104

'Ctl'&lt;lllotloll. .... ... ..... .... .. . .ElL 1103

ca-llled Ad&amp;.... "'""""'' ............Ext. uoo

.~

Gannett .................................71 'h
Km1rt ....................................15'1.
Kroger ..................................58"/te

LlnCII End ............................. 42'Ltd .........................................48't.
Oek Hill Flnl ............................18

ova ........................................33'1.

OM Yllley ...............................38
PeoPIII ................................ 25'!.
Pram Flnl...............................14"
,AoekM11 ............................... 54~
ADI&amp;hell ................................55"S..ra ....................................47't.
Shone(• .....,............. ,........... 2~
Flrttltlr ................................28%
WendY'• ...............................21~.

Worthlngton ...........................12'-

-•-•-

Stock report• ere 1odey's
10:30 a.m. quot11 provided by
Advlll of Gllllpolls.

Leonard J. Fields, 81, New Haven, W Va, d1ed Saturday, May 29, 1999
m the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
The son of the late Ira and Mary Estella Fields, he was i retlfed selfemployed auto mechamc He was a U.S Army veteran of World War II
whose name is inscribed 10 the Battle of Normandy Wall of L1berty.
He was a member of the Christian Brethren Church in Mason, W.Va., and
a 53-year member of the Smith-Cape hart Post 140 of the Amencan Leg•on
in New Haven
Survivmg are h1s w1(e of 48 years, Eileen Clark F1elds; a daughter, Kimberly Harbrecht of New Haven, and a grandson.
•
He was also preceded in d_eath by three brothers, Raymond, Russell and
Denms F1elds, and a Sister, Elma Goodmte
Services will be I p.m Wednesday in the New Haven Funeral Home
Bunal w11l be m the Graham Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home
from 6-9 tomght.
M1htary graveside serv1ces w1ll be conducted by the Stewart-Johnson
VFW Post 9926, Mason, and the Sm1th-Capehart Post 140 of the Amencan
Legion

Archaeology go's high tech in
tracing Ohio's Civil War battle
By ANDREW WELSK-HUGGINS
Aleocllltad Pren Writer
COLUMBUS (AP) - Season
after season has passed and plows
turned battlefield soli dozens of 11mes
smce Ohio's brush w1th the Civil War
in July 1863.
But thanks to a new archaeological
survey using metal detectors, computers and a Global Positioning Satellite
mappmg system, historians are closer
to knowing what happened when
Confederate Brig. Gen. John Hunt
Morgan took on the Umon during the
1863 Battle of Buffington Island.
Atchaeologist G M1chael Pratt of
Heidelberg College began a twoweek investigation Saturday of the
southern Oh10 bottomland where
Morgan's Raiders made the1r last
stand in Ohio.
"The metal detectiOn dev1ces, the
mapping devices, all of those things
are more accurate and faster than anything archaeologists had even a
decade ago, " Pratt said in a phone
interview Friday from his northwest
Oh10 home.
Morgan, a Kentucky native and
Mex1can War veteran, headed north m
July 1863 to attack m and around
Louisville, Ky
Olased east to the Oh1o River
crossing at Buffington Island, north of
Pomeroy, Morgan was under attack
from two sets of Union calvary and
two Umon gunboats on the morning
of July 19. He led more than 1,100 of
h1s men through a narrow pass at the
north end of the valley, then continued northeast until he was captured
near Lisbon on July 26.
Praft, who is cred1ted with redefining the location· of the 1794 Fallen
Timbers battlefield in Maumee,
receJYed a $40,000 grant from the
National Park Service's American
Battlefield flotechon Program for the
Buffington survey.
\blunteers usmg metal detectors
will first locate metallic artifacts such

as bullets and bayonets.
The type of artifact w1ll be logged
and 1ts locahon venfied by a handheld
GPS system The locatiOn will then be
downloaded d~rectly mto a oomputer
mapping system.
Systematic use of metal detectors
is hundreds of times more accurate
than more trad1honal archaeological
techmques, which mvolve cataloguIng artifacts found by systematic digging, Pratt said. Similar surveys of
Custer's Last Stand at the L1ttle
Bighorn Battlefield m Montana
turned up many new artifacts, he 531d.
Franco Ruffim, deputy state historic preservation officer, says Pnltt's
survey will be the first "systematic
field reconna1ssance" of what d1d or didn't - happen during the battle.
Until now, mformation about the
four to five hours of fightmg has been
hmited mainly to contemporary
accounts, sa1d Ruffim, whose office IS
m Columbus.
Ruffim says any informahon that
Pratt's survey turns up will be combmed with a future survey of battlefield property owned by Shelly Matenals Inc., of Thornv1lle. The mfmmation w11l help guide the company's
development of the minmg area,
Ruffim sa1d.
One man watchmg the survey with
special mterest IS Gayle Pnce, whose
grandparents witnessed tbe battle and
whose graridmother threw bread to
her pigs rather than let rebel soldiers
get it.
Pnce, 88, has mterviewed the
dCSCI'ndants of many w1tnesses of the
fightmg, wh•ch occurred on property
he st1ll owns. He expects Pratt's team
to turn up a lot of artifacts.
"When I was a httle boy, we
would say that Morgan buned treasure," Price sa1d by phone Saturday
from h•s Portland farm on the Oh1o
River.
"We'd go hunt everywhere m the
woods.''

Kosovo refugees help
focus on global plight
By EUN-KYUNG KIM
Auocl1ted Prees WrHer
WASHINGTON (AP) - They
also have been driven from their
homes by th~ thousands. Warnors
have assaulted their men, raped their
women and even torn the hmbs off
theu children. But the faces of these
refugees arcn 'I splashed acro"'' the
pages of newspapers, and telev1sion
crews rarely await their arnval at
U.S. airports.
While the pbght of Kosovo
refugees captures America's attention, refugee ass1stance agencies are
trying to focus national concern on
similar stories by Somahans, S1erra
Leoneans, Burmese, Colombians
and many others seeking safety here.
The displacement' and trauma
experienced by Kosovos and other
refugees worldw1de usually vary little.
"But the world response has been
different," said Kay Bellor, resettlement director for the InternatiOnal
Rescue Committee.
Americans are part of an international community rushmg to supply
ethnic Albanians •h Kosovo w1th
food, shelter and promises of repatriation, a pledge rarely made to other
refu~ees. Media reports ahout brutality, mass killings and separated fam·
ilies appear daily. With 11 comes a
swell of sympathy that mternatJonal
relief workers haven 'I seen since the
mid-19705, when AmencaM opened
their homes - and pocketbooks to Vietnamese ani! other Indochinese
refugees.
Concerned individuals who con-

tact rehef agencies wanting to help
Kosovo refugees soon learn they are
not alone.
"Hopefully, this outpounng of a
support will spill over. We're telhng
people, maybe if you can't mentor a
Kosovar family, you'd be w1llmg to
mentor a Somali family. That's the
way we're Iookmg at 11," sa1d
Gabrielle Bushman of the lmmigrallon and Refugee Services of America.
"It's been beneficial for ever~one
that there's so much attention bemg
pa1d to Kosovo refugees because I
think people are beginmng to understand the phght of refugees in general,'' she said. "These aren't people
who are peasants or commg to AmerIca in search for a better life. Very
often, they don't want to come here
at all."
Numerous battles over ethmc and
religious differences ex1st throughout the world but very few grab
qeadlines like the Kosovo Albanians
driven from tliclf homes by Serb1an
police.

Local briefs:
Middleport youth cited In sec/dent

The Middleport Police Department investigated a two-car accident on stlurday morning.
·
:
Acoordmg to the department, Christopher Snouffer, 16, M1ddleport, was
cited for fa1lure to y1eld after he ran a stop SJgn at the Intersection of General
Hartmger Parkway and Beech Street, stnking a car driven by 1llomas
Fetherolf, 58, Blooll)ingville
There were no IDJunes Light damage was reported to both Fetherolfs 1994
Chevrolet, and Snouffds 1986 Ford

Driver injured in one-vehicle accident
An InJUry-related acc1dent was mvest1gated Sunday at I 45 p.m on County Road 43 (Joppa), south of State Route 681, by I he Galha-Me1gs Post ofthe
State Highway Patrol
Troo)lers sa1d Robm Barringer, 18, Portland, was southbound, travehng at
an unsafe speed, when lhe driver lost control, went off of the nght s•de of the
road m a curve, came back onto the road, lost control agam and shd off the
right s1de of the road, overtummg mlo an embankment
Barringer was taken to St loeseph's Hospllal m Parkersburg, WVa, by the
Me1gs EMS, accordmg to the patrol The car rece•ved moderate damage.
Barringer was cited for unsafe speed

Breaking and entering probed
No items were reponed stolen followmg a breakmg and entenng investigated Monday mommg by the Me•gs County Shenff's Office.
Deputies respondmg to Lmle John's C.tgo serv•ce stallon in Tuppers '
Pla1ns Monday mornmg found a busted s1de door on the busmess, but oo
•terns were m1ssmg. The mtrus1on tnggered an aud1ble alann that hke '
frightened the would-be burglars, Shenff James M Soulsby sa1d.
j~
I;'aul Carter, state Route 689, Albany, reported Fnday that someone bro~e..
the lock off h1s gate and took lumber he was usmg 10 build a garage
Y:
Roy P1erce, 51768 state Route 338, Racme, reported Sunday that som;:;
one cut the lock off h1s field and drove over h1s cabbage plants that were .~.
be harvested Monday Several hundred plants were destroyed, the repon stated

Car thefts Investigated

A30-year-old Middleport man was arrested on a charge of grand theft Saturday accused of stealing a car belongmg to Rutland area res1dent
' L~
Edd1e Patnck, Story's Run Road, allegedly stole the 1996 Chevrolet Cli'f"'
alier belonging to Karen S Hunt, accordmg 10 a Me1gs O:&gt;unty Shenff's
Office report. The car was recovered later 1n the Pomeroy Parkmg Lot
In oodltlon, Jason QUJvey, 18, 36920 Pagev1lle Road, Albany, faces'!!'
charge of grand theft in the alleged Monday theft of a 1977 Ford p•ckup true~&lt;'
belongmg to Max10e R1ffle, Hartford, W.Va. The truck was later found
wrecked over an embankment
•, -

'TWo cited following incident

..

1\vo Pomeroy res1dents were c•ted followmg an mc•dent mvesllgaled by;
the Meigs County Shenff's Office Sunday
Jeremy Hubbard, 21, 35404 I..cng Hollow Road, was Cited on charges,\!{:
dom~tic violence and resistmg arrest, and Juhe King, 20, 37998 state Roulffl
143, was Cited on a charge of underage consumpllon.

Man cited for domestic violence

,,

Damel Murphy, 19, 50498 B1gley Ridge Road, Long Bottom, was attif
Monday by Me1gs County Shenff's depulles on charges of domest1c v•olence
and underage consumption. He IS accused of assaultmg h1s father w1th fistS;'ii'
golf club and a glass Jar, accordmg to a Me•S' County Shenff's Office report
H1s father, Rick Murphy, was treated at Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal m
Pomeroy. He was transported there by the Reedsville squad of the Me•&amp;'
County Emergency Med1cal SerYJce.
.Tf

ODOT announces summer'hours

,){'•.

Ohio Department of Transportation employees working from the Me•!P'·
ODOT garage have changed the1r work hours for the summer.
'
Employees have opted to work frorn 6 30 a m to 3 p m mstead of 7 a1'!1'1
to 3.30 p m In past years, employees were g1ven the ophon of working fotur
10-hour days dunng the summer. That was not an option th1s year, accordjf\l;
toODOT

Announcements: •m

~--~~--~------------------~'

Crusade underway

:~

:·~;;

The Mlllenmal Crusade for Christ w1ll begm tomght (fuesday) at 7
p m. at Me1gs H1gh School Tomght 1s Pomeroy/M•ddleport mght ao!l
spec1al recognJilon will go to offic1als of the two v1llages. The Gabr~
Quartet will be singmg along w1th a 50-member commumly chOir PQ:;
serYJce mus1c Will begm at 6.40 p.m w1th She~ Ia Arnold as the featured
singer
~-·,

Meigs Local Board of Education
The Me•gs Local Board of Educahon mechngs scheduled for June"S'
and June 22 Will be held m the Me1gs H1gh School Library and w1ll begm
at 6:30 p.m. 10~tead of the customary lime of 7 p.m.

Ice cream social planned

..•.

The Bashan Lad1es Aux•hary Will hold an 1ce cream soc• aI on June.25
at the fire statiOn.

Couple to entertain

:"

Junmr and R1ta White w1ll entertam at1he Me1gs Semor Center, Thu~­
day, 5.30 p.m. The pubhc IS mv1ted. There IS no admiSSIOn charge.

Lodge to meet
The Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164, F&amp; AM. w1ll meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the hall. There w1ll be three cand1dates for first degree Refresl\l.
ments w1ll be served

Food applications

~~·

The Meigs Uniled MethodiSt Cooperahve Pansh w1ll be takmg app1•cahons for food for low mcome fam1 hes with school age ch1ldren. App.ij,
cat10ns w1ll e taken Wednesday, 9 am to noon only
,.,

Support g~oup to meet

·~

Canng and shanng support group Will meet Thursday, 1 p m at tHe
Semor Cillzens Center Shenff James Soulsby w•ll speak on telephon~·
scams and fraud.

EPISODE
PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
7:00, I 40 DAILY
'
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1·00, 3.40
NO PMSES, NO IWIGAIN NKIHT

LOST&amp;

520 W. Main St. Pomeroy, OH
Phone 992·2588
VInton • 388-8603
Gallipolis • 448-0852

'•

KISSED (PQ13)
1 GO I I 20 DAILY

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1·00 I 3.20

),

\

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel
·

Baseball
. AL standings
Easurn Division
.ll' L

:X..

Boston .....•.... ! .................... JI 19
New York ............. ,............... 29 20

l'&lt;l.

!ill

592
.462

1':

620

Toronto ................................ 24 28
T~ B1y .......................... 2:t 28
Bahnnort ..............................19 .\ 1

.45 1
J80

Centnl Di\:UJon
CLEIJELAND ................... H 16

.6?J

12

NL leaders
10
10
D

.J60

15',

Wtstun Division
.. ........... JO 20

.600

:-'nahtim .. ,...

Plusburgh,
: H.
Chlcogo. J42.
Jl•:
O
lcrud, New.. m
Yorio;,
.14.'!;Rodnguez.
Abreu. Philadelphia.
RUNS,J Beii.Arlzoo•.47: Aifonzo. N.wY&lt;&gt;&lt;k,

Oakland ............... ........... 21 24
................ 26
.... :....... 24

BAITING' L.. Gon,.lez. Ari;,.,, .182: c,.,ey,
Cmcinnati . .l8 1, l. Walker. Co lorado . . 378; Kendall,

..529
520

24

n

471

-'2: Kendall . Pimbt~rgh, 40: Giles. PittJburgh. 39:
B;~gwell .

-~ ·,

Hou,ston, 39: Sosa. Chiraao. 39: Mau

WIIJ,ms. Anz•n• .19

4
6':

RBI : Man . Willlams. Arizona. 51: B. Jordan,

Adama. 46 . Bagwell . Houston, 4~ ; Mondesi. Lo1

Angeb. 44 . Tati~.Stlouis. 42: Vemura. New

Sunday's stores

41: ·V Glli."ITI!,o. Montreal. 40
HITS: 1. Gon,_n let. Arizona, 11: Man ~if::~~:
Arizona. 69 : ca~ey. Cincinn~ui. 67 :
J~usbU&lt;gh. 64. K. Young. Piusb"'gh. 6.1; B.
Allanra. bi. J lleii . Arizona. 61
·

Ntw York 8. Turonto J
BoSton 4, Q.EVELAND 2
Qt:troir J, Chicago 2
Ttxas l , Minnesota'2
Oakhmd II , Baltimore 5
Amtheim 4, Kan srts City .\ '
Tampa lla)' IS, Se!lttlt." 7

Cmcinn:ur . 17 .' 0irrud. New York. 17:
Pittsbur~h.Am;omr.
16: K. Young, Pitt sburgh . I.
Gonzalez.
16: Mau Willianls. Arizon1.

Monday's SCONS

TRIPLES : L. Johnson. Chicagi'l .

Bosto11 8, Detroi t 7
CI.EV·El.AND 7. New York I
M1nnesota 3, Anaheim 2
Se:mle 10, Bahimore 6
Te1c:a~ 4. Kan sas City ·' ( 10'
Oald1mU 10. Tampa Bay 7

~:

N Perez,

CQlomdo, 4: A. Jones. Atlonta. 4: Womack, Ari w na .
4 , Manm. Ptnsburgh. 4:1 ore Ired with 3

llOMERUNS,Monde.,.LosAngelos. JS,soso.

Tonight's games
Dt.-trott I We;li'C'r 6- .~) at Boston L~Olberhng.c tt 2- 1).
7 05 p m
Chkogn tSi rotka 2-61 at Toronto ( [~lT! har 4-21.
7 QS p.m.
CLEVELAND (8urbn 5- I I at New Yor k
(Cief9ens ~ -0). DS p m.
Kan~as Ci ty (Witam:k I -4 J :\I Te)(US ( Helhng 5·
5). 8:35p.m
Miunes otn (Lincoln 1-7) ;u Anaheim (Hill 1-41.
10:05 p.m
Tampa (la)· (EilunJ 0-0) :n Oakland (Rogers 2-2 ),
10:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Guzmnu 2-4) at Scau lc tF Garcia 61). 10:05 p m

Wednesda}''s games

Chk ago. !7; Mall Wi ll i:uns. Arizona. 15: J. Bell.
Ari10iltl,
McGwire.
St 1-J
Loui s. IS:• Tm•s. Sr
Lour
s, 14 ,15:
Bagwell
. Houston,
STOLE N BASES: Cedeno. New Yor~ . 2K :
Wurnad:. Anzona. 16 ; E. Young . Los Angeles. 21:
Came ron, Ciacinnali . 17: Biggi o. Houston . 15;
Kendall. Piusbu'!h . 1-': R. Sanders. S;~n Diego. 0 .
PITCHING (I {k·cision~) . Lima. Houston. 8-2.
800. J O.l. Bottenfidd. -St Lollis. 8-1 . .800. 4.06:
.S chrllrrtg. Philadelphia _ B-2 . 1:\00_ 2.57: Rrmd y
Johnson. Amo na . 6-2. .7'i0. 2 88 : Va!U~:s. Los
Angeles. 5·1 . 7 14. l7~ : 1·11rmpton .. Huustuu .
7 14, 2.85. Ontz .. San Francist·o. 6-- J. _667.
Millwood. Atlao&lt;u, b·! . 001 . ;w,·
Philacklphtn. 6·.l .667. J.,67: Bohanon. I
6

4

~i'R J ·~kouTs

.1 ..
""''' Johnso ... Adwm•. 11
K. Bmwn, Los Angeles. 76, Schll lh•g. Ph•lodci~•ln.
74 , Reynold s, Houston, 71. Hilchcock. San Diego.
69,
As,elo. Colorado. 62 , Es&gt;es. son FcoO&lt;Isco. no,

Pock. Los Aogeles. 60.
c Nen. San
Frnnelsco.
15: J. Lo5
Frnneo. New
YorkSAVES
, 14: Wagner,
Houston.
12 : Shaw,

Kansos Ctty IAppicr &amp;·2 ) nr Tt."a~ {Sde 4-4 ), 2:J5
p.nt
Tampa Bay IAivare~ 2- .' } at Oakland (Candioni
3-5). 4:05p.m
Detroit (lllOmpscm 4-6) at Boston (Wakefield .\.
4). 7:05p.m.
· Chicago (Navarro 3-41 at Toronto (Hentge n 4-3 ).
7;0.'! p.m.
CLEVELAND &lt;Wrighc4-3) at New York (Penine
J- 2), 7:35p.m.
Minnes01a &lt;Radke 4-4) at Anaheim (Finky 3·5 ),
IOJj _p.m.
Baltimore (Mussina 7-2) at Seattl~ (Halama 3·2 ).
IO : J~ p.m.

12; Urbina, Momre 11 1. 11 . Rocker. Atlama. 10:

Willi""'· p,,.,b,'l!h. Jo

Basketball
NBA conference finals
Saturday'.$ score

..

San Antonio 80. Penland 76

Sunday's score

NL standings

New York 1B . Indiann90: New' York leads seri es
J.() '

Eastern Dlvblon
.ll' L l'J:l.
Atlanta ......... .. ................. ,.... 31 20 .608
New York ..... ................. .. .. 27 24 .529
Philadelphia .... "'" " .......... 25 24 .510
Montrtal .......... .. " .... c.... ... 18 JO ..175

1Hm

!ill •

Florida ......

4
5
11'-,
15

J5

..\14

Ctnlral Dh-ision
Houston ............ .' .................. .29 20
Chicago ............................ 27 20

.592
.574

.. ................... 16

CINCINNATI.......

.... 25 22

Pimburgh ....
.. ...... 26 24
· stLouis ................ .............. 25 24
Mitwaukee ......................... ... 23 21

Western DivisiOn
Arizona ........ :...................... 3 1 21
San Fruncisco .
.. .. , ..... 27 24
Los Angeles , .............. ....... 26 24
Colorado ..'
....... 2 1 27
San Diego .. .
.... 19 )()

·

Monday's scor~
Snn Antonio 86. Port land ijS: Srm Antonio l~ ndi
series 2-0

The futu•e
. tOnighl
New York at Indiana: 8:30p.m.
Friday
Son Antonio al Ponl11nd, 9 p.m.

1

.5.l2 .
.520
.5 10
.460

:596
.529
.520

n

4
6',

4

.429

8
10111

.388

.

spotter and wasn't warned of
Luycndyk 's approach. When Carlson
lifted off · the throttle in the turn,
Luyendyk had to tap his brakes 10
avoid a collision, and that was
enpugh to send his car into a slide
that ended against the waiL
" I wouldn't have done it with
you, I don't think ," Brack sa id.
"That's a bold move. But it was
good racing, it really was."
It also was the 15th and finaiin&lt;ly
500 for Luycndyk, a two-time win·
ner who earlier announced he would
retire after this race . And as the
Flying Dutchman walked toward the
stage, where drivers were getting
ready to be introquced, he turned to
the young Swede and sa1d, "I'm

happy for you, man . I'm glad you
won thC ra&lt;:e .''
Luyendyk Mill holds a lot of Indy
records - including speeds in practice, qualifications and the race . He
also has won more money than any
other driver at Indy - almost $5 .6
million - and two years ago set a ·
record with $1 ,568,150 for his second victory.
Bra&lt;:k's $1.465,190 is the SC&lt;:.ond biggest prize in the a3-year Indy history.
" That is absolutely unbelicvable," said Brack, the ·1998 Indy
R~cing League ~cries champion
whose previous high was -$310.750
for sixth place in last year's. Indy
500. "This is the world'·s b1ggest

race, so it should have the world 's flat out doing interviews and all ,f;

bigg~~~ purse. They 're huge num- kinds of things. It ' ll probably take :.f.
bers.
few more weeks until it sinks in com·' :

Jeff Ward, who finished ·econd to
Brack, earned 5583, 150; Billy Boat.
Brack's teammate, took home
$435 ,200 for third ; Gordo~ received
$253,270 for fourth , and Robby
McGe hee, who was named Indy 500
rookie of the year, earned $247.750
for fifth .
McGehee's chief mechanic, Ste ve
Fried, was critically injured in a pit
accident early in the race. McGehee
dedicated his rookie of the year trophy to Fried .
. .
.
·
Brack, meanwhile, said his victory ~!ill hasn't sunk in.,
.
S10ce yesterday, I ve been go10g

pletely, 1f it ever will," he said.
Brack won three races on the wa
to his IRL championship last yearStill , he remained a virtual unknow~
to most of this country - until
Sunday. And winning at Indy, as his •
car owne r A.J. Foyt has always said,
can make any driver famous.
· " It can, if you keep winning as .'
many as he did," Brack said of his
boss, the first four-time Indy winner.
"For .me, I'm not really bothe.red by
that right now, I want to win. That's
why I race . ·J want to win every race
I take part in."

Meigs' Vining scores 16 points in SEOJs title-game loss to Sting
•

BY: ANDREW CARTER

Addington exploded for 22 points
S.E.O. Cats: Ward 3-0-010=6, 1-0-010=2 , }!ayes
1·0·0/0=2,
in a 62-43 thumping of the Rio Cummins 0-0·010,0, Tolzda 2·0- Kubachka 1-0-010=2. Marx 5· 0·
.Gallia
Academy 's
Brianna Grande Rebels . Johnson had six 0/0=4, Benson 2·0-010=4, Gwin 6-0- 3/4=13. Totals: 25·2·9/12=65
Jolinson scored 19 points to lead the points and Gooch added two p(Jints. 416,d6, Vining 4-2·2/2=16, Monroe
W.Va. Sting: Lee 9-Q- 1/7=;19.
W~\ Virginia Sting to a 70-65 victo- Johnson and Atldington both
0\(P Staff Wrllilr

ry?v~r. tbeS.E.o. c;atsintheUnder· reacheddo~bledigits. ina71 -52win

15 . diVIsJOn champtonship game of over the R1o Grande Rebels 10 the

the;, fifth annual Rio Grande AAU
lm&lt;llallonal .on Mond":Y· Johnson
sc&lt;tred II pomts In the f1rst half and
helped sp~rk a second half comeback
forthe.Sung.
. .
• Mctgs ~tandout Amber Vmmg
had. ,16 pomts to lead S.E.O. Jen
.th•p n of Mar.'elta als~ had 16 pomts.
R1ver ,Valleys Cynth1a Ward added
'S IX:J?Oints: ,
.
.
• ~'he St~ng s Casste J{Jmble led all
.sct)fers With 23 pomls. She dram~d
five .three-pomters . L1sa Lee also had
~9'pGmls _for the Sung ..
.
!he Snng won all e1~ht games !n
10
\he tournament, mcludmg five
pool play Saturday .a. nd Sundat
10
,Johnson had 14 poiOls a 65-28 wm
over Urbana on Saturday. Blue
, Angel
teammate .
Meredith
Addmglon had .two pomts. .
Johnson talhed 12 pmnts m a 75.
65 victory ov~r the Southeast Oh10
All-Stars. Addmgton ch1pped m f1ve
J)oints and Chelsea Gooch ~f Ohio
· Valley Chnsllan ha~ four pomts.

TO THE HOOP - With Portland's ·Walt Williams In his face, San . ·
Antonio forward Sean Elliott goes to the hoop for layup during
Mo n da Y n Ig ht's Western con fere nee c h amp Io nshl P sa rlas game In
.,
San Antonio, where Elliott's three-pointer In the final seconds gav .
etha
AP Spurs an 86·85 win and 'a 2·0 lead in the best-of-seven serleal

,..;;,'-~--::-~---~-..~~~---"!"'"-:"~-"!"'"--~--~
possession, Robin son stole the ball
from Wallace at the top of the key.
Elie was fouled by Williams on the
subsequent layup attempt, and made
both free throws to cu.t the lead to 84·
83.
.
Stoudamire missed a jumper, but
Williams got the rebound. The Spurs,
with a foul to give, fouled Jackson
quickly, then fo~led Sto4damire to
send ·him to the line.
He missed the first ·free throw,
swore loudly . a! himself, then made
the second to put Portland ahesd 85·
83 with 12 seconds to go.
Portland shot out to a 21-IO.Iead,

was up by 17 in the second quarte~
and stretched it to 18 early .in the ·
third. The Spurs used a 17-2 run in ·
the third quarter to cut the lead to 54·
51.
.
After Sabonis hit a 20-footer and·:
Stoudamire followed with a 17-fool· .
er to start the second half, the Blazers ·
had their biggest lead, 52-34.
·
But the Spurs .roared to life with ·
an outburst that began and ended · ·
with three·pointers by Elliott.
· .
Avery Johnson , who missed · his·· '
first seven shots, made two jumpers ·

Sp..,fS.. ,

(Continued from

Pag~ 5)

during the run and Elie added a
lhree-pointer and layup. Meanwhile,
'Wallace and Brian Grant bOth left the
' ga~e with four foul~.
Duncan's. three-point play, fOI·
"Jow.ed by Robinson's reverse layup,
cut Portland's lead to 73-72 with
5:25 to play. But Jackson made a
lhree·pointer just before the shot

(See SPURS on Page S)

single elimination .tourname~t round.
John.son poured 10 16 po101s and
Add10gton had 13 points. Gooch
added three pomls.
.
Johnson was voted MVP .of the
Under·l5 tournament. Addmgton
was also named to the all-tourney
squad..
,
Vtntng and Ward were also named
to the all-tournament squad
· The rest of ,the. all· tournament
team featured . LISa Lee ~nd
Kassandra Robmson of tne Stmg,
Anna Ramey and Jenny Royse ?fthe.
R1o Grande Re"':ls, J~n .Gwm of
S.E.O., and Jesstca Liming, Tara
Walker and Mackencte Copas of the
Southern Oh1o AII-St~rs..
.
In the Under- 16 dJVJSJon, Indtana
Top Recrun captured the tournament
IItie. Indiana Top Recruit was
unbeiilen throughout the tournament.
Under-IS liga!-balf 1l!llm
S.E.O. Cats ..................... ..29·36=65
W.Va. Sting ..... :................ 32·38=70

clock 'expired l&lt;i make it 76-72, then
followed· with a layup, his only
points of the game, and Portland led
78-72 with 4:26 to go.
·
Wallace made two jumpers and
Stoudamire . hit a 15-footer to put
Portland ahead .84-76 with I :59 to
play.

Gooch 0-0-0/0=0. Herrald 0-0' 1-0-012=2 , Williams 0·0·0/0=0, ·,
0100'0,
Johnson
7- 1-213= 19. K1mble 4-5 -011 =23. Totals: 24-6·
Rob1n son l-0- 112=3, R amc~ 0-0- 4117=70
0/0:0, Beatty 2-0-010=4, Addmgton

East A'II -Stars
· ··cap
' t ure
. 11 -7 Win
• over West
.

By ANDREW CARTER
Gallia Academy's Ron Haynes
had two hits and River Valley's Mike
Mollohan had a hit and pilchcd one
inning as the East defeated the WesJ
II · 7 in the SoUJheast District
Division 1-11 all· star game played
Sunday at V.A. Memonal F1eld 10
Chillicothe.
Haynes went 2-for-5 with a pair
of sing les and scored a run for the
East. He started in right field.
Mollohan had a single: He struck
out two batters and walked two batters in one inning qf work. Mollohan
gave up two· ru'ns on two hits during
his seventh inning appearance.
The East took an 8·0 lead into the
bottom of the seventh, but had to
weather a six-run rally by the West
over the f1nal three innings to pick up
the win. Jackson's Jason Williams,
the starting pitcher for the West,
earned the win. Zach Lambert .of
Waverly was the losing pitcher:
Andrew Shekas of Logan, who
had three hits in the contest, ·was
voted the MVP of the game for .the
East. Greenfield McCiain;s Scott
Lovell, who had a triple and a single.
was the We'st MVP.
.
ln addition to Shekas' three·hit
performance for the East, Devin
Chapman of Athens had three singles. Warren's Tim Smith had a triple
and three RBI.
Meigs teammates Jeremiah

Bentley and J.T. Humphreys ai so
played in Sunday's contest. Bentley
pitched two inni11 gs. Humphreys
caught four inning s. ,
Like West Jeammate Lovett,
Tracy Od ic of McDermott Scioto
Norhwe st had two hils. John Bialy of
Circleville hotl a double and Ryan
Weller of Greenfield McClain also
doubled .
Ron Janey of Logan and Fred
Gibson of AI hens coached the East.
Gibson Hllcd in for. Paul Ondrus of
Wash.ington ·court House, who was
unable to attend the g,amc.
Marty Dunn of Chillicothe and
Dennis Hagerty of Scioto Northwest
coached the West.
[n the Division Ill-IV game, the
West pounded the East, · 22-3.
Ironton's Dan Meehan picked up the
win on the hill. Jason Lyall of
Symmes Valley was the losing pitcher.
\vhiteoak's Kenny Barnes. was
named MVP for the West. Chri s
D'Augostino of Alexander was voted
MVP for the East.
·
Ironton's Ryan Carmon had a two- ·
run hornet in the fifth. D'Augostino
ripped a two-run shot for the East in
. the sixth.
.
·
Adam Willi ams · of Racine
Southern had ty;o singles m the contest.
Tim Fredericks of Piketon and
Chris Veidt of Whiteoak coached the

.

..

West. Wellston's Pat Hcndcrsholl and (Chesapeake) (4), Brad Morgan
Rusty Webb of Sym 1ne s Valley (Chesapeake ).
coached the East.
WP-Dan Meehan (Iro nton)
Illi'.l:lllnning l!!l;!h
LP-Jason Lyall (Symmes Valley)
East ............... 300-030-212= 11 -12-3 M ·
West ..
.... I00-000-2n=7-11 -2
Un10r ,
East batteries: Jason Will iams Golf
(Jackson ). Adam Sprague (Warren)
(3) , Jeremiah Bentley (Meigs) (5). to start Wednesday
Mike Mollohan (R1vcr Valley) (7).
Bill Sole (New Lexington) (8), Pat · The Meigs Junior Golf Leagtie
Looney (Athens) (9) and Dcv1n will ge l underway on Wednesday
Chapman (Athen s), J.T. Humrhrcys June 2. at 1he ·Pine Hills Golf Club.
(Meigs) (5). Dev ,·n Chapman Regi strati on wi ll bem 8:30 p.m.:with
(Athen s) (9) .
tee time a19 a.m.
West batteries: Zach Lambert
The league is for ages 8 through
(Waverly), Shaun Evans (H illsboro) high school.
·
(4), Shane McFarren .(Vmton Co.)
For more information call Carol
(8) and Justin Wagner (Logan Elm). McCullough at 992-5322, Debbie
WP-Jason Williams (Jackson)
Davis at 992-592.1 or Cheryl Thomas
LP-Zach Lambert (Waverly)
at the golf course at992-6312.
•
lliy. W:IY louin&amp; .l!llab
West ...... :......... 202-585-00=22-22-0 Fried remains
East. ..... :..............OI0-002·00=3-6-0 in critical condition
We st batteries: Dan Meehan
INDIANAI:'OLIS '(AP) _ Chief
(Ironton). Matt Soale (Lynchburg mechanic Steve Fried, who was run , ,
Clay) (3), Kyle Young (Whiteoak) over on pit row during the Indianapolis :. i
(5), Joey Barnett (Whiteoak) (1) and 500, was · awake and responding to .
Adam Stine (Piketon), Kyle Phillips those around him. He remained in crit-; ;;t
(Portsmouth 'west) (6).
ical but stable condition in the intenEast batteries: Jaso n Lyall sive care unit at Methodist Ho.spital.
,
(Symmes Valley), Ryan Skeens
In an effort to prevent such injuries .'~~
(Chesapeake) (4), 'Josh Strothers again, crews for the Energizer,,;,
(Belpre) (5), Chris D'Augostino Motorsports team will wear heifl)tts at ;
(Alexander) (8) and Brad Shortridge .the ~ext Indx Racing League event- 1
(Chesapeake) , . Adam
Haines · at Texas Motor Speedway on June 12.

J ·
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League

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NHL conference finals ·

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Saturday's score
Buffnlo .S. Torumo 2,

Sunday's score
Colorado 7.

Colorado I , Philadelphia 0
Pittsburgh 7, Houston 3

Dalla~

5. Co lorado

lead~

series J-2

Monday's score

Arizona I0. New York. I
Milwaukee 10, San Diego 3
CINCINNATI 6. Florida 4
Chicago 7, St Loui s 4

BUffalo 4. Toronto 2. Buffalo wins series 4·1

•

Dilllas

Mondliy's scores

ill

Tonl1ht
Colorado. 7:30p.m.
Friday

'

Colorado al Dallas. 7:30p.m., if m:cessary

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Soccer

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MLS standings

Tonight 's games
· Ariwna {Anderson 0-1-) at Momrcnl !l'awmo ~~~ - 1:05 p.m.
· .
.
St Loui!l ( A c ~vedo .1-1 l at Floridn !L
Hernandez 3- 4 ). 7.05 p.m.
. Los Angeles ( V&lt;~lde s ~-2) a1 Pit) sbur_gh (Schmidt
4-.\). 7 · 0~ p.m
·
San Ftaocisco (Gardner 0--1 ) · nt l'hiladelpiH:l
{Person 0-0l. 7:35 p.m ·
CIN CINNATI Ul arni~c h -1 -SJ m NeW Vnrk
(Hershlser 4-4). 7:40p.m
Colorado {8 .M. Jones 1·3 ) at Al lnnta tSmohz ~ 1), 7:40p.m.
.
San Diego {Ashby 5-.l ) .at Chtcago ( Trac h ~et 25), 8:0:5 p.m
Houston (Bergman 2"i l at Milwat~kee (Krarl 5·

3). 8:05p.m.

Wednesday;sil!lames
San Diego (Murray 0·1 J at Chicaso (farnsworth

,

Arizona (Daal ~ - 4) :;u Montreal &lt;V:azquez 2- 3).

.··..'.•
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The future ,

CINCINNATI S. New York J
Piusburgh 5. Los Angeles 4
Milwaukee R. San Diego 2
St. Loui5 .'l . Floridn 2
Atlanta J. Colorado I
Arizon!l B. Montreal 5 (10)
Philadclphio 4. San Fmncisco J

•

Eastern Conference
Itu.m

W

D.C ....... '· .................. /

I.SOWPts G.[
·' 2 17 l4

COLUM BUS
..... 7
Tamp1! Bay ..
.. 5
New l:.nl! lonll ..- ........... . A
NY-NI
..4
Mmmi
........ -I

·' J
5 J
6 2
6 2
8 2

t5
-9

10

g
8

II

II

II
R 14

GA
17
R
15
1.1
14

23

western Conference
Chtcngo ........... :...... 6 4 0
Colorado

........ 7 2 2

I M 19
17 18

'

10
9

'
'

D:1llas..
...... 6 .'i I 16 16
7
Los Angel~s....
. ... S 6 J
q 7
7
San l os~ .............
.. ...... 6 .'i 6
6 !2 19
Kansas City .................... I 9 0
J B 19
NOTE: Thrt.'t! poinls l'or VIctory. on~. point for
shootout wi n and zero points for lou Shootout
(SOW) i! a subset of willS. ·
N~w England 4, New York · New Jers~y ~ - SU

St. Louis (Painter O-J ) 31 Florida (Dempster 2· 11.
7:05 p:m.,
'
Los Angeles (Drcifon 5-]J at Piusburgh (Ri lchie
4--J), 7:0.11i p.m.
San Francisco (Onil 6-J) at Philadelphi11 (Byrd
6-3). 7:35p.m.
CINCINNATI (Avery 3-4) 31 Nt."w York
(bringbausen 0-IJ, 1:40 p.m.
Colorado (Brownson 0-0) at Allanta (O.~rel: ].
2), NO p.m.
•
Houlton {Lima 8-2) at Milwaukee (Eldred 1-.l).

Miami 2, Tllmpa Bay I
COLU MBUS 2, Los Angeles I
DC United' 3, Chicago I

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Saturday's scores

7,05 p,m.

s,o, p.m.

home $1.47 million from a purse of
$9.05 million, the biggest prize pack·
age in auto racing history.luyendyk,
who wound up 22nd, had to settle for
$382,350, not a bad piece of change
under the circumstances.
A day earlier, Luyendyk seemed
most likely to get .the congratula·
tions, not to mention the heaviest
paycheck. He started from the pole
position, led much of the early going
and appeared almost untouchable on
the track. Then.• as he admitted later,
he made a bonehead move, trying a
risky pass on the inside of Tyee
Carlspn.
What he didn ' t know was
Carlson's radio was out, meaning
Carlson was not in contact with his

Hockey

Sunda}' 's scores

Montreal 6. San FTilncisCo 4
Los Angeles 5. Atlanta 4 ( II )

2·0), 2:20p.m.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5 •

Sa1urday
Indiana at New York, 6:30p.m.

J

J',

By BOB BAUM
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - The
moment was one a shooter lives for,
and Scan Elliott can shoot with the
best of L~em .
_ .
Sta.ndm. g on h1s toes JUSt InSide
the s1delme, Ellwtt sank a three-,
pointer with . nine seconds lO go
Monday night to give the San
Antonio Spurs an amazing
.86-85
·
victory over the Porl!and Trail
Blazers in Game 2 of the Western
Co~.ference finals. ·
.
.
[ dream about ,makmg b1gger
h
"Ell '
'd "H
f II 'f
s ots,
lOti sa1 ·
ope u y, I
we make the final s; I'll have a
chance.
I don't know if I have ever
·
hit a bigger one."
It Was an incredible end to a great
f Ell '
h
·lk
h
game or lOti, w ose 51 y-smoot
jumper was OJl target throu ~ho ut. He
was 6-for-7 from threc-pmnt range,
and h~s next-to-last three-pointer
with under a minute to play cu t
p I
on and's lead lO 84-81.
" I felt good the whole game,"
Ell!' ott ··d "Som ,. · &lt;
1·
Sal ·
C 1me.. you ge In a Sa l .
situation where · you feel that you
. Portland can use the long lay9ff to
can't miss."
.
. ge t ovc'r this one.
Th S
I
1 d b 18
~ . purs, WlO lrme
Y
1n
"Wc'resosickandtiredof[osing
the t~1~d quarter, led only once -at lo thi s team fight now. They've
Ihe ftniSh.
become. a Ihorn in our side "
" In a word, I would probably say Stoudamire said .· "B ut by no mea~s
' " . p or tl an d coac h is this series over. We still feel ·good
guI-wren cIling,
M1kc Dunleavy sa1d.
about ourselves and we still feel we
The Spurs have a 2-0 lead in Jhc can. wJ·n tl 11·s scr.les."
bcs·l-of-scve_n sc~ies, which wun,'l
. Tim Duncan had 23 points, 10
resume unlli Fnday at Portland s rebounds and five blocked shots for
Rose Garden.
the Spurs, while Elliott added 22 on
" I'm pretty sure they thought they 8-of-1 0 shooting, his best ever in the
had this game in the bag," Elliott playoffs. David Robinson scored 14
smd, "so for us to come back. and points and had the game's biggest
~in has got to break their backs a lit- steaL .
tie bit."
.
Arvydas Sabonls, who had only
Damon Stoudam1re, who s.cored 'five points in Portland's 80-76 loss in
15 pomts for the Blaze rs, m1ssed one Game 1 Saturday; had 17 points for
ol ;wo lree throws wuh I 2 seconds lo the Blazers, 'while Wallace, saddled
play. t? kee~ the door open for San with fo~l trouble .all game, had 13
AntoniO, wh1ch called timeout.
points, 15 fewer than he had in Game
"We came out of ·the huddle with 1.
a couple of options," Mario Elie
Elliott 's three-pointer with just
said. " Scan looked at me and said, under a minute to go cut the Blazers'
'I've got one more in me.' I got him lead to 84·81. On Portland's next

I

DOUBLEs, nlgglo. Hous&lt;un. 2J'

By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- Kenny
Brack saw Arie Luyendyk walking
toward him. He broke mto a big
smi)e, shook his head and asked the
question Luyendyk probably asked
himSelf a hundred times.
"Wiiat the hell were you thinking
of1 You had that race in your pocket.
··· •I mean, you were fast, " Brack
saw, laughing.
:'Yeah, but it was good rac'ing,
eh?" Luycndyk replied as the two
dr~ers chatted backstage before the
In4ianapolis 500 Victory Celebration
on•Monday night.
llrack, who went on to the checkered flag after Robby Gordon ran out
of fuel with just over a lap to go, took

the ball, and sure enough, he had
another bullet."
Elliott barely ·avoided a steal
attempt by Stacey Augmon, then let
go from his toes on the sideline as
Rashee&lt;! Wallace lunged toward him .
Replays showed his heels would
have touched the sideline if he hadn't
stayed on his toes.
The ball went 1'n, and the packed
Alamodomc crowd of 35,260 went
Wl'ld.
"From where [was, it looked like
it was off," Stoudamire said. "But
that just seems to be the luck this
team has when we play them. You
just don•t have an answer for when .a
guy hits a shol like that."
Jim Jackson was slopped on a
baseline · drivc, and Wah Williams
missed on the rebound in the final
seConds as Elliott chipped in with
some cruc ial defense on the play.
'
ft was the fifth 11me Portland has
lost to the Spurs in six tries this scason, and each loss has gone down to
the wire . TI1is one was the closest
yet.
" It 's getting harder and harder for
them tO beat us here," Dunleavy
·d

NBA playoffs

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Srack passes Gordon, wins Indy 500, pockets nearly $1.47M:_

Page 4·
June1 199!1

Elliott's three-point
shot pushes Sp.urs
past Blazers 86-85

.

New York .
Taylor. Oakland. I
II . M Jackson. CleH·Iand. 10.

8'~

.469
.468
.412

Se11ttle . •.

Tl\mpa

8

' Kansa! City ..................... 23 26
Chicago .......
. .... 22 25
Oetroil .....
... 2 1 JO
Minnesota ......
.. 18 J2
Texas..............

~~~~:~~~~~ {~:;:~t;~:~~Li:~::I

T~sday, June 1, 1999

EDI
ELIGIBIL
PROGRA

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Thursday's·game

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Colorado al San J o~e. I O:JO p.m.

,.

-·~:

Transactions

.•.·••..
•

Baseball

American Lea1ut
.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Placed SS Cri~tiail
Guzmon on the 15-day disabled list Rec111led INF
BA.mNG: T. Fernandez. Toronto , 392: Jeter, Clea!US Davidson from New Britain of the Eastern
,
New York, .372: R, Pa.lmeiro, Texas, .358 : · M. League.
NEW YORK YANKEES: Claimed LHP Grrg
Rlmirez, C5eveland, .350; Lofton, Cleveland. .340:
Garciapan'n. Boston . .339: Bernie Williams, New McCarthy from waivers and activated him. Optioned
JNF Clay Bellinger to Columbus of the Internati onal
York. .333.
·RUNS : R. A.lomat, Cleveland. 50; C. Delgado, League.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Optioned RHP Peter
ToroniO; .47; Griffey Jr.. Seattle, 47 ; Lofton,
Cleveland. 45: S. Green. Toronto. 4~ : M. Ramirel , Munro to Syracuse of lhe International League.
Natlon~~l League
Cleveland. 43 : Stewarl, Toronto, 42: J e l~ r. New
CHI CAGO CUBS: Reca lled RHP Jereml
York. 42.
RBI: M. Ramirez. Cleveland. 63: Grifky Jr., Gonzalez from an injury rehabilitation assignn'lt:nt
.
Sealde, 51; S. Green. Toronlo•. 48: C. Delgado, and optloned to him Iowa of lhe PCL.
A..ORIDA MARLINS: Placed 38 Kevin Oric on
ToroiMo, 47: Juan Goozalez, Texas. 46: Canseco.
the 15-day disabled lin, rctroacti'&gt;'e to May 2l
Tampa Bay, 42; Garciaparra. Boston. 41 .
HITS : Jeler; New York. 71: M. Ramirez. Recalled JB Mike Lowell from Calgary of the PCL.
Cleveland, 69; S. Green. Toronto, 6/: Surhoff, Optiont.-d 18 Derrek Lee to C.algill')'. Recalled 18
·
Bahlmore, 67; T. Feraandez, Torooco, 67: Bernie lim Hyers from Calgary.
NEW YORK METS: Purchased tile con1rac1 of
Willian~~, New York, 65; Offerman, Boston, 6~ .
DOUBLES: Offerman, Boston, 20; Greer. INF Melvin Mora from Norfolk o( the lmernntlotlal
Texu, 19; T. Fernandez, Toronto, 19; S. Green. Lc:a&amp;ue. Opti oned OF Jermainc Allel'uwon~ 10
Toronto, 18; Tejada, Oakland, 16: C. Delgado, Norfolk Transferred RHP Greg McMichuel (rom the
Toronto, 16; Glaut, Anaheim, I.S; Sr,:vens, Texas, 15:· l .'l ·day In the 60-dny di,abled list. Activated OF
Bobby llonilla . (rom 1he 15-duy di~ubled , li'st ,
Segui, Seaule, 1.5.
io
TRIPLES: Jerer, New York, 6; Offerman, Optiqned LHP R1go Beltran to Norfolk.
· PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE$: Aui3ned LHP
Boston, j ; Febles, Kansas Ci1y, 4; I~ are lied with 3.
Anthony Shumuker ro Scranton-Wi lkes Barre: of the
HOME RUNS : Griffey Jr., Seaule, 20: Conteco, lnternaciunlll
League.
·
Taffipa Bay, 19; S.'Grcen, Toronto, 1.5: M. Ramirel:,
Clndand, .14; R. Palmciro, Trxat, 14: McGriff.
Hockey
Tampa Bay, 14: David Bell. Scaule. 1_3; C. Delgado,
National Hotkty 1Aa1ue
Toronto, 1.3 : M . Vaughn, Anahctm. 13: Juno
EDMONTON Oli~ERS : Signed C hson
Gontalri!:. Texas, 13.
·
STOLEN BASES: T. Goodwin , Texas. 2J : Chimera ;~nd RW Chad Hin7. .
MQNTREAl CANAD IENS: Announced the
. Stifwnn. Toronlp, 17: Encarnacion. De1roi1. 16: R.
Albmar, Cleveland. 16: Lofton. ~·~land, 14: I rcsigna1i on ef Ronam Corey, president. effecti"e July
J I. Acquired C Tre\·or Linden from the New York
Rodriguei!: . T~.a.as, 12: Vizqucl , Cleveland, IJ .
PITCHING (7 decisions): P. Martinez. Bost pn. lslundcu fur a 1999 lirst-round..&lt;Jraff cho1C'C rmd
10-1 . .909. 2.01 : fred Garcia, Scunlc. 6-1 , .857. 4.26: sigl.ed-hm1 1o r~ l'our-year comrac1
Muuina. Bnhimore, 7·2, .778. 4.2 1: Colon.

ALieaders

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CALL TODAY FOR·
MORE INFORMATION

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(740) 992·2117 or
(800)
992·2608
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MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES

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The Daily

--&lt;By The Bend

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Sentin~l

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Dear Ann Landers: Since you
have been so openly supportive of
gay rights for many years, I was disappointed 1n your response to ·
"Dilemma in the Dairy State."
She was upset that her gay brother-in-law '!'as planmng a "wedding"
with hi s partner. When her 9-yearold daughter was asked to be the
flower girl, you said it could be co nfu sin g for her.
The fact that the couple has lived
together for 2.0 years speaks volumes about their commi tment to

rna's" comment that she isn't prejudiced against gay peop"'-is blatantly
false. Otherwise, she ~ld be willing to celebrate the ce remony uniting "Rick" and "Dennis" If she does
not attend the weddmg, she can
expect her relationship with Rick
and Dennis to deteri orate. l guarantee it.
Evanston, Ill.: Kids arc capable
of understanding anything as long as
adults take the time to explain it
properly.
Just say, "Uncle Rtck and Uncle
Dennis are having a spec ial ceremony to ce lebra_te thelf friendship, and
while it is not exactly a wedding
bccause they arc both men, we love
them and want to be part of their
li ves."
. Baltimore: I have a 13-year-old

each other. Doesn' t that deserve
recognition ? Please reconsider your
advice. -- JEAN ALLEN, PARENTS
AND FRIENDS OF LESBIANS
AND GAYS , HENDERSONVILLE, N.C.
DEAR JEAN ALLEN: I caught
a great deal of flak for that co lumn
from both the left and the right. The
liberals thought! chickened out, and
the conservatives said my approach
was "too liberal." He.re 's what my
week has been like. How was yours'
From Pasadena, Calif.: "Dilem-

niece. If my lesbian panner and I
were to have a ceremony, she would
be devastated nm to, be included.
Charleston, S.C.: When wtll the
gay community reahze that we
would have fewer problems with the
blessings of our' umons 1f we would
stop-calling them "weddings"? Why
would we want to simulate the trappings of a heterosex ual wedding
instead of developing a dignified
and unique service of our own?
Venke, Calif.: My father is gay,
and I have known it since I was 6
years old. At no lime in my life has
this been confusing to me. Love is
beautiful and should be considered a
gift wherever you find it.
Somewhere in California: Parcnts Who teach their children that
gay relationships are not as accept-

.·
Tuesday, June1, 19S$

able as straight ones may be in trouSan Die~o: Same-sex coup~s
ble later.
present us wtt!Jothe tdeal opponumty
The world is becoming more to teach chtldren about love aJ'd
knowledgeable and more compas- acceptance.
.
•
sionate. Twenty-five years ago, few
Seattle: My meces and nephef'S
people would have dared to be open refer to my panner as thelf uncle.
about such a relationship. Today; it's ":h•Y see no difference. because po
no big deal.
dtfferen.ce has been pomted 041 ~to
Malone, N.Y: Gay re lati ~n s hips them. Their parents should be co!'Iare just plain wrong, and you should mended for th1s.
• •
have said so. In my opinion, Ann,
Phoenix: What goes ~n at a.gay
you're getting too darned liberal. I wedding thatts so confusmg' DFII1cmay have to hide your column from ing7 In many. cultures, men daoce
now on so the kids don' t see it.
together; and n's wonderful.
,
Washington, D.C.: If those parOhio: My children don 't care
ents don ' t tell their daughter about about their uncle's sexual oneijtaher uncle, she will find out anyway tion. They only know he IS the kt~d­
and wonder what else .they have not est. most lovmg person in. the wo!ld.
told her. This is not an issue about · Nothing would please them more
gay "lifestyle" but one of truth and than to. see him share his life ll{ith
trust.
someone who Will make him hapPY·

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

,

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783

.r..

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~
iJ1!iJ Garages, Pole Buildings, RoofingJ Siding j,
M:.
Commercial &amp; Residential
M:.
~ 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured m~

740..985-3813

•...

4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert-In Stoc:k
Full Une 01 Water Storage Tanks·
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewe[ Plpa: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp;
Regulators
OPEN:
9:Q0-4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Sat•urd11v

~

.r..

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Nearly 350 Pomeroy High
School alumni and guests, many
travehn g hund reds of miles to·
reuni te with their c lassmates,
attended the annual Alumnt Assoc tatton banquet and dance held in the
Meigs High School cafeteria Saturday n1ght.
Following the dinner, there was a
program emceed by Joe Struble, and
highlighted by the recognition of
alumni classes, along with the
youngest graduate from a reumon
class, Linda Darnell Mayer, class of
1964 , and the oldest graduate, Kathleen Scott, class of 1925
Struble also recognized a special
guest, Dr Richard Tobias from the
Umversity of M1ch•gan , who began
his teaching career at Pomeroy High
School. The professor reminisced
about those ear'ly years in the
Pomeroy · classroom and some
unforgettable experiences w1th students. He joined the class of 1949
for an afternoon pany and attended
the banquet as their guest.
Well wishes were extended to
Chuck K1tchen , longhme alumm
_ worker and emcee, unable to attend
' because of illness, and members
were invited to sign a banner which
will be delivered to him.
Pomeroy Alumni Assoctatwn
· .Scholarships in memory of Bob
Roberts and Charles Gibbs were
awarded to Bridget Vaughan and
Tricia Davis, valedictorian and salu- ·
· tatonan, respectively, of the Meigs
Hi gh School class of 1999.
Bndget, daughter of Roy and
Lmda Vaughan, will be attending
Wright State University where she
plans to maJOr in finance. Tricia,
daughter of Greg and Jan Davis,
will be attending Marietta College
and plans to enter the field of communications
Officers elected for 2000 were
· Frank Vaughan, president; Yvonne
Young , secretary-treasurer; Joanne
Williams, fmt v1ce president, and
Mary Jane Wi se, seco nd vice president. .
Reunion classes recognt zed
,. were :

1929: Loretta Meter Beegle,
Pomeroy , Maxine Jenkinson Russe ll, CrooksVIlle; Martha Brown
Husted Greenaway, Pomeroy.
1934: Dorothy L~onard Miley,
Baton Rouge , La.; Wilhelmine
- Sm1th Maier, Sarah Williamson
' Gibbs, Eva Betz Robson, all of
Pomeroy, and Rachael Elberfeld
. Downie, Racine.
. , 1939: Charles 'c arper, Ktrkersville; Thomas Smith, Wester' ville , Hazel Holter Wynhoays,
• Columbus; Donald Will, Ashville;
LaDonna Gilmore, Pomeroy;
:" Kathryn Spencer, Anna Marie, Fla.;
Aoyd Brown, Mtddlepon; Juanita
: Will , Mildred Ziegler, Grace Jarvis
·' Huntington, W. Va. ; June Forbes
· Sayre, Syracuse; Mary Kimes
", Grueser, Pomeroy, and Pauline
' Mayer, Pomeroy.
;; 1944: Danny M. Rosenbaum,
. Columbus; Betty Jacobs, Colum; bus; Nora Rice Harris, Middlepon,
ioanne Tatterson, Wyatt Will Grove
City Lois Neutzling Burt, Jack
·; Lewis; Harold H. Blackston, Phyllis
', Brown Spencer, Veda Paulson, all
:· of Pomeroy.
•
1949: Janel Gilbert Moore, West
' Grove, Pa.; Joan Riggs Johnson ,
· Atlanta Ga.; William Nease, Barbara Phillips Nease, Bellefontaine;
; A~n Foster Cotterill, Lancaster;
, Barbara Douglas, Pomeroy, Man, ning Kloes , Middleport; Eugene
, J'bomas, St. Louis, Mo.; Jack Seel' ig, Aorida; JoAnn Gilmore Parsons,
-. Grandville; Camaleta McBride
' Williams, Louisanna, Mo.; James
Russell , Sarasota, Fla.; Martha Struble, Pomeroy,' Lawrence Eblin ,
Pomeroy; Edward Ball, Pomeroy;
- Mary Lou lhle, Racine, Rollin
.: Daniels; George Dallas, Califorpta;
• Leo Smith, Pomeroy; Patricia Meier
Suckza, McMurray, Pa.; Vernal E.
Blackwood, Racine; Wyilhs Davis,
New Haven, W. Va.;· Bill Tubbs.•
lois Hawley, .Pomeroy;_Anna Lee

Syracuse,
RoyandHolter,
George
Mary K.. Yost
Bob Hysell
of
Wri'ght, and Howard B. Mullen of
Pomeroy ; Eleanor Walter of Toledo,
1946; ·Betty Holman · Gilkey of
. M'ld d
Co Iurn bus ; Josep h Slrubl e,
' re
Phillips, Horace Abbo.tt, Ida M~rphy, Frank Vaughan, all of
Pomeroy; Kenneth Wiggins, Syracuse, 1947
Kenneth Harris James F. Will,
Jean Bryant Werry, Betty Pullins
Sayre, Phil and Carol Ohlinger, all
of Pomeroy; June Whaley Van
Vran ken, Nas hv1 II e, Tenn , Eve Iyn
Fick Young, Helen Jane Brown,
Middlepon; and Bill Knight, Point
Pl easant, 1948; Gene Ycaugcr of
Avon, Helen E. Grueser Blackston,
Patsy A. Burnside Thoma, Roben
Burton, all of Pomeroy, Betty Grant
of Crooksville; Emmogene Ham1l ton of Syracuse, and Betty Guinther
Knight of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
1950.
Hazel S. Bal I o f Pomeroy,
)~anne Withams of Syracuse, Janet
· Hill Theiss and Shirley Hysell
Sopher, 1951 ; Syvia Schwab Sands,
Phylhs Meier May, Mary Powell,
all of Pomeroy; Sarah Neigler of
Racme; Jean Wolfe of Belpre,
Shirley Beegle Huston of Syracuse,
1952; Charles Hamm of lndianapolis, John !Uub , Marlene Wilson,
James Kitchen, and Corkey Clifford, all of Po.meroy; Sally Bartels
Ayers of Athens; Mildred Stockton

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced
,

'•

WORRYING II!

'I

No Embarrassment ••.
You're Treated with Respect!

lj ROOFING
:; NEW·REPAIR
&lt;• Gutters

· :FREE ESTIMATES
" 949·2168

TRISHA DAVIS

tfJ

ou now have the &lt;¢on of protectil1g your family members

t~L a business panner with low-IU!t
10- or 20-year level term lire
insumnce liom Auto-OwneiS

lnsurnnce OJmpany. Gill us fur more

details and a oompetiuve propa;al:
•

vluto-Orttnm ~
Life Home Car Business

?U'NJflc6&amp;,.,'flq4•

214 Emt Main

Po,..ray
992-li687

BRIDGET VAUGHAN

'' .

•

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your :
• •
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call . l
I
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
~ l
Toll Freel
&gt;l

•
~

DIAL ·

992~7834

~

.i_,

281 Pickens Ad. Patrlol, Oh.
Aski

40

Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise"!

r-==::=:7~::::!===lr====~~~~;;r-~;.;~~~~~;~~~~;~~~
Public Notice

Public Notice

On Saturday, Juno 12th,
1e99 1110:00 a.m. tho Home
National Bank will offer lor
llll iU public oucUon on the
Bonk parking tot the
following vehlcl•: ·
1185 Ford Ranger Vln
11FT8R11AOFUD15586
1eee Ford Eecort vln
11FABR3887GW149143
1884 Gto Tracker Vln

Ohio linea lor tho Jtranamlulon end) dlolrlbuUon of
alactrlc anergy, either by
moane of overhead or
underground conductore,
with an the necauary or
doolrablo oppunenancet
[alllj appllancaa, Including
tlaclrlc oubotatlont), to
render public utility torvlce
In tald Vllloge and to the
tnhablblnta thereof by eupplylng electric anergy to
"ld VIllage and tho tnhabl·
blnto thereof, and para one
or corporation• beyond the
limite thareollor light, heat,
power, or any other purpoe11 or purpoat for which
olectrlc anergy Ia now or
moy hereanor be uuel, and
tha tranemloalon [and dll·
lrlbutlon) of the aamo with·
In, through, or acro11 uld
VIRago ol Pomeroy, Sblte of
Ohio,
SECTION II.
Said lln11, appurtenanc..
(and appllancae) ahall be
conttructod oo •• to lntor,
ltrt •• !Hilt 11 po11lbla
with the traveling public In
Ito u11 of tho ltrMII, thorC!UIIhlaroa, allaya, brldgu,
and public placae. Tho loc•·
lion of all polea, or condulto, ahall be made under
tho euparvteton or tha prop., board or commlltoe of
tho VIllage government.
SECTION Ill.
The rlghta, j11lvllogt1, end
rranchlta haroby granted
aholl be In Ioree and ollect
lo.r a parlod of one year (11

~CNBJ18Y711885097334

1880 Chevy S·1D Vln
11 0CCS 142511l151511
1991 Chevy Lumina Vln
12G1WL54T9M9228431
1992 Ford 150 Pick-up Vln
I!FTDF15Y2NNA42071
·1182 Mltoublehl
14A3CT844XNE013012
188&amp; Morcury Vln
12MEBP51i5GB811762
1888 ~hovy S-10 Vln
~1GCBS14E8J2133022

The terms altho aata are
ceeh.
Tho Home National Bank
ro11rv11 tho right to rtlect
any or all bide or to remove
any unit from tho eala at
any time.
Arrangemontt may be
made to lnepect any ol tho
obovo nemed vahlclot prior
to tht 1111 by calling 740848-210.
Homo National Bank·
George
Lawrance,
Collection Olllcor
(5) 28
t-'&lt;•,_I_1.,,4-,8-,1-1_5T_c_ _ __

VILLAGE ORDINANCE
ORDINANCE NO. 658
An Ordinance granting
Jl'ranchl•l to [Columbua
Southorn fliowor CompanyJ
[Ohio Power CompanyJ, no

Public Notice

Public Notice

' ·

yeara from tho date of the tHhor; ond all rlght8, prt~­
paeoage olthle Ordlntlnco.
legoo, Jlranchllltl 1er d
The rlghte, prlvllogee, end obligation• . heraln conlranchtao hereby granted bilned by or qn behell Dl
ehall not be conetructed to Mid VIllage, or by or cin
bo IXCIUIIVI lnd tht beholf Olllld Grantll, lh.ll
Council ot the VIllage ol be binding """"' and lneufo
Pomeroy, Ohio, horoby to tho btnollt of the rae~
'IIIIIVII tho power 10 grant live tUCCIIIIOl'l or a..igt)a
tlmllar rlghta, prlvllagoa, ol Hkl VIHogt
Whltl\er
and lranchllet to any par· eo oxprna or noL
•
aon or peraon1, firm or SECTION VII.
firma, corporation or corpoThlt Ordlnanco ehell be
ICCiptecl by lht GrantM
ration•.
SECnON IV,
within tlxty (tOI daye lnjm
Said grantee shall oave tho dllo ol the PIIIIJIII .01
1
tho VIllage harmlall from .......
any and all liability artalng
P • - In Council, thll
,
In any way from Grant11'1 day of Mey, 1eae.
negligence In tho oroctlon, John Wt...,, P-ldtnt o1
malntananco, or oparatlon Council
~
of oald lin.. lor the dletrlb- Kllhy Hy1111, Ctork 01
:
utton [and tranamiiiiOn) of Council
Approved thll 17 dty 01
electric tnorgy,
SECTIONV,
,
Whenever aald Grant11 ~:n~ ~aughan. Meyor IIi
ehall bo bolng the ortctlon· tho VIllage of Pom~,
• ,
or lriotallatlon of any llnll Ohio
or oqulpmant, It tholl CERnFICATION OF ORDIpromptly ond diligently NANCE PASSED BY VIL·
prooocuto tho work to com· LAGE COUNCIL
I, Kathy Hy11ll, Citric bf
pillion and lltvo the
etreete, · thoroughlartl, the Council o1 the Vlll9 of
alleyt, brldgll, and 'J)Ubllc Pameroy, Ohio, do heN!jy.
;.,
placaa whero euch work 11 cortlly 11 lollowt:
That the following II I tl:l!l
dona In 11 good condition
ol repair aa before euch copy of en Ordlne 00e ,!'Ill·
659 • n - by tht COUit)qtt
work wae commenced.
of the VIllage of Pomo.oy,
SECTION VI,
Ohio, on the day of 17 Mel'.
Wherever
In
1999.
•
Ordinance, roloronca
Kathy
Hyllll,
Clerk
(II
made to the Vlllega or the
Grantoe, It ehtll be d11mod Counell ol tho Vllltge of
;
to Include tha r"pactlvo Pomeroy, Ohio.
l
eucceaeore or 111lgne ol (51 24
[8112TC
.• i

p

;,

:. ,,, Hey""'
, .a..,.,'

t

Senice1
'' ' House '&amp; Trailer Site~
; · Land Clearing &amp;
Grading ·
" Seplic Sy1te,.. &amp;:

:

.

"

AT6:30 P.M.
· Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$3bo.oo Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progreaalve top line.

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows '
· • Room Additions
• Roofing

.

·,

1

n

'
'
'

Uc. 11·00-50

... -

tt~l/lln

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES '
614-992-7643

''
:

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

•NtwGII'IQII •
' ~~16 Plumbing
. •
ng &amp; Gulltrl
' ~VInyl Siding &amp; Palnttng
; ~ I Porclt Declte
V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112~15

'

..
~

Sidewalks, Patios '
Parking Lots
·
25 yrs experience
Free Eatlmatea

740·742-8608

·HIERT IISSILL
•CONSJRUCnON
•NewHomea
toaragea •
:Complete
• Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

FREE

ESTIMATEES
Equipment Parts
Factory Au1th•ori11ed~]
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
f(l(l() St. Rt. 7 South '
Coolvl/'-, OH &lt;f/1723

985-4473·

'

New Canllrucllon &amp;
Remacltllng-KIIclltn Coblnota
VInyl Sldlng-Raofi-Daclcl-

'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.

'

.

THE MAPLEs ·

(7401667·6992
Quilty C~afbmmhlp
Gu~renteed

NOM! Open Far
Spring Seaoon
Complete Une Of
Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
All Fiala $8.50

.

Must be 50 years
ofage &amp;meet
HUD income
pidelinea. ·
Call
TOM STOBART

SMITH'S

CONSTRUCTIO

Linda's Painting

•New Home•
*Additions
• Remode ling

Take the pain out
of painting, !Jnd let
me do it for you.

CaU 1oday abou• •pecial
_ p~e• th,.u July ora
Quality Builr Houte•

INTERIOR
Before 6 prn leave
message. Alter 6 pm

Rvmmber
OclalllJ Is Job .One
99Z.Z71~

992-UOl

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

EXclud•• B•dllltl#f C•nttdum.

Hanging Baskets
. Blooming &amp; Folia11e
$5.75&amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

NUIIIID'S
GIEIINOUSI

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

740-992-7022 for
hrt••r hfor11atien.
EHO
'I

SHADE RIVER

1 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

•• ~., at

7481Sf-l

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

CaD 98S·M31

Ugh! Commercial &amp;
Residential
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling

Coal ftlla ·

5/28199 1 mo pd.

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE.

Construction

..............
,.. ...,
,
APPIJ now foi

.

H&amp;H

1 Q/25106/lfn

S'YIU.CUSf:

HJ.S776
TFN

''

Free Firewood , You Cut, &amp; You

Wedeme~er 's

Tabby Kittens, 8 we eks old , Will
be Small whe'n IJJII grown! Ptaylull
litter Trained , (740)-245·51 04

ver

1-?40-667-3083
1-740·667-3316

$550.00 Year
$12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

Aucti on Service,

Haul, 740-245-5116.
Gallipolts, Oh io 740-379·2720.
Large Bleck Cat, Male. 740·256· 90 Wanted to Buy
6909
~--~~----~--

60

lost and Found

Lost- 2 coon hounds, male &amp; female , black; white &amp; tan , Outer
Rd area, 740.992·1700 . •

Absol ute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll ~
And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Otamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
A lngs, Pre·1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

- M.TS. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Avenue. GallipOlis, 740-448-2842.

An11Ques , top prices pa id, River-'
lne Ant i ques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740· 992-

Lost- large size well marked adull
mala Beagle, Por tland/ Great
Bend area, last seen runnln~ with
black &amp; white dog . His name Is
Snoopy and his tam11~ misses
him 1 round 'please call 740-843-

2526.

Buying Standing Timber. 740-256-

8172
Clean late Model Cars Or
Tru cks, 1990 Model s Or Newer,
Smith Sulek Pontiac. 1900 EastAvenue. Gallipolis.

ern

Want To SeU Your Sluff? Call Fhv·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Demonstrator: Promo Co. s..ks
OUtgoing, Reliable lndfv1duala To
Dl&amp;tnbUte S&amp;mplel And Coupons
In Stores PIT Flex. $8 Per Hour.
CaH 80()-748-1937.

DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS
Holzer Senk&gt;r care Center, A 70
Bed LTC ts Looking For Position
Of Director Of Admlulona. You
Will Market Our LTC And Will
Review Atl Applications For Ad ·
missfona And Olrlfct FamUy Rela·

trans And Social Services Duties
PosniOns Requires A College Degree, LSW Preferred But Not Requi red, Good Communlc:alion
Skills And Knowledge 01 Long
Term Care Requirements Apply
At Or Send Resume With Cover
Letter To Roger Hittle, NHA, 380
COloma! Dnve. BidWell, OH 45614

or FD 74!l--WI-1346 EOE.

Oriver· Aitention St1rt lmme·
dl1telyl Application• Pro·
Clued In 2 Houra or Lett Long
Haul and regional Drivefl TrainIng program avail tor COL school
graduatu Begy tremtnll :
months OTR exper. 23 Years of
age good driving record "Paid
He alth In su rance 'Denta l Plan
Available "401 K and life Insurance "Obtainable Safety and
Productl\ltty Bonuse&amp; Continental

e

Experienced secretary, hOnfJSt ,
do filing,
tedge r, IRS &amp; st ate taxes, se nd
resume to P.O Bolt 27, Pomeroy,

FULL TIME CLERICAL PEA·
SON Needed For Busy· law Of'fice Must Be Bright, Anlcutate,
And Have Energ~ Must Be Abl e
To Use MS Works DutieS Include Preparation Of Documents,
Schedu lin g And Answer ing
Phones No Legal Experience Re·
qulred Fax Resume To : 740-2862~

Health Managemenl Has An Immediate Opemng For AN , Good
Compensatlo{l Package, If Interested Call 7 40-446- 3808. Or Appty At. 762 second Avenue. Galli·
poliS. 45631 EOE

IMMEDIATE OPENING
LEGAL SECRETARY
Must Have Good Typing &amp; Comp uter Sk ill S, Ke lly Services . 1-

8()0-295-9470

Jewelry Sales Retell Sates and
COmputer Experience Required
,-.cqul&amp;lll ons Fine Jewelry. 15 1
Second Ave . GalllpOII&amp; Apply
Monday lllru Friday.
Medical Processor

FTIPT No e~rlence necessary
Will tra1n . PC required. Earn 40K

CaiiS00-663-7440
Medica! Processor FT / Pf. No
Exp. Nee Will Tra1n PC Req. Earn

401&lt; C.IIB00-663-1440.
Need 7 Ladies To Sell Avon, 740·

446-3358.
NEEDED IMMEDIATE LVIII

Boat trailer to flt14' John Boat,
call 140-949-2246

949·2711
70
Yard Sale

ers1de Auction And Let Us Sell It
For You, 740-2SH989.

Holzer Medical Center Is Seeking
A Licensed Boiler Operator Candidates Must Have A High Pressure Boiler Operator's Ucense In
The State Of Ohio.
E~ecellen t

Drive. Addison

11 to run. Sunday
edition. 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
·10:00 1.m. Saturday.

Rosie Ward
Director Ot Human Resources

1oo JaCkson P1ke
Gallipolis, OH 45631 -1.563

Phone. 740-446-5105
Fax /TOO

110

18. Call 304-485·4300

Awlloblo Floltbed
Opporlunlllel

Saturday, 5th, S:30 AM.·?

Co. Dnvers &amp; Owner Operators

Garage Sale. 2560 Sta te Aoute
141 , June 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 8.30 -5:30

Naw Pay Paci\Bge

'Start1ng Pay 31 Cents IM1Ia
'Plus 2 Cents !Mile Bonus

P.M.

"Tr111&gt; Pay 15101' Aro
!.By ClYef Pay

June 1st -3rd , 9 ·? 48 Ne11 Ave·
nue, If Ra in Cacnelled For That

Day On~.

•ecss

Movin g Sate . 622 Perkins Rd .
June 3-4. Mi se Too ls, ~ea r old
Recliner. 27' Senltn with Stand 4
Tires 185xt4 Household Items.
Home Interior Dresses 3-4-5 Pelitel

'401K

EOE MIF
RHdy For A Clllnt/f?
Cardinal Freigl'lt C.rrtera

Call Boyd 800-220-2421

B c s ., With Ove r 50 LocatiOns In
Southeastern Ohio, Currently Has
Part·Time Openings In Ga!Ua And
Meigs County

Tuesda~.
da~. 9·?

Wednesday, &amp; ThursRa in Or Shine L ots
Clothes! 2 Miles East Of Porter

1) 30 Hrs /Wk.: 9 A.M-5 P.M.
Sun. 3-9 PM. Mon.1!\Jes.:
3-1t ·30 PM Wad ; {Galllpol~ )
2) 27 5 Hrs /Wk: 4 ·9 P.M. Fri .:
8:45AM ·8 45 P.M 581.
10 A.M. -7P.M.Sun,(Bidwell)
3)25 Hfll /Wk.: 8 A.M.-8 P.M.

On554.

61
Road. Olf

Thursda~

3rd, 117 G80f118S Creek

'Direct Deposit
'OuaiiComm
MedUtiDental !VisiOn

'Home Most Weekends
·Assigned EQuipment

New Am1sh Built Buggy, Aabb,lts ,
New Items! Mise Wedne sday
end Th ursday 290, Bladen Rd. off
At. 7$. of Eureka.

6/2 nd.

Help Wanted

411 studenls- several lull and part
t1me openings in customer serv. Ice/sales department $10 35 pe r
hour, appt. No exper ience- will
tra in. Condlllons appl~ . Must be

Garage Sale: 1139 Bulav\l le Pike,
Thursday, June 3rd, Friday, 4t h,

Wednesda~

State Route 7, North, 8 ....

6ai /S111: (Me~s)

Wednesday 612nd, 1 1!4 Mile Qui
Georges Creek, From Ro ute 7, 9
A M Aaln Cancels.

We Are Searct11ng For Compassionate Profess io nal s . With A
Team V Ision And A Desire To
Te ach Personal And Community
Yard &amp; Bake Sale: June 1st &amp;
Sk!lls To Individuals With Mental
2nd , Locat1on· Old Cadmus Ele·
Retardation. The work Enviro n,..ntary School, 9·5 PM.
ment ts Informal And RewBrdlng.
Yard Sale : Wednesday 2nd, 8The Requirements Are · High
am -5 -pm . lots o f goodies! 413
School Diploma /GEO. Valid Orlv~
Texas Rd Gallipolis.
. er's License , Three Years Good
Driving Experienc e And Ade ·
Pomeroy,
quate Aut omObile Insura nce
Coverage B.C S Offers CompreMiddleport
hens ive Tra ining In The Field 01
&amp; VIcinity
MB/ 00 lnltflslld Applicants
Need To Specify Position Of In·
8 family garage sale· Dale Hart
terest And Sand Resume To:
residence, Yellowbush Rd .,
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
Raci ne . June 2 , 9am to 4pm.
SEIIVICES
Books, sweepers, clothing, bicyP0. 80116G4
cle, swing set. coolers. 1oys,
Jacl&lt;son, OH 456o10-0130&lt;4
Chrlatmaa decoration s, dishes, · All Appl ications Mull Be Post·
small appl iances, linens, sewing
Marked By 618/99. Equai•Oppormachine, VCR , bakers rack,
runll)l E11'1)1oyer.
kni ck- knacks and lots of misc .,
daybed,"'"' (P215-70R15).
Bartender Wanted : 740·441·

1428.

All Yard Slltl Mu1t Bt Paid In
Adwance : Deadline: 1:00pm lht
day btfort the 1d It to run,
Sundly
Mondey tdltlon -

Director ol Admlsalo na . Holzer
Senior Care Center, a 70 Sed
LTC . Is looking for a position or
Director of Admissions. 'Yo u will
market our LTC and will re\flew
all appliCations lor admiul ons
and direct family relat io n&amp; and
social services duties. Poaltlo n
reQu ires a college degree. LSW
Preferred but not requ ired . good
communication skill&amp; and knowl·
edge of long term care requlrt·
ments . Apply at or send resume
wnh cover letter to Roger Hittle ,
NHA 380 Coloni al Or., Bidwell,
OH 4561 4 or ta,x 740·446·1346

a

1:OOpm f~day.

Big yard aale· boat &amp; motors, two
days, Friday, Saturday, June 4-5.

T...s Ad .. 7&gt;10-985-416!1.

Carport sale· Fr i da~ . June 4th,
Lee residence , Tyree Blvd.,

Aaolno

Garage sale- June 2·5, 9.00am· 1

Counl)l

Benefit

II Interested Please Contact

AU. Y1rd S.le1 Mu1t
Be Paid In Advance.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before lbe ad

Wage And

Package.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Thursday, 9-3. 412 Hone~suckle

740-256-6147

1-800·809-7771

Free Estimate•
740-742-3411
Hryart Reeve•
Sutall Reeve•

Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Cheater, Ohio

Every Saturday N ig ht 7 P.M .,
Crown City, 740-256--6989

Phone;

Your locally based hauler for residential,
commercial
and industrial
refuse
removal. Serving Meigs County with
state of the art equipment and 20 years
in the refuse industry. Call today to see
how much you can save.

G111g11

t

9 month old Border Collie. 740·

367-7433.

~~ Southern Ohio Disposal .

.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

YOUR

QtuJiily Driveways,

.

740·742·2138

740.992·3470

1

CONCRETE

Joe N. Sayre
3/11/99TFN

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

Fm EIUIIIIIfl

Pomeroy, Ohta
22 yn. Local

Jerry L. Preece
Crown Ci OH 45623

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

NWWoSuu•erHo'me.conc
·WICKS
HAOLINQ INC. SunsatBoma
Consbuctlon
We Deliver

'lloont lddlllanl &amp; RltrtOdtllng

I

Call For Free Estimates

'

. YOUNG'S
; ~AIIPENTIR SERVICE
~

SAYRE
TRUCKING

(No Sundav Calls)

'

RIVERSIDE AUC110N BARN

Lost: male Siberian Husky, neutered , "Mogle ', Oak Grove Rd ,
Ra cine vi c in i!~. no colla r, 740-

.

INC.

n:l-5785 Or 304-n:J-5«7.

5148.

.,.,.,1 mo. od.

B.~.SELL BUILDERS,

Pomeroy Eagles
•" . Club a1ngo On
i
. Thursdays

'

Tuesday-Pizza any size Buy one get second half price
Wednesday- 1B'' 3 item $12.99
Free order of breadsticks ·
Thursday- 16" 4 item $1'2 .99
Free order of breadsticks
Open
4 till 10 Sunday thru Thurs
Friday &amp; Saturday 4 till f1
Closed Mondays

At GRS our lnulness b

•

I

949-4900 .
Weekly Specials

29670 Baehan Road
. Racine, Ohio 45n1
740-~9-2217
Slzee 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·B PM

38782 Sumner Road .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(7401 992·3131

1-800-967-4774

SELF STORAGE

FFIEE ESTIMATES

Vlililie•

1

Busines

'

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

HILL'S

Trucks - tractor
Trailers ~ decks - driveways
Equipment Cleaned &amp; Oegreased
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985 4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUAEKANET.COM

· BuUdo•er &amp;: Backhoe

' '

•

Vine &amp; Third

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FAcToRY DIRECf PRICES

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

' . CONNECTION
I

·RACINE PIZZA
EXPRESS

A.locally owned company wilh over 28 yrs
experience has now extended our coverage orea lo
include oil of Gallio Co. and porlions of Meigs,
Vinlon &amp; Lawrence counlies.

pd.

I
'
'

IUCCIIIGfl IRd llalgna;

the right to .acqulro, conatruct, maintain, and oparatoln the..,_, thorough·
taroa, .allaya, brldgaa, and
public piiCII ol the Vlll8111
o1 Pomeroy, State ot Ohio,
'nd lla lUCCI-II, llnll
tor' the Jtranamtaeton' andJ
dlatrlbu on ololectrlc anor·
gy to tho VIllage of ·
Pomeroy, State ol Ohio, and
the lnhabttanta thereof tor
light, heat, power, and other
purpo111, - tor the tranamllllon [and dlotrlbutlon)
ol the Mma within, through,
or aero• •ld VIllage ol
Pomeroy, State Ol Ohio.
Ia It ordained by tho
Council ol the VIllage ol
Pomeroy, State ol Ohio:
SECTION 1..
(Columbua
Southern
Power Company! [Ohio
P - Company[, Ita aucc•eora, and 11ilgn1 (horalnaltor celled "Grant•"l aro
hereby granted the ·right
prlvlloga, lranehlll, and
authority to acqulro, coilotruct, maintain, and opar·
ate tn, abOve; under, acroaa,
and 1101111 tho otroeta, thor·
oughfarea, alloyo, brldgao,
and pubNc plac" (ao tho
oame now extol or may
harellfter be laid out1 ol tho
VIllage ot Pomeroy, Sbllo of

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

4 white long hair ed kittens to

good homes. 7&gt;10-99H119

1-6118-561-2866

Oh 45789

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company.
rull Ume auctioneer, co mp lete
auction
service.
Licensed
r66 ,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, 304·

(304 )882-2617

AvOn PrOd~• · Start your own In·
Homa Buslneu. Work Flexible
Hours, Enjoy UnUmlted earnltios

80

2623

Giveaway

ShOioy Spears, 30&gt;1-675-1429.

reliable, must be able to

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctioneer ing Services. Co ns ignment auctio n- Mill
Srreet, Middleport, Thursda~s .
OhJo License 17693 740-989·

(740 )-37 9 -2160 NO Ques ti ons

AVON! All Areas! To Buy Of Sell.

Pt Pleasant. l ongenberger, Elec·
Ironies, All sizes/ girts clott11 ng .
Home-lntenor, prom dresses, furniture &amp;marry other items

23rd.Si ,

lis.

Rewa'rdl $750 00 for the arrest of
persons who broke ln&amp;Stole
Tools Propert~ of; Ronald Miller,

Help Wanted

Express, Inc (800)-293·0100
(800)-695-4473

928 ,

Au ction Friday .June 4th , 6:00
P.M. 2 Great Loads Of Merchandise! 241 Third Ave nue, Gallipo-

9.()0-5.30.

110

Tue June 1st' thru Sat June 5th

7AM-4PM

7&gt;10-592·1842

Refuse Service

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

TRI·STAIE MOBILE
POWER WASH

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Qua lity cloth ing and nousehOid
items $1 00 bag sate ever~
Thursday Monday thru Sa tu rd a~

To The Residents
of
Gallia County!

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

Welcome
:•• Contractors
Albany, Ohio
2 roo.
I; L...._ _5125/99
..;.........;...J

Three yard sales on Morning Star
Rd ., Rac ine. a1 the Buck' s, Oliver's and .the Hill's. June 4-5. from
9-5 , two piece living room suite ,
lazybo~ rocker, sola sleeper, re cliner, wood rocking chair, Home
Interior, boys slim jeans sizes 1o14, curtalrls. toys ·and other Uems.
rain or shine.
·

150 to 200 Ton of Good Flii-Oirt.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

I +800·311·3391
.:= Free Estim.ates

Gentleman Seeking Companionship From Nic:a Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Frlendahlp Send Ae·
pties To 553 Second Avenue ,
Apartment t40 3, Gal~polis .

Moving Ule- June 3 - ~ . 32400
McCumber Ra .. Ru tland. Lola of
mise items &amp; clOthes, 9am-6pm

9 West Stimson, Athens

'

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
: r- · GUnERS
~ Sidi"f &amp; S1llil

Personals

Joys. clolhl"tt

New ToVou Thrift Shoppe

1": •

•

005

June 3· 4 , 9-5. Starting Mauar
above Eastern High School1 Re ~
cllner chair, carpet , lamps, stand.

On 5alel7ol0-4&lt;41-1995.

1701

•

num roas ter, trol ltng mot or, 3'
door, c~ng . misc. items.

Going Out Of Business Sale ,
Everyth ing 50% Ort , Thursday,
Fr iday, Saturday, Tuesday. GallipoliS Beauty Supply, 314 Second
A~o~enue , Gallipolis. All Shel\llng

.Jereirnv J.. Roush

..'•&lt;

Summll Ad off Co.•Ad . 5, brass ·

kettle wtth stand. Iron pot, pans •
lamps, bedspreads, club alumi-

30 Announcements

•loaWIICue•a.lp
• M81Dtanaace • PluiUng
-Mulching
• Ratalnlng W.U 8 ldclc
Patio Can1bacUun
D!IIIH Certlfted
Ludacalle Spaci.U11,
· GIU.Aft

.~ Downspouts
~utter Cleaning
•
Painting

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Start Dating Tonlgi'Ht Have l un
playing the Ohio Dating Game. 1eoo-ROMANCE. extension 9681

East St~tte Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

f t Howard L. Wrltesel

Public Notice

Protect the imggrtant
people·in your life.

C~ftft~ft~fl;J~liWiffir fJJ

CREDIT PROBLEMS

J une l -3rd . 8 :30am- 5pm . Noble

Phone 740·992·3987
i;J June 2-4. lour mites out of Rutland
New llma Ad then onto Loop
Free Estimates
ofii:.. on
Ad Watch for signs, home of Sea
..
Owner·. John Dean , ,.~~ !il&lt;!l Wood, 7&gt;10-742-2790.,

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mik e Drehel
Sales Representativ e
Larry Schey

.

Smith Heilman and Harlan H.
Wehrung , Pomeroy, 1932: LoUise
Bearhs Hartung of Pomeroy, Dora
Swank Cnspm of WesterVIlle, Ed
Baer and Eve lyn Edwards, 1935.
Jeanne Heines Leitwiler of Syracuse, Emma Ebersbach Clatworthy
of Middleport, Curtis Jenkinson of
Middleport, Erwm Gloeckner of
Racine , and Elizabeth Duffy of
Pomeroy, 1936; Beatrice Holter
Stelzer of Columbus;· and , Celia
Han, Sylvia Heilman, Charles E:
Sayre, Margaret Thomas Bailey, all
of Pomeroy, 1937; . Rose Sisson ,
Galia Heilman Reed , Mane Dorahs
Curd, Sara Cullums, all of Pomeroy,
and Ruth G. Brown Tate, 1938.
Lawrence Leonard, Walter
Grueser, and Mary E. Karr Bowen,
all of Pomeroy,• 1940; Wanda Ebhn
and Abbie Warner Stratton, both· of
Pomeroy and Mary E. Thomas of
Powell, 1941 ; Mary Sayre Rpgers ,
David Holter of Pomeroy, 1942;
Martha Roedel Hamm of Chillicothe, Marjorie Leonard, Marvin
Burt, Belva Young Glaze, Mary
Wiggins Bentz, Mary Grueser Russell and Homer Hysell, all of
Pomeroy, 1943.
Bill Radford of Pomeroy, 1945;

~

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner; Ronnie Jones

..,
"

-

June 1·2. time 9·5, dlahea, new
oak dOor, perennials, Harry HOner
residence, 32797 Ptne GrO'Je Rd.,

Pomeroy High Schoo{ alumni and guests gather for banquet, dane¢
.
Warner Mciver, John ston City,
Tenn., Peggy Houdashelt, Pomeroy,
Maxine Norris; John E. Werry,
Pomeroy; Lucretta Cornell Stobart,
Irene Bmley and Lee Winnie.
1954: Glona Swindell Mcintosh,
Athens; Jane Selbe Holt, Columbus,
Don Yeauger, Winchester; Rosali e
St.ory, Pomeroy ; Richard Leifheit,
Thornton
Springf•ed;
Joanne
Vaughan, Pomeroy; Richard Vaughan, Pomeroy, Jean Sayre Serve,
Pomeroy; Joanne Colmer Miller,
Beverly, Howard Kitchen, Marietta,
James Qualls, Pomeroy; Ray Hines,
Belpre; Madeli ne Hysell, Painter,
Middleport ; a-nd Anna Canaday
Chapman, Pomeroy.
1959: Sandra Ingraham Strauss,
Vincent; John Thomas, Ponsmouth;
Ruby Taylor Rife McMilhon, Middlepon; Gary Freeman, Pomeroy;
Susan Young Cleland, Chester; SheIta Strauss Eastman, Gallipolis;
Betty Haml)l Johnson , DeLand,
Fla .; Gene Romine, Columbus;
Judy Gilmore Wolfe , Pameroy;
Phtllip H.· Werry, Chester; Sandra
Smith l.a'!dermilt, Pomeroy; Raben
Gloeckner, Canal Winchester; Walter Morris, Hamden; Craig
Wehrung, Charleston, W. Va.; Walter Laudermilt, Pomeroy ; Terry
Phalin, Belle Valley ; Deanna Watson Summerfield; Philip Van Vranken, Nashville; Marlene Harri son, Pomeroy; Lorraine Grover
Venoy, Rutland; Carolyn Meier
Podbesek, Mentor; Jerry Colmer,
Pomeroy; and Bruce Zirkle,
Pomeroy.
1964: Linda Cramer Zcmbry;
Allen Swartz, V1enna, W. Va.; Jane
Baer Bourne , Sierra Vi sta, 'Ariz.;
Same N Arnold, Shadyside; Kenneth and Nancy Burns FISher.
GlenviiJe, W. Va ; Karen Miller
Gilbert, Springfield; Martlyn Renshaw Searls, Circleville; H1lda
Stott, Middleport ; John Strauss,
Gallipolis; Jem Folmer Freem~n,
Upper Marboro, Md.; Judy Folmer
Durham, Gibsonia, Pa.; Robert
Buck, Pomeroy, Jenmfer Crew
Solomon , Lafayetle , Ind ; Fred Sisson, Galion; Lance Hart, Kenton;
Louanna Leonard , Canal Wmchester; Donnie Mayer and Linda
Mayer, Pomeroy; Reta Wears Ord,
Sharon Smith, Yvonne Young,
Brenda Hysell, Rick Crow, all of
Pomeroy; Ruth Ann Ba1ley, Rockford, Ill. Dav id Wiley, Angela
Wiley, Danny Smith, South Pmnl;
and Chad Humphreys.
Other alumni attendmg the banquet were Nonga Fleming Roberts,
Pomeroy; L927; Ella May Romine,
Columbus, 1928; Mary Kathryn
Roush, Pomeroy, 1931 ; 'Virginia

Yard Sale

70

Pag,:e

.- Ann finds herself in no win position over gay marriage issu~
:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

June 1,1999

Ad. 18 on 33 N. Swing se1.

~alia

set, tent. 1011 of mtse nems
and ciOtl'\es.

\

7~46-5106

Now H1rmg Dom ino 's Pizza of
Point Pleasa nt. Good pay, flex l·
ble hours Mus I be 1 or over
Team members llP4'1V In person.

e

NURSING lPN'o And STNA'o

1 LPN FT. 11 -7
1. LPN

P.T. A"'ating,

1. STNA F.T. 11 -7 Also P.T. Ro-

Jating

Holzer Seni or Care Center. 70
Bed LTC Is looking For Ellperlencad And · Dedicated People
Wh o Work As Team Members
W1th Qual i ty Aes !den t Cere As
T heir Goal Onlo license Req .
App l~ At Or Send Resume With
Cover letter, Attn . D O.N At 380
Colon~\ Onve, Bidwell, OH 45614 ,

or Fax 740-448·1346 EOE.

NURSING SUPERVISOR /liDS
NURSE 1. RN Unit Manager, 1
MOS RN Coordinator ; Hol zer
Semor Care Ce nter. 70 Bed LTC.
Is L:ooklng For AN 's With Supervisory: Ass es sment, And Co mmunic atiOn Skills Mu st Have
Knowledge 01 PPS , lntectlon
Control, And MOS2 .0, Ohio Ll·
cense R&amp;Q . Apply At Or Send ' Resu me Wtth Cover Latter Ann ·

D.O.N. At

360 COlOnial Dr.. BMlwell.

OH 456 14 Or Fax 740-446-1346

EOE
Nursing Supervtsori MOS Nurse .
1. AN Unit Manager. 1 MDS AN
Coordinator Hofze r Senior Care
Ce nter, 70 Bed LTC . Is look ing
lor FJN 's w ith supervisory, a ssessme nt, and communtcauon
Skills . Must have knowledge of
PPS , ln tact10n Con trol , and
MOS2 0 . Oh1o License . Aeq. ap·
ply at or send resume with ccwer
letter Ann· 0 O.N. at 380 Colonial
Dr., Bidwell , OH . 45614 or Fa11

740-446-1346. EOE.

Responsible Child Care Provider
In M~ Home For lWo Children MF, 8-5. Tara Estates Area Submit
letter Of Interest, References &amp;
Wage Requirements To . CLA 24,
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Th ird Avenue , Ga llipolis, OH

45631

AN Position, 3 Oa~s Pe r Week ,

S8so.oo Per Week. 11 .000

Sign-

On Bonus . Drive to west Jefferson, OH (25 miles from Co lum-bus) 3 times per week Work 7P·
7 A every Saturday and Sunday
plus one 3·11 P shUt each week
and you wm rec;eive :
per week . ·vaca!lon and hollda~
pa~. *401K. *Medical, dental and
lite Insurance. •ongoing tralnl'ng
and CEU opportunities. ,"Opp~n­
tunlty for advancement Arbora
West fs a leading provider l ot
Subacute Care . We are INking
an organized leader with e~ecpl·
lent problem solving skills for our
18 bed subacute unit.. PrtvloUa
experience a plus but woUld eon~
aider an outstanding new gr•c1u·
ate. Call Debbie Long , RN to In·
terview lo r 11'1 11 opportUnity. Ar·

·ssso.pa

bors

W~st ,

375 W. Main StrHt

Wast Jefferson, Ot'!io 431ft:

(614)879·5103.

I '

•

�'

Tuesday,June1,1999

T¥•~ay,

•

.'

Ju"e 1, 1999

~·~~~~~~~==~~~~==-=~~~-.-~--~~~----~P~o~m~w~o~y~·~M~I~dd~l~e~po~rt~,~O~h~l~o::=:~::::::::::~::::~T~h=e~D~a~ll~y~S~e~n~tl;ne~I~·~P~a~ge
~
f3,
...
~
ALLEYOOP

BRIDOK

PHILLTP
ALDER
320
OWN A COMPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORK I
$25 $75/Hr PTIFT
1-III-US.3718

www worit·lrom-home ne!Aurlr.
Part-Time 7·3 LPN E•perlenced
Paid Offered Apply In Person At
Scenic Hills Nursing Ce nte r 311

Budcrldgo Rood Bidwell Ohio
Position A\lallable Full Time Ac

counts Manager, Job Req uire s
Some Heavy LUting Be M I1ts
Available Health &amp; benta l In
sura nee 401 K &amp; Paid Vac all on
Opportuni ties To Move Up To

Highly

Mol ~ated

People Apply In

Person AI Rent Way 10 00 A M
6 00 PM Mon day To Frtd ay 5
Ohio River PlAza GaJNjXIUS
Postal Job s to $ 18 35 /Hr In c
Benef its No e ~t per l en c e For
App and EXBm Info Call 1·800·

813·3585, Ext 8812 OAM 9PM
70ays Ids Inc

mfo

call

3585 Ext 8826
days Ids Inc

1 800 813
BAM 9PM 7

Recruit ing People For D1scovery
Toys For More Infor matiOn, Peg-

gy Russell 740 388 8983 1 888
262 3758

soli Oetargen1s used exclusively Sate fo r 1111 fabrics Fast dry
lng (1 2 hours) Eliminates o11er·
wetti ng Guaranteed Work Ca ll
Clearly Clean at !304)67 5· 4040
for Ftee Estimates!

$1 2 000 00 (304)-675 2319

Dou Your Hous e Siding Deck,
or Driveway nee d a c!eanlng? It
so Press ure Washing Is th e an·

14&gt;72 mobile home 2 bedroom 2
balll, au appliances, S19,000 740949·8013

swer l Calt Cle arl y Cl ean at
{304)675 404 0 for a Free Es

1971 Darin, 14x60 2 bedroom,
new catpet in living room 2 year
old ca rpet in the r~&amp;t , both bed·
rooms are bi g, will take $3500.
740' 992· 00 75 must be moved

tlmare

Ra inbow Bu il ders bu1ld new or
repair old, no job too small o r
M ajor cred it cards
large

ASAP

•WV029582 Call (304)458 1049

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom

BP M528 8092

TURNED DOWN ON
SDCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

1975· 12x65 Holly Park 2· blld·
room Tota l Elec tric Like New
t hrough out l Free Oell\lery and

1·688·562·3345

Block UPI $7 950 00 (740) 446
0175(304)675·5965

WALL·CEILING CLEANED EX·
PERTLY Saves on repainting In
dehn•te ty We use the excluSI\Ie
Von Schrader V53 Powe r Wall
Cl~amng System Protects paint,
leaves g la ss retards ch alk ing
Anll Mildew no o dor saniti zes
Free esti mate s Call Clearly

1976 14x70 Kirkwood 2·Bad·

c -.an at (304)675 4040

Road Bidwell OH 45614
!Member Of EOE) '
Scen.lc HIUs Nu rsing cente r Is
currently accepllng applications
For a Day Shift Treatment Nurse
(Weekends Only) Please apply at
311 Buckrldge Ad Bidwe ll Oh

45614
Someone to st~end tl'le night with
lh~ elderly m1dnlght·8am 5 days

per week $10 per day 740 992·
5039 or 740-992·44 10

Call 1-(800)·545 4423
WE NEED DRIVERS
KELLI TRUCKING INC
Call

740.2JMI.0819
,.0.288o0209
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game wardens,Sacurl·
ty Maintenance Park Rangers
NoExp Needed For App /Exam

Info Call 1 800 8 13·3585,
Ext8813, 8AM 9PM 7 Cays
ldS,Ir&lt;:
Wlldlllo Jobs/$21 60/Hr lncl
benefits Game Wardens Securt
Maintenance Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For app texam
Info
call
1·800·813

tv

3585,Ed 8827 8AM·9PM 7days
lds,lnc

Business
Training

Gollipollo Career Colltgo
(Careers Close To Home) Call

Today! 740-446·4387 1·800·
214-0452, Reg 100 05-12748

3 bedroom hOuse 2 full baths
lam1\y room large utility ro om 2
car garage attached, separate 3
car garage pool 3 acres phone

Tra !ler For Sale Olllce Trailer
10JC40 All Ele ctric &amp; A C

3681
3BA Ho use 2 car garage, 1 6
Acre University lane (Behind

Armory) (304 )675·5375 aller
530PM

Acceoslble
E &amp; S Lawn Service Design lm
plementatlon
and Serv1 ce
Available for Spring Clean up
fertilizing and plantmg Free esll·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed

Grog Milhoan 3041675-4628
Experienced 16 yr ol d w ill do
babysitting In my home Mon Frl

1or Summer 740.446 2315
Georges Portable Sawmill do n t
haul your logs to the mill just call

304-875 1957

740-388-11041
Jlma Drywall &amp; Construction
New Conslructlon &amp; Aemoelelf
Drywall Siding Aools Add• ~

llono Pelnllng ole (304)6744823 or (304)674·0155
Painting lawn service &amp; plumbing

'lltrd WOI1c· mowing 11edgos, wind-

992·3193 or 740·992·7821 ask

tor Dana or leave a meuage
FINANCIAL

210

Farms lor Sale

Bualness
Opportunity

IN0'11CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend&amp; that you do busl ~
ness with people you know, and

NOT 10 stnd money through lho
you have lnve~tlgated
lho olfarlng

mall until

Business and
Buildings

Or 304 634 0540 Laavo Mos
sage

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
3 5 acre lot for sate river view
and out of flood plain Located on
SA 124 just out of Syracuse Wa·
te r &amp; sewer available Can break
In smaller tots $30 000 740 992

2

House on AI 2 N 5 Bedrooms
Full Basement Sh own By Appl

I 88 Ac Private 740-245·9448

Family Home With Pool 2 Car
Garage/ Apt Albany 7 Miles

0 U MaillS Mi ne 740.690·7150
Restored VIc torian home situated
on t2&gt; acres VIl lage Middleport
secluded and private, appoint
ment, call740-992 5696

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths, In Crown
Clly /Mercervma A.rea, 740·256-

1686

Nice 2 Bedroom Trailer In Small
Trailer Park, Deposit &amp; Aeferer:~c·
as Required 740-446-1104

'llaller For Ronll 740-446 1279
Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments furnished and unfurnished, security
deposit required no pels. 740·
1 Bdrm Garage Apt , V&amp;ry Clean
And Private Lease, Plus Utilities

740 446-3684
1 Bdrm Extra Nice Firat Month
Free With One Year Lease

Mo Overlooking City Park! La·
and Bath $150 00 Call (740)-4462477
1 Bedroom Apt, utilities Included,
Furnished or unfurnished\ $300
mo 2·Bedooms all Electric Trail·
or $300 mo (740)-387.(]1ll1

$200, will allow I pol 740 681·
9729
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port we pay water sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; electric, S200 per
month, $100 deposit, 740·992·

7808
2 BR Apartment New Haven
A.rea All utilities pd $380 00 mo

740.385-4367

470

llelowBenlley,740-&lt;4&amp;-1210
Nice Waedaater $60 lola Of Old

Wanted to Rent

House Within 15 Miles Of Borg
warner Fenced Yard, Nice

Kllchen 513·851·0100 Or 740·
441-3896
•

MERCHANDISE

510

Glass AQLL Anllquo Quill $800
740-446·2529
Pool Table 3'x8' oversize with 3/
4" slate New Cover Sails
Sticks
Excellent Condition

a

$500 (304)675·5093
500PM
Prlmeatar-

Aller

rree DlrecTV Summar

2123

Household
Goods

Appliances

PRIMESTAR
Cell now 1·800-263-2640

Reconditioned

Wasnera, Dryora Ranges Rolrl
grators 90 Cay Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740·U6·

7795
Blue Sectional with futl~slze pull
out bed, 2 racllneraf1 on each

Ond $300 (304)675·9940, belort
12PM
USED ... PPLIANGES

Washers dryers, refrigerator&amp;,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 78

Vine S1ree1 Call 740·448·7398.
I 686 818·0128
New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga

Used King Size Bed Complalo
$250 Full Size $135, Twin $115
New Coy Beds 1130, Bunk Beds,
New Mattresses, Drasaara Chest
Of Drawers, Couches, Dinettes,
Ooffee lEnd Tables Much Morel

Reese rl'i elver hitch , running
boards bedllner bedmat and tall·
gate protector, 1997 AAE tiber·
gia&amp;a topper all tit full alze G~

trucko Dan Slotls, 740·992·1117,
leava me1118(1o
Schoolbus, Pallel Dolly, Snow
Blower, Electric Sewer Cleaner,
used Gsa Weed Eaters. vacuum

Pumps (740)-448·4782
Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1• 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stodc

RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son Ohio 1·1l00-537·9528

550

Building
Supplies

740-448-47112

Block, brick sewer pipes, wind
ows, lintels, ate Claude Wlntara ,

530

5121

Rio Grandt, OH Call 740·245·

Antiques

54" Oak Roii,TOP Dosk 740·441 ·
0384

••;

Steel Buildings, New, Mus1 Sam
40x60x14 Was St7,430 Now

1800 s Model, $950 oo (740)·
256·9309
Anllquo Bottl8. Advartlslng Sale

560

VICiorlan Slylo Love Seat,

Upho~

Burgundy,

And Auction 8126th 9 4 Point
Pleasant Armory Quality Dealers

Needed, 740-992·5068
Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to

6 00 p m 740 992·2528. Russ
Moore owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

350 Watt Ampllllor wllh built In
Crossover also Includes Speak$900 00 OBO

(740)·245·5120 or (740)·379·
9456 Loeve Message
1 Exercise Bike, 1 Tread Mill 1

Slalr Slops 740.379·2189 Alter 5
PM

u• DlrecTV Satelllle Syattml·

$69 00, $100 of lrlt programming
Limited time olfar, call 1·80().7798194

Petsl~r Sale

Adorllllle, Intelligent White Fe
male Maltese 3 Months, AKC All
Sholl And Wormed Puppy Paper
Trained Weighs 1 112 Pounds

Tops 3To41bs , 740~1000
AKC Lab Puppies, 740 379-2883
AKC Registered Golden Retriever
Puppies. Have Shots Ready To

Gol $200 Eacn, 740.256 1084 I·
686·258 3514

•

ooo.

~

~~~~~~~~~~ ·~

Cnrl&amp;ty'a Family Living School

City

day Spacial pay depof511 &amp; receive llrs1 month's rent free Cali
740~992-4514 ask for Chrla Mar·

Hn

Chrlaly s Family Living apart·
menta home &amp; trailer rentals ,
740·992·4514 apartment• avail·

lent Condllklnl 740.446-2751
t4x70 Atlantis Mobile Home All
Electrk:, 740 245-9633

SA 325, NiCS 5 Acres $16 000
Water

curlly Deposit Referencea Ro·

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Info Take 10%

Frenchtown Apartments, Now

Ridge Ad, ·1 Acres S13 000 On

011 LISI Price On Cooh Buys!

Lot behind Krodel Park Wllh Trail·
or Hook·Up &amp; Building (304)895·
3004

360

Rest Estate
Wantad

Wanted To Buy 3 Bedroom
Home, Good Condition On 1
Acre Lol Or Mora, 740-24~9633

We Buy Land 30 ·500 AC!tl,
we Pay casn 1-800·213·8385
Anlhony Land co

rooms. From $275 ·$350/Mo , So·
qulrld, 74o-4&lt;1-o952
Accepting Appllcallono For I
Bodroom, Ft-!HA Subsldlood
Aparlmtnl For Elder~ Aod Hand·
!capped, Equal Houalng Oppor·
IUI'ily, 740-446-4639
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park, AC, No Pets.

Rtleroncoe. Dopoelt $325/Mo ,
74Q.o048.8235 741H46-0577
Gollla Manor Apartment Now fl..c·
captlng Applications For 1 Bed·

room HUD, Subaldl!led Apertmoot
For Elderly And Handicapped,
Equal Housing Opporlunlly, 740·
446-4839
'

AMAZING

METABOLISM

Pounds Easy, Lou
Oolck 10·200
Faat
Broaklhrooghlll
Dramatic Aeaulta, 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam
pitS Cell 74o-«1·1lll12

PM 74Q.o048.21l98

AKC Sheltle, Female, 5 Months,
Nicely Marked Shots. Wormed,
$125 ~o CheCks 740-256-6162
AKC Wtllte German Shepherd
Pups, Pick 1-Mate and 1 Female,

Leltl (7&lt;0)·245-9213
Fish,

Birds

Pond

Supplies

Sun 1·4PM Mon ·Sal 11 AM·
8PM Fish Tank/Psi Shop, 2413
Jackson A.venue/Potnt Pleasant

(304)675 2083
Blue Point Siamese Kittens,
Wormed And LUter Trained

s1oo oo eacn 740-387-7123
CKC Registered Jack Russell
Terrier Mate, 10 weeks old

$150 (304)875-4879

Hand Ftd Tame Cockateal Ba·
bles Different colors &amp; prleea
Also, bonded pair Nanday Conu·
ers &amp; Proven Palra or Cocka·

Don'l C/111 Us Wo Bolh Loaol 740.
448-8308, l·ll00-291-1)098

42 PTO HP, 1 Romolo Wei
Brake, lnd PTO 13,500 00 3010
4WD Same Speco 16,500 00
Come Sao The TN55 85, 75
4WO models with Super Steer
'1)'111 turn shorter than a 2WD
Keefer&amp; Service Center St Rt
87, Pt Pleasant &amp; Alpley Road

Phone (304)895·3874
Hydrollc hoae 1'1\&amp;klng setup wllh
cutolt "saw, hose crimping ma·
chine, with large section of crimp

end &amp; hon &amp; adaptors 1103)36611436
Large anortment or bolts I

bends (803)366-9436

se

3 Year Old

16 Hand Thor-

oughbred Mare, 740-2!16-9384
7 weak Old Araucana Chlckl,
740-256-1815.

-':'-:"',....._....;.____,.:;._1

Cattle May Be Brough! In Allor 4
PM On Friday, All Conslgnmeola
Welcome, Hauling Available

Volut $13 000 Aoklpg $t 1,900," ,
74o-448·7789
·'
Motorcycles
•
;
,
740

Chickens, $3 oo Each, Red ' Apa·
looaa Colt, 7 Weeks Old, $350

0 B 0 740-256·1233

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

,

48,000 mllta Exira Chrome and

r

Ltghll' $15.500.0Q (815)·387· ....,
7444 Eva Wookenda (740)·448· /,
7371
A

8
years old $700 001 (140)·367·
7227

1993 Honda 300EX Excollonl"'
Condlllon Runo Gii&gt;&lt;l. Ntrl Bn, ~1

710

'_,..

Performance Exhaust. Goo&amp; _...
Tires, Call '740·742·2203 After 8 1

~P_M._ ~---------.~oo·:

TRANSPORTATION

1972 Chevelle Malibu Coupe, red
wllh blacl&lt; vinyl lOp; C:Oif'4'1tlo raa-

lor Sale
.,.,.,-,,---...,..------"":

1979 Chevy Camaro excellent

J;

shape 740-985·9820 or 740·985·
3839
11110 ·1990 CARS FROM S500
Pollee lmpoun~s. And Tu
Repo's For llatlngs Call 1·800·

319-3323 EXI 4420

great, look&amp; good V·6, $2100,
740.1149-2838 "'740·949-2045
1990 Honda CRX 5 Spesd, ~.
Good Projocl Carl $700, 740·
388-9972
1991 Dodge Spirit, very good
Condition!
locally
Ownadl

$3,000 00 (740)-448· 15&lt;3 Allor
800pm

1991 Flroblrd. T·Top Like Now.
$79oo (304)675-2339
Aulo, AC, $3,495,
Aulo, AC, $2,495,
High Top, Trade·
Yan, Cool&lt; MOIOII,
'

ltt4 Plrmoulh Acclolm. One
Owner, low mlleage(30 000) ~.
Ca110110, Now Tlrts(300ml )
Great Condlllon (304)875·1345/
875-18331875-3003
1894 Pontiac Grand Am

arr ..

cruise, 60,000 mtlee, $5500 OBO,
740-787-4501

1891 Toyota Tercel 4 ap ru~ns
excellent gas saver body goOd

condl!lon, 4good !Ires, $1150

t.l&amp;JAulo
740.388·9fl93 "' 740-742·481 0
t998 Dodge Stratua, 4 door,
59 000 mllea Price $9,500

(304)675-3943

~

$1500 (304)675-611511

Farm Equipment

June Used H1y Equipment Sale

4 ~% Financing Wllh John Otero

ua ane

Sea Ooo Wave Runner A-1 Con: '";

740-446-6491
1997 Grand Am GT. White, 50,000
miles 110 500,740 949-1701

24 Montho, 3 75% 38 Monlhl,
4 75% 48 Months, 5 5% 60

radro/tape player, run good,

Farm,u Cub tractor wllh rebuilt
motor, Includes mowing machine

&amp; culllvaton, $1800. 740· 742

' . 'I
\

Maintained. wife's car

132k

91 Ford Eocort, • ,_ llrwo, 11m'1m

u.ooo oeo. 740·992 5532

92 Mllaublahl Ecllpu,

GF~

All

Wheel Onval Turbo, arn'fm Sterno

CO Tllla and Crulst, PW PL'a
Sunroof Sap Exeell Condition
New transmluion and clutch Tur-

bo $8,500 OBO (740) 992-6978
(740) ,-6481

THOMAS PAINE SAID,
~THESE ARE THE TIMES TJ.IAT
TRV MEN'S SOUL.5 II

(3CM)675-3.124

.A,

,

a

Campet8
MotorHomn

;

In this deal from a patr tournament
tn SY.rta, they defended beautifully
It must be admmed that South 's
btddtng 1s out tn the mosl opttmtsttc
of all opttmtsttc twthghl zones Pro bably, he should pass o ver lwo spades,
bul to ratse 10 four hearls IS , well ,
select your own word
After wmmng lhe first lnc k wtth
dummy's spade king, declarer played
a club to the queen and ace Now
Maud , from the aucuon expectmg her
partner to be short m dtamonds,
swttched to that sutt Declarer won
wtth dummy' s kmg and called fo r a
trump Ltly conunued the good wo rk
by wmmng wtth her ace (why dtd s he
do that ?) and relurmng her las t dta
m o nd When Maud won the second
round of trumps Wtlh her kmg, s he
gave Ltly a dtamond ruff to defeat the
c onlracl and score a complete top
(TillS means they were the only Eas tWest patr to rc gtster a plus sc ore )
How dtd Ltly know to wtn wtth
the heart ace&gt; Well for Maud 10
swttch to dtamonds , she surely had
trump control a qutck trump wmner
If so, 11 had 10 be held back unul Ltly
c o uld rec etve the dt a mond ruff
Hence her play of the hear! ace
There ts somethmg e s thettcall y
pleasmg about two pla)ers w orkmg
10ge1her 10 produce the ktlhng
defense

CUTTIN6 AND PASTIN6..

•

21~a

22 Moat moture •
23 Accompany
24Reyedll25 " By tile Tlrne

--to

53 Mother
Tere11,for

ono

CELEBRITY CIPHER

."

by Luis Campos
CMOO!y Cipher cryptogram • •~ crea1ed lrom quotaltonS by tamous ~ past and pre sent
Each Fetter-., the Cipher atande for anothet Todlys clue G eq~J~Jis W

HDLC ' II

N

EZa

DLKL
( E IY

P S KL

E

XN Z B

DJ A l

MSYH

HDLC

GDLZ

N' W

XNZB

MNW

AEHNLZH)

YJWLBEC ,

Y H N I I

N H. '

'PEHXNYD' ·

DSZHLK
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'I've been doing this (acting) for over haH my life
flnllly got one right, I guess • - (Oscar winner) James Coburn

'::~:~' S@~6{}1A- ~
ltlltotrl

Rearrane• lottero of
0 four
tcrambt.d words

•r

r..trse

~

'

Don I gtl slung by high prlct&lt; I
Shop tht ci&lt;Jssi(ltd stelioo

I TUESDAY

ti\I:E 11&lt;'1 BUT \'W

~~Rt~SER

lAM I

'.'

the
bo-

low to form lour ~rnplo ""'"'·'

I II I I I I
I
I
VESROP

..

CNOKK

I

PRATA

I

1--l"'"..;,;l,..;..;....l:....;..:.,l_5-l{

My stster told me that •t
L.---1....-.L.--L.--L.---1.,
doesn't matter who wears the
.-~---------.........,pants tn the famtly as long as
1-·__,A.;....:::N;....:..D..;O~C,..:E::....,.--1. there 1s money m the - - - - - · 6 I 17 I J
G Complort
the c~uckle quoltd
1 __J.'--....1.._J___J
by f•llmg in the rmssmg words
L--...J.L-....1..
you develop lrom ...P No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

'

I I
,

••

,

Advent - Clove · Musky • Pursue - SEASON
In the game of life 11 s better to have some early losses,
than to matntatn an undefeated SEASON

JUNE 1 I

l

'

. ,I
'
I'

••
•I
I

I

t

·i.fic,o:2tli-o576: Rog·

~·-

Applla~co Piirls And Service All
Name &amp;Jande Over 25 Years EJII -

pe~lence All Work GuarantHd,

French Clly Maytag , 740·448·
7795
C&amp;C General Hom• Malntenence· Painting vinyl aiding.
carpentry dOors, windows balhl,

mObiiO home repair and moro Fol' '

General Contracting . EltC• J

Carptnlry, Porcltee, Ttoller
And Air Conditioning:

7·0·441·

I

'
.'

WOII

aAT I. POII.AN - - - - - - - - - - -

lO TAKIO IT t!J:IN

1

SERVlCES
Home
Improvements

. ''

SCitAM-UTS ANSWW
•

-::::-::-::==~~~,_....;'
'
1998 lnnabruck 28 Soil Cor!' •I'.\
T.
talned with allde out Good eon~ r{

810

0

52 Actrtsl
Markel

0

•:1

dillon $14,500 (304)675-2338

8 Comelot'o
moglclon
7 - B. Anthony
8Adherentol·

18=-._.

- I X"
21Welght
ollowonce
27 Scotlllh
l-Ily
28New
THtllmenl
book
.
30 Cuoterd opple '
31 MI-lam
o
university
37 Mil do '
38 Slyle ollype
'
40 Wolka
un.-lly
41 Alrlcon lox
'
42 Pllvlc Joinll '
43 Author
Klngeley •45 Tal Mohltl alta ' "'Require
~
47 Gr-puk
"
49 Mln-moull
,
connection
'""
50 Dla11111tlng
vote

e

Now gao tonko &amp; bOcly pariS D-e,,'
R Aulo, Ripley, WV (304)372.-j'
3933"' 1-600-273-9329
•

790

Tennyaon

Pass

}
1

I

· ASTRO·GRAPH
'

m•~mterprctcd

Wednesday, June 2, 1999
The year ahead could hold more
than the usual foir share of opponunllies you might expect However,
nothing will come of any them unless
you're pr~pared 10 takelhe inniauve.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Everythtng wdl go a lot smo"ther for
yqu today if you don't try to aherwho
you are, so just be yourself By
auemplins 10 tmnate another, you
wtll cast yourself •n an unsunable
role Ocmm1, treat yourself to a
birthday gtft Send the requtred
retund form and for your AslroOraph predtcttons for the year ahead
by mathng $7 and self-o!ldnossed
stamped envelope lo AstrQoOraph,
c/o lhts newspaper, P.O Box 1758,
Murray Htll Slatton, New York, NY
I 0156 Be sure 10 slate your Zodtac
Sign
CANCER (June 21 ·luly 22) Be
prepared lo JUmp '" and lake over if
someone who promised to help you
wnh a crttJcnl career 1ssuc reneges on
Ihe Job Don ' l get caught flat fooled
LEO (luly 23-Aug 22) Fu"y
anangemcnts or mstructton' ~.:ould

I

WHAT WAS HE
TALKING A6bUT?

eve Joii)IS, 7.P,245-5677
New Auto Body Plrt&amp; &amp; Acce~
aortn Transformers Auto Part•

oulllx
9 Rooler'o
material
10 Sid 1111
11 Au-Wieoel
12 Monthly
poyment

Pass

1

Budgll Priced Tranamtaalons
and Engine•. All Type• Acctu
To OV.r 10,000 Tranamlaalonl ,

LIVIngaron'a Buement W1ter "
Proofing all ba1ement repairs
done, free e111mat11, lifetime ;
guarantee 12)tre on Job txperl ~
tnco (304)895-3687
•

VInyl Sldrtlng Kilo $299 95, 5 Gal·
lon Aluminum Flborad Rool Paint
$25 21, 5 Gal White Rool Palnl
157 89: Ancnoro $5, Coors &amp;

Lawn lr&lt;: 1-800·594· 1111, Galli·
polls OH Wo Cellverl

Auto Parte &amp;
Accessories

\

IICCIIIDr)'

4 Sponllh llero
El5 u'nloclc, to

26

PEANUTS

•{

Pot32 Uvetydance
33 Laundry

Easl
Pass
Dbl

•

1994 Yamaha Waverunner ~ ·
700cc Excellent Concntton, Low Hours S3 200. 1..0

1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded
28 000 Milas Bal "acl Warr Ex·

$2,800 00 OBO (740)1123891908

Months, Carmichael s Farm &amp;

..

free estimate call Chat, 740·9926323 1 I

•

THE ::0\XTH
ROUI&gt;II&gt;

18ft Sylvan Aluminum VIHauL ' •
50HP Mariner Motor with an .. !
Even rude TrOlling Motor Set up
lor aport or pleasure Selling for 1

1996 Z·24 Ca\laller Loaded , 5
Speed, Power Wlndowe &amp; Sun·
roof CD Player, Keyltla Entry,

740.441.()235

I!.Y A.
TKO IN

750 Boets '&amp; Motor.

torallon all matching" numbers,
loW miles, $15,000,740.949-2248

~A.'1

'

E~ETU&amp;84E!&gt;

250 AlES $1,500 00 (304)-875-, '
5612
J

Autoelor Sale

1994 Cavalier
1992 Cavalier
1994 Dodge,
winds, Custom
74o-oi&lt;IHll03

l't&gt;

__
I•
85 Poiarlus Trallbasa 4·Wheeler ,. 1

NHB!S1, Round Baler~, New John
D•ere Round Balert, Mower Conditioners, 0% 12 Monlha, 2 75%

Supply, 740-448·9418 Galllpolla,
Ohio

with a 1998 California Sidecar - ..r

Sl&gt;ort trike COYI( Conversion Kit

$3,000, 740-256-1191

Peno &amp; St.JilPI';

Windows Gal &amp; Electric Water
Heaters Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parte \ntartherm, Miller I Cole·
man Air Condllloners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett'&amp; Mobile Home

1990 Honda Gold Wing S E Tr1kt '

740-266-5395

celltnt Condition, Price ReduOidli

610

-q
4

- - - - - - - ! ...
1993 500 Suzuki, Low Milot :=

570

model. Slend Included $800
(30&lt;}773-8160

THE

Outstanding Angus And Chlan·
gus Bulls Reasonably Priced,
Slate Run Farms Jackson, Ohio

89 Buick Park Avonuo. Fully
Equip Everything wor~ol Well

~Inventory

1986 Ford F·250HC XLT Lariat,
4x4, 460, 4 apotd, IOadtd, $4000,
740-949-3403
1990 Nlaaan 4x4 4 Cylinder, 5

1993 Chav Plck-tJp Short Bed.
4x4 ENcallant Condition Reta~

'

AI&gt;VI50~

••
•
I
••
•(

$1 ,500 OBO 7-2983

21TV-

1 Fllcll the woveo
2 -poleon
3 w.lllr'o

Jan women 's team

fiNANCIAL

•
I

With Calves Fmm 1 Farm WID Be
Sold Saturday June 5th 1 p M ,

pdl pw, bOdy ol!ttllant condlllon,
4 goodtlroa.$1.95

465 Musical Electronic Key
Board with Brand New Stand EM·

:

TlrM. RunsGreat,-740-2Sfl-6180 , ,

(304)675-3628

A$K
M,. BUCK--

With Ladder Racl&lt;s, 13.995, 740- •
o446--1021
:

592·2322, 740.698 3531 Specie!
Cow !Call Sale SoUiog 13 Cowo

C11dk Approval, JOI219, JC720,
NH474, NH489, NH488 Hoyblnt,
J0335, NH630, NH850, MF1560,

01oooun1 Mobile Homo

1983 GMC Ultllly Van 8 Cylinder,
Automatic 76,500 Mllea White

lrrltatloil

DOWN

By Phillip Alder
Cenam famou s people are known
by only o ne name Madonna and
Pele, to take two famthar examples
In the bndge world , there are Omar
and Zta But there 1s only one patr
that fils the category Ltly and Maud ,
who are lhe matnslays of the Egypt-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

i

&amp; 4-WDs

lbbr.
21 Smiled broedly
21 Couolng

On
a first name
•
basis only

I\ f

Speed, New Wheels On 3r- -

Baby Billy Goats. For $ale

I'M GOIN' ON
~TRIKE It

'

Vane

e.........,

Operung lead • J

1995 GMC Jimmy 4x4, Loll 01 :
EXIraal Exctllenl Conii!Uonl Rotatl ,
Value $10,800 Asking $14,800,

Athena Livestock Sales 740·

1994 Probe, auto, amlfm casaerta,
tee cold air, runs excellent , V·8,

Musical
Instruments

:

1984 Ford Sr,onco Automatic ,.
Wheel D,lve, Good Rubber,

Llv. .tock

SOMIWHARS
ILSIII

FER ME!!

North

Pass
I•
Pass
Pass

-~

Reck. (304)675-6055

Weol

SHE PUT HER'S

HOUSEWORK

1995 Ford Explorer, 4CR 431&lt; Mf.
loaded, Mint Cond1 , Sand Color
In &amp; Oul Flunnlng Boards, Air
Deflector Front and Rear, Air
FrontJFiear. R8dlo Front/Rea(.
Crulae, Tilt, Leather Seats, Floof

730

See The New John Deere 200
Sarles Skid St11r Loedera, 7' 5%
JOC Financing, Carmlchael'l
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 1·800·5911l·

Soulb

Mllng
14 ., good
WOI'tdng..,..,
15 NeWIJMPel'
eubecilbeo
11 -InJury
17EHln
11 Grual811d
20 Out of tile

34 Rub out
35 Ancient
311 01111 olghta
37 Muddlell
3t Muolc:ol

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

I. TOLD ELVINEY !!
NO MORE

------------------ ·~

!rack door, 3' walk door, 688
Eroeledllron Horst Bul~rs 1·
(800)·362·1045

630

t 994 Ford Ranger XLT, 88K • \
MiltS AC AM/FM Ca11ollt
se.ooo oeo Moot Solll 740-o446-1IOO

JUnnt

pe1ugewav

• Q 10 7 6
• QJ 9 8
• Q J 6.

.BARNEY

1997 Dodgo Cloaell Ton, 4X4 1
Ram 3500,. Aakl!lg $2,,000 c.!! ,
1
alter 4 Oopiii (740)-&lt;41.btltt

30'M40'k8', Painted Steal Siding
Galvalume steel Roofing , 15 x8

• K 10 5 3

• 8

1987 Ford F· 700 With 54' HI
Ranger 740-446-1012.

7«)..M6.721J8

Storage BulkiiN Bpoeo

teals (304)382·3436

COOL DOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Syalmea &amp; Furnacel Heat
Pumps Certified Installer If You

aame specs 22,800 30t0 2WO

• A 9 8 2

'

South

1987 Chevy S·10 Blaar, 2 8 va, •
AUIO, Fully Loaded, Cold AI_!;
Nlct Cond $4,800 (304)810· •
3824

1990 Cougar, high mllea, runs

Ibanez SR500 bass active electronics 24 Fret neck black color
new condition $500 Roland XP·
60 Kevt&gt;oard new condition, new

Case Window Air CondtUoner ,
Works Good! $150, Call Aller 5

2yr Full Warranty
$20 900 00 4630 55PTO HP

out lets .

"Tile

workforce.

9 K 3
• lO 7 3

1985 Ford Ranger Plelc Up, V-6, S ""
Speed, Good t lr.., Aunl Goodl •
$1,200,740-379-215e8
:;:;

760

Beanie Bebloa For Sale $8 &amp; Up

(304)516·2284

3930 4WD, 45PTO HP, 192 Tur·
bo, Syncho 8X8 Trans F And R
Shuttle Largo Pump 2 Ramoloo 4

Drive Automatic Good Condl · .. ,
lion $4,000 (304)67~
'

06-01-tt

Eul
• Q 9 6.
¥A J 2
• 54

• J 10 7 3

Whtl!l •

$500, call740-992.0075

Babybo&lt;P, Playpoo, Swing, Car
Soal, Stroller (304)675-4548

Beautiful Alfred Angelo Wedding
Gown More Information, Call

Ford new Holland Tractor Sale

~

OBO, 740.992·9178

cellon! condlllonl .125 00 OBO
(740)·256-7

740-2~909

Trent Foot $3,000 00 (740)·643·
0122 8,00·4 00 alter 5 00 (740)·
643-2916 •

Weal

1975 Ford 4X4 for pans Good
390 4·barrel , powertraln ax1e1, -

colt Grulla halter broke, $400

year old. $200 080, 10 month old

Slzu, Guaranltedl 740·886·
0047

March 1999 740·379

•'

dMion Wllh'llallor, 74o-ol&lt;6-1012

Street Golllpolra, 740-44&amp;7398
Apartment for rent In Middleport,
no pot&amp; 740.992·5656

1794

1987 BuiCk Century, new brakes,
needs fuel pump &amp; battery, asking

AKC registered male Mal1ese.

Air Conditioners, Used Different

1998 Honda FOurtrax 300 2 WD,
37 Wurtltzer JukeboJC /Records

Wate r Pumpa 16f1

Small, Quarter, Mare Sorrel

$10,871,
50x120x16 Was
$33,560 Now $23,885, 60&gt;150&gt;18
Was $48.830 Now $32,350.
100xl75!20 Was $98,650 Now
$76 850 1 800-401·5126

sterad Last Year

Steel

1111 Golllpollo, OH Wa Dollverl

F'" Dlroct Spoclol

13 5 Aluminum V·Bottom Boal 9 5

First Avenue One And 'TWO Bac;l·

600·383-61182

call

also Included

Furnace New Appliances Excel·

Low Interest Rates For 111 Tlma
Buyara, limited Time Available ,

Pomeroy~

2 bedroom apartment tor rent

obto, ILA'r;ohed &amp; unlurr;ohed

Area Papal fCoke Route 30 New
Machines With High Profit Loca·

ween Athens and

month (513)271-!1091

Ad 11 Acres $14,000 Or 9 Acr·
es $12 000 Water Danville Briar

2 Bedroom, Rt 87, big front
porch fireplace free lot rant

Mini Retired Longabargar Saakets , /Accessories Prices At Or

er box loaded wllh I 12• JL and
4· 10' JL s lwo(2) 1' Tweeter&amp;

Melu• Co Rulland, Whiles Hill

6055

Large metal wardrobe recliner

.Apartment 1 Bedroom 78 VIne

Rd. 15 Acres $14
Schools Water

ow Skr Llghl, ClAir, Wllh Relrlg

Hllch Mower $3,500, OBO 740·
448· 1456

Fast Call Today, I ll00-213-8365

$45 500, water Friendly Ridge

&amp; Range, Very Nicoll (304)875

Kubota Tractor (Diesel) Model
B6000E 12 ti H P Overhauled, 5'
Blade, And 48" Cut Woods S PI

SetUp, $60,740-441-11699

218 ~WIIUama Hollow Rd 88
Wooded Acres With Stream

Siding, Shingle Roof Garden

Pike

lamlles Call (740)-446.o251

Golllo Co Hunlorsll S 011 SR

Tub, Hutch, MIWave CeQ, Walk·
In Closet, Range In laland, Book·
Case, Total Electr ic, BayWind

s Miles Out Bulavllte

20 Gallon Fish Tank,

BRUNER LAND
7411-441-14112

preme,/14M74. 3BR ,2BA VInyl

, 004,

Off 35 Right On Keeler Road, Blue
House Cln left

Full Blooded Himalayan Kittens.

$16 500 OBO 313·294·2448
304·075-5994

Skyllnt/Su

Johnson's Used Furniture l Ap·
pllances, 740 ~6-4039 740·446

460

GOOD

Mobile home for rant In Racine,

1985 14x6511 2 Bedrooms CIA

By Owner· l994

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New l RobuHIIn SIOCI&lt;
Cai Roo Evana, 1-ll00-531-9528

$50 Each. 2 Males, 2 Females,
740.256-6995

In Mason County Just Reduced

. ... Amazing· •• · 5 Bedrooms. 2
t/2 baths over 2 000 sq fl. lor
less than $400 mo Free Delivery
&amp; S.l 1·8()().948·5678

JET

Promotion Call now 1·888·265·

Required 740-388-9182

440

Problems? Need Tuned? Call litO
plano Dr 740--4525

lwo 22 rilles, 740-949-3228

Mobile homo alto available bel

• 7

Trucks lor Sale

~ 16 Cat Hoe

(304)875-4975
Space lor Rent

$2,000 Good CQndijlon, 740-4&lt;1f· •,

720

Grubb's Plano~ tuning &amp; repairs

Johnson Motor, 140-379-2228

Almost 5 Acres On Jim Hill Road

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Point Pleasant Call evenings

1971 Chevy Pick -Up 305, A T ~

North
• A K 5%
" 9. 54
t A K62

1976 GMC Plck·Up

Mise

Beams. Pipe, VIbrating Tamp IIlii

4 ·Bedroom,artments for Low
Income Fammls Call lor Income
Limits Available now to qualllled

245·9337

320

Two 1 Bedroom Apt with AC In

,

0\18n, $35,740-992 1493

In The Country, Only S9.100, With
County Water Woods Meadows
Beautiful! II Double WI des Are
Perm1tled
5% Ewn Land Contract Wllh Approved Credit Free Maps Going

2830

Kitchen lg Family Room 740-

EOH 304-675-6679

(740}-U1.0176

(740) 949-2383 Make oiler

1994 Pace American 1OFt BoM
Trailer GQod condition S1 400
740-367·7433.

veyed

Living Room. Clnlng Room Eat In

$8,000 OBO (304)875 3123 or
(304)895·3167

i

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobUe homes, elr
cond itioned, $260·$300 sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

~

Part&amp; traUer $1 ,800 , 16ft Trent

miles $2,800 00 Leave Message

Motor $750 00

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
ptiances furnished, laundry room
facilities cloae to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts t49 or call 7 40 992·
3711 EOH

141 5 3Q Aero Eslalaa. Sur·

Spring Valley 2 story family
home ~ Bedroom 2 112 Baths

applications lor IBR HUO sub

Ford 9 000 Tandem Dump Truck,

63,000 miles· $38 500 Cot·553
Sheep Foot Rollor-$3 t .OOO Cal·
215 Track Hoe $31,000 451t

.

_:.• ,

41 V1118ln'l
exclematlon
44 Period of thM
45 Y-, In
Uruguey
... Anwa Slgnoo et
51 Fencing movn
54 eau.d ,
55 Accultom•
51
wor1c1
57 Dominion
1ormed In 1187

1 "Frilncle" or

7 Child • 13 Not ' - " lar

GrodUIIion GIN 91 Dodge Doyt.. ;'
na Shll&gt;y Fully Loadldl 101 000

Box $3 000 2.000 Gallon Water
Tank $800 oo 427 Chevy Truck

Gl:tson frost tree refrigerator vary
good condition S150. miCrowave

!loner (740)·446-0390

5ACRES

3518

Twin Fllven1 Tower now accepting

tainmtnt Center, $35 00 Computer table $35 00 Kitchen tables
$35 00 (740)~3224

Measage

740 3811-8678

Nice Country Setting 2 Miles
from town 3 Bectroo m 2 Bath 2
Car Garage HeatPump o n 1
Acre Appliances Slay (304)882·

After e PM

Eleclrlc Stove 2 YHII old Enler

18 000 BTU'&amp; Sears .Air Condl·

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View, Gallla County
$32 ooo More .Acreage Available

locationll Locetl onll 2800 Sq Ft

One Bedroom Apanmenllor Rent
In Rio Granda Call 740.245 0082

$4 000 740 448·3159, 740.048
8x12' Trealtd Porch w/Ralls, 1552
1150 Sot ol llvo, 15' Chevy .:.:..:~-----------------,
Rims &amp; Ttr11, $175 (304)675- FertiHzer unit to tit Farman Cub,
20119:
$1 ,000, 740·949-8013

+ deposit (304)773 5577 Leave

4561

Only (304)882·3748

ALL CASH BIZIII
Got $20 Bill For$12 5011
$500 ·$1,500 IWk Easy!
FrH $5 ~f lnv Rtq
1 80tH!97·9888 24 Hrs

llonlf Earn 100K Yoorly 1·800·
387·9416

$350 oo month $150 Coposll
(140)·376-9640
.

2 Bedroom Apartment In Point
Pleasant Upstairs Utilities Paid
References Deposit and Lease
requ ired No Pets $425 per

Commercial Building For Lease
Small Business Or Office In High
Traff1c Area Across From Wal·
Mart On Corner, 740·441-5118

Story 3 Bedrooms 2 1f2 Baths
Near Holzer Immediate Posses
slon 740-446-9672

Low ralas Cell740-591-9817
ows gutters, painting call 740

14x70 MObile Home 2 bedroom.
55 t Turkey Run Cheshire Ohio

fayene Mall All Utilities Patdl Deposit Required Also One Room

6 M1les From Gallipolis 16382 On

Interior &amp; Exterior Palntmg Ex
perlenced. References Reas o n ~
able Rates For Free Estimate

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Oakwood Homes Barboursville
WV $499 Down Sing le Wide
$999 Down Double Wide 304·

340

Cu t~

EXCELLENT CONDITION

cell References Has Private
Room And Full Care In Her Home
For The Elderly For Mor e Into
740 256 6342 Also Nutntlous
Meal Planning And Wheel Chalf

Rqulred, (740}-UI ·1308

1 Bedroom Apartment $350/Mo
&amp; 2 Bedroom Apartment $4501

388-8504

2704 740 992 5696

CNA With 20 Yrs E&gt;p And E&gt;·

Carpentry Remodeling Add1t1ons,
Decks, Porches , Drywal( Pamt·

One Bedroom House In City No
Pets
References Required
$3.00 Mo Plus Utilities Deposit

420

dleP.ort, one bedroom furnished

sldlzed apt for elderly Bnd hand

Used SmglaWide Aro und $100
per month Call 1·800·948 5678

26 Acres MIL 6 Stall Horse ~arn
3 Bedroom House, Fence 740·

By owner 725 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate, will sell house with·
out lots for $89,000 740· 992·

lng 740-441-1316

Wanted To Do

Refrigerator Basement One Car
Garage, washer /Dryer Hook Up
Deposit &amp; References Required
No Pets Rent Discount Call 740-

(304)675-4123 after 6 30PM

330

w1th shower well maintained
$40 000 699 Broadway Street

Trash $315/Mo 740

446-0008

houst In Gallipolis, 7&lt;0·992·91 91

$279 00 Par Monlh Plus Ulllllles
740.446-295 7

738·3409

5 rooms one Dath lull basement

Sewage,

Includes Water

Beautllul River VIew Nice Two
Bedroom, 1 1/2 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp;

992 2218

948 5678

3 Bedroom Spi ll En try Br1ck
Home on Route 2 at Ml Alto
Buill In Kltcl'len Dlningroom, LR
3 Baths FP Woodburnlng stove
on neerly 5 acres land (304)895

Apartments

HUC Approved (304)675-2053

2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Port~
er Area, No Pets You Pay All
Utlllles, Deposit &amp; References

Rent Buster New 1999 14M70 2
or 3 Bedrooms Only $995 oo
Down $195 oo per month Free
Del1very and Set Up Call 1·800·

740.843 5350

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment

One bedroom apartment In Mid

0 CIA $15,500 Musl Be Moved!

1 6811-738·3332

5 room home full baseri;'Bnt
Len nox heat pump cen tral air
Anderson till In windows good In
sulatlon vinyl siding front and
back porches ni ce level lot gOOd
ne1 ghborh ood Mason WV call
740 992 3041 or 740-992·3557

180

Apartments House ~ Duplexes 1
&amp; 2 Bedroom Some utllltlaJ In·
eluded Low Deposil Required

Wheels Are Avai lable, 937·379-

Please Helpl 3 Bedroom 2
Baths just take over Payments!

Middleport Ohk&gt; 740-992-7319

140

llonlng Garage, 740-446 ~3

$100 Deposit 740-446-3617

New Bank repos only 2 left we
f1nance call304 722 7148

2158

PUol Program, Aenl611 NIOdld 1·
80().383-686!

Now Taking Application•- 35
West 2• Bedroom Townhouu

2 Bedroom Mobile Home. References $235/Mo Includes Water,

New 1999 14M70 three bedroom,
lnctu&lt;les 6 m~; FREE lot rent
Includes was
dryer skirting.
deluMa steps and setup Only
S2PO 74 per month with $1150
down Call1 800·837·3238

124 Kmeo n Drive Gallipolis 3
Bedrooms Fully Equipped KitCh·
en Basement $57 900 740 446-

992·50611l Equal Houelng Oppor·
tunlllee

3 Bedrooms, Central Air Condl·

1994 14x70 Sunshine 3 Bad
rooms 2 Baths Slue Carpet, WI

Look ing To Buy Good Older
Homes 1 800·383-6862

Homes lor Sale

port From $249-$373 Call74~

(740)446.()390

no pelS, 740-992·5658

310

Gracious" living 1 end 2 bedroom

441-5118,

2 Bedroom In Mason $295
monlh + Ooposll (304)675-7783

385·9621

New Equipment

Good Pay

3 Bfdrooms. 1 Bath In Gallipolis
Nice Ya rd With Fence &amp; 2 Stor·
age Bulk:l1ngs Central Heat &amp; Air
Lease &amp; Deposit $525/Mo 740

1992 14x70 Redman three bed·
room storm windows &amp; heat
pump, 740-742·2795 after 4pm

Good selection ol used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740·

REAL ESTATE

Campus, 7 40-24~

992·2167

401 5 Leave Message

Crop, 740-441-()268

Wanted Summer Route Drivers
local Routes Good Pay! Please

(304)77:&gt;5881

740·446·4207

$16,500 00 (740)446 8113

Truck Driver To Haul New &amp;
Used Empty Trailers Hook &amp;
Wa itress Needed Apply In Per·
son VIllage Pizza Inn 3004
Jackson Avenue Point Pleas
ant,WV

2 BFI furnished home In Mason
No pets References required

References (304)934-7462

1991 14ttx72ft Shingle Roof VInyl
Siding, E11.cellent Cond i tion

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To Unlvers) ty Of Alo Grande

apartments at Village Manor and
Rivers ide Apartmenta In Middle·

1981 14k65 2BR . Electric, H/
AC Refrigerator Stove Livingroom Su1te &amp; 2 Porches $6 000

388-11335

1

PelS (304)676-5162

New haven 2BR Home, Garage
River Frontage DepoSit ltBae

1988 Redmo nd Danville 14x70
Also Has EMpando Very Nice ,
Must Sell! Askmg $14,000, 740·

Th1s newspaper Will not
knowmg!y accept
advertiSements for real estate
WhiCh IS In VIOlation Of the
law Our readers are hereby
1nformed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity bas1s

2 Bedroom, wi Basement I Ga·
rage Deposit I Referenctt, No

(740) 446.0175 (304)·875·5965

On~.

All real estate aovertlslng In
th1s newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes It Illegal
to ad'Jertlse ~a ny preference
llm1tat•on or d•scrlm1nat1on
based on raco color reUgton
sex 1amlllal slatus or natiOnal
origin or a n~ Intention to
make any such preference
limitatiOn or d1scnmlnatlon ~

Houses lor Rent

992.5502

1987 Clayton Mobile Home
1 14x70 Stove &amp; Ratrlgerator AU
Electrte 3 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Baths,
Central A ir SS,OOO Firm Cash

SALES PERSON NEEDED For

410

rooms Plu s Den Tota l Electric
Recondition Uke new! Free Oellv
ery and Blo ck-Up! $8 950 00

(304)773-5319 evenings

ary Supplied (304)895 3942

Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is
Now Accepting Appltatlons For
The Position Of Cer1111ed Acliv1
ties Person Please Send Resume
And Salary Requirements To
Charla Brown At Scenic H1lls
Nursing Center 311 Buckrtdge

mo·

bile home. 740 992·5039

Rel iable Person To L1ve In W1th
Elderly Male Room Board Sal

Local Service Company Must Be
Arti culate Creat1ve And Able To
Work Independently Some Travel In Ohio Required Prefer Some
College And Abll ltyTo Use Com·
puters Salary + Commission FaM
Resume To 740 286 2660

Farm Tractor Ford 2000. For

14x7 0 HollyPark M obll ehom e,
2BA, large Bath/garden bathtub,
se pa ra te show er larg e liVIng room wlh!Oh ce iJinga, new carpet,
kitch en has new top-o l ·lht·llne
gas stove has gas heat, central
alr Installed In 1994 , new steel
doors &amp;storm doors Asking

wUhoUt "S team· or 4bsorben t
Compounds Soa plesa An11 -Re·

No Fee Unless We Win!

Postal Jobs/$1B 35/Hr lncl benefits no experience For app I
exam

Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned

_______________

RENTALS

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

NE A Crossword Puzzle
•·
•·
--~==~==--------------------~~~~~~~~----------~:
ACROSS
puug1
•

..

he

and cause

you

com·

phcaltons down the hne lodby Make
cerium all parloes tnvolved fully
understand

the

~orrcct mronnutmn

VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpl 22) Leave
well enough alone today tflhmgs arc
f&amp;Jhnmg smoothly II t:ouhJ prove to
he t:ounlcrprodut:tlvc to make

change&lt; merely for Ihe &lt;ake of hctng
dtllcrent
liBRA !Sent 21-&lt;kl 21) All
dCl'ISions c.:onccrnmg Issues Jmpor·

tam lo you should not he lcfl up 10
anyone hul ynur.clf lndoy even 1f
tho.t tndwrdual 1s o trusted partner

Tho cod resuh• moy not please you
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Ignore any somelhtng-for-nolhtng
promtse• you gel lodoy, hecouse
they'll oil be hollow aod empty If
you wont smnelhing, he prepared lo
ge111 the sure way, eom 11.
SAO!lTARIUS (Nov. 23-0cc
21) Opumism is a wonderful quality
when •lonted correctly. If tt is misphtc'Cd today, however, there's a good
chance you could go oul on a limb
that's about to be sawed off.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Don't stan any proJects today where

you kno'l" gomg 10 11 would be
tmposstble to finish The cluuer you
create could severely tmpede your
progress for longer than you could
handle
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Any senous or 1mpor1an1 work
should be double checked m•lcod of
assuming thtngs were done correctly
the first ume If an error 1s made
today, it could be a btl! one.
PISCES (Feb 20-Mon:h 20) Con·
diuoos oro such that promtscs made
might tum outlo be promtscs broken.
Be especially carefultf your deahngs
have anylhtoa to do wl(h money or 1
worronty
•
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19)
Allow olh&lt;r5 10 have lhe11 way from
umc to ume todoy and they'll he 1&lt;&gt;1·
croot ol&gt;oul lelttng you have your's
Bemg too demandmg wtlllum every·
body off
TAURUS (April 20.Mny 20l A
fnlsc scn~c ol sct:unty c.:ould he your
wor~l enemy todny Every~ llrl)C you
ihlnk you have an nee up your ~lccvc,

you ' d hcllcr wnl&lt;h )nur hnck,
hct.:uusc

t:hancc !'i

urc

ynu'll

g~l

trumped

.,

..

�•

•

•
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.Tuesday, June 1, 199p

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~~~~~e~rt High School alumni award scholarships at banquet
Sentinel News Staff
Recognition · of reunion classes
and the awarding of numerous
scholarships were features of the
annual Middleport High School
Alumni banquet and dance held Saturd ay night at Meigs Middle School.
More than 275 alumni and guests
were welcomed by Yvonne Hackel!
Scally, president, who served on the
committee with Nancy Roller Cale,
secre tary, and Dixie Pierce Arbuck_le, treasurer. David Ashley was
master of ceremonies for the' program which followed the di nner preceded by Raymond Walburn 's invo-

nns.wcrs.

Why Does My Dog Lick My
Hand?
·
I take it as a cOtnpliment, but then
I would . In my experience, it is not
followed by any aggressive behav·
ior. Licking, in general, has· several
rurposes. First and foremost. II is a
form of self-grooming and, at times,
groomi ng of others in the Social
~rour (also called allogroorning).
Second. motl\ers with puppies will
lick to clean the pups and to stimu.lale urination and defecation. Third,
juvenile dogs and wolves lick the
mouth of adults as a form of greeting
which also stimulates regurgitation
of eaten food (a convenient way to
tran sport hunted prey back to 1he
den).
·

Meigs County's
Jessica Csle

Jesse Little

· Melissa Holman

-Page4

The licking behavior of pet dogs
is probably derived from this last
behavior - a combination of begging and greeting, which also signals s ubordinate rank. In some
cases, e,~~;treme or constam licking ,
diffi cult lo interrupt, may indicate a

Trlsha Davis

Bridget Vaughan ·

1937: Howard Russell,
1938: Mary Pickens.
1940: Betty Allensworth, Maxine
Bennett, Charles Entsminger, Gene
and Janel Harris, and Mildred
Asbury Moseley. ·
1941: Bill Diles, Lois Bail~y
McElhinny, and Jean Russell.
1942: John Call, Rober! Mitch;
Joseph Young, and Kenneth McElhinny. .
.
1943: William King, Patricia
DeVol Kloes, Mary Seines · Mitch,
. Marjorie Diles Mitchell, Rose Hacken Tribble, and Rowena Warren
Young.
1945: Maxine Herrman Lillie.
Franklin Ginther, Mary Roller
Gress.
1946: ,Richard and Doris Barker
Bailey, and Alfred Scarberry.
· 1947: Roy Evans, John Fultz,
John Kauf( and Clarabelle Riley. ·
1948: Dorothy Anthony, Helen J.
Byer, Harry Featherstone, Marilyn

'

Knopp Fultz, Lorraine Riggs Neff, EasleJ&gt;, Janis Falkner, Ernestin~
·and Dorothy Miller Roach.
Asbury McComas, James . Mourn~
1950: Grace Abbott, Norma Jean . mg, June Chaun&lt;ey Stobart, and
Custer, Naomi Overturf Durst, Ruth Bene Ward Field.
·'
Russell Hayth, fred Hoffman, Bob
1957: James Bowles, Sandra
Richards, Ida Harley Roller, Charles Fultz Brown, Richard Gail Hovatter.
Stobart, Mary Brewer, Jean Craig.
1958: Charles Wayland.
1951: James Buell , Myron
1960: Barbara Stiles Fry, Loretta
Duffield, Don Payne, Jim Sanborn, Hanning Roller, Alivia Bowles
Clara Taylor Sanborn, Betty Ashley Lucken, and Dennis Walburn.
Snow, Dana Walburn, Richard Wal1961: Tom Anderson , Judith
· ters, Roscoe Wise, William Swisher; Sauer Crooks and Bill Stobart.
11n41~es Roller.
1962: Charlene Davis. Batey;
1952: Doris Mayse Coleman Bev.erly Perrin Dixon.
.. Jun.e·
Duffield,
Charle~
1963: John Allensworth, Charles ·
Haskins,Harry Keig, Adrienne Mills Bush.
Munns, Richard Rawlings, ·Nola
1965: Suzanne Bradbury Sayre,
Knopp, Swisher, Carol Bachtel Tan- · Alan Wallace, Judy Kearns Well .
.
· nehill, and William Taylor.
. 1966: John Blake, Conriie Cooke ·
1953: Robert Byer, Arlene Pullins.
.
,
· Bowles K)ng, Lois Rosenbaum,
196'7: Marjorie Harris Blake-,
Marilyn Wolfe, and Bob Ashley.
Kay Ault Logan, and Bill Hysell r •
1955: Ronald Fultz, Yvonne
1968: Carol King Brewer, Bill
Scally, Shelia Stover Hubbard.
Swan .
1956: Nancy Roller Calc, Larry

carpet · This behavt'or probablY ts
·
beh avtor
· perSISts
· · wtt· h'oood that can- would rather eat the food in the .distr.,
dert'ved from the days when ·some not be fitms
· hed ·Immediately or toys turns her back on it, and appears te
w1·ld can·d
• s hun ted 1arge prey and .!hat a dog wt'II return to, or perhaps "bury" _it. Although the behavior is
devoured large • "J'ackpot" qua nt't'
t 1es ts not cer1 am how to eat. 1n an - derived from food-stashing, it coulA
of food · Dogs never kn•w
h
th
'
· 1, some also be the way that some dogs"
• .w en ey ex,treme .orm
of food buna
would get that lucky
aga,·n
So
to
do
(
11
th
h
.
.
gs usua y ose 1 at eat s1owly . express culinary ambivalence. "DO I·
prevent other an,·mals from snac ki' ng an d don •t f.'""
· h thetr
· mea 1s) will like this ? I don 't know. I'll bury it
on tht.s· un pre d.1c tab! e boun ty, tHey . attempt to bury mdividual
·
pieces of and return later and check it out.. ." ~
would hide the remains and return dry dog food by pushing them ranSome or the information here
later when the coast was clear.
domly_about on the floor. ·
. was supplied by Iiana R; Reisner.,
Although the typ1ca
· I pet dog
Th ts .eou ld be a~ it\dication of DVM, from "Frisky Pet" on th,;,.
never goes hungry, in some, this food reJect, rather hke a cat who internet.
• ·

r---------------.;...---------------------"1

TUESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 Tuesday at the home of
clerk, Osie Follrod.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM Tuesday,
7:30p.m. Work in E.A. degree.

POMEROY - Fraternal Order of
the Eagles Auxiliary meeting, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the hall.

WEDNESDAY
PAGETOWN - Scipio Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at
Pageville town hall.

~ystery for school students

and receiver.
.
Was tt a love letter' A marriage
proposal? Only Barnes knows.
"I thi'nk we should leave it
·

closed," said David White , an
eighth grader. For now, Lund has
agreed.
·
---

· You are invited to tfie
BARGAIN
Located at 503 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, June 1st thru Saturday, June 5th

c.,.._,

\

SptclaiiUb..., Cuttlnll
at 9100 a.ni. 1'1Jescla:r, J'iuae J.st .

Refreshments will be served and door prozes will be given away dai~.

~

::otr

q~

'lie offer new and used clothing, new gift items, candles, tools, new and

. ·

@·

used furniture, appliances, flowers and other mise items.
. Store .hours: Mon thru Fri 9:00 am to 3 pm
• ..,

"'efNf cr..e• us·~'

Roger Menley/OWner
'Q)
. .

~

~

· Donna Meadows/Manager
992·3894

--~\*~~it

-After Hours Pediatric Care ·

~ Facility Tours

.
~ Occupational Therapy Screenings
~ Speech Therapy Scr~enings
~ B!ood Pressure Scr~nings
·

Wednesday,
June 2, 1999
2~6pm

- All~ lrfllJire (JfJII'!I!!i!iln slip tmd;tll'tllf/gfKIMkm a«M1pttlliiMIIf
- Sctwnilgs ~ 111 cltildrtA tl§tS 2 4 D.r

.~ FREE Popcorn
~ FREE Cotton Candy
~ FREE Orange Drink
~ Face Painting . ·
~ WBYG Live Remote
-~ Emergency Medical Services Squad
~Point Pleasant _
Fire Deportment Truck
~ Door Prizes .·
.
~Giveaway Items

-

NORTH BEND (AP)- Who's buried in William Henry Harrison's
tomb?
No, it's not a bad joke. It's a riddle that members of the Ohio Historical Society are trying to solve.
· .
Historians know that Harrison, the nint~ president of the United
Stat.es, has been buried in a vault underneath a granite obelisk in North
Bend for the past 1S8 years.
Harrison made his home in the Cincinnati suburb along the Ohio
River,
.
The question is: Who's buried with him?
.
There are three unmarked vaults adjacent to those of Harrison and his
wife, Anna Cleves Harrison. Historians would like to know which one
contains the remains of John Scott Harrison, a Cincinnati congressman
who died in 1878.
·
·
He was the son of William Henry Harrison and the father of another
president, Benjamin Harrison, giving him a distinction in American his'
tory.
•
·
Members of the Harrison-Symmes Memorial Foundation, · which
maintains the tomb for the Ohio Historical Society, tried to find out
Tuesday who occupies each of the other three vaults so they can be
properly identified.
Two foundation members enteied the crypt, removed some bricks on
the unmarked vaults and inserted a small camera on a metal pole.
With Hamilton County Coroner Dr. Carl Parrott and a member of the
Ohio. Hisiorical Society looking on, they watched the video on a television monitor for clues.
The camera found coffins that were more than a century old and had
caved iti. It showed some bones and a plaque on one coffin.
Although historians can't be sure, they now believe they know which
vault eontains-John Scott Harrison's remains.
They think the other vaults contain the remains of William Henry
Harrison's daughter, Mary Symmes Harrison Thornton, a~d a grand·
daughter.
"We think it was worth doing," said Albert Mestemaker, a member
of the memorial foundation.
"John Scott Harrison was quite an important figure on his own. And
nobody else OOI,IId say he was son of one president and father of anoth-

er•.,

.

· How John Scott Harrison's body wound up in the tomb is an intriguing piece of history in itself. Shortly after.hi.s death, his body was stolen
from a nearby cemetery.
·
The family tracked' it down to the Cincinnati Medical School, where
It had bRl'FiOIOs"' cadaver.
.
The family bought it .back for $4 and brought it to the tomb in
December 1879, but there was no recorp of which vault it \fas placed in,
leaving the mystery that historians tried to solve on Tuesday.
"We think this is some.thing worth doing, but I don't know that we
can draw anything conclusively from it," said An·n Frazier of the Ohio
Historical Society. "Short of doing DNA testing on the remains, there's
no positive proof." .

l

.t

------ ·-----

· Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton said that the jail operations, Howard said.
.In other business, the commissioners approyed
new state and federal requirement is the result of
interdepartmental
transfers for the offices of the
difficulties experienced by other counties, whereProsecuting
Attorney,
County Court, and Emerin facilities were built, and then unable to operate
gency Services, and certified $11,197 into the
because of a lack of 0 perating funds.
'
Both Thornton and Howard said !hat they sheriff's department l)udgel for overtime and
would consider placing a half-percent sales tax on other expenses associated with the investigation
the ballot, although the commissioners have the and prosecution of a recent criminal drug case
authority to impose such a tax without a ballot against Fred Priddy.
Bids for bituminous materials for June were
issue. Thornton said that he would also encourage
tabled
pending review by the county engineer.
budget cuts where appropriate.
·
Frank noted that the county stands to lose as Bids were received from Middleport Terminal of
much as $200,000 in annual sales tax -income if a Gallipolis and Asphalt Materials of Marietta.
Thornton noted that the deadline for townships
new Wai,Mart store is constructed In Mason,
W.Va., and said that the long-rumored closing of and villages wishing to apply for CDBG formula
the Southern Ohio Coal Company operatiop funds for 1999 is June. 7, and that applications
would also cut deep into the county's pockets, to should be submitted to Grants Administrator Jean
,
the tune of $HJO,OOO per year, due to the loss of Trussell;
The commissioners alSO;
real estate and personal property taxes paid by the
-- Approved payment of county bills in the
company.
.
"It could be the roughest time, financially, that . amount of $177;898.49;
- Took action to name Olive Township Rd.
this county has ever seen," Frank said, adding that
he sees no hope of industrial growth in the next 695 "Durst Road;"
-Approved the payment of $250 for dues in
several years to offset the losses.
·
A half-percent sales tax increase, over the cur- the Appalachian County Directors' Association
rent one percent now collected by the county, on behalf of Department of Human Services
would generate $500,000 per year, Frank said, Director Michael L. Swisher. '
Also present were County Commissioner
based on current projections. Voters in Jackson
County recently approved a sales tax increase for Mick Davenport and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Meigs County·units hold mock disaster
MOCK I)ISASTER- Emergency crewe from through·
out Mtlga County participated in a mock dlaaater exer· ·
ciH In Racine on Tuesday. The exerclst Involved a
hypothatlcal chemical aplll, and gave a new hazardous
material• team from Tuppera Plaine the opportunity to
taat tMir akllla. One of the team'• technlclana Ia pic•
tured right, checking the spill elte, whlla a volunteer fire
department member participating in the exerclst Ia
- n going through the decontamination proceas. In ·
addition to the Tuppere Plains team, EMS and disaster
crews from the Meigs County Health Department, &amp;her·
Iff'• office, local pollee and fire crews, and Vatersns
Memorial Hospital took part In the two-hour event, aa
·drd amateur redlo operators and members of the news
media. (Photoa by Olvld Ha"la)

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- A moment of silence Was held at CentralHower High School's graduation Tuesday night in honor &lt;;~fa classmate
killed during a confrontation with his mother's former boyfriend.
.
Daron D. Mitchell, 18, had been scheduled to graduate with his class.
Instead, his brother, Marine Cpl. Dale Mitchell, represented the family
at the graduation and received Daron 's diploma.
Daron Mitchell, who was shot and killed Monday, had enlisted in the
Marines and expected to leave for boot camp on June 16.
Tyrone M.. Williams, ~8, of Akron, has been charged with -aggravated murder and was held in the Summit County jail on $200,000 bond.
. Williams allegedly shot Mitchell as the teen tried to prevent Williams
from approaching his mother over her objections.

No bond set for man accused
killing father, wounding mother

ear ng·cance ed

ngton

WILLOUGHBY, Ohio (AP) - ·A man .cl!arged with murder .and
attempted murder in the shooting death of his father and serious wounding of his mother has been ordered held without bond.
Mark Lovsin, 47, of nearby Willoughby Hills, appeared Tuesday in
Willoughby Municipal Court in the death of Anthony Lovsin, 75, and
wounding of Elizabeth Lovsin, 72. She remained in serious cotndi•timlJ
this mo(ning at MetroHealth Medical Center, according to a .nursing
·
·
supervisor.
Lovsln was taken ·from court in handcuffs and would.not comment to
reporters.
The gunman walked out of the family's home and surrendered after
Mrs. Lovsin called police on Sunday an!l said she and her husband had
been shot by their son, police Lt. Daniel Quior said.
·
Quior said no motive was known. The shootings occurred two days
·
after the Lovsins and their son cut short a two-week trip to

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
A-hearing set for Tuesday in the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas to discuss the fate of
the Buffington Island Banlefield in Portland
was canceled Friday afternoon.
The Meigs County Historical Society and the
Buffington -Island Battlefield Preservation
Foundation are appealing a Sept..'3 decision by ·
the Ohio Division of Mines and Reclamation
granting Sh~lly Materials Inc. a permi_t to operate an industrial materials operation on a 486.4acre site in Lebanon Township.
Judse Fred W. Crow III vacated an earlier
order setting an evidentiary hearing· for Tuesday, deciding that the matter can be decided
without a hearing, according to an entry filed

CINCINNATI (AP) -A man and his two sons are going to prison for
allegedl-y hiding their income and assets from the government.
A federal judge on Tuesday also ordered Edgar Bradley, 67,
Madeira, and his sons, Edgar Bradley II, 41, of Cincinnati, ~nd Roy
.Bradley, 36, of Montgomery, to pay $635,000 in restitution.
·
. All three were convicted Feb, 3
conspiring to commit tax fraud.
Good Afternoon ofThe
government said the men, all
independent insurance
tried to hide their income
assets from the Internal Revenue
Sedlonl • lZ Pqet
Service by depositing commission
payments in various trust accounts
Celtmler .
and
in the names of other individ8
91d0 uals.
U.S. District Judge Heiman
II
Weber sentenced the father to five
Ed!!orW•
years in prison and fined him
3
$150,000.
·. The youpaer Edaar Bradley was
Sool'll
sentenced to four years and nine
3
Wgthv
months in prison and · fined
$14S,OOO. Roy Bradley. was sen·
teneed to three years and 10
months . in · prison an~ fined
pwo
$118,500.
. •
l'kk3: 3-4-9; 1'kk4: S-1-S-2
The Bradleys challenged the
B•dteye 5: 17-20-21-22-36
government's authority to collect
w.y&amp;
·
taxes.
DaUy 3: 4-4-2; DaUy 4: S-2-6-1
They refused to cooperate with
authorities, prosecutors said.

SAR holds annual awards banquet

Today's Sentinel
'z

The Children's Clinic·
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

By BRIAN J; REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Meigs County voters may have the opportunity to approve or reject a sales tax increase as the
Meigs County Commissioners and the budget
commission contemplate the future financial
security of county government. .
Meigs County Treasurer Howard Frank and
Jhe commissioners discussed the coanty 's finan cia! future during the commissioners ' regular
meeting on Monday, and contemplated a possible
half-percent sales tax increase to fund the operalion of a proposed new jail, and to compensate for
what Frank sees ·as imminent fiscal .woes for the
county.
·
The commissioners have discussed the possibility of building a new county jail on properly
owne~ by the county on Hiland Road, near Veterans Memorial Hospital. The construction would
. . likely be funded by grant monies available from
the state and federal levels.
However, counties applying for those funds
must now show the availability of operating
resources before a grant is approved. According
to Commissioner Janet Howard, finding the
financing for construction would not lilcely be a
problem for the county, but proving the ability to
operate such a facility with current county
finances would be more difficult. \

Feii(Jw graduates honor slain classmate

Man, two sons sent to prison for tax tra&amp;Jrctl

""r'~

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Megan Rich

Joshua Ervin

By digging and then turning several
times,
they can direct their bodies
.
mto the curled pos_lure that will best ·
take advantage of the depression's
coolness. Thus, t)le lurning behavior
seen_ in o_ur homes is most likely ·
den ved from the denning behavior
compulsive disorder. However,; of our dogs' wilder relatives.
althou gh com pulsive disorder is relWhy does my dog lift his leg?
ativel y uncommon, licking is a uniSometimes they seem to be defyversal soc ial signal among dogs. ing gravit)' by that stance!
Habitual licking is probably a comDogs use a variety of postures for .
bination .of evolutilln- derived
urination . In general terms. they
behavior and learned (reinforced) may squat their hindquarters. stand
behavior.
·
and lift a rear leg, or some combinaWhy does my !log turn round tion or the two. The purpose of uriand round before she lies down?
nation may be generalized into two
, Sometimes it seems to take forev- categories: el imination, or emptying
er to find just the right spot.
!he bladder, and urinc -makin,g to ·
This behavior appears to be relat- place a scent where other dogs
ed to the dog 's ancestral tendency to might cncoun1er ir.
dig her own shelter. At first , the dog · Why does my dog bury his
will sniff al his chosen spot, ·then bones 11nd chew toys?
perhap' di~ with front paws, hoc locFirst of all , you shouldn 't be givnail s extended. After some digging. ing the dogs bones to bury, and it is
the dog will turn several times, low- asking for trouble if you have more
ering her body into a semi -crouch, than one dog with bones. But let's
then "nest" into her imagined hole.
look at why they would. bury any In some cases, the dog will turn thing .
·
several time~. d1g again , turn some
Some dogs are in the habit of savme, and repeat the process until ing their fo qd, bones, toy s, or
asked to Iie down by an exasperated rawhtde, chews by .. burying them
owner. Dogs are often found digging either in dirt or, much to our puzzleinto cool soil to escape hot weather. ment, in the couch cushions or in the

Calendar·-----'-__,..-

Hometown Newspaper

Commissioners and treasurer discuss county's financial future

ales.
The recipients thi s year were Jessica Nicole Cale of Gallipolis Ferry,
Jesse Clayton Little of Racine, Jessica Rene Joh nson of Middleport,
Nicole Lynn Meckstroth of Huntin gton, w. Va., Joshua Craig Ervin of·
Racine , Tricia Kay Da vis of
Pomeroy,
Megan · Rich .of·
Wi11(amston, Mich., and Bridget
Marie Vaughan of Langsville.
' Jessica Cale. daughter of Marci a
Cale Arringt on. rlans to allcnd Marshall University and work toward a .
bachelor of science in nursing.
' Jesse Little, son of Doug and
Connie Little. has been accepted at
Jessica Johnson
Ohio State University into the Hanors Program and will be pursuing a State University Honors College
career in engineering.
where she will begin work toward a
Jess ic a John son, dau ghter of degree in engineering.
Kathy Johnso n and Charles F.
Bridget Vaughan , daughter of
"Hank'' John son, has been accepted Roy and Linda Vaughan, will he
into the School of Business of Ohio anending Wrighl State University
University where she will. be major- . where she plans to major in finance.
ing in accounting and business.
Recipienl of the Crawford-GrayNicole Meckstroth , daughter of lewis Scholarship was Melissa Ann
Sherry King Houck. has been Holman, daughter of James and
acce pted into the College of Phar- Denise Holman, Middleport. A grad.macy at Ohio Northern University.
uate nf Meigs, she will be anending
Joshua Ervin, son ·of Herbert·and. Rio Grande l=bllege to study biology
Patricia Ervin. plans to start cla&lt;ses and chemistry.
in the fall in animal sciences at 'Ohio · Numerous door prizes ·were
State University and then go to the · awarded during the evening and
School of Veterinary Medicine.
music for dancing was provided by
Tncia DaviS is the daughter of Van Johnson.
Greg and Janice Davis. She will be
Other graduates attending and the
attending Marietta College and . year they graduated were: ·
plans a career in the field of commu1933: lthmer Neal.
nications.
1935: B~Jison Baker.
Daughter of Michael Rich and
1936: Clifford Cunningham.
Katherine Kircher, Megan Rich has Robert King, Lorena Pomani, and
been accepted into the Michigan Lois Diles Bush.
·

was an unopened letter inside.

" It's a piece of history, " Lund
said Sunday. "It's a piece of love.
We don 't know exactly what it is. "
The letter was sent during World
War II by Bill Barnes, who served
in the 71 st infantry out of Fort
Lew is, Wash .. to Lenore Pelka in
Stalcn Island.
Lund . says at first ,his students
wan lcd 10 open the leuer. But that
impulse quickly waned when discussion IUrned to how that would
v i o l ~ te the privacy of the sender

Indiana evens It's
series with the
Knlcks 88-86

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volttrn" '19 . Numlwr 2:i6

Antique love letter's contents still
SPARKS,Illev. (AP) - A sealed
letter mailed 57 years ago from a
soldter to ~ wom.an m New_ York
Cuy has ptqued the cunoSity of
Sparks Middle School students.
Still , they won't open it. .
History .teacher Bernard Lund
bought tlie lener at an antique paper
· show, and at the _time was only
interested in the ink stamps on the
en velope. He didn 't realize there

Reds shut out - M~ts 4-0, Page 5
Domestic abuse about power, Page 7
Bush ready to run, Page 12

Today: Shower~
High: BOa; Low: 601

a1

~~----Community
. The Community Calendar is pubhshed as a free service to non-profit
groups w1shmg. to announce meetings
and specml events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
rai.sers of any type. Items are p;inted
only as space perniits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a specific
number of days.

Sports

,

•

Recogn ized were the oldest graduate. Harold Lohse of the class of
1932, and members of the 1949
champion Yellow Jacket foo tball
team . along with reuni on classes, as
follows: .
1934, 65th anniversary, Maxine
Gaskill. Elizabe th Lohse, Dorothy
M111Tis. Margaret Yost, and Rowe na
Vaughan ;
194Y, 50th anniversary. Gerald
Anthony, JoAnn Wood . Beahn ,
Charles Byc r, Katherine Bachtel
Dallas. Dave Diles, John Dudding,
Hate! Hawkins Ginther, Jamey Hoi1day. Virginia Grogan Holman ,
Ho1.cl Davidson Miller, Robert
Mills, Haro:d and ~osemar)' Fisher
Moore, Jane Custer Sayre, Beatrice
Murray Ste wart. and Sarah Goodwin
Walters.
1954, 45th anniversary, Jeanette
Cun nin g h ~m. Rae Gwiazdowsky.
Carl Tay lor, Marcella Taylor Warner
and Charles Winebrenner.
1959, 40th anni versary. Ida Wilson Martin, George Miller, Gene
Ahho ll, Edward Crooks, Mark
Kelly, Herschei.J:Snopp, Carla Wilso n Lohrer, Carol Manley, Nancy
Haddox Morris. Alma Baumgardner
Nelson . .Di xie Pierce, ·Richard
Roller, Harold and Carol Wolfe,
Roland Si nger, Mary Scott Rager.
· 1964, 35th Judith Wildermuth
Allenswonh ,. Marilyn Swan Ander;on, Carroll Lyons Harper. Cinda
Sa_uer H ~rris, Lynn Daniels Wright,
Darryi ,Stumbo, Iva Stewart S~sson.
Susan G. Park Scholarshtps of .
$250 each were awarded by Cmda
. Sauer Harris to eight 1999 graduales, wHh grade pomt averages of
3.5 or bener and d&lt;rect descendants
of Middleport
School

Now admit that you 'have wondered, speculated, and come up with
yo ur oW n theories about various
asreciS of dog behavior. To all of the
questions below, one could answer:
· "Just ·for fun ;' but there· really do
seem to be reasons for odd behavior
~ ail hough, odd is only odd 10 us.
Here ar:e some commonly asked
4uest ions and some s_uggested

June 2, 111119

Weather

Tomorrow: Shower~
High: 70s; Low: 80s

cation.

By Alden Waitt, President
Meig~ County Humane Society

Wednesday

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The annual awards banquet of Ewings Chapter
Sons of the American Revolution was held TI!urs- ·
day cvenins.. at the Meigs C.ounty Museum in
Pomeroy. Members of the Meigs County His torical SOciety prepared the dinner which \Vas attend·
ed by approximately 30 members and guests.
Tom Ball of Syracuse, awards committee
chairman, lumded out awards to the Rev. Keith
Rader for Good Citizenship for the work he does
in God's NET (Neighborhood Escape for Teens),
the Meigs Ministerial AssociaJ(on, assistant director of the Meigs U.nited Methodist Cooperative
Parish and as pastor of Rock Springs, Enterprise
and Flatwoods United Methodist churches.
Rev. Rader spoke of his work and all of the
good things the organizations have been able to
accomplish.
·
· He said he has mqre than 800 teens signed up
at God's NFJ:. He and his family reside in
Pomeroy. ·
Ohio State Highway Patrol Sgt. Paul Pride
received the Heroism Medal Award for using the
Heimlich Maneuver on a Marietta man who was
choking on some food. Sgt. Pride dislodged the
food, saving the man's life.
Sgt. Pride spoke of not seeing himself as a .
hero; but rather as someone who was justtrying to
help out.
·
He said he felt like he was acceptinll the award

Friday.
Crow cited Ohio law stating the court must
confine its review to the record certified . by I he
reclamation commission in deciding if the Division of Mines and Reclamation 's order granting
the permit is "arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise
inconsistent with law."
A briefing schedule will be established to
allow the parties 'to make their arguments, a
court entry states.
·
"I was rather disappointed,.'' said Margaret
Parker, president of the Meigs County Historical Society.
She said the group was ·ready for the hearing
and had witnesses ready to testify.
"People came in from long distances for it,"
she said.

for all of the men and
women in law enforcement, and added that as a
public servant he had to
learn to receive as well as
' •
give and that to him was
very hard to do. He and his
family live in Jac~son.
The Flag · Certificate
was given to Mickey
Williams of Syracuse who
has been flying his flag for
seven years.
He talked about how it
is everyone's responsibility
to fly and respect the flag
AWARDS and commented that while Pride, Mickey Wllllame and the
Ktlth Rader, from left, WSf9
more than 80 percent of the preatntad awards Thuraclay night at the annuat Ewinge Chaj:f.
population is in favor of a tar Sons of tha Amtrlcan Revolution awards banquet. They ate
Constitutional amendment lhown with avnirde commlttaa Chairman Tom Ball, right, who
protecting the flag, ju~t a preeentad the awarda.
•
few legislators are keeping it from becomins law. cer since 1987, he has worked many years 'in
He also talked about the importance of teach- crime prevention and betn a part of the Drug
ing our children our cOuntry's history and that the Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) program.
reason we can lly our llag is that men and women
The other Flag Certificate went to Beverly
fought and died to give us that right .'
Schumaker of The Nabby Lee Ames Chapter of
The Law Edforcement Connection Award The Daughters of the American Revolution in
went to Rick Crossen of Athens, a police officer Athens County. Crossen and Schumaker were ·
with the Athens Police Department. A police offi- unable to attend .

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"We wanted to have live witnesses; they,
make their points a linle bener. It came as a
shock to me."
·
Parker said the battlefield 's defenders will
now prepar.e wrinen briefs.
The groups are opposed to a ·planned surface
gravel mine at the site which is associated with
th,e July 18, 1863, Battle of Buffington Island.
In that battle, the only Civil War battle fought
on Ohio soil, a force of abou1 8,000 Union soldiers routed a smaller for ce of Confederate
raiders commanded by General John Hunt Moegan.
The running banle through the Portland area
ended Morgan's foray through Kentucky, lndiana and Ohio and cut off his escape into western
Virginia (now West Virginia).

.,._,

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