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Page 10 • The Dally S!'ntlnel

By JIM ABRAMS
AIIOCiated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON- Arriid all the uncertainty over the impact of entering
a double-zero yeal next Jan. I, the federal government often seems uncertain whether to sound like Paul Revere or Chicken Lillie.
Critics say ttte government is sending out mixed messages and lulling
Americ~ns into a fal se sense of security by playing down the possible crises
ftOm computer systems that fail because they can ' t read the yeal 2000 date.
"They are erring more on the side of fear," said Liza Christian of the grass•
roots Rogue Valley Y2K Task Force in Oregon. " Fear that the American peopie will act with a lack of intelligence, that they will take bizarre measures."
John Koskinen, head of the Presidem's Counci l on Year 2000 Conversion,
acknowledged that it hasn 't been easy 10 convey th, ir central theme, that
national systems - power grids, telecommunication networks, air traffic are safe, but people should be prepared for soine localized, temporary disruptions.
" It is confusing, but we arc trying to make it as clear as we can ," he said.
His council has created 25 working groups to make sure industries aJOund
the country are talking to ·each other about the computer problem and recently beg·an a, nationwide campaign, with a Y2K tool kit, to promote communily conversations on the subject.
The key, he said, is for people to make cool, informed decisions. " I told
some of the doomsayers from the stan thai sometimes people in a well-mean-

Wednesday

Tuesday, June. 8, 1999

Pommoy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

ing way drive the algument to the e&gt;:tremes."
.
.
James Adams, head of lnfrastruct ure Defense. a technology mformatton
firm that runs a Y2K news Web site. praised Koskinen's efforts but said he
is underfunded and the United State,. is well behind such couptries as Canada and Britain in making people aw: 1re of the possible consequences.
In recent 'testimony before Sen. l~obert Benneu's ~ pecial comminee on .
the Y2K problem, Adams cited a SUi rvey taken last year revealing thattwothirds of Americans did not know wh: 11 Y2K was. Some thought 11 was a tooth
whitener, a movie rating. a stain rerrtover or a brand of petroleum jelly.
People are now more aware of th&lt;c problem, but " l~ e level of ignorance
remain s alarm ingly high ," he said.
.
Benocll, R-Otah, who chairs the '(2K panel with Sen. Christopher Dodd,
D-Conn., agreed with Koskinen lha r: there will almost certainly be isolated
disruptions, but predicting where the probl ems will arise can be a ri sky business.
He recalled that when "Tonight Show" .host Juhnny ·CarsonJoked in 1973
thalloile.t paper was disappearing frum grocery store shelves, the next day
20 million viewers rushed out to st&lt;JCkpilc supplies and cause a real shortage.
.
·
"The antidote to panic is always acc urate information ,',. Betinen said in
an interview. " But some of the accurate information can be prelly scary.''
Bennell's Internet site advises pee&gt;pic to check with police, doctors, pharmacists and grocers about their servi ccs, keep on hand baueries, warm blan-

Today: Sunny
High: 90s; lr,.ow: 60s

kets and "a couple of extra cans of food ," save copies of financial.transactions and bewale of Y2K con artists.
Bennett said that at his own home he has fi11ed a 55-gallon drum with
·water and has stored food . "That's prudent in modern life. There's so many
things that can interrupt your life."
Koskinen's council offers similar "common sense" suggestions such as
prepaling a three-day supply of water and nonperishable goods, filling up
on gas and keeping copies of bank statements.
The Web page ass~res people that major national disruptions ale unlikely, that planes ale safe and that coffee makers, microwaves, elevators and
other equipment without calendal functions should not he affected.
Others, such as Rogue Val.ley 's Christian, say these guides seriously understate the problem and that people should have at least three weeks of basic
supplies. She said President Clinton needs to take the lead in organizing a
national fire drill this fall.
.
. .
But Bennett said there is a limit to what Washington can do . ... I don 't thmk
it's John Koskinen 's responsibility or mine to run around to every local community and say the federal government is checking on you.''

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 90s; Low: 60s

Meigs County's
so

Volume

so,

Regional Briefs: ,
Bid advertising begins
for Wai-Mart in Mason

Investigators set to launch probe into jetliner crash
.senger s~als' leaning into a crushed
left fuselage and a plastic magazine
rack stiH attached to the bulkhead, its ·
periodiGals undisturbed despite' a
missing sidewall.
. Officials expect to reopen the airport's damaged runway this week.

· ..

MASON, W.Va. - Wai-Man is now advertising for bids, by invita.tion only, for Supercenter Store No. 2849, located neal the fool of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge in Mason.
.
In the June 7 edition of FW Dod~~ Cortst.r~aion News Weekly ..Wai Mart in Mason changed from tis pre-titd status, hsted tn the May 17 magazine, to bidding status. Bids will be opened Wednesday, June 23 at ·10
a.m.
,
The. May magazine listing was the first concrete evidence that WaiMart was, indeed, going to open a store in the Mason area, after months
of rumors . Silrveying crews have been regularly seen at the site, which
is owned by MIOOO Ltd., an Ohio limited liability company.
In addition, the most recent magazine listed an increase in the size of
the store by nearly I ,000 square feet, going from 109.450 to 110,329 total
squale feet. It will he a structural steel facility. The, ta~get .start date for
the new Wai-Martis)uly 1999, with a completion daie of February 2000
scheduled.
· .
Boice Raidl Rhea Architects of Merriam, Kan., are listed as architects
.for the project.
.
Numerous calls to the Wai-Man corporate headquarters tn Arkansas
have not been returned.
Wal-Man had 2,435 stores as of Ma~ch 4, including 565 :supcrcenters.
. The first store opened in 1962 in Rogers, Ark. Wal-Man now serves more
than 90 million customers weekly in 50 stales, Puerto Rico, Canada, China, Mexico, Brazil, German, Argentina and South Korea.
Sales for the fiscal year ending Jan. 31, 1999 were $137.6 billion.

Two-car crash near Gallipolis
leaves Pomeroy women injured
. KANAUGA- A Point Pleasant, W.Va., woman is in critical condi:
tion today at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., with injuries suffered in a two-cal ·crash Tuesday at the intersection of State Route 735
and Gallipolis Township Road 207 (Burnett). - ·
"The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported that Tonia
A. Whinlngton, 25, 36 Burdette Addition, was initially taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallia County EMS from the scene of the II :50
. a.m. accident. Whittington was later airlifted to St. Mary's, an HMC
spokesperson said.
·
.
Joyce A. Bowen, 53, 43220 Smith-GoegleinRoad, Pomeroy, and a passenger, Mildred M. Bowen, 83, 34164 SR 7, Pomeroy, were taken to HMC,
the patrol reported. Joyce Bowen was treated and released, and Mildred
Bowen was admitted for multiple abrasions and lacerations, the HMC
spokesperson said.
·
Mildred Bowen was kept at the hospital overnight and was scheduled
·
for release today, the spokesperson said.
The patrol said Whiuington was northbound on Burnell when she
attempted to turn left onto 735 and collided with an eastbound car driven
. by Joyce Bowen. The collision severely damaged both cars.
The accident remained under investigation today.

(SH ,.,•ted photo on P•g• 3.)

Taft selects lawmaker to lead
Governor's Office Qf Appalachia
&lt;;:OLUMBUS (AP),- Gov. Bob Taft has picked a Republican lawmaker from Coshocton to head the Governor's Office of Appalachia.
Rep. Joy Padgett, who is serving her fourth term in the Ohio House,
will become director of tbe agency on July I, Taft announced Monday.
Padgett, :ovho is bmed by term limits froin see~ing re-election, will
supervise federal, state and locally funded commumly servtce, construction and economic development projects in Ohio's 29 Appalachian counties.

Ohio ~iver fish
Good Afternoon kill puules DNR

Today's Sentinel

1.

2 Scc:tloas - 12 Ptlges

Ca!ajdar

I

Clap!Deds

2=10

Comig

ll
2
3

Edlttlria!s
Loql
Sporll

Wgtbcr

H
3

Lottenes
QUID
Pick 3: 3-8-4; Pk:k 4: 1-!1-1-8
Buel!.eye 5:4-14-15-18-36

W.VA.
O.Uy3: 4-7-5; DaUy 4: 6-4-7.()
cr 1999 Ollio \lotlcyl'llbliohina c..

,

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. OhiO

Nurnller 4

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NIWI Staff
"Meigs County Yesterday and Today" was the topic of Tuesday afternoon's
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce meeting.
Meigs County Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe gave the
presentation. to those atlendihg the monthly luncheon held at the Carleton.
School in Syracuse.
.
.
He began his presentation with a brief joke in which one fi sherman, who
is fishing with sticks of dynamite, hands a stick to another fishe~an who
is complaining 'about the practice, and asks him, "Are you going to talk or
are you going to fish?"
He used the joke as an analogy for the state of economic development in
Meigs County. He asked, "Are we going to talk or are we going to fish?
"We're going to fish."
Varnadoe presented demographical information showing Meigs County's
population increasing from 1970 after a hundred years of decline. Most of
the population growth is taking place in the townships, outside of t.he county's ·five villages, he said.
·
Income earned from cash crops, spurred by growth ih greenhouse farm-

'

Nail clippers
bring expulsion

-Page4

Stngle Copy- 35 Cents

DeveloPment director outlines goals to .chamber

The Internet address for the President's Council on Y2K Conversion:
www.y2k.gov.
.
Sen. Bennett's Y2K panel : www.senate.gov/(tilde)benneu/y2k.html.
Infrastructure Defense: www.y2ktoday.com.
_

92 mph, clipped a bank of lights and
slammed into ihe steel supports of a
walkway near tile Arkansas River.
Inside the airport hangar, the piles
of parts create a jaJring tableau: a
jumble of twisted wires dangling
from the jet's smashed nose, blue pas-

Cleveland loses to
Milwaukee 2·1

a1

Without proper treatment for men- Gates, a sophomore at William and
healing power is found in the knowledge that mental problems strike tal iilness, he· ·said, "the loss of · Mary who struggled with anorexia
nervosa in high school. Compliments
human potential is staggering. "
people in all walks of life.
A bill to eliminate distinctions about her slim figure made her ~ant
Rep . Lynn Rivers, D-Mich., wife
of an auto worker, said n\ood swings between physical· and mental health to be skinnier still. One night her
in her late teens were first signs of her coverage is pending in the Senate but mother, in teals, woke her in the midmanrc depression. Later, "I ~ad two the Republican-led Congress has dle of the night trying to get her to eat
babies I could not deal with." She been wary of costly health care'mea- some yogurt.
"I saw how much pain she was
said the day she was diagnosed was sures. The health insurance industry
a happy one because "I was finally . also is worried about mandated ben- in," she said . "I couldn't bring
myself to eat it. I was just so desperdealing with. something that was not efits.
"Our experience has· b~n that ate.''
my fault.''
Professional help finally paid off,
Even
she said it took 10 years mandates, no matter how well inten--·
it
has for Robyn Kitchell's son, a
as
tioned,
raise
!he
cost
of
coverage,"
to ligure out the right mix of medmanic
depressive who recently gradication, and the treatment alone point said Richard Coorsh of the Health
was eating half the family's income. Insurance Association of America. uated from the eighth grade and won
She ')'/ent public with her problem · The National Association of Manu- a football award, even as the struggle
against his illness continues.
after political opponents in the 1994 facturers also criticized the idea.
"When mental illness hils puberelection that brought her to Congress
Mrs. Gore said she sought profesty,
boy is that a ride," Kitchell said.
spread word that she had had a break- sional help and medication for cliniShe
spoke of the imbalance of a
down.
cal depression because "I was not
Against a backdrop of such testi- myself," after her son Albert was hit ·health system tha1 would cover her
mony, Clinton ' asked · Congress to . by a car in 1989 •. an accident from son's physical diagnostic tests for
ensure Americans with mental illness which he has recovered. So, she said, manic ·deprcssion but not the $150
gel the sainc health benefits they now haS she . "I'm happy lo say that it psychiatric sessions in Nashville;
Tenn.
have for broken bo.nes ot an asthma worked," she said.
anack.
The meeting heald from Jennifer

condition.
,
Funeral services are to be held
today and Wednesday in Russel. Jville, Ark. for two crash victims.
The jet, which made its approach
as a violent thunderstorm overtook
the airport, roaled off t(Je runway at

Capable of fighting a war?, Page 2
Sabres win Stanley Cup opener, Page 5
You ain't seen nothin' yet, Page 8

Sports

•

Tipper Gore, others o•utline battle with mental illness
Alleged
slayer-put
on 'most
wanted'
posting

'
.
.
'
for getting treatment
By CALVIN WOODWARD ·
Still, public altitudes don .'t lumr
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Tipper Gore Mrs . Gore's boul with clinical deprestold of sinking into such a depression sion I0 years ago in the same calcthat she went to a doctor and said, " I gory as President Clinton 's recovery
need some help." A congresswoman from a bum knee.
Mental illness is "the last great
talked about severe mood swings in
her youth and how she couldn't look stigma of the 20th· century," Mrs.
Gore said, noting how capcer and
' after her children .
A college student said that at age then AIDS were once unmentionable
15. she was taking in only 20 calories in many families. "Most people treat
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
a day and doing so many sit-ups she someone with a menial illness as if
AssoCiated Press Writer
got sores on her back and hips, all in it'~ !herr raull or as if they can just
BUFFALO. N:Y. - James C.
an irrational· and potentially deadly snap out of it.''
Kopp's name and pidure will now drive lobe thin.
People must.know "lherc ·is the
appear all over the world as one of
right
diagnosis and the right treatment
Giving voice to each of these casthe country's most sought-after es, a White House conference Mon- and the right health care professionalleged criminals.
day showed JUSt how close to home al out there for you, " she said. About
The subject of a 7-month-old memal illness can be .
50 million Americans are estimated
··
international manhunt, Kopp was
Organized by Mrs. Gore , wife of to suffer some form of m'ental illness
added Monday to the FBI's Ten. Vice President AI Gore, the meeting during their lives, but only one in live
Most Wanted . List. The anti-abor- tried to make people understand seeks treatment.
tion activist 's face will appear in
The Clintons and the Gores shared
mental illness is a sickness much like
police stations, post offices and on any other- "a real disease of a real the stage with CBS newsman Mike
the Internet.
organ, th.e brain," as one profession- Wallace, whose own depression once
" Wh~l we are doing is using
al put it - and that no one should laid him ".lower than a snake's beleverything at ·our drsposal, " U.S.
feel shame or suffer discrimination ly," as well as others who believe
Anorney Denise O'Donnell said,
" induding now probably the most
lucrative way ot linding a fugitive
... There is linle more that we can
.
landing.
.
By DAVID A. LIEB
do ."
.
The flight crashed on · landing
Associated ·Press Writer
Kupp has eluded authorities
. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - Investi- June .I at Little Reck National Airsince thc .snipcr slaying of Dr. Bargators prepared to pore over. the port, ki11ing nine, including
nell Slepian, an obstetrician who
instruments aboard the American Buschmann, and injuring more than
performed abortions , in the doc Airlines jet that crashed here last 80. Fourteen survivors remainedhostor's suburban Buffalo home on
pitalized on Monday, three in critical
Oc.t. 23.
we~k. while an airport hangar has
'
Kopp, 44. was soughr as a witbecome the grim repository for its
twisted remains.
ness in the case almost immediately. after authorities identified his .
The pilots' console containing
car in the doctor's Amherst neighmany of ~he jet's important controls
borhood.
was removed Monday from the
Last month. i·nvestigators idensmashed .nose of the plane after it was
tified Kopp as the suspected shoot- · taken in pieces from its crash site to
CL
a private hangar.
Kopp is charged in stale and
Prelimina.y evidence indicates the
feocral complaints with secondpilots appalently skipped all or pan
of their regular checklist'!' they tried
degree murder and violating the
to land in a powerful storm,, USA
Freedom af Access to Clinic
Today
reponed in today's editions,
Entrances Act by using deadly
citing
unnamed
sources.
force against an abortion doctor.
The
plane's
eo-pilot
said last week
Prior to the shooting, Kopp
that he believes the spoilers were
traveled the country and world ,
deployed to help slow !he plane, but
authorities said, spending time in
data recorders indicate that they did
China, Mexico, South America,
Africa, Poland, England, India, · not open at touchdown.
Flight 1420's spoiler system Canada and Italy.
along
with its anti-skid, thrust reversHe has been arrested more than
er
and
braking systems - will be
a dozen times during abortion
removed and senllo labs run by the
protests in .New York, Missouri,
National Transportation Safety
Georgia, Florida, Pennsylvania,
Board.
West Virginia, Virginia, and Italy.
Investigators also are examining
Since October, authorities have
whether
mechanical problems, pilot ,
uncovered more than· two dozen
error
or
severe
wea.ther - or a com·
aliases and ~etermined Kopp most
hi
nation
of
those
factors- played a
recently lived in Vermont, but his
role
in
the
crash.
The
plane's engines
whereabouts since the shooting
were removed earlier and shipped to
are a mystery.
an
American Airlines hangar in Tul''Quite honestly, we don't know
sa,
Okla., for tes'\s and possible diswhere he is," said Bernard Tolbert,
mantling.
special agent~in-charge of the
Testing is expected lo take up to
FBI's Buffalo office.
·
three weeks, said lead NTSB inves, Kopp ts average in height and
tigator
Greg Feith. Scrutiny of the
weight, with red or brown hair and
jet's
other
parts is expected to lake
blue or gray eyes. He is described
months.
as a devout Roman Catholic who
Examinations could reveal
attends daily Mass.
whether
the flight's first officer is corAmherst Police Chief Frank
rect
in
believing Capt. Richard
Olesko said the FBI listing "puts to
Buschmann properly prepaled for
the forefront how serious a crime
we think this is ....This person is not
a hero of any group. He 's a criminal. He's a murderer."
Authorities. noted that of the 454
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)- A 15fugitives placed on the list since
year-old
girl's apparent desire to
1950, 427, or 94 percent, have been
keep
her
nails trimmed cpuld keep 1
captured.
her out of school for a year because · ·
" Ninety -four percent ," Erie
administr~tors believe her clippers
County District Allorney Frank
.
·Clark repeated. "Those arc odds · are a weapon.
Tawana Dawson told administra- 1
I'd bet on any day.''
tors she thought the two-inch metal
The average time spent on the
blade attached to her nail clipper was
list before capture is 316 days .
to clean nails. Administrators sai.d it
Even with the addition of Kopp,
violates a weapons policy and. are
the . FBI has room for one more
recommending the sophomore be
fugitive on its list On Monday
cxpeUed.
night, the leader of the Outlaw
Fingernail clippers are among the
Motorcycle Club - also among
banned weapons pictured in a student
the Ten Most Wanted - was caphandbook at Pensac.o la High. A
tured in Michigan.
teacher
sa~ Tawana's clipper on the ·
Harry "Taco" Bowman, 49, the
desk
of
another
student who had borOutlaws' international president,
rowed it to trim her fingernails:
was arrested in the Detroit area,,
On Monday, a panel made up of a
said FBI special agent Bill Cheek
principal
and two assistant principals
in Jacksonville, Fla.
from
other
schools sided with PrinA Tampa-based feder~l grand
cipal
Norm
Ross, who wants Tawana
jury indicted Bowman in August
expeUed
under
a zero-tolerance pol1997. He was charged wjth murder,
rcy
on
weapons.
bombing, dru¥ dealing, racketeerTawana's palents plan to seek a
ing and consptracy. Bowman faces
before the case is sent to the
hearing
several life sentences if convicted.
Escambia County School Board for
a decision.
··

June 9,1999

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-Environmental crews from West
Virginia a,nd Ohio we~e on the
Ohio River Tuesday looJ&lt;ing for
clues to what. killed hundreds of
freshwater drum.
. The dead fish were discovered
Monday floating along an 8-mile
stretch of river from Vienna downstream toward Parkersburg.
. "There's speculation that it
might be some species-specific
disease that killed them or so~e
other natural fonn of ·mortnlity,"
said Hoy Murphy, a spokesman for
the. slate Division of Natural
Resources. '
·Fish biologists were expected.to
count the fish on Tuesday to get a
more accurate count, Murphy said.
The freshwater drum is a popular sports fish that grows up to 30
inches. The fish is native to the
Ohio River, Murphy said.

.
.
ing, has tripled since 1980, from $3 million to about $9 mill ion annually, he progress is optional. "
Steve Story. chamber preside nt, reported on recent eve nis surrounding the
said. Meanwhile, le ss than 5 p~ rc ent of the county's residents are empl oyed
U.S. 33 project from Athens to Darwi n.
·
in manufacturing.
·
.
The Ohio Department of Transportation's Transportation Review AdviCounty revenue from sales tax is steadily increasing as is per capita
sory Commillee is correcting procedural problems after the Athens-based Citincome, Varnadoe added.
Who would have thought that Meigs County would have a college cam- izens Against Superfluous Highways alleged that it violated Ohio's open meet·
·
pus, more than three-quarters of a million dollars fvr an industrial park and ings law, Story said.
TRAC is sc heduled to meet June 22 at the ODOT Central Oflice iti Columover $115 million committed fur highway projects?, he asked .
The county face s some serious challenges including getting new empl oy- bus, he said.
:'This may in a way be good for us ... as we ird as it may seem:· he said .
ers, and facing stiff competition from other communities, he explained.
Varnadoe's goal is for the county to have I ,000 new jobs by the end of "All the other (highw ay) projects are affected ."
2002; a goal he says is "ambitious, but not unrealistic."
Karin Johnson , touri sm director. said work is proceedin g on Pomeroy's
Short term goals include construction of the industrial park, marketing. downtown mural. The mural will consist of four panels spotlighting the Ohio
building development and development of a good work force while long tenn River, agriculture, industry and history. In addition. ali Ohio Bicen1ennial baln
goals include county business and infrastructure plans, a bu"siness incubator painting on Flatwoods Road near Pomeroy has been completed, she said.
and development in the Great Bend area following co mpletion of the U.S.
It was noted that the chamber will sell Log Jam T-shirts at the Log Jam
33/1-77 Connector Road.
Fesiival to be held June 18 at Portl and. Prbcceds from the T: shirt sales will
"Job growth comes one job at time," he said, adding , "Change is inevitable ; benefit the chamber. .

.• -

By KATHAYN CROW .
Sentinel Correspondent
An milia! phase is underway for
the ren ovati on of the Syracuse water
system.
Robert Wingell. grants admini strator, meeting with Syracuse Village
Council Tuesday night, di scussed a
meeting held with the Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs, Gene
Triplell, engineer, and Wingett on the

After almost 30 years in the same
location, the Meigs County License
Bureau will move to a new home
next week.
According to Deputy Registrar
Sue Maison, the agency wiH conduct
its last day of business in the Gibbs
building· on Mulberry. Avenue next
Monday, and will begin conducting
business at the former McClure's 3in-1 Restaurant building at 354 East
Main St., Pomeroy, on Tuesday, June
15. .
The move will require nq. "down
time," according .to Maison, who ha&amp;
already begun moving non-essential
furnishings to the new building.
Maison works as an independent
contractor for the slate, and has operated the agency in the same location
for 16 years. The bureau was also
' locate4 at the same Mulberry location
for 16 of &lt;he 20 years prior to Mai son's operation of the agencY:
According to Maison, the new
location will provide improved security for the agency's inventory, and
additional parking .and more convenience for agency customers. The

water system .

Wingett said there will be a feas ibility study to determine the needs of
the systcni, such as a new water tank ,
possibl y a ne w well fi eld, and other
needs.
. He noted, "We need to prcscr\'c
NEW LOCATION- Deputy Reglat~ar Sue Maison is seen out· the integrity of the system. Th&lt;rc "
side her new agency location on East Main Street. The license
a strong possibility. in order to obtain
bureau will begin conducting buslnass at the former 3-ln-1 A
a grant. water meters for 'all res ident!'
frame next Tuesday.
will have to be included in an y applrMaison said that the state will con- only is our new office conveniently cati on
Wingen has suomiucd a $35.000
vert the local license bureau to a two- . located downtown , but the parking
grant for the li re department toward
terminal agency next year, a change area is perfect for our agency."
In addition to the secured .inven - the purchase of a new fire truck. and
which required a !alger facility. The
tory
area, the new office includes a he is also subn1rtting an appli cati on
change means that the bureau will
larger
customer service area. private through the NatureWurk s prugmm
begin operating with two customer
service terminals in order to improve office space, an employee hreak . .for $21.000 of a $28 ,000 ·projcctt o
service and eliminate w~iting. Mai- . room, and restroom facilities . It has · renovate and repair the tennis CI JUrt s .
been de~igned for future expan ~ ion as
. Mon y Wood, councilman. di sson said.
well,
Maison
said.
cussed
trash pi ckup and mentioned a
"We have outgrown the old
The telephone number at the hol e in the road on Bridgeman Street
new sect,~rity measures are a require- office,'' Maison said. "The Bureau of
ment of the Ohio Deparlmem of Motor Vehicles has already iold me ·office will remain the same, 992- which will be repaired. Andy Baer ut
Highway Safely, the agency that how pleased they are with the new 2084, and toll -free to Meigs County the Common Pleas Cour1 , through a .
operates license services offices in location, and I think our customers residents outside of the .lucal calling gram. will fix tomhstones ut Snow'
the state.
· will like the
we've }llade. Not area , at 1-R00-225-5961
ball Hill Cemetery.
Council approved the purchase of
tools for the workshop at a cost of
$600.
.
It was also announced that a permissive tax for all Syracuse residents
who purchase I icenses for cars arid
trucks will go into effect Jan. I , 2000.
Councilman Larry Lavend er
asked about a well on the Mumaw
property. Mayor George Connolly
informed him that the well had been
covered.
It was also noted that no advertis-

ing signs ale to he placed oli the eoncession stand.
C(/ut\cil also discussed the painting of the municipal building and
replacement of the gutters. Council man Eber Picken s Jr. will make contact with a contractor ..to have the
work done.
Signs althe fom1er stale park wtll
be. put up piohibiiing truckers from
dropping their trailers at the park.
Brenda Neutzling. pool manager.
mel with counciL She said swimming
lessons will begin on June 17. Int ermediates will be from 9 a.m. lo I 0
Act:lna Mayor Sandy lllnnarelll ara In the
WATCH MEETING- Mkldlaport Pollee Chief
a.m.. beginners from 10- 11 a.m. and
procna aslllbllshing a Naighborhood Watch
Bruce Swift le pictured !luring TUaaday
II a.m. to noo n. There must be at
evening'• ~lghborhood Watch meeting, held , . program to Improve security In Middleport's
least
I0 students in each class. She
raaldentlal areas.
at the Mlddltport Amtrlctln Legion Annex. Swift
al so reported more th~n 200 peQI'ic
ha.ve vis ited the pool in I he last thicc
&lt;Jays.
·
Also meeting with council ~~rc
.By JIM FREEMAN.
Currently, the state is proposing to Ron Miller and Jack King about n
sentations and showed other building
Stntlntl NtWI Staff
projects they have performed.
pay $25,421 ,604, matched hy a local salvage pickup of all scrap metal
Members of the Meigs Local
MKC is the firm which designed share of $5 ,701.000 for a total of products, old appliances, water
BoW of Education met Tuesday Eastern Local's building project and $31.122,604 forthe building project. heaters , old cars, from June 14 - 1 ~ . A
night with representatives of ·tWO is now in ' the process of designing The project should cost slightl y less truck will be parked at the Syracus e
design firms vying for the job of ·Southern local's new K-8 elementa.y than 3 mills and money from the cur- Garage on Bridgeman Street for perdesigning the district's ·building pro- school.
·
rent 5-mill pern1ancnl improvement sons wanting to drop off items.
ject
·
No decision was made.
levy can also he used for the project. Senior citi zens and the handi c~pped
Board members met with repreThe district is considering the con- District voters will hkcly decide the may call 992-4025 or 992-7768 for
sentatives of Mm- Knapp-Crawfis struction of tWo new elementary · issue on Nov. 2.
'
pi ck up .
Associates Inc. of New Philadelphia schools and a new middle school to
In perso'nnd malters, the board
The y will not take couches. g: s
and McDonald, Cassell &amp; Bassett replace existing buildings, and reno- corrected a previous resolution to the tanks. bed springs or tires,
Inc. Both groups gave detailed pre-· vations to the existing high school.
(Continued on Page 3)
(Continued on Page:!)

Architects meet with Meigs Local Board

I
_...._~---·-·"' ¥• •

·.· syracuse
will study .
needs for
its water
system

LicenseBureau
•
mov1ng
to new
location

....,. . ___ _ ___

'

"-l~" ~-

I
•

· • ,. ............

. . . . . . . . - - · · · · · - -.. -

-

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Wednesday, June 9, 1999
P1g1 2
WldftllidiiY, June e, 111811

PUCO chief
wants issues
separated

Ohio weather
Thursday, June10
forecast for

•

The Daily Sentinel Is America capable of fighting a war?
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 1112·2158 • Fu: 882·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publleher

DIANE HILL

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
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tening to the television and reading the papers
these days, I gather that the behavior of Churchill,
For anyone who remembers
· World War II, or even Korea or
Roosevelt and the other World War II leaders is
Vietnam, the current uproar over
nowadays regarded as, at best, an embarrassment
-- the cruel conduct of an earlier generation that
the inflictini of accidental civilian casualties by NATO in
Jacked our sensitivity.
Yugoslavia has a fainUy surreal
· Certainly something has changed radically
quality.
when half a dozen sonies out of thousands flown
The propOsition that such
result in the accidental deaths of three, or 20, or
civilian casualties ("collateral damage," in the 60 civilians, and ·the news is trumpeted in huge·
dry military argot) are to be avoided at all costs headlines, while successful strikes on major tarwould have been incomJl"heillible ill 1~1945 acts are &amp;iven ,leu attention. NATO ..,akesmen
if anybody had loFted it - which, incidental- are forced inlo abject apologies, 111d sud! a nor·
ly, nobody did. On the contrary, both the·Germans mally sensible person as Sen. Dianne 'Feinstein
during the Blitz and the British and Americans in actually calls for ending the air attacks altogether
the later years of the war rained bombs down on rather than Jet such ghastly accidents continue.
the enemy without the slightest regard for civilian
If "enemy civilian casualties are to be avoided
casualties. It was recognized that
these were inevitable,- and if any·
one had been moved to protest, he
would have been told that if German civilians didn't enjoy being
bombed during raids on legitimate
targets, they had only to overthrow
Herr Hitler and peace would break
out immediately.
As a matter of fact, as the war
went on, the view among the
Allied powers got even grimmer.
The whole infras.tructure of the
German nation, including its civilian entetprises (all of which, naturally, were harnessed to suppon the
war effon), carne to be regarded as
a ,legitimate target, and Air Mar·
shal Harris of the RAF invented
the concept of "the self-combust·
. ing city": a deluge of fire-bombs
which set innu.merable small fires
that quickly merged into one vast
conflagration and destrpyed literally everything. Hamburg and Dresden !x&gt;th got this treatment, and
neither ever recovered.
Then of course carne Hiroshima ·
and Nagasaki, and Japan's pmmpt.
aitd sensible surrender. Civilians
died by the hundreds of thousands
· - but the war ended. Winston
Oturchill made !be key point in a ·
speech to the House of Commons:
"Future generations will judge these ·grim deci· at all costs" is to be incorporated into this coun•
sions," he said, "and if they live in a world from try.'s rules of engagement, then the world's only
which war has been banished and in which peace superpower is .simply incapable .of waging war
reigns, they will not condemn those . who strug· successfully. We lost in Vietnam because we were
gled for their benefit amid the perils and miseries unwilling to use the truly decisive weapons we
had at our disposal. We will Jose to Milosevic in
of this dire and ferocious epoch."
.
.
Yugoslavia if the American public cannot stand,
But
it
hasn't
worked
out
quite
that
way.
Lis.
lly WUhm A. Aullher

'E.st46amd i1J 1948

ellnMfl,.,..

poot" 'IcC.

-

- ,. -· ""'u to: un- to tiN -...; l'I'N S.ntlnol,
AM•or/ Ofllo ....,i or, FAX lo 1«)-..Utl7:

111

~ Br.,

Editorial views
llxcerpts 'of recent editorials ~f statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:

Threat to free speech

The f]Oiedo) Blade, June 5
As lhe nation grieves for lhe death of school srudents at Columbine High
School and elsewhere, and wonders about the impact of popular culture on
young people, maybe it's no surprise that proposed legislation in Michigan
would require a warning about some pojlular music concerts. Bul that does·
n't make it right
.
.
We recognize thai the lyrics of some popular music these days csn be
offensive to mimy people.
.
.
Equally disturbing are some of the performers themselves, whose appearance, material, and stage presence are outrageous, to say the least.
However, the Micbigan bill goes too far. It is, as we have argued before,
a threat to free speech and expression, and puts the legislature in the position of making cultural evaluations in which it has no business being
involved.

Behavior can be modified
The (Zanesville) 11mes Recorder, June 4
While many students prepare to take a few months off, major policy makers in school districts across the nation are likely to have a busy summer this
year.
.
They'll likely be sifting through the .Supreme Court's ruling last week
that found districts can be liable for sexual harassment between students.
·. Despite the fact that the ruling throws the door of liability wide open for
'sphools, we think the Supreme Court made the right ruling based on law and
precedent
· While "children will be children," it's important to note that their behavior can be modified.
Perhaps the ruling will ev~n have anotlier unintended positive conse·
quence: takin$ away the stigma of reporting sexual harassment incidents and
stopping harassers before they reach adulthood - thereby reducing future
incidence of sexual harassment in the workplace.

Both sides have their points

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Auocllltld Prell Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Alice
Roosevelt Longwonh invented herself and played the role with acidtongued perfection for most of the
20th century.
Her ve!bal skewer was as pointed
as the stiletto she is said to have kept
in her purse. She punctured ind :
shattered precedents, at times with
what she sometimes called "malev·
olen! detachment," others with a
sound like the crash of White House
china.
Mrs. L, as many called her, didn't
need a motto, but she had one,
embroidered on a sofa pillow: "If
Akron Beacon Journal, June 6
you haven 'I got anything good to
The Ohio Turnpike Commission won't finish a $1.3 billion moderniza- say about anybody, come sit next to
tion project until 2004, three. years later than plaMed. Why? It tried to cut me." In a city where gossip is curout the middle man, the general contractor who puts together big construe' rency, she was rarely alone.
tion projects and then oversees them.
, ·
She has been , gone since 1980
.The result: a project three years .behind schedule and going up in costs.
when she died at 96, having been
One thing was done on time, though: The toll for driving the 241-mile center stage in Washington since her
turnpike increased from $8.20 to $8.95 on Jan. I, as planned.
father, Theodore Roosevelt, fol. Happy motoring.
lowed the slain Williani McKinley
to the White House in 1901. The
·event filled Alice with ".utter rap-

Happy motQring

ture ...

But Mrs. Longworth is having an
active afterlife in the memoirs and
biographies of other people. She is
mentioned 10 times in "Personal
History," the memoirs of Katharine
Graham, the former publisher of The
Washington Post. She appears 64
times in Carl Sferrazza Anthony's
1998 biography of fiFSt lady Flo·
renee Harding, cited in the i~dex

Showers T-tiDrml

Ron

Fkm!H

-

Snow · .

Ice

COLUMBUS (AP)- Like most
proposals in the fight for change in
Ohio's $11 billion electric power
industry, a move sought by regulators
to separate marketing and cost recovery has drawn a mixed reaction.
Alan . Schriber, chairman of the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
told lawmakers· on Tuesday that the
two issues are different and should be
treated that way.
He proposed an amendment to the
deregulation bill that would allow
utilities to recover costs related to the
production of electricity for five
ye.ars beginning on Jan. I, 2001.
The utilities,however, could get
up to I0 years to recover costs relat·
ed to. past regulation, including the
"stranded costs" of investments
made decades ago - with regulatory approval - in expensive projects
like nuclear power plants.
" What we propose sets bound. aries in terms of the time of the transi tion." Schriber told the House Public Utilities Committee . "We don 't
really be lieve anybody wants to gq to
2010 on the competi tion transition

per~~~~
DiNicola, spokesman for
Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp., the

AT THE SCENE - . Gallipolis volunteer lirefighters end emlt'gency peraonnel examined
damage to one of the cars Involved in a twovehicle collision Tuesday at the Intersection of
State Route 735 and Burnett Road at Kanauga.

One ' of lha drivers, 'Tonia A. Whittington, 25,
Point Plea11nt, W.Va., is in critical cbndlllon
today at St. Mary's Hospital with injuries auffared in lhe crash.

I ·,Death Notices

civilians •• is to be ruled out hereafter in far bet· ·
.ter. causes, any petty tytant not similarly handi·
capped can bring us to our knees.
Copyrtghl18tl NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
William A. Ruaher Ia a Dlatlngulahecl Fellow
ot the Claremont lnatltute tor the Study or
Stataamanahlp and Political Philosophy.

When her father was
succeeded in the presiden·
cy by William Howard Taft
she planted a voodoo doll
of Nellie Taft, the new first
lody, on the White House
lllwn.
time she bounced to the Turkey Trot
while blowing rhythmic puffs of cig. Iirette smoke, causing some to liken . ·
her to a rocketing locomotive.
Five, six and seven decades lar r Mrs. Longworth was, in her words,
"an ambulatory Washingtol'l' monument," still parading opinions.
The stories are still' being told, in
print and at Washington parties.
She forbade Sen. Joseph R.
McCanhy, R-Wis., to call her by her
first name, saying the trashman had
that privilege but he didn't. She
adopted a trademarked widebrimmed hat and told President
Johnson she wore it so he couldn't
get close enough to kiss her.
She had known every president
since her father took her to the
White House at age 6 to meet Benjamin .Harrison. Like many of his
successors he left her unimpressed.
"He was like a rather solemn bearded gnome," she recalled.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Lawrence L.
Knuteon hal reported on CongrHB, the White HOUH lllld Waah·
lngton•a hlatory for more than 30

yNre.

By Sara Eckll
I thought I was his one and only. Whenever I
went into the video store; he would run out from
the back and retrieve a large index card with my
name printed in block letters. I was HlS customer.
"Those are really good choices," he'd · say
when I'd bring my selections to the counter. I
always felt nervous around the video-store guy,
like all the staff was.watching us and snickering.
But I also liked it.
"Check it out,"l boasted to my friend Kather·
ine as we were walking there one night. "The guy
at the video store has a crush on me." And he did·
n't disappoint, following his usual bashful-flirta·
tious ·routine.
"Boy, he sure does," said Katherine. And from
then on it became our joke.
"I'm going to the video store to see 'my
boyfriend,"' I'd gleefully report, until once
Kllherine made a sobering point: "You know,"
she said, "I hope there aren't any men out there
referring to either of us is 'my girlfriend."' This
chastened us a bit.
But the real ego-check was to come a couple of
weeks later, when I was having drinks at a local
bar with my friend Paul. "So has the Don Juan of
the neighborhood tried to pick you up yet?" he
asked.
"No!" I said, fascinated. "Who's that?" He
pointed toward the end of the bar, and there he

,
I

,•
•

Announcements

Heritage dinner Friday ·
'The Meigs County Historicdl
parent company of three northern
Society will host its annual Heritage·
,Ohio utilities, sa1d the idea IS good
for them and for their customers.
,__..:;;.:...:...o....::..:...._ _..;__ _:...:__ _..::.,;.;....:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--l dinner Fnday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs

·~That

Opa I Mae Stover Sewar

Mu ~um .

~

With a high pressure system stalled over the eastern half of the country,
puts the on us on us to do it
The survey team from HeidelberQ:
forecasters say the hot and humid weather is likely to continue in Ohio through right and at the end of those periods,
College, Tiffin. which is co nd~ctint
.the weekend.
whatever's · left we absorb ," said
Opal Mae Stover Sewar, 76, Gallipolis, died Tuesday. June 8, 1999 in the the Buffington Island Battlefid8Occasional' thunderstorms are possible through the period. the National . DiNicola, whose companies charge Holzer Senior Care Center, Gallipolis.
Archaeolog~eal Project . will attend
Weather Service.said today.
some of Ohio's highest rates because
Born March I, 1923 in Pikeville, Ky .. daughter of the late Bradley and the dinner.
;·
Highs of85-95 are expected Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the NWS said. they operaie two nuclear power · 'Ivy Williamson Cochran, she was a homemaker. and was affi li ated with the
Cost of the meal is $10 a person
Overnight lows will be mostly in the 60s.
. plants. " It doesn't affect the compel· Baptist Church.
.
with
a cho1ce of chicken cordon bleU·
itive nature of the market. "
Surv 1·v 1·ng are a daughter and son-in-law, Susan and Edward King of Haror glazed ham . Reservations may be
Weather
forecast:
.,.
However, Gene Pierce, a risonville·, her stepm other, Belva Cochran of Mount Sterling, Ky.; five grand.onight...Ciear. Lows in the mid 60s. Light and variable wind.
made by telephonmg the Meig~
Thursday... Mostly sunny, hot and humid. Highs in the lower and mid 90s. spokesman for a coalition of large sons, a granddaughter and nine great-grandchildren; and a son-in-law, Davtd County Museum at 992-3810 by·
Thursday night...Mostly clear. Lows in the mid and upper 60s.'
commercial and industrial users McDonald Sr. of Dexter.
Thursday.
Extended forecast:
pushing for deregulation, said the 10In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her first husband,
The annual Heritage Sunday spent
Friday... Partly cloudy with a chance of an afternoon thunderstorm. Highs year recovery period is too much.
Emsy Stover; and her second husband, Peter Sewar; a son, Thomas Stover sored by .the Meigs County Histori-:
in the upper SOs.
.
.
.
.
.
Sr. ; a daughter, Bel vie Stover McDonald; and a grandson, Peter McDonald. cal Society will be held on Sunday',
Saturday.. ,Panly cloudy with a chance of an afternoon thunderstorm. Lows
Graveside services wi ll be 10:30 a.m. Friday in the Riggs Cemetery, Har- June 20, from I to 4 p.m. This year
in the upper 60s and highs in th~ upper 80s.
(Continued from Page 1)
risonville, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Friends may call at the it will feature a trip into the past with'
Sunday ... Panly cloudy with a chance of an afternoon thunderstorm. Lows . effect that David Deem and Ben · Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, ·from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
ex hibi ts to include ways to beat thi.
Y2K bug. Exhibits and displays wiU,
in th~ upper 60s and highs in the upper 80s.
' Wright be paid $700 and $1 ,000.
show- how people existed without
. respectively, as pan- time . assistant
elecmcity, running water, automoband directors.
Leona
B.
"Lee"
Taylor,
79,
1-lillsborb,
fomie
rly
of
Gallipolis,
died
Monbiles, comp~tei'S , telephones, grocet)i&gt;
The board accepted the 'resignaday
June
7,
i999
in
the
Greene
Memorial
Hospital,
Xenia.
stores,
and all the "essentials" nm\ot
tions, for retirement purpO!es, of
Born
April14,
1920
in
Cheshire,
daughter
of
the
late
Oscar
and
Blanche
taken
for
granted .
Esther Black, Geoffrey Wilson and
·:.·
Siders
Cremeens,
she'
was
a
home
care
worker,
and
a
member
of
the
BapEllie Blaeunar, and the resignation of
'Artisans meeting
tist
Church.
Jeanie M. Dorsey, due to her moving
Surviving are a daughter, Carolyn Joyce Adkins of Ne,.; Vienna; a so'n.
Justin Diddle . EIC coordinator feW
from the area.-Theboard also acceptJerry
Lee
Taylor
of
Rodney;
five
grandchildren
and
a
great-grandchild;
two
the
Meigs County Commissioner~.'
ed the resignations of Kasey Williams
~isters, Violet Wildman of Carynille, Tenn ., and Glenna Nealis of Fairborn.
will
have a meeting at the Rutlaot1•
and Kathleen Dean Goins.
Services
will
be
I
p.m.
Friday
in
the
Cremeens
Funeral
ChaJ?&lt;'I.
GallipoCivic
Center on Friday at 6:30 p.m!.
Teresa C. Carr was hired as head
Opal Mae Stover Sewar, 76, of Galli(lolis, Ohio, passed away Tuesday, teacher at Middlepon Elementary . li s, with the Rev. Ron Linpley officiating. Friends may call the chapel from for all Meigs County citizens inter;;
June 8, 1999 at the Holzer Senior Care Center in Qallipolis
6-9 p.m. Thursday.
csted in being a pan of the Appalacl'ii. She·was born on March I, 1923 in Pikeville, Kentucky, to 'the late Bradley School. Hired as summer school
an Artisan project. to he lp promq(l:.
and Ivy Williamson Cochran. She was a homemaker, and was affiHated with Instructors were Herben Redman,
their products 111 a. brochure, weJi:
the Baptist Church.
Julie DeFelice, Becky Triplett, Marpage. arid the Artisans' Guild. Those
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Susan and Edward King of sha King and Jeremy Grimm. John
attendmg should bring a sample or
Harrisonville; her stepmother, Belva Cochran of Mount Sterling. Kentucky; . .M. Davidson and Andy Doczi were
photo of the1r product,
hired as summer workers.
five grandsons and their wives, Joe and Pam King of Harrisonville, Michael
"•
WASHINGTON (AP) - · Some of
Annan predicted tlie U.N. Securiand Lisa King, and Th'omas and Dana King, all of Rutland, David MeDonThe board also granted a one-year
leave of absence to Teawan11 the heavily armed Apache heli copters ty Council would vote on the draft ·cards ready
Southern High School undergra&lt;l;.
aid and Amy Ferguson of Dexter, and Thomas Jr. and Betty Stover of McCaulla.
sent to the Balkans as a sign of resol ution within 48 hours. Annan · uate grade cards can be picked up ~t;
Pomeroy ; a granddaughter, Susan and Brian Reeves of Pomeroy; a son-inIn other business, the board:
law, David McDonald' Sr. of Dexter; and great-grandchildren, J.B., Mike,
• Approved the use of the high NATO•s mi litary muscle will instead also predicted NATO would put its the h1gh school oflice between 8 a.m .
Corey, Casey, Lee, and Dylan King, Jessica King, Melissa Snyder, Calee and school cafeteria by w. David. help police a peace deal for Kosovo. . bombing campaign on hold " JUSt and 3-p.m. Monday through Friday,.
the Pentagon says.
· about the time that the Security
Raelene Reeves.
·
Eight of the low- flying Army Council votes ... .
. . In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband, Krawsczyn for a for-profit endeavor
Grade cards
readv~ •
'
• I .. '
Earlier in the day, Bacon, the PenEmsy Stover; and her second husband, Peter Sewar; a son, Thomas Stover and·to charge for the costs of custo- attack helicopters will be part .of the
Eastern
High
School and elemen· .
dial services plus an additional $10 vanguard of American forces that tagon spokesman. said NATO was
Sr.; a d aughter, Belvie Stover McDonald; and a g.randson, Peter McDonald.
. tary grade cards can be picked up at
would enter Kosovo on the heels of co nce ntrating airstrikes on Serb the school from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m Moli--"
Graveside services will be held Friday, June II, 1999 atl0:30 a.m. in the per hour for electricity and water;
R
c
· H ·
• Approved a contract with the
tggs emetery m amsonville, with the R~ v. Alfred Holley officiating. Southeastern Ohio Special Education .departing Serb troops if a peace deal forces on the ground in Kosovo, and day through Thursday. of next week. .
f riends may call at the Birchfield Funeral Home in R,utland from 2-4 and 7- Re~ional Resource Center to provide brokered over the past week holds up, would continue until NATO had
Pentagon spokesman Ken neth Bacon proof. the Serbs were really leaving
..9 p.m. Th ursday, June 10, 1999:
· supervtsory
·
spect·a1 educauon
ser- said Tuesday.
the ethni cally divided province.
,
Two dozen Apaches have hovered
vicesi ntheamountof$5,495.12;
. • Approved overnight field trips near Kosovo-Aibanian border for
CLEVELAND (AP) - The OHi b'
for
the
FFA
for
June
18;
19
and
July
.
Fire officials in Middlepon Will continue to investigate a structure fire
Lottery will pay out $591,631 to wi nweeks awaiti.ng orders to attack Serb Marriage licenses
ners i~ Tuesday's Pick 3 Numbers
in the downtown business district this 19-23 ;
tanks, but have not seen combat.
The
followi
ng
coupl
es
were
• Renewed a contract with Meddaily
game.
·
"
morning.
Peace prospects seemed brighter
issued
marriage
licenses
recentl
y
in
ical
Claims
Service
to
administer
the
Sales
in
Pick
3
Numbers
tmaled
to
Bruce
Swift,
a
fireAccording
Tuesday as the Pentagon ·noted signs
(USPS ZJ;J.Ntl)
.
.
Coauaually 11....,.,., Hold!.., tnt.
fighter with the Middlepon Volunteer- district's health insurance;
that Serb troops were readying for a the Meigs County Probate Court of $1,252.637.50. In the Red Ball pro,.
• Met in executi ve session to con~ withdrawal from Kosovo, and mili- Judge Robert Buck· Christopher motion. a white ball was drawn, so ao
Fire Department, the fire was conP\lblilhod every afternoon, Moaday lhrauaJI
duct
a grievance hearing and to dis- tary delegations resumed stallelf talks Scott Newell, 29, Long Bottom, and bonuses will be aw arded to Pick-3
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
tained to a corridor on the second
cuss
hiring and negotiations.
'· Ohto V.lley Publilhlns Compuy. S«:ood du.
,;~
floor of the Silver 8 Ball arcade build·about the nuts and bolts of the Serb Jamie Dawn· Erwin, 20. Pome roy: wmncrs.
P*a:f:r.id II Pomeroy, Oh10.
Paul
D.
Dodgin
II,
42,
and
Linda
Sue
.
Present
were
Superintendent
Bill
In
the
other
daily
game,
Pick
4
ing at the corner of Coal Street and
exit.
Ma
• The A.wodated Preu and the Ohio
Russell,
44,
both
of
South
Charleston.
Buckley,
Board
President
John
Hood.
Newspaper Aaociadon.
•
Numbers
players
wagered
$385.4211,
North Second Avenue.
Secretary of State Madeleine
~ Send addttN correalou to Tho
and board ,members Scott Walton. Albright and the fore1gn ministers of W.Va.; Duane Owen Weber, 40, Mid- and will share $546,600.
Swift
said
that
there
was
minor
Dlily Senlinel, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
4S169.
·
damage in the hallway, and none to Roger Abbott and Randy H~mphreys. Russ ia and six- other major nations dleport. and Edna May Householde r.
SUBSCRimON RATES
41, Coolville; Kenny Ray· R.unyon. $305,786. Players will share
were
·continuing
their
meeting
today
apartments
in
the
building,
which
is
By C•rrltr or Mator Route ·
Syracuse will study
in Cologne. German y. On Tuesday, 39, and Karissa Anne Stilwell . 32. $386.842.
owned by Christy Manin. The cause
One Week ............................... ,J2.00
(Conllnuad
from
Page
1)
Onl Mootb ................................ S$.'70
the so-call ed Group of Eight signed . both of Pomeroy; Bruce Ryan Hawof the blaze is undetermined.
One Year,,,_,., ........................... SlO..OO
Jim Pape, a member ot the sewer off on a text to sec ure a U.N. bless- ley, 21 , and Laura Ann Arix. 19, hoth
SINGLE COPY PRICE
boaril, met with council on behalf of ing for the peace deal !hat Yugoslav of Racine.
Daily; ...................... .-................35 Cerna
Subleriben not desiring to pay the carrier ny
the sewer board about hooking mto President Slobodan Milosevic agreed
n:mil in advance diled to The Deily Sentinel on
the sewer line where new houses are to last week.
• tbrec, liz or 12 month buis. Credit will b&amp;
Am Ele Power :.......:..............42\
liven cmier eadl week.
being built near the state park. The
"Today we arc on the verge of
No IUbscriptton by mail permined in lfeas
Akzo ............. ,....................... :42'1.
line
can
handle
four
houses
and
peace,"
U.N. Sccrctary-Gencrnl Kofi
whe~ home cwrier "rvice il•v•illlbk.
AmrTech .............................. 69 1 ~•
council agreed to allow the hookups. Annan said before addressing the
Publilbcr merva the ri&amp;ht to adjust ntn dur·
Ash on .................:.........:.....40\'. ' He also mentioned that a tree near U.S. · Chamber of Commerce in
Inc the 111t.aiptioa period. Sublcription rate
AT&amp;T ....................................53"1•
dian,.. 11111 be lmplemem.,t l&gt;y ~~~"tt 1111
the pu!)lp station needs to be cut. Washington on Tuesday. evening.
dtration of lhl aubKriplioft.
Bank One ............................ 56'1•
down. If the tree would fall on the
Bob Evans ...........................19"1.
MAtLSUBSCRimON
Borg-Werner
•••
,
.....................
57\
pump statimi, it could knock out sewlllllde Mtlp C-1)' I .
JULIA
Broughton
.............................
16'1.
er
service for a week to to days.·
.13 .- ........................SZ7.30
Champion ...............................7~.
2 6 - ............. _............ .$53.81
Council will look into the matter.
Units of the Meigs County EmerCharm Sh'pa .................... ~ ......51.
.5% '\Veeb ...........................$105.$6
Tim
Gillilan
repongency
Medical Service record~d three
.
.
Police
Chief
City Holdlng ..................... :.... 26\'.
Oullldo Metp c:-1)'
13 \¥oeU ........................... .$29.25
ed issuing 20 citations in April, calls . for assistance Tuesday. Units
Federal Mogul .......................51\
26 \\fookl .................... ;...... .$.56.68
Gannett
.................................
72~.
investigated two accidents including responding included:
.52 'JVoeb .......... :............. ..$109.72
Kmert ............,'...,...................15'"
CENTRAL DISPATCH
one bit &amp; run. issued 12 citations in
I·
Kroger ......... :.........................57'1.
II :53 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
May and investigated one accident.
PHANTOM MENACE (PG~
Reader Services
Lande End ................,............ 42'1.
Janice
Zwilling
Center,
Middlepon,
Lola
Barber,
VetClerk{I'reasurer
7:00, 8:40 DAILY
Ltd .........................................48'1.
MATINEES. BAT/SUN 1:00, 3:40
gave
the
'financial
repon
for
May:
erans
Memorial
Hospital,
Middlepon
.
Oak
Hill
Flnl
............................
19
CorrectiOn Polley
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN .NIGHT
general fund, $4],997.26; street con- squad assisted;
OVB ......... :....... ~ .....................32\
Oor ..111 COIIft111 Ill Ill otortu II to ,bo
One Valley ...........................39'!.
$truction, $14.480.04; highway, . 3:29p.m .. Perry Run Road, PonP.USHING TIN (R)
....nott. If yao U.w or • errer 11 1
Peoplea .............................:.. 26\',
otoey, aoll •• oewaroa• at C740) ,z,
$2,119_14; fire,- S8,67S.89; water. land, Carol Dennis, VMH;
ENDS TONIGHT
Zl5.5. We wiD c~eok yaor 111'o111111M1
Prem Ftnl ........................;......14\
$11,415.71;
pool,
(-$171.83);
guar7:00 l8:30 DAILY
6:16p.m.,
Main
Street,
Pomeroy,
aid IIIQ a comdlaolr wornated.
Rockwell .................................58
MATINEES
1:00 &amp; 3:30 ·
anty meter, $3,554.37; ·cemetery, . Della Milliron, VMH.
AD/Shell ............................... 58~.
$201.80;
law
enforcement,
$!,024:
Seera .......................................48
New• Department•
EMS building fund, $1,618.75; total,
Shoney'• ............................... 2"no ••Ill •••ber II 992-215.5. Do,.n&amp;3:30
_.t tlte8....1 In::
FiratStar .................. :.. ~ ....... 27'1.
$90.915.13.
Holzer
Medical
Center
THE MUMMY (PQ13)
Gt•ntl Mallllt ........................E.t. 1101
Wendy' a ...........,........ u/.........29\ .
Present were council members . Discharges June 7 - Nancy
7:00 l8:30 DAILY
Newt .............................................Ext. 1102
Worthlngton :, ...................... 12"!.
Eber Pickens Jr., Mony Wood, LarrY CoK, Roger Williams, Edgar Trivette.
orElt ll06
Stock reporta are loday•a Lavender and Kathryn Crow, Mayor
BEEN
(PG13)
Discharges· June 8 - Stephen
Othlii''Servlcea
10:30 a.m. quot• provided by George Connolly, Clerk/Treasurer Berkley, Ida Durkee, Mrs. Mark
7:00 l 8:20 DAlLY
Janice Zwilling, police officer Rich
Adv111 ol Galllpoll1.
Adni'IWI&amp;. .................................EaL 1104
MATINEES BAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20
Chc I tt.. .............,....................Elt.1103
Wamsley, 11nd grant administrator Wray and daughter. Janet Caplinger.
ALL
(Published with permission)
C-lled Ad&amp; ..................- ..........EaL 1100
Robert Wingett.

Gee, he never said that to ME.
This is the brilliance of the· video-store
boyfriend, Not only does he have a perfect way to
ask' women for dates, he also has th.e perfect job
for meetina them. Every Friday and Saturday
night he watches a parade of single women renting movies by themselves •• pretty easy prey. So
he rewinds and replays his Jovestruck routine, and
one by one we fall for it.
In the end, my video-store boyfriend and I ~ept
our relationship strictly profe!;Sional -· though·
there were tjmes when I'd ask for suggestions and' ·
he'd come out from behind the counter to find a :
Bette Davis movie I hadn't seen or an indepen- :
dent film that was sort of like "Welcome to the'
Dollhouse."
·
Last fall I moved to a new neighborhood and a
new video store, where customers are cataloged
by number instead of name •• I'm E·l21. The
clerks at tho stpre show no interest in my taste in
moviea, and they certainly never IU&amp;F't that 1
catch them for a boer sometime.
Walking· home, I sometimea .vonJor how
things are going at the old place, a11ol if my video
beau ever miases me. But my gue..s is he's moved
on.
Capyrlghlllltl NEWIPAPEII ENTERPRISE ASSN.
. Send com1111ntllo the author In care of thla
n-apttpar or ·lind her a-men at llreeumaol.com.

Leona B. 'Lee' Taylor

Opal Mae Stover Sewar

Apache helicopters to help
keep the peace in Kosovo

;

Lottery results

'Mlddlep
· ort fire under investigation

..

The Daily Sentinel

~

Stocks

Meigs EMS runs

Hospital news

-·-·-

.'

•.

..
•

•·

Architects meet

under such categories as "political · .sally dubbed "Princess Alice" after
informant," " spitefulness of," she christened the yacht of Kaiser
"unconventional behavior of," Wilhelm 's brother.
·~extramarital ' affair of" and "WH
" In the Progressive Era there was
(Warren Harding) disparaged by."
no star ·like the princess," Carl
Mrs. Longworth, whose husband, Anthony writes. "She became an
Nicholas Longworth, was a Republi- idol to women 8f\)Und the world ...
can speaker of the House, ap)iears an Shortly an •Alice industry' was set
additional 34 times in ·Anthony's in ·motion. When it was· discovered
two-volume history of America's that a particular gray-blue was her
first ladies, weaving in and out of favorite color, 'Alice blue' was born.
one administration after another. ·
... Sheet music for the hit song
Mrs. Graham recalled her moth· 'Alice Blue Gown' became impossier; Agnes Meyer, as "always ble to get because it kept selling
ambivalent about Mrs. Longworth," out."
despairing at her "brilliant but sterAlice's East Room wedding t!l
ile mind."
Longworth was a spectacular affair;
"After one party they both the marriage itself was decidedly
attended early in 1920, my mother sour. It did nothing . to dampen her
deScribed Alice as having been' in a style.
very carnal sort of .mood. She ate
When her father was succeeded
three chops, told shady .stories and in the presidency by William
finally sang in a deep bass voice: Howard Taft she planted a voodoo
Nobody cultivates me, I'm wild, I'm doll of Nellie Taft, the new first
wild."
·
· lady, on the White House Jawri.
By the standards of Washington
She honed an impersonation of
early in the 20th century, Alice Roo- the first lady in which she mocked
sevell had been wild indeed. Her her "hippopotamus face" and "Cinfather, the president, said famously cin-nasty" accent. Years later, Mrs.
that he could manage the govern- LongwQrtb added to her repertoire
men! or manage Alice -but could· an impersonation of her cousin,
n'I possibly do both at once.
Eleanor Roosevelt, whom she had
Attracting enormous publicity, tormented since youth.
she smo_ked, drove her own car,
A congressman's wife, describing
plunged fully clothed into a swim· Alice at a . White House party in
ming pool, placed a bet at a race 1911, said ~he " held the very scant'
tra~k, was seen in public wearing a skirt' quite high, and when the band
boa constrictor around her neck. set played, kicked about and moved her
off firecracker and shot at telegraph . body sinuously like a shining Jeoppoles from a train and was univer- ard cat." At a society ball about that

was: My video·'Store ·
boyfriend.
"He picks up women
at the video ·store where he
works," said Paul, like a
double-agent giving me the .
goods. "He invites them
over to his apanment to
watch movies."
I shook my head and
sipped ·my beer. I had done it again. I had fallen
prey to a wide-netter.
Wide-netters are the men who flirt with every
woman they meet, and they are a particularly
frustrating type. Just as soon as you start feeling a
little bit special •• when your walk to th~ video
store gets that extra little. spring •• grim reality
hits, And you realize .that yo~ are not the light of
his life, but' actually part of a cast of thousands.
And indeed, after a quick survey of friends,
neigh,bors and fellow video-store patrons I dis-.
covered that my video-store boyfrie.nd had more
women than any indie film star. Two of my
friends had dated him briefly, and I heard reports
.
of many other "girlfriends."
"What happens is you ask for some obscure
film," one friend explained. "And then he tells
you that the store doesn't have it but HE does at
home, so maybe you'd like to come over and
watch it sometime."

Cloudy

. ..
...

" "

Heat wave will maintain
rip ·through
Thursday
g
.
By The Assoclited Press

11ood.

•

W.VA.

¢~··· ~··

Tales. of a lovelorn· video renter·

,,.

o·
Sonny Pt. Clolldy

y...,.

In 1980, comedian Richard Pryor suffered almost fatal burns at his.San Fer·
nfDdo Valley, Calif., home when a mixture of "free-base" ~e exploded.
• In 1985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kidn
in Lebanon
~ .he was released in November '!991 along with fellow hostage Terry Waite.
: ~n 1993, Japanese Crown Prince Naruhito wed commoner Masako Owada
iii an elaborate Shinto religious ceremony.
:· Ten years ago: China began reporting large-scale arrests in the wake of the
C(UShed pro-democracy movement. The arresl5 coincided with'the public reapPf8r811ce of Otin~ leader Deng Xiaoping. who was rumored to have been
lirlously ill.
: Five years ago: In a bipartiSan slap at President ainton, the House of Repo
rt,sentatives voted 244-178 for the United States to defy the international arms
embargo on Bosnia.
:: One Y,ear ago: Three white me~ were charged in Jasper, '!Cxas, with the bru·
b,1 dragging death of James Byrd JuniOr', i black man. President Clinton
unleashed a torrent of public works money, signing a $203 billion transporta·
tiim bill.
.
: Today's Birthdays: Guitarist Les Paul ls 84. Robert S. McNamara, former
Y(orld Bank president and former defense secretary, is 83. Moviemaker
,George Ax~lrod ("Lord Love a Duck") is 77. Actreas Mona Freeman Is 73.
Bioadcast journalist Marvin Kalb is 69. Comedian Jackie Mason is6S. Actor
Jqe Santos is 63. Author l.,etty Cottin Pogrebin is 60. Rock musician Jon Lord
(Whitesnake; Deep Purple) is 58. Actor Michaei ·J. Fox is 38. Actor JohMy
tkpp i136. J~ musician Wayman Tisdale is 3S. Al:lreas Gloria Reuben is 34.
. Rpck musician.Dcan Felber (Hootie &amp; the Blowfish) is 32.
·
; Thoupt for Today: "Be the inferior of no man, nor of any be the suj&gt;Crjor.
Remember that every man ia It variation of yourself. No man's guilt is not
yours, nor is any man '1 imocence albin&amp; 1p111."- William Saroyan, Amer·
lean playwright(1908-1981). .
·

ol Colurnbua ler'/14' I

tnc.

The acid wit of.TR's daughter lives on

The debate over gun ownership and how it affects violence in our schools
ajld homes is an issue that will not be resolved by endless posturing of some
members in Congress and members·of the National Rifle Association.
.. Both sides have their pqints.
·
.
From the NRA's vantage point, there is no reason that a responsible gun
owner should not be able to own as many weapons as he wants as long as he
takes care ofthem properly.
The gun control advocates say gun collectors and·hunters should have no
problem putting a trigger Jock on their weapons and keeping them out of the
bands of children.
· Both sides of this issue share a common purpose - to make sure guns
stay out of the hands of children and criminals.
It is time to work together to .make sure that happens and to set rhetoric
and political gamesmanship aside before we read about another Littleton,
Colo.

8y The Auocllltad Prna
Today is Wednesday, June 9, the !60th day of 1999. There are 20S days left
in the year. .
.
·
Today's Highlight in HisiOry:
On June 9, A.D. 68, the Roman Emperor Nero committed suicide.
· On this date: .
· In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in England.
In 1940, Norway surrendered to the Nazis during World War II. ·
• In 1953, about tOO people died when a tornado struck Worcester, Mass.
; In 1954, Army counsel Joseph N. Welch asked Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy,
"Jfave you no sense of decency, sir?" during the Senate-Army Hearings.
• In 1973, Secretariat became horse racing's first Triple Crown wimer in 2S
by winning the Belmont Stakes.
.
.
·• In 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Laner-day Saints struck
down a 148-year-old policy of excluding black men from the Mormon priest-

I uona1~e~c~ ler18t" I •

~-

The Ironton Tribune, June 3

Today In History

and will not suppon. military blows that will
unquestionably from time to time kill "innocent"
civilians. If we are that weak-kneed, we would
lose to the Hutus in Rwanda.
No question about it, in the past three or four
decades there has been a softening and sentimentalizing of the American spirit that will make it
difficult, hereafter, for this country to use its theoretically immense power. And if enemy civilian
casualties ·are unbearable, how much · more so
would be the deaths of American fighting men
and women? Preside11t Clinton knows this, and
the knowledJe explains his fatal reluctance to
order the measures' necessary to win in Kosovo.
. Don't misunderstand me: I would begrudge
every American life lost in that sad little province.
But if death •• for our soldiers, and even enemy

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

�•

Sports

The Dally Sentinel

Page4
Wednesday, June 9, ~999 ·

Radke's pitching propels
Twins to 5-2 win over Reds
By ARNIE STAPLETON
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The
Minnesota Twins stranded 14 runners
through seven innings and needed
wild pitches to score two runs. ·
But Brad Radke helped stop double-digit hilling streaks tiy Barry
L;ukin and Sean Casey as the Twins
beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-2 Tuesday
night.
.
The Reds lost their second strai ght
at the Metrodome after winning eig.ht
in a row, all on the road.
"They' ve had a great road trip and
we 're trying to ruin it for them," said
Mike Trombley, who recorded saves
on consecutive nights for the first
time in his career.
There was a scary moment in the
eighth when Reds reliever D!&gt;nnys
Reyes hit Mall Lawton in the face
with a sinker ball, Lawton stayed
down briefly before walking off. .
Lawton was diagnosed with a
bruised right orbit and was taken to a
hospital for a CT scan.
"The .most important th in g is that
the doctcirs believe I .awton is going
to be OK," Twins manager To m
Kelly said. "The pitch hit his helmet,
'':hic.: h was fortunate. He has some
swe lling around the ·eye socket. ·but
we think he's go ing lU be OK . We're
grateful for that."
Reyes said he was most rel ieved

~urnitz's

he didn 't hit Lawton square in the
face.
''I'm glad I heard it hit the helmet," he said. ·
·
Chad Allen was on deck.
"At first, I thought it hit him right
in the face, but luckily it got his ear
flap first, " Allen said. " He was lucky
and .unlucky at the same time. It was
scary for a few minutes,"
Scon Williamson replaced Reyes
and Cleatus Davidson ran for
Lawton. Davidson took second. third
and home on three wild pitches by
Williamson.
"We take them any way we can
get them, we 're not proud," Kelly
said. "They're legal. There's no law
against that."
·Radke (5-5) improved to :i-0 in hi s
career against the Reds, who only
stranded two runners.
Javier Valenlln had two RBI singles off Reds lefL-hander Ron Vii lone
( 1-1). who gave up fourruns and nine
hit s in 4 213 innings in his first major
league start, which foll owed 162

head. They were all locked in."
. The Twins have 47 hits since
Sunday.
. Radke cruised through seven
tnntngs before surrendering a two-out
walk to Mike Cameron in the eighth
·and a two-run homer to Aaron Boone
that cut the Twins' 4-0 lead in half.
"I had four good pitches," Radke
said. " I was hitting the comers. I
even threw three or four good sliders,
except for the one that Boonie hit. ...
In the Twins' founh. Denny·
Hocking · reached on a fielder 's
choice, . stole second, . continued to
third on a wild pitch and scored on
Villone's second wild pitch of the
inning.
"A run 's a run, " Allen said.
"What difference does it make how
v. ,. got it? ..
Notes: The Reds threw five wild
pitches.. .. Cincinnati lost just its third
scri'es in 13. ·... Villone's 4 213 innings
were a career high by one-third of an
inning.
Reds catcher Eddie ·
Taubensee extended his hitting streak
to a career-high 13. ... Casey left the
game in th ~ eighth with a tight left
hamstring. He sa id he got a cramp in
hi s hotel room Monday night and
was n't able IIi get loose Tuesday ..
HURDLES RUNNER- Cincinnati second sack·
Reds manager Jack Mc;Kcon said er Pokey Reese (right) leaps over the Minnesota
Twins' ,Javier. Valentin after forcing out Valentin at
he 'd give Casey today off.
second bas~ In li second-Inning. double play

career re li ef appearances.

"Mechanically, I just dido 't feel I
was there," said Villonc, pressed into
duty becau se of· Deriny Neag le's
shoulder injury and Jason Sere's ineffectiveness. "When I kept ·the ball
down thin gs worked out. When I didn't. they came right back over my

The Indians said the injury was
the same one that sidelined Ken
Griffe~ Jr. for I0 we.eks in 1995.
"WJI stepped up from the time he
put on an lndtans uniform," Hart
said. "I fee l bad for the ballclub and
I feel bad for Wil...
Before the game, Hart Was dis·
cussing some of the trades he has
made . in the last few seasons as he
has !ned to bring a World Series title
to C leveland. And the only one he
sa1d he regrets makmg was dealmg
Burnitz to Milwauliee in 1~96 for
Kevin Seitzer.
" I find that hard to believe,"
Bumitz said. " When I was here,
there were three All-Stars in front of
me and' I sat on the bench for five
months. They've got the best record
in baseball. l don 't think they miss
me."
.
Leading off.the lOth, Burnitz hit a
1-2 pitch from Paul Assenmacher (1I) off the right-field foul pole for his
12th homer. · · .
·
''I' m just glad I hit something,"
Bumitz said. " Right bow, l(stink)."
Kenny Lofton had three hits and
RobertoAiomar had tWo doubles and
a pair of stellar defensive plays for
the Indians, who had a suicide
squeeze backfire . on them in the
ninth.
With runners at first and third, and
Omar Vizquel at the plate with a 1-1
count , the Brewers guessed right and
Rafae l Roque (1·4) pitched out.
Vizquelthrew his bat at the ball in an
attempt to make contact and save
Enrique Wilson, who was tagged out
halfway down the line.
·

Scoreboard
!i-4), 3:,\ 5 P.m.

MiJ~~o· aukL-e

571
450
41 4

9':

&lt;Abhou 1-!il at CLEVELAND
( Wri~ht 4·,1). 7:05 )Utt
11 iusburgh 1:Corduva\-l) ar Detroit (Mochlcr 55). 1:05 p.m.
·
Duslun (P.Martincz Il - l) at Montre:il (Thumtan
1·.1). 1.05 p.m
,-/
Baltimon: (E rkk~u n 1-IH :11 Florid:t (Springer l 6). 7:05p.m.
·
N.Y. Yank l't'~ (Cone 5·2) at Phi ladclphia (Ogea
J. _l), 7:.\5 p.m.
Seallle (Fos~ro J-6) ill Colorndo {Bohanon 6-.l).

.lb8

ll

7:35 p.m.

AL
, standings
'

t:11.stnn Uh·ision

rc.im
Botton ..

ll'

L

...n l "

.. J 2 14

Nett York ......

2J .-u
.. 24 J4
.... l l .16

lon:mlo ....
Tamp:~ Bay ....
81lftimore........

Centrall&gt;ivis ion
Cl.EVELAND ..
'"' J6 19
Ctricngo .....
.... 27 28
Detroit .......... ,...
..... 25 JJ

fJ;l.
579

WI

-

•

{

•
Westun Division
Te:tWs .............. ,... .. ..
... J5 21
Seattle ...........
.. .. JO 27
Oa~l a~d :.... ..
29 28

614
526
509

5

.466

8',

.. .. 21

An!he•m .......

Jl

9

Jt ,
12' ;
16

6

Nj_ standings
•
•
E-stern Division

n.t

.W L fJ;l.
22

.621

PbiJAdelphia ......................... 30 27

Atllnta ................................... J6

.526

New Yortc ........................ JO 28

S '~

.5t7

6
1 2~

.!196
.!i82
C I~INNATI... ... ............. .JO 14 .556
PiuSburgh ..... .. ~ ........ ............. 29 28 .!i09
St

touis ...... ......................... 29 28 • .!109

Mil.-auk'-'e ............................ 2!i 32
Wtstem Dl11islon
Arile0flll .. ........... ,................... 34 2!1
S•n Franc.:iscu ....................... ]] .26
lus,r4ns&lt;!les .......................... 28 29

Colorndo ..................... .......... lS
Sanlliego ....

'

;
•

.439

!.1

11
1

2';
5
5

Oakland (Heredia 3-4) at San Diego (Hitchcock
.1-ll. l:Ol p.m.
Milwaukee (Nomo 2- 1) :it CLEVELAND
(Colon 6-2), 7:05 p.m. ·

.4 11

PICKENS
•·HARDWARE
I
I

I

Tuesd•y 's H:ores
(AL vs. NL)

'

Montreal 5, Bonon I
betroit II , Rimburah 4
Chicago White Sox 4. Hous1on 3
Phllndelpflia II . N.Y. Yankees !I

1\Jesday's score

Milwaukee 2, CLEVELAND I (10)
:.-.tlmua II . Tampa B8y 2
~ . Y. Mm II , Toron1o 3
Ninne1otu 5, CINCINNATI 2
kanSliS Cily II, St Lvuis 10
Srauk 10. Color.Kiu S
8:111 Diego S, Oaklurnl .\·
'l'e,as7, Lo; Angell"s6 (1.\ )
~I . same: Chknao Cubs 5. A.rizonn .\

Today'• pmes
. (ALvs. NL)

.i\nMeim !Belcher 3-S) 111 San Francisco (Brock

J. Da llas ,l-OT; Buffalo le"ads series 1-0

Thursday's game
Buffalo al Dallas. 8 p'. m. (FOX)

Saturday's game
Dall as at Buffalo, 8 p.m. (ES PNJ

Tran sactions
·Baseball
Anltrlun Lta1ue
ClEVELAND INDIANS: Signed INF Curtis
G_1y. RHI' Stephen Cowie, C Francis Fim'lo·ty, C
Brqdy Lyrm, LHP Anthony Marini. RHP Chris
Kelley, I B Kyle MoyL..-, OF Tr111is Sanl ini. RHP
Kyle Denny, RHP ~ yson Ri11era. RHPTed SulhvDn.
R.HP John Christ 1md INF Byron Ewing.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Pl11eed RHP Dovt
Eilllnd on 1he !.'l-dny disabl~ Jist. Recoiled LHP
Norm Charlton from Durham of the International
Lt01guc. Sisned IN F OJinga 1\Qron, RHP Chris
Cruwford. LHP Mauhew Dailey arid OF Glenn Kalil..
TEXAS RANGERS : Activa1ed RHP Mik e
Morgnn fr om 1he IS-day dls::rblcd list. OptiUfll'd RHP
Danny Kolb 10 OklnhotN of the PCL.
·
NaUOMI Leaaue
NL: Suspended Los Angt'lt't Dodgen RHP Chan
Ho Park for Kw! n 1antes and li ned him S.lOOO for

I

. " We had their signs," Milwaukee only AL team not t~ be shut out in·.:.
manager Phil Garner said. "Oq a 1999.
play like that, you're lu~ky that's all.
Indians starter Dave Burba limitYou try to get a feel for the situation. ed the Brewers to one run and five
Sometimes ·it works."
hits in 7 113.innings.
Said Hargrove, "Phil did a great
Alomar, who tied the game in the
job snj(fing it out. We had the right sixth with an RBI double, kept it tied
guy up at the plate and they pitched ·in the ei'ghth and' ninth innings with
· out. It was a great call."
his glove.
Bob )Vickman gave up a two-out
W\lh two·runners on in the eighth
single. in the lOth but struck out for Milwaukee, Sean Berry hit a hard
David J~stice with the tying run for grounder that appeared to be on its .
hts lith save. ·
way to centef for .an RBI si ngle." But
The I~dians got 13 hits, but were Alomar ranged far to his right, and
held to o.ne run for just the third. time af!er backhanding the bail, made a
in 55 gaines. Cleveland remains the
(See INDIANS on PageS)
..----·- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,_..:__ _::....::_..:__;__;::.;_:..:__~

Meigs 1999
American Legion s~ate
Dill

,
Oppopep!,&amp; !1m
June I (1 1................................. ... ............................ ........ at Belpre-6 p.m.
June II .. .. .. ............................................................... ..... at Logan-6 p.m.
June l~ ...........................................................at.Somerset (DH)-1 p.m.
June 19 ............................................................................ Belpre-1 p.llj.
June 21 ·............................................. .... ........................ 0ak Hill' 6 p.m.
June 27•......................... :................................ at Lanc~ster (DH)-1 p.m.
June 29 .. ,..................................... .. ,............................. at Athens-6 p.m. .
July 6 ................... ,................ ......................................... Wellston-6 p.m.
July 7 ...................................... ...... ............................ at Oa~ Hill-6 p.m.
July 9 .......................................... ,... ,................................ .Logan-6 p.m.
July 10 ..... ........ ........ : ............................... at Pi ckerington (DH )- 1 p.m.
July II ............. ..................... ............ Columbus Westland.(DH )- 1 p.m.
July 14 ............................................................................ Athens-6 p.m.
July 15 .. .............. :............................ ,........................at Wellstori-6 p.m.
July 17 ... .... :................................................ .Lancaster #2 (DH)-1 p.m.
July 19 .... :................................................... Eighth District Tournament

.
.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Signed LB Antico ·
.

Basketball

National Basketball Assod~tion
NBA: Fined F L,.,rry Johnson and lhe' New York
Kni c k.~ 110.000 each for Johnson '§ fai lu re lo make
hiinsc!f available during media access period s follow ing team proclices on June 4 and 6.

Football
National Football Lea&amp;ue

Hockey ·

Dnlton.

National Hockey Lc11ue
NEW ENGlAND PATRIOTS; Release CD
. OTTAWA SENATORS : Named Marshall
Chri s Camy.
. Johns1 on zenera l manager.
NEW Y.ORK JETS; Sigr.:d LB Marc Megna.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING: Named Rick
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Sigrted CD Mark Dudley vice president of hockey operations.
.
WASHINGTON CAPITA.LS: F)red Stan Wong.
McMilliun to a tlu~e-ye ar contrac1.
SEATn.E SE;AHAWKS: Named Dick Rouch trairter.
t!!fensive nssistanl.

DENVER BRONCOS: Signed C Clay Shi ver.

Free Screenings
• Cholesterol
.
• Pulse Oximetry
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
• ·Glucose
15th
Annual ·
• Weight
•
•
Health .and
• Blood Pressure
•
• Body
Fat. Analysis
Infomtatfon Fair
.
Free·
. Health
. Information
• Stress
• Skin Care
• Nutrition
I
• Therapeutic Massage
• Diabetes ..,
Monday, June 14
• Home 'Care
.French 500 Room
• lfospice
10 am- 4 .pm
• Exercise
.

Stanley Cup finals

9

San Franci~eo 6. AnWim 2
DH : Aorida 2. Baltimore I; Aoridn S. Baltimore

l

TbursCiay 's games
(AL vs. NL)

,---~-~------,

Hockey

.491

.. .................. 23 .\3

fighti ng and insli gating a bench-clearing inddc'm in
aJune!igame.
ATLANTA BRAVES: !'laced SS Wt~.h Wei ~~ on
the 15-day disabled lisl. Rcculled .SS Mark DeRnsa
from Richmond of the Jntcrnali ollal League
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Recal led INI~
Hanley Friai from Tucson of the PCL.
COLORADO ROCKiES : Signed RHI' Jason
Jennings.
.
FLORIDA MARLINS: Activated _\8 Kevtn Oric
from the l!i-day disabled list Op tioned RHP Rafae l
Medina 10 Calgary of the Pel.
NEW YORK METS : Activaccd OF Jay Payton
from the 60-day di s:lblcd list an d op1ioned him .l o
Norfolk of the lnternmi onal '-&lt;eague. Designated OF
Scott Hunter fur ass ignment.
'
PHI LADE LI 1 ~1A PHILLIES: Clai mtd RHP
Amaur~ Telemi•co off waivers from · the Arizona
Diamondbacks. Optioned RHP Joel Bennett co
Scranton-Wilke s BalfC of th!l lmernali onal League.
TrandenCd LHP Man Beech from 1he I !i-da~ 10 1he
60 - da~ disabled list. Signed RHP Brad Pm,n z. LHP
Fmnk. Brooks, RHP Brad TuCker, C Hec tor Serrano.
· OF Aaron Merhoff and OF Erik Rivera.

I

.!176
.ll9
.45!1

.

Houston (lllampton 6-ll at Chi~;agn Whi te So,.
(Baldwin J-4).· 8:05 p.m.
·
CINC INNATI (Tom ko 1-1) nl · Mlimeso1n
.
(Milton 2-4), 8:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Jimenez 2-7) at Kanm Ci ty
(Mathews 2-0). 8:05p.m.
·
Chicago Cubs (M ulhol land ) -1) &lt;II ,\riwnn
(R.Johnso n 7-2). 10:05 p.m . ,
Texns (Cinrk .\-4} ot lus Angeles (Brown fd).
IO:JS p.m.
Oakland (Haynes 3-!li) at San Otego {Clement 1-.
6!. tO'JS p.m.

~uffal o

JO

,

7:40p.m.

WI

Monueal:. .................. .......... 22 33 .400
Florida ................................ B J6 J 90
~
Ceniral Dl\'lsion
Holllton ....... ..... .... ,............... J4 2J
&lt;.11idago ............................... .32 2J

·

Tampa Day (Rupe 1-.\) at A1L1n1a (Ginvint' J. 7).

...... 24 .12
... 21 .16

Kansas City
Minnesota...

Torontll (Wells 6-5) al NY Mets (Rel·J .l -3).
7:40p.m.

655
491
431
419
.168

attempt during Tuesday's gama In Minneapolis,
where the TWins won 5-2. Denny Hocking, who hit the grounder . that resulted In Valentin's being :
retired at second, belli Rease's throw to first . (AP)

Sa~res

\

•

Your Full Line Dulth
StanclarJ Dealer
PICKENS HARDWARE
103 South 2nd,
MaaonWV
Phone: 773·5583

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.J

Door prizes, refreshments and much more/11
For.more infonnation, contact Wellness Coordinator
Bonnie McFarland, RN, BSN, at 446-5679.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

beat Stars 3·2 in opening game of Stanley Cup finals.

By KEN RAPPOPORT
manage nine.
,DALLAS (AP) - Jason Woolley playe{ makebt:lieve hockey games as a kid, scoring the wirtn'ing goal
in the Stanley Cup finals. This time. he did it for real.
Held without a shot for three -periods, Woolley suddenly became a hero in overtime to give Buffalo a 3-2
vic)ory over Dallas in the opener of the Stanley Cup
finals on Tuesday night.
"To be honest, I don 't feel mubh pressure," the
Buffalo'defenseman said. "Everyone's watching us, .and
it'stime to shine and bring your best to the table."
· Woolley 's game-winner at I 5:30 of overtime finished
an txciting back-and-forth game. The Stars led 1-0 after
tw" periods, then the Sabres scored twice in the third to
take a 2- 1 lead before Dallas came back to tie in the final
•
miOute of regulation o.n a goal by Jere Lehtinen.
' Woolley ended it in overtime when he jumped off the
bcrich, took a pass from Curtis Brown, skated down the
slot and beat Ed Belfour with a quick shot.
"Curtis made a great pass," Woolley said. "I thought
about passiAg to Miroslav Satan (the Sabres' leading
scorer during the regular seaso n), but I decided to shoot
myself. Ijust wanted to put it on net, and I one-timed it." .
. Just like. he did when he played street hockey in
Toronto, pretending that he was leading his team to victory .in the·Stanley Cup finals .
.
" h's one of the dreams you have as a kid," Woolley
said. "The real thing is completely amazing."
For the first two periods, there was ample opponunity for the Stars to bury the Sabres . Brett Hull scored a
power-play goal on a shot from the middle of the ice at
10:17 of the firS! period, and Dallas had several other
)
quality chances to score.
.,
The main reason they didn't was Dominik Hasek', the
OFF THE BOARDS - Buffalo's Jason Woolley control in the first period of Tuesday night's
Sabres' indomitable goalie who face d 24 shots through (left) comes In too late to keep Dallas' Jon Slm Stanley Cup . finals opener in Dallas, where . the
the first two periods, The Sabres, meanwhile, could only from skating off the boards with the puck in hiS Sabres won 3-2. (AP)

third period.
"The third period was a bad period," Stars center Mike lv(odano said. " We got away from our style of play.
We lost our edge and let them back into the game. We
had our chances to put it away, but didn 't take advantage."

-·

Stu Barnes soon tied it for Buffalo at 8:33 of the third
period, blasting a shot over Ed Belfour's glove from in
close. The Sabres went ahead 2-1 on a power-play goal ·
by Wayne Primeau at 13:37.
•
"I thought we went a little bit flat when they scored
that first goal, and then to give up those two quick goals
we were in a little bit in shock," Stars coach Ken
Hitchcock .said. " The tirst and second period was as
sound a hockey game as we have played .''
The score remained 2-2 before Woolley cam e through
for the Sabres, quieting an otherwise noisy sellout crowd '
of 17.001 at the Reunion Arena.
'
The Sabres were celebrating , though. Everyone but , .
Hasek, who fl opped on the ice.
•.
.,
Hasek shrugged off suggestions that hi s well -doc umented groin injury had Oared up again. No, he said, :
"the bui lding was hot and I was just tired - too tired to· ·
celebrate with my teammates."
·
Hasek had stopped 35 shots and .held the Stars to only
one power.:p.lay convers~on in 10 opporLunities ·in
Buffalo's lirst Stanley Cup game in 24 years.
· "We are very familiar with that," Woolley sa1d o f
Hasek. a two-time NHL most valuable player. "We feed
off him . We need him to play like that to be successful. "
Hasek didn't want to talk about his performance. just
the next game . .
"That's where my focus is. ,.

That will he Thursday ni gh t in Dallas before the sene&gt; ·
sw itches to Buffalo for Games 3 and 4.

NL defeats AL nines in eight out of 13 interleague contests

·10th-inning homer pushes .Brewers past Tr'ibe 2•1 :

By TOM WITHERS
htrrting.
·
because of injury, lost another reguCLEVELAND
(A P) ·
The Indians, ah'eady miss ing lar Tuesday ntght when Wd Cordero
Baseball's hest team is sudclenl y startin g catcher Sandy Alomar broke his left w:ist while making a
shdmg catch durmg a 2- 1 loss to the
M1lwaukee Brewers.
Jeromy Bumitz, one f)f the many
players traded by the lndtans the past
few years, homered leadtng off the
lOth inning for Milwaukee.
But Cordero's loss was the bigger
blow to the lnd&lt;ans, who were also
Without Mann.Y Ram1rez and T~avJS
Fryman. Ram&lt;rez began scrvmg h1 s
three-game suspension for charging
.the mound on Tuesday while Fryma~
was a late scratch with back spasms.
''We ' re playing without four regulars right now," Indians GM John
Hart said. "We're going to need
some help."
·
The Indi ans are likely to bring up
·an outfielder from Triple-A Buffalo
to take Cordero's spot. The leading
candidate is Alex Ramirez, batting
.3 11 with eight homers and 36 RB!s.
Jeff Manto, Jacob Cruz· and Dave
Roberts are other possibilities.
" We haven't really come up with
a decision yet, " Cleveland manager
Mike Hargrove said. '' It's a tough
loss. Wil is a big pan of the club.·
We' ll miss him. The prognosis is 10
weeks."
Cordero, signed during the offseaso n by the Indians, bent his wrist
back awkwardly on a ball hit by
Burnitz in the sixth. As he reached
(or the ball with hi s glove, his wrist
; STEALS SECOND- The Cleveland Indians' Kenny Lofton steals turned grotesquely backwards, and
second base as Milwaukee second basenian Mark Loretta comes after lying in the grass in pain for
down with the late tag .in the third inning of Tuesday night's game In
several minutes, Cordero was helped
Clevealnd, where the visiting Brewers
won 2-1 In 1-0 Innings. (AP)
.
. . off the field and taken to the hospital.

Baseball

-'

Wedneaday, June 9, 1999

Major league
baseball
By The
The Colorado
Associated
Press found out
Rockies
whatAmericanLeagueteamsalready
'knew : You can't keep Ken Griffey Jr.
down for long.
Griffey, who went 0-for-5 in
Seatile 's .sert'es opener at Colorado ,
homered twice and drove in four runs.
Tuesday night as the Mariners beat
the Rockies 10-5.
Griffey increased his home run
total to 22, tying Tampa Bay's Jose
·
· Canscco
for the major league lea~ .
He hit a three-run homer in the first
off Mark Brownson (0-1) and a solo
shot in the eighth off Dave Veres,
They were Griffey's first homers
in four career games at hitter-friendly
Coors Field. ·
"Everyone's been pulling all these
huge expectations on him to come out
and hit 20 home runs (in Denver),"
said teammate Alex Rodriguez. "It's
nice for him to get two at Coors so he
can shut some people up."
The Mariners scored six runs in
the first on homers by Griffey .and
Butch Huskey, and RBI si 9gles by
Tom Lampkin and Rodriguez.
Rodriguez had three hits, including hi s lOth homer, as the Mariners
(30-27) moved three games over .500
for the first time since the end of the
1997 season.
·In other interleague games, it was
San Francisco 6, Anaheim 2;
Montreal 5. Boston 1; Detroit 11 .
Piitsburgh 4; Chicago White Sox 4,
Houston 3; Philadelphia 11 , New
York Yankees ·5; Atlanta 11 , Tampa
· Bay 2; New York Mets 11 , Toronto 3;
Kansas City II , St. Louis 10; San
Diego 5. Oakland 3; and Texas 7, Los
Angeles 6.
Florida swept a doubleheader
from Baltimore, 2-1 and 5-3.
· J L
h
In the NatJOna
eague, t e
. Ch&lt;eago Cubs beat Arizona 5-3 . .
Royals 11, Cardinals 10
At Kan sas City, Joe Randa's second triple triggered a four-run sixth
inning as the Royals snapped a ninegame losing streak.
• · Mark McGwire hit his 18th homer
. career
pf the season an d 475 th of ·hts
•fler missing Monday's game with a
~or~ back. His two-run shot in the
tinth tied him with Stan Musial and
~, "illie Stargell ror 17th place on the
'•I '
·
•f=Mii~
Marlins 2,
Orioles t
~
Marlins s, Orioles 3 .
•. Tim Hyers drove in three runs,
fuc luding the tiebreaker with an
~ighth-inning triple, as Florida com' .

,

pleted a doubleheader sweep tp · Williams. who en t~red the game
After the Padres loaded the bases
extend the majors ' longest winning with a .207 average,, wenl 4-for-5. oil Buddy Groom (2- 1) with a single
streak to seven.
·
· drove in three runs and scored twice and two wa lk s. Owens hit the first
Jesse Orosco walked Luis Castillo as the Braves won the ir fourth pit~h from reliev er Doug Jones to
on a 3-2 pitch with tw.o out and the straight Guillen, whq started the day left-center to score David Ncwhan
bases loaded in the bottom of the w1th a .141 average, went 4-for-4 and Damian Jackson.
ninth to decide the opener in Miami . with an RBI and three runs scored.
New han went 3-for-4 and drove ··'"
Giants6,Angels1
WhiteSox4,Astros3
At San Francisco, Shawn Estes
At Chicago , Magglio Ordonez .
$ $
Pitched seven strong innings an.d the drove ·in three runs and Jaime
NEW YORK (AP) - From the
Giants broke a tie with three runs in Navarro won his th&lt;rd straight start.
Pigskin
and Kickoff classics in
the seventh.
Frank Thomas hit his second douAugust
to
the Sugar Bowl .on Jan .. 4,
Marvin Benard led off the inning ble of the garne with one out in the
2oo0,
that
wi ll probably d~termi~e
with a single and went to second on sixth to set up Ordonez's two-run
the
national
champio n, ABC Sports
Bill Mueller's sacrifice bunt against homer, which. gave Chicago a 4-3
will
telev
ise
many
of the season's top
Steve Sparks (2-5), who ·was then lead. Ordonez also hit a RBI ground·
college
foot
ball
games.
.
relieved by Scott Sclioeneweis. One out in the founh ·as the Wh1te Sox
ABC
released
its
sc
hed
ul
e
on.
out later, Annando Rios singled off won for the seventh time in their last
Tuesday. with Arizona. at Penn State
shortstop Andy Sheets' glove to score II games.
in the .Pigskin Classic on Aug. 28
Benard with the ~a-ahead run.
Padres S, Athletics 3
kicking
off the season. On Aug .. 29,
·
.Ji:xpos S, Red Sox 1
At San Diego, Eric Owens hit a
'ABC
will
televise Miami-Ohio State
At Montreal, Dan Smith retired 20 two-run single in the eighth inning.
in
the
Kickoff
Classic at Giants
straight batters at one point in his and the Padres got key co ntributions
Stadium
in
East
Rutherford,
N.J.
major league debut as the Expos from two rookies.
handed Boston its fourth straight loss.
Smith ( 1-0) owed three hits to
the first four batters he faced, includ·
ing an RBI single to Nomar .
Garciaparra. But he didn' t allow
another baserunner before being lifted for a pinch-hitter in the seventh
inning. Smith, called up from TripleA Ottawa ·on Monday, struck out
nine. .
.
Tigers 11, Pirates 4 .
At Detroit, Nelson Cruz pitched
seven strong innings to win his first
major ·league start and the Tigers hit
five homers . .
· Cruz (1-0), c:alled up Monday
after scheduled starter Justin
Thompson complained of back
spasms, gave up only· one run and
two hits. Damion Easley, Gregg
Jefferies, Dean Palmer, Juan
Encarnacion and Luis Polonia homered for Detroit.
.
Phillies 11, Yankees S
AI Philadelphia, Rob Ducey 's
bases-loaded triple capped a nine-run
seventh inning as the Phillies rallied
to beat the Yankees.
Rookie Marlon Anderson had two
hits and drove in three runs for
Philadelphia, who are 5-0 against the
Yankees at Veterans Stadium.
Mets 11, Blue Jays 3
At New York, Jason lsringhausen
got his first major league win since
I99T and the. Mets won their third
straight following an eight-game losing streak.
.
lsringhausen (I-I) allowed two
hits in S 213 innings. Rey Ordonez
went 4-for-5 for the Mets.
·
DeiiR
1
Braves 11, v a)'s
. ·
Gerald · Williams and Ozzie
Guillen, who have both struggled at
the plate this season, each had four
· hits in Atlanta.

ABC p05
.t

a run - the first hits and RBI of his
career. Fe llow rookie Mike Darr hit
hi s first maj or league homer for the
Padres.
Rangers 7, Dodgers 6
At Los Ange les, Rafael Palmeiro's
· 1co ff· A•can M'll
two-out RBI smg
1 s ( I- ·

I ) gave Texas its 12th victory in 14;;
games.
.
·•
Jeff Zimmcm\an (6-0) pitched two
hitless innings to earn the victory.. ;
Mike Munoz pi tched the 13th for hi s
first save.

Games ABC will televise nationally include: Notre Dame at Michigan
on Sept4 ; Oh io State at Penn State on
Ocl 16; Michigan at Penn State on
Nov. 13; Ohio State at Michigan on
Nov.· 20; Texas at Texas A&amp;M and
Nebraska at Colorado on Nov. 26;
and Notre Dame at Stanford on Nov.
27.
.
· The network also will televise the
Big 12 and SEC championship ·games
on Dec. 3.
Among the bow l games on ABC
are the Citrus,, Rose and Orange on

Jan. I; the Fiesta on Jan. 2; and the·;
Sugar on Jan
:~
. . 4.

Iat e 0f teIeVISe.
• d' CO II ege f 00tb aII games

.

·~

The Su,!!at Bow l matches the top;-.
two teams in the fina l Bow[.;
Championship Series standings.
; .;
'·
1' ," ''
Regio nal telecasts incl ude: UCLA• : :
at Ohio State and Georgia Tech a~ • ,
Florida State on Sept. II ; Miami a~ ;
Florida State and Michigan a~:
Michigan State on Oct. 9; an&lt;t r
Geor~ia at Georgia Tech and Arizon~ ,:
at Anzona Stale on Nov. 27.
•-

.
'

·au

....

· .. Ifthey . g~ me

another tie th1s year••
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$15
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60 cellular minutes
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:Meigs boys' cage camp to start Monday
:r- '

.:. The Meigs Marauder boyS' bas- ers covering topics ranging from bas'
:~etball camp will ~tart . on Monday, ketball fundamentals to motivation .
June 14 and run unul Fnday, June 18
Contact varsity coach Chris Stout,
irom 9 a.m. until noon daily. ~ny as SOQn
possible to ·sign-up, or
ltudent·entering grades three thro.ugh mail checks and names of campers to
6ine is eligible to attend:
Chris Stout, 1415 &lt;llenn Street, P.O. .
•' Instructors will include melljbers . Box 39, ~yracuse Ohio 45779.
;;f the high school .and junior high . Please make · checks · payable to .
eoaching staffs as well as current and Meigs Basketball.
former Meigs High School players.
Registration will also be avail\ The cost of the camp is $40 per able at the door Monday from 8 to 9
i:amper. this includes five days of a.m. If you have any questions call
instruction, a camp t-shin and vari- Chris Stout at 992-2158 or 992~us other special prizes.
6600.
~ The camp will also include speak-

You own the phone.

as .

~

Indians .. ~·

(Continued from Page 4)
Jeaping throw to get Berry at first.
14 of 15 before Cirillo's one-out
: In the same situation in the ninth, double in the sixth.
~lomar went to his left to scoop Jeff
Notes: 'Indians pitcher Charles
€irill o:s grounder on the outfield Nagy was in Washington to attend a
., grass. and threw to first .for the..linal state dinner at the White House for
Hungarian presidcmi Arpad Goncz .
out. .
- Brewers staner Steve Woodard Nagy, who is of Hungarian descent,
6cld the Indians scoreless for the first and his wife, Jackie, w~re invited by
(ive innings. · lte struck out Lofton President Clinton .... The ·Brewers
with twQ runners on in the fifth to will retire Paul Molitor's No. 4 jersquash one rally, and Richie Sexson sey on Friday before a game against
grounde.d into d ouble plays to kill Minnesota.... Cleveland lost for the
;wo potential others.
first time in 29 .games when it outhit
Burba gave up an RBI single to th~ oppositio~.
Dave Nilsson in the first , but retired

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June 9, 1999

Pomeroy • Mlddlepot1, Ohio

By The Bend

Five area players, coach receive All-Ohio baseball honors
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Here
are the 1999 All-Ohio High School
Baseball teams as voted by the Ohio
Htgh School Baseball Coaches
Association:
Division 1-first team
P-Mike DeLong, Centervtlle;
Adam Kirkendall , Vandalia Butler.
C-Ken Tirpack, You. Boardman.
I B-Frank Santore, Ybu. Boardman.
2B-Brad Dorrmann, Cm. Colerain.
3B- Mark Wheery, Dubltn Scioto.
SS-Terry Peuorint, Wooster OFAron Weston, Solon; Jtmmy Rogers,
Upper Arltngton; Chns Abshcar,
Vandalia Butler. DH-Brad Copen.
Garfield Heights
Player of the Year: Ken Tirpack,
You. Boardman
Coach of the Year: Tom Held.
Defiance · ·
Second team
P-Mike Myers. Dublin SciOto,
Jason Holtfteld. Defiance. C-Ben
Vannatter, Batavta Ameha. I BJohn Tellom. Massillon Jack so n

2B-Taylor Eckel. To\. Stan. 3BTim Ward. Chardon SS-Petc Shier,
Htlliard Davtdson
OF-Mtke
Brown, Centervtlle, Josh Holden,
Hudson; Paul McClain , Dublin
Scioto.
DH- Dan
Hoelter,
Perrysburg.
Honorable mention
Jeff Kathn, Lyndhurst Brush; Ken
Mantint, Lorain ~dmiral King, Jason
Smith, Zanesville; Christtan Snavely,
Defiance, Mtkc Ntchter. Perrysburg.
Division II-first team
P-Pat 0 ' Bnen, Cuya. Falls
Walsh Jesull, Dan May, Avon Lake.
C- Brett Counts. Bexley I B- Mtke
Enright , Col. Waterson. 2B-Chns
Tuule, LaGrange Keystone 3BShawn Hurst, Bryan. SS-Matt
Barhorst. Tipp Ctty Ttppecanoe.
OF- Mtke
Btxler,
Sandusky
Vermi lion,
Perkins ;
Scott
Bellefontaine Benjamm Logan, Rob
Gtpson , Northwest
DH-Zac
lant cek, Avon Lake.
Player of the Year: Pat O'Brien,

Cuya. Fal\s Walsh Jesuit.
Coach of the Year: Cltff Zunts,
Avon Lake.
Second team
P- Doug Deeds, Bexley; Dtrk
Hayhurst, Canton South. C- Pat
O'Bnen , Cin. McNicholas. I B- .
Domimc Frankey, Hamilton Badin.
2B-M tke Patnck, Perry. 3BAdam Crowder, Mantua Crestwood.
SS-Russ Ttgue , Rocky River. Of_:
John Spaeth, Hamilton Ross; David
Cook, Col. DeSales, Greg Mateyka,
Sandusky Perkins. DH- Ju stin
Hatre, Hamilion Badtn
Honorable mention
Steve Tracmg. Lewtstown indtan
Lake; Jake Thomas, Brya n, Chns
Leonard, Col DeSales; Craig
Bachman, Napoleon; Brian Woods.
Hamtlton Badm; Brady Stcmeck,
Canton Cent. Cath.; Brad McCany.
Kmgs
Mills
Kmg ~;
Dave
Forte nb augh, Roc ky River; Dave
Schaub, Canton Cent Cath .; Dan
Capretta, Chesterland W Geagua.

Division Ill-first team
P- Josh .
Newman,
Roy,
Wheelersburg;
Matt
Johnstown. C- Adam Haines, Oak
Hill. I B- Mike Brcyman, Attica
Seneca East 2B-Joe Staley,
Rittman.
3B-Nathan
Miller,
Sugarcreek Garaway. SS-Shawn
Burchett, Plain City Jonathan Alder.
OF- Matt Du'deli;, Kenton; Matt
Foster. Granvtlle; Rick E,tep,
Wheelersburg.
riH-Kevin
Weiscnburg, Gates Mills Hawken.
Player of the Year: Mike
Brcyman, Atttca Seneca East.
Coach' of the Year: Jack
Branon, Wheelersburg.
Sec:ond team
P- Rob
Carado,
Dayton
Oakwood; Kenny Ftelds, Ctn.
Madena .
C-Catche rs,
Matt
Schlosser, Bellville Clear Fork. IBScott McMullen, Granville 2BMike Perkins, Wheelersburg.
3B-Ertc McDamel, Genoa Area.
SS-S hawn McKelvey, Apple Creek
Waynedale , OF- Mike Ricc uui ,

Brooklyn; Bob Schetber, Warren
Kennedy ; Paul Young, Attica Seneca
East. DH-Chad Lahna, W.
Lafayette Ridgewood .
·Honorable mention
Jef( Keaton, Genoa Area; Matt
Ruby, N. Jackson Jackson·Mthon;
Rob Evick, Madtson; Rob Talpas,
New Albany; Clint Nageotte,
Brooklyn; Eric Jones , Sparta
Highland;
Nathan
Brown,
Brookville;
Glen
Hannah
Lucasville Valley.
Division IV·first team
P-Mitch LeMasters Toronto;
Brad Meyer, Fort Loramie. C- Josh
Jenkins, Tipp City Bethel. IB- Neil
Schmitz, St. Henry. 2B-Brent
Koestes, St. Henry. 3B-J ason Lyall,
Columbiana. SS-Mall Plunkett.
Tipp Ci ty Bethel. OF- Shawn
Gambill, Bradford; Justin Perucki,
Cin. Hills Chmtian Acad.; Matt
Rethman, Fon Loramte. DH-Btll
Gast, St. Henry.
Player of the Year: ,Josh Jcnktns,

Tipp Ctty Bethel.
Coach of the Year: Matt
Momson, Toronto.
Second team
P- Andy .Ftelds, Findlay Libery
Benton; Johney Smith N Lewtsburg
Triad. C-Tyson Pinion, N.
Robinson Colonel Crawford. I BJosh Thomas, N. Lewisburg Tnad.
2B-Josh Grover, Bridgepon. 3BMike Ward, Fat rpon Harding, SSNtck Baldwtn, Def. Ayersvtlle OFDenck Alsp,ach, N. Robmson
Colonel Crawford, Nick Barrell,
Fairf1eld ; Randy Lmlecot Jr,
'll.ronto. DH- Brian Call , S
Charleston Southeastern.
Honorable mention
Joe Dumtre, Def Ayersville;
Chad Knippen , Ottoville; T.J.
Muehlleld, Edon; Blair Fidak,
Toronto, Rob Nonnan, Columbiana;
Tom Pickering, Newark Cathohc;
Chad Feasel, Fostoria St Wendelin;
Chns' Horstman , Ottoville, Mick
Mt chael
Wtgal,
Columb tana;
Shumaker, Foston a St Wendehn. ;

Major women's golf tournaments suffer from identity crisis
By DOUG FERGUSON
WEST POINT Mt ss. (AP) ~ The
stze of the gallery and the size of the
check were the on ly thtngs that dts·
llngutshed the U.S Women 's Open
lrom any other stop un the LPGA
Tour
After fin tShtng two rou nds at Old
Waverly Golf Club, Kelh Kuehne
was mtldly surpnsed by her score of
9-under !35, especially since it wasn' t even leading the tournament
"Thts ts the U.S Open, " she satd
" Par ts a pmed possessiOn, btrdtc "
l1kc a bonus and bogey ts to be
expected "
Not at Old Waverly.
That Juh Inkster wo n wnh 19
btrdies and only three bogeys for 72
holes should not take away fro m
what she accompli shed She was a
great champton and next m hne for
the Hall of Fame. Her chtef chal-

Ie nger was Kuehne, a feiSty. 22-ycaro\d Texan de sllned to be a star
But women 's gol f needed more
than what Old Waverly co uld offer
In what should be the toughes t
tes t 10 golf. Inkster became the tlmd
champion tn the past fo ur years to set
sojlle ktnd of sconng record in the
Women·s Open.
·

Anmka Sorenstam wo n Wit h a

272 at Pine Needles 10 1996. Ali son
Nicholas won a l Pumpkin R1dgc a
)Car later with " score of 10-undcr.
lnkste r malched Sorenstam 's score
and shattered Ntclto\as' record m
re lauon to par
Blame unseasonably cool weatber
1n May for keeptng the rough so low
that players dtdn't thmk twtce about
pulling a fairway metal Blame two
days ofrain for makmg the green soft '
enough to make a S-iron approach
drop and stop.

St tll , one USGA offt ctai' predtcted
a month ~:arl1er th at - the wo men
wou ld "cat th at place up .'' And
In kster reali zed arter !\\'0 prncficc
ro un ds that unde r par would wi n
The sco ~l ng and the style of play
re llected the Stale Farm Ratl Classtc
tn stead of the one tourname nl could
SCI tlse Jf apart from What has otherWI SC become an Identity CII S IS
among the lour maJors 1n wome n's
go lf.
The LPGA Champion sht p IS tn
thtee weeks. It has the second-htghest purse 111 wome n's golf ($ 1.4 mrl lton) and is the second-longest runnm g event on the LPGA Tour behind
the U.S. Open. Still, tt 's hard to take
a maJor senously when tl has a lttle
sponsor (McDonald's)
The ftrst major of the year ts
named after a sponsor and an entertainer, although that can be excused

for the Nabtsco Dmah Shore.·
The Dtnah, the youngest of the
four majors, started in 1983 and ts
cntica l to the LPGA Eig ht tour
event s have food-re lated sponsors,
and no doubt several of those were
spawned by CEOs who discovered
women 's golf duri ng the pro-am festivities
' ~
Plus, 11 has a stgnature celebratton
ulthe winner takmg a plunge mto the
lake tn front of the 18th green (even
Pat Hurst, who can't swtm, got in up
to her knees). The trouble is, no one
sees 11 The Dmah always goes up
agamst The Players Champtonshtp.
If that's not enough, the Final Four is
the same weekend.
The founh maJOr may have more
than an ·identity crists on its hands.
For those Amencans who thought du
Mauner was ,a French settler, it actually ts a popular ctgarette brand tn

Canada ,-;- one reason why the tournament IS on tis last leg.
Because of Jegtslation in Canada
that will severely ltmit tobacco sponsorship after 2000 and eltminate it
after 2003, there IS no guarantee du
Mauner wtll be able to put up the
money for what has been a major
champtO nshtp srnce 1979.
The most hkely replacement
would be the Women's Bnllsh Open,
which was played at Royal Lytham
&amp; St. Annes last year and goes to
Royal Birkdale next year And that
might be enough to replace the U.S.
Women's Open as the "tough'esttesl
in golf."
Wtth Old Waverly behind it, the
Women's Open wlll have more problems ne&lt;l year when tlts played the
same week as the men 's British
Open. The date mtght make NBC
happy smce tt wtll have the only hve

golf tn the afternoon (and won't have
to woTTy about T tgcr Woods wmning
the Memoria\)
· ,
But wi ll anvone else notice'' Will
'
anycmc Cdre?
"Wtll we be on the cover of major
publtcat wns'' Probab ly not, " sa td
David Fay, executt ve dtrector ol the
USGA. "B ut rn terms of try rn g to
attract more fans, 11 may be that the
view ing audtence 1s greater because
noth mg compellmg ts running
against it. "
The USGA and LPGA Tour are
talkm g about a perenmal date for the
Women's Open, JUst as the men
always end the rr U.S. Open un
Father's Day Loo k for that date to be
the Fourth of July weekend
That would rule out the Deep
South, such as Old Waverly, whtch
mtght not be a bad tdea, anyway

By MEL REISNER
PHOENIX (AP) - Even Sammy
Sosa can' t do it all Fortunately fo r
the Chicago Cubs, he doesn' t have
to.
Re serve Tyler Housto n hit a
three-run homer with two outs in the
mnth mntng to gtve the Cubs a 5·3
win over Anzona on Tuesday night,
their second straight ninth-inning
comeback.
.
"We've got a number of guys that
are constant heroes on this team,
because we' ve won a lot of games tn
the late innings," Houston satd
Chtcago's latest comeback gave
· the Cubs 13 wms in thetr final at-bat
thi s season, ine\uding 10 in the last
20 games Of the Cubs' 32 victories,

17 are of the come-from-behind
variety.
"Our dugout just flat -out believes
we can get it done, " Mark Grace
said. "It doesn 't matter who the
opposition is - we JUSt believe, and
we've been doing tl. I just wish we
could get a btg lead once m a while
so we don't have these cardtac
games "
The mght before, Jose Hernandez
snapped an 0-for-17 slump wtth a
leadoff, pinch-h1l tnpl e in the ntnlh
and scored the wmn1ng run in a 7-6
Cubs triumph In a twist, Houston
was batting for Hernandez.
"Jose was in a slump before he
got that hit last night," manager Jim
Riggleman explained " He was

starting tonight, and he looked off.
balance with (Omar) Daal all mght. I
just felt that (reliever Gregg) Olson
was so tough on right-handers that
I'd better get a. left-handed httter up
there "
Houston, who had just one hit in
11 previOus pmch-htt appearances
this season, didn ' t want the spotlight
" I wouldn' t say I won it," he
satd. " You sltll have to make them
walk back to thetr dugout. That's
pnching ' '
Rick Aguiler~ (3-1} pitched a
scoreless eighth for the vtctory and
Terry Adams got three uuts lor hi•
third save . Starter Kevin Tapant
allowed four hits and three run s tn

NCAA seeks to bar freshmen from playing
basketball; Dempsey says plan may p~ss
By The Associated Press
Freshmen would be barred from
playmg basketball under a proposal
hemg constdered by a spcctal NCAA
panel , accordmg to USA Today.
The proposal, atmed at gtving
both men and woman players a year
to become acc u~t.omed to campus
hfe. ts given a 50-50 chance of being
endorsed, NCAA prestdent Cedric
Dempsey told the newspaper.
The 27-member panel studying
the proposal me\udes schoo l prcst·
dents, ath\euc dtrectors and retired
North Carolina coach Dean Sriuth.
Jumor college transfers and mternational players also would be barred
from playmg tn thctr first year at

sc hool
The panel has moved toward an
tnllial draft of recommeodallons to
be presented at a June 23 meeung 111
Chtcago, USA Today sa1d
Less rad1cal proposals also arc
being considered, incl udin g one
whtch would keep freshmen from
playmg unttl Jan I or a sc hool's second semester. Another tdea would
expand sc holarshtps to cover summer enrollment before a stud ent's
frrst full year at schoo l
A ban on freshmen players would
hkely dtsc ourage some top ht gh
school players from go tn g to colle ge,
presumably trymg mstc ad to go nght
to the NBA

Mystery letters say OSU gave
Katzenmoyer speci~l treatment
COLU MBUS , Ohio (A P} Anonymous letters obtamed by
Sports lllustrated allege that Ohio
State's star linebacker Andy
Katzenmoyer rccetved special treatment from professors, the magaztne
reported.
In a story headlined "Black Eye
for the Buckeyes," the magazine satd
both letters were stgned. "Sincerely,
OSU Faculty" and sent to Ohio State
President William Ktrwan last summer. Sports Illustrated said Kirwan
confirmed the baste facts m the letters, but disagreed wuh the concluSIOn that Katzenmoy!'r got advantages other students wouldn't get.
One letter satd, " The special
treatment football player Andy
Katzenmoyer has received thi s summer in order to be acadetmcally elt·
gtb le is ridtculous.''
Katzenmoyer, an All-American
hnebacker for the Buckeyes, mamtained hi s eligibility by takmg classes last summer tn mustc, golf and
another course titled "AIDS· What
Every College Student Should
Know."
"Something ts d#tmtely wrong,"
a letter dated Aug. 14 said The·
wnter alleged that Katzenmoyer had
taken a mass communications course
durin g the first summer term in
which all 22 students enrolled
recetved an A (\ran A- "even though
there was normal grade distribu·
uon/range for the course in previous
quarters."

,.

The letter also questioned how
Katzenmoyer, who 11 clatmed had a
1.72 grade-pomt average or lower in
five of hi s seve n semesters, was able
to get grades of 3.0 or htgher in the
first summer term . It also alleged that
Katzenmoyer was squeezed into the
golf class, which was full .
A second letter dated Aug. 24 satd
Katzenmoyer had been granted a
grade change for an art education
class he had failed the prev ious
sprmg.
"The academic i~te grity of this
University has become a joke," the
letter satd.
Ktrwan dtsputed that descnptton .
He told the magazine, "From everything I learned, nothmg was done for
Andy Katzenmoyer that can't be
done for any other student at the university. Some will take those facts
and see it one way. I saw that no
rules or regulations were broken "
Kat zenmoyer 's. grade
was
changed from an E - Lhe Ohio State
equivalent of an F - to a C+ in the
spring art course, Introduction to the
Computer and the Vtsual Arts. When
teachmg assistant Paula DtMarco
was asked by Sl why she changed
the grade, she said, "This is uncomfortable. I really don 't want to talk."
Katzc nm oyc r, who left sc hool
midway through hts JUntOr seaso n,
was the 28th player chosen tn the
tirst round of the NFL draft by the
New England Patriots.

seven inntngs.
"They were swinging the bats
pretty well," saii:l Tapani , who gave
up more than two runs for only the
second time in 10 starts. "I thought I
threw the ball real well to be able to
put them out and do what I did keep us in the gatne and give us a
shot.''
"We j umped on him and had a
· lead, but this just happens," said
Matt Williams, who had three htts
and scored two runs for the
Dtamondbacks.
Grace led off the ninth with a
double off Daal and went to thtrd
when right-lielder Tony Womack
hohbled the ball for an error.
Olson (3·4) relieved and struck
out Sosa, got Htll to pop out and
tntcnttOnally
walked
Henry
Rodriguez. Houston hit the first

Dempsey conceded that could
happen , but added, "College tsn't for
everybody."
The commtllee also ts studytng a
proposal that would d~lay the start of
the season more than a month until
Christmas.
·
The group ts Jook1ng mto an 1dea
that would tie scholarshtp luntts to a
school 's graduation rate
Bush's league
AUSTIN, Texas (AP} - Gov.
George W Bush· was part -owner
of the Texas Rangers unttl the
francht se was sold m 1998 fur
$250 mtllion
It was estimated that Bush 's
inittal $605,000 mvestmenl for a
share of the Amencan League
team would yield a $10 million
profit
.
He was the managtng general
partner of the Rangers from 1989
to 1994, when he became governor of Texas.

pttch into the right-field seats, sendmg Olson to his stxth blown save in
14 opportunities.
Daal allowed three runs, four hits
and struck out II - .one below ht s
career high -· in eight-plus mnmgs.
"This was my best game so far,"
he said. "All my pitches were good,
but tn the last two mmngs I lost a hi·
tie control and got behind "
Daal walked Hernandez to lead
off the eighth, Benito Santtago singled, and pinch-hitter Jeff Blauser
walked. But Mtckey Morandini hit
into a run-scoring double-play to cut
the Arizona lead to 3-2.
Sosa led off the second inmng
with his first triple thts season and
scored on a do~ble by Rodriguez.
Willtams scored on a sacnfice ll y
by Travts Lee m the second inntng
and as the lead runner on Kell y

Sltnnett's two-run smgle in the
lourth.
Notes: When Womack stole second, umptre Bob Davidson called
htm out, not see mg the throw roll
into center fteld. Davtdson sheepishly stgnaled safe after another look . ...
Daa\ 's career ht gh in strikeouts ts 12
last year at Ptttsburgh. ... The
Diamondbacks watved RHP Amaury
Tclcmaco and recalled JNF Hanley ·
Frias from Trtple-A Tucson. .
Amon a's 19-8 home record .leads
the majors, but the last two losses are
success ive. Damian Miller had to
leave Monday's game after Sosa hit
him m the Jell arm dunng a lollow,through Stinnett caught this game,
but Miller was schedul ed to return
Wednesday night. ... Sosa's 12-game
httttn g streak ts a team season ht gh.

333 Page St.reet, Middleport, Ohio 45760

•

Wednesday, June 9, 1999

Dear Ann Landers: Thank you
for pnntmg the letter on cell phones
and the dangers they pose. As a traffic safety expert on radto and TV, I
hear too many horror stones abul
tragedies caused by people who use
their car phones while dnvtng.
Your readers might be interested
ro kmow that in the followtng coun tnes, usmg ct\1 phones while dnvtng
has been banned· the United King ·
dom , Australia, Spain, Portugal ,
Italy, Braztl, Chile , Swttzerland and
Israel.
Must we watt until we see some

young mother lying in the street next
to her kids, a cell pho~e still in her
hand , or a businessman mangled
after a car crash with his car phone
next to his ear, before we decide to
do something to stop his public menace? ·• KENNY MORSE. "MR
TRAFFIC," LOS ANGELES
DEAR MR. TRAFFIC: This is a
do-tt-yourself proJect tf ever I heard
one. Are you listening readers? I
hope so Please keep reading for
anothe r letter that could help you
(and your children) stay altve·
Dear Ann Landers· As the ·exec-

utive director of the Air Bag &amp; Seat sit back
Belt Safety Campaign, I am pleased
Buckle everyone.
you told your readers to always wear
Children sit m the back.
Thank you, Ann.-- JANET
their seat belts and that parents
should'place child safety seats In lhe DEWEY, AIR BAG &amp; SEAT BELT
SAFETY CAMPAIGN. NATION back seat.
The greatest danger American AL SAFETY COUNCIL, WASHchildren race ts bemg unrestratned in INGTON , D.C.
DEAR JANET DEWEY. Your
a car crash. Each year, stx out of 10
kids killed in car crashes are not statisttcs are chtlltng The one that
wearing seat restamts. Nearly half got to me was six out of I 0 kids
would be alive today if they had killed tn car crashes were nol wear·
ing seat belts I hope every parent
been properly buckled up .
Studies consistenlty show that we wtll remember thts column when
won't g~t children buckled up unitl their chtldren get m the car.
Dear Ann Landers: After readwe get adults to wear seat belts A
study m the journal Pedtatncs found mg your column for so many years,
that a buckled driver is three limes I have dectded to JOin th~ "how we
more likely to buckle up a cht ld. met" crowd
Several months after the Japanese
Please encourage your readers to
· fo llow the ABC's of passenger safe- surrendered, I w~s sttll servt ng on
the USS Guam The ship was
ty ,
back to New Jersey to be
ordered
Always shde the seat back ·· and

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

Alco ot, gen er key
factors in drownings
· Question: My family and I play on the water most of the
summer. We mostly boat, sk t and swtm in the river I' m always
worried about someone drownmg. Do you have any advtce to
help us mmimt ze that nsk ?
Answer: Drowning is a leading cause of accidental death tn
the United States. Each year, about 4,000 Americans drown. The
ctrcumstances of these deaths vary considerably, but certain
types of accidents occur frequently. lnclude,d in this category
are the deaths of young children in baCkyard swimming pools,
inattentive swimmers who get in the way of boats, and ex peri·
enced swtmmers who take tn to o much air by hyperventilation
before attempting underwater long-distance swtms.
You can reduce your famtly' s risk of death in a water acci dent by encouragmg each teenage and adult family member to
enroll in a cardiopulmonary res uscitatiOn (CPR) course.
My medtcal dictiOn ary defines resuscitation as the restora'lton to life of one who ts apparently dead . That prelly well says
why CPR is so importan t, and the sooner tl ts started, the more
hkely tl ts to res tore ltfe to a drowning victim. If you have the
training , you mtght save a hfe by starling CPR before EMS personnel arrive on the sce ne . .If you don ' t know liasic CPR, I'd
suggest you contact your local American Heart Association
chapter for information about courses in your .area.
Equally imp ort ant , you should tnstst that each family mem ber rece ive sufft ctent mstru ctton to become a competent swi mmer. This includes ad ult s th at may have mt ssed the opportunity
to master tht s sktll when they were chtldren The area Red Cross
can dtrect you to s wtmmm g lessons.
One of the bi gges t risks for your fam tl y may be alcohol Thtr·
ty -e tghl percent of men and II percent of wo men tnvolved in
water- related acctdents , incl~ding drow mn g. had been dnnking
alcoholic beverages.
While the quanlltte s they consumed we re often enough to
make them legall y drunk , you should know that even a small
quanuty of alcohol slows your reflexes and mildl y tmpairs your
ability to make crillca\ decisions. Thts ts why I thtnk it 's foolish
to have any alcohol·before skiing or operating a boat because of
the potenttally severe consequences of an error in judgment.
People who dive into shallow water can sustain one of the
more senous water-related inJunes- paralysts due to injury of
the spinal cord and neck . The easiest way to prevent this tragedy
is to familiarize yourself with the area you're divin g in . _
It 's a good tdea to carefully go feel ftrst into the water before
your first di ve That way, you'll know the water level and you'll
ftnd out about any dangerous · objects under the surface that
can't be seen from the shore or from within the boat. Al so,
remember that the water levels in familiar lakes, st(eam s and
rivers can change from day to day and from season to season.
The best way to avoid water accidents of all types is through
the use of simple common sense - a commodity that may have
a gender bias since males of all ages are about four times more
likely to be victtms of a drowning accident than females . I sug' gest that you watch young children CONSTANTLY when they
are near water.
..
Individuals of any age should not "horse around" on the bank
of a stream, on a water slide, or whtle in a boat. Don ' t venture
into unfamiliar water alone. Don't take chances. Never drink
alcohol before .. going into the w.ater or getting on a boat, and
wear a personal flotation device whenevt;r you are near the
water but not swimming.

"The Overbrook Difference"

1740-992-64721
\

- HostThe

IHII

CuaMr

decommtsstoned. ARt . my room- .that keen on getting married then
mate was a tall, hapdsome naval heeause I had gotten a "Dear John"
offi cer, and I was a not -so- tall Jetter while in the South Pacilic and
Manne captam . We dectded to go on sworn off babes, but she changed my
liberty in New York and have some mmd--J_C , ATLANTIC BEACH,
well-deserved 'fun.
FL~.
We had heard there was a swell
DEAR J.C.. Thanks for a fine
officer' s club m the Sherry Nether- example of the wi sdom in ,never saylands Hotel. Upon entenng we were mg never
met by a mtddle-aged hostess who
When planmng a weddmg. whu
welcomed us wannly and seated us pays for what 1 Who stands where 1
tn a booth. Shonly after, an attrac- ''The Ann Landers Gutde for Bndes'
tive young woman showed up and has all ' the answers. Send a se lf·
was introduced as the hoste ss' addressed, long, business-s ize envedaughter. The young woman Imme- lope and a check or money order for
diately took a shme to my handsome $3.75 (this includes postage and
fncnd -- unlll he remarked that hrs handltng) tO' Brides, c/o Ann Lan
wtfe and baby were on the way from ders , P.O. Box I 1562. Chtcago, Ill
Hawaii Thts babe dropped old Art 6061\ -0562. (In Canada. send
like a hot rock and gave me her $4 55 ) To find our more about Ann
undt vlded attentiOn .
Landers and read he r past column s.
Six months later. we were mar· visit the Creators Syndicate web
ned I should add that I wasn 't all page at www creators co m

Catholic Sisters donate to Meigs youth program

"Family Medicine" Is a weekly column. To submit ques·
· tlons, write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine, Grcs venor Hall, Athens, Ohio
45701.

Because of our Mother's special needs, we wanted her to have the very best care
possible in our area.
Our family chose Overbrook center due to the fact that Overbrook had the special
services she needed readily av~tllable. Qur Mom is dependent on the use of a
Ventilator and we could not care for her needs at home plus we both work. ·
So we decided to make sure she had the·very best of care at Overbrook center and
we are very glad that she Is at Overbrook.
Russell "Rusty" Starcher
Coy Starcher, Jr.
(Sons of Ada Starcher, Overbrook Resident)

Page7

· ·

.

Houston's three-run homer ,helps Cubs slay Diamondbacks 5-3

The Daily Sentinel

Marie and Charles Sargent were guests at the rece nt surpri se btrth·
day party for their daughter, Pat Spencer of Tuppers Plams. The party
coo k-out was hosted by Larry Brian and Kim Spencer, Alhe and
Andrew of Ltttle Hocking. Others attending were Larry and Karen
Spencer, Guy and Evelyn Spencer, Tuppers Plains; Kay ~ Joe , Chris and
Bea u Batley, Amanda Millhone , Lacy Bunting, Steve, Carol , Paul and
Jami e Ervm, and Jess te Newell , Chester; and Ethel Maze, Belpre .
Visuors at the Thelma Henderson home last week were Clarence
and Nola Wollett, Whitehall ; Alberta and Paul Christian, Columbus .
Denny and Alice Sargent of Belpre visited Marie and Charles Sar·
gent recently.
"
Warren and Charl otte Van Meter vjsited George and Sandra Wil son,
Stephante Fisher, and Anthony and Kimberly Marctnko tn Alamogordo, N.M. They attended. Kimberly 's high school graduation.
Mary Jo and David Barnnger vtstted relattves m Cold Spnngs , Ky.;
Susie, Doug, and Mic hael Trout , J.J. and Ryan Batley.
Carol Van Meter, Bucyrus, John and Robin Van Meter, Allison and
Ashton , visued Warren and Charlotte Van Meter dunng Memonal Day ·
weekend and attended the high sc hool graduation of Greg Burke . ·
Marie Sargent attended the bridal s ho w~r for Jamie Erwtn give n
recently at the home of Larry Brian .and Knn Spencer, Lit Lie Hocktng .

The Sts ters of Satnl Joseph Char- N E.T.'s Frid ay's Fun , Food and Felliable Fund recently awarded God 's Jowshtp Program. As part of the proNeighborhood Escape for Teens gram, volunteers purchase and serve
foods nch tn nutrients whtle the cen(N.E.T.) .momes for two grants.
The first grant provtdes funding ter is open on Fnday mght. The
for htring a coordinator of volun· focus of the program IS to mcre ase
teers who wtll be respons ible for the consumptton of vegetables.
recruiting, trainin g, and scheduling fruns , and ' grai n products, whtl e
the many volunteers ullhzed by the decreasing sodtum intake.
The N.E.T. provtdes activlltes for
ce nter.
The person will also establish teens aged 13 to 18 years old on Frilinkages, augmentmg rappon wtth day and Saturday mghts from 6 p.m
community servtce provtders, seek until 10·30 p.m.
Programs offered, wtth adult
additional funding sources, and
supervision,
mclude monthly celefacilitate and coordtnate acuvities
brations, outings to Chnstian confor the teens.
A scheduler of volunteers .will certs, commumty events, overntght ·
also be hired from the funding with and after game events, Chri stian
that person to work dtrectly wtth the music, tutonng, non-vtolent video
volunteers and teens at the youth games, computer games, prayer,
center. The goal IS to provide posi- Bible discussion, adult tratning,
CATHOLIC SISTERS CONTRIBUTE - This is the second year the
tive role model s for the teens mentonng, and guest speakers.
Sisters of Saint Joseph Charitable Fund has given financial assisthrqugh mentoring with the empha· An average of 38.5 teens attend the tance to the Meigs youth program at God's N.E.T. The funding pro·
teen center each mght of the week- llfides money lor hiring a coordinator of volunteers and money
SIS on gtving teens messages of per·
, end hours The N.E.T. is funded toward the Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship Program. From the
sonal worth and importance.
Thts is the second year for the through the Metgs County Coopera- left are Margie Skidmore and Norma Torres, volunteers and grant
Sister's of Saint Joseph Charitable uve Pari&gt; h.
writers, Keith Rader, God's N.E.T. executive director, and the Rev.
Fr. Walter Heinz, volunteer and executive board member.
Fund to aw ard fundmg for the

Disabled Americ~n Veterans provides van to assist veterans
through a cooperative effort of the
DAV's national organi zation , the
DAY Department of Ohto and DAV
Chapter No 52. The van donation is
pan of the nati onwtde DAV Transponation Network.
In making the ann ounceme nt ,
DAV offtctals noted the free transportati on servtces will tnttially be
provided to veterans tn Marietta. and
then the servtce wtll be expanded to
more areas as volunteers drivers are
recrutted.
"This program was estab ltshed 111
1987, when budget constramts
forced the VA to tertnmate be neft ·
ciary trave l benefits for nearly all

Area veterans need not worry
about transponation to and from the
Chillicothe Depanment of Veterans
Affairs (VA) Medical Center for
treatment.
That VA medical facility recently
recetved one van from the Disabled
American Veterans (DAV}. a mtl lion-member-plus nonprofit organizauon.
The van wtll be driven by a corps
of local vol unteers organt zed by the
DAV and its, Auxthary. Headmg up
the effort. is Ttmothy L Ram sey,
hospttal servtce coordmator at the
Chtllicothe Medical Center.
The donatton was made pos~tble

----=Lir.
•
--•~

"'

.

DAY PROVIDES VAN - A van hal been purchased by the Dis·
abled Amerlcitn Veteran• to tntneport veterans to ltte Chillicothe
Mecllcel Center for treatment. While It I•' operating In W.shlngton
County only now, the aervtc:e will be expanded Into other coun~les
onc:e volunteer driver• are In Dlaca.

veterans ustng VA medtcal faciltlles
for treatment , "said DAV Nauo~al
Dtrector of Voluntary Servtces, Jerry
P Steelman. These benefits were
patd to veterans to help cover the
c9sts of ge tt tng to and from the VA
hospttal or clt nic for treatm ent.
"Among those affected by the
be nefit cut we re most veterans sec k·
mg treatment for se rvice-connected
dtsabiltttes. as well as indigent vet·
erans who have VI rtually no other
so urce of hea lth care ," Steelman
satd.

' 'T~e DAV st mpiy could not
stand astde and watch hundreds uf
thousands of veterans bemg left
wt thout health care stmply bec ause
th ey hve some di stan ce from a VA
hosp1tal and have no means of !ra n~­
portatton Thanks to contnbu11ons
frotn gratef ul Amencans. the DAV
was allle to respond to th1 s need ·
Area ve teran ~ n~.:ed1 ng tran sponallon as s istance ~ and who 11\IJ
wlthjn the Manetta area - should
contact T11nothy L. Ramsey at (7 ~0 1
773- 11 41. Ext 79Jt.

Tax Books -a re open
lor the 2nd hall
I998 Real Estate
Collection.
Closing date will be
July 9, I999·
This will include all
extensions.
Howard E. Frank,
Meigs County Treasurer

~ffJJl[ARAJf!!.!ft!!~twt~~~~~, I
I
I
I

You'Wided....-ythingand•ICIIhing,..WOIIIBd... ;,-t
Th/a#a des/aned to world
"'(t'l ~.. '!.1-u ,_I
--~-

-----

---

IG ALLIPQLIS

~-~J...-..'

Pllttn and stmpte. You can tooe 11)..20 lba. per~... ,JV'

month. deatroy your c,..vln• and desires for second "'.,.

h 11
b k 0 1 compulsive addictive eatlng
epn"", rea y u
~-t haKth8 foodt
behaYiOfl ~become tullrwiee BIIIID on
'
One person I rnuhl:
"I ptrll&lt;d rnro "'Y ftNorilt fast food jornr QN/ ordr"d rhr
uswd 11111aedlllly cllttStbtt'Jtr. I actiUilly1t4d Jiff~e.., tallnll~
iu jlavor" alltrrd..• , cu Jwa.r wltablt to forti "'Yitlfto jinuh On
iD.'tllf'day, f ltft Jtibd on my plait in d rrJIDIU'Oitl, at lvnch.
IOiflflltint I rwvtr do. '"1

Thursday, June 17th
.

PM Q·

PM

7.00
·1 .15
HQLIOAV
INN.
"'I
77 S
R
5
tate OUI9 7

(On Ohio Rt. 7 &amp; US 35)

I"'"' (\t&gt;ncm"'•' WA! /c" JJ lbs '" 0

'"""'''· '-'«•dnLmtduiM•.,..d. CA/ ICJr60

lbsm6Jnmontlu , LmrlttSrhmdtr(A.ublllft,

INJtrur Jo lb"" &lt;mcn11tr

Ch""'"' Wh•"

tCttrbonttnie tl.J tm1 70 tbs .,. .f momhl.
c•m/Wrsr,.piS,.nnnb"' SC) Irud&lt;lb'
JJ
Hood(PM Sl. ,__,.
FLJ lml JJ lbJ Ul 2 monthl,
Lyd~
tO~~t.~boro KY) los1 J6 lbs '" 2 lfWftlhs
Ko"" O.Mno f
NCJiosr j 0 lbst•
~::':':'~~;=~1st
mnrulu, Smtdy ·Brrlrttr (Bumnrt. ND/ lost F1
50 lbs m 6 Jn m011tlut . .for'""" \'&amp;.Ut o..r

'"

'"""'"'· Joy«

c..,,.,,.,,

c..m'"

J

Robin K•llar

PeterllerJI'lllll. The Advucate Newsp1per. MA. 3112197, page J

(Goon anendea)
toll 160 tbs.t

hypttoo'- _,lnlr and tn three ~ experience for
yourMII34 high powered flt-.llmlntlllng - -

oJ!i«r wWJ for rr~y

Allend Goen SHitnM'I limo• weight lola wnh

dollberate _ ..~~~~amlllk: ~
bOmblrdmenlwHII fat-dlotroytna ti!;IMtDIDgW.
'Tltafl right. The Mlltflitdlll Ia at1IUilblY
deoc:rlbed

11

a

...._,. Nduclng hWP"'OII- oils kind. You
1n conlrlll. You can enw a ol mt~~J~iftcenl
~=~~ mental reta.alion. You ,...., lllnk, '*'and

-

a

without.,. . . .llfl••t. J Jaued eo you can
In 3 ,_t!he, up to 120 1111, ln 1 year.t

" ... rh ~ polK~

drivers lictfl.ft,
"'~" Jaid, 'T1tis
i.1n) )'051. ·.t smd.
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PPA

1

�The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Yesteryear ·
•
essay w1nners.
are honored

Learning about life issues
"You ain't seen nothin' yeti'
Summer doesn't officially roll in until June 21 but already the heat waves
are with us and it appears that the song is going to continue for a spell. I
liope you have figured out a way to beat the heat. "Tain 't" easy. And what
did we do before air conditioning? If the equipment breaks down or the
power goes out, heaven forbid , we could find out.
·
. Our city cousins in Columbus got by Muirfield without rain and that
seemed to be a pretty big deal since the golf tournament usually brings on
the showers.
I was glad to see Tiger Woods come out of play with the win. He's y0 ung
and talented. I hope not too young to deal with the $459,000 prize money he
won. And this was his second win of the season. Perhaps, among his tal ents is the ability to handle money and fame . Seems as though there are
people who just can't manage the combo.
Middleport's Nora Rice has reoeived word that former Middleport resi- .
dent, Reva Beach. underwent major leg surgery last Thursday in a West Melbourne hospital in Florida.
The first operation didn't go all that well and had 10 be repe·ated on Friday. · Reva, who will be 91 on July 13, makes her home these days with Mr.
and Mrs. Nonnan Yeauger. Her address is 148 Virginia Road , West Mel"
bourne,
32904, in case you want to get in touch.

Fla..

It just "ain ' t'' fittin " '.
Floyd Bailey graduated from Pomeroy High School iri 1936. He now
llves in Phoenix, Ariz., and this year returned 10 Meigs County 10 anend the
Pomeroy High School Alumni Reunion for the first time since his gradua,lion. And wouldn't you know it? His n:ime didn't appear with the published
list of those attending.
Better luck next time, Floyd. By the way, don 't wait so long for .that next
time.

.

.

" Wasn 't it miraculous that only nine people died in that Lillie Rock, Ark.,
jetliner crash? Vie~;Ving the crash scene on television I thought it was amazin~ tl!at everyone didn't perish.
:'
.
Officials are looking into the cause of that accident. and .it is reported that
~~~~plane's pilot had been on duty for thirteen and one-~alf hour~. one-half
hour less than the legally permilled maximum time . Even though I'm con~!antly informed that flying is the safe way to travel, I usually figure, among
other things, when I get on a plane-which is as seldom as possible-that
the pilot has bee~ on duty far too many hours. Somehow that bugs me.

·
·

And, of sourse, although you are not living right off Times Square, a Jot
of you watched the Tony Awards presented on television this week, I'm sure.
ll's interesting each season. I think to note how many older shows are
revived for the Broadway' stages. If it weren't for them I'd be completely
lost. ,
Tiie theater and movies have really gollen their money's worth out of
Arthur Miller 's "Qeath of a Salesman" and bow about that sampling from
1
'Peter Pan" with the cast flying about the stage and Peter Pan flying out over
the show:s audience as a final movement? How do they do that in live tb~ ­
ater? 'There truly must still be genius life out there.
,

I take it you, too, are living· one day at a time. Since none of us arTived
with guarantees that's the best any of us can do. So make each one a dandy
and do keep smiling.

9, 1999:

As a part of their learning about
life and health issues, students in
the Meigs High School nursing
assistant class traveled to Columbus to visit Children 's Hospital.
They were taken on a tour of
the hospital and heard from the
staff recruiter on opportunities in
health care at the children 's facili ty.
Afterwards they presented pop '
tabs which' they ·had collected
which will be redeemed to assist
with operating expenses of the
Ronald McDonald House.
· In the bottom group picture
were , left to right , front ,Lacy ·
Banks, Heidi Matson, Jessi.ca Mat son, Stephanie Jones , Jodie Pool er, and Kelli Lightfoot, and bac k,
C . J. Scarberry, Chandra Moo n,
Tamra 0 ' Dell , Shannon Smith,
· and Dave Shuler.
In another session, volunteers
for the LifeLine of Ohio Organ
Procurement organiza1ion met
with the nursing assi stant students
and health classes at the hi g h
school.
Former Pomeroy resident s ..
George and Carolyn Korn , center,
told about their experiences with
Carolyn's heart transplant . Brian na Abbott of .Columbus, who is
affiliated witli LOOP, s,harcd
information about t~ e importance
of the organ and tissue donation
program.

005

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

St.

n

Rt. 7

Tupper• Pl1ln1, Ohio 45783

HtpDpf

740-985-3813

BuUdoaer &amp;: Backhoe

4" thru ~" Plastic Culvert In Stock

(740) 992·3131

l•dYoltay
Caal 'l'hl•
lummu?
.Apply IIOW

for

Mwt be 50 yeara
of age &amp; meet
H(]D i,.come
guideline•·

Lentes, a fifth grade studenl
from Rutland Elementary, wll~ ·
the overall county winner in the
1999 Yesteryear Essay Contest.
She was presented a plaque a
. the recognition program held at
the, Senior Citizens Center.

Shelly Materials Inc. · plant ·si•
located in Letart ·Falls held a community appreciation day on May 21
. with approximately 750 people
attending the all-day event along
the Ohio River.
The purpose of the event was 10
allow the c'itizens of the surrounding communities to . see our sand
and gravel . mining operation in
action while entertaining them with
tours of the plant, displays of actual equipment used in the mining
process, towboat rides on the Ohio
River and many other ·things,
accorqing to Scoit Wilson, adminis"
trative assistant for Shelly Mated-

A program to recogni1.e the winnerS in an essay contest condUcted
as a part of annual Yesteryear program of the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center was held recently at the Cen ter.
Winners from fifth grade classes
received trophies for their winning
essays. Judging was dorie by lwo
retired teachers with first and second
place winners being selected from
Meigs, Eastern and Southern Local
School Districts.
The winners, their parents, teachers, sc hool personnel an d RSVP volunteers who helped at Yesteryear
1999 were present for the recogni tion program wher.e trophy awards
were given. Cake ana punch were
served.
This is the 14th year for the Yestery ear · Program whic.h teaches
Appalachian crafts. to fifth graders.
The children are .required to write an
· essay about their e•perience al Yes.teryear.

---,-Community Calendar--

•

Friday, June 11, 1999

•

In Dr. Jackson Balles' Office
224 East Main, Pomeror
9:00 • Noon

:
.•

wiH be

by.

•.•••••••

In

Memory

Jan. 25, 1943June 9,1998
In Loving Memory
of Linda A.
]enkim
who paaaed away
one year _a go today/
The

TRUCKING

CONSTRUCTION
.'

*New Homes
.
*Additions
*Remodeli ng
Cali 1oday aboul epeciaJ

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE .

Care for Elderly

Agr:lcultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Ssnd

Under New Mgmt.

la11filf "'"''
Afm11phi,.
740-9tZ.3360

985 4422

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

Cheater, Ohio

. 51'.1 tlit yws roll by,
:Memorits will ntutr die.

Rmtmber ·
Cklallty Is Job One

In Memory OJ
'Dave 'BusKirk

99:1470 99Z-U01

6191'9 6-6191'9 9

Til" ,,,,,...,, tau 5tf1 II ll'lt
Sa"'"l' fo11"ll f md In IItt

740-592·1842
Duality clothing and ho usehold
Items . $ 1.00 bag sale every
T hursday. Monday thru Saturd4)"

Call For Free Estimates

Jerry L Preeqe ·
Crown City, OH 45623

·

~

~

l;iJ

;:..

Owner: John Dean

DBPDYSIG
PU.,I ·

THE APPLIANCE MAN

985·3561

j·

• We service all .makes • Used AppUances • We ~ll
parts • Will deliver
S1645 Bl
Rid e Rd., Lon Bottom, Oblo

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

lhe leadi11g dc:l
cnrpel cleaner

Call 985•383X

,,.

Gutters
Downspouts
;

2 vrs. old , 740-843-5556.
Window air conclitioner, runs on
110 , needs compressor. 7"0'·

985-3467.

No~ Stockiitg

-Host-

•Deep cleans safely
•DEODORIZES leaving carpet
smelling fresh
•Lifts matted carpet pile
•'Dry" cleans so you can use
CBipet right away
992-7028

Lost and Found '·

Found :- Small Pony on Stala Route
7 South, Crown Cily. (7~!))·2566253
.
c,
Lost : 15 Month Black Polled Lltn:
ousln Bull . Q,J. While /Kempe r

Road . 740.446-2158

70

· All Makes Tractor &amp;
110

Help Wanted

WANTED:suckeye Community Services
currently has a part-time opening in Meigs
County: 28 hrstwk: 8 am-11 pm, Sat/Sun. We
are S!larching for compassiona1e professionals
with a team vision and a desire to teach
personal and community skills to individuals
with mental retardation. The o,york environment
Is informal and rewarding. The requirements
are: high school diploma,/GED, ·valid driver's
license, three years ·good driving experience
and · adequate aU1omobile insurance coyerage.
B.C,S. offers comprehensive training in the
field of MR/00. Starting salary: $5.50/hour.
Interested applicants need tG specify position
of interest and send resume to: P.O. Box 604,
Ja~kson, OH
45640-0604. All applications
m.u st bepost-ma(ked by 6/16199.
.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

•.••••..•

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
' · Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rr. 7 Soulll
Coolv/1,., OH 4$723

'

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity ·

·•·· ·
'··

3 Family Yard Sale, Friday June·
11 ,99 . 150 Second Ave . 9 :00AM

- 5:00PM.
6 Family Ga rage &amp; Yard Sale:
101h, 11!h , 12th , 9·? 4867 S,R,

850, Rain /Shine.

ALL Yard S.lts Muet
Be Paid In AdYtnc41.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
1110 dlly beloowltle od
11 to run. SUndly
. edllton - 2:00 p.m.
F~dlly. Monday odltton

741-117. ..•.1

..

949-2168
412 TFN

WWK!.Sun•eiHome.com

New ConttiUCiion a
R-ng.Kltchtn Coblntll · '
Vinyl Skllng.ROOI..O.CklGoFIII•

Free E11ima1eo

Bryan Rrnw"•
Susan Reeveo

.
•

Thke the pain out

wants-championship golf.
Our Father's Day Special: gives him 3 days of unlimited golf for only *99. And
.
ALABAMA'S
kids under 18 play FREE with
dear old Dad.
So, forget th~ ties and go for
. the tees. He'lllove you even
more ... if that's possible.
800.949.4444

•

YOUN(i'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Addttton• I RemodiNng .

• NowGarag"

•Garagee
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE
· ESTIMATEES

• Eleelrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Oultera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio &amp; Porch O.Cka
FtHEatlmat.•

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740·992·6215

985-4473
.
. .
.

22 ·y,.., U.cal

7

SAYRE
TRUCKING

YOUR

CONCRETE
CONN.CTION

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
RNsonsble Rstes .

Qwlity Driveways,

Jq.e N. Sayre

Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience ·
Free Estimates

740·742·2138

740-742·8608

3/11/911 TFN

9-s, 1760 At 141
Boy Mower, Rolotmer, Te~
vi sio n, TV Stand . Kitchen Att·
pliances, Rugs, Curtains, Blar1·
kets, Minlblinds , Home Oeol-,
Crafts. misc.

Friday S/ 11.

• Malchtng

........... Wallldck

htlaConm..aen

Garage Sale: Saturday Jt.Jna lett\
8-3, 621 1/2 Third-Avenue, Next
To Grace u nlted Methodist
Church Parking Lot Car Seat:
Baby Blankets, Towels. Girls 2T
Boys 12.

Degneeerun.d

t.aadac;r...:;c=......:
.Jeremy .L. Roush
~•n 949·170 I

Lllll.e Tyke Toys , 55 Gallon F16W
Tank , Osh Kosh Clothes Anc:l
Lots Morel 10 Miles Out 14,, Fol·
low Sign·s. Tuesday Thru

Satur·

FRALEY .
EXCAVATING
I

tmestoneiT9P'P"

Ha!!"Df

•Bulldozer G
Backhoe Serulces
•1#111111

&amp; 1rt~illr Sil11

•Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS
Sitli11g &amp; Stl#lif
1·100·31 H391
Free /Estimates

•Septic Systems &amp; Utilities

Contractors Welcome

(740) 69.8·9407
1740) 698-6029

Alba11y, Oltio
5/25/99 2 mo. pd

A &amp; DAuto Upho stery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car' seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon •. Fri. 8:30 • S:OO
Over

40 yrs experience

740 742-8888
JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION
New Roors • Repaln •
Coaling • Outten •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing

Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks
74()-992-2068

Hill'S

•

Pomeroy,
; Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

740·949·2217
Sizes ·5' x 1O'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM, 8 PM

.

2 family yard sale, one d11y onlY:
(Thursday) 9· 5, :2 miles S:OUih ol
Tuppers Plains. at the Card Bo•
sign.
·
5 family, Thursday 10th·, Frida¥
1 llh. 9· 4 , Hoback Fld., Racin6,
Codner res idence. 16hp. wn•el
horse 42" mower. alum Ford truCk
wheels. kitchen cabinets. laundr•
tub·s , baby items , table sa..-,
Chnstmas items &amp; IT}Ore.

All Yard -SIIea Must Be PJid ht
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
d•~ before the. ad· IS to . run,
Sunday I Monday edition·
t : OOpm Frldlly.
•
Fo ur family yard sale SaturdllY,
June 12, 9am-3pm, David Spe~
er's. Main Street , Racine, adwl\.
and girl's clothes. girl's bike." toys,
ho useh old items- end misc .. rain ·
cancels.
Friday &amp; Salurday, June t Hh &amp;
12th . 3 tamily. first one In 4 yra.r
wal l to well clean up, everyth lqg
from baby clothes to chest treez·
er. go to 338 to Racine Locl&lt;s ..&amp;
Dam and follow s1gns, Drew FIS:fh ·
er residence.
Garage sate inside : 1-1/~ miiU
Hysell Ru n, Thursday &amp; FridaY.
ho us ehold items, clothes , new
qu~ltops. 74Q-992-5275.
,.. r

Pt. Pleasant

SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

)

&amp; VIcinity
Attentio n: Overstocked Saht.
Ra in or Sh ine Every ThursdaYf
Friday. Lowest Prices Anywhete
6n New PtayStalion Games, DYD
Movi es . D isney Movies. Music
CO s . Beanie Batues , Too Mucl\
ro List. 2nd House on R1ght,
Blaine Lane , Gallipolis Ferry,

WV. (304 )675-4493.
June 8,9, 1Elth. Sl'ladyGrove Trail·
er Park , Hartford W\1. Clothes,

Toots, Misc.

QUA.LITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

$10 per person

FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREn, POMEROY

CRBDrr
No Credit • Slow Craclit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

WIRRYING!!r
IS NOW LOCATED

No Embarraaament ...
.You're Treated with R11pectl

6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD II

'99

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

for reservations
985-4362 or 985-42~ 1

992-4119 OR 800··291 ..5600

WICKS
HfiOLI"G I"C.
We

Deliver

Limeston.e , Gra.vel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agricultural Lime,
Mukh, Top Soil
. (Low Rates)

stAn ~OUTE 33

'69, '74, '79, '84, '89, '94,
C~l

. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

•New Homes

Eastern High
Alumni Dinner
Sat. June 12
E.H;S. Gym
6:30pm
Dinner at 7:00 pm
Years honored-'59, '64,

FREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,

'

IOIEIT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Sunset lama
Construction

740-742-3411

TRI·SIATE MOBILE
POWER WISH

Trucks - tractor
New Homes_• Vinyl
Trailers - decks - driveways
Siding •New Garages
'
• Replacement Wlndo~ 1 Equipment Cleaned &amp; llegreased
JEFF STETHEM '
· • Room Additions
PHONE:
(740) 985-4218
• Roofing
EMAIL:
COMMERCIAL and.RESIDENTIAL '
~EM@EUREKANE~COM
FREE ESTIMATES '
(No Sunday Calls)

'.

·1 0:00 o.m. S.hinley.

175 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH

• Lawa Cate ·llalp
• Mldatu•nce ·,._Illig

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

" 614-992-7643

Linda's Painting

He's paid the mortgage, paid into the college fund and
spent countless hours with the kids at the ball park.
So, this year for Father's Day, give him what he really

740·992·3470

At. 2 North/ 8 miles out by Ray:
burn Road . Bunkbeds, Bean!, ..
Babies, N i nten~o&amp;Games, Atarl&amp;
Games.Lots Morel Thurs/FrVSat.

8·?

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh

es . ·Consignment auction- Mill
Street . MldQ:Ieport. Thunda~.•• .
Oh io Ucense t7693 . 740-9Ut
2623.
.
.

Rick Pearson Aucllon Compan~:
t.ull time auctioneer, complete

au.clion

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACTORY DIRECT PRICES

Peraonala

Start Dating Tonight! Have ·lun

playing rho Ohio OeHng Game, 1800-AOM.ANCE. extensiOn 968 1.

Auclloneerl~

Complete Aucllon11rlng Servlc:

service. · llctn•l'•

166,0hlo &amp; West Vlrglnlo, 30il;
n:l-5785 Or JOH73-5«7.

RIVERSIDE AUCTION IIA~N.' ·
Every Saturday Night 7 P.M.,

Crown CitY. 7&lt;10-25&amp;-1191!9

.

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Gall~ls, Ohio 740-379-2120.

.. -

10, ·I fJIJ •i. .\ '" ,, IIf I'"'' ,,,,,,.,, h)~ )um· .! :-. , ,,,,•., ,,, ,,, '", IIIII lm/Ut/1',/

.

, ·

ute 554 88tween Bidwell / Rio
Grande, Lots Of Stuff!

FREE ESTIMATES

11!!1

,

Registered .Fox Terr ier (n.o papers). female , not good with k~

60

INGELS CARPET

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

BLS.SELL BUILDERS,
INC.

.Free Estimates

.

N~w

Part Aott We ller &amp; Chow, 740·
388-8023.

day.

740·985·4180

f ~kr l~lli.l rim·•~~~~ ."it•tth'/11'~1.''

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE

· Howard L. Writesel

CJftftC~@ft@~i!iU~

· POMEROY- God's NET program, Friday's Fun, Food and F~llowsbip,
6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m Friday and Saturday nights. Free food and games, location Main Street, Pomeroy.

· POMEROY- Right to Life m·eeting, Pomeroy Library, 7:30p.m. Mon. 'day.

Ken Young Former Owner of

Kinens. 740-446-nao.

Big Sa.ltf June 1Oth, 11th. 9·? Ro--

.rr..

FrH Estlmstes .

11!!1

"I'M BACK"

1 mo .

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~
Commercial &amp; 1\llldentlal
·
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
. . . Phone 740..992-3987

Ct

Home . 7 Weeks Old, "740 -441 :
0391 After 5 P.M.

Portland, ·ohio

740-256-6147

ft .,

Free Sma ll Ki ttens . To GoQd

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

AG SERVICE"

~ft~~ft~ft~ft~~~
ft JD COISTBUCfiOII ~
;:..

Beagle Dogs To Gi'Jeaway, 74D-

(740) 843·1252

Phone:

.

«1-0829.

QUIIitv Craftsm~n~hlp
Guaranteed

SHADE RIVER

Giveaway

Small Repair, 7~314 . '

Lie. M00-50 """""'

•Paving
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
.
•Business
•JIIew &amp; Resurfacing
•Piaygrout:~ds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

Clon•l•f'd StCIIM

FRIDAY '

-,.rtlgoll.com

•

9 wesr SrimSOn. Alheno

2 Aider Mowers , Can ' Be Used·

53560 S. R 338·

price• thru July ott
Q~allty Buill Houaeo ,

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

.
MONDAY

New To You T11fi11 Shoppe

For Parts , T.V. Antenna . N·eeds

(740)667·6992

Pomeroy Eagles
. Clu'b Bingo On .
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
·PO!Mroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburit
ProgresSive top line.

*Jlandicapped

me do it for you.

· . LANGSVILLE - ·Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR, regular meeting, annual picnic, Saturday, 5 p.m. at the home 6f Anna Cleland, Langsville.
New elected officers to be installed.

Highy AppnweQ Govt. Grant. C4ll
1 -877 - 885-38~ Or Wnle To P.O.
Box 14300, S. Glenburnie, NeW
Bern, NC 28560.
'

2 adult female cats , 2 baby female
kinens, 740·949-3016.

Ught Commercial &amp;
Residential
.New Construction &amp;
Remodeling
FREE ESTIMATES

ELIM
·HOME

of painting, and let

POMEROY - Burlingham Modern Woodmen. dinner and meeting, 6
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Father's Day to be observed. Food furnished .
·
Everyone welcome.

Going Out Of Bu•"-' Sale: 40"4
Of! Store Wide , Wilton Cal"t
Pa ns, O,J.'s Crall ShOp, 23PO
J ackson Pll&lt;A, 7~2134 .
•

40

Construction

Phone (740) 593-6671

R. L. HOLLON

SMITH'$ ·

POMEROY -Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chillicothe, at
Veterans Service Office, 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Thursday, 10 a.m.
to noon and I to 3 p.m. to provide health care enrollment for veterans. Proof
of military service required.

SATURDAY

5t28J99 \ mo pd.

H&amp;H

Sllll mo.

TOM STOBART
tod~v at
740-992-7022 for
further inform1tion.
E"O

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Musi cians played a selection of his songs
as family and friends remembered
' the life and talent of velvet-voiced
Mel Torme.
"[ never mel anyone in my life
who was as excited about anything
.as much as . he was about evert
thing," actor Harry Anderson smd
before Tuesday's service in a small
chapel at Pierce Brothers Westwood
Village Memorial Park .

•••••••••••••
COUPON
FREE HEARING TESTS
&amp;6ru· nEARING AID CEnTER •

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

c.u

Mel Torme eulogized

•
:

VFW Post 9053, Thursday, 7:30

1·800·809·7721

20 Yra: Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

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

THE MAPLES

:

..

(

30 Announcements

9:()0-5:30.

hy

POMEROY .,..- Enterprise United Methodist Church, vacation Bible
school, Monday through Frid9y, 9 td II :30 a.m.

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

Full Line Of Water Storage TankaSeptic &amp; Cistern Tanka
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Ga1 Pipe &amp;
'
Regulators
OPEN:
9:00-4:30 Weekdays
· 9:00-12:00 Saturday

U1ilitie•

Teddy bears ·decorated the tables for the Racine annual mother-daughter
Activities -such as rock painting.
banquet held recently at the Racine Methodist Church.
a magical show, the moon walk ,
"Teddy. Be~r Picnic" was the theme of the banquet and the table center- tow boai rides and plant tours kept
piece bears were given ·as prizes during the evening with Alice Wolfe mak- the kids busy for most of the aftcrlng the presentation.
.
noon . Hamburgers and hot dogs
' Lee Lee, UMW president, welcomed the mothers and daughters to the were served all day and chi ldren
· Anderson, whose · character on
. dinner served following a unison grace. Sharon Hall was mistress of cere- received coloring books, rulers, and
the old TV series "Night Court " was
monies. The history of teddy bears was given by Karen Walker and "Teddy an activity book.
an
obsessive fan of Tonne. said
"Our ultimate goal was to show
bears Picnic was read by Jennifer Walker.
CHECKING OUT EQUIPMENT - These Southern Elementary Tonne "wi II be remembered as one
.,
A humorous reading, ''Why God created Eve for Adam" was given by our neighbors and the people of the School youngsters check out a piece of heavy equipment; a loader,
on
Melissa Harkness and Alice Wo)fc read a poem. "I Use to Be a Fashion community just what takes place at during a community appreciation day held May 21 at the Shelly ' of those people who didn ' t get
anything
but
talent
and
style
."
Plate."
· · a sand and gravel mining operation Materials Inc .. plant in Letart Falls.
· Olivia and Ellie Dudding sang "Close Your Eyes and He Will Too" and to remind them of the imporacconipanied by Don Dudding on the guitar.
lance of Ohio's aggregate mining about the dangers oi· abandoned
The poem, "Grandma and Me" was given by Stephanie Shuler, Marilyn industry," Wilson said. " Without mmcs.
Division employees lectured to
Bogard presented a reading, "Somebody Said" and Emma Powell and sand, gravel and crushed stone,
the
kids on the importance of stay Stephanie Shuler sang "If I Were aButtertly."
.
there would be no roads, concrete
ing
out of restric.ted active mining
· · Taking part in a -skit, "An Ounce of Prevention" were Chris Hill, Opal . bridges, schools, or buildings,
areas
atid abandoned mines: They
. will beJLiven In Gallla Cou•.!J area ~1.
Oiddle, Margie West, Karen Walker, Cindy Winebrenner and Marilyn Bog- ainong other things, and the quality
were
supported
by
the
Federal
ard. The program concluded with Judy Pape singing"Biess This House" of life as we know it today would
Mine Safety &amp; Health Administraaccompanied by Lee.
not exist."
Numerous bears were displayed around the room and colorful balloons
"If it can't be grown, it must be tion. ·
-American Electric Power diswere suspended from the ceiling. The table centerpiece bears and bear pin mined," he said.
played
information on the history
favors were made by Mary Ann Shoults.
. Some organizations on hand to
of its Ohio River ' transportati on
display were:
·
lleet.
-The Ohio Department of Nat- She ll y Materi als In c. di sIIi
ural Resources, Oivision pf Geo- played e,ducational material on the
logical Survey displayed education- importance of mining, the use of • .Call Tol Free l·IOG-634-5265 for an l~edlate ..pointmenl. :
al material on Ohio 's mined reclamation in re,turning mined
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
: . The tests
given a Ucensatl H•lng Aid Spedahst •
respurces.
ground back to a usable state and
·. groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calendar is not
- ODNR Division of Mines and the many uses of Ohio's mined • Anyone who has trouble hearing or.understanding conversalion is invited to •
designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any type. Items are printed only
• have a FREE hearing test to see if this problem can be helped. Bring this•
Reclamation bro1.1ght its mine res- · aggregates.
as space pennits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number ·
• coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 v~ue.
• .
cue van and handed out information
. of days.
UMWA • UAW ·ARMCO_,AND ALL OTHER
llli .
'
toh,
Whitney
Houston,
Bruce
. Among the famous people born
.:
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.~
• .
YVEDNESDAY
.
in · New Jersey were: Frank Sinatra, Springsteen, Woodrow Wilson and
~ TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Board of Education regular meat·
:t~,~~~i
·
AIOert Einstein, Alexander Hamil- Meryl Streep.
ing Wednesday, 6:30p.m. at the Tuppers Plains Administrative Office.

}'

~~ Southern Ohio Disposal

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

S@nJice•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
land Clearing &amp;
' ·
Grading
Seplic Syole,.. &amp;

RaCine UMW· holds mother- ••s~~~y activities were geared to
· h accommodate
the estimated 440
kids in attendance from the surd. aug hter banquet at ch ~rc
rounding elementary schools .

·· TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers Plains
p.m. with dinn~r at6:30 p.m.

•

' Personal•

Gentleman Satklng Companlonahap From Nice FtiNII For T Wa lkl &amp; F,iendahlp. Send Rtr
plies To· ~!53 Second Avenue.
Apartment t-403. Gatllpolis.
~

''n r .,..

Shelly Letart .Falls ·plant holds community
appreciation day for over 700 people

. RUTLAND - Appalachian Artisans Project meeting, Rutland Civic
&lt;:;enter, 6:30 p.m. Those interested in participating in brochure, web page
and Artisans' Guild project are to bring sample or photo of product.

9

.

"

I

'

•

r

. I

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June 9, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 9, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Qhlo

ALLEYOOP
ACROSS

PHILLIP

Abtotute Top Dollar All U S ~1ver And Gold Coins, Proorsels
Olamonda, Antique Jewelry, G~d
Alf1Q&amp; Pre 1930 U S Currency

Medical Procenor
FTIPT No expenence necessary

ALL CASH BIZIII

W1ltraln PC reqUired Earn 40K
Call 800-663-7440

Get $20 Blls For S12 son
5500 ·S 1 500 Nil&lt; Easyl

AcqulaRiono Jewelry
looking tor taad guitar
• M.T.S Coin Shop. 1 ~1 Second Mus•clansand
bassist
for group doi ng
A...... Ga~ . 7&lt;0- 28-42
cou nt ry and ol dies rock, John
Sterling EIC

An tiques, top prices paid. RJver
Ina An tiques Pomeroy Ohio
Ru u Moore owner 740· 992·
2526
Clean lata Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newe r
Smith Buick Pontiac 1900 Ea sl

ern A.,......., Galipolls
Wanl To S811·Yoor Stuff? Ca ll RIV
ersida Auction And Let Us Sell II
Fo&lt; You 740-2~9B9
Wanted To Buy 1973 Meigs
Year Book If Anyone Has One Or
Know&amp; Of Anyone Please Call

740-742 2512
Wanted To Buy

Used w ood

Splitter 740.245-M92

Peck 741}698-62 12

Free $5 Sawi&gt;lel lrw Req
I 800-997 9888 24 Hrs

Need 1 Ladles,..To Sell Avon 740
446 3356

Needed Babys111er Day Sh1 fl &amp;
Evanmg ShUt Preferal;&gt;ly In My
Home 1 Ch ild 740 446 3912
Leave Message
Nawspaper Carrier Needed for a
Sunda y Route Only Gallipolis
Ferry, Crab Creek, Jerry s Run
Road App le Grove Ashland·
Upland Road Glenwood 1 BOO
982 6397 ex t 1787 Leave Mes

Help Wanted

110

ACII'Jltles Auistant for tOO bed
skilled nursing facll1ty Excellent
QPPOftuntty tor the right candidate
to wor11 with our re~de n ls and be
a member of our team Hours are
evenings and weekends, part time
position Candidate must be outgoing, caring, cree.ttve and Willtng
to excel Restorative expenence
and certified nursmg ass1stant
preffmed andlor expenence wor~
1ng with rehab/medically complex
care needs Applicants send re suma to Rockspnngs Rehabll1ta
t1on Center, 36759 RockspringS
Rd ~ ~omeroy, Ohio 45769 Attn
Dena Warren AcU~Itles Director
or apply In person Monday

lhrough Ftlday EQUAL OPPOR·
TUNITY EMPLOYER
ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK:
Te mporary Pos111 0n Candidates
Must Be Accu rate At Data Entry
And Pos sess M1c rosofl Stills
PositiOn .Requires A Salt Starter
W1lh Strong I nterpers on al And
Communication SkillS ~urchasl ng
Backg round Helpful To Rece1119
Conhdent1al Consideration Fo r
Any Positions Submit Re sume

To
ATTN HR Dept ·CLERK
2t60 Eastern Avenue
Gaii~J&lt;&gt;II s

OH 45631

Fa• 740 441 3249

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Equal Opportunity
AHifmatlve Action Employer

Take Rt 35 Norlh From Gallipolis

AVON has a place lor you! Jom
the 11 beauty company! EnJOY
your own bustness Buy your own
products at cost Call 1 800 4
AVON or 740·594 4354
Awn Products Start your own InHome Business Work Flexible
Hours Enjoy Unllm1t8d Earnings

1 11811-561 2866
Bartender Wanted

740 441

1•211
Dental Receptionist Needed
Sind Resumes To CLA 475 clo
GaiMpolls Oa1ly Tnbune, 825 Th1rd
Avenue, Gallipolis OH 45631
Driver long Haul &amp; Reg1onal
Have A Career In 2 Hoursl 'Pa1d
Health Insurance 'Dental Plan
A~allable '40 t K and life In
surance 'Obtainable Safety and
Productlv1ty Bonuses Appllca
lions Processed In 2 Hours Or
Less! Reoulroments 6 mo!'llhS
OTR ewer 23 Years of age good
driving record Conllnental Ex
press, Inc (BOO) 293-0700 (BOO)
695-•473 Recent Driving School

Graduales We~omel
DRIVING PDSITIOHS
AVAILABLE
ClasaAOTR
Single Driver Late Model Ken
worths With Reelers West Coast

Carner
ClassBOTR
Team Straight Truck, Late Model
Frelghtllnera With Sleepers Mus!
Have Air Brake Endorsemants
800 ~hie Rad1us, Home Dtllllver

les
Bolli Poslllons;
Alleast 25 Years Old
AIIMSI2 Years Exper~nce

Good MVR

Weel&lt;ly Pay
Health Insurance Available
Work Wei Wrlh The I'WIIc
For More tnformallon Call 800·

437-87&amp;1. Hrs 8 30 AM ·5 PM
Easy Work I Excellent Pay! As·
Slmble Products at Home Call
Toll Free 1 800·46 7-5566 Ext

12170
Health Managem•nt Has An Im-

mediate Opanlng For RN, Good
Compensation Package, 11 lnterasled Cell 740-«6-3808 Or Ap·
ply AI, 782 Sec:ond Avenue, GaiN
polio, 45631 EOE

Part Ttme Ofll ce Help Mise Ou
t1es, Mu s ~ Have Reliab le Transportati on 4 5 Hrs Per Day, 5
Days A Week Apply In Person
AI Burl1le Oil Company Gallipolis,

!londay lhru Friday
Johnson&amp; Supermarket, 85 Vine
Street. Gallipolis, Applications
Being Accepted For Cashier JOI
lice Assistant Evenings And
Weekends Must Be At Least 18

Yoara Old &amp; High School Gradu·
ate, Work Experience Required

Inquire BelwMn 8:10AM ·1 00
PM
Landlord n.eds part time main-

- - . 741J.ll92·56!58

REAL ESTATE

Oh~

7

cays Ids Inc

262 3758
Rel iable ~e rson To Stay W1th El·
derty Gentleman Weekends, 740

3 Bedroom built In kitchen. 0 R ,
bath &amp; laundry Mid 30 s
3 Bedroom Spht Entry Brick
Home on Route 2 at Ml Alto
Built-In Kitchen 01n1ngroom, LR.
3 Baths FP, Woodburnlng stove,
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895·

36B1

Momlngs
Scen1c H1lls Nursing Center IS
seekmg a pers on with computer
knowledge In M1crosoH word Ex·
cel, Lotus I 2,3, word Pro and
Payroll Expenence tor our Secre
tary Payroll receptloM ISt Pos1tlon
Please apply at 31t Buckridge
Rd 8 ooam 4 30pm

WANTED LPN (Fuii·Time) At
Two Commumty Group Homes
For People With MR/00 In Galli&amp;
County Hours M F Daytime
Hours Or As Scheduled For
MediCal Appomtments Or Issues
ReqUirements Current Oh1o LPN
License NAPNES JOOPNES
Vahd Drivers License Three
Yeats Good Dnvlng Expenenca
And Adequate Automobile tn·
surance Salary $8 50 /Hour Ex·
cellent Benefit PacKage Send Ae
sume To Buckeye Community
Services PO Bo)l( 604, Jackson,
OH 45640 Oeadlme For A)Jpllc
ants 6/18f99 Equal Opportunity
Employer
W1ldllle Jobsi$21 60/Hr Inc!
benel1ts Game Wardens Securi·
ty Maintenance Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For app /exam
in fo
call
1 8'00 813
3585 Ext 8827 BAM 9PM 7days
tds 1nc

Business
Training

140

310 Homes for Sale
13041675·5162

Recruiti ng People For Discovery
Toys For Mo re Information Peg
gy Russell 740-388-8983 1·888 -

3 Bedrooms , 1 Bath Laundry
Room A/C Garage Nice Yard,

$38 000 7&lt;0·367 0241
3BA Home New Root New Car
pe t Large Lot Georges Creek ,

Kelly Drtve Call(304)675 4230 ,
after 6PM
By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate w1ll sa!! house w1th·
out lots for $89 000, 740·992

2704 740·992·5696
By Owner Sandhill Road /Point
Pleasant Brick Ranch • 3Bed·
rooms 2Baths Basament Two 2
car garages Acre Lot (740)441 ·

061B
Gallipolis Area 2 Bedroom Home
Asking $26 000 Firm Immediate
Possesslonl740.256 6702
House and Lot for sa le 2 bed
rooms 1 bath, $600 00 Down! Located on Kriner Ad Contact Oa
vld at 1 (800) 333 691 o
Family Home With Pool 2 Car
Garage f Apt Albany 7 M1les

214 0452 Reg 190 0~· 1274B

180 Wanted To Do
E &amp; S Lawn Service Design lmptementall on
and Service
Ava1lable fo r Sprmg Clean up
fert1hzmg and planting Free astl
mates Satisfaction guaranteed

245-5341

Restored Victorian home s!tuated
on 12 acre s. V1llage Middleport
secluded and private appoint

menl call740.992·5696

320 Mobile Homes

for Sale

I

12x60 Hometta Suitable for ad
ding to eKist!ng home or storage
stru cture
Good
condition

14x70 HollyPark Mobllehome,
2BR Large Bath/garden bathtub
separate shower large living
room wfhigh ceilings, new carpet,
k1tchen has new top -of the line
gas stove, has gas heat central
air Installed In 1994 new steel
doors &amp;storm doors Asking
1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·
bile home, 740-992·5039

modeUng and Rolling (7401 446·
6802

1988 Clayton Good Condition
New Carpet Central PJC On rent-

330-945 4505

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View
Gallla County,
532.000 More Acreage Avallabla

Siding,

Excellant

Condition

$16 500 00 (740) 408·8113

pump, 74o-742 2795 after 4pm

den Tub, CA, 8x10 Building, an

renled lol (3001675-4871
1100-383-611112
Good aatectlon of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedroom• Starting at

s

~ 000 Sq Fl 740-698 2613

--

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740·
385-9821

°

·Ttade In's "Best of the Season!
7~12x65

Apartment for rent In Mlddleporl,

no pots 740-992·5858
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Ct)rlsty's Family Living, aparl~
manti home &amp; trailer rentals,
740 992 4514, apartments avail·
able, fumlshed &amp; unfurnished

Equal Housing Opportunlly

1&amp; ACRES
READY FOR HORSES
In The Country, West Gallla
County Lots Of Meadow With
New Barns And Fencing, Ready
For Animals Lots 01 Road Fran·
tage More land Available Now
Oi'Jided Into 5 &amp; 10 Acre Tract ,
Take Both -15 Acres For
$27,500 Double Wldes Are Permilled 5% Down Land Contract
With Approved Credit Free

Maps 1-800 213 B365
lot 2 15 Acres. Water, Sewer,
Drlvaway On WoOdsmlll Road,

Bidwell, OH 740·388·9675
2 ·20 ACRE TRACTS
For Only $22 ,000 Each Take
Both And Get DISCOunt Great
Hunting Land, Full 01 Deer Has
Road Access To Wayne National
Forest Land Contract A'Jallable
741}28&amp;0081

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres,

We Pay Cash 1-B00·213·B365,
AnthOny Land Co

RENTALS

41 0 Hou1es for Rent

All Electric.
Par~
sons No
No
Lawn, First Floor For An Ap~
pointment To VIew Phone 740 ~
446 9539
First Avenue, One And Two Bedrooms From $275 ·$350/Mo , S•
curny Deposit. Flelerences Ae·
qu1red 740..441-0952
Frenchtown Apartments Now
Accepting Applications For 1
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised
Aparlment Fo( Elderly And HandIcapped, Equal Housing Oppor~

lunRy, 740·448-4639
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park. AC. No Pets
References Deposit $325/Mo

740·446·8235, 740-446.0577

plea Cal740-441·19a2.

Candle Croalions,
638BrlckStreet
Rutland, OH •5n5,
740-702-.2512
Candleo Of All Styles And 'l'IPn.

Will Do Refills O'Jer 70 Varlellea
Of Scents, Hours Monday ·Sat·
urday, 10·9, Sunday 1·5, Also,
Making Body Lotions &amp; Shower
Gels!

2 BR furnished hOme In Mason
No pets References required
2 BR House at 2219 112 Lincoln
Ave Pt Pleasant WV $275
monlh+deposlt HUO approved
reference required Stove/Refrig·
erator Included
No pets
(304)882·2099 between 7 30·

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
740·~390

Modern 1 BR all Utilities paid except electric Gallipolis Ferry
Area S250+deposlt (304)675·

740 992 5633
N~e

2 bedroom apanmem In Syr·

acuse, $285 per month, trash in·

eluded 740-687·3516
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water

Sewage Trash $31 ~/Mo , 740·
446-0008

2· 3 Bedrooms $300 month De·
posll &amp; Referooces. No Pets! Lin
coin Ave Homestead Really

Rlverbend Place Is accepting
appointments now for 1BR HUO
Subsidized apt for eld•rly &amp;

2BR House New Carpet Newly
Remodeled $300/mo + ulllitles
Extra lot Reference/Deposit

handicapped Equal Opporlunlly
Housing (304}882·3121 or After·

noon,(304)8B2·3274 Leave Moo·
saga

(304)675-1070

5PM (304)675-3469

tease, 1835
lbs, $.25 par lb (lN)736-ol398

Tobacco Allot For

MER CHA NDIS E

Bedrooma $325/Mo , $325 Do·
posn, 740-446·4107
Middleport, 3 bedroom, $300 per
month plus utilities, 740 992·

Forlease

510

6M2
New haven 2BJ:l Home, Garage,
River Frontage Deposit, lease,
References (3Q:t)934-7462
Waterloo, House, $325/Mo , In·
eludes Water &amp; Garbage. Deposit
&amp; RaferencBI, 740-643·2916

14 )1(70 2 bedroom, total electrtc,

$250 renl. $150 deposll, no polS
740-742 2714
1 4x70 Mobile Home 2 bedroom,

551 Turhy Run, Cheshire, Ohio

$350 00 monlh $150 Dtposll
(7&lt;0~378·9840

2 &amp; 3 bedroom 1oo~te homes, air
conditioned, $260· $300, sawer
waler and trash Included, 740·

992-2167

'95-16x60

740-388·8984, 740-441-1 &lt;01.
Two bedroom mobile home In
Recine, 1325 month we pay wa ~
t•r, 11wer and truh, 740·992·
~

Household
Goods

2 Bedrooms, Kanauq,. Area,

$275/Mo, 740·367·7015
Air Conditioners, Used Different
Sizes Guaranteed! 7-40·888·

0007
Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges, Aefrl·
grators, 90 Cay Guaranleel

French Clly Maytag, 740·448·

7795

GOOD

USEO APPLIANCES

Washers , dryers refrigerators ,
rangu Skaggs Appllancts, 76

VIne Slreel, Call 740·448·7398,
1·11811-818.0128.

Strawberflel, YOU Pick, WI Pldl
Cloaed Sunday, Taylor• Berry

Patch, 7•0·2•5 9047 2854 Karr

Road

Antique Bottle Ad..,ertlslng Sale
Pleasant Armory Quality Dealers

Needed, 740-992-50118

1989 Oodgf, ton, PS. auto, utllily
bed, $3,600, concrete flnithlng
1995 GMC Jimmy •x4, Loll Of
Extras! Excollenl Condllionl Ratoll
Value $18,800 Asklhg 114,800,
740-446-n29

730 Vent &amp; 4-WOs

•tAKJ1032

1918 Chevy Ullllly Von Auto

•

Chevy Conversion Van ,
Ill
loaded
$5 700

1

Mlleo $9,400 Call bofott 9PM,
(304)675·7908

580 B Caae Backhoe Extendaboom $10,000, 740.379-2027

1995 Ford Rangar, ~ Speed Air,
AM/FM S~rao Wllh 57 ,000
Milas, Asking $9 500, 74D-3799270

CtOdlt Approval, JD1219 JD720,
NH474, NH•89, NH488 Hayblne,
J0335 NH830 NH8!50, IIF1580,
NH851, Round Balers, New John
Deere Round Balers, Mower Con~
dltlonars 0% 12 Monlha, 275%
24 Months, 3 75% 38 Montha,

4

7~%

•8 Months, 5 ~% eo

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

92 Chevy Astra, loaded muat

.... 740-992 2019

-

Motorcycles

1980 Suzuki 750 18,000 Mlleo, •
Good Condlllon, $600, 1981 Ya·

FlatBed Trailer for Sale (300)4!58·
18!58

$25 21. 5 Gal White Rool Palnl
$57 69, Anchors $5 Doors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters , Plumbing &amp; Electrical
~arts, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Coteman Air Conditioners ll Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Cal-~53

Problems? Need Tuned? Calllhe
p£ano Or 74Q.446-4525

JET
AERATIOH M9TORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebulft In Stock
Cal Ron Evans, 1 ll00-S3'r·~28 .

mond Color, $200 OBO 740·387·

New, Window Air Conditioner

7500 BTU $200 00 (30.)675·
5192 Laava Me881ge
Oheuaem 8' ~all pool ,table, Ughl
sue•• &amp; mise $1 000, 740· 742·
2572
Pool Table. 3'K6' oversize with 31
4" slate New Cover, Balls, &amp;
Sticks Excellent Condition

$500
500PM

Aller

(304)875·~093 .

Prlmtltar- trH OINCTV Summer
Promotion Call now 1·888·265·

2123

Holland 477 Hay Bind, 641 Ford
Tractor, Set CuiUvators, Sickle
811, Mowtr FOr Farmall Cub, 740-

110 BTU Good Condition, $125,
Armoire Wood $150 740·379
2720, 7&lt;0·258-8989
Wanted to buy· couch and chair,

raasonaltly priced, 740-8112-8942.

Walorllna Spacial 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 PSI
$31 00 Ptr tOO, All Brill Com·

Livestock

630

Black Anguo Bull7•0·258-1621 ,
L.....,Moosage
Outstanding Angus And Chian·
gus Bulla, Reasonably Priced,
Slate Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio

740-2118-5395.
Perchtron Mara, Regiatered 3
Year Old, Trained Harnetl &amp;

Siddle, $3,000 1108-473-'1181
Quarter Horae (Mara)

840

560

Large Round Baloa Of Hay, S15,
Square Balea of Hay For Sale

(304)675-5072

TRAN SPORTAT ION

2 mala Etii:Tmo spilz puppies,

1986 Dodge Coli, 4 door auto.

$750 oo oeo (740)-258-9220

1987 Grand Am, Air Conditioning,
Till, Cruise, Aulomallc, V·8, Sharp
Carl $1,200. 7&gt;10-+11 1083

ohoto, $50 OJCh, ready lor good
Home, can 741l-992·546~
AKC Registered Blac; Labs
Have been wormed, _.,,o,t&gt;o
each 2 females, 5
Yellow Female AKC Registered,
2
ld h
b ott
yrs 0 ' ouaa r en, too 00
7
(300)6 5-6048
AKC
Registered Miniature
Dachshund puppies, red dap·

s

a

~·· 740-992·9989&gt;
AKC Whll G
Sh h d
ep or
• · orman
Pups Pick ' 1 Male and 1·Female,
Lam (7&lt;0~205 9213
AKC, black Labs, S malta, 7 wks.
Old, first shot• &amp; wormed, $200,

da1 7•0·949 ·0•0~. eves 740·
949-050e

(304)675-1183, A""' 5Pr,t
1990 Cougar, high miles, runs

groat, loo;o good, V·8 $2100,
740-949-2838 or 7&lt;0·~·2045
1991 Dodga Spirit, vory good
Locally

Like New

388•8972

l'fi\

~~WfV..l

OUT Of

Many Extrasf (740)·
T

me:~~"

:Jf\p.,p(

:'&gt;\OQ..IN.K..~

750 Boat• &amp; Moto111
for Sale

~TTf\EMAU..I

Bow, 3 OL Mercrulser, Alpha 1 II
243-9391

:

Bass boal, 40 hp Mercury trolling
motor swivel seals live well &amp;

more, $1 500, 740-992·5847
R1ver campsite tor tent and ~
tlte lor boat w1th water, cemenl

patios, 740.992-5956
WHATIA

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

'(A

MEAN 1

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Access
To Over 10.000 Transmiuions,
eve Joints 741}245 5677

-

,New gas tan•• &amp; body paris D l
A Auto Ripley, WV (30•)372·
3933 .. 1·800-273-9329

Campe111 &amp;
Motor Homes

790

OwneCII

S3,000 00 (700)·«8·1543 Alter

e.oopm •

1992 Goo SIOrm cioOd Condlllon,
A/C, Tinted Windows, 740·24~.
5156
198~ Ponllee F reb•rd AJC, Au·

to malic, V·6

1979· 1911 Coachman Motor
Home Dodge Chassis New
Starter and Water Heater,
Equipped with Roof Air Runs '

2.
5.

29

3t

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Mtke
Lawrence's
" Pnv~t c
Lessons 2" has been released On a
dtsk, 11 reqmres Wmdows 3 I or lat·
e r and three megabytes of hard-dtsk
space In over 100 deals, you leam
about more-advanced topiCS than m
the first volume Here, Lawrence
c overs crossruffing, dummy reversal,
loser-on-loser plays, trump coups,
Simple squeeze s. endplays , and
c ounung From whtch secuon does
tlus deal come'
In f1ve diamonds' doubled, declare r ruffs the hean-kmg lead and draws
trumps m two rounds, East pnchmg
a hean How should South contmue?
If the spade fmesse 1s workmg,
there are II easy tncks Bul what
chance does that finesse have? (You
are g1ven mulltple chmce at thts
po mt, and at several stages of each
deal ) The an swer IS zero percent
West IS known to have the kmgqueen of heans If he has the spade
kmg too, that would leave East wnh
o nly 13 htgh-card pomls, wh1ch tsn ' l
enoug h for hts four- heart rebtd
Ins tead , play a club to dummy 's
queen East wms wnh the ace and
returns ,, heart You rull and cash the
club km g, droppmg the jack from
East No w the contract 1s guaranteed
Lead the c lub nme (or seve n) and
unless WeSI c overs, dtScard a s pade
I rom the dummy You don't care tf u
lo&lt;es to East's hypothetical I 0 ,
becau se the spade queen would diS·
appear o n yo ur e stabhshed club seven (or nme ) h IS a classtc loscr·Oll·
loser play
The dtsk 1s $ 37 95 postpaid from
M1ke Lawrence , 131 Alvarado Road ,
B erke ley, CA 94 705

•

Don I ftl SIIMtf by high pnCt&lt; r
Shop tho doulf/od socttOR

__ __
SERVICE S

':":":""

810

__;_

"
•'

Home
Improvement•

•

WATERP~

'

_ _.;.:;.,IIA~S::,EM;;:ENT:,;,;:.:.:.;:.__ ~
unc:ondlllonal IIPatlme guarantM
local ref•r•ncea furnished Ea·

'"

llbtllhed 1975 Call 24 Hrl (7-!0)
••8·0B70, t-800·287-0578 R(lg· ,
tlfl Wlterprooflng.

:-~-~--------- :

...ppllance Parts And Strvlce· AI •
Name Brands OVer 25 Y81rt Ex· ~
perltnct All Work Guaflnteecl.
Fronch City Majlag. 740·«8·
1795

mobile home repair and

'""'* For

before mov1ng onto new endeavors 1n

Livingston 1 Basement Water
Proofing , all basement rtpalra
done, free estimate&amp;, nretlme
guarantee 12yra on Job exp8riII&gt;Cf (3001895-3887

Wily Call Anyon. Elsa? Wo Can
Do II Alii MIR General Contra·
cling

Electrical ,

Carpef1try,

Ral-lulldarl

Tails
Rat Terrier
Puppies
Docked 1st shots, wormed

$75 00 each Call btlora 9PII,
(304)675-79&lt;e

Call Looks I runo groal, $2800
(3001876-2908

~R~eg~l~ot:,er~o~d~A~us~l~ra~ll~an~~:~
189 Buick Par; Avenue Fully
Pupplaa, All Colors,
Equip .Everythln9 workll Wtll
Maintained., wilt 1 car 132K
$2,800 00 080 (740)256 190tl

•

carda
1WV028582.
Call
(304)458-1049 BP t528-80112

840 Electrical and

Refrigeration
Rlllclenttal or COmrn81elll wiring,

now

serv~o

or'i'tpalro Muler

L~

cenud tlectrlclan. Ald•nour

Elaclrloal, WV0003011, 304·875·
1788

ASTilO-GRAPB
Thursday, June 10, 1999
You're much closer to nchtevms
your goals than you might reuhze, so

free estimate call Chet, 74().992~

Build new or repair aid, no Job
too small or large Major credit
2 Cara 1988 Ch•vy Corsica
loOkl I runa great. $1500 1991
Chevy Ooralea auto, ale, AMIFM

I WEDNESDAY

742-2884

6323

"
LS paci&lt;ago,
· 11 ,000 mllot,
can
Iller 6pm,740-992-&lt;11,..

ln1trument

29 Biblical weed
30 Champagne· .:;;:.:.•
bucket
~ ' -::
31 Promontory I ·:1·
37 Peanut
"~:
product
.L ; .t

Pass

•

1987 Flealwlng 2-4' motor home,
Chevy chassis, roofalr, cab air.
Onan generator, gas &amp; electric,
refrigerator &amp; stove good tires,
awning, only 27,500 miles, 740~

740-258·1417, 740-256-6228
1997 Thunderbird Sport Coupa,
70,000 mllll, "'IPBIPS, dolu••
f"'"'''
V.-8, baautlful car, aunrool, tlat
II OK, oallfo, $7 960, 740·9•9·
~

23 ~hlnelever
24 Arctic end
lndien
25 Actro. .
Turner
26 llfMII elrllne
27 Old airing

36 Old

THtllment . , •
book
'
40 Jewlah least - ·
41 'IIOe heir do •~ ·
42 Former
~vernor -

. Long
" :
43 - and crena.. •
45 Mere handful
46 Arrow polso~ , ;
47 Hardy
herofne

49 Stool Dkleon, ,,

50 Strttch ou1, -.
•• ellvlng
52 IJibor org.
53 Greek leiter • •

' '

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebri1y Ctpl'\tr ctyptogram• are created !rom qLJOiallons by famous people pasland pres&amp;rll
Each letter In Ihe cipher standi!~ lor another TOday' alu6 E fKNB/a Y

'p y

JTIK

XD

BYGCNVY

RMXCYWVY

X W Y

X 0

RNCTYI

NWH

N

VTCKTSY

JNEZYJ

NWH

PMKZ

JYNWMWU

RMVY
GBYIMHYWK
NC
UXBY
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "When sorrows come , 1hey come nol stngle sp1es 1

But m battalions ~ -

W1lham Shakespeare

WOlD
lAM I

'

$7500 (304)675-8901

C&amp;C General Home Mali.·
tanance· Painting, vlnylaldlng,
carpentry, doorl, windoWI baths,

1998 Ch8vy Blazer, • door, w"h

• hole

22 lleertlkt

SUBTITI.I;S ALWA'(5
BOTHER ME ..

crowave, full kitchen color TV,
Bathroom,Shawar, 5 beds Very
good condition dependable,

TJ1ull i, 54,000
Mll11, Excelle.u Condition,
$11,000 740-446-2300
::.:.._ __
1997 Ford Aaplr~ low Mileage,

2045

code

21 Enltrged, as

,PEANUTS

Porches, Trailer Stt·Upa, And Air
Condlllonlng Alia, Malnttnanco,
7•0-«1·1001.

9172

North

ler5pm

31 9-3323 Exl 4-420

Condltionl

West

goodl $3,500 (7401·245·5B29 af. '

710 Autos for Sale

1()89 Toyota Sup'a Turbo, 81 K,
~7 ,000 Excellent Condition

Pett fqr Sale

Tl'.l~

1995 Honda Shadow Ace. 1100

Doubla Rool AC (Ice cold), Ml·

740-388 8536

~V·C~Il&gt;!

rJ~~~~ ~ Sf\OULD.,.

original miles Onan Generator

Pollee Impounds. And Tax
Aepo's For Listing• Call 1 BOO·

~121.

rm$~~7 "''( f\U!&gt;ml\:&gt;..

197B 3211 MotorHome 37 ,000

Hay &amp; Grain

o~.

- --·

CC, 2800 Mllasl Garage Kaptl

S1,000,

11110 ·1110 CAliS FROM 1500

Rio Grande OH Call 7•0·2•5·

•

0, In The Water 6 Times, u;e
New. Many Exltasl $11,700, 700·

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackoon, Oltlo 1-800-537-9528

Block bri(fk, sewer plpet, wind·'
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,

(304)676-2403/675-6735

Stonge Bulldarollpoco
30'x4Cfx8', Palnled SIMI Siding,
GalvakJma 51811 Roohng, 15 x8'
lra&lt;:1&lt;400r, :r wat• 1100&lt; $8,886
Ertcltdllroo Ho&lt;ee Builders., 1·
(800Hl52·1045

pression Fllllnglln Stock

Building
Supplies

For Sale Or Trade 740 258- ·,
1270
·'

1998 Mareda Sport I 18Ft Open '

740-379-2&gt;127

Speed Queen And Automatic
Washer $75, Whirlpool Automat·
IC Washer $75; Kenmore Dryer
Heavy Duty $75, Air Conditioner

'

1985 Honda '130, Trade For 4 _.

441l-nB7

See The New John Deere 200
Series Skid Steer loaders. 7 5%
JDC Financing, , Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc 1·800· 594·
1111, Galllpoiii,.OH Wt DeiMI~

BUT

MilO&amp;, $1,200, 740-441--0829

1994 Honda 750 Magna Vary
good eondlllon, like new $4,000 ,

For Sale Used Air Conditioner

~ ~ov~
A~ISTOTL~.

J

lon Water Tank $800 00, 427

Naw Holland 258 Hay Rake, New

Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repairs

Full)' Dreased 28,000

WD, Or $1 ooo, 40 Fl Tranera ··

Ohio

Larye &amp; Small (3041675-1937

"D"""

Sheep Foot Roller·
$31 ,ooo Cal· 21~ Track Hoe
$31 000 45ft Perfs lraller $1,800,
16ft Trenl Box $3,000. 2.000 Ga~
Chevy Truck Molor,$7~0 00
Mise Sleel Beams, Plpa, Vlbrat•
lng Tamp !Hs 416 Cat Hoa Water
Pumps 16ft Trani Fool $3,000.00.
(740) 843-0122 8 00·4 00 alter
5 DO (7&lt;0)-643-2916

Supply 740·4•8·9•18 Galllpolla

eso

Information
19 Bit of Morae

By Phillip Alder

8, Excellent Condlllon, $15,850,
740·379-2995

maha

9 Doberman's
doc
10 "- IJI Douce"
11 Alaokl'l 11ro1
governor
12 Leaoe

Conveyor belt
marches on

~~~~~~·A,:.e~:"S:e~!m..:~"tt

740

~~g.~ln

55 Willa
56 Coclllall
Tokyo
Mafood
20 Farm rooldent? 57 Stula
21111Mlby
chance
DOWN
25 Hare
28 Muocle pro1e1n 1 Sente
32 AIOumed r111me a Go wild (ebou1)
3 Brll'l
33 Troety roault
34 Ru1h'o
••clamellon
4 Old tlmett
companion
35 Cu1a
5 IJisl loner
36Woodyot
6 Ancient Jewlah
" Annie Hall"
aacetic
37 Bottie-&lt;:ap
7 Rare goa
removera
8 Soul, In sevroa

Opening lead. • K

1998 Ford E350 Cargo Van,

June Used Hay Equipment Sale.
4 9% Financing With John Deere

•••-

44 Guldo'o hivh
45 1Ht Pul-·
winning play
"' Hairy
51 Wolftlkt
54 Cotpturo

K 9 7 6

South

199• GMC Jimmy SLS, Loaded.

Fl King Kutter Flnloh Mower
$750, Bought Both Now In April
99, 740-408-&lt;IB12

38 Stope
41 TrtUII1jlhanl

Vulnerable· East-West
Dealer: E11st

40R , Excellent Condition High

Ferguoon 30 Good Shapa, 740.
388-8728

lon Aluminum Flbered 1Roof Paint

...,

$1500 (300)87!HI893

810 Farm Equipment

6000 Comander Ford Tractor

• Q

... 10 5 432
I AJ
South
• 7 6 3

BARNEY

•x• Sh"nnlu Tractor $!5 500, 5

East
'
I K9 5 2
• A J 10 9 8 2 •

9 K Q7
• 9 4

$10000llnal, 740-909-2872

Huge lrwenlory
VInyl S.lrting KIIS $299 95, 5 Gal

West
• J 10 8

:r &amp; 2', 740-992·2019

machine

I

• Q8

•'

pojiS 0H We 0811ver1

Of Drawera, Couch11. Olnet1es,
Cotfee ·JEnd Tables Much Morel

And Auction 8128th, 9·4, Polnl

Monday • Friday

oo-oug

• 8 7 6 5

(304)675-2909

FAnM SUPPLIES
I. LI VESTOC K

New MaHressts, Dreuert, Cheat

AnUquee

EEK&amp;MEEK

1872 19 HP Kohler Engine, 60"
Cut Deck, Contact Jeff Harrison
Director Of Maintenance Holzer
Medical center 74Q-.M6.5305

Dlsoount Mobile Home

Non
e AQ4
• 6 5 • 3

s

19B9 Chov1 5·10 PICk·Up,
12.29~ 00 Call (7&lt;01·••1 · 1138•

199~

$260. Full ·Size $135 Twin $115,
New Day Beds $130, Bun; BOds,

530

1989 Chevy -4x4 Silverado
Speed (300)6754159

Mark

New And Uaed Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga
Used King Size Bed Compl•t•

7&lt;0-446··782

1740) 446 4~3

Months, Carmichael'• Farm &amp;
Lawn, Inc 1~800·594·1111, Galli·

650

490

Fruits &amp;
Vegetable~

1978 Ford F-150, •x4 , 109,000
Actual Mllel Average condltionl

Cub Cadet Riding tMwer, Model

Mobile home site available bat·
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

740-365-4367

580

1 Sutler from the
cold
7 1/luaicl., Cugot
13 Golf tcorH
14 c-. out
15 l/lltriiiJH to
avoid
1l Sampra or
Chang
17 W.a 1n front
18 Old name lor

t 988 Ford 2 Ton Dump Truck ,
$800. 740-379-2027

1980 FLH Harley Davidson, red,
white &amp; blue, top and bottom engine redone, lots of chrome,

5 30 740-446-to68

6 00 PM 740-245-9156

Hookup $275 00 Rent Wllh De·
posll 740·408 3481 Or 1•o-&lt;~•6·

Don't CaH Us We 8olh Losal 740446-6308 1·1100-291'&lt;l098

Kenmore Washer $75 White
Kenmore Dryer $65 Cali Afler

3 Ele&lt;lroom House In Rio Grande,
$325/Mo Plus Deposit After

758 First Ave 1 Bdrm , 1 Bath ,
Newly Renovated, Washar Dryer

Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces, Heat
Pumps Certified Installer If You

WMa Whlr!&gt;OOI Refrigerator $75,
While t'hlrlpool Waahar $75,
While u .E Washer $75, Whllo

2BR unfurnished house 507 1/2
2nd St New Haven Call attar

3 Bedrooms, Central Air Condi·
tlonlng Garage 74()..446-2583

7404, can Anylme

7152, Aller 5 ~M

800·383·6862

$125, 740-3811-91105

$3,000, 740-379-2027

pori From $249 $373 Call740·

9 30PM only

(304)-675·5540

Cast Window Air: COfldiUoner,
Works Good! $150, Call After 5

Kenmore Washer &amp; Dryer AI·

Pilot Program Ranters Needed 1·

Yamaha Stereo Keyboard, Does
Everything, Perfect Condition!

C B Base Radio, Demeo Sate!·
IRe Sought Now (304)e7H980

Grac•ous living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunilleS

Musical
lnatruments
'
Sale Pe~~Con~ert Snare,

METABOLISM

Parts&amp;Supply

45631

'84-14x50
I!H6x80

(888~736·3332

AMII'ZIHQ

Breekthroughlll loll 10·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Faat
Dramatic Reaults. 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

COOL DOWN

5 5 Acres Frontage Garhald
Avenue City Utilities $49,000,
Send Response CLA825 c/
oGalllpolls Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue Gallipolis OH

Needed Roomate to Share Ex·
penses In 2 Bedroom Trailer In
VInton S t751Mo , Includes All

'8!1-1•x70
'98·181084
Coli now lor Beet Stlectlonl1·

18,000 BTU'o Seara Air Condl·
tloner (740)- 0390

245-9595

740-388·8678

House For Rent In Kanauga', 2

Low interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers Limited Time Available,

For Rant Building On
R 33
New Haven, WVA. 1 000 t •

Bedrooms, $300 00 Plus Utilities

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
trom $279 to ~58 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568

1990 Clayton 2 Bedrooms, AIC,
New Carpet, All Electric May
Stay On R-ented Lot 740·441 ·

1991 1411x72ft Shingle Roof, VInyl

11" DlteCTV Salalllte Syatema
$89 00, $100 ollrM programming
Llmllod time oHor, call 1-800·779·
8194

48 acre farm. on Kingsbury Ad 2
hOuses oil well, pond well &amp; city
water, $140,000, beautiful view

0101 After 5 OOPM

0221

After~

~M

and one month Deposlll (740)

ed k&gt;l (304)675 5HJ&amp;I576 2101

1997 16xBO. 3BR 2 Baths, Gar·

lt&gt;e olforlng

2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
sewer &amp; trash,
you p~y gas &amp; eleclrlc, $200 per

port we pay water

Stai' SlfiPI, 700·379-2189

663 Third Avenue , Gallipolis 2

Will Stay With Elderly Persons In

r•commends that you do bull·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you ha"Je Investigated

month (513)271 9091

For
Orum(excalle
condition), in
cludea case. 2 11 alleles, music
atand&amp;mu lc
$200

330 Farms for Sale

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

IHOTICEI

2 Bedroom Apartment In Point
Pfeasant , Upstairs Utilities Paid
References, Deposit and Lease
required No Pets $425 per

1 Exercise Bike, 1 Trtad Mill, 1

Complete Air Conditioner, 3 1/2
Ton, 2 Gas Furnaces, 740·448

Wheels Are Available, 937·3794015 Leave Mes98ge

01'110 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

lime (3041882-2326, """'inli

Schnauzer pupplet. 2 miniature
maiM, AKC champion bloodllnetl,
salt &amp; 740-667·340&gt;1

570

PM740-446-2396

D. CIA, $15 500, Must Be Movodl

Bu1lnese
Opportunity

2 Bedroom Apartment In New Ha
ven lor rent (304)882·2119 day·

4 AKC Boxer pupa, ready to go,
7tW-742-8101

540 MIII«IISMOUI
Merehandlse

3711 EOH

740-643-0122

210

Pleasant (304)675·2117

~OWMf

736-3409

WV $499 Down Single Wide

rooms, 2 Baths, Blue Carpet WI

FINANCIAL

1 SA Apartment For Rent In Point

a m 10 800pm , Sundoy 1.00to
8 00 p m 740 ·992·2525 , RUII

$999 Down Ooubla Wide, 304·

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

W1ll Mow and Haul clnd do CJea-

es, 304-875-7961

1 Bedroom Fumlshed , Utilities In
eluded, $300/Mo , Also, Efficiency
Furnished Utilities Included $250/
Mo . 740-387-0611

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Mal" Sttett, on At 124,
Pomeroy Houra M T W 10 00

2bdrm apts total ele ctric, appliances furnished , laundry room
lacilities, close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992

1994 14x70 Sunshine 3 Bed·

Will Stay With Elder ly At Nlgnt
Experienced And Have Refanmc·

Parking. No

7806

4623 or (304)674.0t5~

Home 740 388 9656

Becrr~ . PriVate
7~2602

CONNECTION Information By
Mall Including A $1 000 Cerllfl·
cate On A New Home

1992 14x70 Redman three bed·
room, storm w1ndows &amp; heat

The~

Pats

monlh, $100 deposll 740· 992·

Jlms Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
Drywall, Siding Roofs, Addl
liOns Pa inting etc (304)674-

nup.(304)675-4538

eept

And Ask For The CHILLICOTHE

(304)n3-5861

Georges Portable Sawmill don I
haul your logs to the mill just call
304-675-1957

Interior, Exterior Painting Pressure Washing , Tree Removal ,
Gutter Clean1ng Lawn Care Ae·

dltlonlng All UtMllos Included Ex·

Owner Relocatlngl Anxious to
Sell Newly Remodeled' 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths $62 900 oo {740)·

$12 000 00 (304)-875 2319

7&lt;0·388 8041

At 35 /At 23 lnterchanga Call
Toll Free Number, 888·443·7421

1 Bedroom Furniahed Apartment
Downstairs t 112 Bath I , Air Con·

Nice 1 bedroom furnished apart·
ment with private yard, no pets,

Greg Milhoan, 3041675·4828

Inferior &amp; Exterior Painting Ex·
penenced, References Reasonable Rates For Free Estimate,

23 Chillicothe Just Norll1 Of The

$279 00 Par Month Plus UUIIlles
740-446-2957

OU Meigs Mine 740.89B·7150

1985 14x65 ft 2 Bedrooms CIA
Furnace New Appliances E)(cel
lent Condltionl740 446 2751

Today! 740·446·4367 1·800·

For The Best Housing Deals In
Southern Oh10 TECUMSEH
HOMES. Exclusive Radman
Homes And BEST HOMES, Ex·
clus1ve Dutch Are Located On At

depos •t reqUired, no pell, 740·

1371)(3041875-3230

$1,500 Call K&amp;K (3041675·3000
BAM SPM/675-£277 aft&amp;r 6PM

Galllpolla c.- College
(Careers Close To Home) Cell

Jewelry Sales Retail Sates and
Computer Experience Required
Acqullltlona Fine Jewelry. 151

Second Avo Gallipolis Apply

Th1s newspaper will not
know1ngly accept
advenlsements 1or real estate
wt11ch Is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
lnfo~med that all dwellings
advan1sed In this newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity bas1s

PTIFT 1 (886) 366 670B

Wa nted ell:penenced lull or pari
lime barber at Mlek s Style Cen
ter Pomeroy mterested parties
cal l 740 992 2367 or 740 992·
3488

Shirley Spears 304 675-1429

All real estate adv,rtislng In
th1s newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 wh1ch makes It Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
lllflitatlon or d1scnmlna110n
based on race coklr, religion
sex fam11ial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or d1scnmlnahon •

www ownblz net

4300

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell

1

Own a Computer?
Put It lo 'v\lorkl $25-$75 00/hr

Some one to spend the n1ght with
the elderly, midnight Bam 5 days
per week $10 per day 740-992·
5039 or 740 992 4410

13041882 3477

New Bank repos only 2 left we
finance ca11304·122·7148

1 886 738·3332

1 LPN P:T Rotating,
1 STNA FT 11 7 Al so PT Ro
tating
Hol ze r Sen1or Care Center 70
Bed LTC Is LOOking For Experl
an ced And Ded1cate d People
Who Work As Team Members
With Qual ity Res1dent Care As
Their Goal OhiO license Aeq
Apply At Or Send Resume With
Cover Leiter Ann D 0 N At 380
Colonial Dnve Bidwell OH 45614,
Or Fax 740-441 1347 EOE

All studen~s full and part li me
openings In customer serv1 ce1
sales dep S10 35 per hr appt Nr
exparlence w1ll train Cond1t10nli
apply Must be 18 Call 304 485
Art1st Designs Needed If you
can produce Simple crea1 1ve 1n
co lor
des1gns
call M1ke

down Calll-800-837·3238

Pleasa Help! 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, just lake over Payments!

1LPNFTI 1·7

446·2956 Aller 5 740 3BB·0320
Borg Warner Automotive

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Include&amp; washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month with $1 t 50

TURNED DOWN'DN
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unlesi We Wlnl
I·BIIII·582 3345

NURSING LPN'I And STNA 1

BAM 9PM

t Bdrm , Extra Nice, Aret Month
Free With One Year Lease

Looking To Buy Good Older

sao•

35B5 Ed B826

1988 Clayton U x70 , 38R/2BA,
Heat· Pump, Applian ces, Good

Homes, 1·900-383-6118:1

Now H~rlng Oommo' s P1zz a of
Po1nt Pleasant Good pay fl exl
ble hou rs Mu st be 18 or over
Team members apply 1n person

Postal Jobs/$18 35/Hr lncl benefit s no experien ce For app I
exam mfo call 1 800· 813·

992·2218

Call KlK (30.)675·3000, BAM
5PM/675-6277, Altar ePM

The complete cleaning serv ice
Carpet Uphols tery Walls Cell
ings, and also Powe r Was'hlng
For a free estimate call Clearly
Clean at (30 4)67 5·4040 Guar
anteedWorkl

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unlurnlshed. security

1974 Klr;wood 12x80 2 bed·
""""' Good Condition $4.950 00
CaN (7&lt;0)·387-7306 Emngsl
Cond lllon, Mus t Sell . Sl O 900

Professional
Services

230

Now Taki ng · Applications For
Dnvers For GalliPOlis &amp; Pomeroy
Ont1 Domino s P1u a

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ALDER

Buslne..
Opportunity

Wanted to Buy

90

·

1

the year ahead, make the ones in
whtch you'n: presently Involved pay
olf firsl.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Your
InStinCts are exceptionally &amp;ood today
and can be used to resolve alroublmg
maller that's been disturbing you
Follow your hunches and you'll
come out lhe wanner Know where to
look for romance and you'll find 11
The Astro-Oraph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals which sisns are
romantically perfect for you Mall
$2 75 to Matchmaker, clo this news·
paper, PO Box
Murray Hill
Statton, New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) What
Rroduced aood results for associaleS
In the past can work equally well for
y,(&gt;u ~oday Use your tnsoJhls of
c!ITecuvely .OOopltng lhetr straiCSies to
your rrcj;ent needs
LEO (July 23-Aus ~2) Set the

ms.

tone wtth millat(ve

and

determina·

lion, and alltes will supplement your
efforts wnh strong support 11ns w111
allow you to achaevt two tmportant
objCCIIVCS today
VIRGO (Aug. B · Sept 22) Con·
s1dcmtum

giVen lo future plans atth1s

t1mc can l.1tcr prove to an advantapc

You con ~lrl\'c to I,K,k nhcat.l n hu
wilhuut d1"coun11ng your present
cunt:crns

I.! BRA ISert 21·0.:1 B) If ynu
hcgm tu sense mutcn.ll trends .trc
sh1 fting in your favor today, don' I
think ynu can slack off ln&lt;tcod dtg
1n. becau"' you II sull ha•c 10 work
hard to brmg thlnrs mlo betnJ.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) Fatl·
ing to protecl your interests today
cnuld prove fonli&lt;h, even though lhts
•• •nld invoh·c a difficult dcct&lt;1on lhnl

mtght rc\cal
someone With

ated

·

aspects of
whom you're assl)Ci·
negoltvc

SAOitrARlUS (Nov 23-Dcc
21) WhaiJIVCS you lhe areatcsl •at·
lsfaction today 1s ovcn:omma chnl·
lenaing, complicated sttuatlons.
Instead of dodgtngthem, you'll wei·
come the confrontation. •
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jcn ~ 9;

In order lo cope w11h today's dcvcl
you may have to wear rwo
hats Dcpendmg on condtllons, ynu II
need to get hard-nosed or hccomc
equally casy· gomg and fnendly
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
opments ,

Check

out

a suunuon today others

thtnk of os hetng of httle worth,
because there could be a profit tn II

After you score, associates will call
a finam.aal whtz

you

PISCES (Feb 20 Marolt 201 Oih·
ers will apprcc•ale u today that you
are

not one who makes idle

prom1s~

es You w1ll show them that you
always come thrc•tgh on your word,

even when

condltaon~» arc

dtfficull

ARIES (Marc:h 21 1lpnl I9) It
may not lrH&gt;k ltkc it at first i•ut os the
day wears on. yuu II hcgm tn sec several J)O"SiblhUcs (or matcnnl gaans

1oday Mu&lt;h ol lhts w1ll he due lo
your dthgcnt cflmls
TAURUS CApnl 20-May 2{1) If
you ac-cepl people at ta&lt;e value
today you' ll he able to lhoroughly
enjoy the «&gt;mpany of nlhcr.&lt; II ynu

I(KJktng fur nnws Y"u'll
Jy dJJUtC lhC SC olSS(K! I:lltOns

st.u1

~rent ·

SCUM LITS ANSWIU

Uremrc - Vodka - Growl - JQCund - WORK to DO
I overheard a fellow at work tell another colleague ,
lhat 11 s not fun to loaf, unless of course. you have WORK
to DO

JUNE 91

.

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

Wednesday, June 9, 1999

NEW YORK (AP) - With two
convictions already in hand prosecutors say they will continue to 'pursue
charges against other police officers

.I·
I

•I
I

l

J

c

1

•
I

June 10, 191111

Weather

Two NYC police ·officers convicted of torturing immigrant

•,

Could it be Ventura in 2000?, Page 2
Reds hand Twins 3-1 loss, Page 5
Readers take aim at Ann, Page 8

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 80s

who they say lied about the assault of neth Thompson said Tuesday after a
a Haitian immigrant to protect one of jury found Officer Charles Schwart
their own.
guilty of holding down Abner
" It 's not over/' prosecutor Ken- Louima while Officer Justin Volpe

Tomorrow: P. cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

Knlcks beat Pacers In

conference finals

-Page4

Meigs recorder posts land transfers
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamil!on: '
Deed, Jan A. and Donna L. Parker to Jeffery and Jodi Parker, Orange;
Deed, Margie A. Proffitt and
Margie A. Warner to James J. Proffitt, Bedford;
Deed, American Premier Underwriters to Rutland Church of God,
Rutland;
Deed, Penny M. Smart to David
. A Smart, Chester;
Deed, J~lie M. Runyon to Denny
R. Runyon, Scipio;
Deed, Will,iam F Wells ,Jr. to
Bridgeit S. Wells, Salem;
Deed, Clarence and Louise Frank
to Virgil B. and Johanna Renee Hudson, Pomeroy ;
Deed, Helen E. Findling to Ellen
K. Eblin, Orange;
Deed, Charles F and Paula J.
Chancey, Donald C. Sh.affer to David
E. and Kimberly Vanlnwagen, Sut-

Meigs County's

Eastern ·a·oa·rd tables
bids for new buildings
STORE HOURS

By BRIAN J. REED
frpm the fomi~r Tuppers Plains EleSentlnel Newa Staff
mentary School, that was originally
Bids for two new buildings were construc ted as the Olive-Orange
tabled when the Eastern Local School Grade School before the district was
Board met in regular session on consolidated.
The second building, referred to as
Wednesday evening.
The board plans to construct a new an activity center, will house a conbus garage and an activity center on cession stand; two new locker rooms,
property located directly behind East· · public restrooms, a .press area and
em High School, near the high school storage space. Well said that the existfootball field, and reviewed bids for ing concession stand and press box
the buildi,ngs and fo.r heating, venti- are unsafe, and will be demolished.
He also said that construction of
lation and air conditioning systems
for the new buildings at.last night's the new building will allow school
meeting.
officials to keep the high ·school
Both buildings will be metal locked during ball games.
"pole" structures with concrete floors.
The district is required, by law, to
· Roadways and paved parking areas set aside stale funds for capit~l
will also be included in the building improvements, as well as transponaproject:
tion and text boo~s. These funds,
Associated
Fabricators
of known as "equity funds," will 'be used
Pomeroy was the apparent low bid- to consuuctthe new buildings.
der on the construction of the two
The district appropriated $200,000
buildings, with a· proposed cost of for the project, and board member
$295,896, with Balsa Ltd .. Belpre, Greg B.ailey said , I that he felt the
presenting a· bid in the amount of board should table the bids because
$340,809 .
the cost of construction was so much
Hendrix Heating. and Cooling of higher than was originally planned .
, Tuppers Plains submitted the iow bid
"$1 00,00,0 is not something to be
for the HVAC contract, with a bid of ta~en lightly," Bailey said. He also
$22,700. Bids were also received urged the board to closely examine
from Warner 'Heating and Cooling of the bids before taking action.
·Chester, in the amount of $29 ,900,
Engineer Randy Breech of Breech
and a third from Balsa Ltd., in the Engineering of Gallipolis said that the
amount of $34,000.
additional cost is partially attributed
According to Superintendent , to additional features and more
Deryl Well, the bus garage will detailed,finishing than was·originalreplace a building, located across ly planned, but added that the per-

8AM·10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESI!RYE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU June 12, 1999

R.C. COLA
PRO-DUCTS

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

(12 PK.

:12 OZ. CANS)

SPLIT

·

2/$5

·

99 CC
Drumsticks•••••••• ••:... 49
·
$ ,,
Pork Chops .......~~~. 1

Chicken Breasts •••• ~~: •••
CHICKEN

.

.

.

.

~~

CENTER CUT

USDA CHOICE BONELESS .,EEF LB.

Bottom Round Steak..

· $ 179
·

SSUIP.ERIOdR'S

ICe ·

$299
1
S1rlo1n Steak ····•·
.
BONELESS BUTTERFLY
$
., or k Chops ....
299
US~A CH~ICE BONELESS BEE~

.

SJ99

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100COUNT

C

oz.

DEL

KE.TCHUP

280Z.

NORTHERN
WHITE BATH
TISSUE

99c
Cantaloupes
89c
$ ,9
Orange Ju1ce .......... 1 · FINAL TOUCH
FABRIC.
2/$ .
5
·

.

·

EACH
••eeee •••••••

TROPICANA SEAS~N•s BEST

·

oz.

4ROW

c
.
Potato Chips ...~·::1· 99
.

.

$

(ASST. YAR.)
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9 oz.

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1''

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STOKELY'S
ARMOUR VIENNA

1f.!GAL.

BANQUET
(ASST. VIR.)
..
.

·Frozen ·

VEGETABLES

4/$1

(ASST. VAR.)

·· (ASST. FLAV.) .

,.,,~~$1

. . . . s5''

"Forest Service
Good Afternoon cites area man
COLUMBUS (AI')- A man
charged with damaging
oday's Sentinel .already
ancient American Indian campsites

·

IIOUiHTOI HOMESTYLE, fAT flEE, 01 SUIAI flEE

SAUSAGE

UMIT 8 PL.EASE, ADD. PURCH. 2/$1

.

·- Cheese Singles ~:~:. .
2/$
· a· m ....•..•.~....~......
Ice Cre.
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE·

soz.

.

4

c
99

••••
CRISCO OIL
(REG. ONLY)

$139
320Z.

SOFTENER

l Sectlona • U haes

Win A

BANKROLL
This Week
Powell's Super

Value

$200
Fre·e Cash!

'

'

L·-··-· ~.-. . . . ~-- .:- -~ - -.,. .,

-·

Syracuse's London Pool was a
I
·
cool p ace to b«;l Wednesday afternoon for a.rea youngsters trying to
beat a late Spring heatwaVe
that Set·
tied over the Ohio Valley, above photo. Meanwhile, a bank thermometer
Present, in addition to Well and
in .Racine rec,orded a temperature .of
board member Greg Bailey, were ·
board members John Rice, Ric~
94 degreeS early . in the afternOOn,
Sanders, Greg Bailey, Mike Martin
• h
·
and Roger Willford, and Clerk Lisa .
r1g t, ~
·Ritchie.
L_.:.,_ _.::.,__~-------------~----~...:.!::::!~~~~=~!J

usiness
inventory.

imperiled

has been charged with making
false statements to the U.S. Forest
I
CeJegdar
·service.
9-10
Q•ulflcda
A federal grand jury on Thesday
ll
Comlq
indicted Drew W. Wolfe, 40, of
NelsonvJI!e, o~ two charges of
l
Edltoriall
making
false statements to the for3
Local
est service allout a November 1996
44:5' · motorcycle rally at the Wayne
Spo....
3
WCI!her
National Forest in Athens County,
U.S. Attorney Sharon J. Zealey
said.
Lotteries
Wolfe, president of Action
IJ, Ht
Sports
Promotions, Inc .. .gave the .
Plek3: 8-7-7; Pkk4: 8-0-8-7
forest
service
the wrong date for
Super LaUD: 2·19-26-37-42-44
the
rally
and
said
it .would be run ,
Kicker: 6-().5-4-2-t
on private land. But the rally ·
W,)'A,
course actually went through the
Dai!J 3: 4-8.(); Dlllly 4: 7-4-8-6 .
national forest, according to the
C&gt; 1999 Oblo Yalloy Pubtllhin1 Co,
indictment.

ty Public Library In P-oy. The llemaa dl'ftl
tha attention of HV11111 lhoppert and down-

UNUSUAL TOURISTS - Then two lllmaa,
led by Ralph and Pam Calvert and Kim Roush,
all of Calvert'a Llamlll of Cheater, took 1 stroll
throligh downtown Pomeroy on Wadneaday
anem~. following a vllit at the Malgt Coun-

town bualnell people, Including attorney .
Bernard Fultz, end jeweler Sul8n Clerk, both
pletured here.
·

NATO air campaign· suspended
after Serbians start withdrawal

COLUMB US (AP) - A cut in the
state 's tax on business inventory
could be stripped from the state's
$22.6 billion operating budget unless
lawmakers can figure out a way to
replace the money generated by the
tax.
"This will not stay tn the budget
without some discussion about the
parameters arou,nd it," House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson , R-Reynoldsburg. told the Ohio Manufacturers
Association Wednesday.
- The Senate was scheduled to take
up the inventory tax issue - along ·
·with the remainder or the spending
plan for the two years ·beginning July
I - today. ·
Republicans want to gradually
phase out the tax , begi'nning in 2002'.'
because they say it puts Ohio at a dis. advantage 10 states that don't. tax
inventory. Democrats generally agree ·
with the idea, hut they - along )"ith .
educati on and local government
groups -

waiu assurances thm the

state will make up the lost revenue.
Senate President Richard Finan ·
R-Cincinnati, urged the manufactur~
ers ' group to push their local legislators to solve the problem.
" I do want to emphasize to you
that if anybody thinks this inventory
tax reduction is a done deal , you ' re
kidding yourself." he said . "The
. pressure is starti ng to come out of the
woodwork already."
Republicans thwarted an attempt
by Democrats to insert a replacem~t
mechanism into the budget Tucs4ay .
. when it was debated in the Senate
Finance Commiuee.
The concept likely will reemerge
today. ,
.
,

convoy. their vehicles packed with peace to the province that 860,000
luggage - apparently fearing their , ethnic Albanians have ned since
Aaaocleted Prell Writer
B!lLGRADE, Yugoslavia- After · future in the ethnic Albanian-major- .March .
Now that NATO has ordered
II weeks of devastating bombings, ity province witho'ut army and police
airstrikes
suspended. Briti sh and
NATO suspended the allied air cam- protection.
French
troops
will be the first to enter
"Today, units of the Yugoslav
paign today when it verified that
Yugoslav convoys had begun with- army and police started their with- Kosovo as part of the peacekeeping
force.
drawing from Kosovo as part of a drawal in absolute order, implcmentA British contin gent is expected to
peace deal signed by Serbian and .ing a very accurate. precise mecha~ lead the way, securing . the high
Western generals to end the Balkans nism for withdrawal," Assistant For- ground along a main roadway from
, eign Minister Nebojsa Vujovic said in
conflict.
Macedonia into southern Kusovo.
NATO said allied peacekeeping Belgrade.
'J;hc
first U.S. troops are expected to
The Pengatori confirmed the pulltroops would be entering Kosovo by
cross imo. Kosovo shortly afterwards.
Friday. Secretary-General Javier out had begun, one of several moves . In th e Yugoslav capital, resi dents
Solana told reporters that NATO was required of the Yugoslavs by the honked car horns and set off firerea(jy to resume airstrikes, however, allies to end the Kosovo conflict and
crackers to celebrate the signing of a
if t~ Serbs go back on their pledge return ethnic Albanian refugees to peace deal late Wednesday and what
The .remainder of thr budget
to withdraw all their troops from their homeland.
state media said was the lirst night debate should prove less controverin
the
day,
convoys
of
Earlier
Kosovo .
without NATO air attacks i.n 2 11'2 sial. Included iit the legislation, which
Soldiers in the convoy smiled and dozens of trucks and other military
was approved unanimously: a small
flashed the. three-fingered Serb sign vehicles converged on Pristina, then months.
Ethnic Albanian refugees who cost-of-living increase for welfare
denoting unity. NATO warplanes moved to Podujevo, just north of the
flew overhead monitoring the noon (7 provincial capi tal for the fihal stage , haye been living in tent camps in recipients and extra money ,to allow
a.m. EDT) pullout , which began sev- of their journey out of the province. northern Albania since being expelled more low-income 'Ohioans to qualiArmy sources in· Kosovo said from their homeland welcomed the fy for health care benefits.
eral hours later than the allies expectsmaller army groups were on the peace agreement, but were still wary.
ed.
"We don 't trust (President SloboOverall , social welfare and health
About !50 army twcks. am10red move in distant parts of the province,
dan)
Milosevic because he is the man care programs through the Dep8nvehicles and cars ,.&lt;:arrying soldiers returning 19 their bases to comply
and mobile anti -aircraft weapons with the pullout, a key condition to who broke 35 agreements in the ment of Human Services eat up
crossed the northern border of Koso- ending NATO airstrikes that began Bosnian conflict. Until NATO enters about 65 percent of.the noneducation
Kosovo, we have no chance of ge t- budget.
'
vo at Mcrdare, Western reporters .March 24. ·
ting
back,"
said
Ahmet
C'aka.
On
Wednesday,
the Senate overU.S: Marines in amphibious vehisaid.·
U.S.
officials
said
the
Serb
retreat
whelmingly approVed a Sl7.1 billioll
The ind,ependent Beta news 'cles landed on the shores of Greece ·
agency, reporting from the scene, said earlier in today, pan of a vanguard from Kosovo must be compltted budget for schools and hiJher education~
(Contlnuad on Paga 3)
20 carloads of civi lians joined the force ready to enter Kosovo to bring

By CANDICE HUGHES

'

'
')

.

tax cut

.

64

KRAFT AMERICAN 1

Professional growth payments
were approved for teachers Jayne
Ann Collins imd Glenn Douglas, and
the resignations of bus driver George
Alfred Wolfe and teacher Robin
White Were accepted.
The board also took action to hire
~ubstitute teachers and classified substitutes.
High School Principal Rick
Edwards and Elementary Principal
Molly Jewett p~esented reports to the
board. .
In other action, the board:
• Approved advertising for lunchroom and transportation supplies;
• Tabled payment of a final
invoice from Vargo Cassady In gham
and Gibbs, district architects; ·
• Approved several studenis for
~%:~of~r:~;ment for the 1999-2000

'

The lowest-paying leadership position, assistant minority whip, would
increase from $44,385 to $47,135. The House speaker and Senate president would get the highest increase, from $66,133 to $69,633 each.
The bill also allows automatic increases for each year from 2002-04.
The' raise would be 3 percent or the annual increase in the Consumer Price
Index, whichever was lower. ·
·
' .
·
"I don't think there's ,anyone in this room who thinks legislators are
overpaid," said Rep. Robert Corbin of Dayton, the bill's sponsor. ·
The committee's ranking Democrat, Rep. Peter Lawspn Jones of Shak·
er Heights, said that had lawmakers' sahu:ies kept up with the inflation
rate since 1992, they would be making more than $52,000. .
"Given that, I think this bill is eminently reasonable," Jones~aid .
The committee defeated 24-4 an amendment offered by Rep. Ann
Womer Benjamin, R-Aurora, that would have raised the salaries of
Supreme Court justices and state and county judges. Judicial rules make
it difficult for them to earn what their fellow lawyers earn in the private
·
sector, she said.
"Judges are severely limited in their ability to earn outside income,"
said Womer-Benjamin, an attorney. "When we call judges to service, they
are at the peak, of their earning potential."
·
·
·
But Corbin said giv[ng raises to judges and not to county officialswhose salaries the Legislature also sets - would put 'the raises in dan:
ger.
.
.
" If we were to put this amendment in t~e bill, I think we would have
trouble getting ,it passed," Corbin said.
, The committee also defeated 22-6 an amendment offered by ·Rep.
Robert Net zley, R-Laura, 'that would have lowered lawmakers pay if the
CPiwere to .go. down, which would be'unlikely in a healthy economy.
.

SQUEEZE

FRESH

on a one-year contract.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The House Finance Committee has voted to give
the Legislature a $2,500 raise beginning in 2001 '--.th4 first pay i11crease
for lawmakers since 1992.,
.
The bipartisan 19-9 vote Wednesday night sends the bill to the full ,
House, which was expected to vote on it Thursday.
,
House and Senate members' base salaries would increase from $42,427
to $44,927 while leaders would geta slightly bigger boost.

$1''

24

summer intervention program. and

employed Howie Caldwell as a language arts teacher at the high school

Committee OKs salary
increase for legislators

95c

LAY·s

Single Copy- 35 Cents

· square foot price of constn)Ction is
"very reasonable."
The board met in executive session to discuss personnel, and hired
Carolyn Ritchie as bus driver for the

Regional Briefs:

FLAKES

e•e•e•••e

H Dogs •••••••• ~::!· 79

LIPTON
TEA BAGS

$149 KELLOGG'S
Bacon •••l:·~~ · ·
CORN

LB.

SUPERIOR'S

'

District.planning for bus garage, activity center

Monday thru ·
Suaday

T.

Right of way, 'John M. Roush lli
to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, James G. Hysell to
LCCD, Rutland;
.
,
Right of way, Herman and Lindn
Roberts to LCCD, Salisbury;
Deed, Edwa\d Franklin Rhodes to
J. G. W. SN. L. P., Olive;
Deed, Lawrence D. and Clarice
Carpenter to George W. Schweickart,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50, Numbers

'

Deed, Norman 0. and Vera A.
Weber to Denise Johnson, Orange;
Deed, Bernard J. and Opal E. Diddle to Charles T. and. Cynthia F
Young, Sutton;
Deed, Anthony L;md Company
Ltd. to Timothy L. and Karen D.
Mullins, Salem;
Right of way, Raymond P. Mullen
to Leading Creek Conservancy Dis, trict, Rutland;
Right of way, Terry J. and Pamela
S. Parsons to LCCD, Columbia;
Right of way, Leroy and Rozella
Kessinger to LCCD, Rutland ;
Right of way, Harry R. Mozingo· to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Gamet M. Bachner
to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Kenneth H. Romine
to LCCD, Rutland;
Right of way, Melvin H. Romine
to LCCD, Rutland ;
Right of way, Maureen T. Burns to
LCCD, Rutland;
.

.-----ceating the heat--__,
'

ton;

Deed, Eleanor Faulk to Tericia L
Cogar, Bedford;
Deed, ·Clara , E. Howard, Clara ,
Ho.ward, deceased , to Clifford E. J.
Whitiington, Scipio;
. Deed, Alan M. Grodzinsky, Susan
Garland to United Plant Savers Inc.:
Rutland;
Deed, Paul Stmu" to United Plant
·Savers [nc., Rutland;
Deed, Paul Strauss to United Plant
Savers !nc ., Rutland;
Deed, Beatrice I. Wood to United
Pl ant Savers Inc .. Rutland·'
Deed, Paul Strauss to Beatrice I.
, Wood.'· Rutland;
Easement, Mason D. and Robin
Wood to United Plant . Savers Inc. ,
Rutland;
Deed, John R. and Tamara J. Nelson to Village of Rutland , Rutland
Village;
Deed, Jay' Jr. and Lillian Marlene
\Jail to Jay Hall Jr. Trust, Olive;
Deed, Ct\arles A. Jr. and Janet S. ,
Seines to Charles A. Jr. and Janel S.
Seines, Salisbury;
Deed, Patricia L anct Jeffrey L·.
Dziak to Arnold Jr. and Sara Amburgy, Scipio;
[)eed, Patricia L. and Jeffrey J.
Dziak to John and Judy Galloway,
Scipio;
Deed, Patricia L. and Jeffery J.
Dziak to Sedeanna S. and Christopher M. Howman, Scipio;
Deed, Patricia L. and Jeffery J.
Dziak to J. B. Rudd, Scipio;
Deed, Raymond Barber to Gregory L and M. Ann Pollard, Lebanon ;
Deed, David and Shirley Bumgardner to Chester A. and Mary B. '
Roush, Middleport;
Deed, John W and Eleanor Mac
Blaettnar to Eleanor Mae, Frederick
J. and John W Blaettnar, Pomeroy;
Deed. George Michael and Brenda Shuler to John R. and Tamara J..
Nelson, Salisbury;
',
Deed, Arnold and Myrtle Good to
James Stump, Lebanon ;
Deed, James Stump to Chester A.
Jr. and Phyllis J. Cooper. Lebanon;
Deed, Edward L and Victoria K.
Nottingham to Christina Wil son, Salisbury ;
· ·
Deed, Christina M. Wilson to
Dennis J. Riffle, Sali sbury ;
Easement, Clifford Wooten to
Southern Ohio Coal Company,
Columbia;
Easement, Southern Ohio Coal
Company to Charles R. Simms,
Salem;
Deed. Robert G. and Betty Jean
Swick to James T. Farris, Rutland ·
Deed, Sandra K. and William
Williams to Thomas 1-i. Greathouse,
Lebanon; .

Hometown Newspaper

.

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