<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8065" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8065?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T00:08:58+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18479">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b44c7e472d811118095a67013abed9aa.pdf</src>
      <authentication>69d93a2922055c05343489cb182d124b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="26145">
                  <text>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

'

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.)
. ,.

.

'

9 oz.

'

1''

u•m•l OS•••••••••••••••
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

.

�Thursday, June 10, 1999

Commentary

Page 2
Thuraclay, June 10, 1M

Ohio weather

I,. f!tJsfh Notice

Friday, June 11
AccuWeathe~ forecast for

Medicare plan is bid for seniors

By Monon Koncfraeke
health care and contams strong incentives for though, is th~ prescn~t1on drug benefit covenng
'Esta6fisMa tn 1948
The b1ddmg war for the alleg1ance of senior seniors to join HMOs mstead of sticking w1th tra- all sen10rs, With a subs•dr for poorer beneficl3nes
voters will escalate th1s month when Pres1dent dJIIonal fee-for-service med1c1ne
and a requuementthat h1gher-mcome sen1ors pay
Clinton
unveils
a
Med1care
plan
w1th
a
prescripMost
Democrats
on
the
Med1car~
Com_m•ssion
part ~f the cost of thelf drugs. .
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
tion
drug
benefit
costing
upward!
of
$20
b1lllon
a
opposed
the
Breaux
plan
-·
as
d1d
Clmton
-Shll under debate •n the Wh1te House was the
7411-882·2150 • Fax: 1182·2157
year.
)Jecause it failed to provide a prescr1pt10n drug question of whether to create a "catastrophic"
That dwarfs the plan, costing $2 bilhon to $5 benefit for all semors and because it might deny drug he~efit or to put a $10,000 per-year cap on a
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
billion a year, that Republicans will back as part semors the r~ght to "choose theu own d~tor"
benefictary's drug benefit
.
At the suggestion of the comm1ss1on's coRepublicans have a stark chmce m deahng
of then Med 1care reform package
ROBERT L WINGETT
Ne1ther plan 1s hkely to pass Congress th•s cha~rman, Rep Bill Thomas, R-Calif, though, the w1t~ ~he Clinton plan. Conc~1vably, Senate
Publlaher
year or next, but Democrats hope the1rs w1ll give panel recommended a means-tested drug benefit MaJonty Leader Trent Lott, R-M1ss, could try to
them a 2000 campaign issue to win, back over-60 for "ln-betweeners" -- semors too poor to buy block a committee or floor vote, althOuj!h that
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"DIANE HILl.
voters •• and a House maJority.
insurance covering drugs and too affluent to be would elicit r1ghteous outrage from Democrats.
Controller
Genel'lll Managar
Republicans earlier put in their !lid to keep the eligible for Medicaid.
Alternatively, if the bill makes 11 to the floor,
loyalty of seniors by movmg to "lockbox" 100
The next stage of the Med1care fight would Republicans could try to argue 1n debate that
percent of SoCial Secur~ty surpluses mstead of the come m the Senate Finance Comm•ttee, where Clinton's plan is 1rrespons•bly expensive, encjann.. Sentinel •cotM• ,.,.,._ to 1M NltM fNm ,...,. . , • , _ , . , . . of rpp.
60
percent proposed by Clinton.
Sen Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., would offer Oin- gers the long-term solvency of Med1care and 1s
a Short ,.,..,. (300 or /oN) INiw ,,. - - or_, ,..,,__
In the budget endgame th1s year, Republicans ton's plan as a substitute. But Breaux's measure pa1d for by "robbi ng" Social Security surpluses.
Typod ,.,.,. .,. , . , . _ - oH NY l&gt;o -.d. EH/1-- · ol,...,.,.,
and dllyf#IM,..,.- lpHify a dllr. If - · • • ,.,.,.,.. to •,.,..
almost certamly will pick the Jock and use some should have the votes to prevail, w1th all comm1t- Or, Republicans could broaden the Breaux.,.,.,, 111/clo " " , _ IIIIU to: LI-to 1110 - · liN Sentinel, Ill Coulf 81.,
of the budget surplus -- wholly
tJotrwoy, Ohio fSTtlll; ot, FAX lo 7«J --~167.
denved from Social Secunty taxes - to fund programs other than retirement payments.
But the GOP evidently hopes that
its showy effort to trump Clmton m
"saving Social Security" will
impress semors.
"'-.- '
It's not clear how the GO~ans
to counter the Democratic proposal
By lan Shoalea
to prov1de all Medicare recipients
ThiS brouhaha about the sorry state of our culture isn 'I
with a new prescription drug benegomg to go away any t1me soon, so I figured the t1me has
fit.
come to offer some pos1t1ve solutions
In the seven Congressional elecSome areas of the cultural state, of course, can't,even
tions from 1980 to 1992, Democratbe d1scussed -- those areas where people are passionate
ic capdidates carried the over-60
about the1r weapons, for mstance
vote every t1me except for 1984, but
(Believe 11 or not, I sympathize with those people. I
Republicans have won the last three
don't own a gun myself, but I like the fact that( could
-- in 1998 by a margin of 55 to 45
buy one 1f I w1shed When I'm an old man, for instance,
percent
pursued by credttors, bitter old lovers and landlords, It'd
Last week, The New York Times
be great to buy a couple of Colt 45s, throw on a holster
quoted Democratic pollster Cehnda
and throw down the gauntlet "If you want satisfactiOn from me," I'd say Lake as saymg, "H's v~rtually
between clenched teeth, "you're gonna have to fight for it"l'd love to go impossible to take back the House
out in a blaze of glory, swappmg shots w1th my enem1es In some sunblasted or wm the presidency Without lakarroyo I'd grow a mustache Maybe even wear a black leather gunslinger's ing back semors. That makes them
outfit, weather permlltmg)
the key battleground, and both parThe trouble w1th thts whole area ts that the right to own a gun IS differ- ties know it."
ent than say, the right to free speech. With free speech, 1f you don't use it,
Rep Tom Dav1s, Va., chatrman
you lose 11 W1th the nght to bear arms, the equation is reversed.
of the National Republican ConBut guns aren't the problem anyway (well, they are, but we're not going gressional Committee, confirmed
to do anythmg about that) The problem With the sorry state of our culture, that "each party IS trying to one-up
IS, of course, the sorry state of our culture. Our culture's mamfestabons the other."
tee Republicans JOining Breaux, Kerrey and, pos- Thomas means-tested benefit and offer a prethemselves are the source of our culture's mamfestations
scription drug benefit to a w1der swatch of
Sibly,
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y.
The oext round of one-upsmanship should start
Are these tautological statements? Yes. But we think tautologically these th1s week, when Sen. John Breaux, D-La, IS
That would set the stage for a battle-royill on seniors
days After all, whether you're on the r~ght or left, everythmg is sl1ll every- expected to formally introduce a bill that repre- the Senate floor m September, w1th Democrats
The fasc10at10g quest1on for 2000 wil) be Can
thmg Here's some more'
sents the consensus of 10 members of the biparti- attemptmg to get an up-or-down vote on the Clin• the semor vote be bought with old-fashiOned govSTAR WARS.
ernment benefits, or 1s it swayed by different facsan Med1care CommiSSIOn -- 1ts e1ght Republi- ton plan as a substitute for Breaux's
Th1s series has been blamed for everything (though it is Itself part of cans, Breaux himself and Sen. Bob Kerrey, [}.
, Sources say that Clinton's plan --due out next tors?
everythmg), espec1ally the sorry state of mov1es today Somehow, the fact Neb.
Sigmficantly, perhaps, in 1996, when Democ-'
week or the week after -- will contam modest
that George Lucas made a near perfect (m 1ts way) homage to every silly
rats
accused the GOP of plotting to rob Medicare
The bill calls for maJor revampmg of reforms to encourage more semors to choose
dear mov1e we remember from our childhoods got lost in the intermittent Medicare, offering "premium support" for HMO coverage, but basically w1llleave tradJIIon- to pay for tax cuts, semors voted Republican anY,·
contempt.
seniors on a means-tested basis to allow them to al, government-dominated, fee-for-service way.
Still, we must recogmze that "Star Wars" is a problem Here's a solullon. buy health msurance. The measure challenges the M~1care 10tact
(Morton Kondn1cke It executive editor of
The federal government (or some commun1ty board, if 11 can muster the federal government's domil)ation of seniors'
The key political 1tem •n the Clinton plan, Roll c.tl, the newspaper of Capitol Hill )
authority) must force Lucas to remake "The Phantom Menace" as "Dennis
The Phantom Menace "
There is no evd emplfe m th1s altemahve prequel, JUSt pesky kids The
ev1l emperor is revealed to be Mr. W1lson, who's not really ev1l, just cranky,
and overdue for a nap
A self-proclaimed "liberill" on
A veteran of a sport everyone done polls where I've been as big as
By Chrla Mlltlhewa
DOOM.
WASHINGTON -- Jesse Ventura social 1ssues, Ventura sounds like knows is fixed, Ventura retains his over 20 percent already
This video game has also been blamed for everythmg (though, curiously, seems too big for a politician At 6 anything but when the
"In the pr1mary m Minnesota,"
d1sgust at political cheat1t's not part of anythmg) Why people have a problem w1th the idea that it's feet 4, and 260 pounds, bald and top1c turns to how taxing, especially the 1996 he notes for the record "I was at 10
really fun to blast monstrous creatures to p1eces w1th VIrtual weapons IS muscle-bound, the former profes- payer money gets spent.
DemocratiC
scandal percent Six weelcs later I won "
beyond me, but there you go I'm a guy
Can th1s guy, who upset the
mvolv10g cash payments
sional wresder is the giant Jack met He takes special pride in
A guy with a plan: replace Doom w1th Mood (Doom spelled backwards) at the top of liis beanstalk
experts last November by becommg
from Otina.
vetomg a state-financed
Mood IS a first-person shootmg game, w1th all weapons removed. You, the
"They've accepted the first statewide wmner runmng on
And, yes, the ground shakes museum honoring the
player, are being pursued by cred1tors, old lovers and landlords. You are when he wallcs.
money from a communist the Reform Party t1cket, get enough
labor movement.
g~ven no tools w1th wh1ch to perform this task Good luck!
country," argues the for- votes to beat the Republican and
"Why should the
"I'll tell you where I'm at on that
MQNOPOLY.
mer Navy seal "If I Democratic prestdenllal cand1dates
one," he declares when asked government be paying?
ObviOusly, monopolies are part of the problem. Megacorporatwns are whether an openly gay person Who, on their day off,
would have done that 10 10 2000?
etther dlfectly or md~rectly responsible for the homogenization of the cul- should be allowed to serve in the wants to look at pictures
the military, I'd still be at
"That's a piece of cake I'm
ture. The emblem of th1s mamfestahon, the board game Monopoly, should armed forces.
Portsmouth Naval Prison already 10 the twenttesl"
of people working?"
immediately be changed to "Esteemology "
That's treason."
It's not easy, Ventura
What about Ross Perot, the guy
"Who am I to tell someone they
The board itself will not change, but the goal of the game will now be to cannot serve their country? I don't adm1ts, betng the guy who has to
Despite his anger at Bill Clinton's who staned the Reform Party?
feel good about yourself With that goal m mind, players will exchange care what a person's sexual prefer- stand there and say 'No' to the inter- financial hanky·panky, Ventura is
"I respect Mr Perot for what he
hotels, properties, and cash at random, until everybody owns everything, and ence is. I care that he can get the job est groups grabbmg for the people's quick to defend the presJdenhal accomplished and what he d1d inieverybody's happy
tially," says Jesse Ventura, 47 "But
office itself.
money.
done."
(I also propose that the game of poker be renamed Rece1ver: it would be
Would he h1mself like to run for 1t's lime for him to step aside and us
"I don't care what people do in
"Government's like phys1cs. For
a lot like lo-ball, only w1th group hugs after every hand.)
to get a new, viable cand1date."
the privacy of their own home. It's every actwn, there's an equal reac- pres1dent?
INTERNET·
I wonder who
That's
another
matter
on
which
tion
So
when
you
take
an
action,
none of my business. We live m a
The Internet 1tself (and what 11 represents) 1s probably the b1ggest prob- free country. If you're not harming there 's gomg to be a reaction to tl. Jesse Ventura, th1s man who says "I
(Chrla M.Uhewa, chief of the
lem (next to guns) facmg our soc1ety today. We can replace 11 w1th Yellow anyone -- my v1ew 1s if you're not Something as entrenched as govern- make my own decisions," is San Francleco Examiner'• Wash·
Pages, encyclopedias, telephones and a crazy ne1ghbor who likes to scream harming anyone, do what you ment, you can't change it unafraid to speak
lngton Bureau, Ia hoat of "Hardon CNBC cable ehannala.)
ball"
about consplfacy theones at three m the morning But hey, who cares? Use want."
"Not to be arrogant, but they've
overmght"
11 or don't.

Could it be Ventura in 2000?

fjna!!y:

News hours should be replaced by " Happy Hours " Instead of introducing m-depth features on global and/or domesltc crises, anchors will now
introduce juggling acts from Borneo, Italian ventriloquists and Wookie tapdancers
ALL THINGS IGNORED. That's what America needs

If it came from a softy,·I'd be leery

By BEN WATTENBERG
Shop for goods among merchants you trust Shop for opinIOns among scholars you trust. As
they say. "Get a rabbi "The vexing
question before the house is·
By The Auoclated Preaa
"Do
we have too many people m
Today IS Thursday, June 10, the !61th day of 1999. There are 204 days
prison?"
It's getting hard 1o tell
left 1n the year
the
lock-'em-up
hard-liners from
Today 's Highhght m H1story.
the
root--causes
liberals.
So let us
On June 10, 1935, Alcohohcs Anonymous was founded m Akron, Oh1o,
cons1der
the
v1ews
of
Professor
John Dilullo, who
by William G Wilson and Dr Robert Sm1th
has been my rabbi on this matter
On this date:
Facts first In 1980, there were about 5!)0,000
In 1801, the North Afr1can state of Tr1poll declared w,ar on the Umted
inmates
in American prisons and jails By 1990,
States m a dispute over safe passage of merchant vessels through the
just
a
decade
later, that number had more than
Mediterranean.
doubled,
to
115
million Recently published data
In 1865, the opera "Tr1stan und Isolde" by Richard Wagner premtered in
from
the
Bureau
of
Justice Statistics 10d1cates that
Mumch, Germany.
the
number
will
pass
2 million by the end of 1999,
In 1922, singer-actress Judy Garland was born Frances Ethel Gumm in
and climb to about 2.15 million in 2000 That's a
Grand Rap1ds, Minn.
In 1940, Italy declared war on France and Britain; Canada' declared war 400 percent increase, amounting to 1 5 million
additional prisoners'
on Italy.
During the 1980s, violent crime rates declined
In 1946, Italy replaced 1ts abolished monarchy w1th a republic.
somewhat
and then climbed (probably due to the
In 1964, the Senate voted to limit further debate on a proposed civ1l rights
aack
epidem1c).
'!'hen, from 1991 to 1998, violent
bill, shutting off a filibuster by Southern states
aime
decreased
each
year, for a total of about 25 perIn 1967, the M1ddle East War ended as Israel and Syr1a agreed to observe
cent according 1o the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
a United Nahons-mediated cease-fire
In 1977, James Earl Ray,the conv1cted assass10 of ctvd rights leader Mar- Homic•des have fill len by 35 percent from the1r peak.
Questions Has the v1olent cr1me rate declined
tin Luther King Jr., escaped from Brushy Mountain State Pr~son in Tenbecause
we've put more bad guys 10 prison? Who
nessee with six others; he was recaptured June 13
are
these
new prisoners? Do they deserve to be
In 1978, Affirmed won the Belmont Stakes and with 11, horse racing's
mcarcerated?
Are there better alternatives?
Triple Crown
lncap-=itabon works. A thug in prison cannot
Ten years ago. Easy Goer won the Belmont Stakes in New York, denymg
mug
your sister W)len at liberty on the street, a
the Triple Crown to Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Sunday1~ilence
typical
v1olent criminal commits about 15 VIolent
Five years ago President Clinton intensified sanctions agamsf Hattl 's
crimes
per
year. When more thugs are incarceratmihtary leaders, suspending U.S. ~X&gt;mmerciill alf travel and most financtal
ed
and
when
"t1me served" mcreases by 14 pertrans-=tions between the two countnes
cent,
from
43
months to 49 months, as 11 has
One year ago· A Jury m Jacksonville, Fla. ordered Brown and Williamson
recently,
that
y1elds
less criminality. (lhe duration
Tobacco CoiJI. to pay nearly $1 m•llion to the family or Roland Maddox,
of
incarceration
continues
to climb.) There are
who had d•ed after smoking Lucky Strikes for almost 50 years.

Today In History

•

•

other factors, too A growing economy with lower
unemployment 1s hkely correlated with a lower
crime rate.
But who are these new pr1soners, particularly
the half a million or so added smce the m•d-90s?
It 1s said {endlessly) that the additional pnson
populauon comes from incarceration for "drug·
related" crimes The inmates are often descnbed
as "drug users" and "minor drug offenders,"
implymg folies are going to prison because we
penahze the triVIal pursuit of personal recreational substances
That 1s twice misleadmg, but not irrelevant.
There has been an increase in pr1soners conv1cted
of drug-related cr1mes, but it has not been disproportionate to the r1se of all prisoners. Only 25 per·
cent of pr~soners are mcarcerated because of any
sort of drug connection Additioqal muggers, robbers, car-Jackers, raptsts and murderers are going
to the slammer. The more of them behind bars, the
safer we are.
And almost no Americans are in prison for
s1mple personill "possession" or "use." Typically
lhc pnsoners are "mules;" "dealers" and "traf·
tickers," along with a few "drug lords" and
"king pins" •• ill! players in II lucrative drug
industry that feasts on getting innocent people
hooked The eharge of "possession" is typically
used for dealers who have substantial amounts of
illegal substances in their control, clearly mtended for sale to others, perhaps to your children
Sttll, there 1s a growing case made, includmg
by some hard-liners, that our handling of drug
criminals is wrong-headed. Dilullo, 41, of Princeton and the Brookings Institution, is one such. He
was one of the origipal hawk-academics making
the case that soft handling of cnmmals made it
easier for violent predators to terrorize the mean
streets. He satd locking up more of them would

help restore order. He believes that for VIOlent
crtminals the incapacitation strategy has worked
and is certainly the most documentable cause for
the decline in violent cnme.
But m recent articles m the Wall Streer Journal
and The National Review, D1Iulio says "two million prisoners are enough" and calls for "zero
prison growth." Why? He says that state mandat&lt;&gt;ry minimum laws have been Velcro for VIolent
offenders but they have been too stiff for others. A
d1fferent class of prisoner IS now being impnsoned, he says, coming from the bottom of the barrel. 'I'hey are involved in drug commerce, he tells
me "but now it's not Just the nasties we're putting
away. A lot of pathetic losers are m pnson, for long
ttmes. They haven't been convicted for cr1mes of
VIOlence, and most of them are add1cts themselves." The incapacitation argument doesn't
apply in this case, he says, because subslltute dealers will replace those who have been locked up
Moreover, he says "there are new and more
successful WI'J$ of treatmg add1cts, particularly
coerced abstinence. and faith-based treatment"
Under such programs, drug--deahng addicts are
put on st1ff probat1on or released early under
extra-tough scrutmy, with punishments meted out
if they don't show for treatment. D1luho says '
these strategies would end the need for additional
prisons, free up space for violent crimmals and
cut the mcidence of addlct1on.
It's an interesting case. If tl came from a softy, .
I'd be leery: Coming from Diluho, my rabbi, I
tend to buy 1t
'
Copvrlgh11IKKI NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Ban Wittenberg, 1 eanlor fellow at the '
American Entarprlae lnatltute, Ia ttl• author of
"Value• Matter Moat" and 11 tha holt of the
wHkly public televlalon program "Think
Tank.'

(Continued from Page 1)
the movemen1 of the 1\ATO led
WIIIlln II days •
peacekeepers mto Ko&gt;m o mdudm~
Officials from both s1des sa1d 11 up to 7,000 US mdn~ry perstmnel
appeared the Kosovo confliCt was 1n
Two b1g Chmook helicopter- wnh
1ts final stages
heavy artillery slung I rom the1r ,
May Hardesty, 92, Huntmgton, W Va , formerly of Scottown, d1ed Wednes"It looks as 1f we're m the end underbellies landed at an atrfield JUSI :
day, June 9, 1999 m the Pulley Care Center.
game," Bnt1 sh Fore1gn Secretary outside Skopje, Albanta ' capnal, ·
Born Sept 27, 1906 Platform , she was the daughter of the late Ernest Robm Cook sa1d today
preceded by e1ght Blackha" k chop- :
and Mmme Swmdler Shockley
"The war has ended," Yugoslav pers A dozen Apache holtcoptef\ ;
She was also preceded m death by her husband. Ray Hardesty , and four Col Gen Svetozar MarJanov•c were to arn ve later today
Sisters, Grace Patterson, Ruby Moore, Sophta Dav1s and Emesnne M1ze
declared late Wednesday m MacedoIn a statement, the Ko&gt;"'" re bel&gt; :
SurviVIng are three s1sters, Ella W1lhams and Ohve Mallard, both of ma after lengthy negotiations wnh tightmg Serb troops declared J cea se
Albany, and Nora Adl(ms of Proctorville, and several meces and nephews
NATO offictals at a French military hre once the Yu goslav force' '"'P
Serv1ces w1ll be II am Fr1day m the Hall Funeral Home, Proctomlle, base
theu operatiOnS m Kosovo and &gt;LJrt
wtth the Rev. Fred Shockley offic1at1ng Bunal wdl be m the Crown Ctty Solana sa1d the alliance endorsed to withdraw But the separatist Ko\oCemetery Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6 8 tomght
the deal at a late-ntght mectmg m vo L1berat10n Arm y sa1d H resef'\ c&lt;
Brussels, BelgiUm, but had to awa1t the r~ght to return f1re m case of
a formal suspensiOn of a~rstnke s auacks by · hosule Serb umts "
unul 11 was certam the iroops were
In Belgrade thous,tnds of people ·
streamed mto the streets cclebratmg :
1mprove the1r dnvmg skills, Will be leavmg Kosovo
URG registration
Now the way IS cleared for the what their government &gt;Ought to •
Open reg•strat1on for the first offered m two sess10ns at O'Bieness
summer term at the Un1vers1ty of Rio Memonal Hosp1tal m Athens on UN Secumy Council to approve a proclatm as a vtctorv despite the de\ !
Grande and R10 Grande Community June 29 and June 30, from I to 4 30 resolution shortly that would autho- astat1on of 1helf country and acccr- :
nze advance untts of the peacekeep- tance of terms Mtluse\lc hJd 'owed ·
College 1s planned for June 21,9 am pm
·
Developed by AARP, 55 mg force to move m qUickly from never to accep1
to 2 p m m the atr~um of the John
Macedoma
Bnush
Lt
Gen
M1chacl
Ja~kso
n
Berry Fme and Perform1ng Arts Cen- Ahve/Mature Dr"mg 1s the first
Early today, the flfst group of commander ol NATO uoop&gt; m
ter Classes beg10 June 22 The sec- comprehenSJ ve dnver retrammg
ond term begms JuiJ127, followmg an course geared to the spec1fic needs of about 2,000 Mannes who are to par MacedonJa saJd the agreement
uctpate m the 50,000 strong Kosovo detatled how ail Serh forces '-'auld;
open reg1strauon day on July 26 froin older motonsts
peacekeepmg force landed on a beach conduct a · phaseq vntf\,tblc and•
Bll{'on
DeVeau,
mstructor,
w11l
9 a.m to 2 p.m m the atr1um. For
m
Greece and began movmg toward orderly wllhdra" al lrom Koso' n
present
matenals
cover~ng
the
effects
more mfonnat10n call 1-800-282Macedon10
Peacekeepers commg m v.tl llacc
of agmg and med1cauons on dr~vmg,
7201 ext 7215
The
de]:&gt;loyment
from
the
USS
a
dauntmg
task comp!Jcatcd hy land
bas1c dr1vmg rules, hcense renewal,
local traffic hazards, adverse road Grunston Hall, an amplubwus assault mme threats. boobv 1rappcd bndge;
Board of Public Affairs
conditions,
energy savmg, and acci- vessel, came after days of delay and villages burned to the ground :
The Racme Board of Public
dent
preventiOn
measures Over f1ve because the Greek govern mel)!, fear- They must qu•ckly cst,thhsh -rcur11y
Aff31rs w1ll meet Monday, I 0 30 a.m
m1lllon
people
have
completed the mg more anti-NATO protests, ms1st- to prevent loo ung and 'end etta.
at the mumc1pal bulldmg
ed the military agreement between k1lhngs of Serb Cl\ than&gt; b\ clh nJL
course smce 11 began 1n 1979
Research
md1cates
that
older
perYugoslavia and NATO be s1gned first Albamans seeking revenge for atroc-.
l:lemlock Grove VBS
Alhance troop totals m Macedoma 1Ues
~
Vacauon B1ble School w1ll be held sons can 1mprove their dnvmg abtll
The cnsJS m Koso1o hegan 1n
at Hemlock Grove Chnstlan Church ues through additiOnal trammg, anen- now are about 18,500 Waves of U S
from June 21 to 25, from 6 to 8 30 tJOn and practtce, enabhn g them to helicopters descended on SkopJe 's February 1998 wh en M J!osc\1~,
p m. The theme 1s ' Shme for Jesus ' mamtam their dnvmg licenses while a1rport today too m Albama as part of cracked down on KLA rebels NATO.
the peacekeeping force
began bombtn g Yu gosla\la I,There w1ll b( classes for ages 2 dr1 vmg safer
Persons
55
years
of
age
or
older
Macedoma
1
s
the
stagmg
pomt
for
months later after M•l osev tc refu sed
through seventh grade There w1ll be
are
mvned
to
part1c1pate
and
should
to SJgn a peace agreement
B1ble stones puppet skns, ~rafts,
smgmg, recreation and refreshments call 592 9337 to enroll
mghtly A p1cn1c and sw1mmmg party w1ll be held on June 26 from 3 to Hymn sing planned
A hymn s10g w1ll be held at the
5 p m The closmglJrogram Will be
Fa1th
Full Gospel Church at 7 p m Man charged following truck fire
held on June 27 at 9 30 a m Reg•sFr1day
Mus1c w1M be by the Clark
tratJOn and more mformatwn 1s availA 28-year-old Pomer\)y man was Cited on a charge of dnvmg unde1 the r
Fam1ly
Smgers
able b_y calling 992 6()73 All children
mfluence Wednesday evenmg after his p1ckup truck caught fire on State Ruutc
are mvned to attend
_
7 near Pomeroy
TechnOlogy committee
P1refighters of the Pomeroy Volunteer F1re Depanmenl and Emergency There Will be a meetmg Monday, Serv1ces squad were summoned to the scene around 9 51 p m The alleged •
Parade theme
7
p
m m the Eastern Elementary dr~ver of the truck, Michael M Barrett, was oned on a charge of dnvmg under
The Rutland Volunteer F1re
School
to d1scus technology and to
Department and Lad~e s' Aux1llary
the mfluence by a Metgs County sher~ffs deputy
reorgan1ze
the technology comrmttee
w1ll hold thm annual Fourth of July
Parade and Ox Roast on July 3 The The committee w11l be 10volved m Deputies jail man on two charges
Walter F Garnes Ill, 35, 31597 Fa1rplay Road, Vmton was arrested and
parade theme will be 'Close of Cen- reviSing the current technology plan
tury Neanng, Celebrate by Volun- for the d1str1ct to meet state standards Jailed Wednesday evemng by the Me1gs County Sheriffs Office on charge&gt;:
teermg ' Categones are as follows Anyone mterested m part1c1patmg IS of domestic viOlence and res1stmg arrest
floats rellg10us and non-rellg10us welcome to attend
decorated b1cycles, horses, miScella- Soccer camp
neous (go car~s. 4-wheelers, lawn
The summer's · Great Br~tam­
mowers, etc ), decorated truclcs, Buckeye Soccer Camp" w1ll be held
sem1s, walking umts and vmtage cars on the campus of Oh10 Umverslty,
The hneup Will begm at 9 am on Athens, July 11-15 Th1s Wtll be the
BINGHAMTON, NY (AP) and August
Depot Street and Bnck Street, with mnth 11me that the camp has been
The
mormng
after
she
faced
protestShe took a Jab a1 Republicans
the parade begmmng at 9.30 am The selected by the Southeast Oh10 Socers
wnh
"carpetbagger
go
home"
say
mg the way they 'e h.tnJ\ed guo
Rutland Volunteer Lad1es Aux1hary cer Assoc1auon to present an mtens1gns.
co
uld-be
Senate
cand1date
~ontrol
legJSiau on tim " eck on!)
are sellmg cow drop tickets, whtch sJve five day residential camp for
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton
sa1d
today
proves
that
the Democrallc Port\ ''
can be purchased from any auXJhary mtermed1ate and advanced players
member or fire fighter Information 1s ages II and up Instructors are she hasn't yet secured a New York much more 111 touc h '"th 1hc 111.1111
stream - not only nf Amcnc a but
av31lable from Stacy McKmght, 742- licensed professiOnal and colleg1ate res1dence
''I'm
gomg
around
collecting
particularly of Ne"' York '
soccer pfayers and coaches from
8311, or Ang• Mayer, 742-1115
of
people's
guest
rooms
and
W1th about three duzen dt'm 'noffers
England freland, Scotland an Wales
extra
beds
and
pull-out
couches,"
she
strators
shoutmg \rom acruss the
For more mformatwn or to rece1ve a
55 Alive/Mature Driving
• street outSide a Loc kheed Marlin
55 Alive/Mature Dr1vmg, a class- brochure, res1dents may contact Dave satd
The
first
ladyon
her
lith
tr1p
plant she had VISited near Btnghamroom dnver retrammg program Palmer at 740 593 6651 orthe GBBS
to
New
York
and
her
first
smce
she
ton,
Mrs Chnton told rep orters
des1gned to help older persons office at I 800-877-0834
announced she would form an Wednesday that such prolcsts were
exploratory committee to pay for ear- s1mply a "fact of pol 1ttcal hfc
ly campaJgn forays - den1ed news
Mrs Clinton, born 1n l\lln ots and
reports that she's buymg or leasmg a a former first lady of Ark ansas, has
home m New York
ne ver hved or worked tn New York
"I have heard so many stones
lns1de the plant, she wid ahom40,
GREENSBORO, N C. (AP) cla1m v1olates federal and state
Three c1garette compames urged a antitrust laws It was unclear whether about apartments and hOuses that I've employees, handpicked by company.
JUdge Wednesday to stop Ph•hp Mor- Bullock would tssue an oral ruling on bought and I only w1sh that were true, offic1als for a d1scuss10n With Mrs Clinton abouljob creauon and o1her
ns Inc from offer~ng s1zable dis- the request for an InJunction at the but that hasn 't happened yet," Mrs
economic 1ssues, tl'iat the nation has &gt;
counts to store ownjlrs who promi- conclusu'ln of thts week 's heanng or Cbnton told NBC's "Today" show
She was asked whether she was been so successful "because of peonently d1splay Marlboro and other rule 10 wntiOg later
"Thts case IS about Ph1hp Moms ' bound to make the race now that Rep pie who have been w1Ihng to try new
Ph1hp Moms brands
exerctse
of market power to unrea- Nita Lowey, the only other Democ- thmgs "
R J Reynolds Tobacco Co , Lorllsonably
restnct
the adveru smg by Its rat publicly mulling a run for the Senlard Tobacco Co and Brown and
competitors,"
Rtchard
Coope1 , an ate scat bemg vacated m 2000 by
W1Ihamson Tobacco Corp allege
Ph1hp Moms, the world's largest ctg- RJR attorney sa1d 10 hiS opemng Damel Patnck Moymhan, has bowed
out
arette maker, has used 1ts market state111ent today
"l th1nk a Democrat will win tillS
''Consumers are best served whe n
clout to monopohze the U S Cigarette
Senate
1ace and I m looktng forward
retailers
can
present
c1garette
brands
market, where 11 accounts for almost
to
g01ng
out and llstenmg to New
m
the
best
mterests
of
the
consumer,
54 percent of all ret311 sales
Y01
kers
and
JUSt ha\ mg a good tune.
not
Ph1llp
Moms
"
The three compames have asked
to
be
honest,"
Mrs Clinton rephcd
The
plamuff
compames'
lawyers
for a JUry tnal and unspecified damOn
the
stops
she
made here and m
ages The1r lawsuits ha~e smce been unveiled a model of a retail store to
,,. ltl, I~ 3:50, 4:!0,
New
York
Clly
Wednesday,
she sa1d.
show the alleged diSadvantage at
consolidated mto a smgle case
MRS
t45, 7:15, t35, IG:tli
Even wh1le the tr~al1s pendmg, the wh1ch Phd1p Moms' program places '!teamed a lot I saw a lot of people
~ liam Neesal, Ewan Mi:Gieg&lt;J Natal~ Pomnan
and I had a great ex penence and I'm
compames want US D1str•c1 Judge 1ts competitors
1. HJI " 1i\1:15, 5:38, 7:45, 10:00
go mg to be domg a lot of that m July
The
first
\vUness
was
Bnan
Stock
Frank Bulock to put an 1mmed1ate
D'mil
dale,
RJR
's
v1ce
pres1dent
for
trade
stop to Ph1llp Moms' "Reta1l Leaders" marketmg program, wh1ch they marketmg

in

I llln.neld !er"" I •

·I eoturnbua iN'/10' I

Meigs announcements

lid-.

The sorry state
of our culture

NATO air campaign

May Hardesty

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(}~--~ -

&amp;.1n'f PI Cloudy Cloudy

Alii

Showell T-IIOrmo

..
.....,_

Chance of thunderstorms
enters area weather scene
By The Associated Preaa

.
The r1sk of mamly afternoon thunderstorms wtll contmue mto the weekend A low pressure ~ystem will produce thunderstorms 10 advance of an assoCiated cold front that will pass over Oh10 late Sunday
Tomght will be muggy agatn wtth lows only 1n the upper 60s to low 70s
Today was to be another hot, hum1d day more typ1cal of m1ddle to late
summer w1th h1ghs at many locat10ns reachmg the m1ddle 90s Afternoon
thunderstorms we:re poss1ble m the mcreasmgly unstable atrmass that has been
draped over Oh1o th1s week
The combmatlon of temperatures near 70 and dewpmnts m the lower to
upper 60s produced a sllcky mormng. At 4 a m , most locations were reportmg temperatures m the upper 60s to the lower 70s. Wmds were generally
light Several locations m southwest Oh10 reported fog
Record h1gh 98 set m 1911, record low 41 set m 1988
Sunr1se Frtday 6 02 a.m., sunset 9 p m
Weather forecast:
Tomght A chance of a thunderstorm early, otherw1se partly cloudy Lows
m the upper 60s L1ght southeast wmd Chance of ram 30 percent.
Fnday Partly cloudy and a little cooler With a chance of a thunderstorm
m the afternoon H1ghs near 90. Chance of ram 30 perce nt
Fnday mght Partly cloudy Lows m the m1d 60s
Extended forecast:
Saturday Mostly sunny H1ghs 85 to 90
Sunday Partly cloudy A chance of thunderstorms m the afternoon and
evenmg Lows m the m1d 60s and h1ghs 85 to 90
Monday Partly cloudy With a chance of showers and thunderstorms Lows
60 to 65 and h1ghs 80 to 85

Bill proposes more care
for seriously ill peopl~
COLUMBUS (AP) -'Ole House
Health, Retirement and Agmg Committee has passed a bill that could
save the lives of hundreds of seriously IOJUred people each year, 1ts
sponsor sa1d
The b1ll, approved Wednesday,
w11l requ1re that trauma pallents are
taken d~rectly to hospttals best qualIfied to provtde the most appropnate
care
"What we need to do ts wr~te a
bill that's good pohcy, 1s fa1r and w1ll
'save lives I thmk we've done that,"
sa1d b1ll sponsor W1lham Schuck, RColumbus
The b11l goes now to the full
House of Representatives
The leglslatton creates quality-ofcare standards for hosp1tals that treat
~rauma v1ct1ms, requ~res hosp1tals to
collect and report certam trauma
data and requlfes emergenc~ med1cal

semce orgamzat10ns to develop Writ
ten protocols for the treatment of
trauma vtctlms

There are exceptwns to takmg
trauma VICtims d~rectly to the best
hosp1tal for treatmg the1r •nJunes
These 10clude 1f the pat1ent must be
stab1llzed at a closer hospital first, 1f
11 1s unsafe to transport the patient
because of weather, or no appropriate trauma center 1s able to treat the
vtctlm Wtthm a reasonable ume penoct

Dunng debate Wednesday, the
committee reJected one amendment
to the b1ll that would have ellmmated med1cal defimllons of trauma by
letting doctors determme the scope of
InJUnes on the1r own, and another that
would have ellmmated the state's
rules for determmmg how best to
treat senous mJunes
Schuck sa1d those amendments
would have gutted h1s bill

. The Daily Sentinel

Also Wednesday, the House
passed b1lls
• Requmng candidates for'
statew1de office- such as governor,
secretary of state or state treasurer who ra1se or spend more than
$10,000 to file their campa1gn contr~butlons electromcally. The House
voted to exempt members of the General Assembly from the same reqUirement but s31d they can file electronIcally on a voluntary bas1s

(USPS 113-9110)

Conlmuato, I'I""J'JIper Hotdlnp, Jae.
PubiWied every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ob.a_ by lhe
Oh•o Valley PubiL'!Ihtng Company Second du.s

~

postlge paid 11 Pomeroy, Otuo
Member: The Auocaated PreQ 1nd the Oh1o
NeW5plpet Aasociatton
r.tmuttn Scad address COrm:tiOill 10 The
O.tly Sentmel, 1l1 Court St, Pomeroy, Obto

.,69

SVISCRIPTION IIATES
By Carrier or Motor Roult

One Week ... •........................ J2 00

One Month ... •.... ,.. ................S870
One Year.............................. $104 00

Old~ ~~~~~--~~~~-~~~-

· r.O!!!!!O!!!!!s":!:'""t""oO!!!!!c"""'k."'s"""'~O!!!I!'il

35 ee...
Suhlcribt:rs n01 des1rlna to pay lbe earner m•y
remilm adVance d1red to The Dlily SentJael on
a three. ••• or 12 JnOnth bu11 Cmht wtll be
Jlven a.rner each week
No subkripl1011 by ma1l pemutted m lrelll
wbere home earner serv1oc 11 avarlable
Pubhlher IUellle&amp; the nght to adjust ratet dur·
Ina lhe subacriptron period Sublcnpt:1on nte
cltlnp m1y be Implemented by chanJIII&amp; the
duratron of the subsaipt10n

Am Ele PO- ......................42~•
Akzo ......................................44'.4
AmrTech ...............................68~
Ash 011......................~..............,-.

ATAT .....................................53~.

BankEvana
One ················~·········
...55'•
Bob
............................
1a'/.
Borg-Warner ....................... 58"1•
Broughton .............................1&amp;\

MAIL SUBSCRtmON
laoldeMetpC...,ty
13 Weeb. ........ .......... ..... .$27 30
26 \Voell ......................... .5$3 82
52 Wccb.
.. .... . .. .SIII!.!tl

5,.

Champion ....... ,...................... 7"1•
Charm Shps ........................,..
City Holding .........................~
Federal Mogut .......................so\
Gannett.................................71 ~.
Kmart.....................................15'.1

-Ou-MelpCovnty
13 \Yccb ....................... ..$29.25
26 Vl6eb. .. ...................1!6.68

52 Vt'ceb ......................... .Sl0912

~'

Reader Services
Corractlon Polley

ova ...........,.............................33

Oar -•• .._,. .. olllloriH II le be
ICCII'IIte. If ya• kaow ef •• error I• •

One Valley ..........................:....38

Peoplee ................................. 28'Pr•m Flnl ....,......................... 14~.
Rockwell ................. ,............59"1•
RDJShell ............................... sa.,.
Stare .....................................8'/.

otocy, &lt;all ... aewo,.... II (740) 993'

ll55. We wll clleek )'OIIr

lal'o1'8111lloa

... m•kl 1 ea.r rcctloa I wai'I'MIId.

Newa Dlpart11NI1tl

De

•al•
o. .ber II tn-2155. Def-rt-txtellalo•• •re:

..................................~

Landa End ........................... 42.,_
Ltd ........................................ 45.,_
Oak Hill Flnl ............................19

&amp;honey's ...................:........... ~.

FlraiStar ............................... 26.,•

Mit

_._ _

Ntwl..........................................,Ext. 1101
or ElL 1106

Wenctv'e a .............................2e';,
. Worthlngton
.. ..........................12'!. . .

Othet Servlcaa

10:30 a.m. quotea provided by

Geoe,.l M•oau , ... oo oo• ..... bL 1101

Stock report• ere today• •

Acfveal Of Gelllpolle.

Adwertll...... • .... .... .. ....... bL 1104
Clrnlolloli ..... ,.........,.............ExL 1103
Clulllled Ad&amp;................ oo.bL 1100

-Local News in

Brief:-.~.

Protesters greet Hillary's
latest New York sojourn

Philip Morris faces complaint
on tobacco display discount

EMS units answer 5 calls
Umts•ofthe Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded five
calls for assistance Wednesday Umts
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7 15 a m , South Fourth Avenue,
Middleport, Glada Dav1s, tre~ted at
the scene,
8 24 a m , West Mam Street,
Pomeroy, Paul Bush, Veterans
Memorial Hospital,
9 16 a m , Water Street, Syracuse.
Ada Tttus, VMH, Syracuse squad

assisted
MIDDLEPORT
5 31 am , volunte7r fire department to Coal Street, structure fire,
Chr~sttan Marlin and J 1m McClure
owners, no InJUries reported,
Pomeroy VFD and squad, Central
Dispatch squad assisted
POMEROY
9.51 p m, VFD and squad to State
Route 7, truck fire, no InJUries reported
'

PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
7:00, I 40 OAtlY
MAnNEES SAT/SUN 1 Ill, 3 40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

Hospital news

PUSHING nN (R)
ENDS TONIGHT
7•(1) &amp; 1:30 DAILY

Holzer Medical Center
Dlsc:haraes June 9 - none
Birth - Mr. and Mrs James
Stewart, daughter, Mtddleport
(Published with permission)

lllllllll....~~
••...,.

'

1110
~

520 W. Main St. •
Pomeroy,OH
Phone 992·2588
VInton • 388·8603
Gallipolis • 446-0852

7.00 &amp; 1:20 OAILY
MAnNEEI SAT/IUN 1·tll&amp; 3 20

N• , _ , Sl#lrH"f ~riMy
..m...a: (J&gt;G.I~ 111:80, , .. til,
111....
t40, 518, 6.11, 7:11,
. .•
\l:tl, tiO, 10:10
llllllfllll tP«I~ •l:lt, t2D, ia I:IUI
~aM IIIIII Selld

.

" '

•

t
•

•'

•

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

..

New York credit. They stepped up
their defense, forced us into tough
shots and got some easy baskets on
the break."
The Knicks also got 19 points
from Allan Houston and 10 from
Kurt Thomas. They had a season-lo)Y
seven lurnovers, and lheir reserves
outscored the vaunted Pace rs' ·backups 34- 15. They rebounded from an
abysmal 24 percent in the first quarter to finish 34-of-75 (45 percent)
from the Ooor. They scored 36 points
in the fourth.
As for the Pacers, Mark Jackson
scored 16 ·points, and Chris· Mulhn
13 and Dale Davis 13 each for
Indiana
But the rest of the gang was
nowhere to be found . Rik Smits? A
whoppmg eight points. Jalen Rose?
Followed up his breakthrou gh game
w1th a six-point effort. Antonio
Davis'! Four points, all m the final
quarter.
,
"We came up with big basket
after b1g basket," Thomas said: "II
was JUSt what we needed. Now we
have tn go hack home and finish
the m oil "
That the Knicks are even in 'thts
position is stunning. Preoccupied
throughout the season by the will-heor-wo n' t-he-get-fired mess, New
York sk idded into the playoffs as the
eighth seed. But they beat Miami and
then went on to sweep Atlanta and
become the first No. 8 seed 10' make
the conference finals. Then they lost
Ewing for the rest of the playoffs
with a partially torn Achilles' tendon
Now they're one victory ~way
from their first trip to the NBA Finals
si nce 1994.
·
"When we started off the season;
no one thought we would be where
-we are now, " Camby said. "Just the
opportunity to go to the final s is a
dream come true for most of us. We
just have to make the best of it.
Everyone was wnting us off, but we
knocked off Miami, swept Atlanta
and now we are here. "
And they keep making it tnteresting. The Knicks missed their first
fi ve shots as Indiana jumped out to a
9-0 lead, but then stormed back with

Major league
baseball

. JAM S&amp;SSION _ The New York Knlcks' Marcue c8m:7&gt; dunks
between the Indiana Pacers' Antonio Davis (left) and Dale lVII In
the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the NBA Ea1tem Conference finite
we d nes day n 1g ht 1n 1n dl anapo 11 8 • wh ere ,the Knlc k1 '101·"•
1
..,.. v clory
gave them a 3·2 lead In the best-of-seven sarles. (AP) .
a 10-0 run of thetr own. The Pacers givmg New York a 78-17 edge with
responded with spurts of 13-2 and 6- 7: I0 left. The two teams traded leads
0, and New York was down 28-14 until Johnson finally put the game
With no offen se and no mo!"entum. away.
But in a weird twist, the Knicks
With the Knic ks clinging to an 83outscored the Pacers 28-14 in the 82 lead, Johnson hung back on th.e
second quarter. Camby scored eight b~sehne and JUSt walled until
points in the last 3:35 of the half as .Sprewell passed. He caught the ball, .
the teams wen t into -the locker roorn squared up and let Oy from 23 feet
t1e&lt;,l at '42.
totally. untouched. .
" We got nothing out of our
Sw1sh.•Three potnts . .
.
bench ," Pacers coach Larry Bird
It was the same scenano 48 secsaid. "Especially m the second quar· onds later, only thiS lime the shot was
ter."
fro?,' 24 feet.
Indiana led for most. of the third
You ha.~e to make P!~ys down
quarter, with its biggest advantage at the stretch, Btrd sa1d. We need
67-61 after Miller scored eight sorneon~ to step up and make the
straight points. Rose scored on a plays , hke Larry Johnson d1d for
nifty drive with five seconds left in them.. . .
.
the third to give the Pacers a 69-65
. Fnd~y t~ thetr last chanct. If they
fa1l, Ewmg s screams w1ll be echotng
lead heading into the fourth.
Indiana . led 77-72 before through the hall~ of Market Square
Sprewell, Camby and · Johnson hit for a· long, long t1me.
consecutive shots for fhe Knicks,

Dl• amondbac.k s ·outlast Chl•cago Cub·s 8•7
By BOB BAUM
PHOENIX (AP) - Mark Grace
picked up the bandage that new out
of Byung-Hyun Kim's sleeve and
thought to h1m self, 'This guy 's got a
future in this league.'
•
"You have to give him credit,"
Grace said. "He's only 20 years old.
Most guys don't start cheating unul
later in their careers."
.
On a night when Randy Johnson
struck out 14. Sammy Sosa h1t hts
NL-Ieading · 21st home run and
Arizona weathered a six-run Chicago
rally for an 8-7 victory over the
Cubs, it was what Ktm had up hiS
sleeve tha) provided the weirdest

story hne .
Kim, Arizona's 20-year-old South
Korean pitcher, was thrown out of
the game after the eighth inning
because a bandage came llying out
of his jersey. Umpire Ed Montague
said he thought it was paper airplane
comtng from the stands. ·
Grace, the Chicago first baseman;
retrieved the bandage and .showed it
to the umpire after the inning was
over.

" It was covered with some analgesic balm," . Montague said. "He
wasn 't'accused of using it. It was just
that he had a foreign substance on his
person."

The matter will .be forward to .
National League officials to decide if
a further penalty, such as a suspension, is warranted.
Titrough an interpreter, Kim sa1d
he had put the bandage on because of
a tightness in his shoulder and forgot
to take it o(f when he went m to
pitch. He said m Korea, many pitchers wear such bandages during
games.
Manager Buck Showalter, who
took the smelly bandage from his
pocket and showed it to reporters,
backed up his p1tcher.
. "It was basically a Band-Aid with
Ben Gay on it on the back of his

shoulder," Showalter said. "It was
on the back of his. shoulder and ·it
Oew out I uuJerstand what Eddie
and his crew was trying to do. It was
all very innocent, but what are you
going to do? "
As soon as Kim was thrown out,
Showalter told the umpires he was
protesting the game.
"I'd say half the pitchers on this
field have analgesic balm on th~m
and I'd say half the regulars have a
Band-Aid on them," Showalter said.
" I think we have 10 analyze and
make sure we don't over-react"
(See D·BACKS on Page S)

Scoreboard
{AL vs. NL)

Baseball
A L standings

(Colon 6·2). 7·05 p m

n

New York

Boston

1..

. 31 24
]] 25
.. 27 34
24 '5
.. 22 !t6

~

Toronto . .
Tampa Bay .
Balttmore ,.. ·..

Central Diwlsion
CLEVELAND ..
37 19

Chicago ... .

27

29.

1!&lt;1.
579
569
44)

KIIDsas Cny
;
25 32
Detroit ...... ,.............. ,,... .. 25 34 .424
)7

362

Western Di.-ision
J.S 23
Oakland ................. ..... .. 30 28
S.aule ................. .. .. .. . .. 30 28
Anaheim .................... ... 28 31

.603
.51?
.51?

Min111:S011 .... ...... . . .. 21
Te~tas

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

(AL vs. NL)

·-

40?
179

661
482
439

tO

12'1!
D 'rl
17

.415

NL standings

r....

EMtern Di\'lsion

Atlanta ...
New York
PhilAdelphia .
Montreal .
Flonda

.

n

. 37
. 11
.30
23
.23

1.. 1!&lt;1.

!ill

511

6~
12 ~
14~

22
28
28
33
37

Central Dlwls~
HouSion ....... . .. .. .
. ..35 23
Chicaso .... • . . . .. 32 24
CINCINNATI ............... ... 31 24
Pitbburgh ...... ... .. . ... . ..30 28 ·
St Looit .............. .... 29 · 29
~·lllwau~ ... ,.................... 25 33
Wt"sltrn Dlwlslon
AriJ.c.ma .. .. .. .............. ..35 2S
San Frllf'ICisco .. ........ .... J) 21
Los Angel~s ...................... 29 29
Colomdo . . . . .... .. ...... . .. 26 30
San Diezo . . ............ 23 34

627
525

~:~

431

.583
.550

2

.soo
.464
404

Anllhctm 2. San Franci sco I
CLEVELAND 6, Milwaukc:c .5 (10)
BaiiLnlOrt 4. Flortda 2
N.Y Yankee• II , Phllmdt:lphia 5
N.Y. Mets 4. Toronto] (14)
Allanta4, Tampa Bay 3 (12)
Houston 13. Chicago White So,.: 4
CINCINNATI 3, Minnesota I
Kanm City 17. St Louia I'J
Col0111,do 16. Sr:aule II
Am:ofltl 8, Chlcaao Cubs 7
los Anaeles 7, Tq~u 2
Oakland 3, San Dieso 0
NL: Arizono 8, Okoso 7

·Today's gomes.

2

2'h

5
6
10

500

Wednesdoy's scores
(AL vs. NL)
Pittsburgh 15. Detrmt .1
Montreal 13. Boston I

6

603

571
564
S 17

Stanley Cup finals

Friday's games

Eastrrn Di\'lsioJ'

Iwn

5
?
10'4

Ch1cago While Sox (Porque 6-51 pt Chicago
Cubs {Lteber 5-1}. 3:20p.m.
Tampa Bay CRekar 4-1) at Montrenl CBott sla 521 705 p.m
N.Y. Yankees (0 Hernandez 6·5) at Florida
(Meadows 5·5). 7.05 p.m.
Kansas Cny (Rosado 3-5) Ill: Pittsburgh {Benson
4-4-). 705pm

CLEVELAND (Gooden 2-2) at CINCINNATI
(Parns 4·0). HIS p m
"
TOfo nto (Hitrrul ton 0.3) m Phtl ade lph1 a (Wolf 0.
0). 7 35 P m.
'

LHP Randy Wolf from Scm.ton-WilkeiBltR' of tile
International Ceague,
,
·SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Activated OF
Barry Bonds from tile l.S-day disabled list Placed
OF Ellis BurkJ on the I5-dpy disabled list

Hockey

Oakland (Hc:rc:diil J . .a) at San 0Jc:go (Huchcnck
3·5 ) 505 pm
Milwaukee (Nomo . 2- 1) at CLEVELAND

surgery on his left arm.
Pirates 15, Tlgen 3
Brant Brown went 5-for-5 ai\P
drove in five runs, including a hOrnf
over the right-field roof at Tiger
By The AaiOCIItecl PI'IU
Stadium.
'
· If Jeff Bagwell played all his
Brown also scored four times 115
games in Chicago, he might threaten Pittsburgh ended a four-game losipg
Marl&lt;; McGwire's home run record. streak. Brian Giles, Jose Guillen and
Bagwell hit three homers and Ed Sprague also homered for ·the
drove in six runs Wednesday night in Pirates, who matched a season higll
Houston's 13-4 win over the White with 17 hits and scored at least one;
in every inning e~cept the ninth.
Sox at Comiskey Park.
It was his second three-homer Dean Palmer and . Brad Ausmus
game in the Windy City this season. homered for the Tigers.
Bagwell also had three homers and
Expos 13, Red Sox I
six RBis against th~ Cubs on April . At Montreal, Mike Thunnan
21 at,Wrigley Field.
·
pitched 7 1/3 strong innings and the
"It's just a strange coincidence," Expos halted Pedro Martinez's nine:
said Bagwell, who became the 12th game winning streak.
major·leaguerto have a pair of threeThe .Expos swept the three-game
homer games in a season.
series, extending Boston's longest
Bagwell hit a three-run homer in losing streak of the season to five. '
the sixth inning, a solo shot in the
Martinez (11-2), who struck out a
eighth and a two-run drive in the career-high 16 in his - last start,
ninth. He has 20 homers this season, allowed four runs on si~ hits in six
one behind NL leader ,Sammy Sosa innings, tying hi s shortest outing of
•
the season. He struck out 10, his
of the Cubs. .
"My swing is pretty unortho· ninth game this season with double·
dox," Bagwell said. "When it's otT, digit strikeouts. . ,
· .
Orioles 4, Marlins 2
I'm not hitting any horne runs. When
my rnet;hanics are right, I.'ve got a . At Miami, Scott Erickson pitched
chance."
.
. s~ven .e(fective innings and J,e ff
Bag'well is bat_ting .441 (15-'or- Cont' ne homered against ht's. fonner
''
34) in June with six homers and 13 team as Baltimore ended Aorida's
RBis .
seven-game winning streak.
"He's amazing," said Astros
B.J. Surhoff homered as the
pitcher Mike Hampton (7-2), who · Orioles stopped a four-game losing
gave up one earned ron in 6 213 skid. Erickson (2·8) won for the first
innings. "He's a great hitter and a in six starts since May 9, allowing
great power hitter. He's a good two oms and five hits.
human being, too. Those are three
Yankeesll,l'hillles S
things you don ' rfind a _lot in base- ' With George Steinbrenner watchball."
.
ing from the first row, New York
In other interleague games, it was scored eight runs in the sixth inning
Anaheim 2, San Francisco I;' to halt its five-game losing streak at
Pittsburgh 15, Detroit 3; Montreal Veterans Stadium.
13, Boston 1; Baltimore 4, Aorida 2;
Tino Martinez'homered and dro~e
New York Yankees II. Philadelphia in four runs, Paul O'Neill had a two5; New York Mets 4, Toronto 3 in 14· run triple and Chuck Knoblauch had
innings; Atlanta 4, Tampa Bay 3 in two .hits for the. Yankees; who won in
12innings;KansasCity !?,St.Louis Philadelphia for the first time since
13; Los Angeles 7, Texas 2; and the start of interleague play.
Oakland 3, San Diego 0.
Braves 4, Devil Rays 3
In the National League, Arizona
At Atlanta, Androw Jones drove
beat the Chicago Cubs 8-1.
home the winning run with a bases·
Rocldes 16, Mariners 11
loaded single in the 12th inning as
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his major the streaking Braves beat slumping
lea~ue-Ieadin2 23rd home run. a Tamoa Bav.
·
,
478-foot shot that highlighted a wet
The Braves have won five ill a
andwildnil!ht.atCoorsField.
row, while the Devil Rays have lost
Colorado and Seattle combined six straight.
for I0 homers, two short of the major
Mets 4, Blue Jays 3
league record. Rockies pitcher Curtis
Rey Ordonez shook off an 0-for-5
Leskanic connected. afte~ a rain delay night by singling in the winning r.un
of 3 hours , 18 1)1inufes in the seventh in the 14th inning at Shea Stadium .. .
inning.
Thomas Davey (1-1) walked Luis
Angel Echevarria homered twice Lopez and Brian McRae to open the
and drove in five runs for the 14th before being replaced by Dan
Rockies. The 10 homers, six by Plesac. Following Roger Cedeno's
Colorado, matched the m'ost ever at sacrifice bunt, Ordonez hit a Oy ball
Coors.
over Shannon Stewart's head in left
Angels 2, Giants I
to score the winning run.
At San Francisco, Barry Bonds
Royals 17, Cardinals 13
returned from a seven-week stay on
Joe Randa went 5-for-5 and
the disabled list and went 0-for-4 as Kansas City scored eight-runs in the
the Giants lost to Anaheim.
eighth to ~eat St. Louis despite
Tim Belcher (4-5) limited the McGwire 's 19th homer of the seaGiants to one run and four hits in son.
·,
eight innings as the Angels avoided a
At 4 hours and 8 minutes, it was
three-game sweep. Mo Vaughn drove the longest nine-inning game in
in the go-ahead run with a fifth- Royals history. McGwire's two-run1
inning single before leaving with a 434-foot homer in the fifth bounced
sore left ankle. Bonds returned three off the last row of seats in the left-.
weeks earlier than expected from
(See BASEBALL on Pa11e Sl

.
Dallas

Lure .

NltloMI Foofbaill
" JACJ&lt;.SONVIL~E JAGUAR . Signed LB
Anthc'lny Harris Waived LB Jason Nevndomsky
MINNESOTA VIKINGS. Si&amp;ned DL Noel
Scarle:u, LB Antico Dalton and DE l'alance Sawytt.
PHilADELPHIA. EAGLES~ Releastd LB Ja!T'Ies
Willis Re·slgntd RB Ja~s Bostic 10 a one-year
contract.
·
ST LOUIS RAMS: Released S Toby Wnght.

Saturday's game
01

Quality Prescription Service
at ·Competltlve Prices.

Football'

Tonight's game
Buflalo at Dallas, 8 p.m. (FOX)
Buffalo, 8 p m (ESPN)

Transactions

Hockey

Baseball

Amerk•n Lt•au~r
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Agreed to terms wtth

NatloiLII Hotkcy Leapt:

CALGARY FLAMES: S1111ed D Tommy
Albelin.
RHP Jon Rauch, illP Joshua Stewan, LHP Corwin
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS. Ftred John
Boston (RoSt": J.O) at N.Y Mets (Yoshit S-5), Malone, RHPAlec Holifield, OF Derek Stanley, OFBlackwell, aui51Mlt genera~ manqer
7 40 P m.
18 Julio Reyes. LHP Daniel Martinez, RHP Krii
Baltimore (Ponson 5-4)at Atlanca (Maddux 5-3), M cWhiner, RHP Joseph Cu~n . OF Todd Holt, LHP
1 40 p.m
Rocky HuMbes, 28 JllSOn Rummel and C Trent
Minne sota {Perkins 1·3) at M1lwaukte (Karl 5- . Koehler
5), 8.05 p.m.
.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: , Ptacod OF WU
San Diego (Willlalll!l 2-3) Ill HoUston (Bergman Cordero on the 60-day disabled list. Sent INF-OF
3-2);8 05 p.m.
Jalbert Cabrera to Buffalo of the lnternathmaJ
Detroit (Mlick.i 2-3) at St. Lou1s (Bottenfield 9- League Called up OF Jacob Cruz from Buffalo.
2), 8:10p.m.
' '
Purch35ed the co mrac~ of [Nf Jeff Man10 from
Colorado (Kile 4-3) at Texu (Helling 5·6), 8.35 Buffalo
p.m.
DETROIT TIGERS : Optioned INF Juon Wood
Arizona (Reynoso 3- 1) ill Anaheim (0\ivan:s 6· to To ledo of the lnteroolional League.
4), 10:05 p.m
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Signed RHP Kyle
San Francisco (Gardner &lt;)4) at Seallle (Moyer 6- Snyder
4). 10 O.S P m
MINNESOTA lWINS : Placed OF Matt Lawton
Los An,elel (C, P~rezl-7) &amp;I Oakland (Rogers on the 15-day di sabled list Ret:alled OF Jacque
3-2). 10:35 p.m.
Jones from Snh Lake of the PCL. Sent RHP Hector
Carrasco to ntendcd spring trruruna on a rehlt!llhauon auagnment Promoted OF Micl.ni Curnrnings
from New Ontain of the Eastern Leque to Sail Lake.
NEW YORK YANKEES : S1gned RHP David
Walltns. OF Gary Wmrow and·LHPAlu. Graman .
OAKLAND ATHlEI'JCS: Recalled RHP 'Iim
NBA conference finals
Hud son from VallCOUVet of the PCL. AcqWred RHP
Scott Chtasson rrom the Kansas Cil)' Royah a1 the
Wednesday's score
pla)ler to be named in the Jay Wituick trade.
New York 101 . Indiana 94; New York lettds Asstgned Ch1asson to Southern Oregon of the
1
:w:nes .\-2
Northwest League.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Placed LHP Mike
Friday's game
Duvall on the 15-day disabled list. Recalled RHP
Indiana al New York. 9 p m
M1ckey Callaway rrom Durham of1he lntnnational
League. Tramferred RHP Jim Met:ir from the IS·day
to 1he 60-day dislllbled ltst.
Sunday's game
NMkmal Lfape
•
New York at Indi ana, 7 : ~0 p.m.• if necenary
· COLORADO ROCKIES: Purchased thr con·
tract or RHP David Wainhouse from Colorado
. WNBA slate
Springs or the .PCL. Optioned RHP Oav1d lee to
Colorado Springs.
'
HOUSTON ASTROS; Signed RHP Jeffre);
Tonight's season openers
Bbtstetn, LHP Mike Gallo. RHP Chris GeDfge, RHP
Ch:uloue ot Washington, 1 p.m.
Ryan Jt~.mlaoo , LHP Dmick Johnson, RHP Kri• •
CLEVELA ND ot New York. 7..10 p.m.
Kann, LHP John Onir:, RHP Daniel Parktr, RHP
Houston at Orlando. 8 p.m.
Nick Robens, C Brian O'Connor, INF John Helquist,
Sacromemo at Los Angele$. 10·.\0 p.m
INF Ro)l« Huffman, INF Jason Lane, INF Jason
Mtlllle, INF Chris Sampson, INF Brian Schmln, OF
Saturday's games
M1chael Hill 8nd OF Steve Hoover to minor·le..ut
Los Angeles at CLEVELAND 7 p m.
contrtl.cts.
NeW Yurk ut Chnrlolte, 7 JO p.m
MILWI&gt;.UKEE BREWERS: Ronnl... d RHP I
Woshmgton at Hoos10n, 4 p m
Roberto Paredes to Huntsville or the Southern
Detroit at Minnesol[l, 8 p m
League
~
'
Orlando nt Utah, 9 p.m
PHILADELPHIA PHILUES: Ploced RHP L!7JN~~~~
Phoenix at Socrarne nto. 10 p m
Carlton Loewer on the IS-day di1abled liJt Recalled ·

We honor · most third party
prescription plans~ Your Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
·'Ken ,&amp; Rf?n are here· to fill your
prescrlpti!ln needs.
,

I

~-~-----~-----------------,
· . . C()UPON
.'

••Y

Up to 5~00 oH
proscription
Ll•lt I per Customer P.r proscription

$

Basketball

..

I

Swisher.· &amp; ',Lohse Pharmacy
Expires 6-21-99
•
L------~·~----------------~
SWISHER LOHS E

r·

Pharmacy
Kinnell! MoCullough, R.
.·
"-lei Hlnnlng, R. Ph.
Mon. lllru l'rl. 8 1.111. 10 e p.m. lit. a 1.m•.a p.m.
_ · 8undlv 10:00 a.m. 10 4:110 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
· PH. 11112·2811
E. Mlln
Frlintlly Strvlot .
Pomeroy, OH
¥/Mk Nlgh11 'UIII .

'
..

'1

.,

l

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NCAA
plans to kill
freshman
eligibility
for men's
basketball

·Bagwell's three HR~
push Astros to;13·4·.
yictory over ChiSox.

Last-quarter rally
·drives ·New York
.past Pacers 101-94
By NANCY ARMOUR
INDIANAPOLIS (M) - As the
final seconds ticked down , Patrick
: Ewing sat on the sidelines with a
· huge grin on h1s face, slapping hands
with his teammates and pumping his
fist at a handful of New York Knicks
fans, while the Indiana faithful
watched m stunned silence.
A few minutes later, his screams
of joy echoed through the back hall ways at Market Square Arena.
Those are rare displays of emotion from Ewing, even if he is wearing a suit, about as useful as a waterboy. Forgive him his exuberance,
though. His team is one game away
from the NBA Finals. one step closer
to the ring Ewing covets so desperately.
.
"There are three teams left and
we're one of them, " Larry !ohnson
said afterthe Knicks' 101 -94 victory
Wednesday n1ght. . "We' re 3-2 and
going back home. ThiS IS a golden
opportunity."
And the Knicks have Johnson ,
Latrell Sprewcll and Marcus Camby
to thank. Hardly fazed when they
were trailing by 14. the Knicks
responded with what might have
been their best postseason game
since their t1tle chase in 1994.
Sprewell proved he deserves hi s
spot in the starting lineup, slashing
and bangmg hiS way to 29 points.
Camby grabbed a rebo.und a spill
second after entering the game for
the. first time, and finished with 21
points, 13 boards and six blocks.
And Johnson, who beat the Pacers
with a fo.ur-point play to win Game
3, d1d them in from long range again,
hilling two huge threes in less than a
minute late in the fourth quarter.
The victory g1vcs the Knicks a 32 lead in 'the Eastern Conference
finals. Game 6 is Friday night at
Madison Square Garden.
" It's a one-game season for us,"
said Reggie M1ller, who got I 0 of his
30 points at ,the free-throw line. "We
got out of the gate well, bui -give

~Thursday, June10, 1999

Page4
Thursday, June 10,·1999

Knlcks take 3-2 lead in EC.finals

NBA playoffs

••

By DOUG TUCKER
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP)
-Should male basketball players be
ineligible their freshman year'
Should the NCAA reward schools
with high graduation rates by giving
them e ~tra basketball scholarships?
And penalize schools with low rates
by taking scholarships away?
Nothing will happen soon. But
those controversial ideas are being
considered by a special committee
studying the problems of Divi sion I · OUT AT THIRD - Cincinnati pitcher Brett from third baseman Mark Lewie in the flrsllnnlng
men 's basketball and could become Tomko puts the lag ·on lh1. Minn1soll Twins' of WednesdiY night's game In Minneapolis. The
NCAA law if approved by the poli- Denny Hocking at third ba11 after Hocking triad to Reds went on to win 3-1, (AP)
cy-making board of directors. The advance on Brent Gales_' grounder thlt got away
committee is not consideri ng ending
freshmen eligibility for any other
sport, includin g women 's basketbalL
" Right now, there is mixed sentiment among members of the working group on freshman eligibility,"
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Alter road tnp by a Red s te.am (eight helped g1ve the R~d s' middle rel1e l a
NCAA president Cednc ·Dempsey
completing
their best road trip since games) . sin ce 1957. The last break. Cincinnati start ers didn 't last
said. " I would say there has been a
1981
,
Cincinnati
Reds manager Jack Ci ncinnati team to win more than past the fifth inntng m back-to-hac.k
growing interest.
just
one question.
McKeon
had
eight games on a road tnp was near- losses to th&lt; Twms 011 Monday and
" There are seve ral different
"
Do
I
get
a
bonus?"
, McKeon ly 18 years ago, when the Reds went Tuesday.
options being looked at. I' m not sure
"Brett picked us up big time,"
which ones will surface at this point. joked after Wednesday night 's 3- 1 11-2 on a We st Coast tr ip in
victory
over
the
M1pne
sota
Twins
September
1981.
Graves
said "The past couple o f
one
concept
is
letting'
the
entryBut
~; GETS DOUBLE PLAY - Seconds after retiring the Milwaukee
left
the
Reds
9-3
on
a
12-game
trip.
It
didn
'
t
mauer
to
the
Reds
that
nights
our
starters didn 'l go as long,
level
student-athle
te
s,
including
·srewers' Ron Belllard, Cleveland second bas1111an Roberto Aloinar
·
Cincinnati
,
which
was
22-2
1
only
one
of
the
four
teams
they
but
Brett
was
outstanding and gave
transfer
students
and
international
-watches his throw to flrat baaa arrive in time to retire Jeff Cirillo and
us seven great 1nnmgs."
·
complete the fourth·lnnlng double play In Wadnesday nlght'e g11me students, sit out a year and concen· when it hit the road on May 28 m played has a winning record.
Florida, return s home to start a 10"This trip definitely helped us · J'he Reds won Wednesday withIrate on their academics ."
in Cleveland, where the Indians won 6·5 In 10 _Innings. (AP)
· After Big Ten commissioner Jim game homestand Friday with a 31 - turn t~e corner, " Cincinnati 's Pokey out Sean Casey, the NL's leading hitDelany conducted his own study of 24 record, bursting with momeptum. Reese said. "We didn 't care what a ter at 388, as they made the most of
Division I basketball and announced The Reds batted .305 on the tnp , team 's record was, we just came out SIX hits. Jeffrey Hammonds· t wu- r~n
possi bl e solutions to such issues as came from behind in six of nine wins and played hard and got some vicio- si ngle in the fifth inni ng was their
key hit and but it a 3-0 lead.
low graduation rates , gambling, and allowed four or less runs eight ries. "
Casey left Tuesday 's game with h
Danny Graves, who p1tched the
agents and recruiting problems, the Urnes.
" My goal was to go 8-4 on this final two innings for hi s seventh sli ght hamstri ng injury and was hel\1
NCAA appointed special 27-memtrip, but I' ll be a hog and take 9-3," save , said the Reds are looking for- out as a precaution. " He coul&lt;) have
ber committee.
By TOM WITHERS
Mtke Jackson (2·2), the '!nd1ans'
" At the t1me, the NCAA was talk- McKeon said. "We actually gave the ward to Friday when they start a played but we didn 't wanl to take a
CLEVEL AND (AP) - Jaret stxth p1tcher, went I 2/3 in'nmgs for ing about a marketin g study," Delany first game of this series away (an 8- demanding stretch of30 games in 31 chance if we didn ' t have to ... ·
Wright didn 't go ncar anyone's head , the win. Three of Clevehlnd's last sa1d. "I didn 't think marketing was 6 loss Monday) , and probably days heading into the All-Star break. McKeon said. "He 's too valuable:"
·not even his ow n.
four games have gone to extra our problem, and I told them that."
Notes: Twins catcher Juv ie)'
should have gone 10-2. Now we
" We're playing pretty good base. Wright, using a more compact innings.
The committee, whose chairman come home, get a day off, and have ball right - novy," Graves said. "I' m Valentin was 2-for-3, giving him 10
·wmdup that doesn't bring his hands
Milwaukee 's Jeromy Burnitz and is Syracuse prestdent Buzz Shaw, is a lot of enthusiasm for our next ' no( sure we even want a day off. the ·· h1ts in 16 at-bats Hi s leado ff double
over hi s head , pitched six strong Brewers manager Phil Garner were e~pected to make formal recommen- series."
way we're playing right · now. led to their only ron, which came on
tnning s in an il)1portant start both ejected in the ·I Oth inning by datioits in late July. They would be
The Reds now have the National Especially- the pitchers. We would Denny Hockmg's sacrifice ny in the
Wednesday night but got a no-deci- plate umpire Greg Kose after Burnitl. passed on to the NCAA management League 's best road record at 19-10, like to pitch every day and stay fifth ..:. Minnesota utihty mheld.er
SIOn as the Indians beat' ihe was called out on strikes for the sec- council, and from there go to the including a 1-4-4 mark since May 17. sharp."
Corey Koskie was 2-for-2 after
Mtlwaukee Brewers 6-5 in 10 ond out.
board of directors . The board might Their recent trip through Aorida (2·
Brett Tomko (2 -3) 1mproved to 7- replacmg first baseman Dou g
. '
tnntngs.
" I had to go out there," said not act until October 2001.
I), New York (3 -0), Kansas,City (3- 0 on his career . in int erleagues Mientkiewicz in the sixth inning.
.. Jacob Cruz, recalled earlier in the Garner, who rushed out of the dugout
Delany is not certain the NCAA 0) and Minnesota (1-2) included the games. He allowed one run and Mientkiewicz teft the game after
day tram Triple-A Buffalo, singled when Burnitz got tossed. •."You pro- presidents would be willing to make longest winning streak on a single seven hits _m seve n 'ihmngs and fouling a p1tch off h1s right leg.
horne Jim Thome with two. outs in teet your 'players. Let's just say that I men's basketball players ineligible as
the lOth inning for the Indians, who effected my exit."
freshmen while letting all other athblew a four-ron lead in the eighth
The Brewers sco\'ed three letes. including female. basketball
(Continued from Page 4)
tnning and cost Wright his first win unearned runs to tie it at 5 in the players, compete in their first year.
in a month. ·
eighth, with the final two 'tuns com"I don't know the answer to
Matt Williams and Jay Bell homeKim then reheved Johnson and
Vladinm Nunez p1tc hed the ninth
• ·Wright hadn't won since May 9, ing in when right fielder David that," Delany told The Associated red in the third tnning for the got Mark Grace to pop out, but ino ing for hi s first career ~;ave
but one of his best performances of Justice lost Alex Ochoa's liner in the Press. "But they should have the Diamondbacks , who shelled Cubs Taylor Houston doubled to drive in a Wi,liams made a diving catch at lhird
the season - two hits in six innings hghts for a triple.
opportunity. I hope this committee is pitchers for 18 hits. Bell also had an run. Roosevelt Brown struck out, but base on Hill 's ltne drive for tlie ftrst
'-' ·eased the Indians' fears about the
"Ninety-nine times ou~ 9f 100 he bold and does what it thinks is right RBI double, and Travis Lee went 5- Santiago scored on a passed ball and out of the ninth, and pinch-runner
rtghi-hander 's fastball and psyche.
catches it," said Hargrove. "This for the game "
for-5 with a triple and double.
Manny Alexander singled tn the Lance Johnson was pi cked off in a
' · "I thought Jaret was outstand- was the one that didn't come out of
Fres ;,?" have been eligible
Johnson was up 8-1 after seven Cubs' sixth ron of the inning to cut it rundown between first and second to
ing," Indians manager Mike the lights."
sine
72.
innings before the Cubs erupted in to 8-7.
end the gaine.
Hargrove said. "He threw strikes and
Geoff Jenkins homered for the
the NCAA bars freshmen com- Jhe eighth.
The bandage new out of Kim 's
" It is a greiu ni ght for me." Nunc/
two kinds of breaking balls. I'lltake Brewers.
tition among men 's basketball
Sosa, who struck out three times, sleeve on the passed ball pitch sa1d " I got my first chance in a close
that 'OUitng anyt1me especially wtth
Sexson, who has been takm
layers, a court challenge would homered off Johnson's first pitch in Showalter said the distraction is what game and my f1rst save . It 's beaut! ·
what he's been through lately. The extra early batting practice , led off almost surely follow.
the eighth, a shot that traveled an caused catc her Damian Miller to fu I. "
trick now is to sustain it"
the third inning with his his ninth
"I thmk a judge would listen to estimated 443 feet to left. Glenallen miss the throw.
'
Johnson. I ~ · 3 since comin l! tn the
· Wright had lost hi s last three homer, a shot to left field off J1m different treatment foi men's basket- Hill doubled , Mickey Morandini hit
Kim struck- out Sosa on a · 3-2 NL midway through l a~ t Se ason .
starts and some of his confidence Abbott that snapped an 0-for-24 slide ball if you could demonstrate with an RBI triple down the right-field pitch to end the innin g. Asked about struck out at least 10 in a game lor
after AL president Gene Budig pub- and tied it 1-L
data how unhealthy Division I men 's line, Henry Rodnguez walked and that strikeout. Kni1 sa1d, "Two more the nin th lime thi s &gt;easu n and Ill th
li cly anno unced he wanted to see the
In the fifth, Sexson , who went 0- basketball really i.s." sa td Delany, a Ben ito Sant1agu si ngled for the third to go," Indi cat ing his goal to strike time in his career. He gav ~ up IU hns.
right-hander in his New York office for-4 with two strikeouts and former chairman of the· NCAA' s time of· the night to drive in another out Sosa , Mo Vaughn and Mark including fo ur m the ci .~.dliiH nnm g;
tast week. Budig wanted to speak grounded into two double plays in · tournament selection committee . run .
MeG wire .
collap se.
with Wright about his behavior 'on Tuesday night's 2-1 loss, again led "You would need to have rationale
ihe mound following two bench- off with a homer, thi s time to right· for it."
&lt;Continued from Page 4)
c'learing incidents he triggered by center.
Delany conceded that barrin g
hitting batters.
"The only time you really think fre shm en males from basketball field bleachers at Kauffman Stadium. perfect e1g hth. and Billy Taylor fin - run sin gle py Rust y Greer in the tiftl1
But Wright, who has been work- about a slump is ~!(hen everyone asks could encourage them to jump from
ished the comhined four-hitter for his in ning after bctng slaked to a 6-(J
Athletics 3, Padres 0
oing w1th pitching coach Phil Regan you about tt," sa1d Sexson, who had high school to the NBA draft.
J1mmy Haynes pitched seven 15th save .
lead The v1c1ory was the f1t'lh in s 1x.'
"
~n some minor adjustments in his his second career. two-homer game. I
" But to me, that should not be
shut out innings for his first road VIC·
Dodgers 7, Rangers 2
starts for Brown. who tct Jrcd his last
~ eli very, looked rcla~cd and confi- was more proud than anything-Jhat 1· primary consideration,' ' he said . tory of the seasori.
Kev in Brown pitched eight strong I0 batters and dealt the AL West
e:tent agamst the Brewers.
didn' t lose my confidence."
"Those players are not going to be
Haynes (4-5), who allowed only innin gs to imProve his home record leaders only thctr third loss 111 15
' " It felt real good to go out there
Jeff Manto and Cruz were called (in school) very long anyway. At the two hits .. had been 0-3 with a 6.75 to 5-0, and Enc Karras snapped a games.
e nd keep our team in the ballgame," up· when Wil Cordero went on the end of the day, that's not an NCAA ERA in five road games, includmg scoreless tie Wllh a three -run homer.
Eri'c Young had three hi ts and
~ aid Wnght, stung by accusations he ·60-day disabled list with a broken problem. That's a problem for the four · stans. He struck out six and
Brown (7-3) struck out six and three RB Is for the Dodgers .
lvas a headhunter. "I was real wrist. Cordero, who broke his wrist NBA players association."
walked three. T.J. Mathews pitched a allowed five hits, including a twoIn another possibly controversial ~leased with the way I pitched making a sliding catch in Tuesday's
game, had a screw inserted i ~ the move , the group is thinking about
"'
' h"
l&gt;"ntg
t.
.
• Wright said after watching video- radius bone of his wrist, ~nd is ~sking the board of directors to tic
scholarship limits to graduation
~pe of some previous starts and expected to be out for 10 weeks.
Notes: Garner said he knew rates. Schools Y,'ith low graduation
Gullpen workouts, he decided to go
Dack to the windup he- used in the Cleveland's signs when he pitched rates in men 's basketball would have
91inors . Instead of raising his hands out Tuesday night in the ninth inn_fg fewer scholarships to offer than those
abOve his head, he kept them in tb foil the Indians' try at a sul1!1de with higher rates.
squeez~ . He seemed to know someMales would be singled out for
~ont.
,; " It was a little too much move- thing Wednesday as twice Abbo!t fresftrnen ineligibihty because of
~ent," he said. "It felt a lot better. picked off Cleveland runners who their consistently low graduation
lt's just the little things. And if you had broken for second. ... Abbott rates. According to the NCAA's hitdp the little things right you're going pitched a no-hitter against the est statistics, only 41 percent of male
Indians on Sept. 4, 1993, for New basketball players in the 1991 entertil throw strikes."
ing class' got their degrees, including
~ Richie Sexson snapped an 0-for- York at Yankee Stadium.
lune slide by homering h&gt;vice for the Milwaukee has homered in seven just 37 percent of black players. That
Stroll through the Country Store. Have a down ho111e cooking in the newly
fndians , who because of tnJunes and straight games and , 14 of 15. '" was the lowest of all groups.
renovated Dining Hall or just open the window to the past by wa~t&lt;lertn!li
The graduation rate for all
SUSpensions started tWO players just Indians broadcaster Mike Hegan is
through the grounds and enjoying our many exhibits.
..... ...r~ailed up from Buffalo.
. one of only four Brewers to hit for Division I athletes was 57 percent.
• One of them was Cruz, who had the cycle. Hegan did it on Sepf. 3, The rate for female basketball play:Mruck out in his two previous at-bats 1976. The others: Charlie Moore, ers, 66 percent, was the highest.
"hen he came through with his first Robin Yount and Paul Molitor.
~L hit in the I Oth with the winning
l'lln at third.
,
: " Not bad, huh?" said Cruz.
·~ After the first five or six innings I
.,alized I was back in the big
l~ag ues. It's just one game, -but I'm
~ff to a good start."
,.
.: Thome reached on a two-out
~elder's choice in the. lOth before
~exson singled to right off Rafael
Roq ue ( 1·5). C~uz, acquired last year
. irom San Francisco, then blooped a
~ngle into left in his sixth AL at-bat.

Cincinnati finishes road trip with 9•3 mark

Reds be.a t Minnesota Twins 3-1

Jri·be tops Brewers
6-5 in 10 ·innings .

a

D-baCkS . .:.

Major league baseball...

a

. . """'"' ATrip To
At

Past

WV State Farm
June 12 &amp; 13, 1999 9 AM • S PM
Gas &amp; Steam EnW,ne Show
Entertainment On Stage

HYMN SING
Spon80red By

HILLSibJt BAPTI~
CR1.1RCR
' St. Rt.

'•

:: The Rose Bowl , the laSt
:holdout in college football's
~sponsorship deals, in _
1998
~became Tile Rose Bowl
Presented by AT&amp;T.

•.o

Pomeroy

SATURDAY, JUNE %Ztb 7 pm
Pomeroy farldal Lot ·
.
Dr. James R. A.- Pastor
lavltes Everyone To -Attend
Please Brlftl Lawn Chairs
•

Dewey Taylor 11 am •1pm
and
Everett Wedge Band 1pm •3pm

.

Demonstrations of
Corn Grinding,
.Broom Making &amp;
Rope Making .

Church Services Sunday 9 AM

�Thursday, June 10, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

·P &amp;G reorgan·i zation gets cool response on Wall .Street
By JOHN NOLAN
Aa.oclated Pre•• WrHer

CINCINNATI- Procter &amp; Gamble Co.'s plan to overhaul its worldwide
operations, cut 15,000 jobs and close about I0 plants in order to increase sales
and get new products to tbe market sooner wasn't an immediate hit with Wall
Street.
As the company revealed the plan Wednesday, P&amp;G's stock cl osed down
$2.56 1/4. or2.7 percent, at $92.25 a share in heavy trading on the New York
Stock Exchange. It had fallen to $90.50, a 4.5 percent decline, before recov·
ering. .
·
Mel Hughes of Stein, Roe &amp; Farnham, one of the analysts at the company 's briefing in New York, said he was disappointed that P&amp;G is still expect·
ing sluggish revenue growth and that the reorganization won't produce quick
improve.ments.
,
Connie Maneaty, an analyst at Bear Stearns &amp; Co., said she was encouraged with what she heard.
'
"Anything that will make. them nimbler to market" is a plus, she said.
P&amp;G management said the "Organization 2005" restructuring is essen·
tial if the·w mpany is to meet its stated goal of improving profits and doubling its worldwide sales within 10 years - despite intense competition in
U.S. and foreign markets.
The worldwide cuts amount to 13 percent of P&amp;G'.s work force of 110,000

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 10, 1999

people. That includes 4,300 jobs in North America, among them 1,900 in the next decade.
The company with annual sales of more than $37 billion has more than
the Cincinnati area, P&amp;G's corporate headquarters city.
P&amp;G said 10,000 jobs would be eliminated by the middle of 2001, with 300 brands and reaches more than 140 countries.
the remaining 5,000 jobs to be cut after that.
The reorganization takes effect when the company'snew fiscal year begins
P&amp;G's chief executive, Durk Jager, said t~ estimate of about 10 plant , July I. Under the program, P&amp;G will move from four business units based
closings includes one in Wakefield in the United Kingdom, which the com· on geographic regions to seVen global business units based on product lines.
pany announced was closing two weeks ago. He declined to identify other The company also will tailor sales programs for local markets.
plants being closed but said they would probably include some from the baby
The program will cost Procter &amp; GambleS 1.9 billion after taxes. Man·
care, feminine pmlcction and hair care businesses.
·
agement expects that it will generate afte.r-tax savings of $900 million annuThe company 's former chief exe&lt;utivc, John Pepper, had said in 1995that ally by the fiscal year that begins July I, 2003.
·
the company's sales would double to $70 billion in 10 years.
P&amp;G said 42 percent of the work force reduction will occur in Europe,
But his successor told securities analysts Wednesday in New York that the Middle East and Africa, 29 percent in Nprth America, 16 percent in Latin
reaching that goal would be·an "enormous challenge " requiring sales growth America and 13 percent in Asia.
of 9 percent a year. The company nuw expects long-term sales growth of 6
Jager said some workers will be laid off, but that P&amp;G will try to make
percent to 8 percent a year.
maximum use of retirements, relocations, voluntary departures and reducJager said the company, maker of the household main stays Tide, Crest, tions in hiring,
Pringles and J&gt;ampers. has fallen short of its sales growth goals for the past
The last major restructuring was a 1993 reorganization that was ·designed
six q·uartcrs due to 'cconomic· weakness abroad.
. to reduce expenses to 12 percent of sales. That program involved closing 30
-Chief financial officer Clayton Daley said sales this quarter are expect· plants and eliminating 13,000 positions throughout the w0rld. Most of those
ed to match or-come in slightl y below last year.
job cuts came from early retirements, attrition and voiuntary separation packJager said $70 billion remains·Procter's "stretch goal," but conceded thC ages.
new growth forecasts would leave it at about $60 billion by the middle of
(Editor'• note: Bualneas Writer Skip Wollenberg In New York con·
trtbuted to this repon.)
·

bee

NOTII!NG RUNS
UKEADEER~

...._GitQ
688 Pinecrest Drive
Galllpolll
We Aulo w.s Ill oW Rle. 35 . .

Aaoa'""'

(740) 446-2412

across-the-board pay raise for the mi litary, up from the 4.4 percent hike pro·
posed by President Clinton, and is $1.4 billion higher overall for the year
than Clinton's 'budget for the fi sca l year that beg ins Oct. I.
The legislation also endorses a Pentagon plan to lease, for about $50 mil·
li on a year, six new business jets for the use of its top admirals and gener·
als. An effort to reject the proposal, which occupied most of Tuesday's debate
on the defense bill, was defeated 66-31.
'
Sens. ·Barbara Bnxer, D-Calif. , and Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, led the
unsuccessful effort.to delete the provision authorizing the Air Force plan to
lease six Gulfstream "V" exec uti ve business jets for the military's commanders in chi ef at a cost of about $500 million over IO years.
"I'd like to have nne - to go back and torth to Iowa," said Harkin, stand·
ing alongside large color photographs of the sleek. top -of-the-line aircraft
during Senate de bale. " I wou ldn ' t have to go through Chicago anymore.''
Harkin, a Navy pilot durin g the Vietnam War, said the Pentagon already
had more than .300 "administrative ~ircraft ," including more than 100 busi·
ness-style jets, and didn ' t need to lease new ones.
But Stevens, a former military pilot him self in World War II, said the
nation's four-star commanders currentl y were forced to fly in "old dumbos," some of them converted 707 passenger jets as muc)l as 35 years old.

New .mothers' hospital ·Stays gradually. getting longer
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
· AP Medical Writer .
WASHINGTON .- New mothers
are st~y ing in the hospital' about half
a day longer than they did in the mid·
1990s, who;n insurance companies cut
childbirth stays to 24 hours and
spa.rked an outcry about ''drive-by
deli veries."
A government study says the trend
began before a federal law requiring
insurance coverage of 48-hour child·
birth stays went into effect last year,
thanks to a few state laws that already
were giving women a longer stay.
Doc tors say 24 hours often is long
enough for healthy women with
·un complicated vaginal deliveries
who are hav ing their second baby.

But first-time mothers who generally have l o nge~ Jabors and more.ques·
tions about newborn care often need
a second day.
So in the wake of complaints
about insurers forcing shorter stays,
states began passing laws in 1995 and
. 1996 requiring coverage of 48-hour
stays. A simil ar federal law took
effec t last year. ·
In 1980, the nation's average stay
for a vag inal delivery. was 3.2 days.
That dropped to 1.7 days by 1995, but
inched up to 2. 1 days by 1997, the
Centers for Disease Control and Preventi on reported Wednesday.
In 1995, 1.4 million new mothers
- 37 percent --, we'e hospitali zed
for one day or less. In 1997, 951,000

new mothers - 25 percent - had
Separate.data from insurance giant
such short sta.ys, the CDC reported. Aetna-U.S. ·Healthcare shows its
Obstetri cians wcre n'1 surprised, members' mater.nity Stays after vagisayi ng the differe nce between 1995 .nal deli vety increased from I. 7 day's
a,nd te&gt;day is obvious - length of stay · in 1997 to 2.4 days in 1998. .
is no longer an issue thei r pa ti en~ s
But because the change is expen·
discuss.
si¥e- Aetna pays about $1,000 per
Before the laws, " patients were cjay of childbirth hospitalization angry or upset" while today. "it's the insurer .has c ut its previous beh·
mostly noticeable'by the lack of di s· · clit of two·at-home nurse visits after
cuss ion:" said Dr. Fredric Frigoletto, a baby's birth to one.
'The bigger issue is whether hosobstetrics chief at Massachusetts
General Hospital. "Those that want pitalizing lots of new mothers longer
to go home earlier are ready to go is beneficial: Are newborns healthihome, it's apparent they are and er" Do women get extra training in
everybody . feels comfortable, and breast feeding? Do they bond better
we don't have 10 force people out that with their babies? Thus, is the extra
c3re cosl-effective?_
literally aren 'I ready to go. "
Nabody yet knows. University of

wide autonomy and power within the
department
has run into strong oppo·
Associated Press Writer
. WASHINGTON - Congress is sition. It was blocked from floor
mov ing with unusual speed to tight- action just before Memor.ial Day,
en sec urity at nuclear weapons labs, although its ·sponsors hope to revive
but lawmakers surprisingly have it thi s year. ·
The proposal was the subject of
shown little interest in using the Chi:
nese espionage uproar to break up the three hours of debate Wednesday
Energy Department - an agency that before the Senate Intelli gence Comnot long ago was a target for extinc- mittee , where it got a cool reception
tion.
from Democrats.
'
While the House on Wednesday
But Sen. John Ky I. R-Ariz..
passe.d a . string of proposals to argued that such an .ad mini stration
improve counterin telligence pro· "with clear lines of authority,
grams, including wider use of poly· accountability and responsibility"
graphs at research labs. a proposal to and control of its own budget would
begin planning the transfer of nuclear "ensure the safety and reliability of
weapons programs to the Defense the U.S. nuclear arse nal. "
But Energy Secretary Bill
Department was withdrawn.
And in the Senate, another pro· Ri chardson den ounced the idea. call·
posal to create a Nuclear Security ing it "a first step toward military
Administration that would be given takeover of nuclear weapons devel·

opment."
Still, the proposal offered by Kyl
and Scns. Frank Murkowski. R· Aias·
ka. and Pete Domenici, R-N. M.,
pales in comparison to efforts·onl y a
few year;s ago to dismember the Ener·
gy Department altogether and give
the nuclear programs to the Pentagon. ·
Despite the controversy over 1ax
security at weapons labs and loss of
nuclear secrets to China, there is litti e talk of breaking up the $18 billion
department, where activities range
· from promoting more efficient light
bulbs to assuring America's nuclear
warheads will .work properly if they
are ever needed.
One 'reason may be Richardson,
the former congressman and U.N.
ambassador, who took over at the .
·department in September and has
been gi ven high ma.rks from both
Republicans and Democrats for hi s
handling of the security mess.
By contrast, when talk of breakirtg
.
apart the department was at its peak ·
under fin ancial responsibility action in 1995, at the helm was Hazel
suspension , $240, no insurance,
O'Leary, a frequent target of Repub$140; Jason E. Hudson, improper lican conservati ves who dogged her
passing, $115; Jessie V. Cochran,
on everything from her worldwide
speed, $55; Darlene Jeffers, speed, travel itinerary to her push for an end
$25; Greg Nease, dri vi ng under the to nuclear testing.
influence, $490, speed, $54; Michael
Ric hardson by contrast has
L. Snyder, speed, $52; Raymond worked Congress incessantl y and
Post, speed, $52; Russell A. Robin· with finesse ever since the China .
son, speed, $58; Linda Crites, speed, espi onage brouhaha erupted in early
$52; Edna M. Householder, speed, March. His strategy has been to
$5~; Michael G, Cotterill, speed, $52. ·
acknowledge past failures and agree

to a broad range of .security changes
and greater oversight from Congress
in hopes of heading off more onerous
.
measures.
"I think the worst is over,"
Richardson said in an interview late
Wednesday after the House by a 428-

ATTENTION
ADVERTISERS! .

AdvertiH 11 this

w

'•

Inc.

Bob's Market 8

-.cllrCcMmp~on:Mark

'-t•

I

The following cases were resolved
. recently . in ihe Syracuse Mayor's
Court of Mayor George Connolly :
Minter V. Fryar IU , reck less operation, $140, failure to control. $80, fictitious tags, $290; Michael S. Ricker, speed, $53; Bernard R. Alderman
Jr., speed, $52; Jessi W. Knight,
speed, $55; Susan M. Pullins, speed,
$52; Keith K. Householder, speed,
$51; Matthew A. Eblin, speed, $55;
Daniel .S. Whi(tek.ind, speed, $52;
Eric J. Day, speed, $62; Jonathan D.
Moore, speed, $53; Earl R. Willi ams
Jr., obstructing justice, $290, disorderly conduct, $90; Lowell C. Flowers, obstructing justice, $290, disor:
derly conduct, $90; Crystal D. Gheen,
leaving the scene, $190, dri ving

Actions to end
marriages filed
The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk Of Courts Larry Spencer:
'
Oissoiution as~ed- Jill L. Johnsori, Racine, and Patrick V. Johnson,
Racine, June 8. .
Dissolution granted - Angela .
Sue Maynard and Stephen Maynard,
June 7; Gloria K. Herdman and
Ephriam V, Herdman, June 7. .
Divorce granted - Michael
William Duhl fJom Robin Leigh
Duhl, June 7;Angela Marie Lee Hudnall and Roger Lee Hudnall ,' June 8;
Patsy Ann Choate from Walter Allen
Choate, June 8.

,

~·~-....u.......,...._...__

·

· lf~r tpelf iflfl$e «tillJe klrl.fwrr/~
c!Me '-" 1999~M l-9;~r MlffiJ&lt;tif!
(he raflaatto~r fl~&amp;tir 8. /Vt11"1(tl" ~M Rto

oR ·

::.,........
WAVE
PETUNIAS
.

/},.,

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

ilttf~uru flJ('{vrtt, tJ/"t, ,~'tu/ t~1tt~1 bj fo,.
~k,,.,.t.r "'fr«.

-'"'fc-~"'-~_.....---

.

'

ilf01Miol

Jack Sprague, Chevrolet,

CRAFTSMAN TRUCKS
Clenllnl up: Pronto Auto

178.642 mph, June 4.1998

••••••••••••

YowTurn

o.•·•·

Fl

'Could )'OU explain .how the

1

weekly rankin"' by N'-l&gt;Co\R Tnls -

·Ridenour
Supply

Won from the pole

1. (3) llobby Iabonte
2. 111 Jell IIUrton

A bft orr at Dover
Another top five
Two strai&amp;IJtlllirds
Not enouatJ In the tank
Any week now
Ran ~~ at Dover
her montn 'til Da~ona

3. (2) .,... _

4. )4) M M I 1. (I) Jell-

e.

.

money (prize) for each - ;.
distribut&lt;d by posilions, I to 437
Ther&lt; (have) been quile a few
times where a driver M\o .fmiJb.
es !=loser to last still gets more
priu rtlOI1&lt;)' than a driver Mia
fmishes in a better position.

writer

Last week 's rankin&amp; 11 In parentheses.

111 'l'onrltenrt

7. (II ilultJ wan•· (I) Eemberdt
e. (71 Tonr !.Monte

hui ·Giftll

Dubaque, lu.ra
!«SCAR lou bemus plans,
tlr.e most prominenl/Ming the
ttfJrMrs Clrr:k, Wltich rrwards

SF

·

llfVI"I troubles
one of his better weeks

10. (10) WIN 1 -

tire most successful teQMS artd
lhe ona Olfld successfolly

qualifyfor all tM ni~J. Wizen a

team is 011 such a plmt or plllns,
its prize money ls enhanced at
every ruct. 17ri.J accounts for the
seeMing discrepancies.

'

Deor NASCAR Th~ Week,
In 1998, NASCAR and
Good)af developed a rain lire
(and) also had the owners install

(windshield wipers). So \&gt;by
haven\ they fmished any races
in the rain?
·
JIIFOI E. Doaperly

J - l l t t,N.C.

FROM LA IT WEE K
WINSTON CUP I I -

,

.

E""")OOO elSe """ to pit, Old r101 t!olllly LllllOnle, and when the
ween fla&amp; wawtd fot' the ftnal105
the result was Labonte's
first v1cto&lt;y or the seoson. Jeff Gonion wu the onty 'other car on
the tead lap as he, third-place ~laher Mark Martin, Wth-plece
Tony stewart and atl the otlleiiiiCietS """ to pit In the wanlrc
laps. For the second week In a raw. bOth Joe Gibbi-OWnld
PonUacs.• I.JII&gt;onte and Stewart, ftnlshod In tho top lour.

.ps.

~-~~~~'--~~---.. -

=

c

&amp;l

~ ~ ..C
• _..
~ ::1 ; "0

1
]
J::il·
·~ ~ ~~ ~~~~~

!

Q

t!l o ~.. ':l~

~

~,..

~

f ~ 10 ii
.~ ~ "CC
;; .§ ;g ~
01

i"'=•
e~

Ij
0

1;11

~ ~ U S ';. ~~! ~~

Deor NASCAR This Week,
How do I 1!0 about getting
ticl&lt;ets for 1he nexlllaytona 500
race? Any information on the
race -ud be helpfu l.

1\taryG-

MattKeMolh.

St. Cloud, MloF.

CIIAmMAN TIIUCK IIIIID
Jack Sr&gt;riiiiUO. the 1997 SUperTruct&lt;o c:hamp, won the nltlllttlmo
e-.ent at BriS!OI Motor Speedway. k was Chrly- Spra&amp;uo'a
second victory In • raw. Spraaue waa never threatened In the
•loolrC ,..,., ftnloh1rC ...rty 4...., """"!l'la , 1ron1 of Dodp d""'
Stacy Carnt&gt;!on.

C&lt;ltt (904J zsJ.mJ. JN,
do so right aloM:ly. .
7Jiey are ltard ro come by.

s~t you

., ..

~~~hH

••••••••••••

••••••••••••
VJhftiiM:V.IIIo'sNo&amp;

~~~
~1

ill~ lfl

~::i~td

The ti~ you mention I4W
developed ONLY for road counts. No practical mearu of mclng
on ovtJIJ with rain tires has bun
developed.

X

won_,

H~sr~:;i:1&amp;
~ ~~i :II 1 :
i
8~

'

IIWID NATIONAL
Dale Eamnardl Jr.
tne fll'lt: time this year as well,
defendlrC his title In the MBNA Platlntlm 200 at D&lt;M1r Downs.
Earnllanlt, the 1998 series c:hamc&gt;lon. too11 o 34-polnt teed OWt

1..

-·

•MAn IIINIEnt FAN CUJI
ANNUAL OUD: $15

championships?

........

It

Fan Tips

wno w111h0 ftrot- to be bloct.

rtaaed durtnC a raco ot Doyto')l?
2. wno won ttvee stnl~ Convertible OMolon

• HOT• ~ Llbonto, aecond
andllrlt In 1hO Iaiii two

...... ii: Ouwteftt newslettets.
discounts, ~card
-IITIRID BY: Roy
ttladl. 1101~ l&lt;ensetll

- .

'UJOqltM qog · ~ '096l Ul 'lOWJOlt
• 1I10II1I'A ""'' ~tllll"'"' lltii»&gt;Ot ......., wll~
11Jt1 "'11 ~(UUI\I.IOj 'WOOS .Jtlll1.1. "'U. UIWJ9H ~

• N01'1 Emit lrvan, no better
then 22nd tn the 1a11 nlllll

••••••••••••
11f -

(sister)

MAIUN8AJIDIIDI:Matt
Kenseth ' Fan Ckb, 10 WtMr St..
c~. ~

NASCAR This Week

DOVER. Del. - Soon
·
named aow .m.r
forT- Soboo~ No. .w Coon
Liahl Chovn&gt;IOI and driver,
Slerll&lt;w Marlin. Ho - l h e
2010ot«oo"""'_be_
.,.,. ollilfforTeam Sabco\
Bclls..itt\ Chmotet aridJpo N,_llel&lt;,

Euletlol. -

Lto S Cruise
tJj 'Ira.fJel
740-992-4233
800-795·1110

'IWniiWIIp'TonyOIOI'H
wiii~C~Ve

u interim m:w chief
forN..,..hok.
· '

202 w. Second street

K

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

X

.J. LOOKING FORWARD ro

n: Ruoty WaHioolikealhe

niANKS JOE: Notlho ,_of

•poomlna """'h of Winol&lt;ln Cup

•. sas23

-IITI: -.mattllo!NJo...- -•.oom

ARIIIJNO THEGARAGE

...,.. be,_ aow and mld.July.
· "It~ IDnd of an en,joyll&gt;le -.b
bca!Uie lpt to 10 to tome ""' .
nW thai t haYm' been 10 in a
while,"lllclwa\lace. ·-n-~
"""""'• oboul what I to 10
Pacmo. I lib aoinl to Focono.l
don't know wfllt it il, bull like
.,....,_. n.o..~~&lt;aoouplc
f'aloorile _.,.,.. hq ou1
st. tnd the c::c.cb M..,.. at IIW
c:ool. l - flon up ."'There are a lac of~~etnch
I like booa-1 haw fun. and
there lrll IOIDe lhat I JUII hlee.
I lite 1ht bade, bUI I hale 1he
aurroundinp."

Dutton

tony SleWirl~ adY111118et in 1ht
...., for WiniiM Cup rooiUe of
the year is the owner who brouc,ht
him 10 1ht Winsl&lt;ln Cup Serieo.
SaidSIOOIIIofJoeGibbs:"l
oouldn 'I
fon bc11«
car owner thin Joe. In thi1 busi·
ncu, to put a Ieamon the track
you'letalti&lt;wbiadollan,andl"m
no1 tallcinJ oix dipll, you'le talk·
• in1 teYen dicits ~ eomdima
eiaht Sometimes -;o. tooe 1"'"'. •
focus, and people~ to becomo
obje&lt;talll certain poinL
"I've beC11 wi~ r.oe teaml

·

have'*""

whi.e -people wetl! 11&lt;11ed

like material or cool&amp;insteld of
people. One llti•¥ aboul Joe
Gibbs, everyone 11 ...led u an
equal. He 'I there, will ina to Iitten

11\d willingiO http you any way

he can. Everybody~ so -ned
about the business aide. they for·
aet it~ people Mia make it hlp-

pen.

.

· fuel mlleaco on a ~naton
Cup ... ,. I rloky

Herallytake~&lt;anof hio

poople. He makes you r..tlike .

you're !lpCCial."

X

.

• Sometimes ..lcutatl"'

·

1'01'1:NTIAL DARLINGroN MtLLIONAIR£8: The top

liw finilhen in the Cota..COia
600 will be etipltte for 1ht No
B•ll FM $t tlliltion bonus inlht
Soodllern soo Sqtt. s at Dutina·
""'· Forlht .......t, they ""' Jetr
B.non, 8obb, .Labcn,., Mart
Martin. TCII)I aDd Dale

--. ~­
No-·
110 10&amp;

Jimmy M - ~ld IIIII

~ Llbonte,

c:ould
tapo around
tlcMir llowna lntematlonol

SoeodWar on one tonk or
fuel. 10 Llbonte , _
orr hli fuet tn wt1h
preclut) 1IWt runber ot

' - tc t10 .. tno MBNA

Plltlnum .tOO. No one elM

c:ould

or-,_ .......

• _ , . dlelolon. and
... mutt. t.abonto lhoby
mlflln, 22.0 7 1 -•

the--

of the ooaoon to dille. ·

Jam:n.

.

CoprtW1t1M 1"111 O.on (N .C.j Glntte • OlstrltMid br ~ Prtu ~ (800) 2554734 • fOr,...... WOIIIC rl JUI'It 7, lM • 0..~ ~ InC., lniOI.I, At.
.
.

TREES and SHRU

ATTENTION

ATtENTION

ADVERTISERS!!

ADVERTISERS!!

9f !lou Have COte }leed fOr Speed•··
we've got ltttf

Advertise on.this ~ge

Advertise on this page

'

Call 992-2155

·,

.

l

.3/8~=·ai~

For llll'e

·
quaNftinl record:

Linin,_

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

Caii992-21SS
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy .Ext. 1OS

0eor NA.'!CAR This Week,

1

;::. *I,••

Pfl~r~" ()ito. ·
£,.,;., ,;, tie r!a.pteJ&lt; of.f~~r tt". /Vt11"~rtl"
(/1 PtiM~! flJ(dR!ew.l11. W'tl/"l(tl" (/1#ttrlle;fll'~
Mdtk~r/IQ«~teJ&lt; flj Ra~~ «KdtJcte tlfct«&lt;(e
6ftf!tlrl~t flJ(d¢~ 4/rd~f6Qce

~

Raines
Tn~ek

When: Saturday, Juno. 12

BIIH&amp;.
....,,,dbluu.COftl

lravel needs

.

1

. /Vt11"1(tl" t~f Po~r~l·

1

Parts 400
Where: Texas Motor ,
SPH&lt;Iway (1 .5 miles[,
Justin, Texas. ·167
taps/250.5 miles
When: Friday, June 11
IJei'WrldtnC -pion: Tony

page

41nch pot

¢,.f1J(r/e tf~r,HJ&lt;tlft e(/~ «tit~&amp; aBacie!u,. (/1
S'cteil'ce lJeru tir 8a~tirwt tf«K4J'Uf"~~'t Mrl
aeeJ&lt;ttfreatto; tir efl~r;atu- Tuil(flluif at
120'1~ .S',.,.eca

OR

T1'8Ck quallf)llic record:

PROfllF

your

GERANIUMS or
NEW GUINEA IMPATIENS

ROSE

Tim

Eggleston named crew·chief for Sterling Marlin

Includes: All bedding plants &amp;o111 Aaeratum to Zinnia•.
And au 10" lfansJns ilukets In stock

:Jac:kscm Perkins

DallndliiC cMmplon:
FedeWa

Date 'Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
94.457 mph, July 24, 1998
-.....,..,Todd Bodine,
Ch&lt;Molet, 70.785 mph, June
8,1996

Medique 300
South Boston (VB.}
$peedway (0.4 mile}, 300
taps/120 miles

186.611 mph, June 16, 1995

218JS

Quality

.,.,. - :

Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet,

] .e

COH'I1lNUES!!
:. . ,...,._L BEDDING PLANTS AND 10" HANGING BA~;KE"rS

Rice.....,.., Rusty .
Wallace, F&lt;&gt;rd, 1 5~ .033 mj,h,

Clenlinl ..: MtcNpn 400 June 23, 1996
" ' - Mlchlaln Speedway
(2,0 mitesI. Brooklyn, Mich.. .
lUSCH- NATIOIIAL
200 lop$/400 miles
Wlltlo: Sunday, June 13
CGmtnl up: Telltllea..,
MarUn

·;
Z
c..ac

June Savinlls

Syracuse mayor's court

THE WINITON CUP RRIES

7:30p.m. • Friday • ESPN2
• Mil, TIICI'II t MMtque 300
5:30p.m. • Sal1,i(day • TNN
• Wlnaton cu,, Mlo~lpn 400
1 p.m. • Sunday • CBS

.

Meanwhile, Richardson disc losed
that an internal department investi·
gation intn the mishandling of the
alleged iheft of nuclear secrets at the
Los Alamos lab in New Mexico ·
won't be released for at least another 30 days .

'

ON THE SCHEDULE

All nn. b8fetll
.
• c - TniOkl. ,_,.... 400

Chicago researchers just won feder· may not be easy. Frigoletto said for
al funding for a five-year study of the first-time mothers recuperating from
effects of the 48-hour stay law.
longer labor, much of that second day
But in a study just published in the ' is spent resting - something they
American Journal of Public Health, might not do at home.
the. universitY's Kristiana Raube used
Illinois births to estimate the law 's
The CDC's hospital s!udy also
costs.
Her conclusions: Extra hospital· examined patients with the AIDS
ization will cost about $1,400 more virus, and found good news: They
per mother and baby. Overall , about spent almost 900,000 fewer days in
2 percent of U.S. newborns are read- the hospital in 1997 than in 1995.
Better drugs that started hitting the
mitted to the hospiial during the fi rst
two weeks of life. If a 48-hour initial market in 1995 already had slashed
stay eliminated every newborn read- AIDS deaths. But the CDC said its
mission, the state's· childbirth costs study is the first to show these expenstill would rise by 18 percent if all sive drugs - about $20,000 for a
mothers took the extra day.
year's supply - also cut even more
Measuring an extra day 's benefit costly hospital stays.

0 vote had approved a package of
proposals that beefs up count~rintel­
. ligence programs, requires polygraph
tests of lab scientists, restricts lab visits by foreigners and requires a bar·
rage of new reports to Congress on
technology exports.

992-2825

740 992.;,2196

Congress moves .to enhance security at nuclear laboratories
By H. JOSEF HEBERT

106 North Second
Aw. • Middleport, OH
.

461 South Third Middleport, Ohio

.

"They're big, they're old, they're costly to maintain," Stevens said. Allow·
ing the Pentagon to lease the jets would enable the milit~ry "w redu~e . the
cost and put our people immediately into mor;; cost etTecuve, q~1et, eftJOJent
planes."
'
·
.
Cheryl Irwin, a Pentagon spokeswoman, said the current fleet of planes
used by the Pentagon's top commanders was aging and had "outmoded navigation and security systems."
·
'·
·
She said Army Gen. Wesley Clark, the top NATO commander. "cannot
make a trip across the Atlantic without a refueling stop" in hi s current plane,
a military version of a DC-9.
The Senate also approved $220 million for four of Boeing Co.'s F-15 tight·
er planes, a move designed to keep the line open through 2001.
Flagging sales of the company's premier aircraft last month triggered major
cut~ in the company's St. Louis workforce, with layoffs of 6,500 to 7,000
workers over,the next two years.
The Israeli government recently postponed a $2.5 billion F-15 purchase,
just two weeks after Boeing lost the $3.5 billion sale of the aircraft to Greece,
which instead signed a contract to buy Lockheed Martin's F-16, an advanced
fighter.
.
,1_

I F 1........... 5 a.

lliuiD=i\:-i
.

Carmichael's ·Farm &amp; Lawn

Defense spending bill restricts funds for helping .Serbia
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The Senate is insisting that the United States not be
billed for any costs associated with rebuilding the rest of Serbia under a Koso·
vo peace plan, as long as Slobodan Milosevic remains in power.
"Rebuilding should primarily be done with European money, " said Sen.
Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, chairman of. the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Steve ns, speaking with reporters. said some European leaders were anticipating that the United States would pay up to half the costs of repairing the
damage from NATO airstrikes that began March 24.
The prohibi tion, which l)ad wide bipartisan support, was part of a $265
billion defense spending bill approved Tuesday by the Senateby a 93-4 mar·
· gmThe House is expected to consider a si~ilar provision later in the week.
Even if the peace plan now being finalized holds, "the problem is Mil o·
sevic," said Senate Majority Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss .
Loll and other Senate leaders say they want to see Milosevic arrested and
tried on his ind ictment by an international war crimes tribunal _ althoug~
Loll did not specify how Milosevic might be apprehended.
The defense spending measure includes funds to pay for a 4.8 percent

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

2 COJi(YENIENT LQCATIONS1·,
1/4 MILl! NORTH OF POMEROY-MASON

2o400 EASTERN AVENUE,

BRIDGE, MASON, WV

OALLIPOUS, OHIO
PHONE (740) 441-1711
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK

t11j

PHONE~) 7'7U721

OPEN·7DAYIAWEEK

I

·---

-----~---

--- --- ----...--....

.

Dave Ext. 104 .
·Kathy Ext. 105

'

total·web
.
'

. . . ,l ...... ,..... ....... .....m

Call Now And Sign·Upl
675·3398 or 107()6.0553

For more Information

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
Modems!

CABLEVISION

..,-------~--·

· Dave Ext. ·104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information

COMMUNICATIONS

•·
.

Call 992-2155

--

_

.. '--;------ ....... --

-

·' '

�,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
..
P.~,;;,ge_a_e_The_
· ~D:.:a:.:ll.:.y..:S:.:e.:.:n.:.:ti.:.:.ne:.:I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.P.:.o.:.:.m.:.:..:.eroy ~ Middleport, Ohio

Ann gets a blast of letters
Anonymous and have been for 30
years.
How come you didn't tell that
guy who was feeling up the young
girl and claiming he'd had too much
to drink that he needs to join up and
and
get his life back on track?
Denver: You missed the barn
. Dar Ann Landers: You were a the house. -- FONTANA. CALIF
door
by a country mile. What do you
few peas shon o( a casserole with
DEAR FONTANA: I received a think would have happened if that
your response to "Unsure in Colum- load of complaints about that
16-year- old had gone home and told
bia, Ohio." She had ca ught her 40- response and agree it' was a dog. her
parents about the 40-year-old
year-old boyfriend, "John," kissing a Keep reading for more :
· man who was drunk and came on to
16-year-old girl at her teehage . From San Diego: You must have her.?
daughter's New Year's Eve pany.
a leak in your oxygen tank. What is
If it had been my daughter, I
The man said he was drunk and a 40-year-old man doing at a pany
would have called the police and a
couldn't remember a .thing. You told for teenagers? And he admitted he'd lawyer.
_
her to forgive him if this was a one- had too much to drink? Wrong!
Dear Ann J,.anders: ·Please
time lapse.
Wrong' Wrong! How did you miss remmd your readers once again
~ I noted also that the letter said his that one?
about the 21 days from June 14 (Flag
hands we[e firmly planted on the
Corpus Christi, Texas : A 40- Day) to July 4 (Independence Day)
young girl's behind.
year-old man ·· a kiss on the lips of that Congress has set aside as a periI hope . you have that woman's . a 16-year-old? I see red flags all od to honor America. During this
address so you can write her :back over the place .. I can'i believe .you period, we should display our flags
and tell her to get that perven ou.t of defended him _
and pledge allegiance every day_·
Smithtown, N.Y.: You need a
One of the ways to honor Amerivacation. You're obviously suffering ca is to help the handicapped and the
from work overload.
aged, and. encourage the young to
Mom was supcrvismg a party for understand .the opportunities and
15- and 16- year-old girls.
responsibilities inherent in our conWhat was her 40-year- old stitutional system.
boyfriend doing there anyway? And
Through such positive actio n
. intox icated yet. Mom should have during these 21 days , Americans ca n .
been supervising hihl. ·
celcbrale the Fourth of July with a
Long Island, N:Y.: Hellllll- feeling of accomplishmenl. ., JACK
ooooo there. Instead of maki ng FI,.EISCHER, SPORTS COORDIexcuses for the boozer who kissed NATOR, HONOR AMERICA
the 16-year- old (with his hands, on
DEAR JACK FLEISCHER:
her kcist~:r ) , you should have told Thanks for a time! y reminder.. I
the mother to send him to Alcoholics hope my readers who have a llag
·Anonymous or dump him .
will display it with pride. If you
Chicago: If that woman marries don 't own a flag. maybe it's lime
the· lech who kissed her 'daughter's you went .out and bought one.
16- year-old girl friend on the lips
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets
(with his hands "fim1ly planted" on and Doozies," has everything ftom
, REVIVAL PLANNED - The her rear end), she'd better be preRev. and Mrs. Tom Bell ol pared to 'vatch him around the,-clt)ck -the outrageously funny to the
poignantly insightfuL
Shirley, Ind. will be condl!cting .. drunk or sober. He's bad news.
Send a self· addressed, long,
revival services at the CommuSan Diego: Some people plead business-size envelope and a check
nity Church on Main Street in insanity. Others say, "I was drunk."
Rutland, Tuesday through June Well, no excuse is good enough or money order for $5 .25 (this
includes postage .and handling) to:
20 at 7 p.m. The evangelists will ·
when
the
guy
is
40
and
the
kid
is
16.
Nuggets, c/o Ann !Landers, P.O.
also conduct . vacation Bibl\i ·
School, June 16-20, from 10 to Wake up imd smell the coffee, Ann. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611Beaumont, Texas: Yo'u arc a 0562. (in Canada, send $6.25.)
11 :30 a.m. Pastor Amos Tillis
strong
supporter of Alcoholics
extends a welcome to the public..

News.Hotline 992-2156.
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS'
-ANNOUNCEMENT

Thursday, June 10, 1999

70

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

DO

Lots ot Lo noaoerger Baskets•
171 Laria l Dr Across lorm the

FoirgroUtldS

HOWARD

••

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
General Code, Sec.11681
Ravleecl Code, Sec. 2329.26
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY
FTMORTGAGE
COMPANIES, DBA, ETC.

'

vs.

DANIEL L. THOMPSON,
ET. AL
NO. 99 CV 013
In pureu1nce of an Order

of Sate tn tho tbove entltlll
action, l will ollar lor oalo at
public auction, on the front'
atepe of the Courthouoe, In
Pomeroy, In tho above
1111med County, on Friday,
the 16th day of July, 1999,
at 10:00 o'clock A.M., tho
following deecrtbad real
eatate, lhuate In the county
of Melga and Stata of Ohio,
and In the Township of
Scipio to-wit:
Sltuatid In the County oi
Motga, State of Ohio, and In
the Townehlp of Sclpto and
bounded and deocrtbod aa
lollowa: 's.gtnntng ·In the
center of tho public road
which point 11 north 1308
· teet, eouth 84 degroea 50' .
aut 11181eetfrom tho contar of Section No. 6; thence
fallowing tho center o1 eold
I'OIICf eouth 84 dogreeo 55'
1111 122.2 feet; thence fol·
lOWing the center · of uld
rad oouth 311 dogroea 30'
eall 2415 feet; thoncetallowlng the center ol llld rood
oouth 37 dogroee 30' 0111
7411.51HI; thence weet1745
IHt to the Clllter of Soctlon
No. 6; thence about 1300
,... to the place ol ~In­
ning, containing 12.5 acroe,
more or I-.
Ret- Dftd: Volume
18, Piige 103- of the Molge'
county Ofllc181 Recordl.
'Said PromiiH LoCated at
371115 Chi• Road, Route2,
f\lbony, OH 457\0
Sold Prtml- AppniiHCI
at $M,OOO,OO ~d. unnol bo
eald lor Ieee then two-thlrda
ol thlt amount.

Public Notice

· Public Notice
Public Notice
TERMS OF SALE: 10% reaervee the rtght to accept on Monday, June 28, 1ti89
down at the time the bid le and/or reject any or all bide lor reaurfaclng· work on
accepted, . depoell to be · and/or any part thereof end deatgned county roada
waived II oold to the ploln· will -ard a contract to that between certain termini. .
till. Balance to bo paid with· bidder which 11 In tho beet
Bid apeclflcatlone may bo
In thirty (30) dllye. Any oum lnteroat ol Melge county.
picked
up at the Malge
Gtorlo Ktoeo, Clerk
not paid within uld thirty
County
engtnoera
or
Board of Metge County tho Oftlce ol thoOlllce
(30) daye ohatt beor lnttreat
Motga
at the rate of tO% per Commlulonera
county Commloelonere.
annum -from tho date of (8) 10, 17 2TC
Tho Board of Melge
oalo.
county
commlaatonere
Public Notice
Jamaa M. Sabby, Sherlll
may accept tho lowell bid,
Herbert J. Kramer, Anornoy
eelect the boll bid lor the
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL or
,For Ptalntlll
Intended purpoae, and
Notice
to
contractoro:
Melga county, Ohio
the right to accept
tn occordance with Me• rellt'llle
(6) 3, 10, 17 3TC
.reject any or ell bide
tlon 307.86 of the Ohio and/or
any part therlill and
Revlaed Codo, etoled ·bide and/or
Public Notice
will
award
• contract to that
Wlll be IICilVed by tht
bl-r which 11 In the beet
Boord
·Of
M•lge
County
of Metga County. .
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL commlealon1ra,
Court lnterut
Gtorte Kloea, Clerk
Notice to Controctore:
Hoult, · Pomeroy, Ohio Boerd
of Melge County
In accordance with etc- 415769, until 9:00 A.M. on
lion 307.86 ol ·the Ohio Mondlly, June 28, 111119. Tho Commlutonera
Revteod Code, eeafed bide bide will then bo opened (6) 10, 17 '2TC'
will be received · by the and
read aloud at 2:10P.M.
. Board of Melge county
Court
commtoelonera,
Houaa,

Pomeroy,

Ohio

45769, until 9:00 A.llll. on
Monday, June 28, 1999. The
blda will then be opened
and read .aloud ot 2:30 P.M.

on Monday, June 28,· 1m

tor wo.rk •• lollowe:
A "design • build" propoa·
al ror reptacamant ot a gird-.
er olmplo 1p1n bridge and
8butmanta over Thom11

.Fork creek on co.unty R&lt;*l
3 (LAedlng CrHk Rotd), be
1
new HS-20-44 lad
doetgned etructure,, 55'
clear otngte epen • 24' I'OIICI·
way width Including ehoul·
dere. The oontnctor aholl
provide tn Engtneore eoal
with the doetgn ollhlllructure; only contractore thll
ere qualified ODOT bl-.o
will bo conelderld.
Bid opeclllclllone may be
picked up at the Metge
County tnglnHra Olltco or
the Oftlce of the Melgl
county Commtu1one11.
The lo.ord of Melge
county Commloelonera
may ICOIPI the loweat bid,
or 111101 tho beat bid lor the
Intended purpolt, tncl

WANTED:euckeye Community Services
· currently has a part-time opening in Meigs •
County: 28 hrs/wk: 8 am-11 pm, SaVSun. We
are searching for compassionate professionals
with a team · vision and a desire to teach
personal and community skills to individuals
with mental retardation. The work environment
is informal and rewarding. The requirements
are: high school diploma/GED, valid driver's
license Jhree years good driving expenence
and adSquate automobile insurance coverage.
B.C.S. offers comprehensive training in the
field of MR/00. Starting salary: $5.50/hour.
Interested applicants need to specify position
of interest and send resume to: P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640.()604. All applications
must be post-marked by 6/16/99. ·
··
Equal Opportunity Employer.

St. Rt. 7

99 CHEVY 5·1 0 PICKUP

4 DR, V6, leather, 7 pass
WAS $29,410

LS Pkg, air, cass. Indigo
Blue, more .WAS $14,273

Tuppers Plains, OH

Servictt•

Culverts: 4"- 46" in stock

House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
.
Grading
• Seplic Sy•lerm &amp;
•
Uriliri&lt;&gt;•

• 100' · 1000' Rolb I' &amp;3/4' 2001\Vattr Une
Full hne of Gos Pipe &amp; RegulatotS Water Storage Tanks

a•Graveiless Leach

........ .. I
I

111

...

·LnDC..·DIIIp
.....a.iaa-PiuHng

Larry Schey ·

750 East State Street
IAthens, Ohio 45701

Rou~h -

1701

.

"I'M BACK"
K111 You~ Former Owner of
KEN'S A P~IANCE SERVICE

'

Now

THE APPLIANCE MAN

· 9as-3s6r
·
• We service all makes • Used AppUances • We $Cll

'

Summer?
Apply now for
THE MAPLES
Musf be 5(} years

of age &amp; Jrn!ei
HUD incorm!
. guidelines;

Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

HOME

'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agt'lcuHural Ume,
Umaatona • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

TOM STOBART
today at ·
740-992-7022 for
flrther information.

E"O

Care for Elderly

*Jfandicapped

1amllr

985-4422

'

Chnter, Ohio
1

*'''"'

·CU.SSIREDSI

53560 S. R 338
Portland, Ohio

A*'""''"''
74G-99Z-3360

ANNOUNCEMENTS

(740) 843-1252

.

WICKS
. HfiOLIHG .IHC.
We Deliver

5 sp, pewter,
WAS$16,949

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

All power, sunroof, V6, Black
WAS $20,355
I w '""

740.992·3470
INGEU CARPEl
No .. Stocking

-Hoat-

the !earling flc:x
carpet cleamJr

•o9ep cleans safely ·

•DEODORIZES leaving carpet
smelllngfr~

99 CHEVY MONTE CARLO LS

99 CADILLAC
'

V6, loadect, Midnight Blue Jade Green, 1/6, CD Loaded
WAS $19,838
WAS$24,806

LIMITED

VB, leather, Sable, Black

Save Thousands

•'Dry" cleans so you can use
carpet right away
992-7021
175 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH

HILL'S

SELF STORAGE
29670 Bohan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houre
7:00AM-&amp; PM

,_, .......

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

;:!;
NoS\

'II:

~.

99Z-Z7ri ,..uo1

BINGO

7,475
95 CHEVY SUBURIAN 4 WD, loaded, LT ~kg, leather Int. we.S $22,900 .. .:............,....................... $18;660
95 CHEVY G-20 Conversion Van, loaded, Was $16,900................... ........................ ........ ............ $13,850
97 5·10 PICKUP 4 Cyl, 5 sp, air, AM/FM ~ass, Was $10,900 ....................................................... .... $8925
98 CHIVY 1/2 TOH LWI Silverado, V6, auto, air, till, cruise, 9,900 nil, Was $19,900 ....... ........ ,... $17,250
92 CHEVY 1/2 TON SWB V6, 5 Sp, Tilt; Cruls~. Air, Am/Fm Cass, Sport Pkg, Red WAS $11 ,900 ... $9450
911 DODGE lXI CAB 2 WD, Laramie SLT pkg, Red Was $18,995 ............................ ,...................... $16,550
98 GMC SIERRA Sll Ext Ca··4x4, loaded, Was $23,900 ...................................................... .. ...... $22,450
91 GMC JIMMYV6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM 9ass, 4 WD, 4 Dr, was $23,900 ....................... $21,560
98 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA AWiltoaded, 4 Dr, Was $24,900 ................................. ....................... $21,850
98.PONTIAC TRANSPORT loaded, WAS $21 ,900 .............................................................. ............. $18,990
91 .GMC SONOMA 4 WO, EXT CAB, V6, auto, alt, IIR, cruise, Alum wheels, AM/FM C85S'Was $1 9,900 ..... $16, 925
91 5·10 BWER 4 WD, 4 DR. V6, AUTO, AIR, TILT, CRUISE, WAS $23,999 ...... ......... ..............$18,900
93 ASTRO EXT (ONV VAN loaded; WAS $8999 .......................................... :................................... $7450
94!iMC JIMMY4 WD 4 Dr, v6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM·FM case, 41,000 mile~. ..................... $14,900
94 CHEV C·IO LWI Two tone paint, Red/Btack, 'V8, auto, air, tilt, crulle, AM·FM caas, WAS St1,1lll5 .. :....... $9450
94 CHEVROLET 1/2 4 WD LW•. V6, ~uto, air, AM-FM WAS $10,900 ........................ ,.. T ................... $7990
90 CHEVROLET ASTRO CON VAN 6, auto, air, cass, WAS $5900...................................................... $3850
301 EAST MAIN

· Mon.·Frl. 9 am·l

···~llr III!M payHt

HIM ..............

Cr . JD CONSftUCftON t;r

OftCICrCftftft~"'ttiCJ

BUICK•

(!)

'

PUft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts

Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 Sauth
COilolv//l'e, OH 45123

Sunset lome
Construction
New Conllruotlon &amp;

Rimodollng-KIIohon Coblnoll
VInyl Sldlng-llooii-Doclli-

Goregn
Free

Et~imateo

740-742-3411
Bryan Reeve•
S01an Reeve•

&lt;12 TFN

TRI·STATE MOilLE
POWER WASH

INC.
· New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
· • Room Additions
• Roofing
COMMEROALIIIII RESIDEJIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES

Trucks - tractor
Trailers - decks - driveways
Equ~ant Cleaned &amp; Degreased
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218

EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COII

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
-

WW~t~.SunaetHomB.corn

949-2188

B~ELL BUILDERS,

{No Sundav Callsl
'

38782 Sumner Road, ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

YOUN(;'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

ROIIRT BISSELL
CONSTRUCIION
•New Home•

• Room Addtttone a Aemodtung

• New·GIIIflll
• Electrlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Rooftng &amp; Gutta,.
·Vinyl Sldtng &amp; Painting
• Pallo &amp; Porch Deckl

•Garage~

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

F- Eelfmti!N

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740.992-6215

985 4473

'22 yr.. Loeal

7

FR.UEY
EXCAVATING
I ht tpw·a ag g

....11.

•Bulldozer c-

Linda's. Painting
Thke the pain out
of painting, and let
me do It for you.

Free Estimates

YOUR

SAYRE
TRUCKING

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

. Hauling ·

Quality Driveways,

Umestone &amp; Gravel
Rt~Json1ble

Sidewalks, Petios
. Perking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Eetlmataa

Rates

Joe N. Sayre
74G-742·2138

5 family, Thurs day l.Oth, Fr·d ay
1111'1 , 9-4 . Hobac.k Rd . Raclflil,
Codner ruldence. 16hp wheel
horie 42• mow&amp;f, alum Ford I'·•C~
wheels . kitchen cabtnets launo•y
tubs , caby 1tems . ta ble sa ....
Christmas 1tems &amp; '!\Or&amp;.

All Ytrd Selet Mutt Se Pa id tri
AdVInce . O.edllne: 1:OOpm the
dly before the ad 11 to run )
Sundey &amp; Monday edit ion;

1:OOpm Fndr;.

Four famtl~ van:l sate Satu rday ,
June 12, 9am- 3pm , David Spenc·
er's , Main Stree t , Raci ne , adul t
and gWt 's ctotnes, gu1's bi ke, ~~~
household Items and mi sc •• rain

I

740-742-8608

. 3/11/89TFN

Friday &amp; Saturday, June 11\h,j
12th , 3 lam•lv, first one m 4
wan to .wall clean up, every thf" '
from baby clothes to chest Ire~
er. go to 338 to Racme Locks. 4
Oam .and follow s1gns, Drew Flsli:
er resklence.
·

Y''•

Garage sale ins'lde , 1· 112 rr.nleS
Hy&amp;ell Run , Thursday &amp; Frid a~
hOusehold Item s, ClO the S . new
quilt tops ,.740·992·527 5 ·
..

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

1-877-885·3832 Or Write To P.O.
Box 14300. S. G lenburnle. New
Bern, NC 28560.
·

New To You Thrift Shoppe
· Quality clothing and household
Items . $1.00 bag sa le everv
Thursdav. Mondav thru Saturdav

Ju'ne e.9.101h. ShadYGrove Tra if·
er Park . Har ttord w v . · c lo t~e&amp;.
Tools, Misc.

AI. 2 North/ 8 m11es out by Aa'f·
burn Roa d . Bunkbeds , Beanr~ ·
Babies, Nlntendo&amp;G~mes , Atar1&amp;
Games.Lots More! Thu rs/Frii Sat. ·

8-?

80

Auction
and Flea Market M oodlsp~ugh

•

'

Auct 1oneerin!7.

es. Consignment au ction · MiU
Srreet, Middlep orl. Tnursday5'.
Ohio UceMe H69 3 74 0 ·989~

Glvilaway

. 2 Ald.er Mowers, Can Be Used
For Parts, T.V. Ante'rma , Needi
Small Repair, 7~31.( . .
2 Tabby Kittens, 10 Weeks, Out·
door Or Indoor. Litter Trained, 1
Ma~ : 1

Fema-., 740·245-5104,

•

nJ-5795 Or 304· n 3-5447

RIVERSIDE AUCTI_ON BARN
Every Saturday N1gh t 7 PM ..
Crown City, 740·256-6989 ·
Wedemeye r's Auct10fl S•Hv1c e . .
GallipOlis. Onlo 740-.37 9-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Beagle Dogs To Giveaway. 740-

8 String . Slngte Ne Ck Stee l Gw'

UHl82\l.

tar. (304)695·3900.

Beautiful Kittens . To Good Home.
· All Colors , 4 Wh ite With Blue
. Eves. 740-~8595.

.

.

:

Absolute Top Dollar · A!t 0 S Sil'ver And Gold C 01ns. Pr.ools etS:,
Dil!-monds, A nt1q u~ Jewelry. GOI;'
Rings, Pre- 1930 U S Curr e11cy,
Sterling, Etc. ACQUI!iltiOns Je·N etr~
M.T.S. Coin Shop 151 Seconq
Averue , Gallipolis,740·446·2842 .:

1740) 691·9407
1740) 691-6029

Antiques . top prices paid: RIVer~
ln e An't lques . ·P o me ro ~ . Oh10',
Russ Moore owne r, 7 11 0-9 92 ~

R8g istered Fox Terrier (no papars ). female. not good with kids,

2526.

H&amp;H
Construction
Light Commercial &amp;
Residenlial
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling
FREE ESTIMATES ·

'1740) 667·6992
Quality Crtftttwlnthip
· Gurtll"4 .

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUOION
New Roots • Repairs •
Coating• Gutters •
Sldlnll' Drywall •
Palnliag : Plumbllll

Ft'H EttJm•tH

Joseph Jacks
740.992-2068

I.

' ·

2 yrs. old. 740-843-5556.

Clean La te Model Ca rs Or
Trucks, 1990 Models O r Newer ..

Window air conditioner. runs on
110 . needs compressor. 740 -

Smith Bukk Pontiac . 1900 East ·
am Avenue, GaUipolis.

Lot~t

80

and Found

Lost 1.5 Month Black Polled lim·
ousin Bull, O.J , White /Kemper

Road, 740-US-21511

Want To Sell Your Stuf1? Call AI\'·
erslde Auction And let Us Se ~ 11

For You, 14Q-256-69B9.

Wante d To Buy : 1973 MeiQ:si
Year Book. If Anyone Has One ('fr
Kn·ows Or Anyone Please Ca ll

lost Red Marlboro Beg , Has
Tools In It, Vicinity: Ramp Of Sll·

740742·2512.

ver Brk198. 74Q-oi4H247.

Spil18r, 740-245- 5492.

70

wanted To Buy: Used Wood

Yard Sale
EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
11 ,99. 150 Second Ave . 9:00AM

·5:00PM.
6 Family Garage &amp; Yard Sate:

10th, 11th, 12th, 9-?

4S67 S.R.

850, ~aln IShlno.

61.1. Yllrd Solos ......
lll,..kllnAclvlnce.
QFAQLIN£: 2:00p.m.
tho d o y - tho od

t. to run. Sunclly
odhlon' 2:00 p.m.

·

F'*Y, Monday ocittlan

·10:00 o.m. Soturdly.

Big sate: June 10th, 1ttn. 9-? Route 554 Between Bidwell /Afo

Grande, Loll Of Stutft

Clothee. Furniture, Excerlse
Equipment, 'Househo fd. 6/11 tn .
1211'\, 8 :30-• :30, 7 Brusny Point

Road, Btl1kld Jofdon's Gas.
Friday 6111. 9-5, 1760 Rt . 1.t 1
Lawn. Boy Mower. RototUier, Teie·
vision. TV Stand, Kitchen Ap ·
pllances, Rugs , Curtains, Btan·
kets , Min lbllnds. Home Oeor,

Crafts, misc.

Garage Sale: Friday, Salurday,

little Tyllt Tovs. 55 Gallon Flan
Tank , Oth Kosh Clothes Afld

Lo15 Morol10 Ml-.s Out 141 , Fol·

row Signa. Tuesday Thru Satur ·
day. .

110

Help Wanted

Act ivi ti es Ass istant for 100 bOO
skilled nursing 1-tcillt y, E• cellen t
opportunity for the rig ht cand•dat)t
to work with our res idents and be
a merOOer ot our team Hours are
evenings and weekends. oan time
pos ition . Candidate must be out·
going. caring , creative and willing·
to exceL Resto ra ti¥e e•oen&amp;l'lr.f
end certilied. nursing as. slstarYI
preferred and/or eJ:pepenc e woik :
lng wlt,h rehablmec:hcau y compr~
care needs . Applicants send
sume to. Rock springs Rehabillta ·
lion C_enler . 36759 A oC kspr.ln~
Rd .. Pomeroy, O I'HO 45769 . Attr) ~
Dena War ren . ActJvJ hes OlrectQr
or apply ·In person Monday

,e.

th rough Friday. EQUAL OPPOFt-

TUNITY EMPlOYER

'

"VON ! AU Areas ! To Buy or SeQ:
ShirleY Spears, 304·675- 1429, ._.,
AVON nas a place lor you! Jol ~
the 11 t:leauty compa ny !
your own business. Buy your own
produ cts at cost. Call 1·800·~-\

EniW:

AVON oo 7&lt;0·594-4354.

•'

Avon Products : Start your own lp..
Home Busi ness . Work FtexlblHours . Enjoy Unllmfttd EarnlnQI,
1·888-561·2866
'
'. ~
Bartender

1.28.

Wanted :

7.t0-•41f
1":

ilj:

1

CNA, LPN, needed . Good p
hourly, bonus lor week&amp;nd wot1ri.
Must be licensed in wv. Ciu
Capitol Nursing, 1-800-576-63&gt;48. ~ 1
Dental Rece ptionist Neediltd ,
Send Resumes To: CLA 475, clq

Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Awinuo, GallipOliS, OH 4593t

'

:.I

•

40

Boys 12.

,,
•

WV. (30&lt;)675-4493.

Rick Pear son Auct1on Compani
full time auc:h oneer, cdmolett
auc tion
serv ic e.
licen sei
t66 ,0 hio &amp; West V1 rg1n1a 3041

Gorago ~110 : satu,nlay June 12\h ,
·s-3, 621 112 Third Avenue . Nel.:t
To Grtce Unlttd Mtthodlst
Church Parking Lot. Car Seat ,
Baby Bianke1s . Towers. Girls 2T

VINYL REPlACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACfORY DIRECT PRICES

Atten tion : Overstocked Sa le.
Ra in or Sh ine Every Thursday/
Friday Lowest Prices Anywhere
Qn New PtayStat1on Games , 0\10
Mo vies, D1sney Mov ies, Music:
CO 's, B ~anie Babies. Too Mu~
To List. 2nd House on Righ t ,
Blaine La ne, GallipoliS Ferr9'.

2623:

2 actun lema!$ caiS, 2 baby female
kltlen~ 740-949'3016.

j

...

g,oo-5:30.

$1 .001

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600

6 Wakel ield Dnve , Fnd ay. 8 30·1
Small Womens Clothes l

Complete Auctioneering Servi(·

740-592·11142

Church, Lett. Most Items Under

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

Sat. ~ewet r y/C io t h es , Lawn/Ga r·
den. Lots of Mise aAM -4PM .

B!ll

9 West Stimson, Athens

5065 Garlltld. 6 Hou..s Pa&amp;l

FORMERLY Of 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
· IS NOW LOCATEP STATE ROUTI33
6 MILlS NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNn ROAD II

2100 Lmc ol n Avenue Th ur/ Frif

Part Rott Wel ler &amp; Chow, 740388•8023 .

Gradipg

No Emblrreument ... , .
YQu're Trelttd with Rupeetl

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

:

·Septic Systems &amp; Utilities

waiiYIIG!U

[i] '

M.C.. large au condiiiOnF·r

•Land Clearing &amp;

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

Ge8

111ri &amp; 121ft. 19 S LOCU$ 1 Sl_,
Cheshire, houseMIO lt~ms :ools'1
Beanie~, Walk F1t , Honda O·eam

Free Small l&lt;itt8ns . To Good
Home. 7 Weeks O ld, 740-441·
D::39::1:_:A::::he~r::_5P:.M:
,: :.__ _,;...__
Kittens. 740-446-nJO.

Baclc:hoe Serulces
•1#11111 ' 1Niilfr Sil11

CIEDrr

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
-$8.00 PER DAY.

Going Out Of BusiOess Sale: 40%
Off Store Wide . Wilton Cake
Pans , D.J.'s Craft ShQp , 2390

HiQhy Approved Govt.·Grant. Call

mo.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
' P.M. ·
AT8:30
Main St.,
· Pomerily, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 COVII'III
$500.00 Stlrburet
Progreaaive top line.
Uc. I OQ.50 11M•""

30 Announcements

3 Family Yard Sale, Friday June

740·985·4180

Sat. 9 •m·4 pm; Sun. 1 p1111•S p1111

fktll~

ROOFING

ft ·
ft
ft

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

(7401992·6614 • (100)137·1094

@

$1000 cover ell fer

145 ,..,11 or •ore.

9115·10 IWER Loaded, Two-tone paint, Red/Sliver sharp, Was $19,900.................................

Howard L..Wrltesel

. Start Dat ing Tonight! Have lun
playing tne Ohio Dating Game. 1·
800..ROMANCE, utanslon 9681 .

Jad&lt;son Pike, 74!).446-2134.

'

'

Sitling &amp; S1llil

3,10 &amp;Tc

Call 98S·J83l ·

i:.. . New Homes &amp; Remodeling
. i:.. ·
IIEW·REPAIR
·. III!!J Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding lil!!l
Gutters
~Remod..,!ing
iii """- Commercial &amp; Reeldentlal
Downspouts
CaU today abou1 •peciol · III!!J 27 yre. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
Gutter Cleaning
pric•• thruJulr on
~ .
Phone 740.:992·3987
Qunlity Built Ho'""'
III!!J
Painting
'
ltmember
..,.,
,
Free &amp;tlmitt"
FREE ESTIMATES
Quality Is Job One . IJI!I
Owner: John Dean ,
"
1

Public .Notice
IN THE MEIGS COUNTY .
COURT OF COMMON
SEAMlESS
PI;EAS PROlATE OMSION
In the Motter of the
GUnERS
Adoption ol:
· Tyler J. Goble
CASE NO. 30688
, PUBUCATION OF NOnCE
1·100·311·3391
NOTICE TO THE
UNKNOWN FATHER
Free Estimates
You .,. hereby notified
Contraotors Weloome
that on the 15th· day of
DICimber, 111911, Reymoncl ·
Albany, Ohio
LH Goble ruldlng at 2399
5/2!5/!IS 2 mo. pd.
Weter strHI, Syracuu,
Ohio 45~, 1nd Cheryl AM
Goble reeldlng 11 2399
Wilier Street, Syracuse, 30 Announcement•
Ohio 45779, filed In thle
court of P.UIIon to adopt
Tyler J. Goble, d.o.b. July
•21, 1993, born In Orlando,
Fforlda, and th1t hearing of
' otlkl Petition will be had
every Saturday
before the PrObate Court II
court and Seconda StrHta,
llltht 6130 .....
Pomeroy, Ohio 457111, on
·the 19th dty of July, 111119,
· berlcan L~tlon
II 1:30 o'clock P.M.
•WITNESS my lignllu,. end
Middleport
-~ ol aald Court, lhla 4th
Poat 121
day ol May, 111119.
Robert E. luck, Judge
.
Starlturst $1300
- By: Judith R. · Slaoon,
Deputy Cterlc,INotary Public
Door Prl1e $100
8,13,20,27

.wsi!KVIa•

1

ftCJftftftftf;;tftftf;;tft~ ·

· WILLIS'

99 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVIUE Loaded, While, leather int, only 15.000 mi. Was $32,900 ... NOW $29,850
98 CHEVY MONH CARLO'S V6, auto, air, lilt, cruise, AM/FM cass, Was $14,995 .................. ....... $12,900
·
. 12 ta dtaose·fram 1 Ma11an· l 5an..tlft)
.
·
95 CAD SEVILlE SLS Loaded, leather int, Was $24,900 ................................ :................................ $18,900
97 LUMINA V6, auto, air, tilt, c;uise, AM/FM cass, Was $13,900 .. :....... :...................................... $10,400 "'
911 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE VB, leather int, loaded Was $24,999 .................................... ,............ $20,800
911 CADILLAC SEVIUE STS loaded, leather int, Was $29,900 .......................................................... $22,450
91 OLDSMOBILl DELTA 8S .Loaded ...............,....... :............. .-................ ......................... Only $15,995
98 PONTIAC GlAND AM V6, auto, air; tilt,.crulse, AM/FM cass Was $13,900 .: .......... .... .............. $1 0,800
911 LINCOLN TOWN CARV8, auto, leather int, White, only 40,000 Ml, Was $19;900 .................... $17,450
93 BUICK LE5ABRE V6 auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass Was $7999 ........ ,........................ ,. ......... .$6,200
95 FORD TARUS V6, a~to, air, tilt, cruise, P. seats, PW, AM/FM cass'Was $7900 .......................... $5,900
93 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVIUE Loadecj, leather int, P. Moonrool, Was $10,900 ................................. $8,450
911 PONTIAC FIRIIIRD V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, T-tops, CD player, Was $12,995 ........ .................$11,860
98 CAMARO COUPE V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, Was $16,900 ............................ , ............................ $14,950
98 PONTIAC SUNFIRI4 Dr, 4 cyl, auto, air, tilt, tinted glass, Was$12,900 ....................................... $9975
97 SATURN SR 2 52,000 Mi, Beige 4 cyl, 5 sp, AM/FM cass, tilt, cruise, Was $11,900 ................ $10,650
92 OLDSMOIILI DELTA 8S V6, auto, air, cass, ti~. cruise, Was $8900 ................................. ............ $7,250
· 911 OLDSMOBILE 98 Loaded, leather lnt, one owner, Was $15,995 .............................................. .$13,650
911.CADILLAC SEVILLE ,SLS, loaded, leather Int. LT Garnel Red, only 15.500 ml, ons owner, like n;w ~as 127,995 ................. $24,850
97 HONDA ACCORD 4 Dr, auto, air, ~It, cruise, Blijck Was $t7,80tL ........... ................................. $15,7.50
99 GRAND AM 4 Dr, auto, air, II~. cruise, alum wheels, AM/FM cass, Was $1 5,999 .................... $13,880
91 PONTIAC BONNEVIlLE Loaded, only 21,000 mi,Was $18,995 ........... ,: ................:.......... ,........ $16,950
911 PONTIAC GRAND AM GT 4 Dr, 14,000 mi, loaded, leather lnt, Was $12,900 ............................ $11,675

SHADE RIVER

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

Phone:
740.2511-6147

*New Homes
• Additions

ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Fr iendship. Send Replies To: 553 Second Avttnue,
Apanment t-403 , GallipOlis ..

SERVICE

· · Call For Free Estimates

Personals

Gentleman Seelelng Companion·

SHADE RIVER AG

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

Jerry L PrHcl
Crown Citv, OH 45623

Pomeroy,
· Middleport
6 Vicinity

Housewa res

005

4. exJ!~~S~ ~~~~~ron /!JI

''

Slturday 12th. 9·5 !19 Htl dt
Drive , Galhpol li , Baby Item'-'
Clothe.s. Coll ect ables Toys, Loi f
Morot
•

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Under New: Mgnit;

Friday and S.t

cancels.

c.11

.

TRUCKING

5128199 1 mo pd.

Caol'rhltl

"

Nowsl·
0nJ3'

POMEROY, OHIO .

Rutland; Ohio

740 742-8888

ELIM

Rd. Lon11 Bottom, Ohio

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

Phone (740) 593-6671

Re Le HOLLON

parts • Will dellver
51645 Bltd.,_; Rid

-

A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

Sales Represe.n tative

. ........ ..

1-800-809-7721

·20 Yrs. Exp. • tns. OWner: Ronnie Jones

Stop In A'n d See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel

• w.ant•gWd I lrloll
. hila Ceaatnu:tlea
D111• l:wlln.t .
'••d·~ ...clldllt,

Silver, V6,
$21,609

,.

Mon•• Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat.9:oo to 12:00

•••••••

4 Dr, 4X4, VB, leather
WAS$36,799

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

7 40·985·3813

1740) 992·3131

99 OLDS SILHOUETTE GLS

~ . Southern Ohio Disposal

(;&amp;W Plastics and Supply

IXCAVATING CO.
n
Bmsng1
BuUdu~er &amp; Backhoe

•l.lfts matted carpet pile

Justin Diddle, EIC Grant Coordinator for the Meigs .
County Commissioners will .have a meeting at the .
Rutland Civic Center, Friday, June 11, at 6:30p.m.
for all the Meigs County citizens interested in
being a part of the Appalachian Artisian Project to
help promote their products in a brochure,
web page, and the Artisian's Guild.
Please bring picture of product or sample. ·

Yard Sale

I

'

�.

-

•

•
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 10, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

; thursday, June 10, 1999

•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

-nt

)

PHILLIP
ALDER
ACI.IIIIIATIVE CLERK:

SorMone to spend the n6ght w ith

T...,porary PooltiOn Candidates
Mutt Be Accurat. At Data Entry

per week , $tO per day, 740-992·

And Po11t11 Microsoft Skills
PoaiUon Requires A Self-Starter

~::L:,nttrp ersonal And

Skill&amp; Purchasing

~ lad!: ground Helpful To Receive
• ConlldenUal Considerat ion f or
; Any Poalllons , Submit Resume
lb:

8ota-Wasner Automotive

AT1'N HR Copt -ClERK
21eo Easrern Avenue

Gaii!JlohS, 0H 45631
Fax 740-441 ·3249

NO PHON~ CALLS P~EASE

Equal Opportunity
Alfirmattv. Action Efrl'loyor

All students - full and part 11me
openings In customer servi ce/
sales dep. S 10 35 per hr appt No
experience- will train Conditions
apply Must be 18 Call 304·o485-

4300
Artist Designs Needed II you
can produce simple, creative, In·
color , designs
call Mi~e

(300)882·34n
Driver-Long Haul &amp; Regional
Have A Career In 2 Hours! *Paid
Health Insurance "Dental Plan
Available "401K and life In ·
surance "Obtainable Safely and
Productivity Bonuses Appllca ·
t1ons Processed In 2 Hours Or
least Begulremants 6 months
OTR exper. 23 Years or age good
driving record Continental Ex

press, Inc (800)·293-0700 (800)·
695.-4473, Recent Dnv.ng School

Graduates Wolcomol
DRIVING P05mDNS
AVAILABLE:
Class A OTR
Single Driver, Late Model Ken ·
worths With Reefers West Coast
Camer

ClassBOTR
Team Stra1gh1 Truck, Late Model
Fre•ghthners With Sleepers Mu st
Have A1r Brake Endorsement s,
800 Mile Radius , Home Delrve rk!s

Both PoSlliOnS
Atleast 25 Years Old
Allaast 2 Years Expenence

the elderly, mldnlght·88m, 5 days

GoodMVR

Earn $104 $400 + Free Portraits
Invite Your Friends To Your
Home For A ProfeSsional Glam·
our Portrait Party 1·800-426·

6363
Easy Work! Excellent Pay! A$sembte Products at Home Call

Toll Free 1·800·467·5566 Ext
t2t70
E~ecellent

Opportunity to join the
long term health care Held Ll·
censed Practical Nurses Aotat·
lng shifts ~ntermedlate care center. West VIrginia license re·
qulred. Apply at Point Pleasant
Center/Genesis Eldercara, State
Route 62, Route 1, 8011: 326,

Point Ploaaant, WV 25550. EOE.
Jewelry Sales Retail Sales and
Computer Experience Required
AcQuisitions Fine Jewelry 151
Second Ave Gallipolis Apply
Monday lhru Friday.

5039 or 740-992-4410

Wanted- experienced full or part
time barber, at Mlck's Style Ctn·

dleport, hOuse &amp; 3 klts, O'IJSt see

ter, Po meroy, intere sted part1es

to

call 740·992·2367 or 740·992·
WANTED : LPN (Fuii·Ti mo) At

0616
Gallpolls Area· 2 Bedroom Homo,
Asking $26 ooo. Firm, Immediate
Possessool 74D-256-6702

House and lot tor sale 2 ·bed rooms. 1 bath, $600 00 Down! ~
cated on l&lt;rlner Rd Contact Da·
vld at: 1-(600)·333-6910
Owner Re locating! Anx ious to

Soil Newly Romodolodl 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 baths, $62 900 00 (740)·
245-5341

Errj)ioyer
WI Idille Jobs/$2 1 60/Hr Inc I
benefl~s Game Wardens, Secunty. Maintenance Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For app /e~eam
mlo ,
call
1-800-813·
3585 , E~t:l 8827 8AM-9PM ,7days
fdSiflC

Restored VIctorian homa situated
on 12 acres, V1llage Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint·
ment, can 74~992-5696

Ca~

Today! 740-446-4367, 1·800.
214-0452, Reg 190·05·t274B

180 Wanted To Do

Being Accepted For Cashier /Of·
flee Aaslslant Evenings And
Weekends Must Be At Least 18
Years Old &amp; High School Gradu·
ate, work Experience Required
Inquire Between 9 00 A M ·1 00
~M

lady To Stay With Semi·invalid
Lady On Saturdays And Sundays,
7~258-8753

ProfessiOnal Contractm9 SerVICes

1974 Kirkwood 12~~:60, 2 bed·
rooms, Good Condition $4,950 00
Ca ll (740)-367·7308 Evenmgsl
1987 Oakwood 3 BR, 1 112 BA,
Washer &amp; Or~er, New HeatPump. Porch Carport (304)67518331675-3003

W111 train PC req~lred Eam 40K

Callll00-663-7440
Mus1c1ans- looking for leacl guitar
and bassist lor group doing
country and oldies rock John

Pack, 740.696.6212

Need 1 Ladtes To Sell Avon. 740
446-3358
Newspaper Carrier Needed for a
Sunday Route, poly Gallipolis
Ferry, Crab Creek , Jerrys Run
Road, Ap~le Grove. Ash land·
Upland Road , GlenwoOd, 1 800982·6397, e~~:t 1787, Leave Mas·

sage
Now Taking Applications For
Drivers For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy

1988 Clayton. Good Condition .
New Carpel. Cenlral A/C On rent·

Jlms Drywal l &amp; Construction
New Constructlo,n &amp; Remodel!
Drywall, Siding, Roofs, AdditiOn&amp;, Painting , etc (304)674-

od lot

Must Sell! Asking $14,000, 740·

Will Babysit In My Home, Week·

368-8335

days 8-5, Toddler Thru School
Age, Have References, 740·448Will Clean Houses, References
Available. 740-446-1834

0221

1991 14fbt721t Shingle Roof, Vinyl
Siding , Excellent Condition

Will Mow and Haul and do Clea·
·~ (304)675-4538.

$18,500 00 (740) 448-8113

W11i Stay With Elderly Persons In

1992 Palm Harbour, doublewide,
be moved Asking
$20;ooo
Price Negotiable

Home, 740·388-9656

24•46 Has to

Will Stay Wllh Elderly At Night,

(304)937-2590

Experienced And Have Relerenc·

1994 14~~:70 Sunshine 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Baths, Blue Carpet, WI

304·875-7961

Wheels Are Available, 937·379-

4015, Leil\18 Mtssage
1994 Clayton 14x78 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Roman Tub, C/A, All
Electric, New Dw. Storage Build·

Business
Opportunity

lng, Large Rented Lot, Very Nicet

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

$19,000 Arm

recommends that yo u do busi·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnvesllgatecl
the offering

Caii7~2M-935t.

1997, 16x80, 3BR, 2 Balhs, Gar·
donTub, CA. 8xt0 Building, on
rented lot. (304)675-4871
low lnteresfRates For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time Available.

ALL CASH BIZIII
Get $20 Bills For $12.5011
$500 ·St,500 /Wk. Easy!
Free $5 Samp-.llnv Req
1·80().997·9688, 24 Hrs

80().383-8662

Good selection ot used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

$3995 Quick delivery. Call 740·
385-9621

For ~ant Bwlfjlng On S A 3:3,
New Haven, 'WVA 1 ,000 To

Hamo&amp;Mw

5,000 Sq Ft 740-698·2613

"li'ade-ln's "Best of the season!

Professional
Services

The complete cleaning service
Carpet, UphOlstery, Walls, Cell·
ings, and also Power Washing
For a free estimate call Clearly
Clean at (304)675-4040 Guaranteed Work!

TURNED DOWN ON
SECURITY /S$17
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
HI86·5B2·3345

www.owrtJiz net

Part· Time Babysitter VarlabiJt

Shilts, (304)882·3922,
Me181Q0.

~eave

Postel Joba/$t8.35/Hr. Incl. ban·

thts news~per Is subject to

the Federal Fair Housing Act

Reliable l'erson To Stey With Et·
dirty Gentleman WHkenda, 740-

448·2956 Alter s. 740·388·0320
Morillngo.

which lsln violation of U1e

wv $499 Down Single Wldo,
$999 Down Double Wldo, 30&lt;1·
I

law. Our readers are hereby

Informed that all dWellngo
advertised In this new~paper

are available on an equal
opportunity baalt. ,

7Je-34(19,

'

PayroN Exporltnco lor our S.Cr•
tory Payroll receptionlat Pooltlon.
Please apply at 3t t Buckrldgo
Rd. a:OOerrH.i!Opm.

310 Homes for Sale

Soaking Cortlllod Nurn Aldoa.

3 Bedroom. built

Part time. Rotating shlfta. Weat
Virginia cerllflca\lon required .

bath

c1

Mid

30'1

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Laundry

Room, A/C, Garage, l'jlco Vord,
$38,000, 7~387-112&gt;41.

\·

LBnd Co

RENTALS

1 Bedroom House, In Mason,
Utilities lo&lt;:kKied, Some Furniture,
Hous~

at 2216 1/2 Lincoln

port From $249·$373. Call 740·
992·S064. Equal Housing Oppor·
lunltJos

Alter5 ~M .

Percharon M•re, Registered 3
Veer Old, Trained Harnaaa &amp;

Kenmore Washer; G.E. Dryer

- · $3,000,~73-ttat

Heavy Duty, 1150 Parr, or Sell

Quarter Horae (Mare) $1 ,000,

PilOt Program, Renters Naeded. t·
110f1.383-6882

Separate, 740-387·0219, 740·

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,

New, Window Air Conditioner,

740-14&amp;-0390.

7500 BTU, $200 00 (304-)875·

MOdern 1 BR all Utllttles paid •·
cept electric Gallipolis Ferry

Area $250+daposlt. (304)875·
1311 /(304)875-3230.
Nice 1 bedroom furnished apart·
ment with private yard, no pets,

011a""'m 8' liltt pool toblo. llgh~

atlcka &amp; mloc. $t,OOO. 740·742·
2572.

710 Autoa for Sale

Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo .• 7•0·
Rlverbend Place Ia acceptln8
appointment&amp; now for 1BR HU
Subsidized apt . for elderly &amp;

handicapped Equal Opportunity
Housing (304)882·3121 or After·
noon,(304)882·3274. Loavo Mea·

!ower no'!_ accepting

7~385-4387

490

House For Rent In Kanauga, 2
Bet~rooms, $325/Mo , $325 De·

MER CH M JOISE

420 Mobile Homea
for Rent

510

2 Bedrooms, Kanauga Area ,

$275Mo • 740-381-7015
Air Conditioners, Use~ Different

2 Bdrms. No Pets , Rental Refrence Required, Water &amp; Trash

Furnished t Mile From Gallpolls
$250.00 Rent With $150.00 Do·
posit 7411-446·0761
2 Bedrooms, Addison Pike, $220/
Mo, $100 Deposit, No Pets, 74().

446·1637, 740-446·3437

Two bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $32S month, we pay wa·
ter, sewer and trash, 740-992·
5039

440

Apartments
for Rent

AKC, black l.at&gt;l, 5 maloa, 1 wlcl
otd, llrot ahoto &amp; wocmocr, 1200,
day 740·949·0405, •voe 740·

Washers, dryers, refrlgar•tora ,

ranges Skaggs Appllancu, 78
Vine Street, Call 740·•441·7398,
H88-818.0t26.

530

Antiques

Antique, Bottle, Advertising Sate
And Auction. 6/21th, 9·4, Point

N-.

Pleasant Armory. Ouollty Dulers
740-992·!088.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques.
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M.T W tO 00

a.m. to 6.00 p.m., Sunday t.OO to
6:00 p.m 740·992·2528, Ruoe
Moore OWI'IIr

1 Exercise Bike, 1 Tread Mit!, 1

Stelr Stapo, 740·379-2169 After 5
P.M.
Ferguson

Gaa

Tractor

$5,500 Good Condition: 2 Aus·

nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

Mo-. &amp; Fomale Spayed, 8 Months

1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment,
Downstairs 1 1/2 Baths, Air Con·
dltlonlng, All Utlllies Included Except Electric, Prlyate Parking, No

traillan Shephard&amp; Cow Dogs,

Old $400 Both, 740-«6-4288.

II" DlrteTV Bthtlllto Syohtme·
$89.00, $tOO ollrH PIOIPBnvning
Limited timo oftlf, call 1-800.719·
8194

Registered Australian Shepherd

Pupploe, All Cotora, 740·388·
9172.
SChnauzer pupplea, 2 miniature

malta, AKC, chlmplon -llnal,
lalt&amp; popper, 7~7·3404.

Mu1lcal
lnatrument.

For Sale: Pearl Concert Snara,
Orum(e~ectllent condition), In·

clul:f11 : Cllt, beta 1Ucka, mu·

ale
otand&amp;mualc.
(304)4611-1997.

S200.

Yamaha Sttreo Keyboard. Doe•
Everything, Perfect Condition!

$125, 7~368 911S

a

580

Fruita
Vegetablea

Strawbtrrfts, You Pick, Wa Pick
Closed Sunday, T1ylora Berry

Patch, 740·248·11047, 2814 Korr

Condie Creations.

FAfH,1 SliP PI IF c;

tioner (740)-44e.Q390

636 Bricks-.
Rutland, OH 45ns.

Road.

&amp; LIVE ~ifOCK

740-7~·2512. ,

Candln 01 All Styles And Typoa,
Will Do Refills Over 70 varlollaa

610 Farm Equipment

Pleasant. (300)875-21 t7

Golol

580 B Caae ' Bickhot Extenda· '
boom $10,000, 7~379-2o127

2 Bedmom Apartmenl in New Ha-

Case Window: Air Conditioner,
works Goodl $150, Call Attor 5
P.M. 7ol0-442398

ven lor rent (304)882·2t19, day·
Umo, (304)882·2326, evening.
2 Bedroom Apartment in Point
Pleasant, Upstairs. Utllhles Paid
References, Deposit, and Lease
required No Pets $425 per

month. (513)27t·909t.
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, we pay nter, sewer &amp; traah,

you pay gao &amp; olectrlc. $200 por
month, Stoo dtpoait, 740·992·
7808

ur~ay, t0·9, Sunday t·5,
Making Body Lotion• &amp; Showor

Complete Air Conditioner, 3 112
Ton, 2 Gaa Furnaces, 740·,..8·

7404, Cal (ltrflm..

COO~ DOWN

Central Air ConUitlonlng Addod
To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
S~atme• &amp; Furnacee, Heat
Pumps Certified Installer. II You

Don't c•1 Uo Wo Bolli Looel
446-8308, 1-I00·29Hl098.

7~

Cub Cocrti ~ldlng Mowor, MOd•l
1672, 11 HP Kqhler Engine; eo•

5.5 Acrel Frontage, Qarlleld .

Avtnuo, City Ulllltlea. $48,000,
Send Rooponaa: CLA82S, el
oGatllpollt Dolly Tribune, 125
Third Avonut, Galllpolla, OH
45831.

2ol&amp;-91511l5

Vlnyt Slllrflrig Kll e;llil5; 5 Goo~

·ion Alurnin&lt;lm " - Rool Paint
$28 2 t: 8 Oal White RooI Paint
Aparrmenl for rent In Middleport,
, $57 e9: Anchora $5: Dooro 1
no pots, 740·992-5656.
WlndOWI, Oll I Eloctrlc Wolor
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Heat•ro. Plumbing &amp; Eloctrlcol
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Pans, ln•rthtrm, Mtllar &amp; Cote·
ESTATES, 52 Wootwood Drive lnen Air Condltlonoro a Hott
trorn $279 to $358 Willi to atMip Pumpe. Bonnttl's Mobil• Hom•
I movloo. Call 740·44t·2581. Supply, 740·441·fl.4te Gollllpolle,
Ohio
Equal Houolng Opportunily.

1988 Toyota Supra Turbo, 81K,
Excellent Condition

(30oi)t78-1tl3, Allor &amp;PM
1 990 Cougar. high mile I, runs

grnl, looko good, V·8, $2t00,
740-949-2838 ()( 7~949-2045.
t 8110

~lncoln

Continenlal, Bleck

1994 Harley DavkJoon Sportoter,
dition Lots or extras. (304)81S·
7894.
.

1982 Plymouth Acclaim For Sal•
Or Trade For A Truck, 40 Inch
Mower Deck For Walk Behind

Grevoly, 740-256-153!1

199S Pontiac Flrlblrd AIC, AU·
tomatlc, V·6, T· Topo, 54,000
Mllta,

Excellent

Condition,

$11,000, 740-448·2300

FO&lt; Salt: Shannlu 4125 (~e HP, 4
WD) Thlclor, Ca174Q.5C-43t0.
Cat·5S3 ShHp Foot Roll•r·
131,000, Cat· 215 Track Hoo
$3t .ooo. 4611 Pone tralllf 11 .aoo:
teft Thlnt Box $3,000. 2.000 Ga~
ion Wot•r Tank SBOO 00, 427
Chovy Truck Motor,l780 oo
Mloc.: StHIIIOime, Plpo, Vltlrtt·
lng 'Tamp ftfl 418 Cat ~ Walor
Purnpo tlllltont Foot $3.000.00.
(740)·843·0122 8:00·4:00. alt•r
e:oo (740)-84a-29te

~'OOC.TL'( ~~\~,MY
, OOY!

,...
Dl DYOU flfi&gt;-.T \1-\Ei'\ 7

20 Ft Boat Cuddly Cabin with
Trailer. sto.eoo. oao (304)77~
5178, Afler&amp;PM.

1

BeM bOI~ 40 hp Mercury trolinll
motor, awl~al aeatt, live well~
mort,St,500, 7~-7.

,

Rlwer campsite for tent end dock
site lor boat, with water, cement

patrol, 740-982-5956.

•

Auto Parte &amp;
Acce11orlea

Now gas tanka &amp;body porll. D a
R Auto, Ripley, WV. (304)372·
3933 ()( 1·110f1.273-93211

t 998 Chevy Blazer, 2 door, with
LS package, loacJed, t t ,ooo mlloo,
callatlor5pm,7~982-1t44.

1998 Nl11an 200SX 19,000

Mlloo, $11,900, 7~3111-2791.

Double Rool AC (lc• cold), Ml·

720 Trucka for Sale
$800, 7~319-2427.

Equipped with Root Air Rune
$3,500 (740)·245·5829 .,.
ter Spm
~~

1987 Fleetwlng 24' motor horne.
Chevy cha11i1, rootalr, cab a'tr,
Ona(l generator, gas &amp; electric,
refrigerator &amp; ttove, good tires,

I

Don't gtt stung by high prrca r
Shop tlrt c/oul(itd SKIIon

awning, only 27,500 mllea, 740·,
742·28&amp;1.
'
SE fWI CES

Home
Improvement.
BASEMENT

WATERPIIOOFINO

~

UnconCUHonal lllttlme guarani•.
Local references furnished. II·
1975
24 Hrl. (7(1)

c...

44a.oaro. 1·800·287·0576. Roo·

era Woterproollng.

•

te71 Ford F·t50, 4x•. t09,000
Actual Milas Average condlllonl
(740)-448-405:1

1919 Chevy 6·10 Pick-Up,
$2,295 oo Call (740)·441•1 138·

t 993 c~ 112Ton wng Jloll, V·
1. 4 St*4 wibodllner, - · raar
window, lOcking cJI-tltl, A.C.,
AMIFt-1, Excollontl Condition.
$?,000.(300)678-7128 Allor IIPM.
tete, GMC Jimmy 4x4, ~oto 01
Extrul E~t Coitclltlonl Rota1t
Val.,. $te,eoo Aoklng St4,8oo.
7-7728

Appliance Ports And Strvlca1 Nl
Nom. Brandl Over 25 'ftoara Ex·
ptrlence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Moytag, 740·448·
7791.

'

8323.

Llvlr\gston'l Ba11man1 Wlliter
Proofing, all battment rtpalra
done, fret 11t1mataa, llfeUme
gu~rantu. 12Yrt on job oxporl·

onco. (300)18e-3891

Wily Call Anyona liiH? We C.n
Do II All/ MIA Gon•ral Contre·

cling. El•ctrlctl, Carp•ntry,
Porch&lt;il, Thlllor Sat·Upo, 4nd Air
COnditioning, Aloo, Malnttllanca,
7o10-+4f·1401.

ltall-

Bulclonl
Build now or ,.pair
old, no job
too amall or large Major credit

730 vane a 4-WDt

cards.
tWV021812. Call
(301)4511-1048.BP1528-1012. ·

tile Ch&lt;ivy Utility Van. Auto.
,,500, (304)e7HI83.

840 Electrical and ,
Refrlgerltlon

t 915 Bronco II, 4•4, Auno Goodi
CaiA(Ior8 P.M. 7~2811-1287

,_ IIMco or r.potra.

1H5 Chtvy Van 350 Automatic,
7~2§1831 '

~-tiel

38 Boxing
.
vlclory: abbr.
40 Like Jugs and
ewera
4t Rocker Pop
42 Cry of
ourpriH
43 Loam, e.g.
44 Healthy
46 -meter
47 Thailand,

or com-1 Wiring,

-IJ.

ctnlld altctrtclan. Rldanvur

Eltctrlcal, WV000308, 304-e?e1781.

\

once

48 Miller and

Jillion
50 Mrs , In

Modrld
52 Above, to
poets
53 Startling
exclamation

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher Cf\1Piog11!1mll are cruled lrom quotllltioos by fa mous people pu t and

pre.-.1

Each lener 1t1 the Cipher Stands for anothet, Todaysclu. T . . ,,, G

'u

0

OELBP

OADBB

RAUYJ. '

B.B.

'RAUYJDaK

AEGB

VMJBYP

OAEK

M S

OM

V E

~

e

B

RCVVUKTP
V MD B

KBBJ

MS

RDUOURP . '

XMPaF.A
XMCHBDO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "We must replace a culture ol v1olenco and mayhem
with one of values and meanmg " - Vece Prestdent AI Gore
WOlD
IAMI

I

II P I I
YE T T S

1~

/t--.t-,L,r:-5N-r.r-l-r-~/~

~-s.....,..&amp;....,-...L-JI..-.J,.. \,

I

C QEH U N

f

My miserly fnend says lhat
the secret to saving money 1s
~~ ~~rn it faster tha.n 11 ••• be .

1-""T,;....;T,..;;.-i,7;-:;,8-:.:...,,~-j Q

~~~~{RMBlE FORI

r I•

I' [ I' I
I I Ibe I I I I I I
1

1

SCUM LITS ANSWIRS

good!

810

cuts

.,

Glltl1(740~

2 Cara: 1988 Chevy Corarca,

state

31 Long, deep

' • rmJR~y~a~t~m I' II

•

looks &amp; rune great, $1500 t99t
Chevy Coralca, auto, ale, AM/FM
ca... ~ooka &amp;" runs great, $2800.
(304)878-21149

Anderoon

Complete th• chuckle quoted
..-.J.I......L.-.J.I..-....1..-..1.'-.J
by fiiiii''Q •n the m•um; words
you develop from srep No 3 below

crowava, lull kitchen. color TV,
Bathroom,Shower, 5 beds. very
good condition , dependable,

1998 Pontiac Trana·Am, Fully
Loaded! Price Reduced to
$22,500.00 Great Graduation

20 Ac:treti-

All pass

An unusual autobtography ts
Michael Rosenberg 's "Bndge, Zta ...
and Me " (Master Pomt Press).
Rosenberg, a Scot by btrth who
moved to New York in February
1978, describes hts bndge career, m
particular hts pannershtp wtth Zta
Mahmood. For such a great player.
Rosenberg ts surpnsmgly cnltcal of
his own game
There are vanous lips and pteces
of advrce; and many deals, most of
them advanced. Bullhe te]\1 1s writ·
ten on a hghr vctn, and everyone
should get enJoyment from the book.
In thrs deal , Rosenberg was srttmg
West, defendong agarnst four spades.
What would you have led ?
Four dtamonds and four hearls
were c ue·bJds, showmg Ihe ace tn the
b1d SUJI and slam Interest rn spades .
Rosenberg hoped to score four
tncks vra the ace-Jack of spades, a
wonncr m panner 's hand, and a club
ruff tn hts hand Yet where was part·
ncr 's entry? The opposrlion 's strong
brddtng dtdn 'rlcavc room for Easlto
hold a kmg. II would have to be the
heart queen Buttf Rosenberg led ht s
club, won wrth the spade ace, and
shtlled to the heart kmg, declare1
might see what was happenrng and
duck
So Rosenberg led rhe heart ktng m
111ck one South won wolh lhe ace .
crossed to dummy wtth a dramond.
and played a spade to' h1s kmg
Rosenberg won wuh the ace ,
swnched to a club, and a moment lat·
er rece1ved a club ruff to defeat rhe

original mllae Onan Generator.

1979· 19ft Coachman Motor
Home Dodge Cha1111, New
Starter and Water Heate:r.

2045.

12 Let~ noloy
13 Droll agcy.
18 Here, In Poria

Eaot

Declarer could have succeeded by
duckrng attrtck one , bul who would
do that ?
The book IS $18 95 postpatd from
Baron Barclay Bndge Supplres. Call
(800) 274-2221 lo order.

197t Camper, 22Ft., Doublt
Axle, Sloops 4, AC, Awning, Fu~
ly Equlpod, Roal Nlco. $2400.
(304)4511-1793. '

1997 Thunderbird Sport Coupe,
IIOK, 11illor $7,950, 740·949·

21 Elk's horn
22 Dlotlnctlon
23 "Cot on - nn Root"
24 Genuo ol
lroga
25 Plaintiff
27 Auditioning
actor'• quest
28 " - - Three
Llvoa" (old TV
sariat)
29 Racotrock

Pass
Pass

contract ,

Campara a
Motor Home• ·

1997 Ford Aspire Low Mileage,
740-2158-1417, 7~2!58-11228

1989 Dodge, ton, PS, aulo, utility
btd, $3,800; concr•to llnlohlng
maciJq, 3' • 2': 7~992·2018.

1658.

.,

1989 19 Ft Bayllner Caprice,

$7500. (304)875-8901

Months, Carmlchael'l Farm &amp;
Lawn, Inc 1·800·SM·111'1, Gail~

Forguoon 30 GooG Bhapo, 74().

'

Open Bow, 200 HP, 1/0, V•ry
Clean. 740-245--8239.

790

4.

4•

t978 321t MotorHome . 37,000

Monday • Fflday

polio, OH Wo Do11vor1

P"

eve Jolnls. 1~245-sen

2• Months, 3 75"4 38 Months,

4 75'1'. 48 Montho, 5.511 80

..

Engine, Good Condition, $2,000.
(304)875-5091
.

'carpentry, cJooro. wlndoWI, llottha,
home rapor and mort. For
lrH •atlmato call Chet, 74().992·

CradM Appmvol, JD12t8, JD720,
NH474, NH46t, NH488 Hayblno,
J0335, NH1130, NH650, MFt 1580,
NH8St, Round Baiera, No John
DHro Round Beltre. IAoMr Con·
dltlonoro, 011 t2 Montho, 2.75'1'.

'

f

199S Honda Shadow Ace, 11 do
CC, 2600 Mllul Garage Ko~tl
Like Now Many Extraal (740)·
388-8912

1818 Chovy 4x4, Silverado, s
Spood. (300)675-2159.

John DHre

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST

and Engines, Alll)'pee, Acceas
To Over 10,000 Transmlsalon•,

1992 Cleo Storm Good COndition,
AIC, Tinted Windows, 740·2~5·
5158.

North
2A

11 Nome lor
lrwllnd

From Scotland
to New York

Budget Priced Tranomlellol\o

1992 Qeo Molro. Automatic, A/C,
Good Tlreo, New Brttcel, $2,200,
74Q.:JIIHI728.

F-1S:;:t;*~

33 Run away

1993 GE 500 , E Suzuki. ~ow
Miloa $2,100.00 ~ow Milts I (7'"'t
2§1191
·,

760

:::,-:t.,-c;

1
ocent ::
8 H01 weglon city 4e Slmll•'• 10 Ellualt't ...,.
41 Husky-lh-ldent
51 Evil epr!W
12 C""• flle&lt;*e 54 Edmonton
14 lnequ!Wble
hoclcey t.am
15 Diellnl ~~~- 55 Navel peny
11 HorH relatlvo
olfl17 3, to Toronc•
56 Molitor of
19 Hurt
Caotor and
20 Covalry
Pollux
IIO(dloro
57
23 Flrebug't crlme
26 ihhabltant:
DOWN
aulflx
27 Cll'nlvar city
1 Blulofl.grMn
30 Frequents
2 o.-aiH
32 Wrop
3 Blockh&lt;ildo
34 Playwright
4 cr.m genuo
Eugene
5 ActiQ835 Turned over
MacGrow
38 Rooler'o
8 "The Skin of motorial
Teeth "
37 Sup
7 Chtlrt
39 Gardener'o
8 Joy of
bane
late-night TV
40 Author
9 Burden

By Phillip Alder

C&amp;C Ganerat Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,

Juna U,.d Hoy Equtpmont Solo·

• sw. Financing With

'

•

Coldwwll

Opening lead. ? ?

1992 Suzuki GSXR 750, Ex Ac·
coosorlea, $3800 1301l878-t27A.

With Black Interior, Moon Root.

740-2.45-5659

Pass
Pass
Pass

t98S Hondo V30, Trade For 4
WD, Or St ,ooO: 40 Ft Trollora
For Sale Or Trade, 740·251·
t270

198• International dump truck,

FlltBed Thlllor to&lt; Sale. (300)4158-'

Hugel-*&gt;ry

t987 Grand Am, Air ConditiOning,
Tift, Crutao, Automatic, V-8, Sharp
ca~ lt,200, 740-44t·t083

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

...e ease.

DT 4811, Allloon automatic, 33,000
GVW air brakes, 9' dump bed.
s - plow b,.ckoto, good condl·
tlon, $8,1500, 740-992·2478

371 t. EOH.
863 Thlr~ Ayanut, Gallipolis 2
Bodroomo, 1300.00 Plus Ulllltlee
end on• rrtllnth D~altl (740)·

Dlocount Mobile Homo
Perfs &amp; Supply

1962 Kawa11kl. GPZ 550, 1,000

1!Sft Trlhaul Boat, 85HP, Mercury

U88 Dodgo Colt, 4 door, auto,
$7!0.00 080 (740)·2§9220

IKQ7

Milts. E~ectllent Condltlon. -740·

8000 ,Comander Ford Tractor

water, $140,000, beautiful view,

Director 01 Malntonanc., Holzer

1980 Suzuki 780 18,000 Mllh.
GoOd Condition, $600, 1981 Yl·
maho ~so Fully Droe11d 28,1100
MilOs, St .200. 740-441-Q829. .•

8 4 2

• J 8

1980 FLH Harley Da~ldaon, red ,
wl'llte &amp; blue, top and bottom en-gine redone, Iota of chrome.

$10,000 llnti, 740-IMQ.2872

Q 10

•A a

West

1985 BuiCk Ragal7~2!i8·163t
Work, $850,740-441-1083.

• K

Motorcycles

$3,000, 7~379-2o127

Modica! Contor, 740-4-18-e305.

Applications available ot: VIllage

740

UmoWHkend.
1985 Honda Shadow V·70 Looks
Good, Low Mileage, Nits Minor

South

82 Ch.vy Altro, load•d. muot
-.740-992·2019.

750 Boata &amp; Motors
for Sale

t 988 Ford 2 Ton Dump Truck.

Of SCentt, Hodrt: Monday

1 BR Apartment For Rent: In Point

gelhtr with some - ports and 1
gallon ol paint $2150 (304)675·

70,000 mllee, ACIPBIPS, deluxe
v-a, beautiful car, tunroof, litl

18,000 BTU'I Saara Air Condi-

Pots, 740-44e-2802.
1 Bedroom Furnished, Uillltles Included, $300/Mo.. Also. Efficiency
Furnished Utilities Included $2501
Mo' 7~387.(161 t

Puppt11.
Tills
111 shots, wormed.

$7s.oo each Call boloro 8PM,
(304)875-7948.

570

540 Mlacallaneoua
Merchandise

135

Fish, Blrdo, Pond Suppllu.
Sun 1·4PM, Mon ·Sit. flAM·
6PM. Floh Ttnl&lt;ll'el Shop, 2413
Jackeon Avenue/Point Pl•asant.
(300)675-i!Of3.
Docked

ero Both naad work wtll sen to·

ll

Rat~ Terrier

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, fur·

$279 00 Per Month, Plus Utllltle•
740-448-2957.

AKC Slborlon Husky , pupplu,
Rest Colora, Blu• eyes, $too
Each, AutomotiVe Paint, 15 Gal·
ion 740 446 8627.

949-0508.

198t OIGe Cutlass: tga's Cam·

$7,000.

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Oryars, Ranges, Rtlrlgrators 90 Day Guarantee!

GOOD UIID APPLIANCES

water and trash Included, 740-

4 AK.C Boxer pupo, ready to go,
7~74U'101.
.

AKC Whitt Gorman Shepherd
Pups, Pick: t-Malt ond t·Fomale,
Leltl (740~2.45-8213.

t 4x70 Mobile Homo 2 bedroom,
551 1\Jrtcey Run, Chtohlre, Ohio
$350 00 month $150 Dopoolt
(740)-378·9840

992·2187

Ptta lor Slle

560

Sizes, Guaranteodl 740·886·
0047

French City Maytag, 740·448·
7795.

conditioned, $260·$300, ..,,ar,

Block, brick, ttwtr pipes, windows. lintels, etc Claude Wlntert,

pie, 7~982-9819.

Household
Good1

$250 ront, $150 deposit, no pots,
740·742·2714.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air

Suppl~a

AKC Rtglaterod Mlnloturo
Oachohund pupplee, r•d &amp;diP·

740-448&gt;4107.

1988 Chevy Chevellt SUiltr
Sporl, 350, 4 epaod, lair &amp; driv·
ablo condition, 32,000 mllea,
$3,800 firm, call days leave moo·

7158 after SPM thru weak, any·

Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245·
5t2t

Forlease

TRAN SPORTATION

• 1
• Q 8
• 10 9 a t a
1109432

tete Ford E350 cargo von,
47,000 Milos, 11' Box With Alurhlnum Ramp, ""· CaoHtto, oleO, V·
8, E•cell.nt Condition, $15.150,
740-319·2995.

t994 Honda 750 Magna.~~'J
good condition. like new. S4.ooq.
(304)875-2403/675-8135
•

550

East

1815 Forn Ranger, 5 Spood, Air,
AM/FM Storeo With S7,000
Mll11, Aoklng $9.500, 740·3798270

ACROSS

W-•

t AK5
I A J 8 6

(300)87S.194e.

1MO·fll0 ClAAS
Pollee lmpoundo,
Repo'e. For ~!stings
319-3323 Ell 4420

Building

• J 953

t 994 GMC Jimmy SLS. Loaclod,
4DR .. Excollent Condition. High

883, 6,600 miles Excellent Con--

White Wl'ltrlpool Washer $75,

• 9 6

VIIUI $13,800, Aaklng $1 t ,100:
7-7728.

1979 Otd1 Cutlaos, 280V8 Good
COndition, $800. PhoN (304)7735656, altar 8PM.

530740-4411-9088

Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

PICI&lt;·Up Short Bed,

Waterline Special. ~4 200 PSI
$2t .9S Per 100: 1' 200 PSI
$37 oo Por too: All Braoo Compresll!&gt;n Flttlngo In S RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jaoksori, Ohio, 1.110f1.537·9528

Kenmore Washer .$75: White
Kenmore Dryer $65; Call Aflar

MobHe Hom. Lot For Rent. Reier·
encos Required, 74().2§1922.

Che~

sage, 7~982·2478

White G E. Washer $75, While

460 Space for Rent

tl93

,.x,, Excellent Condition, Retail

2720, 7~2SH989

!capped EOH 304-675-8679.

sklized apt for elderly and hand·

Tobacco Allot. For Loose, t 835
lbs, $25 PI&lt; lb. (300)7~

&amp; Relorencos, 740·643·2916,
740·643.0122

Heavy Duty 118: Air ConditiOner
t to BTU Oood COndition, $t 25:
Armoire Wood $150, 740·371·

White Wl\lrlpool Relrtgerator $75:

Hookup, $275 00 Rent Wllh De·
posit 740·446·34it Or 740·446·
Ot01 After 5 OOPM

Waterloo, House, $325fMo , In·
eludes Water &amp; Garbage, Deposit

lc Washer 175; Kenmore Dryer,

applications lor tBR HUD suD·

3 Bedroom House, tn Rio Grande,
$325/Mo , Plus Deposit, After

month , plus utllllloa, 740·992·
8542.

Square Bal.. ol Hay For Sale.
(300)875-5072.

Promotion. 0111 now 1·888·265·

Twin Rivera

Middleport, 3 bedroom, $300 per

Lorgo Round Btloe 01 Hay. $1 s,
740-388 8538.

5182.Lail\18~.

Pri. .ata,. 11M Dtoe111 Sumrnor

Hay a Grain

2123.

2BR unfurnished house, 507 112
2nd St • New Haven . Call after

Newly Renovated, Washer Dryer

640

7~992·5633

sage.

756 First Avo. 1 Bdrm., 1 Bath,

7~319-2427 .

387-7272,

'

(304)675· t 070

Uonlng Garage, 740-446-2563

l.tevt'*Niagt

Color, $200 080 740·387-7152,

446-0008

3 BedrOoms, Central Air Condi-

Livestock

Riverside Apartments In Middle·

2·3 Bedrooms, $300 month De·
posit &amp; References, NQ Pets! Lin·
coin Ave. Homestead Realty

Hud accepted, 740-742·0712

JDC Flnanelng , Carmlchatl'l
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc 1·800·584·
1ttl, Gallipolis. OH W. Dollvt~

Slato Run Farms, Jockoon, Ohio
740-2141'11311S.

Wash•r 175: Whirlpool Automat·

3 bedroor:n house, Wetzgal St ,

Stt The New John Deere 200
Strlta Skid StHr ~ra. 7 5%

630

tUt •ChiVY Converolon Van ,
Mark Ill. Loaded . IS700.
(304)87S.2!M9

Mlltt. 19,400 Call before &amp;PM ,

G E Washer &amp; Cryer Almond

Speed Queen And Automatic

8 00 PM. 740-245-9156

(800)-352·1045

Gracious living t and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vllltge Manor lnd

Now Taking Applications- 35

SPM (304)675-3469

...... lktiiJIIIpect·
30'x40'al', PoJntod Stool Siding,
- S t o o l Ftooftng , t S:XI'
t1ack door, 3' door, S11,888
ErOctldllron HorN~ f·

CaH Ron EvMI, 1-800·537-9ll28. '

Wetl 2 Btdroom Townhouse
Apartments, lncludea Water

2BR House New Carpet, Newly
Remodeled $300!mo + utilities
E~etra Lot ReferencefDe~osil.

7~

Outstanding Anau• And Chlan·
QUI BUill, Rtaaonably Priced,

(304)682·2099 batwaen 7·30·
9 30PM Oflly

(304~675·5540

S., - F o r r=.rmoll Cub,
448-m7.

JET

AERATION MOTORS
RopalrBd, New I Rebult In Stock.

Green Apta 149 or cal 740·992·

7~388·8118

(300)e75-5t82.

An~ny

477 Hay
Bind,- 841· Ford
-Holtand
Holland
251 Hay
Tractor, Sat Culllvarors. Sickle

Block Anguollull 740·25&amp;-1621,

hoUuo, 011 wol, pond. well &amp; city

48 acre farm on Kingsbury Rd. 2

$32,000 Mo,. Acreage Available,

kitchen. D.R ..

We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8385,

Grubb's Pllno- tuning &amp; ropalrs.
Problems? NMcJ llln«&lt;? CaN 1M
pllno Dr. 7~525

388·8728

5 Acrea Bllcktop Frontagi &amp;
Lake Vle,w, Gallla County,
In
laundry

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acres ,

For Solo. Uood Air CondltiOnor.
Large &amp; Small, (300)871&gt;-1837.

Cut Detlt, Contilct Jeff fterrtaon,

3SO I.Ot8 a Acreage

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Apartment For Elderly AM Handicapped, Equal Housing Oppor·

New Engine, 32 Inch Cui, $250,
7o40-446.Qii19.

2bdrm epll. , lot•' elaetrlc, ap·
pllancas furnished, laundry room
lacllltlos. ciOH to ochool In town.

' 330 Farme for Sale

330-948 teo&amp;.

knowledge In Mlcroooll won!, Ex·

62, Routo I, Box 328, Point
Pleaoan~ WV 2S5!0. EOE

Redman

Oakwood Homes Barbourtvllle,

advertisements for real estate

eel, Lotus1 .2.3. word Pro and

Gtnetll t;:kltrcare, State Route

Exclusive

Homes And BEST HOMES, Ex·
ciUIIW Dutch Art Located On Rt.
23, Chillicothe, J!Mt North 01 me
Rt. 35 /Rt 23 lnlarchange Call
Toll Fre• Number. 81H43·7~21,
And Ask For ThO CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION lnlormotlon By
Mall including A $t ,000 Cortlllcato On A New Homo.

This newspaper w1ll not
know•ngly accept

Scenic Hills Nursing Center It
aeeking a pereon with computer

Apply at Polnl Plo•oant Conhtrl

HOMES,

or 1968 which malc:es It Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
llmllaUon or dlscriminaUon
based on race, color, religion,
sax familial status or natiOnal
ongln, or any intentlon·to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination "

1·800·8 1:3·

3S65,Ext.8826, 8AM·9PM. 7
days tdo,lnc

1·888·136-3332
Take Rt 35 North Frorl) Gallipolis
For The Boat Housing Detla In
Southern OhiO TECUMSEH

All real estate advertising In

efila, no experience For app I

!unity, 740..48 4639.

1 Bdrm., EICtra Nice, First Month
Free With One Year LeaSe

Please Hatpl 3 Bedroom, 2.
Baths, just take over Payments!

'

740-288·008 t '

992·2218

p•llil••--••lllljll down
$20~ 74 per month with $tl50
Call t ·110o.B31'·3238

Put Hto WOrlcl $25-$75 00/hr
PT/FT t-(888)·388-6708

for a 20 unit apartment complex;
please tend resumes or inquiries
to: Attention Carolyn Emmons,
BOt Hawkins Dri\'e, Mt Sterling,

Frenchtown Apartments, Now
Accepting Applications For t
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised

Looking To Buy Good Older
Homes, 1·8Q0.36H882
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rant.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, lklrting,
delu~ee steps and attup Only

SOCIA~

OWn aCO~r?

Part tlme maintenance (man who

2 ·20 ACRE TRACT&amp;
For On ly $22 ,000 Each Take
Both And Get Discount. Great
Hunting land, Full Ot Deer Has
Road Access To wavne National
Fo! est. Land Contract 4vallabte

'75-12x65
'B4-14x50
'9t·16x80
'95-16x80
'95-t4x70
'911-t8x64
Call oow IO&lt; Best Seltctlonl1·
(888)·736·3332

New Bank repoa only 2 left we
finance caft 30ot-722·7148

will do mowing), part timo manager

Bklwetl, OH 7ol(l.31111-9675

t4 x70, 2 bedroom, total electric,

D. C/A, $15,500, Must Be Moved!

FINANCIAL

230

First Avon~, One And lWo Bed·
roomt. From ~75 ·$350/Mo , s.
eurily Depos\t, Rarerencn Re·
qulrod, 740-44 t .Q952,

pos~.

1990 Clayton 2 Bedrooms, A/C,
New Carpet, All Electric , May
Stay 0{'1 Rented lot 740·441·

7519

Ontl. Domino's P~za

exam. info , call:

(304)675-5108/576-~tOt

1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Also, Has E~epando, Very Ntce,

4623 or (304)674·01 55

4814

Medk:al Processor

Call K&amp;K (304)675·3000, SAM·
5PMI675-62n, Alter 6PM

6802

20 Bed ICFIMR Fatmty In Chesapeake, II Interested, 740·446·

FTfPT No e~t:PBrience necessary

1986 Clayton, 14x70, 38R/2BA,
Haat Pump. Appliances, Good
Condition Must Sell, $10 900

Interior, Exler~or Pamt1ng Pres·
su re Washing Tree AemoYal,
Gutter Cleaning, Lawn Care, Re·
modeling and Rotting (740)-446

Full· Time With Benallts For

Lot 2. 15 Acres, Water, Sewer,
Orh1away on Woodsmlll Aoad .

Ave Pt Pleasant,WV $275
month+deposlt HUO approved,
reference required . StoveiRefrig·
erator Included. No pets.

bile homo, 740-992·5039

AemOdelmg All Kinds Of Roofing
S h~ngtes 3·0 Lap Metal, Add On
Add111 ons , Pa•n t1 ng , Free Esh·
mates' Residential. 740·44t.0653

210

44&amp;-9539

Furnace, New Appliances, Excel-

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo-

OS,

Dynamark Rldtng Mowor, 10 HP

Maps. HI00.2t3-8365

2 BR

304·675·1957
H S. CONTRACTING

The~r

Lawn, First Floor, For An Ap·
pointment To VIew, Phone. 740·

t965 t4x65 It 2 Bedrooms. CIA

$12,0001&gt;0 (304)-675-2319

ploo
CII7«Hoo1·1982.
Doctor
- -· -

mltted. 5% Down Land Contract
With A.pproved Credit. Free

$300/Mo, 740-256·1489

Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul your logs to the m1ll just call

Dremalic R11uh1, 100% Nature!,

IIITAIO~IIII

Por·
No

BAM·SPM/675'6.277 attar 6PM

1&lt;4~~:70 HollyPark Mobilehome,
28R, Large Bath/garden bathtub
separate shower. large livingroom w/hlgh cel!ings, new carpet.
kitchen has new top·of.lhe-llne
gas stove, has gas heat, central
a1r installed In 1994. new steel
doors &amp;storm doors ASking

E &amp; S Lawn Service. Design, Implementation
and Service
Available lor Sprmg Clean up,
lerUIIzlng and planting Free asti·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed.
Greg M1lhoan 304/675-4628

able, lurnlol1..s &amp; unfurnlohod.

AIIAZtNQ ·

All
eons.

41 0 HOUB88 for Rent

""t Condltion1740-446·275t

Brulr:throtiQhlll Loaa 10· 200
Poundt E41y, Quick, Faat

$27,500 Doultle WIMI Are Per·

12~~:60 Homene Sultabte tor adding to e~~:isllng home or storage
structure
Good
condition,

$1 ,500 Call K&amp;K, (304)67a·3000,

Golllpollo Co...t College

Chr ltty'a F11mll~ Living, apart·
mants, home &amp; trailer rentalt ,
740-992·4!5t•. •pertmenta 4v•ll·

SamC.B. Bill RldiO, D•mco SIMI·
•Bought - .(30410-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Business
Training

"(Careers ClOse To Home)

wtll sen house with·

By Owner Sandhill Road ,/Polnt
Pleasant Brick Ranch - 38ed·
rooms·2Baths Basement, lwo·2
car garages, Acre Lot (740)441 ·

Two Community Group Homes
For People W1th MR/00 In Gallla
CIJunty Hours M· F, Daytime
Hours Or As Scheduled For
Medical Appointments Or Issues
Requirements Current Ohio LPN
L•cense , NAPNES /OOPNES,
Valid Drive r' s Llcense. Three
Year s Good Driving E ~epe rl ence
.A.nd Adequate Automobile In·
surance Salary S8 50 !Hour E~~:·
ceuent Benefit PaCkage. Send Resume To Bu ckeye Community
Services, PO Box 604, Jackson,
OH 45640. Deadli ne For Appllc
ants 6/18/99 Equal Opportunity

140

apprec~~tte,

ou t lots lor $89 ,000, 7•0·992 ·
2704 740·992·5696

3488

Johnson&amp; Supermarket, 85 Vine
Street, Gallipolis, Applications

Ky 40353.

By owner, 725 Page StrHI, Mid·

i n The Countrr, West Gei!Ja
County, Lota 0 Meadow, Wjth
New Barns And Fencing, Aeady
For Animals. loll Of Road Fron·
tage Mora Land Available. Now
Divided Into 5 &amp; 10 Acre Tract,
Taka Both · Hi Acres For

740·388·804 1

For More Information Call 800·
437-B7S., Hrs 8 30 AM -5 PM

~PN

tUCAES
READ\' FOR HOlliES

Kelly Orlvo Call (304)675·4230,
alter 6PM

lnten or &amp; E~~:ten or Pamtlng, Ex·
perlenced, Reference s. Reason
able Rates For Free Estimate ,

Weekly Pay
Health Insurance Available
Work Well W1th The PubliC

38R Home, New Roof, New Car·
pet, large l ot Georges Creek,

NEA Crottword Puzzle

-~·
. '

ASTRO·GRAPR

,,.' Friday, June I I. 1999
"' Palience may not be one of your
;: grcolesr a.&lt;~~sels, bul you'll exercise
-~ .. whatever amounl 1:; needed In lhc
year ahead in order lo elevale and
•• .a~hteve your goals and objectives.
. " . GEMINI (Moy 21 ,June 20) It
•. might be wise today for you to be
t./fuore reactive thon assertive Instead
. of sttrring up issues on your own,
,; you'll fare beuctdcolma wirh mailers
o;

one at a rime os each occurs.

Oet

a

·.':1ump on lrfe by underslanding lhe
,, mHuenccs that' II govern you in the
year ahead. Send the required refund
fonn and for your Astro-Oraph pre·
. .. dictions by matllng $2 lo Aslro·
• • Graph, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O. Box
' ,. 17~8. Murray Hill Slation, New
- York, NY 10156. Be sure to state
your Zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 2l·July 22)
-,;!lecause you may nol be as comfort·
: . Qlt1e wilh people you don'l know roo
• ,11\'CII, slick ro sdcializlna wilh friends
•IVith whom you COO lei your haJr
down ond he yourself.
l,J!O (July ~3-Aug. 22) Even lr
you're unable 10 be the first one out

and feel young is your beSt prcscrtp·
of the starting block• in compctilove .
tion today for relaxtng and havtng
situarion•, todoy, y9u' II have the '
run Their exuberance Will prove
tenacity and pcrst.slcnce to finish a
tnfccttous and refurbish what aols
wmncr.
,
you .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feh 19)
possess the wherewirhBI to compre·
Peace or mmd con only be achieved
hend the whole plc1urc today and nor
, today· hy finishing what you start.
merely just a few brush srroltes. Lei
Tack long and complet1ng your "must'
someone else take core &lt;&gt;f Ihe dctoils
do" hsl wtll give you gratificalton
whtlc you take control of Ihe plan
, and enhance your feelongs of self·
I.JBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) Even if
~ worth.
~ t~u arc ·lmffing at the hu tndny to
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Your
hc~:mu" iftvolved In Q prowsal you
sincere concern for others has always
lind e•lrcmely inrrtguing, it'll serve ~
been your greatest asset This will be
Y''u hcsr if ynu assurne n ~ton:nl, scnenhanced today to the poinr thot those
ous a1r.
with whom you ' re involved wtll
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 22) Har·
~ show 1he1r apprec1aiJon.
mony wtll enhance lhc strength of
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Rea·
your Tl'latumshtp tOday, so he wtlling
son and logtc prc~.:edcs success today.
to play second Iiddle to your male in
Treat all your affa1rs m a pracll~.:al.
o sllualion where she or he craves the
ra110nul murincr, cspectully lhose that
11
leading role.
pcrtam tu your financial wherewith! al.
,,
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) You would be doina your wai•t·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
line • bia favor loday if you forao
You've always been a take-charge
overindulaing in foods, sweets or
person nnd today !hose urges will
drinks. l:.et your mollo be: cverylhins
serve you well Whtlc other~ nrc cunin·moderation.
lcmpltottng what needs tn he done.
CAJ&gt;R.lCOilN (Dec. 22-Jon 19)
Y''" ' II he way aheod of them com·
Associating wilh friends who lhink
plettng lhc job
'I

Evenly· Baron • Weave · Tncky- CAVE IN
"Before investing in shelters, " !he financtal consultant
told his audtence, • make sure the roof won't CAVE IN
on you"

�'

Pege 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mason County Home aryd Garden Tour planned for Saturday
1'hree OUtslanding homes and a
beautiful garden will be featured on
the Home and Garden Tour. spon·
sored by the Mason County Com·
munity Educational OutreaCh Service
on Saturday, June 12. The tour will
be from 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Tickets with maps for the entire
tour.may be purchased at a cost of S5
at any home on the day of the tour.
Homes on the tour will be designat·
ed by signs.
This year's tour includes the
Mount Vernon-style home of Dr. and
Mrs. Breton Morgan and the French
country style home of Carol and Jim
Shadle on Route 35 in the Southside
~of Mason County. The garden of
Carol and Dan Jones in Meadowbrook of Poim . Pleasant and ihe
modem, traditional home of Tina and
John Rail'!len of Stoney brook Estates,
Sandhill Road, Point Pleasant.
The Mount Vernon-style Morgan
home features distinctive craftsman•
ship, including an octagonal roo111
w~th walnut woodwork and English
made oriental wallpaper. A foyer has
French wallpaper found only in the
White flouse and three other locations
in the United States. The house was
built in the mid 20's by entrepreneur
Harry E. Shadle, owner of the Mor. gan Lumber company and supplier of
the wood used to erect his marvelous·
home and farm buildings, known as
the Mount Vernon Farms of West Virginia. Directions to the home: Take
U.S. 35 toward C)jarleston from
approximately 7.5 miles from Hen·
der~n.
,
, Carol and Jim Shadle's home sets
in a dip of grassy hills in front of a
cool, green lake. The ex terior architecture of the house is French Coun·
try and the interior reflects the creative
talents of the Shadles. Caro!'s.use of
color and fabrics and lim's work with
decorative moldings and panels make
their home welcoming. Every room
has received the magic touch, including the "I Hate Laundry Rooms." Car·

ol calls their home's decor a duke's
mixture. Directions to the home: Take
U.S. 35 toward Charleston for
approximately seven miles from Henderson and watch for signs.
Dan and Carol Jones have lived on
Meadowbrook Drive in Point Pleasant for about 20 years. They own a
ranch style home with an extra lot.
Both are retired and love to work in
their yard and vegetable garden.
There are several flowerbeds in the
fronf of the house .that offer many
'blooms from spring until the first
frost. The side lot has a vegetable garden in the center with flowers sur- ·
rounding the lot along the fence line.
The backyard has a focal point of a
rock fish pond with a fountain. There
are many water' plimts in the pond,
surrounded by inany flowers that
enhance the pond to a place of interest for anyone interestea in flowers.
The entire yard is feqced in with ·
flowerbeds lining the fences with vari. eties that even the homeowners do not
know all the names. Your visit may
bring the Jones family some new
ideas and you may get an idea yourself. Directions: From Point Pleasant
take Sandhill Road, travel approximately one mile and tum left onto
Meadowbrook Drive.
John and Tina Rairden reside in a
new two-story, modern traditional
home 'located at 13 Stoneybrook
Estates. The many windows provide
a bright and airy interior that highlights the oak staircase with a catwalk
balcony. Four bedrooms and three
baths.are eclei:tically decorated. The
Rairden's built their home in the mid
1990's and it was one of the first
homes in Stoneybrook Estates. Directions to the home: From Point Pleasant, travel along Sandhill Road for
approximately three miles, tum right
at the signs.
· For more information about the
home tour, contact the West Virginia
Extension Service at (304) 675 ~0888
or Judy Chapman at (304) 576-2933.

Meigs County's

I

.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- All hourly and salaried employees at Century
Aluminum in Ravenswood were given notice earlier this week that they were
to report to work today in the event of a "no" vote by steelw orkers on a current contract proposal, according to a repon in The Jackson Herald.
The announcement was jointly made by Century Aluminum and the Umted Steelworkers of America Local 5668.
The current agreement was scheduled to expi re on May 31; howevp;sPmpany and union officials agreed on an 11 -day extension to allow tim~r the
ba llots to be printed and mailed to the membership and then returned for
counting. It is estimated the ballots will be tallied by late this afternoon.
Union leaders have been advising their I ,550 members not to accept the
contract offer. According to Local President Jerry Schoonover, the biggest
reasons are the changes in the insurance benefits and the out-of-pocket ma ~-

, . . At approximately 2:30a.m., Miranda Jo Moon, 16, of Henderson, and
' Justin Hudson, 17, of Southside, were killed in a 1991 Chevrolet Cava. 'lier driven by Moon . The vehicle was traveling west on Little Sixteen
Creek Road in Southside, when it apparently entered a right-hand curve.
The vehicle came out of the curve and c.ontinlied left, then went off the
left side of the roadway, traveled up the shoulder and struck a tree headon.
. .
The accident remains under investigation. Assisting on the sc.~ne were
the Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department and the Point Pleasant EMS.
The automobile was. a total loss.

Salem Center VFD wins grant

ESSAY WINNER - Daniel Thornton, a Meigs Middle School stu·
dent, was a regional w!nner in the recent "Loserville" Essay Contest
sponsored by the Ohio Attorney General's Office. Thornton, second
from left, is pictured with Attorney General Betty Montgomery
Meigs County DARE officer Mony Wood, and Meigs County Sheriff
James Soulsby:

SIIIIAIVIIIIIIIS Onlr 59,000 •lltl
WAS $185,995

A grant in. the amount of $3,393 has been provided to the Salem Cen·
ter Fire Department for the purchase of protective clothing.
·
According to State Sen. Mike Shoemaker, D-Boumeville, the VFD
grant was awarded under the authorization of House Bill 215 and was one
of several awarded by the Ohio Department of Commerce.
Shoemaker said that the ~p ~nment of Commerce received numerous
applications wonhy of consideration. Close to 505 depanments requested grants under this program, but by statu)e, the department must limit
the amount awarded to no more than $10,000, unless there has been a natural disaster. This allows the Department of Commerce to award as many
as 120 grants. .
·'
·
According to Shoemaker, these grants should prove useful to the recipients since the average annual budget of those fire departments was approximately $26,197.
.
A computerized ranking system is used to determine wllich departments
will receive grants. Factors considered in ranking included the department
budget, total resident population, geographic size, the number of fire items
and compliance with state mandates. Additional consideration was given to departments requesting funding in order to meet state requirements
for protective clothing and breathing apparatus.

Sale Price $1

Storms rake portions of Ohio
By The Associated Press .
Strong thunderstorms producing'lightning,.high winds, heavy rain and
hail hit portions of western Ohio Thursday and early today. There were
reports of minor flooding , downed trees and· power lines and fe)!l roofs
blown off.
There were no reports of. injuries.
In southwestern Ohio, the sheriff's offices in Hamilton, Clermont, Warren and Butler counties reported numerous trees down and roads under
water. Mothball-size hail was seen in Clermont County, where the roof
was blo'wn off a house in Miami Township.
Scattered power outages also were reported throughout southwestern
Ohio as trees knocked down some power lines.
Wind damage was reported in Seneca County in northwest Ohio, where
a grain silo was blown.across a road Thu~sday night.
·
There also were scattered power outages in Hardin County, along with
downed· trees, the sheriff's office said.
.
Moderate damage was reported in Maple Grove, where a garage roof
was tom off, a concrete block. barn was blown apart and an oak tree was
toppled. Hail, a quarter to half-dollar in size, was reported by the National Weather Service.
Near Ada, a strong thunderstorm produced frequ ent lightning and winds
gusts of up to 45 mph.

$13,995

Racist fliers spur ·investigation

STEPHANiE ANN EVANS
versity, majoring iA' physical therapy.
Vaughan is a graduate of Meigs
High School, and is the granddaughter o f Catherine Colwell Shenefi eld
of the class of 1947. She will attending Wright State University majoring in finance.
Morin graduated from Moran
Hi gh School. She is the granddaugh-

ter of Delma· Riggs Nelson, class of
1945, and will be attending Miami
University '!'here she will major .in
middle childhood education .
Fetty,' grandson of Wanda Gard· ·
ner Fetty, class of 1945, is a graduate of Athens High School. l-Ie plans
to attend Embry-Riddle Aeronauti·
cal University where he will major
in aerospace engineering.

MARBLEHEAD (AP)
.• prompted Gov. Bob Taft to ask for
Racist fliers left on dozens of cars . an investigation. .
·
at a parking lot near Lake Etie has
The fliers, which included
derogatorY. cartoons and pho·
tographs . ~~ blacks and Je)Vs,
were distributed over the weekend
at a boating access point owned by
the state. The access point, which
has about 200 parking spaces for
Today~s
~ars and trailers, attracts people
2 Sections • U, Pages
from all over the nation.
Police learned about the fliers
Calmdar
8
after Ray Brown, a Lucas County
9-10
Classlfteds
sheriff's sergeant, filed a com·
11
Comics
plaint.
Brown, who is black, said he
2
E41todala
Loql
3
doesn't plan to return to the site,
_....,...,_ _ _ _ ___."-::&amp;-!- but was "ecstatic"to hear the gov4
Sporfl ·
- - ernot was concerned.
Weather
3
. "Good for the governor," he
said. "I'm glad he thought it needed to be looked into."
Lotteries
Taft asked Satri Speck, director
OHIO
of the Ohio Department of NaturPkk3:'S·l-5; Pk:k4: 9~-8-1
al ResourceS, to investigate and
Buclu!ye 5: 3·6-10.15·29
"do whatever is inthe state's powW,VA
er to stop ihis from happening
again," said Scott Milburn, the
DaUy 3: 1·5·9; Dilly 4: 4·5·5·6
governor's spokesman.
0 t999 Oltio Ylltt.y hblilhln1C..

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

Membership open in hospital foundation to ·Meigs County residents
elects the board of tru stees of the
hospi ta l, individuals who live in
those counties must pay dues of $25
per person no later than June 30 by
check, cash or credit card . Memhcrship dues ar~ considered .by the hospi tal to be a charitable contribut ion.

Foundation members will .be
notified of the annual meet ing and
elec tion of trustees to be held in Sep·
tcmbcr at thc .hospital.
'
For :more inforniation residents
may co ntact the Community Rela· ·
lions Department, 592-9300.

· N's 'Moneyl rie,'
quits network
.
.

outer spacs:.
Dobbs has been host of CNN 's
ni ghtly financial wrap-up show,
"Moneyline," and is also president
of the spin-off financial ' network,
CNNfn.

and ~,;ompany an opportunity to meet a nd assess the situati on to dctenn~ne

the approprialc course of action. even if there is a "no" vole. He said the obje~­
tivc of the notice was to avoid an inadvertent work stoppage at the redUe·,
tion plant and fabricati on plant facilitieS .
Century Aluminum 1s Jackson County's largest employer. and also emplo~s
many from Mason. Meigs and Galli a counties.

Man charged

ment.

a

NEW YORK (A P) - Amid
reports thai he. c,lashed with the network's top executive, prominent TV
financial journalist Lou Dobbs has
quit CNN to launch a new lliternet
venture devoted to the coverage Of

He descnbed the proposal as clearly not a concessionary co ntract,
The economic package for steelworkers includes a $l .OQO SJgning bonu• .
a pay increase of 35 cents per year' for four years, 25 percent pension in crease
to $8, $10,000 increase in life insurance for all active and future retirees, $5,0
per week in S&amp;A benefits, and $90 per year increase in safety shoe allowance.
With employees reporting 10 work tod•y, Posti said it will give the utilon

SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. - Two teenagers are dead following a single-vehicle accident early today, according to the Mason County Sheriffs Depart-·•

The Shadle House

Sale Price

Lou Dobbs, host of

If approved, the new contract would impose a deductible of $200 for an
individual and $400 for a fa mily on insurance. Beyond that, the company
would pay 85 percent of costs, with an annual maximum co~ t of $1,500 for
individuals and $3.000 for families.
While he is opposed to the proposed contract , Schoonover said he is hopeful there will not be a work stoppage at the Ravenswood reduction and fab rication rolling mill plants. Century spokesman AI Posti said the company
ha·s no plans to operate the plant, however, if an agreement is not reached.
"It was our last and best offer," he to ld the·Herald.
Posti said a strike would be a very serious threat, adding it is difficult to
start and stop the facility. To do so would be at an enormous cos t, Posti said.

Two Mason County teens
killed in one-car accident

DICniYISIIIII, •lr II,OOQ 11lles
. ..

must be at least 18 years of age, a
resident of Athens, Hoc king, Meigs,
Morgan Perry, Vinton or. Washin gton Coundes, and pay annual membership dues of $25.
In order to become a voting
member of the corporation which

imums.

with shooting
at his Wife ·

'14 LINCOLN COiftNE171L

Membership for 1999-2000 is
now open · in the Sheltering Arms
Hospital Foundation, Inc., the corporation the op.erates O' Bi ene ss
Memorial Hospital.
. .
ln order to be eligible for mem- ·
bership in the foundati on, residents

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Century Aluminum vote. may be tallied today

.Four awarded scholarships by Rutland Alumni Association

Erin Rente Morin
ANTHONY R. FETTY
Four scholarships were awarded McConnelsville.
by the Rutland Alumni Association
The. students are all 1999 gradu· at its recent banquet held at the Rut- ates. One of the qualifications was to
land Civic Center.
a direct descendant of a Rutland
The scholarships went to High School graduate.
Stephanie Evans of Reedsv ille,
Evans, a graduate of Eastern
Bridget
Mari e
Vaughan
of ' High School, is the granddaughter of
Langsville; Anthony R. Fetty of Ruben Edwards, Rutland class of
Athens.. and Erin Renee Morin of 1954. She plans to attend Ohio Uni -

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume 50 . Number 6

'

the dangers of smoking and to promote the state's new "Loserville"
anti -smoking campaign, which is
aimed direct ly at young people.
"Each of these kids understand
why .you th smoking is a losi ng
proposition," Montgomery said.
':These SJ~ entries represent the most
talented and gifted DARE students
m the state."
A national settlement between 46
states and the tobacco industry which settled a lawsuit by a group of
state~ trying to .recover health. cos ts
asstrciated with smoking - banned
nearly all outdoor advertising. The
agreement also all owed states to
replace tobacco billboards with antismoking billboards, with 1he tobacco industry pick ing up (he tab.
The producti on cost of the billboards - about $155 ,000 - should
he defrayed by the tobacco industry's repayment of the state's legal
e~pen ses from liti gating the' tobacco
lawsuit.
Thornton is the son of Roger and
. Elaine Stewan of Middleport and
Bill and Karen Thornton of Gallipolis .

Stars defeat Sabers, Page 4
.There's too many names, Page 8
News of area graduates, Page 12

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 60s

The Morgan House

Sports

June 11, 1999

Weather

Tomorrow: P. cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Daniel Thornton wins DARE regional essay contest
A Me1gs Middle School student
was recent.ly named a. regional winner of a statewide DARE
"Loservill e" Essay Contest.
Daniel Thornton, a sixth grader at
Meigs Middle School, attended an
awards ceremony in Columbus
where he ·and five other fifth and
sixth graders were honored as
regional winners in the essay contest.
The studentS' wrote essays about
the dangers of smoking to coincide
with the Attorney General's antismoking "Loserville" billboard
campai gn.
"Smokers are losers because they
spend money on somethin g that
might kill them ," Thornton wrote in
his essay. ·
Thornton and the other regional
winners received a commendation
from Attorney General Betty Montgomery at a press -l.:o nfcrcncc wilh
their families, teachers and principals, state legislators. and DARE
officers.
Hundreds of essays we re su bmitted from around the stale. The contest was held to rai se awareness of

Friday

Thursday, June 10, 1999

Dobbs will leave CNN on Frida y was looking forward to the opportuto launch Space.com , a Web ,site nity to bUJid "the world's leading
devoted to educating a~d informing. Web site on space."
-·
users about outer spai:e, CNN said in
Just two weeks ago, Dobbs was ·
a statement Tuesday.
in vo lved in an unusually public tiff
In the statement, Dobbs said he wi th CNN president Rick Kaplan.
-I

F •

/.

. ,I

'

•

- DISCUSS VIClLENCE - Law enfq.r9ement
officials, school administrators and te'achers,
and other social services workers met Thursday to discuss potential violence in Meigs
County schools, and how to handle such· inci·
dants. Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souls-

by is seen at right with Pomeroy Pollee Chief
Jeffrey Miller, Southern Local Schools super·
lntende~;~t James Lawrence, Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley, Middleport Pollee Chief
Bruce Swift, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes
and VIctims Advocate Christie Lynch.·

Officials discussing plan to deal
with possibility of school violence .
By BRIAN J. REED
die port.
"It's imponant that we thmk abou t
Sentinel News Staff
A meeting with school officials, the unthinkable," lcntes said. noung
law enforcement·officers and repre- th.lt inany communities have a fal se
sentatives of seveial other agencies sense that school violence in local
met Thursday to discuss an unthink- sc hools is not a problem .
Reference was made to thi s
able subject: violence in local
spring's eve nt s at Co lum bine H1gh
schools.
It was the first of a series of meet- School in Littleton, Colo., where stuings organized by Prosecuting Attor- dents went on a violent spree. teav·
ney John Lentes, who said that its i.ng a teacher an d students lying dead
purpose is to prepare a plan on how throughout th e schoo l building.
Building secunty. a chain o f comto deal with a violent situation in a
mand, c merge~cy response, mental
local school should it occur.
Administrators and teachers from health assistance. law enfo rceme nt
all three local school districts, the backup and media issues were all disAthens/Meigs Educational · Service cussed at the meeting, as were some
Center, Department of Human Ser- mci dcnts of violent bchavwr. or
vices, chlldren's services division, potentially v10lent behavior, wh ic h
Juvenile Court, comity and village occurred in local scho0ls d'urin g the
law enforcement officers, the county past school year.
"All of our agencies are working
health department, local eme rgency
medical services, and mental health to identify and get help to our tr()uagencies were mcluded in the group .. blecl. children ," Lentes said. "Howwhich met at the DHS offices in Mid- ever, we must plan on how to deal

with a violent situation should it
occur."
"As we all . know, we have our
share of troubled chi ldren. and with
the· easy access to guns, we cou ld
have a tragedy similar to other school
killings here," he added.
While the . group discussed the
advantages and disadvantages of
'placing officers in school facili ties,
there was no indication made at the
meeting that such measures were
even being considered. However,
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said that he
plans to train up to s i ~ qualified
deputies in the area of school security and potential violence on the part
of school students.
·
It was noted that there were uni formed officers on the Slaff at
Columbine High School on the day
or the shootJngs. and that qfficcrs in
school buildings are hecoming more
common. Gallia Academy}. l'ligh
(Continued on Page ;JJ I

An Albany man · was jailed on
numerous charges Thursday after
allegedly shooting at his wife during
a domestic dispute Thursday morning.
.
Jerry A. Stone, 41, Carpenter Hill
Road, was charged with two counts
of felo ni ous assault, one count of
having a weapon under a disability,
and a felony count of domestic VIOlence.
Deputies of · the Meigs County
Sheriffs Office responded to the
Carpenter Hill Road residence of a
neighbor, Michael Haendiges, where
the alleged altercation took place out·
side.
Stone is accused of threatening to
kill his wife. shooting at her with a
9mm handgun as she ran for help.
and then shooti ng at her after she hid
inside an automobile, striking the
automobile three times, according to
a Meigs Co unty Sheriffs Off1ce
report.
The incident ended when Haendi- ,
ges emerged from his house with a
shotgun: fJred shot into the air and
made Stone unload the gun . accord ing to the report.
The sheriffs repon indicates Stone
has a pri or domestic violence convictiOn and a past conv1clion fur tral ·
ficking in drugs, either .of . which
would make it illegal for him 10 possess a firearm. Under Ohio law. a second arrcs r for d.omcstic violence i.;
consid ered a felony charge.
Deputies recovered a 9mm hand gun and a .22-calibcr handgun ncar
the scene.
·
Felonious a-;sauh is second-degree
felony punishable by up to eight
years in prison. Felony dome stic
violence and possession of a weapon
under a disability are bqth fifthdegree felonies punishable by 12
months in prison.
·
Stone is being ·held in the Meigs
County Jail, pending an appearance
in Meigs County Court.

a

RUSSian force
on the move
for ·. Kosovo
By LAURA KING
Alloclated .Press Writer
BLACE, Macedonia - NATO
troops along the border in Macedonia were waiting today to enter
neighboring Kosovo and · Russian
troops headed toward the province
after Yugoslav troops began leaving
in trucks , armored cars and buses.
Even as debate in Moscow continued about Russian participation in
the peacekeeping force, an Associat·
ed Press photographer saw a Russian
convoy in Ruma, a Serbian town 35
miles west of Belgrade.
.
The private Beta news' agency
reported that a convoy · of Russ ian
troops numbering up to 1,000 and in
armored vehicles, transporters and
trucks crossed over into Serbia from
Bosnia at midmorning and were
expected in Kosovo by the afternoon.
The Ru'ssian vehicles were
marked KFOR, the insignia of the
Kosovo peacekecpi)lg force, Beta
said.
Led by. a Yugoslav govern ment
car,. the convoy co nt ai n~d more than
50 vehicles, flying the Russian colors.
The Russian governmen t earlier
denied that its troops were headed for
Kosovo. Later, a report from the
Russ ian lnterfa~ news agency said
1,000 Russian peacekeeping troops
were to fl y today to Kosovo.
Hours after the Russians crossed
over from Bosnia, NATO spokesman
MaJ . David Scanlon said up to 200
Russian soldiers were headed toward
Kosovo and. would return to Bosnia
after preparing for the arrival ,of the
(Continued on Page 3)

BIG WINNERS - Sonny Folmer and Keshla
Norman, both H, are Bllllf'! with Folmer's
horse, Ruby, and the ribbons and trophy they

Drctugnt home from the Wellston Lions Club
Horse Show last wetkend.

Meigs 4-H members net honors:
from horse show at W,ellston
Two Meigs County· 4- H members
. returned home from a Wellston horse
show with 17 ribbons between them,
and a trophy for high point winner.
Keshia Norman and Sonny
Folmer, both II, an ended the 52 nd
Annual Lions Club Horse Show in
Wellston, and returned with several
first, second and third-place rosettes.
Foltner was the high point winner for
the show.
In addition to that .trophy, Folmer
and her horse, Ruby Rides Again,
brought home third place ribbons for

the youth walk trot , yo ~th b~rrels. ""walk trot and horsemanship, .third
and youth Western horsemanship . place for open halter, open Western
second place ribbons for JUnior poles pleasure riding and youth Western
and junior barrels, and first place rib- plea•ure riding, fourth place for open
bons for Wes(ern horsemanship and · class poles, and fifth place in youth
senior barrels. She is the daughter of barrels. The daughter of Sherrie NQr·
Don and Carol Folmer of Pomeroy, man, Athens, and Kelly Norman.
and is a member of the Meigs Coun- Shade, she is a 1111~ mber of the Silver
ty Young Riders:
Spurs 4-H Club.
Norman , who rod~ her horse .
Folmer's father noted that her
Touch o' C10namon. was awarded horse. which she calls Ruby, has her
first place honors in sh,&gt;wmanshlp own story to tell: she was rescued
( 13 and under), and open showman- from the Last Chance Corral, a sancship. second place ribbons for yout h tuary for aili ng and abandoned horses near Shade.

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="427">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9857">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="26147">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="26146">
              <text>June 10, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2907">
      <name>hardesty</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
