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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, June 14, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs DAR hosts Cameo Victorian
tea and conference held in Columbus
The Cameo Society of the
Ohio Society. Daughters of the
American Revolution, held its
annual Victorian Tea and Coilfer- ·
ence at the Haimerl Center in
Columbus last week.
' The event was hosted by
Return Jonathan Meigs .Chapter
of Meigs County represented by
Anna Cleland and Linda Bohner.
and the Columbus
Mathias Ridenour Chapter.
Theme of the Conference was
"A Victorian May Day Celebration. " Aimee Thomas. Cameo
registrar, ann ounced that the
members present represented lh'e
500 Cameo Society Members

VICTORIAN TEA HOSTESSES - Linda Bohner and Anna
across the State of Ohio, Char- . Cleland of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, · Daughters of
lotte Boerge r, chaplain. ar. 1 America, pictured second and third from the right, were coKathy Pullins, hi stori an. conduct- hostesses with !flembers of Mathias Ridenour Chapter of
cd a memorial serv ice in memory Columbus, for the Victorian Tea and Conlerence of the Cameo
of the eight members lost in death Society of the Ohio DAR.
during the past year.
to any member of DAR who can Burns. treasurer; Sharon Snyder,
The Cameo Soc1ety. organ ized show curre nt active membership regi strar; Kathy Pullins, historihy 1hc Ohio Soc iety Daughters of 1n
co njuncti on
with
a an; and Janet Burns, treasurer.
the America n· RevOluti on, was mother/daughter/granddaughter ·
Following the confere~ce sesini tiall y organized to . prom.ote relationship,
soon and May Day ac tivities.
understand ing. between genera ~'
Anna Cleland. her daughter lunch was served. Tea was served
tiuns and to enco urage the pas- Linda Bohner and gran ddaughter by Charlotte Boerger, chaplain
sage of genealogical information, Amy Bohner are one of several and Anna Cleland .
fam il y hi stori es and patri otisni to three ge neration members in the
Cameo will meet again at the
subsequent generatiOns. Cameo · Ohio Cameo.
.
State DAR Co nference in C.o lumme mbers. as members of the
Ohio Society Daughters of the bus in March. 2000. The neXI
DAR, also promote the objectives American Revolution state offi - annual Cameo Victorian Tea and
of the DAR: educational, hi"ori- .cers attepding were Marilyn Conference will be held May,
cal and patriotic activities.
Vaglia, vice regent; Wini Cloran, 2000, location to be announced
Membership in Camen is open orgamzmg secretary : Janet later.

..•
•

Racine Grange discussed federal legislation.
Racine Grange was presented
information concerning currently
·proposed •legislation to U.S. Congress called the National Hate
Crimes Protection Act.
Keith Ashley, legislative chairman, informed the members that this
legislation is unnecessary due to
already existing laws that protect the
public. He stressed the danger in
·passi ng this legislation as it will
make it illegal to speak ill of any
group including sexual preference
groups. It would also make it illegal
for religi ous groups to deny employment to any person whose lifestyle
was in opposition to the beliefs of
that religion. The legislation would
curb freedom of speech and freedom
of religion as guaranteed by the First
Amendment: The Grange voted
unan imously to oppose this l~gislation and to inform federal legislators
of this position.
The members also discussed the
current changes occurring in telephone billing ~nd in electric deregu- ·
lauon. It was pomted out that southeast Ohio will be the losers in deregulation of electricity as rates here are

the lowest in the state.
An update was given on the
effons to preserve the Buffington
Island Battlefield. The last minute
cancellation in Meigs County Com- .
mon Pleas Court of the e~identiary
hearing was discussed along with
the (ailure of the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers to follow their regulalions in the procedures to grant a
loading dock permit.
A fl oat was planned for the
Racine Pourth of July parade.
Work is set to construct the float
on Friday evening. July 3. Plans for
the Meigs County Fair booth will be
made at the July 8 meeting when
Hemlock Grange will be visiting.
Charles Yost, master, discussed
the continuing improvements being
made on the hall. He also set the
election of officers for the August
meeting.
·
Information was presented to the
membership on a reputable company that restores and rebinds im'portaal old books like family Bibles. .
Also, Racine Grange will visit Star
Grange.
Upcoming events include the

CODY BRUCE CAMPBELl,.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED·
Jeff and Tabitha campbell . of
Syracuse announce .the birth of
their first child, a son, Cody
Bruce.
·
·
Born on April 23 at Cabell

Ohio State Grange Rural Life Weekend on June 12-13 at Friendly Hills
Campground north of Zanesville!
There will be line and square daneing, workshops on investments ana
crafts, and a rare performance of the.
Eighth Degree. Camping or dormP
tory space is available, but reserv11~
lions for this are required.
•
Mary
Virgi ni a
Easterday,'
Women 's Activities Chairman,
reponed .that sales of the new Ohio
State Grange cookbook are going'
well with only a few left to sell.
Bernard Shoemaker, state Gran~
master, and Sen. Oliver Ocasek,
state exec utive committeeman, were
both reported gravely ill.
Emma Ashley, lecturer, had a.
program on Aag Day. She empha;;
sized the failure of the public a~
sporting events to place their handJ•
over·their heans at. the singing of the
national anthem · and when a fl a~ .
pass in parade.
~
A quiz on flag etiquette w~:
given foll owed by a candle lighting::
ceremony on the colors
the fla~
and the singing of several patriotiC:
songs.

of

Programs planned ,
.~.

Hemlock Grange holds meeting
H~ml oc k Grange met recently iu
lock Grange received q very · good
the Grange Hall, with Rosalie Story score on inspection.
conducting the meeting. Naricy
Vada Hazelton, lecturer, held a
Well&lt; CWA, reported . that more program on Flag Day· and Father's
cookbooks are available for sale.
Day. A reading , "What the Flag
Jim Fry gave a lcgislati ve repon Means" Was read by Barbara Fry.
.on a bill before Congress. concern- "Ten Marks of a Good Citizen" b~
ing guns sold at gu·n shows. A spe- Margaret Haning, "God Bless Amercial program on hean ng will be held ica" by Sylvia Midkiff, the group
in August.
singing of "The s·tar Spangled· BanHemlock will vis it Racine ner" and a poem, "Father's Day,"
Grange on July 8. The election of were also · included. The program
officer&amp; will be ·held in Augu st. concluded with everyone commentThere will be a contest judging at the . ing on their father.
·
July meeting. Grange will once
The July janitor will be Sara Culagain exhibit at the fair.
l urns.
Wally Bradford . and Berni ce
The July meeting will be preced'
Hawk wer~ reported ill.
· ,
ed by hamburger and hot dog cookPatty Dyer, deputy of Meigs out. Some members will make
County, inspected the Grange. Hem- homemade ice cream.

LARISSA HAYMAN ·

JOSIE HAYMAN

FIRST BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION • Larlasa and Jo1le Hay·
man, twin daughters of Jam11 and Melinda Hayman, recently
. observed their first birthdays at the,famlly home at Long Bottom.
.
A party ~arrled out a "Barbie DoW' th11me. Refreshments
Including cake and Ice cream .were aerved.
Attending were their parente and brotllara, Josiah and
Jonathan, Diane and Sarah VanCoaney, Glenda, Ambar and
Stephanie S~. Clair; Richard Stanley, Matthew and Faith
Caplinger, Elizabeth and Sarah Lawrenca, Brandl Nlcholette
and Autumn Walla, Frankie, Brittany and .Marty Tolliver. . .
Se_ndlng gifts were paternal granclparent•, Jamaa and Jean
Hayman of Merritt Island, Fla., mat!!jnal grendparantl; Frank
and Shirley .Wells, Timmy, Jllff, Chrl1tapher and Callyn Cowdery, and Bill, Melissa, Josh and Alex Morris.

A variety of programs will be carried out at the Senior Citizens CeO:
ter this week.
•
Seniors are encouraged to atten11
the activities and to participate in t1i
senior nutrition program 's noof\
meal served daily.
·:
A trip to the Sav-A-Lot store will
be Wednesday, call Wanda Vining at
992-2161, if you are interested in:
going on the van.
"'
The monthly Blood Pressure.
Clinic will be held Thursday from
9:30 to II a.m. A program by th.;
Senior Sense Troop "Using Medica.:
lion Wisely" .will be presented at It .
Thursday. This is a progra!ll through
Winning Wellness sponsored by t~
Ohio University College of Medl{ .
cine through a grant from the Ohio
Department qf Health.
·
~
The Arthritis Group will meet oti
Friday at 10:30 p.m., with Sarab'.
McGrew, R.N., coordinator. Dr;:
Thomas Blodgett, a . dermatologist~
from Holzer Clinic will speak aboui•
skin cancer.
The birthday party for June wili ·
be held Thursday, June 24. The prtlgram will be at I p.m. by Chester
Courth9use Presenters portraying
persons from Meigs County history.·,
The public is invited to attend the
evening dinners served on Thesdayi
and Thursday from 4:45 to 6 p.m. :
The suggested donation for the meal
is $4. A rqast beef dinner will be
served on Tuesday and a Salisbury
steak dinner on Thursday.·

~~r~~e~ 0 ~our H;~~~~~. fo~~

ounces and was 17 inches long.
Qrandparents are Gary and
JoAnn Willford, Racine, and the
· late Robert Campbell and Georgian Whited of New Knoxville.

IT'S A

the Mason County Library Lawn

on

CHICAGO (AP) - Women who
exercise vigorously while trying to
qu it smoking arc twice as likely to
kick the . habit than wannabe exsmokers who don 't work out regularly. a new study finds.
The report also offers good news
to female smokers who fear that giving up·tobacco and nicotine will lead
to weig ht gain . Researchers found
that women who worked out as they
tried to quit gained only about half
the weight of those who did not
exercise.
Of the 134 women in the group
who exercised regularly, 19.4 percent kicked the habit for at least two ·
month s after their program ended
while ' 10.2 percent of the 147 nonexerci sers did the same.

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 150s; Low: 40s

Meiss County's
Volume

so,

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MACKENZIE SELLERS
TURNS SIX - Mackenzie
1\aron Sellers celebrated his ·
sixtli birthday at his home,
along with his mother; Catlna
Wolfe, his brother, Jacob, and
his sister, Kaylee.
·
The party featured a Jeff Gordon theme, with a cake provided
.by Vaughan's Supermarket.
Those attending were Ann
Sellers, Mlkey and Justin Engle,
Ruth Sellers, Agnes Sellers,
Cheryl Sellers, Stacy and Brit·
tany Black, Brenda Wolfe·,
Kenny, Mandy and Ryan Powell,
and Suzanne Sayre.
J.a mes Wolfe and daughter,
Valerie, Julie Spaun and ca;ol
Wolle also attended.
Patricia Fisher sent a gilt. ·

BUFFALO
p·
o
PCORN
\
"'" • 8HICKEN
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.BY

BRIAN J. REED
'
Stntlntl Ntwl Staff
·
: The Village of Middleport has a new mayor and a
new councilman.
. Sandy lannarelli, who has served as acting mayor
$i,nce Mayor Dewey "Mack" Horton suffered a
stroke earlier this year, assumed the mayor's office
at Monday evening's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council.
: Judge Robert E. Buck administered the oath of
office to lannarelli prior to the meeting, and will ·
process the necessary paperwork at his office on
Tuesday, he said.
Horton, who is recovering at his home, submitted
his resignation as mayor to lannarelli, effective yesterday. Iannarclli was elected president of council
during its organizational meeting in January, and
therefore automatically assumed the mayoral duties
at the time of Horton.'s illness.
In reading Horton's resignation last night,
lannarelli commented on Horton's accomplishments,
and praised him for his years of service.
"When he came into office, he inherited some
problems that were already here," lannarelli said,

noting thai the village had incurred $80,()()0. in debt,
along with other financial problems, which the vii !age continues to face.
·
"Think kindly of him," Iannarelli said.
.Robert Robinson, who was nominated without
competition in the May Democratic primary clection, was appointed last night to fill lannarel.li's
vacant council scat. The resolution appointing
Robinson stipulates that he will assume his regular
council seat in January, at which time lannarelli will
reassume her seat the council table.
Jean Craig; who currently serves on council, will
likely be unopposed· in the November mayoral race.
She was nominated in the Republican primary, and
faces no opposition unless a write-in candidate files.
In other action relating to Horton's resignation,
council members elected Steven Houchins as president of council, and appointed Rae Gwiazdowski to
fill Iannarelll's position on ·the village's finance
committee.
·
During the business meeting, council. discussed·
several problems and issues relating to the operation
of General Hartinger Park and the Mi&lt;!dleport Pool.
Iannarelli said that problems with fights and

mauer

lr-~~iiii'i~:~:~~!t~!::':;
··~!
Aaroo..was .se!Jipg .2.$·1'Cni.Jillp!i
I
II.O&lt;~H'\Ia when
rponey was taken on Thu~day.
"I just want (the teen-age~) to apologize and give his money back,"
she said. ·
.
~o boys, ages 16 and 17, ·were in custody, sheriff's spokesman
Brad~aemer said.
They arc c;harged with delinquency counts of complicjty to theft and are
scheduled for a June 22 court appearance, said·Toni Pagano, juvenile court
spokeswoman.
,
HAMILTON (AP)- A clergyman convicted of repeatedly raping his
daughter has been sentenced to 17 to.SO years in prison and fined $7,500.
But a judge declined to classify the Rev. Darrell Bell, of Middletown,
as a sexual predator, based on coun-ot'dered psychological examinations
that concluded he has a low probability of repeating the offense. ·
Butler County Common Pleas Judge H.J. Bressler also noted Monday
that Bell had not been convicted of a sex offense before.
Bell, 45, plans to appeal his conviction. He declined to comment in
·
court, as did· his daughter.
Bell was returned to the Butler
County jail but planned to post I 0
percent of his $500,000 bond to be
freed d.uring appeals.
::;eltttute.Q If released, Bell must be confined
1 SectiOIII • 10 Pages
. to his home except Ia go to work,
------------1 church or his lawyer's office, the

Today's

~

~55~~~~~~~3

Pick 3: 4-S-2; Pick 4: S-1·2-9
Jluckeye 5: 10-16-25-31-35

w.yA.

DaUy 3: 9-1-8; Dally 4: 8-3-1-6
0 t!199 Oblo Vatky hbllahlq Co.

Bell has been a minister and an
judge
ruled.
· AK Steel
Corp. worker for 2.S years,
He has served as associate pasior of
Bethlehem Temple First Pentecostal
Church.
··
·The judge ruled that Bell is a sexu~lly · oriented offe 0 der, a less
severe finding than being cl~ified
as i 'sexual predator.
.
Bell will have to notify local
authorities about where he is living
and will be required to check in
periodically with those authorities.
But the police will not be required
to notify Bell's neighbors, 8s wpuld
be required if Bell had been ruled to
be a sexual predator.

Quarter Pound Sausage Patty
.......

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smoking, which . is prohibited in the pool area, will ·
be addre5scd by park personnel and the police
department, if necessary.
Street Supervisor Kenny Madden noted mainte-.
nance problems at the park restrooms. He said that
he had been called 'at home late in the evening last
week to clean the restrooms, which are to be cleaned
and locked wfien the park closes.
Council also discussed other maintenance and
safety issues at the park, including an injury sustained recently by a ·spectator, at a ball game, who
received a serious cut from the metal bleachers in
the park. lannarelli said that she wouid coord' .ate
efforts between the village and the Middleport Youth
· League, which has agreed to assist with maintenance
of the park, to see that the restrooms are cleaned
each night and locked at the time the park is clos~d . ·
Sam Eblen, who serves on the village park and
.recteation committee, said thai the council should
consider hiring a park manager for next year, noting
that many of the problems discussed last night
would likely continue until a manager is put in
place.
Iannarelli also thanked lim Thomas of Valley.

,

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Lumber(fhomas Do· it Center and several of his
employees, who assisted with painting and other
repairs at the pool . Thomas' employees and village
crews assumed responsibility for completing the
repairs upon the passing of Arn old Johnson, who
was overseeing ihe repairs at the time of his death
last month.
"It's too bad that it takes a tragedy to pull us all
together, but the work got done, and it was d&lt;?n e
well," lannarelli said.
'
lannarelli noted that the pool repairs and work at
the Riverview Cemetery were both completed in
time for the Memorial Day holiday, and praised
those who worked for their cooperation.
~he also thanked Bob's.. Markel for donating
flowers for the downtown beautification project, and
members of the Middleport Community Association
and other volunteers for their work on that project.
lannarelli. also noted that many residents had
cleaned ~p their lawns and were keeping grass cut.
She said that the village will begin enforcing a new
ordinance addressing high grass and weeds and
unsightly refuse, including furniture and other trash
Continued In Middleport council, page 3

Firefighter• of the Syracuae and
Racine volunt•r fire departmantl
re8p01ided Monday around 2:40 p.m.
to the Sacand Street, Syrecuae, re•
ldence of Floyd Michael Raltmlre.
Flreflghtere found tht hou11, which .
auttalnad avare fire, emoke and
water damage, fully ablaze upon
arrival. Firefighter• remallied on
-n• until about 5:30 p.m. A report
on the fire waa not avellable . tlils
morning.

Or small."

·*Made By Gallia C(Junty~ Own
·Steve Evans Co~ntry Sausage

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' HAMILTON (AP) - · .A 9-year-old entrepreneur said a teen-ager
stole $6 from his lemonade stand was easy to recognize. He had striped red
hair.
Aaron Faughn supplied the description, and on Sunday two teens were
arrested by Butler .County sheriff's deputies. Their names were not
released.
"I was sad whe!l it happened, but now I (eel better because the people
cared about me and tried to help," Aaron said Monday.
Sheriff
Don Gabbard said his office investigates all erimes, "no

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Two Hamilton teens arrested
for $6 lemonade stand ,,.,

Lotteries

89¢ Bags Of Ice

-Page4 .

lannarelli assumes.Middleport Mayor's post; Robinson appointed to council

To ge~ a current weather
report, check the

s~·ntinel

-

helps Reds to 8-4
win over the Mets

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 7

Good Afternoon

tn downtown Point Pleasan t. W. Va,

Exercise helps women quit
smoking, stay smoke free

WNBA roundup, Page 5
Meddling mother, Page 6
Time out for tips, Page 10

Today: Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 50s

1

A regatta gospel sing will be held

June 27, beginning at I :30 p.m..
Si nging will be the "The Johnson's
New Generation" of John son City,
Ky.; 'Jim mie McKnight of Dunbar.
W. Va., and the "Faithful Witness"
of Charleston. W. Va. It is suggested
that those attending take lawn

June15, 1000

Weather

Clergyman sentenced for raping da•:Jah terl

Gospel sing planned
on

Tuesday

C::olmi~UE:s - Reatoratlon
on tht
'c heater CourthoUM contlnuae with tht ippllcatlon of calling
'platter. Here, Jody and Joe Cuattr of Cuatw'a Stucco &amp; Pluter,
Mlddlapo!'t; epply pallttr to the dawnatalra calling of the 17&amp;year building which Wll built In 11123 an~ HI'Wdaa the ...t of
county gOYtmment until June, 1841. In ..cer~t ywre, the build·
lng h11 ..-1vtc1 a new roof, wlndawt, floOring, h11Ung and ventilation and other lmprovamenta.

missioners

. . ..-::. 's Compensation plan

By BRIAN J. REED
tax on tritiler sales,' could create a financial hardSentinel N_. Staff
ship on the county general fund if allowances are
The Mei~ County Commissioners adopted a not made during ihe 2000 budget planning process.
special 10-step plan to reduce workers compensaMichael. Lonchar of MGB Architecture and
lion COlts when they met in regular. session on Engineering, Lancasle!, met briefly with the comMonday afternOOn.
missioners to discuss the procedures required in
The county has eKperienced a high number of applying for grant funding for the construction of a
workers compensation claims in past years, placing new jail.
it at a high-premium risk.
Lonchar has met with the commissioners in the
Participation in the new plan, which will be . past to discuss possible plans for a new jail, and
·overseen by Commissioner Mick Davenport, will . yesterday. discussed the "campaign" which will be
allow the commissione~ to take advantage of ·a needed to pass a sales-tax increase if the commisreduced premium rate.
sione~decide to seek such a tax hike.
The plan is designed to reduce risk of on-job
The commissione~ have discussed placing a
injuries, and is coordinated by the County Com- one-percent sales tax increase on the November
missione~ Association of Ohio. The commissionballot, with proceeds from the tax to go to the operers have also appointed Joan Hoffman of the lrca- ation of a new jail.
surer's office as the worker's compensation adminThe commissioners have tieen assured that they
istrator, in addition to her regular duties.
could likely receive grant funds for the construeIn other business, Meigs County Auditor Nancy tion of a facility, but the state will no longer award
Parker Campbell f11el with the board to discuss. grant funding lo counties unless they are able to
changes in the·taxation of manufactured· homes, .to show the ability to operate facilities after construetake effect ne~t year. According to Campbell, the lion.
new legislation will eliminate the local one-percent
The commissioners have discussed building a
sales tax now collected on the sale of second-hand 40 to 60-bed jail on county-owned ,real estate
mobile homes and other manufactured housing.
behind Veterans Memorial Hospital. The jail would
• Campbell said thai the new legislation will also replace the 19th-century jail adjacent to the courtrequire the county to pu~lish its list of delinquent house, which has been deemed unsafe by state fire
mobile home taxes, which has not been required in and corrections officials.
the past. Publishing the list, similar to the list of
The commissione~ approved the renewal of
delinquent land taxes, will COlt approximately existing contracts between the County Department
$1,200, and coupled with the 1068 of the local sales of Human Serv'ices and several child care

provide~.

beginning July I.
Those facilities are AC&lt;;:ESS Headstart and
Gingerbread i'louse, Middleport and Rio Grande
Child Care Center, Rio Grande; NOVA 'Learning
Center, Athens; William and Mary Kiddie Acadomy, Wellston; Tri-County Community' Action
Agency and Little Rascals, Athens, and Day-Care .
Connettion, Nelsonville; Hocking Valley Day
School, Athens; Miss Paula's Day Care, Gallipolis;
and Athens Church of Christ Preschool, Athens.
The rates for these centers .fall below market
·rates.
Davenport announced that the Ohio . River
Sweep will be held on Saturday. Contacts for the
annual event are Kenny Wiggins at the Meigs
County Office of Litter Control and Recycling, and
Tom Hayman of the Forked Run Sportsman's
Oub, who will oversee the event in the Reedsville .
area.

Davenport urged public participation in the
river Qleanup project.
The commissioners also:
- AtiProved lranSfers of fundS for the Veterans
· Services Office, Community Corrections and
County Auditor;
- Approved the appiopriation of funds in the
county crafte~' grant program;
-Approved payment of bills in the amount of
$332,362.09. ·
• Present were Commissione~ Davenport, Janet
Howard and Jeffrey Thornton, and Oerk Gloria
Kloes. ·

Allies watching for Serbs to meet first deadline for troop withdrawal
By ROBERT BURNS
AP MIUUuy Wrlllr · ·
WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Ointon administration
officials say they are satisfied that the Yugoslav military is making a sincere effort to meet today's
deadline for emptyina a swath of southern Kosovo
of all soldiers and police. The territory includes a
section of Kosovo being patrolled by American
troops.
It remained unclear hOw NATO would respond
.if it discovered Serb straggle~.
"They arc makina a •trona effort to get them
9ut," the Pentagon's chief spokesman, Kenneth
Bacon, said Monday. "I can't predict now, 24 hou~
before the deadline, what will happen. But they are
certainly making a very strong effort to get them
·ouL"
·
His commcniS suggested doubt that 11\e deadline
would be met. NATO had said it would resume
bombing Yugoslavia if the Serbs deliberately
dragged their feet in leaving Kosovo, a province of
Serbia, although Bacon's description of the Serb
withdrawal effort seemed to indicate a willingness
to let the deadline slide a little.
"The roads are jammed; so they 're having a hard
time ~tiling them out," he said. "But ":'e basically
sec a 5IIOna effort to try to comply."
·
A:J the Serbs pulled out, NATO troops continued
to pour in, numbering about 14,000 as of Monday.
They · include 1,000 U.S. Army soldiers and .1100
U.S. Marines, the vanguard of a U.S. force eventually to total 7,000.
.
' A continaent of about 200 Russian troops
remained at the Pristina airport in central Kosovo
. while U.S. and NATO officials saught to·work out
an arranaement for the. Russians to participate in a
peaoekoepina force under NATO control. The Rus·

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sians are pushing to have their O..n geographic sector of Kosovo to patrol while resisting NATO's
demand that all peacekeepers in Kosovo answer lo
NATO authorities.
Defense Secretary William Cohen made plans to
meet Russian Defense Minister .Marshall Igor
Sergeyev on Wednesday and Thursday in Helsinki,
Finland, to hash out the peacekeeping dispute. They
were to bejoined by Secretary of State ~adeleine
Albright and Russian Fomgn Minister Igor Ivanov.
More Russian peacekeepers were heading
.. toward Kosovo today, the Defense Ministry said.
Russia had sent an It-vehicle convoy from Bosnia
to resupply its troops.
Ru5sian control of the airpon has caused 110
embarrassing diplomatic standoff. The surprise
arrival of the Russian troop&amp; ahead of NATO has
given Moscow greater leverage in negotiations over
its place in the peacekeeping force.
.
Albright told a Wliite House news conference
Monday a range of issues would be discussed at the
Helsinki talks. Despite the stalemate at Prlstina,
"there has not been long-term damage from this" to
U.S.·Ruasian relations, Albright said. "We'll work
the Russian part out because.there is good will:" she
added.
·
·
President Ointon was to discu~ the situation
with Russian President Boris Yeltsi~ in Cologne on
Sunday it a meeting of the world's seven richest
nations and Russia.
· It will be up to the commander of NATO's
peacekeepers in Kosovo, British Lt. 'Gen. Sir Mike
. Jackson, to determine whether the Serbs ,have lived
up to the "military technical ag/eement" they
signed June !I that laid doWn deadlines for pulling
out of KOIIOV(). It gave the Serbs until today to
vacaiC a stretch of southern Kosovo; they are to be

· completely out of a middle section of.the province
by Friday, and out of Kosovo altogether by Sunday.
The area of Serb withdrawal in southern Kosovo
includes large parts of the !CCior U.S. peacekeepers
are patrolling, as well as parts of the German, Italian and British socton, including the provincial capital of PristinL Thus it includes Serbs who are
eiiCllll)ped with the Russians at the Pristina airport.
Bacon said the Serb forces were struggling with
clogged roadways, a shortage of transport vehicles
and vehicle breakdowns. He showed repone~
vide9 tape from a U.S. surveillance drone that
shoWed an estimtlled 300 lo 500 military and civilian vehicles forming a convoy hclded north from
south-central Kos&lt;ivo on Monday. The convoy was
being monitored by U.S. Army Apache anack helicopters. .
"We do see firm evidence they are trying to get
out." Bacon said.
Between 14,000 and 15,000 Sero army and
police forces have left Kosovo, Bacon said, plus
about 20 percent of their estimated 300 tanks, about
half of their armored troop carriers and as much as
15 percent of their artillery.
The military agreement signed with NATO
required the Serbs to l)ave I00 percent of their air
defense weapons out of Kosovo and beyond a 16mile buffer ZOfle in Serbia by last Saturday. ,Bacon .
said all of these weapons had been withdrawn
except for an unspecified number of anti-aircr.aft .
artillery guns, "whic~ they arc working to move as
soon as possible." He said some of these are broken
down.
After t1le Helsinki meeting. Cohen wtis to meet
with NATO defense mioiste~ or their represent&amp;-.
tives in Brussels, Belgium, then fly 'to the Balkans
to meet with U.S. troops.

•

�•

•

Tueaday,June15,1999

Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

PegeA2

Indeed, not only were the numbers of northern
and tl\e record shows that the anti-development
By JOMPh Parklna
'EJta6{isfid in 1948
spotted
owls much huger than logging foes
groups have almost always been wrong. Indeed,
It's a red, black and orange
remember the famous battles over the endangered .claimed, a population of spotted owls was found
butterfly with white "checknourishing in California forests that were no dif·
snail
darter and the spotted owls.
erspots."
And
il
just
may
stop
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
ferent genetically from those in the Pacific NorthIn
the
mid-!970s,
the
Tennessee
Valley
of
a
$260
million
construction
740-1102·2"0 • Fax: IIV2·2157
Authority proposed a dam. which foes said would west.
private tollway in the South Bay
Like the snail darter and spotted owl, the
destroy the habitat of the 3-inch-Jong snail. darter.
area of California, an eight-lane
Community
Newspaper
Holdings,
Inc.
Quino
checkerspot butterHy is an innocent victim.
In 1977, a federal appeals court ordered a: halt to
highway that would do much to
.
construction of the Tellico Dam, a decision II is being used .as ·a pretext by an anti-growth
relieve traffic congestion for
group to stop construction of a toll road that it
ROBERT L WINGETT
upheld a year later by the U.S. Supreme ·&lt;;curt.
tens of thousands of daily commuters.
Publleher
An anti-growth group says that while it sym·
Congress, 1ecognizing that the Endangered would oppose whelher or not there were endan·
. pathizes with motorists forced to endure bumper· Species Act was being used in ways that lawmak- gered species in the project area.
DIANE HILL
The Endangered Species Act marked its first
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
to-bumper rush-hour traffic along one of San ers never intended, passed a law that exempted
Controller
GIMnll Manllgel'
-Diego County's busiest corridors, the toll road Tellico Dam from 'any law-- including the species quarter-century this year. And while the law was
well-intentioned •• to preserve· species on the
must not be built. because doing so will destroy act ·- lhat would stop construction.
the habitat of the Quino checkerspot
n.t sendnel •M.,.. ,.,_,.,to rh• Hllor ffom ,_.,.On • tHoH ,_..of f.butterfly.
Ice. Sllort _,.. (3110 ...,.,. "'lou) .h o .. 1M or l&gt;tlnt/I'Ubl/&amp;....,,
Of course, when members of this
,..t.n.d end •II INY &amp;. Hlt«&lt;. EM:/1 Mould lllclutle a • .,.,.,,.,
~. •nd UyflrM phon. num•. Sp«Jiy • d.t•
ro •,..
citizens' group first came out in oppo·
IPRP
PeR...
wouo "' loft.,, lll.oU lo: Lotroro to U.., odffor, Tllo Sentinel, Ill Court 81.,
sition to the toll road ,in I 996, they
- . 1 1 Ohlo U~; PI', FAX to 741J.flll2·2167.
THe'
P.~PoLLS
I
.
had never even hear;! 6f the Quino.
When the Qui no was added to the fed ·
eral endangered species list in January
.1997, the anti-growth group sudden ly
became butterfly lovers.
This has become standard practice
for anti-growth groups, not only in f::;:T==~~~
San Diego County but throughout the
country as well. Whether it be a proposed road or housing development or r-t~~~
dam or some other project, foes know
· COLUMBUS (AP)- The short haircut of c.o nservativc white politician they can stop development in its
Lynn Wachtmann isn 't the first thing you think of when the topic of African- tracks (or, at least, delay it indefinite·
ly) by "discovering" some endan·
style hair braiding comes up.
.
·
gered
species or another.
Nor, .for that mal!er, is the coiffure of white liberal politician Eric FingerIndeed,
since the sighting of'two
hut.
Quina
checkerspots
within the toll·
You 0an 'I always judge a·politician by his hair preference, a point driven
home by the diverse group of lawmakers trying to exempt hair braiding from way project area, Caltrans (oversee·
licensing requirements considered unfair by its practitioqers, most of whom ing the project for tollway developer
California Transportation Venlures)
are black women, some using the craft to work their way off welfare.
"Every once in a while, left meets right and we end up in the right posi· has been forced to revise its environ·
mental -impact study to set forth a
lion," said Fingerhut, a Democratic senator from Cleveland.
plan for protecting the endangered
..Wachtmann, a Republican senator from Napoleon, agreed.
butterfly.
This plan must be approved
"ll's~ertainly brought the far right and far left together on this issue," he
before
ground
can be broken · on the
said. "I think that's good."
.
Black Democrat. John Barnes Jr., a House member from Oeveland, has new toll road.
To reasonable minds, the state
no probiem aligning himself with the conserVative .Wachlinann.
transportation
agency has gone above and beyond
Meanwhile; biologists discovered that more brink of exlinction •• it is primarily invoked tOday
"We've had a discussion , and we do nol see the common sense of the
the
call.
It
proposes
to
schedule
construction
.
snail
darters actually ~xisted t~an previously not so much to prolect fish and birds and butterstate restricting individuals," Barnes s.aid of hair braiders. "We found comaround
the
Quino's
three-month
"flight
season,"
thoug'ht,
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service flies, but to thwart developmenl and construclion
mon ground in the fact lhey should be exempl from slate regulation. "
the fish's status from " endangered" to and commercial enterprise.
upgraded
to
reslore
a
)
2·acre
vernal
pool
sile
and
seed
the
At issue is whether the state Board of Cosmetology should regulate hair
That's why Congress needs to get around to
braiding, called African-sty le or natural braiding, and require practitioners to area with plants used by the butterfly to deposil its "threatened."
.
rev.ising
the law. A new and improved. act would ·
eggs,
and
to
raise
captive
Qui
nos
for
release
at
the
A
similar
legal
batlle
erupted
in
the
1980s
obtain licenses. Almost all hair braiding customers are black girls and
site.
·
when
environmental·
activists
opposed
Jogging
in
continue
to promote species preservation. But it
women.
would
no
longer allow anti-growth and other
of
the
Pacific
Northwest
on
the
national
forests
Of
course,
the
anti-growth
group
opposing
the
In Ohio, cosmetologists earn a license by taking classes for about nine
activist
groups
to exploit the Jaw for purposes that
private
tollway
is
unsatisfied.
The
only
way
to
grounds
that
the
habitat
of
the
northern
spotted
months and passing a state test. The schooling can cost thousands of dollars .
lillie
to do with saving enilangcred
really
have
·
owl
was
being
destroyed.
gu:u;antee
that
the
endangered
butlerfly
will
be
.
Cosmetology schools in Ohio do not teach African-style braiding.
species:
The anti-loggers prevailed in court, and some
The cosmetology board's position is that because braiders provide ser· spared from extinction, it insists, is if the toll road
6.9
million acres of forest land were set aside for Copyrlght1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
is
never
built.
vices in facilities that look and operate like licensed salons, they should be
JoMph Pll'ltlne Ia a columnlat for Tlla san
The same argument has been made in endan- the owl. As it turned out, however, the bird was
licensed too.
Diego
Union-Tribune.
Barnes proposed a bill in January to make hair braiding exempt from gered species disputes throughout the country, not 'as "endangered" as claimed.

Wedneac:t•y, June 1 8
for

s... s... sur. ..
P...

'Ia

..

'

'"

:::~~g~a~~~~d~~~et~~~:ru~~~;e~~~:=:~b~~~~n!:~~:.~k"'i~,:~~
now to see ifthe amendmenl survives House .and Senate negotiations over a

c1·1nton ·Is Euro·pe's unqu·est·lo· n··e··d leader
IBerry s w0 rIdI
.

.

.

final budget bill .
·. By Chris Matth-•
That, of course, is preCisely what
WASHINGTON _
William he's done! For the fourth time in this
I
Fingerhut said he became aware of the i'ssue after meeting woinen in his
district who are trying to 'earn a living by practicing hair braiding.
"!hen in comes the State of Ohio, the same state that just lold ·single Clinlon has ended the 20th cenlury cenlury, an American president has
.
.
·
fb ·
" h
'd
as Woodrow Wilson began it. mounted the galloping horse of his. women to get off public assistance, to put them out o usmess, e sru · ae·cause of hl·s thankless zeal, the tory. saymg
· w1'th h.1s a1rp
· 1anes w ha1
"I'm outraged by it. I think it's terrible public policy."
United States has cc;&gt;nfirmed its piv· he could not say to the microphones,
. E
aff .
. Cll'nton has confirmed the bond of
al
Meanwhile, a lawsuit filed by two Ohio· hair braiding businesses against
the state remains in federal court. The lawsuit asks that state regulations 01 P1ace t.n uropean airS.
When the United States leads •• common interest Wilson and his
requiring licenses for hair braiders be declared .unconstitutiorial.
The lawsuit has been filed by the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for the victory against Serbia now con· doughboys forged in the fire of
Justice. The institute generally champions what it calls libertarian 'causes, firms .• the great nations of Europe World War I, that Franklin Roofollow. When we champion the sevelt and Winslon Churchill
said Dana Berliner, the lawyer overseeing the lawsuit.
cause of democracy and human renewed.in the late 1930s in the wai
On the one hand, minority communities aren 't always as concerned as
rights on lhe old continent those against Adolf Hitler, that all the
conservatives are with issues of government deregulation, she said.
'
great Cold War presidents carried
forces
Unl'te and prevail ·
"At the same time, for some conservatives who aren 't generally known
And when we say, "Never forward in the 1950s, '60s, '70s and
for being aware of black issues, this is an issue tha\ everyone can undersland. It's so ' clear-cut that it just doesn't ·make any sense,'' Berliner said.
' again!" to European genocide, the :80s.
Chery II Hosey, owner of. 1MB Hair Braiding Gallery in Youngstown, is decree becomes decisive.
. Each of those leaders agreed, in
· 'ff
That heartfelt message is what his own time and way, that the
one of the lawsuit's plamh s. A hair braider for 20 years, she opened a salon President Clinton delivered when he Atlantic Ocean, over which the mass
three years ago.
Hosey says she has been pleasantly surprised by the interest that people began the 11-week bombing cam· of our ' country once emigrated,
of all colors and political slripes have shown in the debate.
paign over Yugoslavia. It .is what would be Mt a barrier but a bridge·
drove the war in the hearts of his • of common values, common inter·
· "It's amazing to me the white folks who are· looking at this," she said. Cabl'net, what sold the war 10 the
ts d
ct f h
"I'll be in the grocery store and people will recognize me from the news or
. ft~. an common respe or oman.
whatever and say, 'We're in total support of this, we think it's just stupid."' · country. ·
.
"Never again! " will the United
The words which echo most per·
. 0 18119 by NEA,InC.
States stand by. as a European dicta· suasively this weekend.are those o(
tor prosecutes a war against his own the president who inaugurated this
www.comlcs.com
population..
cross-Atlantic union. "America can"My boyfriend is trying Clinton's military action
For political reasons, the presi- not be an ostrich with its head in the
dent could never make that state- sand," President Wilson told an
strategy on me - · 'INCREMENTALISM.'"
Come on up to our house and watch me kill potato bugs.
menl 50 plainly. He could not, as a Iowa audience in early 1916, the
Twioe a day do I bug potatoes; knock 'em in a pan with a paint paddle, good Democrat, defend a military year before we entered World War I. devote later decades to saying they in 1989 when the Berlin Willi carne
twice a day, morning and evening.
campaign against genocide in
The beauly of this simple state· didn't know what was happening in tumbling down. We put ourselves on
Methoxychlor, Seven, Rotenone, Thiodan were used right down the line. Europe while refusing to act against ment is that many can, and do, dis- those ovens out back. Try thai on the the right side. We had a leader to put
it in Africa or elsewhere in the Third agree with il. The country is filled American people who hear each us there.
Those bugs were just laughing at me.
Today,searching through my store ofinsecticides I found half a po~nd of World. He'would be admitting to the today, a~ it was in Wilson's time, evening of the "ethnic cleansing,"
(Chrll Matthewa, chill of the
San Franclaco Examiner'• Waah·
arsenate of lead, from· ~ay back.
.
.
loudest Republican accusation with the yahoo batllc Cry that what rape and murder in Kosovo.
.
. · against him: that h~, Bill Ointon, we don 't see can't hurt us.
. Its been a ~':"IC s~emg those pests fall off the vrnes.
America triumphed .in lhe Europe lngton Bureau, 11 r-1 of "Hard·
, Of course 1t s agamst govern.ment regulations to use any~hmg that w1ll was according Europe a special
Try that on the German civilians of I 999 for the same reason we tri· ball" on CNBC cable channela.)
opyrlghl18119 NEA.
. of the 1930s and '40s who would umphed there in .1918, in 1945 and
kill potato bugs. One fellow I know used termJte .kliler. He sard he had a lot · plaoe in u.S. priorities.
of dead potato bugs.
.
Those fellows in swivel chairs who are guarding our lives ought to .come
up with something that will kill potato bugs. Meanwhile arsenate of lead is
doing a good job.
Gayle Prlca
PorUand By Sara Eckel
I remember how deep that this as not her strength. "My husband : is
.
I was inlo the treadmill belt . .· t,'' she says. "On Saturday, he'll say,
A friend of mine, an investment banker, recent·
, w~ can work on the door for two hours, and ..
lifestyle several years
ly detai.led a typical day : "I get into the office al
ago, when I· came back then we'll take a bike ride.' Whereas I would just
about seven. At Iunchtime, I grab a sandwich and
·
to my ·office afler a work on the door all day."
eat it at my d.csk. Then I work until10. I pick .up
.. lly Tllo
p-. .
.
.
week-long
vacation.
It
This
is
what
a
lol
of
us
do
••
we
become
.so
dinner
on
the
way
home
from
work
and
eat,it
Today is Tuesday, June 15, the I 66th day of 1999. There are 199 'days left
was very difficult. After completely focused on lhis .lisl of lhings lhat we .
while I watch TV, for half an hour. Then I go to
in the year.
~an entire week of feeling "have" to do that we. never find time to,do any of
On June 1S, 121S, King John put his seal to Magna Carta ("the Great bed and read for another half hour." He smiled
like a human being, I die ihings thai we wanl to do. I think we do lhis
bitterly. "Kind of a little routine,"lte said . .
Charter") at Runnymede, England, granting his barons more liberty.
had to get baek into lhc for a few reasons .
.
This
is
a
routine
I've
heard
about
many
times,
On lhis dale:
robotic
work
state.
The
frightening
thing
was,
I
from
frierids
and
acquaintances
who
work
for
Firs~
lhere
lruly
are
a
lol
of
lhiilga
that
have
to
In 177S, the Second Continenlal Congress voted unanimously to appoint
knew
that
the
transition
was
lhc
painful
pan.
In
••
bills
have
to
be
paid,
dishes
washed,
get
done
large
law
firrns,
banks
and
brokerage
houses.
• George Washinglon head of the Conlinental Army.
"ll's like finals week in college, except that it another week I •d be fine, be&lt;:ause I'd be a robot . reporta delivered to the bo~ . Bul our lists also
· In 1836, Arkansas became the 2Sth state.
give us a sense of security. So long as we have
In 1844, Charles Goodyear received a patent for his process to strength· ne11er ends," says a lawyer I know. She frequent· again.
how
do
we
get
off
the
treadmill?
ll's
a
dif·
So
demands
being made on us we have a pl11ce in the
ly
finds
herself
working
until,
I
1
p.m.
Once,
when
. ·
·
.
' en rubber.
world.
ficult
question,
since
almost
all
of
us
have
to
the
lwo
of
us
were
planning
to
see
a
movie
togeth·
In 1846, the United States and Brilain signed a treaty settling a boundary
•
So long as we arc moving lhrough our lives in
er, she told me she thought she could "sneak out" wotk. Bull got a lillie bit of insight into the issue
; dispute between Canada and the U.S . in the Pacific Northwest. ·
from
my
lawyer
friend,
who
quit
her
high-presa
robotic
fashion we don't have to think about
at
7:30.
• . In 1849, James Polk, lhe I !lh U.S. president, died in Nashville, Tenn.
job
and
moved
to
a
small
cily
on
the
Easl'
we
are going. And so long as we see oursure
where
Their
situations
may
be
extreme,
but
law
and
In 1864, Secrtlary of War Edwin M. Stanton signed an order establishing
:
selves
as
slaves
to our circumstances we don't
Coast.
You
would
think
that
with
this
transition
; 1 military burial ground, which became Arlington National Cemetery. .
· finance types aren't the only Americans who gel
my
friend
has
Jots
more
time
for
picnii:s
and
base·
have
to
lake
responsibilily
for them.. ~
In 1904,, more than l ,000 died when fire erupted aboard the steamboat caught in that cycle of work-eat-watch-TV-$leep,
For
many
of.
us,
I
think
there
is only one thing
work-eat-watch-TV-sleep. Practically eve,ryone ball gnmes and sitting on the back porch. But
.. General Slocum in New York's East River.
•
In 1944, American forces began their successful invasion of Saipan dur- has done this routine at one time or another. We when 1 last spoke to her, she was slill feeling per· more upsetting than having no time·· it's having
fall into the pattern without thinking about i~ and petually behind. Her work hours weren't so bad all the. time in the world.
' ing \\tlrld Wlr 11:
it quickly becomes impossible for us to imagine anymore, but now all that exira lime was being Copyrlght11811 NEW8PAPER.ENTERPRISE ASSN.
:
In t!n8, King Hussein of Jordan married 26-year-old American Lisa Hal
·8ancl comnMtnta to the lllrthor IJI care Of thlt ·
that life could be different. When someone sug· absorbed by her new house . She rattled off.a long
; aby who became Queen Noor.
newapapar or Mnd her •ll!all at . . .._.
lisl
of
all
the
things
that
HAD
to
be
done.
When
I
in 1993 former Texas Gov. John Connally, who was wounded in the gun- gests that we •stop, y;e throw up our hands. What
askCd her if she made time to relax, she admitled rnaol.com.
can we do?
fire lhat ldiled President Kennedy, died at age 76.

.

•··

Letter to the editor

~W. VA.

By Tlla Anoclated PI'Ht

•muJOid

r

company

'

~

All Flats

.

The Daily Sentinel

URG Kid's College course offered
The University of Rio Grande is offering as part of Kid 's College tHi s
summer "Wales, The Country of the Red Drago n," today through June 25,
1-3 p.m. The class is open 10' children seven· through 12.·Gallia and Jack·
son counties have a large Welsh -American popul a1ion and the course
offers children a chance to learn about their heritage o r·that of friends or
classmates. To sign up, calll -800-282 -7201, ex1. 7325.

School building costs rise with
decay, growing student enrollment
By ANJETTA McQUEEN
AP Educatlqn Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ As
school disrricls slruggle to fix or
build riew schools for growing slu ·
denl enrollments, lawmakers are
touti ng plans to help .case the burden
o n taxpayers'.
Democratic Sen. Bob Graham of
Florida wants to usc private investors
to build public schools.
Meanwhil e, th e Clinlon administration says its School construc1ion
proposals we.re val ida led by govern ment figures s howing that states .and
local districts are spending and borrowing billions of dollars moie for
public school construction.
School districts nationwide spent
$18.7 billion on school construction
in 1996, the latest year for which data
was available, according to Cen~us
Bureau data released Monday. The
districts spent $15.9 billion in 1995 ·
and $14.4 billion in 1994 .
"There is a tremendous need as
ev idenced by th ese figures," said
Julie Green, the Education Depart. ment spokeswoman . " And it's a
problem in many different communi ties - city, suburban or rural."
Ohio spent $492 million , trailing
·12 states.
·
The spending was in the 1995'96
school term , or a year before the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled that the state's
system for paying for public schools
was . unconstitutio nal. That ruling
ordered Ohio
rovide all children
with an ad uate education and adequate sch I facilities.
A-'iubsequent report by congressional auditors rated Ohio's sc hool

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buildings worst in the country.
One third of America 's schools,
about 25,000 schools, are. in need of
at least one majm repair, according 10 .
the General Accounting Offioe, Con·
gress' investigative age n~y.
Green said a Clinton administra·
lion plan would address the need 10
fix existing school b~ildings: The
plan would make construction and
repair· of more than . 6,000 schools
cheaper for states and districts by
providing federal tax credits to pay
the interest on bonds.
·
Graham's plan, meanwhile, would
cut red tape , said the senator 's
spokesman, Chris Hand .
"It decreases the time in which
schools can he built," Hand said.
Rep . Bill Archer, R-Texas, who
oversees tax pOlicy for the House, ha•
a similar plan to create more money
for school construction.
Nationwide enrollment of pre·
kindergarten through 12th grade stu ·
dents reached 44.8 million in 1996,.
up from 44.1 million studen ts in 1995
and 43.5 million in 1994, according
to the Census data, available on the
Internet.
The Census data also indicate that:
- Texas, New York and Florida
spent the niost among the states.
Texas spent $2 billion, followed by
New Yorlc. and Florida at $1.6 billion
each.
- School systems in five states
borrowed more than $1 billion each
for building conslru\'lion , reconstruction and refinancing: Texas, $2.7 billion: ~ennsylvania, $2.5 billion; New
York, $1.9 billion; Illinois, $1.5 billion; and Florida. $1.2 billion.

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer11 :23 p.m.; Powell Street, ~id gency Medical Service recorded dleport, Sam Williams, treated at the
eight calls for ass istance Monday. · scene.
Units responding included:
REEDSVILLE
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I a.m., state Rou te 124, Elva
6:54· a.m., U.S. 33, Pomeroy, Rood, treated at the scene.
Charlotte .Eakins, Veterans Memori·
RUTLAND
al HOspital;
.
11:45 a.m .• Vance Road, Har8: 14a.m., Powell Street, Middle- risonville, Cheryl Hysell , O'Bieness
port , luella Driggs, VMH;
Memorial. Hospital, Central Dis12:38 p.m., state Route 124, patch squad assisted.
Reedsville , Elva Rood , CamdenSYRACUSE
Clark
Memorial
Hos pita l,
2:40 p.m., volunteer fire· depart Reedsville squad assisted;
ment and squad to Second Street,
3:04 p.m .. Riverside Apartments, 'Syracuse, structure fire at Floyd
Middlcpof1, Donald Guthrie, Holzer Michael Reitmire residence , no
Medical Center.
injuries reported, Racine VFD
POME'ROY
assisted.

ANDERSON'S

RECLINER. SALE

$$.50

(USPS 213·1160)
Com~ualty Nnrsp•per Holdl~:~p. Inc.

All Hanging
Baskets
$5~50

FREE

MIT~D'S
Flowers 8

FREE
LIVERY

Produce

Middleport and
Gallipolis Locations

liven cmitr each week.

, ..

No aubaaiptioa by mail pcrmined · in ue.u
wbeJe"bome carrier acrvioe is available .
Publiaher Jtserves tbe riPI to adjuat r.te&amp; durina tbe subscriplion Plriod. Subscription rue
ehanps nw.y be ilnplemenced by g.,nging the
dW"Itlon of lbe SlbecripliOI'I.

''

MAJLSUBSCRJPnON

..

-·d

'

Mae Anna Weber, 97, of Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, died on Sunday, June
13, 1999, at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
.She was born on November 11, 1901 in Buffalo, N.Y., daughter of the late
Henry and Anna Jergens Weber.
She was ·a factory worker in Buffalo, N.Y. until sbe moved to Rutland in
1967. She attended the Rutland United Methodist Church , was a member of the
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital and a member of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens in Pomeroy.
She is survived by several nieces and nephews in Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas and
Illinois.
Besides her parents, sbe was preceded in death by four brothe!!r.
Memorial services will be held on Thursday, June 17, 1-999 at 11 a.m. at the
Rutland United Methodist Church, with Rev. Arthur Cmbtree officiating.
There will be no visitation.
Memorial contributions may be sent to. the Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital or the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Anangements are under the direction of Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland.

bituaries.
·
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•-1 ""*"'

Today In History

.,

·

.Middleport council

Those roses might not sme

I

Mary E. Reush, 80, New Haven, W.Va., died this. morning at Pleasant
ValleY Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Ce nter, Point Pleasant, W.Va. Arrangements will be announced by the New Haven Funeral Home.

laolde Melp c..oi'l'

25%
OFF

. 13 - ..............................$27.30
26 _ .............................. ,553.82
. 52_.. .......................... .$105.56
.... O.hldellklp County
11-b ............................S29.2S
26 ~u ...........................JS6.68
52 VtloeU ..........................SIO!t7l

Reader

StHVICes

Correction Polley
011r . .,. &lt;011&lt;en to Ill llorln to lo be

'
'.

~H:Rntc.

If yo• bow of •• uror Ia •

doty,' ..u

.

... - · - · ..

All Recliners

(740) 992-

l155. We wUI clleck rour talomotlo.
old .... 1 ..,.,...- lfwarnokd.

·,

Newa Department• r

•-btr

· · De •ola
II 992-1155. Doperl~ , •nt txlell. . . are: ·
Gurnif Mo.... t ........................EIIL 1101
Nrw. .......:.....................................E~L 110l
.
·
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·

Other Servlcea
.W....U.,...,............. ""''"'":....,ElL 1104
• CI~ ••~......................~.........Ext. U03
~lkdAd...............................EIL ltOO

Open Monday·

Saturday ·
9;»5:00

ANDERSON'S

FURNITURE, AP~LIANCES &amp; FLOOR COVERING

AU 'A QII, AU 111111 ...00

,,

:

Area teens are invited to attend Fri day's Fun , Food and Fello wship
project at God 's NET (N eighbo rhood Escape for Teens) on Main Strett,
Pomeroy. Nutritio nal foods will be available, free of charge, for snacki~g
~h1le teens arc at the ce nter. Teens wh o have June birthday s will have
b1rthday cake and p1zza. Tee ns ca n play non-violent videogames, computer programs and cards free of charge. Pool tables are availabl e. 'file
center opens at 6 p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

The unseasonably cool conditions' should continue across Ohio for at
• leasi Ihe remainder of this week, the National Weather Service said.
Highs under mostly clear skies will range from 6S to 75 degrees during
the period. Some showers are possible. on Thursday, forecasters said.
Overnighl temperatures could dip to as 'low as 40.
,·
The record-high temperature for this date at ttie Columbus weather
tion was 96 degrees in 1897 while the ,record low was 47 in 1959. Sunset
tonight will be at 9:01 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:02a.m.
Toalghl: Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid SOs. Light northeast wind ..
Wednesday: Panly cloudy. A chance of showers in the afternoon.
• Highs in the mid 70s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
:
Extended forecaat
Wednesday nlgbt: Moslly cloudy wilh a chance of showers. Lows in
the mid SOs.
.
Tbursday; A chance of showers during the day...Otherwise partly
inve s tigating
te nant/landlo rd
Continued from page 1
· ' · cloudy. Highs in the mid 70s.
· .
.
. ·
Friday: Mostly clear. ·Lows in the mid SOs and highs ncar 80. ·
· on p ~rches and in lawn s begin- complaints, and is paid a perce ntage of fees collected from pe rSalurdily: Partly cloudy. Lows 55 to 60 and highs near 80.
ning next week.
· Li~llers will be mailed to those mits.
who violate the ordinance, and
Since Johnson 's death , the
those who refuse to comply will building ·inspector duties hav e
be fined in Mayor 's Court, she been filled by · Councilmen Roge r
.
~.
'
.
Manley and Robert Pooler.
said.
0111111- 'lft Pe~ct llhncibnoemoolli
11y
1,...._ obi!UIIn~
. . publst.cl•u q tl diDa:cammDJ IIU...dlalllngmanlnforrnlionthan
Madden reported a proble m
Craig reported that the res ult s
II proeM !In ... ICU ,...,...,. 'lelllt MO"oM ·
.
.
with swimming and loitering on of a test for volatile organic com·
the levee, and said that the street pounds in the village water sysdepartment had installed tempo· tem had been receiv ed by village ·
Mae Anna Weber, 97, of Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, passed away on Sun- rary signs prohibiting swimming s upervisor Brent Manl ey, and will
in the area until new signs can be be published in · The Daily Sen• . day, June 13, 1999, al Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
ordered
and in stalled .
tinel later this week.
She was born on November 11,.1901 in Buffalo, N.Y., daughter of the late
After meeting in . exe~utive dis·
Henry and Anna Jergens Weber.
Myron Duffield , president of
, .MM.-Viebcl:.."\'ali a factory worker jn Buffa)o; N.Y until s~e .moved to Rut- .cuss ion for the purpose of dis- the Middleport Community Assopersonnel,
council ciation , was given permiss ion to
lllld in 1'967 in a mobile borne on the Weber farm. Later, she moved to cussing
approv.ed the hiring of Richie use Dave Dil es Park for MiddleStonewood Apartmeill oomplex in Middleport.
· Miss Weber attended the Rutland United Methodist Church, was a member Wamsley and Randy Smith as port 's July 4 ce lebration, an d it
of the Women'sAuxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital until1991, at age 90. part-time patrolmen in the police was noted that the fireworks will
AI) active member with Meigs County Senior Citizen~ in Pomeroy until a stroke de~artment.
be set off from the Wes t Virgini a
in 1994. Mae then moved to Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
According to Iannarelli, the side of the river this yea r for. th e
, She is survived by several nieces and n'ephews in Ohio, Oklahoma, Texas and new officers will work on a week· sake of safety.
·
Illinois.
end and as-needed basis, and will
Council also approved · th e .
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by four brothers.
be paid from a special' overtime
Memorial services will be held on Thursday, June 17, 1999 at 11 a.m. at the grant that the village · recently mayor's report of fine s co llected ,
in th e amount of $2,936.75.
Rutland United Methodist Church, with Rev. Arthur Crabtree ofticiating.
received.
·
There will be no visitation.
Present,
in
add ition
to
Smith has been employed as a
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to the Auxiliary of part -time dispat c her for the ·Iannarelli , Robin so n, Houchins,
Veterans Merporial Hospital or the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
·
. department, and council agreed lo Manley, Gwiazdowski and Pooler,
Arrangements are under lhe direction of Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland. seek a replacem ent for him in that · was Clerk Bryan Sw~nn .
Power
repalnnen leave llva wire In home's backyard capacity.
Council memb er Beth Stivers
Council agreed to advertise for .attended th e mee ting briefly to
TOLEDO (AP) - Rodney Kusic his job, Kusic discovered it was a
noticed a wire left behind in his back· live wire carrying 230 volts of elec- . a new building inspect or to approve the resolution approving
replace the late Arnold Johnson. the appointments of Jannarelli as
yard by a Toledo Edison crew that tricity.
The
inspector is responsibl e for mayor and 'Robinson as counci lhad repaired a downed power line.
The electric company crew had
building permits and man.
iss
uing
So the electrician decided to check replaced a power line knocked down
the wire that strelched under his son's during during thunderslorms on Sun·
. day bul apparently neglecied to disswing set Monday morning
Using a digital voltage tester from connect the old wire.

0 ./ d bUg killerS WOrk beSt

1/1

Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship

·

Mae Weber
· Cool conditions likely rest of week

Rocksprings United Methodist Church will have Vacation Bible
Schoo l June 21 -25 from 9 a.m. unlil 11 :30 a. m. The theme will be "We
Shine for Jesus." All children arc welcome.

Darlene LOuise McKinney, 8S, O.eshire, died on Sunday, June 13, 1999, at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She was born on January 19, 1914 in Lawrenoe County, daughter of the late
William Henry Kingery and Nancy Callicoat Kingery. She was a homemaker.
.Surviving are two daughters and a son-in-law, Selby Manley of Cheshire and
Juanita and lim Spears, Cheshire; a son and daughter-in, Jaw, William and Virgi~ia McKinney, Gallipolis; lwo brolhers and sisters-in-law: John and Opal
Kingery of New Vienna and Floyd. and lma Kingery of Gallipolis; 15 grandchildren and 19 great gr.mdchildn:n.
Besides ber parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Thomas C.
McKinney; a daughter, Andrea Milchell; a son, Owen McKinney; three sisters:
Bessie Kingery, lani~ Comer and Edith Bears; and four brothers: Arnold, Calvin,
Gerald and Jasper Kingery.
Services will be beld on Thursday, June 17, 1999 at the Addison Freewill
Baptist O.urch, with burial to follow in the Reynolds Cemetery.
Friends ·may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday .at Mrs. McKinney's resi dence on Little Kyger Road in Cheshire.
· Anangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral Home in Middleporl.

Mary E. .Roush

.

Hair braiding debate
creates unusual
political alliances

•·

ol Columbue 147'171" I

Announcements:

Vacation Bible School

Darlene .McKinney

Ohio weather

.

If,,.,...• •,.,.,.'"'

~

Death Notices

Tu.-.y, June 11, 101111

The Daily Sentinel Growth opponents cry 'endangered'

·Typ«&lt;,.,.,...,.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

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... -- -------- ~ -----

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The Daily Sent~~~

Sports

'

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By JOE KAY
CINCINN ATI {AP) - 1hc hcSI
bullpen m the Nall onal I e.tg ur out
d1d liS closest compctllor, and I urk
Wendell blam ed h1msclf fot the out j

.tnd the pllchcr s spot next, Wende ll
should h.!ve been c.trclul lnstc.td he
gave Boone exactly what he expect
ed- a fas tb,tll
Bonne pulled 11 to left tor hiS thml

Astros' manager
to undergo brain
surgery today

come

homer

Aaron Boone hll Wende ll s Il l
concet ved fastb,tll for ,, three run
homer tha\ sent the Onunn,\tl Redo;,
to an 8~4 VICtory Mond.ly mght o\Cf
the New York Mcts
" It s tough to ~wall ow :1 h&gt;ss Il k~..:
that," sa1d Wendell who let the game
ge t away on onl y h1 s second J111L h I
really fcclltke I let my team dpw n
That one pllch changed ,, game
that started out wild - sc\ en \\ 1lks
by Reds starter Ron Vd lonc - an d
took on a httlc mtnguc when the [\HJ
bullpens got mvolved 111 the mth
mnmg
Scott Willi amson (6 2) Lam e (} Jl
and gave up a S£iC 11fl c ~ tl v ICJ Rq
Ordonez that t1cd 1t 3 1 111 the 'i l \t h
It wasn ' t a ptOITII SIIl g " ' ut ln1 thL
bullpen v.nh the lmH::s t ER \ 111 !I H.:
Nattonal t eague
The next hcsr hullpen d1d C\ Lil
worse dnommg the Mct"i Il l !IIlii
second loss 1n CH!h l u um"
GrcgMcM Jc hac i (O l )npcnu l th e
Reds sJxth\\Jth a p:'l.lJ Dl " ·d~ . . l h n
got two stnkt.!out s \Vnh u ~~nt1 t up

fo ur RBis fur the game Boone ""'
l1.1d a two out RB I double 1&gt; 11 Me ts
stnrtcr Jason lsn nghausc n
I m not s u rp11 ~cd when the)
come after me bee ause ol the

Meigs H.S.
athletic physicals
to begin Friday
Athlelrc ph) stcab lu1 Me1 2' l!t clt
School athletes w a nun ~ In pl ,tv du t
tn g the 1999 2000 sc hnol )' "' 11111
be grvcn on Fnda) 11 om I unt il I
p m at the Vete1an " M ~.. m o l t tl
Med~eal Chnrc
The phvsrL:als a1c !ur student... th 11
will he 111 g1ades 7 12 lhc Hhktcs
must have a ph) sJc.tl Ldrd s t ~rH.: J h\
the parent s at the tunc of the [1 11\' \ l
· cal
Cards are a'adahle .11 Mc1 g' H1 "lt
School or Me1gs Jun1 or H1gh Schtl&lt;l l

~ nd

strt: ngth of

By MICHAEL A LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
Astros manager Larry D1erke~ must
undergo surgery to remove a tangled
mass of blood vessels rn hrs bram that
caused Ius sc rzure m the dugout on
Sun day
Drcrkcr was scheduled for bram
surgery today to remove the mass of
malformed blood

a 6 1 le.1J !!I\ 11112: hun

OUT

benc h

Boo ne sa1d

I hope ttu .s gets us gmng .md g1vcs
us some mome ntum t..:~p cu,illy Sl ll LC
we have such n h1 g stre tch gotng 1nto
the All -Star bre,tk
\Vc have a lot ol games ag unsr ._1
lot ol good tea ms nnd I 'e hcen SO)
1ng 1! s tune to fish or ~ut han
Wende ll wrl heu al mos t 11nmcdl
i-ltl~ J y rh .tt he J thrU\.\Il .1 'ihdcJ m~ t cdd
ol lhc la:-; thall
In 1 ... ,tu 111011 likC th.ll Wllb the
l! llll l' on th ~..: \me I \l' go t 111 he .till

vessels

tiL ~ 111.1 1\C J tlh:n: \VL!lLk ll sml It
\\, Is f11l!t) "'ur1d L\) tl11 nw 1 t.hth.tll
I L u~.: s.., 111 11 " th~.: " l\ \ l lU IL:.u 11
~ I n the ~C\Cill li th~..: Rl:lb .tddeU 1
I1 Hi c motl: S[J ICI.' to the n sct 1n
Ju 11 Th! lh L Mc ts In o hJ Cl:t iiH! to the

CELEBRATING near the Cinctnnatr Reds' dugout are Aaron
Boone and teammates Greg Vaughn (center) and Barry Larktn atter
Boone's three-run homer rn the SIXth tnnrng of Monday nrght's
Natrona! League game agatnst the v1slttng New York Mets, who lost
8-4. (AP)
o~\11'-C I s hil l ske\Cs p H;IJll t h ng ' lyle Wh,Hcvor '
m.magcd to syllee zc out only two
!1n m IL I!LH f P 1t M 1homes jetsey
Vnlc nunc .rlso t: ould hn\ c fumed run s
lt.ll ll" I l L 1L4li i1 Ld to h ,l ,~o: tdLlli K II &lt;~h oUI h1 s ldc k ol offen se hut cht1s c
You ge t two 111 the f1rst mnm g
utJ dP illl " .md i\ 1. \h o m ~: . . \\,h th1..
to he mm e acccptmg VII lone walked that ' ,, good st,\11 , Valcnune smd
( llh \ )li e \\1\fl ( ll ,l ll g~o: -.]t:L\c&lt;.;
It stalled out after that
sc , en 1n h vc ~ plu s mnmgs and tho
][-. II L!JlUI\lUS ,1 \' ~" l t.: Ufll llll:
Notes: Valcntme left M1kc Prazza
Reds walk ed I0 111 all m.ttchmg thc11
MLtS Jll dll.H!e l Bnhb y V t lcntlll L' "ml SCdS Oil l11gh
and John Olcrud out of the ltneup
I 1u, t "rl,l) 111th1n the ' ulcs
But the Mcts nl.ln,tgcd only tl\c g1\ wg them a day of rest P1azza has
Rn f.... m m t~'L '
1 1c k M ~.: Kclln llr ts .ltH.I stt ..mdcJ c tght 1unncrs rn a 17 game hllllng streak and Oler ud
11.."po nJe d
st;oTJJH! positi On 'Whe n Villonc had st.trted all bur one of the Mets '
I h~.: 1 ~.:" r)IO t ~o: ~o tn .! {l !1 hd c ol walked lou1 ol the l1rs1 e•ght bailers 62 games
lO UI Se
lhc Re d~ \\ :re pe1turbcd he f,tccd Ill the I 11 sl mnrng , the Mets
''hen the} lound !he h 1t1e1 s box
mudd\ hcfmc .t g .. um: June 3 . 1t S hc.l
EHS athletic physicals set for June 25
St1Jwm . tlc UsJn g the Mt: ts ol wat c1
Ill !! 11 do wn to ncg ..llt.: then speed
E.Jstern H1 gh ,School athleuc physrcals lor the 1999 2000 school year
ll~ey Itt~• l orc ~d th~ Met &lt; to co1ct a
11JII be g1vcn on Frtday June 25 at Veterans Memonal Med1cal Clrnrc Ill
" IHtc spot un b1111 g:h tu s~.:n s glove
Pomc1oy
Me Kcon s id lest obJ cclt un d1un l
The ph)Sicals lor gr.tdes 7 12 11111 be gtven from 1-4 p 111 PhySJca l
stl 11 cll '" tl" V.tl enun c
cards
can be prcked up at the h1gh school olltce I10m 9- 2 p 111 Monday
I hat s wlut he docs Valentine
Fr1d
ay
sa.u He hkes to do that It s Iu s

·
IS C1ty (I usse ll 0 l ) at Bal1u10re (J ohnson

New York

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New 'l mk tY11.slm ~ ~ ) m CI NC JNI'AI I 11'u m -1
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Thursday's game

New York
Churlotte

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CLEVELAND

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1

\ H S 1I n l s l \,xl~, l

Buftnlo at DIll 1s 8 p m

.................... .2
2

U I 000

M1nne~o t.1

2

01000

Sacramento

2

I

66 7

Utlh .. .. '·· ··········
I h o ~n111.

I
0

I
l

SOO
000

Uoui lon
Los Angeles

Monday's scores

lnn1ght 's game
Lns !\n ~ clcs

110IImc.lo 7 '0pm

No

4 11

gam~

\Vt!dnesday

1 hursday 's g.tmes
Ollmdo u Dc rou 7 l0pm

U1d1 L\

Houslul R'O pm
Cl EVELAND 11 Snn an , n!o !0 p 111

INF Joshua W1Json lNF Joke
Lrudlaw rNI K!.'\10 Hooper INF Kevm Perkw s INF
Ketlh Herbert INF Man i'oslel! INI Jose Gomez
OF Scon Goodman OF Barry Schell 01 James
Close and OF Qumn Davts
I OS ANGE LES DODGERS Stgned SS Jason
Repko
PHILAD ELPI-HA PHILLJ ES Cl,umtd LHP
J tsnn Br eskl o ff wm"ers from the Colorado R oc ~1es
a 11l ass1gn('d tum to Rea dmg of the Eastern l..eflgue
Move(t C Tom Pnnce f rOr]) 1ht I~ lilly to the 60 day
d1 sablcd li st

Saturday's game
1

I

Transactions

2

Basketball
Nnuonal Basketball Assoelalion
ORLAND O MAGIC \\oa1vec.l F Dom1mque
WJ! km~

Football
Baseball

01000

71 Ct EVEl ANIJ 71
W 1sh ngton 81 N&lt;!w York 61
f\.hnn csoln 7H Ulah ~ 4
Sncrtmcnln 74 Phoc n1x tH

Dcnm ~ And~rso n

Dallns lit Bu{falo 8 p 11 1f ne cessary

Western Conference

1)

10 r m
ll l lllll (f\. lc 1ll01\ &lt;; S {J l 11 'ri WtH j Rl' n ~o .j I )
10 0 ~ p II
l' ll tMlul ch ((lt d01 12 2) 11 l.o~ \n cdl ~ IC Pe 1 ~1
! XI IO '~p m

!ill

500

1n

\ tln111 1 ( M 1ld
K 0~ p m
~

7

ll' L

Ol:l OH

M o n l r, d (BJU SII I'l

II

Lu~

lomght's game
Dall1s at Buff tlo 8 p 11

Eastern Conference
Itam

Nc ...,. York (Reed '1. 1) : u CIN CINNATI (lontko 2
' l 1 05 pm
Clueago (I 1ebcr 5 2) at Mllw lUkce ( o\bbou 1 ~ 1
8OS p m
\tlmt 1 (G IIvmr l 7) tl Huu s1Ull {Huh 0 6) 8 Q&lt;=
p n
MCHIIrcal (lhurma l 2 l) It St I .o u t~ u.rnenez 2
71 8

Stanley Cup finals

WNBA standings

Tomght's games

iOO ';p m
'
Phd tcl1: lph1t rOgc 1 4 ) u San

Fa ~l~rn Ui\tSitm

Monda) 's ~con s

h ~:1

IMot&lt;: r . ., 4) at IJe tro ll !MI1ck1 \ 'i J 7 OS

] m

40 20

Ch1cago
Detro11

S~n

5 Clu ltgo I

H

6 l 705 pm

C~ntral Onl ~ i o n

CLE\I EL \N D

M d ,..,&lt;~ u kec

7 (15 p m
U 1kb.nd (Hl:rctl a 1 5) at (I E\ ELAND (l nlf n

l'

~6

Phlladclphm !Wolf I 0 ) al

Monda) 's scores

K 1 ls IS Cny ( Ru ~ ~ lo -" :'i; 1t R d111101 e {Pn LN n
n -1 ) 1 fl'i r m
\ n ~l c 1m (Sp 1rh 2 ~ ) a1l 1rm 1n IH;umltcm 0 4 )

lK

Nt \Ymk il

24

7
12

C INCIN Ni\1 I 8 Ne\\ York 4

Wednesday's gumes

L

"26'" ,, "'
'
,,
'"
,, ,, "' '
'"
"' "
'
"

Boston
Toronto
Ball1more
Tampa Bay

Mcn l~

Dregu

T u lpaHay(R upe 1 1) 11 Chu; ago(B 11tl,.,m 15J
~ 0~ p Ill

lY

Bos1on-l

Sn n

4/S
400

1l 7 '5 p m

f.a~ftrn lli\II~IIIR

Seanlc
Annhu

29 H

l .os Ange les

K an~

I)

fum

s ~pl • n•~tlt

fcared
Drerker
was great to see
had a more sen
that ~e rs OK
ous tumor, but
Now we can go
were
~~~
u ut~~wha
after fmdmg hrm
he tramed us to
111 good spmls rn
do the last three
ht s ltospilal room
years have fun
Monday. when
and play h.~rd '
Jeff Bagwell and
Astros general
Cra1g Biggio v1s
manttgc r Gerry
1ted thc1r m.mag
Hunsicker 3,ud he
er
-~~~d oc
When we get
tors that on a
he•c
(wda))
scale of I to 5 hopelull y we II
w1th I the le,"l
have mo1c good
scnous
n e~• s
B,&gt;gwcll ___...,:L:;A;R:.:,:.R:.,:Y_D:;.;,;IE:,:R,:.K:.,::E::.R:...--- Drerkcr s co nd• s,ud
Monda y
11on 1s I
nu!ht when the Ast10 s dei ce~ ted
Doc tOJ s nl so told Huns1cke1 the
At'l,mta 10 4
We miS s h11n We m,t&gt;s - &lt;~bo ut I 1/2 mches m dmme
hope he has a speedy 1eco very He s tct - ' ' lm:.lteclm a less cnuc.tl pdrt
m our th ought s
ot th~.: br.11 11
DtcJke1 went mto Violent co nvu! D1c1 k~.:1 s conditi On added to
sum s m the c1ghth mmng: ol the game Hou ston s grow 1ng !1st of 111JUt ed and
Sunday ag,unstthc S&lt;tn D1cgo P,Jdre s rll pi,Jy crs and coaches
at the A&gt;Uodome Pl,1ye1 s and coach
Fu st b.&gt;sc co ach Jose Crullclt the
cs restrd1ncd hun unlll med1cal per te~tm Mdy 10 bc&lt;.: ~tu s~.: ul an megular
sonnc l ,trnvcd ,tnd took h1m 10 heall beat and hrttmg coacll Tom
Methodt sl Hosplltl
McCt aw lclt srx day s later lu r
Tes ts Monday Jcvc,\led he had .m prn st.ll ~ c,mc.: el 11 c~ 1me nl Cru z IS
a11~1 u1venous malform a.uon - ,t &lt;..:o n- expecte d h.tc k till s month
dJtron 111 wh1ch peo ple are bo rn w1th
Oull tc ldcJ Mor scs Alou lol C ,,
malformed, someumes tangled .Jrtcr kn ee li gament when he fell oil a
1es or 1e1ns 111 the bram Over dme \treadmill '" Fcbru,try .md w1ll rm ss
they can hecome dilat ed so that the most of the sc.tsun Ami tluru base·
enlarged vessels etther pressure neur- man Ken Camrnru has been on the
al uss ue 01 even bur st and bleed rnto dr sabled lr st smc e May 22 wllh a
the bram
stramed calf

Scoreboard
pm

AL standings

WNBA roundup

The As trus put up D•erker's No
49 Jersey m the dugout Monday mght
111 the" first game wnhout the1r man
ager
Desp11e the se n ousncss of
Dtcrkc r's d•.t gnos•s. 11 &gt; not as bad as
hiS players ftrsl th ought
It wa&lt; scary to hear that he mr ghl
ha\c a tumor, n ght fielder Derek
Bell sa1d 'You
~;o uldn r eat or

~~~ ~p l~ s

I

l

American Leagut
BALl !MORE. ORI OLE S S1gncd C Jon.tth 11
Kesskk SS l'e1er S heer 1 HP Sh 1un Dnbult RH P
Wilh 1111 d rmond OF Ch tries Dees 2B G II) Cates
Jr RHI' letT)' Plank und ~ lll.X ugl IS Sowers
nos ION RF.D SOX l'bct&gt;d RHP Tom (i mdon
nn I ~ day d1 s1hlci hsr f.l.\l Ulll, rl f.I.HP J1n Hn C'h
I Ifil l\ !'a \\11 'kd ol t l ~~: lnkrn 11 on 1! !..t: II!. It:
TA.MPA IIAY Ui VIL HAYS Ass gnt.:d 01
l'c u e ll t n"" t'l ) o uln glu lo Durh~m ol t ll:
hn ern luo nul Lc tc.ue Rec 1lleJ 01 Hubbu Tuunmcll
!t om Duth\11 S1 gned INI And rew lktnbrmk tNr
1J 111 Orm C Juq n S~ hud &lt;t
Nallcmal I caKm.•
C JN( INN \11 REDS I' I Kt.: d ( II ~ 1 J ohu ~ 1
&gt;llhc: l 'i J1y J1 s •lied li st
I LORIDA M A l~ I INS S1 g nnl I liP N 11hu
Rnbln smt lUll ll..: llllnllll H l km Ill RHI Rn nJ lll

RUI' Bry m Moori! I HI' Iodd Mok•
\'{~ l O ll RHP W111 1lm II 1yn..: s HHI
Sh 1nt' S 1111111 liW Jose ph Se rgc11 1 1 HP Bn m
I'I I OISt Rlil' lllOill lS Bell RHP Brandon B \\C C
M e~~~.:n g lf

RHP Jnncd

N3honal Foolbal1 League
CINUNNAI I BENCrAL S S1gncd U11 Scon
Co, 1ngton to u thrce ycur contm;;l
DENV ~R

BRON COS Sl!!ned G Lcnm e
f-1 1cdnm and l E Des mond Cl ark Wm~ ec.l G Man
[ l!t UII
N8 W ) 0 RK GI&lt;\NTS R~l em c.l DB lito
W o(ll ~ n tnt! DB Cur IS nu ~k l ~;:} R~ Signe d CB
lelt.: III VI u l ulr
1'1-IILAOI LPHI A 1 A(rll S S1g t~:liLB \n1ou o
I ond 111 to l 1WCI ye 1r con r1l l
SAN Dll CrO CHARC.I RS Sn'- 11u l K Jose
l0 11Cl

Hockey
N 1tlonal lincke' L~ugur
Lo S 1\ NGEI ES t\INGS N ~mcd Anlly Mnrr w
ll

h

PHil AI1 EI PHI 1\ I I) ERS N m cd
ll r&gt;i n g•u &lt;JB~ Iilllt ~:;~.:n ~m lmm• i!l' r .-end
II l ilT 1 Inn li&gt;JSt 11lt 1 o 1h~ jlr&lt;"s llienl
\ &lt;\N l OU\ I H. ( \N UlK S ~• g nr:: I r

I' nil
R ~ rry
I ~ 1H n

Rm IU

I

I

CLEVELAND (AP) - Detrml
""s dow n by one pomt w1th 4 112
seconds 10 pl ay, but Shuck coach
Nancy Lrebennan fell good because
the ball was tn the hand s of Carl a
Porter
"The ball was 111 the nght person s hand because rf she wasn' t
o pen, she could hll a shooter,"
be berman sard alter Porter 's lay up
w1th I I seconds beat the Cleveland
Roc kers 73 71 Monday nt ght
"She made the nght dec iSIOn ,"
L•cberman satd " We weren' t sur e rf
she was gomg to pull up , take rt to
the hole or shoot the bank shot '
And Porter? I was like, ' No one
ts on me. so I beucr shoot 11 ' I don 1
tlllnk an yo ne has seen me "llh hang
It me bef ore she sard
Clevelan d coach L1nd a H1ll
MacDonald sard a defenstve bJ c,tk
down made Detro1t s wm pos s1ble
Two defenders went after the potnl
gu,ud It left Porter w1de open 111 the
1111udle ol the lluor , she sard
Kort e Hledc and Sandy Brondcllo
led the Shock (I I) wah \5 pmnr s
tplecc Poll cr 11111\ hed wrth 9 pnmts
Mcllakra Jones led Clc, eland (0
3) With a cmeer-h1gh 24 pmnls and
Suiie McConnell Scno had 15
Cleveland rallied Irom an I R
po1n1 def1c11 m the second hall ,md
McConnell Scno's rhrce-p01 nter put
the Rockers ahead 71 69 ,u I 09
Hlede 1csponded w1th a 17-lnotcr
wah 4'1 scconus to pl ay to make rt
71 71
Aftcr Porter s hasket put Detroit
ahe,Jd 73 -71 Ncmco va s three pmnt
shot hounced off the r11n
In
other
WNBA
games
Wa s h t n~ton ~e,Jt Now York 8~ - 61
Mlnn esQta routed Utah 78 54 and
S,tcramcnlti downed Phocnrx 74-64

I

Mystics 83, Lrberty 61
At
New York, Chamrque
Holdsclaw scored 20 pomts ~nd her
first game as a pro fes~ r o nal m her
hometown was also her frrst Will m
the WNBA as the Washmgton
Mystics beat the New York Lrberty
83-61 Monday mght
The 6 foot 2 forward was the No
I overall p1ck 111 the WNBA draft
aflcr a co llege carr er at Tennessee
that saw her named an All Amenca
tour t1mes and the Lady Vols Will
thre~ natiOnal champ10nshrps The
New York nati ve was JUSl as Impre sSive m hrgh schoo l leadmg Chnst
the Kmg to four stale trtl es
The Mysucs. who went 3 27 las t
sc.tson as an cxpanswn team los! the
ftrst two games thiS season but took
command late m the In st hall to han d
the L1be1ty then fnstl o" of the sea

The Da ily SentiMI• Page 5

By KELLEY SHANNON
SAN ANTONIO (AP)- 1 he San
Antomo Spurs drc rmpre;scd w11h
the way rhc New York Knt cks
reached the NBA F1nals dc, pne a
psychologrcal f,1cc lift
' Jt ' been mcrcd tb le' Tun
Duncan sa1d Monday " I hey re a
very resilient te,lm They JUSt l md
ways to get 11 do ne E\elybody
counts them out They JU't pru1 c
everybody 11 rong ..
The Sp u" and Kn rc ~ &lt; bcgtn their
best ot seven d 1atnp1unshtp ~ell~"
Wed nesday mg ht J l the Alamodomc
I houg h t h ~.: tup-Sl!edcd Spu r~ dl t!
I I I 111 the pla)offs and &gt;WC(H the
Los Angc lc::, La ker ~ and Pon~drltl
rrall Bluzer-.; 1(1 re,h:h thr 111Mb S:.~n
An1 omn-. playe r.;; !'O:ty t hq .ucn I
overlooking tht: c IJXI.hil lttl'' nl the
Kntcks the eH.!Illh ~ceded tc~m 111
the [a,t
Ynu 't.: got tu rt::-.pc&lt;..:l the m
be~.:au ~e th ev \ c t:om e till uug.h th'E.tst uH.I th~.:v 'c hc~H~.: n .111 the tc II li S
111 the Last they nee ded lo hc,l!

son

The crowu ol 12 563 .t t M,&gt;drson
S&lt;1uarc Garden g.tvc Holuscl.tw .1
m ~.;c tcc cptJOn when she w.ts mtro
duced and then watched '" she and
N1kk1 Mc CIUY, wh&lt;) scored 20 nl hct
24 p01nt" 111 lhe sec ond hall lcMI
VV.tshmgton to the 1!11pr.cssJ\ c w m
Holdsd .tw wh o a \! CI aged 12
r&gt;01111 S ..mtl 9 5 lt.:buulll.J s TO th(: lu st
m o g,nnc s sllll strugg led wnh her
shootmg, gmng 6 lor 15 2 ln1 R 111
the seco nd hall
L}n• 78, Starzz 54
At Mtnncapolts Mmnesot.l th~
on ly ex pan siOn tedm to w 1n 11 s open
c1 m the WNBA's two plus sc .tson-.
l]t.tdc II Iwo Ill &lt;1 row w llh a 7X- 'i4
rout of th e Uruh St.tra
The rcmnanl s ot the tY. n tunc
ABL champton Columbus Quest h vc ol Bnan Anglers pla) ers JOin¢d
hnn 111 M1nncapohs - v.1ll try to
m,tkc u l 0 ag,unst the two lime
WNBA ciMmpwn Hou ston Comets
on Saturday at Target Center ·
Brandy Reed led the Lynx w1th 16
pomts Andte&lt;t Lloyu Curry had 14
Tn sh Fall on had 13 Tonya Edwards

Spur ...

DRIVING by the Detroit Shock's Val Whrtrng (left) rs the Cle veland
Rockers Merlakta Jones In the second half of Monday night's
WNBA contest In Cleveland, where the Shock won 73-71 . (AP)
wtrh 41 96 R'i Wi ll O\ Ct Ph&lt;lCll JX I Ius
had 12 ,tnd Kn slln Fulkl hitd I0
N,ttalie Wlllr,um led the Stat zz tnnc she "'' ugglccl \\ tth JU St lou t
( I I) wtlh 18 ptltnts She w,ts the J10 11ll :&gt; Ill tile !n sl h il l hut ma de 1 or
unly Utuh pl.tyc • w ln t uoubl e i• g () shnts ,md :\L nrcd s~o:\ e n po1n ts Ill the
Jn.., t t:ll.!ht lllllltJIC"i Il l the SClO n d
UI CS
Dut~ng th .ll o; pm S.u.:rclm ~.:n to
Monarchs 74, Mercury 64
AI Phoemx Yo land o Gnlluh had wh1 ch llC\C I u .ulcd ~..:x t c nded .1 iS
11 pmnts and 18 IChounds as the 29 h,tllumc lc tdrn ,tiO pomrad1.1n
S.&gt;e~,un c nto Monarchs beat Phoent x t 1ge - tt s 111 ~ ~d o ub le d1g1L lead
Kcd1 .1 Hollan d Corn dnd Ruthtc
74 64 Mond,ty mght thctr second
vretory over the Mercury 111 three Bolto n Ho ltlte ld each sc meu 16
polnl&gt; and Nu t"'h 1B) earsscorcd 13
clay&gt;
Gnflnh who played m the ABL tor the M JJ n c~rc h &gt;, who h,td lost thcu
the la st twO seasons, had 31 pomls fir st c1 gl1t mcl'l 1ngs '.l. tth Ph oemx
when the MnJhUI..: hs o pened ,\l home bclo1c w tnn1ng the last l\-\.0

lakers offer Jackson four-year, $24M contract
By KEN PETERS
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Whrle
· .Phrl Jackson rs m Los Angeles
stumpmg for a presrdenual candidate
thrs week, he m1ght also use the trrp
to take a JOb as Los Angeles Lakers
coach
The Lakers, reportedly o!Termg
h1m a four year, $24 mrlhon con
tract have made therr pnch and awan
hts deciSIOn

Ltkcrs execull vcs Jerry West and
M1tch Kupchak spoke Monday w1th
Jackson, w~o had been on a fiSiung
lnp to Alaska
It was our first actual contact
wah hrm ,' team spokesman John
Black smd "The conversauon went
ve1) well Ther~ rs no deal done, but
'"e rc hopclul that we can get some~
tlung done
Black sard that Lakers owner
Jerry Buss West and Kupchak 'hke
hm1 very much and we hope to come

to an a11reement wrth hrm "
An announcement Is expected thrs
week
Jackson alread) was scheduled to
be m Los Angeles on Wednesday and
Thursday to campa1gn for B1ll
Bradley. a former NBA star
The decrsron to pursue Jackson
came after the Lakers md1cated
recently that Kurt Ramb1s, lured on
an m1enm bas1s when Del Harns was
frred 12 games mto the season,
would return as coach
Buss apparently dec1ded to open
Ius checkbook and go ,liter the h1gh
profile Jackson The Lakers contact
ed hrs agent, Todd Musbutger, lag~
week
Ramb1s an ass1stant before
replacmg Har11s, rs expected to
1cmam With the tca01 as an assistant
01 m some other t.:apat.:llY
The Lakers haven 't won a cham
p11m sh1p smce 1988 .tnd haven' t

made the (mats smce 1991
fhey were swept out of the playoffs the past two years, tlus season
by San Antonro 111 the second round
after losmg to Utah 1n the Western
Conference f1nals m 1998
Jackson. who won SJX NBA titles
al Chrcago wnh Michael Jordan.
would be faced wtth the ch,tllenge ol
helpmg Shaqurlle O'Neal w1n hrs
flfst champmnsh1p nng
Jackson look last season oil buill
was wrdely beheved he wanted to
eventually return to the Sldeltn es
Jordan asked rece ntly II he
thought Jack son would coach agam
sard, I'm preny sure he will
M,tdlson Squ are Garden presrdent
Da\c Checkells spoke w1th Jackson
about the New York Knt cks coachmg JOb m Apnl but cuncnt ~.:oach
Jell Van Gund) m.ty h,we secutcu
h1s JOb by gurdmg the Kmcks ntto the
NBA Fmals

The New Jersey Nets also were
beheved to be nueres ted 111 Jackson
at one ume

Jackson wrll try to blend 0 Neal
and Kobe Bryant two ol the NBA s
marquee pl ayers, and thw tea m
mates 1nto a ~.;h a mpiOnShlp con
tenucr
At Chrc,Jgo he was suc cessful 111
dealing wuh the
di stinct pers on
ahlles of Jordan Dennts Rodm,m
and Scottie P•ppt;n and the Bulls
became one of the be st tc.un~ m
league lmtory
Although 0 Ne.tl lms three years
remammg on Ins cont ract there 1s a
clause that would ,tllow hun to
become .1 h ce age nt 1h1s ~ c 1r But
Jac kson s hmn g probahl) 1\ 0uld
mtlu e n~.:c 0 ' Neal 10 st.ty and Fox

"'Y

Le ll! CI

.;orne pomt 111 the se n e-.
l'atlllk F.wrng wril be nussrng
frvm the Knu.; k, lineup .t11a ~uUer1ng .1 1urn !\tlulle.., tcntlo n In the
Im.h an.t "iC! 1ct;
W1thnut John .. on , contamJ ng
DunL~tn :md Rnhtn .. on \~ ou\J t'le eve n
lll t llC lhllt . . ult 1t 11 Nr.;\\ York than It
.tlrc.td\ " It lei) '"he
lllt: t llln~ Du n~ tn .1rJ Ruhmson
;._,lfl do 1-.; L•lll'i ~.: -.o ll JLI\.. li luul tr~mhlc
lhc llLrth t rLII)J 111\. t\' l: 1s c ntH..:.tl for
u:-.

Vrm (Jund) ' 11J Mondt~~ m New

'rork h'-=f( 1 !hi lCtlln l1cw to lcxas
V,tn &lt;Jund} :.nd !he KlliC).;r.; pl.!}'
c 1.., n[U"i t 11 ... ,1\ d tht V II Jcparl
!rum c..:o mnwn ~l tat t:L \ and u!'; e s tn
glc &lt;.:1H crag~: r;.~thl l- thJn ti •Ju ble
IL um, .tgrun . . t Dul1llll 1n\i R 1 ~ h1 n :-.on
fh~.: Spurs 1nJ KnH;I{, Uo n I rcalh ~ 11!1\\ hul• 111 , It ...,tid up a~.un~ 1
ca1.:h nthc l \' 1\h tht 1r L Uf! cn t li neups
ht.:l;JU L the\ 11L\ e l j ,l( ~... d t u,;h OthCI
tlw. h~. . ~ ~~ fl "h • ll ln e..:d " t l "~m
Ill ~.: h .nd ~-.;t thlll ~ \.\ lth Nt.:v.
YH I J... , .., t h ~ ' JU q l&lt;•t1111..: li 1h~.,:Jr tedm tn
th~.: pl,t \ nlh
Spu 1 ~ u1K h G ltc);!g:

1)._\\ HI R ub i nson -..ud

Pu p d\ 11.. h

tid

Il l!.: \,\!~,..; \~ho !h e)

M,m thcv :m : pl ay mg grc.u h to,; k!.: t ate 110\\ I he "' ,.., die\ pll)Cd
I.! Hn...,t l ndtnn1 I" \ \. h 1 th111 IC.J nl 1~
h dl
I he I&lt;I '&gt; I llh,. ltn !::! ht.:l\\~t n St~ n
N~::w 'r otk dctc..tll:d the Inch 111.1
P.Kcr s 4 2 to W ill the E.t"tcrn AntP nH) m ~l NL"' l ul l-.. \.\ 1s M.uc h
C i mi Ci l: llLe fln:1 ls eve n .titer lmmg 11 IYtJX 1t :\1 !d1..,nn Squ ttc &lt;.1 tl \.lcn
powc1 lorw.trd L~m y Jo h nst m lu 1 lhl' SJlUI '&gt; \\() IJ lli1 1 .. lllH: ]JV 17
knee lllJUI Y The Km cks ad ,,mce d tn pnmt:-. lllglh h~.:~.. tlhl ul tn J UI IL,. ~ tl)
the NllA h nal s lor the lu st lilli e rwm• ,llld (It I ' [l uJil'v
') tn AntPnlu h.1" lwt.:n v. ll( h1ng
s1n ~.:t: 1994 wh en Ne\\ York lo-.,t In
the
Kn t'tl...-. c\Ll\ ll11l\e nnl~l~ \h JO n
Ho uston 1n sev en games
rh e Kn~~.:k s who la~ t won a ttriL tl11.. p ' t l\\ t \\ ( "-" tf tu •kk . .ltlng
111 1971 are th e lu st ctdllh ' ceueu p, 11! 1nd 11 ltll "tPlt" md u tltng: .1
team 10 make 11 to the._ ftn::~ ls N 11 n trh ]() d.t\ 11)\ d untt lthl fu1 ll s
othe r C l !! hth ~sce dct.l te mt won nwn:
\1\t k h'-' Lh pl~l\ . . l" \Ve vc
pl a\uJ \l liP ... t !lh m
Hoht n'iOil
them
playoff SCII C"~
I' ve never played 111 the [ a,lu n "did Ju..,t tht-.~,.l l lllhl n ti lt n \W d1l n I
Co nfcrcm;~ lmals nc vc1 done ctny o!
kno"
Onh d lc" d tv . , :1~~) t i K Sp u1 s
th ese thmg s, the Kn tc ks L.1tt cll
Sprewcll sard Ob vrously I know act ed thn llcd tr l&gt;o1 c m 1de 11 to the
what I m plavmg lor ,md wh.tt s nl llll als On 1\l pnd IV the \ \\ &lt;.: r_ t.:on
stake hut I JUS! focu&lt; on th~&lt; hemg c.:nt ntllh! t lll lh..: 1oh tt hanJ
the m.:x t game
Tlw Knllk' ,lln\l'u 111 Son
The Spurs have ne1er been to the Ant on1o nn Mtmd 1y tn lmd 1 LO\\ n
NBA Fmal s srncc JO!nrng the lc,1guc ' ul u 11l v pJ t..,h~ l t d \'Hit Go Spurs
111 the late 1970s from the Amencan Go "' gm md L 1r" wohn!' J round
Basketball AssociatiOn f he Spu1' wt th Spuf" li t, . , Il1pp1ng from thc1r
are the hrst of the old AB A IC&lt;&gt;ITI&lt; to .Ul!l:ll]l,l\
make llthrs far
! he K111L~ 'i m t\ ht tn mg to
Wh1l e the Spurs have been 1ela 1 g n ur ~ thl dl"iil ll \itllb dUI 'oO di C the
t1 vcly mJury -free tl1lS season the Spurs
Kn1 cks have bee n anyth tng hut
I Jon 1 \\ ml IP li L 11 1 S m
Johnso n suffered a spramed hgamcnt Anto11 to 1 u wl \1 \111 1 111.. -.Jtd
111 Ius ught knee Fuday It wil l he .t
! hH 1 \ lll. '-~,.11 -.n l ' 1.. cui to
g,tme lime deciSIOn as to whether go nut .tnd ..'ll lit e; '-! JIIIC _!TI )Cencs
he II piny Wednesda y, th e Knr cks now and thtJ II HHI Jh, np lc '"k rnc?
SR ld
&lt;\rc \&gt; OU ~nl n !! til \\111 ) I 111 IUdc I
' II he s there, ob &gt;~ p u sly he &lt; d~..m t llnS wu tht.: m l Jlt-.1 gll rn ' tood
gomg to play a huge role If not and l c ct \~.: EI1 L ~ltd
we' ll depend on other people '
I umh..:1 ~t md t he..,~.: pl~llp l c
Kn~eks co.tc h Jell Van Uu nu) sa1u
am und ht:rc :.tiL cX, IIld butthc.1e sa
John son predicted he will pl,l\ dl lot n l ' '-OJ k 10 IlL dnn~..

ont

Muhammad signs to play football at OSU

COLUMBUS Ohro (AP ) -- A (o/r11nhu 1 Jtr ,ru/(b 111 1 'c kpl1one
sc hoo l standout at Sto ne mtl! l \ H.:" I ~' L th\ ~\\ '- l1kt.:d w,\h.:hMount.u n G.1 has de~..:Jd c d 10 pla y mg th~.: m pia\
h1 s coll ege lootb.tll ,11 Oh to Sidle
Ot hc1 "lhlnll.., h1.. u) ll"i ldctcd
lnli.:t CXl CilSJ Oil
J un 1l Muhdmm dd d (1 loot I md udt:"d
H n 11d 1
1\l.th.un .t
230 po und llncb,tekcr ls the fil th M u ~ ILt ntl .tnd Mh"il'i" 'Pr'
playe1 to conHnll Ill Oh1o Sia!e ~
Muh 1mm.1d \\ ht, h 1d I '16 t.l l k leo;
Ullc\ '\ IX ~,\Lks d~ l lllll i OI !01 :1 11 8- ~
d"" ot 2000
He '~lid o n M o nJ,\) the l1kcllhood tC .Ul l th 11 Ill ILk ' ihc (Ju l £"l t ~~ lt C
puck He s not unnpl.111l1n g loo th1 ec We nu ght h,l\ e to "111 ,1 g,Hlk ol nat1on.1l ~.:x r &lt;ls UI ~o: w.h a 111 1JOI pla ~\J ih. l ,bt \l:;,.]J I" Jl~u 1 TU II hl o~ k
10
mu~.:h now
mllu t.:n~_;~.: Ill Ius d ~..:L J S IOil
tnl! lullh.td \\]hi 12 II !lui f'-1 :Y~m.l s
A D.lll .ls \' !dOl \ \\ould £!1\C thc
I'm tit mklul lm them I know
The BuckC)es .ue un TV a lnt I U~I1111~ 111 }lJl)S
'
Stars ,, 1 I .1d1 ,mt,Jgc 1n the 'best ol dnwn here Muhammad to ld 7/Jt
the) help me
The nt.lln quesu on posed to JUS! se ve n se ne ~ . g1v 1n g th e m .1 cldn c ~.: 10
about L.: \Cityon e m the Sdb1 cs lockc1 hc.td bac k home l o ! d r os~l hil.::
1oom on Mor)d,Jy How do ) ou beat cllnchml! 1n G.1111l: ~ on I hw :-.da\
n1 ght
the Dallas delcnso'
1 he Sta t:s m c,Ul\\ hilc "111 not he
'They block a lot ol shuts.
Cunrs Brown satd One key that we pl.tymg ,11 lull sl1 cng lh Brei! Hull
IM\C been workm g o n (IS that) we one o f thc tr top s ~.:m c rs ft gurcs to
ha1 e to n1.1ke sure but shots ge t m1 ss tomght :s gdmc bee msc ot .1
through Somet11nes we are tak•ng st1 amed gr01 n
_..___y·OL~TEER
It h,ts rc:-; ulted 111 some shul tl wg
too much tulle wmdtng up for the b1g
• RACINE:- Meet at the Old Fer') IA mliug Slrelter
of the Dallas li ne up , rncludmg the
slap shot"
po ss ibility o l mm mg Sy dor f1 0 111
A thou ght from Rhett Warrener
Hmtse ... Near Ri11Pr
"One thmg we shoHid be domg def ense to fm ward on the top lmc
• POMEROY: ·Meet at stage &lt;111 l'arki11g Tot
(IS) to be a httle more pallent You along With Mtke Modano ,md lc•c
ace not
to gel four, frve goals Lehunen
uear the let&gt;ee.
not
Spotts Nc\\ "i !CpOIIcd that &lt;he u;n
tc1 s a~cnt L con~1rd Ann lt o m~.:t
MondaY '" llh Wes t to d1 s~.: u ss .1 Lnn

h1 g h

Sabres to host defense-minded Stars tonight
By KEN RAPPOPORT

BUtiFALO, NY (AP) - The
Bullalo Sabres ha'e to ltgur c uul a
way to solve D.1llas ' defense qu1ckly,
01 they can lnrget ,tbout the Stanley
Cup
Comtn g otl one ol the greatest
delenstve perl01manees rn Stanley
Cup f1nal s hrst01y the Stars have a 21 lead rn the senes and clearly the
psychologrcal edge as the teams pre
•Ji,u e for Game 4 tonrght
• " I don 't thtnk we went mto the
J ast game thmkmg 11e would hold
'lhem to 12 shots' ' St.\rs captarn
:Den an Hatcher sard " We JUSt want
ed to make them have to light for
space '
• Facrng the strfling Stars, a team
mrghl know what 1t feels hke 10 play
tn a phone booth The I 2 shots
allowed by the Stars 111 thelf 2- 1 vtctory on Saturday mghl matched the
'frnals record set tn 1988 by the
Edmonton Otlers
Now they hope to match the
01lers rn another department wmnmg the Stanley Cup
"It's not the amount of shots that
we gtve up We JUSt don't want to
g1ve up any quahty shots, ' Hatcher
sard
The areas that the Stars try to

guard most rntcnscly the slot ,md rn
front of the net
So far , so good The St.us
defense has gotten progress1vely bet
tel allowrng the Sabres 24 21 .md
12 shots , 1espectrvely Overall they
have outshot the Sabres 97-57 rn the
l~rst three games of the fmals while
outsconng them H 6
Saturday mght. the Stm s blocked
19 shots m front of go.1he Ed Bellour
- seven more th,m he faced
" Everybody JUSt feeds ol f II,"
Dallas' Darryl Sydor sard "Guys
would putlhetr faces m front of (the
puck) because they reahze the pnze
th.tt 1s at the end ·
Bellour used to complam about
hiS teammates blockmg shots 111 lront
ot h1m because he couldn't see the

OHIO RIVER SWEEP

-Saturday, June 19th-8:30 am • 11:30 am
_
YOUR HELP· - - -

•MIDDLEPORT:- Meet at Dm•e Dtle• Park
(Old Railroad Depot .)

MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING &amp;LITTER PREVENTION

117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy PH: 992·6360
MEIGS COUNTY

OF COMMERCE

WEEKEND GOtF
SCRAMBLE

Meigs Chamber
.sets golf scramble
for June 26
The Mergs County Chamber of
~ommeree Will hold 11s annual golf
scr.tmble on Saturday, June 26 at the
J&gt;rne Hills Golf Course (lormerly
:Mergs Golf Course)
Thts years toum.uncnt will be a
bnng your own team format , the
hand1cap total must be 40+, wrlh
ohly on~ player I0 or under
Tee time rs 9 am The cost per
team rs $200 per team and the pt rcc
Includes green tees, cart loud bcv
~ r.tgc s and many pnzcs
For mo1e mtorma11on or 10 reg1s
ter a tc,un, call Jun Ander &gt;on at 740992 3671

\

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~...:.:.:...:.:.=-:-:--:--:---~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:::;:::;::::~==r-R;;t:;~:;;;,:;;;;;;;;;-- - -shock
ra II~ to top
Best-of-seven series starts Wednesday
~~
Knicks hope to get
Rockers 73-71;
Johnson in lineup
Mystics beat Liberty
later in NBA Finals

Tuesday, June 15, 1999

Reds n tch 8-4 win
vs. New York Mets

I

Tuesday, June 15, 1999

1999
Date 06/26/99

This y&lt;'O I 's fo rm at IVill lw
" BRING YO UR Olf'N TEAM''
(handicap must total 40+ w1th only one playe1 at 10 or under)
Start Tame 9:00a.m. at l'iue Hills GolfCour~e
'
(Me1gs Golf Course)

FISHING DERBY WINNERS - Winners ot the
June 5 Meigs County Fish lo Game Fishing Derby
were: largest fish, J.R. Jewell and Tara Jewell;
smallest fish, Josh Partlow and Came Elberfeld,
most fish, Josh Hayman a11d Bo-Dare Powell.
Shown here with Fish &amp; Game president Tom
Grueser are .(L·R) Elberfeld, Powell, Tare Jewell,
J.R. Jewell, l&gt;artlow and Hayman. Attendtng the

'

annual derby were 102 children plus adults. Prizes
were awarded to all chrldren attendtng and wmners received new rods and reels. Lunch was
served to all attending. Grueser thanked merchants and individuals lor prtzes_ and other lt!!ms
donated to support the derby whtch has been held
every year for more than 30 years.

,_

Will's Hill R oa&lt;l , l 1mru•rov, VII
$200 .00 /)f'l '~""'
(Includes Green Fees, Cart Food bever8ges &amp; many PR IZES)

MEIGS COUNTY CH &gt;\MUER OF COM MERCE
238 W M.\IN STREET.
POMEROY. OH 4576Q

�The Daily Sentine~

By The Bend

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohto

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

1r=70;=:=;Ya=r~d~S=a=le=::=1:1~10~~H~e~lp~W7,a=n~ted~==~=11:0:::H:~:p:W:a:n:te:d:::

Page&amp;

CLERICAL St2 ·S18 IHA FTIPT

Pomeroy,
Middleport
\VIcinity

Tuesday,June15,1999

• A &amp; D Auto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

Can true love overcome a man's relationship with his manipulative mother?
cal therapy she needs and the tndi vidual attention she wants. I sug gested thi s to Jay. and he accused me
of wanting to separate him from hts
famtly
Ann, it breaks my heart to see
how Jay cannot enjoy his · life
hcc ause of his family obligatoons.
We have had to move our wedding
back a full year hccause he doesn 't
feel comfortable leavmg hts mQther.
Jay can st tll take care ofCiaudta, but
why does he have to hve wtth her !
I'm concerned that thts woll ulttmatcl y destroy our marriage, and I
don ' t know what to do - FRUSTRATED IN TORONW
DEAR TORONTO: It 's obvious
that you are gotng to play second
fiddl e to Claudia as lon g as she
l 1vcs. Ate you sure you want to stay
in that otchesLra''

Ann landers .
''-

Dear Ann Landers: "Jay " and I
h;wc hccn dat mg for three years and
wac plan ning to get marr1ed th1 s
summer We have an exce llent rela·
uon&gt;htp and love each other very
much The prohlem is hJS mother
'C iaudta" has multtple sclerosos
and cannot move her legs. I sympatht lC \\ 1th her hut she trea ts me ltkc
£.u h.tgc I h.tvc tned for years to get
hL'r to hkc me. to no ava1l Claud1a i s
'~r'TV

manapulau vc She has made
Jay lcel tcs pun&gt;J bic lUI her illness .
and the gUilt ke eps htm hanging
.ll l'Und She bnbc:, twn \VIIh mom·y

and gtfts so he will continue to live
with her Jay's older siSter lives with
her. too, but she refuses to lift a fin ger to help her mother. "Dons" locks
herself- m her room and won' t ptck
up the telephone ,
I know Jay loves ht s mother, but
he needs to have a life. too Claudta
has suggested we move mt o her
home after we many. but I would be
nHSera blc hvtn g there. Although
health care workers come datl y to
help Claud ia · w11h her need s, I
hclt cvc •he would be better o fl at a
fauhty where she can get the ph ~ st- ·

family

sister, "Darlene."

When we returned Sunday
evening, I discovered that Darlene
had cut at least 6 inches off Betsy's
bcaut•ful. watst-length hatr. She a lso
hacked at Betsy's hangs and made a
mess of.them I was in tears when I
saw the chtld. Not ,only do I feel that

nent damage was done . Apologize to
your sister for overreactmg, and tell
her I think she should pay for Betsy's
professional haircut as apeace offerong Needless to say, you should not
use Darlene as a baby sitter again,
' inec you obviously cannot trust her
Judgment.
,
Pl anning a weddtng? Whaf's ·
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Gutde for Bndes" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a self
addressed, long, busincss-soze envelope and a check or money order for
$3.75 (thi s include's postage and
handlmg) to .. Brides, c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box 11562, Chtcago, Ill
60611 -05 62. (In Canada, send
$4.55.) To ftnd out more abou t Ann
Landers and read her past columns,
visit the Creators Syndtca te web
page at www.creators.com.

Ohio
Unlvtralty
College Ol
Olteopalhlc
M.c:llcln•

the me al ts served, ts to keep all
foods "cooktng hot " (above 140
degtees) or ··rcfngerator cold"
(hclow 40 degrees) untJI they arc
consumed.
Temperatures tn the middle of
thts range- the pleasant room tem,
peratures - arc the most dang erous
Transport your picnic foods in separate msulated conlamers for hot and
cold items. This should he satJsfacmc;A~sswer : As your prevtous expe- tory for meals that are to be conll enc taught yo u, an episode of sumed wnhm four or It vc hours.
For meals that are to be eaten
food- orne ol lness can turn a pleasant family gathenng into a most · later than thts , tt ts best take the
unpleasant event Mtllions of people ingredients as canned or frozen food
dtscuvcr the nasty effects of thts and then prepare them tmmedtately
type of il ln ess e very year
before servi n ~
Other bactena, VIruses, chcnuMan y of these cases of "food potson tn g" arc the result of picmcs. as cals and parasttes can cause foodyour story tll ustrates , but others arc borne illnesses
To lessen your n sk of these ,
1ro m meal s e:tten at restaurants or at
home Fortunately, only a small wash your fruits and vegetables nL
number ol th ese unlucky VICtims home before you leave on your ptcneed med ical ancnt1on for the contll - nu..: . Ill S also w1sc to take your water
wnh ynu 1f the water at the ptcntc
tl&lt;ln
.
FtN I'll tell ycu a httle about the stte JS of unknown qualtty
. II you fulluw the guodcltnes that
n,llurc of fond -borne Illne sses and
I'
vc mentioned 1n thi s column, your
\~,-hat cau ses them Then , I'll give
next
fam1l y re uniOn should be mem you,, l'c" lips that ' ll help you make
-;urc you don' t have a repeat pcrfor- orable ror _somcthmg o thcl than the
contaminated food I hope you have
lll &lt;~n&lt;.:c .tt your rcun1on tlu s year
Salmo nel la c.tuscs mote than 25 a wonderful t1mc!

Question: Several years ago I
,llld several of my rela\tve s got food
pu1sunmg at ;;~ family rcumon . We
;\rc now plannmg our next reunion
l&lt;•t tht&gt; summct. and I'd ltke to make
sure we don'1 repeat tht s bad expen cncc, agatn Wou ld you please give
me some advtce on what we should
do to avotd food potsoning when
prcpanng outd oor, ptcmc-type

Th e 50 aim tvcrsary of th e
Pumcwy Htgh School graduattng
class of 1949 was celebrated MemotiUl Day weekend wtth a soc ial a lun ohcon and s11ctal at Tnnity ChUJ ch._
A total of 39 gradu31es of the
cla:-;s attended the eve nt' where rcinl msc mg was featured D1ck Ash~lms­
band '~f Betty Hawley Ash, gave the
bl css tn g bel ore the bullet luncheon .
A mcmonal tnbute was on display
dcpH;l1ng p1ctmcs ol classmates who
had passed av.ay The memonal was
ou tltncd til purple and whttc nett ing
and the names and dates of thctr
death was noted beneath thcor pictuJcs
The classtmttcs were Jean Zahl ,
Patsy Shtelds, Marvm Kmg, Patrtcta
Jesse, Rt chard Young, Lawrence
Napper, Frame Whtpple, Jqan Conway, Bennett Roce. John Hunnell,

and Don Bctzmg
The tables wete decoriued m purple and white. The gold numeral
"50'' was featured tn the display
along wtth purple and whtte balloons and ccramtc Purple Panthers
The regostratton table was also decorated m the school colors, and each
class member was given a pi cture
name tag tnmmed m purple and
white ribbon
Items of memorabtha were diSplayed on tables , including gold
cop tes of the Panthers Roar,school
ptctures, annuals, doploma. and
PH S. letter sweater.
A former high school teacher, Dr.
Rt chard Tobias, professor of English, University of Pittsburgh, was a
guest during the festivtties of the
day
Attendtng the reumon were John

and Jean Werry , Eddte and H'azcl
Ball , Ruth Fox Douglas, Lots Smtth
Hawley, Guy and Donna Morris,
Lawrence and Barbara Ebli n, Joe
,md Martha Terrell Struble, and
Peggy Datley Houdashelt, all of
Pomeroy.
Nora Mochael Shook, Wylhs and
Eleanore Davis of New Haven; Jack
Seeltg ot Starke, Fla , Jom Russell
and Bonnie from Venice, Fla., Albert
and Barbara Rusche! of Cocoa, Fla.;
Maxine Cuckler Noms and her husband, Tom, of St August me, Fla.
Dorothy Leonard Mtley and her
husband, Gene, of Baton Rouge ,
La .. Btll and Barbara Nease of
Bellefontaone; Marttn and Joan
Rtggs Johnson Atlanta,Ga. ; Janet
Gilbert Moore and her mother Helen
M Profita of Oxford,Pa.; Bill and
Sue Tubbs of Syracuse, Rochard and

Betty Hawley Ash of Syracqse,
Irene Angus Batley, Manning and
June Klocs , and Lucretta Cornell
Stobart of Mtddleport
; .
Paul Retbel ol Reynoldsburg ,
Rollin Daniels of Cathedral clity,
Calif.; George and Kttty Dalla~ of
Aguora Htlls. Caltf , John and J~an
Gilmore Parsons of Granvtlle; Mac
and Ann Foster Cottnll of Lancasler;
Carmelita McBride Willtams ' of
Louisiana, Mo .
Eugene Thomas of Unton, Mo.,
Max and Pat Bowers of Monroe
Falls: Leo Smtih of Bemen Springs,
Mich ; Bernard and Patncoa Meter
Suchoza of McMurray, Pa ; Vernal
and Betty Blackwood, John and
Mary Lou Reed lhlc of Racine.; Lee
and Fern Wtnce of Zanesvolle; Jtm
and Anna Lee Warner Mciver of
Johnson City, Tenn.

las and Carol Bachtel Tannehill.
Members of the team, cheerleaders and guests attend tog were
Mr and Mrs . Charles Haskins,
Spencervtlle, Roger Dtllard ,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs,. William
SwtSher, Middleport; Dr. Harry
Keig , Tecum seh, Neb.; James
Buell, Kntghtdale , N. C.; James
Sanborn, Huston, Texas; Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne Wood , Knoxville ,

Tenn. Don Payne , Dayton.
Richard Walters , Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Blatne Walburn ,
Vienna, W. Va; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Warren, Fairmont, W. Va.;
Norma Jean Custer, 'Middleport ,
Issac Wilt, Columbus; JoAnn '
Taylor. Westport. Conn.; Lt. Col.
Jame s Roller, Ret , Waldorf,,Md.;
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Stobart,
Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. William

Stobart, Lothopplis; Robert AS:h- '
Icy, Middleport ;. Woodrow Call,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Byer, Syracuse; Mr. and M)'s .
Roscoe Wise, Middleport.
.
A decorated cake was prep~fed
and serve d by Jennifer ·and
Megan Hamson, daughter and
granddaughter, respectively: :of
Mr and Mrs. Wise .
·

.• Rlllalalng Wall I Irick
PaUo CanstracUon
- · Certified

Land1ce1• Specialist,
0 D·Aft

_A,
PREECE PAVING
M
~ Experienced"Pawr~g You tan Rely On ~

''I'M
BACK"
Ken Young Former Owner of

•Paving
•Lots
•Sealtr,g
• Drives
•Stripino
•Private
•Business
•Patching
•New &amp; Resurfactng
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

KEN'S APPLIANCE SERVICE
Now

THE APPLIANCE MAN

"

985·3561
• We service all makes • Used Appllances • We sell

.d'

.,,. '

'Will dellver
Rid e Rd., Lon Bottom, Ohio

Jerry L. Preecl:' ·
51645 Bi
Crown Cit , OH 45623
~~~~~~~~==~~~

):

..' .

ROOF IN.&amp;
.• NEW·REPAIR

,, '

Phone·
740-256-6147

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

1·800·311·3391
Free Estimates
Contractors

' ...--~==!"~· --..,
HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

N:..

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~~~~::r.t~~~~!t~~

pd

TRUCKING

ftauDpg

1

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

&amp; Bllckhoe
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SerWce•

__ ____

Free Estimates
Owner: ~ohn Dean

R. L. HOLLON

u............,..opaoU
House &amp; Trailet• Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic System~ &amp;
Utililiea

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
N:..
Gar:~ges, f'ole Buildings, Roofing , Siding If..!!:
Commerc!a'l &amp; Residential
N:..
27 yrs. ex .
Licensed &amp;Insured 00~
Ph t; ne 740-992-3987
~

Welcome N:..
lil!~

5/25/99 2 mo.

4/2TFN

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N:..

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Albany, Ohio

'

JD CONSTRUCTION fEr

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HOME

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Under New Mgmt.

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Public Notice ·
public to dlacuoo and Ilk
queatlona
about
the
Dlvlalon of Foroatry'a program In Hocking, Zllloakl,
Richland Furnace, Shade
River and Gifford' State
Forultt and any other gen·
trll foroatry IIIUI.
(6) 14, 15 2TC

PUBUC NOTICE
The Ohio Department of
Natural Reoaurcu, Dlvlalan
of Foreotry, Dlatrlct 4 will
haat an Open HouH from 4
to 8 p.m. June 22 at Ita
office In Athena located at
300 E. State Street. 'Fhla will
be an opportunity for the

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Freel

DIAL
992-7834

JACKS ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION

Holzer Clinic ••• Keeping the Promise!

Protect. the imoortant
people m your life. ·

New Roofs • Repairs •
Coating • Gutters •
Siding • Drywall •
Painting • Plumbing

Hoof Hollow Farm

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Take the pain out
of painting, and let
me do It for you;

Chesler, Ohio

. INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message ..After 6 pm

740·985·4180

(Low Rates)

Free Estimates

Sunset Home
Canstractlaa

" ' or a bustne.&gt;&gt; partner with low-cmt

l0- or 20-year level tenn life

New Construction I
Romodotlng-!(llchtn Clblntts
VInyl Sidlng-Roofa.Otckl·
Garogtl
Free E1tilnate•
740-742-3411

insurance from Auto-Owners
lnsumnce GJml'lny. Call us fur more

Bryan Reeve•
Suaan Reeve•

details and a qJmpetitive propo;al.

INGELS CARPEl

vluto-Ownen ltmuwnce

No,. Stockin!r

L11e Home Car Business

-Ho•ttloe leadllll( d.a

7!i!iJ!I.IIJ.m'!l.p&amp;•

carpet dea11er

•Deep cleans safely
•DEODORIZES leaving carpet
sme!tng freah
•Ufts matted carpet pile
•"Dry' cleans so you can use
carpel right away

214 Eaat Main
PorruJroy

992-6687

8ervtoea

992-1021
175 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH

l

BIS.SELL BUILDERS,
INC.

SMITH'S

CONSTRUCTION
'

•New Homes
*Additions
*Remodeling
CQI/ t'oday about •peci.nl
price• daru July 011
Quality BuUt Horu••

Remember

Quality Is·Job One
99:1470 ....1101

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138
3/11199 TFN

1.

'

814-992-7843 . '

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room AclciHtoM &amp; Fltmodtllng

• New oaroa•

• Elactrtcel • Plumbing
• Rooftng • Guttert
• VInyl Siding • Painting
• Pltto • Porch Decile
FfH Elfllllllfel

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-6215
22 yro. Local

I

.

~~ Southern Ohio Disposal

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Your locally based hauler for residential,
Thursdays
AT, 6:30 P.M.
commercial and industrial refuse
Main Sl.,
removal. Serving Meigs County with
Pomeroy,OH
state of the art equipment and 20 years
· Paying $80.00
in the refuse industry. Call today to see
per game
$300.00 Coverall
how much you· can save.
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line. ,
Uc. # 00·50 11/tl..., ' .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ __;5:12;:.,..;::.:',::m::,o~:t&gt;&lt;l~
-

1-800-809-7721

.

'

t

CONCRETE:•.
CONNECTION

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Esllmates

'

;

•'

(
:

740-742-8608;

'

•
ROBERT BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Gsragea

:

•Complete
:
Remodeling
;
Stop &amp; Compare :

FREE
I
ESTIMATEES : ·~

985-4473
7

:~

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

""'"nr~

•Bulldozer

G1·ading

•Sepllc Systems &amp; Uttltttes

.Quilty Crafllmanshlp
· Guaranteed

o

Bacl:hoe seruices
.,,,., &amp; 1r11iler Sil••~
•Land Cle11ring &amp;.,

&lt;FREE ESTIMATES
. (740).667·6992
·

(740)691-9407
(740) 698·60~9

r•
•

•i
I

:
I'

HILL'S

TRI•STATE MOBILE
POWER WASH

.SELF STORAGE

Trucks ... tractor

29670 Bashan Road
-Racine, Ohio 45771

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1O'
~

x

to 10' 30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8PM

:w,w~mo . od.

Tratlers - decks - drive..;..ys
Equipment Cleaned &amp; Degreased
JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 985-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@&amp;UREKANET.COM
fREE ESTIMATES
38782 Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

750

East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Phone

(740) 593-6671

ANNOUNCEMENTS ,
Personals

Galllf'OIIS, 01'110 740 319 2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Ab solute Top Dollar All U.S Sliver An d Gold Coins. Proolsel!l.
Diamond s Antrqt.Je Jewelry, Gold
Rings P1e- 1930 US Currency.
Sterling, Ftc Acqulsltrons Jewelry
• M T S Co 1o Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galllpohs, 740-446-2842

C lean Late Model Cars Or
Tru cks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smitl'l Bu rck Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, GallipoliS

" EJi'IPLOYMENT
'-· 'Jt:'SERVICES

~-· \l·_~

GenUe ma n Sae kmg

1

ship From Nice Female For Talks .
Walk!ij &amp; Fnendship Send Re plies To 553 Seco nd Avenue ,
Apartmenl #403, Ga!hpolls

STAAT DATING
Have Fun
I
gles In Your Arl'a
I
Inform a ti On. 1-8 00 ROMANCE.
Elo:l 9735
Start Dating Tonight! Have
playing the Ohio Oatlng Game, 1·
800·AOMANCE1e11:tens1on 9681

30 Announcements

11 o

$2 ,000 WEE KLY\ Mailing 400
Broch ure s! Sa 1isfact1on GuaranTeedr P?stage &amp; Supp11es ProVIde d1 Hush Self-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT

5.

Box 1438 . ANTIOCH , TN

37011 · 14 ~·3.

• ' GOV T POSTAL JOBS • ' To
$1724 Hour Free Call, Apphca·
liOn /Exam ination lnforma11on
Federal H1re /Full Benefits 1-800·
598·4504 EJCt 1s14, 7 Days.

"DRIVE THE BIG RIGGSIII"

Gomg Out Of Sustness Sale· 40'Y.
Off Store W1de. Wilton Cake
Pans, 0 J 's Craii . Shdp, 2390
JadtsQn Ptke, 740-446·2134

ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK:

HEALTH

PRO-

New To You Thnlt Shoppe
9 West Strmson, Athens

.

Temporary POSition Candidates
Must Be Accurate At Data Entry
And Po ssess MICrosoft Skills
Posit ion ReQui res A Sell-Starter
With Strong Interpersonal And
Communication Sk1lls Purcnasmo
Ba ckg rot.~ nd Helpfu! To Receive
Confidential Consideration For
Any Posl110ns, Submit Resume

To

Borg-Warner Automotive
ATIN HA Dept -CLERK
21130 Eastern Avenue
Galhpolls, OH 45!)31
Fax 740-441-3249

740 592-1842

9 00·5 30

NO PHONE CAU.S PLEASE
WEIGHT LOS S I lost 90+
Pounds In .6 Monthsl I'll Help You
Reach Your WetgtM Loss Goals!
Toll Free 888-781 9624

40

Giveaway

2 Beautiful Kitten s. 1 Male Black,

1 Female Calico. 740 44 1-1707
3 Ktltens To Gtveaway, 740-388·
8445 Leave Message

4 Kittens, 3 Bobtatt9d 1 White, 1
Grey Ttger, 1 Cream 740-446-

9884
5 Month Female Part Border Col·

· lie, Housebro ken Does Tncks ,
Had 1st Round Sflots. 740 -388 ·
9824
8 Kittens, to gtve away (304)6 75·

1094.
Adorable Pupp tes To Gtveaway,

Free To A Go od Home. Da ch-

sund Dog. Catl740· 446·2196
Mant.~re

740-446-7104

St. Rt. 7

LoBI 2 Cogs t Brown &amp; Wh ile,
Answers To The Name Of 'Bud-

Full line of Gas Pipe &amp; Regulalors Waler Storage Tonks
~H1111o

111111

.. .

I

.,.,

Mon.· Fri. 9:00 to 4:30
Sat. 9:00 to 12:00

AOVNiCE ORAl AGE SYSTWS 1"-t

Lost and Found

FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE ~3
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD I 8
VIS IT OUR OFFICFJ SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 800-291-5600
VINYL KEI'LACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY DIRECI' PRICES

795·0380 EKI 1201 (24 Hrs)
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell
Shtrley Spears. 304-675- 1429.
Avon Products Start your own InHome Busmess Work Ftelible
HOurs, EnJoy Unlimited Earnings

t-886·5SI 2866

Barlende'
1428 -

Wanted

======:::::===
Gallipolis
Yard Sale

&amp; VI Cln itY

Coder/AI"J..Iyst Jackson General
Hospital Ripley, wv has :2
opemngs IN full -time COder/Analyst Cert tll cat,on as an A AT ,
Cod ing Specialist or equivalent
experrence wllh CPT and IC0-9
Coding reQUired. Tumor Reg1slry
knowled ~e or expertence pre ferred Rep ly 10 HR Director,
JacksM 'J aneraJ Hosp1tal. PO
Box 720 , Ripley WV 25271

EOE

Onver-Lon.g Haul &amp; Reg1onat
Have A Ca1eer In 2 Hours! •Paid

tiOns Pro cessed tn 2 Hours Or

OTA exper 23 Years of age good
dnvlng reco rd Continental Ex·

pro6S, Inc (800)·293·0100 (800)·

1695-4473. Recent Orlvlng School
Graduates Welcome!

01 lve,s . Free 3 ·- week COL
list

Training Earn $26 ·$32,000

&amp;LJ. Yard Sate1 Mult

Yr. W f Full ' Benefits. No E.:p.

Be Paid In Advance.
QEAQLINE, 2·00p.m.

Needed P.A.M Transpor t SpeClal Call Toll Fru 1· 877·230·
6002 Sun -Fn . 7 AM -7 PM

YARD SAL E S EC A ~TS I FIRST
OF ITS KINO! Pr oVen Tech·
nfquesl CASH AES ULT St Send
$3 oo· Be.lken Erll~rpnses Box
903, Ma!'IChesier, TN 37349.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sa lea Nu1t Be Paid In
A~ance . Deadline: 1:OOpm tht
doy before the ed It to run ,
Sund•y • Monday edlhon·

1:110!&gt;m Friday.

GtganiiC Garage sale, Bradbury
cnurcn ol Christ par&amp; on age be·
side WMPO on Braooury R~ ..
June 16th, 17th, &amp; 18111, 9am untH
5pm

Earn S104 -s•oo • Frp Portraits,
lnvlle Your Friends To "(our
Home For A Pro!et:.. .,.nal Glam·
o ui Portrait Party, 1· 800-426·
8363
~loymen t

1800

Service•

WEEKLY POTENTIAL Compl•to
S1mple Go11ernment Forms AI

Home No Experience Necessary

CALL TOLL FREE · l ·a00·966·
3599 El[. 2flO I

ENVELOPE STUFFERS WANT·

ED: 1.ooo Envelopes .. S3,000 t
Month Receive S3 For Every Envelope Proc eu"d With Our
Sales Material Free Info 619·

492·8624.

E•cellent Opportunlly to Join lhfl
long te rm health care field ll·
cense d Practical Nurses' Rotat Ing shifts lnlermedlale ca re center West V1rgm1a l1cense reQuired Apply a1 Pom t Pleasant
Center/Genesis Eldercare. State
Route 62 , Route 1. Box 326.
Point Pleasant. WV 25550 EOE

HOUSEKEEPING

wym.pamtran5port.com
DRIVING POSITIONS

AVAILABlE:

ClassAOl R

Single On vtf. Lat e Mode l Kenworths Wtlh Reefers. west Coast

Carrier

Class BOTR
Team Slralght Truck, late Model
Frelghlllnera With Sleepers. Must
Have Air 8r&amp;ka Endorsements.
800 Mile Aaelms, Home Deliver·
los

Both Positions·
Attoesl 25 Years Old
Atleast 2 Years ExpenentA
Good MVR
'
w"""~ Pay
Heallh ln~urano. Ave1\able
Work Well With Tho PUOIJC

SUPER-

VISOR Due To Sta ff Changes
Holzer Senior Care Center Is Now
Able To Accept Appl ications For
Supervisor 01 Housekeeping And
Laundry Experien ce ReQu ired
W&amp; Are Looking For Ded1cat8d
People To Join Our Team Apply
In Pens on Or Send Or Fax Vour
Resume To Roger Hitt le 380 Colonial Dnve, 81dwell, OH 45614, Or
Fax 740-441 ·1347 EOE.
HVA.C IServlce Tech
Minimum 2 years expenence 1n
service. Must haYe EPA re!Oger, aoon certification and ASES cerllflcatton. Must ha-ve own handtoots Truck lurMJhed Athens Co
area Excell9flt pay &amp; benefits
Send Resumes to HVAC JOBS,
PO Box 2289, Athens, Oh 45701 .

JOBSITES USA MAGAZINE
Accurate Natlonw1 de Mon thly
PubUcalon 01 Contractors Needs
Tradesm11n t J Obslte locations
Contractors Names Phone t's
Anct Wage Information $12 95 1
Month Order Today! B00-943·
9090
Johnsons Supermarket. 85 Vme
Street , Gallipolis. Applicat ions
Semg Accepted For Cashier /Offlee As&amp;lslant Evemngs And
Weekends. Must Be At Least 18
Years Old &amp; High Scttool Gradu·
ate , Work Experience Required
Inquire Between 9 00 A. M -1 00

PM

LPN Full-Time W11h Benefits For
20 Bed ICFIMR Facility In Chesa·
peake. If Interested, 740·4464814
MACHINE OPERATORS needed
lor lmmed1ate work al packaging
plant in Northwestern Ohio
Transportation and housing opUons available Starting wages
S9 50 per hour: 2nd and 3fd shifts
available , 90-day assignment With
completiOn bonus For this position, Interim Personnel uses OIA·
LAPP, a 24-hour, 7-days·a-week
appl!cant screening system TO

APPLY FOR THIS POSITION.

CALL 1-800-524-1990, USE JOB

CODE 11726

MediCal Processor
FTfPT No ei(J&gt;Mience necessary

Will tra1n PC required Earn 40K

Call aoo-663-7440

Musicians- looking lor tea!! guitar
and bassist for group doing
country and oldies rock, John
Peel&lt;, 740.e98-6212
Needed· Babysitter in my home
8 00·5 OO.M· F Two children, 8 &amp;
10 years. (304)675- 1904, before
5 00/leave message
Needed Tree Trimmers &amp;
Ground Men , Mus! Be .Able To
Sharpen Saw! Top Climbers, Will

431·8764. Hrs 8 :JO AM ·5 PM

resumes or lnqtririll
Atten tion Carolyn Emmons,
&amp;01 Hawktnt On't'8. ~~ Sterling

Ky '0353
Part-T1m1 Babysitter. Variablfi
Shilts, (30 4)8 82· 3922 . Leave
Message
Posittont Ava1 lablt PT. PTA .
COT"', ST, &amp; OTR , Scenic Hlllt
Nursing cent1r, 31t Suctutdge
Road . Bidwell . OH ~5631 , 740·
446-7150
Rehib le person, help on paper
route 3- 4 hrs. day, 5 davs week,
prefer someone with drivers H·
cense. 740-742-2852

Seeking Ctrtlfied Nurse Aides
Part time Rotating shills. West
Vlrg1n la centflcatlon required
Apply at Point Pleasant Ce nter!
Genesrs Etdercare, Stare Route
62. Route 1, Box 325 Point
Pleasant. 'IN 25550 EOE.

SINGERS! GOSPEL OR CLEAN

COUNTRY. Call Now Toll Free 1·
800-339·4202 Or 1-·615·367-6153
For App ointment To Come To
Nashville, TN And Aud ition For
Major Record Producers.
Skilled Nursi ng Factllly l!@lklng
an AN for full Ume on 11·7 shllt
We are also accepting applicatiOns for part time LPNIRN. Rock·
sprmgs Hehabllltation Center Ia a
100 bed sk1IIM and intermediate
level facili ty We hawe an excellent survey hi&amp;IOr';' and a very
stable staff. Th rs is an excellent
opportun!ry for the rtght candidate
for perso nal and professions !
growth Submit resume to· Rocksprings Re habilitation Cente r,
35759 Rockspnngs Ad , Pomeroy,
Oh1o 45769 Carol Greening , 0 1·
rector of Nursmg Ectu al Opportunrty Employer
Someone to spend the night with
the elderly, m1dmght-8am, 5 days
per week. $10 per day, 740-9925039 or 74Q-992·4410
Wanted· &amp;Kpimencad full or pari
time barber, a1 M1ck's Style Center Pom eroy. interested partie s
call 740-992 2~67 o r 740· 99 2-

3488

WANTED: LPN (Fuii·T1me) At
Two Communtly Grouj:l Home!l
For People With MA/00 In Gallia
County Hours· M- F. OayUme
Hours Or As Scheduled For
Med1cal Appomtments Or Issues
Requirements Current Ohio LPN
L1cense , NAPNES /OOPNES,
Valid Dr1ver's License . Three
Years GoOCl Onv1ng Experience
Anq Adeq uate Automob ile In surance Salary $8 50 /Hour Ex·
cellenl Benef1t Padage S.nd Resume To Buckeye Communtty
ServiCes. P.O Box 604. Jackson,
OH 45640 . Oeadllne For Applicants 6/18/99 Equal Opportunity
Employer

WE NEED ORIVERS
New Eqt4&gt;ment

Good Pay

KELLI TRUCKING, INC.
Ca~

740.286-0ITe
r•o.288-0:10t
140
Business
Training
GeiHpotla c.,..., Cotlo9e
(Careers Close To Home) Call
Today' 740-446-.C367, 1·8D021H452. Reg 190·05 12746,

150

Schools
Instruction .
EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Sacholoro,
Masters, Doctorate, By Corre·
spondenca Based Upon Prior Ed·
ucalion And Shoft Study Course.
For FREE Informatio n Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE

UNIVERSITY H00.964-83te
180 Wanted To Do

Start Out $850 TO $900 Hour.
740·339-3377

Carpentry Remodeling Additions,

Newspaper Carner Needed lor a
Sunday Route Only Gal li polis
Fe try, Crab Creek , Jerrys Aun
Road , Ap ple Grove, Ashland·
Upland Road . Glenwood, 1·800982-6397, eJ~11787 , leave Mes·
sage
'

E &amp; S Lawn Service· Design, Implementation , and S&amp;rvict
Available for Sprin g Clean up,
ferltltz!ng and planting Free esll·
mates Satisfaction guarantud
Greg Milhoan 3041Ei75-4628.

NOW HIRING
$170.00 PER WEEKIPT
IGUARRANTEED SALARY)

Men And Women Needed To Do
TelephOne Operator Work For
LOCAl RADIO

·Day And Evening
Shifts Available

·Full And Pan llme Openmg
' No Expenenced NeededWe Tra1n
Student!ij Welcome
Apply In Person At
17 Pine Street
GallipoliS, OH
Monday, June 14th
Thesday, June 15th
Wednesdl:ly, June 16th

600 PM t&gt;ll9 00 P.M.Only
Astl For Ms. Hammon

Now Tak 1ng App llcn llons For
Drivers For Gat11potis &amp; Pomeroy
Only, Domino's Pizza

NURSING lPN'a And STNA'o
Due To Stall Change&amp; Holzer
Senror Care Center. IS Now Able
To Accept Applications From
LPN s And STNA's Who Are Ex·
pertenc ed And Dedicated People
To Jotn Our Team . Ohio license
Aequ1red. W8 Are Also Proud To
Announce That Appl ications For
Futur, CNA Clanes Are Now
Being Accepted Apply In Person
Or Send Or Fa" Rttsume To

Rhonda Coe. AN O.O.N 380 Colo-

mat On&gt;A, Bidwell, OH 456 t4, Or
Fax 740·441 · 1~7 EOE

Porches. Decks, 740-,141 ·t316

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs 10 the mill Just call

304-875·1957
HS. CONTRACTING

Prolflsslonal Contraclfng Service$
Aemoc!ehng, All Kinds Of Aooflng,
Shingles. 3 0 Lap Metal, Add On
Addlt10ns . Pa i nting , Free Elh•
mates! Residential , Call After
6 OOPm 740-«1.0S53 '
Interior &amp; E11terio r Painting, Ex·
p&amp;rlenced. Relerences. Reason·
able Rates For Free Estlmatt,

740-388·8041

.

Jims Drywall &amp; Construction .
New Construct1on &amp; Remoc;IJIJ
Drywall, Siding, Roo ts, Addl·
t1ons, Pamtrng, etc (304)674·
4623 or (304)674.0155

Painting interior &amp; exterior, plumbing, hauling (trash), lawn service,
demo\lllon. low rates . 740-591-

9617.

Twu 14 Year Old G1rl1 Willing To

Babysit Childre n. B11w11en 1 To
10.740-441-0664, 7~·3&amp;26.
W!ll Clean Houses, References

Awlabte. 7~ 183&gt;1
Will Mow and Hraul and do Cteanup (304)67H536
Will Aepan lawn Mowers, Farm
Tractors And Equipment In My
Garage, Call Evenings, 740·4410199
Will Stay W1th Eldefly "-raona In

Thoor Home. 740.388·-·

PINKERTON SECURITY

FINANCIAL

Now Accepting Applications

For Tho Gallipolis Area

•1bfM Average Wag~s

Benehts lnctude
Hourly Wages
'Full Time Posl11ons
·raid Vaclltions
'LHe. And Accidental Oeoth
And Dismemberment Insurance
•0p1 Dentall\.1fe
!Me&lt;:lcallnsuranoe
'Compeih~e

-I

To Ou1Ufy Appl\cllnll MUit

Tho Following:

·a. te v.." 01 Age o. Otdor
"He ... A C:._•n Polk:e Record
•Muot a. Allto To Pooo
A Drut

serwon

Apphcatlonl W1ll Be Accepted
For The Gallipolis Area
At Tho SUPER I
OF CjAlUpOLIS

On Thursday 17th June

For More lnlorma tio n Call 800 -

dO mowtrvl. Port - manooor
a 20 untt apartment comple1.

1pt••••• send

740-441-

le$ 51 Beouiremen ls 6 months

70

t1me ma1ntenance (man wno

STATION PROMOTIONS

Lo st· Red Marlboro Bag, Has
Tools In 11. VIcinity Ramp 01 511·
ver Bridge 740-446---8247

Friday. MOI'Ictay edition
~ 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

Toys, Jewelry, Wood , Sewing

Typing Gteat Payl CALL 1·aOO·

dy' Black /White Name "Flash'
Reward, Both Beagles. 740-446
4015, Kanaugu Area

edition - 2:00p.m.

WORvRYJNG!!!

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crafts,

Health In surance •oenlal Plan
A11a1lable ' 401K and life In·
sura nee 'Obtainable Safe ty and
Pr oducl! v l t~ Bonuses App lica-

thedaybeforetheed
11 to run. Sunday

No Credit • Slow Credll • Bankruptcy

All studenrs- full and part 11me
openings In cus tomer service/
sales dep S10.35 per hr appt No
experience· will 1ra1n. Conditions
apply Mus\ be 18 Call 304 4854300

CNA , LPN , n8eded Good pay,
Bees and hOney to giv eaway, ttourly bonus for weekend work
must rem ove from house. 740· Must be licensed In WV Call
CapJtol Nursing 1-800 576-6348
992·9031

60

Culverts: 4" - 48" in stock
8' Grav8lle1s Leath
100' -1000' Rolb I' &amp; 3/4' 200#Woler Une

Equal Opportur'llty
AffJrma11ve ActiOn Employer

740·245·9143

G&amp;W Plastics and Supply
740-985-3813 .

Help Wanted

Reg. 0 T.R • Truck Or1vlng Tra1n·
ing No Ex.&gt;er Necessary1J 21 &amp;
Over 1·877·213·1 303 (Tol! Free).

Two Full Blooded German
Shepherds 1-mele and t -FemaiEt.
They are One year old {740)·256·

Tuppers Plains, OH

...

Always t1red? Run dOwn? Want
feel better? F1nd out hOw, 740
742-3119

Horse

" A Beller

-

No Embarrassment ... ·
You're Treated with Reipectl

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN

Wanted To Buy 1973 Metgs
Vea r Book It Anyone Has One Or
Knows 01 Anyone Please Call
740·742·25 12

Free Hay (304)1l95·~972

!....CREDIT PROBLEM
'•

Rtcj. PeJf&lt;;On Auct ion Compan~.
lui! lime auclloneer. complete
auction
serv1ce
Ltcensed
t66,0hlo &amp; West Vlrgm1a 3047,73 5785 Or 304· 773-5447

2526

further informalion.

1725

I•

YOUR

New,Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages '
• Replacement Windows '
• Room Additions .
• Roofing
COMMERCIAl and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES '
(No Sunday Calls)
.

I

Agricultural Lim(l,
Mulch, Top Soil '

.

www.Su11ntHome.corn

ri
..'

Light Commercial &amp;
Residenltal
New Conslruction &amp;
Remodeling

(IS} 740·

Auction
and Flea Market

Quality clothing and hou se hold
Items $1 00 bag sale every
Thurs day Monday thru Saturday

10/25196,/tfn

EXC~VATING
,,........,...,.••• u

ta~e

Antiques top prtces pa1d, Rrverine Ant.quao;, Pomeroy, Ohr o,
Ru ss M oo re owner , 740-992·

740-992-7022 for

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

FRALEY

H&amp;H

•'&lt;'

We .D eliver ·
Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt, ·''

~ au now have the opnon of protecting your family members

--

•'

1"':

WICKS .,
tlfiCJLirtG lrt~.

Linda's Painting

TOM STOBART
today at

Call 1-800·621·9661

••

.. -

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

740·698-3290

"''L-------.1
••

,..,r."
.. .Construction

Free Estimates

Hor.ea &amp;'Tack
New &amp; Used Saddles
Also riding lessons

~~ 740-99%·~~60

Baseball Tournament
11 &amp; 12 year old teams
June 21 thru July 3
Team drawing June 18

·

DUCTS Jewelry Shoe Soles .
Body Support, Anlt· Nausea
Bands,
Mijgnelic Plasters
Wholesale /Re tail · Free Catalog -

-~

'

Jlfust be 5U YNlrS
of llge &amp; mec•t
Ill! D in come
gnidelines •

MAGNETIC

985-4422

a

Want To Sell Vour Stull? Call Rrv·
ers1de AuctiOn And let Us Sell It
FQ1 You, 140·256-6989 ,

~
tll.'\i

Sidi11g &amp;. St~llil

GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer C!'eanlng
Painting

~ nt

949·2044

WedamPye r's Aucti on Service,

EttO

N:..N:..Ano.~ilno.~Ar..lfin..lfin..lfin..ilno.N:..
Ei1!!J ~·J ri l.! 1' lll~· ~ :11.!.1! W!!1 !i.!!l fi!!lll•!J ~~ r,w.~ i!~~

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUTTERS

Howard L. Writesel

"

THE MAPLES

.

"

"

Apply now fo r

Call

&lt;.lflYOn8 'W 1th IIC'l\S 10

Every SaturCJay Night 7 PM .
Crown City, 740·256-6989

Call For Free Estimates

parts •

,.

Summer?

Call 98S·383I

Jeremy ..L. Roush
949-1701

18th, 9·3,

17th,

2623

Need To Stay
Cool Thla

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

• Mulcblng

. 602,

Bill Moodlspaugh Auc1 1oneering
Complete Aucllonurmg Servic ·
es. Comngnmen t auction- Mill
Street , Middleport, Thursdays
Ottl o License 11'7693 740-989·

740-687-41383

SERVICE

• MalateDUce • Planting

&gt; ,_

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column.
To submit questions,
Cc ntct:-. fur D1 scasc Control and Pte- ,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
vcnt 10n Tlw·• hndcnum L&lt;tn he prcUniversity College of Osteopathic
'&gt;C ;lt 111 U,ury pt odul b . eg gs, heel
Hall,
Medicine, . Grosvenor
.tnd poultt y
Onc.:c the \,tinted food 1s con - Athens, Ohio 45701.
su med. th e hactcttum tcprodut:cs

lllliUIULOe

·Lawu C.•· Dnlgn

ra1n 01 61
donate o

80

D ~a iPr s.
1000 St. Rt. 7 Sourh
Coolville, OH 45723

(740) 843-125.2

(740) 742-8888

l I.

...,..._ (7401..,....,...
992·3131 _,

paccn t ot the food -horne llln c~scs
rcpm h.: d t q the Iedet .11 governme nt 's

acute dtarrhea that 3ll petcent of the
tnne, has assouated hlccdang with
the bowel movements.
Staphylococc us aurc\ts, another
hm..: tcnal germ. 1s alsO a co mm on
cause of food -borne tllness About
15 pet cent of reported lood potsontng cases arc due to thi s Staph germ ,
whtch produces an tllncss th at dtffers m severa l ways from that
caused by Salmonella
Ftrst, 11 begtns one to etght hours
after cattn g the contaminated food ,
and the vom thng ts more seve re and
the dt arrhca IS less intense
Second , Staph food poisoning ts
the result of a toxtn made by the bac- ·
tena rather than as a direct result of
an mfeclton by the bacteria. I can
tell you from personal expenence
that thi s type of food poisonmg ISn 't
a demablc consequence of an otherwise pleasant meal
The best way to prevent these
bacteria from attackmg your food
and your family, regardless of where

.'

Middleport Yellow Jacket championship team gathers for 50th reunion
The 50th anntversary reunion
of the 1949 Mtddleport Yellow
Jacket champiOn ship football
team was held Saturday al the
Riverbend Arts Council on Mtddleport
The team was coached by Forest Bachtel and Don McKenZie.
Representing the Bachtel 'family
at the luncheon served by the
Co un cil were Kitty Bachtel Dal-

E&lt;[l.!ipment Part s
Factory Autlwriz~c l
Case -1H Parts
53560 S. R 338
Portland, Ohio

P

RaCiolll

All MakPs Tra r tor &amp;

Over 40 yrs experience

J

Reader , wants to prevent
experience of food poisoning

mstd c the hod y and L:U UI\l'" dwrrhca
vomJtJng .md lcvct wathm c1ght to
4X houts C.tmpy lub.lc tct tllness ts
s t ~lttsttc ally as common as Salmoncll.t and cam,cs a sJnHI.u lorrn ol

Truck seats, car seats, headlluer
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00

IPHS class of '49 celebrates 50th anniversary ,

J

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

Darlene violated my daughter, but
now, I must lake Betsy to a professional slylist to have the damage
fixed. This ts not the first time Darlene has overstepped her boundaries
when tt comes to my children.
I do not want to speak to Darlene.
ever agatn. My husband says we
should refuse to leJ her see the children. I have told my sister that she is
not JO phone the gtrls or send them
any more gifts. I am so angry, I can't
see straoght. My molhe' thinks I am
overreacting. Am I? Please respond
tn print so all of us can see your
answer.-- SAN JOSE, CALIF
DEAR SI\N JOSEi Your mother
is right. While Darlene was clearly
tn the wrong to cut the chold's hatr,
thiS demonstration of ,poor judgment
does notJUSttfy breaking up the famoly. Hatr does grow back. No penna-

It might help for y9u and Jay to
see k premantal counseling. Your
clergy person or doctor can recom mend a gOod therapist. I urge you to
discuss this siluatton frankly with
the counselor and ask for guidance.
You must be pretty crazy aboul Jay
to put up with all this.
Dear 1\nn Landers: Last weekend, my husband and I went to a
hotel to celebrate our wedding
anniversary We left our 6-year-old
daughler, "Betsy," and our 8-yearold daughter in the care of my older

--

PARTS

Rutland, Ohio

Pos1tion1 Available Will Tra in
Full Benef1ts .WI I( Pd Vacat,on,
Investment Plan Exp A Plus
800-941 -8310 ExL2200

Betweon3PM,And•PM
EOE IMIFIOIV

210

Buslnesa
Opportunity
INOntEt
OHIO VALLEYPUBLISHING CO.
rec omm endt th at vou do bull·
ness With people vou kn9w. 1nd

NOT to send money thrqugh tile

m1u1 until you have ln..,.aHgatecl

the offering

ALL CASH IIZIU
Get $20 Bills For $12.!1011
$500 ·$1 ,500 /WI&lt;, Eottyl
Free $5 S.J11)1ot
1·S00.991·9811. 24 Hll.

l'lood A Loan! Try Ooot Conootldatlon. S!.OOO · 1200,000. hot
Credit 0 K FlO I•8Q0.7'1Q.OOII
Ex! 215

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You Learn Co/llplete Internet
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'

�Tuesday, June 15, 1999

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Tueaday,June15,1999

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The _Daily ~ntlnel • Page 8-

BRIDGE
ACROSS

101 IC 111
448a-11*yer
1 Medo I elrldent
Mel
45 llllmo ltbbr
7 Exploolono
41 Oveljoyt
13 Ono or the
51 Kept out

ALDER

o1her

48 acre farm on Kingsbury Rd 2
houses oil well pond well &amp; city
water S 140 000 beautiful view,

Area Pepsi /Coke Route 15 High
Profit Locations With New Ma

330 945 4505

chines Earn 100K Yearly 1 800
4&lt;()-2371
Available Vending Route 10 20
Locations $4K $10K $4,000 +f
Mo Income • ALL CAS HI 100"4
Finance Available 1 800·380

2615 24 Hro

Banks And Financial tnst1tut1ons
Earn 60% Of Their Profits Trading
Foreign Currency For Vour Free

Repor1 Call 1 800 392 0843
S5,000 Mlnknom Required
EARN $90 000 YEARLY RepairIng , NOT Replacing Long Cracks
In Windshields Free V1deo 1·

800-826 8523

US /Canada
www glassmechanlx com
EARN A COMPUTER CASH &amp;

CAR Of Your ·cnolce"t No Com
puter Skills Required Call 1·888·
300-5067 (24 Hro)

EARN UP TO $540 AN HOUR
Send Us A One Page Form We
Do The Rest No Direct Selling
Free Information Package 1 800
310..8745 Ext 27 24 Hrs
FINANCIAL PROBLEMS? We
Can Help, Regardless 01 Credltl
No Fees Great Ra tes 1-800·
932 5612

Ati real estate advertising In
ttus newspaper rs subtect to
the Federal Fair HOUSing Act
of 1968 wtuch makes 11 rllegal
to actvert1se "any preference
llm1ta1ron or d1scrlmmat1on
based on race color religion
sex familial status or na11onal
ongm or any 1ntent1on lo
make any such preference
limitation or discnmmatron "

Tnis newspaper w111 not
knowingly accept
adver1rsements for real estate
whiCh IS 1n VIOlatiOn Of lhe
law Our (eaders are hereby
rnformed !hal all dwellings
advertised rn tnrs newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunrty basrs

310 Homes for Sale

40 Acres Gallla County Several
BUilding S1tes Great Vrew 800 Ft
Frontage 30 000 Board Feet
Pnme T1m ber Wrl l Split More
Lan d Available $65 000 740·
682 9032

45631
15 ACRES
READY FOR HORSES
In The Cou ntry We st Gallla
County Lot s 01 Meacow With
New Barns And Fencrng Aeady
For Animals Lots Of Road Fron
tage More Land Ava ilable Now
Dl¥ tded Into 5 &amp; 1 o Acre Tract
Take Both
15 Acres For
$27 500 Double Wldes Are Per
mltted 5% Down Land Contract
With Approved Credn Free
Maps I eoo-2 13-8365

By Ow ner Sandhill Road /Poi nt
Pleasant Brick Ranch · 3Bed
rooms 2BathS Basement Two 2

CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS 1 800

cer garages Acre Loi(740)44 10818

BRUNER LAND
7(()-441-1492

HOMES FROM $5,000 Fore

731 7233 EXT 2403

dosed And Repossessed No Or
Low Down Payment Credit Trou
bta 0 K Far Current Llstmg Call

Melg1 Co Pick Of The Week
Oye sv rlle 10 5 Acres With
Stream Great Getaway Or Rem
ote L1vlng Just $8 sool Rutland
Whiles Hill Rd 11 Acres $14 000
Or 9 Acres St2 000, Publi c Water Danville Briar Ridge Ad 7
Acres $13 000 On SA 325 Nice
5 Acres $16 000 Publ1c Water

On S5Kl They Do It Shouldn I
'lbu? Galll-888114-6999
METABOL:.ISE INT'L, INC /S 01·
faring Anyone Interested tn
Working For Themselves A Tre
mendous Opportunity Toll Free
877·7524418AMer2EDT

1-;:;:j:-;-:-:,:~~~=--_;-=:;­
and Lot for sale 2 bed
rooms 1 bath $690 00 Down! Lo·
cated on Knner Ad Contact Da
vld at 1 (800) 333- 6910
By Owner EKcellent Lo cation
Very Atlractlve Price $80s
Please Call From 6 to 11 PM

(304)675 4B08 or 675-3991
Sener Gel Of Course

Uh Oh

It's MAACO The Name Synony
mous With Auto Painting And Bo·
dyworks MAACO Is Now Award
lng Franchise In Select Areas
Across The u S II You want To
Be A Part Of The •1 Auto PaintIng Franchise In Amenca CALL

TODAY 1 800 296 2226 Fran
ch lse 'O,evelopment $65 000 Min
Cash Required www maaco com

Owner Reloca ting! Anlllous to
Sell Newly Remode led! 3 Bed

rooms 2 balhs $62 900 oo (740)
245 5341
Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres VIllage Middleport
secluded and pnvate appointment cali74D-992 5696

32D Mobile Homes

for Sale
VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours = Gr9at Income
Priced To Sell Free Brochure

1600)-B20-6782
WORK FROM HOME

Fuller

BrUSh""'ttMMs Reliable People To
Service Customers In Local
Area PT/FT Average S150 To
$350 Per Week Must Have

Beaulifut 2 Acre Lo t Cenlenary
Road An Area 01 Beau tiful
Homes $32 000 74~6-2927

Gallla Co.: Hunters! Oft SA 218
Williams Hollow Rr:l 68 Wooded
Acres W1th Stream $40 000
Cash Pnce Public Water Friend
ly Ridge Ad 15 Acres S14 000
Cdy Scnoots

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Info Take 10%
Off Ust Price On Qlsh Buys!
2 -20 ACRE TRACTS
For Only $22 000 Each Take
Both And Get D1scou nt Great
Hunting Land Full Of Deer Has
Road Access To Wayne National
Forest Land Contract Available

Trailer 741l-38B BOB9
1211.60 Homatle Suitable for ad
ding to existing home or storage
stru cture
Good
condition

$1 500 Call K&amp;K (304)675 3000
8AM-5PW675-62n alter 6PM

360

We Pay Ca&amp;h 1-800 213 8365,
AnthOny Land Co

RENTALS

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

14x70 HollyPark Mobllehome
2BR Large Bath/garden bathtub
separate shower large livingroom w/hlgh ce1!1ngs new carpet
kitchen has new top of the line
gas stove has gas heat central
air Installed In 1994 new steel
doors &amp;storm doors Asking

2 Bedroom House In Eureka
$275 00 plus OepoSif Plus Rater
encisl Call (740}-384 2560

NO APPLICATION FEESII 1-800-

$5 000 INSTANT UNSECURED
CREDIT CAROl GUARANTEED!
PLUS BONUS $170 GIFT CEA
TIFICATEI
1-BOO B95 7496
SLOW CREDIT? BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT? WE SAY VESt 1
B8B 805-9026
u•credlt Card Problems-- · Debt
Consolidation Stop Collection
Calls Reduce Payments &amp;
Finance Charges Avoid Bank·

ruptcy 1-800-270 9894

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Monlhly Paymenla 20 so•!. Save
Thousands-Of Dollars In Interest

No"""'IH TCC BOO 758 3844
CREDIT PROBLEMS? VISA
CA~O

• Guaranteed Approval
No Credit Check O%APA Re
qutrementa 18+ US Citizen Have
Checking Account Phone Appro·

val 1-800 737 0073 Issued By
Merrick Bank, SLC UT

1974 Kirkwo od 1211.60 2 bed
rooms Good Conditron $4 950 00
Call (740) 367 7308 Evenings!
1984 Carolina 2 eedrooms 2
Ba ths Good Cond1t1on $5 500

0 8 0 740 256-9123 Ask For
Maly
1987 Oakwood 3 BR 1 112 BA
Wasner &amp; Dryer New Heal
Pump Porch Carport (304)67 5

18331675 3003
19BB Clayton 14x70 38AI28A
Heat Pump Appl iances Good

Condlllon Must Sell $tO 900
Call K&amp;K (304)675 3000 BAM
5PMI675 6277 After 6PM
1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Also Has Expando, Very Nice

Mus I Sell I Asking S14 000 740
388 6335
1990 Clay to n 2 Be drooms A/C
New Carpet All Electric May
S tay On Re nted Lot 74 0 44 1
17
0221
1992 14x70 3 bedroom, Redman
mobile home heat pump &amp; skirt
lng included 740-742·2795

DON T SORROW MONEYI The

1994 Clayton 14x76 3 Bedrooms

Debt Management Club (Not ·For
·Profit} Can Pay Your Debts And
You Don't Have To Pay Us Back

2 Baths, Roman Tub CIA AU

EVER! Send SASE To DMC
Dept 4320 PO Box 4332 Valley
Vlllaye, CA 91817 818 783·1000
Elrt 4320

FREE MONEYI ll's True Never
Repay

Guaranteed $500 •
$50,000 Debt COnsolidation Personal N11ds Business 1 800·

511-2640

3588

230

Electric New 0 W Storage Build
lng Large Rented Lot Very Nice!
$1 9 000 Firm Call 740 256 9351
199~ Dutch Mobile Home 14x70
Vinyl Siding Shingle Roof Steel
Doors 2x6 Walls Thermopayne

Wlndo••· Deck $18,900 740
256 6980
1997 16x80. 38R 2 Balhs Gar
denTub CA Bx1 0 Build ing on

renled IOI 1304)675-4871

WANT A VISA CARD?? $12 000
Plus, Unsecured Bad tNo Credit
OKI No Doposll Required Evory.one Wolcomel Call 1-800-285-

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

385-9621
Homes 1-IIOQ-383-6882
New 1999 t-41C70 three bedroom
Includes 6 monlh!l FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer skirting
deluxe $tepa and setup Only

REAL ESTATE

$200 74 per month with $1150
_ , Cal I B00-837 3238
New Bank repoa only 2 left we

llnsnce cal 304-722-7148
Take Rl 35 Nonh From GaH!&gt;olls
For The Best Housing Deats In

- 310 Homn for Sale

~· :a~B~.-d~ro_o_m_s-.~~-B~a-l~h-.~La_u_n~d~ry
Room A/C, Garage, Nice Yard,
$311,000 740-387-(1241
Bradbury, 6 rooms barh full
basement, double garage, central
air, big yard 740-992-!80'7

By ownor, 725 P11g1 SlrHI, Mid·
dloport, ho... &amp; 3 lola, rrotst 10 _ , . , . , will lOll -

-

oul loll lor ue.ooo. 740·f922704, 740-992-S888

Southern Ohio
HOMES,

Frenchtown Apartmen ts, Now
Accepllng Application s For 1
Be droo m FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand
!capped, Equal Housmg Oppor
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vrllage Manor and
Rrverslde Apartments Jn Middle
port From $249-$373 Ca!l 740
992 5064 EQual Housing Oppor
tun1lles
Pilot Program Renters Needed 1
B00-383-6862
Nice 1 bedroom furnished apart
ment with pr1¥ate yard no pets

740 992-5633
NoW Tak ing Applicati ons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740

TECUMSEH

Exclusive

Redman

Homos And BEST HOMES Ex
clusMI Dutch Are Locoled On AI
23 ChiiiiCOihO. Juol Nonh Of The
At :J!i, IRt 23 Interchange Call

Toll Free Number, 888·443-7421,
And Ask For The CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION lnlormallotr' By
Mall Including A $1,000 Corllflcate On A Now Home
Oakwood Homea BJ:rbourlvllle,

WV 1499 Down Single Wide.
$999 Down Double Wide, 304
736-3409

~ea

programmong

8194
30

e Ft

Pine Trees $30 Each,

74()-446 2927
4 Cubs Tickets fo r Friday, June

251h Priced cheap (304)8822053
Cub Cadet Riding Mower Model
1872 19 HP Kohler Engine, 60"
Cut Oec:k Contact Jeff Harrison,
Director Ot Maintenance Holzer
Medk:al Center 740 446 5305

Huge inventory
Vinyl Skl"l"'l Kits $299 95 5 Gal
ton Aluminum Flbered Aoot Paint
$25 21 s Gat White Rool Paint
$57 69, Anch ors $5 Doors &amp;
Windows Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Paris lntertherm Miller &amp; Cole
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennett's Mobile Home

Supply 740 446 9416 Gallipolis
Ohio

3 Bedroo m Central A1r Full
Basement Camp Conley $350 +

Oeposll (304)675 3230
4 Bedrooms , AU Electric A/C,
$500/Mo Ptus Deposit 740 367

7802
758 Fir st Ave 1 Bdrm 1 Bath
Newly Renovated Washer Dryer
Hookup $275 00 Rent With De
posit 740 446 3481 Or 740 446
0101 After 5 OOPM
Hause For Re nl In Kana uga 2
Bedrooms $325lMo $325 De
poSit 740.446-4107
House Trailer Apartment Very
Clean No Pets Wate r &amp; Trash

Paid 74()-388 1100
Water loo, House , $325/Mo In
eludes Water &amp; d'arbage Deposit
&amp; References 740 643 2916

74Q-643 0122

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

PENTIUM

COMPUTERS Poor Credit 0 Kl

1-BOQ-52()-6364

Grubbs P1ano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Or 740 446-4525
Heritage Pool Table By BrunswicK
(Has Slat&amp; Top Regulation Size),
Apartment Size Refrigerato r
Queen Size Waterbed E11.erclse
Bike Norod1c Track Cardlo Glide,

MERCHANDISE

G E Washer &amp; Dryer

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS FENPHEN ALTERNATIVE TRI-PHE;N
GUARANTEED 100% SAFE
JUST RELEASED TO THE PUB
1 Month Buy

lion 1 B00-733-3286 COD S I
PRE PAY /CREDIT CARDS

Speed Queen And Automatic
washer $75 Whirlpool Automat
lc Washer $75, Kenmore Dryer,
Heavy Duly $75 Air Conditioner

Taylor Ice Cream Machine, 3
Head Baseball Card Collection,
Slng~s

&amp; Sels, 74Q-4&lt;6-2927

Metal Side Box 525 Delta Sox

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Call Any Time, Johnson s Used
Furniture

Antlquee

530

Antique Bottle Advertising Sale

$40 One 8 x6 6" Garage Door
Walerllne Special

3/4 200 PSI

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son, Ohoo 1-Boo-537-9528
Y2K FOOD STORAGE MADE
EASYII Feed YOUR Family For

Bu IIding
Supplies

550

Was $79 850

Gallpolls S250 oo Rent Wllh

am lo600pm,SUnday100to

$78 B50 1-800-408 5126

$150 00 Deposit 740.446.0761

6 00 p m 7.40 992 2526, Russ
Moore owner

Sleet Building• Never Put l)p

Steal Buildings, New Must Sell!
$10 971,
50x1DOx1B
Was
$27 850 Now $19 990 80K13!5x18

Now $48 950

100K175x20 Waa $129 650 Now

40x30 Was $6 212 Will Soli For
$3.497, 50x86 Was $17,890 Will
Sell $8 970 Chuck 1· 800 320·

2340

' 550-MHZ COMPUTER! Will

S1eei "Bulldlnga Never Put Up

Aequ!red You Pay All Ullllllea,
740 388-9162

Finance Bad Credit FREE Inter·
net Service I 5 Day&amp; Only I "Call

40x30 Was $8,212 Will Sell For
$3 497 50x86 Was $17 690 Will

Tol Free 1 877-E02 5180

Two bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $325 month, we pay wa
ter sewer and uash 740 992

AMAZINil

Sell $8 970 Chuck 1·800.. 320·
2340

5039

Brealcthroughltl Lose

Pounds

FaSI

pies Call 740-441-1982
638BrK:I&lt;Siraet
Rudand, OH 45775
740 742 2512

992 221B
1 Sdrm , Extra Nice Firs! Month
Free With One Year Lease
$279 00 Per Month, Plus Utllllles

740:446 2957

Candles Of All Styles And 1'(pes
Will Do Refllls Over 70 Varieties
Of Scents Hours Monday Sat
urday 10 9 , sunday 1 5 Also
Making Body lotions &amp; Shower

Gels I

I Bedroom Aparlment Slave I
Regrigerator Included 7.40·4462583
1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
DoWnstairs 1 1/2 BathS Air Con
dltlonlog All Utlltles Included Ex
cepl Electric, Prlyate Parking No

Pals, 74~&amp;-2602
1 Bedroom Upttalrs Apartment In

Syracuse, 1250/Mo . Depo&amp;ll &amp;
References Required 740·992

7104 Alter 6 ~~
t Bedroom , Partly Furnished,
Downtown

Point

Pllasanl (740)441-0n2
2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, we pay wo1or, sewer &amp; trash.
you pay gas &amp; oloclrlc, $200 par

monlh, $100 deposit, 740-992-

Approvodl Call Within 48 Hrs To

74()-992 5465

AKC tHack Labs, ! mates 7 wks
old llrst shots &amp; wormed, $200
7•0-9o&amp;9 o•o~. eves 740

tract&lt; door, 3 walk door. $6 861!
(BOO) 352 1045
See The New John Deere 200
Sarles Skid Steer Loaders 7 5%
JDC Financing, Carmichael a
Farm &amp; Lawn Inc 1·800-!594·

Pond

Supplll8

Blue Point Siamese l&lt;ltlena

$50 00 (740)446-44 12
CFA Beautiful Persian Reglatered
Kittens Mala &amp; Ftmala , While,
Cream &amp; Blue. Firat Shots 6 Vel

740-949-2836 or 74ll-949 204!
1990 Ford Taurus SHO 5 sp
good condition, $3 500, work 740742 2#1 ho"" 74()-742 8004
1990 Honda EX Good Condition,

$3 500. 74()-446-8239
1990 Lincoln Conllnental, Black
With Black Interior Moon Roo t

1993 GS 500 E Suzuki Low ,

Mtlos $2,10000 Low Molesl(740)- j
256 1791
"

Weol
1 KJ 75

East

1994 Honda 750 Magna Very
good ~ondHion like now $4,000
I304)675-240:W75-6735

•QJJ 086

• J

• 9 7 4 3
• Q 10 9 7

• 10 8 4

• QJ

I

1996 350 Banshee. ~una Good
Excellent Shape Needs New

Tlros $2 000 (304)862·3612

1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 8

740 4-46 936ot

1993 Gran Chor LTC High Mile
age Runs Good 740-245-9143
1995 Neon 73 000 Actual Miles
$4 200 1991 Grand AM Rebuilt
Motor $1 800 305 Motor, Hear

Clean 740-245-f239

Mercury, oil Injected 4 blade 1ur· •;
bo atalnless prop aerated live '
wells e~etra butt seal, •2 PlB .. '
thrust Motor Gu1de trQIIIng motO[, i(,
2 new balterles, 2 wide angled v,

l

$9 400, 74()-742-3602

nice. asking $8000 740 9921506 days or 740·949·2644
awnings
1997 Eagle Talon 28 000 Miles
Air Cruise Power Windows Sun·

roof. Call Aller 5 PM 740 44B
7411
1997 Ford Aspire Low Mileage

740 256-1'17 74()-251H1228

$10K sell lor $7 950,
2045

7~0

Livestock

630

Grain fed freezer beef Robmson
Farms Alfred Oh call after 6pm

740 985 3829
Outstanding Angus And Chlan
gus Bulls Reasonably Priced
Slate Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio

740-286-5395

94'-

1998 Pontiac Trans Am. Fully
Loaded/ Price Reduced to
$22 500 00 Great Graduation

Percheron Mare, Registered 3
Year Old Trained Harness &amp;

5addle $3,000 606-473--11BI

640

7470 Ext 7007

Hay &amp; Grain

Round Bales of hay tor sale,

(304)675-5072

TRAN SPORTATION

•

River campsite for 1ent and doCk w
alta tor boat, wltn w41ar, cement r
patios 740-992·5956
*

•
•
•

------------------~
Budgat Priced Tranam luion&amp; ~
and Engines All Types Access ·
To Over 10,000 Transmissions,

•

THE BORN LOSER

eve Jolnls, 740 245-lllln
New gas tanks &amp; bocly parts 0 &amp;
A Auto, Ripley WV (304)372
3933 or 1 800-273-9329

...

11-\1\~ ~ foaD~'&lt;i-\ ro~ ·~~.
IC£ , CI\OCOLI'\~, E~...EN~it0N "1

1 m~oc~u:.'£U..I\~
~~~ N-1 f&gt;aDN'{Ii\ FO~ " ~:,1,

or •

Campel'll
Motor Homes

1971 Camper 22Ft Double ..u
Axle, Sleeps 4, AC. Awning Ful ~
ly Equlped Real Nice $2400 ~

992-5024

BIG NATE
HEY' IS
THAT THE
YEAR BOOK?

740 256--6382. Alter 4 P.M
Fa ctory Wheel&amp; 1 Alloy, Rally,
Steel Buy, Sell Acker Wheal 1
800 994·3357 Worlds Moat
Complete Inventory www acker·
wheel com
Seized Cars From $500 Sport,
Luxury, &amp; Economy Cars Trucks.

More For

Cu~rent

LiSf1''Vs Call 1·800·311·5048 Ext

1183

original miles Onan Generato ~
(IC~

COld), Mo,

cro.wave full kitchen color TV
Bathroom $tlower, 5 beds Very
good condition. dependable

$7500 1304)675 8901
1979-Uft Coachman Motor
Home Dodge Chants New
Starter and Water Heater
Equipped wllh Roof Air Runs

1989 Motor Home Coachman 1..... j
1

0050

ta s Chevys Jeeps And Sport
Utilities Call Now! 800 772 7470,

1992 Dutchmen 5th Wheel ,1
Camper 30' Fully Equipped ,

720 Trucks for Sale
1979 Chovy Stepslde Truck, 305,
Automatlc $800 (304)675-S456
1984 International dump truck,
OT 466 Allison automatic. 33 000
GVW air brakes, 9' dump bed
snow plow brackets, good condl·

$9,950 740-258·1290

Concession Trailer Custom Built
8Ft X20 Ft 74().4.46.2927

1:

Home
Improvements

11 Hardy horolne
12 Photocopy

pepper

8 Couatlc:

11 Juz player

IIUbollnce

Kkl 21Pellrof
" lAwrence of
Arablo"

9 - Lingua
.....1. .,
10 Dog-ilriWn
Y8hlela

R.jecta
Poetic foot
Plllllmp
Preurveo
"- -llrot
you don't
oucceed
27 Roman

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

37 Decornpote
38 Go higher
than, lithe
auction
40 Sailor a

• Q

portrall

41 Actor Parker
42 Highly

Nloonod
dlah
43 Scottlah
Highlander
45 Ollle'a human
friend
46Ab0mlnoble
anowm1n

47 The - of
March
49 Southeut
Asian flollday
50 ActNaa
Alden
52 summer
cooter

53 Sllmpy'a pel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
,

by Luis Campoa

'

CMbrity Ciphar cryptogranw ar. c,.lted from QLIOiaUOn• by famout people PISI and present
Each lettef nlfNI ClpMI" aIandi; for lln04her Tod.y 1 clue L .-qual.s F

·o

C J N W

up w

J

J

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PWDHYFDOSOVOZB,
L J F D,

RB

V Y Y E

AH

zy

SAZ

zy

FYZ

RW

Y F VB

E 0 I 0

zv

MCY

POIIOXE

•, uu on the next round

orne from enher mmor sun And as

S Y M W

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "There os no1htng wrong In Amertca 1ha1 cannot be
cured by what ts nght 1n America • - Btll Clinton

'::~;~~'

S© tloil~ -lG t. !fS•

WOlD
tAMI

ltllteol ~ ClAY L POlLAN

O ~-rango

t.ner1 of !he
fovr terambl.d -da be
1.,.. 1o form fovr simple """d'

UNDE G

I I I' I

I I I~ I f.~.
l_....JP_,..L.L-.B-ML-I.J....-1~
..

One snobbtsh woman to
another, 'Conversations at
. - - - - - - - - - - - . - many parttes only gel better
R0 0 L I E
after certa1n parttes • • •••• "

I

I

Q

L~~-1-...1..--~.1-...1..--..L.....I. yov

Complete the chuckle qvolod
by filling In 1ha mouong words
develop lrom slop No 3 below

•

SCUM LETS ANSWUS
Should- hutch - Jomt · Dotage · THOUGHT
A friend and I got stumped whtle assembling a b1ke 1

Don I gel Slung by high pr&lt;ets r

1

guess two heads are better than one unless they are
devotd of THOUGHT

Shop rhe clos,(itd sect""'

_.,

..

22
23
24
25
26

garment

ASK YOliR DAD IF
I CAN SORROW
HIS CAR .

•

SERVICES

810

'&lt;OU CAN SORROW MONE'(
OR A 6ASE6ALL GLOVE, OR
A CAR, BUT 'fOU CAN'T
60RROW A DOG.

I DIDN'T
KNOW THAT..

I
I
I

,,'

IMPOUNDS Honda's Toyota'a,

Chevys Jeeps, And Sporl Utilities BOo-772 7470 EXT 7832

'(OU CAN'T SORROW A D06 ..

t-11, CHARLES . MA'{ I
BORROW '&lt;OUR 006
FOR THE DA'{ '?

'

388 9907

tion $6 500 740-992-2478

7Typeof
climbing

1"'s.....,,~..:,.,...:..,,;:,:..::,.,...:.....~

'

1996 Palomino COlt Camper Re·
frigerator, Slove, Awn ing, Excel
lent Condition Evenings 1•0

cartoon
Character
Floro and
founo
Hockneyod
Stlrrod up
Adv001le
London
woathor

2i C.M,
110811cally
30 Princely
lillian family
31 StUdy

PEANUTS

HONDAS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE IMPOUNDS Honda s Toyo·
EXT 6332

41

success

•

Looks And Drives Like Now 23 11
2 Fl Long $12,995 00 740 446

3t

a

1

goodl $3 500 (740) 245-5629 alter Spm

37

we di scove red yes te rday, a 3-2 d1 a
11n o nd break 1s m ore ltkely than a 3
I club spill
Howe ve r here you can have yo ur
v ttamtn ptlls and "'allow them too
Afte r wmmng trtck one play off
dummy 's two to p dtamo nds Do both
oppo ne nts loll o w throu ghout? If so,
pl ay a lhtrd dt amond You wtll usc the
spade ace as the dummy entry lor the
established dtam onds W1th thts lay
out tho ugh , WesJ dtsc.trds on the sec
ond round N o" you must turn to the
clubs, playmg three 1ounds ol that
sutl and hopm g for a 3-3 brea k
ThiS hne wms tf etther dtam ond s
are 3-2 or clubs are 3-3 Thts combmes to produce
79 2 chance ol

S-10 $100,740-448-9384

Coubla Roof AC

31

1 o take the whole dealtnto cons1de r
&lt;ltton Sometimes, there are two
• .tnngs to your bow net one And 11
t '• much better to comb1ne the m
owhenever p osSi ble
Tht s deal bears some marked stm
t lanltes to yesterday's , but the best
l me of play ts diiTerent Agatn, you
.tre tn three no-trump. a nd Wes t
I cads the heart queen What IS your
.tpproach 1
In the m odern game, N orth's
t hree-dtamond rebtd IS tnvttalt onal
hut not forc mg Wtth a stronger
It and, N orth etther begtns Wtlh a twod mmond strong -Jump sh1 ft response
or rebtds tw o hearts fourth-suit forct!Og , whtch artt fie tally sets up a ga me
I orce In both cases, N orth repeats hJS

1.

Tonneau Cover For 1995 Chevy

790

34 Nu.-.lghtod
35

Yo u have seve n lop lncks one
•, pade two heans, two dtamonds and
ttwo clubs The other two lncks mt ght

IC£, ~.~&gt;5l.ONI,u.E~V~i10N

ROBOTMAN

ITUESDAY

JUNE 151

1966 Chevy Chevelle Super

Sport, 3!50, 4 speed fair &amp; drlv
able condition 32 000 miles,
$3 600 firm call days leave mes-

sage 740-992-2478
1977 International Scout, $700

1304)576-2147
1978 Chev Corvette, T·Top, 3

Speed Aulo , L 48, 350 V8
1111,000 mllee (;l04)675-5195
1978 Chevy Impala 740 2561528

INIHHO CARS FROM 1&amp;00

ASTRO·ORAPH

,981 Olds Cutlass 1985 Cam·
ero Both need work Will sell to
gether with IOrTl8 new parts and 1

Wednesday, June 16, 1999
The year ahead could brtng you

who can

gallon of paint $2150 (304)B75-

greater at.:ccss to (!'ontacts

7158 after SPM thru week, any·
lime weelcenc;1

help you reail1.e your ambtUous atms
In the process, several new fnend
shtps wtll be developed
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Forget
about pohltcal or phtlosophlcal dtfferenccs and have fun wtlh your
f11ends 10day Keep all toptcs light
and breezy especially when meeltng

$500 oo

Compulor-$200 oo

(740)·258 1799 E¥anlnga after

600
19B5 Suklk Regal740 256-1831
1985 Olds Cullaaa Supremo.
Great Shape, New 350 Motor,
Power WlndOWI, Power 000fl,

$2,500, 740-367-o028
1987 Dodge 600E 7!,000 Aclual
Mil" AT, Air, PS , PS Now
Tires

Good Paint

No Rust

11200 (304)675-5403
1988 Dodge Colt, o4fdoor, Stan·
dard 4 New Ttlres, asking

RegistereQ Australian Shepherd

1,800 oo Call (740) 367 0285 al

Puppies, All Cplors, 740-388
0583

ler400 pm
1989 Toyota Supra Turbo, 8 1K.
$7 000 Excellent Condition

(304)675 1183 Alter 5PM

...,_llulldort

1993 Chev Pick-Up Short Bed,
1
h:4, Excellent CondllionJ Retai l

Build new or repa ir old, no job
too &amp;mall or large Major credit ·

Value S13,BOO, Asking $11 900
740-448-7289 •

cards
IWV029582
Cell
(304)458 1049 BP 1528-&amp;og:!
'

1994 Ford Ranger Extended Cal&gt;
4 WC, Pick-Up, Excellent Condl·
tlon,l12 000, 7o00-379-2880
1994 GMC Jimmy SLS Loaded
40R E•cellenl Condition High
Miles $9,400 Call before 9 pM
(304)6751'948

"PIPE" DAniGHT IN000ft81
Br'Ohlon Any Soiling Nature II,. '
Kltchenl, Htllway1 Bathroomol
Llko A Brlg~t CoiNng Flllturo, Bul
Wllhout El,.lrlc11yl Tho Orlalnal
SUNPIPE . • Since IU1 .~roo
Brochuro 1-BOo-W-478h25

1996 Ford E350 Cargo Van ,
47000 Mlloo. 16' So• With Atumt-

840 Electrical and
Refrlgll'ltlon

num Rln'\P, Air, Cassette, 460 v.

8, Excellonl Condition $15 850,
740 379·2995

RasldonUal or commercial wiring
now aorvtco or ropalrl Meehl&lt; Llcenud elecrrlclan

1998 Hondo Rocon 1304)5762505

Ald•nour

Eloclrlctl, WV000308, 304-875
1786

someone for the first ttme Gem1m,
treat yourselfto o btrthday gt ft Send
!he requtred refund form and for your
Aslro-Graph predtcuons for the year
ahead by matllng $2 and self·
addressed Slamped envelope toAslroGraph. clo thts newspaper, PO Box
1758, Murray Htll Slatton. New
York, NY 10156 Be sure to stale
your Zodiac Sign
CANCER (June 21-luly 22)
Because your ' famtiY ts so spec tal,
mvrte someone who 1~ away from
home gver to your place to sha10 tn
1he good nmes It's worth far more to
1h1s person than malertal @tfls
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Your
strong lellderslup quai1Ucs.contmuc to

'
•

,..

,..
:"1
'(CU~ ~IS\' I':&gt; J.f.&gt;i ~~()I

1978 3211 MotorHomo 37,000

Eagle VIsion TSI 1993 Model
Green Automatic, $8,000 OBO,

·~~_utility &amp;

I

more $1.500 740-992 5847

1976 Dodge motor home, 20' ,
good condition, $3500 call 740 1

FL 337B1 727-484-7406

--

"'

620 Wanted to Buy
Old Motorcycles. Motorscooters
Motorscooter Parts (Cushma n
preferred) Contact 0 Mitchell
5568 80th PI No Pinellas Park

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1998 Dodge Dakota Spon $150 '·

1997 Thunderbird Sport Coupe
70 000 miles ACIPB/PS deluxe
V·8 beautiful car, sunroof, 1111

Pass

Operung lead

Ba01 boat 40 hp Mercury trolling ).:

Tonneau Cover For 1997

Pass

•-&gt;

4 Or.~&lt; letter
5 Elernolly- I Cloth dooler

It doesn' t mauer how well you

••

Auto Parts &amp;
Accenorlee

I •
3.

Norlh

3 --time

~ .now the probabthly tables of you fad

20 Ft Boat Cuddly Cabin with iL

760

West
Pass
Pass

2 Willingly

l:ly Phillip Alder

~

motor. swivel seats, live well , . I"

1996 Plymouth Breeze 50 000
miles white with gray Interior au·
tomallc air amlfm cassette, vary

1 Mre Trum1n

25 Skltllah
21 AulhOr Hor.Uo
32 In progNII
33 ......,tot of the

II

kept, eover, white with teal green /
melal flake, showroom condition,

1995 Pontiac Flreblrd A/C Au·
tomallc, V· 8, T· Tops 54 000
Miles
Excellent Condition.

After 4 00 PM 740 441 -0996

NUMIIR

1996 17 Nitro bass boat 90hp •

Run, 740 446·7278

1995 Z 28 Camarro, T-:rops,
Loaded, A.sklng $12,000 oo CaN

TAKE A

- ;,

nsn Hnders, one ownar. garage

20 Aug. houro
21 co-

~Ngraph

9

arm

·rwo chances are
!better than one

Trailer $10 500 080 (304)773'- ~
5178 Allar 6PM
' li"

$11 000 740-448-2300

II
3NT

Engine Good Condlllon, $2,000 '
(304)675-5091
~
1989 19 Fl Bayllnor Caprice. ,

1992 Geo Storm Good Condlllon,
AIC , Tinted Wlndowa, 740 2455158

••

BARNEY

15ft Trlhaul Boat, 85HP, Mercury :

Open Bow 200 HP, 110 Very 1

740-386--8728

South

- - - - -··
750 Boet1 l Motol'l
for Sale
~=,:-.-=-...,.,=..,..,.-- ,.

1992 Corsica Very Good Condl

54 Coat

PrwYloua PUDlo

14 Small holo
55 Concelw
15 ....nlth M,..
54111 Mothor 57 Mr. Wlleon'o
17 A.,._ to land
_,,
In CoiH.
18 Edgar Allin DOWN

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer. South

':---:---:-:-~---:-....----.Jo ! ""' !&gt;

.,

tlon S2 600 1304)576-2749
1992 Geo Metro Automallc AJC,
Good TilliS New Brakes, $2,200,

n

1999 Foramen 450 4x4, Electrk;

Shill 17 Hrs , 21 Miles $5 295 J

Asking $4 295 Call 740 446

~1; •§

I

740-245 5659
Cvllnder Automatic 4 Speed
Transmission, AM/ FM Stereo
Tape, Air Bag Air Conditioning,
Anllloclc Brakes , Power Door
Locks Windows Drivers Seat
Cruise Conlrof Tilt Steering, Ga·
rage Kept Wilh 80 000 Miles

I

1996 Suzuki 600 Katana 607
milts, front damttQe, black/purple '
$2700 080 740 992 1506 days
or 7-40-949 2644 awmlngll
,

• Q 10

South
• 9 8 6 2
•AK
• 8 5
IAK652

I

~1304:::.:C)~45::B:._1~7.::93::.._~---- -:•

(304)675-7948

Seal Point &amp; Slameso killona lor
1810 740 992 3216

t 990 Cougar, high miles runs
great, looks good, V-6, $2100,

Nortb
08 15 1111
I A 4 3
• 52
• AK6j32
• 7 3

EEK&amp;MEEK

740-446-8530

Cars $100 ·$500 &amp; Up Police
Impounds Hondas, Chevys
Jeeps And Sport Utllllyl Good
Condition! Call Nowl 1 800 772

Fish

Birds,

264oiOWIS

1988 Honda 250 SX 3 Wheeler
serious caners Only After 4 PM

Glltll (740)-'146--4548

Station Wagon 4 ely Aatomallc,
1500 00 Flrml 1987 VIking Popup
Camper, Sleepa 4 Stove, Sink,
Water Heater, Electric Hockup,

Sup 1·4PM, Mon -Sat 11 AM8PM Fish TankiPot Shop 2413

1989 Ford Thunderbird, 3 8 auto
sliver with gray Interior, 7.4 000
m1lea. alr cru1se amlfm cassette,
good tires very clean S2.eoo,
uo 992· 1506 days, 740 949

1960 Suzuki 750 15,000 Milos
Good Condtllon, $600 1981 Yamaha 850 Fully Droned 28 000
..... $1 200 740-441-otl29

1111 Gall!&gt;olls OH We Cellverl

day

949·0506

Rat· Terr ier
Puppies
Talis
Do cked 1st shota, wormed
175 oo each Call before 9PM

74()-

Stonge Bulltlero Space

19B4 Ford Ranger V-8 long bed,
$450 00 1985 Plymouth Reliant

Ootnplele Air Conditioner, 3 1/2
Ton 2 Gas Furnaces 740 4487404 Cel Anylme

Don1 Cei tJo We Bolh LoHI
448-6308, 1-800-291-oo98

Rawhide Catlle Trailer 16 Ft Pull

l)lpo 74Q-388-8536

319-3323 Ex1 4420

ChecJ&lt;od, $150 Each, 740-2561311

Central Air Condllloning Addtd
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Syatmea &amp; Furnacea, Heat
Pump1 Cerltrled Ina taller It You

New Holland 258 Hay Rake, New
Holland 477 Hay Bind 641 Ford
Tracto r Set Cultivators, Sickle
Bar Mower For Farmall Cub 740446-7787

1 male Eskimo spitz puppy, sho
S!SO ready for good home

Have Your 1a.t Months Payment
Waived! Call Buyacom Now At
800-498·3267 Alk For Extension
14000

COOL DOWN

(740)-643-0122 8 00 4 00 aller
5 00 (740)-643-2916

560 · Pets for Sale

COMPAQ COMPUTERS! $0 - Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant
Down, Low Monthlv Installments! 1304)B75-2083
Complete Home And Buslneu
Systems Available! Free Printer
With Every Purchll'l Credit
Problema 01&lt;1 Almost Everyone

Cat· 553 Sheep Foot Roller·

Pollee Impounds, And Tax
Repo &amp; For Listings Call 1·800·

4 AKC Boxer pups ra
740 742-8101

Candle Creations

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur
nlshe d and unfurnished, security

7806

10·200

Quick

Dramauc Aesuna 1COo/. Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam·

Apartmentl
for Rent

Apartme nt

Easy

For Sale Shenniu 4/25 (25 HP 4
WD) TractOr, Ca\1740-592 4310

CARS $100 $500 &amp; UP POLICE

Buy or sell Riverine Ant1ques .
1124 E Main Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

METABOLISM

JD335 NH630 NH650 MF1580

710 Aut01 for Sale

2 Bdrms A/C No Pets Rental
Aelrence Required, Water &amp;
Trash Furnished 1 Mile From

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Balhs, In Port·
er Area Oeposlt &amp; References

Credit Approval JCI219 JD720

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-2455121

Needed, 74ll-992-508B

Merchandise

June Used Hay Equipment Sate
4 9 ~. Financing With John Deere

Block brick sewer pipes wind
ows, lintels etc Claude Winters,

992-2167

540 Miscellaneous

610 Farm Equipment

Square Bales of Hay For Sale

800

1989 Chevrolet Corsica, maroon
extertorllnterlor 90 ooo miles,
good tires very clean $1500
OBO 7-40 992·1506 days or 7&lt;10·
949-26-&lt;0 evenings

4223

NOW For FREE Catalog
330B002

40xBOx14 Was $17.500 Now

446-1637, 740-446-3437

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

$20 00 out oflhe flekJ (304)7822540

Pleasant Armory Quality Oeaktrs

2 Bedrooms Addison Pike $220/
Mo $100 Oepos1t No Pets 740.

Road

ONLY 89 Cents A Meal Call
cious Tasting Emergency Food
Syppiles, Immediate Delivery Call

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned 5260 $300. sewer
water and trash Included 740

And Auellon 61281h, 9-4, Polnl

Strawberries. You Pick Only
Closed Sunday, Tay lo rs Berry
Patch 740·2o45-90o47 286.4 Kerr

Efec:tedllron Home Builders 1

$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fittings In Stock

740-448-4039 740-446-10404

Fruit• &amp;
Vegetables

580

GAA A\lallab\e Call Unltad Phar
maceuttcals NOW For lntorma·

$21 95 Par 100 1' 200 PSI

u sed Furniture /Appliances Ott
Bulavllle Pike On Keeler Road

$125 740 381Hl645

30 x40 xW Painted Steel Sk:llng
Galvalume StMl Roofing , 15 11.8

7795

International Bears Teanle aean18 Set, McDonald's 1998 &amp; 1999
Complete Beanie Sets, Super Nlntendo System 74G-446-0350

Yamaha Stereo Keyboard, Does
Everything Perfect Condition !

2 Months Gel t FREE I AS SEEN
ON 1' V CELLASENE H-VIA -

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PHILLIP

..•

.·.

CAPRICORN (Dec n-Jan 19) If
you have somelhtng profitable on the
back burner. gtve tt prtollly atlentton
today Your greatest gams are ltkely

·be very pronounced today Now ts the
lime to dtsplay lhese qualtltes w1th
those who can help shape your future
VIRGO (Aug 2) Sept 22) In
reward for lookmg out for the welhll&lt;

ul someone who

been hovmg n

ha.~

difficult ttmc fendtng for htm 1&gt;r herself. larj!e dl\•tdends could he tn the

niTing

rrom another

for Y11U today

s&lt;M.m:c
LIBRA(Sept 23-0ct 23) Someone who ha.; excellent connccl~tms
mtght tnv1tc you 10 Jotn h1s or her

pluns for the day Nol only wtll you

make

snmc good cuntacls. you'll
have a wonderful ume 1n rhc proce~~

SCORPIO (Oct
Through

an

24 Nov

undisclosed source

22)

who

has your he&lt;t tntel&lt;st at heart, your
chances lor fulfilling an ambtltous
objecttve look good tnday You may
fmd out who the benefactor WllS Ia!
er
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 21-Dcc
21) A meelmg of the mmds wtth
someone who has been m oppostttoo
to your plano Will he responsible lor
the success you will garner today Be
open-minded

1

to come from somewhere other than
sources

your usual

AQUARIUS (Inn 20-Feb I9)
EYCn though you mtght lntttnlly hove
mtsatvm&amp;s aQ&lt;lut gotng along wtth
the will of the maJOrity today, relax
and enJOY yourself wtth them 11 II
turn out lo be a great day
PISCES (Feb 20-Mmh 20) Recogmztng lhe true value of yoOr lalenls
and abthttes wtll put you m a bellcr

bargnmmg pos1110n today Those who
need your servtces wtll he wdhng tv
pay who11hey' re worth
ARIES ~March 21 - Apnl 19) Hap
pter cucumstances

and an ascendmg

populanty on your soc1alltfe should
be on the pse lodny helptng to make
yesterday's problems a dtm memory
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 21fl
Even though you mtght not be l&lt;&gt;tal
I• m accord wtlh a fomtly member's
\ 1cws nr posH ton, stand by hun or her
ngo.nst out!udc nppus1tmn Your support Will for~C bond !O of lo ve

II

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•

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Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

:

.....

Wednesday
Tuesday, June 15, 1999

'

New Forest Run
UMC shelter house
dedicated recently

!TIME OUT FOR TIPS\
BY BECKY BAER, EXTENSION
AGENT ' Family and Consumer Sci·
ences/Communlty Development
"Why don' t you ever listen to me?" Is
this something that · is said in your home?
·
Good communication sk ill s arei mperati ve
for family members to understand each other and get along. Here .are
some things that cari be done to make family communi cation more
effective .
·
.
Stress the positive: Don't dwell on the negative. Uplift each other
with genuine praise. Family members will feel more accepted and
have more sel f-dtee m from si ncere encouragement and compli ments.
Notice nonverbal cues such as body posture, gr&lt;tures and feelings. Take a good look at how the person is talki·ng or listening. The
majority of our communication comes th roug h nonverbal ways .
Read between the lines for the emotions that are bei n ~ co nveyed.
. Liste n! Really listen ! Concentrate on what is hei ng sa id. Cu rb the
temptation to think ohead about what you want to sciy.
Be a . reflective li ste ner. Rephrase what the p ~r~nn just said to
make sure that you understooU it L:orrec tl v.
· lm:orporatc the "Te ll me" method o..f starlin g a conversat ion .
\Vhcn you think something is bothering sO me one. en.courage them
to talk by say ing. "I c.an tell somt:thing is on you r mind.. Do you want
to talk ~thout it ?" Thi s may ope n up the comm unicJtion process. If

the person docs not want to talk about it. respect that. hut let them
know that you are there to listen if they change their mind .
!\void "yo4" .messages . Explai n how a behavior affects you. such
ns " I become upset when thi s happens.'' Stay away from ac~:usation s
like,. "You make me upset."
Don 't bring up pas t prohlem s. When disagreein g, stay on the
problem at hand. Diffic ulties from the past sho.uld be forgotten.
Promote open c&lt;immunknt ion. All family members should feel
free to cx rress their feelin gs with everyone else in the farnily . Avoid
onc-wav dictate~
Share personal thou ghts. dreams and goals. E~ plaining how you
felt in certain situations\:an help ot her famil y mclflbers real ize th3t
others have gone through similar cin.: umswnccs. Thi s sharing can
lead to strong family bonding.
Be dign ified·and respec tful. Handle &lt;lisagreemcnts without criti cism or judgmen ts.
Be accept ing. Each person in the fam il y is a unique perso n with
. pos itive qualities and talents. The differen ces among famil y memhcrs help the famil y as. a unit become stronger. ·
· Be empatlictic. Try to put yourself in the other person's placcc
How do they fee l? What do they think '! By showing empathy, you
can understand {)!hers better.
Maintain a sense of humor. Don't take yourself too seriously.
Enjoy your life and your family.
St rong famili es have members who are good communi cators. We
should try to practice these techniques to have more effective communication within our families.

60· YEAR MASON HONOREC t • Wallace Bradford, ti 60-:year member of the Masonic Lodge was
recently recognized by Shade Fliver Lodge 453, F&amp;AM.
.. .
.·
'·
He was presented a·certilica te , issued by the Grand Lodge of Ohio, Douglas A. Brenneman, grand
~aster, by Wes Arbaugh , masll" of Shade River Lodge. Bradford al'o received a 60-year membership
ptn.
·
Attending the presentation c eremony held at the Bradford home on ·sunny Hollow Road were~ left to
right, Jim Nelson, Danny Spur lock, Virgil Windon, Herman Carson, Roger Keller, Arbaugh, and Wah
Manley.

Alfred United Methodist Women hear program on widows
Thelma H cndc r~on kU th ~.: pn )gr::tm . :·A Wid ow 's Ri ght - , 1\
Widcl\1/s Mtght: Human Rig ht s ~· ~s
Cove nant's Renew al." · when th c

Alfred United Methodist Womc'n
met at !he Church flll June !:{. Os i . .:
Mac Foi lrod and Nc.lli e Parker read
Scripture from Jcn.: mi,th and Luke !.
Marth a Poole. r:J nrcncc 1\n n
Spencer. Sarah Cald»c ll anu Nin a
Robinson acted the parts of Anm L
Tamar. Rmh , and Ahigai l who ar e
qui lting a quilt for a pnor. ynun g
unwed mother.
Discuss iot1 was held on ho •,-\'
people can help the poor. al ien·;.
widows, vrphans. and thos~ Lk nic d
their rights. Spiritual help. a~s" ;-

The famil y of Evelyn Stos ve.
Syracuse, surprised her with a party
.in observance of her 85th birthd.ay
on Sunday. May 23..
Anending were her four childn !n,
Sarah Neigler, John • and Martha
Dudding, Racine, Eher and Shir.l cy
Stowe and Linda Me Kenzie, Colu m-

tancc in obtaining l ~gal ri ghts, and
phys ical aid arc all needed, 11 was
nutcd. ·
The busin ess mee ting opened
with prayer by Spencer; welcome .
was by President Parker a nd the
UMW Purpose was read by all ; Secret;iry Poole read the May minutes;
Treasurer Follrod gave the treasurer s report. Friendship calls recorded
were 14.
Di scussion was held on donation
to Fcsti val of Shating, phone calls
listL'd as · friendship calls, and the
t:o rning change of pastors.
Henderso n gave the mission
.report on "Witnesses": Laura
McCray who leads a feeding pro: ::-.;:.:::;&lt;:.:,, :. ='·: ':. ::,
bus, Others attending were her
grand children, Rodney Neigler, Don
and Ruth Dudding, Dan Du~ding;
l uy Ma11hews, Sheri Thompson.
Two grandson s, Randy Dudding of
Atlanta, Ga., and Jay Stowe of
Columbus called to wi sh her a happy
bit1hday. ·

.Community Calendar.,.-· The Commu~ity ·Calendar is published as a free service to. non-profit
gwups wishing to annou·nce meetings and special events. The calendar is not ·
dc&lt;igncd to promote sales or fund rai sers of any type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number
of days.
TUESDAY
RhlTLAND .- Rutland Village Council , 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
POMEROY -

M e ig ~

County Board of Elections, Tuesday, 9 a.m.

POMEROY - Immunization Clini c, Tuesday. I to 7 p. m., ·at Meigs
Cou flt y Hea lth Department. Every child to be accompanied by a parent/legal
guardian,. Take immunizati on record.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - American Red Cross Bloodmobile at the Mei gs Cciuntv
Senior Citi7.ens Center in Pomeroy Wednesday, 1-6 ·p.m .
·
THURSDAY
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM spec tal meeting Thursday.
7 p.m. at the lodge hall with work in the Master Masons degree.
SATURDAY
. SALEM CENTER - Star Grange 778, fun night and fire degree pracltce. Potluck at 5:30 p.m. followed by meeting. Members to take items for
food bank.
·
CARD SHOWER
Robert Elberfeld will celebrate his 88th birthday, tomorrow, June 16. Cards
ol well wishes may be sent to ·him at 43660, Hart tnger Road, Pomeroy,
45769.
.

Local residents awarded URG scholarships

.

gram - Luke 14: 12; Joetta Davis
who works on the street with
TRUNK (Togeiher Reac hing Unfortunate Needing. Kindness), and Denni s Morgan who is an educator at
.Youth House in Bosnia.
Follrod had the prayer calendar
and chose Deborah Lindsay who
works i'n evangelism in Juneau,
Alaska. The society signed a birthday card for her.
Spencer was hostess and served
sandwiches, chips, pineapple and icc
cream bars.
.
The neKt meeting will be July 13
with Sarah Caldwell program leader
and Charlotte Van
. Meter hoste&lt;s.

Dedication of the new shelter
house and picnic tables at the Forest
Run United Methodist Church was
held June 6 with a carry-in picnic
dinner. '
The serVice of dedication began
with prayer by Pastor Chad Emrick
foll owed by group singing of
"Church in the Wildwood ." Pastor
Emrick then read a letter from the
Alfred and Hilda Yea~ger family,
whose grandson, Gary Yeauger was
the donor for the project.
The shelter house was built in
memory of the late Alfred and Hilda
Yeauger who were longtime active
members of the church and commu:
nity.
Chicken biscuits and beverages
were provided by the church with
each famil y bringi ng a covered dish.
Four flav ors of homemade ice
cream, made by Randy and Dawna
Arnold were served at the close of
the meal.
The group sang "Happy Bit1hday" to Stacie Arnold who was celebrating hi s birtbday that day.
Those attending were Kathleen
Scott. Mary K. Roush, Helen Baer,
Carolyn Sal ser. Mary' Nease, Dan
Nease, Jacoh, Caitlin and Ben
Nease, Mr, and Mrs. Stacie Arnold,
Gr~nt and Alaine Arnold, Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Arnold and Kari , Mary
Bell Warner, Jenny Warner, Amber .
Findley, Roger Nease, Jean Nease,
Wilma Reiber, Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Hollon, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Wiggins, Sandi Hawley, Alex and Sarah
Hawley. Jane Harris, Mr. and· Mrs.
Jim Anderson, Myca Michael, Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Varney, Bridget Varney. Rick Hauber, Cassie Hauber,
Mr. and Mrs.. Jim Freeman, Chelsea
and Victoria Freeman, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Knight, Kathryn Mora, Evelyn
Freeman, Florence Howard, Kath·
leen Overholt, Chad, Emily and ·
Annette Emrick.
':::·:'

,.,..
•'
. ·~~ .
Also attending were great-grand- . Lisle, Mary Lis!e and Jeame Allen
children, Olivi and Ellie Dudding, and grandsons , Tyler and Dylan
Tim, Sarah and Madison Matthews, Allen.
Samantha and Todd McKenzie,
Gifts, cards and flowers were preMatthew and.McKenzie Thompson; sented to the honoree.
sisters, Ruth Lewis arid Blanch
Hickel and sister-in-law, Bernice and
Kenneth Theiss; Sara Roush. Janice ·

'

Weather

Phil Jackson named Lakers coach, Page 5
Are memory lapses a trouble sign? Page 7
Philip Sporn plant honors student, Page 8

Today: P. Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 501
Tomorrow: Rain
High: 70s; Low: 501

I

-Page4

•
Meigs County's
Volume

so, Number 8

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single

Copy· 35 Cents

Rutland ·council dis·cusses mitigation, cabin
l.o cation
.
.
.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Rutland Village Council discussed its FEMA flood
mitigation prograin, plans for its 200th birthday celebration and the future location of the Harder cabin when it
'mel in regular session on Tuesday evening.
Misty Casto, who "Ill" administers the FEMA program
on behalf of Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development Distric~ reyiewed the status of the project,
which involves relocation and elevation of homes within
the village's flood hazard areas.
. Casto said that she is in the process of closing on sev·
eral more homes, and presented council members with a
list of participants in the program and the status of each
project.
.
'
•
.
Margaret Edwards 111et wit11 council to report .that she
.had appealed an offer to purchase salvaged property from
her home, and council reviewed and approved a salvage .
list submitted by another participant, Bill Willi am son.
Council also approVed a $30 invoice submitted by
Howard Birchfield. The invoice represented repairs to the
Birchfield air conditioning system which was apparently'
damaged when lhe home was elevated early in the project.
· Councilman Jay Dewhurst said that council should
ltdopt a policy to handle any future claims arising from

Andrew, that an emergency meeting be held wit~ council
members and firefighters before the cabin is moved, but
the motion was defeated, with all members of co uncil
except Dewhurst and Andrew voting against it.
In a separate action, council appointed Dewhurst as the
representative of council to meet with representatives of
the fire department, garden clubs, churches and other
organizations in Rutland to discuss future development in
the community.
Dewhu'rst suggested the meeting, saying that fraction alization in the CO~l!munily should be addressed, and tha)
all organizations in the community should meet together
to discuss cooperative efforts.
Eads announced that the Rutland. Bicentennial Com'mittee will meet on June 22 at 7:30 at the Civic Center,
and urged public. participation. Council approved purchasing a half-page advertisement in a special coll)mem·
orative historical edition of The Daily Sentinel, to be published in July in honor of Rutland's bicentennial.
Eads said that WYVK-FM would be broadcasting live
from the Bicentennial celebration on August 28, and Mar·
garet Edwards said that the U.S. Postal Service will be
offering a special commemorative stamp cancellation for

damage incurred by the contractor on the project. Casto
"It's been voted on and that's where it's going," Eads
said, and Dewhurst agreed, that. such claims should be said. "Besides, it would look stupid in front of,the Civic
referred to the village, which will, in turn, work with the .Center."
contractor to see that reparations are made.
·
Dewhurst, on lh~ other hand, said that he would, be
David Davis and other members of the Volunteer Fire willing to discuss other locations, but noted that the vilDepartment addressed council members, asking that they lage l)wned other propeny that would be appropriate for a
reconsider locating the Harder log ~bin on a site adjacent firehouse.
to the Rutland Ci&gt;&lt;ic Center.
'
Council member Tammy Searles said that the village
The cabin has been purchased by the village through would like to develop a park ~~round the cabin, including
the mitigation program, and the village plans to move it a playground, and said that the location adjacent to the
·next to the civic center, although the ·future use of. the Civic Center was the mast appropriate place for such a
building is still undecided. Proposed uses have included park:
using the, building as a meeting center for public events
Council member Judy Denny noted that the village had
and alumni gatherings, and as a branch library for the owned the propeny for five years, and asked the fire
Meigs County District Public Library.
department members present last night why the issue was
· The fire department, meanwhile, has requested that the only n~ coming up.
village make the land where the cabin will be located
Davis noted that the subject had been discussed at preavailable to them so that a new firehouse can be built out· vious council meetings, and said that the i$sue of relocat·
ing the firehouse had only .come up since flooding threatside of the flood plain.
.
.
Last night, Davis suggested that the cabin be placed in ened the.building a year and a hal(ago. Department memfront of the civic center, but Mayor JoAnn Eads said that bers also say that they have outgrown the current fire·
the location had been decided by council and voted on by house on Larkin Street.
council, and would not be reconsidered.
"Remember, that's your $150,000 fire truck as well as
Huston Brothers Construction plans to move the cabin ours that's in danger when it floods," Davis said.
to its new location within the next several days, Eads said.
Dewhurst inade a motion, seconded by Martin

Continued on page 3

Deceased Middleport teacher· remembered
The Peoples Bank of Middleport ·
recently presented Middleport Elementary School with a plaque in
honorof Barbara Log~n. former secState
Carey, R·Wellston, was appointed last week to the
ond grade teacher whose class won
Operating
. Conference Committee by House Speaker Jo Ann
the blltlk's stock picking contest
Davidson. R-Reynoldsburg. The budget, House Bill 283, makes operating . three years in a row.
appropriations for the .biennium beginning'July 1, 1999, and ending June
Logan, a former Pomeroy resi· ·
30, 20()1, and proVides authorization and conditions for the operation of deht, died on Feb. 25; 1998.
state programs .
The bank sponsors the ·stock
The Joint House-Senate Conference Committee was appointed to hear picking contest each year with the
deliberations on the operat,ng budget and work out a compromise between
winning class receiving $400.
the House and Senate versions.
.
Since Miss Logan died during the
"The Senate has made some very good recommendations. However,
1997-98 school year, the money was
there.are still some differences that need to be worked out between the two donated to her memorial fund for
versions," Davidson said. "John Carey has been a valuable asset during Middleport Elementary,
FORMER TEACHER HONORED - Members Sellers; second row • Principii Don Hanning,
the budget process and J am very confident in his ability to help foster
A new public address system for of Mlaa Barbara Logan's final second grade Kayla Jacka, Katie Pltleraon, Usa Tiemeyer,
lc;c•mpron~isc on this bill."
,
.
the school will be purchased with ell.. at Middleport Elementary School partlcl· Chris Goode, Josh Eakins, Tala Maloy, Twlle
Can;y, who is ch.Urman of Human Services Finane~ Subcommit- the contributions made in her mem - pated In a recent praeenlatlon honoring the Childs, second grade taacher 1WIIa Childs .a nd
tee,
he is ready for the new appointment.
ory.
teacher who died on Feb. 25, 19!18. Preaent Sharon Smith of Paoplea Bank, Middleport;
"I want to thank Speaker Davidson for placing her trust ancl·confidence
Members of her last class were were, from left: front row • l'y!et Uttle, Tlffllny third row • Cornelius Engllah, Maaon Conde,
in 'my abilities," Rep. Carey said. "It will be our job not only to gain conpresent for the presentation.
Simpson, Katie Evana, Patti ·VIning, Michael Holley Geary, Phillip Sleaon and David Caacl• .
·
sensus,. but to make a good bill even better.
Carey noted that both legislative versions of the budget bill received
strong bipartisan support.
This Saturday, Meigs Countians will join thou- is coordinating one site in the event.
ments will be served afterwards.
"We must continue to make sure
In Meigs County there will be several clean-up
AI Reedsville, volunteers will meet at the
that we contain expenditures while sands of other volunteers in six slates from Pitts·
burgh
to
Cairo,
Ill.,
in
the
11th
annual
Ohio
River
sites.
Prospective
volunteers
or
people
seeking
Forked
Run Ohio River Launch Ramp and lunch
providing fair and dependable state
Sweep.
more
information
can
contact
the
Meigs
County
will
be
held
at noon at the Forked Run State Park
services for the people of the Ohio,"
The
River
Sweep
is
a
gigantic
riverbank
Recycling
and
Litter
Control
Office
at
992-6360
'shelter
house.
P,articipants will get T-shirts and
Carey said.
cleanup
of
the
waterways
in
the
Ohio
River
Valor
stop
in
at
117
E.
Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy,
refreshments.
Carey is one of six legislators to
u.a~
ley. Last year, more than 21,000 volunteers in' the behind the Holzer Oinic.
The Reedsville area River Sweep is sponsored
sit
on
the committee: ~nl2 Sections • 12 Pages
six states bordering the Ohio River collected
Volunteers must sign a liability waiver f&lt;!fm by the Meigs County. Fish &amp; Game, Forked Run
10,000
tons
of
trash
along
both
banks
of
the
river
and
anyone under 18 years of age must have Sportsmens Club and the Meigs County IKES
House of Representatives.
and its tributaries (over 3,000 miles of shoreline). parental permission. Each participant will receive Oub, ·and will be administered by Tom Hayman.
Pslr wslks swsy from
The River Sweep will be held Saturday mo111· a free River Sweep T-shirt and there will be light
Racine, Pomeroy · and Middleport s'Yeep
Chillicothe work csmp ing from 8:30·11 :30 a.m. Volbnteers should wear . ·refreshments at each site.
events will be administered by Larry Circle, Hal
Three sites, Racine, Pomeroy and ·.Middleport, Knee'n and Kenriy Wiggins, respectively.
CHILLICQTiffi (AP) - Two old, comfortable clothes and shoes or boots.
are administered by the Meigs County Litter ConTo volunteer at Reedsville, call Tom Hayman
inmates escaped from the ChilliCQthe GIOlles and trash bags are provided.
Correctional Institution early today,
"Each year, more boaters and ski enthusiasts trol Office.
at 985-3509.
At Racine, volunteers ~ill meet' at the Old
The River Sweep is sponsored by the Ohio
use and enjoy the beautiful Ohio River, and this is
spokeswoman MelisSa Adams said.
Ada!Jls said Timothy L Ander- a wonderful opportunity to help improve the Ferry Landing Park; in Pomeroy at the levee and River Valley Water Sanitation Commission in
son, 21, and Brian K. Hess, 31, water quality and environment," said Meigs in Middleport at Dave Diles Park. Participants Cincinnati in partnership with several industries
Lotteries
walked away from a minimum-secu· County Recycling Director Kenny Wiggins, who will receive River Sweep T-shirts and refresh- and businesses throughout the Ohio River Valley.
rity work camp situated across the
omo
.-.
street from the main prison complex
Pltkl: 7-S-7; Pkk4: 1-7-0-9
sometime between the 2 am. and 4
. Bllekeye 5: 9-21-25-28-34
American Electric Power was presented The
''To cam The Edison Award at a time when
• additional habitat efforts that the company
a.m. bed checks. .
'
W,\'A.
Anderson was serving a two-year Edison Award Tuesday, recognizing the company many companies in ou~ industry are recording · bCgan;
for its environmental &lt;:ommitment.
noteworthy accomplishments is an achievement
• more than three million trees that the comsentence for convictions in Franklin
Ddy 3: 8-3-0;Ddy 4: 7-(i·J·S
Thc .Edison Award, the utility industry's high- that will make our employees and shareholders pany planted in 1998, increasing the total to 55
County on receiving stolen property
C t\19!1 Ohio V.t~y Publlobtog Co.
· est honor, is given annually by the Edison Elec- . extremely proud.
million trees planted on company 'owned land
1111d robbery charges.
tric Institute (EBJ) to the U.S, shareholder-owned
"AEP has a long standing commitment to ' since 1944;
• tropical forest protecti.ve efforts that began
company and international member company environmental leadership," Draper said. "Th.e .
making the most .~tstanding contributions to the award honors AEP for our efforts in 1998, but in earnest as AEP formally signed its Bolivian
advancement of tHe industry.
these efforts arc simply a continuation of many carbon sequestration project commitment; '
· tokyo Electric PoWer Company Inc. earned years of environmental stewardship on the part of
• an AEP plant that prepared to demonstrate
the international award. The winners were AEP."
.
important new pollution control technology;
The company earned prestigious citaiions for
• existing energy efficiency initiatives that
announced at EEl's 67th Annual Convention and
Expo •99 in Long Beach, California. This is· the its environmental achievements.
. received honors as AEP was launching new ones.
40th year for the Edison Award.
·
Particular efforts and recognition focused on
AEP, a global energy company, is one of the
According to E:EI, AEP "is being honored for wildlife habitat enhancement, pollution control . United States' largest investor owned utilities,
its aggressive work to develop sustainable, envi- techqologies, and energy efficiency. These . providing energy to 3 million customers in lndi·
ronmenfally responsible operations for coal- include:
·
ana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Virginia and
bumins power companies that meld bottom line
• AEP's coal mine reclamation efforts that West Virginia.
·
results with environmental stewardship."
continued to turn once mined land into pristine
.AEP has holdings . in the United States, the
· "We arc ·very pleased that AEP was selected natural environments, and garnere~ major recog·. United Kingdom, China, .and Australia. Wholly
for this prestigious award," said E. Linn Draper . nitions;
·
owned subsidiaries provide powe( engineering,
Jr., AEP's chairman, president and chief execu• generating and transmission sites that energy consulting and energy management sertive officer.
.
&lt;
earned wildlife habitat cet1ification;
vices around the world.

Saturday to mark annuai .River .Sweep event

'

~Do

Good Afternoon

.

Today's Sen ..

AEP ·r ecognized with Edison Award

~Tensions

SUZANNE f,t. EVANS
RADLEY FAUI.K
SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED awarded the · Atwood Award
• Two more scholarships have for Excellence, a tuition-free
been presented to Melga scholarship given to high
graduates by the University of ·school students who demonRio Grande.
strate academic excellence.
Radley Faulk receive the She graduated from Southern
Peoples Bank of Middleport High School and plana . to
Scholarship. He Is the son of major in nursing at Rio
· Ch11ck and Linda Faulk and Granda. She Is the daughter
plans to major In secondary o.f Larry M. Evans and Rollle
education at Rio Granda.
and Shirley Stewart.
Suzanne M. Evans was

June 1e, 1000

'

,
'

,
:
•
·

high in Ko.rea after high-seas shootout

All leaves were canceled, and officers were
By PAUL SHIN
and other combat ships formed a picket fence
ordered
not to leave their po5ts.
Alaocllllad PrMa Writer
across the contested. border, the scene of a nine-day
The
United
States decided .to dispatch additional
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - U.S. Navy and military standoff over a rich crab fishing ground.
Air Forte planes joined South Korean aircraft
The standoff exploded into an armed conllict aircraft to South Korea, but its 37,lXXI li'OO!li siA·
today in patrolling over disputed
e 10 t Vel· Tuesday, when warships ·of the two Koreas · iioned here remained in a normal stale of alert, the
U.S. military command in Seoul said.
low Sea, after a high-seas shooto tsank one .,.,...,_......&gt;&lt;:hanged fire. )
·
·
Generals of the U.N. Conunand 8JI(j North Korea
Korean gunboat, ·damaged five others and may
1Grean gunboat was sunk and five
have killed 30 sailors.
.
others badly damased. An estimated 30 nonhem met Tuesday·but failed to resolve the dispute.
The command said today it was seeking another
Five North Korean warships stopped just out- sai.lors were believed killed, a U.S. defense official
meeting
'with North Korea
sidC thc:boundary today and did not try to move said in Washington, speaking on condition of
South Korea said Tuesday's shootout began after
into the disputed watel's, the South Korean Defense anonymity.
Ministry said. Entry into the contested zone by
Seven South Korean sailors were injured when a North Korean torpedo boat opened fire when a
North Korean ships provoked Tuesday's battle.
their ships-a frigate and four patrol boats - were South Korean patrol boat tried to ram iL
North Korea said the South picked the fight and
· Earlier, the North 's warships, escorting about raked by North,Korean lire.
demanded
an immediate aPQ)ogy.
The damage to the southern shill' was described
20 fishing boats, were spotted just north of the conThe
disputed
waters lie between the North Korc·
tested zone and were moving slowly southward, as insignificant.
.
•
the ministry said.
·
All South Korean armed forces were put on an mainland and five South Korean islands, 60 .
mil~ northwest of Seoul.
A flotilla of South Korean destroyers, frigates heightened alert la~er Thesday's shootout.

.~

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