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                  <text>hge 16 • The DaHy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Gingrich goes on offensive in Hubbell tapes controversy
wrongdoing.
White \{ouse spokesman Mike
McCurry said Bunon "decided he
was above" federal privacy laws
when he released the tapes.
And congressional Democrats
renewed claims that Bunon- a controversial figure who makes 'some
Republicans uneasy - had issued
excerpts that had been distoned to put
Hubbell in the worst light.
"Things shouldn:t be taken out of
context They shouldn't be censored
to Roscoe and Sandra Mills, Sutton and cut. doctored real Iy," said Rep.
parcelsi
Henry Waxman, [).Calif., senior
Deed, Jonathan Scott and Carol Democrat on the panel Bunon heads.
Sue Miller to Douglas L. Miller, Sal- . On the tapes, Hubhell.ind his wife
isbury.
talked of White House pressure to

WASHINGTON CAP) - Strug·
"The question is, Have crimes
gling to gain the political offensive, been committed? Has there been a
House Speaker Newt Gingrich systematic effort to cover up?" Gin·
IICCII.Ied the White Hou.'le on Thesday . grich said in comments designed to
of trying to "spin away" from trou· deflect public attention away from
blesome comments contained on questions concerning GOP Rep. Dan
tapes of Whitewater figure Webster Bwton,leader of a politically chalpl
Hubbell's jailhouse phone calls.
probe into alleged campaign finance

Meigs land t.ransfers·
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogcne
Hamilton:
Deed, Mildred K. Eskew to Lewis
Taulbee, Rutland, 80 acres;
·
Right of way, Gary E. and Penny
L. Wisor to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Columbia. 5 acres;
Right of way, Gary and Kathy
Spencer to BREC, Columbia, 74.83

avoid legal actions that would raise
"allegations that might open it up" to
Hillary Rodham Clinton. But. in
comments originally excluded from
Bunon's excerpts, Hubbell also
denied that he received "hush mon·
ey" from friends of die president
while he was on his way to prison.
While Gingrich was sharply crit·
ical of Waxman and other Democrats,
he did little to defend Bunon, who
once staged .a mock re-enactment'of
White House counsel Vine~ Foster's .
delllh to call into question the finding
that the former offtcial had eommit·
ted suicide.
·
Privately. of'ftcials said Gingrich
was unhappy that Bunon had ignored

his own weekend suggestion that an
impanial third pany be brought in to
prepare the transcripcs of Hubbell's.
conversations with his wife, his
lawyer and ochers.
At the same .time, they said no
thouaht was being given to transfer·
rina the entire investigation to a separate panel, or of giving in to Democratic demands \hat Bunon be
removed as head of the investigation.
~·can you imagine in 1973 ... if
· Republicans had 1111nounced if Sam
Ervin (the Democrat who chaired the
Watergate Committee) had stepped
aside they'll be gild to do some·
thing," Gingrich said at one point.
"They would have been driven out of

High: 70; Low:50

town."
Leaders of bolh panics met privately Thesday to plan their next

Tomorrow:· Showers
High: 70; Low:50

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The controversy flared nearly a

moves.

week ago, when DemocratS on Burton's .committee refused to join
Republicans in ¥oting to grant immunity to four witnesses in the campaign
lUnd-raising probe.
Waxman said at the time the
chainnan was running a thoroughly
panisan investigation.
· In replY,. Gingrich said he would
give Democrats one mole chance to
vote for immunity, then transfer the
issue to a different committee

~·ieigs

· Hometown News}'aper

County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

Single Copy · 35 Cents

Shell to
cut local
workforce
by 170

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel ~· Staff
Recognition of 58 top students in
Meigs County schools highlighted
the 14th annual ac;idemic excellence
banquet held Tuesday night in the
Meigs High School cafeteria.
Trophies were presented to each
of the students by Jeff Harris, presi·
denl of the Meigs County Service
Center, as their names were
annourx:ed by Bill Buckley, superin·
tendent of Meigs Local, Deryl Well,
superintendent of Eastern Local, lind
James Lawrence,' superintendent of
Southern Local.
·
Another highlight of the evening
was the presentation of the Fmnklin
B. Walter Awru:d by County Supt.
John D. Riebel, Sr. to Michael
Leifheit. He was one or three senior
nominees for the award. The other
two were Michelle Caldwell of East· 1
em Local, and Evan Struble of Southf
oum
· ANDiNG·SENIOR ~This -r's recl..._t of the F111nklln
em Local.
Selection, according 10 Riebe , . B. W1ltlr Awllld Wll Mlchllel Leifheit, 1 Mnlor It Meigs High
School. Here he accepts• pllque from County SUpt. John D.
was based on academy abilit • · Riebel, Sr. It the ICidlmlc exc:elr.- -rd. He wiiiiiiO 1ttend
schol"tic achievement, activities,
1 progl'llll In Colilmbul next - k where he will p~~rtlclpatl In
and SAT scores. Leifheit will be
tlle.I'ICOfl
. nhlon of -rd wlnMI'I from ICrOII the ltlte.
guing to Columbus next week for a
.

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acres:
Deed, 'keith Herdman and·
Richard L. Gilmore, Scipio;
Deed, Federal Home Loan Mon• gage to James H. Jr. and Jane G.
Crace. Sutton, 7.52 acres;
Easement, Meigs County Com·
· missioners, Patrick O'Brien to GTE
Nonh Incorporated,' Salisbury;
Deed, Nancy A. Bums, Karen R.
and Donald Randolph Jr.. Middle·
pon;
Deed. Clara Anna Baer to Charles
William Baer, Sutton parcels;
Deed, David A: and Albena K.
Hysell to Connie M. Manley Trust,
Middlepon;
Deed. Michael and Mary A.
O'Brien to Robe~ L. Ramsey, Olive
parcel;
Deed, Fred E. and Ruth A. Smith
to Tonya M. Griffin, Chester, .66
acre;
_ ...
Deed, David G. Dodson to Connie ·
J. ·Dodson, Middleport parcel;
Deed, Franklin E. Sr. and Ann M.
Mills to Oma M. Hysell io Richard
and Wilma Jean Vannoy, Syracuse
village;
·
Deed, Richard and Wilma Jean
Vannoy to Virginia Madel Pendleton,
Syracuse;
Deed, Dan P. and Donna J. Smith

,_ . . .,.

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You've just spent all day fighting traffic

'

everything on your shopping list. Now
you're home, eXhausted, and ... ob no!
The lettuce! You forgot to stop at the

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Your New

grocery store!

Kiss those frusttating diys goodbye!

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Come check out your new Wal-Miut

with. a full-service ·supermarket -

lupercenter Wlil

all

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under one roofl Whether you're looking
for fabrics and craft supplies or cleaning

Be Open

supplies, fme jewelry or footwear, Grade
.·A meat or fresh produce, you '11 fmd it all

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Soem ...

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heie at our' ~very bay Low Prices.

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Evervthlng You

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ordeal. Let us make your 1\fe easier at
your new Wal-Mart Supercenter -

Need Is
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the

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Bo"y of .missing .·Ohio
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Unit~~
. ersity·student found

on

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ShOpping doesn't have to be an ail-day

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Voters OK town$hip
and viHage issues

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Henderson
man killed ·
by gunshot

suppon, noting that it takes everyone
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HENDERSON. W.Va. - A Henworking together to bring about aca·
COLUMBUS (AP) - State tax Tuesday overwhelmingly defeated spe!fding on welfare programs has state programs with otl1,er state ta~es. derson man died after being shot
He said committing 88 percent of once, at what appeared to be close
demic excellence.
.
revenue is growing so fast that the state Issue. 2. a proposal to generate decreased the amount.of money the
the
income tax, and lottery profits to range Wednesday evening, according
Well used li "Roads ofUfe" theme state expects the fiscal )'e!ll'-end sur- more.money foreduc01ion by·raising state receives from the feder;il govand qllDICd from Robert Frost's ''The ·pluk'td-t!e S350·milll&amp;n higber lhan the state sales tax from 5 percent to emment. meaning total state revenue schools would provide an immediate to the West Virginia State Police ·
$600 millron increase in education Poinf.Ptea.•ant Detachment.
Road Not Taken." He sfressed. indl· wa.~ anticipated when·itfii!&gt;. biidgft.' 6.p:~~~el\l, ;
·l'
is up $241.7 m.illi!&gt;lt for the year.
funding,
viduulity. noti1111 iha!it doesn't hun to was enacted 10 monthS ago. The
The surplu~ for fiscal 1~8: which
A spokesperson for the detach·
"You've got this continual growth ment said the victim was William
be different, and that sometimes it Columbus Oispatch reponed today:
ends~une 30. 1s ~ $936.6 m•lhon and
Some of the surplus ha~ been
pays to tak~ "the road less traveled."
The $350 million will go toward growmg, accordmg to the Office of committed to olh.e r programs and.for of ihe income taK. And that;s what Harry "Butch" Thompson, 51, of Rt.
· "The right thing to do may be dif· .a personal income-tax cut next April . Budget and Management.
a year-eOd ca.'lh cushion, the Dispatch will pull schools out or the rut. If edu· I, Henderson.
cation ·is the No. I "priority,. put the
ferent.lf it doe~n't infringe on othen, unless the · Legislature spends the
The amount includes nearly $700 said.
Friends found Thompson's body,
then do it," said Well. "Things are - ffioney elsewhere. An additional $200 ·million that was budgeted, but notr The surplus vindicates some Issue money. there,". he said.
and called police at a~ut 8:30 p.m.
Despite. the surplus, state Budget . The shooting occurred at Thompson's
-happening hen! in Melgs County, and million th!\1 had been designated for spent. Most of that money was set 2 opponents who argUed that school·
you may be satisfied to stay here, but tax relief has been committed to pub- aside for welfare programs and health funding reforms could be financed Director Paolo DeMaria defended the home. which is located off Crab
if you're not, lake your own road."
lie schools.
care for the poor. disabled and blind. without a tax increase because of the proposed sales-tax increase. He said Creek Road.
it· would have provided steady rev·
He concluded with a poem. "The
Gov. George Voino\lich had con· · Tax receipts for the first 10 growth in til)( revenue.
The spokesperson said police do
Man in the Gla.~s" and called on the sidered spending the $350 million on . months of the fiscal year were ahead
State R:ep. Roben E. Netzley, R- enue for schools had the economy flave a suspect, although no arrest' ha.'
students to consider their reflectiori in repairing and building schools. But of estimates by $564.5 millipn, with Laura. renewed his call to fund edu- . slowed and had higher unemploy· been made. Details. of the incident
the mirror and then go about to s~t- the newspaper . reponed that he most of the increase coming from the cation with the penonal income tax ment and·welfare spending eaten into were not released due to the ongoing
isfy themselves. "But remember," dropped the idea after voters on personal income llix. But reduced and .the lottery, and financing other the surplus. .
investigation.
cautioned Well, there's no fooling the
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The body was transponed to the
medical examiner's offtce in
Charleston . The Deal &amp; 'Brown
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, will be
. visor, gave the welcome and in'ro"'•
duced guests which included school
in
charge of the funeral arrangements.
Friends and family joined author·
Univenity police Chief Ted Jones
Noble's parents identified their
ATHENS (AP)- Two Ohio Uni·
board members from all three dis·
Senior Trooper IO.B. Starcher is in
versity students walking along. the said the body of Keith Noble, 19, of son's body. His wallet and driver's ities la.•t weekend in an unsuccessful
tricts. He aisq introduced Kitty- nearby Hocking River discovered the Columbus, was discovered on license wa.• found in his pants.
search of the river and the area charge of the investigation and will
Hazier, talented and gifted coordina·
The freshman was last seen leav- around the west side of Athens where be a•sisted by the other member.; of
body of a student who had been miss· Wednesday. Jones did not say
tor, who planned the program.
the local detachment, who were also ·
Noble was last seen .
ing a pany on April 2S.
ing from the campus for more than a wbether foul play wa.~ suspected.
Qualifyinil for trophies on the
at the scene Wednesday. .
week.
ba.~is of their academic achievement
were these students:
Meigs Local: Grade 4, Samantha
Cole of Bradbury, Miranda Beha of
Harrisilnvillc, Whitney Thoene of
Pomeroy, .Sarah Dawn Jenkins of
. Rutland, and Christopher Van Reeth ,
In addition to approving the Meigs the amount of 1.9 mills for five years
: of Salisbury; Grade 6. David Boyd,
1
·
County
Council on Aging's one-mill, was ·approved by a vote of 281 to
: Jaynee Davis, Maegan Dod.o;on, Henfive-year levy. and rejecting a per· 180, and a fire protection renewal of .
ry· Rider. Ryan S.toban. Brandi
manept levy- for the Meigs ·county one-mill for five years was also
Thomas, Meigs Middle School:
Bo~ru of MRIDD. voter.; in Meigs
approved. 359 to I05. ,
Grade 8. Amber Ellis, Monica Moon,
County
approved
several
township
Middlepon voters. approved a
Mindy O'Dell, Amber Snowden. and
and village levy issues on Tuesday. . renewal fire protection levy of one
Tara Wyatt, Meigs Middle School.
In Rutland Township. voters mill for five yean, by a vote of 446
Grade 10, Stevt&lt; Bella. Beverly .
approved an additional Qne-mill fire to 15~.
.
Burdelle, Marjorie Halar, Kyle Srilid-·
Local
voters
opposed both State
profection
levy
b~
a
vote
of
256
to
die, Jeremiah Smith. Joshua Sorden,
237.
.
Issue I. which. would ha ve allowed
Wesley Thoene; Grade 12. Michelle
the
state · to issue bonds for school
Township
voters
approved
Scipio
. Continued
fll[lt 8.
.
a replllcement fire protection levy. of construction, and State lsoue 1'1.
two mills, for five years. by a vote of which would have rai sed the state
169to 69, and in Cbester Township. sales tax from five to six percent.
''oters approved a replacement one- Issue I was defeated countywi~e by
W.VL lternewhlllw. They ... 1-r, Jlmle ~.
EASl:ERN PROM CANDIDAtES • TheM
mill, five year fire protection levy. a vote o( 3,695 to 1.863, and State
Angle Riling IIICI Kelll Billey, 1nd blclc, Nlte
524.10 200.
Hnlol'll ..... ClndldlltH fof Prom King lncl
Issue Il by a vote of 4.55 1 to 1.462.
Rlldford, Chris Buchlnln tlnd Sltlun Lona. The
Queen lit e..t.rn High School'l pn1111, which
In the village of Pomeroy, a Both issues failed statewide, as well.
2 Sections • 16 Pages ·
w111 be !!ltd on~~ lbolrd I_PI!I.*Iburv. lhernefottllllyur'lprom II "F.--Toriight."
_renewal of a current expenses levy in
Vol. 49, No. 13

ma~~nt~~!r:;~:elementarysuper·

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Supercenter, a full-line discount stote

ACHIEVEMENT ACKNOWLEDGED • Sam11ntha Cole, a Tourth
gl'lder 1t the Bl'lldbury School In the Meigs Local School District,
waa the first of 58 acsdemlc 1Chlenrs to receive a trophy from
Jeff H1rrl1, prssldent of the Melga Servlcs Center board, at Tuesdsy nlght'aiiCICiemlc;: IXCIII!InCI ~anquet.

APPLE GROVE, W.Va . ..:..- A glut
· in the polyester resin market is forcing a Mason County chemical plant
to cut 170 employees from its payroll
this year.
Employees at the Shell Chemical
Point Pleasant plant are being offered
enhanced benefits to either take early retirement or voluntarily leave the
company. said Paul Mcintyre . the
plant's hUman resources director.·
· The plant employs 524 people and
the cuts will affect both hourly and
staff employees, he said.
Special se"erance payments have
also been approved for any employee that may be involuntarily laid off.
Outplacement services will be offered
to employees.
· "Our initial plpn is to open the voluntary period in June," Mel ntyre said
Wednesday." All of this is pending on
a vote by the local union for us to ··
Continued on page 3

State"budget surpiU·S of $350
:=:~~~~=~=~~i million above previous estim·ates
Speaker for the banquet wa.~ ~upt. •

to get from store to store, trying to find

By AP, Staff Repons

:~::_.~e:~n;~~nctu~t'!:~!~

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·FDA approves
automated
system to help
·diagnose Pap
smears

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Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel

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home of true, onC.:stop shopping ... from

C!auifitc!s
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Comks
Editorials

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Cumberland Prin.cess wilt visit Pomeroy Tuesday evening

10
12-13-14

Calendar

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Air Freshener to Zucchini.

l.ocll

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Sports

4-5-6

Wnthcr

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Lottenes
omo
Pick 3: 280; Pick 4: 2220
Super Lollo: 12· 1·9-28· 31-40-46

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· JIIIUII'y that AUlD~ PRnot detect
IU~ lfl"l of ll.ltual[y lr8Nmitted

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Righi of way, James W. and Sandra A. Nelson, Huben L. and Judy
Wolfe and TPCWD, Chester, 59.14

dlfue'

Cubs'
Wood
fans 20

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acres;

"' smears 11\(1 help carc:h mi"cd
~ems.
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•Advi~m to - PP4 CIIIIIO!Ied 1n

Sports

Top Meigs
·students are
recognized

Deed, Robert L. and Tamara L.
Mash to Michael 0 . Dickerson II,
Salisbury;
Easement, Sammy L. and Sherry
Darst to Lloyd Douglas, Columbia;
Deed, Kenneth and Betty Young
to Gregory and Paige Winebrenner,
Olive parcel;
·Right of way, Parthenia L. Vance
to Tuppers Plains..chcster Water Dis·
trict, Scipio, 154 acres;
Right of way, Virgil M. and
Pamela J. D,ill to TPCWD, Suuon,
2.46 acres;
Right of way, Don C. Weese to
TPCWD, Suuon, 22.08 and 31.35
acres;
1
Right of way, Evereu T. Calaway
to TPCWD, Orange, 2 and 32.0858
acres;
Right of way, James E. and Elsie
M. Folmer to TPCWD, Chester, 1.07

pera~ion AufDPip: to doubre-dleck

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Beat of the Bend column, Page 10
.. Meigs High School news; Page 9
Chicago Bulls lose. 78-76, Page
4
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Today:ShoMra

acres~

WASHINGTON (APl- Labora·
tories that check Pap smean for signs
of cervical cancer may soon become
more automated: The Food and Drug
Administration approved a computer
system Tuesday that means some
women wi II have their Pap tests
checked solely by a machine instead
of a person.
The goal is to allow NeoPath ·
Inc.'s AutoPap Primary Screening
System to sort out the lowest-risk
Paps so that lab workers will have
more time to spend on lite Pap
smean most likely to show subtle
signs of cancer.
"A lab that has a very high rate of
accuracy is not going to see a great
deal of improvement with the
machine," said FDA device evaluation chief Dr. Susan Alpen. "A lab ·
that has a lower rate of acc:uracy ...
Willjlet more benefit'.''
Spme 60 million Pap smears are
performed every year, simple scrapings of the cervix that c:tl) detect cancer and prec:ancerous changes early
enough to cure thousands. Pap
smears have helped cervical cancer
rates plummet, Still, an eslimaled
13.700American women will Jet cervical cancer this year, and 4,!100 will
die.
The test isn't foolproof: C)'rotech·
nofogists must visually hupl tiny
chll"aes in huiK!reds of lhou~a~~ds of
tin,y cells. Between 3 pen:ent and 25
peftCDI of ibf!ormal Pap 110111n Ale
mi,sed, depending on the lab.
'In 199~. the FDA lppiO~ two
COfllpuler sylll:ms, irx:ludina a filii·

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· Thursday

Wedn•day, May 6, 1998

Kltker: 164el9

2:141 laatem Avenue

w,VA.

Galllpolle

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~y 3: SIO Dilly 4:4127
0 1991 Ohio V.llcy l'ul&gt;lillllnJ Co.

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BY CHARLENE HQEFI.ICH
Sentinel ~ st.ff.
The Cumberland Priitc:eas will
.make its firslatop in Pomeroy Tues·
day, it waa alinounced at Wednclday
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
' Association. .
.
· Ann Chapman. presidellt, sald
that the boat will arrivt at the levee
about 4 p.m. r The 30 puienaen
aboard wiiH~ejoined by anodler JO·
·people who 1,1e being bused in to
board the boal.,A local quartet will
provide entertainment and~ in
costume will conduct tours and'tlve
historical infDr1111tion on the villaae.
.The visito!'·R expected 10 .be in

town for abOut th~ hours, until
aboUt 7 p.m.. Chapman reported. She
also noted that at least nine stores will
be open durinJ that period and will
be panicipatina in a myStery game
which is gean:d to get visitors in each ·
store.
Trinity Church will have on icc
cream social for the visitors, Chipman said.

Shealso~portedontheuseofthe
$6,000 'received from the Ohio
· Depanment of Development..A por·

lion is going into makin&amp; costumes
for Jreelers and the balal)ce will be
used for providing the guide service.
Cliapman complimented Becky Baer,

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Meigs Extension agedt. on the cos· sale provided a "good weekend", said
tume work~op held recently at the Chapman. It wa.~ decided 'to contin·
ue cooperating with Middlepon on
Museum.
the
eveht.
It was reponed that the .first per·
Alull)ni weekend was noied and it
formance in the amphitheater will a
cqncen by· the Community Band was ilccided to decorate windows and
directed by Toney Dingess on Satur· fly flags in the purple and white colday, May 16.6 p.m. Merchants. are ors of Pomeroy High School, and the
being a.~ked to remain open an addi· ·maroon and gold colon of Meigs
tiona! hour that evening as an added High School.
incentive to bringing people into the . The two new bu~inesses in
Pomeroy, Always and Forever, and
downtown shopping area.
Bill Quickel who serves on the Rainbow Ceramics and Gift Shoppe,
amphitheater cpmmittee announced a
gospel nijlht to be held there on July were noted and cards of tongratulations will be sent.
18.
July 9 was the tentative date .
Despite thetain, the six-mile y,ard
announced fora .1(isit ofthe'OU Com-

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muQiversity Band sponsored by Peoples ·Bank and for the an:in·the· pa{k
program.
. Also announced was an o~n
house at Peoples Bank held last
night and today for viewing the newly remodeled facility.
,
It was noted that Sarah Fisher is
completing plantings downtown. A
variety show to be held Friday night
at Meigs High School wa' announced
with funds raised from that to go into
tbe unifornl fu~d.
,
In other busmess Wesley Thoene
was hired to continue mowing the
mini-park this summer with the cost
to be paid by the Merchants Assooi•
ation .

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Com1nentarr

ThP,naday, May 7, 1998

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The Daily Sentinel

AccuWcather•

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•leolumbusl68'

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More flower thieves

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A toad is ·a:toad
is a toa~ is a tQ~~ . Vi .~;)
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By Joseph Spear

What Newton Leroy Gingrich
needs is a fair maiden to kiss him and
turn him into a handsc&gt;me prince.
Dear·Editor,
I say this because the poor fellow
I am writing in response to a letter to the editor published on April 30 lly keeps trying to redo his persona. but
Gayle Price. I am a very proud ind;..idual ~nd I felt totally confident about it never seems to take. Indeed. I
my letter being published on April 24. Not many 17:year-olds would feel believe there . have been more New
that way about a whole community reading their writing, but I -did. I would Newts than there were New Nixons.
Iike to make the public aware of the fact that the only rc~son I wrptc my lei- Richard•had maybe a dozen, by my
ter was to support my school and to let th~ community hear things from a count. Newt could ca.,ily double that
student's poinl of view.
ligurc.
I expected a response, but not a personal criticism. I received a very posAt the moment, he is striving to be
itive response · from the school superintendent, his wife, and the rest or Newt the Mellow. hut the black angel
Southern's teaching staff, because they felt my effort was a goqd thing. I sup- · on his shoulder keeps whispering
pose there arc some of us who arc still choosing to live in the past. but that na.,ty things in his car and he is findcan be overlooked. I hope that Mr. Price enjoyed his letter and I hope he ing it hard to contain himself. Bill
reels -proud or putting down a senior in high school. who
Clintnn and the Democrats, he
is obviously much younger than he is and is more likely to make mis- recently charged. arc tantamount to a
takes. When writing my letter I will admit I was distract~d by a previous let- white-collar Dalton Gang:. "We have
ter published by Mrs. June Ashley. and I did not proofread to the best of my neve• seen the level of complex,
ahility. but I would like you to know I am a very intelligent individual and I interlocking lnw-hrcaking that we
admit when I've done wrong.
have stumbled upon the more we
Even though I do not plan to let an aggravating letter, from someone who · look into it." he told reporters on
&lt;1hviously cares more about putting people down than about his community, Capitol Hill.
ruin my view on a public issue.
Gingrich came to Washington in
I believe every child at Southern deserves a chance for better education. 1979 and soon gained a rcputation .as
I hope people who arc still living in the past do not keep them from achiev- Newt the · Pit Bull. Democrats, he
ing that goal. The future of upcoming generations, with positive attitudes, loudly and angrily charged, wer~
need your support, even if they do make an occasional mistake .
Jennifer Yeauger
tlaclne
( (Editor's note: Ycaugcr is a senior at Southern High School.)

Writer's grammar not the issue

"weird,"
Then he got elected House Rcpub- chapter titled "Learn to Keep Your
"bizarre,''
lican leader and suddenly he was Mouth Shut." Somebody ought' to tell
"socialist." He
. · back as Newt the Crusader. He orga- him to read it.
" ·
even suggested
ni7..ed a massive rally on the steps of
Not only did the White House vio- •'
a list of words ·
the Capitol building for the sign ins uf late campaign laws, he recently rutthat Rcpublihis vaunted Contract With America minated, and not only have they. ,.
cans should usc
and promised tn cut ta'xcs. trim stonewalled the investigation being. ·;
to trash the
domestic programs, increase defense conducted by Rep.· Dan "Clinton is':~ ·'
opposition: Idespending and halancc the budget.
Scumhag" Bunon. but they have· · •
ological, inscThe .Oampaign worked. Republi- picked on (l(X&gt;r Judge Ken S1arr. the ·
cure, failure .
cans took over Congress and our hcrn independent counsel who is strugshallow, traitor;
Spear
ascended to the speakcrship and wa.• . · gling to do his patriotic duty hy sting- 1
pathclic, cortransmogrified into Newt the Rcvol~- ing: the president. investigaii~g oral .
rupt, incompct~nt. sick. cheat. steal.
tionary.
. sex and sub(J(.:naing mothers. h&lt;wlkDcmocratic leaders were "mug1l1e public hegan to sec him a• store owners and every (J(ll, pup and
· gers." His favorite tnrg:ct. Speaker Newt the Repulsive, and he decided porcupine in Washington, D.C., :ond
Jim Wright. had a "Mussolini-likc it was time l&lt;tr yet anoiher image the state of Arlmnsa.•.
·
ego" and wns "the · most corrupt remodeling joh. He became Newt the
Let's sec if we c:~n sum this utf . ~
speaker in the 20th century." He lilcd Moderate. shed an cx:ca,ional puhlio succinctly:
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ethics charges against Wright and tear. tried out a new, warm smile and
All the fair maidens in America · ·i
eventually forced his resignation.
macjc· public appearances with could kiss Newt's mug every hour . :.
He continued ranting until his own snakcs,-donkcys •.owls and elephants. from now till Christmas, and . all· :'
colleagues tired of it and scolded He bragged about cuiting out de lOver- they'll get is lip warts.
·
him. He O(J(llogizcd liw going "olf ics of icc buckets to members of CunThere is nn handS&lt; nne prince. A
the reservation" and \•ani shed from grcss and extolled beach vollcyhall as toad is a toad is a toad.
center stage for an extended period. a symbol of American freedom .
·. J..,.ph Spear is a ~ytidicateci·. ·
That was his Newt the "DcsaparcciRcce,ntly Ill: has heen on tour to writer for Newspaper Enterprise·
jlo" phase -- Newt the Disappeared tout a new book, "Lc~sons Learned Association.
One. ·
the Hard Way." which ccmtains a

a

W·hat is next for the state of Israel? ··

To.da_y in histor..y :~~~.;~=:
By The Auociated P1111s
Today is Thursday, May 7, the I27th day of 1998. There are 238 days left in
the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
•
On May 7, 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender'at Allied headquarters in Rheims, Prance, to take effect the f ,llowing day, ending the European conflict of World War ll.
·
On this date:
In 1789, the first inaugural ball was held i·· New York in honor of President
and Mrs. George Washington.
.
lnd847, the American Medical Association was founded in Philadelphia.
In 1915, nearly 1,200 people died when a German t~ sank the British
liner Lusitania off the Irish coasi.
In. 1939, Germany and Italy announced a military. and political alliance
known as the Rome· Berlin Axis.
In 1954, the 55-day Battle of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam ended with Vietnamesc insurgents overrunning French forces. ·
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, .
In 1975, President Ford fonnally declared an end to the "Vietnam era" In
iio Chi Minh City, fonnerly Saigon. the Viet Cong staged a rally to celebrate
their takeover.
·
In 1984; aS 180 million out-of-court ;.,ttlement was announced in the Agent
Orange class-action suit hrought by Vietnam veterans who charged they'd suffcrcd injury from expo5ure to the defoliant.
In 1992. the space shuttle Endeavor blasted off on its maiden voyage. .
In 1996. the first international war crimes proceeding sinCe Nuremberg
. opened at 1lic Hague, with Serbian police officer Dusan Tadic facing trial on
•.· murder-torture charges. A year later. he was convicted of II coup&amp;s of war
crimes and crimes against humanity.
Ten years ago: Winning Colors won the I 14th running of the Kentucky
Derby, becoming lhe third filly to win the event.
Five years ago: President Clinton proposed dramatic changes in politit;al
campaign financing. In South Africa, representatives of 23 political parties
signed a declaration of intent to hold multiracial elec~ons within a year.
·
· One year ago: The Army accused'its top enlisted man, Apny Sgt. Maj. Gene
McKinney. of sexual misconduct. At his court-martial, McKinney was acquitted
of sexual misconduct, but.found guilty 6fobstruction of justice.
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bad news - then: is both - but whether
there is big and unique news. Apocalypse soon? Or a panty raid?
Israel's 50th annivei-sar}&lt; of independence was widely publicized, and poorly spun, in the ~· ':Israel Ill 50"
blazed across the cover of~ f.cooo.
mist. The lead J*lii!I8Ph of the story
offered this profundity: "In lsn!cl, this
spring is a lime of mixed and 'ometimes
biller e~. The national mood is
sour." The brealhless subhead: "Half a
century after its birth Isrncl m last feels
confident of survival. But where does it
go from here?"
.
- . Ah yes, when:~ .i! go from hen:?
What next? These are the ultjrnate
thumb-sucker questions, known in
newsrooms · everywhere. yielding
answers. like :'The mood al the White
House is one of guarded' optimism."
Where does llny countl)' go from here?
(Where do you go from here?)
It might be nice to report thl! the
sourness is not really SO, just another
mcdiadistonionslantedagainstpoorlitde Israel. Not this time. This wound is
sc!f-inflicted. emanating mostly from
clue !1011:-losers. (Among whom I count
dear friends and close family here.) The
sentiment should strike achord of mem01)1 for anyone in America during the
V~etnam Waz or the Reagan years. ·
The standanl story sr.ts With good
l'II'W5. Yes, Israel has grown from
600:000 J~ws t_o S million. A oncemaltgt!ant tnQaltonary' spiral has been
whipped. ·Yes; the economy has .been
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robust in the '90s. Uving stanclards fiave
climbed
sharply. The
high-tech .leG•
tor is a marvel.
Yes, a Soviet
superpower no
longer~ies

.geopotilical
muscle to hostile Arab states
already .weakened by low oil .
prices.
The
ani vii of about 900,000 Jews from for·
mer Soviet staleS has provided a deep
pool of educaled workers.
But ~ is standard-version .bad
· news. too. 1l1cte is the "stalled" peace
process. actually in intense negotiations
as this is written. Many Israelis. pollicularly in the cultural-media-intellectual
elite, lay much of the blame for the stalemate on Prime· Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, for whom they did not vote.
There is the threat of lCITOrism, but most
!smells arc cautious, not fearful, and for
a tourist the fear tends to evaporate upon
ani val.
Further complaints: Then: is a mild
recession; people arc lttoking for work
but softwti'C finns e~port programming
projects·to India. Privatization programs
have helped a few rich Israeli families.
Foreign guest workers are "taking
Israeli jobs." Men in their 20s say, "It's
l1lld to be a young lJI!IIl in Israel these
days."
'
1'\lrhaps most imponam, then: is
deep animosity between secular and
ultra-Orthodox Jews. As the elites see i~

the :ultraS don't .scnd their children to woman who smears chocolalc an.her' "
military service and don't pay taxes boi:ly ~ or the pictures of a crucifix irr
because they pray and study Torah all urine -- get government funds? Don't
day, except )'.'hen procreating proliftcal- libcrnls complain that religious Jundit- - .
ly. But they get special educational and mentalists arc trying to impose their cuiwelfare benefits; because in the Isrncli tural will, about everything from aborekx.1oral system the religious parties are • tion 1o R-rawd movies? Don'tconscrvathe swing vote. Biller Israelis say the tivcs say that liberals rewrote textbooks,
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uItras impose their religious cuhun: on ·to glorify homosexuality, denigrate ' ,
the secular majority. The elite.• also have American history and support a depc!1- ·.· :
problems with Scphanlic Jews from the dcncy class? Is America also being: ,
Near East, and with Israeli Arabs. You . stoleli?
!
can alltl()!,: hear it: bur very Special ·
America has • it c~y. A ·:ian ; :
·country is IICing stolen lium us. The cry economics have llccn hit by a tsunami. •
is echoed in the international media, Where docs it go .from here? Will there ' · ;
which has always regarded Israel very be bloodslxxl in Indonesia'! The funda- ;
specially, for good or ill.
mental vs. secular argument is ablaze in
j
. A "culture war" narcxJ during the the Middle East. What next'! Will Ru.'Sia •
50th anniversary cclcl#ations. Nut- prosper or collapse'' What's going "' l
shelled: The world-famous Blllshcva happen to all those young Euroj.cans !
dance company wa&lt; tn pcrfnnn in a who can't get jobs in economics with 12 I
stale-sponsored Jubilee gala: One num- pcn:cnt unemployment rntCs? Where 1'
her involved female dancers taking otT doc.&lt; if g:n Iicon here for Africa'! Will ·'
their outer garment.&lt;. down to und..Y- Canada lwcak apart'' Will peace hold in··
wear, to the tunc nf 'a traditional Northern lrelnnd'! Will Ctlr,iica scccdc ' ··
Passover melcxly. The n:li~ir••s fl'v1ics fmm Fmnce'! What about the poor ·: :
called the perfunmn..:' insulting: otnd Kurd,'!
sacrilc~ious, nlleP''IIIy thrc;llcnin~ tu
What nc•t liw lsrncl'' I think, on halbring down the ~nvdnnll.'nt. ·n..,n: wa.j an....: it kdc.&lt; pn.1ty good, a state even
I
a compromise; or wa' there'!. The ;lhlc «1 withswnd the perpetual glollal ·•
liani.'I.'TS Willi~ d:ttJCC with lun~ und..'T- • Sfl&lt;~light of pani&lt;:ularism and c•c.'Cflllonwcar; no. they W&lt;tUidn 't. AI g;unc time. otlisn1. But at ug~ 50, a state (or a person)
the Bal.Jlcvas hnycc~tcd the flll~&gt;r.un. ha.• prOOlcms thai don't go away. Nor
Hoo Hah! It wa,·ccnS&lt;Mllhip hy the rcli. dt!Cs the quc.'ilion "Whal ·l'll'•t?" . Any·
giou.' forces, a bi~ step on a slippery where.
·., ',1•
slope! No. a govcmmeiu-produccd
Om WattenberR, uenlorlellow 11 . ~.
event shouldn't sponsor J1101l1111fls that the AmerlcM F.ntnprhe 1nst1tu1e, 11 ...
insult the values of some of its citillliiS! the audlor oi"Valua M.Utr Moetw ~:
Familiar? :RememiJcr ~ American . and II the hoet ol the weekly JtUb11c ·;:,;.
culture w... over the Natumal Endow- Clle•W..t pnt~tao "11**k link.w
ment for the Ans? Should the OOked
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William ·B. Cnpehai1, 80, Middleport, died on Wednesday, May 6, 1998
at his residence. He was born in New Haven, W.Va., son of the lace Frank
L. and Hetty E. Ord Capehart He was a sheet metal worker and a member
of Local No. 31 in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Surviving arc a son and daughter-in-law, William L. and Sandi Capehart,
Point P1ea.o;ant, W.Va.; two daughters and sons-in-law, Nancy and Earl Gilkey
and J81)e· and Robert Bergman, both of Pomeroy: a sister-in-law, Marsha
Capehart, Middleport; eight grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and four
step-grondchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother, Fmnk Capehart, and a special friend, Mary Burton.
It was Mr. Capehart's wish to be cremated. Memorial services will be ~on­
dueled at Kirkland Memorial Gardens in Point Pleasan1. W.Va .. at a later
date. There will be no calling hours.
Ammgements were under the direction of Middleport Chapel of Fisher
Funeral Home.
Memorial contributions may·be made to Holzer Hospice, Meigs County Branch, 115 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. .

STUMPING FOR TOURISM- Teresa C. Carper, executive dirac·
tor of the RosS:.Chllllcothe Convention &amp; VIsitors Bureau, and
president of Ohio's Appllechlan Country, left, was prelllltled pet!-,
tiona and a proclamlltlon from Judy Williams, chairwoman !If the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's tourism committee, center, and Denise Pittinger, repreaentatl'l'e lor Congressman Ted
Strickland. Carper was part of a delegation visiting Meigs County aa part of a 29-county tour of Appalachian Ohio.
·

Claren~e S. Griffith, 78, of Pomeroy, died on Wednesday evening, May
6, 1998 at Holzer Medical Center.
Arrangements will be anno~nced by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

d.t·"-··.-...""'"' "'-

Other valuable paper money

..

Clarence Griffith

ol...,. ,_. '"'"",.

Letters to the editor

&gt;

William B. Capehart

Why did Mount .Gingrich blow its top?;

By Morton Kondracke '
One.
·
executive privilege and savaged known that the base ,IS resttv~ tha~
Well,
it
didn't
take
long
for
Some
of
Starr
to protect the president and the the GOP has not done more wtth tis
'Lstab(islilli in 1948
Mount Gingrich to erupt. Now, like Gingrich's
, first lady.
majority.
.
.
Vesuvius
did
to
Pompeii,
House
best
friends
in
Beyonit
this,
the
president
may
Party
officials
dispute
this
expla;
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., Washington
have committed perjury and sub- nation. however, claiming that Gin·
814-992-2156 • Fax 1192-2157
almost certainly has buried chances confess that
otned perjury, and the White' House . grich and his closest allies are con:
for bipartisan cooperation for the they
don ' t
fllay have used threats, private vinced the GOP will pick'llp at least
rest of this Congress.
know what
detectives and husll money to 10 House seats this yeai, "Vindicating
Just a week ago, reviewing his · caused him to
obstruct justice.
their leadership.
·
new book, I thought I detected seis- erupt, utterly
On the other hand. all this has
3.. Psychology. Rather than
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
mic rumbling beneath the beatific abandoning
been true for weeks, but Gingrich worry. some officials say, it 's cuph~
ROBERT L. WINGETT
surface that Gingrich had been pre· his previous
wisely kept to' the disciplined line ria or hubris that set Gingrich off;
senting.to the world.
circumspection
Kondracke
that he'd make no pUblic pronounce- Things have been going so well for
PubllaiMr
Little· did I guess that Gingrich about Clinton
ments until Starr reported.
·Gingrich -- his book tour, cheering
would blow so fast. But he has, in a pending a report from independent
Gingrich's intemperate outbursts audiences, successful fund raising, a
crescendo of hot rhetoric against counset:Kenneth Starr and the open- ·-prejudging issues of law-breakihg place on the best-seller lists, dsing
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANEHU
President Clinton's " law-breaking" ing of an impeachment inquiry by -- now have handed congressional poll ratings .. that he has thrown
G-rel Manager
Controller ·
and "obstruction of justice" and the House.
Democrats just the eKcuse they caution to the wind and is indulging
·threats to stymie legislation while
But with assistance from both needed to brand the coming his ambitions and resentments.
TIMIS..Iloet--ICJIIIe _ _ _ ...,. _ _ ol ........
Clinton refuses to cooperate with his friends and foes, it's possible to impeachment inquiry a partisan
Gingrich last week reminded
Shott- (3011-"' -) ,... ,.. - accusers.
speculate.
There
arc
four
possibilienterprise.
.
friends
that as a mere backbencher
. ,_. 1ft p•fllmd IJIId 1111 ""'Y I» died. Elich Mould~ •.,.,..., J6D'I ....
In the process, Gingrich' has pub- ties, not mutually eKclusive:
They were planning to do this he ousted former House Speaker linl
..., _ p/JorN ............ Spoclfy.
licly humiliated Rep. Tom Bliley, RI . Indignation. This is Gihgrich'~ anyway -- they have consistently Wright, D- TcKas, so as speaker he
"' - . - FAK"''
"' ,.. Edllor. n.. - - 111 eowt st. Poo•or. 01t1o
-;or,
to .,.,_-3167.
Va., the courtly chairman· of the own simple explanation : He was shilled for the White House and can do the sall)e with Clintpn. Some
House Commerce Committee, ·for mi)lhtily offended when Democrats ·obstructed GOP investigators .. hut believe him, others i111ply he 's on the
negotiating a tobacco deal with on the House Governmental Reform 'no\~( the onus is shared.
upside of manic-depression.
•,•
Democrats and has threatened to and Oversight Committee unaniSo why did Gingrich throw away
4. Ins-ide information. Gingrich. is :
block replenishment of. the !merna· mously refused to vote immunity for . the mantle of statesmanship''
said by some friends to be contiona!· Monetary Fund out of rage at four witnesses in Chairman Dan
2. Politics. Some GOP members vinccd that Starr will produce a dcv' •·
Clinton.
·
Burton's, R-Ind., probe of 1996 · speculate that Gingrich feared astating report on Clinton with ·such '
Dear Editor,
Gingrich had better hope· that an campaign finance abuses, and that Republicans were in danger of los- . strong evidence or criminality that
In my letter about valuable paper money, I forgot and left out one type of Asian c'conomic panic doesn 't created an imperative to speak out ing seats·- even thcii majority-- in Democrats will turn against the
very valuable paper money : error notes. Error notes arc paper money that undercut U.S. prosperity. For sure, on the totality of Clinton evasions November, which would spoil Gin- president, lcadmg to his resignatiOn. "
has been printed with mistakes by accident at the U.S. mints.
his IMF threat will be likened to his and abuses.
grich's presidential chances, and that ·So hy confronting Clinton, Gingrich ''
.Every year the U.S. mints print billions of dollars in paper money, and 1995 'shutting down of the federal
Tjlere's no question that Clintoh he decided it was necessary to stim- is clim~ing into the cabin of a sure- .
while all this money is supposed to be in~pected, there is no way for all to government because he' thought he and the White House staff have lied . . ulatc the Republican base with raw thing locomotive that · might con:
be inspected. Error notes are paper money which may have two fronts or two wasn't treated well aboard Air Force stonewalled, ridiculously i'lflated meat to swell GOP turnout. It's well ccivably carry him to a White Hous~ "'
backs. It may have an upside-down front or back. It may have a blank front
nomination.
or back. Sometimes they have words added or missing words. Error paper
Frankly, I'm not sure which of : ·
money is hard to find and the usual value can range from hundreds to thouthese theories is correct. What is · '
sands or dollars, depending upon how few of them there are in circulation.
sure is that Gingrich has declared "
Error notes are one of the most desired and colle.cted types of paper money
total war on Clinton, making it next · ·
in the world.
to irppossible to get anything but '
•
If you find a U.S. paper note that you believe may be an error note, you
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minimal work done on the country's
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can find out its value by writing to the Oh Kan Coin Club, 100 Union
business. Whether it's tobacco, edu- '
Avenue, Pomeroy OH 45769-1000. We will be happy to help you find out
cation 'or the IMF, everything's ~
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its value and if you want· sell it for you as well.
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bogged down .
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David Edwards
•
Beyond that, the stage is set for a
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Pomeroy
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savage confrontation over impeach• • • •
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ment, with each side slinging rocks · '
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and
muil as .well as evidence·for the · '
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next several months. The country . '
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will lie disgusted. But who knows? ·• '
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Gingrich may inherit the wasteland.
Dear Editor,
. (Mortoo Kondraekc is ixccu~ · '
I am writing this letter as Nan Swartz did. I also have had liv~ flower's
•
ti'l'e editor of Roll Call, the news• -,
stolen off the grave at Middleport· Riverview Cemetery recently.
paper of Capitol Hill.)
Also sometime on Sunday, someone helped themselves to.a special basht of live violas sitting on my front entrance to my home.
I too, cannot believe that people have the audacity to steat flowers from
hraves and your own front porch.
Only God knows their names.
Nancy Cale
Middleport

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Friday, May 8

· Thursday, May 7,19H
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OHIO Weather

P~2;

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Mlddl~port, Ohio

Helen Hayes ·

VloAJiocla!ld""" Grlp/liciNol

T-aday's weather forecast

Helen Hayes,-99, Racine. died at Holzer Senior Care Center in Gallipolis on Wednesday evening, May 6, 1998:
Arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home.

By Jhe Alsocleted Prell
,Chance of rain 90 percent.
Squtheutem Oblo
.
Extended rorecast
TfJday,..Mosdy cloudy with showFriday night.. :Cioudy wiih a
ers and thunderstorms from late chance of showers and thundermOrning on. Rain may be heavy ·at · storms. Lows in the lower 50s. .
tirpes. Highs 70 to 75. Southeast wind
Saturday... Mo$tly cloudy. with a
10 to 15 mph shifting to the south- chance of showers and thunderwest late. Chance of min near I00 · storms. Highs in the mid 70s.
percent .'
Sunday... r,rtly .cloudy with a . By JAMES HANNAH
tonight ... Shower5 and thunder- chance of s~wers and thunder- Associated Press Writer
A sure sign of summer this year in
storms... Mainly until midnight. Rain storms. Lows in the upper 50s and
Ohio will be of the "Help Wanted"
may be, heavy at times early. Fog highs in the mid 70s.
.
frqm late evening on. Lows in the
Monday...Partly cloudy wtth a variety.
"Lots of them." David Garick, a
upper 50s. Souihwcst wind around 10 chance of s~wers and thunder. mph. Chance of min 90 percent.
storms. Lows tn the mtd 50s and spokesman for the Ohio Bureau of
Employmeni Services. said Wednes.Friday...Showers and thunder-· highs in the upper 70s. .
day
when asked about the expected
storms. Highs in the lower 70s.
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availability of summer jobs for teenager.&gt;.
Gillick said. a strong economy
coupled
'With a low, unemployment
u.s. 1-3 300-400 lbs. 23.00-25.00,
.COLUMBUS lAP) - lndianafew 22.00; 400-500 lbs. 25.00-26.00; . rate will milke seasonal jobs plenti- ·
O~io direct hog prices at selected
500-600
lbs. 26.00-28.00, few over ful at amusement parks, restaurants
buying points Thur.&gt;day as provided
and other businesses that flourish in
tiOO
lbs
29
.00.
.
by. the ·U:S. Department of Agricul·
~oars: over 300 lbs. 15.00-1 8.00; the summertime. The ·situation was
ture Marf!et News:
.
Barrows· and gilL~: steady to SO · under 300 lbs. 19.00~23.00, few· similar last year.
"Students can pretty much pick ·
cents lower. demand and movement 25.00. .
and
choose," he said. "Employers are
Estimated
receipts:
34,000.
moderate.
··
scrambling."
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs: country Prices rrom· Produc:en Livestock
Restaura~ts are lookinl! for
points 40.00-41.00, few 39.50 and Association
greeters,
table clearers and other
Thursday's
~fends:
41.50; plants 41 .00-42.00. few 42.50.
workers.
Hogs
SO
cents
lower;
sows
steady;
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 35.00Leslie Dixon, c&lt;H&gt;wner of BullCl!ttle steady.
39.00; 210-230 lbs. 3L50-3S.OO.
winkle's restaurant in the Dayton •
Sows: near s&amp;eady.

Tourism tour visits
Meigs County area ·

Summer jobs aplenty
expected for Ohio teens .

roday's livestock report.

Gallipolis livestock auction results

Man faces burglary charge

Producers Livestock Market Medium/Average $'32-$36.
retiort from Gallipolis for sales conThin/Light $26-$33, Bulls $44.
A 21-year-old Middleport man
dueled on Wednesday, May 6.
$54
.
• was bound over to the Meigs CounFeeder Cattle.
- Back-To The Farms:
ty Common Plea~ Court on a charge
200-30011 St. $88-$102, Hf. $80Cow/Calf Pairs $400-761l; Bred of burglary. .
$97, 3()()..4()()jl St. $84-$106. Hf. Cows $S2S-$63S; Brered cows, 250Anthony A. Robinson, 25 Cole
$78-$88. 500-6501 St $78-$93 Hf. 67S; Baby Calves $15-175; Goals Streel. Middleport, al~o known as
$63-$82 650·800t St. S6S-S77: ,Hf. . $20-$58.
Tony Harris, is charged in the April
$58-$72.
·
· All day breed feeder calf and 25 burglary of the Misty Lane resiWell Muscled/Fleshed $37-$45 brood cow sale Saturday, May 27. · dence on Wells Road. Middleport.
• For free on·farm visits, please She reponed the back door of her
c..1614-446-9696.•
Holzer Medical Cenler
-=:C:::::ont::::lnu:::ed:..::f'ro.::m:...l:page::a::...:.l_ _
Discharges May 6 ·
Angela O'Shea. Dorothy Woolextend the offer."
• capability for the future.
. didge, !(andy Bachtel, Harold MorThe company would like the. 170
The unit plans to introduce new
'- gan, Beverly Harris, Mrs. James
Am Ele Power ................... 46 518 off the payroll by De~. 31., he said.
products to the marketplace and lest
Akzo ................................105 518
Westfall and daughter, Dori5 Oiler,
The glut of resin is depressing new concepL~. This will allow Shell
AmrTech ...........................43 1/4
Billie Brown. Oather l:lelm. Lccta
prices for the product. Mcintyre said. to be more flexible as a supplier as
A8hl*'tl 011 ......,................ 54 118
Long. Alva Oiler, Frank Nukey,
"Shell is committed to the poly- well as maintain its competitive edge.
ATIT .......... ,•.•••. ,.•.•.•.•.•....• 58 718
Mildred Scali.
ester
business. Because of this we
"The restructuring will put Shell at
Bank One ......,..................5&amp; 7/16
BirJhs May 6 ·
the
forefront of low cost PET prointend
to
transform
the
performance
Bob Evana ......................20 7/16
The following babies were born;
B9111-W1mer .....................59 1/4 of Shell's Point Plea~ant polyester . duction with world-cla~s manufacMr. and Mr.&gt;. Matthew McCaulla,
8rotJghton ......................:•••15 7/8
plant to world-cia&lt;;&amp; levels in the areas turing centers in the U.S .. Mexico and
Champion
.........................13 112 of cost, quality and reliability while Europe. Shell will also continue to
a daugbter. from Bidwell.
Mr. and Mr.;. Rudy Perry, a daugh- · Cherm Shps ........................4 7/8 at the 'same time increa.~ing the ·have the capability to develop new
City Holdlng ......................441/4
ter, from Jackson.
Federal Mogul ......................... 63 capacity at the plant," said Dale markets such as food trays, beer botMr. and Mr.&gt;. Brian Stiltner, a
Gennett ........................... 66 9/16 Holecek, vice president PET (poly- tles. baby bottles and 12 ounce botdaughter, from Jackson.
Goodyear ..........................69 1/4
tles," Holecek said.
ethylene terepthalate).
Kntllrt............................... 18 3116
Veterans MeiiiOI'illl
"We ·believe that this expansion
Kroger ...........................40 13116
ADMITI'ED WEDNESDAY and
restructure program will allow
Lands End .........................36 518
Tina Storms. Pomeroy. and Albert
Shel~
to improve our position in the
Ltd .....................................34 318
Roush, Pomeroy.
.
.
U.S.
well
into the next century."
Olk Hill Finl ...................... 27 112
DISCHARGED WEDNESDAY ·. OVB .........................................49
The plant will restructure, chang--None.
·
One Vllley ....................... 37 5116
ing the mix of operating units. idling
Peoplea .............................31 518 iL~ oldest continuous _production unit,
Prem Flnl ...........................21112
flockwwll ...........................57 1/4 and upgrading 'the remaining continThe Daily Sentinel
RD/Stlell •• ;.....................~.57 3116 uous production units to state-of-theCIJSPS ll:J:"'l
s.................................... 57 7/16 art technology. Four batch lines will
Shoney's ........·...................s 1/16
also ~emain bpcr:itional.
Publllhed cvlry allcrnoon. Monday tlvovJh
Star
Bitnk
................................
62
The plant will oper~te it~ .Market
Frldly, Ill Cfturt 51., Pomeroy, Otlto, ..y lhe
Wencly'a ..................... ;.•2311/16
Ollio Volley Publ~-iol ComponyiO•ncn Co.,
Development Unit at the Point Plea.~­
Pomeroy, Ollio 4~769. Pll. 992-2156. S«ond
Wosrthlngton.................. 17 9116 ant plant. on a cost-effective ba~is in
clua poscacc p1id .u Pomeroy, Ohio.
;.WE NEVER
Siock reports are I he 10:30 order to provide product development
M•btr. T1te Aa~i1kd Prns, and lhe Ohio
a.m. quote• provided by Advest
Newtpaptr Auocilllon.
CoMPROMISE ON
of Galllpoll•.

Hospital news ·

Shell to cut•..

Stocks

I

THANK ·YOU!

My sincere appreciation goes out to each
of the 1,317 Meigs CounUans who voted for
me In .t he May 5th Republican Primary
Election.
.
.
1 am also very · gratef.ul to all those who
have given me support and assistance during
my years as County Commissioner.

~ /.hr~?:"'L1~
Pd. tor by Fred Hollman, 258 So. Fou.th Ave., Mkldtwport, Ohio 457110

,

ON MOTHER'S DAY,
GIVE HER WHAT SHE'S
ALWAYS GIVEN YOU.

,.-

-·-·-

POSTMAinll: Sor:nd 16dre11 c:omc1ioasto
1M D1ily Sen1il1el, I 1I Cour1 Sr., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

.

S!!ISCRtrrtON IATES
a1 c.merorMoter ...w

.

0., W..L ...............................................S2.00
()fte

M01111h .......... ......................................$K.70

0.. Year ............................................... SI04.00

IINCLII COPY PmCE
Dally ............................... .............:.......35·C'lenu

.,

s t r ibtrt 110t cllliri., 10 pey sM ta"Mr ruy
remit 11 ldv•nc:c direct 10 1\e O.lly Sc•ti~l
Oft 1 1hm,lix or 12....,...,. bui1. Credit will be

atv• CJn!Cr ndl week:

COLONY THEATRE
lOMGtfT .
IIIIUCa WUII·IN

MERCURY RISING
R
ONE EVIIIIIIG BilOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
WIIII•M HURT, QAIIV OLDIIAH

-QUALITY

.,.

Bur OCCASlONAUX
WE Do ON Plua.

The Very B~st.

SPRING SALE
NOW IN PROGRE$5

Give the gift that's as
precious as her love.

IN

LOST IN SPACE P0-\3
ONE EVINIHO SHOW 7:30

FINE JEWELRY

No pbsc:riptiaa by tuil pcrmlned In •re••

.,.... .,.. wrier ttn~k:e it 1\'lil.t&gt;le.
hbliNtr raervn tM ript 10 ldjlltt raw dllt·
Ina tile ,_,lptloo period. S.-lp&lt;ioo rate
ChlftiJCI Jill)' lJc lmpltftNilW by dunp. lhc
dur11ion o( lllte IMiblcripllon.

·-lllclp

MAlLIIJilcturnONS

,

c-, .

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
I'RL,IAT~ lUlL
BRUCE WIUJIIN

MERCURY RISING
. R

ll - ............ ............... ................... $27.30
;!6 ........ ............................ ............. S!Il.Kl

AND
JACK IIICIICII.ICIN, HILIN HUNT

. --~~~c~pc-,.
tJ - . ...........................................-.. $29.2!

IN

sz-..............._..............................stnB6
26 !2 -

............ - ......._._ ....................... S!16.611
.. ~. - .................................... Jt09.7Z

,.

....

A GOOD AS IT Gm P0-13

1120 W. Maill St. -l'oiqeroj, 0

Pb-811-11118 ' ·

Vmtoa ~ 188 IJIOS

Galli~-···0811

•

·'
I

•

ed Carper petitions supporting
By JIM FREEMAN
tourism.
Sentinel News Staff
Carper said tourism brought
"Toutism Means Big Bucks For
$605 .84 million in receipts to
Ohio's Appalachia" .
That's the message of Ohio's Appalachian Ohio in 1996 and
Appalachian Country, an organiza- employees 22,823 people with a
tion promoting Ohio's Appalachtan payroll of $204.41 million.
"Ohio's Appalachian region holds
suburb of Miamisburg, said compa- region.
so
man~ treasures for the visitor to
Members of the organization were
nies that arc hiring "need td be
aggressive. There.'s plenty of compe- in Meigs County Tuesday .~oming a~ explore. This rich historic area holds ·'
part of a three-day motor home tour Ohio's first settlement, Ohio's first '
tition:·
Elizabeth Williams, a spokes- through 29 counties of eastern and capital and Ohio's first French settlement,'' she said. ..
woman for Pammount's Kings Island southeastern Ohio.
I; '
The tour is being held in conin Mason, said the amusement park
had so far filled 4,500 of its 6,000 junction with National Tourism
openings for tempOrary jobs in food .Week.
"Members of Ohio's Appalachian
and game booths and maintenance. ·
"The Ohio marketplace is very - Country are spreading the word that
challenging in terms of finding the tourism industry brings millions
employees," Ms. Williams said. "But of dollars each year to the region,"
we're a fu'n place . We offer a lot of said Teresa C: Carper, executive
director of the Ross-Chillicothe Conbenefits and ·perks."
. She said Paramount's Kings vention &amp; Visitor.&gt; Bureau, and prcs_Island has advertised, conducted job ident o( Ohio's Appalachian Country.
They were greeted in the Pomeroy
fairs and even met with chambers of
commerce to get the word out :ibo~t Parking Lot by local officials including Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
job openings·.
.
and
Middleport Mayor Dewey
Stephen Norton, a spokesman for
Cedar Point amusement park in San- "Mack" Horton, Also attending were
dusky. said the park's rec~itnient . Meigs County tourism director Karin
Johnson and economic development
effort~ stretch to 70 colleges 10 sevdirector Ron McDade.
en states.
The delegation is collecting local
proclamations and petitions of support that will be presented to Governor George V. Voinovich on Fnday.
Judy Williams, chairwoman of the
trailer wa' kicked in and a .22-caliber Meigs County Chamber of Compistol and jewelry stolen, according merce's tourism committee, presentto a Meigs County Sheriffs Depart·
' Tl)e care of -born ll'lplds lakes
inent report. The handgun was recov- :jabout
197 hours per week. Since
ered during a traffic stop in Rutland,
then: arc only 168 hours every !Ieven
the report indicated.
days, triplet porents are ¥tl')' tired. .
Soulsby said the incident is not
likely related to a series of burglaries
in the western end of the county.

�Thursday, May 7_, 1~

Sports

The D.aily Sentinel
·

Young's
sixth-inning homer .helps Reds defeat Expos -4-2
.

. Page4
Thursday, May 7, 1998

MONTREAL (AP) - Mike
Remlinger is happy that he doesn't
have 10 face Dmitri Young in a crucial situation.
. Young's leadoff homer in the
sixth allowed Remlinger 10 win for
the third time in hi's last four deci sions as lhe Cincinnati Reds won
their third straight series by defeating
the Montreal Expos 4-2 on Wednesday night.
" He was one of those guys that
you didn't want up there when the
game was on the line because il
seemed like he was always just fight·
ing you/' R~mlioger said of Young,
who was acquired in the trade that ·

NBA second-roimd playoff action cohtinues

Hornets shock Bulls; Lakers also win
Wednesday night. the Los Angeles final period, missing all six of his
By NANCY ARMOUR
CHICAGO (APl- The Chicago La~ers tied their Western Conrerence field-goal attempts.
Bulls stood around, waiting for semifinal at I· I by crushing the
Jordan managed to keep the Bulls
Michael Jordan to save them once Seallle-SuperSonics 92-68.
close. scoring ~ight of his 22 points
again.
Tonight. the 'New York Knicks are in the fourth quarter. Qur after hilling
It didn't happen. And the Bulls at Indiana and San Antonio is at Utah. two free throws to cut the margin to
have Jordan's former backcourt mate Both home teams won their opener. 74-71 with 2:261eft, Mason stopped
After a dismal showing Sunday in him cold.
to thank.
BJ , Armstrong scored eight of his which they shot iust 36 oercent. the
The Bulls wouldn't score again
10 poiniS in the final periOd. includ- 1-Jomets looked to be headed for until ·Luc Longley's layup with II
ing the game-sealing jumper with 17 another bad night after the first three seconds left. Toni Kukoc added a
seconds left, as Charlotte rail ied to quarters. Glen Ric~. a big scorer who meaningless three-pointer at the
beat Chicago 78-76 Wedne sday has a history of trouble at the United buzzer.
Center. was 4-of-12. Anthony Mason
night.
"Late in the game, they clamped
As Armstrong's 17-footerwent in was 5-of-12. Charlolle was hovering down defensively," Jordan said. "We
-right in front of Chicago's reserves around the 35 percent mark.
rotated and didn't get the basktiS that
Trailing by eight midway rhrouglt we wanted. They came back with a
- he turned toward his old teammates, pumped his list and started the fourth quarter, coach Dave lot more momentum at that time an&lt;l
woofing at them. The Bulls could Cowens turned to his reserves for made some big baskets down the
help. Armstrong and Dell Curry did· stretch."
only stare back in silence.
And Armstrong. who played on n"t disappoint him. Curry sparked a
Mason finished with 15 poinL• for
9-0
run
with
a
three-pointer
with
6:46
Chicago's first three championship
Charlotte, and Rice added 14. Vlade
reams of the decade but was left · left, and his follow-up jumper gave Divac grabbed 19 rebounds, includunprotected in the 1995 expansion Charlotte a 64-63 lead.
ing a key offensiv.e one to set up
Cuny scored 13 of his 15 in the Armstrong's jumper.. •
draft, wasn 't about to let the moment
go. He was still yapping at Scottie final period.
Dennis Rodman had I 8 rebounds
. "B.l. and Dell came in and played for the Bulls .
Pippen after a timeout.
"Some people may be shocked big.'" Cowens said. "I qid not play·
Armstrong tried to downplay the
with his attitude and some of his ges- Dell a lot early because we ~new they significance of his shot and his role
tures, but give him respect," Jordan would put a lot of pressure .and we in beating his old team.
said. "He motivated his team and wanted a fresh shooter at the erld. BJ.
"What happened then is then and
won a game, a big game for them." hit big shots at the end and kept us what happens now is now," he said.
A big game• Try a huge game. organized."
"I had a shot that presented itself and
While.Armstrong and Curry were I pulled up and shot it with confiCharlotte's victory evened the East·
em Conference semifinals at one rolling. their teammates were shutting dence. Fortunately.- it went down. "
game apiece, with Game 3 on Friday the Bulls down. Chicago was just 8Lakers 92, SuperSonics 68
in Charlotte. The Bulls have now lost of-24 (33 percent) in the fourth quarIn Seattle, Shaquille O'Neal got
Game 2 of the conference sem1finals ter and 31-of-85 (36.5 percent) over- even with Sonics coach George Karl,
all . Scottie Pippen. who finished who criticized the Lakers center's
for a second straight year.
' In the only other game played with 13 points. was scoreless in the high elbows and hip-hop moves in
the paint. O ' Ne~l scored 20 of his 26

poiniS in the first half and had 10
rebounds lmd four blocked shoiS
before leaving with 4:20 to play and
the Lakers ahead by 21.
Eddie Jones added a career playotT-high 23 poiniS, and Nick Van Exel
had. 16 for the Lakers, who played
without I 9-year-old All-Star Kobe
Bryant. who missed the game
because of the flu.
Vin Baker had 13 points and Gary
Payton and Sam Perkins 12 apiece for
Seattle, which was held to a franchise-low postseason scoring output.
The 68 points were the fewest given up by the Lakers in a playoff
game.
_
Garnes 3 will be held at Inglewood, Calif., on Friday.

I

in

fl

Dave Burba (3-3) allowed three
runs and six hit• in seven innings.
even lhough he said his heart was racing and he couldn't catch his breath
the whole game. Manager Mike Hac- ·
gro_ve and trainer Jimmy Warfield
went to the mound to check on Burba·in the fourth, but the right-hander
said he was OK.
"I don't know if the cup of coffee
I had before the game was stronger
than strong or what," Burba said. "It
,kind of scared me because my heart
was racing lind I CO\Ildn't catch my
breath. I didn't feel comfortable out
there .. I'm surprised I didn't hit a couple of guys. it was that scary."
With Cleveland already leading 4. 1 in the founh, Thorne hit his si~th
homer, a three-run sho.t to left to
make it 7-I. Erickson was replaced
by Nerio Rodriguez, who allowed an
RBI bloop single by Bell to make it
8-1.
The Indians made it 3-0 in the second on a two-run homer by Lofton,
· a .383 career hitter with three homers
in 47 at-bats against Erickson..
Notes: The Indians tied a season
high with 14 runs and had a seasonbest I 7 hits .... Mar~ Whiten. signed
to a one-year contract to be Cleveland's fifth out.fielder. came in as the
'right fielder in the eighth and later .
walked.... Manny Ramirez. out with
sore calves. is expected to return to
the lineup tonight at Texas.... Cal
Ripken stopped an 0-for-15 slide with
a single off Burba in the founh ....
The Indians scored only 20 runs in
Burba's first six starts for an average
of 3.3 per game. Hargrove said he
didn't think the right-hander's shortness of breath was anything serious.

Scoreboard
IO:M 1'1 m

f.ut~m Di"bion

Bn!lron ...
B:Jitimore .

l!: I. f&lt;l.

ll

6

,.,. ,.,.,.

21 10

...

Tnronro ,

I]

TampQ Bay

.7..

Gil

.677

2';

~"
4\K

Ill

4llJ

•

10'

Ctntral DMsion

CLEVELAND

,,.12•. .... ,•...,,
""12 ,. .."""
1K7
7
?' ·
.lM
'
I')

···'·

K:uua• City .
Minnesota ..

Chic"o·:.......
Octtou ........

611

lO

,.

Wnttm Oivlsion
Te:IIIOd '''.

1\nahc•m ...
Sc:.rl lt: .

Oakland

..

.

..

·········

12
lj

611
'lj.\f

2',

'\00

l ':

17

.4:\2

5

,.14 ,.

11

Oettorl 10: Oakland:\
CLEVELAND 14,_H :Il rnnaw~." ·:\
Minnnot;t. tl. ~W~f'1'J. 7

Friday's g•mes

.-':til

20

. ~$~

IC

22

;\.\J

11
tl!

. .14

17

Mnnlre;•l ........, ................ II
t-•lunda .................. ................ ll
Hn11~1nn .............................. 20
Milwaula! .. ,..............
IK

12

••

IJ

.. Cti11..'3JO ........

... 17

I~

St. Lnms ..

.. .. 17

I~
J 1'1

h

CINCINNATI ..
...... If!
Pi11aburjh ..... .. ................ 14

Itt

62~
. ~ltl

llliH
'ii.l l

."00
.4.1M

Wtst~m

Dt.-hion
.. ......22 10
San Franl..'r." ct ... .......... .. .I" I~
... .

..

.. 16

lh

.. ... :.............. U

J. San Oie~;o 2

Atlanta 7, l.ot AngelcsO

Bosron CRow 1-l) at KanJas Ciry {Rapp 1-)),
8·Cl'l p.m.
.
CLEVELAND (Co 5oft 2·1) at TeUI (Sele .4i-1).
2-~) .

( l.rdltrl~l. 7~p. nt

.
S! Louill f t't1h t1~ 2- 11 at N.Y. Mel' lRtL'd 2-2J.
7:40 J'l n1
Su n Oic!ln (A~h y .t-2) al Allimla 1Gh1~int: 4-1 ),

~1'1

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." ql

4~~

.242

·

Chicago Cyt)tl. HouSfon 0
Philadelphia 7. Color:ado 6 ( IOJ
CINCIN'NATI4, Montreal 2
•
San Francisco 10, Aorida 9
PirtlburaJI '· Sr. Louil 0
N.Y. Meat 8. AritMa 1

Tonlght'spmu

Huu~hlfl

!'·:
.1

I J.K :O~pn1

·-•
)

(HanlfJ!nn -~ ·0) at Milwauk.L"( IJUtlt:n ·' ·

Basketball

NBA tonferente Semifinals
Wednuday's stor..

' ciou-lollc 71. ChN:aJO 76: ~ntcs ll.t:l.ll· l
los AOf.clea 92. S.aule 61: !Wfiu lied 1-1

Tonight's '"""'"

New York at lnd_it~IJJ. t\ p.m. (TNT)
San An.tonio a1 Ur:il, IO:JO {TNT)

Friday's pines
Chicago a1 Chodoue. 8 p.m. {TNT)
Sealtle all..ol AnJtlcs. l0:30 ,-..m. ITNT)

Solanlay's pmes
Utah llt San Anronio, J :.lO r m. (NBC)

Indiana ar New York. I p.m. CNH'Cl

Cokndo {Wri&amp;hf 2-2) ar Morureal tPcKz 0- JJ,
7:0l pm.
Arit.olla Clknn 2· 2) at Philadelphia !~hillinJ
Friday's pma
.l-J). 'H K o.m.
1.- . •
- - 1 ·-:n :ot Ronda (Ham: so~r;more tllnbek Ml • Tompa lby '(Sprin11Cf
OIOftd
Baseball
1-4), 7;Cl'l p.m.
· ·
CINC INNATr (Weathers 2- 1) at PitiiburJh
AtMrkanLt.,...
($oba""*"" "-0) 11 K.n,.. Gly (H.,.,
(Lo.-.u 1-1), 7:0l p.m.
2·2). ~~ p.m.
CLEVELAND INDIA1 NS~ Sr&amp;nc:d OF Mn,k
N.Y. Vaniut (lnbu I-OJ at MinneiOia (Radle
St. LouiS (Osborne 1·1) ar NY. P«fs (Yottni J. Whiten
11. 7:40p.m.
·
•
J-2).1:0:1 p.m.
KANSAS CI'IY ~OYALS; Pt,~ed RHP Hopo~; .
a.EVELAND (()poa HI oo Te..s (Hellina &amp;San Ditao (Hamilroo .1· 1) 111 Atlanta {Smoltt2· ro Pichardo on J~ I ~-day diubled hsl. Called up
OJ. 7:40p.m
0). 8:Jl pm.
LHP Jamie Walker from .Oznaha of rt.e PCL

Transaction s

0-ll&gt;:r.;s,.;,

·•

·

7 : ~rm

W•dnosday's stores

)~. J ; I Sp . m .

111 Seattle CMoyrr

. Ptnllllldf!h~&gt;l ..........

M ilwat~ktt

Today's gamH

~-J•

.

Ill
Arizona ............................... K 2.,

lldroit c~ r-4l a1 Oakland tCundiofli J.

Toromo CCieme111
10:05p.m

Anothctm {W:If!U)n 1-]J.j

n:

Los Angeles.. ,.

B:.y ~ . K:tn$~ Ctty 0
N.'Y. YonkM 1~. Te:w./u I~
Statile I 0. OucaJo Whll~ St!:w. 1)
Toronto 6. An*'m ~

!Jl p.ln.

:It

NL

Cnll.'of'ado . . .

Tamp:~;

Chicngo Cuhs

Cht~af!n Whu~ So• ISuntka 4-21 ar OaklanLI
Snn Fr:md~o ~Darwin 2-2) "' Chiug(l Cuh,
(Oqut~l IJ.I I. 10 .\. r .m.
(Tr:k:h!CI.•I ·' · I I. ~; 20 r .nt.
·
l'ulnnrdn (1\Madl) 2,.,.) a1 Mnn.,tal ( 1-k."mllut~nn
standings
1-2). HI~ f'.nl.
.
Anzuna (Riaif 0.6) a1 Ptlila..ltlfl'hia IC"m=c-nc 2- .
EMtern DM!~ikln
21. 7:0:'ii r m
Iram.
L lf&amp;.· 1i1l
a...~· 1\nj:d~os !Park l -01 at Floridu!Sand~l 11\tlama . .. .. ~,.......
. . 2.1 10 h"n
I ). 7 :0~ p m
New VtJfk ..........
lfl 1-'' .:'ii.U
~·.
CINC INNATI ITt•IJil\1 4- 1) ~• Pirt"!Jur~h

~n Di~go

W•dnosday's S&lt;ores

.U

(Gonulczl-31. K:M p.m.

IX1ro1t {Mnchk.'f 2-21
IO:O:'ii fl m

AL standings

rNewY(If"lt .....

San Frarl4.'i~o (Gardner 2·1)

Turontn IWtlliarn.; J . l) 011 Sc-:ttrh:: (JfflmMJn 2- 1),

Baseball

.,y RICK GANO

· CHICAGO (AP) Kerry
Wood's fastball was buzzing through
the strike zone at speeds up to 100
mph. His curve was dipping at the
last second. His slider? That was
even more untouchable.
Swinging or looking, the Houston
Astros were simply overmatched by

DRIVING p11t Chicago guard
Michael Jordan Is the task of the
moment for Charlotte guard B.J.
Armatrong· during Game 2 of
thalr NBA Eaatam Conference
aamlflnal •erlaa Wldna1day
night In Chicago. Jordan'a exteammate acored 10 polntl,
Including tha gama·w!nnlng
jumper to help the Hornell win
78-76 and ·tie lha serle1 at 1·1.

curveball, then another curve to
strike him out," Young said. "And he
came at me the exact same way. He
came with a fastball away. then a
curveball. I was fortunate enough to
get good wood on it"
. The Reds got a break in the seventh. that allowed them to score an
insurance run.
Reggie Sanders drew .a leadoff
walk and was sacrificed 10 second by
Remlinger. Chris Stynes flied out to
right, and Sanders attempted to
advance to third. Right .fielder
V.ladimir Guerrero's throw struck
Sanders in the back and Sanders fell

a 20-year-old right-hander in jusl his
fifth major league start,
" It's the besi game I've ever seen
pitched. I'm just proud to have been
there to watch it.'' Chicago Cubs
manager Jim Riggleman said.
Wood struck out the side in the
first. and he never stopped, He finished with 20 strikeouts. a first for a

National League pitcher and tying·
Roger Clemens' major league record.
Wood also allowed just one hit.
" I couldn't imagine ever doing
this, to tell you the truth," Wood said
after-one of the most dominant performances in major league history as
the Cubs beat the Astros 2-0 Wednesday.
"It's special to strike out that
many, regardless of who has done il,"
he said. "It hasn't settled in, and I'm
still in awe a little bit."
Wood (3-2), who will tum 21 on
June 16. tied the record set by ·

lson-Moore tandem
wins title in Rivers,ide
Two-Man Scramble ,. ·G~ma quartet
The 1998 Riverside Two-Man Scramble Championship was decided by a
tough five hole playoff on April25 .
A total of 3ltearns entered the championship flight this year with the resuliS
decided after flve holes of play between the teams of Doug Ison Jr. of Ironton and Mark Moore of Ashland, Ky. against Jay Kauffman and Greg McGraw
of Beckley, W.Va.
.
' Json and Moore bif!(ied the 600-yard par-5 fifth hole to take the 1998 title.
The two teams had tied after regulation at 61 , which is 9-under-par for the
-Riverside layout.
·
·
A total of 55 teams entered the tournament with more than $4,500 in prizes
returned 10 the winning teams. G~eat weather and excellent play resulted in
some really good scores for this year's event.
The following results were the final totals in the two nights.
·
Championship Dlght
First: Doug lson, Ironton; Mark Moore, Ashland, Ky.
30+31=61
33+28=61
Second: Greg McOrnw &amp; Jay Kau!Tman, .Beckley, W.Va,
Third: Gary Withrow, Charleston, W.Va.,
32+30=62
Josh Agee, Cross Lanes, W.Va.
Fourth (tiel: Dave Bodkin &amp; Andrew Nibert,
33+30=63
Point Pleasant. W.Va.
.
33+30=63
Fourth (tie):' Drew Dunkle &amp; Aaron Epling, Gallipolis
Sixth (lie): llill Hess &amp; Keith Palmer, Parkersburg W.Va.
33+31=64
33+31=64
Sixth (tie): Mitch Miracle, Belpre, David Lock. Marietta
First night
TIE-First: Bill Yoho, New Haven, W.Va. . .
34+35=69
Bob Mcintosh, Athens
34+35=69
TIE-First: Randy Rainer, Jacksnn, Gene Layton, Jackson
36+34=70
Doug Williamson &amp; Matt Cline, Huntington, W.Va.
.Rick Ferrell and Bill Kennedy, Cross Lanes, W.Va.
34+36=70
36+34=70
John Mahaffey &amp; Craig Banford, Huntington. W.Va.
35+35=70
Denny Keiffer &amp; and Eddie Berry, St. Albans. W.Va.
~andy Akers &amp; Don Duty. Madison, W.Va.
37+33=70

row

~D PLAC!' belonged to lh- young men my Gardner and Taylor Newman. In lhe,blicll
who participated In the 12 weight c)altel In the are Brian Haisley, Josh Hagar, Jolh Dlltlehol'lt,
lirlt Southam Powarllftlng Meet at Southern H!gh Tony Diu and Mike Vedder.
~hoof.

In front are (L-R) J-mlah Donnet, Jere-

Marauder
golf ·scramble

'WinS

.

little bit of extra cushion ."
forward s•fely onto third base.
letT Shaw pitched the ninth for his
Willie Greene then singled for his
second RBI of •t,e game. scoring NL-leading lith save. Scott Sullivan
Sanders to give the Reds a 4-2 lead. pitched a one-hit eighth, striking out
"It was just a battle and I was real- one.
.
After retiring the first six Cincin1y glad thai, we were able to come
back and score the one on Dm'itri 's nati batters, Vazquez ran into trouble
home run," Remlinger sai~. "It in the third.
Casey drew a leadoff walk and
seems like my last couple of games
I've made one two-strike, two-out advanced to second on a single by
pitch, and it's ended up costing me Sanders. Remlinger advanced both
games. I thought that was going to be runners with a sacrifice, and Vazquez
the case today.
hit Stynes to load the bases. Greene
"Then Dmitri hits the home run then hit a sacrifice fly. and Young
and we score that fourth run and added a two-out RBI single.
that's just a huge run ttl give us that
Center fielder Rondell White pre-

vented another run from scoring in
the inning wir.h a sensational diving
catch on Ed Taubensee 's sinking
line drive to left-center.
Chris Widger hit his first homer of
the season in the third to cut Cincinnati's lead to 2-1.
Guerrero's two-out RB1 single
tied the score 2-2 in the fifth . Guerrero drove in F.P. Santangelo,...who
had drawn a one-out walk and stolen
~ond .

Santangelo reached base safely for
the 24th straight game, but went 0for-3 to end his 14-game hitting
streak.

The fifth'annual Meigs Marauder
Foolboll Golf Scramble was'held Sat·
urday at the Meigs- County · Golf
Coun;e. [)espite a steady rain tfu!t fell
the entire 'day 20 teams played in' the
tournament.·
Taking .home first place honors
w~ the team of Ron Jackson, Mike
Haynes. M.T. Blaine and Gene
Canady with a score of 10 under par.
The team. won a one hole playoff
after to win the championship after
the team of Shawn Baker, Matt Baker, Don.Nelson and Randy Pierce also
:carded a score of 10 under.
A three way tie fonhird place was·
decided with a playoff, the·team of
Mick Davenport, Dale Browning,
Charlie Marshall anll Steve Bachner
won the chip off.
Despite the weather the towna·
ment was a suCces5. "The tournament
was a suicess," Marauder football
coach Mike Chancey said. "I appreciate all the players for fighting the
elemeniS, along with the sponsors and
Pat O'Brien and the Meigs County
Golf Course for helping us."

Clemens against Seanle on April 29,
1986, and matched by Clemens
against Detroit on Sept. 18, I 996.
"!think it's awesome," Clemens
said from Anaheim, Calif.
"He's got a really good idea
about how to pitch, or he wouldn't be
at this level right nciw. as young as he

ell and Moises Alou- in all three of
their at-bats. He walked none. but hit
Craig Biggio with a pitch.
"It's not fair to compare him 10
Nolan," Biggio said. "The kid's got
good stuff, but leave comparisons
alone. Today was his day. He. had
everything working. Plus it was the ·
;s."
first time we faced him."
Clemens. who was 23 the fitst
Astros manager Larry Dierker, ·a
time he fanned 20. and Nolan Ryan, . former major league pilc~er. did
whose No. 34 Wood wears on his · make a comparison.
back. are fellow Texans and the
"He reminded me of the first time
pitchers who have inspired Wood I saw Ryan." Dierker said. "By the
most.
time the ball left his hand. it was in
"You don' tteach that kind of ann, the mitt. Only that time. ~yan was
it's just there," Cubs pitching coach wild. This kid wasn't wild."
.
Phil R~gan said. "He. has a nice easy
Ir not ror a third-inning single off
delivery. His fastball just jumps and third ba.&lt;eman Kevin Orie's glove by
they can't react to it."
'
Ricky' Gutierrez. Wood would have
In his first complete game in the . had a no-hitter.
majors; Wood fanne.d the Astros 3-4"He'll probably pilch a few no5.hitters- Jeff Bagwell. Jack How-. hitters. His stu IT is the real item.''

.

,OIIEROY, OHIO
Mon.•Frl. 9 am~l

Dierker said. "What he throws is
clearly distinguished from what the
rest of the league throws."
With the fans chanting "Kerry,
Kerry '.' in the last iJlning: Wood
fanned pinch-hitter Billy Spiers on a
1-2 pitch leading off for his seventh
straight strikeout. !Iiggio then
grounded to shortstop on a 1-0 pitch.
Wood got No. 20 by fanning Derek
Bell on a 1-2 pitch and was mobbed
by his teammates.
"I had no idea how many I had
going into the last three innings. After
the first inning,. I knew I had three
and I lost track after that," Wood said,
.citing his slider as his main strikeout
pitch.
"I wasn't really worried about the
strikeouts, I khew it was getting up
there. It was just one of those days
where every thing you throw is
(See CUBs on Paae 6)

'

(614) 992·6614. (800) 137·1094

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sweetheart, couples, teacher, etc.
To be
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May 22,1998
in .
· The Daily
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AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES .OF 1998
On Friday, May 15th, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with photographs
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· Now through Friday,· May 8th, Drop Your
Photo Off at The Daily Se~tinel or At Vour
High School Office to Be Included In This
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•'

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•

sent letT Brantley to the St. Louis
Cardinals last November.
"That's. what he's been doing so
far this year and it's great to see. A
Iinle bit of hunger and aggressiveness
goes a long way."
Remlinger (3-3) pitched seven
solid innings, giving up two runs on
six hits. He sb'uck out six and walked
four.
Young's ltomer off Montreal
starter Javier Va.Zquez (1-3) gave
Cincinnati a 3-2lead. He also had an ·
Rill si ngle in the third and went 7for-13 in the three-ga!DC series. ·
"Earlier, he (Vazquez) threw Sean
Casey a fastball, came back with a

Wood fans 20 Astros to help · push· Cubs past Houston 2-0

'Thome's five-RBI effort ai-d s
;Tribe in beating Orioles 14-5
; By KEN a 'ERGER
seven runs and .eight hits in 3 1/3
CLEVELAND CAP)- While the innings .. Kenny Lofton and Brian
' Baltimore Orioles are happr to get Giles also homered otT Erickson,
;out of Jacobs Field, it doesn t sound with all the shots estimated at more
as though fun and frivolity are on the than 400 feet. The right-hander is 0agenda.
5 with an 8.92 ERA in seven career
· The Orioles had another night· starts at Jacobs Field.
, marish night in Cleveland. losing 14''I'm not real happy. We got our
, 5 to the Indians Wednesday night.to . buns kicked," Miller said. "This just
complete a two-game sweep that had was not a good game. I'm not real
:manager Ray Miller lamenting the happy with the pitching.
' team's high payroll and poor play. '
"We go over their team in the
" I'm supposed to take a $74 mil- pregame meeting, and (pitching
· lion Jlllyroll orwha1ever it is and win coach) Mike Flanigan says not to
' with it.'' Orioles manager Ray Miller challenge them with fastballs. And
:said. "Obviously. this team has got to then we go out there and challenge
·do better than it has."
them with fastballs."
A night after Omar Vizquel rock~ • The Orioles, who started the sea"
;·Armando Benitez and the Orioles son-10-2. began the night nine games
with a game-winning single in the behind the AL East-leading Yankees
ninth, Jim Thome homered and had in the loss column.
five RBis as Cleveland scored seven
" It isn't one guy's fault or two
runs against Scott Erickson.
guys' fault," said Eric Davis. a lone
"Right now, things are not going bright spot with his 12th career twothe Orioles' way.',', Erickson said.
homer game. "You know you're
The "Oriole Way" is a baseball going to lose about 62 games a year
term coined in .Baltimore. It is syn· even if you have a great season. The
onymous with strong pitching. sound problem right now is. we're gelling
fundamentals and the strut of a win- a little closer to that figure than we
ner. It is lost on the Orioles at the want to."
moment.
Thome had an RBI double in the
· Baltimore, with the highest pay- first, a 411 -foor, three-run homer ill
roll in baseball history at $69 million. the fourth and an RBI double in the
lost for the 14th time in 20 games and fifth to raise his average to .388. His
fell to .500 at 16-16. The O's dropped second run-scoring double came durto 7-19 at Jacobs Field. including two ing a three-run inning against Norm
losses the AL championship series Charlton.
last fall .
"ll'scontagious." said Giles, who
"I've been thinking about having had a 434-foot homer ofT Erickson in
a team meeting," Miller said. "I've the third and a broken-bat, two-run
been putting it off. but maybe now bloop single to ri~ht in the fifth that
it's the time."
made it 11 -2. "Thome's really picked
Erickson (3-3) tied his career high it up and we've kind of fed off him
with three homers allowed, giving up the last four or five games.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

·

.

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio.
Thur8day, Miy 7, 1998

The Dally Sentinel !' Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Speedway. Loudon

WEIGHT-CLASS WINNERS - Thlle young
men placed first In the 12 weight clasaes In the
first "Southern Powtrllftlng Meet" at Soutl!em
High School. Event winners were Brett Pierron,
Notre Dame; Willie Collins, Southam; Nathan
Wray, River Valley; Brice Hill, Southern; l't'lchael

Ash, Southam; Adam $andere, Eastern. StandIng are J.B. Boao, River Valley; Juatln Terry, River Valley; George Gam11, River Valley; Clay
Enalen, Southam; Jason Stevens, Eastern; and
Joe Saltsman, Notre Dame.

'

.

Moyt

COIICh Pat Newland, Will Ia Collins, Buster Penix,
Josh Davia, Josh Ervin, Matt Warner, Adam Cum- ·
ln(ils and Matt Aah. In the third row are Clay
Enalen, Jonllhlln Evans, Jll!'lle Baker, JHA Lit·
tie, Jeremy Hill, Jeremiah Johnaon, c:oac:h Dave
Bllrr 1nd Tyler Little. In the fourth row are Josh
Ol~t, "JYier Johnson, Jimmy Alley a"d oloah
Bilker. Not plcturad waa :rommy Roberti.
·

In•
n -

to
Hampohlre, end ... '."!"Y
wlllllo, "Why, lobelw. " ' -·
Tho -..ad dollclcy II llbundanl
oupp~y 1n - Englhl.
-prioh. T h o - -

WHEN: Satulday,

TEAM CHAMPIONS - Tha hOmet-n South·
.em T~ c'-lmect flrat place overall In team
competition, halplng make. the tlrat "Southern
Powertlltlng MNt" a huge succell . Saturday
afternoon In 'Southern's Chllllea W. Hayman
Qymn111um In Racine. In front are (L·R) Mlchasl
Aah, BriCe HIH, Aaron Ohlinger, Anthony Coff:
man, Andrew Coffman. In the 11c:ond row are

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COMING UP: NAPACARD 200
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Ext.1o4

SpMdwoy,

"""· 'a••• elekle

IVIHT QUALIPYING RICORD:

Rich BICkle, CIIW;y, 100.397 mjlll,
May 19, 18117.
RACE RECoRD: Mike 81111, Fonl.
81.2118 mph, May 11, tll98.
.OTH!R I'OIIM!R WINNERS: Ron Hor·
nodi)' and BIIU 11110 won II Monroe. .
NOTAILI: Bickle Ia the only driver to
w1nne111 of thlt race•.•• Ricky Craven
have cletmecl bOth a win ond 1 pole at
and Jimmy Honllil)' on the only drtvero lhlo track.... Mike Skinner .,d Tobay
with two paleo.... Chovrolet hh won
BuDer 11110 have won poiH. , .. The .
five of the prevloue 11 rtcn, three
track II .846 of 1 mile, wit~ B·degrH
m011 Ulan Buick and Ford. Oldomoblle bonking In the t..-no •
ofUice't."••~···

QUIIIIIy - . . . ; . , II1IW1Y lliluoted In
IVIHT QUAIJFY·
lNG RECOIIil: Mike · llwL.oconll-.
MCUUghlln. Chevy,
124.803 mph. May
Randy LaJoie and MoL.-..glllln.
12, t995.
NOTABLE: Joe Nom- onil Robert
Prftoloy 1r1 oliO omong tlto former
RACI RICORD:

C~od Utile, Fold,
104.972 mph, May 13, 1895.
.

St. At. 248 Ch11ter
. 985 3301 '.

OTHER FORMER WINNeRS: Eleven

-

i

different driven hav• won thla rtce

once. Including c......,t BGN ,.guloro

,................
eiu.

lflJ:(I

. I

For More
Information

2. FIDn ~

s..-,....,,m

L-C:U• ... &lt;I!II.
ll . .kll~l61 •
.. Flak CINII. .., •

Wallace

• 7. 1bnp . . . . . . . .

l Br)WI
Alak er.cotd.
I.
AIIIW, C- .
10. - ...
11:1:, 471.

·,

Door NASCAR Thio Week,
Every - k I teod lilt oporto
paac. I mel lilt "NASCAR Tllio
Week" Pl&amp;c·
I rud obwt oil ll1ne poople
arauina about the race cera u ir
IIIey just rolled otrtlte •oembly
line.
·

flGII WT Will

Millin In ... oporl'o modem

Wlltll'ON CUPMM&lt;-boclmethli-

_ .. tnt u... lime -with

a'll
•a ___,_
........,_.....,.__

....... Secootd-ploco....,...
.-ny Meytlold took ..,. ""
. point INd......, ...,.....

__
---·-

~-

.SECOND PLACE belongad to these young
men who compatad .In the 12 weight classes In
the flrat Soutl!em Powerllftlng Meet at SOU1hem
High School. In front are (L·R) Adam Rigdon, Jeff

I

Gardner, Aaron Ohlinger, Clark Delabar and Joey
Shannon. In the back row are Josh Ervin, Adam
Cumings, Matt Warner, Dough Monlllvon, Luke
Daniel and Tyler Little.

Southern Powerlifting Meet
Weiah.t Clus-Unlimited
Player
.
Geofle Games ·
Ada• Rigdou
Josh Hager
JasouGHI
Jake Mit~bell
JeaeUttle
Jeremillh Johasoa
Jeremy Hill
JBJh Kiel•ar
Jimmy Alley
'JYier Johnson
Tommy RoberU .

Sthool
·Bench
31!1
River Valley
J.,illle Miami
320
Euteru
' 290
2SS
River Valley
RiverV.aley
27!1
Southern
145
Southern
14
So at bern
125
Notre-Dame
20!1
170
Soutbt!rn
175
Southen Southern
150

We!Aht Class11!1 poands
a.y Enslen
Southern

100

We~Aht Om 20!1 pounds
Joe SAltsman
Not~ Dame
'JYier Little
Southern

190
150

Weilht Class 19!1 pounds
WIRie CoDins
Southern
Adam Cumings
Southern
Josll Diltlehont
Southern
Jamie Baker
Southern
Johnathan Evaus ·
Southern
Soutloern
Matt Ash
Josh Baker
Soutllern .

315
205
18!1
1110
175
1!50
150

Weight Claa 111!5 pounds
J.D. lloso
River VaHey
Dou&amp; Montavon
Notre Dame
Toay Diaz
Notre l)ame

250. .

0

350
300
.240
235
235
220

150

350
245

335
345
310
315
275
275
270
420
385

275

3115

455

245

340
300
340
250

125
230

260

175
175
225
190
190
190

18!1
1110
165!1
17!1
16!1

1115
1115
16!1
160
160

Wript Clulll!IP"nd• •
·
Nalllaal Wray
River Valley
Jrtr ~1rdner
River Valley
Mike Vetter
Notre Da111r
.Joe Webb
Notre o.DIIIY Hil ·
Southern
Aadl'fl" Coflinan
Southen

375

325

335

m

WeiiJII Claa 145 pGUI.ldl
· Adul Saaden
Eastern
Man WarHr
Soutllem
Taylor New•••
Notre Dame
Bralld011 Hil
Southern
Aadlony Coflin1n
Soatllern

160

23!5

1!55

Wei&amp;llt 0... 155 pounds
Juoa S*"en•
Easten
Jntll Ervin
Southern
Je~lily Gardaer
River Valley
Jnth Davis
Southern
Nick Rutman
Not~ Dame
Jared Taylor
Rwer Valley
Andrew Wlllte
Notre Dame
Shawn Milllpn
Notre Dame
Matt White
Nom Dame ·

I

3110

22!1

We!Aht Class I 65 pouadt .
Mike Ash
Southern
Joey Shaailoa
Notre Dame
Bri~n Haisley
Utile Miami
Buster Peaix
Soulhern
Andrew Grar
Notre Da-

I

Dead.lift
4!15
425
405
450
375
385
315
335
300
315
2110

330
3118

225

Weight Clan 175 pounds
Justia Tel"l)'
River Valley
Luke Daaiel
Notre Dame
Je~illh Donnet
River Valley
Aaron Lindner
Notre Dame
Daney Canter
.Soothe~

Squ•t
405
350
375
315
340
31!1
350
290
215
240
. 115

330

358
115
27!1
25!1

300

liS

300
31!1
325

330

350

zas

150

3110
325
340
310
315
375
• 3110
365

215

315
305
315
245

165
24!1

135
25!1

225

350
315
300
300
150

32!1
2115

2110
260

250 .

100

155

3115

16!1
150
11150

175
250

315

145

~:

IZCI

lOS

2011'

0

230

225

145 .

225

135

•

..r

Welillt O.U 125 poaadl
.
Brett Plena
·
Notre Dame
Weiallt 0....115 pouadt
Oark Dnlbar
Notre Dalft
Aarila OltHqer
Sotlllltn
~ Hil
Soutllem

us
10!1
no

160
175

1110
175

19.0

22!

, Total
. 1175
1095
1070
1020
990
945 '
915
150
790.
735
670
250
785
1015
395

RUNNER.IJP - Plac:lng IIC:ond In the te1m
competition In the flrat Southam Powerllftlng
Mill Wll P0111mouth Notre Dime, COIChld by
.,... native Bob Alhlay. In front •re (L·R) Aaron
Lindner, Shawn Milligan. In tha •aeon~ row are
Matt White, Brett Pierron, Clark Delabar, Tavlor

Meigs Football -Coaches
.
Clinic slated for Saturday·
The lint Meigs Football Coaches
Clinic will be held on·Saturday from
9 a.m. until 3 p.m. at Meigs High
School.
The clinic will feature three top
high school and two·college coach·
·es.
·
·
Among those scheduled to attend
arc:
• Jeff Mullen, an Ohi9 Univenity
assistant Mullen coaches the tight
ends and offensive tackles for the
Bobcats. Mullen was an 1989 allAmerican defensive back at Witten· ·
berg and has seven years of Division
I coaching experience at Hawaii and

O~. Tim Hinton, the head coach at

In.
llo wlli1 Jim -for 20th

Marion Harding High School. Hinton
IOOO was the 1995 Ohio Division I Coach
850 of the Year to go along. with Central
735 Coach of the Year the same year. He
7~
is a two-time Ohio Heartland Coach
6115 of the Year. and his team has won two
645 titles. Hinton has 10 years of college
570 coaching experience at Ohio State.
· Ohio Univenity and Wilmington
College.
1000
• John Magistro, head coach at
911~
Bellaire High School. Magistro is the
955 1995, 1996 and 1997 Ohio Division
IV Coach of the Year. He is a six-time
district coach of the year, and has led
1115 Bellaire to a 39-1 record overthe last
91 5 four years and three straight region·
:
al championships.
.6!55 . • Frank Marino. a highly successful coach for 21 years 11 Ripley
(W.Va.) High School. Marino has.
ov~r
30 year.; of coaching experience
93!1
at
the
high school level. Marino's
905
Vikings
have been a state qualifier
7115
760 four out of the la~t five yean.
• Ray McCartney, an assistant
"!45
coach at Ohio University. McCartney
is the defensive line colich and al!\0
900 serves a$ the Bobcats Rec.-uiting
1115 Coonlinator. McCartney has t4 years
1155· of coaching experience with stops at
1120 Ball State, Wittenberg. Bowling
815 Green, North Carolina and OU.
720 McCartney has been recruiting coor·
:;~ dinator at three different univenitics,
665 and be spent three yean as defensive

- Cubs win ....

(Continued from Page 5)
860
7115 crossing the plate. It just felt like I
745 was playing catch."
720
Wood said he didn't have &amp;ood
6611 stuff warming up. And be was work·
ing with catcher Sandy Maninez·for
the lint time, making his perfor760 mance even more reiJlarkable.
755
"We were on the ~arne page.
645 Every sign he put down I already had
640
the grip in my glove," Wood said. "It
525
fe)tlikc
we could have gone out there
455
with no signals."
Wood struck out the side In the
first, fifth, seventh and eighth · ·
inniqgs, and fanned two each in the ·
secOIKt, fourth and ninth, and one .
i
455 each in the thinl and the sixth.
"I'm
gning
to
give
most
of
the
·
45!1
525 credit to the fans," Wood said. "They
were in it the whole game.

••

•

YM'·

lhete .: • .
Jimmy Miller

.

Red Bay, Alw.

Dewr NASCAR Tllio Week,
I have been w NASCAR ' fan
for about tO yea,., laot my hw·

Lllclc'o run out
7• .,... (II) '
From 43nl to 9tb

. e. .,... .Jomft ltll

.. ""'-1101
Beck In top 10
10. M lllolt (Nil)
~ him alone

Up fiDnl ~ 8. ....., I I a (Ill
Up end down

i ·

0111111 SCIIDIU

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Chester
985-3857

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12:30-6:30

"""&lt;GO·-

g: ~
.'*"'" t

·WilL BE HERE WEDNESDAY, MAY 20.

Nov. •

!.':""" =-...,

=..."":oo~....

.c.tloicio&lt;GO," 11 9••&lt;N.c:
.-11011. Colt&lt;otd. N.c,

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

The Daily
Sentinel

.'

,. . . --In·
-In
.-·
Wllll-tt-·•

CAR: No. 81 Square D
Ford Taurus, pwned by
Filbert Martocci.
CAREER RECORD:
127 starts, 0 wins; 2
poles, 11cip-llve llnlsh,
12 top t Os,. ca!11ef earn·
lngs of .more than $2.5
million.
HOW DID YOU
•
DECIDE TO FOLLOW IN
0 A 8 "0THERS'
Y U ...,
.
FOOTSTEPS? 'I've
always wanted to be.a
Winston Cup driver.
Growing up. our family
wasatar«cetrackev•ry
weekend. Racing was a
way of life lor me, always
has been.•
YOUR FIRsT EXPERI·
ENCE IN WINSTON CUP
WAS NG-T A PLEAsANT
ONE, WAS IT? "I learned
evaluable lesson there.
This Is a team sport, and
we just weren't a team.

_
--

--DullontliOMiill
"*"""
.
NUCARn.--·Eliott

· EIIOit., ......-~
unwitting
victim.
and far ...
hll Fold hlllhe

'·
· "'for lhelirll """
- - ollhe
-lnlhetop15. Mol
... good luck, unfarttNialy•

-lloty.,...

- · Thogood-........
... P~YII
wllh &lt;1/ti

..... _"'

Tony '--tie 11M

1. -

-..--lnllwlut

Dear Charlone,

. C1mera1 are placed in c:an
with lhe approYal of the driveR
ud learnt. NASCAR does not
forft any 1eam to carry an in.c:u
c:amcn. In faR, in aome cues,

Everyone needs to work
toget.her In order to be
succeaaful."
WHAT lilT ABOUT
YOUR PRI!IIENT TEAM · in·c:ar . cameras are placed in
em whose 1ponsan pay a fee
THAT SETS IT APART
FROM YOUR RUN WITH for ttKh u;powre.
FI!LIX SABATI!S IN
11114? 'I consider 1996
my first seastin In Winston Cup because It was
II
Ih
fiiY rat chance w t a
team that was working
together. This Ia my
team; we've grown up
together In a racing
8 ThougiiiiHI win-

MI'IH.TheyarelOOpe~·

c.nt behind me, and I'm
100 percent behind them.
We're In our third year In
Winston Cup, and I'm
poalllve about what this
team Is capable of. We
can win some poles, and
we can run up front.
We're !8ady to show
people that. •

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St.
Middleport

I

.I

992-6611

~
.. blggoet

'COfllinoh
to llo
....
-·
Ml)'fltkl

!Ill
:JI!
1i0
11.

0

~

_

IIICCeiiiiO!y. CIW

cNefPIUIAnd-.
dnctecl Mlylleld to •
~ . ,...,.

flnlall

In the Cellfomle 500.
t!lldng o-llie Win·
11011 Cup point )Old

In lite procen.

. TRIVIA .

-

-.tHOn

1111 EIIIDIIn. Lldr Llct

111 Court St.
Pomeroy

By MonU Dutton
NASCAR This Week
To this point In his
career, Kenny Wa"ace's
achievements have not
rivaled his older brother
Rusty's, but the youngest
of three Wallace brothers
remains as amblllou,s as
ever.
Driving for the third
consecutive season with
the support of electrical
product giant SquareD,
Wallace Is slowly makln_g
his way up the Winston
· Cuptotempole.
Noted for his senseol
humor, Wallace Is a fan
of 1he St. Louis Cardinals
and the rock group ·
Aerosmith.
AGI!: 34
WIFE: Kim
CHILDREN: Brooke
(11 ). Brandy (9), Brittany
(7).
'

..

llUil Of '1111 Will

..

Jofwl a.M'Ioi'ICM\lNI w..k

K8llfii'WIII c• 11'- to be -'dng will hiiCUINIIt-. ~qt-. D.

Wolll of -.nda

AIGp ... polnta
.'
... ....., Lab ....

..

bond to become v.. too. l-Id
like to knoW why Jeff 0-n
never haa a camera on hi a car.·
He '• my favorite .
CharlOtte Tomh:k
Hu\Jcrt, N.C.

._..._WI..... I4)

a. ,.,..,. MeJtllld m

'

\

.

NASCAA.'Ihlo Wool&lt;- Manle Dt*tn. Loll

t. M1rk Merlin 1'1
.F1111
2. ""'Gaftlon (1)
1..- Chlrlotle .

(

•.
'
I'
'•

\

111 onnation on ,·

ire Forcb and Chtvrolets out

end Darrell Wllllrip.

WIIII:IP .......- hllllrlltop-

3--- .·

~

Dlylcne !100 -011011 held I-'&lt;! h... tW.... tlohlng

2. Who- 1fw filii- to win 1fw Dlytono !100 In I Plymouth
Sl p blo'll?

-.tHDn

Kyte Polly 11M finlohodln tho
top 15 only onoo•

II lull • """""Y .-.·

992-2155

I

..

..

RACING ON rill W8! ·

n..Autoc~ ...

m

- - · O C I I I I&gt; .

'
I"
"I

..,

.'

I

SIIHJ:. ··

I

\

"'

\

'

~

St. Rt. 248
· Chesler 9115-3308

...

GET PIC-SURE

...

CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS!

lleuiiJh GIII"NU be.

/

Ripley, wv 28271
.Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1·800-964-FOAD · .

'

••

Only $1.'00 a month ind no more
.additional oudet charges. · ~ ~

Come·See Ua For All Your

Partaand

l

l

ServlceNHfl•

•

. coven cotll that may occur .with
a cutomer'• illlide cable wiring.

•'

I

CABLEV'JSION
c 0 " "u N 1c " 1 10 N 1

WHAT IS PIC-SURE??
· .._
. ·
A service maintenance plan that · 675-3398 or 1-800·768-0553

At. 21 It the Rlpley-FIIrp181n Exll1132 ·

'•
•

••

.

Supply ·

• &gt;(

•

.

•

Ridenour

.

.DAVE HARRIS, EXT. 104
BEFORE MAY 11, 1998

'
.,
C ;;:lghl 1 - Tht ._..., fN.C.) G.-.. • Dlwb•ulld br ......... ,_Ito II 111 tloot•lln4 •Pot ....... WMkof Mlr4

Accessories

'

•

i•

See us for Your Stlh..
Power Tools &amp;

,.

992·2156

.i

.

, www.ttlbluN.com

•,

' I

• THE DAILY .SENTINE:L··
• GALLIPOLIS. DAILY TRIBUNE \'.
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
IF YOUR BUSINESS :1s INTERESTED
IN PARTICIPATING. IN THIS
SPEC.JAL SECTION CALL:

:.&amp;
II

.

,.

Jtll -

~-.Only-- ... fitloh In I

3ummerfields
Restaurant

'18

a..y -

_ , No. 2&amp;, plaolng

tri1nut Ill"
-\.-...11\njM...

·"t

E

pooltlot• wont to
'hrry IM:IOntO, . '

... ..., -

lOP'IDI '

•

R
EDI710

I've never teen anythi0a so
ridiculoull in all lit)' life . ... I
jUit c:an 'l He the point of
arauina over this or ·Jeadin&amp;
· people 10 believe that thote can

- - " " " " - tiw1

Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel
DIAL

. . 992-7834 ..

the ahowroom.

"""""Gh F - - 1·2,

F..--.H--"*"

Newman, Ed Vedder, Josh Klslmar •'lief Joe
Webb. In the back row are Andrew Stlggt,
Andrew Greff, Josy Shannon, Nick Rutmad, Doug
Montavon, Joa Saltaman, Luke Daniel and Tony.
Dlaz.
.

....lf-th_e_99_2_Ex_c-ha-n-ge-l...
s a_F_r_e.-P-art_o_f-Yo_u_r..

coordinator at Wittenberg.
1'he cost of the camp is $10 if you
pre-register and $15 at the door. The
pri~ includes lunch..
·
For ·more infonaation. contact
Meigs bead coach Mike Chancey at
42091 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 or by calling 740-992-2158.

--

___,

engN-IIUinllw,_,

P-=11t••u

temotely elooe 10 IIOC:k elrt, but
by the way poople and the dri·
vert themselves ara:ue, you
-ld illink they juot came from ·

In ... .,.,..,..,_.. point
otandlngo, by two poinll &lt;NW
a-olel.lloth 1lw T....., nl
1lw MonteCiriO howl won

• vlclort. ~ SpNd·

JEFF
WARNERU

These can arc.. no' even

n,llom1972to1fw~.
Fonl .... took &lt;NW llrllplla

.

.
.

.

....

Call or v111t our office It
1410 JetftrtOn Blvd.
In Pt.Piea•nt

••
'

AITENTIONADVERTISERS!!
Advertise·on this page

Call992·2155
.
.

.

Dave Harris Ext. 104
.For More Information

.

.

----7

II
I.
I

.

o

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''

'.
(

.;

I

..• •
••

••

...

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· - - ...-·~-

•i
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�•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohl~

Thursdly, ·May 7, 1898

.

New business plans Mother•s Day open house
T)le Country Bam in Sherman.
W.Va., located on Route 68 about six
niiles nor1h of Ravenswood along the
Ohio River, will hold a mother's day
open house Friday and Saturday, I0
a.m. to 6 p.m.. aod Sunday. noon to
6p.m.
The Country ·Bam houses Ohio
River Herbs &amp; Everlastings, formerly of Long Bottom, and Crystal
Visions by Sharta. The two businesses opened a month ago.
The Country Bam is owned by
Connie Hill of Long Bottom, who
also owns Ohio River Herbs &amp; Everlastings. She describes her business
as a ganlen center specializing in
perennial plaots and herbs. She al5o
ciUries Ohio .River Bear Company
bears and herbal and gardening
books.
Crystal Visions, owned by Sharla
Cobb of Sherman offers hand-blown
glass aod crystal wm. Cobb said
glassblowing is a long tradition in her
family . which practices -the art in
Ritchie County. She also offers
homemade candles and bird houses.
Hill said her business is the same,

The Daily Sentinel.com
Meigs High School

Page9
Thursday, May 7, 1998

riety sh·o w Friday------.
OPEN HOUSE ·The Coulllry Bem, houllng
Ohio River Hert. a Evertutlnp and Cry.tal
Vlalo~ by Sharla, will hold a Mother'&amp; Day
open house tills WMUnd. Shown ill Cont:tle
but in a new location, and invited her
friends from Meigs County to ·Come
visit. Visitor.~ during the open house

Hill, owner of ()fllo River Herlla a Evertutlng
• Hill's bu$1neu waa previoully loc:lillld In Long
Bolt011).

will receive f= herb plan15 and a through Salurday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.,
piece of gla~sware .
and Sullllay. noon to 6.p.m. The busi. Business hours are Tuesday nesses m closed on Mondays.

1.7 FORI CBDWI VICTDBII LX · · ·
Auto, V8, A/C,PW, PL, cruise, tilt, aluminum wh8els .·.·

Top Meigs ...

.

. Contillued from pqe I
Bissell. Elizabeth Farley, Emily
Fowler, Danielle Grueser. Myca
Haynes. Michael Leifheit. Amy
Smith, Matthew Willjams, and Sandra Young.
.
Eastern Local: Grade 4, And~w
Mclntye, Chester, Shawn Reed,
RiverView, and Nicholas Kuhn, Tuppers Plains; Grade 6, Alyssa Holter of
Chescer, Sandra Powell of Riverview,
alld Jes.,ica Boyles ofTuppers Plain.';
Grade 8, Tammy Bissell and Bradley
Brannon; Grade I0 Molly Heines,
aod Jessica Pore; and Grode 12, Kel.li: Bailey. Brandon Buckley, and
Michelle Caldwell.
· Southern Local: Grdde 4. Dustin
B"tinager of Letan Falls, John Bentz
of Syracuse; Grade 6, Stephanie
Bradford of Portland, Bethany
Amberser of Syracuse; Grade 8, Joe
Cornell and Tyler Little; Grade 10,
· C~ris Randolph. Bran4on .Wolfe;
Grade 12. Cynthia Caldwell, Crystal
Coleman, Evan Struble, and Bill

sica Boyles, and .tanding, Tlnnmy Bluell,
Bradley Brannon, Molly Heines, JMilca
Kelll Bailey, Brandon Buckley and Michelle
Caldwall.
'

Pen:

ONLY 15,398 MILES

.

II• .FORD RAilER 4WD

•

A/C, aluminum wheels, AM!FM stereo.
ONLY 33,405 MILES

'

. computer.

1998 yearbook will be produced
.·entirely by-.staffers vi~ c~~puter ,
· · The Marauder yel\fbook staff is

using a difTcRnt &amp;ppro~~~:h to producins the yeaJbook this year. It is
being done entirely on computer in
place of the conventional paper and
pencil method.
Lacy Banks, yearbook editor, and
Bcc~y Collins, a.~sistant editor,
attended the Week long Jostens Yearhook Camp 1ut summer at Denison
University in Gmnville.
The students learned how to use '
the computers installed with the
Adobe PageMaker and Yeartech 98
programs. While at camp, they also
pnerated the 98 theme, "Stepping

.-

'

- -·

-

· ,1198 nRD WIIDS'rU IL~ ·
AUto, V6, IJt, ·PN, PL, cruise. tilt, AMJFM cass

J..-

IIEIGI HONORED • T ' - fourth, llatli,
lnCI elflhtl.l g....,. In the Meigs Locel SChool

Reeth, Drtld Boyd, tllld .tanding,
The following Meigs County citDIIYia, Meegan Dod1011, Ryan Stobart, Bnncll
Dl.trlct were tecognlad liw ac!idemlc excel·
izens were named as prospective
Tllomaa, Amber Elllii, Monlc:a Moon, Mindy
lll!ce at the 111nu•l bMqilet Tunc~-v night. ·
jurors for the May term of the Meigs
O'Dell, Amber Snowden lnCI T.-a Wyatt. HlnThey,
.,. left to right, -~. ~11111ntlla Cole,
ry Rider wa1 not p,.lllllt for the recogniUon
County Court:
.
Ill,..,. Behlt, Whitney Til-, s.,. Dawn
prog,.m,
Cl~nce Edward Fraley. Albany;
JeniiiRB,
z.clillry
Webel,
Christophel'
V•nOscar Allen Maynard. Racine; VeraCrow, Pomeroy; Robert L.
Williamson, Pomeroy; Mari A.
Reynolds, Middleport; Julie A. Laudermilt, Rutland; Russell Len Marshall Singleton. Portland; Richard R.
Young. Middleport; Cynthia Kay
l.'atterson. Pomeroy; Charlotte A.
Ault. Middleport; Nancy A. Mullen,
Pomeroy; William James Mahaffey,
Albany; Jane Ann Hawley, Pomeroy;
Olartotte M. Armes, Pomeroy; Norman Ray VanMatre, Middleport;
Robin Elizabeth Qardner, Middleport; B~nda Lee Spaun, Racine;
Sharon Kay Buffington, Pomeroy;
William Torn Lavender, Middleport;
Benton C. Phillips, Rutland; Randy
Don George. Langsville; Roger Lee
MORE MEIGs ACIIEVERS • Melp High
Sorden, Willey n.-, and Mlclielle B._.l,
Jones. Long Bottom; Steven E. ShepSchool lludenta Ncelvlng rKOgnltlon at the
and at.ndlng, Ellubetll Fltley, O.nlelle
aRI. Long Bottom; Larry Joe McMur14th 111nu•l acldemlc excellilnce banquet
am-,
Myca Haynea, MlchMI IAIIhelt, Amy
ray. Rulland;
·
were, left to right. Bevwty Burdette, U.rjorle
Smith, M~w Wlllillllll and S.ncb Young..
Lowell Waid Bing. Long Bottom;
HIW, Kyle Smkldle, Jeremiah Smith, Joshua
Not p111 ant.were Stevtt Behti lnCI Emily Fowler.
.
Troy Tyson Manuel, Racine; James J.
Per-Singer, Long' Bottom; Marjorie M.
Reeves, Chester; Luke R. Holman,
Racine; Linda L. Stewan. Sytacu'!=;
Sheila M. Breedlove, Albany; Anita
Irma Winner. Albany; Nathan Lynn
Brady, Albany; Roben K. Chapman,
Middleport; Timothy R Dillon,
Racine; Ralph A. Butcher, Middle. port; Richard A. Peyton, Dexter.
Linda A. Vaughan, Langsville;
Cheryl Lynn Raines, Pomeroy; Barbara J. Neece. Langsville: Harry
Warner Pickens Sr., Racine; Roben
Steven Harris, Long Bottom; Lynn A.
Napier, Pomeroy; Charles Raymond
Manuel Jr.. Racine; Alan L. Halliday,
Dexter; James Spaun Jr.. Racine;
Bradford Lewis. Rutland; Paul E.
Wilson, Shade;
SOUTHERN SCHOLARS • p,.Mm.d trqpt~lea
~ Uttle, and 1t.ridtng, Chrle "-ldolph,
for IOL'tmlc excellenca from Southern were
David B. Cundiff, Racine; Larry
BrMc1on Wolfe, Cynthill Calttwtl, Cry8tll Cole11ft to rtght, ltlllild, Duetln ............ 81lphllnle
111111, EVIII Slrvble,lllld Bill Young. Not plcllnd
Joe Ball, Lanssville; Ricky Lee
ill John Bentz:
.
Bntdfunl, llelhllly Ambet ger, Joe ,Cornelllllld
Deeter. Racine; Gina Rae Tilli~. Rutland: Nellie Marie Watkins. Middleport; Barbin Frances Mullen, Mid- Strom, Pomeroy; Sandra Louise ,Warner. Rutland; Wendy L Giles. dleport; Lawrence Robert Wolfe,
dleport: Carol L. Hill, Racine; Phillis Booche. Racine; Belva F. Fisher. Pomeroy; Betty Lu Fife. Middleport; Racine; Bonnie Jean Du~ Ponlaoy;
Jean Rees, Racine; Brent West Zirkle. Racine; Jeff A. Birchftcld. ·Albany; Roy R. Gilkey. Pomeroy; Christopher Shirley Joan Bumgardner, MiddlePomeroy; Anita J. Avis, Coolville: Derek A. Cremeans. Rutland; James M. Proffin. Portland; Rita Diane port; Dorothy Jean Hanlen. Racine:
Jeffrey G. Skinner, Rutland: Terri Robert Gnleser Jr., Racine; Corrine Smith. Middleport; Richard Loyd Kevin B. Sider.~, Middleport; Bruce
Lynn Mow~ry. P?meroy; Kenneth M. Ambrose, Pomeroy; Emma M. Coleman. Long Bottom: Delma I. R. Zirkle, Pomeroy: Karen R.
Leroy Baker. Ractne; Faye Frances McDonald, Dexter; ·Teresa Ann Karr. Middlef1011; Brian Roaer Hoff- Triplell. Pomeroy; William Earl Cray• .
Clifford. !'omeroy; Thelma R. Reed, Davit. Middleport; Chri$1ophcr M. man, Pomeroy; Jon Fredrick Musick. Dexter; William Joseph Rc:itmite.
Ponllnd: Grant G. Reynokll. Mid- Stewan. Middleport; De,mis Eupne Portland; Marshall RicHard Roush. Pomeroy; Linda Lou Kaufman,
clleport;
Wilma
Hendlnon, McKinney, Rutlandi Teena L. Com- Racine; Clarence T. Wolfe, Long Dot- Racine; Lawrence E. Klein.
Guysville; Deborah L. Babbitt, er. Pomeroy; Palricia Hayman. Mid- tom; Christopher L. We.~tmoreland. Pomeroy; Erit Joseplt ·Aanestad.
Racine; Melva L. T1111:y, Pomeroy; dlepon; ~ary V. Ketiierson. Rulland; · William · R. Gilkey. Pomeroy; Audrey June . Ashley.
Robert L. Jones, Shade; Kelly L. Pomeroy; Michael. S. McCoy, Pomeroy; Marcilyn C. Brienl, Racine; MI!Jlftl AM Wi!ICCitp. Mid- .
1'ollin. Middlepcvt; Bonnie lean Bat.- Racine; Ruth Armita Wolfe, Racine; Albany; Bobby E. Dill, Middlepcin; dl~; Timothy J. Rood, Reedmlle:
er, rotiddleport: Terry L. Wolfe, Lon1 Unda E. Gonway, Pomeroy; Diana Elbert Lee Williams Jr., Vinton; Brenda L. Justice, Racine; Renee
lloaom; Virginia A. Back111. Mid- LyM NeMe, Lanpville; Johm M. · Clarence Ivan Norris.lbcine; Shawn Surop. Tuppen Plains; Ricfllnl M.
dleport:
.
Ana, Racine;
·
Brett Diddle, ~Kine;
Collins, Alblny; Stanley Allen Rc:eae,
Teresa Kay 8arber-Burin1er.
Robert M. Haley, PonoetUJ; Doris
Nicolyn S. Smi.... l'ilml:roy; Eri- Albany: John Michlel .lelfen,
Reednille; Edith May Moyen, M. Davia, Tuppers Plaint; Shawn ta,Dawn Rudolph, Lanpville; Mart ·Pomeroy; Deborah L. MGIIIet,
Fomeroy; Mlltha L. Ki~t~.l"oititiOj; MIChael &lt;lama. t...npville; Jennifer A. Richmond, Middleport; Slephanie Pomeroy; Milk Couatae-1, RutJeny E. Clrpenler,l'ilml:roy; Sltirley L Slteeu, Pomei01; Connie Sue Kay Hill)', Pomeroy; V'qil E. Jacka land; ElizabeiM. Swilher,I'Oiliti"1;
0i1Me Reynolds, SyiKII~e; Lee A. Thornton, Llnp~ille; Richard N. Jr., l'ilml:roy; Ernest W. Dilon, Mid- Robert W. Sinon. Rudtind.
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thtt booll Ia being entl,.ly produced on the

Y9Un~.

Prospective
County Court
Jurors listed .

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ONLY33,141 MILES

i

1114 nRD RIIGD IUPD CAB
4WD, 4.0 V6, auto, A/C, PN, PL. cruise,' tilt
"SPLASH" .
ONLY47,370MILES

The science projects of two Meigs
High School juni~ were among the
winnen in 1he recent competition
held al the Branch Rickey Arena at
Ohio Wesleyan University.
Taking a superior in the conteSt
was Lacy Banks with her entry,
"How Does Hip-Hop Affect Your
Tick-T~r Kristina Kennedy toot
an excellelll awanl with her entry
"Comparins the Effects of Commercial Antibaclerial Soap on Bacteria.•
She also received a $1 SO special
award for project. The two were
among over a thousand juniors and

•
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l•t FORIIXPLGID 4 114 WI
Auto, A/C. AM/FM cass, PW, PL, cruise,' leather,
I

llliED

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•, ,..;)

LIICy Blnb

senaors ~ ltiC state compc11ng for
awards.
.
The Jlft!iecu were judged by I.200
~~sionals~. ~icine. educaliOn, indusb}';..alld sctence.
The State Science Day is sponSored by the Ohio Academy·of Science, American Electric Power, and
the Objp Environmental Education
Fund.

• • • • fti&amp;CIIII4D

Auto, A/C, AMJ17M casa, c:onvertlble
BRIGHT YEU..OW

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EcOnomics Department.
Billie Dye, Brian Harold, Holly HanProjects this year included a pack- nan, Ben Milchell, Jenn ifer Allen.
ct of various ,ewing samples, starting Ryan Jeffers, June Cremeans, Sonya
JASON KNI&lt;IHT
Kr1a11M Kennedy
Meigs High school students in with a bean-shaped pillow and con- . Drumnond. Heather Ferrell, April
"' Awards were provided ·by ovtr . Life Choices, a vocational family eluding with each siUdent making a Sain. Alison Hay•. Sue Tobin. Bridgel Johnson and Cory Stewart.
100. colleges and universities, pro- consumer science class, spent the last pair of shorts.
Sophomores Billie Dye and
Students displaying their work in
fessiOIUIJ societies, corporations, and six weeks learning the basics of
the school show-Case were Rachel · . H~alher Ferrell prepared and set up
governmental· units and included sewing.
cash, savings bonds, trips, and schoiThe s tudents · used the new Moore, Saman1ha Marshall, John the display of garmeniS. Mrs. Vanarshijls worth more lhjm $400,000. . machines pun:hased for the Home Kopczinsky, lisa BiaS, Josh White, Reeth is lhe Life Choices teacher.

COOLSPOT
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COIIYDIIENa STORE

f':nl Q

Call .

667-610.. Restaurant
Owner: Bryan White
WheelHorse
' TRACTORS
arid RIDING
MOWERS

wr.stnet
President. he will be lqiii!Knling 94.
vocational sthools and 21.000 VICA
mc:mben to I!Cilllon, oongresamc:n,
educatiooal offiCials, busi- and
iqdustry leaders and the geaitial public. He will belin his duties lly llllveling to Kansas City, Mo. to ttjWtseN
Ohio at the National VICA Confer_,., beinJ beld JlliiiO 21-27.
- John. an electnJa~ student. is the
son of John and Debbie Davidson of
Cheshire. He is a junior at Meip
High Sd!ool· and this is the f1111 time
fonscudent flom Meip Hip School
to be elected VICA Slate ~idenL ·
. .

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Olio
45760
(614-992-6472

rl - D II

fllllly8 ~-­
Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
667-6100 Store

992·2155
Ask for Dave

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Shank, In photo above, belt out
"I'll Be There" In one of the
number• of tile show.

HEATHER FERRELL

Advertise your
business h~.

·inducted
.as state
president
of VICA
By IIEUSSA WI I'AIIS .
On April 24. John O.vidson was
elected president of the Ohio VICA
(\tJcationallndustrial Oubs ofAmerica). He was installed to offJCC at the
Ohio VICA JUOgllilion banquet held
at the .Aladdin Sltrine Temple in
Columbus.
There were seven students from
Ohio competing for this offJCC. They
were n:quired 10 pve a speech and
allfWa' an ilnp~ompcu qtletlion before
the Delegate Assembly. Adam
W'dlilms, Amos Mills. Ryan Dill IIIII
RGbbie Smilh wcre the voting delepreS and in dl8lp of Johit ·, ampaign.
. In NOIIember, 1997, John wu
elected Sou111C811 Rc:Jional VICA
~ lepi
Iiiii 13 ¥Oallional
.d.ooJs and ),(iQO VICA members.
UponbeinJd ""'OhioVICASiale

the production .. B!ll .Q ulcbl.
~ will Include "hiiJ.
houae Roell,• •Ain't No Moun.fllln High Enough," "I Clln't .
Help lly11H, • "How Do I Live"
and "!!IY Hltrt Will Go On••.
ncldltilre wllllllllt t11e c1oor
for S$1pl-lldulta and $3 for studints. AH procttdl will go
.,.
graup of .......,. and
tolli.-d the putd ..e of unlforrne for" the bind. Par· · dllncers In ltie lop photo.
fanning fD. aongffom the·'5Cie Hyung-Do Kl'r' and Adam

ByBIWEDYE

a . a. "l' lO MI \.

Student

sliJoor

routl-··

' dMca
P8ulette Harrleoo, and doing tile IOUIId tor

Life Choices class members
briefed on basi.c s of sewing

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to -be atliged Friday night at
7:30 In the Meigs High Scho'ol
gymn•alum.
The · -Melgl
...,.uder Band Ia pnlttntlng
thtt pragnun, which will ehowc:Ue the ..Ients of Melgl studena In IOJillllllld dances or
tile put 50 yq,., The allow ..
directed by Toney Dingess,
band director, •nd ill accom.,.nled by Sharon Hawley,
planlat, and an en-.ble ot
bend atudentl. Aulatlng with

'

Science
;p rojects
winners
at contest

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Up,"attd ·also 1101 a head start in section. which before has not been
designing ~s and the book cover possible.
design.
"We have had fun and enjoyed
Lai:y has done the layout and woaking together and helpin11 each .
deSign using Jbc programs. lla:ky has other to produce the pages for this
done adve~g ~illins usins word year's yearbook.· said Melissa Holprocessing. illclissa Holman, tisis- man.
tant editor, designed the advertise"Using the computer is very dif. ment section on the computer as well. fe~nt. At first, it was intimidating.
Preparina the yeaabook pages on Bu! after.awhile. we liked the chalcomputer cnahles 1he designer to see lenge and lealized it is the '90's an4
the page with the artwoak, copy, and . the computer is just a machi.ne with
caption in place 'before submitting it a few bultdns, and it will enahle us to
to the compaoy for publication. 11 produce the best book ever;" said
alloW$ for mixing and matching sev- Lacy.
eral diffe~nt. colors i" the opening

•American P.op FdrevW" Ia
thtt theme of the variety allow

BAUMWMBER
State Route 248
/

Chnter
98W301 ·'

feed SuppiJ
"Stuft'• for Pees • Farm
Animak Stable

Joe EVIIMI 992·2164
Owner

Ohio River
Bear
Company .

Alumni Dinner Dance
SaiUtday, May Z, 1998
Dinner will be served
fromS.o 7 pm ,
Entertainment until
lOpm
$Udulcs $1 Children
Anyone mtmsted in

auending should
contac~

Tma Parker

740-378-6158
~-lr

ICe- J\re

·-·-

.... -

Salle •• tiM!

For more information call
Debbie PraH At

992-4055

Riverview School
740-378-6287

__...,..._

Tn-Cowdy

Cooing, Inc.

Ford

'Rutland
Bottle Gas
Supporlng all u.

0111 . . 1111.

Oh..e720

wv. .

•

The "Good Buy"
Guys&amp;.Gals

992-2196

. ..... schools • youth
Stop In end NY •H1•
to DtiYe CK' Herb. .

742·2211

�----...- · · · T!"

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Thuradly, lilly 7, 1998

\

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel:
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Page 10

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What belongs in an·obituary notice·- views ditteron·what should appear : .:
see "an extended illness." As for the
multiple marriages, it's pan of the
person's history, and J·have no problem with it.
Dear Ann Landen: I hope you
have room for another response to
the woman who was glad to he single.
I am past 70 and have been single for nearly 30 years. I grew up in
a home where· love was scarce. My
mother was a battered wife. I suffered verbal abuse and grew up an
insecure, frightened child. I also was
indoctrinated with the idea that
women did not become professionals. They got married.
I married twice . Both of "'Y husbands were losers, but I had two
children who were a ble~sing in my

life. I moved my children to a s~all
town, operated my own busines for
17 years, founded a youth ce ter,
was elected . pre~ide"nt of the C~am­
ber of Commerce and was a city
council member and the mayor.
If I could tell young \"Omen only
one thing, it would be this: Learn
about yourself. Get some sort of
training so y~u can be self-supporting.
.
Learn to enjoy your own compa·
ny. You will make wiser choices in
men, lose your sen~ of dependency
and be a much better wife and mother.
Should y0 u choose not to marry
and have children, there is nothing
wrong with that. You can be happy
and fulfilled eitjler way.

, .
who is at home with the kids. There ·'
is a constant stream of phone calls to . .•
tnY office as inoms are interrupted · '
by calls from t~eir husbands to - . .
locale lost anicles of clothing, give
cooking instructions or sEttle argu- , • .
ments.
If "Loving Husba~d " comes up
with a solution to. this problem, I'd ·
appreciate his passing it on. -- R. in
Baldwin, N.Y.
Dear R.: So would I. along with • .
millions of working mO!llS. How · "
about it, readers?
•
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Along with this, I would say,
don't give yourself to the first goodlooking man who whispers sweet
nothings in your ear. If you do,•
you're sure to regret it. -- No Name,
No City
Dear N.N.N.C.: Thanks for sitting in my chair today. You've given
some excellent advice, especially
the last two sentences. I'm sure a
great many women who read what
you have written will recognize
: themselves. .
.
Dear Ann Landen: The letter
from "Your Loving Husband," who
complained about his wife calling
him at work, made me laugh.
111c behavior your ranted correspondent finds so appalling is business-as-usual when Dad is the one

. ' !,

Send questions to Ann Landers, Cre- • ,
ators Syndicate. 5717 W. Century "" · ·
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. ''
90045
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Right to Read Week
observed .in local schools

Beat of the Bend ...
By Bob Hoeflich
·Gone are the sugar barrel, the from one of the libraries is a
pickle jar, the "5 and 10" and ny library card, a valuable little item ·
paper too;
.which is free and will provide you .
And gone is that public library with a variety of worthwhile ser"sssshhhhhhhh". . .
vices. If you don't have a card
If you have any mileage on request one from a people orientyou at all, you'll remember the big ed libniry staff member at the
library "sssshhhhhhh" which was library counter and before you
a. warning signal that your wliis- can say Jack Rqbinson, you'll
per in the library was getting out have your card whic~ entitles you
of control.
to the wide range of facilities. It's
Patrons communicated only a simple. painless process.
the necessary messages in a soft
Another interesting offering of
whisper an&lt;\ if the communication the libraries these days are books
got beyond that, the warning on cassettes. The libraries have
"sssshhhhhhh" was sounded by a on band a varieiy of these casstem behind-the-counter librarian settes. This means that if you
io caution you to shape up or ship spenil a lot of time in your car
out.
commuting hither and yon, you
There was a tinie.or· two I was can be enjoying a book at the
tempted to test the system and do same time or the .cassettes, of
a really loud whisper or even, course, can be played at home or
heaven fofbid, speak out loud to wherever. The tim~ you ·are per·
see if I really would be sent to miued to keep a boo~ on cassettes
Siberia as rumor had it, but ·I •before a return is necessary is two
never got up enough nerve.
weeks.
Fortunately, libraries today
· You might want to try them.
have cbanged. 111c big "sssshhh- Then if somebody should ask
hhh" has gone' and you're even you:
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allowed to speak in a normal
"Read any good books lately"?
voice to staff members wbo also
You can show how cool .you
have voices . .Can you believe it? really are by replying:
As you may or may not know I
"No, but I heard four dandies
have signed on for a pan-time job recently".
,
with the Meigs County District
I did want to mention one
Public Library and its branches in more feature of the libraries at
Mtddlcpon and Racine. So far. T - this-panicular time and tbat is the
have been impressed with the big print books which _arc availefficiency, services and atmos- able. So if the ~yes aren't exactly
pherc which prevail in the local what they used to be, try some of
libraries today.
those volumes--they're on the
I do want to call to your auen- shelves waiting for you to stop by.
tiona couple of library services-By the way. ori books barthere arc so many these days--of rowed from the library. you are
which you might not be.awarc. I allowed to keep them four weeks
wa.•n't.
before a return is necessary. .,.m
Did you know tbat all three sure some of you remember a
libraries now offer videos as a time when you had just one week
pan of their circulation process- to--ready to not-- return a book to
es'1 The libraries not only have on the library. And, incidentally, the
hand classic films but there are number of books you take home
also videos on "how to" and pop- during a visit is not currently lim·
ular ·current release videos arc · itcd.
being received on a regular basis.
So, perhaps, even though you
There arc also many children's haven't been using your·libraries
videos available.
you might want to give them a try.
And how do you go about bor- They are well stocked, comfort·
rowing videos'! It's really very able, anractive and you'll find
simple. You are pennitted to take . staff members to he very accomtwu videos out for two days and modating. In fact, it seems
there's no cbarge involved. Of . incredible that we have ' !uch
c&lt;Jurse. there is a penalty if you facilities at. our fingenips, You
dun.'t them return it lfilhin the might say, "we:ve come a long
dcs1gn:tted 11mc structure. How- ·way. Baby".
ever. two days should give you
And I &lt;lo want to comment:
adequate time to enjoy the films.
I "ain't" never seen so many
All you peed to he ahlc to take ~ks. Miz Scarlet.
advantage of this video service
Do keep smiling.

This is Right to Read week and
in Meigs Local Schools a variety
of programs arc underway.
Bradbury's theme is "Your
Tickets to Employment" with a
variety of programs taking place
and points being awarded to thOse
completing activities . .Classroom
doors will be decorated, reading
PLAYS PLANNED ·The Mllga Middle School PJayer11 will present
and math projects will be carried
plays on Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. Tha evening's program will
. out, and on Friday the school will
include two comedlea,, "WI!odunlt?" and "Why Teachere Go Null, • · ·go on a field trip to the zoo. ·
as well as 11veral akita end monologuee. Pictured. In a ae- from
The awards ceremony will
"Why Teeehert Go Nuts" are Amber Snowden, Erlcia Bryan, Ben
take place Monday. If students
Haley, Jon Wilson, Sara .Moon, Jnsica Seh.uler, Johnny Lentes,
have read a total of 2500 pages
Shuana White, R- Wyant, Bobble Burton, Zach Davis; and Shawn
during
the week, a dance will be
Gwinn. Admlaelon to the preeenlltlon, to be held ·In the John L.
scheduled
as a reward.
Mora Audltcirium, Ia $2.
·

The Community Calendar is pub- p.m . .
men of America, Camp 7230, .
as a free service to non-pr:ofit
potluck dinner. Saturday, 1 P·lll· Sat- . SUNDAY
groups wishing to announce meeting SATURDAY
· urday at the haii. ·Camp to f~rnish · ~ARPENTER - Mt. Onio~· '
and special events. The calendar is
POMEROY - Return Jonathan meat, rolls, salad and a drink. Moth- Baptist Church, south of Carpenter; ' ·
not designed to promote sales or Me;gs Chapter, Daughters of the er's Day to be observed 'with each special singing, Sunday, 6:30 p.m.
fund raisers of ~ny type. Items are American Revolution, Saturday, .mother to receive a nowcr.
The Messengers of Jackson to sing. , .· ..
printed as space penn its and cannot . P«meroy Library, 10 ·a.m. Marcie
'I
. be guaranteed to run a specific num- Seifert, Ohio State treasurer,
SYRACUSE - May Day celePOMEROY - Meigs ~o.unty ,....
ber of days.
C.-unswick
bra\ion Saturday at the park to kick Fish and .dame, meeting, Saturday ~
.
. w,ill be the speaker.
off youth lca,gue baseball. A parade night, at the club house.
STIVERSVILLE·- Hymn sing, will stan at 10 a.m. followed by
THURSDAY
Stiversv.illc Community Church, games and introduction of teani·s and MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local Bald-Knob Stivcrsville, County players. For more information conCHESHIRE '-- Disabled AmeriKindergarten screening. Call 949· Road 31. Singers to be Delivered tact Eber Pickens 1f. at 992-5564 or •can Vet~rans 2805 I State Route 7,
2664 to make an appointment or for and Joe McCloud.
· Larry Lavender at 992-60 I 2. In the Cheshire. installation of olficcrs,
more infonnation.
event of rain, the parade will be held dinner at 6:30 and meeting at 1 p.m.
POMEROY - M,odcrn Wood- M~y 16.
.
POMEROY - AA and At-Anon
Thursday, 1 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic Cliurch.
li~hed

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JZLcquisitions ~ine. Jewe{rg

TUPPERS. PLAINS
Town
meeting rc~arding TupperS Plains
Regional SCwer District project. 1
· p.m. at Tuppers Plains grade School.
Members of sewer district board,
county . commissioners, Auorney
· John Lentes. and Paul Reetl, president of Fanners Bank, to attcrid.

'

-2 DAYS ONLY-

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· to Your

FRIDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
, Kindergarten screening. &lt;:;all 949- .
2664 to make an appointment or for
more information.
POMEROY - Friday's Fun,
Food .and Fellowship" project at
God's Neighborhood Escape for .
Teens, Teens can use the game room
at the center located on Main Street,
Pomeroy. Nutritional foods for
snacking. Everything free. Center
opens at 6 p.m. and closes at 10:30

'f

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TWO DAY SPECI..U.S

.

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141 GOLD CROSS

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CHARMS: ::• .. . .
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Our J!,ne·Up:
Friday and Saturday

rdy

2%

Save an addition ·

o\houl Irritated Foods" Leifheit,
"What do you Know About Band
Aid Surgery" Barbara Fry. "What
Your Nails Reveal About Your
Healt~" ; Lindsey Je~rs; Three
Cheers for Cereal"
d Helen
Blackston. "Can Ac puncture
Help'!"
.
The CQntest was . a nutritional
action. q,uiz conducted by Fry and
won by Leifheit and Jeffers.
Hostess for the May meeting will
~ Helen Blackston, the program
will he hy Skinner, and the contest
by Nancy Morris. Skinner served
refreshments . to members and a
guest. Jeffen.

NinaDi~IOn

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all our 10kand :14k.
•

•

off

Gold
.

From our guarantee lowest prices ori·

'

CHAINS AND BRACELETS
10K starts at only $12.23/gram, 14K at •14.96 gram
TWO SPECIAL SALE
Shop Acquisition~ before you buy
'fine J'welry anywt,erel

,
·We begin this life crying
and end it dyinJ.
It is whalltappens in between
that cives life it.s mean. ·
For the world is a llagc
with.• e-·ehanging scene.

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LAYAWAY- ONLY 10% DOWN!

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SHOE PLACE

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· That's the same message Karen same Bain de Solei! Ail-Day Kids
Sweeney gives her three children.
30 as the children do. She's getting
Six-year-old Erin , 4-year-old her husband to wear sunscreen and a
Caleigh and 3-year-old Matthew .hat more often.
•
can't go out without sunscreen .
Many mothers in her neighbor- '
Sweeney made up her mind even hood share her concern. she says.
before she had children.
They're trying to teach ·their chi I- •,
She was shocked when the dry dren they don '1 need a tan to be
patch over her right eyelid, which beautiful or healthy.
she discovered whiie applying
She cites her three lively but pale
·makeup, turned out to be a basal cell children ·as examples . ··My kids '
carcinoma.
really do go outside ."
"It was traumatic ,"
says
Sweeney, 37, who gr~w up in BuffaPulling on the sunscreen
lo and basked in what liule sun
Sunscreens come in a variety of
graces Western New York. "All I style s~ from non-aerosol pumps to
could hear was my' parents from the old-fashi oned goopy lotion. "
years and years before sayi ng, 'You There's sunscreen formulated for
shouldn't do this; you'll wind up athletes and brands for children .
with skin cancer. " '
Dermatologists suggest picking
But they ne ver pushed her to one that block UVA. so-called ··tanwear sunsc reen, and the prediction ning" rays, and UVB . the burning
was made before her mother devel- ray s, and contain s titanium dioxide
oped melanoma.
and zinc oxide.
" Kids think they"re invincible ...
Consumer Reports rated su nI was saddened when it happened . screen in its May issue. SPF 15
But it's a blessi n~ in disguise. When brands that scored well included All
it happens. it's a wake-up call." ·
Day Extended Protection and MadeShe undergoes an annual full- . moiselle Oil -Free. both by Bain de .
body exam. ' T vc had a couple of Solcil. and Hawaiian Tropic's Clear
suspicious moles removed. Luckily, Sense and Protection Plus. Of the
they 've been beni£n ...
SPF 30 brands. Bain de Solei! Lc
She wears makeup with sun pro- Sport and Cnppcnonc Kids Colortective ingredients. and when she's block scored well.
going out for a while . .she uses the •

•·.~~r:

Double Cheddar Mashed
Potatoes with Horseradish
2 112 pounds (6 to 1 mediumsized) russet baking potatoes
peeled and cut into I 1/2-inch
chunks
3 tablespoons softened butter
I cup (4 ounces) shredded
· sharp cheddar cheese
I cup (4 ounces) shredded
white &lt;:heddar cheese
112 cup warm milk
2
tablespoons
prepared
horseradish
• 2 tablespoons chopped fresh
chives or parsley
Salt and pepper to taste
Additional shredded cheese
for sprinkling on top
Cook potatoes in large pot of
boiling water until very tender,
about 18 minutes. Drain in
colander. Return potatoes to pot
and mash with · potato masher.
Stir in butter and cheeses and
mix until smooth. Add milk to
make a creamy consistency.
Stir in horseradish and half
of the chives. Season to taste
with salt and pepper. Place in
serving bowl and sprinkle with
additio 0 alch·ecse and remaining
,,:hives .

Makes 8 servings .
Recipe from thC American
Dairy Assm;iution .

COMFORT FOOD WITH A lWIST ·Three chee~es, bacon and sage add zip to the old family favorite.
· Mashed potato!ls will never be tHought of as boring again.·

Delta Kappa Gamma chapter meets .
State Senator Michael Shoemak- "Founders Day."
er spoke about education issues at
Fern F:chon. necrology chairman.
the recent meting of Alpha Omicron reported no deaths .this year. She
Chapter . of Delta Kappa Gamma read a JlOCm, "Home at Last."
held a! the McArthur United
"President Eberts recogni1.cd
Mcthodi$1 Church.
·
those whu aucndcd all the meetings
Shoemaker said that many arc this year: Myrtle .Fri. Esther Macrkmaking decisions who do not know cr. Nellie Parker and herself. She
much about education. The idea th:it recognized those who had missed
all students learn in the same. way at only one meeting : Esther Cottrill,
the sarric time is wrong, he said. and Ida Mac Crabtree .. Felton, Feuy.
the time has come for an under- Gcules .. Fern Grimm , Berniece
standing of w~at each student needs. · Mapes. Snider. Toon and Michelle
· McMana"(ay. She also recognized
&lt;;:hcryl Nisley gave the invoca· those with April birthdays.
tion berore the dinner was served by
Fetty presented Eberts with a
the , women of the church. Tables candle, a gift from the ~hapter.
were decorated with spring flowers.
Jean Ward of the nominating
During the business meeting, committee installed , new officer~:.
·President,.Carol Ebens thanked the .They are Marjorie Fetiy, president;
hostess cpmmittee. Regular officer Sharon Nodruff, first vice-president;
reports were given, correction. of Pam Toon, second vice-president;
addresses for .the program book wa.&lt; Nellie Parker, secretary; Deborah
done, and President Eberts thanked Hammond, treasurer; Carol Eberts,
Lisa QueEn, Teresa Snider, Pam parliamentarian ; and presented each
Toon, CltCryl Nisley and Michele with a red rose. The meeting wa.&lt;
Royster for their work on the chap- adjourned with the singing of the
ter's ~iography book. Viola Gettles Delta Kappa Gamma Song,
gave a report about the state conven- . ·• The ne~t meeting will be Sept. 28
tion.
at St. Peter and Paul in .Wellston.
·
1
- The Fqllnders Day program was
Attending from Meigs Coun1y
presented 1 by Donna Jenkins, Mar- were Fetty, Parker, Grim, Jenkins
jorie Fetty and Sue Carpenter. Jenk- and Perrin, and JoAnn ,Hayes, Saunins rend the names of the 12 dra Tillis, Sandra, Welker, Rebecca
founders and Patty lighted a small . Zurcher, Carpenter and Rosalie
candle for/ each. 111c cbaptcr gave Story.
t.hc Pledge to Founders and sang

.

..

Hop&amp; Baptist class enjoys cookout

'

was fine. "It looks like they got It
all," she says. "I'm a very happy
camper. "
Melanoma· is the rarest skin cancer, making up 4 percent of new
cases, according IQ the American
Academy of Derrnawlogy. But it's
the deadliest. This year, 7,300 Americans will die from the disease.
About 1,200 people will die this
year of basal or squamous cell carci- ·
noma.
Melanoma first spreads horizontally. then penetrates the skin. If the
cells enter the bloodstream or the
lymphatic system, they can travel to
vital organs.
" It was scary." says Gardner, a
mother of two. "You look at the
five-year survival rate. In five years,
my youngest will be 16."
Eleven-year-old Josh- and 14year-old Andrew were fascinated by
t~e eight stitches needed to close the
2-inch in,ision the doctor made in
the back of their mother 's leg.
"They wanted to see how big a
scar I had. whether I looked like
Frankenstein."
Aside from show-and-tell, she
and her husband dow nplayed ,the
diagnosis with the boys.
'.'We won't· make a big deal
except to say it runs in the family
·and you need to wear sunscreen." .

serve immediately . Sprinkle
with additional grated cheese if
desired.
. Makes 8 servings .. •, .

per. Place in serving bowl and
sprinkle with additional cheese
if desired .
Makes 8 servings .

• Four Cheese Mashed Potatoes with Wild Mushrooms
2 112 pounds (6 to 1 me.dium·
sized) russet baking . potatoe,s
peeled and cut into I 112-inch
chunks
,
3 tablespoons butter
2 cups (about 6 ounces)
chopped mushrooms such as.
Three Cheese, Bacon and chantcrelle, creminf, morel,
oyster and shiitake
Sage Mashed Pot11toes
i/2 ·· cup chopped green
2 112 pounds (6 to 1 mediumsiz~d potatoes) baking potatoes,
onions with some green tops
peeled and cut into I 112-inch
112 cup (about 2 ounces)
chunks
• sOft, 'spreadable cheese wiih
3 tablespoons softened butter garlic and herbs
10 ou1nces (2 112 cups) mixed
112 cup (about 2 ·ounces)
shredded cheese, such as shredded prov•Jlone ·
sm,oked Gouda, cheddar and
1/2 cup (about · 2 ounces)
. shredded foritina
Swiss
1/2 cup warm milk
112 cop (about 2 ounces)
4 slices bacon, cooked until grated fresh Parmesan or Asiacrisp, chopped
go cheese
112 cup warm milk
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
sage or"l teaspoons dried sage
Cook potato·es in large pot of
Salt and pepper lo taste
boiling water until very tender,
, Additlon~l shredded cliecse about 18 minutes. Drain in
for sprinkling on top, optional
colander. Return potatoes to pot
Cook potatoes in large pot of · IHid mash with potato masher.
boiling water until very tender. · .Wlliie potatoes are cooking,
. about I 8" minutes , Drain in heat butter in 10-inch ·skillet
colander.
until
melted . Add' mushroom~
.
.
Return potatoes to pot and and onions and cook until ten mash with potato masher. Stir der. about 3 to 4 minutes . ·
in buller and cheese until comStir cheeses into hot potatoes
bined . Add milk to make a until smooth. Add milk to make
creamy consistency.
a creamy consistency .. Stir in
Stir in bacon and sage. Sea · mushroom mixture ..
S(ln to taste with salt and pep Place in serving· howl and

I

OPEN
1:30-8 DAILY
8:30-aMONDAY
11:30-7:30 FRIDAY

TWO LOCJ\TIONS. ~I?([, j'EWU~
.
111 SICOND AYE., GALLIPOUS ttl 21t2
Memben Jewelm'
Board olTnde
11 .U. ST.~ MIDDLEPORT
1112-GIIO

By the Associated Press
Mashed potato is such a
favorite comfort food it's now
being called a classic .
The following recipes combinine it with cheese and a few
inspired trimmings eman~ipate
it from the role of good old
standby side dish ~ perhaps
even elevates it to the status of
outright treat, a~ a savory
accompaniment to the other
parts of the meal.

f.
1

.9LCQfl!_ISifJ109{S

By PA1TI SINGER
Doctors worry that fewer of us · mole - the diameter of a pencil
Roclleater Democrat and may use sunscreen after a widely eraser - from her tower left calf.
Chronicle
publicized study in February report·
"It looked like all the other
As the weather heats up, derma- ed that sunscreen does not prevent moles," says the adjuhct professor at
tologists remind us that each year I melanoma.
the State University College! at
million people in the United States
.Dermatologists argued the study Brockport. "When he took it off, I
are diagnosed with skin cancer. was nawed: It looked at the effenof said he's not going to find anyBasal cell, squamous cell and the sunscreens on melanoma only ~ thing."
more virulent melanoma, once asso- not on other more common types of
Since the basal cell, Gardner uses
ciated with the elderly, are striking skin "cancer - dnd was based on sunscreen every day from Mat
even younger people.
data nearly 20 years old.
through October and avoids the mid· ··Yo~. don't think it will happen
·
Today's sunscreens are superior . day sun.
to you, says Karen Sweeney of to the goop mar.y of us used as kids. . But like most people her age, she
Penfield, N.Y., who had a basal cell says Dr. Mark Goldgeier, a derma- can rtcall getting burned as a child.
carcinoma removed 13 years ago, tologist and assistant professor at the Doctors say two blistering sunburns
when she was 24.
·
University of Rochester School of during youth can increase your ~isk
"We see a loi of 30-year-olds Medicine and Dentistry. Current for· for melanoma. But that doesn 't
with basal cell," says Dr. Liz 'Anhur mulas block both the burning ultra- mean your fate is sealed; using sunof ' Dermatology Associates of violet B and the slow-acting ultravi- screen regularly can prevent future
Rochester, N.Y: Most of her oletA rays, while older versions pro• bums and halt furthcr.skin damage,
melanoma patients last year were in tccted against one or the other.
"Sometimes people feel it's
their 30s. She says light-skinned
"They made things worse hopeless," Gardner says. "The)'
people are at risk for all types of skin because we felt we were safe," says don't want to think about bad news.
cancer, but African-Americans and Lynne Gardner, 45, who has had two I don't blame them. I didn't w~nt to
think about bad new• either. But I
Hispanics also can develop bouts with skin cancer.
Gardner, of Brockport, N.Y., wasn't given a choice."
me lahoma.
A few days after removing the
Dermatologists say we can ne ver basted herself with baby oil
and
"laid
out."
But
she
enjoys
being
mole,
her doctor called to say it was
reduce our risk by avoiding the sun
from II a.m. to about 3 p.m., dress- outdoors, biking, hiking and taking malignant melanoma and he wanted
irig .sensibly and usillg sunscreen.
· her Boy Scout troop on adventures . take a larger tissue sample for biopFive years ago she had a basal sy. Just tn be safe . She thought: " Do
But only one-quarter of U.S.
cell carcinoma removed from the I have my health care proxy written
ad~lts and one-third of children regularly slather up, says Dr. Brctl bridge of her nose.
our!"
Shulman of the Center for Derma.Last month during a routine
But it turned out \O be needlesS·
exam, her dermatologist rook off a worry. Gardner found out everything,
tology in Rochester.

Mashed to the max, cheese and potato winners s.ure to please every spud lover

I

i~ogs by Dorothy Jeffers, "What

And everyone has a pan play. ·
Big or small. young or old age
By siving our all
we will hear God ·lltd the
angels' applause
when the curtain falls.

Rutland's theme is "Westward
Ho!" Some of the week's activities include daily tnvia, &lt;laity •(
reading, pioneer days cot_nprchcn- ' ~
sion activities, reading about
quilts and making chiss quilts. ' I
· Students will learn abuut cattle
branding, how to pan for g&lt;ild.
. and make covered wagons. They .
. will create frontier settlements
· ftom milk cartons.
Teachers and students are dec orating the school with an overall
western theme with cowboy and · ' ~
Indian dress-up items. Tho PTO
wiII be hold a book fair.

•
...
_ _____,;__ _ _ Community CalendaF---'--~--_.,.,_'.

He!3lth Club supports programs
Plans tO· donate to the Meigs,
Cooperative Parish and assist in purchasing school supplies in September were made when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
recently at the home of Phyllis Skinner.
•
. 111c meeting opened with the
pledge to the nag mid the lord's
Prayer.
,
Devotions were given by Helen
Blackston titled "Everywhere
Al:rou the Land" and "After the
Winter." Lenora Leilhcit spoke. on
the ""nior citi7.ens levy and received
the endorsement of the club.
The program hy Helen Blackston
was called "Zap" and included read-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

With cancer hitting earlier, sunscreen.is now crucial to saving our skin

Thursday, May 7, 1998 ,

family estrangement?
· What about the murdered
Ann
woman whose obituary lists several
Landers
sons with different last names? It
fV97, ~ AllfCkl TlmfJ
makes the reader think she was a
Syllilicalt a!W Cruton
person of low morals who could
Sylldr~MC.
expeetto wind up murdered.
111c final printed story on our
Dear Ann Landers: I have lives is always written by someone
reached the age where I read obitu- else. Your column would be a good
aries every day. I wonder sometimes place for us to discuss our right to
about the personal nature of what is privacy and the public:s right to
printed. It seems to me like an inva- know the details of our lives. --Midsion of privacy.
west Senior
Does the public need to know
Dear Senior: Usually, the inforthat someone died of AIDS? Is it mation that appears irr obituaries is
anyone's business that he or she was supplied by a family member.
married brieny 40 years ago to
I agree that informing the public
someone else or that there was a sib- that an individual died of AIDS is
ling no one knew about because of a not necessary, and I would prefer to ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-~

The "Adult I ' Class ' .of Hope Baptist Church. recently held a
potluck and cookout at the church .
·
Pastor Jim Diuy gave grace over the food and fellowship.
Games were played and prizes were won . .
Auending were Jim. Jenny. Paul and Peter Dilty;,fV(ark, Denise,
Nick a~l:l Denise Michael; Lei:. Bron and Chrissy "Williams; Brie
Patterson ;. Debbie Clay; Tim. Jcrrcna, Trey and Hailey Bbersbach; .
Justin Rohson; Ray, 'J)acy, Jacob and Ashley Smith; ltegina, Mark,
Josh and Tiffany Simpson; Norma Grueser, Dorothy Kinney, and
Bmma and Whitney Ashley; Irene Dill, Charles ~lain; Skip
Dodson; Ashley, Amber and A.ututnn Ebersbach; Katie Reed and
Homer, Rita, Whiiney and.Me'gan Smith .

.

•

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Special (jift just for coming in!! Living Room

'•

�Thursday, May
Page

12 • The Daily Sentinel

"Doo·dah! Stephen Foster and
th• Rise of American Popular Culture" by Ken Emerson. (Simon
and Schuster; 400 pp., $30)
By KEITH L RUNYON
Louisville Courier-Journal
With a title like " Doo-dah! " and
his subject' the life and times of
Stephen Collins Foster, a reader
&lt;&gt;pects Ken Emerson's recent biog·
raphy to be a delight. Instead, it is a
painfully sad account . But it is also
an imponant study of the impac t of
music on the nation 's cuhure in the
era before phonographs, radi o and
movies.
Emerson. a former edi tor of The
New York Ti~ Magazine, is a dili·
gent reponer and researche r. He had
lO be, si nce th e historical record of
·s tephen Foster's life contains signi f·
icant gaps.
It also contains great ironies. For
instance, the author of the nat ion.'.s
foremost. antebellum ballads a nd
minstrel tunes - mcluding "Oh.

BRYNN MOSS

Susanna!," "Old Folks at Home,"
"Jeanie With the Light Brown
Hair'' and "Camptown Races" was a Yankee who never lived south
of the Mason -Dixon line and whose
own roJllantic life was a great disap·
pointment.
The youngest child of a wealthy,
politically inOuential Pittsbu rgh
family. Foster saw his parents' for·
tune evaporate before :ae was grown.
For him, life was always a struggle.
Never well educa.cd, he had no
sense for money. Fv·:unately for us
all, he did have a sr~se for melody.
When he died in 1864, at age 37,
he was a penni less inhabitant of
New York's Bowery,.a victi m of too
much dri nk and too little care. Emcr·
son perceptively compares Foster to
such 20th century figures as novelist
F. Scott Fitzgerald and , musician
Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys.
both of whom experien ced critical
and publi c .rejection after ach ieving
dazzling early fame.
The antebellum fantasies of some
MOSS RECOGNIZED·
Brynn Mitchell Moss of Long
BoHom was recently named a
United States National Award
Winner in history and govern·
ment.
Moss, a student at Ohio Val·
ley Christian School, was nomi·
nated l;ly Faye -Tillis, a teacher at
I
his school.
He will be listed in the United
Stales Achievement Academy
Official Yearbook, which is pub·
lished nationally.
The son of Jeanette and
David Grate, Moss is the grand·
son of the late Dewey and
Gehevie Jones of Cheshire, and
Norma Moss and· the late Marvin
Moss of Gallipolis. He Is the
stop grandson of Mildred Grate
Tucker and the late Arnold
Grate.

Public Notice
Tht Stale ol Ohio will June 11, 1ttl (which It 15 TA·117 ond TA·111.
accept an obJection to Itt dtyt after It It anticipated
Bid tp 10 lftcllllono 11111Y bt
approval ol lht rtlteao of IIIII tht Stott will receive I picked up at tilt Mtlgt
lu'hda end tccoptenco of ·requ .. t lor rtltttt of County E!lllnHr'a Office,
tht carttftcttlon only If It It lunda), wilt be contldtrtd 34110 'alrgroundt Roed,
Pomtray, Ohio ....,.,
on one of tho following by the Stilt of Ohio.
Tht eddrtta of tho chltf
bt-: (1) the ctrtlflcotlon
The Boord of Sutton
wat not, In feet, executed executive offlc« It:
·Townohlp mef' accept ttie
Jo Ann Etde, Mayor
by iht Vllilgt'l Chltl
loweol bid, or "''"' tiN
Vltltga ol Rutltnd
executive officer or other
. boot bid for the lnllndliil
P.O.
Box420
officer of the vlllege
purpoot. The TruRutllnd, OH 45n5
approved by the Stott of
rtHrvtt 1111 right to tccatl
Ohio; or (b) thet the (5) 7, 11C
ond/or rtJICI eny or ell blda
end/or any p!lrt !IMNOf, Tlte
vllltgt't envlronmantol
revlow rteord for the
Truattta will twerd Jl
Proltcl lndlcllta omllllon· I--.!P:!u~b:::llc~N::o:::ti;::C,::e_ _ contrect to thet bidder
or 1 rfqUirtd dtclalon,
which II In lht btlllnlll'lit
finding , or ttlp applicable REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL of Sutton Townohlp, lltlgo
to the . project In the Notice to Conlrectora:
county. .
•
environmental rovlaw
The Sutton · Townthlp Ktnnolh Wlttlno, Clortc •
·
TruiiHt, 43410 Dutchtown Board of Sutton Townlhlp,·
procett.
Aotd, Rtclnt, OhiO 45771,
·
Written objectlona . mull will rtctlvt ieeltd blda until Malgo County
bt prepared end eubmltted Thuradey, May 21 , 11111, (5) 7, 14, 21c
to envlronm1ntal revlewa, In accordance with the
to Section 307.81
dtclelon·m•klng, end IC· required P~• dure (24 CFR eccordlng
Public Notice
of
tht
Ohlo
Revlttd Code.
lion; 1nd that th ..t Part 51) end mutt be
Tht · bldt will then bt
r..ponalbllltl.. hove bttn addrttttd to the: Sltlt of op.-ned
PUBLIC NOTICE
at • reguler
I
onl
utloflad.
The ennual roport For61
Ohio; Envlranmenlt
ct; tchadultd townahlp mHI·
Tho legol effect of tho Community Development tng 11 the Munlclpel 910 PF for lht Klbblt
certlllcllton Ia thtl upon lht Dlvlalon; P.O. Box 1001 ; Building
ln Syrecuot, Ohio. Foundetlon, Bernerd Y.
appro'ltl, the Vl111go of Columbua, Ohio 43218· Tht blclo wilt bt ratd aloud Fultz, Trutlle, It evelleblt
llullond may · uu the
lor public lntpocllon 11
Ftdtrollundt, tncllht Stell 1og:,-Jacllonato the Rlltttt II 7:30 P.M. on Mondoy, Btmerd v. Fultz JAw Ofllce,
of Ohio will htvt ·Ill lolled of Fundt on boot a. other June I • 1t88, for 111'/• Wttl second Street,
Ill rtepontlblllilll undar then thoaa alllld -v• will reaurfaclng work batwatn Pomeroy, Ohio 45781,
1111 Nltlonel Environmental not ba contldared by tho certain ltrmlnl• followe:
during regular butlnett
Job No. 811-01
Polley Act of 1tell, u Stela of 0 hlo., N0
T·117; Beginning at the hourt tqr 1 period 'of 110
omtndtd.
Objocllont recalvod after lnltraectlon of CR·30 ond daya aubttquent to
publlcttlon of thla notice.
110 Help Wanted
TR·117 thence Eoot on TR· (5)
I, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
117 lor opproxlmotely 1.08
mlltt to tho lnttraoctlon of 15,17, 18, 11, 121c

Immediate opening for
Body Shop Technician.
flat rate pay scale. No
Apply In person.

experienced
Competitive
phone calls.
·

Business

Service5

EOE

.DDI 'Aft MlmiRS
308 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH

45769

SWEETWATER
PAY LAKE .

a

Over 100 Varieties of
Herbs and
Perennials
e Over 1,000 two .
gallon roses
a Full line Rf shrubs
and trees
e

Several Specials
Throughcwt the store

"""''

Modern Woodmen of America
- ..... ' ..,
Camp 3730,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Is Sponsoring
A Matching Fund
CHICKEN &amp; RIBS
BARBECUE
For the Benefit of
· TUPPERS PLAINS
EMERGENCY MEDICAL
SERVICES
Sunday, May 10, 1998 ·
11:00 A'. M.to 3:QO P.M.
Tuppers Plains Fire House
State Route 681
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.
$4.50 per person
Pie nd Cake Availabl for An
. Additional $.50

located 3 1/2 miles past
Southern High School

St. Rt. 124 Racine, OH
.
740-949-2682

Hrs: Mon-Fri. 9-S, Sat 9-4, S~'n 1-4
Public Notice

Public Notice

Country Mark~t
Fonnerly Harris F1nns

St. Rt. 124 Portland, OH
740-843'-5211
Hn: Mon-SJII. 9-li,'Sun 12-6

Public Nptlce

NOTICE TO PUBUC OF NO lottowtng proJtcl(a):
Vltlegl of Rutlend H.-cl
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT ON
Mltlgltton Proal'8r!l:
, THE ENVIRONMENT (FONS)
AcquloUion, Rttocllton,
COMIIINED NOTICE
Floodprooflng end/or
May7,1Demolition
Vllltgt of Rutltnd
...... ,, Nlllt·
CDBG Imminent Thr•ot
Progt~~m, FEMA
llocldng Yalley Regto..l
Mitigation Ma11u·, .. de1llng
Dnelopment Dltlrlct
with lht acqullllton,
11outt 1, Box 21110,
demolition ond/or
lltrlttlt, OH" 45750
fiQOdprooltng of
(740) 37+1431
\
hollllt/mobllt In the
to Alllnlltttltd Peraone,
Vllltga of Rutlond
Aatnclte, tncl
Multi•Vur Project
The Village
Vllltga of Rutlond
I prapqe.. to requeal the
I ' Stttt of Ohio Ia 'rtltett $23,100,001,041,170.00
Total Projtct Colt
.....,.. Iundt uncltr 8tctlon
It h11 been determined
104 (g) of Tille 1 of the
Haualng and Com111unlty thai auch Raqueel lor
011 tloprntnl Act of 1tr74, 11 Rtltloa of l'unda will not
amended; laotlon 2M of conetllute an action
11111· II of the Crtnaton llgnlflcantly elltclllljl lllllt•t,tclt
Gonulet
National qulllty ol tile human
Allordtble Houalnt Aol ln¥1ronmtnt 1nd accord·
(IIAHAI, . . -dld,l!nd/01 lnglf' lht vlll•t•. hu
'tlllt rY af 11M Stawrt e. ~lded not to p~pare •n
lala:aaWin
lloKinnay Homelut Envlronmentll Impact
but lht projtcl
mltJtllllon .tforla
Altlltlnll Act, •• ttattmtnl under tilt
ellmlnala floodplain
••nJ!Id; to "' Ulld tor 1111 Nellonel Envlronmtnt•l

-·

LARRY'S LAWN
CARE '
· e Mowing (Residential &amp;

'
.
,.

Umestone Hauling
HOUM &amp; Tralltr.Sitel
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading ·
Septic SVIItm &amp;

COUNTRY ROADS
Appearing Friday 8:00·12:00

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

' Utllltttl

(614) 992-3838

Trees Be

Serve Ice
Crnni

Shrubs
Opan: Mon.-Fri. 11-8
Set.
Sun. 12-4

.

- ·~ ..- ·

l•

(740) 742-7405

I

'

l~ERNET SIGN-UP

I ' IPIOMEIROY,

1

lam i ~

I

•

Brian MorriiOil
(740) 115-3948

IIIII- ,

'

SPECIALS
• House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $1'00
• Hedges trimmed • Gutters cleaned
Call now for a Wftldy lawn care progrem.

..
.

.

.
'

7~174

•

Fill Dirt

' j

·
•

WAYNE'S PLACE

Frt~e EJatlhmaDta•
0wner:
o n ean

~

113 W. 2ND ST,

II.~

R_,. ,_

Joe N.Sayre
614-742-2138 .

RL7.
All Yonl SatH Mull Be Pald ln

Deadline: 1:00pm lht
the ad 11 1o run,
Monday •dltlon·

Yard sale· Saturday May 9th. in·
tersection in Danville, up Red Hill

Two lamity yard sale· 43880 fQt·
esr Aun Rd ., Racine , May 8th·
8am-3pm,

Male HARDBODIES Rev~e
7:30 PM-10:00 PM

Al8o for lhe Guys

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

Remodeling

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St RL 7

ANNOUN CEMENTS

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Sale Friday 8am·? behind
National Guard Armory.

lots for ktds sires newborn &amp; up

Sat9·?607 lstStNewHaven.

Yard Sale Fri &amp; Sat 9am -5pm .
Clothes, rurnilur• &amp; crafts. 9 Bur·
dene Addition Pt Pl&amp;asant

005

Tuppers Plain•, Ohio 45783

.

,.., I

...

'

1·1()1).285-1287

EXT.8654 ·

$2.99 Per Mill
Mull(819)
Be t&amp;Yro.
Setv.IJ
645-&amp;134

30 Amouncements

Garages • Replacement Windows
ROOIIJ Additions • Roofing

Babies- Still
J.Jasebaii-FootbaiiBasketbaii-Star Track~
Video Games &amp;
Rentals

740-667-6092

.

'

'

FREE ESTIMATES

4!11riino.

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON·
Panalft, C.bbege,

Btocc:oll, Clu'"'-·

Hlnglngle......

Phlolt, Azaleea,
Shrube, Spruce rr.. .

O,.Daly9·S
Suaday 12-S
'

1192-am

Run Moore owner. 740-992·
Antiques &amp; clean used lurnirure,
will bu~ one piece or complete
ho~o~sehold, Osby Martin, 7-tO-

Co. P.O. Box

JobPolllnt
SEPTA Corroetlonat Facility
ma~ be obta ined
!rom and returned ta the Athans
Office of the Ohio Bureau of Em-

Applications

Senrlces. Comple18lob
view at lhe OBES olllce. The
~loymenl

descriptions are available tor re-

deadline lor applicalion lor lhia

posillll is Friday,

.

Position: Learning Lab lnetruc·

Work
Schedul• :
Uond•y
lh
h F fd
2 oo
roug
r ay, :
p.m ...

1D:OOp.m.
Hour~ 1318: $8.118

MiniiT'llmquallftcallona:

EValid Ohio TeachingBaCertificare.
xpertence in Adult

ence. Knowledge of c:omputer

hardware, software ancvor operat·
ing sysleml.

interprel

1

1·740·949·20 15

and larQe and small groups;
maintain daily attendance and
evaluatiOn records; abiliJy to-work

••

2tS29.

eaan Pu~ 740-251i-l318.
Frei Beagle PupPies, 2 Males, .,

and

tentiaL No exp necessary, must

bear loaol 18. Call614·992-6387
(anytime) or 304-675·5955 aher

SEPrA Corooc:ttontl Foclllty II

" STAASEARCH ••
COIIPETtOON

iiEDtt:AL SOCIAL
SERVICE

Singers, Bands. SOngwritets. Etc~
All Slyles /Ages, Major Record
Label Exect's, Seeking N~ Artists. Coming To Huntingt,on, 901 -

Immediate OpeninQ For A Uedi-

caiSo&lt;lal Serviu R&gt;silon.
Social Service Degree Required.
Please Call Or Apply

ground, 740-992-90:J1.

AVON !. All Areas ! Shirtciv

UpriQht piano, you haul away.
Can be seon at Twin River Tow·
.,1 or call ~-675-6679.

Awn , 8 ·S20 IHr, No Door

60

Lostan~Found

loti: Blonde Cocker Spaniel, Vi ·
cirWty: Qldmus, - d l 740-3792111 .

70

Yard Sale

2 family : Fri h, 9·5, Clothing,
Ni~ · Na~·s , M1" ·· 114 ,Uile Past
RV.H.S. Lillie KYOtr lbld.

740-4ot&amp;-7112
Need 4 Ladies Who Would l ike

To Sel Awln. 740-4ol8-33511.

Need a batr,'litter in ""r horne tor
two children. good pay, referenc -

304-875-1420.

es
-~o.
11

0406, ask lor Alice.

CPA

&amp; FIRST AI.D COURSES
For Those Individuals Working
Wilh The Public And lOr Children.

New Bteaklast Shift Downtown...
Please Apply For Wait Slall Or
KHeh.en Poait1ona, Mogies, 31

Two Classes To Choos.e From !

Coun S-L Galopolil.

Satu•dar. May 2. 1998 Or SaUH·
day, May ae .. 1998.- Boa• Classes
Aro f•om 9:00A.M. ·5:00 P.M.
Contact Buckeye Hills Career

Now htrmg sare drivers, good
pay, fle•ible hours. Appfy in person at Domino's in Pl Plaisant

Cemer. Adult Servtces To Reg-

111er. 74D- Z4S.5334 Ext Z09. Tu•·

NoW Taking Applications At ()om.

llln:l40.

5181h, SISUh, Ill-S, t2 Lewts Street,

17•~ 301

1283 Sale.

Expenenced

ino'a Piua, Gallipolis. · &amp; PbinW+ot
lotat10ns.
Oak Hill, Ohio Trucking Company
lookmg For Eaperienced S1mi
Tractor Trailer Drivers. Exc:ellenl
Pay &amp; lnsuranc:e Package, 740-

East 5lh Aw.. Suite 112

Ac:ro11 Old State Hig-, Rl 35, eo.,;c:ana, Texao 75110.
Household, Carpet Mill&lt; .. 0 E.S.
,

ALL Yard SaiH Muse

Frtrl"1'. llonday edi11or!
· 10:00 • ·"" Salurday.

Srnar1 Style
Soon Be Clpenong.
In The New Wat-Man. Super
Con1or jAnet II Owned By Regis
Corporation) And Will Be Hiring
Stwetal Hair StytiatJ., AI Well! AI
A Working Salon Manager. No
Ctianlele N8eded, Ju11 Have
Sheefl &amp; Lie:....., AI Hanel, &amp; We

Water Toys. Cheshire, OhiO, 740-

367-7110Z
OUo&lt;broak Center lias lull time 1
part time SlNA poSitions avail·

w•

5 -8 Family: Friday 8&lt;11, Sanorday
9111. Tme: 9-5, S.R 141 To Rl 233 Shall SUpply Tho Ro11. Benelill
To Wagna~ Road, Signs' House·
llofct.

Tec:hnrcian. Apply AI Bijlllclyo

H"RSTYUST
~"ON
~~
MANAGER

ocllttoil· 2:00p.m.

As Folowed:
0

a-anwct ~ Woge

-Commiloionf'fCJtl"'l"'
•T,..Ro18ic.rM..oion
_ .
Wiln Pncel
•.....,.,• FWd
.,_,ranee
An! lata
V.COO..

• SIDdl. PUn:Nietl Aan
o ...._II E1igi11fo Fca-

Garall" Salt: 10et Sacond Av•
Yay 7111, 1111. 0:00 1\.M. Ta

~7.':'~=­

Garoll" Sal•: May 41h. Tllfu e111.
1.2 -.OUt - · 211, -...,.,

'"""""""'for _ _ ,.,,.

WHdea..,a. Baoks, HowthOkll

For Uore lnfonnatlon C•ll 8 111

·-hi...

• Uacn.dll OiiCOU'M

Be....... a-s.

()penmg fOf Eapenenced Marine

Treaunents, Furnitute, Resum&amp;

To : Tope Furniture, 151 second ·
Atler&amp;Je. GaJ!tpolts. OH &lt;15631 .

8 10 Garage Sale : 5181h, 91h. 9
A. M. -5 PM. A-Frame . Cora Mdl
Road. Rain!SNne.

682~13,

Salesperson- Home
Furnishings, Carpel, Window

Be P.W In AdWinc:e.
QENJ t"i : 2:00p.m.
thta.day
botorethtad
10 run. Sunct.r

call U0-9Q2-3668

9:00...,.2:00pm.

Need lead and ban guitar ptaren for country band, 7&lt;10·7&lt;12·

381-04811 incl/slllr8p.

_ _ _ _;.:_____

requ~recl,

-

"
Door, Easy Cash, fun. 1-800-

Earn Sl.OOO Weald¥. Stufttng en....,., no P'* oxpenence, lree
rle181ls, send SASE to: N.B. Dept

tn Per100:

Arbors Al Gallipolis
110 Piner:resa Drive
Gallipoli~ Ohio 45631 .

Fun llmosph•re.
only. Ask tar
day. 30&lt;1-

~.

repor11.

an Equal Opponunttr Elnptor.
.
or.

8pm. Wed ttwu Sat. ·

Female 740-·7SQS.

-•ly

-

lor al1 shihs. -

..,....
an ep-

fld piMN lOp by &amp; fiM out

pllcalian, 740·012·6472. Over brook Cenrer. 333 Pa~ Str"t.

Mirfdtpon, Oh45780. EOE

Part·Time Bartender Needea Far

We~ends

and Ntglltl, Pick Up

Appl icaiJon At 408 Sconcl Ava.

nue.
OH12-3.
12·3:~o,
Fri., ..., ...

·· llay &amp;lh

Roofer, mus1 be erperianced a

llnow urpentrr.

740-31H3411.

c.n efttr lpm•

Scenic Hills Nurstnt Center 11

-

Acup1ing Apflficlliono Far
~op­
ptr IIG-J ·friclay Foom 1:04 .
4:30 At ~ Ifill Hunintl cPa1·Tmo

s--..-

.... 311 IMlriclgo - . " -·

01145814.

1·181·8H·7771 Ext.
SOCIAL WOIIKER. Ouahtr
Garolle Selo: May '8111, t111. 9·4,1.- - - - - - - - - - ~ ...... Kill'• to ou;
64011 S.R. W, Furninoro, ClrnhH, HVAC Instal- N - Far Ex· SuCI:HII.llonooamonr- op.
tnllrior. T _ ..
paneling c_.ny Far lnstalla· portwnilf IVIillblt.· R"uirtt 1
lion&amp; OIHMiing &amp; Coomg Equlp- BSW degloo from on Outeditocl
~

-·-.

Othtr.......,

··-....

Rao~or,

1113. .

a.aoe 'Salt: Rlln /Shine,

men1 tn ManUfaclured

Briel&lt; Sclloat Aolld, Ac:rvu

-

Arldatrille. F• AntiquH, Furn~

.... C - Top. llilc.Fri. Set

a.....

lla•ing Sale: Grftdng Card

Rac:l&lt;t, Tolllos, Sowing lllcltl1•

a

Aes i·

-,;ng
• 3YIS. [xper"'a·, RSESC...

•- - -

·-llalidlp

o-.,

•

Colrit• 1111e111o Dleli.
women. 11oM cto.,lnt. Cllriot·
moo !toms, Cral.., lilac. New
• E ' 1Wigto
Thintls e...,
2~n••--•llpra&lt;••••• Onlrt Cll
OUt a-ooo C- Rood, E-r Bonntne Hooting I COO~ng At
Friday, Seluntay, g A.M. • S P.ll. 740·4....141• Or 1·100-172·
U.,lfl.tfl.11h.&amp; 111\
S1117,C •·ro"I,OH45131.

w.-.

progrem of tocial work. Must

have curNr11 lic:atiH 1D practiQ
toc.al work in W.il Virginill lind

••,.nence en

IMCiidt! aoci at

--•11.-..-.oioion,
-·totoor .. facilhy
-

c:aJe
11 tequirad. Tu ilion reint--

... lifo. -

40~.:--

ptorclr
- -&amp;-·
Ptouanr
Nu••int
AeMbililllion
Aaoilo 12. A.- 1

c
-. 11&lt;1• 32t. Painr

~ ..., wV
25550. (A Ctonmerft·GtMIIo

ldty)fOE.

•

'
'

etloctively

independently; ability to

r

•

score, and

the tests of Adult Bat"

1 Monn•• Did Pup. 112 Lab, 112 11 0
Help Wanted
tianships with dients. co-worker&amp;.
Engli•h Seuer. To 1\ Good Home, ......,==~====~ criminal
justice aystems person740-24!&gt;5444.
lSI..DANCERS WA~D SIS ·
nel. etc.; skill in oral and wrinen
Excel~rppponur;ty lor lho ngln
Colie pups, 8 wks. ord, 740·742· girl. $!i001•)pet week eaming po. convnunica~.,: cample10 mont111y

nu•.
4:00 P.U.

CAll

sic litefa·

c~ Eduta1ion: or teaching experi-

manage time and organize workload; abilily to establith and
maintain effective working rala·

~:00.

IIRIICB
•Septic Syste•s
·••••••nts
·•Excavating

May 20, 1998.

...

EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICES

Fuday, Sarurcfa¥. Centenary.
Name Brand Clothmg. Adult I
Chiktr.n, lots Mise: .• Rain. Shtne

UD

Milan, lllinolo

daily Ienon plar)t Jor Individuals

E¥11ylhing!

'S .

280,

6126• .

ern Averlle, Gallipolis. ·

City Gar1ge Gallipolis, Lots 01

· ·. ..(No Sunday Calls)

And Income Will Be

Re~

992-6576.
Cleah
ta· re
skills·.
~~~~J~~~0~'11·Sio0didiiecl
Trucks ..1990 Models Or Newer,
Sm•r• Buick Pcnliac. 1900 EaSI· Abil ity to administer,

......._ ~ 5 ....._ • -- By
..;_,, g ,o , 1 , _ , ~-.

61+992-7643 ·

IUBBAIIS
GREEIHOUSE

' 8jrlcule

,

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Rt. 7

740-985'3831

tory

Baaed On 27"4 Commlslion.
Send Resume and Relerencts
To: Michael Loehrer, lmpro !Seal

DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Ectucalion: k~ ol 11\o GED:
Be Enlided To Receive Your Dia· J &amp; 0 Auto Patts. Buying ability to gather, Jntarpra!, and
Hlie Supplies At No Co11 To wrecked or salvaged vehtcles. cla.ssify information: knowt.dge of
'
and aboity 10 wook in Worcf'vrfoc:L
You. For More lnlormauan 1·888· 304·713-5033.
Windows 95 and Novell; maintain
en-8561,
·
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
area computer network; orHomes. 740·446·0115. 304·675· local
40
Giveaway .
ganize, prepare, and leach trom
51165.

BUILDERS, INC.

. New Homes • VInyl Siding New

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

Thppers Plains
Now has Beanie

.

~ISSELL

• GRASS SEED
Near·Chester Ofl St.

MIS
. . . Coin Shop, 151 Setond
Awnuo, Gallipoijo, 7&lt;0·4&lt;&amp;-2842.

2526.
·
----::==-=----1
MEETVOUR
---------

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Full line of water etorage tanb I
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanka
Water line- 100' thru 1000' Rolla
~r Pipe- 3" thru S", G11 Plpe &amp; Regulators
Dreana"
·
Open;
Joe Wilson
111:00-4:30 WMkdjlya
'
(814 992-4277'
IIDYAHt:all OfWNAQE SY~TI!MS, HIC. 8:00.12:011 ~turday

IUIIIIDS

8110:00 pm

Personals

I Am Seeking A Self-UaiiV11411d
Individual Wi!h A Wofking Knowl·
edge 01 Bearings And Mechani-

Ne110nvll .., Ohio

Auction
and Flea Market

Antiques, top prices paid, River- - - - - - - - - · 1 irie Antiques, Pomero~. Ohio,

740/985-3813

.........

~T-SHIRT CONTEST

1998·99 &amp;ehool year. Submit lit·
ter of Interest, resume, 3 letUHs of
recommendat ion, copy at uan·
acript and cu,en1 ce rli'ic:a(e 10
John Riebel, Superintenc:lent, P.O.
Box 6114, Pomeroy, Ollio 45169 by
,June 15. 740·992·3683 lor mare
inlotmation.

Tree lor firewood , aheadJ on

• FERTO..IZEB
• GAilDM SEED
• MIJLCH

l l/2 mile south of

Hot&amp;....kflllt

740-387-7138

and

cal And Elecuical Rotaong Equip-

Small Collie type, good W!lh kids.
740·742·1507.

-1-

THE CARD BOX

• •
All Topplngt
' : CIIIItn~Accepl8d

SAT., MAY 9TH
$1Q.OO Advance TICkets
$1~.00 at the Door

COORDINATOR ol Talol)led

Gifted Servtcu beglnnlnt the

427-5490, 901·427·9514.
Shepherd, 1 male. 1 female.. 740·
•ATTENTION DANCERS AND
742-0202.
MIXERS• All LADIES
Regiatered female mother Gar·
of men? Tired of wOrrying
man Shephard 2y01 old. 5mo. old
money? Wanl 10 be inde·
lemale puPf&gt;r not re9istered. 304· pendent?
New CIJbl New Owner!
615-11229.

Call 614·843•5426

1998 M1rtln Street ' · .
Pomeroy, ·O hio 45789

.-

0,.. 24 Hr8. A Day

· Blac:uH StlndWieh,

• COIIPUTCR !FREELANCE •
Dala Entr~ . Word Proceulng,

ment To Sell To Indus trial And
Power Generating Facllllies In
Sau11'1eas1 Oh io. The Applicant
Will Ac t As An Agent For A Fac-

·

Mi•ed Coonhound pups. 2 males,
8 females : mis:ed German

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
. Free Estimate•

"Bu'fld Your

.

FOODMfiiCT

,·

.

611\,

ower And Gold Coins, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
·Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Cutrenc~.
Sterling, Etc. Acquisilions Jewelry

4" thru 48" plastic culvert In stock

Hlllllng, ExcaYIItlng
I Trenching·
UmeRo,le &amp; (;revel ·
Septlc'Syiteml .
Treller ·a. .._Situ ..

7DiyaAWeek

Pomeroy, Ohio

729 -62,

45769.

338-4433 /800-621·2Z20.

713-5785 0&lt;,304·113-5447.
90 Wanted to Buy
Absolute To~ Dollar: All U.S. Sil·

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

ft~ft~~.~~c-~~ft~

MI.I

SAYRE
tiRUCIING
.

,.

Box

Graphic&amp; And Web. Many Levels
And Fosilion'sl Flexible Hnt Mo dem Req . Stan Now! Call : 800·

auclion
service.
llcenaed
t68,0hio &amp; Well Virginia, 304·

. .I

Hot&amp;Cold
' Lunt:h S.ndwlc:il
Including Plmt
• 12" 11.41-

FOR LADIES ONLY

360° Communications
.
.

~-

Custom Homes

Gutlw • Raalil:e
•lteplaCIIIIIIII W•tdoJII
• StaliotiGt y DDcko
• Blown lnlulalion
• Gatllgll. 0.:111
24 X 24 Pole luilcq
otarting at $5995
740 9112-2772

cttESttiRE

,.'

.CELLULAR PHONES

~

.

'

...

riDf experience, must be abte

Bonehollow Rd . Middleport oil of

Trained. 740-446-7730.

Phone740-992-3987

•

'

Help wanted

worlc unsupervised . Send rt·
sume- The Dati~ Senunel, P.O.

4 Kittens, 8 Weeks Old, Litle,

C
.II!!:

JlLSIDING l
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • 5ollil
• foscia • Seamlm

;Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Realdentlll
FrH &amp;limlllft

OH

"'' WARNER INSUUNCE
.
JEFF.·

COfTimerclal &amp; Realdentlel
~
~ 27 yrs. exp.
Ucen4ed &amp; Insured il!!i

'

&amp;14-992·34-ro

~Concrete

POINT

LOHG'S
.COHSTROOIOH

Gravel, Sand,

-

~

~

Limestone,

•Bobcat Service

.

Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

448-4759
441·1191

li!iJ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siaing

.

···- . ... ..

"Your One Stop
Co•puter Shop!l9

.

~~~~~~~~~ftft~

WICKS
HAULING

Top Soli,

Carp~r~ters witt't imeriof and

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete

Price

COMPirfER
PERFORMANCE·
~ UPGRADES

E•timate•

(LimeStoneLowRate1)

\

Qu.•llty ••• hw

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats
Ha~glng Baekets $6:13
Atbloomlng Ullea, Holle, Paonlta, Blttdlng Heona, etc.
Variety of Parennlala 94¢
.Fruit a. Flowering TrHa, Shrubs, Pines &amp; Azaleas
Momlng Stir CR 30
· Racine, Ohio
1411-2115

~Ch-ti,SOft

111
'"'·

Open 1\lta..f'rf.1H

FOODLAND

Doors

Plants,

15 North Main
Rutland, Ohio am Dell: featuring
·
Amlth

Galllpolla, OhiO 45831
~ Top • Trim • Removal
·
• Stump Grinding
Insurances
20Yra. Exp.
. Ina. Owner: Rick Johnson

Slt..f0o4; CloHtl Sun. a lion.
'Rl tz,t, Mlntr1vlllt, OH
7401121551

.

HANGING BASKETS
Large Asst. Varies to
Choose From
BEDDINGPLANTS
SILK MEMORIAL
WREATHS ...
· SILK FLOWER SPRAYS
99¢ and up
VEGETABL EPLANTS
Full Flats $6.99

FREE
ESTIMATEES

COMPANtONI

Woocltn Angett,
Stulltcl Rlllltltt .....

YOUNG'S.
CARPENTER SEVICE '

MOTHER'S DAY ·
SALE

1D/25/IIIIo1fn

Fountains, lncludn pump,
for$121.00
Clntlln, Rlllllt,
Alromatltenapy,

•

12/tl/llft

•Garages
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop Be Compare

"We don't want to make maney, w just
want to seU ftot.~~era."

OlfEill6 CAIIllf mG surrua t;t ID CONSftiUCftOI ft
-.
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lin.
2 nor Angel Blnllltlt .

No Job Too Sft!M/

Elllmet"

Verltty,

COUNTRY
CAIDlE SHOP

.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Pomeroy,.
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy
yard 1010, May 7th £

.•New Homes

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

.740-949·3006

P/1 Contractors, IlK.

EXCAVATING CO•.,

ROIEitT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

lORY'S PORtABLE WELDING .

Free Estimates

OHIO RIVER SERVICE

'

HOWARD

740-985-4422

3/12198 tfn

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
. Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roof$ • Decks • Garages

Call

;

•

614) 949·2804

RADIATOR

New Conctruction &amp; Remodeling

(No n1111 ten behind)

Gravel, Sand,
.Umellone, Dirt, Top
Soli, Anything you
need to haul.

740-949-4803

SUNSftBOMB
CONStRUCtiON

Quality Service
ForAIIVour
Garbage&amp;
Rubbish ·
Pick Up for
Residential &amp;
Commercial

•Room Additions
•New Garage•
Commercial I
• •Electrical a. Plumbing
e Weeftating
•Roofing
•Interior a. Exterior ' '
e Ttee Trimning
PalnUng
• Shrubbery MoinlellaiKe
Alto Concrtle Work . '
Plan ahead. Call
(FREE ESTIMATES)
today for free estimate
' V.C. YOUNG Ill
I
'
992-41215
742·2101 .. 446·3622
31301'1111 mo pd .,
Pomeroy, Ohio
.

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE &amp;COUNTRY MARKET
Greenho~se

'

...
..
614-691·7231

No job too small,
Some too big.
740-949-4802

'

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio

11 o

Rd .. 3rd house on right next to
bus garage.

SERVICE
• Agricultural Uma,
· Umastone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand · ... •
:1~ ·
· , Chaster, Ohio

614-691·5716

MIJwlng, Mulching,
Pruning
Cion and Install Gutter
Flowers, .
Bru1h Removal,
Install New Btdl
· Free Eatlmoteo
"Go Anywhere"
No Job tilo amoll.
Mon.·Sat:
(740) 86ll-s904

S'tale Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

DUMP TRUCK ·

FREE ESTIMATE$

Laadscapin'

Opening May
Weekly Jackpot plus BigTag
"-~~ii~1 Fish. Stocking weekly with
Channel and Shovelhead.
Tum onto Woods MiiiRd. off
Rt. 325. between Vinton &amp;
Rio Grande. Watch for signs
to 475 Deckard Rd.
· ~ ~~~~
No fishing license needed. ·
"
740-388·844 7

o.ttloor Power [•tlfiiiRI Assodatlan: Urllfled 2 Cydt

.1RUCKING

· Cov~ring

PICKENS
HAULING

. Attorney AT Law
614-592-5025
.Athens, Ohio
4/30/98 1 mo. pd.

R•.L. HOLLON

Professional Floor

~d's

•Mower• •Chlln Sewa •Weedeeters •Authorized
Deller For:
•Brlggl &amp; StraHon ~MTD •Murray •McColl\)UIIh
. •ECho •Ryobi ·Roper •Rally •Hydro G11ar
ANOOTHERSI
lrlfts &amp; Strattan: Master Strvlct fechttldatt

Chapter 13

Yard Sale

Two Famil y: 40 Pecan Street,
Spring V•lley, Fri, Sat, 8·5. Hull,
Fenton, Roseville Poue,y, CO
Pilylf, llioc. 11ems.

992·5583
985-4473
FrH Etllmatee
740•74 2•3411
.,.,....
9/4/fFN ,
~~;:~-~~1~mo~.
r~::=;:==;;:;;~~~~~BO
t
·· ...' ·· pd~-~ L._ _ _ _ _....;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:,:1mo.:.~:o·.l 1.-,.-.~~------.-.------t
. ..

PLUS

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Parts and Service!/

William Safranek,

Take tl'!e paln 'o utpf
painting, and let me
do lttot you.
Interior
eatore s p.m.
~ave me111ge.
Attar&amp; p.m.
(740) 985-4180.

CARPET .

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

LIIDICIPI
DDIIII

.IIACIIIIIDWD CLIIIC

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

LIIU'I
Plllmll

Show Chicken .....................17.30 ·
n.s. prim 11ft lor 5()11 beg '
Howard L. Wrltesel

Chapter 7

Tr.._

PINEGROVE '
FARMFEEP&amp;
SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grave Ad, :
Racine, Ohio 45771 :
740-9411-2451
Pig Gr- .........................16.25:
12% Complelelloni ...........1S.60 :
II" Rablth ........................18.00:

949-2168

KfiRE"•s GREE"HOOSE &amp; COO"TRY MARKET

QhloRiver
Campgrounds and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
New I uttd H111111. Wt
Buy • Sell Toola,
flthlng equip., TV't,
Cl't, alareoo - little bit
of twrylhlng.. Loctted
an Ohio River Ctmp.
grounda, St At 124,
Racine, Ohio. '
. ' 741).94f.1012

---:...-'---:-----

BELPWINftD

UP!CY

OPE.UII APRIL1

1--------....-

FREE ESTIMATED

at

70

Public Notice

Public NOtice

Public Notice
reltatt 'aderellunclt under
Stcllon 104 (g) of Title I of
1111 H-'"11 and Community
Development Aol ol1tr74, 10
omanded Section 218 of
Tille II ol the Crenllon
Gonulee Notional Allard·
obit Houelng Act (NAHA),
oo emended; end/or Title IV
of the Stewart B. lllcKinnay
Homtltll Atolottnct Act,
11 emended; to bt uttd for
the pro)eot(l) dllcrlbtd
obovt.
Tha Vlllege of Ruttend 11
certilylng to the Stele ol
Ohio, that the Vllltga end Jo
Ann Etdt, In hll/htr oHicl•l
copoclty oa Meyor, conunl
to acctpllht jurltdlctlon of
Federal courto If an octlon
It brought to enforce
roaponolbllltlo• In relellon

of Foster's most beloved tunes ·
seemed completely out of step with
the spirit of the Civil. War, which
came along in 1861 when he was
onl y 34. Wh ite minstrel singers who
wore burnt cork in the 1850s were
pelted with eggs and stones by the
1860s as Yankee sensibilities
sharply turned against mockery of
African Americans.
Emerson writes , "The Beach
Boy who never surfed and the songwriter who had never visited the .
Deep South when he wrote.most of
his plantation melodies could no
longer sustai n their fantasies or
share them with the rest of the world
when the rude reality of war kicked.
sand in everyone 's face. " •
·
Although Eme•son does not.
spe ncl a great deal of time on Fos·
ter 's posthumous popularity after
the war, certainly the combin ation ef
nostalgia for the Old South and -the
ri se of Jim Crow gave new l.ife to his
songs. So did the availability of
cheap sheet music, Widely republished and played in drawing rooms
ac ross the land, Then, the growth of
vaudeville. phonographs and rad io
expanded the audience. Despite their
lyriC's ' racial stereotypes, hi s
melodies were so wonderfully alive ,
and so uniquely American.
Emerson makes a great effon to
explore the link between the state
song, "My Old Kentucky Home,"
and its composer. He recounts the
great popularity of the Rowan Mansion in Bardstown, the Kentucky ·
shrine that is said to be the inspira·
tion for the melody.·
It may have been. No one is sure.
But it is also fairly clear that if Fos·
ter ever visited Bardstown, it was on
a quick jaunt when his steamship
made a siop in Louisville. Emerson
argues that the true inspiration may
have been "the While House," Fos- .
ter 's family home in Pennsylvania.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 7,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The life of Stephen Foster was
not light- hearted like his.tunes·

7, 1998 .

�.

.

Thuraday, May 7, 1998

•'
.•

7
A~~.:u~~;~·0;Y·Oi:P~~
0 ~·1~H~N~~--:-----~------------------~P:ome~~~·:·:M:I:dd:•~·pm\;;~o;h~~::~-:::::~~:::::::n.::o:•:ll:y:Se:n:d:M:I:•:P:~:~:1=:s!~
NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANTS

,._

Arbors Ar Gallipolil Currenlly
Ao:ctptlno Appllcatlono for Stall
ltlrtd Nursing Allll1n11. We
Art looking For Hard Working
Dependable Applleanla. Benefill
If Vau Have

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Joo'oTv.VCRSoMce
Free Eslirra181
All Work Guaranteed
304-1'15-172.0

)oliil-titilili.,;,lliil-lliliJ

Oueatlana.
Please Contact Lisa Sholl AI

From 8 A.M. To 4:30 ~II.
ARBORS AT DALUPOI.IS
170 Pinecrest OJW.
Gal~potis,

OH •5631

7.0.446-7112

TEACHER of Pre1cr1ool Handicapped Students beginning the
1i98-e9 athOQ!I year. SubmiT 111llf of iniBftsl. resume, 3 ..tters of
recommendation, copy of ttan·
serlpt and cumtnt certificate t.o

John RioOcof , Superintonctent, P.O.
Box 884, RlmerOW, Ohio 45769 by
June 15. 7.40·992~3183 for ""'ore
information.
The Southern Local School Dis·
trict has the following coaching
po1ition1 available for the 1g98·
08 1choot ye., : a11iatant htgt'l

PJ real estate advertising In
tills Is subjec:l to
the Federal Fait' Housing kt

of 1968 which makes nillegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limlation or discrimination

based on race. color. religion,
sex familial statu&amp; or national
origfn, or any intention to
make any such preference;
Nmllation 0! discrlmlnatlof'l.•
This newspaper wf11 not
knowingly ac:c:et&gt;l
advertisements for real estate

wf1ic:h Is In vlofaUon of the
law. 0tx readers are hereby
Informed lhal atJ dweltfnga
actvertised in this newspaper
are availatWe on an equal
opportunity basis.

foollltoi, junior h&lt;gh footbofl. l!'o-lllll....i~~~~llllllll~.
aui11ant high school volleyball,

nior high

boys basketball (2

coachel,, juntor high girls basketball, aNistant high IChool girls
baaketball, reserve baseball,

monll, 304- 73t-72D5.

REA L ESTATE

310 Homes tor Sale

varsity chHrleading advisor., and
junior high tchool cheerleading

ung In Golllpoil!, Ott 1300. mlh.

Gallipolia, S3401t.lo., WID Hook·
Up, Deposit Requ11ed, 513· 574-

2 or 3 bedroom , lull lin bait-

mont no poll. 740-DD2·5858.
3 Bclr, Full baument, c.tnlral air,
Camp Conley area. S350. mo.

510

'*''

Houllhold
Goods

O..k blue '""""' I M

1111 wilh

mauve accen11. S.fDO. 304· 17&amp;.

2157.

Dol..,

Discount · Uoblle Home Pan• &amp;
Accenories Wlttr Heaters, VI·
nyl Sk~ Kits $~&amp; . as. An-

chon.
I Fiborgla11 Stopo,
Root Cootino•. Dooro, Wlncfowt,
Plumbing &amp; Elt&lt;trlcal Suppfleo,
Blockino Wood &amp; Wtdoe• And
Morel Call Benneu's Uobila
Homo Supjily AI 1-740 441 8418.
Divorce Forcn Sa .. 1~Take over
""'"'"""· .2br, 2 beltl!, Hnanclng
81111ilable.3CM-7SS.5Ytl.

Wild Turkey 11110n, buy .Army
woodland trH·bark camourtagt
at S1m Samervilla'l by Sandy -

7170.

Nice three bedroom ranch style
home with attached garage, iuppers Plaint area, $4251 montn
plu1 deposit and utilitiel, 740·

fi8H)I8D after 5:30pm.

ville Foil Offo&lt;CI, Fri. Sat. I Sun.
12pm-5pm othor dora. 30•-27311055.

530

-ino.

Viclor Victrola YV·XIY 204841,
wairll\ loor modol,
very well, 150 with ~.cords, 740·

Antlqun

420 Mobile Homes

for Rent

IID2·3301 .

Fitting• '"

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

Jl&lt;lloon. Ohio. t.II00·59H52B
Wtdding - Gown~Seautlful ivory

aequ1ned, r•tmbfoldlfed lace,

Ill.. 10 wi1h vtil. Only 1225. 304875-11040.

Woodburnino ffroplaco With

Pipe, soars Drrtr. 740-311-2405.

\

550

Stock, brick. tewtr pipes, w.lnd·

owa. 11n1111. ete. Claude Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121 .

Stool Building Dealerthipo In ••

lect open markets. Huge profit

potenUal. Call Mr. lloonle. 304758-4135.

Pets for Sale

WI-

2 Aquarluma 3tlgal. tanks w/cfou·
ltlo rot Iron atond, lulfr equipped
filtora, -. · lighll etc.
lt25. 304-e7!1.,11D1

·

A Gtoom Shop -Pel Grooming.
Fea1urlng Hydro Batn. Don
ShH!a. 373 Georgtl Creek Rd.

AKC Chihuahua amall mole,
7moa. old, ... grown. $300 080.
3()4.87~.

AKC Ll!asa Apso -~~. 5 moo

ofcU200. 304-ct7S. 7223.

AKC Reg malo 11111111. AKC
pupa. Boxerl
Enofllll Bulldog pupploo. 740·
143-5285.

Rea Peking•••

AKC Regtsterctd Keeshond retnlllt, spade, hDUie broken, 10
good homo onl,. 304·87$-0887

Dip or 30t fiD!i 311t1S E...,..;ng..

-

o,.n Sunclara

t-4. Mon-Sa1
11 ·tl. Fisn Tank &amp; Pel Shop,
2413 Jecklon Awe. Po1n1 Pl•a•111. 304-e7S.20e3.
'
Codl.lrlels-Pearl &amp; luDnoa. 304·

875-4220.

tor

lam kM*ing

.

t9110 ·1!HIO Trud&lt;s Fot$t00111
Sctizod And Sold
Localtr Tnio llonlh.
Trudlt. 414'1. E~e.
t-80fl.522·2730, X3DOt .

1t81 Corveue Classic, 50,000
lliles, Askino 1t0,700, 740·311702tg,
1D82 Cullall Suptft, 2 D, 260
VB . Good Condi1ion, S1 ,800 Or
Boot Otfor, 741).11112·4588.

t D84 Old Cutluo 305 V-8 po, pb,
11,500 Firm. Can be seen 1t
2405 llomoe A¥o. Pt. Pleo&amp;ant,

--·

WV. 304·675-50tt after Spm or
1D85 Trans Am 305 auto trena,

btacklgray interior, t-~Pl. lOaded.
sz.500 oeo. 304-4175-4220.

t lise_Cadillac: Floe-. 2.8 filar
ong111e. $3,000, call 740· 7422215.
.

Escott Slation wagon
888 Mtrcury Topaz

&lt;ip 11184 Ford T ftOO, 1188 Dodgo Atltt auto
rranomiuJon 175. t984 2.5
Buick 4tyt.
1871 4.3 v.e

uoo.

1150. 1&amp;70 Aula tran1ter

Jfov$100. 304-578-2387.

c•••

tll&amp;e' Trana·Am Aulo, 350 En$2,895; 1891 Sundance
Conwor••llle 89,000 1111u t:~.2D5:
Cook Mo10r1, 740-«e-0 103.
1081 ¥u•rang Gl, 5.0, conveniblt, aum, AIC. white, new top, real
n1ce shape, $5,495, 740· 742~

3802.
1987 Ntssan reo..~'· new stflfiG.
oood tran1mi11ion, engine,

brakes &amp; batterr $1,000. 304675-1981 .
1988 Choory Coroico, 2.1 v.e, oir,
till, cruise, naw Urn. runs good,

lharp, $t•9~ 740·1182-ct824.
MG

ferret&amp; it you

oro 1te potiOn who bought tl!om

1088 Dodge Shadow, whhe, four

ltom rhe Atk abOul one rear ago
pltaH call tnt!l Ferrttl name1
Bta""' and Toottio Pllono (7401

-tent ·Condition,
••· &gt;h. otc.,Su95,
1ow miot. excof740·g92~

441-14111

NOTICE

, _ Cllr Pttl-..g

?6 ford F·250 ... HV&gt; SO,, 380 ,
engine, autamalie. new 33" Iitts. •

, _ - lotbtd, manw ,_ pano, ·
$2000080,740-742-2192..
•

Wett&amp;

tg78 Joop CJ·S 414 good ce&gt;ncf. :

• Q 54 2

882•.

.

1088

Ford

sow· miles,

Wagon

107,000 lll01, Cruilo Con•ot. PL.
P S . - Til~ PW,- Scoa11,

-o,ant

570

MusiCal

Instruments
FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO.

r.._;blo porty _,.od 11 , _
tow monlhty payments on pianO.
- focoltr. Colt t ·lflD.~te.

• A 54 .

;,;,:..:,;;..;..:..~--- '

Wet!&amp;

Noi111

ttBB Nltton ~thllndcH I WD
14,000, 740-37i-213e. .
•

PBBI

I t

P~s

3NT

1888 Plymouth Voy- V·8, ·

tGD2 Chery

e,

:

miles, 18800, call collect 740· '
8D8-10111.
•
.
.

88 Hartor Dl'liclson soh •i cuo- .
axeelfam &lt;ondition, ...,. low

10111,

- · 740-74.2-11103.

750 Boats &amp; Moton

for Sale
1U69 Saa Imp 1g 11211. doOp•V,
bei,Qt w/und interior, lcrl•
180hp. MetcruiMr Inboard moaoq.:
with trail•r. life Pr••erwer• •~
bufl1)tr&amp;,J2,750.114 4113114. :

ti78 Taylor Crah 1711. opon - .
tOhp. Chfyaler mo10r wltrailtr
304-875-5018 aftat 5pm ot

THE BORN·WSER

saoo.

~~

·Bow t 70 HP,

OM'
1

Ullfi-50HP,
•

·---

" LIVESTOCK

Nico ,,........... . , _ ta fd .;..... ·,
-·••pickup,
ocr- --.
ows. bronze
in color. mUsr ue.
740-742·21112.

61.0 Farm Equipment
I N Ford tractor,' et . 'ond.

12.800.

•

MIIMJI Fe~guton culhwal•ng
uacuw, nice Shape. $1 ,500 . 304875-3112.t.

A£

4 tOW

no

hll

corn platt•r _..lh

monitor &amp; plate&amp;. 7~0-949· 2878
E......... ~ atefle;ICft.

fr!lornalionaf 8DO 711. Hay Bino •
a.hf 85 GrtncNr MiJIIer, John

0... 1211. Tran-t Iliac. al os.
-304-273-4215

11196 Dotfaa ·Noon. 27,000 Mills,
3 Door E1proaso, IJ,ogg 080.
740--251-1 5», 740-25$-1371.
111117 ~oac Firebifd Blac:k 3.1
Litol. V-8, fo&lt;101J .Pall- Alumi"""' WhHII, CO Ptoror
11•,500. Strioua tnqulroa, 1•0·

..,.,.,

=·-·

s~o ceo.

7441·742·

Bad . Credi~ No Credit, Bankrupt·
q? Wo Can Hofpl Bank Fi,..,..
111g On Ulodllafli&lt;tn. 740-4410107.

Vican Hay Salet Model 1211 C-.dlt Problomo? Wt Con Hctlp.
llakol 5'15' Roflt, Samet Aa N"' Eur llan~ Fonanclno For UIOCI
18,800: Len For Sail: 3.55 A&lt;roa, · V•hlcles, No Turn Dawns, c ·all

Crib C1eek ADad, Mason Co.

owner FirWicong, Down Ptty_,
3()4.875-4112.

Your Atoa John . DHro DH,.,
for Rnicl.noll Anct Cctmrna&lt;c:it!t
L - Equipmoru. eo._t Utility
TriC1DII from 20 Ta 38 HP. All

VldliO, 740-211117,

Upton UIOCI Coro RL 82-3 llitet
Sou1h of Loon, WY. Financing
. . . -. IDH!il-10111.
Why "-1 2S ·30K fot A N.,.

Luauty Spot11 Coupe Wh,n You

SiZH 01 • WO And 2 WD f•m Con Own Tho - f o r A~
TrOCIOrl, Haw Equo-t, Joftn 01 Tho CoiL C - l Rod. Adult
.,.... SMts- . . -. ~ OflYtn 14' Cougar, IIR7·YI. 21
With Ut Abou1
AI Law - ·· 43.000 MIIH, ~. I.Mt
Aa 2.K On l..;.,-j,"IIC"'ro..o And 01 Ill Kind, II Raal Coilt&lt;IOr"l
Low Ra•.Financino On- 11nc1 car. tu.ooo 740-4411·1527, 'After
UIId Eqoi-nt. Ca~michett'l I.::;•.;.;P.M.;;;;,_ _ _ _ _..___
Fa-m l.alt Gollillalo,. 011740- ......
"*Z!t21-~,,,, ,
---~~~-;_;_;_...,....;.~-I

f"""-'""

for.....

a

130

~
llvNtodl

ao Anau• Alllf Clti-Angua Bufta
Fot Sale. Raall•lill PrieM. El·
ctttenl lltHCiino, Slllfa Run

,.,__7..0.-!UM.
IIMiolillllo

::.c.---.-.c.tll==.
38r,d DIU.. 2 ....

II 170 81, -

~f ~/rt.~

')

1tt2 Cherrcllet lullurl!en 314
Ton Chai-t Grar. Tirao,
Towiittl P ,..,.,
llaanl.
E --a . - . . 111.000 74024!1.-5111.

"'"'*"

·DocJect

11113
0·1110 E a ~ II 112' bod. QIOCI
111315. 740-1112.flk.

-tton.

HOlttttin ~- 400 Polo.,
1250, 5 Ft Woodt Finlal!lno
- · Eoc.H.,t Cond. 740- 1-::-~-=:-----

a• ••

__

790 . Campers &amp;
Motor Homea

.....:,.:.:.:.,..:..:.:,;,;.:,.::..:...~

DINI-U.

~c.oaca&gt;

I'IQ;;I'Nlft&gt; Po.

22~

~lbllry

23 GIIIU411 fuel

24 Ai:MI

2SEI.-,T•-

21Cuplcl

Ealt

'D Actme

Dbl
All pall

Altdlr-

.....-+-+-+-1---1

I1

5

ftNie

J rl

I

I I' I I

I

~~ Yl/! Sl

·.·. I

~all~

~.on

I . I I .17 ·I e Complota "'"~~e~&gt; 3
0
LEI1EIS I'
rl1 tl'tl'l

PEANUTS

1.-L.,;,.,L,-.L.-.L.-...1.,;,....1

"1 will always v.uit "If youd011't qo
for you," she said. any.P.lace, I can't
"I'm nOt going
wa1t for you,"
she said. ·
anyplace~ he sa1d.

1

I LL ADD SOME

you cm.1op ''"'"

No.

. 1~1 1HESE SOUAIES

6

UNSCIAMil! l!llltS ·lO
GEl ANSWER •

..

.' '

I

..
"

MAY? I·•••·

ITHURSDAY

'.'

,·
•
•

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Pl:rSAOnTARIUS (·Nov, 23·Dec.
mil!ht mar- 21) A clique who!tc pracncc make
Friday, May 8, 1998
vel II your indusuiciusncss. Howcv- you feel a lriflc uncomfortable mighl
A number of uRusual bul plca.o;;ml ·cr. you won'lllke pride in yuurwort be 11 an acdvily lhlll you 'II aucnd.
'su.,.-iscs collld be in !IIIIR: for you in if you Slllt a buncll of lliings ·Chal
che year ahead. From. lime lo lime you 'II noc fi"ish.
.
. ' ~:'mm~ civilly. bul ~~~~ roaa
normal roulincs may be lcmporarily. .
LEO (JIIIy 2J.Aug. 22) Avoid di5CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
lhrown OUI of killer, bul Ibis will be ' cussions today Wilh a fricnd~ho ~ Do 1101 do Mylhing today lhal will
fcir a conllnlctive, bcncfa:uil purpos- • way of puainl! a chill 011 your hoi make you look JOOd 111 lhc. expense
cs.
·
ideas. Jllllcad. lalk 10 pals who are of someone else. If you do, your vic-.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ll'sl rnoce rec:eplive IJid open-minded.
tory will be shon·lived and have ·•
.
noc to your lllvMtqe co lllift aroun;d
VI ROO (Auf. 2).Scpl. 22). An .rqiCrtllllioM.
amnsemenll aild wiJIIIIICIIIIIOday · ltqlllinlllnCe who ~ yuu are a
AQU~RIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
jUSI b«MISC !hey illlelfm: wilh yuur .ott IOUI:h milfll ay 10 impose upon
UJUally you are a vel)' open·minded
pi•. Ia will be fwd ro cllc:h up if you lpin IOCiay in IIOifte lllllcrial penon. but today you miJitt rejeCt · ,
you fall~ zt ind.Oclejump on Hl'e by ~. Keep~ a-d up.
ideas of ochcn before you bear !hem
UlldeUJIIIdint lhc inftiiCIICCS dlal'll
UBRA (Scpl. 23-0I:t. 23) The duoup. Oct blck·OIIIIIICk.
gOvern you ia lhc 'JCII ahead. Send opillionl ofochcn misfit mike ,il dif· . PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:ll 20) If
for your AsiJo.Oqlpll p!edieliOns by fiCUII for you IOCiay 10 make •scnsi· you find it necessary ro IXlllduct butimailiDJ S2 ·10 Al,lro-(lnpll. do dill ble. speedy decision. Sometimes lav· ncsiiOCiay, do so cautiously. Maacn
· new~p~p~~; P.O. Box 1758. Mumy in1100 many advilen is wonc lf!aD may suddenly ~ IIIIUSUIIItmiS and
Hill Scllioe. New Yort. NY 10156. havina·nonc II Ill.
you could F' .cauaht off auanL
Be sure 10 your zodile sip.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It
ARIES (Man:h 21·April 19) Per·
. . GEMINI fMay 21..J- 20) Aa could compound l!llllCJI if you fll.lll· .wilh whom you normally F'
old frilnchrill beolfa fc:llf you plln pone llllelldina 10 111 unplll!nlll · llofiJ qtrite well could be dltriadt 10
IOiilethlaf IIOdiiiOday IJid Clldudc . 18ipment . . . . . . )'1!11' ll1allion ' dell wilh IOday. ll's 1101 alllhcir liuk,
her. Let it be ~ your pal will be now. You misfit i~ il. bill it will · Jlowcvcr.
•111011 welcome fllllkipuL
demand diliJCOeC IIICt.
·
AS'I'IIO·OIIAPII

"

-

Appfilnca Paoli And Stnoice: All
- • - 0var 25 Wtra EJpllriencct An Work GuarantHd •
F
•

n;:ch CilV MaJiag, 740~44t-,. •
::-;::-~...:.------ • ,

. CIC General • 1141... llain-r 1
tononc:o- Painting, •iftJt aiding
- - ~ · do ' ~-·• •
;;;.. .......
- -ancl
l
1,.. ...... &lt;Oft Chal, 74fi.DD 211323.

w,;;;.;;F.;;,

felt'·-----.. •

~i;;;;;;c;;;;;;;;:-;;::-- -~
111wct....,lrtc.

' I•
'\

·'·
'~

" !
, •.

•

·;.

Win&amp; •i .

_.... -lllcien. Ridtriovr • ·'
EloctilcaC, WVOOO.., 304·175·

11il.

•'

.Knolty ·Glint· Yucca" Evenly· VANITY
Professor to clns: ·"Cruelly was the vice of the ancient world. For the'I!IDdem world it is VANITY.•

WATE~IIB

840 Ellcii1C118nd
Rehlgii•lloo

'.

SCUM UTS ANSWilS

Uncondirlonalliferime ~rlftiH. , !
.loc:•l ,.,.."'" furJitlt?ICI. E t • •
laltliiMcl 1875. Coli 17~8 - •

7•lflll Jal

'

bafow.

I .1 1· I I I I I

--iA.-iiiiiiiliTr- .•

SaoiOIC4an!~!f;oura

'.

ehuc:kla quotocl
by fillinv in the milling worda

'I

c.porw,:Fr111in0fnloh . .,..,..,.
Rocltr1g, Pttir1ffriiL o.,.iofl
......... antt·£ -:'
Fot-.. flj w, ' " ' 1111:.
' - • - • • _ _,

1.

PIINI NUMIEifD

FOOTNOTES ..

:
:

~-------~
810
Home
tmpioveinenll

:::

.

_;. ::

SERVICFS

T-c

fllllnlliwnnl

42

0vo&lt;. ' .

-~

unit

43-- .....

$25,000 Pticad lo Got S J 2,100~
Al1« 5 ~... 74f1.441.«111.
'

0170 Of 1-800-217·0578.

r.:oy

38 !11.- In Aquila :
40 Rich cllle
41 COC*lne poe

Sutmw Spaciof: 111111 32" Doll-. :

Tarr, 511- Trallat -

,.

21 11111MC11111le
301"
'1101 · · - 31 Coril'lnNCI
moiiMM
.

':~::.' S&lt;a\\.{}lA-~t.tfi5•

~'VoL. ~l,l)!

1898 Spt'intlf 30' travel ltlillr f
i\ko ,... ce&gt;ncltfon, oiocl 4 oil accauor'-• $10,750. 304· · ;
875-31123.
•
•

Ae11J ...

1740) ....

I'E~'(

111114 Cottmon Fop.Up Enetlent 1
Condi1ion, SIHpS 5 ·8, - n o
Stove. Sink, f2,100, 740·258:
G8H '--M Me I gl .

__or..,.,_,.
.. ,.,.,.._1.1-

OoM1 I OIII.Y

we~ter
J-IWII(,&lt;U:.

PIG NATE

TIOD -

12 ~tiac: 11000 LE, ....... good,
rebuillltllnlmillian. n...,a en-

~;ct

.,

205175 R 1 5 ' - ~--::-;;,;_------. l tiros, original coot 1110.- 175.
tll03 f'lrmoutl! Ao:ctaim 4 Doora.' call 740·885·4334, ..... mtt· •
AulD, I Crfindor. Law Mites, 74fl. 11110.
441-22111.
•

740-251 1340, 7025e4487.

~~TEl.'(

..--..,.

.

GtMI Condirianl740 ••• lt81.

•
• af 5 pel
1-2
•• •01°11 oorc
• • tupor
rod. 3Q.I.a7S.5325.
11113 Chfrottr eon-d; 78,000
llitot, ~ 18.500 DBD. 74().
2!i6-et8D.

FARr,, SUPPLIES

'

f\V6t TELl.. If£

~o~.Nt(~T!

11112 18 Ft. Nitro Ban Boll.'

,. .

MOT! I'VE

oruvaro

•

.:. 18:.:'.:. '.:. "'.:. '. :·1fl0.; ,; ;21M321:; ,; ,.: : :·;. .__:.

ltl5 Pl,mo~o~lh Neon 4 Doors,
Gl"" With Spoiler Automatic,
!Jf, S7,500 Milot, 14,900 080,

I~-~

I"' J.\Oiflf, ~.

1870 GalaiJ 11l FL Fiberglass!.

~ntoon

-

11 Conlpae pi
21-111(-

&amp;:;...

ttlt Hondl 200 4·Whealor.
$1800. 304-1175-2040.

tG88 24h.

mo1e11ne

12 Loeli-

=-

Mol~

motor, hard lOP, 11ert0 w/Uail.,,

10 FIX
11 a..ll8ptd

41 I..Mveout

•

Ooncor.l3.000 Col 7-1744.

.-

441 Wr11tr Rice
By Phillip Alcllr
47~
Playing in a no-lnlmp conln!CI.
4!1 Sluglue
you have only one lop-crick stopper
in lhe s11i1 your lefl·hand opponenl
50
i iUfllx
52 Old Cllll
has led. And to establish nine lricll:s,
53
plalil
you may have 10 give up a Irick. So,
the opponents are 1hrea1e~ing 10 win
five lricks before you can. coiiCCI .
nine. How long should you hold up
lhal sloppcr? Enter lhc Rule of Sev·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
en. In Ibis suiL add lhe number of
by Luis Campoe
cards you have in lhe dummy 10 the_
CtiiMV QphwCII= t111 ftcr.-d tn:lln ql I Wb+/ r.mou. PMPw. peltlftd ~
Elcft
tn . . dphlr lllndl tor irlolhef. Toct.n dufi Y ~ K
number in your hand. Subtract !he
COla) from seven and hold up, for lhat
number of rounds,
.·
• J o·.
XJ
ODFC
F
CFSIZKX
OKW
II works beauljfully - tt lht rigbf
moment (like in yeslerday's deal) CDKL
UFPKICE · O. KFGK I
ODKS
I
but must be handled wilh care, How
would yQu play in lhrcc 110-uump
IIDR· ZXPKS
.C DJI • . Y CDFC · C!)KRP
here? \Vesl 11eads lhe heart IWO.
. YOIL have eighl lop lricks: one · FPK ' IFRGK.'
JIXKS
SFED
spade, one hqrl, one diamond and
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: '11 it lhe malady o1 our a_pe thai the young are 10
buly teaching us that tl1ey heve no time left 10 le8m. - Etic Holler
•
five clubs. The e~lra Irick will come
from diamonds, bul chc fiiiCSSC will
probably fail, given Easl's double.
The Rule of Seven tells you 10
duck IWo iounds of hearts. But what
does che lead lcll you? Right •• lhal
..... lor ClAY I. I'OI&amp;AN
.
Wcsl has only four hearts. Therefore,
if you win Irick one and lake lhe.dia·
e=:r::1e~
monel finesse, you will lose .11 most
low to fonl1 four limplo. --'a.
four lricks: lhrcc hearts and one diamond.
Whal happens if you duck the firsl
2
Irick? An obscrvanl Eas1 Will.swiu:h
lo the spadcHing. Then, when Che
diamond finesse fails, you will go one
ALLIC
down, losing lhrcc spades. one heart
(al trick one) and one diamond . .
r~ ·
If you know the leader has only
four cards in che suil he has led, nor·
8
malty you should win lhc firsl Irick
f..:,'
Do you ever feel
is
and go aboul your business. You can• • • • • _ ·a car wash and you.re g0111g
DOl CUI lhcir communication in lhc
sui I.
. r""'T"S--rW_E-.-L..,Y..,.....I..-ll.lhrough
a.-- . .---?

tate Honila 300 4X4 Llka Now

Yarcruiser. Gera. . K•pt,

....

The often-r•llable
Rule of Seven

11196 Cltovy - · 350, !opd, lljr,
cruiM, btl. ~fm canetle. 30+
fl75.!m2 oret44112-G11g.

Op~~n

·.

.37

1028.,----3110. .

Deep Vie,

1 l'8l1y ......
20- .......
21 'lflle&lt;lljMiatntr 2Revettlerltllon
3 - over 1118ml
25 Actar .leek 4 Firat nuntller
28Lultlwarm
32 SUITOUIICIId by 5 Pwt ·jMII
33-...U.
• linin&amp; 111111
34 na:c1:a11 1
·e~mce
7 Tla . .
I GUiclo'a lllgll
35Bow•nd.
38 Say window
I Roman 1,11111
37Fiep

Opening lead: • 2'

tllll3 ~Uoc Tr•n-1 Von, 3.1 .
ilor V-et onglno, NC, cMIO, Ilk
milu, 17500 nrm, &lt;Ill 740-DD2· '

---·

DOWN

MAW

4.3, eir eondlliontno. .,.,000

740

57=-

lOOK

MONEY,

llfazoo: S-tO, 4a4, V· :

1958.

11105 CltlyofOf Concord Loadod,
ti.SOD 0110, 740-25&amp;-1118D.

I'LL PUT lT
IN MY

:THANKY FER
TH' CARD

111M, St,IIOO '

ai!IOO 1.0 • .. eaae-.

..~

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South .

198&amp; F- 150 4 WO 9DK S3.80if. '•
74fl.367-7n7.

0110, 740-25&amp;-1233.

11 LJIMIOIIJahnaon
17 CIOie re1et1w

15 Allllnpllc

.. . K Q 10 9 4

Radio Cassella Player, Nle• &amp;

Hanvnonct Or8on llodtt L. 304-

.. 7 3 2

• A 10 7
• 10 9

Proft11ian11l Grooming ., Appoinlmlnts. ONr 15 yrs. experi·

Sl1ill-au " " - Mato I fomoll,
Sholl I Wormed, 1100. 740·
-~ 1311.

K4

Sotdll

24 Foot Pontoon Boat FOf Sale; •
1~
Sharp Bociy! Clean ltttorlor••Aik- "140-441 -1538.
'"D 11,8~, DBD. 740-2•5-5178.
K-solli 55750 .Itt Ski Jo-t. ·
ence, nanino 1ppoinunen1a
Traitor, Cal Aht&lt; 7 ~II . 740-446.
15189
8ef,eua
GT,
V-e.
aulD.
ale.
740-2~
...- . 850 Sac:ond 11110. Gol2320 740 ... 4248.
good cc&gt;ncfltioh, 740-D49·3421l.
lpolia, OH. 7-1528.
Brand li.wl Groat Gill! COivldeo
tlDrage unit. BlaCk and chtrrr. Rtadr mid·llll -5 female r. 5 18811 EI&lt;Or! 11,000 140·379- K-lli STS Jat ttftl, lltftl • warranty, thfH - • · 13 hOI•·.._. OUI of boJII. 1125. Hold&amp; up male white Lab puppies (regis- 2405.
bOugnt new Julr of '87,
lO 840 discs, alao holds 11pe1.
tered as JIIIOW). H1gh quatny 18~ l!lymoutf'l Laser 1.1 •cyl, power,
three matcltine K ....aalill · Ri
Call 7~o-g82·883e after 1 pm. witlt local fotltor. Hovo 11etn held
wtme; loaded, ex . .:and. Muat veatt and 11111er an go·wHh it
and .,avad daily. Call 304-675 COo' ..... not Ire..-.
1HIIoppo«ala. 304-1137-288t.
$5000, 740-D48-2203 or 7_._
!iiDII ""pridngond awo~-.
C1rport tOr tale no ;eu0nabfe
1110! Docf9e Spirit ES. 4 Doora, 20•5. will conllicltt ltado tor a
- rtfuiCid, 740-!1112-il5a.
. Roadr To Go Ahor Ma, l51h: II•· Loadocl, 114,000 Millo, 12.8115, good-boiL .
n1ture CoU••• Thorougnbred. Good Conti!lon, 74().UII 2300
760 Auto Pins &amp;Fintpl... ll&lt;onco, 1 74().3flfl.9971 .
Coalburning, Thermoatat Anti
7
111111 Fonloc: Gntnct Am, Ail, T1t1,
Acc:NSCif!el
:.
Blower. 1• FL Stainl•ll SIMI Regisltred Oalmatiot'l To Givea - Crui1e.
Newer
Ffutliner tSOO; 2 Mote~ way F.male, Spade; To Good
Wroclltd,Uitel,
WollGIHI '\o:i::::·1
81l'Fcord
beef good
- ·rullbet.
4-1S c:hromo
CoCich'a 2 YMrs Old Udo. 7~ Hcono0nfyl7403118 U88:
Original
(;
Wheell wtlh
All Jo!IJ!o •'
-7171.
7-1W3.
$350.304-e'l5-4501.
•r:
R o - puppiol, purol!rocl cno
G&lt;vblfo Piono- tunlno a r. . .o. - • 1 . born llarch 2•111. 1100 111112 llitsubiohl 3000 GTSO -Gil taral I bodf Ptlftl. D l..·
PI a·rna? Need 'ilnecr? c.. .. 01 llado, c:ofl after 6pm 740·11112· 18.300 740·388-8575, 740-•.e- R Auto, Riplay, WY. 304·372piorDDt.740441W"
4181.

Are YDur laokina FDF AVDn ProCiu&lt;ll But Don't Know WMro To
find Them? AIU, It You Would
Liko To Self Avon, Call Pttm At

t

t98&amp; Chi'IJ 4 WD, Short Bod :
With Topper, tO,OOO lollitl On
Robuit Engine, Haollft &amp; Slih Kit, .•
Cloan lttoido I Out, 18.500 Firm,
Coi After 5 P.M. 74fi.245-582D.

3()4.875- 7301.

Taurus

• K J 63

• 6 5 ·s 2
.. .8 5

,

Auto, Ail, 132,000

•'lftle"* ...... ·

fi¥O'd

Ealll .
• K QJ 7

• 6 3 2

12.500. 304-578-2D88.

\

1 lle¥k
7 Ac:lor Jlclt 13 01.-.cl
48Aarl
11 Orlclullll·
1- • '
14AMitrl- 14 llemotlll d

1a Weclellne p1a1

• 9 8
tAQJ87
• AJ 6

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

304-117H17t .

1180 ·1110 HONDA CARS FOR
ttOO Saizod I Sold l,gcof~ Thlo

05-o"l-91

.. 10 9 8

;
runa goad, In good condition. ·

710 Autos tor Sale

74().4ole.0231.

North

·:
••
':T~:'T."T::'T:~ ;.

AMwlf ID Ill cut aue Puallt

41 lhtllcll Mlllbt
44Notln

Frieo.

'

1983 Oodoe Caravan

Wonth. C111 1~800· 522·2730 En

Supplies

560

TRANSPORTATION

4420.

Building

7548 aftor Spm.·

adviiCir. All applican11 mus1 posaeu or acquire a sports medi·
cine certificate and a CPR card.
Phone 740-D.40·28t18 for funher
intormalion.

304-812-235(5.

Hay &amp; Grain

640

--~--------------------------------~·:
••
ACROSS

15=actlton

tflfll t11tvy SportS-to'""· lhort .
bod WIIOpper, 5opd, ~. ,_ dr., ·

I brOkal, •••· &lt;,d. $2,200. :

s- ·

3 AKC tegiltet'ed miniature
Pinscher puppie•. call 740-992-

12160 2 Bedrooma,- LO&lt;Ots&lt;f !&gt;KJd.
more Road, 740-4-g7.

F.. Pie• E1colent
Call
740-2•5-5872, Or 740-387.()5113.

Ear""" for oale, 740-247~.

Watorlino Spocial: 3/4 200 PSI
$2t .g5 Por tOO : t• 200 PSI
137.00 Pet tOO: All Bran Com·

pr....,

LtvMtocfc

630

4-._-

Appliances :
Rtcondltloned
Wuherl, Dtro&lt;o, Rongoo, Rofrl·
gratora. eo Day Quarantttl
French Citr Mawtag, uo.ue.
71115.

GOOD , USED APPLIANCES
dopotil304-67S.~.
Wa1ht11, dr,era, rettioeratora.
3 bedroom. t.tirwavil... t350 plu1 ranges. Skagga Applianctl, 71
Pttrts, ~ Buying Moons . dopooi\ 74().1182-ct542.
Vino S.Uoot. Coil 740·441·73g8,
The Lowell tnatallocl Pri&lt;t, E•sr
Over Tho Alone Bonk Finol1clng. 3 Bodroomo In Porter, 740·388· HIOD..tDD-3411D.
CaM Bonnotfl Mobile Homo HTG 8030, 740-38fl.9515.
Rotirtmont Sato Room Slzo Car• CLG 1-IICIJ.8n-5De7.
pot 112 Prlca Kit&lt;hon Print $5.00
4 ,Room house no Pttl,
Sq, Yd. 740·448·7444, Mollohan
BUY IN APRIL
1
monthly ... S225 depoSit.
Catpof.
No Pttymctnll Urwil .Aitr 1DD8
30H7~534 aftor Bpm
E-Z F'*'&lt;ing
Sporting
Avai~ble For L0..se: 2,000 Sq Ft 520
C.IFinclrlc»Lino
t-e00-948·11078
E•ecutive Home, Near Golf
Goods
Course, lmmediale Oceupancr
Frio SOI"'P I
R.mington 1100 12 Ga. New In
17501Mo. 740-44e-2D57.
New Clayton Mobil• Home Gar·
Bo1f 11om RID Wltl! Turfcar Cltolte.
den Tub, Stoyflglw. CA. On Rontod In New Haven. S250. mm. t100. 1350. 740-446-3117.
deposit, plus ulilitiea. 304·848Lot. Boot Olforl740-ol4is442&amp;
therm I Coleman HMI Puft1PI,
Air Conditionera, Furnace• I

540 Mfsctltaneous

Merchandise

$250. dopolit 3()4.875433.

253D.

Allentfort llobllo Homo OWnerl:
Areu Laro••• lrwen.,ry Of lnter-

IChOOI

junior high school volleybaU, ju -

Save My Credit, Aauume Pay-

-ng-follfa.304-.~71i1 .

7..,."'6·71 12.

2 bdr, unturnilh.CS, country Mt•

2 Bedroom HOYit Burkhart Lane,

ABANDON HOME llako 2 pill·
ments, 111ume loan, ownet fi·

Any

Applicauont Will Be Accepted

12d0 Haw winng, Rettntly ·,.
see appreciate.

r.1~ H CHAtJDIS~

...........

:·

• ...

. I

MillS observinl! you today

•

•

j

•

.

�Friday

•

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Meigs farmers
may .be eligible
fOr federal
a•SiStance
.

Pomeroy •

Middle~

More Republicans voted against
Hollister than .for her. due in port to:
- Her view on nbortion. She is
generally pro-choice. with some
exceptions.
- A backlash against the state
GOP bigwigs who recruited her to
run.
- The wide array of choices
available in the primary. She ran

By KATHERINE RIZZO

against four OJliiC?nents:
Dissatisfaction by the right-wing
faction of the party should not be
underestimated. said Roseann Sider·
its of Maines ville. Ohio. who wOitcd
against the Hollister campaign.
"People arc sick of these anointed candidates," she said.
Siderits, who was an important
part of past campaigns by former

'Benefit planned
A benefit to help pay medical
expenses for Alvin Chutes will be
held Saturday night at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School. There will
be live music. door prizes, a flea market and other fund raising activities.•
Among those providing music will be
"After Midnight", "Happy Hollow
Boys~·, and "Wildfire." The event is
being sponsored by George and
Sylvia Cozart, Fay Westfall, and
Kenny Stew~!'·

High: 60s;

L~w: ~~

.

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

..--..v-o
J- · ztr
.

--

By JIM FREf:MAN .
Sentinel New• Staff
.
Syracu5o Village Council approvt9 pool hours and other matters during
its regular1'hursday night meetiQg.
•
_ London Pool in Syracuse will open Saturday, May 23, with free swimming for that day only, and will officially open the following day.
· Councilmen Bill Roush and larry lavender, who serve on the pool·committee, gave a report of prices, pool parties, costs and the opening and closing hours of the pool which was approved by the council.
.
General admission passes, pool jlarties and time of opening.and closing
are as follows:

.
.
Passes will be offered at a special price for a two .week period beginning will close after two hours.
Council hired the following lifeguards, pending certific;ttion: Andrea NeutMonday, May II, through May 25. The·special will be $2S for the first pass
zling. Autumn Thomas, Michael Ash, Emily Duhl, Jody Hupp, Erica Arnot!
and half-price for a second pass for a total of $37.SO.
Persons wanting to take adv1111tage of the special pricing on packages may · and Keri Caldwell.
Council agreed to add an extension to the new pole building at a cost of
do so by pun:hasing their tickets bc:ginning Monday at the municipal build.
ins from 6-8 p.m., or call lArry lavender at m-6012, or Bill Roush at 992- $4,200.
Fire Chief Eber Pickens Sr. met with council and' requested permission
5315. General admission will be: under 2-years-old, free: 2, 3 and 4-yearto have the air masks tested at a cost of SSOO and to pursue a request to have
olds, $1; 5-17-ycar-olds, $2; 18 and over, $3.
·
Pomeroy and Racine tire departments assist Syracuse with structural fire s.
. . Pool parties will cost $40 an hour with a minimum of two hours.
Pool hours will be from noon to 6 p.m. It was agreed the pool WPIIId stay Both were approved by council.
open as long as 10 persons are pre&amp;ent; with less than 10 persons, the pool
(COntinued on Page 3)

49or
Each .

"'"
ll
)leatell

2/$

.

00

Ohioans received ~
worth $59
million last year from arly 2,500
food-distribution agencies &amp;erved by
the Ohio Association of Second Har. vest Foodbanks. A year eanier, $46
million wonh of items were distributed, Tina O$so, the group's chair. womari, said at a news conference on
Thursday.
The increase in the number of
low-income Ollioans 'l'ho received
·.
. cheese, milk and other basic foods
from the U.S. Department of Agri'
culture was eyen n\cln! ilnunlllic:. 2.6
million in 1997. compared with 1.4
million the year before.
That's largely becau&amp;e the government provided more food la5t
year, but .it illustrates the large
•I demand in Ohio, said lisa HamlcrPIXIolski, public policy chairwoman.
"These findings provide an early ··
wqming signal that h11nger and
poverty is continuing to iricrea.'IC in
Ohio in the midst of ongding eco. nomic growth and ... rising living
standards fiJr some Ohioans," she
said.
.
, Six of the a.'ISOCialion's 12 member food banks· in Ohio participated
·in a national study of charitable food
programs and the population they
serve. The state study, conducted during the first three months of 1997.
Covered more' than SOO,OOO recipients
of food aid at nearly 463 local agencies in SS counties.
· Among the ~,udy's · findings :

PlayM for thl community
IRd the country.,. ott.rec1
during Mllga Counly'l oburWince Of the annUli Nltlonill
Dey of Paeyer, lltld It the
Melgl County Courthou• In .·
4
1t111Potl!fta
·:II'Ofl'llill

on ·~

v.h

ciua·;M¢t?'!A~~~&gt;I.

nllllon'a, 111e 111te 1 end the
cominitnlty'e ellelld offlcllla .
and leedera, llfld apeclal '
mullc wu provklld by local
elnge,., At rl~' JoenneRoblneon, provided prelude
muelc before the aervlce
bipn. Alao plctuNCI . . dllld,.n . fr~ Jtejolclng Life
Scllool, who ....... for the
..n'lce. Approxl......., 400
people . . . . . the ceremony, ICcordlng to Steve Bella,
. who ~~- .Ieee! lt. Plltor
lAe Hayman of Middleport
wtl the chairmen for the
National Day of Player ......
VIce In llllga County, wlllcll
also Included a ~r bruk·
fMI.for 111 cKd ufllcllla end •
Bible .I'Hdlng marathon at
the
Pavilion.
·

Just

:District sets meetln11

"Great Gift for Mmn" ·

The Tuppers Plains Rdgional
• Sewer District board will meet in spe·
. cial session Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
• Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Office
to consult with legal counsel and dis. cuss future project development.

Budded and

~~

'

.
For Your Busy Mom ...
.

TPCWD boll order lifted

·~EMS logs 6 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Se..Vice reconded six
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included:
·
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:19 p.m.. state Route 32S
Danville, Keith Weber, Veteran~
Memorial Hospital;
6:02 p.m., South Thiro Avenue
Middleport, Bobby f!urson, VMH; '
. ' 9:S4 p.m., Broadway Street, Middleport, Helen Young. Pleasant Val• ley Hospital, Middleport squad assist. ed.
.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -A
hearing is planned for June 29 in
Huntington. W.Va.. on an alleged
misc~uct violation by a towboat.
operator. according to Lt. Eric G•
Westedlerg. senior invc~igating officer with the U.S. Coasl Gu:ard.
Timothy L Mayes, 43, of Letart,
W.Va., ,was charged with the mis.. conduct violation of~ U.S. Code on
April 29. followina the April 9
grounding of the motor Ya5el Elizabeth M near Syracuse.
A routine casualty lnmtiptlon
pursuant 10 the incident disc:overed ·
civil convictions for DUI which maY

·Deck or Porch
,.

able

•••••••••.. Bo".' ' Por All Your Beddf.n1 Plant Neeu••~

• Vegetable·Plants • Herbs • Potitn8 SoUi • creeping Phloz
• Sprays U Dusts 'Perennials . , Garde.-.
• And More!

Good Afternoon

Stop in and register to. win a H,.nging Basket!

' POMEROY

There's.lots of chances to win, 'cause we're •
giving o~e away every hour all day.
Saturday at Both Locations and our
Grand Prize is 100 Cash ·"No Purchase Necessary"

· 8:17 a.m., Willow Creek Road.
Flossie Nelson, VMH, Central Dis-parch squad assisted:
10:14. p.m., Willow Creek Road,
· Richard DeMoss, PVH.
. RACINE
. - 10:06 p.m., 'Elmwood TeiTIICe,
· lucille Diehl, PVH.

Today's Sentinel

.

2 Sectlom • ll PaFS .
Vol. 49, No. 14

' •

C.kMer

.n•rlfkds

.

....

Cmn!q

:·Couples Issued
:.marriage llcens88

1/4 Mile North of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773-5721
Open: MOnday thru Saturday 8 am - 8 pm
Sunday 10 am -7 pm

The followin1 couples were
: .iMued marriage licenses ""ently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
· • .Judge Robert Buck:
•. • Durell Thoma.• Young, 26, and
: Meliua Dawn Jeffers, 21, both of
•_,...iddleport: Ph ill ill Eugene Hawk,
. 40, and Donna Rae Still, 34, both of .
: Middleport; iannes Clifford Brpley,
•.;zs. and r.,elissa Ann Norman, 17,
. •)loth of Pomeroy.

Fd!tgd"'

Two Convenl~nt Locations

1

Sporll

2400 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
Phone' (740) 446-1711
Open: Monday thru Saturday 8 am - 8 pm ·
Sunday 10 am -7 pm

l:Z
8::10
11
l
l
4.!.7

Lotteries
QHIQ

Plett 3: 5-4-9; Pick 4: 9-6-7.j
h1Dyt5: 7-10:11 -28-35

Sale Prlcu In effect Thu,., Mey 7ttiru Sun Mey 10

W.VA.

Dilly 3: 1-2.0; Dilly 4:9-7-8-3
0 19911 010t1 Vllley - . . ... Co.

I

1

.. ..

~·

'

.. . .

.

'

•'

license. according to Westerberg.
In addilion. George Kline. 61. of
Bidwell. and Jerry L Lewis. 28, of
Leon. W. VL, were each is.wed a letterofw~forlllegtdmisconduct

in conneCtiOn with the failure to
report c!aml!le to a vessel. • ·
Cline and Lewjs, as captain ·and
pilot aboard the motor vessel Muskogee. failed to disclose damage suslained by a ·~e in their tow during
locking opclllions at WinfiCkl Locks
and Dam on Feb. 2, the Coast Guard
said. The men wen~ employed ·by
I&lt;_IUiaWha River Towing Inc. of Hen-

··· - ·

By Tile Aaaoclated p,...
Storms caused wind damage and flooding in southwestern Ohio, and police
in Xenia said they spotted a tom:Kio. bot no injuries were reported. .
Strong winds from a storm that passed through Xenia' on Thursday night
uprooted a large tree and damaged a house in the city about 20 miles southea.~! of Dayton: tile National Weather Service and the Greene County sheriff's office said.
.
City police said they saw a·tomado on the ca~t side of town at 8:36p.m.
The weather service said it had no confirmation of a tornado. but a tornado
~aming had been issued after radar indicated a possible twister developing ·
tn the a111a shortly after 8 p.m.. said Ashley Kells. a meteorologist with the
weather service in Wilmington.
.
.
The hou~ in. the northern pan of the c,ity had some of its siding tom off
and a hole was ripped In the roof.

Shooting victim's nephew
rec~i~:;~too~l!~~n;e.:le
hose
arraigned on murder ct,arge
• More than one-third had a1 lea.•t

dcrson, W. ~. at the time of the incident.
·
The U.S. Coa.~t Guard Marine
Safety Office of Huntington exen:is- ·
es oversight of commen:ial marine
industry operations affecting pc)rtion!lof'lhe Ohio, Kanawha. and Big
Slindy river$ for the prol«tion of life,
propeny and the environment
The primary goal of the above
;u;tion is .to bring Coast Guardlicensed workers and ularine industry
into compliance with federal standatds and regulations, the Coast ·
.Guanl added. ·

PoiNT PLEASANT, W.Va: ~ The nephew of a Henderson, W.Va., man
one houSehold member who works.
·
found
shot to death has been charged wiih his murder.
• Seventy-two percent of those
Steven
A. Pancake, 28, of Henderson, formerly of Delaware. Ohio, wa.•
.
receiving aid reponed an annual
household income of less than arrested by Senior Trooper Eddie Starcher, Sgt. Gordon tlark. and Sgt. Dale
$10,000. Twenty-nine percent said Humphreys of the Point Plea.•ant Detachment-West Virginia State. Police
·
.
they had 10 choose between paying Thursday evening.
During
que~ioning.
Pancake
confessed
to
shooting
Willillm Harry "Butch"
their rent or mortgage and buying
food SOIIletime in the previous year. Thompson. 51. twice in the back of the head with a 12-gauge pump sholgun
· .
And while the Second Harvest .around 9 p.m. Tuesday, according to Clark.
Thompson's
body
wa.
•
found·
.
i
n
his
home
off
Crab
Creek
Road. around
survey was COII)pleted before the new
8:30p.m.
Wednesday
by
friend•.
Pancake
wa.'
located
and
picked
up for quesfederal welfare law's time limits take
effect. changes in Oh;u•s welfare sys- tioning on State Route 2 near Gallipolis Ferry, Thursday afternoon.
He wa.• arraigned before Magistrate Johnny Reynolds at 8:30 p.m, and
tern likely will mean more people
charged
with first dep murder. Puncake is housed in the Ma•on County
wiiii!Jm to foo4 agencies for help,
Jail.
He
will
appear before Circuit Judge Clarence
Watt for a bond hearjqg.
Ms. Hamler·PodOI5kl prediCted.
. .

area residents question cost
surrounding sewer .connection
.

By BRIAN J. REED

i11001ne residents mconnecting to the-. cal)ed upon to explain why the engi- ·
neer's plan- included a line to the
Sentinel Newt Slllff
9'*111·
._
· Residents concerned llbotlt the
Raidcnb will be teijlonsible for bank's parking lot; rather than to its
costs' associatal with ciJnnectinJ ·IO crushin1 and flllins in their e11isling property line, as in the case of all res-.
.
the new Tuppers Plai~ Regional . septic tanks. and will be required to idcnces.
Reed
said
that
he
had been
Sewer Dislfid held another town slwe in the retiremeni of the district's
unaware
of
the
11p's.loc1ltion,
but said
meeting on ThuncJay eveninsto dis- debt. incurred by conlllructing the
that the location could have been
cus.' !heir COIICClJII about connectioa • sylfem.
·
costs.
That "capital improvcrilcnl" dctennined with consideration of the
Amon1 thole 111tendin11 were Joe diAIIJC could rath u hiafl u $5,700, fact lbat the blink miiht require
BOyles and. Sue Mai1011, '1\.tppm -dislrict ofticials have said, and e11jllnJion of ill parking lot or bank
. PlaiDS midcall wlao 117Ye 011 the dis- teaidenU will have the option of pay• buildilll i( the community ellpetilfict's bolnl of dim:ton, llld county ill&amp; die capital ~-· chiiJe at ences consiclmble growth.
'Maison denied that the board
Commissionen JIIICt H~ and once, or liy ll!leadilll it 0111. on their
pvc
ptJ:ferentill treatment to the
Jeffrey 'lbomlolll ·
·
sewer bill, over a 40-year period.
Jloyles. Mli- and Howard were . The COlt of IICIIII!Iy connectina 10 blllk because lhe and Reed serve on
arilled by Lomta Mlllplty, 'who, the syslem will vtty, dependilll on the baird of the Community 1
11on1 with Randy Kidder, led the the location of the 11p in relation 10 lnipiOvemcnt COf)IOI'alion, which ·
meednJ.
1111!
Residenta !Ill! respon· OWIIII!IId is c:urmltly developing 111
Boyles and Milson wae quet· sible for ruMina the 11ine from the itldlsa ialsite in the dillriet. l!ld Slid.
· iaitelld that the eiiJincera appartloned about the way the board ·nemst lip 10 lhlir raidence.
Udy
IllUmed that the bAnk's propllliiP fllldl• the COIIIIIUCdon ot
1'1111
presideat of FllllltiS
the piOject. etpetillly why the boud Bank .t Savinp 01., whidl GpenlleS erty line beJins at the parkiiiJ lot.
did IIOC requct~l'undin&amp; 10 141iSIIoW• I bl'lnch ol'llc:e in Tuppen Plains, was
(Cvntlnued On .Page 3)

m*-·

ror

Storms rake parts of Ohio

1

~~~~~~~~~t!~~~~! . TP

..

GIVEAWAYS GALORE!

.

·Hearing .se..t on alleged · v.iolatio.n

. (Variety of Slzea)
Ready to set on your

.

Combination
*
Gift Certificates Av
.

A boil order for Tuppers Plains.. Chester Water District customers in ·
· .Orange and . Olive townships ha•
• been lifted following water sample
• ·testing.

95

Bloo~

.Elvis.tonigh

COLUMBUS (AP) - Working
people stuck in low-wage or part·
time jobs are increasingly turning to
Ohio's soup kitchens and food
pantries to help feed their families,
acconling to a new report prepared by ·
~o~~wide hunger~~licforganiza-

Includes: New GUinea Hybrid Impatiens, Non-stop Begonias, BostOn Ferns, Double Impatiens, Geraniuins
·
and all your favorite sninmer annuals.

LCCD anaounc:ement
The Leading Creek Conservancy
District has placed a boil advisory for
customers north ()f Mount Union
Church, County Road I0, County
Road II and Carpenter, including the
area of State Route 143 near Carpenter.
The advisory is the result. of a
water liite break in the Carpenter
area, and will be in e(fect until further notice.
The district has lifted the boil
• 'advisory for State Route 7, north of
·Union Avenue. laurel Cliff Road,
Hiland Drive, Collins Road. Willow
::creek Road, Goeglein Road. Chil• dre!Ls Home Road, Wagner lane.
Slate Route 143 from State Route 7
·;to Bailey Run Road, Bailey Run
"Road off'State Route 143, ·and Ball •
·
·Run Road.

Food aid
re·quests
increase
i·n oh·io

Prayers for leadership

. BEAUTIFUL·HANGING BASKETS AJt)
QUAUTY BEDDING PlANTS

$

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Pool ~ours in Syracuse get council's approval

?o.

.

Pacers, Jazz
net victories
in playoffs
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett co. Newspaper

.

Sports

\
. Meigs County's

With The Best From
B~B'S MARKET &amp; GRE~.NHOUSES, INC.
"For Twenty~EightYears We've·· Been Working
Hard To Produce th·e best quality plants
available!!' Bob's Retail Locatiolis are stocked
daily with plants a~d hanging ·baskets fresh from
the greenhouse. aob's still offer~ the ,full size
flat-;.. no mini or ·partial flats~"

Announcements

•

•

Awesome power of prayer, Page 2
Suffering trom drinking problem, Page 12
Following mother's example, .Page 12

Today: Showera

his ~half. Despite sW(ing as an
unknown quantity, he outpolled Hollister in one county ·and gathered
more votes than well-known fomier
Rep. Franlc: Cremeans in three coun-·
ties.
·
Now that Hollister is the nominee.
" I wouldn 'llook for lh~ type of volunteer ell'ort on her behalf at all,"
Siderits said.

Rep. Frunk Cremeans, this year
eschewed the Cremeans comeback
effort and instead aided first-time
candidate Mike AZingcr, who won 20
percent of the vote by energizing
social conservatives.
Azinger's volunteers devoted
hours to making calls, writing lcuers,
pulling up Burma Shave-style signs
•!'fHI holding living-room meetings oo

Mey8, 19H

Weather

Can Hollister rely .on GOP base in .fall campaign ?

Auoclated Pre•• Writer
WASHINGTON - As Ohio Lt.
Gov. Nancy Hollister tum5 her attenMetgs County fanners whose tion to the general election in Novemcraps were damaged by he~vy rain- ber. one of the problems she'll have
fall last su~mer may be ehgtble for . to deal with i~ how JO capture the loyfederal u~•stance. .
.
. alty of conservatives who opposed
U.S. Sen41!lr Mtke DeWme (R- her candidacy in the 6th CongresOiuo) announced the U.S. Depart- sional District primary.
ment of Agricultut:e's approval to
decl= a Non-Insured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program (NAP) area d~s­
ignation for Meigs County. The NAP
assistance is designed to help farmers overcome financillllosses resulting from natural disasters.
In an effort to help Meigs County
fanners offset the loss of crops due to
excessive rainfall in July, 1997. the
USDA approved the following crops .
for assistance: cantaloupe, cucumbers, sweet com, sweet bell peppers,
tomatoes and watermelon.
"I am pleased to announce this ·
federal assistance for Meigs County
fanners whose crops were damaged
by heavy rainfall last summer," said
DeWine .. "Fanners who may be eligible should call the local Farm Service Agency office (David Fox at
992-6646) for assistance."
. Approved NAP crops with a qualifying loss related to the excessive
rainfall from July 24-29, 1997, in
Meigs County may be considered for
assistance.
"This is great news!" said County
.Commissiolier Jeff Thornton, who
last summer organized a tour of the
damaged areas for legislators or their
representatives.
"The farmers of Meigs County are
a very important part of our local
economy. As a commissioner I would
also like to thank lynn Crow and
Karen Sloan (representing DeWine)
for theii assistance."

••

Thuraday; May 7, 1998

Ohio

a-.

•'

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