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                  <text>Sundly,~y17,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WY

Weather
Today:

.

Heroes don't work in D.C., Page 2
Bulls.hand Pacers 85-79 loss, P~ge 4
New challenges for seniors, -Page 10

Sunny ·

H"h: 808; Low: 50a
Tomorrow:

Spo rts

Mly18,111H

S~nny

High: 80s; Low: 50s

Yankees'
Wells hurls
•
perfect game
Page 4
-!
•

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. News pa per

Community
Involvement
---------

I

\

\' c0upons., \
\

'1 -...

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MORE THAN CI.AaSMATES - Floyd Cl.e - , friends. Whlls hugging msy not be a "boy. ·
land, Matt Selltra snd Jereniy Thorn•• have thing," the three decldtd It would be aH right
been more than cluamat.. during their years · to put their arms around each other for 1 pic·
at Meigs High School - they've been best tufll befofll Sunday's MHS gfllduatlon.

See store for deta• s

--- --

·
Meigs gradua,tes left..
ha
II
en·
ges
c
to. ponder
. .
.
.·

PoulT '

PUiiiin',

wv

----

-----

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH '
life," and then questioned the .simSentinel Newa Staff
plicity, the unchangeable status
The challenges and choices of the implied, and called for the graduates
day •• ahcad'a.~ tile gruduates ente.rthe to look toward another phra.~e .::_
"first day of the rest of"their lives" "this is the life I have chosen." · ·
was the theme of speeo;hes given by
He stressed the im110nance of.
the valedictorian and salutatorian at choices which influence the path of
Meigs High School's 30th Annual life, and the need to select paths ·
Commencement program Sunday which lead to per.ional accomplishafternoon.
ment.
"We have begun to live our own
. Before a standing-room only
crow.d in .Jj)e Larry R. Morrison lives, ffot .the lives chosen for us,"
Oydlilulum. Mi;h10l -Leil'heit- an4- concluded Leifheit.
.~ •
Sandra Young called on the 1(13 grad- · Y911ng · referred to education at
ll8le5 to look back, reflect, and then Meigs us a "ray of l_
ight leading to
move fi!rward. .
·
future opportunities." She spoke of
. The valedictorian referred to his choices to be made, about.higher eduFrench class and a favorite phrase. ~ Clition, careers, and other facets of
"C'eSI ,Ia vie." which means "that's life, and called on her cl~sma~ii.,lO

F.
•·

.........,

OHIO

OH

•

Cup·ar

Cans for
·College
Scholarships

COFFEE

CUSTOMER SERVICES.

•'

Money Orders Available Here
untiiiO am
_We sell postageistamps ·
Greeting Cards (MOst locations)
• Lottery (Except Buckeye Foodland)
• Film ~~ping .
More Than
• Spree Pre·_Paid Phone .Cards
's
'• Money TransferseeeWire money fast .
f
• Gift Certiflcates
CUSTOM·ER SER.V ICE
.• Newspaper copies for sale
Daily from 11 a.m. • 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.•
• Utilily Payments See store for details .·
7 p.m., ifthere is more than 3 cust~mers
·Plus ·0.u~,- ~lll~li~;~~~~~-~er
in line· at a register, we will·open
..

ro.w

•

•

'

_another _registet...
"WE GET You IN, GET _
You OUT &amp; GET
You HOME THE MORE IMPORTANT

ro

THINGS IN LIFE!"

'

Southern grads
cautioned about
freedom, risk

_______,

~-------~iiiiplltel
.

Stng le Copy . 35 Ce nt s

A look
forward
.

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'~t

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&gt;:

THE PROCESSIONAL- .. lchHI LI""'H,·VIItdlQorlen, and

Sandra Young, salt,ltatorllll, lad the ptOc:asli-1 of 183 Meigs

High School gracluatlllmo ttte Llr'ry R. Morrllon Gymnasium for
the 30th annual blccalaufllalellld
commeitcement
program.
.
.

Good Afternoon
llOCJ8V'S

Sen.t't' nel

'

•- Qhio Valley "SuperSonic" Services
• ATM Machine ·
• Flora~ Sales
• We accept Visa &amp; MasterCard ·.&amp;
Discover
·

3: 1-8-7; Dally 4: 5-8-1-6
0 19911 Ohio Valley PobHoiiiRJ Co.

~~~~!;~i£~e:~~i~li!:::~

he said, citing the examples of

pro~~~~:?.~c~a~sg !~h~e~ simple

?::~:~~~~y~;~ your freedom

LAST-MINUTE ADJUSTMENTS - Jackie Proffitt, right, Is
shown making II! last-minute adjustment to Derek Smith's tie prl·•
or to· graduation ceremonies at Southern High School Sunday .
night.
Only because of God's love have I ognized the students reo,eiving honbeen able to accomplish the things in ors and scholarships. noting that the
my life," she said.
class has received_, more \han
Coleman outlined some of the $200.000 in scholarsfiips. Honorariaccomplishments of the graduating . ans were Jennifer Rebecca Friend.
cla~s. including a Secret Sama project. Nikki Lynn Robinson, Jennifer Lynn
and a food drive in which over 1.000 Roush and Ranetta Lynn Wheeler.
pounds of food was gaihered.
James Lawieru:e, Southern Local
Like Caldwell. Coleman offered superintendent, presented the cia." to
thanks to God. quoting James I: 17 David Kucsma, vice president of the
Southern Local Board of Education,
and Galatians 5:22-23.
Struble began his address by read: · who then presented the diploma.~ .
ing a portion of "Birches.• a poc:m by
Diplomas were presented to:
Amanda
Jo Adkins, Angela Renee
Robert Frost. He then told a brief story· aoout a young man God had Alley. Erica Ryann Leigh Amotf,
allowed to review his life in a reflec- Michael Sean Ash, Amber Kaye
Bird. Cynthia l&lt;aye Caldwell, Chad
tive pool in the woods.
"...The young man realized that Michael Clark, Winter Koren Cole.
the pa.~t is always there from whi~h ·Crystal Lyn'n Coleman, Jack Lee
to learn, the present is this moment, Amos Day, Matthew Oliver Dill.
theJuture is neKl," ~ concluded.
G.hwut,l.:Q(~J;v..,.., .Wnill\ ~!chelle •
In addition. senlol Gin nee Renee Fisher, Darlene Lou Ellen Freeman,
·Hendricks spoke in memory of Shaun Michael Fmncis Freeman Jr., Jennifer · .
Paul Harris, a senior who died on Rebecca Friend.
Oct. II, 1997. An empty chair was
Minter Vaughn Fryar Ill, AmbCr
placed on the stage in his memory.
Nicole Haves: Ginnee Renee HenSHS Principal Gordon FisHer rec(Continued on Page 3)

.
Salutatorian William Young 11
She C31JtiOned that they .won't began his brief remarks with a poc:m
always receive the recognition or the • by .Ralph Waldo Emel'lion and stated,
pat th b k the dese
b tth t "graduation is more than a diploma.
on e ac
Y : rve, u a
It is one. of m.any steps you take in
the most imponantthing anyway is
to plea.~ with them!&lt;elves. ·
reach!ng yo~r g&lt;&gt;!lls,"
.
Quoting from Alexander Pope,
Tn•val_edlctonans Cynthia Cald"'1is education form• the common • well, Crys~l Cole_m~n and . Evan
mind; Just a.~ the twig· is bent the Struble dehve~d • bnef, splntual
tree's inclined," Young concluded by . addresse~ recalling the1r expenences
calling on the student• to remember .and lookmg forwa~ to the future.
t~t every new "twig" of knowledge
Cal.dwell, president of _student
-gathered"""""" their lives and..akes c~unctl. t~n~d her famJly . and
them who they are.
fne~ds for thetr constant supP?rt·
Music' for graduation was pre- lovl_ng .~ncouragement, and canng
sented by the Meigs High School 00 ~!ce. .
Band and Chorus. Selections of the
. Most lmpol'lantly, I want to teeband inciuded "Overture: Bisham
my,Heuvenly F~ther for
Grange" and by the chorus, "I Believe
me With
I Can Fly."
A welcome 10 open the baccalaureate service wa.• gillen by Melissa
Ramsburg. class pr~sident. With
·Danielle Peckham making the introduction of bollr!l .members.' school
offiCials. and other guests. Courtney
Leanne ·Haley gave both the invoca- .
tion and benedietion.
Dennis R. Eichinger. assistant
principal, presented the clas~ to John
Hood, president of the Boord of Edu·
C'ation,. for the'awardinjl'of diploma.~
as Shannon Marie Jenkin read .the
class roll. The symbol ofgraduation
was given by Lauren Elizabeth
Ander.;nn.
Receiving diploma.~ were Gary
Lee Acree. Amy Beth Allman. David
Hennessy Anderson. Lauren Eliza·
beth Anderson, Carissa Lynn Ash.
· Rachel Audrey Ashley. I?avid Gordon Banb. Ryan Lee Bareswilt. Carolyn Sue Ellen Barnhart. Wayne
Allen Barnhart. Michael Lewis Barr.
lilises BaJT".aza. Katherine Lee Beaumier. Billi Jo Be~tley. Michellt ~nna
Bissell. Laurie Lyrin Blankenship.
Ivan Vincent Broderick. Kindell
Renee Brown, Stephanie Nicole Burton. Joshua'Carl Butcher.
,Leigh-Ann Elizabeth Canterbury,
James Tyler Chapman. Carly Ryan
Chasteen, Jerica Renee Cl~rk. Floyd
Dean Cleland, Eli Kaleb Cline, Ray GEmNG READY_ Making everything per·
mond Jt. Cott~rill, Brett M. Count&lt;,
feet for that SPKial momeht was the order of
Sara · Jean Craig, Clayton Thomas ·
the day for tllcher Diane Dunfee, standing at
(Continued on Page 3)
left, and Tammy Marcinko, 1hown glvlitg 11111-

do wllat makes them happy. ·

tance to Amanda Adkins and Alicia Mulford,
respectively, before Southern High School's
graduation Sunday night.

. ~.

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RenO: 6th straight' drQp in crime no reason .for complace. ncy~i
WASHINGTON (AP) - The of crack cocaine, the anomey gener·
sixth straight annual decline in seri· al said. With crack came gangs that
ous ~:rime reported 'to police has ricruited teen-ageB pnctgavc theln
Attorney General Janet Reno c.oo- guns, prompting other young people
cenied that Americans may grow to ann themselves in defense or
l'llmplacent even its new criminal emulation.
challenges emerge.
the next ~lems could ~me
. :&gt;erious reported crime declined from . cyberspaee or ab(OIId, Renu
during I
in evecy region; led by said:·"The gun may become obsolete
a plunge of more than 10 percent in us people ·learn how to hack through
murder in larger cities and suburban and ... accomplish thefts and scams
counties, the FBI said .Sunday. The-- through the Internet. ... lnt:cmational
good news on crime appeared to . crime iii aoing to be more on our
reach deeper into every sector and radar screen than ever before as ...
region than before.
. .:people become more mobile." ·
"Everyone woriUng together has
Relelll!ing preliminary figures for
made a difference. But you can't say, 1997, the FBI reported a4 percent
'OK. now let's move on 10 something decrease in the total or sevtn major
else'," said Reno. "We can never . crimes recorded by 9,582 police
relax our visilance about crime, agencies III'OIInd the n•tion. .
about enforcement, about preven- • The violent crimes of murder.
tion" because "there's goina to be a rape, robbery and aaaravaled a.uault
new problem down the I'IJII!I."
dropped S percent nation!Nide. The
A decline in crime during the ear- · fir more numerou8 property crimes
ly 19805 was reversed by the lfrival of burglary, auto tile~ and larceny·

m

lluaer Lotto: 8-1 S-22-27·34·41
3: 2·9-3; Plck4: 0-7-2· 1
j(ldrier: 6-S-1 -5-0-4

II

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stiff
"Freed&lt;im is a dangerou~ thing."
That observation. and a warning to
use freedom carefully, was the mesSllge of the Rev. Brian Harkness, pastor of the Racine United Methodist
Church. who briefly addressed the
Southern High School C.lass of 1998
· during combined llaccalaureate and
commencement exercise Sunday
night in the Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium at the high school in
'Racine.
With freedom comes risk•.Harkness told 1/le 63 graduates participat-

~

tllefi dipped 4 percent nationally. .
The most drumatic declines were
in murder,for which the statistics are
the most reliable and uniform. Mur~,.,dropped 9 percent nationwide,
but 14 percent in cities of 250.000 to
500.000 population; II percent in
cities of over I million and in suburban counties, and J(l percent in cities
. between with 500,000 and I million
resident~

Reno and other crime experts
credited a wide range of reasons:
~ging ofthe 76 million baby boomel'li
, from their crime-prone years; a
reduction in crack-based violence;
community poUcing and aggressive
police actiod to remove guns from tbe
streets; stiffer prison sentences:
greater community involvement ~ith
juveniles and broader prevention
efforts for at-risk kids.
In 1996, the South wa.~ the only
region experiencing a rise in the num~Ier or crimes, though not in th~ rule

~

per I 00.000 residents. The 1996
suuthem !Otal for the seven cnmes
rose 1.1 percent.
. In 1997, every region saw an overall decline. The Northe~st, where.
cnme soared the most m the late
1980s,sawthebiggestdrop - 6percent. The South was down 4 percent
anilthe Midwest and West fe113 percent each.
Cities ohll sizes, su~urbs and rural area• reported overull drops. Citiel;
frum 250,000 to I million reported a
5 percent drop. Suburban counties
~ere down 3 percent and rural coun·
t1es down I percent. The ~mallest
urban drop wa.~ 2 percent m small
towns, under 10,000.
Aside from a few spots wbere the
often-erratic m~ figures rose, the
onlv not1cca~le ~ncrease~ w~re a 1.
percent rise 1n v1olent en~ m ru':ll
areas, led by a 6 percent 1ncrea.'!C tn
robbet?'. There als~ was a 4 percent
sur;ge 1n auto theft m rural area.•.

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. "Rural area.' are lagging becaus~ ·
they are the last front in the 19KOS,
crime wave that staned with~rJck 111.
the bij1 cities and put guns in t~ ·
hands of kids in gangs and ouL~ i~
gangs," said professor Alfred Blum.·
stein ofCarn~gie-Mellon University
in Pittsburgh.
;
Since October, four school·related shootings in smaller communities
- Edinboro, Pa., .Jonesboro, Ark. _
West Paducah. Ky.. and Pearl , Miss.
- have lefi II dead and 25 wound~- In each ca~e, atlca.~t one.teen-ager
. wa.~ charged.
"Many small towns, eMpecially in
the southern areas, . are playing
catchup with the big cities," said professor Jack Levin, director of The
Program for the Study of Violence at
Northeastern Unive~ity in Boston. ·.
"The!&lt;e Small towns thought they
were immune from teen·• viole~ ..
ilnd didn't prepare for the onslaughL"
·1(1

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�Monday, May 18, 1998

Commentary_
Th~

Daily Sentinel
'Emzljfisfid in 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-892-2158 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlehlf

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

. o-...a Manager

Letters to the editor
Quieting a barking dog
Dear Edolor,
If there's one thong I can't stand, n's a dog that ts constantly barkmg for
no good reason Granted, some barks are very dosuncuvc, the water bowl IS
empty bark, I'm hungry bark, someone's pulhng on the dnveway bark, I want
you to notoce me bark, etc.
'flten there are those ol' dogs thai JUSt bark. for nothmg more than to make
n01se.
The Southern Local Levy passed because many can ng people of l)lc do slrlct thought more about the future of the choldrcn than they dod thetr bank

Pege2
Mondly, May 18. 1998

By Jack Anderson
end Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -- The real story
can now be told of the behmd-thescenes problems that woll soon spell
the end for Asoa's longest·runmng
doctatorshop
Bloody nots on lndonesta have
clrumed the hves of at least a halfdozen student protesters m the last
week The nots have also begun to
threaten the authoroty of Presodent
Suharto. who has ruled the lndonestan archipelago w"oth an ~ron fist for
32 years
People who have seen and met
wuh Suhano on recenL weeks say the
76-year-old despot appears to be m
faoltng mental healll). He fades out
for hours at a tt me -- penods tn
whoch he canno1 remember the ume
of day, the day of the week or even
the year He's usually at hiS best on
the mornmgs, sources say, but someltmes by afternoon he's barely funcuonmg
Some believe 11 could be senolny,
that age has sompl y begun takmg us
toll on Suharto Others fear 11 could
be SO{Ilethmg worse. such as

Alzhenner's. Either way. Suh;uto's
mental imprurment comes at
the worst poSSI·
ble lime, as
lndonesoa faces
ots
worst
domestiC cnSJS
tn many years.
Those who
sa)ll Suharto
spoke candtdly
Moller &amp;
woth otlr reporter Anbderson
Mochael Voner,
but would not reveal thetr names.
Although lndonesoans are somewhat
free to cnucize theor government.
they can face death tf they lash out at
Suharto by name
The nots began on February, when
students took to the streets m protest
of government pohctes tbat have
helped put lndonesoa 's economy tnto
a ta1lspm Whole student protests are
common 10 many pans of the world,
they are fare m Indonesoa, where
Suhano's despottc ways have long
been tolerated by the free world 10
pan because of the relauve tranquohty of the populace

For thetr part, average Indonesians ha~e largely endured tota.htanantsm as a pnce of economic growth,
whtch had been robust unul the bottom fell out of the nattonal currency
last summer
But wnh pnces and unemployment both nsmg, students rose up m
protest. The noters have lately begun
to mclude laborers and other cttitcns
who heretofore sat !die. And whtle
Suhano's regune remains a focus of
theor anger, they' re also taking out
theor wrath on the country's most
vulnerable cttozens. ethmc Ch10ese
Though few 10 number, the Chtnese dominate Indonesia's merchant
class Like the Jews tn Europe before
World War II, they are the shopkeepers and small busonessmen who compose much of the moddle class But
now many Chmese are either fleFmg
the country or hodo ng from ·the
marauding masses, who blame them
for economoc woes that have much
more to do wtth mtsmanagement and
cronyism at the lop.
So whtle the fault hes large))( wtth
the Suharto famtly -- whtch controls
large sectors of the economy

Bob Collins
Portland

The Right and the Far Right
Dear Ed11oi
I refer to the May I edotonal by Wolham Rusher, "Whom Wollthe Socoal
Conservallves Support'"
Rusher menuons that conservausm ts dovtded onto two groups: economoc
conservatives, or tax cutlers, and soctal conservatives I would hke to doscuss the tax cutlers Most everyone would agree that th~ pubhc has borne a
heavy tax burden How dod we get so far from those good old days of the
1950s, when corporations paod a thord of federal oncome receopts, and the
effectove mcome lax rate for the nchest one percent of the populatiOn was 45
percent of earmngs?
The standard conservatove ltne, whtch demonstrates a lack of htstoncal
perspcchve, os that "liberals controlled Congress for 40 years " What they
are really saymg os "The DemocratiC Party controlled Congre&lt;S for 30 years,
therefore Ltberals controlled Congress for 40 years " Not so! For large poruon of its history, the Democratic Party has been burdened by a conser~a­
ti~e wong (for the most pan, Southern base), whtch teamed up wllh northern
Republicans to cnpple a great deal of v1tally needed reform legoslauon clear By Nat Hentoff
than in ihe coronto the 1960s. Tb.e maon reason corporallons and the nch paod thetr fatr
The mayor of New York,
respondtng
share m the '50s was due to Ike's "moderate Repubhcantsm"whoch fonned Rudolph Gtuham, takes JUStofied
penod
last
a consensus woth maonsh-eam "vttal center Ltberahsm " Thts consensus pnde m the decrease m the cnme
year."
moved writers such as Dame! Bell to write of the "end of ideology " It was- rate during hos watch He now
As u~ual,
n't the old nonhero Repubhcan-conservauve Democrat co9h11on thai was mforms the ctuzenry that hos efforts
a large majortpnmaroly responsoble for changmg the progressove tax system mto a regres- to &lt;educe cnme even further woll be
ty of the comsove one. A wholesale conservallve shoft occurred w1thm the Democratoc contmually proacttve He ts sellmg
plamts
are
Party as the power of the Dtxoecrat-Repubhcan coahtoon was fadmg Thos up surveollllnce cameras m vanous
from blacks or
conscrvahve sh1f1 gave the country not only to the nght of Etsenhower and pans of the cny .. onclu.dmg housmg
Lannos, who,
Noxon, but the most conservalll'e Democrallc presodents smce Grover proJects, whose rcsodents woll not 1
understandCleveland· Caner and Chnton Both parioes cooperated m msututmg an have a vote m the maner
ably, do not
tncreasmgly downward redtstnbutJon of taxes.
Mean whole, Norman Soegel, the
HentoH
vote for the
By 1980, the moddle and workmg.classes were attempttng tax revolts to - resource ful head of the New York
mayor on congam rehef from the regressive tax system, when tax reltef passed durmg the Covil L1bcrttes Unton. tntends to sodcrablc numhers But more and
Reagan adminostrauon. tt benefited people who already possessed the most publish a map showmg all k-nown more, brutality complatnts arc comweallh and power
surveillance cameras on New York , ong from moddlc-class New Yorkers
Between 1980 and 1989, the combmed fcdcml lax rate on moddlc cia." . so that we can wave to the mayor as -- whncs as well as blacks an.d Lalland workm~ people on the honom three qumules of mcome dlstnbuuon rose, we go hy
·
nos
whtle taxes decltned for Amencans m the top two qumtt)es Whole those at
As G1uhano puts the city under
There ts lor example, Barbara
the top one percent of the tncome dostnbuuon rcc.eovcd a 14 4 percent tax lighter col1)rol. Jaywalkers -- trado- Mostcl's cxpcncnce wtth some qf
cut. the poorer famohcs saw thctr federal tax total go up by 16 I percent uonall y lrcc on New York to race New Yorks hnesl
After the Re~an-cra tax reforms, 90 percent of the people owed more taxes cars at thcor own nsk -- arc now
Wh1lc she was wattong for a bus
than they would have owed had the 1977 tax law&lt; rcmamed In place Only bcong vtgorously pursued hy the ncar Rockefeller Center on 1996,
the wealthoest 10 percent of the pubhc rccetvcd any benefit from the tax cuts pollee
pollee on horseback and on foot
Between 1933 and 1969. ccononuc mcquahty dechned Smcc 1969,
G1uiJOno however 1gnores a started shouung at her to move
mcquality has rosen. It can't he any come~dcncc that. the penod Since 1969 growtng source .of voolcnt dosordcr Because she d1dn 't obey soon
has seen the most nght-w1ng prcsodcnt stncc Coolidge, and two Dcmocra11c on the ctty the pohc~ force.
enough. a cop pocked her up and
prestdents who. m economoc tenns, have hecn more conscrvauve than Ntxon
In the I~rst quancr of thos year. threw her down on the pavement.
or Etscnhower Since the 1960's, the conscrvauvc -- nghtward shoft -- has complaonts of pohcc brutalny rose lnJUrtn[! her head, arm and back
cnppled the Loberal wong of the Dcmncrauc Party even more and straoght- by 24 pcrccn
.
Mostcl IS 5'4" and weighs 93
cnetl conservauves tn the DemocratiC Party cJote -- hke the former Senator
As Ahce McQutlloo pomtcd out pounds Shaken, to say the least, she
Dan Rostenkowsk1. who played a maJor role m helpmg the Republ1can con- on the Daoly News, "Dcspote an 8 asked the olfocer lor hts badge and
servattves shoft the lax burden from the affiucnt to the mtddle and working percent fallon. cnme. there were 264 prcconct·numbcrs
class. Gore Vtdal spoke well when he saod that there os now, tn effect. one more complaonts agamst cops dur·He complted, but the numbers
polittcal party wnh two wmgs -- the Rtght and the Far-R1ght
ong the first three months of 1998 he gave her were false.
Jeffrey Fields
Middleport

Indonesians are takmg out thetr
wrath on the moddle class. And as the
Cl!mese flee, economoc condtloons
woll only delenorate
Woth Suharto's mental health
detenorattng -- and hts onternatoonal
support qutckly erodtng -- one question remams Who'll take hos place?
Rtght now there's no clear successor
on the clan, whoch could produce an
ugly, protracted struggle once Suharto steps down
Most hkely it will be one of the
generals, many of whom are Amencan-tramed and are already suspected to be pulhng stnngs behtnd the
scenes
THE DEMOCRATS' BEST
FRIEND? -- House Speaker Newt
Gmgnch 's new hard-hne :posture
may have some untntended consequences
The fiery speaker transformed
homself from a ptt bull to a· poodle
when hos poll ratmgs started to sag
Earher thts spnng he produced a
i:ontrote ncj" book, " Lesson&gt;
Learned the Hard Way," wh1ch talks
frankly about the many mostakes he '!
made smce takmg over the House :
But then the old Gmgnch cam~
back, the Gmgnch who talks uf
Democraltc "cromes" and who ~ow s
to bnng up the Clinton scandals th
every speech unulthe tnvcstigauons
arc over
Many msoders hchevc the turnabout ~' Gmgnch's way of cncrgozmg the actiVIst Rcpubhcans who
make up a dosproporloonatc share nt
prestdenttal pnmary voters II may
also help the party ratsc funds as they
try to hold on to thelf slim House
maJority thts fall.
But tt's also been a boon to the
other side Says one top fund -raiser
for House Democrats "We love that
Newt ts getting fanher and farther to
the nght Every tune he's on 'fV, our
dorcct matl (appeals) goes up Tlfc
last couple of days 11 's been great. "
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wrlten ror United Feature
Syndicale, Inc.

Crime goes down, police violence goes up .
She ts an arttst and drew ptctures
of that cop for her appearance at the
Ctviltan Complamt Rev1ew l)oard.
But pohce offi~cr~ . after hav1ng
been goven the drawmgs, saod that,
try as they mtght, they have not
hecn able to fmd that parttcUiar officcr
1
Joel Berger, a privatq attorney
who handles pnhcc hrutahty cases
and os Mostcl 's lawyer, was searchtng for a word to dcscnbc her
natvctc on cxpcclong cops to turn
another cop 10 Her fanh, he said,
"was potgnant " Barbara Mostel
had come up agamst the blue wall
of solcnce
"It's very deprcssong," Mastel
told Roher! Lopsytc of the New York
T1111es, because "there's no cl~su,rc.
and you lecl so unprotected. And
you 're rcmmded every day wben
you gq out and sec a pohce officer"
When )talked to her recently, she
satd she ts sttll appre,hensove whenever she sees a police officer on the
street and has yet to fully recover
from bemg thrown "' the stdewalk
(or not havmg moved fa.•t enough
She may never fully recover.
In New York state, there ts a
ctnne-~tcloms group that has mfluencc in the lcgoslaturc and the
medta Mostcl ts t_rying to start a
support group for other victtms of
~onlencc: victoms of the pohcc. (A

whole state Jcgoslator tells me . he
wtll help form Barbara Mastel's
support group for all voctoms of the
. police.)
Rudolph Giuliani likes to say
that he is the mayor of all ~cw
Yorkers, bu t Fchcm Lee, a reporter
1
for the New York Tunes, notes that
a constderable number of New York
parents feel an urgent need to pniteet thcor ~holdrcn from )Whee
"Black and Htspuntc Jlllrcnts
from the hardscmhhlc.fcnelncnts of
the South Bronx to Jhe genteel row
houses of Harlem .. say they talk to
theor chtldren about deahng wtlh the
police. It is just a matter nf lime.
they tell their chlldren, heforc they
encounter a pohcc onicer who sed
dark skm as syh«lhymnus with
crome.
"'nlcy couch them 'on how to
behave: Don't ))an~ out In crowd~ .
don't make any' sudden mnvc ~;
carry tdentoficatoon, ask to make a
phone call. refuse to answer 1ncrtm -'
mating questoons.,
But Mayor Gouhalltos indtflerent
to the fact that m hts re 1gn. hlack
and Htspante parents have to teach
theor choldren how to protect them-'
sel~cs FROM hos poliCe.
'
Nat hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest or the
Bill of Right~.

Today's heros. don~t work i~ Washington

Enjoyed show

ByTO~V

' Dear Edttor
For those of you that mtssed the Variety Show at Mctgs Hogh
School on May 8, be assured that you mtssed one of the btggst shows of talent I ha~e seen tn a long ttme I know ' lot of you audoence members shore
my vo1=ws. I am a parent and a substitute teacher at the school, and &lt;!vcr the
course of se~eral weeks watched these kods pracuctng very hard each day
Sull Froday night, when I saw evcrythin!! come together, I was stmply blown
away by our talented Band and Chotr 1 I can't smgle out one performance
because ever number was great 1
•
What started out as a way to raose funds for our new umforms.
(limed mto a lot of fun for our ktds and a blockbuster show! Thank you

..

SNOW
Creator• Syndicate
WASHINGTON -- The jig os up
in Wash mgt on. The natoon 's ·capnal
has made the falal mostake of
declanng tlself mdospensable, as tf
the only tho~g standmg between us
and rum are 535 members of Congress and a randy presodent.
Fortunately, fate hao sweet ways
of rcplacong the legtslator'S anogancc wnh humthty. Cons1der a
telhng recent example·

r~as:~n~~~~:~~~:~n~:~,~~;~~=~~;~~~~~~~~~~g:~ ~~~ Ma~h~ ~=~s~~~1,;£~~~s~c~o~~

icated to see 11 through Your parents, school and Band Boosters are very - qTheuere our mos d Nabel loscase.
d'
story quote
o
aureate
""'u
James Watson a.s crowong that Dr
Penny Bu111e Judah Folkman would "cure cancer
Middleport

'

.

Tod.ay in history
By The Auocillted Pre11

,,
Today is Monday, May 18. the I38th day of 1998. There are 227 days left
in the year.
Today's Highhght tn Htstory.
'
On May 18, 1896, the Supreme Court endorsed the concept of "separate
but equal" racial segregation wnh its Plessy "· Ferguson decision, a ruling
o~ertumcd 58 years later Brown v Topeka Board of Educatoon
On this date:
In 1642, the Canadtan coty of Montreal was founded
In 1804, the French Senate proclaomed Napoleon Bon~parte emperor..
In 1897,1 public ~adonl! of Bram Stoker'$ new novel, "Dracula, or, The
Un-dclld." was staged m London.

Thesday, May 19

•

·Who will· replace ailing Suharto?

m two years "

The ptcce set off shoc k waves
Watson, along Yitth Francts Cnck.
dtscovered the double-helix stru•ture of DNA
He's not gtvcn to blubbering. and
he 's a huge player m scoenttfic corcles
Yet, there he was, waxmg rhap!
sodoc because the Folkman research
team has osolated a couple of natuTally occumng compounds, dubbed
angoostatin and endostattn, that
starve cancer cells by cutung off
thetr blood supply.
When Folkman and his colleagues tested the compounds on
tumor-nddled mtce, the malignan-

t

Ctes
melted
away -- wn~ no
sode effects
The same thong
happened when
they tned the
potoons on a
varoety of cancers
The mvcstogatc!rs
ha~e
ossqtd the usual
Snow
that
cautions
lhcor cure only works on lab rats.
.But they also note that human blood
contaons these magtcal substances.
Not surpnstngly, the Ttmes story
set Off a Wall Street stampede
The stock price of EntreMed, a
chtef sponsor of the research, leaped
from 12 1116 dollars a share to 83
ovc rnoghl
Eve n af~ Watson complatned
that he had been quo)ed out of context, the company's stock price sull
stood at nearly three umcs ots prcvtous level.
The story os remarkable for thos.
Nobody dismissed ot as snake-011
quackery. We all thought II posstble.
And why not?
Medtcal research has become our
natoonal field of dreams.
You can't open a newspaper ,..
magazme without stumbling upon
an advertisement for a phannaceUiocal breakthrough In recent months,

manufacturers have unleashed Voa- Nowadays, inventors and entrepre-'
gra to cure impotence, Propccoa to neurs hold lhe upper hand -- and
reverse male·pattem baldness and theor success has set off a tectomc,
two drugs-- Tamoxtfen and Ralox- shtft m the way we view ourselves. :
tfine -- to attack breast cancer.
We no longer see go~ernment as
Through such deeds, researchers the great guarantor of ~irtue, that'!&gt;
have rcvoved somethtng Vietnam- our JOb (Just consider the spate of.
era leftosts tned to destroy: a belief Californoa ballot10ittatoves aimed at
tn Amcncan exceptoonahsm
returRmg power to home and•
Call me Pangloss, but thos brides hearth )
well for us all.
Today's hero\:s •don' t Yiork 10
The tnfonnatlon re~oluuon that Wash10gton
swamped the Berlin Wall now bods They tml 10 thtnk tanks, labs and
to bury the btg-govcrnment incama- even gar~gcs, throwong harnesses
llon of Uncle Sam
around theor omagmatoons and rod-:
The marketplace has become too 10g wherever thcor dreams lead
ntmblc and smart for the governAlmost songle -handcdly, they
ment to control
•
.
have rev1ved tfic chtrpy optomosm:
The Federal Reserve Bank of that tradiltnn~lly has served is
Dallas reports that a recent national Amcnca's calhng card and reki4-'
surge tn affluen~c and confidence died faoth tn our decency and dtgni woll conllnue -- pro~oded , of course, ·'Y
.
the Clinton Jusllce Department
History turns o.n small, unforedoesn' t throw the ~nitre computer seen p1vo1s
industry tn proson
Who would ha~e though! that the
With each pa..sing day, ncccsst- secret to our hhcrat10n lay not m a
lles hecumc cheaper.
politocal leader, a poet, an actor llr a
We spend less of our money on global crisis but10 a pocce of glonbaste resources, such as gas, and get fied sand called the mocrcx:hip?
far more bang for the buck when II
comes to daoly appliances, from
tcleviston sets to home computers.
Write Tony Snow, Creaton :
People once worried that tech- Syndicale, 5777 Wes&amp; Century '
nology would enable government to Blvd., Suite 700, Los Aagelu,
cnsla~e its citizens.
CaiJr. 90045.
But the information re~oluuon
has turned Orwell on his head

· The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

•.••

Meigs graduates left

OHIO Weather

(Continued from Page 1)

•
AccuWeather forecast for daytome conditions
and

accounts

a

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ly Renee Mtlhoan, Candace Ntcole..r
Mtller. George R. Mtller, Jesse Lee_
Molden. Darlene L. Moodospaugh, ;
Marlene M Moodospaugh. John ;
Patnck Moore. Amanda Sue Napper. •
Hope D Neace. Christina E Neece, ',
Pamela K Neece. Kevon M Neel . ~
Lmzoe Nottongham, Patnck Sean i
O'Bnen, Larry Del Ogdon
:
Mochael T Parker. Dante lie LeAn ;
Peckham. Annette S Poerce, Tabotha :
Dawn Powell, John Andrew Pulhns. •
Melis~n Day Ramsburg. Mtchcllc :
Dawn Ramsburg, Andrew Lee Reed. ,
Mehssa Sue Reeves, Collon Clay ·
Roush, Jason Albert Roush. Andrea ;
Nocole Runyon. Jerem1ah Ray Rus- :
sell
;
Caseyne Darlene Ly nae Sanford, •
Amoe D Sayre. Harold Scarberry. Jr. :
Charles Rollan Searles, Amy Mehsa ;
See Matthew E Sellers. Scott Aaron •
Sellers. Juslm M. Seymour, Wendy :
Ntcole Shromphn, Amy Sayward :
Smnh. Brandon S Smuh. Kenneth :
Michael Smnh, Sabrina Dawn Smnh, •
Georgoana Faye Spears, Mariana L :
Staats, Jonathan M. Stewart. Troy D :
Swartz
Crystal Gad Tay- •
lor. Heather Maret Taylor. Adan(i
Joseph Thomas. Jeremy Thomas. :
Zane M Thomson. Eric Toops.
Charles Edgar Trader. Clayton Robed•
• Tromm. Charles A .Tyree. Andrew '
Vance. Aaron Justm Vaughan. Jen- ·
mfer L Vonmg. Jared A. Warner.
Nancy Lou Whaley. Jesstca LyniY
Wheeler Joshua A. Whue. Matthew "
J Willtaons. Mehssa Ann Williams. v
Raent D Wood, Jesstca Dawn
Wnghl. M1ch.tel J Wyall. Broan C.'
Young. and Sandr.l Kay Young.

Crow, Valene Lynn Cundoff, Kelly
Lynn Dalton. Gonger Rae Darst. Brad
Allen Davenport, Lcanna Jo Davos.
Nancy June Crawford, 68, Point Plea.wnt, W.Va , died S:uurday, May 16, Tara Beth Davos. Trenton-Joe Kee1998 at her residence.
baugh Davis, Scott Allen Dodson,
Born May 22. 1929, daughter of the late Carl M. ana Rachael Rebecca Tony Ray Dugan. Jenno fer L Dun•
fll.
Donnally Bush, she wa.~ a homemaker
can.
She was also preceded tn death by her husband, John Jackson Crawford;
Jesse R Eastman. Crystal Ann
a son. Delbert "Randy" Crawford, and a grandson, Shawn Alan Leach.
Eblin. Pholip John Edmoston. Brllndoe
Survi~ors tnclude two daughters and sons-in-law. Pam and Donald CasKaye Elhott. Elozabeth Hope Farley.
to of Pomt Pleasant, and Penny and Da~t d Wollhelm of Houston, Texa.•. two Jay P Fisher, Brandon L Floyd. Chad
sons and one daughter-on-law, Rocky Crawford, John and Melody Cmwford. A Folmer, Brandon Ford. Emily
all of Potnl Plea.'\llnl, five gr.ondchtldren. a soster. Frnnces Plantz of Gal hpohs, Rose Fowler. Jeffery Edward Fowler.
and
a brother, John Bush of Potnt Plea.•ant. and fi~e grandchtldren.
Ja.'&gt;On Bradley Frecker, Mochael J
Columbus 86'
Servtces wtll be II a m. Tuesday tn the Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Poml Frymycr. Jeremy Gatrell, Ned
Plea.'illnt. woth Brother lsatah Crump Jr otfictating. Bunal will be tn the Ohto Desmond Goles. Brandee Mochelle
Valley Memory Gardens, Gallipohs Friends may call at the funeral home Gtlmore. Bnanna Damelle Gilmore.
from 7-9 tomght.
D~vtd A Gnmm. Dantelle Elizabeth
Grueser. Sarah Elizabeth Grueser
Courtney Leanne Haley. Nathan
Edwtn
HaltlHII. Chad Evan Hanson,
W. VA
EulaJean Noble McCoy, 67, Henderson, W Va , dted Fnday, May 15, 1998 Came Dawn Harmon. Joshua D
Hams. Carne Lynn Hartson, Jennofer
10 Cabell Huntmgton Hospotal, Hunhngton, W.Va.
Marie Hayman. Myca Suz'anne
norn Aug. 19, 1930 tn Mason County, W.Va., daughter of the late Otos E.
Haynes, Dustin A. Hershberger. Knsand Nadine Aeikcr Noble, she was a former employee of Quahty Manufacten Rae Htll. Sing Tong Ho. Amanda
turing of Po tnt Pleasant, W.Va
Faye Huegle. Jenntler R Husk. CurShe was a member of the Henderson ~hurch of Christ.
Its Lee Jeffers. Shannon Mane Jenk ~s,.hoioiWBt...,rs;.;.T-oiiSIOrmSoiiiiiiioooiRaoiiiiiln;,;FI&lt;J,;;;;,rrliiieiiis..,jiiiiii•..;;'"•"-•Suiiiiinniillr...,Pt.,.Cioudiioiioiilir..;Cioudyiiiiii"" Sr She was als» preceded m death by a former husband, Dorsol E McCoy
ms. Jeremy Davtd Johnson. ShawntVl.t Auoclalod Presl GraphlcsNot
ta
A Johnson. Penny Lee Jones II.
Survmng are four sons, Dorst~ . (Karen) McCoy of Galllpohs, Roger
L (Jeana) McCoy of Potnl Pleasant. and Otos "Art" (Bonme) McCoy and Jene R Kean, Hyung-Do Ktm . Jeremy Kmg, Michael Shawn Krautter.
rarl Denms (Edna) McCoy, both of Henderson; two daugh~ers, Jean Ann
Davtd
Larsson, Joshua Davtd Leach.
(Raymond) Mount and Becky S (Terry) By us, both of Henderson; II grandForest
Alan Lee. Jr, SarJ Lee. He1d1
choldren and 19 great-grandchildren; three ststets, Barbara (William) Spears
Mane
Legar. Mtchael Cltfford
of Pmnt Pleasant, Ann Harmon of New Haven, W Va., and Christi (Kermol)
Letfhen. Jtll Ann Lemley. James
By The Auocllted Preu
Brown of Gallipolis; and a brother, Otos N (Anna) Noble of Pomt Pleasant.
Travis
Lodwick
Clouds will buijd again over Ohio tomghl and Tuesday, forecasters satd
Servoces wtll be 1 p.m. Tuesday tn the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home, Pomt
Robert
K Malhotra, Todd Mar· Showers and thunderstorms are likely m northeast Ohoo tonight and over Plea~ant. woth E~angelist Eugene Zopp officiating. Bunal woll be m the
cum.
Marquna
J McChnltc. Steven
the enhre slate on Tuesday
' Austm-Hope-McLeod Cemetery, Henderson. Friends may call at the tunerJ. McCullough. Matthew Adam
Lows tomght wtll be 55-60 Htghs on Tuesday will be 85-90.
al home from 7-9 tontght.
Metheney. TarJ Lmden Mtchael. HoiThe sbowers w1ll rematn tn theptcture until Thursday, the National Weather Servtce said.
••
The record-high temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather station was 93 degrees tn 1962 while the record low was 34 m (973 Sunset
tomght wtll be at 8:42 p.m and sunnse Tuesday at 6 13 a.m
(Continued from Page 1)
Sellers. Clifton Thomas Sosson.
Weather rorecast:
dncks, Nathan Allen Hensler. Zorah
Clayton Lee Sham, Derek Elhol'
T~night ..Mostly clear. Lows m the m1d and upper 50s. Light and vanDawn Hensley. Dean Vance Holl Jr. Smnh. Lmdsay Jane Smnh, Evalf
able wood.
By The Associated Press
Matthew Wolham Hill, Nocole Dawn Tyler Struble, Wolham Robert StuckTuesday... Mostly sunny. Highs '" the mtd and upper 80s.
Weekend celebratoons at Ohio State Umversoty in Columbus and Ohio Uni- Holl, Lctersha Lynn Holman, Stacey ey II. Wilham Lee Tackett. Htllary
Tuesday night.. .lnereasong clouds Lows from the upper 50s to near 60
verstly 10 Athens led to arrests late Saturday and early Sunday, pohce said Tahsha Hubbard. Mosty Dawn Ann Turley, Amy Mane Varney. :
Extended rorecast:
Pohce in Columbus used Mace and fined "knee-knocker" proJecllles to Hysell. Charles Duwayne Johnson, Zachery Paul Ward, Stacy Ann WarWednesday... Mostly cloudy, with a chunce of showers and thunderstorms. break up crowds alter bottles and rocks were thrown at officers. satd Colum- Jason Paul Lambert, Tommy Roben den, Ranena Lynn Wheeler. Corey "
Highs tn the mid 80s.
bus Pohce Sgt Art Baker. One ollicer was sltghtly tnjured.
Calvin Lane. Josette Dupree l:.egan. Patnck Wtlhams, Joshua Lee Wilson,,
Thursday.. Partly cloudy. Lows m the upper 50s and htghs in the upper
Howard Jason Wntesel. Jennofer •
About a dozen people were arrested, most for dosorderly conduct.
John Mark Matson II.
70s.
Ashley Brooke McKmney, Jusltn Rose Yeauger and Wilham Albert ;
The arrests came on the weekend of Ohto State's annual African-AmerFnday... Mostly clear. Lows m the lower 50s and highs in the mid 70s
tco.n Heritage and Arts FestovaJ:
Lee Moddleswart, Jayme Larae fu~gll
.•
Moller,
Davod
Chnstopher
Lee
MtllThe
SHS
Choor.
under
the
dtrec,
Organizers expected about 10,000 people m the area for the festival
In Athens. mne arrests were made at an annual street party ncar Ohto Uni- oron. Ahcta Rae Mulford. Jason Ray lion ol Kent Howell and accompa~ersuy.
Netgler, Tommy Rochard Alvin noed by Jocelyn Baoley on poano. sang,
Athens police Officer Brian Lushbaugh satd the weekend wa.~ a little busoer Ottman, Jackte Lynn Proffitt, Charles 'On the Stde of Angels" by LcAnn,'
Rtmes and "Fnends" by Mochael W:
Tra~os Ranson. James Matthew Rifthan most, but the fesuval was quoeter than 11 had been tn past years.
.'
COLUMBUS (AP) - An Ohio income taxes for schools or poggy• The southeastern Ohoo college town has had two confrontations between ne, Nokko Lynn Robmsnn, J"nntfer Smuh
Lynn Roush, LISa Jennofer Russell,
Harkness gave both the mvoc;atoon:
Supreme Coun ruling ha.• lawmakers back sales taxes for countoes, law- crowds and pohce otficers lhos year.
tryong lo figure out how lo prevent a makers spectfically have allowed
Thousands of people gathered near campus Apnl "5, the mommg when . Dante! Bruce Sayre Jr.. Jenmfer Rose and benedocllon.
double taxation.
flood of new mumc1pal taxes.
bars closed a half-hour carher than usual because of the switch to daylightThe presumplion, based on a 192S saving time. It was the second consecutive year authortttes were called m to
Lcg .. Jallve leaders wtll wor~ thts
week on soluuons to pre~cnt ctties court decosoon. was that if poggy- break up a crowd Thiny-four people were arresled.
from tmposing taxes in area.~ the stnte back ing " not specifically allowed,
On Apnl 25, a fight outside a bar drew a crowd of about 250 people. The
already taxes, The Columbus Db- are,ts olthe state taxes are off-hmots crowd sptlled mto the street and became unruly when pohce tned to make
'
arrests.
patch reported Sunday.
to Cll)eS.
Moyer saod the policy ha.~ result"The Supreme Court opened up
CLEVELAND (AP)- There are two Super Lotto game uckets woth the '.
such an n)Crediblc vista that we real - ed m coofusmg definitions as courts
correct six-number combination from the Saturday dmwmg, the Ohm Lotj•
ly do ne~d to nail this down as quick- na~l: wetgHed questions over the
tery said.
ly as possible," said Rep. E.J. years such as whether an ex!=•se tax
One of the wmning llckels entitles the owner to S 153.846 a year. before'
Thomas. R-Columbus, chairman of ts the same as a net profits tax or an
taxes, each year for 26 years. It wa.• sold at Hadeel Market in Cleveland. 1
the House Ways and Means Com- mcome ta~ .
The other os payable m a lump-sum. pre•.x ca.'h payment of $1 ,868,761 ,,
mittee, whoch o~ersees tax pohcy
He saod the state constolullon MHSClass
the
amount the lottery would ha~e mveMed expecting to pay $4 million m
The tenth reunton of the Meogs High School Cla..s of 1988 will be held
The court's 6-1 decision Wednes- clearly go~es legtslators the right to
annual payments spread over 26 years That wmntng ticket wa.' sold at Super- .
on Saturday at Sacred Heart Church tn Pomeroy from 1 to 11 :30 p.m. The
tl;ly on a Ctncmnau case clears the restnct taxmg powers of etltes but
America No 5241 in Galltpolos
.,
way to increase so many consumer contams no ban on double taxatoon. cost is $9 per person. payable to Knn Calvert Roush (949-3421) in ad~ance
Sales
on
Super
Lotto
total
S2.6H3,957
and
players
may
share
$6,172,307,
The cia." will hold a ptcntc on Sunday at I p.m. at Hartmger Park in Modand busmess taxes that lcgtslators
.. Accordtngly. we hold that the dleport Those altendmg should bnng the or own food and dnnks Teachers
Sales m the Kocker total $469,464 and players may share S 151.870.
onust quickly ompose a tax moratori- taxing authority of a municipality
There are 114 Super Lotto llckeLs woth five of the numbers, o.nd each is.
who
taught,
the
class
are
tnvtted
a.s
guests
for
both
events.
~m whole the full effect IS weoghed.
may .be pre-empted or otherwise prowonh $879. The 2,945 Super Lono tickets Wolh four of the numbers are each ·
Thoma.~ satd.
hJboted only by an ex pres. act of the Matching runds dinner
worth $78.
oJ
In the decoston written by Chief Gener.ll Assembly," he smd.
There " no Kocker game 1icket woth all the numbers so no one wms the
The Burhngham Mo&lt;!em Woodmen will hold their annual matching funds
J~suce Thoma.~ Moyer. the court
Justice Evelyn Stmnon, the court's smorgasbord donner on May 25 atthe hall The meal wtll be served from II· 30
$100,000 proze
•
t~rew out a pnnctplc that lcgoslators
only di'--&lt;enler, sa1d the decoston o~er­ to 6·3() p m., for dontng m or carryout, lor a donation Funds raosed woll be
The five Kicker lockets showing the firsl five dogots arc each worth S5.IXIO!i
have rehed on for more lho.n 70 years roles "a long hne of well-reasoned
The 42 wtlh the first four numbers are each worth $1 ,000. The 427 wolh tho •
to prevent colles from imposmg tax- cases .. on whoch lawmakers have matched for by the Modem Woodmen home ollice m Rock Island, Ill , and
first three numbers are each worth S 100, and the 4.217 woth the first two numdovoded between the Pomeroy Volunteer Fore Departmenl and Mrs Leroy
es tn area.~ the state already taxes
rehed tor decades.
bers are each worth $1 0
Sauters. for her medocal expenses.
In some cases. such as poggyback
Thoma.• smd the Legislature wtll
The Ohoo Lollery wtll pay $753,521 SO to wmners m Satuiday's Pick 3!
ha~e to detine whoch laxation areas Health Club to meet
Numbers daoly game The sales total is $1 .351 ,975
.
are oll-hmots to colles.
In
Pick
4
Numbers
players
wagered
$413.1191.50
and
may
share
•
Rock Spnngs Bener Health Club w oil mce1 at I p.m Thursday at the home
"We
certamly
don't
want
any
$250,700
(USPSZI3·t6t)
of Helen Blackston
Ac.-c.. -.,.,...
unmteQded consequences." Thomas
said, concerned that the potential for Board sets session
PUhiL~hcd .:~ry al'k:moon. Mundi~ through
uncontrolled taxe• could drive away
Friday, Ill (".ourt Sl , Pnrneroy Oh~t•. hy ltk:
The Eastern Local Board of Education wtll meet m regular sessoon
Ohio Valley Pvbhahm&amp; Compi~ncll ( 'n '
. busmesses and mdustr)eS
Wednesday.
6:30p.m. at the high- school buolding.
The followtng actions to end mar· Cline, Pomeroy, May 8, Cynthia K, ·
Sf!t."'ftd ddl pnsta&amp;l: plkJ II Pofi'Mr~, Oh10
The
court
ruhng
specifically
Me••. Thl: Aquciat~:d ~'\'as •"'-' thf Ohtt•
nage were llled recently m the office Bumgardner, Moddleport. Irom Bruce 1
,tllows Ctncmnau and ots suburbs .to
NcwspipL."r ..........oc ..tton.
of Meogs County Clerk ol Courts Lar- D Bumgardner, Moddleport. May 6
..... '~r, Send llddreu ~"*"to lk ~ tax profits of Ctncmnati Bell Telelboly ScM•acl. Ill Cl""' St , """'"'Y· 011••
ry Spencer
Dissolullons gmnted- Mary Ann
phone The company contended the
45769
Dossnlutums
askell
John
D
Mullord and Fred Everett Mulford.
SUISCRIPI'ION RATES
state exdse tax on utilnies gave u an
Sturgeon, Pomeroy, and Teresa J May 4. Laura Mane Holsmger and
B7 C•rritr Dl' Mnlor Rotllt
omphcd pre-emp1ion
One ~ .. k ••••
• •.S! (10
RACINE
SIUIJ1"''"· Southsode. W Va.. May 13. Jay Allen Holsinger, May 4; Herbert
Unns otthe Meogs County EmerOne """"h • .... • ••• • ••• •••• $1&lt; 7tl
8 48 p m Sunday, Fotih Street. Julia E Sulo, Pomeroy. and Michael Dougla.• Noel and Komberly Kay«!
gency Medical Servoce recnrded 12
()ftc Year •••••••••••• -· ••• SltMtll
SINCU! COPY PRICE
F. Ranauro. Medford. Mass . May 12: Noel, May 5; Bryan Lee Holman and
calls for a.•sostance Saturday and Wolham Adams. VMH
D11l~ • •
•
•15 C'..:nllt
REEDSVILLE
Larry
Holsmger. Racme, and Darlene Jamce Lynn Holman. May 8. Dawn
Sunday Umts respondtng tnduded:
SUbM:nbcn 0011 deltrina au piJ ttM: anK: may
~mlltn .tVsna; d~n:C'IIO T'he Oaaly ~ntiacf llft
4·24
p.m
Satunday.
Eden
Rodge
Holsinger,
Pomeroy. May II, R Davos and Mochacl C. Davos, Ma)'·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I lhJC'C.' IIll or 12 month Nill!l Cn:dtl will ~
3.09 a m. Saturday, Batey Road, Road. Lowetia Nuner. Camden-Clark Mochael P. Wolle II. Pomeroy. and 11.
~~~en ca~r ctt:h W~\:k
Am Ele Power ..............., ........46\
,
Stephanoe R. Wolle. Pomeroy. May 8;
No ~lpi!On hy nuul p:rmtllcLI 1n al\:n'
Violet
Riggleman, treated at the Memorial Hospotal.
Divorce grant~d - Barbar.1 Ellert
Akzo ......................................1~
where tpomc: c:amcr M:TVIICC 111 avatlahlc
SYRACUSE
BenJamin
D
Carroll,
Ponland.
and
Bowen from Rtchard Allen Bowen,
scene;
Amrlech .......................- ......43~
Publilhcr rocM:J~ the nJhiiO ldJUII ,_, dur
1.11 a.m Saturday. Third Street, Melody A. Carroll. Portland, May 5 May4
Aehlalld 011 .......................... 53,..
12:S3 p m Saturday, Red Htll
•1 thl; aablmphon period. Sublcnphnn rat.::
(:hangcs ml)' be ifnpkmcntcd tty 1.:hancmg the
AT&amp;T ...................................
Divorces a.'ked ~ Mark Anthony
Road, Dan~olle. Jumor Keller. Veter- Marilyn Sharp. treated at the scene.
durat100 of the suh~.:nptltln
Bank One.............................
PLAINS
TUPPERS
Cline,
Athens, from Bunky Sue
ans Memonal Hospotal, Rutland
Bob Evan• ............................19'MAIL SUISCRimON
9:17a.m.
Sunday.
Stale
Route
7,
squad a.•sosted.
Borg..Werner ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 58~
,...,..MdiiJC...c,
6 41 p.m Saturday. Beech Gro~e Willie Jones, CCMH.
Brooghlon .............................18\
I J W.Cu... ................ ...127:141
Road. Rutland, Macy Priddy, Holzer
Champion - ••:..........................13
26 w.~"' ..·-··· ....... -·· ...J5lB2
Charm Shpa ..........................4"S2 -u ... . ....
.... J lll\.&lt;6
Medical Center, Rutland squad a."-•ist--IWIJOCouiT
c.t,
Holdlng ............................4Cfl'.
ed;
ll .,..,.......... •..............129 2.&lt;
Holzer Medical Center
Faderal Mogut.......................S1 'lo
26 - ....- ......................156 68
8·42 p m. Saturday, Broadway
DlschefiCS
May 15 - Andrew
Gannett
.................................
81~
.Sl V..u ... . . . ..... .S 109 72
Street. Middleport. Charles Young, Burt, Mildned Tolli~er. Ml'll.
Goodyear ......••..•.•••...••.•••......81\
VMH;
Kmart:....................................18)4
Theodore Kester and son. Clay JorReader Se r vices
7
24
p.m.
Sunday,
Childrcns
Kroger···············-·················40,_ Home Road, Mildred Full~. VMH dan, GerJidinc Hawk, Delphu HarpLanda End ...........................33 1 ~
er, Patricoa Russell, Nokki Whole,
Limited ...................................34\
Coiaecllon Poley
MIDDLEPORT
Robert Davis. Maude Lttteml, Ccr.o.
Oak Hill Fln1 ..........................27).
O.r •I• .....,,. In on II to bo
2·29 p m Saturday, VFD and Webb, Wilham Decl. Ronald Love,
OVB .......................................38~
eccuntt. If 1• of Jl!l tmll' .. I
squad to North Second Street. molor Mrs. Timothy Brumfield and son.
~. co11 111e .... . _ •• (74tll ,z.
OM VII ley ...............................37
vehicle «cidcnt, Sarah Eads. Fred
:1.155. We wll ...... ,...,. tr.AN -lion
Peop.....................: ................30
Birth - Mr. and Ml'll
Stewart and Rhonda Cwy, Vt4H, Roberts, daught~r. lont! Bonom ·
Prent Flr\1...............................21 \
Rockwell ...........................la\
Pomeroy squad assisted;
Dlscherps May 16- Mrs Jeff
News Dlf*lli.ill
RD/Sttell ................. - .............58~
10:55 a m Sunday, Broadway Roberts and daughter, John Dillard.
·n.
- " ..... ftl-2155. Doper~­
Seara ....................................63'Street, Kyle McBane, treated at the
_ , tdJirfDM Mr.
Dlscherps May 17- BOI)nte
Shortey'a .................................4'scene, Central Dtspatch squad assist- Metzler, Jimi Banks, Robert Kuhn,
GnenJI Mn p- ..........- .. ·-·.111. till
Star a.M ...............................I1~
Newt. .................--.....--........1&amp; 1112
ed.
WtrMty'a...............................23"Cory Kelley. Sagar Palel, Gene
wl.a. tiM
POMEROY
WorthltlgtOI't .........................18?.
Abels, Dominic Wickline. Debra
S:51 p.m. Sal)lrday, U S 33, Anne Lambert.
OtMr SltV.CII •
Stock report• are the 10:30 Griffith, Pleasan1 Valley Hospital,
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
,Woa • • t ........................_"'".1&amp; Ul4
a.m.
provided by AcMel
Central Dispatch squad assisted.
Clo I
UIJ
Nance,
son, Bidwell.
or Gellpolla,
•.
a I' '~.-.....................111. n•
(Publlslled with pennllllloa)

Nancy Jane Crawford

MICH.

.

•I

I I

· ~

Eula Jean McCoy

~

Buildup of clouds will be
prelude to rainy weather

Celebration prompts
9 arrests in Athens

Southern grads cautioned

..

Lawmakers fear flood of new
taxes in wake of court ruling

.,

Winning Super Lotto
ticket sold in Gallipolis

.·

Meigs announcements

The Daily Sentinel

..

Actions to end marriages filed

EMS units record 12 calls

·Stocks

..sa-,.
se-.,..

Hospital news

......... _...... .,............

_,_._

II

. . . . . . . . . . . .: . . . . . . . . . ., _. . . . . . . . . . .

C

�Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 18,1998 .·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Monday, May 18, 1998

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Blues de_
feat Red Wings 3~1 to stay alive in NHL playoffs
•,

~

By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit
Red Wings had a chance to slam the
door on St. Louis, but the Blues kept
it open.
"We knew it wa.~n't going to be
easy," Detroit forward Brendan
Shanahan said Sunday after the Blues
s1ayed alive in the playoffs with a 31 win over the Red Wings. "Now
there's even mon: pressun: on us
because we have to go into their
building.:·
The Red Wings still hold a 3-2
lead in the Western Conference semi·
final series. But they nQw face the
prospect or having to win Game 6
Tuesday night in St. Lollis. Otherwise. it will be a one-game showdown Thur.lday night back at Joe
Louis Arena.
.
" If !he odds against us were 100-

....
.'

... -·

(~
I

DAVID WELLS

Wells
throws
perfect
game,
Yankees
w.I n 4 0

•

"'

..

~ lllllilwi ....illlliiltll·

' ;.. ..

GETTING AGRIP on the loose basketball Is the objective lor Chlca- .
•
go's Ron Harper (left) and Indiana's Antonio Davis In the second hall
In Clnclnnati,.Whtre tile I'
National League
BOWLED OVER - The Cincinnati Reds' Joe
of Sunday's Eastern Conference championship series opener In
Nunnally (right) and Chicago Cubs catcher Scan
Cubs' 5-4 victory set the stage forthelr 10-1 win
Chicago, where the Bulls won 85-79. (AP)
' By RONALD BLUM
Sunday that clinched the series for the gueata. ..
Servala are bowled. over altar tlhe home plate collision In the first Inning of Saturday night's
(AP)
NEW YORK (AP) - David
NBA Eastern Conference finals begin Wells had been called a lot of things.
Perfect wasn't one of them.
Until Sunday.
Until he became' only the 13th
player in modem major league his- By JOE KAY
when he walked Weathers and Chns ERA. his worst mark against any
tQry to throw a perfect game.
CINCINNATI (AP) - No, Kerry Stynes and threw a wild p1tch. He fin- leum.
•
"Couldn't happen to a crazier Wooll didn't get another strikeout IShed with three walks overall.
Notes: Sammy Sosa is 7-for-11
guy. huh?" Wells sa1d after the .Yan- record. All he did was domma!e the
"I was workmg too fast," Wood career off Weathers with two homers.
P1ppen said. "We fell Ron !Harper) kees' 4-0 VICtory over the Mmneso- Cincinnati Reds with a cui finger and said. "When I faced Weathers and .. . Grace is 13-for-30 in his hi.st·sevBy CHRIS SHERIDAN
CHICAGO tAP) - They'll be could do a better job on Reggie ta Twins. "I'm Just going to cherish an undependable fastball.
went to 2-2. I was out of breath. I had en games with five homers . ... Reds
giVIng the MVP award to Michael I Miller) and give Michael more ener- · this for the rest of my life."
controlling partner Marge Scholl was
to
step off and take a breath."
All things considered. the Chicagy from an offensive standpomt "
He is hurty. perhaps overweight. go Cubs' record-selling rookie
Jordan today.
Cubs coaches and a trainer visit· bac k at the stadium Sunday for the
W1th thelf playmaker unable to Goofy. confrontational and maybe a 1mpressed in a different way Sunday. ed the mound in the sixth to treat first time Since she fell and brOke her :
Based on 'whal happened in Sunday's game. lhey could have g1ven it comfo rtably run the offense, the Pac- bll peculiar
Wood allowed only two hits in six Wood's finger. He got Boone on a hip on opening day. Schon is·using a •'
er&gt; turned 1nto an inept. bumblin~
And he's one of only two people shutout innings despite a small cut on swinging third strike to end his final walker.... Sean Casey was hitless in .
16 Scottie Pippen.
Right from the start, P1ppen con- bunch. And afte r the Bulls shook off to, throw perfect games in Yankee the index finger of his pitching hand, inning.
two at-bats, e~tending his slump to 0- .
frOnted Indiana point guard Mark their offenSive cobwebs. they were Stadium. baseball 's most famous helping the surging Cubs beat the
Terry Mulholland p1tched three for-21 .... Weathers nipped his glove
Jackson wilh 94 feet of m-your-facc on their way to a 1-0 lead in the best- ballpark. The other. Don Larsen, did Reds 10-1. Chicago moved to a sea- inmngs fur hJS firsl major league into the stands us he walked off the
defense. The rest of the Bulls fol- of-7 series.
it in Game S of the 1956 World son-high seven games over .500 with suve.
field following the Cubs' five-run
Tomght,
the
Utah
Jazz
try
to
take
Senes.
lowed his lead as Chicago beat the
its sixth victory m seven games.
Weathers gave up all live runs in mth. He asked for 11 back and the
Both went to the same school:
Pacers 85-79 '" Game I of the East- a 2-0 lead m their Western Confer·
Wood (5-2) fanned eight. coming the sixth after retiring the first two fans complied.
ence final when they play host to the Pomt Loma H1gh 10 San Diego.
em Con ference finals.
up two shy of Dwight Gooden's NL. bailers. He fell to 0-4 in five career
And both are carefree characters record ·of 41 strikeouts over three starts against the Cubs with an 11 .44
" I wanted to play Jackson. I !...os Angeles Lakers. The Jazz befudwho
love the nightlife.,
wanted to make him have to work,"
(See BULLS on Page S)
starts. He left after the sixth inning
"Two Point Loma Pointers pitch- because of the cut. which he got
mg perfect games," Wells said with while opening a soft drink can two Meigs softballers beat Alexander 5·2
. a laugh, puffing on a Monte Cris.,to days ago. and the Cubs' six-run lead.
cigar after laking Larsen's telephone
"Kerry did a very good job."
call in the clubhouse. manager Jim Riggleman said.
"I knew that. I understand he's "We've kind of goUen spoiled. We're
goofy. too," Larsen said from his expecting greatness every time out
home in Idaho. ''I'm glad for him." and this time we only gol very
came back in the bo!!om ufthe sixth
Wells (5-1) struck out I L throw- good."
By DAVE HARRIS
to close out the scoring.
·
ing 79 strikes and 41 balls 10 domiThe 20-year-old rookie found a Sentinel Correspondent
•
nating
from
stlrt
to
finish.
Laudermilt
singled.
and
stole
secSophomores
Amy
Hysell
and
•
way to dominate on an off-day. He
felt thar we would get the No.
~ TOM CANAVAN
"In the seventh inning. I started said the artificial turf magnified the Tangy Laudermih comb1ried to lire a ond. Kelly Gilkey reached una Spar·
• SECAUCUS, N.J. (AP) - Now pick."
gelling really nervous. 1 knew what heat - 77 degrees at game time .:.... no-hiner Saturday morning at the tan error driving in Laudermilt.
Another Vilncouver comblmltlon
tli:at the Li:Js Angeles Chppers have
was going on.'' Wells said. "I was
Meigs Marauders defeated Ale~ander G1lkey later scored on u ground out ,
No. I pick m the NBA Draft. was drawn lhird and discarded before hoping the fans would kind of shush and left him breathleos at 11mes. His 5-2 in TVC softball action.
. to give Meigs a 5-2 lead.
gin Baylor " going to play some Denver. wh1ch had the worst record a hllle bit. They were making me ner- slider was flat and his fastball inconHysell
p1tched
the
firsl
SJx
inmng,
Hysellloadlld the bases l)y waling
sistent. Only his curve worked with
at II -71 . sot the third p1ck with the vous.••
g roes.
the
first three batters to open the sev· ,
striking
out
e1ght,
but
walking
I
0.
regularity.
·
· ' That's one of the advantages of combination 1-5-11-14.
W1th 49.820 on hand for Beame
The Reds' radar gun gauged his Laudermilt pitched th.e final innmg enth inning, but Laudermil! came on
·nning the NBA Lottery. even if the
Toronto will pick fourth . Golden Baby Day. the ballpark was nearly
striking out two of the lhree bauers to put the fire oul. Tangy struck out
lippers did it somewhm by default State. which stood to lose its pick full It was hard to believe some funs fastball at consistently between 93 she faced. Six of Hysell's walks came the next two batters and ended the
because of a lrade if it finished first, lef1 af1er the eighth innmg to beat mph and 97 mph. orfset hy a change- in the final two innings.
Sunday.·
game by inducing t~e next bane~ to .
up that was 78-80 mph.
1 "Other teams would hke to move secund or th~rd . will select fifth. fol- traflic.
The L;Jdy Marauders mised·thcJr pop out to first.
"At least we won the game,"
lowed by Dallas. Sacramento,
j o that posilion and chances are we
Hysell picked up the win in rais''I" m sure there have been no-hit· Wood said. "I didn't have good record to 13-8 overall and I0-5 m the
n do something and get our player Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Boston, ters that have been pitched when stuff. My control wasn't where I like TVC's Ohio Division. Some records ing her record to 4-4 on the year with .
a d somethmg else also.'' said Bay- De1roit and Orlando. which w1ll have there were like 16.000 people 1n the
it to be. The curve really bailed me are· pnavailable because of make-up Laudermilt picking up the save.
1 . the Clippers' vice president of the final two p1cks
games. but it is believed the Me1gs is Meigs only had three hits, Price, ,
stands. It's nice to have one on a day
Utah has the option to take the when there's 50.000 people." said out of jams.''
bp..sketball operations. "If no~: we' ll
Abby Harris and Laudermih all had
Wood has permined only one run leading the Ohio Division. .
second Mas1c pick. but it must reach Yankees mana~er Joe Torre. who
lt•t take the player we want
Meigs
scored
m
the
boltom
of
the
smgles.
and e1ght hits over hJS last three
~ Baylor said the Chppers have a a decision I0 d~ys before the draft.
Meigs will host Nelsoqvitle-York
watched Larsen's game from the · starts. a 22-inning span that has lirst inning. Amber Vinmg w~lked
Th" marks the second time a upper deck '" lefl. " We'll keep
JJtUY good 1dea who they will dr.1fl
and Sha~non Price followed with a today.
on June 24 in Vancouver. but he Canadian team has finiShed first m remembenng what Beame Babies made him a curiosity and a drawing single. Vining scored on a Brooke lnnin11IJ!lllli
the louery and had to sive up the top mean from now on - even though card.
iwould not 1dent1fy him.
.
000-002-0=2-0-1
The Reds promoted Wood 's Williams squeeze play and Price Alexander
' t The two players most 1denti lied pick. Toronto won in 1996. but the Boomer is the farthest thing appeamnce
Meigs
carne
into
score
on
s
pu,~sed baiL
.
201.·002-x=S-3-1 .;
and ended up selling .
~ NBA player personnel direc10rs as because of the same e~pansion
Batt.....
.
·Meigs
increased
the
lead
to
3-0
in
from a Beanie Baby."
.
,.;:
,!•
(
33.480 tickets. their best gate since
agreement. Philadelphia got the top
t~ 1mpac1 players are Arizona pomt
Alexander:·8randy Secoy (L) and ;
Wells tried to keep his mind occu- the season opener. Many of the fans t!k third inning_when Pnce walked.
~ard Michael Bibby and North Car- choice.
Mary Blair · ,
,, ·
:•
WWi sacrificed 10 second ' and •siOJe
pied. but his teammates tried to
The chances of a Vancouver num- avmd him. excepl for David Cone were cheering for Wood. who lied two.bases including home.
olina forward Antawn JamiSon.
Meig~:·
Amy
Hyselr
(W). Tangy •
Roger Clemens' m:uor lea sue record
, 1 Gelling the lop p1ck is a good start
ber coming up first were 104 out of and Luis Sojo.
Alexander scored a pair of runs in LaudertlliJt (7,'&amp; savel and Amber i
with 20 strikeouts. on May 6 and
Itt he off.season for the Clippers. who 1.000.
the si~th inmng on three walks and u Vinin'g, Casey Sanford (6) '
~
"After the ..eventh inning. I told
pflsted the thirJ worst record ( 17-65)
"It's a shame that we weren'l eli- him it was time to break out the struck out 13 more last Munday in pair of lielders choices. But Meigs
, 11 the league this season and then gible for No. I: · Grizzlies coach Bri- knuckleball.'' Cone said. " He let out Arizona to set a m;uor ~~~ue mark
an Hill said. "We're very happy with a big laugh. That told me he needed for striketluts in two games.
frred coach Bill Fitch
Lines of K's kept track of his
. t B.ay lor has no t1metahk for No. 2 It's going lo sivc us an oppor- it. ..
strikeouts
in more than a dozen locar~lacing Fitch. addmg hts replace· tunity to go in a couple of different
When Wells came back to the tions around the stadium.
ment won't hO\·e to be "' place m directions. Most importantly, we get dugout after the eighth. Cone so11d he
"He's amazing because he sets
a young player who can add to our was disappointed not to see any
~~ for the draft
the homelown funs pulling for him."
: " I thmk the player we have m team right away or perhaps we can
knucklers.
sa1d
Mark Grace. who homered :md
nSmd I think the coach would agree use the pick to add a veleran tu an
"You ain't shown me nothin','' drove in three runs. "It's fun to play
v(ith.'' said Baylor. who also would already young team "
Cone told him.
behind him. Everybody's excited. the
The last NBA team to win the lotJike to re-sign free agenls Loy Vaught
Wells, who went to a three-ball other' team is gawking. the umpires
~md Isaac Austin. "Lookins at our tery after having the worst record in
count on four baners, gave up his an: gawking and we're still gawking.
'team. the way our team is set up. I the league was the New Jersey Nets only hard-hit ball in the eighth, Ron This kid i• special."
· in 1990. There have been three teams Coomer's sharp one-hopper up the
think he would agree."
"You know he's good beca~se
: One other thing that can:t be with 70 losses m the regular season middle that second baseman Chuck (Bret) Boone was giving him his
denied is the Clippers were ·lucky since the lottery started and each now - J:(noblauch
knocked
down. stamp of approval in the dugout,"
has failed to win it. with the Nuggets Knoblauch recovered and had plen- said Eddie Taube~see, who had one
~nday.
.
· • The top pick fell into !helf laps joining Dallas (11 -7 1 in ' 93) and the ty of lime to throw out his former ofthetwosinglesoffWood. " He was
WheP the Vancouver Grizzlies had to Clippers !12-70 in 1987).
sining there saying. 'This guy's
"Well. given our past history in teammate.
f~eit it as part of their· e~pansion
"That's a reaction-type play." • good.· And he doesn 'tlike to give the
this thing. I would have been sur- Knoblauch said. " It hopped up in my other guys credit"
o~reement.
' Under that agreement, neilher prised had we had the No. I p1ck." face. ..
The
• Thyroid
. , Cubs. were good al I around on
Toronto nor Vanco'lver can get the Nuggets v1ce president and general
Wells got a standing ovation as he Sunday as they put lot!elher the If
top pick until ne~t year. If ~ith~r of manager Dan Issei said. " We ' llloo~ came out to pitch the final inning. and biggest offensive game since April
their four-number combmnuons at everything. When you win I I the cro~d stayed on Its feet. Jon 10. The Cubs scored five runs off
OFFJCE HOURS:
~
~me up in the lot!ery. til~ owner is games. it's obviouryotrneed a 101 of Shave~~~ a routine fly to nglipaviCI'- David Weathen (2·3) in the sixth. all •
automatically n:legated lo the second help.''
MON..fRI 8:3N:OO, WED 8:30-NOON
Valenun struck out.
with two outs, to give WOOl! the big.
I ' L
There are four othet highly
PICA.
•
Aet:tpllng N.w Pllliall
II all came down 10 Pat Meares. cushion. Jose Hernandez had a lwoThat:s what happened Sunday regarded players ilJ the draft: Vince He took a called strike. then lofted a run single in the mlly and later
when the first combination 14-6-12· Carter of North Carolina and Paul high. lazy fly to Paul O'Neill in right. added a two-run homer.
13) was dmwn. It belonged to the Pierce of Kansas at the swing posiWells pumped his left fist twice at
But the spotlight was on Wood,
tion, Raef LaFrentz of Kansas at for- the ground after the final out.
Grizzlies.
who had never faced the Reds before.
· So a second combination was ward and Pacific 's Michael
" 'Thts is great JolJ!e! This is Three .0 r them took. called third
~rawn. The combination 3~5-9- 1 I Olowokandi at center.
great!' He must have said it six strikes the fin! time they faced hini.
was Clippers' property, and n gave
When the Clippers won the IOIIery times," catcher Jorge Posada rememWood. who walked only one batin 1988. they picked Danny Manning
them the top choice.
:
bered.
ter in his last two startS. began strug"I wasn't silting up there sweat- of Kansas with the No. I choice.
~
(See GEM on Pllp 5)
gling with his control in the third.
ing or anyt~ing;'' Bay for said. "I just

g~e

Cu~s

Bulls notch 85-79
win over Pacers

L.A. Clippers draw

cruise past Red·s 10-1 ·

Hysell, Laudermilf
combine for no-h-itt~r ~.~

f)rst .pick in NBA draft
league's -lottery

In
~

c

• •

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Aaron
Sele has always come with a warning: If he ever ~tays healthy and
learns to get that curveball over the
plate, watch out
It may be time to watch out.
Looking like the complete power
pitcher who never quite panned out
in Boston. Sele struck out nine for his
major leag~~~:-leading seventh victory on Sunday a.~ the Tex;t.' Rangers
beat the Cleveland Indians 1-0.
" Aaron was in control the entire
game," Texas manager Johnny Oates
said.
Sele (7-2). snapping off his overhand curve at will, allowed five hits
and walked two in eight innings, outdueling Bartolo Colon and falling one
strikeout short of his sellson hjgh.
Sele. who has two shutouts, threw
115 pitches and lowered his ERA to
2.64. John Wet!eland ignored a
throbbing wisdom tooth aiKI pitched

iJLI//~

MD .

.

Boaftl CertJfled Internal Medicine
• Stress Testa ·.
ECHO Cardiography
• DlabeUc Mangement

• Cholesterol Caanulng
• Blood PreiiWJ
Dllordtrs
• Crftlcal Cant Medicine

'

304·675· 7700

Medical OOlcC Bldg. P.520 Va11ey Dr.
Sutte 212-Pt.
wv. ··

t
I

ond playoff goal with three seconds
left in the penalty.
"We got some boUnces today,"
Gill said . "That helped us get some
pucks behind. (}..good."
•
Lapointe's third goal. at 11 :03 of:
the second. came off a l"eed from·
Yzerman .
"This was the type of game where
bo!h teams take a while to get going.
but they got the quicker start. · Yurman said. "We were still sloppy early in the second. and it cost us."
Fedorov missed Dc;tr01t's first 59
games th is sea.son because of a contract dispute. When the Red Wings
linally matched an offer Fedorov
received from the Carolina Hurricanes. they pa1d him a $14 milhon
siening bonus. His salary is S2 mil·
lion.

Colon (3-2), who was as brilliant as
Sele. Colon allowed five hits in eight
innings with three .w alb and five
strikeouts - three of them looking
The 22-year-old ha.~ allowed three or
fewer runs in seven of nine starts and
lowered his ERA to 2.48.
Juan Gonzalez singled with one
out to stan the Rangers' rally. Second
baseman David Bell thnew wide to
second on Will Clark '• grounder, get·
ling the forcewl! · but losing the
chance for an inning-ending double
play. After Lee Stevens walked.
Elster deliven:d the decisive hit.
"If we lum the double play there.
maybe we're still playing," Bell
said.
Sele retired seven straight. four on
strikeouts, before Kenny Lofton's
bunt single with two outs in the
eighth. Third baseman Fernando Tatis
ended .the inning with a fabulous
catch on Omar Vizquel's roul popup.
reaching rar into the stands ror the

a 1-2-3 ninth for his 12th save.
" I' m taking medication and it
kicked in about game lime," said
We!!eland, who'd slept aboll! S I12
hours the previous two nights. "I flat
out didn't feel it out there."
David ·Justice nied out. Jim
Thome struck out and Mark Whiten
grounded out against Wetteland in the
ninth.
The AL West-leading R_angeJ11
snapped a two-game losing streak
and ended Cleveland's three-game
winning 5treak. The Indians' offense
spuuered again after a rare breakout
in a 10-3 victory Saturday. They had
only three runners in scoring position
ugai ns! Sele.
"I don't know that he thn:w 100
many balls with his curveball," lndi·
ans manager Mike Hargrove said.
" He kept it down and it was effective.••
Kevin Elster drove in the only run
with an RBI single in the fourth off

grab.
"You need plays hke that IQ wm
a I -0 game," said Sele. traded by tbe
Red Sox after winning onlr 20 games
the past two seasons

When it became obvious thai
Colon and Sele were on lop of their
games. the Indians and Rangers were
forced to try manufacturing runs.
Lofton and Rangers leadoff hitter
Tom Goodwin both tried delayed
steals of second but were sent back
because time had been called.
With Lofton on first in the Indians' third. Vizquel hit a swingmg bunt
to left that landed foul just past third
base. Had it landed a few feet to the
right, Lotion might have scored from
first.
"That would have been nice, but
that wasn't really what I was lrying
to do." V1zquel explained. "I was try·
ing to hit the ball to the shortstop. I
wa.~ trying to move the game around
a lillie bit, but it didn't work."

The fourth inning provided more
baserunning adventures. Brian Giles
singled with lwo outs and stole second, but neither shortstop Elster nor
second baseman Luis Alicea covered
lhe base.
Catcher Bill Hase lman was
charged with an error when his throw
sai led ri~ ht over the bag into center.
but the official scorer later changed
the call and gave the error to Alicea.
Giles was stranded at third.
Vizquel and Lofton also were
hoth doubled up when they strayed
too Far on ny-bull outs. Lotion was
doubled off first by Gonzalez on
Vi zquel's lmer to nght in the third.
and Vizquel was doubled off second
by Goodwin on Thome's nare to center lO the sixth.
Notes: The Rangers' Gonzalez
failed to drive in a run for the second
straigl'1t game and remams stuck on
50 RB Is. He snapped an 0-for-13 skid
with a single in the fourth .... From

the unheard-of department: Five·
time Gold Glove shortstop Vizquel,
whose 70-game errorless streak end·
ed last week on a double play relay.
booted a grounder in inlield practice . •
His teammates booed and mzzed him ;
loudly. . . Cleveland nght-hander ·
Dw1ght Gooden 1s sCheduled to make
hiS last rehab start for Triple-A Buffalo on Monday at Richmond. Good- •
en. recovering from biceps tendinitis •
in his throwing ann, must come off
his 30-day rehab a."1gnment June 3.
The Indians are discussing using ',
Gooden, signed to a $5.675 million.,
two-year contract, as a long reliever ;
when he returns.... After Tmvis Fry- •
man pubhcly questioned the leadership on the Indians, Shawon Dunston ·
took infield pracllce behind him at ~
th1rd base. Dunston IS still a potent
offensive player who does not have,
a position because Bell beat him out
defensively at second ba.-;e.

MfiiJ••• ~(C=o=nt=in=ue=d~fro=m~Pa~g=e~4)------------------------------------~----~--~--------~--------------------------------

died Shaquille O'Neal and the Lakers 112-77 in Game I on Saturday.
, "That's something we looked at
coming into this series. " Pippen said
of defending Indiana's point guard.
"(Jackson) really makes ·that team
click. and with ball pressure and my
size. it sort of limits the offensive
opportunities that he can have and
also allows us to pressune the ball and
not let him see our defense."
It was a scheme for which Indiana
had no answer. And as the Pacers pne-

Wel,s·' 'gem...

pare to play Game 2 on Tuesday expect you to win the championship.
''I'm sun: (the voters) expect the
night. they'll undoubtedly be wondering what wrinkles the Bulls will elevation of my game to the point
come up with ne~!.
where we get the sixth championship
In the meantime. Jordan will -and that is part of my challenge."
receive his fifth Most Valuable PlayJordan certainly looked like anyer award.
thing but an MVP as he struggled
"I feel proud about it." Jordan through a 1-for-9 first half. even
said. "But rig.ht now I can't say I've · missing three or four layups.
accomplished everything I wanted to
· But he was his old self in the secaccomplish. It puts mon: pressure on ond half, scoring 25 or his 31 points
me and this team when you win !hi~ as Chicago went ahead and stayed
type of award. because now they ahead.

l.::&lt;c;:::on!!::tin::::ue::::a~rro;:::m::.;P:.:aali::e:.:::4&gt;~...-_,...-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Wells' teammates swarmed him,
and the hero was carried off !he field
by Bernie Williams and Darryl
Strawberry.
By the time he made it into the
clubhouse. three magnums or champagne alread) wene on the carpet in
front or his locker. Comedian Billy
Crystal was there to g&amp;;l his ticket stub
signed.
"I got here late. What happened?"
Crystal said to'him.
O'Neill was retldy to· joke with
Wells. too: as they came off the field.
"What should I do with this ball?
Throw it in the standsT' the outfielder said to Thrne.
·O'Neill then decided to play it
straight with Wells. saying merely he
had a present ror him.
"Boomer might have rn:aked if I
asked him." 0' Neill said.
Thene h!ld been I 2 perfect games.
including Larsen's gem, since 1900

" l told Michael he'd have io use
his energy on the offensive end," Pippen said. "I was gelling tired on the
defensive end."
The Pacers maile only one run in
the second half, pulling to 66-65 early in the fourth before Jordan m:1de
three showstopping plays.
The first was a \l(enving drive,
mcluding a crossover dribble .
through three defenders for a layup
that made it 70-65. The second was
a backdoor cut behind Jalen Rose for
a reverse layup and three-point play,
and last · was a jumper with 5:13

remaining for a nine-point lead.
And ·on a day wh~n Chicago was
playing defense so well , even lhat
margin was too much to overcome.
Jordan had five of Chicago's 19
steals, and Pippen - whO' guarded
Jackson moSI of the game - had
four. Chicago forced the Pacers into
26 turnovers to overcome a 1-for-9
shooting performance hy Pippen and
u 2-for-11 afternoon for Toni Kukoc.
"It's scary to' see how good Scottie is," Ste.,ve Kerr said. "He's 1-for9 and scores four points and totally
dominated the game. That's why he's

on~ of the greatest players ever. He
doesn '! ·have to score to control the
game."
Jackson had seven of Indiana's
turnovers and Rik Smits and Dale
Davis added four each.
"There's only one Sco!tie Pip- ,
pen," Jackson said. "He did a great
JOb. It as uncharacteristiC of us to turn
the ball over that many t1mes."
The Pacers know they will have IQ
make adjustments in Game 2 to deal .;
with the Bulls' defense.
•·
"We anticipated wron.:." Miller.
smd.
:-

- several others previously ~iewed "He came back with another one that
as perfect. such as Harvey Haddix's was maybe a i:ouple of inches outexira-inning effort. wen: dropped .' side. The way the game was going,
from the list a few yean agQ by the it-would have been very difficult not
records commit!ee.
to call it a strike. He dido 't give in to
Wells, who got only his rourth me."
career shutout in 219 starts, c~me in
Wells, who shook off Posada just
with a S.23 ERA, and his consisten- twice. went to three balls three other
cy was certainly in question. On May times. He struck out Valentin looking
6 in Texas, he nearly blew a 9-0 lead at a rull -count pitch in the third. He
and tersely flipped the ball to Torre then came back from a 3-0 count to
when he was lifted in ari eventual IS- retire Malt Lawton on a popup on a
13 win.
3-1 pitch leading off t~e fourth. In the
But Wells bounced back last Tues- seventh. Wells went to 3-2 on Brent
day against Kansas City. winning 3- Gates, who came up before Molitor.
2. He retired his last 10 butlers in that
Within minutes of lhe final o~t
one. and Sunday's game gave him an Wells had already donated his capt~
AL-record 37 in a row and 44 of 4S. the Hall of Fame. He wa~asked if he
Wells and 'Ibm: sa~d the key to the would give anything else.
perfect game came m the seve~th.
Perfection hadn't changed his perwhen Wells struck out Paul Mohtor sonality.
.
after falling behind 3-1.
"Send me," he shouted. "My
"He painted me a good fastball soul!"
away." the seven-time All-Star Sllid.

Scoreboard
b:IF.CD \ - II 1 tl~· t• m.

Baseball

t

RANQALL F..HAWKINS

Osgood sa1d. "They were a desperate team, an&lt;l we waited too long to
start turning i't on •·
Marc Bergevin, doing a nice JOb
of keepmg the puck inside the blue
line. fired a long shot toward Osgood
which Courtn.all denected high into
lhe net on the goalie' s stick side at
I :44 of the second.
''They say. the fourth game IS •
always the hardest to win," Bergevin
sald. "That's true. and you saw that
today...
Eastwood's tirst playoff goal went
between Osgood's legs for a 2-0 lead
at 2 58.
·
The Red Wings. who have eliminated St. Lou1s from lhe playotTs
eachofthe last twoyears,gotcaught
with too many men on the ice at 7:24.
Gill, from the top of the slot. blasted
a slap shot past Osgood for his sec-

-sele outduels Colon in leading Rangers _
past Indians 1-0

....,

•

Fedorov. whose contracl calls for
it much harder on ourselves today.''
Detroit captain Steve Yzerman said. him to collect the bonus if the Red
Fourteen teams have come back Wings reach the conference finals,
from a 3-1 deficit to win a best-of-7 was not much of a factor Sunday. He
series, mo.•t recently the EdmoniOn had two takeaways and two giveOilers over the Colorado Avalanche aways. The St. loUIS defense shadin the first round of this year's play- owed his every move and knocked
Fedorov down almost every time he
offs.
"The pressure is still more on us touched the puck.
"We never got anything goin£ on
than it is on them." said Geoff Courtthe
power play.'' sa1d Fedorov. who
nail. whose goal triggered a 3-0 St.
Louis lead in the second period. had four of Detroit's 30 shots on
"They've still only got to win one." Fuhr. "We weren't getting enough
, Mike Ea.&lt;;twood and Todd Gill also shots on goal."
Detroit outshot lhe Blues 8-7 in
scored for St. Louis. A shorthanded
the
first period and seemed to be m
goal by Martin Lapointe wa.' the only
mistake Blues goaltender Grant Fuhr control. But the Blues, who scored 16
r.oais 10 their firs!·rOuAd sweep Ol
made against Detroit.
The longe1 St. Louis prolongs the Los Angeles. began swarming DetrOit
series, the longer Detroit forwatd goaltender ChfiS Osgood from the
Sergei Fedorov must wait to collect start in the second penod.
"We just didn't play well ,"
a Sl2 million bonus.

I befone today. maybe they're half
that now," St. Louis coach Joel
Quenneville said. " It's stillnol easy.
especially with the success they'ne
had in our building."
The Red Wings-Blues series is the
last one still going in the second
round. The winner will advance to the
Western Conrerencc finals against the
Dallas Stars staning on Sunday. The
Stars advanced by beating Edmonton
2- 1 Saturday night to wrap up their
series in five games.
1n the Eastern Conference finals,
Buffalo will open at Washington on
Saturday.
·
The Red Wings. trying to become
the first team since 1992 to repeat a.•
Stanley Cup champions, won games
3 and 4 in St. Louis la.•i week.
"We don 'I feel uncomfortable in
that building. but we certainly made

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When 1 w.1 ~ P,rl)wlftP, 1jp m y d.l d t.1ur,ht nlC' th;'l t 10m t~f' tl "' '.of FJt 1•, ,,,. , ' ' .,,, . trJ •• to /')' II lt0.t':i h ,, ,..tl 1 10ur bodr II~ N,l \
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�~y.May18,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The DaHy Sentinel • Page 7

Big print books are included in
new volumes at Racine Library
Several "big print" books are
included in over 60 new volumes
which have been added to the Racine
Bmnch of the Meigs County District
Public Librwy.
Titles of tbe new big print books
now on the Racine library's shelves
are Booth by David Robertson;
Upstan by Catberine Cookson: Mur·
der at the National Gallery by Margaret Truman; The Senator's Wife by
Karen Robards, and Spring Fancy by
L Spencer.
New adult fiction books which are
included in the added volumes are
Switcheroo by Olivia Goldsmith;
You Belong to Me by Mary Higgins
Clark; Legacy of Silence by Belva
Plain; Swimming to Catalina by Stuart Woods; Twanged by Carol Hig·
gins Clll(k; Song oftbe River by Sue
Harrison; Interview with the Vampin:
by Anne Rice: Murder on the Prowl
by Rila Mae Brown: With This Ring
by Amanda Quick: Mark of the
Assas.iin by Daniel Silva: Message in
a Boule by Nicholas Sparks; The
Long Road Home by Danielle Steel
and Masque by F. Paul Wilson.
New juvenile fiction volumes now
on the shelves are What Are Seasons?
and What is an Ocean?, both by Chris
Arvetis: Hooray for Diffendoofer

'
REV. MARK MORROW

·Rev. Morrow named full-time pastor
·of First B
_ aptist Church in Middleport
The Rev. Mark Motrow is now the
l ull-time pastor of the First Baptist
Church in Middleport, located ~I the
·: comer of Sixth and Palmer Streets.
For the past four years. he has
-been a bivocalional paStor al the
-church. He was ordained in 1984.
became a bivocational pa~tor in 1988.
and has always had as his goal a full
time pastorate.
·
"I am excited about the change. It
, is a dream come true." commented

the minister. who described.the decision as one of faith for himself and
the church.
The Rev. Mr. Morrow has now left
the business which he started with
two other men in Mariclta so that he
can devote full time to the ministry.
He and his wife, Vicki, live in
Syracuse. Their son, Malt, will be a
senior this fall at Marietta College
where he is majoring id sports med-

icine.

Day by Dr. Seuss: Katy No Pocket by
E. Payne: Mauhew and the Midnight
Pilot by Allen Morgan and Hey!
What's That Sound? by Veronika
Charles.
A wide variety of subject matter is
covered in the newest shelf additions
in the field of non-fiction for adults
at the Racine facility. Included in the
new books are Ancient Civilizations
by Timothy R. Robert~; Oxford Com·
panion to English; The Guide to
Investing- for Current Income by
David L. Scou; Military Insignia by
William Fowler: Avon by Bud
Hasti n: ~portunities in Welding
Careers by Mark Roush: The'Gen...ngs. a User's Guide by Christopher
Hobbs; 1998 North American Coins
and Prices; Stand Hunting for White·
tails by Richard Smith; Rick Steve's
Best of Europe; Family Adventure
Guide, Ohio. by.Kristi Zimmeth: The
Guide to Investing in Bonds by
David Scou: The American Dream:
the 50's; Sports by Allen Ric~llf'l)son ;
Emergencies by Linda PeterSon;
Venison Cookery; Still Me by
Christopher Reeve; Serge It ih ad
Hour or f,.ess by Andy Cummins;
Standard Catalog of U. S. Stamps;
New England by Anne E. Wright;
The Complete Scholarship Book;

90

Clean late Model Car• Or
Truckl, 1990 Models Or Newef,

Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 Eall-

ern Avtnu~ . Gallipolis.
Female Quaker parrot, at least

tyr. old. 304-576-24-4-4.

Plumbing; It's Easy 10 P!ay Disney;
Gieat Ta•tc, Low Fat Grilling; Cabinetmaking: Hand Tools, and Snakes
by Richard D. Bartleu.
Aciditions to the juvenile non-fiction seciion are Billy, lhe·Kid by John
Hamilton; The Detroit Lions by Bob
ltalia: 1900's, The First Decade by
Mwgaret Sherman; Tbe Search for
Gold by Nicola Barber; Cleveland
Cavalie(S by Bob Iealia; Trash 1 Trash'
Traih! by Shelly Nielsen: Elizabeth
_Cady Stanton by Lucille Davis:
Fierce, Strong and Snappy by But·
terfield; Stonehenge by Wendy Ma.~s;
The United States Air Force by
Michael Green; The Abortion Baule
by Felicia Lowenstein; Astronauts by
Tami Deedrick, Margaret Mead by
Susan Saunders; Incredibly Awesome Crafts for Kids; Hurricanes and
Tornadoes by K~ith Greenberg and
The Kid's Science Book by Robert
Hirschfeld.
The Racine Branch located at608
Tyree Blvd. is open from 12 noon to
8 p.m.. on Mondays and from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m .. Tuesdays through Satur;
days. Supervisor of the branch is Norma B Hawthorne. Patrons with ques'
lions on the facilities services may
call 949-8200.

· MoJTOw has a master's degree in
pastoral counseling from Ashland
Theological Seminary. He has had a
Sunday morning radio program on
WMPO with the 'Rev. Les Hayman
for eight years. Tbe program is called
"Common Ground."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The held by the Dolly Sinatru Lodge of away i_n an ambulance: Rushed to
MoJTOw wa~ ~KC~~tly elected president of the Middleport. Ministerial •·Ma" was standing room only. The the Sons of Italy in Palm Springs. the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center by a
meal was potluck.
reminiscences came pouring out.
family employee, Mrs. Sinatra got·
Association.
And when the Rev. Bill Faiella
Mary Sorrentino, founder of Sor· there in time to hold her husband's
asked hundreds of fans on Sunday rentino's SeafOod House. a Palm hand. "She was by his side when he
what Frank Sinatra meant to them. Springs restaurant that Sinatra fn:- died," Deutsch told the Daily News.
the answers came back in shouts: quented, said she will always rememDoctors pronounced Sinatr-d dead
"generosity,"
"comfort,"
''humor,"
ber
how
he
used
to
come
in
and
go
in
the
emergency room at 10:50 p.m..
By Alden Waitt,
gain at the expense of the animals' the Do~ Warden, Bill Dye, 992-3779.
"warmth."
"celebration."
into
the
kitchen
to
greet
the
cooks
and
an
hour
and 20 minutes after authorPresident
well-being: and those who commil However, if the Humane Agent is
Fans
rushed
to
buy
COs
of
his
waiters.
.
ities
rei:eived
the 911 call. He was 82.
Meigs County
acts such us withholding food for an called 10 answer a complaint on a cru••J plan to put a linle plaque on the
After word spread of the death of
Humane Society
animal. Prosecution could result in elty is.•ue, she can and will make note music and videos of his movies.
More
nocked
to
the
star
oh
the
Hoi·
stool
he
sat
on.
I
think
it
will
say
'The
the
man considered to be one of the
Most of you may have read in The lines, imprisonment, and loss of the of dogs at large or those without
lywood
Walk
of
Fame
honoring
his
Voice,'
butl'lllet
my
boys·choose."
greatest
pop music stylists of all time,
Daily Sentinel that Carol Dye Lem- animal(s)_
licenses and be in contact with the
musiche
has
two
others
for.teleSorrentino
said.
.
record
and video stores were
ley, dispatcher with the Pomeroy
There are situations thai are NOT Dog Warden. The licenses are so
The lodge, formerly known as the swamped with cusiomers. _
Police Department, assumed her within the Humane Agent's purview. inexpensive in this county that no one vision and movies.
They
left
notes.
cards,
wreaths,
Palm
Springs Lodge of the Sons of
The Virgin Mega&lt;tore on the Sun·
duties as the Meigs County Humane If you find a possum in your cellar or ha• an excuse not .to pu~ha..e them.
casino
chips,
pennie.&lt;
and
even
cigaItaly,
changed
its
name
in
1985
with
set
Strip set up a special three-shelf
·Society's Humane Agent on May I. a bat behind the couch. remember And proceeds go toward the upkeep
rene
buns
piled
upon
the
star.
Bou-...
Sinatra's
pennission
to
use
his
mothdisplay
of Sinatra movie and concert
This position, funded · that the possum and bat are consid- of the Meigs County Dog Pound:
videos on Friday afternoon. quickly
through the County Commissioners, ered "wildlife," and call the Wildlife
If a cat or dog is reported to have quets, wreaths and vases of flowers er's name.
began
to
wilt,
but
the
sentiment
Lodge
president
Ed
Cucchiarella
selling
out of "High Society,"
the Meigs County Humane Society, Officer, Keith Woods, at ~2_. 3312. . biuen someone an~ need• to be quar·
remained.
said
the
membership
wanted
to
hold
"Oceans
Eleven" and ··From Here
and the United Fund for Meigs Coun- The Wildlife Officer, or Game Pro- antined, under 505.10 of the Gi:ner"FrankYour
music
will
be
the
an
event
for
.tbe
people.
"Everything
To
Eternity."
for which SinatrJ won
ty, is a major step forward for our lector, is mandated by section al Offenses Code, a report should be
•county. Now. we will have someone 1513.13 oflhe code to enforce all made to the Health Department with- legacy that generations yet unborn else is so private and Sinatra wa~ Mr. an supponing actor Academy Award •
":They've been selling like hot'
' whose job it is to focus on enforcing laws pertaining to the laking, pos- in twenty-four hours. The Health will remember you by," said one Palm Springs for SO years," Cuehandwriuen
note.
chiarella
said.
cakes."
salesman Phil Hansen said
the Ohio Revised Code laws about session, protection, preservation, Commissioner orders than the animal
Sinatra
also
left
$70
million
10
Also
Sunday,'
details
emerged
Sunday.
· the treatment of nonhuman beings, management, and propagation of all be quarantined in a pound or kennel
Downstairs in the IJ!Usic section,.
• 'both domestic and fann animals.
wild animals. That' s quite a lot for at the expense of the owner or har- S150 million to help abu,.,d children. about Sinatra's final hours, including
the
New
York
Post
n:ported
inday.
a
repon
that
his
wife
wa•
dining
at
Karl
Ritter. 44, wa.• bolding three ·
The Cruelty Investigator/Humane one person to manage, particularly borer:
Fonner
Sinatra
assistant
Artie
Funair
·
M_orron_'!_
Res_caurant
in
LOll
_Angeles
..Sinalra
CDs,.trying to decide which~­
Educator (or Humane Agent. for during hunting season. Why not . The Humane Agent will be -worktold
th~ewspaper
lllat
the
singer
w1th
fnend•
when
he
wa•
stric~en
to
buy.
, . ~hort) answers calls -about-v.iolations----auemptto·lure the possum-ur bll.tout ing closel~th-a~ olljcials and
'' I figured I'd end up jumping oh
of Section 959.13, Cruelty to Animals yourself before calling the Wildlife they will certainly be helping each spelled out the donation in his will, with a he~rt attack Thursday night. .
Mrs. Smatro learned of the prob- the bandwagod soon," said' Riner,
"(GC 13376). In part, this section Officer?
ocher out from time to time. These are angered over the abuse he saw.
"At
first,
he
wanted
to
break
the
fern
at the restaurant ·and was taken who never owned Sinatra music
; reads: "(A) No person shall: (I) Tor·
Barking dogs fall .under General all difficult, stressfui jobs. Think
legs
of
the
abusers,
''
Funair
told
tlie
to
her
Beverly Hills hof11C by pro· before. "He's definitely tbe voice uf .
.. lure an animal. deprive one of nee.- _ Offenses Code 505.90, and com- IWice before you impulsively make
Post.
"But
when
his
fla.•h
of
outrage
·
ducer
Armand
Deutsch, who sped his his geneMion."
·
: es.',ary sustenance, unnecessarily or plaints should be made to the Police an aa:usation that is unfounded. Too
A private funeral Mass is schedcruelly beat, needlessly -mutilate or Department branch closest to you. Or many calls are motivated not by con- wore off, he sat down to the practi· car through intersection~ ant;l ran red
cal
goal
of
helping
them
with
his
forlight.&lt;,
the
New
York
Daily
News
uled
for noon Wednesday, to be ofli., kill, or impound or confine an animal beuer yet, speak to the owner your- cern for animals but by disputes of
tune."
repo~ed
Sunday.
ciated
by Cardinal Roger Mahony.
..without supplying it during confine- self and spare the police, who have kind~. In the pasc, the Humane Agent
At the public Ma.s and memorial
Srnatra · had already been taken
"men! with a sufl)cienl quantity of higher-priority issues to manage. You wa• called to the home of a man who
:good wholesome food and water." can do this by sweetly telling the allegedly shoe his neighbor's cats. -The
·.. However, it is her -duty to enforce neighbor that You are certain that she real issue wa• that this man allowed
Public Notice
Public NoUce
ALL laws related to animals, other would like to know that the entire his kids to run their mud bikes all
PUBUC NOTICE
DlpartrMnt of Dtwtopment
" than wild ones.
.
neighborhood is _ at each other's over his neighbor's adjoining properThe
Tupper.
tor
funding under tha .
The ,Humane Agetn will be busy throats because her basset with the ty. And, while we are on that sort of Plalni/Ch•ater Wiler
Community
Devetopmant
.taking care of complaints abo.ut ani- operatic lungs howls all day while · misCommunication', let's admit' it-- Dl81r101 did not,monltor and Block Grant (CDBG)
Small
..mals belonging to county or munici- she is at work. Offer to walk the dog;. relationships fail. If you still .smart· report tor tht pretence ol CHI•• Program, • tldarally' :'.pal residents and is mandated by the see if there is anything vou can do to ing after tbe breakup, then call a ll'Hnlc, ttuorlde, antimony, tunded
program
beryllium,
nickel,
and
edmlnlalertd
by
lhe State,
court to prosecute oftenses. She will resolve this problem.
friend and talk, see a counselor, buy thallium In the public
Melga
County
11
eligible
tor
be working closely with the Office of
The police also· answer calls a self-help book. Do not accuse your drinking -•r ayallm from Flacal Year Ill CDaG
the Prosecuting Auomey and can be. regarding nuisance conditions, which c~·mate of abusing the dog if this is the entry point d11lgnatld Formula Alloclllon funding
reached there, at 992-6371 or at the refers to keeping animals and/or fowl untrue. False accusations of this sort P01 during tlnl July 1, 11197 In tht amount of 1111,000,
Pomeroy Police Station; 992-6411 .
in filthy. offensive, or conditions inju- are inexcusable, and there is the "cry to Dlcember 3t, 1997 Uma provldlnglhl county mttte
period ae- required by tho appllceble requlrementa.
The agent will prosecute those rious to the health of people living iri wolr phenomenon to think about.
Ohio Envlronmantal
The llrat ol two public
accused of abandoning animals, of or employed in the vicinity.
Protection Agency.
hllrlnga will be held May
fighting dogs or fowl: people careDogs running at large and dogs
Upon being notified ot 28, 1991 II 7:011 P.M. 811111
thll violation by th• Ohio Malga County ·courthoull, ·
lessly breeding animals for financial that are unlkensed are the concern of
Environmental Protection Common PIIH Courtroom,
Agency, 1111 water aupply · ,_,oy, Ohio to provldl
Wll requirec! 10 lmmldllllly cltlzena with the ·pertlnlnt
: have the drinking water lnfllnMtlon ebout tilt COBG
,.,.,-r
•
· analyzed lor the ebove- program Including an
'
.'
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN ·
totultake to $74 million.
te~ Scou Thomas in a tou~hing tale -ntlonld pll'lm81ei'L tlnl· ••planation of eligible'
Pomeroy
weler auppll•r win tako aollvttl.. and program
·'AP Enleqalnmenl Writer
Starring Tea Leoni as aTV news- of love, trust and equestrians.
Lawn and Garden
- LOS ANGELES - North Amer- woman whose career rises as fa.•t as
••ft's the kind of tilm likely to play IIepa · to enaure that requlremenla. The CDBG
adlquett
monitoring
will
be
Formula
program
cen
lunjl
lean theaters have probably seen the the comet falls, ··beep Impact" need- for many more weeks," said analy't ·P•rlormed In lhl future. broad ran11 of actlvltlll,
Outdoor Power ·
,; hist chart-topping tremor from "Deep ed a quick start to recoup its $80 mil· David Davis. vice president of invest- Pereone having qu11tlone 1Including:
economic
.Equipment repaired:
Impact" - the big lizard is nearly lion costs before "Godzilla" stomps ment bankers Houlihan. Lokey. r101rdlng thll Information, dhllopmtnt prOIICtl,
mowers, tillers, chain
into towns to officially kick otT the Howard &amp;• Zlikin. " It still has the plllll contact Robert strait, wller aupply,
here.
Horrla
at
31561
Bar
30
dr.INIII
lnd
Nnlllry· -The comet-is-coming s,aga "Deep summer movie seao;on Tuesday night. -potential to go throughout the sum- Road· R••devllle, Ohio.
saws, trimmers.
Improvement•, p.-rk
lmpuct" was the Nn. I film for the
. Robert Redford's "The Horse mer.··
Phone (740) 115-3315
aequlaltton
and
George Francis
' second cons.culive week. industry . Whisperer" made a strong debut .at
Romance also kepttbe Meg Ryan- (5) 11, 11, 20 31c
lmprovemanta, demolition
. :~naly•ts said Sunday. bringing in an
No. 2.. with S 14 million before large Nicola• Cage lilm "City of Angels"
ol unaale etructurea, and
9-4-Tues., Wed., Fri. ·
rehabilitation
of
estimated $23 million to boost its audiences. The film also stars Kris- in the top live after six weeks. The
Public Notice
- '
ll.llghborhood fecllltlea. The
angelic tale finished fourth with $3.2
PUBUC
NOTICE
octlvlttn
'111U81 be d11lgnld
million.
The
. T UJllllt'l to prlmo"ly benefit low and
All Alumni !rom
Platna/Ch .. ter Wllllr modlrat• Income pereona,
Rutland,
Pomeroy, Middleport. ·
Dlllr!CI did not monlto' tor aid In the pr•ventlon of
Meigs, Southern, Eastern and
the Pflllnct Ol aynthtllc alum and biiJJhl, or meet an
You Don't
To
:, Garden Club meeting ·
en and ribs: it was reponed. and servorganic Chlllllelll (SOCt) urgent n11d of the
Wahama Get Your llckets for
Dorothy Woodard hosted a recent ing will start at II a.m. There will be
community.
In tilt public drinking Be·RJch
To Start
PHIL DIRT &amp;THE OO'ZERS
1y111m during t 11117 11
Citizen• are encouregld
:; meeting of the Rutland Garden Club. a parade and Vf"« service,o; at I:30
. NOW AT
required by the Ohio 10 anend thle meeting on
Devotions were given by Woodard p.m. Spaces are available for flea Investing, But .You
Environmental
Protection
May
21,
teN
to
m1ke
ANDERSON
FURNITURE
_ _from Luke und a poem.about Earth market setups on the Commons withIUIIUIIOnl lnd to pi-ovlde
Pomeroy
• Oay titled • A Tree" was read. The out charge.
Start
being notltlld of public Input on varloua
COncert/Dance at Meigs H.S. Gym
'tree&lt;! and collect were given in unilhle vlotltlon by the Ohio ectlvltlll whtcb may be
Sunday, May 24, 9-12
Investing For A
Environmental Protection undertltUrl In lhll program.
. 'son. For roll call member.i named Announce birth
•a•noy,
the
water
-.upply
II
I
partlclptnl
will
liNd
Proceeds
to Operaflon Ult-01 &amp;
.flower starts they would like lo
Roger and Mary Leach of
Wll
requlrtcl10
havo
the
IUXIIIary
lldl
(lnterpr811r,
Chance To Be Rich.
lha
Wish Foundallon
Cheshire announce the birth of a
;:'mhange.
drinking lll.llvz-«1 for brallld or liPid matarlal,
,
A visit was given on a visit to the daughter. Briuney Noelle, A~ I 17, at
thl abova menttonod 11111tlvl llatenlng device,
paramotora. The wat•r other), due to 1 diNblllty,
Veterans Memorial Hospital Extend- the Holzer Medical Center.
aupplllr
will 18ko lllfl• lo pl1111- Otolie Kloft,
Call
Me
For
Details!
~ -ed. Care Facility. Pauline Atkins
Briuneywas 21 inches long and
onaure thet adequate Clerk ,prior to May 21; 1991
-"'reported ~n the regional meeting weighed seven pounds, five ounces-. m,onllorlng and reportlnt 81 114-992·21H In order 10
' ,where Scou Damitz of Bob's Green- Maternal grandparents are Peal and
will
bt portorm•d In the lriluNt thll your Rllda will
Karl Kebler III, CPA
lutur•. -- Pereone havlne be oceommodat•d. .The
' ,houses spoke on bedding plants and Linda Edwards, Long Bollom, and
qu .. tlon• on lhla Mtlgl County ~urthouN
Investment and Tax Consultant
' Pat Holter did an arranging demon- paternal grandparents are Donald
18", 31t~m
lnformaekHI, )11M-. -.ct Ia 11&amp;1dl t padl nibil.
&amp;lration. Woodard read a Gardeners and Dorothy Leach of Cheshin:.
740-992- n1o
Robtrt ...,.,. 311111 a. 30
Wltlllh'l com~ w11 be
Maternal great-grandparents are
:. Creed from Ideal~ magazine.
Roed• Rlldlvllle, Ohio. IOCiptod unUI 4:30 P.M.,
Phone (740) .a--3315.
Blancbe and the late Pearl "Penny"
Securities olf~,.d tblou&amp;h H.D. V&lt;st
••, 21, 1991, lnd lillY bt
..
'' 1'1111 barbec:ue
(5) 11, 1 tc
Edwards. Middleport, and Cora
l11lllld to tilt . . . . CoUnty
lnvetlment Securities In&lt;:. AdviiiOt)' /
Commiulanwa,
Pickup and Delivery
Se,.lcet olfered throup H.D. \bt
· '' Plans for a Memorial Day barbe- Folmer and the late Geocae Folmer.
Pullllc
NoUce
c..a.
~-. f'omtlor, Dlllo
'i:ue were made when the.CheSler Vol- Paternal sn:at-lflllldpu-ents are the Advii9&lt;J Se,.ic:eo, In&lt;. 6333 Nonh Stote
411'81.
992~9200
HOTJCa 0# PUILIC
llnteer Fire Department met necently late Joseph ft!ld Mwgaret Leach, and Hlpy 161, Founh Floor,ln&lt;l"l TX
Janot Howard, Prnldlnt
1 75038-{972) 870-«Xl0
. . . . . .Q
; !at the firehouse.
_
John Veith, and the late Dorothy Vei-..~
....... Counly lntlfldl to
CanlmlttiOIWI
;
The menu will include both chick· . th of Cheshire.
lpp_ly to tho Ohio (5)11,21,21,1991

Roofing

614-992·7643 .

'

'

.

992·5583

740• 742•34 U

9/4/TFN

,.
'
.
•Mowers •Chain Saw'a •.Weedeaters •Aillhorlzed
.
' Deller For:
·Briggs &amp;.Slralion ~MTD •Murray :M~C~IIough
·Echo •Ryobi ·~RDper •Rally'•Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI

3/t 21911 ttn

KRUPTCY

Tuppert Plaln1, Ohio 45783

~

- 740/985·3813~~

Chapter 7

, ....~:· ,,I:Jfl,l 4~:· pl•a~l,:: 1 culvert ln. •tock

~flo• Communications

"!·

' -'t

,,

'"Vour One $top
eo..puter Shop"
Give us ~ call for system r11palrs,
salu, upgrades or consulting.

I

-. JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE
113 w. 2ND ST. .
, ,

•.

-POMEROY, OH.
. •

·:•. &amp;14·992·5479

'·

.:L;::=::;:=:=;:-;:::;:;;:;;;.;;;;=;;:; ~;;;;;;;::::::::=:==&lt;1/1=3111~1mo;·::.
LIIDICIPI

J&amp;L SlDING.
INSU!.ATION
~- VinYl' s~ ~ Soffit • foKia • Seomleu
Gutter o'Roofing
• Replacement Wind-s
• Slalionory Docks
• Blown Insulation

..

...

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

DDIIIS

'
Computer Graphics
Designs

FULLY INSURED

. iDlES

All Landscaping &amp;
LI!Jwn Services
•Commercial
•Resldenll!ll
-Owner, Mickle Hollon
.Chester, Ohio'1•0-

• Goroges • Decb
24 x'24 Poll'luildlng '
slarling ...
_ .,c _
-; c599
~

140.992•2772 , ,

!RIB IIBVICI

•Trim
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45831
·StumP
1740) 367-0266
GrfndiOII
1-800·950-3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • lns.•Owner: Ronnie Jones

L----~~!!!!~~----.J

-==.::::::::::::=::= ~:;;:;:;:;~
~ -...:.Pu.::.b;;;;l,;.:lc;..;,.;.:.litl;.;,;.:c;;e__
CHESHIRE
t;~~- ~fr.'~fot-t.~ff.;~~ ·
00°
~
~ mcaNsnumo•- ~-··
.. 985-4422

.

LEGAl.
NOTICE
'b
RTD
• Sel•m
Townahlp
TrueiMH
P..,n 24 H""A
rl.
IY
.- otter tor ule 1-11188 Dodge
7 Days A Week
:; Tenk Truck. Model osooHot Breaktaat
• 1000 g~t. ~lalnl••~ tiUI
.IJIICI'It Sandwich,
- water tank· 311 Dodg••
·Hot &amp; _Cold
;: motor· all dNI art'llllt new
• radial. llolct a1 11. ·can be '1-...;..&amp;.unch Sandwich
: viewed by llllklng an
Including Pizza
•FPOintment with WIHIIm
12" $7.49 Deluxe
: J-Im bert, ·s tate Ro~lt 124
All Toppings
• Lengavllle, OH. St•!ld bid
Collin Orders Accoplitd

fil.11:

ill".

1/A

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
· •
II'~• Garages! Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding 'f~:
C
1 &amp; R fd f f
ommercla
ee ent a
· ~iii
. ·,_,,
"" - 27 yre. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

t:;t .
~
.tn.
!'ti.ll,

.

740-992~3987 .
E. , ...
- rfH •t•trM•••

.P.hone
r:.

Owner: John Dean

Take the pain oUI of

•Masonry

painting, and let me

•General .
Commorclal and
Rnldantlal
FrH&amp;flmatH

No Job Too 81111111

Brian Morrison
- {740) 915-3948

~-

!1/111010.

. ROOFING
NEW·REP'I~
Glitters•
Downapouts

~ (5)f.n.11,310,

•

•
;

I

,
•

.1
)

,.UC NOTICI

I

949-2168
THE CARD
1 1/2 mile sou.J,!_l of
Tuppers Plains
.Now has Beanie
Babies- Still
Baseball-Football·
Basketball-Star TrackVideo Games &amp;
Rentals
74o-&amp;67-6092

-CARPET
PLUS ,

'

The 111nuiol rtpelill!•rm

.-o PF 1 tor the kibble
i-roundallon, lernor4. V.·
1 ,ulll, rn.tM, II _
Ifill......
rtor publlo lnapHtlon 11
i Itt lWei v. , . Llw ~.
' 111'/• . . . . . . . . . .......
~ Ohl• ,117···
1•urlflt reguler buiil•na

t

•'"""" ..... fllrltMI of 110

ldiYI . llllllltn~ent

I

)p~~lll

llh .... . llllllla.

(I} .. 7, .. t0, -11, 12,
.... "· 11, 11, 12111
I '

to

Re110111b,. ,.,..

Joe N. Sayre .

FREE ESTIMATES

..,

61.Wtl-5716
61.Wfl-7231

OPJfiiNI APRtL 1

Ohio River
~ - . Campgrounds
and
6:-.
..;_1
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
111
Gen. Merchandise.
New I Ulld Items. We
Buy • Sell • Trlldt: TOOII,
lllhlng fCIUip., TV'I,
CB'a, lleriOI - llltle bit
of nelyl""ng. Locltld
on Ohio Rlvtr Campo
grounda, St. Rt. 124.
R.clne, Ohio.
7411-141-1012

992-2

01110 liVER SEIVICE
74M4f·J006

· Umestone,
Gravel, San~.

Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

Top Soli,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVJU
•Room AddlUCHUI

•NiwGoragN
•Eiectrlell &amp; PlUmbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exteflor
Pointing
AIIO Concrete WCNfl
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG II
112-Q15

Pomeroy, Ohio

Tired of men? Tired of worry1ng

'

1·800-48 I ·6334.

•COMPUTER/FREELANCE•
Data Entry, Word Proceaslng,
And Position's! FleKible Hrsf Mo·
dem Aeq. Starl Nowt ceu: soo-

·

Dance, Aock. Soulhern Rock. and

ESTIMATEES
blues. call 740·446·9596 to ar985-4473
mngelntarviewaAdaudttion.
'=====;:::7:'12:2/ll:::n::!.,l Established worktng band wilh fu·

,.

ture engagemenl6 seeking pro·
lessional drummer. serious in·
quires only, call 740·446·4953 or
740.441:.g838, leave message.

Full or ParHime CPA &amp; First Aid
drivers, EMT's &amp; Paramedics_

304-372·1900.

Furniture Delivery. Fuil·time, lm ·

mediate Opening_Apply Utestyte

MAitl QU) IUllff(( A«...:
SHOr 1011- N TIC ,;.'-SIIlOI

AN NOU NC EMENTS
005

Personal•
DERN£'101111 STYLE
Everyone anjoys lrylng the latest

Kay. Ira IM!ft more fun ,

Cal Shl!1ay c.r-n

FEMALE TEENS· 17TH ANNUAL
MISS West VIrginia Teen USA
Pageant Search for contestants.
For lnlormatlon write: Tri -S tate
Headquarter&amp;. Dept to. 347 Lo·
cusl Avenu~. Washington, PA

15301 . Doadline: Jift t3th. -

Giveaway

2 ca1s-1 1g white neUiered I Dclawed . 1 Female Bob tall cat.

740-205-9750
5:PM. 740-4oll-Q391
Elghl week old puppies Wromed
Miud Steed 740-446-0517.
Kittens, eight weeks old. ~ with
while paws. 740-992...-286 .

Yard Sale

Food Service,

Aoact Ma in-

tenance. Vehicle Maintenance.
Applications must be a resident

of Ga!Ua "' Meigs counf'i

age 14 -

~1, and meel JTPA gu fdelines .

JObS will begin In early June aM
last approxlmarely 10 week s, ·
W8ge rate 'ss .ts per nour,140
hours per week, worksites wiD be
at various lOCations In bOth counties. High school students. high
school graduates. college stud·
ent~ . l'ld those ·who have
not
completed high school are encouraged to apply, GMC4A Is
especially seeking appplica nls

A PrOllllPiication can bO -~~ ·

br ca~hg-1018, 367-7342.'or

GatH!I-Melgs Communily Aei&gt;On
Agency

P. 0. Box 272

BOIONorthStaleRoute7 .
Clleshwe. Ohio 45620

.,

Equal Opportunity Emp"""'r
LaOOrers· SIO/hour to start train·
ing provided, travel requir ed .
Conlac:t Lop! Enterprises, lnq t-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AIJ,YoniStlooMull

800 - 327 - ~374

EEO ~mptoyor.

or

7~0 - 45 3-2~80

-lhe . .

Manual !abaters and d•shwa&amp;h·
ers wanted. Serious appliea~t s
· onlr. Apply at The Cool Slot in
CcotviNe- Olllo.

Frldly.llandly• 10:00 1.01. Solunloy.

Now hirmg s~le dnvers, gdod
pay. flexible hours. Apply in per·
son at Domino's in Pt. Pleasant.

It Paid In-'-·
DEAD!W: :Z:CJO p.m.
1he . ,
II 10 run. SUncloy
«!Ilion· 2:00p.m:

'

Pomeroy,

Opemng For Experienced Marine
Technician. Apply AI B•g Boys
Water Toys, CheshWe, OhkJ, '140.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

367- 7802 .

5 lamily, Mav t81h &amp; 19th, 8•m·
4pm , 681 West one mile past
Whaley's Junk Yard, Computers,
girfl 0-fiK, hOlly lled, Homo lntlfiOf.

AU Ylnl &amp;1111 Mull le Pold In
AdWince. Do1dttne: 1:Oilpelllle

d1y before the ad ts to run,

SYndey l tlondey

edition ~

1:00pm Frldly.

80

-Milnte~ance, Olflce/Cierle';:;
at-.~-

992-6629.

3 Klnen to Good Homes call after

70

Gallll ·Melgl CAA Is Accept·
lng Preapplicallon&amp; For temporary position with work assignments whtch may inckJde;

Preap~llcariorts are available at
GMCCA of!Jce, high IChOO I OfllC·
esr University of Rio Grande
Crossroads Office. Hocking Col·
lege JTPA Oflice, Buckeye .,.•lis
Career Cenler· Adull Educajl.on
OffiCe and Student Senilce 01 ice,
and OBE5- Rio Grande

Must Be IBYrs.
' Serv-IJ 16191645-8434

40 ·

Furniture. 856 Third Aye . Gallipo·
liS, 011. No PIIOnl cans pteesef

age 18-21 .

IIEETVOOA
COMPANION!
t-t0tl-285-l281
EXT.II54
$2.99 f"9r Min.

Sat.IH

.HAULING

'ATTENTION DANCERS ANO
MIXERS" ALL LADIES

LaCanttna ~.~~~~Restaurant
ana Bar Is rooking for a OJ lor
one to two nights per week . Use
your mu!IC on our equipment.
Play list must Inc lude·'l'op 40,

Dpln Tun.-Fli. 1o-1
Clolld Sun• • Mon.

WICKS

Singers. Bands , SOngwriters. Etc
All Style6 1Age6, Major Record
Label Extel's. Seell lng New Ar·
ti6t&amp;. Coming·To Huntington. 90 1·

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop '&amp; C ompare
FREE

thtm

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

STAASEAACH ••
COIIPETITION

622-11331600-3528880.

•Come try- of ow

St. Rt. 124,
Mlntravllll, OH

~

•New 1-jomes
•Garages

COU"TRY CANDLE
SHOP AND MORE

•New tlprlng pottery

Waa

Graphics And Web. Many Levels

614-742·2138

Covering

- !NO-~~~~ biNnd)
Cali

I

Hauling, ExcavaUng
&amp; Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic Sylllms
Trailer·&amp; Houn Sllea

I 8. CaM 6 I 4-992-6:1,07

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

.. 985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Professional Floor

Scntbael
Clauifiede

13, 14,

1 1110.

Mary Kay Consulanl
740-7-12·2125.

:,TRUCKiNG

al least

(anytime) or 304·675·5955 after
Bpm _
thru Sat

c·ertil!ed Nurse Aide 'Needed F,or
In Home Care . weekencls &amp;
Weekdays -Available, Call Angt ·At

TRUCKING

·SAYRE

be

Applicat ions are now being ac·
cepted lOr Food Service worke rs
a1 Unlvel'sit';' of Rio Grande Dining
Services . Applications can' be
p~ed up between 9·1 I am &amp; 1·3
pm daily at the sludent dining hill.
SudeKhO MarrioH Services. EOE.

R. L. HOL~ON
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Excellent opportuntty !Of the right
girl. S500(+)per week earninQ"PP·
tenll&amp;l. No exp necessary. must

AVON I Ali Areas I Sh irley
Spears, ::.&gt;4·675-1429.

makeup ahadts; al)d with Mary

many MWICintl
•Bring In yow odde •
ends 1nd -11 raftll

Quality Service
For All Your
Garbage&amp;
Rubbish ·
Pick Up tor
Reeldenllal &amp;
'Commercial

\

.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATED

: =~=.=:=~=.:co..:: :;;:::7:40--:36::.7;·:~::·:,..:·:· ~~~~~~~f;!~~~~
" een1 to s'11_1m T~

• Trull" 28239 Leglon'R -- i
&gt; Langsville, Ohio 41741.
: lllrltld l'ld Fll'l! !lei&gt;t. Dldl
• will b1 optnld II 1:30 PM
' May :M, 18811 11 tlnl Salltn
~ Fire HOull. Til• !loard
·.--voa till rlflhllo i any and 111 bldl. •
-

· Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave massage.
After 6 p.m.
(740) 985·4180
Free EStimates

11 o Help Wanted
$$$DANCERS WANTED$$$'

633-SLAM175261.

· do it for you.

Box

.
INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
POMEROY, OH
740-992-1135

31.,""'

•Bobcat Servlca
•Ccmcrete

Howard L. WrlleHI

.COIIPUIER
PERFORMANCE
:uPGRADES

..

LiliA'S
PIJIIftll

•

William Safranek,
Attorney AT Law
614-592·5025
·
Athens, Ohio
4/30/98 t mo. pd.

CELLULAR PHONES
"

Chapter 13

' For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

, Full line o• wa~er etorage tanks •
Septic &amp; Cletern Tanka '
WI!~" line • 10o' thru 1000' Rolla
Sewer Pipe·I 3" thru 8''• Gal Pipe &amp; Regulator•

•'

_

12/181ttn

P/8 Co•tradors, Inc.

, . . . . 4174

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Clean ·~!::~1 Gutter
Brulh Ramovol,
lnltall N- Bide
FrMEatlm81H
"GoAnywlnlro"
No job too •tn•ll.
Mon.'SIL

,......;._______ r':=:;:;;;;;;;;;;:;~::::

• House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp;,treated
starting at $100 ·
• Hedges trimmed • G_uttera cleaned
Call now for 1 weekly lawn care program.

State Route 338 • AI VIne • Racine, Ohio

HOWARD .
A\IAYING (0•
Ex(Mt'KI
Umestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer SliM
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Ulllllles
Estlmatea
($14) 992_3838

(740) 86HII04

SPECIALS

BriggJ J, Strat1011: MaJter Service Tedtnldu
O.tdoor Power r,llip11111t Anodallon: Certified 2 Cyd.
614 949·2804

1::""

CLEI·AID'S OUTDOOR
MlllfEIIICE

Parts"' and Servfce!l

•

~d's .
1.4ndscapinl
Mowt~~~=~~hlng,

Call 614·843·5426
.v.z..-

EMPLOYMENT
SE RV ICES

about money? Want to be lnde·
pendent? New Club! New Owr!:tr!
ease pay!l Fun ·atmo6phere
Serious Inquiries only. Ask lor
Sam . 304 -576-2966 day. 304 -

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates ·

740--949-4802
740--949-4903

Free Estimates

Syracuae 992·5776

rno

304-n:l-5033.

427·5490. 901-427-9514

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

No job too·small,
Some to(' big.

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding ·
Roofs • Decks • Garages

RICIII MDWEB CLIRIC
'

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

New Conlfruction &amp; Remodeling . .....-""'!!!!""~--.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

'

'

'

HUB.ARDS
GREENHOUSE

LOnG'S
COnSTRUCTIOn

PICKENS
HAULING

SUNSftBOME
CONSNUCTION

Agricultural •Industrial ·• 'AI.Itomotlva
' •Re-core• • New Radiators ·
'
'
'
'
OJ(y• Accet Regulator Repair _
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

RT. -7
EXPRESS

i

(NO Suhday CaliS)

RADIATOR REPAIR

$12.00

•

15 North Main Simi
Rutlend, OhiO 45775 Dell: flaturlng
Amlah
f?lants,
Trees &amp; .;&amp;~ Chenea, Soft
Serve Ice
Shru~s
Creom
Open: Mon.·Frl. t-9 ·
(740) 742-7405
Sit.
12--4

FREE E~TIMATES

1\i...r

·open ·Daily 9-S
Sunday 12·5

1·740·949·2015
&lt;1/15/111

COMMERCIAL and Ri:SIDENTIAL

I,

Plnllel, Cabbage,
Broccoli, Cauliflower,
Hanging ilnktlll,
Phlox, Azll•••·
Shruba, Spruce Tl'lll

CALL

Room Additions • Roofing

"l!f;:·

.;L "

&lt;1/11/t mo.

740·985-3831

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

Near Chester on St. Rt. 7

JoeWIIeon
(614) 992-42n

-Garages • 'Replacement Wlnd.o ws

Need

... •

SHADE RIVER AG
. SERVICES

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

:,Society scrapbook

'

BICKHOEua
DOZER SERVICE

BIS·SELL . BUILDERS, INC.

&lt;

'

e

Plumbing

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE

JIM'S

FERTO..IZER
• GARDEN SEED
• MUL£8 .
• 'G RASS SEED

Remodeling

1998 Martin St;eet
Pomeroy, ()hfo·45769

O'Dell Lumber Co. .•

-~~

wrecked or salvaged vehicles.

, "Baild Yoar Dream"

Meigs County Humane Society : Who you gonna call?

Neect To

Ma J .

Homes

Custom

•

Auto Parts. Buying

J &amp; 0

Public Mass for Sinatra draws standing-room crowd

'Peep Impact' remains top movie at the box office

Wanted to Buy

Auction
and Flea Market

Now selling merchandise by" the
akkls a case lOll lor Auclionl &amp;
FIN Mtlto .. 740-25&amp;-1270.
Alck Pearson Auction Cof'JPany.
full time aucllonter, complete
auction
serwlct .
Ucenud

166,0hl0 &amp; Wool VIrginia, 304·
713-5765-Dr-\IOH13-5+17.

-

10 W1nt.d to Buy
Aboolute Top Doll1r: All U.S. Sit·
wer And Gold Colnt, Proo11111,

OlltnoAdo, Antique ~- Bald
Ringo, Pro· tt30 U.S. Currency,
Stifling, Etc. ~no -'-}'
COin
Second

·II.T.S. Sl!op,15t

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tat ·•• lOOk·

ing lor a part·t1me Pharmacisl
Must be license(! or ellg•ble lor
lieaniure in WV. Hospital exp8nence Is a plus. Computer sktlls .a
must . Apphcanl should have
gOOd communicatiOn and super ·
visorr skill&amp;. S1.nd resume to Bill
Barter. Ass istatu Executive Oi·
rector, Pleasant Valier Hospital.
2520 VaHey Or .. PI Pteasanl ,

WV 25550. M'EOE.
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; Reha·
bUitallon Cenler Is looking lof a
part-time LPN·Ph. Must be WY licenaed. Must be able to wort( all
shifts. holida~s and weektl'¥)s.
tong lerm care t•perience pre··
terred. Contact Ang ie Clelahd ,
Allitlant Director ol Nursing ,

304-675-52311. M'EOE
-Rodllprlngs

Rehlbilllation·Cff't•r

II oeoi&lt;ing' I Plrl·limo !iN·In co,~~!.

Gishwaat'ltr, e1c. Please apply In
person: Rocksprings Rehabilha·
lion Center, 38759 Roc•sprlillgs
Road, Pomeroy, OhiO 457e9. No
phOOICdl pteeSt.
Scenic Hms ·N~rslng Cente" ts

Now Acc1pt1ng Apptlcallono For
Port·Tlmo STNA'S. and Part-Timo
&amp; Evlnlngo Sni!to 1.
Antlquoo, top prlcoa pold, Ri¥1r· AN'S (Day
Apply At Scontc Hills
fne Antlquoo. Pomeroy. Ohio. Pleooo
Nursing C1ntor, Monday -Friday
Au11 Moore owner, 1ol0·112·
--. ~7-21142.

2521.

Rem 1:30 A.M. ~;30 ~M.

•

At llrldgo f'llll ·"'1W
Antlqutl &amp; C!Hn uNCI furniture, s-a
Acclpllng Applicaliono fat SeiH
will buy ant piece or completl &amp; Slocii!Aollmbty. W.ekend
houiiiiOid, Otb)' Merlin, 740· wortt
requlr«&lt;. Apply In Por111n.
8112-6578 .
No-CIIIploul.
\

�•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page·t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Monday,.J.y 18, 1998
:AUE\'OOP . -

Pomeroy t Middleport, Ohio

•

••
•
••

NEA Cro81word .Puzzle

37='
:a:.

ACROSS
1 a. acur on

·PHJIJ,W

ALDER

40 ...., ol 1111-re

FfMilr
7 ltytl8ll
1atc ed

bird

o.dMr

46 Pen point
141111~
15 DlniM1S tooe. 46 Ellll6plln tltt.

320 Mobile Horne•
koctAL WORKER.

for Sale

Ouollty.

tommitmenl ... .the Keys to Our
~uCcessl Management le11el op·

1988 Claylon 14170 3 bdr, 1
batn. heat pump, gOOd cond. Will
delil&lt;er local. $11 ,1)0(), 1982 Oak·

por tunlty available . Requires a

li.SW degree from an accredited
Program of social work . Must
ttave current license to practice
'o.plal work In West Virginia and

Jtxperlenct In medical social
!WOrk, gerontology or neal!n care
Jaclllty is required . Tuition relm·

lDUr&amp;ement, neann., dental, vision,
hearing. lift. and 401(k) with em·
~Ioyer

contribution . Point Pleaa ·
ant Nuralng &amp; Rehabilitation
~en ter, State Route 62 . Route 1,
Bal. 326, . Point Pleasant. WV
25550 . ( A Gltnmark-Gene sls
iadlily) EOE.
Stylist NeedM No Cl1ente1e Nee·
nNry. Contact Carol King Finest
Styli~

Solon. 740"'-16·8922.

Wanted- lull time bartender, apply

In pt'rson at Holiday Inn of Galli·
polis.
~·

All real estate advertising In
tt11s newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
o11 968 which malo:es 1t lllegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, cotor, religbn,
sex farri11ia\ status or natiOnal
origin. or any ltllention to
make any,such preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

This newspaper wl! not
knowingly accept
advertisements for feat estate
which is In violation ol the
.taw. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dweJiings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bas1s.

180 Wanted 'To Do
ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed. mulch·
lng, flower bed s, landscaping ,
stdewal~
edging , mowing ,
etc ... Free Estimates . Call Bi ll

30H75'7112.
Circle ·N· Convalescent Home,
Has 3 Openenlng s Elderly Or
Handicapped Person In My

Home. 740-441 · 1536.

3 Bedroom wlfull finished basement, detached garage, prime location . 2 Bedroom, ba11men1,
good starter hOme. ::.K&gt;.t-675-5162.

$8.900 . K&amp;K Mobile
Homes &amp;am-!pm. 304-675-3000.
loca l.

1992 14X60 2 Bedrooms, all

Gontral. Spring. VInyl Siding.
Paneling. Wee!&lt;~. Monthly. One
'time. Oualit,' Oauranted. Free
Estimates. 740·446·2376
Con's Lawn Care. Free Estlmate:s.

Reasonable Rate s. 304-674 ·

46n.

Experienced carpenter will do re·
modeling. decics , vinyl s iding ,
plumbing . Free estimates. Call
Jim Shull. 30-4-675· 1272. Refer-

ences upon request.

3 Bedrooms, '1 Bath , LA . FR.
Kitchen , Laundry Room Wllh 3
Acre s, Butavllle Ptke, 740 ·.t41 ·

0036.
Cozy th ree bedroom ranch in
Hide-~·Way Acrn. Gallia Coun~- F01ma1 dining area, great room ,
laundry room. full ank:. smaH foyer,
two car auached garage with re·
mote s,. all on one plus acre In
beautUul country setting wllh
Green Twp. schools. A real sreal

In the mid 90's. Call Will al 740·

Furnilure repair. refinish and res-

245· 7221to see tt'II&amp;I'!Ome.

Cooo1y. relocating lrom Col\lmbus,
cal Rile 814-781.()265 ASAP

Wanted· approx. 1·3 Ohio coun·
try acres for or with 80'1 + three
bedroom. two bath mobile home.
Chesler IO GtiUpolis, 740- 441 ·
9806.

Circle Motet Lowut Ratea In
Town, Newly Aemot1tled.' H80 .
Cinemax, Showtlmt I Disney.
Weekly Rates , Or Monthly Rates,
Con5trucllon WorktrJ Welcome

740-441 ·5&amp;98. 741).441 ·5187.
Steeping rooms wllh coqklng .
Also trailer space on rl\'er. All
hook-ups. Ca ll after 2 :00 p.m.,

304-713-5&amp;51 . Moson wv.

1s1Time Buyers. E-2 Financing

948-5676.
Doullle Wido
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
11.8115 Down $269 Par Monlh
· Includes De!Nery And Sot Up
Call 1·800-251·5070
~BANDON

HOME Make 2 pay·

41 0 House&amp; for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom, In Pomero;, S300
per month, deposit reo Jlred, no
pets, pay own utilities, call 7-40 ~

2 Bedroom House But1thart Lane,

Gall ipolis, $340/Mo.. WID Hook·

2 Bedroorri House Walking dis lance 10 downtown Gallipolis, No
Smokers Or Pels, Raterences and
Deposit Required . 740· 258·
9t90881ore 9:00P.M.

E·Z Flnanc"'l
can Finance Une
1-800-948-5878 •

free Sol·up &amp; OoiVOI'/
Dl&amp;count Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessories Water Heaters, VI·
nyl S~irtlng Kits S299 95 , An·
chars, Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps,
Aool Coatings, Doors. Windows ,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies,
Block ing Wood &amp; Wedges And
Morel Call Bennett's Mobile
Home Supply At l-740-446-94t8.
Divorce Forces Sales· Take over
payments, 2br, 2 batn, financing

a\lailablo. 304·755-556(;,

IOJafiOn, also custom orders. Ohio

'

Houaehold
Gooda

510

GOOD

2 btdroom nouse, clean, carpet·
ed, stove. no relrlgerator, no In·
aide pets, deposit required, 740 ..
992·3090.

992·3725.

USEO

APPLIANCES

Vine Slreet. Coli 740·446-7398,
1·800-499-3499.
King size brau tied. like new.

$900 080. 304·675-7242.

2 or 3 bedroom, full size base·

mont. no pela. 740-992-5658.

(304~736-7295

Awileble fof Lease: 2.000 SQ. Fl.
Eucutlve Home, Near Golf
CourSI, Immediate Occupancy

76 Vine Street, Galllpolla, Ohio.
_74().446·7398.

S750/M0. 740-446-2957.

We Moved! Used Furniture Store

I ·5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
14,000 Local Go•'t. &amp; Bonk
Repo'• Coli 1·600·522· 2730. X
1709.

Below Tho Hqllctay Inn In Konauga. OhiO. Beds, Oreours, Couches, Mattreaus. Ect. Hrs M-T·W.
11).4. (740)44&amp;-4712

Antique•

530

&amp;ell. Riverine Antique&amp;.
MIUn Street, on Rt.J24,
Pomeroy. Hou11: M.T.W. 10:00
a .m. lo 6:00p.m .• SuO&lt;Ioy 1:00 1o
6 :00 p.m. 7-40·992·~526, Russ
Moore owner.

1.

PatnHng, Plumbing, Remodeling,

Conlral

~lr

Condllloning. FrH Eo·

tlmalesl It You Don'1 Call Ul, We

surance. Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·

Bo1h Looer 140·448-11308, 1-800291-11098.
'

9648. 614-387-7010.
ReplaeetN

1/3 carat,

round dlamond IOiitalle,
&amp;lze 8. pold $800. wiN lake $550;
MarquiJ wedding se1 112 carat •
size 1, paid S1400. wilt take
$ 1250; 'wedding gown with ~ell
size 7, paid $700 will lake, S300;
7o40-311H12BB or 740·949·2481 .

Add~IOIII,

-Mng.

Tile &amp; Hardwood Floors, New Construction .
No Job Too SIQ Or Too Smalll
Contact Joe Saunders At 740·

446-2450. Rofo10ncet1 Awl-.
Will do babysttUng in my home.

304-875-!5903. '

1988 Ford· Range Truck Top.

741).44&amp;-4874

Will Do landscaping An.cl Carpenter Work , Free Estlmatesl
740-388 8968.
.

.t Bridge Stone Tires. Low Profile. ·

P.1951eOR15. Mounlld on 15'
Lug Alumtnu"l Wheels. $150.00
Ch3rlie • 740-388·9109 ,

Wi• haul junk or traah away. S35f
plclwp IOOd. 304-675-5035.
Will Mow' &amp; Trim Lawns, Reason·
able Rates, Contact Joe Saun·
- Al740.....2450.

Schull New Generation 16x72,
3bdr, 2 bath, vinyl siding, shin·

gled rool. 21e wo)ls . $27.280 .

Will mow yatds~ clean out attic.!!,
garage&amp; , ba&amp;ements. Will haul
lunk or lrash $35. pick-up load.
30H75-2647.

Clayton Winner 24x40 , 3bdr, 2

bath. $25,900 . Mountain Stale
- Hom11 3411 Jackson Ave. Pt .
Plea..... 304-675-1400.

' Perent Program. Special
Single
. financing on 2. 3 &amp; -4 t:1at1room
hom11. Pey111en1• •• low ••

Will take care of !he siCk or elderly in their home. E.pefienced.

74Q-446.9832 '

SilO. Coloow 304-755-51115_

FINMJCIAL

tho ollefing.
The State of Ohio, Department of
·Co'1)merce, Oiviaion of Liquor
· Control wishea to locate a retail
busfnell interested in operating
a 1~ agency wilhin their busi·
nell (eAabllshed or new) in tne
cilin ol' PomerOy or Mtddleporl,
Ohio. The agent would ba re quired 10 store and sell spirituout
Nquot' lor 1M cltp8nment from ''"'
retail buslneas location . Quota
exe~pt C· 1, C-2. permita are

avai,abfe In areas where.quota
filled . To obtain a copv or an
.age1cy application , intaresred
parliel should wr~e 10: OMsion of
Liquor Control. Agency OperaIlona. 860e TuUif19 Road . .P.O.
Box 4005. Columbus. OH 430688005 or call (6e8) 222-8936. To
rttei¥1 an _application pleau re·
apo~ to this advenlsement by
the elo11 of butlnen Mav 22 .
fllllf, AOenev appHcalions win bt
-

230

Mason County •• Contemporary
style house altractively situated
on approxlrnatery 3.5- acres. mini
orchard , pond. workshop. Home
has 3 baths. ramlly room. 2 lire·
places. calhedra! calling, garage.

Lthl Only ot Ookwooct'Homes Ni·
ro wv. 304·755-51185:

basement,

awe.

lwo porcmes.

back patio, concrete driveway
and woochwor-ing shop; also 20
unit mobile home park, rental
building. 10 wooded acres, all
alo119 tho rivof on SR 124, 0111 of
high water. Wi1111lltoge1ner or

IIOn, '""" ... 10 - -· 74().
1112-6375-epm.

3 lodroom Aancfl, 1 Milt From
BallipOIIa. Affordll&gt;lo. Eactlltnl
N t l g l -. Call For ApPoint·
. llltnl, 740· 441-0529. 740·448·
0714.

$50 each, 740-949-2653.

gan. 74().368'8204

340 BualneSI end
·
Bulldlnga

Building _(140) -1192-8250 Acqul·

350 Lots I Acreage

7"o.tt2-6737, 7-·3041.

1• 170 3BR. lll9t Oown &amp; ON~Y
1179 per mo. Ffllll .olr &amp; too lkh·

lng.1·- - -·

14•70 3br 1999 down. 1198 per
mo. frH olr &amp; aklrii"'J. 1·10Hf1·
em.
16x80 3br. 2 bath, II .~5. - .,
$205. per mo. FrH air &amp; lltlrl. I·
MH9r-em.
11188, 2 bedroom. gaa hMI, cenlrlll orr, 2 - .. wry good condition, mullsel. 19.000. 740·1192·
7822.

-40•60x1o4 Wa• $18 ,200 Sell

$8.990: 50x100l16 Wao $28.550
Son $18.990; 801150116 Woo
$49 .990
Sell
$2'9.990;
1001200120 Wai $98,500 Sell
$74.990, HI00-4Q6.5128

560

Pell for Sale

ble rol Iron llancl. luliy equlppad
wfpower filters, 'hQoda, Ughts ere.
3 AKC registered miniature
Plnacher puppies . can 7.t0·992·
~oiler !pin.

A \lroom Shop · Pal· Grooml~g .
mower,

Bath. Don
373 Georgea Creek Rd .

Featuring
She~ts .

Hydro

I

!1946

749-448.()231 .

992·2218.

Brand Newl Gr..l Gil11 CDividoo

AKC Labs . one chocolate , two

36'cul. 12hp, 1400.00 740·368·

storage unit. Blacll and cherry.

b11Ck, Dorn 31t3/98, ?40·379·
2853.

1 bedroom downstalrl apt. W/0,
S1ove , Aetrlgeralor, utility's pd.

Never out of boa:. $125. Holds up
to 940 dlaca, also holds tapn.

BIOCic o1 Wall Mort Call Mornings.
74().446·11021
'

Call 740·992·6836 ahar 6 pm.
COs&amp;-nolincludod.

For So ..: Full BIOOclad ROIIWitler
Pups. Sroe.OO each. 740·368·
8599
•

Bull dozer Ca&amp;l 310, Good farm
machine. $5,500. 1989 Komatlu
:7.::40-44:..;_.:.t-.:258=3-...,..----·l Mini Excavator (Track Hoe) Low

HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·

2 Bedroom upstairs apt. 30467 5-

hours, runs good. 304· 738·9131

2649-

" ' - 6pm 304-525-5359.
Complete living room Jult.- with
free matching tamps . Only S19
doWn delivers to youf door. Call

'

2bdrm. apts., total eteclrle:, ap-

. h

pi Iances Iurn~s ed, laundrv room
facilities, cloH to school In town.
Appllca11ons available a1: Village

· Groen Apia, t48 or call 740·992·
~711 . EOft.

Home Products

05311 ·

0 1-800-779·

Computer aystem "wlth free prlnter. Onl~ S19 down dell.,.ers to
your dOOr. cau Home Producll 0

t 800- 779-0538
•
·
·

LAR: kills Ileal. tid!; , IIJJl milel
Jll1bgyJ systemic poi1ontng. J- 0
North Produce. 740· 446· 1933.

(www.hal&gt;f&gt;l1acltinc:c:otn)

1425/Mo.• f225 Doposil. ,Ulililies
Plld74().446.2129.
BEAUTIFUL IIPAATMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 .Wtllwood Orivo
lrom $279 to $356. Walk to 1110p
&amp; movlts. Coli 740·448·2588.

ENTIIIE STOCK
IO'II.OFF
YE OLDllliAifT SHOPPE
:121IIAIH STAEET
POtiiT PLEAIIANT
ACIIOI8 flllllll POIT OFFICE

~An'EHTIOH DlYELOPERI,

SIIAU IUIIIEIIII,
COUNTIIY ESTATE)
83.85 Ac"'· Approa . .I -'ere
Lalit. Mobile Home Will'l Large
Add Qn Den. Gollit Counly.
County Watll 4nd Electric
12.800 Par /oat, 14().3111·1071.

2.2 i1C181 ,4 milol OUI JtrTy's R101.
$11.500. 30H75-1213.

8: miles
-BtUtol Rd., ofl Slndltill, -no-liogro
~om

Point - . r 1 114 milt ..,

w""'.
ll4·11 .000ta.
tor S37.000. 304-075-71148 -

or I acres

tpm.

•
lltll• Co.: Dam~lllo. Nleo 17
AcrH I1J,OOO ·t2,000 Oown t
1212/Mo.: Or I Aeroa $18,000,
Walar. ~l¥illt, Nice 11+ loaH
. $10.1!00 \~try ·

-Co.: Gllllpollo. Hunleral 22
Acrao Willi Pond NOW f24,00().

nlcl

10 Acre

building

11t1

118,000; or 8.5..,.. f7,500"""'
.. B.lii!HI 11.000, 110111115,000

Fur~lahecl

1 peraon. No &amp;mOkart. S200. de·
potlt I relerenc11. 30,.·675·
2851.
.
1partrnen11 at Vllflge Manor and

-

Frultll
V~bln

Call For Fru Mapo • Owner Fl·

"'"*an

10% Off LIIIICI
ca111 Puttho-

JET

Now Ttklng Applications- 35
W11t 2 Bedroom Townl')ouse
Aparlmtnll S295/Mo., 740·448·
0006.

Prlmtaltr· 150 oH lnollllallon.

Ont bedroom apartmen~ in Mkf·
dllpon, til r&gt;tld, WO per

wllh.-

f ifll montfl frtt lncludli"'g ''"

HI!O. froo ptt&gt;tMIIion
IIIJ0.213-2140.

month. 1100 dopo•ll. call 740·
982·71011.
'
Twin Rl¥trs T...., ,_ ICOOI'Ii"'J
opplicallt"" lor 1b&lt;. HUD auiJold.
lzod ppt lor oldart~. and nondl·
" - '· EOH 304-117!H679.
'•

740:742·2220.

·

,. •-.wv
.,.1.....
Bur. Sol, llldo

Ultd&amp;.wq...

F..-.

304-n:J-5341.

'

llolltli

Dbl.

·s •

1993 ,Dodge 0 · 150 Extended
Cob. 6 112' bed. good. condition,
56395, 741).992·61!54.

11~

AC , Extras. Excel Condition .

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STO CK

miles, V6. Ssp, super Sharpt,

$3,1100. 740-4411·6119

a~nomatlc

transm ission, 4 door

4WD,Ioaded, 119.000 miles, ask•

""$10,500. 74().367-7708.

740

Motorcycles

198t CB &amp;5Qcc 4cyl. Honda road
bike. godd cond. $900 . Call K&amp;l( ·
Mobile Homes , 8am·5pm 30-4 ·

t¥Y

MNGt,

wttArve

we GOT

675·3308.

IAa
Tttm

1998 t&lt;awasakl 250 Ninja Street
7~0·448•8172

96 Honda 300 EX 4 Wheeler,

Good Cond . $3 .000. 740 ·245·
5158
'

...

THE BORN LOSER ,

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

'rJ()!Qi..l~

'78 Cadillac Fleetwood, runs
good. good lires. $850. 740·91t2·

7•87.

N(.'JE;ft (X)tE I

7~0-

256-1977.
1970 Subaru 310 , rare liad, 2cyl
w/oil Injection. run• &amp; drives
good. 12.800. Mual 1111 to appre·
elate. K&amp;K Mobile Homes eam·

_!l&gt;m:...;,-"304-;.,...;8;.;,7-"5·-"3000=;.;,
· ---,---I
1978 Corvette, 25th Annivefsary.

red. auto. L·62: 350. e1. cond .
$9.000. 304-1175-7829.
1979 Datsun, blue, goot1 e:ond.

1300. phone anylime. 304·458·
2221.
1180. ·IIIlO HO~DA CARS FOA
S1Dq Seized &amp; sOld Locally Thll .
Monln_COli 1-800·522·2730 Exl.
44~.
•
t 9110 ·1990 Truclts Rlr f 100!11
' Selnd And Sold
Locally This Monlll.
TrUCk&amp;, 4x.t's, Etc.
1·800-522·2730. X 3801.
198a Cutlass Suprema, 2 o. 280
VB . Good Conctlllon. S1;800 Or
Best Ollar. 74().992-4588.
1882 Oodga Mirada. •ery good
Condition. new paint job. call 74().
992·5828 Bhor 6:00.
.

BIG NATE
!&gt;T... II.T AT ~ : )0 TOOO.Y.
&gt;lOT 3 :00 ..... . ANI&gt; MOW.
H.'lfE A VERY !&gt;l'f,
IAL AfiNOUMCEi1E!'IT...

boal, 115HP. extras, ea . cond .

$4,1)0(). 304-882·34381fier 5prft.
t9811 Btjl t80 111ancror, 18' open
bo.w Marcruloor 110 motor wl1h
' lrallar. 7o40-367-7516.
1
19,7 Fourwlnns 215 $undowner.
21112ft. To many extras to men•
lion. $11.500. 141).381·0594·•••·
74().992-6195 dayS,

'

1~1

n3-mr.

a

J

•

I,.,

17 , I

,.

8·

~~~~~~~rs-J~~~E~ETTUS I'

6 ~f:~:~~

-460 Ford engine, auto transmis·
sion &amp; transfer case. e:an lltar
run $1.100 . You lake out . 304·

lETTUSTO

LIKE?

•

New gas lanki &amp; bocly parll. D &amp;
R Auto. Ri ple~. WV. 304· 372·
3933 or HIOil-273-93:19. '

r r r I' r I' .I

II II I I II

MAY18

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ . ~

'"
,.

;t•

~~~~~ ·~"''
"I I

:

~

~

1C

,, ft, j

1\1 j

""

~~

w't:

Home
Improvements

·Ufi(:OnditiOniJ lifetime guarantH
Local relerencea furnished . e1:

changes or revi5ion5 wit~l·_:wiih those you love today, but yo,.
t/'\lrtd.lvisin.•l! them. :What you have . l,n ·~might also attach terms and Ct~r~di­
!:!!~!!==~!:!!~~="mlnd could be mtles away from thetrii'otions to, your acstures. This could
idea.~. .
cause recipient~ to reject them.
ASTRO·ORAPH
· LEO !Jul~ 23·Aug. 22) · • 1
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
11
;-'Fue=May 19. 1.998·.
t;&lt;'pleb '!1' ~ ~~ you v~ ~
In career situations. act in accorJoint endeuvon could work out com ron~ e ea mgs prevto~s Y/&gt; dance with your impulsive urges
rather well for you in the year ahead. should hve up to your expectauons loday. The longer you mull things
provided whllt you're attempting 1o today. Convmely. t~ose
have ov~ ~more likely youe10 lniV·
1
do is pr.lgi)Wtic and useful. If there is : ta.uf!Cd you agmvallon n
past elm a ctrcle.
Strong markc!t intere.~r going in. your m1sh 1be repeat offenders.
.
. AQUAI.UUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
2
22
succe~&lt;s c&lt;JUid be impressive.
VIRGO (~ug. ~-Sept. &gt; ,
In yolir Involvements with friends . TAURUS !Apri120-May 20)
In ~rm;suc relalions to:dD.Y· don 1 today. don't base what you do for
11 coold prove unwise today tO'I ~ 100 !ns~&gt;tent a~t dotng some- them on wllatthey do for you. The·
become obligated in some manner to lhml! you~ mate dtsapproves of. If . aa:ounts mi1h1 be a bit out of bala!ICC
individuals you do not know 100 well. Y~ are 51'!tefu! Yhou couhldads~ some- ai!d it could be }our tum 10 be the
T .
h
b k
thing you II W1A you
n I.
aivet:
.
'
=~~;,:~~tro-ubra~ ~:tc~~ · LI~RA (Sept. 23..oct. 23)
. PIScES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
maker can help yoil understand wliat . . Stnve 10 be. hell't:ul and coopera- ·
E~~e~~ dtoup you'll be ambitious,
to do to make the relationship work. uve w~n ~alms. wuh others today, re!OIIrteful ind effective today, tim·
•
lo h"
but don I tmpulllvely volun..- 10 ins could prove to be critical If''""
Mat.I S?•.1S to Matehma~er.
c 1 ts
al
· nment y011 ·re not
• ,_
newspaper, P.O. Box 17S8, Murray 1 e. on an UIIIJ .
ai!Cmptto im~lement things pre1111·
Hill Station. New York. NY 10156.
quahr!Cd 10 handle. . .
1 1u~y. they m1ght be met with stif'(
.GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
1reStstance.
~thina unutual might ,130:
• lncli~tio~s and urges to gel
,ARIES &lt;M.an:h 21-Aprill9)
spire today from which you could mvolvcd m "'kyendeavon must be , Today you re •.good door opener
reap special beqeflta.. Theie is I.JIOI· quulted today. The problems you 1" your penonalmvolvements. but
~ibility IOIIIeOIIC 1111y Compete with
may have if YD;II fall Oft your face your fQIIow-throuah could leave
you for the rewards.
• could be luti...
·
IOIIII!IIIinaro be desired. ~fore you
CANcER (June 21-July 22)
SA91TTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. · ri" the doolbell, have your whole
If you're Working on a project in
21)
IIOiy worked out.
'

1

SERVI CES

1.994 Buick LtSabre Cuslom

,.;

'"

1980 F.._ing wiln owning 17ft;
1972 Atistocrat 18h. 1973 Smolty
1511 . Bob McCormick Rd. 740.'

-ENT
WATERPROOfiNG

U
,.

..,- - v.:.... ·~.

good tifeJ, IICiilllnt COndition in•
lidO &amp; ""'· $3995 neg. 74().1192·
ell24,
•

•.

""
"0

1976 Coachman 21 fl . camper.
Ba1h, air, stove, refr igerator.

810

..,.

••
-n

PhorW 14().25HQ61

6. """"""""· 304-675-7912_

·~
....

·"'
,

1973 Cobra Fllltt Wheel Trailer,.
33 Ft. Completety RecondiUoned .~

.ale or uade. S3500 , 7•0·256·

b.loor.

.

I MONDAY

HOBOTMAN

CamiJ!Irs I
MotorHomea

'

•

•

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
Nalive • Tempo - Deity • Keenly - DON'T. LIKE
Maybe it was a mistake, but have you noticed that
Mother Nature put ai the goad vitamins in food we DON'T

llbllsllocl 1915. Call 17401 448·
0870 Or 1·800·217-0576. Aogora
Waterprooftng.

nancing on used RoUnd Illata &amp;

EX.-., --474~

J

Auto Parts I
Acce11orlea

·P -.

blne Ex, oond. Carmlchttl"o
Firm l,alm, Inc. CIII14().448IU120ti.OS841111

40 Polntlell
42 Common

If you go to North American
Championship, at the beginning
50 TV'a Pllplle
everyone is happy. But after you do
saw-·· · '
nothing but play. eat and sleep (at
palllolle 101!.
53 AuthOr.
. least the last, badly) for I0 days. only
Anala- · 1
lhe. few winners are still S!Oiling. And
..
who is .capable of anything· for the
nul week'?
In Europe, players like to relax
and socialize too. My favorite tour·
nament is held in Juan-les-Pins.
which is west of Nice on the French
IRW
XMP
Z FIZ R
YRFMM
N
Mediterranean. You play one long
session a day. from four until eight.
(RWOKP
D)
The daytime hours are free for sport·
ing activities and lying on the beach.
In the evening. you can enjoy the
(UWFYGKW
XVK
YFXW.'
local food and wine. not having to
'R W 'Y
worry about returning to the .bridge
LNMMNFU
U · W F Y G K W)
"' · table.
As the five-day pair event begins
"
YRF ·JWYTWFKW
&lt;
today, here is a deal from last year's .
tournament. How would .you play in ·PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Talk loW, talk slow and don't talk too much."- John '
Wayna, to MIChal( Caine
•
,
·
·.; .
four hearts? West. who ha.~ opened
one spade.,.lead~ the sRacJe ·ace: four.
I
queen, six. Now he switohes to a
WOIO
'l
J
I!J1111P· ·
lAIII
_...
_••
Yes, Nonh's raise was aggressive.
but you did double before bidding
"
Rtorra• lttltrs of "''I
three hearts to .5how. a very strong
four ocrambJ.d wordo below
10
form
four
slmplt
words
hand:
"
'1
West is marked with tlie diamond •
EQIVUR
ace. One choice is to hope thai it is
••,
doubleton . .ducking 'two round~ or
.I
diamonds. Alternatively. ' you can
play West for only two hearts. Then
.,
CROTH
you can organize a diamond ruff in
tl)e dumm)'. As this ·is the better play.
3
at trick three. duck a diamond. Win
1~
N
the trump .return, then l~ad the dill· ·
I md king. As the cilubS are splitting 1 I ,. .A ·V L 0 C 11 , ..,
•
, My husband believes that in
favorably. this le11ves West with no ' · :' .
5
I I I 1 ..~ today's 'society we need only
GOUtlter.
'
.
. . .
three basic necessities: food,
·True. West could have defeated
w
,
... - -- -V-E-N-·1----., clothtng, and a tax-.--- ••.
the contraCt by switching 10 a club at
•
51
·H
trick two. cvenlwdly giving East a
·r
Complole · rho chu&lt;kle quatod
ruff: Yet that defense is hard to
_ _ •
•
•
by filling in the misting words

ll0PIN6 I 6ET TO
DANCE Wml TWE
LITTLE RfD·WA"IREP
611U., ANP...

S5000. 740-949·2203 or 74().94~
20-45, Will consider trade for e

790

31 Dleorltlve .
3t llcMclules

L.....L-.1-...L-"-.:..1-.J you denlop from llep No. 3

t&lt;awaaaki STS Jet &amp;Ill, Still Ut1der
warrarit~. three seiter, 83 hoiSI·
power, bought "new July of '971
three matching Kawasa.ki std
VIlli and trailer all go with It'

576-2667,

' :) '..

(lail

··I I ·I'

'

Joltrl O..rt 7000 4 Rdw NO Til
Pltntor,Euc Conct. 2·AC 333 4
Aow Air .Pitnllro. Olcltr John
Dtert f Rdw
Jolin Dtert
2eOO 4 Boilom Plow 2-Joltn Dotrt
12•14
" Disk"""
-·
8qua ..
Baltro,
Round 811tra
8.5'll.
fl.
Mower condlllanera. New ldea
llcM1d lllltr I yur old Nt1
Wrop/Ntw HOllncl 472 Hayblnt

....
44=
:
4·=·-~

'

1988 Salarl Pontoon 35HP Mel.
S.t.ooo. 304•

2111. Maple Leal camper, aleeps

ccrtllltlort.
r
15,000milol.
'
48" AQ.I'ro-hog ln-1893
Rtd
Cn....,
8·10
Tahot
ohope. ~ firm. 740-992·5305.
41 ,000 miles. air, auto 304·67'"
5.1ll&lt;.Firtonctng on ·uud TriiCIOrt. 5523-...._,
Ford 5030-400 HRS., Ford 7040
4WO WI Loa&lt;lor·1370 HAS.,.Kubola M!l030 50HP·IIOO HAS. Car·
mtcnut Ftrm &amp; Lalfn. Inc. Call
740-441l-2412or l«llJ.58oo-1111

eoldllr
34HIIdlcl
35 Cruclllnd oiiMilve

I I 'I .

I

cury 2-tll. wllraller.

446-1511

11192 Toyola COrolla, air. till, ouro,

Alll'8'a

· I I I P P·:

• AND f'IV.CTIC.E FOP.
~E TAACK TEAM WIL~

1992 Ford Tempo Gt. A door.
roadtd, clean , 73.000 miles. lor

•

4•

28 Centrll
Amerldtntree
30 Ablcondlnll

~

bumpers.l2.750. 614-446-3el4.
1985 Bass Hawk 17 1121t. flshlr!IJ

760

1628

Pa.u

11 Pod lltm
22MIHWyunb
24 , .... out.

0

1969 s
1m 19 11211
y'
· &lt;feep· •
P
beige ea
w/sand Interior, 6cyl ,
190~p. f.!lercruiser inboard motof, !
with trailer. life preservers &amp;

Aries . both run good, 11200
each. 74().379-9278.

1988 Corsica. good cond. no air,
109,000 mile~ , good work c:ar.

PUI

~

12Hindu~

_~_:_~~'---S_CQ_.!~~.~P04Y,~s·

14 Ft V·Bol1om Boat. New Gafvanized Trailer 10 hp. Johnson
Motor. $1 .200.00; Will Separate.
740.245-9109.

good pontoon boaL

14.000. 304-895-31129.

~DO'IW~
WIW \!~AT I~ 7

12ft aluminum Jon boal. trailer, 2
folding seats. aluminum oara &amp;
anchOr. Lillo new. $700. 304-8753581 .

1986 Dodge LllltCer. 1987 Dodge

1987 Nlssan Muima, $3,000.
198&lt;4 Chevrolel Custom van.

...

.

r...w~·~

Ciilenl COO&lt;IIIIon. $1400, 740·992·

'95 Camaro. 38,000 mlleo.

S•

on to

H=::r

Welt Nartll Elll
1• · Pua . 2•

Paaa

.

Wild

.,

1ft/

"LVMPY"1
. .

• Greedy- '
10 SUpple
'
11 Run•

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

..

• Logglt'l loa!

z.ro

8 Ford flop

a

1992 Ford Explorer, V·6 4.0 Iller,

'92 Kawaskai jel .skl. 650X2. ex-

·as Honda Accord. 2295 Mill
Creok Rd.• Gan~lls.

5

. By ·Phillip Alder ·

730 'Van• I 4-WDa

710 Autos for Sale

1992 Plvmoutn Accllam. • dOOr,
4cyl.• auto, aif, $2.800. 740·379·
2645

2000 lb. corn etib•. excitlltnt

33 Thou '
34 uu!otmll

not pressure

92 S· IO Te~oe Package 73.000

or 740-256-6251

TRANSPORTATION

32-cteFronce

7 80iciiY

4 Actor Lindon

Relaxatlo~, .

66 .000mile&amp; . $6.000 Flrm l 740·
446-4207

BW&lt;e EICOII. Cond.

black Angua

1 Pop .
2 lYPI of houu
3 Kllill"• 11011

Operung lead:.• A

Oualil)l Bloclt Angua SuMo 11-15 2 Aactng Go·Carts. 304· 675·
months. 304-675-6248. ·
. 1769.
Two yur old

DOWN

(lllbr.)

1994 Fo rd XLT 4 ely. Slandard ,

1991 Honda 4 ~ WD 4 wheeler .
Exc. cond. 304-675-2648 or 304-

41854.

tonclllion, 12 ion 1~. txctlltnl

AEIWION i.!broAs
Ropend, &amp; - I n 8ladl.
Col Ron Evant, 1-537.J1521.

1991 S·10. 62K $2,795. 1989 5·
10. 631&lt;. $2.695.00. 1986 Chevy
Plck·Up II4K SI ,995. Cook Mol011
74(). 448-0t03
'

875-3000-

and 112 Man·agu, approx, tOOO
lbl., $500, 749-245·5122.

•

Vulnerebla: Both
Dealer: West

As 2.9% On Lawn Tractors And

1991 Plymouth Acla lm , Sell or
Trade, Nice Car alt. 7.t0· 256·

$100.00, Whitt Apt. slzo Eltc.

model Kenmore Drr-r.

81124,

WHh Us About Financing As Low

Llveatock

27 Book broiCMI
'28 In till centar
31 &amp;c:8le unlta

• AK74

5828 allor 6:00.

81 o Farm Equipment

·Furniontd /UniUMfshecl, Down· ProOitma? NHd Tuned?
1he
alalra, UIUiliea Paid, No Smoking, . p10n0 Dr. 74Q.448.4525
No Pall, Parting, f Month LillO
1200 Dopollr. 13001Vo., 740·446- House cltonlng producla ._on
31187.
1111 10·25'll. 0111CoP Dllt WOOd
304-6 75 ·IOilO. lndopendont 01'·
Nfce one bedroom rurnlshtt1
-OfF'*'
Brulll Produc1l.
tportnitnl In Mlddltporr. clean

ind qritt. no poll, 740-992·5633.

Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid StHr Loadera. Check

8~.000

288-1211. '

304-075-5471• ·
Gold Wh irlpool Wtahor. 185.00

.:s;.-~·s~75~.oo~.7:-o40-~4~!1~~~-~;;;-l
Ntwly Rtmodtltd Ultdroom~ ~ubb'l Pilno· luning &amp;
1
'*'·

A/IT .... AILE -

nonc:lrtiJ lnb. Tall

Free camcof(ter-wlth purc:hale.of
52·inch big screen TV. Only 118
I!IOwn deliv.,s to your dOOf. Call
Home Prod~cll 0 1-800· 778·

L111

Lawn Equipment. CompaCI Ullllly

onty

1978 Marlin 2 t' camper, lleepa'
Six. good conclit100. can 741l-992··

fof • • rod &amp; while • - polo·
to planta, call 7.t0 7•2·2773 or

2yrs old, uHd 4 monrr.s. 1350.

Mod1rn t Bedroom Aparlment.
140 ue

ple : 3010 Diesel 42 PTO HP. Dill
lock, 8112 Tran&amp;, Independent
PTO Wet Disc Brakes, 1 Double ·
Hyd•ol.a
$12.800 .
4·WD
$16.900. Goodonli until Moy 26.
Keelera Service Cenie1
Si.Rt87
Point Pleuani &amp; Ripley Road
' 304-895-3874-

whltll , .t new tires,

~

llolltli

actual mllos. 13995. 740·992·

Sleeps ~ . $3000 _ 740·387·0594 ,
...... 740·992-61!l5clays.

Fisher Price defu•e: stroller, like

J 52

511 ...... beloved
57 Wrller
Hemingway

name

• 8

1991 Gao Slorm GSI. Ex . conct.
FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO air. AT. PS. PB, $3.500. 304·875·
Atsponaible Party Wan11t1 To 5403.

General Eltc1ric 11.000 BTU.

Rhltrsldt Aptnmento In Mlddlt·
pott From 1248·$373. C•ll 740·
HHce4 . Etiuil Houal119 Oppor·

Ford New-Holland au·20 series
Compact Diesel Tractors $500.
extra diSCOunt. All 40 IO 100 HP
Tracto.rs S1,000. extra discount or
o-;. financing ror 12 mos. E•am-

5prft_

Instrument•

580

()536_

Gracious tr.ing. I and 2 bedroom

May Spring Slvlf191

Make Low Monthly Payment• On
Plano. Sle Locally, Call: 1·800-

·new. S50. 304·812·3914.

I .bdr dupitll, ldoal tor

Massie Ferguson dlak 7', turn
plow, 1-4' trailer. 14' wagon. Alvan

NOTICE
1990 Red EagiB Teton TSI alii
F.-it.City Fela.-nlnt
wheel drivt,ps,pw, pl. amllm
-Open1
. Profestional Grooming by Ap- e~ss . Stpd, 65,000 miles.
pointments. Over 15' yfl. experi· M.OOO. 304-075-5&amp;56.
ence. evenin·g appotn1men11
available, 850 Second Ave. Gal· 1991 Chevrolet. Z24 , Sporls
,P ackage. 3.1 Ve Engine. AT.
lipob. Ellt. 740·-1~.
PW, AC , AM-FM. Good condi·
lion. Call 740·446t63eo Alter
570 .
Mu1icel

Dressing table. baJI.Inet, stroller.

swing. pleypen, p;gh t:halr, &amp; car
1001. 304-67$-4:MI.
.

Manure spreader, PTO. tobacco
seller. potato plow, subsoller,

$1 .500. 080. 304-075-eOOO.

4

conven.-nt ye1 prlvlte,

Has a 4~8 porch lok condlllon.
Mull Move, 12.800, 740·441·
1121.

SIHI Building•. New. Mull Sell

1 and 2 biKkoom apar1menta. lur·
niihed and unfurnished. securi1y
deposit required. no pelS . 740·

Equal~ Opportlftty.

4- Building 81111·2 Acree tach.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
a IIO&lt;Iroom Mobilo Home. 12X85

s5oo: both good

90 Lawn Chief riding

458 112 Second Avenue. Gallipo·
us. 2 Bedrooms, AC. Appliances,

Commerclai·Oflice or Aetalf. 17
Mill St. MldO .. porl. 1.4SO. SQ Fl .
$400 mo.(or aubdivide to 1,000
sq ft . tor $30000 mo.) Corner

Remodeled 2 story. 2 king 1fn
bedrooms. new vinyl WindOws, •
tached 2 car garage, large comer

lol, lrwiHng neighil0r1100d, dralle

tor Ran'

1100 deposit , no pelS. 740·6e·r.
3083.

~- (netll door).

~hp ..

Call: 74Q..I48·24t2 or 1·8fl0.594·
1111
.

2822.

Rio Grande. OH Call 740· 245·
5121 ,

AQ&amp;

1990 Chevy Silverado, 350, auto.
loaded, long bed, exterior brown/
aandltone, one owner, $.t,500.

• K 54

630

Btock, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
owl. lintels, etc. Claude Winter~ ,

• Q•J s
• 10 8 5
' • J 10. 7
• 10 3

A K 10 7 2
98

54=-own'-

24Airowpolaall
25 Flnnlah llrot

EUt

1987 Che:vy .t.x4 ShOrt bed. 3!50
aula., loaded. Exc. condition. 740245·9061 .

criminal)
46 Scflllt. to
ShiiCI.tPI•...
51 CongOinllally
55 Kind of

lho(t

t ae

• .A K J 7 2

Waterline Spe&lt;lol: 314 200 PSI
$21 .95 Per 100: 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Brass Com·
pression Fi11ingo In SIOCII
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jac:koon. Ohio. t-fiOil-537·9528

Approximate 2,500ft rough lum·
ber Oak &amp; Popular 816. 4x4. 214
I Inch lumber, in tenotha a to
1611 304·895·3808 . Brycol Ourll
R1. 2 Loon, wv.

• Q

package, 8 cyf.• 5 speod, cuslom

Producls 0 1-8(10.779:.0538.

Building
Suppllel

• es

John Deere Skld Steer Loader ·
All Sizes and Attachments In
atoek 7.5% Financ ing Avalll\ble.
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc.

446·2412 1-1100·594·1 111.

Willet 10 pc. cherry dining room
suite: mahogany bedroom chest

EEK&amp;MEEK

1983 S· 10. Wrectted front end,
good V·6 engine &amp; runnlnQ gear
$500. 304-882·3438 after !pin.

20 lmllale .
21 Nonpoftl org,
23 Bemateln, lor

• • • 54
• Q4 s

1424.

1991 Ct'levy S-10, with Tahoe

waaner &amp; dryer pair with free va· · Low Rale Financing On New And
Used Equipment Carmicheel'l
cuum cleaner. Only S19 down
Farm &amp; Lawn Gillllpolli. OH 741).
deUvera to your door. Call Home

WurHtzer piano/organ with extras;
Gibson lrost free refrigerator.
lOOkS II'"' new. 740-992·3860.

18 H.P. Whlzard mower: 740· 2~·

6230

Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Form

Wanted to buy 3· 4 Tickets to
June 14th Nucar Race at Mk:hl·

·-orcure

1914 Dodge Uucl&lt;, 112 1on IIOibad:

304·n:l-5139. 7o40-n3-5039.

Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All

.$125. 304-675-3191.

oondllor1. 74().256-916 t.

John Deere Bailer W/Kicker. Exc
e:ond .,
$3,200 .
Grlnger·
$1 ,000.Soay Sheep Miniatures,
Ra rtl $400,00 each . 74 0·2!6·

Two 9x7 fit:lerglais garage doors.

2 Aquariums 30gal. tanks wldou·

spliner.

Apartmeot•

440

tntemallonal 990 7h. Hay Blne .
Gehl ~5 Grinder Mixer, John
Deere 12ft. Transport Olsc, all ex.
cOnd. 304-273-4215

Your Area John Deere Deater
For Aealdenllal And Commercial

VCR. Only"S19 down delhlers 10
Yo&lt;Jr ctoor. Coil Home Prodlll:ls 0
1-1100·779·05311.
8' wlli1e IGergiiSI lnJOk lor
'87 or older, $200; 20 ton wood

90Hl949.

3 bedfoom apartment on Spring
AWl.• 1 1.2 bath. S300 per month •

soparaletv, 7o40-992-5e23.

tel' 5;00 Of anyli'ne llllllnctl.

bUry Grado School. living room,
11m11y room, NC, 1.5 ..,.., largo
ll'f'llll- -.rtclp. IYOIIIOca-

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down S 189/mo.

hospllal &amp; town, 740·44&amp;--tf73.

ThrH IIO&lt;Iroom. Dill! a0&lt;1 hoW, In
Mkldleporl. caH 7o40-1192·34e5 al·

s bedroom home next to S111•

0011--

N1ce three bedroom ranch, fr, two
baths , lnground pool . ca . neat

740-44Hl885.

1 Mile our L""'ing Ad. Wt~l Col·
umbll, 1900 oq.n. 3 llclr. 2 bat~ .
l'r1codln 711a.30H7:H379.

$1-PayS11,tlllort3BR.
DeNwty. Stktp
Ottly AI
Nilfo, WV. 304-7IHIII

free Set -up &amp; Denvery ." Onl~ 3

Owner fl11ring- beautifully Ut·
stored and mainlainitd rivlffronl
two Slory nom• . anade Ifill.
hedged yard , eleven rooms. lour
bedrooms, modern kiiChen, full

Farm house for renl at Thurman,
Ohio to elderly coupte , may re·
quire some maln1enance, 216·

See. Jlvldens Farm Equipment.
Ingalls Rd. 740-446-1675

nos.

46· tnch big scteen TV with free

2 Bedroom Apt. S1ove and retrig
included. 7-4 Cqurt St. GaltipoiiJ.

doors I trim, Smith's custom oak
ca bineta , Jenn-air range , diSh·
washer, detached garage, by appointment. 740·992·5243.

Three bedroom brick home. on
Jackson Plkl, ••riOuJ calif only,

310 Homes for S.te

M9t0own
UAUIIRIIN

Middleport, beautiful two story," 3
Dr. 2 bath . large l.r. &amp; lr., oak

Profeulonal
Servlcel

il F A L E', TATE

IPAIHG SPECIALS

662·2405 or 304·662-2447.

cally reduced, appointment only,

once. 304-075-2145.

Special 1h80 3BR. 2 both .
S1 .325 Down. S205 Mo. Free olr
&amp; traolidrting. HI00-691-em.

Homestead Bend, broker. 30-4·

OUIIhorlly ......11or.

lfvlnQtiOn' a · batement water·
proofing. 111 basement repairs
dO,I . frtl esllmJtll, lltetime
gu1r1ntu. 10~rs on Job ••peri-

Bowman·• Homecaro . 740·

"COQLJ)(lWIW

Professlon81 Tree Service, Stump
Removal , Free Estimates! In· .

recommends that you do busi·
ness with people you know. and
NOT to und money through the
mail unlil you have investigated

Scooters. Electric Wheelchairs,
Sates: Aenlal , Trade, New &amp;

550

Merchlndltse

.tl.rnares, 740-245-5151 .

ducts 0 1·800-779.()538.

and vanily: 7--t2!54.

540 Mlecellaneou•

Any And All Odd Jobst Free Es-

Aiding lawn mower wit h your
choice of a free push mower or
weed eater. Only $19 down dallY·
ers to your door. Call Home Pro·

ThrM pleco IMng room ouilt, god
eondllton . asking $500. 740·387·

Washer $95; Dryer $75; Electric
Range S9S: Nice Freezer $195:
Washer Like New 1 Year War·
ranty $205; Skaggs Appliance•.

3 BR I 2 BR 1300.00 a monlh .

1-801). 779-0538.

446-7283.

74().859-4406.

Ford 800 Serill Farm Tractor,
Recent Overhaul and palnt. Must

Mooney. 74().256·1117'

Refrigerators-Only S19 down deUvefl to your door. Free ml·
crowave. Call Home Products 0

~Hd.

Allatd Fumllura
Polly's Wo now hi"" Army Surpluolll
2101 Jellarlon Ave.
Open 9:30 · 5:00 Mort-Sot
304-615-SOFA (7e32)

2-3 Bdr. house on 71h Street In
New Haven . Available June 1.
Garage, air-conditioner. nice
neighborhood. $335 . mo. plus
I:Jopos~ .

Only 119 dawn detlven a com·
plete living room suite, bedroom
and "d lneue to your door-plus a
free 2!Hnch TV. Call Home Pro·

etc. Tu11day through Friday," 740·

Waahtr s, dryers. refrigerator&amp;,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 78

· ~S Remotrellng Painting, Roof' , Coli 7~0·446·6964 . 304-675·

INOTICEI .
OHIP VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Lltt Chair, Good Work ing Condf·
tion, $150. 740-379-2720. AFTER
t P.M.
.

Items; walkers. toddler car seats,

French City Maylog, 740·446·
7795.

3Q4-675-1957.

BualneSI
Opportunity

$45.000; 740·643-2918 Allor 4
P,M,; Altere P.M. 740·1143-2644.

Pomeroy Thrift Shop now buying

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers. Ranges, Re1rl·
grators . 90 Day Guarantee!

Georgea Portable Sawmill, don't
ho~l your logS 10 lhe mill IUSI call

210

1872 40 Ton Lima Truck Grade,

ducts 0 1-801).779-0538.

MERCHANDISE

Deposit Required, 5 13·574-

2539.

74().992·6578.

WIMOwl.

Lllurnor $7 ,500; Cat 2
$52,000; Cot 215 135.000 : Cil
416 $25,000; 04H $45.000: Hera
Powell Driving H,ammer, $25,000:

lo rQo ou11fail loys and ba by

Att&amp;ntion Mot:lile Home Owners:
Areas Largest Inventory 01 Inter·
thtrm I Coleman Heat Pumps ,
Air Conditioners, FL!rna ces &amp;
Parts. Huge Buying Power Means
The Lowe111 lnstaiiPrl Price, Easy
OVer The ·Phone San~ Fln~nclng.
Call Bannan's Mobile Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1.80().872·5987,
No Payments Until July 1998

74().385-4387.

9am-4j&gt;m.

~Up ,

,

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

992· 2381 Monday lhru Frldoy

menta, assume loan, owner fl .
nanctng available. 304-755-7191 . '

BUY IN APRIL

Merchendltse

740.9P2·5579.

46o Space for Rent

2 or 3 Bedroom, Around 1200 per
mon1h . Call credU line 1-800·

Ml~e~llaneoua

NOfgt fruzer che1t, upright, 57•
high x 25• wide, runs good. SSO.

Valley Relinist1 1ng Shop, Larry
PllUIIp~

~;,.

rented Lol. 7~0 U6 6063

3 bedroom , 1 1l2 bath, trl·ltvel

wit h lamily toom. Close 10 hospllal.
550 Jay Dri•e. 74Q..I46·8251, al·

h,ouse to rent In Gallia or Meigs

Electric In good condltlon. On

ter 5pm.

c...nlng

it

310 Homes for Sale

wood Ux60 2 bdr, 1 bath , ex .
cond . Can ally in park wl ap·
proved appliCI!IIIon or win deliver

Single Chrilllon lomale looltlng lor

540

· Furnlahed
Room a

450

47 eliCit (•

II ANI
17 TV'• .........
11 PN!Ix lOt

I

•

.

"t"

'

•

.

(·

•

�• •

•

By The Bend

The Daily .Sentinel
·

·

Page10
Monday, May 18, 1998

Ann
Landers
I\I'J1. Lus AllfCie.
Sy.Wu: ~ IC

:~ml

n_..

C n:~t•&gt;o

Sylllho..1UC.

Dear Ann Landers! I am heartbroken and inconsolable.
My beautiful wife imd the mother of our four young children died
yesterday. She killed herself.
Did she use a gun? A noose?
Pills? A knife? No. It was cigarcnes.
-- Grievi ng in New York
Dear New York: My heartfe lt
condolences. No comment from me
is necessary. Your letter said it all .
Dear Aim Landers: I read your
column every day in Ncwsday. you

tim agreed to take money instead.
The problem:. How much is a
camel worth?
None of. us had anticipated that
hurdle, but we were perfectly will·
ing to pay the price of 80 old, broken-down male camels, figuring it
would not be very much.
The victim. however, had other
ideas. He insisted on the price of 80
young . healt~y. pregnant female
camels.
The negotiations dragged on for
several weeks, and fi nally. we set·
tied on SIO per camel . which would
give the vi.ctim $800. Thi&gt; was a
very large sum of money in Somalia
at that ti me.
That scnlemcnt was much greater
than any Somali would have been
forced to pay. and we knew it. bu t

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60

we were helpless.
examination of a doctor. I hope you
Q: "So then it is possible the
Of course, because of lhat huge will print it in your column.
patient was alive when you '?egan
ove'l'ayment. we became the laugh·
Your readers can always use a !he autopsy?"
·
ingstock of Northern Somalia, and · good laugh. No name, plea.ic,(~
A: "No."
the transaction was thereafter sign this letter -- Your Nonh Slill(e"- Q: "How can you be so sure.
referred to as "American compcnsa- Neighbor
.
.
doctor?"
. .
tion.•· --George in Wantagh, N.Y.
Dear Neighbor: I, too. think it is
A: :·Because his hra.in wa.• Slttmg
Dear George: It was a good very funny and am printing it at the on my desk in a jar."
.
.
move, in my opinion.
risk of antagoni zing al l my friends
Q: " But could the pat1ent still
Bener to have ove'l'aid and been . and relatives in the legal profession. have heen alive nevertheless?"
A: "It is JX&gt;Ssible that he could
laug hed at than to have chc~ped oul · Here it is:
and damaged the image of our great
Q: "Doctor. before , you per- have been nlive and prac ticing law ·
cou ntry, which has nlwnys bee n one formed the autopsy, did you check somewhere."
of I!Cnerosity.
for a pulseT'
Consider the ovc'l'Oyment your
A: " No."
contribution to protecting that image·
· Q: " Did you check for hl ood
.
ofA menca.
pressurer•
.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Dear Ann Landers: I read this in · A: " No."
Creators Syndi~ate, 5777 W. CenCurmudgeon's Comer and thought it
Q: . "Did you check for breath- tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
was hilarious.
ing?"
Calif, 90045
It is supposed to be a crossA: " No."

•

Suggestions ranging from raising the
retirement age to investing in the
stock market are being proposed.
President Clinton has called for a
niuional dialogue during the coming
year after which he will host a White
House conference on the future of
Social Security to make recommendation~ to a bipartisan Congressional comminee.
You should take the opJX&gt;rtunity to
become involved in the discus.•ion in
your place of worship, your community organization, your schools and
your living room. You need to make
sure you know enough about Social
Security to be able to understand the
various proposals for change. AI
some point, you may liave to cast a
vote for a candidate, or a proposal,
that will affect your future security.
V:ou want to know what you're voting for.
.
For more information on the
Social Security program, you should
call 1-800-772-I213 and ask for the
booklet, Social Security: Basic Facts
About.
Investments don't count against
benefits
The following types of income do
not count toward the earnings limits
designed'as a measure of whether a
person is actually retired frpm the
work force: investment and interest .
income, inOney received from an iRA

(individual retirement account), a
40l(k). annuities, capital gains, gifts
or inheritances, rental income (unless
you are a real estate dealer or you rent
a farm to someone and have an active
role in managipg the farm ), income
from trust funds, moving expenses,
travel expenses and jury duty pay.

, I

\

.

Sign up for Medicare at age 65
You do not have to retire to qualify for Medicare at age 65. Medicare .
consists of Pan A (hospital insurance)
and Pan B, (medical or a doctor btll
insurance). Pan A is paid for by a
tion of the Social Security.lalles you
pay while working. Part B is paid for
by general tax revenues and bv the
monthly premiums
·

The Community Calendar Is
published a.• a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meellng and special events. The
calendar is 1101 designed to promote
sales or rund raisers or any type.
Items are ~nted as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
speciftc' number or days.

POMEROY -- Special meeting,
governing board of the Meigs County Educational Service Center, Monday. 7 p.m. at center's offices in
Pomeroy. ·
TUESDAY
POMEROY -· Meigs County
Health Department, Thesday, S to 7
p.m at the Meigs Multipu'l'OSC Center. 'Child 10 be accompanied by parent/legal guardian, Immunization
records to be brought.

MONDAY
LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees. Monday; 7 p.m. office
building.

I

Fund$ may
add 2 jobs
to chamber
WINNERS· Hoola, the drug-frae hippo, or lleallto Alcovery S.
vlcft, conducted 1 drug-tree coloring contlat at the Salllllury
Elemenllry School-lily. Judging 1M enb lea were Meigs High
School Teenlnltltule omc.ra. Prtaa went to 1he winners, lift to
right, Jllri Bentley, t!llrd; Rosa Well, eecond, end Melthew Wendling, flrat, pictured hera with Hoole, .l he Hippo, pleyed by Jeke
Birchfield, a 11 olflcer, end Melissa Davia, another otncer, 1att.

-.:..,_Military news--+_

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......

mentaJ ·piaintiffs t.rying to protect the
national forests," True said.
The ruling's impact on Wayne
National Forest also may be minimal.
Federal law requires ihat a new plan
for the forest be in place by 2002, and
expectations are the new plan will be
inuch different than the old one.
A long-range federal plan designates about 126.000 of the 177,000
acres as suitable for timber produc~

_..;. ··___.;,;.._A work of art..,.._....
., ___,

State will add 50 acres
to forest site in Meigs
Gannett Newt Service

.
COLUMBUS - Fifty acres of land will be added to the Shade River
·state·Forest in the nonhea.~t JX&gt;rtion of Meigs County. following State Controfling Board approval of a $37,700 check to buy the t~act of woodlands.
Without commenting on the proposal,lhe board approved the pu rchase
of the acreage owned by Franklin and Janet Doherty. The land being p ~r-.
cha.'led is adajacent to slate-owned land on two sides.
• ••
"It's a policy of our foresti'J' divsion to acquire in-holdings from wDi-:
ing sellers 10 impr:ove forest management, reduce boundary problems ll,!liJ.:
provide more areas for recreation." said Jim l ynch, spokespen;on for~
Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources.
: .;
•
tion. On four-fifths of lhose acres, the year that ·the Forest Service ha.!dW;plan adopted a decade ago allows for counted the forest's recreational valclear-cuuing.
.
ue and improperly dcicided that clearA federal trial judge upheld the cutting wa.~ nece~sary. The Ohio
plan. bul the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun Forestry Association appealed !bat·
of Appeals in Cincinnati ruled l:t~t ruling.
. . ..

Commissioners split.
ove·r repair funding
for Syracuse's pool : .~
By BRIAN J. R.EED

Sentinel N-a Staff
.
· The Meigs County Commissioners, voting 2- 1, approved payment of
$4,000 towand repairs on the London Pool. The action was taken, with Com- ·
missioner Jeffrey Thornton dissenting, at the board's regulw: meeting on Mon·
day.
.
• .
Mayor George Connolly of Syracuse requested financing toward an esti·
mated $7,(1()()'in repairs to the pool, eKpected to begm thts week.
.. .•
Thornton,
in
voting
against
the
action.
cited
financial
difficulties
that.
he
... •
says the commissioners are facing in several areas of the cou~~y budget, name~~·f. ~
'·~
...
,.
ly the operation of the county home and the need to addtuonally fund the
county's self-insurance claims account
. . .
..
.. ·
The county home has required a $30,000 appropnauon m add1t1on to.the
. $20,000 initially budgeted in January. The facility is now officially operating a.~ a "temJX&gt;rary" facility for housing indigent resident\.
The ins~t'ance fund. used to pay claims ror employees participating in the
coi1nty:s '"If-funded insurance. Protram, must be Mupple~~~Cnted to pay in
excess of S12,000 In claims now due and payable to employees or care
cJiM&amp;i, ,,..llij¥1'1~11 ·~three
!IIIHii Rtih IIC'hoolll!iWY Nc.nuy, you heve p..oiliibly 111n
.·positions: economic devei01Jment
Ill* fir wall. 841nlol' Art Ill .-udlilt Juon FI'ICklr, who graduated from .
providers. According to calculation.~ made,in the county aQditor's offi~e. the
director. a IOUrlsm director and a secor Marlc TWain lhlra. The Image was P,Jtnnecl ·to visually
fund 'faces an actual deficit of $63,856.
·
. ·
retaey. The chamber also useA man·
portrait of WIHiam ShaklapMN on 1he rlghlalda of the door. It
,• ·
"I would like 10 give (Syracuse) the money they need," Thornton said.
JX&gt;Wer provided through the DHS as
Roxanne Wllllama end Holly Cleland. Wttii FI'ICtcw •• he worked on
"but I feel we have obligations to all the people. and giving money away is
a !'ar! of its work experience pro- ~ George Naglllald, 1rt Instructor. .
goins to bankrupt the county."
. .
.
gram, according to E!:onomic Devel.
. . "I don't want to come back next yel\1'. a.~ a commtss1oner, and not have
the fund.~ we need to operate," he added.
In making a mtJtipn to provide the fun&lt;:ls to the vill~ge of Syracuse, COIJ!opment hu determined that funding
.
.
.
.
rois.~ioner Fred Hoffman said that !Je ~ .ews the fundtqg not a.~ a gtveaway,
.
but as a serv1ce.
.
· •
"We're not giving money away." Hoffman said. "I see this •~ providiQg. a
reduce the probability of increasing
.
·
·
·
necessary service."
.
. •
, .
new Ohio Work.s First (welfare) cas- By JIM FREEMAN
will apply to all events and no alco- Midclleport corporation line.
Specifically. Hoffman said the funds were especially helpful to low and·
es," the news relea.'IC said." and pro- Sentinel N-1 Std
hoi is allowed at the amphitheater
Council also met with Robert moderate income families who must use the public pools because they ~lil!'\;
vide employment ror·the county's 846
. Pomeroy Viii,. Council, meeting unless special arrangement, have Smith of Locust Street, who reJX&gt;rt· not afford privately-owned swimming pools .
existing ca.'ICS.".
in regular ·sesston Monday night, been made with the village. People ed JX&gt;tholcs near his home have not
(Continued on Page 3)
McDade, ·w11o works through the gave its. approval for a pl~n for com- using the amphitheater 8re required to been repaired for lhree years: He lives
chamber office in Pomeroy, said thai munity use of the Me1gs County clean up the faciUty afterwards.
at the end of the street.
Other services are available at · Council .members indicated their
·representatives or the chamber and Amphitheater in'downtown Pomeroy.
economic development dffice, the
Council President John Musser extra cost including lighting. elec- desire that the road be patched as
Community Improvement CorJX&gt;i'a- presented the ProPosed rules to the tricity, public address. security and soon as JX&gt;ssible.
tion; and the county commiuionen tJther council members, saying it clean up.
Council members also noted sevwill meet later today to di!ICilss the would let the committee find out who·
People interested in reserving the eralstreetlights in need of replacing . By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
use of the new fund.,.
is going to use lhe facility, which
amphitheater can. call village hall It wa.~ rejlorted lhat American Elec- Sentinel Newe Staff
Mike Swisher, director of the officially dedicated la.~l year. .
between 8 ?.m. and 4 p.m.
. · tric Power has been notified and that
John D. Costanzo, elementary
DHS, said·la.•t week that the JX&gt;Sitions
A reservation request quesuon- . . In add1t1on, Musser commended no action has taken place .
supervisor of Meigs County Educaare "yet to be defined. • McDade said naire must be submitted to the BOb's Market and Jeff Thornton for
tional Service Centersince 1981. has
this morning however th;lt one opti011 Amphitheater Committee at least 14 their donations of flowers for th(
. Wright as~ed if routine .street been .named superintendent of the
being considered is the addition of at days prior 111 the event 11nd a reser- downtown IU'Ca, and John and Sarah patrols were taking place.
newly formed Athens-Meigs Educalea.~t one additional staff member to
vat ion fee of $30 must be paid to the Fisher Jor their work to beautify the
Police Chief Jeff Miller said offi- .tion Service Center (ESC).
a.,sist him in promoting business and committee wilhin 10 days from the . · area.
· Costanzo was hired last night in
cers still walk the downtown area,
economic development.
date the reservation is made.
"It looks snazzy," Councilman weather permitting. ami added that separate sessions of the boards of the
Commiss~r Janet Howllrd said
Reservations do not require. the George Wright commented.
patrols will increase during the sum- Meigs and Athens Educational Serlast week that the infusion of funds commiuee to control normal recreIn addition. council approved an mer months.
vice Centers ut the Athens ESC
from .the state could be used 10 atioMI boating. or allow the person ' el)ltrgency resolution authorizing
Council also mt:t in executive ses- office. He a.~sumes lhe new position
relieve the county of the SSO.OOO it · reserving the amphitheater to control Village Administrator John Anderson sion to discuss personnel matters.
on July I, the effective date of the
now contributes, so that the funds the recreational boating. Normal parking to apply for 1998 Community Devel!'resent were Mayor Frank Vaug~­ ESC merger.
.
county contributes can be directed to rules will be apply during future opment Block Grant Water and San- an, Clerkll'reasurer Kathy Hysell • .
At the meetings, the re•ignations
other uses.
·events unless other amngements are itllf)' Sewer Competitive Program Musser, council members Geri Wal, of Virginia May, superintendent of
However. the county made a two- made with the village.
funds for a proJX&gt;sed sewer project ton; Dave Bolland, LaiT}' Wehrung the Athen• ESC, and John Riebel.
ymr commitment to fund economic
In addition, a midnight curfew from the Legion Terrace area to the and Wright, and Miller.
superintendent of the Meigs ESC
development efforts through the
office. were accepted .. Both are effec~~
chamber of commerce when McDade
tive July 31. For the month of July,
was hired in Febroary 1997.
both May and Riebel will serve a.' · _ _ _Joh
__
_nzo
_ _..,.._;
consultants .to the' new superintendent
he said.
· 1
The new center will serve all local
Costan zo ha.O; u.doctorate in Odu·
district schools in Meigs and Athen., cationa! administration from f"J.io ·
counties, a total of about 8,600 stu- University with extensive and¥coodents. This fulfills the slate require- tinuing e•perience in educational .
ment that a single service center.serve administrution related to the devel1 Section • 10 Pates
a
minimum of 8,000 studenL~. Athens opment and improvement of ctirrlc.ti·
Vol. 49, No. 28
City and Nelsonville York Schools lum instruction. and professional
· are excluded from the program · development in public schools. '
Calc'"'•r
10
although the new center will contract
His 11m1S of professional expert~
Claytoale .
for specialized services with lhQ~;C have includea providing educaticinal
Comics
schools.
·
leadership, developing, coor&amp;~­
z
Editorillf
"I'm honored to have been chosen ing. and evaluating staff development
to be the superintendent of the new- programs. coordinating administra3
l.oc•l
ly
formed Athens-Meigs Education- tion, ICOring, and reJX&gt;ning proce·
Sports
.u s
al Service Center. commented dures for school and district ~ling
3
Wuthcr
Costanzo. "I feel that this is a gmtt programs, coordinating the utilization
opportunity for me because I will of instru~tional materials and.
Lotteries
continue to serye Meias Counly resources. assisting teachenr and
SChools while serving !)(:hoots and ldministrllors in the preparation o(
communities in Athens CountY where grant ptopostb for federal, Nte,
OHIO
,·
I live.
local and private funding lll!"ncies;
Pick 3: 8-0-9; Pick 4: 3-4-0-8
· POMEROY POPPY DAYS-~. Frio
"I'm
iookinJ
forward
to
ivortcin1
coondinatinalllld supervising5peCial .
Budleye 5:6-11-12-17-27 .
day and Saturday will be Poppy Deyl In
with school pelliOIInel and commu- programs, and working with· !or;al
. PonwOV. IICCOI'dlng loa proclaiNillon .....
W,fA.
nity members in both counties to school districts to implement pttblie
MondiY
night
by
P0m1roV
Mayor
FNIIII
Yaugho
.
Dilly l : 5-0-0: DIU)' 4: ~
•
· improve educational opportunities · relllions projll'lflls.
an.llemblrll
ol111e
Amar1can
utton
Auldllary
0 1918 Olllo Vll"'' Publlllll., Co.
fot children and adults in our 11ft."
(Conanuad on Plge 3) ·
' ~
~

Commu·n ity use .of.amphitheater
gets Pomeroy Council's approval

.

.

was

'

~

.•

Tlie versatile 400 Series features ijquid-cooled, 20· to 22-hp
engine ·and 54- or 60-inch mowing deck.

.'

.Costanzo .t o supervise.
new .Meigs-Athens ESC .

,

•
•

..-.

.

-~~5 Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Sentinel Newa Std
.
As many as two additional
salaried positions in the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will be
funded through the Ohio Department
of Human Services.
The Position~ will focus on work
force development for a period of 12
moflths begin~ing on,July I; acc:onding to a ne.ws release fi:om the Meigs
County Deplrtment of Human Ser·
vices. The Ohio DHS has made
SI2S,OOO available to Meigs County
to fund the positions.
The Meil$ County Commissioners cumntly contract with the chamber to worlt in economic development, providing $50,000 per year to
offset salaries and other expenses.
With those c:ounty funds aid oth·
...~funds ral~ ll~~-~~1&gt;: t!!~.Jilthe •

op~~fo'~=.!!~tr&gt;evel~o~"n~~~~~~~~~~o~iiob~e::

'

MC519 Material Collection System

Hometown Newspaper

By BRIAN J. REED

s·sthan fiVe minutes ~nd· you'll
be hooked -on the 400 Series!

.

•

National Forest from harvesting. The
Todd True, a lawyer for the SierBy RICHARD CARELU
Sierra
Club
and
the
Citizens
Council
ra
Club,
said that ~he timber industry
Aeaoclated Preaa Wrn.
on
Conservation
and
Environmental
had
hoped
for a broader ruling that
WASHINGTON - A Supreme
Coun ruling that will allow lhe gov- Control in 1992 challenged the For- would, in effect, impact on -environmentalistS challenges against timber .
ernment to .continue logging in a est Service' s logging plan. ·
"We conclude that the controver- companies.
southeastern Ohio national fo~t
"Anytime you lose a case, it's a
wasn't a complete setback for envi- . sy is not yet ripe for judicial review;"
Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote for setback. But the Supreme Court did
ronmental groups.
The Supreme Court on Monday the court, which ruled the effort to · not give the timber indu.~try the
rejected the plea or two environmen- preserve trees from timbering opera- sweeping rulina that would have
closed the court doors to environtal groups to save t~s in the Wayne tions was premature.

This flexibility .allows our naval
Eric Mlll'tlnko
Marine Pvt. Eric S. Marcinko, son forces to protect Jj.S. national interor Eric S. and Malvina M. Marcinko ests by serving as the principal
TuPJ!Crs Plains, recently reJX&gt;rted for enforcers or peacetime engagement,
duty with Headquanen and Service deterrance, and crisis response
Battalion, Marine CO'l's Combat around the world.
A I997 graduate of Eastern High
Dhelopment Center, Quantico. Va.
Marcinko's rotation to a new duty School, Marcinko joined the Marine
station exemplifies the worldwide · Co'1'5 in September, 1997.'
as~ignability of Marines and Sailors.

from NBA
Page4

..

High court rejects challenge ·
to Wayne National Forest plan

Por-

Community calendar

Jordan · wins
MVP ' award

•

Meigs County's

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

• Your benefit is also permanently increa.~ --depending on your age
-- bv a certain percent~~Ae wben
retirement is delayed. For example, a
person who reaches age 6S in· 1998
would increa.'le hiS' or her benefit b,y
5.5 percent each year he or she works
beyond age 65, up to age 70.'

Delayed retirement credits
People who continue working
beyom! 'age 65 increa:;e their Social
Secu(ity benefit in the following
ways:
"Ea!:h additional year you work
pdds anotlier year of earnings to your
Social Security record. Higher lifetime earnings result in higher benefits .

Sports

a1

.New challenges for an aging America
BY ED PETERSON, ..
MANAGER
Social Sacurlty
Office, Athena
Older Americans Month reminds
us once again that we're getting old·
er, not just as individuals, but as a
society. The theme, A Living Longer,
Growing Stronger in America, con- ·
fronts us wilh the fact that growing
old is no longer a matter of slow
death. It can be living life to the
fullest in every sense of the word.
Whether attributed to a reduction
in infant monality, decrease in fertility rates, fewer cases of infectious
and parasitic diseases or improvements in nutrition. education and
. technology. Americans are living
longer. And with longevity comes
strength. The maturation of America
will impact products, resources, services, technology, health care, labor,
social services and publiC JX&gt;Iicy. The
mature market is fast becoming a
dominant market, providing Americans wilh more choices and options.
Perhaps nowhere is the phenomenon being felt lhan in lhe .Social
Security program. It is the primary
reiiSOII for the current public di~ogue
on lhe future of lhe im&gt;gmm. dptions
designed to assure the program meets
lhe needs of the 76 million baby
boomers who '!'ill start retiring
around 2010. are being discussed.

Pundit or executioner?, Page 2
Meigs wins TVC softball title, Page 5
Rutland. Alumni scholarst·iips, Page 10

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: SO.

•

Ann doesn't share reader's gripe about 'American compensation'
have pri nted several letters ahout
.unusual judicial decisions, and I
would like to submit the following
amazing example.
In 1963 and '64, I was administering a Peace Corps prpject in
Northern Somalia, a semi-desert
area where camels were extrem~ l y .
important to the people.
One day, a Somali employee who
was driving a Peace Co'l's jeep
struck a young Somali man and
broke the poor fe llow's leg.
Under Somali Ia"·; the owner of
the vehicle was legally responsible,
so the victim sued the Peace Co'l's
for damages.
The jUdge ruled in favor of the
victim and decreed that the Peace
· Co'l'S pay the victim 80 camels.
Since we had no c~m e l s. the vic·

May 19, 1998

Weather

Includes Riders, LX Lawn
Tractors, GT, 300, &amp; 400 Series
Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors; F500 •
Front Mow~rs. and all
"·
· attachments.

n_o_._eoa
__..

Good Afternoon

40 lo~der

Today's Sentinel

!':ll · tn Broom

450 Tiller

47 111 Snow Blower

54 -In Front Bl ade

It's easy to g.et auached to a 400 Series Lawn and Garden Tractor. With over 25 different implements to choose from. the 400 is designedo to ~ork o~ more th~n just your Lawn or garden.
With the OUI~· latch implement ,mquntmg system that lets you get~ok.ed·up mmmutes, you can change attachments as fast as YO\I change your mtnd. No tools needed ~Which means the onl-y problems you II have wnh a 400 Senes lawn and Garden Tractor IS decrdmg what to get attached to next Get hooked-up wilh
best lawn
i
See your John Deere dealer today.

,•

661 PINECREST DRIVE
(740J 446·2412 .

lH'vl'

'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

rter·" · r /1(/}

I

•

J

•

...

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