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rhursday

Weather

Sports

May 21, 1998

Beat of the Bend column, Page 12
Ann landers column, Page 8
Reds edge Mets· 8-6, Page 4

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Today:, Sunny
High: 70;·Low:45
Tomorrow: Sunny
- Hl.gh: 70; Low:50

Fairfield
eliminates
Southern
Page 5

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Meigs County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co Newspaper
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NOelvtcl•,ooo r-c~ay from tt~e·~ ot Ohlo '4ttorner
tral Bttty D. MoniOOtMt'Y tor •wraparound" MI'YtCII.tor 81-rllk
youthl. the . - y wHI be uaed to INlet with ••""'" lnvolv·
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·Rx~ PRESCRIPTION OXYGEN INC.
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tutortnr.

,..ncy

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By T1le Aeeoclated Preu
·
An Ohio Lottery Commission
sJ!Pkeswoman said Ohioans will continue lo have to go !lilt of state if they
wanl to play the Powerball game.
Rebecca Boroff of the commis.~ion
said Wednesday that Powerball is for
stlltes with smaller populalions than

Good Afternoon

· Today's

~elntiJne•
:t Se&lt;lions • 12 Pages
Vol. 49; No. 21

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The Tri Counties ONLY L~LL~ 0Wn8d._ Momeca~ Company-.

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47442 Rl338
Recine, Ohio

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Repairs begin on Syracu·se stre.e t project

Wi~geu stat~!} the pf9ject has
Triplett said the work 'will take four
been I 1/2 years ih the making. · to six weeks tp complete.

By BRIAN J. REED

. and 'two Iitten of kittens from certain

Sentinel News Staff
A disfiguring scar on his lip is all
thai Morgan ha.~ to show for what
could
been a fatal encounter .
with a
hunter.

death . Another dog. found in
Pomeroy with an arrow through his
lung, was humanely . euthanized
through the program.
The rest, however, are happy end·
ma, for animals whose utures once
looked_blea~: .. . _
,
%!A stray cat whose leg was so
badly injured that it required amputation received necessary v~terinary ·
care and was later adopted by the
man who cared for him .
%A mother 'at and litter of kittens
found abandoned were spayed and
neutered, and adopted by .the woman
w~o found them.
%JA stray cat who came to the .
Humane Society Thrift Shop in Mid·
dleport was neutered and placed in a
.
caring home. ·
·. % A dog suffering in an abusive
home. malnourished and ill, received
medical treatment and was later
adopted.
%lA dog whose severe mange
made it impossible for his rescuer to
pay for his neutering was !reilted for
mange and·neutered and is now well.
% A stray cat and kittens were
· placed in a caring hoiJle after they
were spayed and neutered, even
though the person who adopted them
was unable to pay the veterinarian's
SELF- Morgan, owned by Ron Wood of Snowville, Is
bill.
almost his old seH again following a battery of surgarlea and proThese cases. along with Mor· · cedures to repair a gun,llol wouild. Wood racelved financial
gall's, have cost the Humane Society , · asslatance through·the Meigs County Humane Society's Ahlm$1.693, all paid through the Ahimsa
sa Grant.

Morgan, his dog, who is I:IC
to
have been the victim of an intention. al close-range shooting by an oui-of·
town hunter.
.
·
Morgan is like his old self again.
-jumping to,greet strange visitors and
playing with the other animal's at the
WOOd home.
•
Originally, Morgan was given little hope for survival,' but surgeries .
were performed to repair a fra~tured
jal", a damaged sinus system and his
disfigured lip. In fact, Morgan has
been 'through a battery of surgeries
and other veterinary procedures to
repair the damage incurred in the
shQOiing .. the left side of his face,
front the tip of his nose ·to the tip of
his face was virtually torn away by
the impact.
Pan oT the expense for Morgan's
treatment -- $450 -- has been paid by
the Meig's County Humane Society's
Animal Rescue Project. which .in tum
·is fun.ded through a grant from the
Ahimsa Foundation of Boston, Mass.
Alden Waitt, president of the
Meigs County Humane Society, said
Wednesday •that the grant ha.~ been
used to help rescue six adult animals .

grant. ·
of the local hull)ane society, Ahimsa
The Ahimsa Fou~dation, named · funds come with strings atta,hed -lOr the Sanskrit phrase meaning non- the person·receiving financial assisviolence, devotes its efforts to help- tance must bo: willing to adopt the
ing to improve the lot of threatened anil)lal if the animal is not already a
animals, both wild and domestic.
. pan of the home.
·
Beeau;re-oftlwlimlted-Tesoun:es
- - - - - - +,

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.Ohioans go out-of~state io play Powerba/1 game

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shill'e!l the story of Ron . '·;;i~e-,;r;~

and .Sleep·Disorder

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Morgan, other animals ha·ve happy endings through Ahlmsa progr~m

oxygen·

OXYGEN

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Work began last ·week and will
continue for several more .weeks on
the Bridgeman Street Slip Repair
f'roject in Syracuse.
Workers with Rose's Excavating
of Racine are conducting, the
$100.035.72 project which involves ·
removing the soil below the slip,
installing drainage. and filling in the
hillside with new fill dirt.
Engineer Gene Triplett was hired
by the village for $5,000 to serve as
construction supervisor. He said
Wednesday morning that 2.000 yards
or fill dirt, obtained from two neighboring properties, will be installed to
support th.e hillside.
Instead of the steep slope that was
below the roadway, the , new. slope
will be more gradual, he explained.
The project has been undertaken ·
through ' Issue II (State Capital
Improvement Project) grant . funds
and Ill percent village financing.
according to village Grants Administrator · Robert Wingett who
e~tplained the total cost of the project
for the village willl;le approdmately
$11,500.
.
.
Triplett earlier explained to neighboring property owners in detail the
work that will be done including
drainage, curbs and guardrail. He also damaged and that shrubs, and other
. rioted driveways will be repaired if plants will be repl:ice.I.

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Hill,.,,..,

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PRESCRIPTION
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Hometown Newspaper .

OHIO

Pkk 3: II o; ~ 4: 11116

Super Locto: ~-10.12- 19-23-47
Kicker: 631269 '

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W.\'A. .
31972; o.lly 4: 4610

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Ohio that can't afford big lottery
jackpots.
.
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"Ohio ha.~ such a large population
and a IIIIJ!e amount of sales orlottery
tickets that we ·can afford to have a
large jackpot on our own. The
(Powcrball) states ... pool their money in order for them to have "bigger
jackpot like this one," she said.
Traffic was heavy on roads from
Ohio into Indiana, Kentucky and
West Virginiaod Wedne.o;day as Ohio
residents lined up to buy tickets f9r
a $195 million Powerball jackpot-

the largest lottery prize ever in the
United States.
At th~ Petro truck stop on old U.S.
40 near New Paris, Ohio. some customer;; weren'i sure w~~te they
were m.
.
"We're less than 500 feet from the
Indiana border, so we're getting lots
'of requests for Powerball tickets ·
from travelers Y&lt;ho think they 're in
Indiana," said .Cheryl Stephen, a
Petro supervisor.
"'I send them to Richmond. which
.is just down !he road. but many end

·Hous~ app·rov~s
. COLUMBUS (AP) .:_ . Kindergarten won't be all run and games
any mOle as a result or 'legislation
approved in the Ohio Ho118C.
Lawmakers voted 82-13 Wednes·
day to require parenlll who Sel)d their
5-year-olds to school to keep them
there.
.;
Cwrentlaw doesn't reqti!R school
attendance until a cllild turns~. but
!l'bme parents stan their children ·
going to school earlier, said' Rep.
Otarlets Tavares, O:Columbus, who
·
sponsored the bill.
Problems occur when parentJ
enroll cllikllen in kindef8111en early,
then are lax about llllendance, ihe

said.

.

"Once . a parent or guardian
decides 'to enroll the child in school,

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up coming ba'k here to huy Ohio ·
Lottery tickeiS ~cause the lines in
Indiana are too. long."
· The winning numbers drawn
Wednesday night were 4, 9. 30, 34
and 48. The Powerball number was

non-Powerball stale.
The odds of nne person's match·
ing all six numbo:rs lhr a share of the
mqney were HO.I million-to· I.
· Players lined up at 'onvenience
stores, gas ''at ions, tobacco shops.
8.
liquor stores and malls tn buy tickets,
Powerball officials announced
Steve Crum of C:lldwell. Ohio.
early today a ticket sold in southern drove 50 miles to Williamstown.
WiscOnsin was the' only winner,
W.Va., to buy $20 worth of ticket~.
The .1'finner's identity w:b not
"We're just. buying a ton. It's so
known . .The big tick~! was sold in high now and this is -the only chance
Walworth County. Wis.. at a store just I'll ever have to m;d&lt;e $175 million,''
across the state line from Illinois. a Cru'" said. · ·

Dennis Marr of Marietta travels to
West Virginia twice a year to play
Powerball.,
"It's a waste of money and 1know
that. But with the size of this. 1 had
to do it," Marr said.
People from communities all over
northwest Ohio trJveled to Indiana to
buy tickets.
·
·
P.Jt Tovar ofTuledu sat in his car
out~ide one Indiana store, with charts.
book~. number lists, lnlemel printout~
and scribbled notes on his lap.
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compulsory kindergarten· bill

it should be•the beginning of a continuous educational process." Tavares
said.
SOme parents abiiS~= the system by
using kindergarten as a day care een:
ter, sending the child only on days
when it fits their schedules. said Rep.
Randy Gardner, R-Bowling Green.
Opponents of the bill said it was
another q.ttempt by the ·state. to take
away parents' control over their chil·
dren 's education.
Rep. Richard Hodaes. R·
Wauseon. said he could think of several reasons why a parent would ·stllrt
a child in school, then pull him or her
out. A parent might not be sure
whether the child is ready for school,
he said. . '
.
Rep. Micltael Wise, R~Broadview

Heights, won support of the bill by
adding an amendment allowing p;lrents to remove children 11.~ long 11.~
they notify school oflicials: ·
The bill goes to the Senate for
consideration.
Also, going to the Senate were
bills:
-Creating the offense of reckla•
homicide. Rep. William Taylor, ~­
Norwalk, said he introduced the legislation. which wa.• approved 93·1.
after a Lorain youth shot and killed
a girl while playing with a gun. The
most serious crime the boy could be
chlllJ!ed with under current law wa.~
stealing the weapon from a gun
store, Taylor said.
-Changing the state's environmental audit progrilm to deal with

complaints raised by the U.S. Envi- · a bill requiring ptiblic hearings before
.ronmenlal Protection Agency. The · governments can cteate water and
program . is designed to encourage sewer districts. It also authorizes
companies to clean up contaminated health ·boards lo charge a fee for
sites and prptects companies from inspections of districts' systems con•
punishment if they clean up the sites ducte~ under contmct w.ith the Ohio
.
.
orl their own. It also lets companies EPA.
k~p results of environmental testing
Sen. Robett
Hagan,
D·
from the public.
Youngstown, cast the only "no" ·
. ·The EPA wanted limits on the time vote after saying the bill wu.• unclear
frames and scope of internal reviews about whether the boards could
by companies of their cleanup effort.~ . increase the fees.
The changes were approved by a 94- . · ''I'm left bewildered because of
3 vote.
·
the four or five people we llllked to,
Requiring OP,Crators of we got different answers," Hagan
. overnight children's camps to report said.
allcosations of libuse or neglect. Gov.
The Senate also approved a bill
George \binovich was expexcted to that would allow ·counties to place
sign the lesislation, approved 95-1 .
liens against the property of people
The Senate voted 32-1 in favor or who don't pay for sceptic tan.k
inspections.

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Thursday, May 21,1998

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.CommentBrr:
'F.stllbtrs~a in

Thura-,

1948

~- and lhreareninf! to proscctlle
l)lem unless they sign onto it
The White House and Clinton

However, a~
By Morton Konclracke
Who's worse: Independent Counsel Jeffrey Toobin
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Kenneth Starr or President Qinton? The recounts in this
614-992·2156 • FIX 992·2157
public thinks it's Starr by a wide margin, week's
New
but I think. Clinton has done more dam : · Ymker, Starr was
age to public life.
· on a special proseStarr may be guilty of prosccutorinl cutor lis• put
excess, bUt fundamentally it's Clinton's togcthcr by Clin- ·
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
conduct .: relatively petty alleged ton's deputy attar·
general,
offenses surrounded by a massive con· ney
ROBERT L WINGETT
cealment effort - that has p&lt;1 the coun- Philip HeymaJfn,
Publlllltr
who judged him Kondrtlcke
. try through a wringer
. In 1992, when the Whitewater scan- "responsible and intelligent.''
dal story firsc broke in the New Yori&lt;
Attorney General Janet . Reno first
CHARU:NE HOEFUCH
DIANE HILL
limes. the Clinton presidential cam- picked Roben Fiske, another ~cpubli ­
Controller
paign's general counsel, the late Dav1d can, but he )'las dismissed by Sentelle
,. General Manager
lfshin, urged making a clean brca~t of and replaced by Starr. Within days, Clin•
the facts He warned lhat Chnton, if ton associate 'James Carville and other
TlloScntloel_lc..,..Gil
elected,
would face a sjx:cial prosecutor. Democrats were assailing Starr, and they
- ~ -or~llawll»--oll»&gt;llf~- 7yPacllof·
..,. .,.. , . , . , . , and . , ,.., , . edltad. bell altGuld lnclud. • .,...,., ld 81
'
Instead of heing heeded, lfshin was haven't let up since.
' lnd dllyllnw p/HHN numbor. 5pK/Iy I -llfhiiW'o 11.,.,01... 10 I,..._...,;
shoved aside liy Clinton, his wife and
The
most serious allegation agltinst
or toiiOt. - to; unw. 111 1M , _ , n..
111 COW! St, " " - · 0111o
top =npaign ollkials Mickey Kantor Slarr is that he has indulged in prosccu~or, FAX to .,....,..Zfl7.
and Harold Ickes, who insisted on insti- torial excess.
tutmg what lfshin con"dered .a coverThe recent re-indictmcnt of Whiteup His prediction came true in the per- watct refusnik Susan McDougal and the
so~ of Starr. ·
tax indictment of Webster Hubbell's
Starr was attacked by DcmocraL&lt; wife do seem vindicuvc,
· almost from tbe montent of hts appointStarr also is "'-'CUsod - by McDoument in 1994. largely on the basis-that he gal, Hubbell. Monica Lewinsky auorncy
Dear edno"
was appointed by a panel of federal William Ginsburg and Whitewater witRobert Weedy's apotheosis fo1 the miraculous resurrection of the Zionist judges headed by David Scntelle, an nesses interviewed recently 011 "60 Minstate recalls Euripides adage, " A. had beginning makes- a had en~ing." a-.sociatc· of Sen. Jesse. Helms, R-N.C.
utes"-- of writing n scrip! for po!cntiul
Besides this is one of the oldest staples of Israeli-Zionist propaganda. This
is the ideational framework with which the entire sorry, history of Israeli
destabili zati on and destruction has been vended to propaganda consumers. I
write this response to surgically de nate the vase forego of errors. mismtcrerpretaiiOns, half truth and'outnght lies that characterize Mr. Weedy's article( I lind the m;uenul to be tcndcncious, sentimental, in places saacharine
to lhe point of idolatry imaqc- confused, uneven in tcr,npo, without the will
10; logical cleanliness, very convinced, and therefore disdainful of truth.
In a meeting with Truman in 1945, heads of U. S. diplomatic missions in ·
the Middle East adv1sed strongly against parlltionmg Palestine, saymg it will
result in a bloodbath. They were right, as history has proven. But Truman's
reply was "I am sorry gentlemen, but I have to answer to hundreds of thousands ivho arc anxious for the success of Zionism. I do not have hundreds of
thousands of Arabs among my constltutants." In 1948, Clark Clifford, Truman ;s domestic political adv 1sor, warned him that 1f he d1d not recognize
Israel, he might lose the 194&amp; election. General George Marshall America's
lop-ranking World War Two military leader, who by then was serving as
Truman's Secretary of State, counseled strongly against recognizing the
soon-to-be Zionist state of Israel before it defined its borders. In Marshall's
' words, "I said.bluntly that if the president 'were to follow CUfford's advice
and if in the elections I y;cre to vote, I would vote against the President."
Thr.:e days later, Truman recognized Israel II minutes after it procla1med its
exjstence. Now, nearly 50 years later the Zionist state st1ll has not defined irs
boroers. .
! It i&gt; not the Jewish presence in Palestine which Palestinians or anti-

lawyers also, alfese that Starr leaked
gmnd jury infonnation, although Starr
allies make a plaUsible ease that · the
leaks also fit the \Vhite House's pallein
of getting unfavaable news out on its
awn tenns - in this ease, ~th the 1wiS1
of having Starr blamed for it
There's no qlleSiion lh3t Starr has
been politically inept, notably by agm:ing to accep1 a Pepperdine UniverSity
deanship panially funded by conservative activist Richard Mellon Scaife' -thereby seemingly confinning White
House charges that ,he is part 9f a "vast
right-v.img conspiracy" to oust Clintoq.
The charges against Starr are serious
- panicularly leaking, which wbuld be
illegal, if !Ne. However. il's also true
that S14IT was fli'CI'Irc(l to quit Djtd go to
Pcpj]!J1dine after· secwing Whitewater
conviL'Iions m Arkansas -- until tbe
Monica L.cwin•ky case broke.
What's important about Lewinsky 1s
n01 just alleged' seli in the Oval Ollicc.
hut the suggestion .. which Starr &amp;:..'Ills
a pattern dating back through Whitewater -- that potential witnesses were systematically ~ohloff, hu.'&lt;hcd up or otherwise suborned..
.

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101M--- 1broad-,..,..._
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Letters to the editor

Responds to Weedy article.

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c·leo ·sheff• Kerns

Matched against one anqthcr, tllCre 's
no question that the public prefers Clin.
ton to Starr. Clinton'sjob approvallllling :
is 67 pen:cnt, according to a May MFox
News/Opinion Dynamics Poll, ,and
StaJT's· is 2M pen:cnl Clinton's pcrson:il'
tiwornhility mting is 50 pcn.'Citt, douhle,
St;~rr's 25 percent.
' ·
On the &lt;~her hand. the p&lt;~l indicates
tlutt hy 5~ to 37 P,n:enl, the puhlic.
think.&lt; that Chnton is invoking executive
privilcgc·to "stonewall the invcstigmivc
pmcess," and 48 pen:cnt believe "he
must have something to hide." A majority, 51 to 45 percent, now thinks th;1t
Clinton h;IS "damaged the dignity of the
presidency."
11JC major consequences of the scandal, of L'OUrsc, depend on what the iruth ·
is about Clinton's conduct. On balance,
Starr -- for all his unauractive 1.cal seem' to be after the truth. Qinton's
behavior indicates he wanl&lt;' to l'Onccal
it.
•. (Mortoa Kondracke is exiculive
editor ~ Rol Cal, the new5p1J1e1' ~
Capitol HiD.)

By the Associated Prell
Soutbeastfrn Ohio
Today...Moming clouds giving
way to a mostly sunny afternoon.
Highs in the mid and upper 70s. Light
northw..:t wind increasing late this
morning 10 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight .. Mosdy clear. Lows 45 to
50. Nonh wind 5 to 1S mph.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in the lower 70s.
•
Extended forecast
Friday night ...Ciear. Lows in the

jn history ·

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COLUMBUS- E.W. "Bill" Ingram Ill. president and chief execu·
live officer of the White Castle System Inc. , has bee_n III!P'linted to the
Bob Evans Farms Inc. Board of Directors. The appomqnent wa• effeclive May 15.
,
''
Ingram replaces Robert S. Wood, who has retired f~in the bo~rd..
White Castle ba.'ed in Columbus, is generally cons1dered the ongmal ·
quick service h~mburger chain. Ingram, 4?, is the third ~encration ~f his
family 1o lead the business. founded by h•s g~.1~dfnth~r.1n 1921. _
Ingram served in several tinanc1al posts wtlhtn Wh1te Castle, and was
named chairman of the board in 1994.
·
·
He is a 1972 graduate of Bowling Green Stale Unive111i'y wd it~~ deg~
in business administration. With White Castle_, he wOS:tln a mlolslrnltve
assistant in accounting. assistant trca.,ul'l:r and v1ce pres1dent hefore becoming its CEO in 1979.
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~-

•

...s.~·-··

- - - - - - -----·- ;_.__ _

•

•

MelVin R. Smith
Melvin R. Smith, 85, ReCdsville, died at his home on Thursday, May 21,
99
.
1 8.
Arrangements are under the direction of the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher
Funeral Home and will be announced upon completion.

0 ra-watkiJlS
•. --

idenl and CEO of White Castle, he has successfully led.the company mto
:its most aggressive growth period. whi~e maintaining a,!'lodcstlong-te~
,debt. Bill's overall business strategy wrll add funher depth to our board.

Gallipolis livestock au_c tion results
Producers Livestock Markel
repon from Gallipolis for sales con·
dueled on Wednesday, May 20.
Feeder Canle.
.
200-300# St. $90-98-$108, Hf.
$90-$98, 300-40011 St. $84-$112. 1-lf.
S78-S91. 500-650# St. $82-92-$80
Hf. $72-$84 650-800# St. $68-$80;
Hf. $58-$78.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $34-$37
Medium/Average $32-$34.
Thin/Light $28-$33, Bulls $35·

S44
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Bac~oThe Farms:

Co
·Cows

alf Pairs $375-750; Bred
$825; Bred cows, 400-

The Daily Sentinel
(liSPSllJ.Ml

AGaeotttc..-.,..,..

...........
Monday
Friday, Ill·C...rt lite.-.
St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio,"'""""
by lho

ONo Vllk:y PublisbinJ Compt~nyJO~nnett Co.
Second dus posliiC ptkl.lt Pomeroy, Otlio.
11M: Auuc:iatcd Prts.t 1nd the Oftio

,._..r: Associ1tiun.

Ncwsp1pcr
,_._.r:
Send address comc:tions tn The
Dilly Scalincl, 1t 1 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

SUBSCRIPTION llt\TES
ByCarriol'orM-Ono W.ok ................................$100
One Mooth ................. .,,,_.........$8.70
C)nc. Year.................................. $104.00
. SINGLE COl'\' PRICE
O.ii,. ...... ................................. JS Ccnu
Subscribcn no1 desiring to P'Y the. Cl"k:r m1y
rcmil ialdvance direct to 'The Dail)l Scnlinel o•
1 three. 1\x or 12 month basts. Cn;dil wtll be

aivcn e~rric:r each week.
No subsaiptKJn b)l ~il pcrmi.ncd in arc11
wtlcJC home Clrrief IC~ICC n IVItllb~. •
Publllbor retCNes 1M riJhliO ldjust ra1ct dMr1• lbc aubll:riplion periG:I Subscription r11c
C:U.S may be implcmcn1cd by chln&amp;in&amp; the
durllion of tile avbta'iptton

MAIL SVISCIUmON

575; Baby Calves $45-17~; Goats
$29-$53.
All day breed feeder calf and
brood cow sale Saturday, May 27.
. For free on-farm visits, please
· call 614-446-9696.

Stocks
Am Eft Power .... ;..................45'1.
Akzo ••••••••••••••·-···..·•·•u••••u.. 105\

AmrTech ...............................44'-

Athland 011 .........................51 "'.7
AT&amp;T ........" ...

58 .4

n ......................

Bank on•............... ,.............58"t.o
Bob Evant............................19't.o
Borg..wamer .........................sa'.t

Broughton............................. 1&amp;~.
Ch~~mplon ............................. 13~•
Charm Shpa ............................ s\
City Holding ............................ 42
Federal Mogul ...................... 63~.

Genrwtt ................. ,..f ............

&amp;n.

GoodyHr .............................&amp;a"l.

Kmert .......................•...........:.. 19Y..
Kroger .................................. 41"1.
Len de End ............................ 31 '!to
Ltd......................................... 337/•
Oak Hill Flnl .............., ........... 28~.
OVB ....................................... 36'1.
One Valley ............................36'1..
Peoplel ...........................
30
Prem Flnl .................................21
u ......

sn.

Rockwell .....................1........
RDIShell ...... ~ ...........................57
Sear• .................................... 63 ~.
Shoney'a ................................4~.
Star Bank .............................62'•
WendY's ................................ 24 '!.
Wosrthlngton ........................ 18~

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quote• provided by Advast
of Gelllpollt.

..... M&lt;lrtl OtolllJ

13 - ............................. .$17..10
l6 - b .......................... .$.!3.82
52 -111 .......................... .$UI5.S6
...., o.rMe Melp eao•y·
13 ........................... .$:19.25
l6 - b........................... .$56.68

52 W..b ......................... $109.72

RciJdcr Serv1ccs
CoiiiCIIoR Polley

0111' .... ~•• • wIa all ltOI'III il to be

IKCW ..... If,_ kwow of u enor lw 1
~. col dte II (741) 991·
2155. We wll clletk you m-lloa
. . . _.,. 1 -Jtdlow If nnuted.

Newa Departmei1tl
Tilt -

'

News Hotline
NewsHotUne
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

-...........................................-::: :::
OII•S.r."'.CII

Msaiiii....................................Ellt. UM
Q
Jtlt. IIIJ
CloooiW Atk ............................Exl. liM
I

,,

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

I'll., lAT.. IUN.

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Dance to be held
A round and square dance :will be :
held June 5 at the Glouster Senior
Citizens Center. Music will begin by ·
8 p.m. by the Happy Hollow Boys .
with J. B. Wilson a&lt; caller. There will
be cake walks, refreshments, and
door prizes.
• •·
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To close
!'
Planned Parenthood of Southeast.:
Ohio Health Services administrative
offices will be closed Monday iii.'.
observance of Memorial Day. Office~ '
will be open on Tuesday as usual.

Barbecue set
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department will have its annual
chicken barbecue Monday with serv·
ing starting at II a.m. chicken and
ribs will be served along with homemade icc cream. The parade to the
cemetery will be held at I p.m.

Hospital news

' '

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Wednesday, May 20:
Mr.s Brian Col bum and son; N..O:
rna Brinker, Rosemary Ellis, Polfy ,
Sell, 'Stanley Watson. Opel Ferrell; ·
Mary Swick, Emma Woodruff, Cindy '·
Prater. Macie Priddy, Glenn Beck lll)d ·
Marian Hoover.
Birth May 20
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wilcox, so.n,
Jackson.
·

Chapter to have inspection
Pomeroy ChajMer 186. Order of
the Eascem Star. will have its aQnual
inspection at the Shade River Lodge
hall, FridiiY· 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Pool openlnfl
Middleport Pool will open Satur·
day, noon to 6 p.m. every day. Prices
are $1.75 for students, $2.75 for
adults, and free for children under
three with an adult. Seao;on passes are
S25, single, $35 for family of three
(mother. father and one child) and
$10 per child al'ter the first one. For
more information call Cheri Johnson,
pool manager, at 992-9907 from II
a.m. to 6 p.m.

.'
Winning number · ·

DES MOINES. Iowa (AP)- Th~ . '
winning numbers drawn Wednesday , ,
night in "Powerball" are:
.• ..
4-9-30.34-48
Powerbllll 8
(four, nine, thirty. thiny-four. ,:
forty-eight, Powerball eight)

COLONY THEATRE

Workshop slated
American Electric Power's River
Transportation Division will host
area teachers at a teachers' workshop
on July 8 and 9 at its headquarters at
Lakin, W.Va. The program, 'Towing
the Line for Education" will feature

THE

O~~N~:!;UPLE II

',

PG 13

()HE EVENING SHOW 7,30
STARTING FRIDAY
LEONARDO DICAPRIO

TITANIC PG-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 1.:30

. •,.

ue 111123

Phone ·system out
The telephone system at Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative is not
operational and may not be repaired
until at least Friday.
In the interim, BREC will operate
with two cellular telephones to hand
incoming calls, and requests that customers with non-emergency business
to plea&lt;e refrain from calling on 1~
two Iines in order to allow emergency
calls 10 be processed.

..
'

Farmers Bank Is Having A Reunion
StQp In On Friday, May 22nd
. From 11:00 a.m. untn 3:00 p.m.
For Cake and Punch.
See old friends and classmates.

Carleton Scholarship
applications available .
Applications for 1998 Carleton
Memorial Scholarships for higher
education are now available to residents of the Village of Syracuse at the
1\f'aple ·Street home or- John Lisle,
Carleton College Board, of Trustees
secl'l:tary.
Deadline for returning the completed applitations IP Mr. Lisle is'
)un~ 19. Applications submilled al'ter
the deadline tbite will not be consid·
ered.

'Otillfl illfl ~~~
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;&lt;.

9 Utlft.

~n•···
Bank
Fa ...FarinerS
_
...............
, ..........
-··
...
--·- ·=--·.cu.c. - 8 5aYfngl COil !POllY

~CII-

....., CCIMI'ANY

.......

E&lt;hlNWtatim

...._

LEOIWIDO DICAJIRtO

&amp;20 W. Nahl St.- Pomeio~ 0

TITANIC

VIDtllln -1818101

a.Dipolil- 44e.o&amp;SI

.•

_......

Memorial Day services set
.
Racine American Legion Post 602 ·
will have Memorial Day services:
Monday at I0 a.m. A steak dinner :
will he served for $5 following the ·
service.

Units of the Meigs County Emer· 9:40 p.m., Wehe Terrace. Lisa
gency Medical Service recorded 13 Haggy, VMH, Central Dispatch
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units squad a'!istcd;
responding included:
10:26 p.m., Monkey Run, Tammy
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Wolfe, HMC, Central Dispatch squad
· 12: 12 a.m., Zuspan Hollow·Road, assisted.
Middlepon. Bernice Jones, Veterans RACINE
.
Memorial Hospital;
2:31 p.m., Portland Road, Mil7:45 a.m., Mulberry Avenue. dred Parsons, Plea.~nl Valley HospiPomeroy, Tammy Wolfe, Holzer tal.
Medical Center;
RUTLAND
II ;24 a.m .. Cole Street, Middle8:44a.m., McElhinney Hill Road,
port, Mary Brown, HMC:
E~a Seidenabel, VMH;
4:44p.m., state Route 124, Mid8:51a.m.. stale Route 143, motordleport, Russell Meadows, VMH;
vehicle accident, :ronya Anderson.
7:55 p.m .. Rocksprings Rehabili- O'B~ness Memorial Hospital. Jere·
tation Center, Pomeroy, Gerald Shus- my Runyon, VMH, Columbia TawnIer, VMH.
ship VFD as.~isled . .
POMEROY
. TUPPERS PLAINS
5:02 p.m., state Route 124.
. 7:45 a.m.• Rocksprings Rehabiliuuion Center, Even Crabtree, VMH; Reedsville, Tommy Scyoc, Camden·
8:34 a;m.. Mulberry Avenue, Clark Memorial Hospital, Reedo;ville
Patricia Henderson. HMC;
squad assisted.

MONUMENT•

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

Republk:an committee
, , :
The Meigs County RepubltcanCommittee will meet in the County:
Court Courtroom on May 28, 7:30:
p.m. All newly elected committee:
persons are encouraged to attend.

Meigs EMS logs 13 calls

992-2156

_.. nte••••n: .

•••

eration. Worksbop participants wiJJ
receive materials and academic cred·
it through Marshall University. Rc!Wo
istration can he completed by con-;
tacting Dee McCallister at (800~
642-3635.

ty, maritime !Owing industry envi•
,
ronmental concerns and coal-fired
Ora Watkins, 82. Middlepon, died on Thursday, May 21. 1998 at Over- and hydro-powered electricity gen·
brook Center in Middleport.
:
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral Home and will
be announced when completed.

-bor II 991-ll55. Deport·

co-ol Mt1 JI&lt; ........................ExL 1101

FUm to be shown
"Apocalypse" will he shown at the
~n U. B. Church located two mile
north of Reedsville at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday.

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---------==--'~ssioq~QD,!iver tran__ij)OJ!;!tion~safe·~·~--------IIN----=-~

I

I

Mowing planned
Tuppers Plains Christian Cemetery mowipg and trimming fees are
due now. They are $25 for each
grave. Payments are to be made
immediately to Rubal Caldwell,
40898 Old 7 Road. Reedsville, Ohio
45772:

and Anne Seidenahel, all of Middlepon; IWO granddaughters, Carla Set·
denabel of Pomeroy and Angela Seidenabel of Darwin; a step grandson.
James Anthony Bearhs of Middlepon; a brother, Leland Brown, Middlepon;
a sister-in-law, Marabclle Frecker. Pomeroy; and several ni«es and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Howard
Alfred Seidemibel. her stepfather, Clarence Rupe. and her brother, Clarence
Brown.
Services will be held at II a.m. on Fridax, May 22, 1998 81 the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Jim Huffman officiating. Burial
will follow at Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m.

--"We-areplen.o;edto-weleome--BdUn_gram-to-our~-satd-~anrei,E.. c--- Evans. chairman of the BEF board and tis chref executtve oft'tcer. As pl'l:s·

'

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The Meigs County Democrntic
ExeCutive Committee will not meet
this ev~ning, but will meet on May 28
at 7 p.m. at Carpenters Hall for an
organizational meeting.

Eva Seidenabel

j

SpaccAdininistralion has a Ncar-Earth•
A.'teroid Tr;.cking (NEAT) pmgram to•
locate Ncar Earth Objects (NEOs) and~
Potentially Hazardous Asteroids
(PHAs), but so far they've mnriagc&lt;f.to·
identify only I to 3 percent of.' the
things that &lt;;ould impact Eanh. Tell
your congressperson you SU(l(lOrt
NASA's efforts and would like to take
money from thC budget..; of the independent counsels and give it to NEAT.
-- You might want to sl&lt;x:k your
favorite cave with a year's 'worth of.
canood good~ in cru;c of an impact.~:
Keep checking the pull dates and l:
freshen up y&lt;KJr cuphoard every so
often.
.
• · ' ·
-- ~heck out the spate tmcking • · ,
Wch s1tcs. One of the mo&gt;1 interesting ' '
is maintailled by Lowell Observatory ; : /
in Aagslaff, Ari1. Go to buf.:Hasu:r· ·
.oid.lowcll.edul and click on " nfonna- :
tion for Ama&amp;eurs." There you will :- l
find helpful hints on how to spot aster- • • ;
oids.w1th your new. 25-cm or 30-cm . · '
rellccling telescope.
· · ' :
News ·you ean uS.. Joe (ll'liCtically :
invented il.
:
J-ph Spear Is a syndicated •' ;
writer for Newspaper ·Enterprlle · : !
Asa:tciatiola.
I
)I

Democratic meeting

MeJIIQrial services for (:leo "Sheff' Kems, 80. Avon Park, Aa., whe died
· Wednesday, April 29, 1998, will be held Sunday, May 24. at I p.m. at the
Riverview Cemetery in Middlepon with David Bryan officiating.
A former Middleport resident, he was born Dec. 9, 1917, in Conway, Pa..
son of the late Even and Winnetta Kerns. He retired from the Army in June,
1966, and Kaiser Aluminum in June, 1980.
He is survived by his wife, Peggy Robson Kerns. 10 whom he was married on July 9, 1946. in Russell, Ky.; two daughters and sons-in-law. Judy
and Larry Well of Shade and Joyce and Kendall Hecken of Avon Park; a
sister and brother-in-law, Sylvia and Chester Rice of Union City, Ga.; two
brothers. Carl Kems of Holmes Beach, Fla., and John and Becky Mayer of
mid and upper 40s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Highs in Grove City; a sisrer-in·law, Odella Kerns of Grove City; two grandchildren
the mid to upper 70s.
,
and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a brother. Paul Kerns, and a sister, Evelyn
Sunday... Pnnly cloudy wrth a
chance of showers and thunder- Johnson.
stonns.• Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the upper 70s.
.
Memorial day...Panly cloudy w1th
Eva Gertrude Brown Seidenabel. 81, Middleport, died on Wednesday.
a chance of showers and thunderMay
20. 1998 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Poll!eroy. She was born on
storms. Lows in the upper 50s and
February 6, 1917 in Rutland, daughter of the fare W1lhert and Vtolet Vema
highs in the lower 80s.
Kennedy Brown.
She wa~· a homemaker and a member of the Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Surviving are two sons and a daughter-in-law, Terry Seidenabel and Joh_n

··'hl"te
Cast'e
Chl"ef J"ot"ns
1'1'
I'
8 EF's board of directors

·r he whole world
is
suddenly
atwitter
.
plllliCtat a distance &lt;&gt;f 280,000 'miles. A
few mbnths later, NBC was on the air
with a thriller miniseries called" AstCroid," and vivid disasr,er scenarios suddenly began appcarin~ everywhere.
Washington Post: "A 300-foot-high
r110unlain of water traveling hundreds
of miles an hour carrying rough, roil. ing debris would rake civili1.cd coa.o;tal
areas."
,
Parade , magazine: "The sky
liccomcs black a' u darkroom, and for
more than si• months there is no sun- ·
light anywhere nn Earth. C&lt;x~ing rains
full, but they arc poisoned with sulfuric
acid."
'
Reader's Digest: "Du.•t panicles
and smoke block out the sun .... Plant'
f'Scrish and animals starve. Earth
plunges into a deep licim~. Sulfuric
gases rclca'ICII from vupori1.cd rock
mix .with water 'in the aunosphere to
·form 'lCid rain."
•
Oh well, let the multitudes rush to
the movies to·catch up. We'll just keep
' on going. Here's some more news you
can usc:
- There are more than 2,000 nearcnrth asteroids out there thai are roughly the size of Lower Manhattan. Be
aware of this.
- The Na&amp;ional Acronauiics ·and .

Burlingham service set
- The annual Memorial Day services at the Burlingham Cemetery
will be held at I:30 p.m. with lames
Ditty of Middleport a.' the speaker.
There will be special music by Denver Rice, Junior White and Joe Colbum and a salute by Feeney-Bennett
Post 128. American Legion.

Today's weather f~recast ·

tivc .

'
have not
could move
2000 problem. Dospite congressional '
2IXXl
appeals beginning almost i y~ar ago, l
been repaired thC
or replaced
In 1997,
Yunlcm, chief Y2K coordinalor Koskinen didn't
will think it's economist of Deutsche MOQlan Oren- stan work until last March and, Hom
Jan. I, 1900.' tell, cSJimatcd the odds of a Y2K- says, Clinton h\1-' "spent maybe 10
That's right, induced worldwide recession at 30 . seconds" rai~ing public awarcncs.&lt; or·
movie fans: · percent. In mid-March, after the latest thC crisis.
·
'
Groundhog
pmgress report on g()vcmmcnl comMost R~puh,licans have hccn conCentury. Is pliancc. he raised the odds of a tent to play no-fault politics on Y2K.
that
why "severe gtohal recession" to 60 per- But Steve Forbes isn't willing to ·let
Core has yet cent. Likening it to the 1973-74' the architects of the hridge to tllC new
to cmer~c OPEC-induced slumr. Yunlcni says. centu,.Y oil' the hbok so c:ISily. "If the
Wattenburg
from his hur- "lust a.&lt; oil is a vitnl resource for our hridge is not going tn be ready l&gt;y the
glnhal c4.:onnmy, so is infnrmutinn.'~ · time ynu. open it up liJr trntlic, il is·
row?
•
Hom estimates that at current ruics legitmuue to point that nut," suid ·
Dcclwing the lcderal government
"on the edge of failure," Hum." chair- qf pn&gt;gres.o;, just 63 percent of tbe led- Forbes jn un inlcrview defending his
man of lhc House Subcommittee '"' ·erul government's "mission critical" memo's charge that Clinton and Gore
Government Management. lnfonna- computer systems will he ready by the had 'g&lt;mc "AWOL" on Y2K. possihly ·
tu "limit puhliL'COilL'Crn until ufter the
tion and Technology. in March issued year 2000.
But, counters administmtion Y2K midtcnn clcctums."
the administration a grade of D- ror its
The Forbes mcnl&lt;&gt; is '" a mther
belated cffons to identify, repair and e1.ar John Koskinen, n.o; federal ugcn- '
replace outdated computer systems. ·
cics intensify their repair work .under ex1rm&gt;rdinary example of playing the
Government and private industry deadline pres.,ure. progress i~ likely to pre-emptive • blame game," returned
arc now reallocating munp;owcr and acce,lelllle. However,, even Koskinen Gore spokesman Lurry Hmt&lt; m an
money to the labor-intensive ' and sltlps shon or gutllUittccing 100 per- interview.
'
'
expensive ctfort to 'hunt d(&gt;wn' and. centL~Impliancc by 21XXJ. "I am hao;iMayhe. But techno-pride ·gnclh
rewrite hillions of lines of obsolete cally sa~isficd that the va.o;t•m(\jority of hel\&gt;re a techno-fall. Come Jan. I,
code: Pro)lress ha.&lt; been uchieved. But the rnissi&lt;in-critical systems of the fed- 20fXI. the government's unrepuincd
w1ll it be cnough7 Nuhudy really emf government will work," he says. computer systems won't know what
knows, but he sure to keep hurd Especially proud of progress on the century it is.
copies. because everything· frnm mL'II· . air-tranic C&lt;,mtrol COITI(lUicr systems,
But voters will. And in plain
ical and banking records to cmnmuni- he pledge., "I am !lying on New COBOL, that could mean an unnnuci- '
'caLions, JXlwcr and transportatiOn sys- Year's Eve and llying back on New paled Millennium Bug . in AI Gorc's'·
tems could he affected. One oti.'cited Ycur's Duy."
race. for the presidency in 1900. Oops,
estimate says tl&gt;e worldwide tah for
One thing is ccnain. On Y2K. Bill 2000.
:
the compliance pmgrnm will be $60(1 und AI did stop thinking ahouttomorBen Wattenberg is a syndicated'
bilhun -- half of it. Amcncan. Esti- rnw-- unttl JUSt about yesterday.
. writer for Newspaper Enterprise
When Horn ,;urvcyed Cabinet oOi- Association.
mates of Y2K-rclated htigation costs

led by Bruce
Willis nics into
space to destroy
an · eanhbound
astcr9id the size
of Tc,xa•.
For Spear
readers, this is
Serious Yawn
lime. You have
been
reading
about the penis
of
ncar-earth
'
objects for I0
Spear
years. You already know what the dangcrs arc and how to take cvn.o;ive
action. The hig question is. why did it
take so long for the rest of the W&lt;wld In
catch up with ~~·s threat to the eidstcncc of mankin '?
· Indeed, it . w n't until July 1994.
when huge chunks of Comet Shoe·
maker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter
with the force of 6 million nuclear
!lambs. sending up. fireballs and gougmg QUI colossal craters, that people
hegan to sit up and take notice.
Then in May· 1997, an a.'tcroid the
siie of six football fields shot. past
Earth at a discance of I.9 million mile.•.
a veritable cosmic inch. 'The same
month, a smaller object grazed the

Douglas O'Dell Clonch Sr., 60. Gallipolis, died Tuesday, May 19, 1998,
at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Bom June 28, 1937, in Henderson, W.Va., son of the late John A. and
Elizabeth Marie Bright Clonch, he was a Navy retiree and veteran of the
Vietnam War. He was a memher of the Old Primitive Baptist Chureh.
Surviving is his wife, Belly Lou Bates Clonch of Gallipolis; two daugh·
ters, Shirley Stoban of Racine and Shelby Clonch of Patriot; a son, John
Clonch of Nonh Carolina; nine grandchildren; three sisters, Lana Toles of
Gallipolis, Velma Sue Bloomer and Diana Gardner, both of Patriot.
He was preceded in death by a son, Douglas O'Dell Clonch Jr. in 1~2.
and a brother. Richard Clonch.
· Services will be held Friday, II a.m. at the Willis Funeral Home in Gallipolis with .the Rev. Darius Underwood officiating. Burial will follow in
Qhio Valley Memory Gardens with a flag presentation by volunteers of local
veterans lodges.
Friends may call Friday. 9 a.m. until the lime of service a1 the funeral
home.

IToledoI 7f1' I

ThoUgh Starr gets bltllled for prolonging the scandal agony, the White
House has done as much or mae - by
failing to tell the,Whole lrUth right away,
"misplacing" documents, selectively
refusing comment or dumping data on
the recOtd· for maximum benefit and
spending millions of dollars in taxpayer
funds on lawyers and PR people to susrain the president's defense.
· The Hubbell prison tapes. fVCn if
. tllcir (llfease was mis~ by Rep.
Dan Burton, R-Ind.. do confum charges
of the White House "squeezing" po!ential witnesses to keep them quiet.
And Hubbell did roctive ~valanchcs
of money tToril Clinton friends ·· inciUd·
ing the Indonesian Riadys .. for no
. apparent wori&lt;. ·
Clinton's asscnion of c•ecutivc priv·
ilcgc to prevent testimony from White
House aides about. conversations
amongst themselves and v.:ith' the First
Lady is a delaying tactic that also triviali4-'S a lcgitimale presidential prcf'l'lgit-

...

Douglas o•oell Clonch Sr.

MICH.

G~re· m
b
'
.
.
·. ay . e a ·pro·.blem.· •. n -2000

e'\clus1ve possessiOn of the land and the simultaneous dispassion of the
indig&lt;,lous population to accommodate recruited Jewish settlers loom all
parts of the world that is intolerable and unjust.
By Ben Wattenberg
; Israel's racism manifests itself in the distinctions drawn in bas1c legislaAI Gore can p@iJ:tgjllbal.climate_
-=ti'1n.hc.twc:cn.Je.l~&lt;s.anclrnm,,k~l~the-latter--are give~-a sc~ond"class-tili"'ze""hr-""
change, put real-time video o( .our
status whether they be Moslem or Christian. This i• a far cry from .Weedy's lonely planet on the Internet, and digia&lt;l!llation of the Zionist state. From Israel'• outset the racist attitude of its tize federal benefit transfers .. when
l~acrship has lx:en ev1dent David Bengunon stated "Israel is the country of he's not putting your middle-schoolcr
tl·lflews and only of the Jew" After questioning, w.hat Palestimans There on the Information superhighway or
~ nq Palestinians," one of his successor, Gold Mcir said to the Knessct. "I
poring over blucpriots for the Bridge
wlt!lt a Jewish state with decisive Jewish majority which cannot change 10 the New Century.
·ot:r:night-- I always believed this ..w~s plain Zio~ism." Moshc Davan. on
With the Year 2000 (Y2K) computFai;e
• the NatiOn, stated ;. " There arc about ·a million Arabs whom we don't cr crisis looming just 1·8 months from
,...nt ns citizens in Israel ..... It is not in accord with our ai'ms for the fuJurc ·, now (less. really. because most state
it~ould tum Israel into either a bi-national or an Arnh-Jewish' stnte mstcad liscal year.; begin in July 1999). we
o~ a ·lcwish state, and we want a Je-vish state." 'It is rather Israel and its are lucky to have such a man as our
Alllcrican supporters who refuse to resolve differences thmugh negotiations. ' VICC president.
F~~ it is they who cnnti~ually thrust the pejorati ve words "ant·i-Scmite" and
Aren't we''
"t~ifonst" into the forefront of puhlic consciousness. instead nf addressmg
"You can't lind Gore's tracks anyl~l!lsclvcs to the very real gricvanccs.causL'tl hy the cstahhshmcnt nf Zion- where'' on the Y2K problem, says
in-Israel in the heart of the Arah world.
•
Rep. Ster.hen Horn. R-Calif.. who has
~Th~ hour for truth has almost nassed
us .- Histn""
,.
'l will &lt;omeday cert:iinly
been trying fur two years tp pwJ the
n~ord that it was far from heretical to have declared that there was neither admimstmtion into speeding up federa ~~ed for a state of l~e " Jewish people", and certainly lillie juslifkalinn'fnr ul Year 2000 conversion~ . "What has
cs14blishmg such a state m its present lqcale. Meanwhile, there 1&gt; httlc sense the administration's technology point
il(funher meaningless talks ahout Israel's legitimate right to cxJ&gt;t unless we man. Vice President AI Gore. heen~
ddi~c precisely what Israel we are talking about. A normal Israel pmpagat- doi~g for the pa't live years'!" a.'kcd
1rf' genuine Jewish faith in behalf of the people living within its boarders likely GOP presidential candidate
eQUid gain cocxistenc~ with a Palestinian state and all mher Arab nations in Steve Forbes 10 a recent memo 10
ti\1: -exact same manner m which Arabs and Jews lived together si(lc hy side Congress and conservative leaders
1'&lt;1f centuries before the advent ol' Zionism. But an ahnonnal lsrad prumul- chiding the administration for its
' gat!ng worldwide Jewish n·ationahsm means only perpetual warfare. More "silencc".on Y2K.
lhliJ.I physical boundaries the limitless natio.nality base of the present ZionTo save valuable sto.mge space in
IS{ '"!ate obstructs all hope of a peaceful tomorrow and underlies such of
the days of cardboard computer punch
Arab fear. The "Lebensraum" the Zionist slate reqUJres for its ingathcrecs cards. software programmers conven'
•
PO.es a perpetual threat of limitless expansiOn .
11onally
represented years wnh two
• •To place the brunt of the burden upon Arab Palestine is a miserable eva- digits instead of tilUr. In archaic prosian of the duty that lies upon the whole of the civilized world. It is also gramming languages like COBOL
morally outrageous. No code of mor~ls can justify the persecution of one and other "legacy systems" still in
pe~le in an attempt to relieve the distress of another The cure for tbe cvic- wide usc in maintrame computers. all
tioll of Jews from Europe is not to be sought in the eviction of the Arabs years were assumed 10 fall in the 20th
froAI their homeland, and the relief of Jewish d1strcss may not be accom- century. So, when the 21st century
plished at the cost of innicting a corresponding diStress upon an innocent
and peaceful populauon . For although the Zionist state has existed for nearly 59 years, ncvcnhclcss. the log1c of facts remains inexorable.
It has continued to show that no room can be made '" Palest me for a second nation except hy dJSI~ging or extcrmmatmg the nation in.possession.
Thank you,
By JoHptl Spe1r
.' Mutlh Skelnl,
. One of the many reasons you keep
Gallipolis returning to this space, my survoy' tell
••
me. is. that you appreciate the ll&lt;'Ws••
you-can-usc appruach. The competition gives you opinion and little more.
Joe gives you the facts AND tells ynu
what to do with them.
By The Associated Press
.
The whole world is suddenly a.Today 1s Thursday. May 21 , the !41st day ul 1998 .•Thcrc arc 224 days .;;. tV.:ittcr, forcxample,ahoutthcdangers
felt ulthc: y~ar. . . . ·
.
of space objects that could collide with
Today s H1ghhght m H1story :
,
.. .
. Earth. uL&lt;t March, screaming headOn May 21, 1927. Charles A. L1ndburgb hmdcd h1s Spmt ol St. LoutS lincstoldusahmitamile-widea,tCr&lt;&gt;id
ncar P~ri&gt;, cumr.lcting the lirst solo airplane llighJ across the Atlanti~ Ocean. called 1997 XFII . that w&lt;KJid pa&lt;&gt;
On th1s date: .
,
.
. . .
within a whisker of Eanh on Thursday.
In 1542, Spamsh c~pl?rc~ Hernando de SoU&gt; d1cd while searchml,! for Oct. 26. 202M, and maybe even collide
gold along the MrssJSslppt R1~cr. .
. .
.
with the plooct.llten adny h1tcr, il wa'
In 1832, t!tC ftrsl DemocratiC Nauonal Convention ~ot under way, m Bal- Whoa. Nellie, never mind. The
timorc.
.
astronomers had recalculated. and now
In 1840, New Zealand was declared a British culony.
it appeared the object would lla'ih by
In 1881 , Clara Banon founded the Amencan Red Cross. .
Earth at a safe distance of 600.000
In 1892, the opera " I Pagliacci," by Ruggiero Lcollj;a~allo. was first per- miles.
formed, 1~ Milan, Italy.
.
,
•
'
At lhiS rnOillCnt, the crowds arc
In 1924, 14-year-old Bobby Franks was murdered in n,"tlyill killing" pouring into theaters to sec Paracommitted by Nathan Leopold Jr. and Richard Loeb. two students at the mount/DreamWorks'
pruduction.
Untvcrsity of Chicago.
•
"Deep Impact," which is aboot a team
In 1956, the United States exploded the first airborne hydrogen bomb of astronauts who arc dispatched into
o~er Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
·
deep space to nulfc a comet that is
In 19S9. the musical "Gypsy," inspired by the life of stripper Gypsy Rose bearing down on 'Earth. In July. the
Lee, opened on Broadway.
movie houses will he fcatunng a. Disney nick· called "Armageddon," in
I
which a team of oil-patch tough guys
'

today

Meigs announcements

Friday, May ll
AccuWeathe~ forecast for d•vll""'

u.y 21,.18111

_Who's·· worse, Slarr or· Cl.inton7

Zlonis&lt;s(Jewsandnon-~ews)findobjectionable. ItistheZionistdewandfor

I

OHIO Weather

'

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-·- I

•

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~

..,-

'··

�Sports

The ·Dally Sentinel
.

That's how much we think of him. To· Dave Mlicki in the Reds' three-run
my mind, he belongs on the All-Star . sixth inning, took the loss.
team."
"Our offense did a great job," '
Taubensee, 29, was traded from Mlicki said. "They gave me five runs
Houston to Cincinnati in 1994.
and that should be enough to win a
Taubensee is hilling .488 with run- game. I let them (Reds) back in. I
ners in scoring position.
went deep in the count and gave up
"I'm fortunate to be hilling fourth too many walks."
in the lineup and getting the oppor-McRae opened, the first inning
tunity to drive in runs," he said. "I' m with a double, moved to third on an
not a hanger like (Mark) McGwire: infield ,out and scored on John
so I just try to make contact and put Olerud's sacrifice ny to give the Mets
the ball in play."
.
a 1-0 lead.
Pete Harnisch (4-0), faring his
The Reds tied it in the second on
former team for the second time this Melvin Nie ves' RBI single, and took
season, pitched five innings for the a 2-llead in the thifd on Lenny Harvictory. He gave up five runs, two ris' RBI groundout.
earned, and six hits.
· Cincinnati made it 3-1 in the
. Jeff Shaw pitched I 2/3 innings fourth on Taubensee's sacrifice Hy;
for his 14th save.
but the Mets rallied for four runs in
Barry Larkin and Willie Greene the fifth off Harnisch on the homers
each had three hits and an RBI for the by McRae and Baerga.
Reds. who finished with 15 hits.
The Reds cut the Mets' lead to 5Brian McRae and Carlos Baerga 4 in the sixth on Harris' baseseach hit two-run homers for the ' loaded, RBI groundout off Dennis
Mets in the fifth .
Cook. Taubensee followed with a
John Hudek (0-2), who faced two-run double to put Cincinnati
only one batter in relief of starter ahead 6-5.

.
,

CELEBRATION TIME comea for the Cincinnati
Rilds' Jon Nunnally and Barry Larkin as Larkin
ecores on Eddie Tsuben-'a two-run alnQie In

the sixth Inning of Wildneaday nlg!it's game
sgalnal the hoat New York Mala, wHO loel 11-6.
(AP)
~""

·GaettPs HRs help·Cardinals beat Phils; Bucs, Padres split DH
.

"

'

night off. It was the third game he's les 0: Houston 4, Montreal 3; Arizona for the Pirates.
missed this year. 7, Florida 3; Atlanta 5, Colorado I;
Cubs 5, Dodgen 0
By The Associated Prell
"We' ll have a staff meeting and and San Francisco 4, Milwaukee 2.
Kevin Tapani pitched a three-hit·
'· Mark McGwire's day oli didn't see if he deserves to play tomorrow,"
Pirates 5, Padres 2
ter and Henry Rodrigue~ hit his lOth
cause the St. Louis Cardinals to miss Cardinals manager Tony La Russa
Padns 8, Pirates 3
homer as Chicago moved nine games
·abeat.
joked after the game.
Greg Vaughn hit a two-run homer over .500 for tbe first time since
Phillies fans, who cheered MeG- and Sterling Hitchcock pitched his 1995.
· ' , Gary Gaetti hit a pair of two-run
homers in place of McGwire on wire on Tuesday night and booed best game since rejoining the starting
Tapani (6-2) allowed two singles
Wednesday night, leading the Cardi- Gaetti Wednesday, apparently are rotation as San Diego earned a split to Gary Sheffield and another to Raul
nals to an 8-5 victory over the hoping McGwire plays in the series of the doubleheader at Pittsburgh.
Mondesi, striking llut a season-high
Philadelphia Phillies.
.
finale tonight.
Vaughn was 2-for-2 with three nine and walking two in his second
" It makes me wonder if I've been
Pittsburgh and San Diego split a RBis' and. reached base in all four shutout this season and ninth of his
_,playing out of position," said Gaetti. doubleheader, witb the Pirates win- plate appearances.
career:
normally a !bird baseman. '"Get me ning the first game 5-2 and losing the
Hitchcock (2-0) hadn't pitched
Hideo Nomo (2-6) took ·the loss
over there to the power position."
nightcap 8-3.
longer than six innings in tbree starts for visiting Los Angeles. .
' Gaeni. who hit just two home runs
Ron Gant and Deli no DeShields since moving from tbe bullpen to the
Astros 4, Expos 3
. i~ his first 130 at-bats, connected .off
also homered for the Cardinals, who rotation on May 4.
Derek Bell hii ;: tiebreaking RBI
:·Mark Ponugal (2-1) in the fifth tied a team record by homering in
In tbe opener, Francisco Cordova single in the ninth inning off Antho"inning and Darren Winston in the their 12th straight game. The Phillies · (5-3) shut out the Padres until tbe ny Telford (2-1) as Houston won at
,~venth.
went homerless in their fifth straight ninth inning, and San Diego's shaky Montreal.
''Mark McGwire is only one guy loss.
defense led to a four-run sixth inning
Doug Henry (3-1) got the win and
·on that team. You can't take 31)ybody
Mike Busby. making his first stan
lightly on that team," Portugal said. of the season and only the fifth of his 1'::'"':'"':'":::::~~~=-~:::~:=-~:::;:::::':~1
1.1 tried to make sOme adjustments, career, gave up six hits and two runs D ,t 1\,TT'\ A T
'1:1' ,\
---,;t-[~iai.a::. up gethng my liiltr-·in-silr innings"'!&lt;rimprove to~n.~~-1-.n:n:l:~V~·
·
.
.D.l1.
1
kicked." ·
Jeff Brantley pitched the ninth for
McGwire, whose three hQIIICrs his seventh ~ave.
'lJf'T'\
Tuesday night gave him a ma~r
In other NL games Wednesday, it
l.•.1JJ
.
.
league-leading 20, took a scheduled · was the Chicago Cubs 5. Lot; Ange-

NL roundup

-L
" F.

. By JOHN FAY

.

Cincinnati Enquirer

CINCINNATI - It's ironic that
Don Gullett. a guy who had his career
cut short on the way to the Hall of
Fame at27. now specializes in reviving pitching lives.
Bring Gullett Pete Schourek, the
most hittable pitcher in the National
League. and a year later you have the
Cy Young runner-up.
· Bring Gullett Jeff Brantley. ·the
reliever who couldn't close, and a
year later you have the relief pitcher
of the year.
Bring Gullett Jeff Shaw, a journeyman on the brink of being out of
a _job. and two years later you have

• Bltell Teitl · .
ECHO Cardlugrapby
• DlabiUc Muagement

..

the relief man of the year.
Bring Gullell Kent Mercker, a
starter with his mechanics in shambles, and a year later you have a
reborn power pitcher.
Gullett is in his sixth year as the
Cincinnati Reds pitching coach. His
task this year was his most daunting.
The Opening Day rotation consisted
of one man (Brett Tomko) with a
winning record and ERA below the
Dow Jones average.
.
But Gullett ha.• gocten results. The
starting rotation has combined to go
16-12 with an ERA just above 4.00.
The starters are the biggest reason the
Reds. a team picked to go nowhere,
(See GULLE'IT on P~p 5)

The Braves won for the 18th time
in 22 games and ended a five-game
home losing streak against Colorado
Millwood(6-l)hasa9-l record in
his last 13 starts since last Aug. 30.
He allowed four hits, walked two,
struck out three and hit a batter in
seven innings.

Giants 4, Brewers 2
Orel Hershiser pitched seven
strong innings for his third consecutive victory and contributed two singles to lead $an Francisco to the road
wiQ.
Hershiser (3·3) allowed one run
and five hits, struck out five and
walked two. Robb Nen pitched a per·
feet ninth for his IOth save.

liED
!0
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YOUR
,W K,JNS
SUI

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Gullett's builds
new career around
reviving pitchers

Billy Wagner picked up his lith save.
Diamondbacks 7, Marlins 3
Matt Williams capped a six-run
fifth inning with a grand slam as Arizona spoiled Mike Piazza's home
debut for Florida.
Piazza, given the night's biggest
ovation by the crowd of 17,560, singled in four at-bats. Todd Zeile, also
acquired from Los Angeles in la.•t
week's seven-player deal, doubled,
walk.ed twice and scored a run. · ·
Arizona's Omar Daal (1 -2) got the
win.
Braves 5, Rockies I
· Michael Tucker hit a two-run
homer in the first inning to help
Kevin Millwood win his sixth game.

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The Dally Sentinel • page 5

Pomeroy •·Middleport, Ohio

fairfield beats·Southern 10-3~- wins D-IV district baseb_
all title ;

Peae 4. •·
21

Reds·-tally 8-6 win over Mets,
kill four-game losing st.reak
NEW YORK (AP) - In less than
a year, Ed Taubensee has been transformed from a pan-lime catcher to
one of the lop hillers in the National
League.
Taubensee went 2-for-3 and drove
in three runs Wednesday nigllt as the
Cincinnat i Reds snapped a fourgame Josing streak with an 8-6 vict?ry over the New York Mets.
• Taubensee boosted his batting
a'verage to .373, second in the NL:
• '"I believed in him ever since I
took over," said manager Jack McKeon, who replaced Ray Knight las(
J.uly 25. "All he needed was the
chance to play. This is his first sea¥'" as a regular catcher."
Joe Oliver, who was the Reds' No.
I catcher last year. is now with the
Detroit Tigers.
·
"When Joe Oliver had been here,
Eddie had always been talked
down," McKeon said. "'Pitchers
wanted to stick with Oliver. but I told
'J:aubensce he would get his chance.
"We just gave him a two-year
extension that carries through 2000.

Thursday, May 21, 1998

A seventh-inning rally broke open and Cox walked 10 load the bases :
a clooe game and put the game out of DUI then got Hodson to fly out to end
reach as the 1-burg·F~rf!Cid Lions the innidg at 4-0.
defeated the. Southern Tornadoes I0Corey Cox, the hard-throwing
3 in the Division IV district champi- Lion, struck out two in retiring
onship game .at ·Jackson High · -Southern 1-2-3 in the fourth.
School's Dick Haller Field.
In the fifth in11ing. Bennington
Southern bows out at 12· 12 over• was hit by a pitch, stole second and
all as the Southern seniors - Matt .scored on a Harry Eidenour single .
"Pork" Di)l, Michael Ash. Pete Sis- Leesburg threatened for more as
son, Corey Williams. Danny Sayre. Greg Mendenhall walked to put runand Billy Young - played· their last ners on first and second. A fly_ball
game m the Tornado purple-and-gold. advanced the runners, but they were
Leesburg now advances to the left stranded to make the score 5-0.
regional tournament.
.
Southern stim:d up o wind in the
Leesburg took a 3-0 lead in the top fifth when Danny Sayre reached op
l),f the first wben Adam Haines an error, Benji Manuel doqbled him
walked, "Corey C.ox singled. andl&gt;ar- . home. 'Pete 'Sisson followed, with a
rei I Hodson singled over third base to one-oot.double. then after a strike out.
. knock home a run. Josh Bennington · Adam Cumings singled wilh SisliOn.
then ripped a one-out double to deep holding up safely at third. Southern
left center for a 3-0 tally. .
had runners. on the comers, but a
Southern put a runner on in each · strike out .ended (he inning as Cox
the first·anjl second inning, but nev• again worked his way out of a jam to
er scored. Dill then settled down to make the score S-2·.
tame the lion's bats in the second and
Leesburg added a single run in the
third innings. In the Southern third, sixth for.a 6-2 score a.• Soul/tern quiMichael Ash and Pete SisliOn eaj:h etl) went down 1-2-3..
Then Southern's hopes of a comesmgled, but two strikeouts and a 4-3
ground out ended the frame.
back dim inished wheQ Leesburg
An error .opened tbe door for' a thrust back its mighty Uon's head and
Lion run in the fourth inning. when roared a growl of anger, taunting
with two out Steven Scott reached on Southern to make a comeback· from
a routine grounder, then top-of-the- a 2· 10 deficit. The Lions roared and
order batters Adam Haines and Trent scored four times in tl\e final round
Saunders each singled to score Scott to all but seal the win. . ,
·

Southern plaled a single run in the
sevetith wheo Ash reached on 1 oneout single an scored on a Pete Sissoa
single. Adam Cumings reached on an
error with two out, but both were left
stranded on the 10-3 finale.
Coach Mick Winebrenner's crew
finished strong to record 'a sectional
championship and top-three finish in
the Tri-Valley Conference.
.
Cox and Scott combined for the
pitching victory for Leesburg. They"
combined to strike o_ut fourteen SHS
batters, while giving up nine. hits,

three runs. and walking none. Leesburg made tWO error.~.
Pork Dill went five innings in suffering the loss for Southern with
relief from Corey Williams in ·the
sixth. They combined to strikeout six,
give up eight hits, walk nine, ~it
three, and give up ten runs. Southern
made two errors.
Leesburg hitters were Adam
Haines a si ngle. Saunders a double
and single. Bennington a double
Hank Barrett a double, und singles by
Cox, Hodson, and Eidenour.

Southern hitters were led by Pete
Sisson wit/1 two sing~ and a double;
Michael Ash two singles, and singles
by Corey Williams, Adam Cumings,
Billy Young; and a double by Benji
Manuel.
IDnlaai!Hall

Fairfrekl ·
Southern

.

300-111-4ool0-9-2
000-020-1•3..S.J,

~

~

,

Fairfield: Cox, (WP). Scott 61fii
and Eidenour
_ :1
Southern: Dill (LP), Williams flfl!i
'Jld Cumings.
• ·•

,,

,

"
FORCED OUT -An unidentified Southern bllurunner Ia thrown
out by ~eesburg' Fairfield's shortstop durlng .Wedneilldsy'a Division
· IV dlslrlcUIIIe game In Jackson, where Southern loat 10.3. (Sentinel
photo by Scott Wolle)

.....•

DELIVE~S TO PLATE - Southern starter Matt

L

'

dellvsra to 1~
plata during Wildnetldsy'a Division IV district lllle game In Jackson
IIIJIIIJ:Ial Leesburg Fairfield. The visiting Lions won 1D-3. (Sentinel photo by Scott Wolfe)

Gullett ... &lt;&lt;;:ontinued f;o~ Page 4l

.

.

have hovered around .500.
Once. a player is signed. Gullett Pete Hamiseh, it's a matter or"geiting It made a huge difference."
career ended early to wear off.
· . "Everything is different today. Te&lt;:h·
, ''I' ~e been in baseball 49 years goes to.work, The Reds tend to claim . back to what HarniscH had success
Gullett is a man of few words. So
He was only 27 when a rotator nology has come so far in so. m4
and in the big leagues 24," Reds u lot . of the ba'!lain basement free • with in Houston.
the pitchen~ ' tend to listen ·when he cuff injury ended his career in 1978. areas. Medicine is one of them." ~
. manager-Jack McKeon said. "and agents. This year's class includes
"I try to break a guy dowr~ phys- speaks.
.
His record - t09-50 with a 3.11
Anocher· I 0 years with simi I¥
h,e's the .best l'·ve ever been around. Pete Harnisch, Steve Cooke, David ical in regard to mechanics," Gullett .
Gullett's basic philosophy is : ERA- giv~s him instant creditabil• numbers and Gullett would be in the
And I know some gOOd pitching Weathers and Mark flullon.
said. "Everybody's different. It can ThroW strikes. get ahead in the count. ity with big leagues.
Hall of Fame. 8ut it dido 't happep.
coaches. But he's the sharpest." ·
"Don.Gullet\ is the reason we can be a complete overhaul, or j( can be change s~ds, work quickly.
'"He's been there," Weathers said.· So after 12 years out ofba..eltall. Gill·
Gullett. 47, was one of the first bring people like that in," Bowden minor adjustments."
''I don' t want guys walking "He knows what we' re going ten came back. .Now he saves careers
11
people' Ji"m Bowden ·hired when he said. "He's been invaluable."
Gullett and Harnisch got "together .~und out there.'' he said. "And you .through. He knows we're not out vicariously through tbe pitchers on
took over as general manager after
He hasn' t had success with every- very early in spring training and just "tiave to work-both sides of the plate. there trying to walk guys."
his staff.
,
the 1992 season.
one - Ricky Bones and David Nied talked. .
Not many pitchers are successful just
If Gullett's shoulder . gave out
" I' ve enjoyed it," he said. "I~:S
"I made him pitching coordinator are two that didn't "work out - but
"Jie gave me a few things to work working one side of the plate."
today, doctors could likely repair it. bee!! very satisfying."
•.
when I
farm director." Bowden the Reds' .apflropch · is to bring in on mechanically," Harnisch said. "I
.Chris Welsh, a former,big league
'~There:s no question," he said.
said. "I believe in him. When I · quantity to find qpality. · ·
. was receptive from Day· 1. . It's pitcher nDw the Red•' television anabecame general manager. I wanted
With each pitcher. it's a different worked out pretty well."
.
lys1: says Gullett d()Cs another thing
briefs----~:~
~
·him to be my pitching coach."
approach. That may be why Gullett
Hami!ICh jloints outthit it's early, that helps pitchers become successSan Antonio businessman lted
Football
· , Gullett's role has changed a bit as is successful: He doesn't try to force but he is 3-0 with a 3.03 ERA. That's ful.
McCombs,
who finished third among .
11\C"Reds' payroll has gone down. The his philosophy and style on a piich- as many games as he won last year
"He gets these guys throwing
MINNEAPOLIS (API - The
Rids annually bring in pitchers who er.
.
' . · '
and 1995 combined.
their fastball more.:· Welsh said. same bidders who lried three months three bids received in February, pllt .
for one rea.c;on on anotllerha\•en't had
" A lot depends Ol} whatthe probAlthough Shaw struggled before "Because they throw it· more they ago to buy the Minnesota Vikings himself back in the running a~d
:'
-much recent success.
lem was," Gullett said. "I try to be he come to the Reds, Gullett didn't pick up velocity. That makes their were back in the running after nov- expects to win.
Also mentioned as possible bid' "We look for guys with good · patient with guys. A lot of them have · stan from scratch.
other pitches better. He did with Mer- elist Tom Clancy withdrew his $200
ders were Vikings co-owner Roll~'
;arms and good deliveries," Bowden been successful but inconsistent. We
"(iully's an 'if-it-ain't-broke- · cker. Mike' Morgan. (John) Smiley." million bid.
:said.
·
. In the case of Mercker, he came
Clancy's financial adviser, Marc Headrick. Minnesota Twins owner
analyze things and come up with a don't·fiX·it' guy." Shaw said.
• Gullell is liC)metime.s consulted gante plan. Thera has to .be a willGullen's major advice to Shaw; into spring training throwing the Gariis, was trying to put together Jl Curl Pohlad, Philadelphia Fly~rs
:before the 1\eds sign a guy.
ingness to accept what we're trying Throw your slider through rhe catch- mid-80s and was up to 93 mph dur- Ileal with other investors. Atlea.•ttwo . owner &amp;I Snider · and Minnesota
ing the season. ·
of the Vikjngs' I 0 co-owners said the Timberwolves owner· Glen Taylof:
: "One of things llook at is the guy to get done."
1 , er: no! to the Fatcher.
·healthy," Gullett said, "He can't be
In Schourek's case that was a
"I had never heard that before,"
Gullett knew when he was a play- · team tnay be better off waiting until
'"
~imited physically and do Jhe rhings complete overhaul his mechanic!~; ·SI)aw said. "But it clicked. If I throw er that he would lil;.e to coach. But il tbe postseason to fond a new owner.
. ,, ,
:we want him to. "
111 the case of his curreni star pupil, ilth1'9ug!t the catc.~~r. it breaks l.ater.
took, sol)le time for the sting of a
• ,.
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•

l'

�.

Thuraday, May 21,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

.

MUFFLER SHOP

992·2196

NOTHING···
UKEA

llrV.CII .

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See Steve Meadow.

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Gallipolis
Across from Galli&amp; Auto Sales on okl Ale. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8·5: Sat.
. 8-3 ·

Start~ng

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THE WIMST ·OJ CUP CIRCUIT

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THIS PAGE

cau 992·2156

cat•IO ..., eoco.cota.eoo .

WHIRl: a.tott. Motor Spe&amp;Jd)·,
Concon:t. N:C.
Slr\day, May 24
D&amp;EHOtHO CH'IIF._ Jtft OCftlon
QUAUFVINQ RICORD: J e l l -·
~. 184.300 ..,., May 21. 1887

Nartl1 ConJIIna ~ -

-..-.ondiM

by

lot, 151.1152 mph, May 28, 1886.

NOT.AIILE: lWo of"'""'"' four COIIo
800'1 hove_, won by ltm·tlmt win·
,_, Gordon'a fllot 'olllclll vlctoly
IICCIJ!10d "' 111114 ...... ll1d Bobby
Labonte with hlo flnlt win the
-.ng
·
...
Dlnwll
and
. Bobby Allloon n tied 11W8ltrlp
CMS' all·tlme
-In vlctarioo wlthllx op... ...
Second to W8ltrlp among oct1w -~~
Dlle Eamhonlt with live wino.
•

St. RL 248 ·

Cllester

1185-3301 .

--

TC)HC l

When you wan! it done riF1"'
www.toro.com
•t997 The Toro

1 . M . ~1,534.

2. IMt1 KenMII'I, 1.~· 3. D. E8Tfllfdt -l'., 1.423.

• . 0111..1..-. 1,215.
1. Dill EIJMitat, 1,223.,
• . Jmny Sp.nc.w, 1,184.
i . BatJboj L.ltlrJnte, l ,tel.
10. Ken Sc:tndlr, 1, 158.

Call:JEFF

G

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

WARNER

.._

1-J-=-"'
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Fa:llt . . . .u

""""'

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1' ....,y ....,..., , ...57

2. TlftY Labonte, 1,421.
3. .»ftqotdm. 1,410..
... fUty WilKe. 1.314.
5. Mitt! foWin. 1.334.

• • Jfly s... 71_1•
5. Ricll CINii, . ,•

• 4. llucklf'oo!Jclflea, 1,374

$. Elioft Sdlr, 1344.

· e. JMOnt&lt;eW, t,3t4 .
1. Oick Tricide, 1,214.
e. fWICfy LIJole, 1.2111.

e. Joe Aultnwl. 111.

r.m..aa•.

1. R.ndy
7. ~ AMfrw, e24 ,
I . Tony ,..._ tl05.

i . Gllrwl Allin. 1;177.

ID. BobK

10. To-n Ftdlwa, 1,2el.

-

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For' More
InfOrmation

.

=~.f.lay23

CH'uiiFIOM: Joe

-

Nol•-

l!IACI( QuN..FnNO RICORD:-

- · Fon:l, 178.881! ..,.,Oct. e. 111114.

.

Charlotte Motor Speedway·
.

these "race teams" to
rae~ .

BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
For the firet time aJnc:e 1995,
Tim Fedewa captUIId the
..,uaiSGN race a t -·
(Pa.) Speedway. Tho ....,_
.,., notable since they make Ul&gt;
tho HoH, Mich., driver'S two
career ...,_In the diYislon.
Dale Earnhardt Jr.. the !)Ole
wlnnor, dominated the earl)'
going bul cruhod alter being
ponollzed by NASCAR for '
M. .ly entering tho pits.
In I 1 owen!$, tho Buach

t50,000 fins. .
'H'I pro1ty embarrassing.'
admitted a dejected Gor&lt;lon. 'I
don't know all tho ipeclflcs of
what happened, bull do know
this: We had an aw8101 11e car.•
Jenom)' Mayftold woo tho

TNo---

·-.tngs
NASCAR
WMk'tl'll'llting
il inby!MIIIIf1
1111.

1.-Mifttn(1)

7•

3........,

Gas "'"" loll ooloop
ll.,nold (31
Unoftlclel checkeNid flags
4. Teny 1.obo!11e (4) .
Seoklng a victory
15. Bobby ' ane. (I)
Nice Wlneton ohowlng

" ' -· Loot

.,...-181tfme

.. ....,_1111

. Could win It lillY

t

Teamll\lhl hoggl~ W'8
~,.,..._(7)

Back In black
10. IIIII ~ (101

Back In business

011 THI 50IIDUU
1-Winnw . . .
J. Gordon
J. Ooftkln

.....

Ca: Coli 100. Concord , N.C.

._.__.

-""'--·- -.....
......
...,

..... 1

A4.1ciJ. 11

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Mlw500, bw, Dll

Ponlllc «lQ, Alchrnond, ...

R. WIIIKe
lrv., ·
J . Gonion

T. L.ltlontt
~

Pocano 000. Lang~. Pa
8M Mlft 300. Sonoma. c.Mf.

.._

Jllfy
Loudon.
N.H.
- "LW130D.
" '· --Fl&amp;

Pwi&amp;)lt'oll. &amp;01), Long Pond, P&amp;

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

Bud • tn1 Olin, w.llinl Glen, tt.Y.

J. Gofdon

~ 400. BrDI:Iidyn. MICI'I.
~ 500, Briltol, TIM.

..,...

Hlmiltan

...,.;

J......

-""'·-·""·

IIIII-. Cllll1cme

Moa.,....., ,_

Ph:D~tla.t:IIIMollr......,

the top I0 can finishins
in a race wil.l he a Jack
llouob car.
llohert Taylor
Munith, Mich.

Sctndlr

.....

T. Bodine

.......

K.WIIIt»

LOCATION: eo.-d. N.C.
SIZE I CONFIGUIIA-

TION: 1.5-mlle lri-oval
OPENED: 1960

ALL·TIME WINSTON

mr;;;.~._

ALL·'I'IMIIIUICH

111m, ala 1lla -

CIIIAHD tumOIW. RACE
-EA: Milk Merlin and
Harry Gent, each with lour
vlctorlel.
SCHEDULE: May 16, The
Winston; May 23, ~ •
Auto Porta 300 (BGN): MaY ·
24, Coca·Cola fiqo (6Jp);
July 25, Vklkinaint 500 Qndy
~ l..llaguo); Oct. 3, All
Pro Bumper to Bumplir 300
~. CMS led the -In
(BGN); Oct. 4, UAW·GM
construct1n0 coo nlorlllbll

Quality 500 .(Cup).
Charlotte Moler SpeedY.ay
Ill the lllandaRl fer fin comfcrt and lmo~ lhal
many NASCAR laciHIIes
have strived to equal. Under
U1e farsighted - i p of
builder 0. Billion Smllh and
. gerwW IIBIOQOI HA (HIInpy)

lie

111 Court St;
Pomeroy
992-2155

Tht-.J)IQ1opti1Q

- c o l i n the Win-

lion, or Jtlf Oardon'a,
--ltodrl-

_,lng,luxury ou~es. a

.... 10 run OUI of gao?

Thenod-ID

-ln ¥lclory-.

IW2 Mut Q&amp;lita,

... ~tum one.
CMS wes the ftrwt NASCAR ·
~tolnotall .. .

wllldlputllmF-

· II

-

advomod lighting aylt8m for
nlgt!l racing. Challolle . . aJwayo .. - · bc!th fer

(lrwln'a plaoe .
.. "'""-_,by
Ernie IMn
lor . . _ - _ ,

w

lo hint t11et Irwin had no

oth tar the 1111t

olnoe 111111•

-,w.
-,.,.,. .......
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l...... I ...-l_
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3. Who It "M1: Eadtlp1•11'1

ol clobUI·

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Wll Ulld to CIIDI'III . . Hudlan HomM? '

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lng In Wtn-. Cup wlthiUCII
a~ .........
being- ......... Jell

~TIIUMMI

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In

.

Gor&lt;lon."

.mv••··~atlhlepi:lrl.

•

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

'

I

The Dally Sentinel• Pilge 7

Yankees beat O's;
White. Sox, Tigers,
Rangers also win
•

for his league-leading 17th save.
Blue Jays 9, Devil Rllys 1
.
By The Aseoclatad Prest
Jose Canseco hit one of four
There was calm after the storm at Toronto home runs ahd Pat Hentgen
Yankee Stadium.
pitched eighl string innings for the
One night after a wild brawl Blue Jays.
between the Yankees and Orioles,
Hentgen (6-3) allowed nine hits
both reams were on their best behav· and one run as he won his third
ior in New York's 9·6 victory over straight s1an. Alex Gonzalez.. Jose
Baltimore.
Cruz Jr. and Shawn Green also home·
· Three batters were hi t by pitches . red for Toronto. which won its ~ec·
Wednesday night, bu! all took their ond straight game. · ·
bases without incident as the Yankees
Wilson Alvarez (4-5) look the loss
handed the Orioles their seventh for visiting Tampa Bay. He gave up
straight loss.
four hits and six run s in 4 1/3
. "I think everybody ·though I, 'Tum innings.
the page. yesterday doesn't counl,"'
Tigers 12, 1\•-ins 11
'•
New York manager Joe Torre said.
Damion Easley hit a pair of lwo·
·'Before Jhe game, Torre and Ori· run homers and drove in six runs as
oles manager Ray Miller spoke to Detroit overcame a six-run deficit
their teams .about getting over TuesEasley homered in lhe seventh and
day night's brawl, which resulted in eighth, wilh the second shol pulling
the s~spension of five players.
the Tigers up I r-9to complete their
·"I thought our guys handled it comeback from an 8-2 deficit Easley,
well." Miller said. "I didn't think who also had a two-run double, tied
there was any retaliation."
his career in high in RBis.
Derek Jeter tripled. doubled and
Sean Runyan (1-2) pitched one
singled and 1im Raines drove in inning for the' win. Todd Jones
three runs as the Yanke"' roughed up allowed a two-run single by Orlando
former ·teammate Jimmy Key and Merced in the ninth before picking up .
won their fourth straight. Scoll Bro· his seventh save. ·
sius homered and Jorge Posada douRangers 8, Mariners .7
bled twice for New York.
Lee Stevens hit -two homers and
"I think both teams did well to pul 'I;exas look, advantage 'of anolher
it all behind us," said Key (4·3), who collapse by Seattle's bullpen lo rally
was tagged for nine earned runs and from a six-run deficit at the Ballpark
12 hits in 5 2/3 innings by the team in Arlington.
he pitched for from 1993-96.
Tom Goodwin drove in the go·
Hideki lrabu (3·0) allowed two ahead run in the eighlh with a sacri·
runs in 6 1/3 innings to give him a lice fly off Mike Timlin ( 1-3) . .
majorleague-leading 1.40 ERA afler
Tim Crabtree (1-0) pitched two
six starts.
. innings of hitless relief for I he win
Roberto Alomar: Rafael Palmeiro and John Wetteland pitched the ninth :
and B.J. Surhoffhomered in the Ori· for his l3Jh save in 13 chances.
:
oles' ninth off Darren Holmes.
Seattle's Alex Rodriguez hit a pair
Elsewhere in the AL, it was of solo homers to give him an AL··
Toronto 9. Tampa Bay I: Boston 6, . leading 18 this season.
·Chicago .2: Detroit 12. Minnesota II;· .
Angels 5, Athletics 4
Texas 8, Seattle 7; and Anaheim 5I
Darin Erstad homered ,and drove
-Oakland 4.
i.n three r)los. and Tim Salmon added
Red So¥ 6, White Sox 2
a two-run shot as Anaheim heal visAt Boston. Pedro Martinez scat· iting Oaklarid.
tered four hits over seven innings to
Ken Hill (7·2) gave up three runs
improve to 5·0, and Mo Vaughn hit and eighl hits in 8 2/3 innings.
his 12th homer for the Red Sox.
Erstad hit his lOth homer in the ·
Martinez strock out five , walked sixth to tie it ).J. Jim Edmonds fol- ·
two and allowed one run. lowering lowed with a single, tt.en Salmon .
his ERA to l .74. He leads the AL in homered ofT Mike Oquist (0-3) IQ put
strikeouts (88), inning~ pitched (72 the Angels up 3· 1. Erstad made it 5·
· l/3) and winning percentage ( 1.000). . I in the seventh with a two-run sill=
. Jaime Nayurro (4-4) lost for the gle off reliever M,ike Mohler;
t1rst time in four smns. allowing six
. Troy Percival struck ou1 Jason
runs on seven hits in 4 1/3 innings. Giambrwith the tying run on third in
Tom Gordon got 1he last three outs the ninth for his 12th save.

AL rou nd up

challenge is nm ·going back ·and
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Tony . forth between car.;: it'sleaming each ·
1
Stewart's answer to mosl everything car.
"I
feel
like
I've
go1 a halfway
js to get in a race car.
·decent
handle
on
the
IRL car. The
Last Saturday. after the disap·
. pointment of qualifying in ihe secpnd only car I feel (ike I'm struggling
row for !he lndianapoli~ ")(), the with now is the 'Busch car, and the
· reigning Indy Racing League cham· only thing that can cun: that is seat
pion and favorite in Sunday's race tim~." ·
This is likely to be". Stewart's last
went ou1 to nearby Indianapolis
Raceway Park. jumped into his Indy 500'as an IRL n:gular. He cur- ·
USAC Silver Crown car and won the rently is under contract to both John .
. Menard's Indy-car team and the .•
event.
So far thi~ year, Stewan has raced NASCAR team of former NFL coach ·
in five· separale series in five dis· · Joe Gibbs. But it appem his future ,
tirictly dif'fen:nt etn .:..... the Indy Rae· will be in NA~AR.'s
fJ A
I
ing League's Indy cahl,the U.S. Aulo series,
He is driving. II IRL races aJ1!122
Clubs's Silver crown, sprint and
•
midget car.; and' NA.SCAR) Busch Busch Series events this year, with
the likelihood he'll move up to Win· .
Series stock car.
·
ston
Cup in 199~.
Asked which he like~ best, he
-"That's
Joe's1plan," Slewart said.
said. "Whatever I'm in that day.
"To me rKing i5 racing. I've go1 "I lhink if everything g~s well;
·· minibikes that me' and my buddies · !hat's what I want ·to do, too. But I
· l'liCe in the backyard. and we're as want to see how the n:st of the year ·
goes..
• intense;there as we are hen:.
"We could ·h;we a couple more
: : "!learn something ever}- day that
I get in a· race .car," Stewart said. races like we had at Rockingham and
'·
ANN ARBO~. 'Mich. (AP) loss of postseason berths. scholar·
"People think I'm racingjustto race . like we .had a Loudon (both second·
WAmNG
for
thalr
baton•
from
the
front
runnere
In
the
boya'
4
x
The
U
niversily
of
Michigan
co01ends
ships
or lelevision appearances.
Well, that's my hobby too. Getting in place finishes) and I'll feel more
are
the
Malga
Maraudare'
Ullaea
Barraza
and
Gallla
100:-mtter
relay
Its
hasketball
program
can
move
. "It was determined rhat the case
il m1dget or getting in my dirt late comfortable about it. Just running up
Academy'• Kevl~ Wilker during Wectneaday'e Dlvle_lon II dlatrlct track ahead, now thai the NCAA has sh~uld be cla.~silied as secondary and
model oi' some of these other cars thlll front one or two races isn't going to and
field meet at Ironton High School'• complex. The Marauders' 8:36
I run. that's my release. how I get make me convinced lhaJI'm ready to ftnllh, good tor thiRI plaee, earned them a berth In next -k's region· accepted .the school's self-imposed thai. in ·as much as the instilulion's
penalties without adding funtier sane~ actions ... were substantial and meanaway from the IRL series and · the . make the jump.
al meet In Zaneavllle. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
tions.
ingful, no further action should he
·I still need to learn (in stock cars).
NASCAR series.
"TJte bottom line is that we COO· iaken in this case," NCAA enforce"I'm not a good golfer. I gel frus· · I've been in an IRL car for three D-11 track meet to resume Saturday
tinue to run our department in a . ment representative Cynthia Gable
trated and I gel mod at the aolf clubs. years now ... this is my second year .
clean. classy way." coach Brian wrote.
It does me absolutely no good to take . in stock cars. A lot o1! it is l ,haven't
Ellerbe. who took over after Steve
The NCAA did not specify ;.,hal
a day off and go play golf to relax been to most of the Atock car tracks
Fisher
was
fired.
said
Wednesday_
"subslanlial and meaningful" meant.
.still and. at the same!time. the stock
because it doesn'frelax me;"
"We'll continue t~e great traditions But Mich!gan's self-imposed penal·
But w.hat nboutthe physical pun· tar is more differenG!han 'anything
he!e al Michigan nod will stan cre- t1es mcluded the reduction by two of
I've ever driven. w ; the IRL car
ishment of allthall"dcing~
ating
a new legucy here starting next on-campus recmiting visits in lhe
is more like what I' ·driven in the
"Afte~ going · oul on Saturday
season."
.
1997-98 recruiting season.
·night and running a .Silver Crown pasl. ••
Fisher wus dismissed last October
"The entin: university is extremeStewart still plans to driye a.•
.race. when I' get here Sunday. phys·
after
a
school
investigation
found
ly
happy
thai this is over." alhleti ~
many
IRL
events
neJlt
season
as
his
ically I might be tired, but mentally
three
rules
violations.
all
involving
director
Tom
Goss said Wednesday.
I'll be 100 percent and be ready to get . hosy NASCAR- schedule will allow,
In
Wednesday's
Division
II
dis·
2.75-inch
leap.
Also
qu~lifying
for
booster Ed Martin. 63, a retired "We now have this behind us. and we
hopefully including lhe Indy 500.
right back in nri Indy-car again.
can concentrale on the future :"
"Nobody h'auo tell me it's diffi- tricttrack and field meet at Imnlon the regionals in this event were Iron· autoworker from Detroit.
·"I need tha:t to kind of ~harge
High
School's
athletic
complu.
ton's
Kristen
Kavanaugh'
(15-9.75).
.
Mic~igan
received
a
fax
Tuesday
Anonymous allegations that Marcult
.
I
know
jt,"
he
llllid.
"But
I
like
and regroup."
·
·
M~ill".
Gallia
Academy
and
River
·
.
Minford's
Emily
Burchett
05·
7.75)
night
from
Jhe
NCAA
in
which
the
tin
had given ca.~h and e•pensive gifts
: All the cm he drives have four c~allenges . This is p~bably -the
Valley
captured
wins
and
earned
.
ahd
Wheelersburg's
Kristi
Sisler
(15.
governing
body
accepted
the
school
's
to players could nol be proved
wheels and bralo.e and ticcelerntor-. biggest challenge of- my life other
.
self-imposed penahies.
because key figures refused 10 talk Jo
pedal. but they are different weights lhan 1ryinj! to win three champi~ berths in next week's regional meet 2 .~5).
.
at
Zanesville
with
several
top-four
.
River
Valley's
Ashley
RobeMs
.
The
violations
occurred
between
investigators. The allegalions thus
onships
in
one
year."
·
~ith much diffen:nt aerodynamics.
performances.
·
won
Jhe
discus
with
a
125'
fool
,
Sept.
I.
1994
and
Feb.
17,
1996.
The
played
no role in lhe decision by Jhe •
He met that challenge in 1,99S,
Vel Slewart, something of a prodigy
In
boys'
action,
the
Marauders
•
nine-inch
throw.
Also
qualifying
for.
NCAA
said
Martin
was
present
dur·
NCAA's Committee on Infractions Jo •
becoming the only person ever to win
in his chosen field, isn't deterred.
took third In the 4 x 8()().meter relay the regionals in this event were Bel- ing a h.ome visit by Fisher lo Jhen· spare Michigan from further penal· :
: "It.'s like goinll from one f&gt;&lt;~ir of all three of USAC's top series,
with an 8:36 'finish, 2.1 seconds pre's Bobbi Jo Alloway (I 19-11 ). recruit Robert Traylor and provided t~L
'
9ld shOes to another," he said. "The
ahead of Belpre. Ahead of the Gallia Academy's Meagan M:uura Traylor and his grandmother with
The university bannei! Martin
· Marauders
were
runner-up (119-10) and NQnhwesJ's Pa1ricia food totaling $80.50. Man in also pro- from com~ct with ils sports progmms
Portsmouth (8:32.7) and champion Bruch (110.9). Also competing in lhe vided lrdnsponation for Tr.cylor's in March 1997. He did not respond '
Minford 8:32.5);
·finals were River Valfey's A11gie grandmother to high school games Wednesday to a request for an inter' ;
Also running wen: Wheelersburg DeGarmo' (99-4) and Warren's Car· and. later. Michigan games.
view left with a relative, The De~ mit •
(8:40.5) and Gallia Acad·emy rie Johnson (95-7).
·
News
rej,oned tllday. ·
' ··
The NCAA said no additional
NEW YORK (AP) -1im Dun· had 544 pciints.
(8:41 .8).
The meet will resum~ Salul'day penalties would he imposed. Those
"We knew ii was going to be u
can has matched l.,arry Bird in one . Duncan. lhe first rookie lo make
In girls' competition. Gallia Acad· wilh finals in the remaining events. could have included probation, or Jhe positive situation once il concluded," .
said Ellerbe.
respect.
·
the team since Bird, received 45 first· em1 took second in the 4 x 800-meter
. : The seven' footer from San Anto- teani votes and 370 points. Just th- relay with a. 10:30.~ finish; 6.2.sec· :~~::;::7.=:;='!!!1="11-~~:=:=:::=::===-----.-------...;""'----nlo is the first rookie to be selected weeks past his 22nd birthday, he is onds behind Portsmouth. Behind lhe
Pulltllc Notice
Public Nottce
for the aii-NBA team since Bird was the second-youngest aii-NBA pick in . Blue Angels were Warren L:ocal ·
Vlll.l lt .Admlnlellltor,
pic:~ed in 1980.
·
history, behind only Max Z..•lofsky, (10: 4 1.4), Wheeler.;bufi (10:42.4), AE=no:=~IER
Jolin
Andareon, 119 and
1
Dunc•h, 'who earlier was named who was 21 years and 4 months old Ironton (I0: 44 .2&gt; and Wellston
Wllar::.. th~ : v~~~age htraby -II' luthorlnd to
the league's Rookie of the Year. when he was pick~ for the fir.~t all· ( IO:S4.2).
coun~ll of Pome10y ciHir.. meka •uch application to
9" Rib .Pattern.
· joined perennial 'picks Michael Jor- NBA team In !94.?.
.
The Blue ' Angels' Amy Wilson lo meka lmprove,..nta to the approprtal• aganolea
tlll!l any and all
$1.25 per running foot,($31.40 per eq.)
danofChieagoandUtah'sKarlMal·
'The secend team wu composed won !he long jump with 1!16-foot, ~=a·r.~eanclcoeta and
documant• 1~11 m1y bt
otle, along with two mher first-time of Delroit's Grant Hill (290) and
briefs- ...oolatell with 1uoh NqUII'ed In tht , _ H of 3' Wide x 10', 12', 14'.6 18' Lengths
choices: Shaquille O'Neal of Los ~attle_'s Vin Baker (269) atforward; .,
· · ~ll!lli
Improvement• wiH nacee- IMCU.. nl .funding f,Or thlt
For uees on ·Pole Blims, Garages,
proJect, 11111 furthar 119 n
.. Angeles llld Gary Payton o~ Seattle. San Antonio's David RobiniOO (332)
STRASBOURG, France (AP)- . lltltt the borrowlne of ...........
thet:
.
Storage Buildings 6 Porches
Jordan, who won h1's fi ••
.
In order 10 compM!e
u• MVP al center: and M'Jam I'·s 1i m Hard• top.~ Amanda
CQtlzer edgcid fuMe
the hnproveonenta,
end
Tllla Naolutlon lhalt taka
award this week, and Malone, ihe away (245) and WashingtO!'J'S Rod China's Fang Li 7-6 (7·3), _'l·S to
Wherab, addltlonll eHect lmmelllltlly upon ·
ROOF TRUSSES
runner-up for that award, each .. Strickland ( 173) at aUIIII.
-""
the uanerfinals or Strasbouro monlaa In lha form of "''"• or 11 the WIIMI
Soutltem
Yellow Pine ConatNctlon
' ed
R:..,;n
q
I
·
·e
grante are naoeiHry In
~1v the maximum 580 points
Picked for lhe thirtl'tam were .Clpen.
.
.
.' · order 10 meke 1111 tiiMIIIo-wedllyllw.
Cuatom Engl""rlng
l'a•lfla• v-...
Wtth 116 fil'!t·tcam ballots rrom an Chicaao·~ Sconie Pippen (201) and
In otlleri«&lt;OId·round,play,lhtrd· Improvement• ettordallle, Counoll
of-I'OJ, Olilo
C.lllor Quot. TodiY
'
intemationll JIIIICI or writen and Charlone'• Olen Rice (179) .111ror· ' ' seeded N11hllie. Tauzi11 of France · theletore. ·
thla 11111 day
AttNI: KIIIIV ......_
bro.dcutm. llllch wu ~keel on the Wild; Atlanta's Dik,embe MUIOinbo ' bell venezuela's Marii Alejandra
leltllmtved n..t:
fmt team ror lhe lOth
(80) at ·center: altd Slmmento's Vento 7-S 3-6 7-6 (7~) llld eighth·
Tile VIlla.. of '"-rDJ' Cltr'-1N IIUfll'
.._
hid 108
'
·
' '
·'
, ....... fOr, . . CillO Wiler Fl'll'lll ..,.._., ...,.,
· nylon
fint·team votes MilCh Richmond (139) and Indiana's seeded Sloyakia~ Henner~ Nqy~va 1";:d' Sanltlry St'!'lr John MutMr, Prealdant
115 3301
SlAt 241
lnd 361 points. O'tieal WIIS picked Regie Miller ( 124) If pard.
outlasted France s Sarah Pit~sk1 3· Co~r..IIIIIM Ptogram funde, (S) 21, 212tc
for the first ICIIIl on 103 baJ1ois and
6. 6-2. 6-4.
anc1 t111t
f

NCAA OKs Michigan
baske,tball program's..
Jn-flouse penalties
.
.

Meigs, Gallipolis,
Riv~r Valley get .
reg~onal qualifiers

- . "!he Loll Lip"
1USA. 124.111),

- - ..... opllilol&lt; 'Irwin·to be

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Tiny Lllllltln. Ktnny lrwl1
TheiOOkle--bolnga-.

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· nvouWtot•••••Dn

CUP RACE WINNER: Bobby
AllliiOn and Dlmlll WIJirip,
eech with llll vlctqrtes,

fiUD Of Tilt WID

·' the -.time cl&gt;lo11jlio! I out of

intere1t in ra·cina because
yoU know at le11t four of

ee-...Cidllltorilla '17 I lAW CIM 11011.

NASCAR Thlo-

- l l i d ovlrdue

Could be llllyeor

......
""'",.
.....
.......
........
.....
........

of people out lhero wbo
feelul do.
,I personally ~m losina

Br-Dvlloft

. t.AUI!y-(e)

. :z. ...., Gordon Ill

......... -

·I'm 1ure there are a lot

-

•

I'Y MIKE HAf'RIS

to enter in a race, say, no .

10 different race Winners thla

TOP TIN

•

more than three caro . .

Gland Notional division has hed
VM'· Only Joe Nemechet&lt; has
IICOied twice.

-Stewart strives for
multi~series . driver.
.=status ·in Indy 590

I am a Ford person and
like all tbe race drivers,
hut the way thinas are .
aoina. lhere will be only
aeveral nee teams [soon].
I am 63 years old, and
years aao. ncina otaMed
out to ho competition.
Now it'a all aboul who
bas the moot money. Let's
keep tbe money there and
aive mbre teams a chance

star race at ~ Motor

Speoidway.
Martin auumed the lead alter
oeltndlng Champion Jell Go&lt;·
don ran out of gu It the white
flag. Fuel·mileage allould not
have been an issue In such a
o11ott (t05-f!1ile) race.
Tho Fon:l- altiO won the
· race's aeeond segment, giving
him earnings of $257,500 for a

De•r NASCAR Thi•
:Week,
.
I am wonderins why
[NASCAil ial allowins
place oo many cars hi a

evening's primary undeiCOI!I,
eomlng a tranater Into The Win· ·
ston with a vtctory In the 6().tap.
Winston Open.

WINSTON CUP SERIES
Mart&lt; Martin tool&lt; adv011tage
ot an Incredible mtstake on the
final lap,to win The WW.ston all·

race watclled by ""'"' than

The Daily
Sentinel

· -

:M.eol

I

.

IIUICH- NA,_
COIIIIQ IP. ~- -300
WHIJII: ChlwtotW Motor SptNwaw,

___.:.PI=OIII~-·

I . JKII~.B40.

z. Ron Hor'nl*i.l22.
a. BtiCy COft'll*lft. 721.

.

fiOMWTWWI

For Homeowners
l ns ur ~ rv:::e

POIIffi STANDINGS

Davit Harris
Ext.104

anita -

.-by town o1 LexJngton II one o1
the Tllhell Stale'8 'Q.capltall.' To
reKh Llldngton- Chaltotle
Mo\or ~ay,- HG Nartl1
put Salllbuly, tl1lln .., """' u.s.
52 North to tho Lulnglon edt.

tovtfiii1111Ck
- mph,
hold
Word
-·
Pontiac, 186.758
Oct. 5,
111114).
RACE RECORD: Bobby~. Chevlo-

BAUM LUMBER .

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) "The seven. eight and nine hitters
. Suddenly, the Cleveland Indians are in this lineup are nottypicll of your
hiningthe' ball again.
usual seven. eight and nine.'; Fryman
- The Indians pounded 16 hits in a said. "You can hit anywhere in thii
·14-S win over the Kansas City Roy· lineup from one to nine and produce
als on Wednesday .night and now runs and score rubs. Our leadoff hit· •
have scored 30 runs on 361rits in the ter lr.Js 27 RBis."
Fryman's three hits came in his
first two gaines of a three-game
series. Cleveland has won five of six first .lhrec times at-bat. but with a
ga~s.
cha~ to hit fur the cycle. he ground·
"Then:'s no way you can predict ed out and struck out his in his last
the way we've hilthe balllhe last two . two at·bals.
,
games," manager Mike Hargro\'e · Charles Nagy (S·2) got the win
'said. "If you could, you should be in despite giving up 10 hit~ and five
Las Vegas.
earned runs in' just five tiiJlings.
"Bulthis is a good ball club, and .
The 3() runs are the most ever
if good hitters give themselves scon:d against the Royals· in two
. enough chances to put good passes glunes, as are the 3~ giv,cn up in the
on the ball, then they'n: going to get last three games.
their hits, and that's what we're ·
"We had a good haifa ballgame,"
'starting to do."
.· said Royals manager fbny Muser,
·Kenny Lofton drove in a career· who kept the Royals behind closed
high five runs with a home run and doors for 27 minutes after a 16-Jioss
uingle. while the bottom oflhe lndi· Tueo;day. "I Saw a little bit more
ans'lineup- Sandy Alomar. Travis intent and we had pretty gooil;,inten·
'Fryman·and David Bell- combin¢ sity until the sixth inning. You get
for eight hits. seven nms and six behnd by a ton and it~s hard to stay
RBis.
.
enegetic." _
"I was in position to get the RBis,
The Royals led 5-4 going into the
lfnd I took advantage of it,:• said sixth, only to have the lndi~ns score
Lofton, who drove in two r:uns with six times.with two ou\S. A double by
'
I GOT HIM! .,.. Cle,veland ehortstop Omar Vlzqual (13) taga
outlha
a third-inning single, hod a sacrifice · Ramirez, a walk and 11 single by Alofty in·the tiflh and capped a six-run mar tied the game before Fryman put Kan- City Royale' Johnny Damon to loll the latter's first-Inning steal
sixth inning with a two-run homer, the Indians in front with a 4:(14-foot attempt during Wectnelday nlght'a game ln Kllnaaa City, where the
lndlane won 1+&amp;. (AP)
·
his fourth 9f the season.
· three-run blas1 to left-center.
· Fryman added his sixth home
Lofton added a two-run homer off
Cleveland right-hander' Chad land · on Wednesday for an MRI.
ryn, a d&lt;!uble and .a single; -Aiomar loser 1im Belcher (2·6). wl1o gave up Ogea, wbo left Tuesday's gal'!le in the Results ~ere not expected for at least
hlldlhn:e hits for the second stmight . for II hits and 10 ..runs in S 213 seventh inning with a strained right 24 hours.
night: and Bell tripled and doubled. innings:
·
pectoral ~uscle, n:tumed to Cleve.
I .
. .

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Indians hammer
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·:Duncan joins MJ~ Shaq
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'.

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�..•

The Daily -Sent~~!;~

By The Bend
• .

The Dally Sentinel• Page g·

• Middleport, Ohio

Pt.Pielunt

Thursday, May21,:1998

1 Family Yan! Selt Fri &amp; Sat 8·? ~~~~-:--~~-:--:-:
2001 Joftor1on BIYd.
Naoded EnorgeUc. Kind An4.- •
Dtdlcattd STNA'a IParl·Timo)
Yard SUa a Miles on Rt. 2 North· lnter..ted In Caring For Peopl• ·'
All kinds ol 'Junk' loto of an· In OUr Spaclallzod Alhelmera Un~ , ·
IIQun, loll of blue &amp; grttn Jars.
Day And Evening Shlftl. MUll Be .'
Senol!lvo To Tho N..d, Of The
Elderly And ThoY Wilh Alzhelm·_ •
t&lt;l And O.mtntia. Ploalt 4pply, •
80
Aue11on
In Peraon At Scenic Hills Nursing •

--------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------~--------------------------~--~---------------------------~
Ann
Landers
19'17 , Los An,cLeJ Timc.1o

Synd•calc anU

C1Ul11r1

S)'lldtca~e .

Dear Ann Landen: You probably received hundreds of angry Jette". from teenagers complaining
about shopkeepers who follow them
around in the stores because they
suspect .lhem.of bei ng.shopl iflers ~I,
for one, was very glad to see that letter.

I worked briefly as a loss-prevention agent for a major retail. chain.
While the official corporate policy
was to watch everyone, the unoO'icial guidelines were to watch for the

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education regular meeting
Wednesday 6:30 p.m. at the high
school building.
. THURSDAY
~ ~OCK SPRINGS

-

Rock

following:
I. ' People dressed in baggy
clothes ·- shirts and pknts.
2. Anyone wearing · a coat or
sweatshirt Ollt of season.
3. Anyone who looks weird -nose rings, strange hair, etc.
4. Those wearing vulgar T-shirts.
5. People carrying oversized
handbags, shopping bags or backpacks.
·
6. Anyone between the ages of 12
and 21, and over 65.
7. Young women with babies.
8. Those in groups of three or

how many teenage shoplifters read
my column. I would guess not many.
They are probably too busy shoplifting.
At any rate, I thank you for an
interesting letter and hope that _it will
make teenagers see that they are not
the only ones singled out to be
watched .
. The experts say that eventually,
the vast majority of teen~ge
shoplifter~ get caught. Their small
successes embolden them, and then,
theirluck runs out.
Those who shoplift for "kicks"
more.
should be aware that if they · arc
Of course, no retailer will admit caught and written up, there 's a blot
this, but it's the absolute truth. -- An- on their record that could follo'w
Ex Private Eye in Missouri
them through life.
.
Dear Ex Pvt. Eye: I don't knQw
Dear Ann Landers: A while

Springs Better Health Club will
meet at I p.m. Thursday at the hor.1c
of Helen Blackston .

Prostate screening.offered at Health Department ·
' A low cost prostate cancer screen- excess of $200, according to Norma
ink clinic for men over 50 is being Torres, R. N., nursing director.
· The American Cancer Society esti-·
ofl'ered again this year by the Meigs
Couniy Health Department (MCHD). mates 184,500 men will be diagnosed
This is lhe sixth year that Veterans with prostate cancer this year; of these,
Memorial Hospital (VI) and the 39,200 are expected to die in 1998.
Retired Senior Volunteer Program of
Torres listed lhe wiuning signs of
lhe Meigs County Council on Aging prostate cancer as the following:
will collaborate with the MCHD to
I. a change in urination patterns
lasting two weeks or more;
offer this service.
"The screening clinic will be held on
2. frequent urination, especially at
night;
June 18, from I to 4 p.m. Dr. James E;.
Witherell, M.D., . Dr. Douglas D.
3. persis!ent pain m the back. hip,
Hunter, M.D.. and Dr. Shrikant K. pelvis or thighs;
Vaidya. M.D. are among the doctors
4. burning sensation during urina•
uon;
.
who will be volunteering their time for
thC clinic.
··
5. inability to urinate or difficulty in
.There are slots for approximately starting urination;
100 men to be examined. About half
6. weak or inl!'rrupted urine flow;
have'already been filled.
·
7. painful urination.
·
The clinic will begin with. registraMales, 50 years of age or .older,
tion at the Senior Ciiizens Center who have not had a prostate examinawi;Jich is located on the first floor of the tion in lhe past 12 months, may contact
Multipurpose Health Center adjacent · Amber Well at the Meigs County
to VMH in Pomeroy. The fee will be Health Depanment at (740) 992-6626
$5 imd will include the,prostate specif- to .schedule all appointment.
ic antigen (PSA) blood lest which will
Younger men can be scheduled
be drawn at VMH and a digital rectal (from ages 35 onward)' only if they
examination by one of the panicipat· have or have had a first degree relaing physicians. If the clients were pay: tive- father, brolher or grnildf:jther ing full price, the cost would be in diagnosed with prostate cancer.

Prices are $1.75 tor students, $2.75 adults,
chlidren under _3 years ar~ free with a.n adult~
Season pas~es are $25.00 single, $35.00 for.
family or three (mother, father and one child).
$10.00 for each child after the first on.e. For more
Information you can reach Cheri Johnson, pool
manager, at 992•9907 from 11 :00 am to 6:00 pm

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(614) 992-3838

JilES

IIDidiiCI

GAIII!»&gt;US, OHIO 45831

· Tuppers Plains
Now has Beanie
Babie~- Still
Baseball-Football-

•

Basketball-Star TrackVideo Games &amp;·

):

~_5.:

Rentals

.. ' ..... :

740-687-6092

'
l..

•
.•

CHESHIRE

•Trim
.t;tumP

FOOD MflltT

17401 367·0266
orifldlnO
1·8 00 -95 0-3359
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

Open 24 Hrs. A Dey

ft~~c~~ft~~Cr~ft

7DayaAWaek
Hot Breakfast
Blacull Sandwich,
Hoi 6 Cold
1 2;..~::~::-·

it
-.

C.ll In~· Accepted

!&amp;!';

ill.!!:

740-317-7831

New HOmes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
A
. Commercial &amp; Realclentlal
li!!!/
'Z7 yra. axp.
licensed &amp; Insured
1/n.
~
Phone 740-992·3987
·
.,,.,.,
.,._.,m_.H
•
n.... ...... ...
Owner: John Dean

"""'""-

2·Tlger kittens 5'!ks . old. 304871&gt;-Mtt or ~7!HI188.
I Month Old Border Collie
Shepherd Male Dog , To Good
liclrMOnlyt 740-25&amp;- 1337 ' .
.

Coon Dog Puppleo, 710·258·

...

~-::;~
,._ '===:::;::~41211t~~
I
A -' OPEIIII APII.L1 •
lf/IJ'A.,.,.

Part Ron Wodder til•, Malo 2 ·3
Years Old, LOWts Children; LDvoa
To Play, To Oood Home Only!
740 ua 1851 .

o.·:

1'1-.

60 LOll and Found

Ill!!'

ft
!I

-.M.II#:.N&gt;.~M:.illfAIJi:..M:.M:.A
rl!!lll!!l ~. ~ ~ ~;- ~ r 1 Jl~ ~ 11!!1 ~J

lngs. 740-141-G363.

FOUND: Pelr or men's eye gtaao11 In brand new cue. found on
Jericho Rd. 5112198. 304-895-

Ofllo River
Campgroun
. ds and
.
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp; ·
Gen. Merchandise.

..._ a liNd ttema. We
Buy. W. Tt'llle:

Toole,

llahlng
equip., lV'a,
CB'I, 811Yreoa - lillie lilt
o1 .,..,....._ Localetl
on Ohlit lltllllr c.m;:
gooundl, St. Rt. 124,
ReciM, Ohio.

.7......1012

........
. -·

l.llwn 8er\tcea
·CO-clll

•Relldetllfll

Owner, Mlcltle Hollon
Chntlr, Ohio

l~~7!40-~··~~~·~4~22~.~

Resumes Will Be Accepted
Through Ida, 27, I 991. Please
Mall To Cellular One, 1502 East·
ern ~rte:. Gaitlpolls. Old 45631 .

Loat: Blacl Bull 8-900 lb&amp;. Fair-

Ueld Church Road, Call Larry
NMh 74Q-44 Hl384.

"""""1410fb-.

• COMPUTER /FREELANCE •

Graphlca And Web. Many Levels
And Positlon'll Fle•lble Hrsl Modem Req. Slart Now! Call: 800822·11331600-3528880.

Loat : ladies black wire lrame
glaase&amp;. vicinity or Subway &amp;.
Ohio River Boar COmpany, 740742-2012.

Cooking &amp; Cleaning For Elderly

Furniture repair. refiniSh and ttl· ~,
loraliorl. also custom onlers. 01110
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry
Pl:iltlps. 740-992-6576.
Georges Ponable Sawmill. don't
haul your logs 10 tho mil Just call

~.7«»448.051. ,

304-675-1957.

CountrY, &amp; Rock Voc11111 Wilh
P.A. Looking For Leal! Guitarist
To Meet &amp; Work On MUSIC To
Start Good Local BaneY For Woekond Gigs. C.ll 740-379•9488 AI·
ler 7 P.M. Serious Muaiclana
llnlyt

Matt Red &amp; White HUSI&lt;y wl
.Lost
2 Bluo Eyos. Bluo Coll•r. S.R.
1000
-.

Yard Sale

K6S AemodeUng Painllng, Roof·

6021 .

•

Professional Tree Service, Stump •
Removal, Free Elllmalesr In · •
surance, Bidwell. Ohio. tt4·388- !
9MB, 614-367·7010.
..

ctoaning. ~7»731 .

ALL---

Furniture Delivery, Full-time. lmmedlatt Opening. Agi9ly Lifostylt
Furniluro, 856 Tt:inJ A"'. Gallipo11, 01:. No Pl:ono caito please!

:.t~--=.,

Galllpolla, Pl. PioaHnt &amp; Rio
Grandt MeOonaiCI'I Accepting·

:.'Dr.:.::.
Gaorvos croo~&lt; Road.

Inside Sale: M11 23rd, '24th,
Noon -?. Home Yntarior, Housoho'd hems. Misc. Off 233 On Dfy
~a::.oed, Follow Signs, 740-

Will Babysil In .My Home Or

"'Stoia.,

·IO:GGL•.,. • ·

Jual Aemodel•df Doors. Stove
Top, Lights, Bathroom Fl•lures,
Houoohold !lema, Lawnmo ... r,
Tlrn, Clolloo.

We Do Vlnyf Siding. Rtplacemenl
w,_, Roofs. Room A&lt;LdiliOns,
-~~~. Ceramic Tile &amp; Holdwood Fk&gt;ors. New Construction.
No Job Too Big Or Too Small!
Contact Joe Saunders At 7.40· ,.
446-2~. RefiRtl IC8S Av.liabte.
:

Application• For Anylime Posl·
lion, Agigltj
PINion.

"*'· .......,_

Loc:alli'ooh Service

N~a

Mlcldltport

9787.

Drlv·

er floader wnh COL Lleenu,

"VlclnJtr
All- lllllt . . In
AIUIIIIIM. D11 lltllll. 1:1DpM ....
- , ~.,. tile . . 11 Ia run,

:.'!;.•,',:.,.IJCNidiJ HIH-

Co:MtunYty
yond · Juno 5-11,'
HJ:m.~Piains-

--.-1'r111111&lt;

lnsldt salt acro11 lrom

May 25th -

Summerlleld't
In Cholttr, girts IIIII
~~~a. tlzes •·••- time

Will Mow a Trim LiW!'II, Aeasonlble Rates. Conuu:r Joe· Seun·
.... "'740-44&amp;-2450.

Pt. Plssnnt
1 VIcinity

co..

Ga111;-mle 8alt-Ftd1Sal
0111 Rt. 87 - May 22&amp;23.
:t.:::.ch · lor algno. Cherlea

w~

-

'

can: ad tho old! or oldor-

FINANCIAL

zfo

..

Bualneaa
OppottunJtr

YldOTICEJ
OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommenda thlt you do bull·
neU with people you llnow, lncl
Rtooull:.. University OJ Rio Grande, . YIOT 10 ...., inoney tllrough tho
Campus Box F27, Rio Orancle. mall unHI you h1ve lnvasug~ted
Old 4M74 EEOIM £:: .......
..otlarlng.

-OJ -

230

::
,.
'
,
j

'
•'

-••

...... lMCII .......

Oy:trq For E-lo:i:ood Morine
Technleiln, APP'I' At Big a.,.
T.,., Cl:tll*e. ONo. 740387-7801!.

•
C

I

a•

'"

I

7-9832

-s --s

.

I

lr in their home. Experienced .

And Arid Copy OJ'"""
Rllleronces
OJ Tronacrlpt Belore The Deadline OJ
Juno t2, 1111 To: Pf:rdlis ·

'

'

mow y1nl1. clean our antes. i
g1rages, ballmenla. Will haul I
Win

Unll1 In Tflt Ar111 01 Ment1l

-llllilng ~piCMIOI• AI IJom.
lno'S Piul. Qddg: ..., I f'IMIW:Uf

t

I

Now Taking Appllcati'ons For
Part-Time CllnJcll lnslructor For
AISOCille Degree Nursing Progmn. Dutloo Include Suy:eryilfng
Aulgneel Nurtlng Studenla On
Tht Clinical Apncy Nursing

"'*'

''

WNI haul junk or !rash away. l:l'!t •
pickup lOad. 304-675-5035.
;

FfMrpllll
AI Wen GuwaAiid

-1714 _ _
_ _..;.:._:.;.:..:.:.:..;.
-

'

I

Will do babysitting In my home.
across from Middleport panr:, any
silifl. 740-1192·5073.

Some E-iotiCe Protorrtd, 5and
Reo11111 To: P.O. Box! 17. ·
OH. 4li814.

inga And At University Meetings
E&lt;pectod. 8SN .Roquirtcl Wllh
Muter'a In Nuralng Preferred .
Mull Bt Eligible For AN llcenauro In 01110. PlfOI TtiCt:ing E•·
perltnce In AON Provram Wllh
AI f.Nst .llwo Yaara In Tho Pracllce OJ Nursing AI An RN Highly
Predllred. l'ltiM Send ~ Or
Yi:lortsl, Resume Wllh The

:

Yours On Nights I Weekends ,
Call Me For Services. 740-«6- '

Nu:'ling Or eal
Nuralng.
AllendanceSlirgi·
AI · junk or tralh S35. pick-up load .
School OJ Nurlfng Focufty Mett· ~75-2647.

Pomtror.

(

ing, Call140.418-6964, 304-675-

Dependable llldy Will Do HouY.

Gallipolis
lc VIcinity

\1

modeling, decks, vinyl siding,
plumbing. Free estimates. Call
Jim ShulL 30.4·675·1272. Refer·

Data Entry. Wotd Procelllng,

Lost: Brown Dachshund With
While Patch Or Chest &amp; Broken
Tail, Patrio VIcinity, Call 740-3792119.
.

Compultt'
Grapl!lca . Largo

Deelgne
Alf UrodiCiplng I

4672.

----""--------·
.
Experlenc:ed carpenter will do re- :

'

3849.

Frl, Set Moy 22nd, 23rd. g A.M.
22 Redwood Drive, t/2 Mile Odd

•··

-late-

To good homo in MUntry, Female
Pot Boily Pig, Vory lovable and
tame. PhOne 301-675·7828 after
5:00pm.

Routt 1 an

laciily). EOE.

To

-1740-~ 13.

70

25550. (A Glonmark-Geneolo

Someone-to mow &amp; trlrri yard In
Hartford, WV. Will take approx. •1 1·
hour, Phone 304-875-7828 allll' .. ,
A woll Eatabllihed And G~owlng 5:00pm. or 304-882-3186 anyCompany 11 Seeking Heavy lime.
Equipment Mechanics. Must
Have A COL , Willing To Work Stylist Needed No Clientele Nee;.
OYorlimo, Ability To TroW!olhoot, e11ary, Contact Carol King FlneSI
Diagnose And Rap11r Heevy Styling SaJc:r:, 740-146-8922.
Equipment. Good Communications And Wrlnen Skilll, ADUity V1c1ncy: CuatOdlln HS Oiplo· . '
To K11p Accurate Recorda And ma IGED. Custodial. Housekeep-· Repona . t.tust Have Own Tools lng, Maintenance Experience 1
And Poosibly Bo Willing To Ro· Ability. Contact; Gallla -Jackson '
locaia. E:ccolltnt BoneY~ Paclraae. -Vinton JVSD 710·245·5334 Ext · '
EEO E"1ll0yor. Send Rtaurno to: 201 By 5127198. EEO.
CL.A 134, c/o GaHipotll Daily Trb- ;;.;_;;;:...:.;.'-=':=..---- '
. une, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipo- 180 Wanted
''·
Do
lis. OH 4563 I .
ANYOOOJ08S
CELLULAR ONE, A Proven Shruba I weeds trimmed, mulch·
Leader In The Wirelns Industry, lng. flower baCia, landscaping,
Will Be Hiring For Tho FollOwing sidewalk edging, mowing,
etc ... free Estimates. Call Bill
A:oillons:
• - I I Ieite
Ga~ ·304-675-7112.
tJpotio, OH (FuJI.Time~
Circle -N· Convalescenl Home,
Has 3 Opononings Elderly
We Offer Competitive Wages HandiCapped PeJ&amp;On In My
And A Good Work Envtronlr\lnt.
· 74G-441·1536.
~ICe
But Not R&lt;t- qulreel. Must Be Avitlable To
Cloanlng
work Fltxiblo Hours. A Negative Gar:erl:l, ~Vinyl SidWlg,
•.
Drug Test Is A Requirement For Panoiing. w.kly, -111~. One
Emplotmtllt
••
Tine. Ouailty Qauranled. Free
•
'"Esti:...·_mar:...es.:.:.:...7..,40-146-:.......:..;:;23:..78;,__ _ : ,
Join The Cellular One Team ...
And Put '!bur Futuro In The Palm Oon's Lawn Care, Free Estimates, ·;
Reasonable Rates. 304·874·
()1'1ti..-Handl

2 blacklwhllo twin cats, 1yi old,
neutered, has allahats. house~75-3035.

-~

Bo• 326, Point Pleasant, W'f

AVON l All Areas 1. Shirley
Spoaro, 304-675-1129.

Giveaway

=~~h

~ JD CDISftiCftDI

lfA

Slogort, Binda, Songwriltrl, Etc.
All Styleo /Ages, MaJor Record
Label Exe&lt;:t'l, Seeking New Ar·
~sfl, Coming To Hunlln(lton, 901 427-15490, 901-427-9514.

MustBe18Yrs. .
Serv-u 1819) 845-8431

588
.

SOCIAL WORKER . Quallt'l: .,'l
Conwnltment ..•. the Keys to Our C
Success! Management level op • .• •
portunity available . Requires a
BSW degree lrom an accredlled -~~
program of social work. Must ,·
have currenl license to practlc• •
social work in West VIrginia and
experience in medical social •
work, gerontology or health c:are
facility Ia required . Tuition relm·
bursement, health, dental, vision: •
hearing, life,~ 401(k) with em, f
ployer contribution. Point Pleas- , .
ant Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation r
Cbnter. State Route 62. Route 1. ·.

" STARSEARCH ..
COMPETYTKIN

~=======Z'I=Mfn=~ COllar,
Found:Rl.
Black
Kitten With
Flea
7 Gaddipolts,
Call E"'n1 1/2 mile south of ·

Soars At Sliver Brklg&amp; Plaza now
Accepling' Application• for Sales
&amp; Stock/Assembly. Weekend
work required. Apply In Perso~ ··
No Phone calls please.
1.1 · •

NfDANCEYIIWANTIDU$

p

THE CARD Box·

Part·Time STNA'S. and Part-Time
AN'S (Day &amp; Evenings Shifts 14··•
Please Apply At Scenic Hill• Nursing Cenrtr, Monday ·Friday
From 8:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M.

· E•cellent opportunity tor tne right
girl. $500( • )f)Of wool&lt; oarnlng potenllll. No exp neeenary, must
be at leall 18. Cal8t4-992-8387
(anytime) or 304· 675-5955 alter
&amp;pm. Wed lhru Sal.

1

...'

i ::l. '
~ l , ) \I

Oradlng

Scenic Hills Nuning Center It
Now At:ceptlng Applicatlonl Fof &gt;

110 · Help Wanted

Khlena: s Cute Kittens. 8 WOeko
Old, Roady To Go To A Good

Land Clearing I

Rocksprings Rehabmtallon Center
Is seeking a ~n-tlme till-In cook,
dlshwaaher, etc. Please apply in
person: Rocksprings Rehablllt8- "''
tlon Center, 36759 Rock1pringa
Road. Pomeroy, Ohio 45789. NQ ,(
phone calls please.
·

EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICE S

Five mi&gt;ed brood puppies. liVen
740-1192-3875.

Umntone Hauling
Houat 1 Tl'lller SltH

Fllendly, Outgoing And Dedicated '
fiN's IPart·Time). Pdaase Apply IN
Person At Scenic Hilts Nursing
Center, 31 I Bucl&lt;rldgo ,Rd .. Bid· ·
well, OH 45614.

51165.

$2~::in

40

Facility Specializing In Alzheim· .
As Well As Skilled "'
And Rel'laD .Services Has Re·, ~
warding Posllions Open For

er's Care.

Wanted To Buy: Uud Mobile
Homes, 740·446·0175, 301-675·

IYEET '101111
COIIYWIIONI
1. . . . . . ,

•

part time STNA positions avaU · ~
able for air shifts, anyone Interest· •
od pleaoe top by &amp; flll out 81\ application, -740-992·8472 , Over• •
brook Center, 333 Page Street,, ,
Middleport, 01145760. EOE
Progressive Long ·Term Caie

Wanted to Buy Junk Auto's any
Condition . ~~ 418 9853

"'ARD
-old.
How
,&amp;\IA'fiHG (Q•.

Utllftlll

Re•.on.,_ RIYfH

Free Estimates

LOOK!
Live Paychica Here 24 Hr1 1·
900-407-7784 Ext. 4883, $3.991
Min. Must Bo 18Yra. Sllrv·U 619645-8434.

Overbrook Centef has lull tune •

Basket In Excellent Condition,
Prefer Years 1995-1997 74G-&lt;148·
12110.

Personal a

ADOI'TYONi Loving a child with
all of our hoarto. providing a aafe
and ha[(y Mme. close exlended
family, fun, oducatlon. and all the
beat lite hiS 10 orfer Ia our moal
hearlfeh wlah. Help wltll oxpona·
11. Please call 011ne &amp; Jim,
'(800) 803-9955. .

!

Longaberger Heartland Spring

~::::::::::::::::~=13_1•_· ~~--~~-----

Sepllc Syatam &amp;

ttaullng, ExciiVItlng
· lc Trenching
UmeilcJ!It lc Gravel
Septic Syatems
Trailer a Houu Sitae

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

Vinyl Siding • Garages

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SMCE

•

..

"'

Residential

FIN &amp;1lmtlft
No Job Too Smlll

.,....111n0.

15

773 55t2

•Bobcm Service
-concrete
•Masonry
_..entl'll
wu
Comrnwcflland

SAYRE
:,TRUCKING

Joe N. Sayre

005

Neecttd: Eacperlenced Mature 1 •
Pianist M Grow.ing Church In 11 ,.
Gallipolis, Must Be Available ,
Sunday Mornings &amp; Evtnlngt, , '
Compensation Provided , Send In-:..,
!orosi Loner &amp; Quallflcollono To:
P.O. Box 345, Gall ipolis , OH
456-:-3_1_
. --:--=-.,----

J l D Auto· Par.ll. Buying
wrecked or ulvaged vehlclea.
304-773-5033.

ANNOUN CE iv1ENTS

P/1· (oafracf.-s, Inc.

Athens,
4/301981 Ohio
mo. pd. .

so

(740) 985-41

Call 614·843·5426

WAS $689.95 ·

• Slide-out dla.is

POMEROY, OH.

Over 20 yHrtJ experience.
FrH E•tlntllte•

'r

• 3fan/dual speeds

Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After 6 p.m.

• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Rem!Jie Control MMBIRR34~4~7_!~SAM

'

•

painting, and let me
do it lor you.
Interior

LOnG'S
COnSTROCTIOH

.• Swivel lillie with

• CorrotYiciYi-ralltant cablYNIII end liala
• High energy ellk:ieucy t1111o11 (U to 10.5)

(740) 8IIN804

Ex""WMI

••

Clpabillty

Shell
·Night Vllion1"'

Ta~~!i:~ of

614-992-5479

;

.I

Heavf.·Duty Room

• Modular chassis conatructlon
• Grooved copper tubing

360° Communications
.

JEFF.·WARNER INSURANCE

I

LIIDA'I

CELLULAR PHONES

''
l

. •MTSStereo
Rio I•IMooikli
• Surra Up~ a.nnel
. SIIScloit
•"Trilingual On-Screen
. Dllpl.,..·
.
• ~ _Labeling
• Pli•ltill Control
• Clptlon Vllion (CC)

'"GoAnt•Mt•'"

No Job too .....
llon.-Set.

William Safranek;
Attorney AT Law

I

• Audia/VIdeO Input Jackt
' · • ZDG'" High Contraet
PiciUie Tllbe '

llruah ReYIIOVIYI,

lnBIBII New Beda
FrN Eellm8t•

Chapter 7
. Chapter 13
For lnfOl[!lation Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

DYI'IYYI'GIIYilliii"S. INC.

I

Seniry 2 Color TV 25"

' I'IMra,

1 mo.

DP!CY

I~~~~~~~=~9~:00-4~:~30~W~ae~k~ds~v-~
9:00-12:00 Saturday. . , 614-5~2-5025

!t&gt;

'99

-

Mowing, Mulching,
Pruning
Cte•n and lnlllll Clutter

SPECIALS
• House washed
• Qeck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $100
· • Hedges trimmed • GuHers cleaned
•
Call now for a
lawn care program.

Tuppers Plalna, Ohio 45783
740/985-3813

4" thru 48" pintle culvert In stock
Fullllna-of water storage tanka-

I

A Our Hi-backs are

Now Only

..

I

Model Cara Or

Trucks, 1990 Modtll Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, Galtlpolla.

985-4473

l.aft41seapfllf

CLD.AID'S OUTDOOR
lllllftiiiCE

: G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

I

I

-~..~,."!!',!!"'.-...

614 .949-2804

..

.

Power l;tlpYtltll AsNCIItlodJ: (trllflttyl2 Cycle

, ' Stitt Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

I

Now Only '369

2nd Street

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

914fTFN

•Mowers •Chain Saws •Weedaaters •Authorized
Oealer For:
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
,

Enjoy the beautiful ·
weather With
. UoydiFianaen.outdoor

Some too big.
740-949 4102
740-9411-4803

••

l

Parts arid Service!!

1\e

No job too small,

I

l

'

Gallipolis, OH

'

SUISft
COISftiUC,.IOI

Clean La1e

•New Homes
•Garages
,
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop !c Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Gravel, Sand,
Umutont, Dirt, Top
Boll, Anything you

New Coastructlon &amp; Rem•••llng

l

••

I

Shrubs

Agrlcu!tural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Weldlng'Supplles • Steel Sales
· Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

•

I

(FREE ESTIMATES)

404 Second Ave.

Trees&amp; ·

RADIA,.OR REPAIR

t

Antiques &amp; clean used lurnilure,
will buy one piece or complete
household , Osby Marlin , 740·
992-6578.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

need to haul.

I

2!26.

S/2~~/!!~~.l.mtl..

PICKENS
HAULING

1 ,.

ver And Gold Coins, Proofsata,
DiamoMs. Antique Jewel~. Gokl Rings, · Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqulslllons Jewelry
• '-U.S. Coin Shop, t 51 Second
""'""'· GaMipolls, 740-«16-2842.
Antiques, top pricts paid, River·
ine Antiquo&amp;, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner, 7.40·992·

1·740·949·2015
.
Plante,

, :

full lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service. llcen&amp;ed
166,0hlo l Weal Virginia, 304 •
113--5785 Of 304-nl-SUJ.

Wanled t O Buy
Absolute 'Top Dollar: All u.s. Sil·

CALL

.

I

· A 5 pc. Table &amp; Chair Set

Cross Pens $18~0 up .
Billfqlds $22.50 up
Clocks $19.95 up
Earrings $14.00 up
Crosses _$24.50 up
Picture Frames $22.00 up _
I.D. Bracelets $9.95 up
Letter Openers $16.50 up
St. Christophers $35.00 up
Money Clips $12.50 up
Chann Bracelets $24.95 up
Key RingS $15.50 up
Lockets $32.50 up
Business Card Holders $15.50 up
Tie Tacs $14.95 up
Gift Certificates- ADy Amount

BISSELL BUILDERS, ·INC.

.' .

SUMM.ER S·I.. ZZLE SALE ·

CRADUATI·ON 'GIFTS

740-985-3831

IACIIE MOWER CLINIC

.

•

D
D
D
D

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

Center, 311 Buckridge Rd ., Bid· : •

Rick Pearaon Auction Company, well. OH 45614.

90

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating

Near Chester on St. Rt. 7

!

.20% Off Stor~wide

Pool Hours are 12:00 pm to.
6:00 pm every day.

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

·1t91 Martin Str11t

and Flu Market

BICKBIEua
DDIIR SERVICE

, (No Sunday Calls)

While You Art In Town,
Stop In and Say Hi
And Receive ·

MIDDLEPORT POOL
TO OPEN MAY 23 AT NOON

II 'S

eFERTRIZER
eGARDENSEED
•MULCH
e GRASS SEED

614-992-7643

Alumni

FRIDAY

8J

RemOdeling
Plumbl,..g

"Build Your DNa111"

w.,Icome Dome

POMEROY - State Rep. John
on design of new building. Similar ·
Carey,
R-Wellston , open door ses·
meeting, 5 p.m. in high school cafe·
sion, Friday, Meigs County Courttcria.

fumit~e!·

Gifts to be remembered iorever
at great prices!
·

..

:
:

House , II a.m . tn noon .

RACINE - Jack Pottmeycr uf
Marr-Knapp•Crawfis Associates.
Inc .. Thursday, 3:30 p.m. with
Southern Local teachers to get input

Custom Homes
Roofing

••

Dear Dallu: What a beautiful · •
back. someone wrote to complain ated from high school before his
about those "boring" how-we-met 16th birthday. When our ships were love story. Long may you love. · · :
letters. You prirtted the complaint bombed at Pearl Harbor, he joined
Dear Ann L111den: Tell your :
and were deluged with letters from the Navy a few days_after his 17th readers when they plan a trip to~ big :
readers who said they loved the birthday. I saw him 'off at th~. rail· city if tlle word "cuisine" is in the •
how-we-met letters an'd hoped you road station. He said he hadn't slept ad, .the restaurant will.be expensive. ,
would contin ue to print more. Well, mu.:h that night, but he prayed for If the ad uses the word · "food," it •
here's mine:
two things •• that he. would come will be so-so price-wise.Jfthere'\ a l
I was only 14 and given the honor b~ck in one piece and that the- little sign in the window that says "eats,"
of reading something from the blonde would be waiting for him.
it will be cheap, but' the medical bill ,
Shortly before the war ended, Jim may be high. -.- Been There Ancl. :
Scriptures during Easter service$.
I noticed a new family in the came home on a 10-day leave. We Done That
•
•
Dear Been TheR: Thanks for •
congregation. The oldest son wa~ decided o~ the spur of the moment
·
16. His black curly hair and dimples to get married.
the laugh.
·•
almost made me lose my place.
The florist decorated the altar
That night in youth grou~, I was beautifully. for $10. That was S3 Send questions to Ann !-anders, Cre- I
the only one who spelled 1\is las! years ago,.and we have had, and are ators Syndicate, 5111 W. Century I
name right. Little 'did I know how still having, a fuller life than I ever · Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
many times I would spell that name. could have imagined. I'll sign' this -·
I
90045
"Ji_m" was very smart and gradli· C.A. in
· Texas

N11d Someone To Care For E1w
derly Lady In Mlddloport , 7•0·

387-7404.

:•·

Who look$ l'ike a s~oplifter? -Teens aren't the only ones s-ingled out;.

Help Wanted

110

&amp; VlclnJtr

Pagel &gt;;
·
•a

.

· ··

~omeroy

Thureday, May 21, 1998

. -.

~

.,t

�..
May 21, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Deily Sentinel

.
Ohio

OOP

The

NEA Ctdsaword Puzzle

BIUDO.E
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 -""(got
&amp;

230

Prof...lonal
Servlc:u

440

320 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Livingston's basement water·
P(OOflng , Ill b111m1nt repairS

dOne, tree estimates, lifetime
~arantea . 10yrs on lob experl.,.,.. ~75-2145.

REAL ESTATE

14 x70 38R, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 per mo. Frot air &amp; tree skfn.
frO. Hl88·9211-3&lt;28.
14X70 3br $999 down. $198 per
mo. ~.. air &amp; oklrting. 1-800-691 •
87n.

BRUNER LAND
740-441·1412
llolgo Co.: Danville, Nice Rolling
Lan~ 17 ACres 118,000 ·$2,000
Down • $212/Mo.; Or 9 Acreo
$16,000, Clly water. Dyeavlllo ,
Nice 11 ... Acres S10,500 Very
Remote.
Athena Co.: Torch , Real

Country

Living, Minutes To Belpre 5 Or 1
Acre Building Sileo ·$15,000,
Water.
2 e.droom ~ .. tor sale, needs
-k. 2505 lincoln AWJ. 304-6754210.
3 bedroom home next to Salls·
bury Grade School, living room,
family room, NC. 1.5 ""'"· large
garou- w~n -'!shop, ~oat IOCa·
don, must see tp apprectate, 740992-6375 after epm.
3 8edtoom Ranch, 1 Mila From
Gallipolis. Attordablt, Excellent

Neighborhood, Call For Appoint·
ment, 740-441 -0529, 740-4460714.
3 bedroom. 1 1/2 bath. lri·lavel
with tamlty room. Close to roapnai.
550 Jay Drive. 740-446·9251, at·
lor 5j)m.

3 Bedroomo, 1 Bath, LR, FR.
Kitchen , Laundry Room With 3
Acree, Bulavllle Pike , 740·«1·
0036.

Convenient Racine aocation, out
.ot high water. 3BR, one bath, plenty storage, reduced $37,950, 740949-3228.
Double wide 3br, 2 bath,. only

$1,325. dOwn, $205. per month.
t ·800-119H&gt;m.

For Sale By Owner: 8 Room
House In-Ground Pool Good

Condition, 1 112 Acrea. On Rt. 7
- · 740-441~.
For Sale By Owrw: ~ Pille,
BriCk. Morton Building, 3.8 Aaeo;
35 Ferguson Diesel, 740·448·

42118.
Houle tor Sale !5mie out ot GaJtll.
polls, Close to Elkl Farm. 3be·

dtOonHome.
Middleport, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
many e~raa , must ue to appre-ciate, plaase call 740·992·2019

-epm.
House for salt In New Haven,

wv. 3 bedrooms. $35,000, 740·
992·5841.

HouM -

ot major ropolra, loll

than 2 Acres, Utility hookUps.
$33,000. 740-4411-3524
' House. 2 Story Duple•. 1 Bed·
room Cottage, 13 Pine Street,

Gallipolis. Largo Lot Shown By
Appointment, PriCe: $98,000 740448 4999.
Loaded 28x80, aar. 2 112 bath

with all optlono, onty 12,499.
doWn, $382. par month. Frot air &amp;
skirt. 1-4171.
Lovely Country Home On SR 7
South With A Breathtaking RIYer
View. Vary Private Salting On 2 11
2 Acres But Only 10. Minutes

From Gallipolis. 3 -4 - · 2
112 Balht, Hardwood Floors, 2
Flreplaceo. Now Hoot PIJmp, New
Kllchen, Many Extras. Won't last
Longlt ,, 10,000.
Call Virg inia L. Smith Realty At

740·408·8808 Or Call Cara AI
140·245·9430 For More lntonm•
liOn.

1970 12•65 3 Bodroomo, Has
Some Remodeling liveable In Water, S2.000 080. 740·388-

9686.

Prices On

casn Purcha&amp;esl

1988, 2 bt(lroom, gas heat, cen·
1n11 air, 2 tloclts, very good cond~
lion, muot Hll, $9,000, 740·992·

360

Real Estate
Wanted

7822.

Single Christian lomalo looking tor
~ouse to rent In Gallla or Meigs
County, relocating trom Columbua.
call R~ 61H81-ll265 ASAP .

1988 Clayton 1•x10 3 bdr, 1
bath. neat pump. good cond. Will
deliver lOCal. $11 ,000. 1982 Oak·
wood t4xl0 2 bdr, 1 bath, ex .
cond. Can 11ay In park w/ap·
proved application or will deliver
·local. $8,900 . K&amp;K Mobile
Homel 8am·5pm. 304-675-3000.

1992 14X60 2 BedroOms. all
Electric..Mt;(lood condition . On
rantod Lot. 740 446 8063

9411-5678.
UNBELIEVABLE $499 Down S/
W $999 Down DIW only at IOAK·
WOOD HOMES) Barboursville
3(M.736-3409

ABANDON HOM); Mtkt 2 pay·
ments, anuma loan , owner fl nanc:tng avallallta. 304-755-7191 .

Attention Moble Homo Ownero:
Areas Largeat Inventory 01 Interlherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumpl ,
Air ConDitioners, Furnaces &amp;
Parll, Hugo Buying Power Moans

av.r

Tilt Lowest
Installed
Easy
The Phone
BankPrlco,
Financing.
Call Bonnett's Mobile Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1-800-872·5967.

BUY tN APRIL
No Payment&amp; Until July 1998
E·Z Financing
Cstl Finance t.r.o
1-800-9411-5678
FnteSat-up&amp;~lvary

Discount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Acce11ories Waler Heaters, VI·

nyl Skirting Kits $299 .95, An·
chora. Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps,
Roof.Coatings, Doors, Windows,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies.
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
·Morel Call Bennett's MobUe
HomeSI.IlPiy AI 1·740-4411-9418:
Divorce ForCes Sales· Take over

paymenta. 2br. 2 bath. tlnanclng
.....-. 304-7M-5566.
Hugo 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath .
Starting at ONLY 139.999. Many
option• available. t ·888· 928·

3426.
ltrgt-olusedhomel. 2
or 3 ltiidi...,.. Stattlng at $2995.
Quick delivery. Call ·740·385-

9821 .

LIIITID OFFER
1998 Doublewide 3br, 2 baths.
St.8997llown W91mo . Only at
Oakwood Homes Nitro, WV 30&lt;1·

755-5885.
NEW 3 BEDIIDOII '
(J16,995)
OAKWOOD HOMES Barboura·
vllt 304-7311-3409
Make 2 Paymenla Move. In No
Paymenls After 4 Years, I -B00-

876-3169.

Sat l4l on lot. Boll Offtr. 304-7380735

(IIEPOt

New 1998 14x70 three bldroom,
Includes e months FREE tot rent.
Includes skirting, deluxe steps

polntmonl740-992·5243.

and oetup. Only $187.08 per
montlt wnn $1075 down. Call t ·

Nice three IMidtoom ranch, k. 1wO
batho, lnground pool. ca. near
hOipil8l &amp; IDM'I, 74()-446-.4173.

_IIOO-_S37_·323S
_ _•- - - - - NEW BANK AEPO'S onty 3 llftf
Still under warranty, owner fi·

Nine rooms . two baths. heat
pump, oak kitchen , electric lur~

nancing available.

naco.

New Doubtewlde 38R. 2 bath .
$1,325 Down I 1205 per mo. t·
_6611-9211_ _34
_ 26_· - - - - - -

187 N. Main. Ruttand. 740742-2789.

One aore on O!tlo River. 90' river
frontage, 1 tQ story cedar hOml,
2 112 car garage. concrete dflwway, dlctl gaiOfe, one bedroom
uparaln 28x24 with whir~ tub,
ont bedroom dOwnstairs 14xU,
large living room, large 24x26
kltchoA'cltnlng ..... laundry room,

one tutt beth dOWriotaira, garbage

7191 .

304·755.·

Schull New Generallon 18x72.
3bdr, 2 balh, vin~l tiding, lhin~
gled roof, 2x6 walls. 127,280.
Clayton Winner 24x40, 3bdr, 2
bath . S28 ,900. Mountain Stata
Hom11 3411 Jaekson Ave. Pt.

Hutch, mapl&amp;, Baasetl , glan
top, $225, 740-992·2874.

Riverside Apartment• In Middle·

JET

port. From $2411-$373. Clll 740· •
AERATION M010RS
992·5064. Equal Houllng Oppor·
Repaired, New &amp; Ret&gt;uin tn Stock.
tun~. .
Call Ron EYIM, 1-800-531·9528.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
74().446 0390.
Kin~ size soft alder waterbed ,
Newly Remodeled i Bedroom , night stands &amp; floor model TV.
304-576-2615.
Furnished JUnlurnished, Down·
slalra. Utilities Paid. No Smoking ,
No Poll. P.arklng, 8 Month .Lease Lilt Chair, Good Working Condl·
$200 DoposH. $300/Mo.. 74Qo4.48- lion, $150, 740-379-2720, AFTER
I P.ll.
3687.
Now Taking Applications- 35 Ludwig Drum Sat With Gatos Call
Alter4P.M. 740-4411-7496.
·
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

Wo Buy Land: 30 · 500 Acres,
We Pay Cash. 1· 800·213·8365,
Anthony Lend Co.

992·7606.

APT AVAIUIILE NOW
Twin

Rl~rs

Tower now accepting

992-3725.

450

Prlmtatar· 150 off installation.
First month frae Including tree
HBO. Free promotktn' with rebate,
1100-263-2640.

lzed apt. tor elderly and handicapped. EOH 304-675-e879.

Fumlahed
Roome

2 &amp; 3 badroom, In Pomeroy, $300

740-441·5696, 740-441·5187.
Sleeping rooms wllh cooking .
Also trailer space on river. All
hook·upa. Call after 2:00p.m.,

304-n:l-5851. Masonwv.

2 Bedroom Houao Burtcnort LOne,
Gallipolis. S3401Mo.. WID Hook·
Up, Deposit Required, 513·5742539.
2 Bedroom House Walking dla-

to downtown Gattlpolil,

460 Space for Rent'
Mobile home alta available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

740-385-4387.

No

~~~;~or~Pets~~·
~Ro~tor~encos:~a~nd~
Required
. 7•0·258·
9:00 ~M.

·

2 bedroom houH, clean, carpeted, stove, no refrigerator, no In·
side pets, deposit required, 740·
992·:Kl90.

2 Bedroom Houle, No ...... $2501
Mo .. $150 Dapoolt, 740·4463817.

MERCHANOISE

51 0

2-3 Bdr. house on 7th Street In
New Haven . Awallable June 1.
Garage, air-conditioner, nice
neighborhood . $335. mo. plus
depoait. 740-859-4408.

3 Bedrooms. 1 112 Baths. WBiklng
Distance Downtown Galllpolia, No
PaiS, Reterenea, Deposit AaQuiled, 740-44&amp;-1182.
3 BR 12 Be $300.00 a month, 304736-7295
Avai- FOr LeaH: 2,000 Sq. Ft.
Exacullve Home , Near Galt
Course, Immediate Occupancy
$75CMJ. 740-4411-2857.
I -1 eEDADDM HOMES FAOII
14,000 Local Gov't. &amp; Bank
Repo's Call 1·800·522·2730. X
1709.

Otdor homo on •Monroe /we in Pt.
Pleasant. Large yard &amp; garden
opace.304-675-1899.
Three bedroom house and two
bedroom trailer in Pomeroy, 1250

month each, $50 deposit, 740·
1143-5218.

420 Mobile Homn
1
for Rent

Uled, Bowmen's Homecare. 740446-7263.

Washers. dryers, refrigerators ,

ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 78
VIne Street, Call 740·446·7398,
1-800-499-3498.
Used Furniture Store Below Holi- ·
day Inn In ICanauga. Beds,
Couches, Dressers, Tables , ·
Otsks, Lamps And Morel Open

M·T ·W. IIH, 740-448-4782.

Sporting
Good1

Gott ·ctubs· Wilson 1200 LT. full
sot, t, 3, 4, 5 woods. three PW
Iron&amp;, 740-949-3235.

Anti~

Buy or sell. Rtverlne Antiques,

1124 E. Main StrHt, on Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m.• SUndoy 1:00 to

8:00 p.m. 740-992·2528, Ruu

Moore owner.

540 MIICellaneoua
Merchandise
"COOL OOWNt•
Cennt Air COnctillontn;. Frot E1o
tlrnatesl It You Don't Call Us. Wo
Both LO&amp;el 740.448-63011, 1·800291-«J98.
113 carat. round diamond IQ1Italrt,
liza 8, paid $800, wilt lake 1550;

1 e.droom Moblo Homo tor rent
·Clean, nice yard, $250/Mo.,
$200 Deposit, 5 rninu111 from
town on NtigN&gt;OIIIOOcl Rd. 2 Ro~
erenceo Required, 740-4411-11342.

Marquis wedding set 112 carat ,

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile horoes
$260~$300 , sewer, water and
lrBih - · 740-992·2187.
2 bedroom mobile nome In Middleport, 740-992·5039.

12120 wooden carport, 1100. can
740-992·2358.

Brand new two bedroom mobile
homo, rofrlgenltor •nc{ range, cur·
tains, nlea Rac:ine rural senlng,

3 PIIH:a Living Room Suitt: LOYI
Seat, COuch &amp; Chair; 2 S - •
Recliners; · Kitehen Table &amp;
Cnalrl; Wh._,..t Reklgtrator, All
In Good CondiUOnl 7~0-3792720, AFTER I P.M.

1325 month pluo dopoolt, uuh,
water and aawn care, no pats, ref·
erences required , call 740·949·

alze 7, paid $1400, wilt take
$1250; wedding gown with veil
&amp;lza 7, paid $700 wil take, 1300;
740-387-o288 or 740-949-2481 .

2 largo bago ol linlo gl~s clothes
size ex. Good cond. $40. Call
onytime. 304-875-7188.

2686.
Mobtte home In country, Racine/
Portland area. $225 monthly rent.

Ak conditioner, 5000 BTU, $95;

pluth couch and chair, mauve,

1200; recll.ner. rose, $75 ; '740·
S225 depoSit, 7&lt;10·9112·7624, call 985-44 18. •
altar 5!&gt;m.
1;;;.;;._..;__ _ _ _ __

Pieaotn. 304-P5-1400.

AST Adventurer 133 """Hurn-1.2

Roush Renlals hal a 2br fur- gig hOml computer, colOr ink Jet '
mar-eel/unfurnished rnot)lle home. printer, 15" color monllor, Oolb.304-173--5944.
stereo, Windows 95, plus more.

dlopolal, double oven, di&amp;hwaan. 1Slr'lto - • Progrom. Special
er. slde·by-aide refrigerator, all financing on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
buill In, Island Jenn-Air stove, homes. PayiMntt 11 low ••
bUilt-In vacuum ayalem, natural 1110. Cll now 304-7~.
g11, central air, does not flood ,
prlco reduced 10 soil, 740-949- &amp;peclat .t la80 3BR, 2 balh.
28tt.
11,325 Down. $205 Mo. FrH air
&amp;llltlkfrlno. HI00-891-&amp;m.

Two llodroom trailer lrt Gallipolis, 1750. Lillo new. 304-875-6993.
$375 ptuo dOpollt. no pots, 740- Beanie - F o r Sale $10 &amp; Up
448-431;1.
Sell Only No Tradoo, 740·448·
Two bedrOom trailer, $300 per _11'1_87_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

Owner retiring- tteaulifully re-

month, $250 deposit 741):i92·

__

._.t411Down

IPMGM!EC!A''

otored and malrtt.lhed rlverfrOft!
two ·story home, shade trees,

ntCiilod yont, · - roorno.

tour

bedrooms, modern lllteften, full
bellment. attic. two porchll,
back pallo, concrete driveway

one! woodworking shop; atso 20

tt-...o. ,........

..,.. . t,,7.,..-8823.

Aomodtltd 2 otory, 2 king SilO

INdiGOrN. -"""' clo-2r:M-.Iarg0
......
101. iiMitng Mlgllllolttood. co11y reduced. _ . ,..... ototy,
7 - . . m ' . 7 - 1.

---·-·outSollor1 roiOCOIIng. loU titan 1yr.

old. 2 llory hlrm houao on 3.2

hilt Rd. 41tr. 2 112 bothl, Whirlpool tub, 2 cor h"fld ;arago,
ootid wOott·l po..t dooro, ;11

flflp,.ct. hardwood floors In
k"c- I toyor. Sl41.600. 304·

, , . Dolhrtry. 8tkp
OnlrAIC' aall.._.

-.wv._,_
TAXII'ECW.

Now 3br S9i9/down 1189/mo.
F1H Sot·up I DoUvory. Only 3
Left! Only .. ~ 111-

tn&gt;WY. 304-7~.

Bulldlnp
Commorclol.otlk:o or ~7
MIH St. Middleport. 1.450 8q Ft.'i
$400 ma.(or llllbdlvklo to 1,000
sq n . tor 130000 mo.) Corner
llulldlng . (7&lt;10)-11112-8250 Acc!ul-:

-(-dOOif.

350 . Lois. I Acreage
.,., l&amp;mON DIVILOHM,

~··

Aooll, L1rgo Kitchen &amp; Break

-~~. 7em.

COUNTIW IIT.QI)
M,

13.15 Aerilo, Approa. e Aero
Lake, llobho Horne Wllh Largo
•dd On D•n. Oatllo County.
:ounty Wotor And Electric
12,800,.., Acre, 740--8,

, _ ltiidioom.- Mdltotl.lrt

•1:00

t11..,..

l.2 acreo • -.,.. Jllr(o Run.
111.500. 304-f75-1213.

-

lllolllle~

• Bulltllno stt.. -2 Acroo aoctt,
::on.enllnt yol privata, mi...
"'I
• 1 t/4 mtto an
...., 1111. G4l Sondhll, no lingle
· fl4-te.. or 8 acrM

I 17 I

~CII74011a.._3115fl-,

......

31 t 1 • wss MDIIII fofiofM, 12M5
Hit a 4lll pordt fltr condition.
.,,., - · $2.100. 7&lt;10·401·

ttlaf.

Apei bilintl
for Rlnl

1 - 2and
ltiidioorn
- -HCurlty
· fur·
nilhed
unturntohld.
deposit required, no pell. 740.
992·2218.
1 -oom dOwnotalro apt. WID,
Sto¥e, Refrigerator, utllltj'a pd.
8toci&lt; ot Wal Mart Call Morni~g~.

740

340 Bual- and

f75-t301.

..,. 00 VriWf ~~&lt;•· 4 lltdn&gt;Oml.
Ul, DR. 2 f/2 - . Llrgt "-1111

440

117...... - .

unll mobile home park, rental
building, 10 wooded acres, all

010no the mor ort SR 124, out ot
high water. Will Hil togotltor or

9052.

ue ' 26

,., a 2llr tn

--.Cal -

lpn. 3DH76-tt172.

-oorn

--

Apt. StlM and ro1r1g
lnc~ ..74 Court Sl. Galllpotlt.
74()..M1 ·2!183

2

2 -..om upot.lra ljlt. 304f75-

2641.
2twlrm. opto .. total oloctrlc, apptlonces turntohld. loundrr room
- - - 1 0 - i n t a w n.
Aptlflcatlonl ...ltablo 11: VNiago
GrHn Apltt. 1411 or cal 740-11112·
31t1.EOH.

Roll Up Desk , Not An Antiquo
$475; Antique Floor Lamp, Other
ltemo. 740-387-7401 .

Good1

French City Maytag. 740·448·
n95.

530

Red Metal Bally .Bod. Mitcnln;
Cradle &amp; Youth Bod 11 50; 2 Car
Seats &amp; Misc. Baby Items. 740446-7928.

Houaehold

Appliance•:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Rai)Q:es, Retrl·
orators, 90 Day Guarantee!

520

Quun Size aah Side water bed;
Stoo.oo . Lg. Hanan Snowblower;
$350.00. Complete Satellite Syt.
$200.00 . double Rabbit Hlltch
$80.00 , Single Rabbit Hutch;
$40.00; Smelt Dog House; StO.oo,
Lg. Dog Houle $40.00. Mlnotta 35
MMM Camera, extra · lens
$1~5 . 00 , Malt boll wnreatod Poot
$ t 5.00, Weotbend leo to a Makar
new: $15.00. 740-4411-7928

Scoolert, Electric Wheelchairs,
Sal11 : Rental, Trade. New &amp;

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
2 or 3 bedroom, tun size bas.ement, no peta, 740-992·5858.

ole. Tualday through Friday. 740-

applications tor 1br. HUD aubold·

Construction Workera Welcome

9am-4pm.

large outalde toy• and baby
items, walk111, IOdd ..r car Mall,

Botene GS.t 4XL Rlcltng - · ••
HP 44 Inch C... Aoktro S80Cl. Calf
Daytime 7-3310. E-'"00:
740-387-04el
Bolone lilting - · 8rlggo ....
tor. Battery, - · 740245--.

Saara

11 hp. riding mower, 31'
deck, a spare new deek , $350,

caii99U833.

Sears Armodltlo chain link htnce,
380', two gates. 5' high, take
down, $BOP. wilt sell hall $400,
740-992·5 181 .
STEREO COMPONENTS (Car·
ven. Hollor, Henman Kardon) 740-

258-6360.
Throe ploce living room suite, god
cortdltton, asking $500. 740·387·
7706• .
Tlmberja(k Skldder Int., Truck,

DniiOing
-· -c:ltlt~.
· ·""""·
playpen,
,.
&amp; -.

-~E·Z Go Eloclrtc Ooll Cart And

Chir;or $800; 5 HP Oo Cart
S380. 740-245-5118.

F l - Prlco deluu ltrolor, like
-Iii, 21
/ 2 - -Itt;, Appttlncet.
· Ootttpo. ·-.M0.-·3114.
Bl.looml,
$425/Mo., $225 Dopool, U t Gold Chain Link Noctlloco For
PIId 740 4.. 2121.
Sale, Voluod At $250 Wilt Take
Aoooonabto Oltoro. 740·441·
f787.

-

Watorllnt Special: 3/4 200 PSI
121 .95 Por too; t" 200 PSI
137.00 Par 100; All Bra11 Com·
pr0111on F1ttlnga tn
RON !VANS ENTERPRISES

s-

- · onto, 1-1101~537-9528
.Weight Lltung Equipment, 740·
~744 .

Wwtl P'Pn"n

Do You NHd A Word Processor
For Some Bu11nesa Work Or

Maybe A Cotlogo Bototd Sludont.
11 So, Catt 740·241S-5443 For

2412 or 1-600-594-1111
John Dearo Beller W/Kickor. Exc
cond ..
$3,200.
Grinder·
$1 .OOO.Sooy Sheep Miniature&amp;.
Rartl $400,00 eacn . 740·258·
8230

Coli: 740-4411-2412 or 1·1100-594·
1111
lley 8plng Savlngo
Ford New-Holland au 20 series
Compact Dlelll Tractors $500 .
extra discount. 411 40 to 100 tiP
Tractorl 11,000. extra dlacount or
0% financing for 12 mos. Exampte: 3010 DieHl 42 PTO HP, Dill
lock , 8x2 Trans, Independent

,Building
. Suppllel

2 Registered Herolord Butta: 1
Yearling $700; 4'Year Old $1,000
740-4411-2884.

Approximate .2,500ft. rough lqm-

25 Angus and Chi -Angus bulla
tor lale. roaoonably priced, -

ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

·Rio Grandt, OH Call 740·245·
5121 .
Two atulllulldtnoo. pul&gt;tlc tlqul·
datloo. 40154 $9.218 now $5.880
40125· waa l5.50d now $3,081 .
Mull HI, can · t -800-282·

0111 .

580

Pets for Sale

A Groom.Shop ·Pet Grooming.
Foaturtn; Hydro Bath. Don
Shoell. 073 G-oo• CrHk Rd.
740 141 0231 .
Adorable Auatrallian Shepherd
Pupo Tri.COiortrt, 1100, 740-4111032.
AKC Labs, one chocolate. twe

black, born 3113/98, 740·379·

2883.
AKC Rtglotorod Ballot Hound
Pupplla, 1II S~otl &amp; Wormed,
740-387-7705.

West
Paso
Pass
1988 SUnblrd, red, fOur door, air,
bo.dy in good condlllon, runs
good. $1300, 740-992-6824.
1989 Serena V-6, Auto, AC,
$2,295; 11190 Cavalier 2 Doors. 5
'Speed , AC, 94K , $1,895; Cook
Mo!Dis, 740-44H103.
·1989 Camara RS Loaded, V·B.
Looka And Runs Good $5,200,
'740-245-5789.

;1989 Corsica , while, has high
·mtlel $1.100. 304-675-5253.

Uvestock

lent breeding . Slate Run Farm,

- · 740-288-5385. '
30 Anguo And Chi· Anguo Sullo
For Sate, RoaiONIIlty Priced, E•·
cettont Brttdlng, State Ruh
Farmo. Jacklort740-288-5395.

7Old Gatcllng Horlo Gontlo,
Good Trail HorH, $800, 7 Angua
Crou Cowo Whh Calves $800 A
Pair. 4 Fainting Pigmy Golto 3
Due Anytime ltOO Each, I Billy
$50. 7*-258

230.

Ntoo Boned G-.y SUI WoiQhtng Approx. 800 Pdo. $425; 5l't.
Woods Finishing Mower Like
_,,,000,1~.

Polled Blllcl&lt; Umouoln Bulla 740387-7800.
Two yeer old. 1 /2 black Angus

and

1~

Man·agu, opproa. 1000
110., IGOO. 740-245-5122.

840
-

Hay I Grain
hay, 11 a bale out

ot tlold.

Langovtlo/ Dostor aroo, 740-742·
2118S. 74HIN4011.

pies, tliWkl Old, llrtt 11\oll I

evos.'

sale or trade, $3500, 740·258·

6854.

1992 Plymoulh Accuam, 4 door,
oleyl .. auto. air. 12.800. 740·378·

2845

td Towing Package, E•collent
Condition. 85,000 Mites. $11500
51ta1pt 740-4411-8278.

ti94 Cadillac Sedan DeVIlle,
Faart White ExteriOr, Tan Interior,
42,000 Mlleo; Uke Now, $18,500
.can 7&lt;0·448·2058, Aller 8:00
~M.

-....,...----

,1~94 Camero Z,28, 8 Speed
Standard, 350 LTI V·8, T· Topo,
CD, Air. ·Tnt, Cruise . 55K, Ono
Owner $13,000 740-882·3242 AI·
ter5~M.

-·

88.000 mltoo. 15.600. 740-949·
23t 1 daya Or 740·949·2844
1194 ford Tempo, fully. loaded,

....uont condition, tour new tlroo,
$5500, 740-992·5295.
1994 Ptym_oulh Sundance Auto,

Air. 4 Doors. Eacelent Condition,
$3,500,740-446-9552.

Loa-

1995 Chryolor COncord Looded.
inlllllr, $8,800 080, 740-

25&amp;-ltllt.

lt98 Monte Carlo. Btad&lt;, Leather,
Lotdod, 33,500 MIIOI, Reduced!
740-379-2M8.
· 11196 Z·24 Cavellar, 5 Speed,
PW, Sunroof, Koyltll Entry, Ex.
Cond.. $12,700, OBO, 740-441·

0235.

.-..us a,.- potoontng. J D
~--~·

NOnCE
· -CIIyNC1111 r' •

. -·~~poott
Protooatona~ Grooming, IW Ap·

-rl·

pointmonte. 0vor 11 , ..
•-· -tno lj)polntmerttt

.30411a3340,

'

•

:JIM

~-

2553.

•'

~~~ W~"" DWC.IOJ~ ~...,.

1985 Ball Hawk 11 112ft. tlshlng
boat, 1 t5HP, extras. ex . cond•
$4.000.31J4.882.3438aftltr5j)m.

FPOT, ~! ~· 1 11-\lN.K
I'l.L AAIJE. P.. 0\oc.oLf'..TE. &lt;.1\1?
lo\UFfiN. TO

1985 Sayllner Open Bow 19 FoOl

R~ n~ter

crtmlftllil
DOWN

rr =~to

1 -Here to

30 Turned ovor

Etemlty

ancl o-

2 A-T....-

32 Gum troo
34 Sedative
35 IliON thll

3 Well St. Ofll.
4 Blllball 5 Old ....
&amp; Long lime
7 Sacl

lime
341 Acquire

11 Hu laod

12 Qulcll NIOrl •
13 11un.1pnch -

18"-n
twwa

: ~

• t· •

DE~~
me~

'

I
I
.•

-

..,

BIG NATE

1994 Mlroda Runabout, 4.3 Liltf,: •
V·6 , 83 Hours. E•cellant Condl· :

I .;.4

.

·1995 Baytlner 20 Ft. Cuddy 4.3 &gt;
MtrtCIIMtr Cel1740-256--1180.

1996 Marada 19 Ft. With 4.~:·
MtreCrul88f Excellent ConditiOn, '·:
Cel740-256--1180.
: ••
Bau boat, 18 fl. Ball Trldler:·n• .':
50hp Mercury motor, Humming:-- ...
bird , ID-4 Flaher Finder, tJUIIQr..,.,.
kola Trolling" motor, anchors~
batteries. fully equtpped, eQ\'f'P.,...
Good concl. 304-675-3313 or 740' 1'

1a

20 - IIIOftltlt'

warranty, lhree IIIIer, 83 hor. .
power, bought new July of '91.
lhree matching Kawasaki ski
vesta and trailer all go with ·11,

·

CNAAUE SROWN ..

~

2045, will consider trade for a :

780

•

Eat

25l.ln..c

Auto Parts I
Accesaorlu

.

21 CUll (llflll)-'"0
31 Minor dilly

33

Legum••

J

•

38 Rlf depot

..,

40 Small Vllllly-1

41 ..... Aurton ,;

42 title
HHIIallon

'. .
IOUnda
~
43 Ht or bye ' '
44 "'-CCpllllloft~
• Crv Of piln ,
47 DIRIMCI
•v
48 Conlakwl .,

lor 33-0own c

so~··
nlckt111rM J
52 Guklo'a hlgill
noll
53TMH

.•·.

I

:;

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.o.tlyCiphtfCl=··· ..~ Luis Campos
Tod!IIP
&amp;dl

ct.lldfw:mq~l"'

.. byfemoul peoplll, f*l
cUI: N ..... L.

In . . clphlf lllndltor lltdW.

KG 0 I

A G DB."

'XT ,IISJ

end.,....
J P F.V
\

/

•u 0 y

G
E
·~.

..
,,

'0

IIVPIIGtll:

WGTO

XVN ,GHIVII

'SI

UOY

8 y' z

. ., ·.

RSGNII
OW

•

' 'VISTII , ' XPISMUG
IPIIPDDG
•
• PREVIOUS SOLUTIO~; .'I -the playwrtgllt as a lay preach8r ped&lt;lllng ~
ideas of his time in popular lorm." - August Strirwlberg
:.
•U

_,

.........

.,

..

"'

..1

,,

s y .R H A L .
1

••

I

...
&lt;.

•

I 1 I I I

I

W0 R E·C

,·",

I

..
''.

F H T I F ~~
Ovlll1lelfd in ollice elevatOr:
- • Have. you ever noticed that
~ nothing makes a boiS mora

I I . I r I'

I

..J

'

.

I

r-""'"'::"-:-""~~~--.likea!&gt;le than being in ---·-.- ~ r

E L GE u A
t'"~-~~1'"1-_-;l..'~~~~~~~~~~-1:'~~ ·e
~~~n': i~~~h:~i:g~~~
you develop lrom "**I No. 3 below.

..

Tawdry- Hoist- Nudge - CMntnt- NEW ON/$S
The only thing my siSter-in-law makes from her past
mistakes is hoW to make NEW 9NES ..

I

Now gas tanlll &amp; body perta. D &amp; •
II Auto, Riploy, w.v. 304· 372· -;
3933 or t-eo0-273-9329.

790

~~=
~
l"''ediet I .A

All ......

SCIAM LI1'S ANSWIIS

•

t

Pass

6 ~i~~~~\ LfTTUS TO I I I I I I I I

..
•

$5000, 740-949-2203 or 740-94'1- •

good...,_, boat.

4NT
&amp;.• ·

e~~~~rs~~u~~f~TT!RS r r r r 1·. I' I' 1·

5FE?THERE SIIE

Kaweaakl STS Jot lkl, atiU Under ,

..
•'

•"

,,
,.

,,

,.•
'

.

...
•

,.

Campen &amp;
MotorH~

.t

1974 Snesta 2411. new paint, NC, l
tlreo. brao... upholllery. $4.100. 1

.~

'

1978 .Coa~hman 21 fl. campt~rA
Bath. air. stove, refrigerator. ~

SIIIPI 6. 13000. 740·387·0584 :
'
- · 740-lla-6f95clayt.
1980 Floatwtng with - " " ' t 7fL ~
1972 ArlltCICrlll 1811. 1873 Smoky .
1511. Bob McCormick Rd. 740. ;
446-1511

I ot 2)1CC)

1987 tnnsbruck UlYII troller, 28ft. •
VInyl &amp;Idol, uled twice. 114,000. ;

080. 304-675-2793.

goloellln:~;Ji~~:~~~~~

. •

-... and-. ~ - .
IIH oatlmalt CIIChol, 740:1112·

.

~.

4420.

llilti'UiniiD
AMidtnclll or conwnen:llll

11180 F-250 4 WD. 5 Bpood, C.
IIII.P,IOO, 740 t4e 1317.

_l
II .:

.· ,

C&amp;C General Home Main .. •·
tononco· Painting. vtnyl atdlrtg, •
carpormy, CIOOr1. wil-t, IIOtfte, '

82 S· tO Tahoe Pocklll' 73,000
mlloo, VI, 5ap, oupor Shorpt ,
13.100. 740 ue 1111

..,

I Nf.ED '!0.:.0\l!f'&lt; .
'":-'&lt; ~t "1'0011-\
W!tl\ N.J..~'( W.C.!

'(OU WI-NT

1987 Fourwlnns 215 Sunctowner, l
21112ft., To many e•lras to m~~

4411-8340.

North

;
·

21 Slngir
'" .
Fftlllldln
•:
22 LOin 8ltlrk -~
23 Pond Cllll.....
24 Eeayplt
e

The next stop on our European
tour is Stockhplm. This beautiful city
isn't far enough north to· enjoy 2~
hours of ~unlight ·in mid~ummcr. but
it doesn't stay dark for long. And
Sweden has produced many . topclass players, who have two other
chnracieristics that stand out: They
are very friendly and sP.,ak excellenl
.'1'
English.
One of the victorious Swedish
· ~5~"'
team at the 1977 European Champi·
iii
on ship was Jorgen Lindqvist, who is
affectionately known as Jorgen-dad·
.f 0
dy. He declared this deal brilliantly,
•f
dating the 1976 Swedish Teams
J~
Championship.
·
'Jorgen-daddy began with a thin
· S'•
two clubs. This was natural. showing
!!::'!:::!:~.-r.l...,~,..:::::"':!'-~$:.,__J • at least six clubs and, in principle, II·
· IS high-card points. North, Anden
·srunzell, understandably launched
into Blackwood before bidding six'.
West led tlie ·heart four, which had
all the aura of asingleton. ·
It looks natural ID take two trump
finesses thro~~gh East'and one dia·
mond finesse through West, getting
home if IWo win.·But Jorgen-daddy
sensed that ttie' card.• didn't 'lie so
favorably. AI trick two, he played a
club to his a~;e. (Not surprisingly, East
didn't drop his king.) JoJten-daddy
continued with a spade to dummy's
. qu~n and a spade to his ace, West
making a length signal consistent
with .aq odd number of spades. .And .
the appearance. of East's 10 on the
second round seemed to confinn
thiS. So. Jorgen-daddy cast adrift with
a trump: Bingo! Ea.•t had to return
either a diamond into dummy's ate·
queen or a heart into the ace-jilck.
Whicbever,he.chose. de&lt;:larer had 12
tricks.
~
If an opponent leads a singleton
against your small slam, he won'l
hold an:ace or the trump king. ·
•

2! · ·

.

'lOP 1\Qff!

r~~~Le~a~v~e~M~a~sa=a~g=o~ti~N:ol:

140-~a-a195 days.

'

THE BORN LOSER

...._.. $2,750.614-446-3814.

tlon. 111,500. 740-387.0594-eve.

,.

......: .. ...I

SERVICES

ft7t Datsun, blue, good cond.
$300. phone onyttma. 304·4511·

ve..

•

.·()

. .I

17ft. baas boat. 120 Evlnrude. :
fully loaded, 65 • ~P'I 30"· 578- •

'

Ttlf flfCf, ltAICIJS!

.•

~ ­

Mull~··

'""-tly.

.. /

S&gt;·

t7' Starcrafl lrl-ftull 140hp. In · '
board, trailer, covers, all equip~ :
ment. A-1 condiUon. $3,700. Call •
304-675-3485.

,011 IALI: COIIIOLI 'lANG

i!pm.

'

•

se.ooo.304-675-7112V.

Roopon- " " ' Wanted To
Low MotltNy raw-~~a On 11112 Cldlue ~. 2 D, 2eO
"llno.
c.Jt: 1-100; · ·
Good co,..llon. fl .eoo Or
- 1 1.
-Otllr.74011all5.

tor $37.000. 304-f75-7M ~

.'

• 1.1

:so Ct.OSe TO

NOT

•

to-

IVIItaltlo,IIO llocandiNI. Ool·. 2221.
1MO •I NO ~ CAlli POll
'Rat Tenter puntn, mate a• .,.. 8oiJtd ' .._ly Thlt
· Calf 1·100-522·2730 Ell.
matl, twU old, full! Ia a ~ted, 110 -

.

:

mtlto. Runo good, good ohope.
It ,300. 304-571-21118.

........011.7 - l l f a

- N 0.-

'• . .

:

1170 380.- roro lind, 2cyt
wlolt ln)tocllon, runo &amp; drtvn
good. $2,100. data. K&amp;K lloblll Homoo 81m·
5pm 304-876-3000.
1971 Corvottt, 25111 Anntvtraory,
rod. auto. L·l2, 350. Er. cond.

.~orth PrOduce. 740·.,.1·1133.

,
1

'85 Camaro. 38,000 mllol, 740·

.H._,PY .lACK IX PLEA COL·

11111 """'

•

1G' Baja Ski Boat Excellent Conclt- .
lion, 740-245·551 9.
•

'88 BMW 3251o, lwo door. new
Chrome rima &amp; liret, co, amnm,
leather, 11r, power aunroof and
-74,000,740-992-5181 ,

· • - Ro11'1111r American, 87,000

LAII: """ ftoll , tlclt,

750 Boats &amp;.Motora
for Sale

:lo4-571-2088.

Credit Problorno? We Can Halp.
Easy Bonk Financing For Uaod
VehiCiet, No Turn Dawns, Call
vlcfdo. 740 ue 31W.

1983 8·10, Wrecked front end.
good ~
&amp; ruMing gear.
$500.
·3438 allor 5pm.

-::'75~.7:-42-27
__
38_.- : - - - - - Full Blooded Poodlto, 8 WHkl
0111, 1150, 740 111172t.

1tone

57 Hotpe I•

By Phillip Alder

2f

1994 Ford Taurus GL, v-e, • dr.,
auto, green melaiUc wilh tin in·
1er1or, ale, pw, pi, amlfm caas .,

720 1'ruckl for Sale

256-1877.

whelM
48 Sh8rp borlt
41 Tltuler dtelrlct
11 Son woo1
54 Wtnt b y 55 Wlna-fooled
511 Semlprecioul

Toward the :
midnight sun

96 Honda 300 EX 4 Whatlor, ,
Qood Cond. 13,000. 740 ·245' •
5158

llof'll740-44&amp;-8313.

1915 Honda Accord, Grey, Engino Aobuln. Many Othor Now
· 2295 Mil Creek 1111.. Galllpoto

~...... cGior

k;;( of

~ning lead: • 4

080. 304-882-3741 .

bow.!
Jill'. concl. l7,000. 304-67He75.

AKC Sllllrlarl Forno" 12 Wool&lt;o,
Vet Chocl&lt;od, Sholl I Wormed,
1100, 740-~2383 Kif'¥.

and-·

4 new 6·ply holt shot
tires, runs &amp; looks great . $4,000

1990 Four Winna 18' open

710 Aulol for Sale

Full blooded Gorman ohlpltard

whe~ler,

Condition Runs Good

wormed. 2melol/21omalto. 304·
fl75.4te:J or 304-675-11!75.

... 304-676-2083.

.

'

1996 Yanama 350 Banshee 4· •

1991 Pontiac Grand Am LE, ma- 1989 Sea Imp 19 112ft. deep-V, • ·~ ,
roon, twO door, aulomatlc. cokl air, . beige wJaand interior, ecyl, •
tilt, lour brand new llrea , $3295, 190hp.. Mercrulser inbOard motcM".
740-99~ .
with trailer, life preservers I

Upton UMd Caro Rt. 82·3 Mites
South of Leon, WV. Financing
!w 'd'h. 304-451-1069.

AKC Rogtolorod Shih·Tzu pup·

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Mort-Sol

1991 Honda 250x 4 Wheeler Lots ·
01 Now Stutll740-441-1419.
.

·1990 Chevy Beretta GTZ, White,
.2 Dooro, 122,070 Mlleo, $3,000, '92 Kawaskal jot ski,. 850X2, .,.
740-2«HH171.
colon! condition, $1400, 740-992·
1991 Cadillac Seville S5.500. 7467.
•
·304·675·5800. For sale or parts ;_;.:F;_t_V_·Bo.,.
. -ttom--Boai-.- ---Ga-114
1967 Chevelle 263 3·tP, 2·dr, · vanized Trailer 1o hp, Johnson
lots of eatra&amp;. $1,2QO. 304-675· Motor. $t,200.00; Wilt Separato,
1906
740--2.5-9109.
·

Excellent Condition, 19,000; 1863
Chevy C·IO 112 Ton, Full Size
Pick·Up Y·8, Automatic, Excellent
Running Condition, Needs Some
Body Work $3,000, · 740·446·
7473.
.

.·;I GOT A
REAL BAD
. lTCH,"
. poe!!

Your Area John
Dealer
• 1 .nd i'!or~~!~•rl ' 1992 Toyota coron•. alr,IH, 111111.
For R - n.a
"
"
goocllkeo. excellent conclltlon In: '
Lawn Equipment. Com,...t
sJde 6
$
1914 24 Ft. Pontoon Boat, 23out. 3995 neg., 740·992· lnch Floats, No Motor, With Tan-Tractors From 20 To 39 HP.
8824
Stzes 01 4 WD "nd 2 WD Farm _ :--:· - : : - - - - - - : - - - dem Trailer $2.195 614·882·2110 ·
Tracrora, Hay Equlp~ent, John 1993 Chevy 41tro ven Clload - - · orat4-279-70M.

Wtllt Uo About Financing As Low
As 2.9% On lawn Tractors And
Low Rate Flnltnclng On Now And
Used Equipment. Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lewn Galllpono, OH 740...,._24121,.00.594-1111.

42
45

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Soutl,l

.1992 Ford Tempo 01, 4 door,
~aded, clean. 73,000 miles. for

550

Btoek, brick, oowor pipes, wind·

I A 52
" 8 3'
• 8 7
6 A J 10 8 5 3

Vour Area Bush Hog Dealer For
Parte, Rotary Cutters, Loaders ,

.DHno Skid Sloor LoedorL Chodt

6 K 9

South

1992 Buick Regal Gran Sport ,
86,000 - · 2 dr., w~ bur·
gancly leather lntertor. auto. 1111 oplions, maxed outll $5100. 740·
949·2311 dafs or 740·1149·2844

630

bar 0~ &amp; Popular 818, 4x4. 2x4
&amp; Inch lumber, au lengths 8 to
1611 304-895·3808; Bryce! Duro!
Rt. 2 Leon, wv.

• 10 4
• Q 10 9 7 6
• K J 9 3

•106542
• ,Q 6

PTO Wet Dloc Brakes, 1 Double
Hydvalve
$12,900.
•·WD
$18,900. Good only until May 28.
Keolorl Sarvlce Ctntor
Sl Rl.87
Point Ptaaoant &amp; Ripley Road
3()1-q95-3874.

B e - Gallpolil &amp; RiO Grande,
Ohio On Jackoon Pike 740·44&amp;.
24' 2 or '-aoo-594- 1" 1.

20 YaporOIII
23 Aptitude

" 4

John Deere Skid Steer Loader • 1991 Jimmy V·6 All Power, "u·
All Slzet and Attachment• In tomatlc, 4 WO, 2 Doors, E11001tint
atock 7.5'4 Financing Available .. Condition $10.000; 1988 Monte
Carmk:hael'l Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc . Carlo SS V-6, Sunrool, Automallc,

More lnbmauun.

570

e

bine Ex, cond . Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. Call 740·448·

Wasnor &amp; Dryer 1400 Call 7&lt;10·
446·8200 Eventngo Or Wee·

IM4It1iol.,..., loft, melt

-For SOlo 7-2781.

Wrap/Now Holland 472 Haylllne
EX. cond., new Holland 474 Hay·

michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway

CDII tepoonol ·
Bull doztr Cuo 310, Good hlrm
mac111na. $5,!1011. 11188 Komatlll
Mini Ellcava!Of (Traclo Hoe) Low
hoUri, runo ;aoa. 304-738-9131

SlnrU• And Krw

Round Baier 1 year old wllh Na1

Ttllaro. Finish Mowers; Etc. Car·

1 1-1. • Fllh Tank &amp; Pot ShOp,
2413 Jacklort Avo. Point Pltoo·

Crone -

Deere 6 Row Planter, John Deere
2800 4 Bottom Plow 2·John Doole
12·14 ft Disk Ulod Re!Cts. Square
Batero, Round Balers 8.5% Fl·
nancing on uHd Round Balers &amp;
Mower condltlontrt. N•w Idea

Prencice loldlr, 740-2!8 9301.

Brlltcl Newt Groat 01111 CDMdoo
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Never out ol boll. $125. Holds up
to 940 dlocio. also hotdo tapoo.
Coli 740·892·8838 altor e pm.

or-lpn 304-525-53ee.

Row Air Planters: Older John

• 1 4 2
Ea8t

a

John Deere 7000 4 Row NO Til
Planter Exoc Cond. ~-AC 333 4

11 Type of dance

eJ9 .8 63

&amp;10 Farm Equipment

Ford 5030·400 HRS.. Ford 7040
4WD WI Loader· 1370 HRS.. Ku·
bot. M5030 50HP·800 HRS. Car·
michael Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc . Call
740-446-2412 or t-800-594-1 t 11

Bw

•AQ
WeN

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

me

(comb.
form)
10Wancler
12 Kings lnd
q-.
14 New """'
Indian
15 Slloe part

II

NwartDPtcu1a .. .._...

oiO 0\llllilld

UI'Bortr'/actor

•AKJSZ

For Hlo· red &amp; whitt o-f pota·
10 planto, call 740· 742·2773 or
740,742-2220.

5.9"-Financing on Used Tractors,

Oli-21·98

• K Q7

Fruita &amp;
vegetablel

Pomeroy Thrift Shop now lluylng

410 HOUHI for Rent

992·2381 Monday thru Friday

580 ··

month, $100 deposit, call 740·

Weekly. Rates, or Monthly Rates,

per monlh, deposit reQuired, no
pets, pay own ullllries, call 740·

-··

clteport, all utilities paid, $270 per

One bedroom apartment In Mkl·

North

Kimball Artlll Consolo Plano, Ex·
celloitt Condition $1 ,200. 740 ·

1 - New Tranaplanter Left - Hoi·
land Rotary Sauer $2,750, Carmicneoro Farm Lawn 740-448·
.2412 or t-800-!1114-11 n .

Circle Motel Lowaat Ratea In
Town, Newly RemOdeled , HBO,
Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; Oitney.

RENTALS

2-

Musical
ln1trumeiltl

Moving Sale:
8x8 1/2 Area
Rugs, Complete Living Room SuIte, Apl Size Eloc. Range Yameha
Gullar&amp; More 740-4411-2711.

0008.

bedroom, two bath mObile home.
Chester to Gallipolis. 740· 441·
9806.

570

Gradous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apart~n&amp;nta at Vlltaoa Manor and

Apartments $295/Mo., 7•0·446·

month. Call cred ll line 1·800·

383-t882.

cabinets, Jenn·air range, dish~
weoner, detached garage, by lP"

.

Wanted- approx. 1·3 Ohio coun·
l1y acre&amp; tor or with BO's t three

IS! limo Buyers, E·ZFinanclng
2 or 3 Bedroom, Around $200 per

Lullon buWI, 2 bedrooms, passf..
bly lhlrd or apartment in ball·
mont. LOrge porcfl &amp; ll"rJu-· 304-

Mlddttp0r1. beautiful two story. 3
br, 2 bath, large l.r. &amp; fr., oak
doors &amp; trim, Smith's custom oak

'Caii 'For Free Maps + Owner Fl·
nanclng Info. Take 10% Off Lisled

Aptirtments
for Rent

37 Brti. Nevy lllllr.
31 Plll.:IIII&amp;IN

wtrlna.

new ltMct or ropoh. Moolor iJ.
ctnHd olt&lt;:trlclan. Ridenour
Elt&lt;:trlcol, WV000301, 304·115-

1116.

poinl today. .
· Your personality will be endowed ·
AITilO-OilAPB
VIA:OO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
with extm pizzazz today. but YOUf
Thin~ befQre you speak loday or commertial aptitude mil!ht not be too·
else
you might unintentionally say nifty. Be careful in situalions.that uli·
BERNICE
something that could upset a ~sitive lize financial expenditures.
B)!:DE OSOL friend. Once yoor comment is aired.
.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20:~ti. 19J
il'll be difficulllo relrieve or amend.
A delicate llalance must be mainLIBRt\ (Sept. 23..()ct. 23 J
tained in family relationship:; today or
Be willing to share equally in a friction mi~t move· i~ and shove har: .
joint endeavor today, a~ your behav· . mony out.
·
.
fi.June 201
ior will in.~pire )'OUr counterpat~to do
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Do not ignore your hunches today. likewise. Both of you could come out • Do not take ihe lcindnes.~ or sen·
but·by lhe same token: monitor them .winners. .
.
erosicy of ochers for granted loday. If
care~ully - they c:ould impel you 10
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
you fail to reciprocale kind JICSIUres,
do iomethins thai isn'l 100 .bright.
You'll be mote comfortable today :your peers miaht not be available the
Get a jump on life by undenlalldinlli · with companions who art' re!trved next time .
the :influences that'll goVCilJ you iii and ae~le. Agg~Pive or' erratic
ARIES (Man:h 21·April 19)
the year 1111ea4.
.
types could make yoo feel u-y.
Be tareful how you behave today
'· C'ANCER(June21-~uly22)
and . you won't enjoy your time · when involved with someone, who
You can have a JOOCIIime today toplher.
has less than you do. DOn'unalce this
willqlt le'llitls it 0011 you an 11111 and . SAOmARIUS · (Nov. 23-Dcc. person feel his/her worth is INucd on
• material wecs. ·
·
a Jea. Y~::;:- will be 21)
fueled by N
y0u keep If .
'l'hirip should 10 Ainootbly for
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Yourpllan hialn,,a~~'n:aptiO , youlllday. proYided you do ev«y·
Otherswillfindyoumore~·
fOllow $UiL
•
.
· dtlna.in -•ICC wiih jOIIr·lliaft-. ing than u.wal today, especially mem. ·uo (July
22)
· • ideall. If y011'rr 1811 in expreui111 bers of ihe opposite gender. Don't be
lc'uby 10 10 be ~Jiilrc; ihiR q.ritia, dilllppOin&amp;menl is tiUrPnsed if your cllarisnlli causes one
dcnund lillian. yo.-dwn ldmlily. ' jNoblble.
·. of youqJeen to be a lritlc jealOus:

..•
l

'

~~~:==~~~~ .r

23-:Auf.

'l

I

'

•

.

.

.

�Pt~ge 12 • The Dally &amp;intlnel

Pomeroy e Mlddlepot1, Ohio

Thurtdey,May 21 ,1998

Friday
May 22,1998

Weath er

Beat of the Bend ...

•

Being strong and courageous, Page 3
Cleveland hand loss to Royals, Page 4
Promise of new leadership, Page 16 •

Today: _Partly cloudy
!11gh: 70.; Low: 50e

. .
Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: SOe

By Bob Hoeflich

Sports
Mets defeat
Cincinnati by.
five runs
PageS

'

Many of yoo, undoubtedly caught
the fi nal episoqe of the Jerry Seinfc ld _show which was met with
mixed reviev-. .
II must h.we been judged pretty
well overall, however, since it is
being aired again and who knows
maybe.again and again, · ..
· What is -especially interesting is
that the episode does have a local
na vor and l wanted to pass that
along to you- and thanks to Sharon
Rol ey Ashley of Middleport for the
input.
In the episode Jerry and his
fri ends were arrested in the early
pan of the show and at the end were
led to their cell and locked up.
The guard at the jail was played
by Scott Kloes who has Meigs
County roots.
Scott's grandparents were the
laoe Harlan and Margaret Rile y
Kl oes who lived in Middleport
many years. They had a son. Riley
Kl oes. who is Scott's father. Mar·
goret was a sister of the late Tom

Riley, a well-known long time Mid·
dleport resident.
Scott was very active in the
Columbus area theater groups anol
has now moved to California.
He has had small parts in movies
starring Martin Sheen. Valerie
Bertinelli and others. Just a couple
of months ago he was spotted -on an
episode of 'Third RQCk From the

•

their high school years. The items
will be placed on tables under plas·
tic during the reunion.
If you have some ihings around
to place on one of the tables, would
you please contact Shirley Johnson
right way so that plans can be made
for the ·displays?

Over 2,000 American Oags wlll
be lining the village street$ and ·
homes and busines,es are being dec·
orated !n patriotic red, white and
blue. Festivities ar,· being held in an
around the Central School in Oak
Hill.
.
There will be a free concert by
Phil Dirt and the Dozers at 8 p.in.
We lost a great entertainer in the: Saturday and on Sunday Stella Par·
Sun
death of Frank Sin~tra~ His career ton- -who once played the Meigs
I know you join me in wishing spanned several decades and he · County Fair-will pcrfonn at S and
Scott tremendous success with his managed to bridge that time frame 8 p.m.
.
career.
maintaining his popularity despite
There will be a variety of enter·
the changes on the music scene of tainment and activities offered 'over
Southcrn·Racine Alumni arc America.
the entire weekend including carnidragging their feet just a trin e in
Undoubtedly. there will be even · val rides so you might want to travindicating that they will be coming renewed interest in his recordings el over Oak Hill way and look over
forth with some memorabilia from and you can probably look for a IGt the festival.
bygone school days.
·
of releases of hi s rec9rds and albums
The group planning this year's to take plac'e o~er the next few
My hat is on· to Sarah and John
alumni reunion which will be held at months.
Fisher who work so hurd and give so
6:30 p.m., ihis Saturday night at
freely of themselves in beautifying .
Southern High School, have asked
The sixth ~nnual Fcsti val of Flags Pomeroy. When you sec the results·
alumni to come forth with items will be staged over Memorial Day of their efforts, it certainly should
such as newspaper clippings, pho· · Weekend, May 22 through May 25. mak_e it cosy to keep smiling.
•
tos. programs and other items from . at Oak Hill. ·

·al
Meigs County's

STANFORb. Calif. (AP) man was reco vering Wednesday press secretary.
.
. ·
Chelsea Clinton was •'on the mend " after she suffered stomach pains and "
"Chelsea caught the llu and as a
after battl ing a to ~c h of the flu . a spent the night at ' the umversity precautionary measure sh ~ was hasWhite House spokeswoman said.
medical center, said Marsha Derry. pitalized yesterday and released this
The Stanford University fresh- · lirst lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's morning," Ms. Berry said. "She's

Public Notice

11t7HONDA3004X4

lti!}:J Auto, va, AC, (front &amp; rear), AM/FM cass, PW, PL,

By JIM FREEMAN

cruise, tilt. BUILT-IN.CHILD SEATS

Sentinel New• Staff
. - Teachers and community mem·
bers in the Southern Local School
bisgict met with architect Jack
Pottmeyer, representing architects
1\otarr·Knapp-Cruwfis Associates Inc.
of New Philadelphia about the disirict's K·8 elemen~ school building
project.
·
The meeting Thursday afternoon
~I Southern High School was held to
give the firm additional input inJo the
Sc:hool design plans. plans which will
be · submitted to the Ohio School
Facilities Commission'for approval.
Pottmeyer tentatively proposed
two kindergarten classrooms, IS
-classrooms for grades one .to five,
-seven classrooms for grlulcs siK
'throullh' e~ght, two science class·
i'lioms; two remedial classrooms and
one resoun:e toom.
A computer laboralory would be
lncorporated into the library area and

$12.00
Pickup and Delivery

992-9200
Greenhouse Worker$ &amp;
Field Workers
Tye Brinager ~ Sons
(minimum wage)

740·843·5280

(5)

zo, 21, 22 3tc

·

~~J

PrlnolpiM or thuu lnnt
art: .!liMa R. oltnklnt,
ollntt :11. olanlllnt, .lana
Wllllt, .IIIMI Weyllrlght,
llexHHI. -

A copy or tilt application

amandmtntl 1nd relattd
mattrllll ara on nt.. for

public lnapeetlon 11: ~. .
County Ubrtry at 211 Wtel

Main St., .Pomeroy, Ohio .

41781
(5) 11, 12, 13, 14, 111111

PubliC NOUO. .
NOTICE 01' PUBLIC
.HI!ARINQ

Malga Coul)ly lntancla fo
apply to lht Ohio
Departnient Of DewiiOpmtlll

lor funding under lht
Community Dtvalopmtnl
Block Grant (CDBG) INII
Cltlat Progrlnt, II

Sentinel

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

Cluaified1

Members and Guest Invited

992-2156

Serving starts at 11 :00 a.m.
.There will be extra

llrat of two publlo
hellrlnga will 1M htld 11ay
21, 11111 II T:OO P.M. II the
...... c-ty~.
Common Pttu c-tn.om,
Pomaloy, Ohio to provld1
Cltlztnl with tilt ,.,U.IInl
Information alloultM CDIIG
progrlm Including 111
IXPIInltlon of tllgllllt
aothlltlta 1ne1 pr01ram
. raqulra~~~enta. Tilt CDBG
Formula program oan lund
The

a braid range IJf ICIIvltlat.

Including:

tconomlc
~tvtlopmant . pro)tclt,
ltraat, water aupply,
dralnagallld--.,lmprovtmanla, park
aequltltlon
1nd
lmprovamtntl, cllmolltlon
of unllla alnletUIH, 1ncl
rallabllltltlon
of

U1M1tone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

~-

t

II

;

·~

•

nelglllla111o0d flcHitlll. Till
actlvltltt .muat H diiiiMCI
to primarily llltiiiiiiOw 111C1

ChtltM, Ohio

~ lnco~~~e .,._.,

aid In 1111 . pravtntlon or
Ilium lind blight, or 111111111
urg•nt ntael of tilt .
communlly. .

COUNTRY CANDLE .
SHOP AND MORE
-c-try- or our
many.--...

toCitizen•
alttnd 1!1••;ra~:;::;-.:
May 21,
to mall•

•Bring In VVJ~todda.

endallld . .'ll ra1111

8Ut111Mtlolll lind to ........

publi; l.nput on varlout
ICtiVItllt Wllloh
H
unc11r1 rltsn In 1111 pniplt.

tiMm

...... IPI'tno poltli~

Opail TIM&amp;~rl. 104

"

Cion d Sun. • Mon.
.... ,G-4
lt. At. 114,
Mlnertllflle,OH.

'••·
, fll

••~

A/C, 5 apd, tilt, AMIFM C818
LOCAL TAADE·IN

: : CINCJ~NATI (API - A federal
!ljlpeals court today lifted a stay of
e~ecution for Wilford Lee Berry Jr.,
~o has a.~ked to be put to death in
v.ritat would be Ohio's first eKecution
in 3S years.
: The 6th U.S. Cin:uit Coun of
Appeals unanimously rejected U.S.
pjstricl Judge Algenon Marbley's
~Wing that prevented Deny's execu·
~on March 3.
: ~ Berry, convicied of killing his
. · ~ss. Cleveland baker Charles ·
~iUQff, in 1989. has said he Wlllts to
6e executed instead of spend the rest ··
e~t:his life in prison. Prosecutors bave
du'bbed him "The Volunteer."
::Three appellate judges today
lipjteld the Ohio Supreme Court's ·
· t1ecision t)tat Berry is ~ntally comJ!C'tent
·

.

Good Afternoon
•

:Today's Se1nt11ne~
:
"'

· l Sections • 16 Palles
.
Vol. 49, No. Zl

f\)\l-~~f-0~':"

JOID'
..,.11!1!_

.

.

; QHJO
: l'ldll: S·4.0; Pick 4: 8-8·2·6
: hckeye 5: 18-23·25·29-30

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owrlllr: Ronnie Jonee

; W,YA.

- - - - · , (1)11,21,2e,IM
- ~

•

: Dilly 3: 1·8-4; Dally 4: 1·7.-4-S

~

'

-Summer vacation--

••. atarll today for Younaaters attending Southern and Melga
Local achool dlatrlciL Students and teachers ara generally busy .
thalaat taw echool daya with awarda program• and gamn days. _
Shown here ara alxth-grada girls from ~yracuse Elementary School participating In lha school's g - day Thuraday al
Raclne'a Star Mill Park. School enda next weak In lhe Eaatem
l-ocal School Dlstrti:t.

Non-action on funds:
eroding educators'
tr·u st. in Legislature ·

execution
may proceed

applicable ,.......IMte.

DUMP·TRUeK
· SERVICE
Agrlcultut'll Ume, ·

•

.

.~Volunteer'

•••.ooo.

. . ' 985 4422

The Racine Fire.
Dept. and Auxiliary are
· · having a
Chicken
B~B-0 and
Homemade Ice Cream
on Sunday, May 24.

He briefly touched on renovations
to the high school. saying the reno·
vatioM could possibly be started as"
early as end of the 1998-99 school
year.
Superintendent James Lawrence,
Trea.~urer Dennie Hill, school board
Vice President David Kucsma and
Pottmeyer are meeting in Columbus
on Wednesday with the Ohio School
Facilities Commission to go over
necessary paperwork.
.·
Building plan~ will be completed
over the summer for submission to
the facilities commission. Addition·
al pulilic meetings are slated for addi·
tional input.
·Construction documents will be.
prepared this fall with contracts bid
early next year. Construction on the
SEEKING INPUT - Archllecl Jack Pottmeytr, alandlng at left,
new building should start around
repreaenllng archltecta Mm·Knapp-Crawlla AssoclaiH Inc., Nlw
March or April next year with com·
Philadelphia, met wllh Southern Local Schciols teachers and the
pletion slated for the beginning of the . community Thursday about the dlslrlcl's K-8 alemenlary school
building project. Ha wa~ Hiking Input on the building project pri2000.2001 school year, according to
Lawrence.
· or lo preliminary design work.

..

Formula Allooatlon tunc11ng
In !he 'lllnDUnl of
providinG ... county .......

··TRUCKING

FLASHBACK

lec*llfr-

filneltd
progr•m
tdmlnlattrecl by tilt IIIIa.
loltlp County It 111011111 for
Placal Ytar Ill .. CDBG

I. ·L.

992-9200

ttie hallway.
The building will be furnished
through the state building a.~sistance .
program.
·
•
Plans also call for a 3,7SO.squarefoot cafeteria which will also serve as
a central . gathering place for the
school. A stage·iike platform will be
included at one 'end of the lOOm for
presentations and performances.
Community re.sidents suggested
the district look a1 one·story and twostory building designs before deciding o~ a final building _plan.
Pottmeyer said the building design
would likely depend on the space
available on the available lot. A
building design would also have to be
suitable for future expansion. taking
into considerution die possibility of
growth wjthin the district.
Pottmeyer said it is his hope that ·
the trees lining the Elm Street side of
the lot can be incorporilled into the' .
design.

~ . SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (o\P) - In . reportedly those of his parents.
night, students tucked tlowers into a
After no more than a minute. and
Since
October,
similar
iqcidents
chain
link
fe~
and
gathered
in
small
dozens
of -rounds' fired. l-7·year·old
lhe face of terror, with students
(ICi'eaming and diving for cover have hap~~Cned across the country. groups to hug and cry and talk. A few wrestlerJilke Ryker. already wound·
around him, Kip Kinkel was surpris· from Pearl. Mis.~ .. to Jonesbli,ro1Ark., sang "Amazing Grace." Propjled up ed in the chest, tackled the hoy while
and Edinbclro. Pa. On Tuesdly. /l high against a small cross, nearly buried he was trying to reload and was shot
ingly calm.
Those unlucky enough to be in the schoOl senior allegedly sho~ and by flowen, was a sign pleading . in the hand. Several others quickly
piled on to end the terror.
packed cafeteria at Thunton High killed a student in Fayetteville', Tenn.. "Will we ever learn?"
"You don't make sense out bf
"JUS! shoot me. shoot me now,"
School on Thursday say the· IS·yeur· apparently over' an argument about a
• , this," said ·wrestling coach ·Gnry · ' eme·of the· s!IKienl~. ~yker's brother ·
old suspended a day earlier for hav· 1irl.· • ..;, .·, "' • ' .
~~~ Sprinar~eld. ~ •o.;mu,. !IOU\fl or. ~dell_.;.~~1•.!10"__...... ~-it.:'-' . , -.Josh. II11Dtc4 tile..~ a. ~•. .
ina • 1.1111 auchool l'llllmed with a
. Ofthe2~ ~1t onju~'ll(en:
ri0c.M4 ,PII,.il)\\l~l\l~~~ ..,_ , Portlano, Kinkel 1s a f~-~"fllfec!., :~oi~M~inlte~ ~a f~w
"His (nee was casual like It was freshman who was once Jokingly vol· blockS away from the h1gh school, h1t by gunfire and the ~t w% h11rt
somethins be did every day;· said ed by hismiddle·school da.~tes as ·walked inside the cafeteria carrying · in the pal)ic to Oee the cafet~na. Four
David Wll~is, a '1'.5·~-old freshrnan. "Most Likely to 'Start World War a .22-caliber rifle, a .22-caliber hand· of the victims were in critical condi·
·
gun and a Glock haniJ&amp;un.
tion this morning: four, including
"He put htil foot on the b~~:k of Olle 111."
He was io m!lke his fi,AJ court
Th11rsday momirig, just before Ryke~. we~ in se~~s conditi?n; live
kid and shot him four times."
.
Sixtecn·year-old )onalhan Craw· appearaoce today on an adtr,f,charge classes began, Some 400 students wen: on fa1r cond1tton; and SIX were
ford said ihe young pnman. wearinll of murder. If convicted,IJe cClJid face were millil!g about or eating break· in good condition.
Thti dead student wa.~ identified as
i trench ·coat and backpM:k. fired life behind ban..Oregon (Jw ban fast in the cafeteria. Shots rang.out,
'!"ildly from the hip. "He was swivel· juveniles from gelling the death bullets shallerina huge plalc·glass Mikael Nickolauson, 17. who had
,
windows., Some teens fell. Others enli;~ted ·Monday in the Oregon
ing back and forth, firing a1 every· penalty.
one."
·
.
' Thumon High's 1,3SO ~ludenls ducked benealtuables or ran scream· Nattonal Guard.
After the bcly was arrested, police
When the nation's 'Jateit school were off today for the long Memori- ina for the exits.
Students heard the click, click of .. follow~ up on his suggestion to
rampage \\'&amp;.~ over and ·Kinkel was al Day weekend, but dozens qt coun·
taj:kled by another student, one class- selors planned to !le there anyway in e~pty cham~rs as the gunman kept check hts house. There, they found .
lilate was delld and severul othen ca.~ the students wanted ·to talk or finng ·after h1s bullets were gone. One the bcxlles of a man and a woman.
'1
of those misfires came with lhe bar- · Authorities would not confirm their
were critically wounded. Two bodies grieve,
·. At a candlelight vigil ~rsday rei pointblank at.a·student's head. . · names •
. '!fCre found biter in his hotric -

'

1'81umeto
Rlv•rdale Homea
37121 Hocking Dr.
Locil8n. Ohio 43138

10 pc. Dinner $12.99
20 pc. Dinner $19.99

other roams will include an art room
and music lab.
.
Pottmeyer said the number of
rooms wa.~ preliminary at this time
and would continue to change until
the final plans are approved by the
state.
Some of the district's teachers
indicated the two special education
·rooms and one resource room would
not be enough for the district's spe~
cial education programs.
Pottmeyer explained how some of·
the ind'ividual rooms would be
designed. Kindergarten rooms wiD
. have coun~er space with a sink, ~om·
puler work stations and separate
cubicles to hold children's personal
articles.
Standard cla.~srooms will also fea·
ture a counter with sink, and individual cubicles or lockers inside of
the classroom instead of in the hall·
way. The middle school area of the
building will have student lockers in

$.u spect in deadly rampage heads to court

Public Notice

Must be honest, har~ working team
player with a d..lre to make good
money, and care about the customers.
Sales position with a company that has
experienced 9 record breaking yeara
since 85 .. We are experlencl.n g a very
high traffic level · and need help
Immediately. Average lncotne Is $32,000
w/44 hr. per/week schedule · and n.o
Sunday work.
Vacation, 401K, Profit eharlng &amp;
Insurance benefits. If th!• sounds like
you then
In perton or •end

Now Delivering
Chicken · ·

Appearing Friday 8:()().12:00

condition It Ia In, wttll no
npr••• or· Implied war·
rantlea glvan.
For further Jnlormatlon
contact 11m at IIII-42H

TIM Permara Bank and
Bavlnga Company, Poma·
roy, Oltlo, I'IMrvaa 11M right .
to bid at thla ula, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to aala.
FUrther, Tile Farmara Bank
and Savlnga Company
raurvaa the right to ralllcl
ltiiY or all bld1 aubmlttecl.
F11111ter, lila above
collateral wilt u eokl .In· ' the

.

RT. 7 PIZZA
EXPRESS

Public Notice

. 478TE1110t1VAI21711

18" ' 31tem

Racine Ameiican Legion Post
602 Memorial Day Services
May25,10am
Meal to follow: Steak, mashed
· potatoes. 'green beans, cole

t' •

of-WHEELER

HT. 7 PIZZA
EXPREss ·

740-992-5853 .

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Architect, ·Southern community
share input.ori. ~ b -uilding proj'ect

nBDWIIIftU

on the mend. I don•t have any n:torc
infom;1illion."
· ·
•
The 18·year·old was admi!~ed
under an ns.sumed name and spent
the night in a VIP room.

Public Notice_

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hereby given
that on Saturday, May 23,
1111, at 10:00 e.m., • public
ult will H held at 211 Wlat
Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Fermara Bank
end Saylnga Company
parking lot, to aall for cuh
the followlng·coltlta,.l:

FOR SALE
2 - "Indianapolis 500"
Penthouse Tickets
Face Value can

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Ga nnett Co. Newspaper

H.

President's daughter 'on the mend' after night at hospital

••

Hometown Newspaper

By PAUL SOUHR~DA
Aaaoclated Praaa Writer
COLUMBIJS - Local school
officials hoping to share in the state's
school·building assistance pro!lram
say lawmakers have made their job
tougher.
,,
Not only do they have to convince
voten to raise taxes, but they also
have to a.~k the. voters to trust ~tate
government.
.
Twelve low·income sehool dis·
tric!S could be eligible for stale aid to
bargar'a 111011 book, •&amp;ante of Politt Plealailt."
AEPRINJS ~VAIL.ULE...,. Bill Bltrnalt aclt·
repair or replace rundown buildings
ad lncl nprlntad Livia Nva Slmpaon-Potr.n· . Coplaa ara IVallabla at tha Malga MuMUm.
if they convi.nce local voters (o come
up with matchins funds, staning at I0
percent of 'the project cost. The idea
wa., tucked into fairly rourine legi~­
lation approved 88·S Thursday that
made technical con-ection.~ and minor
adjustmt:nt, to the state budget.
Ordinarily. the stale sets a.,ide
Plea.w.t
Slate
Gaze~
in
1888
and
man
who
operuted
a
newspaper
in
money
for school repair. then &amp;,ives
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
wa.~
still
publisher
in
I~
whep
the
· Pomeroy durins the-late 1930s and districts the go-ahead to go to the bal ·
StntJnet.
Stall'
"Bailie of Point Pleasant, • the fir.u book - a group of biographical early 1940s. That newspaper later . lot. This time. lawmakers couldn't
agree on a pi_an to add $160 million
battle of the Revolution. Oct. I0. sketches of the riten who panicipat· became The Daily Sentinel.
Barnett said that his love of the for the next batch of schoQis, so they
, lTI4. by Li~ia Nyc Simp!On-J&gt;Of. ed.in the battle- was published.
Barnell has four direi:t ancestors Bend area prompted him to edit and · offered them JOUs instead.
fenbarger, edited ond reprint,ed by
Bill Barnett of Muncie, Ind., is now who participated in Ill!= Bal,lle of repriotthe book. The colors he select·
"I don 'tthink the averuge. intel·
Point Pleasant...,. Charles Clendenin. ed for .th~ paperback book. blue and lisent voter will buy that," said Ken
available for 'purc:ha.~ locally.
Copies at $1 S eadlare available at Leonard Cooper, IIUiaC '!Yier and gold, are those of the state of West Bocshart. superintendent of the
Danville Local School District, which
the Meias County Museum, • John Greer, and it is that connection Vi11inin. · · '
that prom"'ed him to reprint Simp· ·
"Maybe my most compelling rea· is eligible to apply for the new monPomeroy.
I'On aftet the project wa., underway ey.
.
The book, a story of.the histori· son·Poffenbarger's book.
They were among the first settlers wa., my desire thai reprinting, the
"II seems· backward.~.'' Bocshart
cally sianilicarit battle lhat occurred
·
in
Ma_son
County,
according
to
Bar·
1909
publicalion
would
"commemo·said.
111 the confluence of the Ohio. and
Kanawha' riven, was wrinen by nett. who is dircetor of business ser· ra1e the author. who in her time was 1 Rep. Robert Netzley, an opponent
vices at Ball State Univer11ity at orie of the most influential individu· .of the bill. agreed.
· Simpson·Poffen...., in 1909:
. als of Mason County and all of West ~ "People are learning more and
She wu born on Mlldl I, I 862 in Muncie. Ind.
The
family
lived
along
the
Ohio
. POmeroy, the oldest of live children
Vi'lllnia."
more not to trust the Legislature."
He described her as "the driving said Netzley, R·Latir:l. ."We' re not
of Peny IFld Almeda Kennedy Simp- River fot many yean before moving .
,
son. Her father was an attorney wlto to Indiana. Barnett said the allure of · force behind recognition of the sig· trustworthy." ·
the
area,
and
family
and
friends
bere
nificanc:e
of
the
battle,
development
House
leaders
and
.
Gov.
George
practiced law and after movinJ to
West Vi!Jinia became involved in "beckon Him to come back ·to visit. • of the battle site, Tu·Endie· Wei Park. • Voinovich had planned tospecify the
politics.
A descendant of the George and the buil4ing of the monument." . money for buHding aid in the budget
The author pun:hased the Point Roush family, he was ihe son·of the
, correction bill so local voters could

Area native's repr,i nt celebrates
history of~ Point Pleasant battle
New•

..

..

see where the · $160 million wa.~
comin~ from.
That plan wa.~ sidetrucked by conservative R:epublicans in the House
and Senate who objected to siphOO:ing money from an expected budget
surplus that otherwise would be
returned to taxpayers through an
automatic state income tax cut.
"I wanted to keep the projects
moving." House Speaker Jo Ann
O,avidson told reponers when asked
about promising state money withoul _
setting money aside.
;
Davidson, R·Reynoldsburg. doe.'n't think voters will make the dis-;
tinction.
"I don 'tthink going to the voter.&gt;
ts' ever an ea.~y se II ,". she sat'd . .,,
She said school districts would
have been required to come up wilh
a local share anyway. She also said njl
taxes could be collected or bonds
issued
. .until the state came up with itS•
ponton.
This way. the districts still CQn 81\1
on the November ballot while Ia..-.
makers wransle over where .the
st:tte's share should come from, sh~
explained. . .
,
. Supponers of the construction aid
billed it a.~ another small step toward
dealing with a major_problem · , .

.

No Sentinel
on -Monday
The Daib' Sentinel will not be
published t,fonday · so ' that its
employeet~ can observe the Memorial Day hQiiday. · .
Regular publication and busi·
·ness houn resut11e Tuesday.
1'

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