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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wed

Tuesday, May 26, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

.

Six.scholarships awarded at Middleport alumni· banquet
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
Recognition of returning alumni
and awarding of six scholarships
highlighted the 1998 Middleport
High School Alumni Association
banquet held Saturday night at
Meigs Middle School. •
Classes holding reunions were
1968, the 30th; 1963, 35th; 1958,
40th; 1953. 45th; 1948, 50th; 1943.
55th; 1938. 60th; 1933. 65th; 1928,
70th.
Given special recognition by Bob
Byer, emcee for the program, was
Mary Rinehart of the class of 1928.
the oldest graduate attending .
Others recog nized were Ike
Neal, the oldest football captain;
Judy Wildermuth Allensworth, oldest homecoming queen; and Doris
Barker Bailey, oldest valedictorian.
. Recipients of Susan G. Par k
Memorial
Scholarships
were
Katherine Bachtel. daughter of Forrest and Carol Scou Buchtel of Phocniz. Ariz. ; Mauhcw Joseph•
Williams. son of Clarence and Jill
Williams of Middleport ; Sand ra K.
You ng, daughter of James R. Young
·and Barbara A. Demoskey Young of
Rutland, and Michael Lcitheit, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Lcilllcit,
Pomeroy.
The sc holarships were eac h
$600. Since 1961 when the scholar.
ship was started as a memorial Jo the

longtime Middleport teacher, more
1933: ltharner Neal , Middleport. Clara Gilmore Riley, Middleport;.
than $50,000 has been awarded to
1934: Edna Hayes Qaskill, Mid1948: Marie Greenlee Allen,
students with parents· or grandpar' dleport; Elizabeth Brailford Lohse, • Spartansburg, S. C.; Dorothy Chase
ents who graduated from Middleport fomeroy.
Anthony, Middleport; Helen Gilkey
High School.
1935: Edison Baker, Middlepon , Byer,. Middleport; loraine Riggs
The McComas-Moore School of Middleport.
Neff. Ravenswood; Harry Feather$1,000. named for the late Supt. Lee
· 1936: Clifford Cunningham, stone, Wooster; Belly Lewis John·
McComas and longtime teacher, Lima; Roben King, Middlepon.
son, Carroll; Eua Burrell Norton,
Nan M()(lre, was awarded to My ca
1937: Chester Haddox , Holly- Bellview, Aa.; Ruih Prall Powers,
·
Haynes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. wood, Fla.
Middleport; Dorothy Miller Roach,
Sonny Haynes, Coolvil,le.
1937: Wallace Russell , Middle- Pomeroy; William Russell, Mariet·
Came Hanson, daughter of Mr. port.
ta; Kenneth: Sauer. Sunnyvale,
,
and Mrs. AI Hanson, Middleport,
1940: Betty Roush Allenswort h, Cali,f.; Mary Rollins Scarberry, Tup·
received the Crawford-Gray-Lewis Groveport; Charles Entsminger, pers Plains; Lee Smith, Adrian,
Scholarship, given' by Dr. W. W South Charleston; Mildred Asbury Mich. ·
Edward Lewis in memory of Dr. Mosely, St. Albans, W. Va.; Chesler
1949: Gerald Anthony, MiddleRichard H. Crawford; H. Burdette Rice, Union City, Ga. ; Manha Rob- port; Charles Byer, Middleport;
Gray, Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis, son Cunningham. Lima.
Kathryn Bachtel Dallas, Agoura
Judith Andress Lewis and the eight
1941: William Diles, Athens ; Hills, Calif; Virginia Grogan Hoi·
siblings of the donor.
Nina Triplen Haddox, Hollywood, man, Middleport.
Planning the -observunce was I he Fla.; Denver Rice, Middleport; Ruth
1950: Grace
Montgomery
class of 1952, with a C0!11mittee of Hamilton Tygert, Point Pleasant.
Abboll, Pomeroy; Mary Gilmore
1942; J. William Call. Long Bot- Brewer; Middleport; ·Norma Jean
Nancy Bea•~r. June Kloes. Carolyn
Litchfield, and June Duffield .
tom ; Peggy Robson Kerns, Sebring, Custer, Middleport; Grace MeDon·
Invocation for .the dinner was Fla. ; Jose ph Young, Pomeroy.
aid Hanawalt. Merrill Island, Fla.;
give n by Mike Gcrl at h, and music
1943: Charles Burk, Brook Park; Don na Russell Haylh, Wellston ;
for the dance which followed the Lois Roush Cunnin gham, Syracuse: Charles Stoban, Columbus ; Raydinner was by Sunny and Stix. Janelle Stewart Harney. Huntsville; mond Walburn. Middleport.
Yvonne Scally with a commi ncc she Patricia Devol Kloes, Bidwell ; Mar1951: James Buell. Knightdale.
will appoint, w1 ll have charge of the jorie Diles Mitchell , Athens; Helen N. C.; Don Payne. Dayton ; William
1999 banquet.
Burk Sti ckley, Columbus; Dorothy Swisher, Middleport ; John Ward,
Allending frum their respective Burnell Walter. Belpre; Rowen a Bourbonnais. Ill. ; Roscoe Wise,
classes were the l(lllowing alumn i:
Warren Young. Pomeroy.
Middleport; Belly Ashley Snow.
1928: Mary Stephenson Rinc1946: Richard Bailey, Middle- Shade.
hnn, Pomeroy.
port; Doris Barker Bailey, Middle1952: Nancy Miller Beaver. Mid·
·1931: Clara Ham ilton Darst. pori; P~~gy Lewis DarSt, Zanesville; dl cport; Franklin Clark, Point Pleas, Middleport. .
Alfred Scarberry, Gallipolis.
ant ; Doris Mayes Coleman, Jackson;
1947: James Arnold. Cincinnati; Shirley Miller Coleman, Rutland ;
1932: l:larold Lohse , Pomeroy.

Charles Haskins, ·spencerville; Ruth
Chase Jenkins , Thurman ; June
Smart Kloes, Middleport; Carolyn
Pierce Litchfield, Point Pleasant;
Richard Rawlings, Mason, W. Va.;
Nola Knopp Swisher. Middlepon;
Carol Bachtel Tannehill. Middle. port.
1953: RolJert Byer, Syracuse;
Nancy Hartley Cooper, Liberty,
Mo.; Bill Darst, Lima; Frank Eastep.
Dayton; Shirley Evans Eastep, Dayton,; Arlene Bowles King, Bronx , N:
Y; Paddy lambert Dooliule, Berea;
Rex Maiden, Nelsonville; Mary
Bradley Stanton, Marietta; Charles
Vroman, Belpre; Baline Walburn,
Vienna W. Va.; Marilyn Ebersbach
Wolfe, Racine.
1954: Jenene Moore Cunningham; Huntington, W. Va.; Rae Mills
Gwiazdowsky. Middleport.
·
· 1955: R0nald Fultz, Westerville;
Steila Stover Hubbard, lancaster;
Iii's VanCooney, Franklin .
1956: Ernestine Asbury McCo-.
mas, Parkersburg, w: Va.; Chcrole
Blake Burdette . LaVerne . Calif~
Nancy Roller Calc . Middleport ; Jan·
icc Childs Faikder, Fair Hope. Ala.;
James Mourning, Middleport.
1957: James Bowles, .Pdint
Pleasant. W. Va.; Gail Stumbo Hovatter. Richard Hovatter. Middleport;
Barbara Captcina Mora, Pomeroy. ·
1958: Judy Arnold, Middleport;
Carol Blaker Oiler, Stockport; Charlotte
VanMeter. Pomeroy;

Indians defeat Tigers 9-2, Page 5
Beat of the Bend column, Page 7·
Observes ·1OOth birthday, Page 12

Today: Cloudy
High: 70; Low:SO

.Vonda See Walburn, Vienna, W. Va.;
.Charles Wayland, Coolville.
1959: Richard Roller. Belpre.
196o: David Hartinger; Apple
Valley. Minn.; Lorena Haning
Rolle r, Belpre.
1961: Thomas Anderson ; Middleport; Darrell Bechtle, .Middleport ; Linda Forrest Stobarl and
William Stobarl, Middleport.
1962: Karen Gregg Nease, Middleport
1962: John Allensworth, Tiffin;
Carol Gilkey Bechtle, Middleport;
Charles Bush, Enon ; Carolyn Russell Collins, Pomeroy: Charlotte
Davidson Hanning, Pomeroy;
Jeanne Bowles Gross, Columbus;
Roger Manley, Middleport.
. 1964:
Judy
Wildermuth
.Allensworth, T1ffin; Marilyn Swan
Anderson, Middleport; Cinda Sauer
Harris, Middleport; Ellen Dunon
Ki ehl, Saratoga Springs , N. Y
1965: Tommy Lyons, Lapeer,
Mich.; Alan Wallace, Arlillgton, Va.
i966; John Blake , Middleport.
1967: Marjorie Harris Blake ,
. Middlepon; Mike Gerlach and Debbie Gerlach, Middleport.
1968: Ca rol King Brewer, Mid·
dlcporl; Debra King Finlaw. long
Bottom; Mike Gress, Columbus;
Candace Bahr Pope, Bidwell ; Mary
Gerard Rice, Whcelersbug; William
Swan. Middleport; and Mark Tannehill, Heath.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80; ·L9W:60

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
TWo victims of a fatal Saturday
afternoon fire in Middleport have
.been identified.
Dead are Roger H. Vining. 53, and
Jesse Howand Vining. age 2. Coroner
Douglas Hunter said he is awaiting
official autopsy results but indicated
the preliminllry cause · of death
appears to be ~ moke inhalation.
He said the bodies were released
lo Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
The two were killed in a fire Sat·
urday that gutted the two-and-a·halfstor)', 98 Pearl Street residence of
James Vining around 2:30p.m.
Cause of the blaze is uridetermi!'ed at this time, acconding to
Dennis Ginty, a spokesman for the

shown here 111118 fire scane at 98·Purl Street
S&amp;turUy afternoon. Cauu of tha flra Is unde-

. ~ICHAEL LEIFHEIT
Susan Park Scholarship

KATHERINE BACHTEL
Susan Park Scholarship ·

State Fire M~m;hal's Office in Colum· ·efit' pro wrestling show Satunday, 7
bus, the agency investigating the p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center with
. blaze. The fire marshal's office is rou· proceeds to benefit the family .
tineiy called to investigate fires . Admission is any needed donation of
non-perishable food , clothing or
resulting in.fatalities .
Meanwhile, the community i~ household it~ms. ·
reaching out to assist survivors of the
Tyler Scarbrough, age 3, llrother
of the younger victim, was reported
blaze.
. The Ash Street Free Will Baptist in good condition Tuesday at 'Chil·
Church, Middleport. is accepting dren's Hospital in Columbus where
donations Thursday and Friday, 5-7 he wa.~ treated for facial bums. Their
p.m. for the Vining family.
· mother. Bobbie Scarbrough. 26. was
. Sought are non-perishable items, discharged Sunday from The Ohio
household items and clothing in the State Univers ity ' Bum Center in
following sizes: men's pants, 36-38 Columbus.
.
Two passersby, Josh Kauff. 16.
waisl/30 inseam and J4-36 waisl/30
inseam; women's pants, 5-7; bOy's. Pomeroy. and Dana ireland. 30.
.4T-5T.
. Chester, were. treated at Veterans
In addition. the Bloodwar Memorial Hospital forminor.injuries
Wrestling Alliance is holding a ben' and released. Bystanders said the two
had assisteij the fire victims.

Park·conditions discussed

· By BRIAN J. REED
and that they agreed to provide the that she wa.' especially concerned
sentinel
N-1
Staff
.
necessary security for the facilities. about sevemlthefl complaints from
or 111e Middleport VOiuniNr Ffra DlpaibiiBIIt are
Conditions at Middleport's park . The agreement will only be in effect residents whose !lowers had been
.
.
areas were discusSed at length when for one year. he explained.
stolen from graves.
.. Middleport Village Council . .met in
When games are not underway.
Council discussed locking the
regular ses.~ion on Tuesday evening. 'however. the permanent restrooms cemetery entrances at night. and .
'
'
'
'
In the absence of Mayor Dewey will be closed. to the public due to Chief Swift said that police officers
Horton, Council ·President Beth vandalism problems.
would monitor the cemetery area.~
.
'
Stivers presided at the meeting. . Council agreed to install a handi- closer at night, although h~ said !hat
which was held on Tuesday due to.the capped-accesKible portable toilet in . officers do !11ake a point of policing
II
Memorial Day holiday.
each park, and to stabilize all of the the areas frequently. ·
COLUMBUS (AP) _ A Peiry
Sam Eblin. a member of the vii· portable restrooms that the village
Council reversed a decision from
County judge will begin hearings in !age's reoreation C9mmittee, met with . maintains. The village now has four the zoning variance committee,
August 10 consider the . state's the council to discuss a dumpster on such facilities from Modem Sanita- allowing Steve Hudson to install a
est
tap
as
well
as
the
cost
of
destroyresponse 10 the Ohio Suprem.e the corner .at Dave Diles Park near tion at a cost of $200 per month.
small used car lot on his property qn .
By BRIAN ,J. REED
.
$entlnel News. Staff
ing their old septic tanks. They also Court's ruling that said the state's downtown Middleport, saying that
Eblin complained that passersby Rutland Street.
Councilman Robert Pooler, who
"If you have to bOITow the mon- will be required to pay asllare of the school-funding systenl is unconstitu- I he dumpster was an eyesore and were play'•ng portable stereos at loud
questioning the need for the recepta- tevels la.te at njght, causing a distur- serves on the committee and voted
ey. then borrow the money. These cost of debt incurred in construction, tional.
either in 11 flat fee ai !he time they
Common Pleas Judge linton· cle.
bance in residential areas. Police against the ·variance la.~t night, said
people have suffered enou(lh.'
A request fot full ·fundins of connect, or over a 40-year period on Lewis, who,.was lert in charge o{Jhe
The dumpst~rjs used by at ·l~ast . Chief Bruce Swift~ that warnings that Hpdson's request wa.' originally
.•
ens~: by the Supreme Coun. will hear . two downtown liilsinesses, acconling and citations have DCCn issued for denied· because of traffic concerns. ,
expepse$ necelfiBlY to cOnnect ali tJ1Fir sewer bill. .
homes to the Tuppers Plains RegionSewer District board members testimony before determilling to village administrator Biil Brown- disorderly condUCI in cases where the and ·betliuse several residents in the
al Sewer sy~m wu reiterated to the have said ihat those who refuse to whether the state addr.:ssed the ing, and those businesses pay to use loud music has been a repeated prob- area,opposed the proposal.
Meigs Couniy Commissioners during conneet 10 the system could be forced . court's concerns, William Phillis, the dumpster because they are unable lem.
Hudson. in meeting wiih council
their regul!'f meetiiJB on Tuesday.
to.abandon their homes, due to EPA head of the coalition of schools that to place suitable receptacles on the
Eblin also noted an a~ndoned C:'f last night. presented a petition from
The meeting.. wa5 held yesterday -require'!'Cnts.
challenged the funding system, said street. ·
·
at First and Wal~ut wh1ch he satd other residents in the area who
Despite those conditions, vinualCou.icil deCided that the du.mpster should be removed.
· expressed no opposition for the produe to the Memorial Day 1\oliday.
· 1he d'tSind
· .,as
" · 'f\H:sday.
·
f
nd
C
'
I
be
S
d
I
arel
nn••l ·
Loretta Murphy, who heads a cit- ly every, res•'de nt m
Lewis scheduled a two-week hear· ~ould be moved out o sight a
ounct mem r an Y ann • r~
izens group made up of residents j~ threatened to refuse~ c~nnc:j:t to the . ing beginning Aug.'24.
chained, and fines will be issued to li said she felt that those violating viiThe lot will be used·only to ternthe new .Tuppers Plains Regional system un~ess financmg 1s avaiia~le.
The Supreme Court raled la.~t those who are unauthorized to use it. lage ondinances, whether relating to por.uily store autos. Hud'on said. and
Sewer District, and William and Those res1de~ts have been meeung year in a lawsuit filed by most of
Eblin also said that the village noise, junk cars or illegal use of vii· to:qualify him for a dealer's license.
Doris Buchanan, business owners in reg':'larly to dtscuss the status of the Ohio's 611 school districts that the · needs to repair several pieces of park lage dumpsters should be conSistent· Hudo;on wa.~ limited to •toring a maxTuppers Plains, .met with the com· prolecL
,
.
.
current funding system creates 100 equipment, and .need.~ to install hand- ly cited and fined.
·
imum of si• cars on his property. ..
missioners to check ihe board's
, We would }tlce a ..c~m~ment many disparities among dislric~ and icapped~accessible portable toilets in
Council thaOked Eblin ~or helping · lannarelii thanked members of the
.progress on seeking funding to assist from you today, Murphy said. guar· that it relies 100 heavily 01\ local prop- boill ·parks. those portable toilets to install new grills at Hartmger Park, Middleport Community Association
residents in connecting to the system, anteeing full funding 10 connect ~o erty taxes.
.
.
have been knocked over by vandals and for mowing the park areas.
and the Riverbend Arts Council for
as well as disconnecting from and the-sy.stem and io destroy old septiC
The Legislature and Gov. G,eorge this spring. and Ebljn . &lt;~aid he reels
Arnold Johnson reported that the their efforts in planting flowers and
• · t hat t he M'ddl
destroying residents' existing septic tanks ·
.
.
Voinovich placed a peqny-per-dollar that it is unralf
1
eport fitrst wee ken d 'ror ac 11v1 t1es ·at the · other beautification efforts downtanks and sewer systems.
Mutp"y sa~d her dc~d tncl~ iall increase on the May !I ballot. The Youth League ha.~ been siven "exclu· Middleport Pool was successful. and town.
.
Residents in the district are not only~ who quahfy as low and is.~ue would have mised St. I billion sive use" of the petmaneni restroom that a pool party with a band 'will be
Council also approved a transfer
:required to pay ~ full. cost of con- moderate mcome households as a year 10 be 'Split between schools and facilities at Generill Hartinger Park. held this weekend and open to the of funds of $3,000 to the water tandk
improvement tund. and authorize
;necting_their _residences to the neatCouncl'l member Steve Houchins public.
ConlI n•ed on page J
property tn relief. But voters reject-'
he 1 rk
· eed · h
1 fi
that the action taken earli·
· He ,also noted that b.usinesses. I c.e to
proc
wu annua
reht·
ed ihe issue 80 percent to 20 percent. e xpl•;ned
...
f he
$?64 nnn
.
1
er
this
month
to
give
control
of the have been asked to contnbute to a nanctngo t
·"""owmgont
e
The state says it wm argue that it restrooms to the league does not •und to purcha...e season pool pa.•se.~ VI.11 ages
. newest fi•re truek·
.
:
•
already ha., done enough for schools
''
Pre 1
c ·1 membe rs
sen
tosatisfytheruling. That includes the me•n
-· tliat only Youth League panic· •or
" needy children.
s
·
Poolwere1 ounct
11· H h'
.
·
lannarelli said that she had and
livers,
· appropn' ation of more money. a fund ipants can use the restrooms. explainR
Mer. 1annan:
B' '· · oucJoh.ms
ing that the Youth League paid for received·numerous complaints about
oger an ey; rownmg. n'
.
scene only ml' nutes after them
· ,·shap, that provides more aid to replace or
.
son and Swl.ft and Brent Manl"" vi' I
One official investigating a
repair run-down school buildings necessary repairs to make the the conditions atthe vtllage cemetery ·
. •
-,. •
·
J
i'estrooms functional for this sea.o;on, over Memorial Day weekend. and 1age supenntem.1ent.
"·-elrecreational vessel accident he &lt;~aid
-&amp;
• ~'es.terbc"" sat'd the smaller boat
and new school and student penor·
that occurred on the Ohio River
"'
·e
d·-'·
· ·
Sundayaround6:JOp.m.nearRac:ine did
wa., owned
by
Dennis
t.ohman.
He
mancestan
wu.,.
The 'coalition of districts that filed
"r 1
r :,
1101 know his age or address. The
said boaters on the ·smaller vessel ·
he
boa Chatl
the suit wiU argue that the siate ha.~
•
· es
A lawrence County man ha' been the Huntington (W Va.) Herald-Dis- Sheriff Roy Smith and othets
· were very fortunate to escape injury. other vessel was I tow t
anempted to coax him into surren"We are very fortunate 110 one was T. Jones owned by Madison Coal and not done nearly enough to comply chllf'l,oed with felonious assault and patch.
dering.
sefiously hun." &lt;~aid Lt. Eric Wester· Supply, Charleston, W.Va.
with what the cqurt described a.~ a aggmvated arson in the wake of a
Thacker is alleged to have entered
Deputies ended the standoff wben
beiJ. senior investigalive officer for
It appears 'the recreational vessel
"complete and systematic overhaul... Memorial Day incident in Waterloo the State Route 141 home of Pamela
they threw twh tear ga~ canisters into
the Huntington, w.va. offiCCoftlle
the outbuilding. ·acconding to the
U.S. Coast Guard.
f
~.... headed
. Westerbeii is investigating the path 0 the
~II MS
with authorities.
itT's Department, and nuacked her HerJ!d-Dispatch .
Neighbors said Thacker and
incident along with the West Virginia cjownriver, Westerbc
id. The
Kevin Thacker, 42. Ironton. wa.~ around 9:41 ~.m. Monday. Beacham.
Depanmeqt or Natural Resources. three occupants of the small boat
COLUMBUS (AP) - Mary arraigned Tuescjay in lawrence , who wa• allegedly beaten in the inci- Beach~m had lived 'together, but
The qeneies have joint jurisdiction, were able 10 swim to safety before the Boyle. the Cleveland Democrat run· County Municipal Cou.rt and faces a dent. ·fled the hOIIsc to a. neighbor's were separated at the time of tbe incident, the newspaper reported .
. l}e said. In addition, a boat owned by barge struck, he said.
.
niil[l for U.S. Senaie: wants to halt the preliminwy ·hearing on the charges on residence 10 call for help.
An exact motive behind the incithe Ohio Division of Wildlife was 011
The incident remains un&lt;ler inves- growth of foctory farming in Ohio Monday. June 1.
Thacker is alleged to have shot at
tigation. he said. , · · .
· until the government addresses what ·
He i~ lodged in the Lawrence Beacham five times before she: cjent has not been established, court
· The Racine Volunteer Fire Depart- she considers a need for more regu- County J,ail on a SIOO.OOO'Ca.~h bond reached tht neighbor's house, and ollicials said. The assault charge
ment and . squad, a.•sisted by tile lation. · ·
or 5200.000 propeny · bond. But wa.' reportedly seen ·selling the fire carries a prison term of two to eight
Syracuse VFD and Central Dispatch · Boyle tiddres.'led the issue Tuesday- Thacker may 1101 post bond because that leveled the residence. He then years, and the arson charge, three to
squad resPonded to the scene where at a news conference with Sen. Tom he is atso sought in Gallia County on went to a nearby outbuilding•.where 10 years. acconding to the HeraldDan Pancake. Jeffrey and Dennis Harkin, D-lowa. Harkin is a leading a rape allegation, court officials told he stayed while lawrence County Dispatch.
· lohman were treBled a1 the scene.
advocate of stricter feden!J.regulation.
.
2 Sections • 12 . . . . '
VoU9,No.l5

termined.

TP residents.
seek total ·funding
for sewer ·costs
SANDRA K. YOUNG
'~usan Park Scholarship

Giants
rally to
top Reds
Page 4 .

Fire victims identified·:

. VICTIMS IDENTIFIED • VIctim. of a .fltal
ui•kencllllddlepal1 fire W11't Roger H. VIning,
53, and ...... Howard Vining, • 2.11embera

CARRIE HAFTSON
Craw-Gray-Lewis Sch('larship

Sports

May 27, 1998

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NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE

LVLW' rit'l'fl' l.0/11

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GALLIPOLIS; OHIO

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Sentinel

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7:11:13
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Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J: 737; l'ldl4: 8544
Bqdeye 5: 3-1&lt;),2.5-26-32

w.yA. ·

Dilly Ji 7.58; Dtlly 4: 2278
Co.

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Blue
Cross
company
to
end
Medicare
HMO
in
rural.
areas
.
.
.
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I

· CINCINNATI (AP) _The com- . experienced Challenges in some rur·
pany that ha.• the Blue Cross and Blue aJ areas. So rather than fC!~uce our
Shield francbi!IC in Ohio is dropping benefits or charge a premium that fdl
its Medicare health maintena~~~:e seniors could alford, we deci~ ~~
organization in 19 nJa1 counties and · concentrate on our urban counttes.
partsofth~eeolhers:··
Medlcare'HMOmembeninrural
Anthem Blue Cro&amp;a and Blue area of northeast. central and south,
Shield said Tuesday it is losing ilion· west Ohio haVe uniil Jan. I to find
ey on the program in rural areas but alternatives to the program known 8JI
would 1101 511y how much. k wants to Anthem Senior Adv8!'tage, _the corn·
concentnte on profitable um.n Dill'· pany said. The chaJI&amp;e .wtll affect
kets. .
about 20,000 of Anthem's 60,000
"lninostofthellale'sniajorntet· Medicare HMO members.
rcipolitan areas, we have .had' out"Obviously•• Anthem. i's givin(l
standing sua:css "said Lynne 0rou, 1¥1tice. But I think It's g01ng' to ereAnthem vice ~ident.
ale a hiah level of stress for seniors," .
"However, like many other said Oarlinn Story. executive director
health-care companies, we have of Pro Seniors. a no_nprofit qency
. ~

that provides legal and long-~em~ care
services for elderly people. " It's an
is.\ue that they'd prefer not to deal
·with."
People affected by the change can
switch back into the government
Medicare pi'OIIram. That m~ght cost
them access to some servtces that
HMOs offer - including physical
examilllllions or eye exan.'s - that
aren't covered under Medtcare. Ms.
St'!')' said.

not covered by the government program, Anthe'." spokeswoman Kendr~
Overbeck sa1d. ,
.
In tnaJIY tllo'ICS, thllt. would repre·
sent a sharp monthly tncrea...e from
whatelderlyjleople.payforcoverage
under the Med•c~ H~C? program.
Anthem satd 11 1s lnaihng packets
to alfected customers to inform them
about the iltematives. .
.
Anthem operateS tts Med1care
HMO program ul\der con~tto the
federal government, through the
Or, .those losina the Medicare . ~lth Care Financi?g Administra·
~0 coverag~ may cjloose to start t1on. Anthem has nottfled the HCFA
:paying $60 a month or more to be of the planned chan~e. aac','CY
covered by Anthem's Medicare sup- spokesworilan. Betty WetsbciJ .sat'!plemcntal programs. which pay costs
·Anthem satd that on Jan. I. II wtll

withdraw the Medicare HMO program from Carroll. Holmes. S~.
Tuscara~a\, Wayne. Brown, H1gh- .
Ia~. Chnto.n, Cos~ton, Delaware; :
Fa1rfield. Ltckmg. Ptc~awpy, Clark, :
Darke, Greene: Mtarm, Preble and :
Shelby . counttes . and parts
Columbiana. Madtson and Warrep. :
counties.
:
The program will continue 10 be ·
offered in. Butler, Hamilton, Clermopt, Cuyahoga, Geauga. lake•.;
loniin,, Medina, Portage, Summit. ·
FrankUn, Union, Montgome!'Y• :
Mllhomna and Trumbull copnhcs ,
• :IIIII eastern Madison County, 1011th- :
em · W~!fCn County llld northern
Col~mbtana County.

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Cotnm~ntary
The Daily Sentinel
T..stDblislit.i in 1948
111 Court Strltt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-192·2156 • Fex 192·2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

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Publlaher

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: CHARLENE HOEFUCH
; Glltenll-11.,...
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DIANE HILL
Controller

·-J-IIto-EMil--• _.._

OHIO Weather
Thunday, May 28
AccuWcather" forecast for dayhme conditions and

- - (.1011-

~l)pod lot·

.,...,..~..-.Bpoclll'•-"-.""_....,.,.,......,...1 Cowt St.
- - - lo.· -' - lo ,_
1

L..:•::~~·::·~·~·.::IWf::,:~o:.:•::r•:;:•:;.a:::t::n~·--.;..----~------·_.

. Co.n servatives set to
go after teachers' un~ons ·
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MICH.

Kerekou: From
dictator- to -role model
.

By J.c:k Andenon
e~ample we
'Benin Republic' on the one · hand
end Jan Moller
hope other dieand 'banana' or ' benign' republic on
Mathieu Kerekou, the P,resident tatorial
the other. In English, tlie pronunciaof the tiny African nation of Benin, African rulers
tions are very similar, and offense
is trying on democracy f~r size. Sur- wtll follow.
could be taken if the nuance i~
prisingly, it seems to fit the fol'll)er
Benin is a
!)lissed."
dictator well.
small , poor
Besides rct•,·essing his own peo·
Kerekou was an avowed Marxist sliver of a
pie, Kerekou had ~orne legendary
who ruled Benin with an u on fist country
run· ins with American diplomats.
from 1972 to 1990. A ruthles' dicta- crunched
Ae often re(L ·rcd to the "imperialist
tor, he imprisoned and sometimes between Nigepigs" in the :.Jnitcd States.
even executed those who opposed ria and Togo.
Moller &amp;
Ambassador Jai'lles Engle
him. But in 1990. 18 years after he When Kerekou
recounted in a still-classified report
had seized power in a military coup, first took over in 1972, he was a the "insulting reception" he once
Kerekou had a complete change of French-trained army maJOr. The received from Kerekou at the presiheart. He cast his socialist beliefs country he ruled was, as he dential palace. According to the
aside and -j:onverted Benin mto a described it, a. "Marxist-Lcnmist" report, the African. dictator formed
democratic &lt;tate Under the new one-party state.
"a kangl!fllO committee of inquiry,
democratic system, Kerekou was
When he took power, he also which tried to establish (Engle's)
promptly voted out of office.
changed ·the name of the country incompetence and dishonesty."
But now, at age 64, he is pres•- from Dahomey to Bemn, origi!'ally
Engle was embarrassed and furi·
dent once again. And he wastes few the name of an old African empire. ous. He informed then-President
' opportunmes
· to prcac h 1he VIT
. Iues of Kere kou Was senSI.t.tvc abo ul 1he Gera ld Ford th at lhere was no. Ionger
freedom and free markets. The for- name, and for years, contidcntial any need to have ·an Am~rican
mer practitioner of voodoo is now Staic Department cables carried this ambassador in Benin.
an evangelical Chnstian who has warnmg td vasiting dtgnllaric.s:
. " My incredible adventures ·...
surrounded himself with the kmd of
"We would caution U.S . govern- must surely be counted the mu.-t out· ·
people he once sentenced to death.
ment offictals to take care m main· ragcous experiences any A111crkan
The conversion of Kerekou is an raining the distinction between the chief of mission has ever undergone
.-..:......:....•::..__..:.__ _ _ _ _ __ ___::.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......;_ _ _ _ _:::__

at the hands of the lop leadership of
any govemmen~"Engle wrote Ford.
" It is reasonable and proper at this
point for the U.S. government to
consider whether we sho4ld remain
at all in Benin."
Ford agreed .. there was no reason to suffer sue.h abu~e at the hand•
of the tinhom dictator of Dnbomey
or Bemn or whatever Kerekou wan.
ed to call the place. The United
States recalled its ambassador to
Benin in. 1976, and didn't set!!
another until 1983.
,:
But Kerekou began c~anging hi's
ways in the 1980s. He was profoundly affected by the collapse of
the Berlin Wall, and was distressed
by the way socialism had bankruptcd Benin. In 1990, he Qfficially
renounced Marxism and called for.a
conference on democracy.
In Bcntn
. 's fitrsl d emocra t'tc clcc tion, he lost the race for president to
Nicephorc Soglo; a former seni.Or
oflicial with the World Bank. . ·..
In 1996, using, amo.ng other
· thinlls. a World Wide Web honk'
page to promote his cause, Kerekou
handily won the presidential clcc,

IND.

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• IColumbus Iss· I

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Vla Msociated PresS GraphicsNet

a·erry's
World.

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. First, do no harm.

B. . . . AIIOCiat.d Preu
~tlieastem Ohio
.
.
Today...Cioudy with a chance of
·showers.-n&lt;f thunderstorms. Highs in
Ute mid 70s. Light and variable wind.
Chance of rain SO percent..
Tonight ... Partly,cloudy until midni.ght...Then areas of 'dense fog
developing. Lows in the mid 50s.
J,.ight and variable wind.
Thursday...Mostly sunny. Highs in
~mid80s. .

determined through an income 'Survey
c:Onducted by ,the county grants
office, but all resident• in the system.
· The commissioners have discussed with the residents of Tuppers
Plains the possibility of using
$40,000 from the county's housing
rehabilitation grant funds and
SSO;OOO from the ~ommunity Development Block Grant formula money
10 assist those who qualify as low and
moderate income households.
However, Murphy said ye,terday
that the community expected. total
funding from the commissioner.~ of
the $186,000 required to install the
system at every home iii the district,
FVen if the commissioners are
required 10 borrow the money.
If all of the commissioners' forg\ula block pnt fun!!-~ for this year
and the housing rehabilitation money. would be used to fund the con·
nections. which has not been proposed by the board, a balance .of
$21,000 would still be required . .
·Commissioner' Jeffn:y Thornton
said yesterday that he was committed
to assisting the low and moderate
income families either through housing and fonnula .runds or if discretionary funding can be made available.
Those discretionary funds. howe!ler, are not likely to become avail·
able, according to Commissioner
J1111el Howard.
Commissioner Fred Hoffman
reminded Murphy that while the
commissioner.t would be willing to
offer assistance, they were under no
obligation to do so, noting that the

The D~ily Sentinel
(U5rS llJ.M)
AGaoottt Co. ~per

•

Mlllhcd every 1ftemoon, Monday throch
ftldly, Ill
Sl, l'omeloy, OliO.. by tie
Otlio V.llcy PublWIIna Comr-.ny!O•nncu Co
Second d . . pooLIF pold II
0110..
M ' t. The Allocl11cd Prcu and lhe Ohio
NCwap~pcr Aaaoci11ion.
,_,. r= Send lddrcu QDRC'diou to T1K:
Dlily Scminc:l. 111 Court S1., Pomeroy, Ohk&gt;
4:1769.
S\JIISCJUmON RATES
By Conltror M - . _
One Wcek.. .............................. J2.00
One _ .................................. $8.10
()nc Year................................... SIOC 00

a...

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Today in histor}'

Mid-cap growth fund: Not too big, .not too. .smaU :.

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age annual return of 17.09 per
cent.
David' 0. Nicholas ·has be . n
managing that fund for the p: . ~t
five years. His investment philosophy is a simple one:
.pany." .
"We look for growth-type comThe MFS Mid-Cap Growth panics and companies that we
Fund ts one of thiS quarter's lOp would like to buy and hold forcvperformers. With I 08 stocks in its c~''
. .
portfolio, and over half of the
With 55 stocks in the Nicholas
fund's assets invested tn technol- II Fund, the bulk of the portfo·
ogy (28 .6 percent), health- care lio's assets arc invested in health
(12.8 ' percent) and leisure (12.4 care (36.5 percent), . services.
percent) compamcs. the ,fund was (21.4 .percent), and financial
up 20.H2:pcrccnttbrougll May 14. companies ( 16.3 percent}.
· Mark Regan ha.- been the MFS
Because long-term invc-'ling is
Mid-Cap Growth Fund's ron folio truly part of the Milwaukcc-llased
manager since its i'!ccplion ·in Nicholas family of funds' investDecember 1993. The average ing style, one of the screens used
annual return for the fund from in selecting stocks for this pnrtfnits incepuon date through March liq is earnings consistency .
31, 1998, was 13.57 percent.
"We like to sec IS 10 20 perThe Nicholas II Fund is "also a cent earnings growth each year,"
mid-cap fund .· It's ·been around said Nicholas.
for about I5 years .
"That would leave us out of
The fund is up 12.83 percent cyclical s and commodity kinds of
thus far this year (\hat 's about I companies whose earnings will
percentbgc poini higher than the swing based on the economy."
performance of the average mid·
Nicholas also likes to buy
cap fund). Since its inception in sJocks that are priced right.· He
Oct?ber 1983, .it has had an aver- said that he likes to buy c01npa-

•

nics when they arc out' ·of fa~or :
with the market, and "when pco•
pic have a dim view of them iri .
the short term."
·:
That ·kind of thinking led him
into health• ca~c stocks in the
early 1990s, after the Clinton ..
administration first took office
and coni:.erns over the idea or
con(rolled health-care pricing ·
cause&lt;) a lot of health-care and •
related industry stocks to tumble., :
Wh'ilc ·the Nicholas II Futfttl
isn't big on selling stocks out of1'
its porll'olio •• lhe fund's turnover ' ·
ratio is only 13.55 percent per ·
year .. Nicholas said the llest , i
sells arc '"our mistakes" and "oo~ · ~·
dasappointmcnts. "
'·
Wise words for investors to '.
consider.
Dian Vujovlch Is the authow · j
or "Stralaht Talk About Mutual , I
Funds" and "Straight tafk ~ '
About Investing for Your ·
Retirement," botb which are I
published by McGraw Hill.
Sead questions to her In citre of , ,
thla newspaper, or via t•!llall at · ;
.
:'
MlsMutualaol.com.
~

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or

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aiven unicr each week.
tfo hbsaiptton by mail permitted in treu
wkfc home ctrrier service il IYtlltbk:
~ilher

racr."et the tiaht to ldjUM tMes dur-

ina

the tut.:riplion period. SubM:riplion ntc
':""'~!'" may be lmplcmcotod by •hln&amp;ina the

........ of the IUbl&lt;ripllon.

1- Mdp CoootJ

. . 13 Wceb. ..........................J27 JO

ATIT ........................,............ 59~

B•nk One ............,.........~ ...... 58~•

,.43,.
Ginnett ......., ........, ..............65'Federal Mogui ......................S8'-

Qoodytar ..., .... ,.~, ............... 87),

Reader Ser VI CCS

CorrectiOn Polley

1:01 au Ia • •atorNs Ia to be
- ' " · II J1111 bow of u error lo o

O.r ....

*"J, .........., _ .. (141) 992·

JtsS. We will dtodl Jllllr .... .......,

... _ .. • -·ec-llwarnotod.

Nm o.Pertmenta ·
11tt .... - - lo ta-215.!1. Doporl-

.

C, n1 Mouee• .......................bt.UOI

~.. - ........................................Ext. tl81

orl!ld.ll06

Oilier ServlcH

g:;::;:r. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

AmrTech •• , ..............., ..........43'1.
Aahlafld 011 ....................,.,..48\

Chlrm St..,a,,,..,,•..., ..........s~

• , M - . ........................... .$56.68
' 52 - . ......................... SI09.n

.

Akzo .................................... 106'-

City tfoldtng ...................., ••

13 - . ........................... .$29.25

. ·an:

Am Ele Power ........, ... ~ •••••••••44\

Champion ............................... 13

M - . ........................... .SS3.82
52 - . .......................... ,$105.56
--MelpCoolll)'

.......

Sta,cks

Bob Evana ••,.,,..,,••, ..........19'1.
Borg·W•11181' .......................55.,.
BroUghton .............., .............16'1.

MAIL 91JIISCIIIPTION

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ject had been providing formula
funds for construction.
"Uitimatc;ly," Hoffman said, "the
Meigs CoUnty Commissioners are
not responsible."
· ·
While no funding was promised
yesterday, the commissioners did
pledge to ,tfork with the community
ofTupper.;flains to provide funding
and assi~tance in connecting qualify. ing households to the new system.
In other business, the commis·
sioners awarded a bid for bituminous
materials .for the month of June 1D
Asphalt Materials. Inc .. Mariella. A
second bid was received from Mid·
dleport ·Terminal of Gallipolis but
was not accepted.
David Spencer ofthe county high-way department. reported that ·stale
funding of $26.000 has been received
for the repair of a slip on Depot Street
near the village ef Rutland. The fund~
will be used for piling and materials
·and labor for the repair will be provided through a force account
through the highwU¥ department.
The commissioners accepted a bid
from Don Tate Motor~ for the purcha.~e of a new Chevrolet Lumina, at
a cost of $16,505 for the Department
of Human Services. The Don Tate bid
and a bid from Tri-Counly Ford of
Middleport were opened at last
week's meeting.
The commissioners also;
-- Approved the renewal of a contract with Health Recovery Services
and the Department of Human Services for drug and alcohol counseling
at a cost of $17,200, and a contract
with Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for parenr. ng cla.~ses at a cost
. •
of $2,500;
•• Approved the subdivision of
,20.88 acres in Bedford Township on
the Fraley propelty;
·
-- Authorized' the payment of
county bills in the amount of
$431.627.08.
Also present was Clerk Gloria
Klees.

,

Ollly. ....................................... 35 Cents
Sublcribcn not dalrln110 PlY the e~rrh:r m•;
Rmil in tdvt~a dioo to The Dtily S.:nlinc:l un
• lhNC, lix or 12 month buls. Credit will he

AJ1eadii•.................................Bxt.l104
.Bxt.llll
Allo .............................bt.UOO

Knrt .........................., .... ~ ...18'Kroger .................., ................41 ~
Lend• End •• , .........................31'Umlted ............................, •••• 31'0ik HIN'Finl ..........................27'1.

ova ......, .....,,........., ......, ...31).

0.. Valley,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,••••••• 35 ~
PMpin ...........................,.,.31 'li
Pram Flnl. •••••, ......, ..., ..·•.•••.•.21)..
Rockwell~ ..........~.................55
Roa.tl ..........................., .••..se
11 ,.
1

. . . . . . . orr orororoo ooorororrro•noo oronoo ..

~·· ...........,,, ................4'1.

Stir Bank...., ....•.., •. , ..•...., ..10~.
Wendv'a , .............., ..............23,_

-·-·-

WCM1hl"'III" ......., ..................17'!.

.

lnzy Newell, Joan Calaway, Heidi
Elberfeld, Debra Mora, Barbara Barringer" Helen Frank, and Rebecca
Maxson, cooks; Sheila King, Charles
Sargen~ Pat Buchanan, Florilla Baker, Rosemary Fluharty, Paul Brannon,
Sandra McKay and Maxine Thomas,
custodians; Janet Life, accounts
payable; and Janel Life. Joan Calaway, LAura Hawley, Sheila Connol·
ly and Rebecca Maxson, secretaries;
Duke Pullins and George Basim,
mechanics; Arch Rose, Kay Gi II ilan,
George Basim and Rhett Milhoan,
bus drivers.
Supplemental contracts were .
awarded to Ron Hill. a.•sistant varsi·
ty football coach: and Joe Bailey,.
junior varsity basketball coach. The
board accepted the resignation of
Casey Coffey as SLD teacher.

Meigs announcements

Tuppers Plains...

SINCU: COP\' PRICE

al Funds 10 Eoston. "These com·
panics sri.II · are in the rapid
.growth ph osc of. tbeir hfc cycle
but have :nnde it through their
initi.ll puMic offering an~ the
firs~ phase of being a small com-

The Eastern Local School Board
approved a list of substitute personnel for the 1998·1998 school year
during their reg~lar meeting last
week.
.
, Those substitutes are Nancy Jo
Aldridge, Michael Atkinson, Robert
Austin, Lorri Barnes, Dorothy Bentz,
Belly Boggs, lise Burris, Craig Butz.
Kenneth Farmer, Kathy Jean Garrison, Michelle Billian, Lucille Hag·
gerty. Robyn Hawk. Shannon Kom,
Lorre Osborne, Wilma Parker, David
Extended forecast
.
Thursday nlght ...Ciear. Lows near Ramsey, Herbert Redman, Angela
Rigsby, Kelly Satterfield, Heath Sav60.
Friday... Panly cloudy. Achance of age, Nancy Scarbrough, Aaron Schetthunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs ter, Kristi L. Skinner, Jared Spencer,
Nancy Wachter, Grace Weber. Sharon
in the lower 80s.
Wickersham,
Michelle Winebrenner
Saturday... Mosdy clear. Lows near
and Diane Wolfe, teachers.
60 and highs in the lower 80s .
Joan Calaway, substitute aide;
Sunday...Pardy cloudy. Lmvs in
the upper 50s and highs in the lower
80s.
.
To meet
continued trom page'
Caring and Sharing Support
Gro~p will meet Thur.day at I p.m.
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Disat the Meigs Multipurpose Pomeroy
trict board was a separate entity,
from the commissioners, and that the Senior Center. The topic will be can·
commissioners' only role in the pro- cer.

Today's weather forecast

·*

·By Olen VuJovlch
Want · a middle-of-the-road
play in the equity market? Then
how about a mid-cap growth
By T; ·e Aeeoctet.d Preee
· Tc.lay;, Wedll"sday, May 27. the I47th day of 1998. There are 218 days fund?
left.in the year.
Money is being 111adc in this
·
market in compames of all dtffcrToday's Highlight in History:
On May 27. 1937, the newly completed Golden Gate Bridge connecting cnt sizes. Small-cap funds
San Francisco and Marin County. Calif.. was opened to the public.
through mid-May were up, on
On this date:
·
_average. over I 0 _p_£rcent: largeIn 1647, the first recorded American execution of a so-called witch took cap funds, as measured by the
lace in Massachuscus.
.
.
.
performance of the average
p In 1896. 255 people were killed when a tornado muck St. Louis, Mo .. · growth fund . were up o~er 14
· 111
·
.
percent ; and then rtght m the
andInEas
I Sl· Lours. ·
·
.
.
·
..
-1933. Wall [1isncy's Academy Award-wmnmg ammated short Th\: mt'ddl c were 1hc mt'd -cap fun d s.
Three Little Pigs" was first released. .
They were up almo~l 12 pe~ccnt
5
he
Supie"""
Court
struck
down
the
National
~ndustrial
~covfor the_year, accordmg to Ltppcr
In 193 · I
.
..,..
.
Analyttcal Scrvtccs.
ery loAct1936. the Cunard liner Queen' Mary lcft .England on its maiden
·
· one_' h. at typ-·
voyage. . A mt'd -cap f.un d ts
Jn· l941 amid rising world tensions. Prestdent Roosevelt proclatrncd an tcally mves.'s ·~ c~mpantcs wt!h a
. · d' · 1 merg'ency"
market capnah7.auon (at the umc
"un Itmtte nauona e
·
·
(
h ) r d $5 b'JI'
• 1 1941 he G an battleship Bismarck sank off France. with a loss of o pure ase o un er . 1 '?n .
n . •t
erm
·
··
One of the attractiVe thmgs
2 • 3 ~ ::;::· inde ndent India's first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nthru, died. about companies of this size is
n
• · peB ...
representatives of Britain and China exchan•ed that most have been around long
In 1985• tn CtJtng,
•
h
h
·
bl . h d
·
f rat'rtcation
on the pact returning Hong Kong to the Chinese enoug to ave est a ts e . a
1
0
tnstrumenls
.
track record and shown some
in 1997
·
.
·
d bT
'Jenyearsaso:TwodaysbeforetbestartoftheMoscowsummit,the~en~ . ma!~Trhuy an stat rny. h . k .
lie voted'93-5to ratify a treaty eliminating medium-ranJe nuclear mtssdes.
.
ere ts .no . as .muc ns. !n .
..
'p;
,.... The House of Rcpresenlatives approved a massive mtd-cap companres as there ts tn
ynn a.,-.
·
deli ave
it.nducllon
tax·inci'CISC'bin by a vote of219-213.
sma II ·ca~ ones, " says 1ohn Rer'I·
1C
•
·•
ly, a spo~esperson at MFS Mutu-

Board hires personnel

W. VA .

By PAUL SOUHRADA
lion agaiqsl the incumhenl SogiO;
Meocleted Pre81 Writer
.
Kcrckou had become Bertin's lit'st
COLUMBUS -Conservative House members, whose long-simmering
Civilian
leader voted out of offic9 in ·
feud with the state'• teachers' unions has largely remained under control ..arc
1991: now, he had won rc--clcctloit
threatentng an all-out assault for control of Ohio's schools.
in
a fully. free, fair and o~·n clcctiiin
. "The people' of Ohio are loo~ing for more systemic change~ ," Rep. Btll
..
a
rarity on the African contincnf.
Batchelder, R-Medina, said dunng debate last week on a relatively routmc
Kcr~kou
pronounced upon wi~bill that made technical corrections and minor adjustments to the state's two• ning bac'k the presidency: "We rev~
year operating budget and next year's education b~dget.
olulionaries have · understood thla\
. And either the Legislature ts gomg to s~bstanllally address the problem
power is in the ballot box and not
of poorly performing schools or the_ I'C~ple arc going to tak~ the matter into
through'
the harrel of a gun."
their own hands through a ballot mUtative, Batchelder predtcted.
Since then, he has received only
"If that happens, it may be decided well or poorly," he said.
· ·
praise
from Western diplomats. "li'~
, House Speaker JoAnn Davids~n, R-Reynoldsburg,' talked the conservathe
premier
-- or at lca.•t' o'nc of1he
tives out of offering three education-related amendments that could have
·mtlst
vibrant
.. democracies in all !lf
Jeopardized the budget co~tion~ bill last _week. But the authors of the
Africa," a Stale Department official
amendments promised to ratse the tssues agatn.
effused
to our associate Dale Vi1n ·
The amendments would have let voters dectde three hot-button areas of
Atta.
"He's
a good model for other
the education debate: making it easier to fire incompetent teachers, giving
African leaders to follow."
.
parents tax money to send their children 1D private schools and dilutin'g the
Jack
Anderson
and
Jan
Moller
power teachers' unions have o~er tssues such as the length ofthe-$Chool day. ·
are writers for United Feature
Rep. C.J. Prentiss, the rankmg Democrat on the House Educauon ComSyndicate,
Inc.
millee, says she's .heard these threats before.
· .
.
. "That fight has been going on since I came to the Legtslature, and It probably was going on.before that," said Prentiss, a former teacher from Cleveland.
.
~
.
dlh ,
.
·
.
, "We're going to continue to ,.ave 11, an ey re gomg to conunue to
lose."
Prentiss said critics of the public school system fail to take into account
tl)e poverty, under-educated parents and generallack.of preparation that play By Joueph 'Perkins
--,., whtch would executive for a state-controlled acroBack in Fchruary, Clinton approved
a role in the education P• :&gt;blems.
Of aii crimes against one's country,
make it possi- ·spacc compahy, China Aerospace the Chinese launch of another L..aral
She noted that wh~n she taught in the privileged Cleveland suburb of none is grealer than lieason. The Con.blc for Hughes l~tcmational Holdings Ltd .
satellite, over Justice Dcpartmcal
Shaker Heights she didn't have to worry about low scores on.standardized stitution defines the traitorous act as
to e.port them
Among Chaoying's JObs is the objl!4:tions, attaching conditiOns that
rests. "Should I be rewarded for that, or is it what I had to work with?"
"levymg war agamst (the United
to China.
acquisition of statc-of-ttJc..art "dual reqUire scpnrate government review
Michael Billirakis, president of the Ohio Education Association, doubts . States)" or "adhering to (its) enemies,
Mean-.
technologies" that have ostensible heforc participating in future accioonl
the conservatives' latest rumblings will amount to much.
giving them aid and comfort."
while,
the commercial functions -- like satellite reviews and including stronger "safe:
"There are enough rational people m the Legislature - of both parties
Communist China is known to have
administration technology, which 111ay be used lor guards" againstiC&lt;hnology transfer.
·
- to see it for what it is," Billirakis said.
long-range ballistic missiles auned at
was also being telecommunications -- hut that can
Justice Qcpartmcntlawycrs argued
"They' re pushing an agenda to destroy public education."
the United States --hardly !he mark of
innucnccd to also be readily adapted for military that the prcsidept's action has the ciT~i
a "friendly" nation. Yet two U.S. satel'lift the ,ban on purposes - like improving missile· nf unden:uUing the vinbtlity of a crim'
lite companies, Loral Space &amp; Comsatellitc
gu1dancc systems.
inal case against Lorol -- and, by a.&lt;.«&gt;munications Ltd. and · Hughes Elecexports
to
About the time Col. Liu bought niT ctation, Hughes -- by creating the
Perkins
tronics .Corp., provided lhc Chinese
China
by Chung in 1996, China Aerospace was impression. in the minds of a prospcc.
military with technology that enabled
•
Bernard
trying to revive the Communist gov- live jury, that the· government found
them to improve the guidance systems Schwartz., the chairman of Lornl Space ernment's failing rocket program. niMhing wrong with Loral's earlier
for their nuclear warheads.
&amp; Communications. Schwanz . hilfl· Toward that end, it brought in teams conduct. (If it did, why would the PfC&gt;'"
President Clinton himself approved pens to be one of the biggest individual from Loral a~d Hughes to help analfl.C · iden1 allow Loralto launch yet another
this sellout of U.S. technolbgy ovcrthe Democratic Party donors since 1995. why a February 1996 mckel launch -- nne nf its satellites ilhoard a Chinc...c
•
•
objections of his own State Depart- having contributed more than $1 mil- with a Loral satclliiC aboard -- had rocker/)
ment and Pentagon. When quened hen to the pany of Clinton.
gone awry.
Of cotm&lt;C, the ·president will deny
about it last week, the prcstdent a."ertAI the same time that Armstrong
A Pentagon report ~oncludcd that that he is providing cover for lhe L11med that his deciston had been made "in · and Schwartz were using thear cntlJO- the outside review in which Hu~oflcs pany chaired by one of the Dcllkx:rnl'
the interest of thC American peciple."
ralc tqtlucnce and personal alllucncc · and Loral all-too-willingly took part· ic Party's largest individual donors.
But the evidence contra&lt;ltqs the to persuade the Clinton administration ~armed .U.S. 11ational security tly Just a.• he denies that anyone in his
prestdenl. It suggests that Chnton com- to grant Chma access to U.S. satclhtc advancinl! Ch~na's rocket and ·missile administration knew thai Chinese
promised nalion;tl security not hecause technology. the Chinese .govemR)cnt capabilities.
lli&lt;Jncy wa.• htin~ funneled mto Demo•••
the mass of Americans stood to benefit wa.' secretly funnchng money to the
This · has prompted the Justice cratic concrs IO aid his n&gt;-&lt;:1&lt;!4:1Kin. JUS!
in some way. but to pay otT powerful Democrat P'oll1y, in brazcn .violation of Department to conduct a criminal a.• he denies that campaig'n donations
corpQratc. supporters and btg-nioney U.S. law.
investigation to determine whether the . h:'ldunything In do with hjs dc!;ision to ,
campaign donors who lobbied the
The conduit for these illcgai!Cucign )wo satellite compantcs violated allow satellite exports to Cmnmunist •
I
adminislrntion to loosen rcstnctions on contributions was Johnny Chung. who national security laws by providing China.
:
•
technology transfers to Communist ha.• confessed to federal investigators . their report'to the Communist Chine~
B.ul clearly, President Clinton went :
China.
that much of the $1 00,000 he donated government without first clcarin'g it out of'his way to plca.o;c ~is pro·C~ina :
•
••
Indeed, in 1995, Clinton appointed to the Dcmtx:ratic Party in 1996. to aid with tho Pentagon_ and the State corporate suJllllll1ln, even over the •
C. Mtchacl Armstrong, then the chief in the president's re-election. originat- Department.
nbjl!4:tions of his own State Dcpoit- :
executive of Hughes Electronics, to he ed w11h the Ch1nn's Pcorle's LthcmBut like . prru:tically every mhcr , mcnt and Pentagon. And the Ameridin :
the head of his export council. Arm- tionArmy.
mvcstigahon that directly_lir -- as in I"''OfliC are lcs.• safe fmm Chinese mis· '
strong used his appointmcnllo urgethC
Chung ha.' identtlicd his Chinese this ca.o;c-- indirectly involves the pres- · silc auack because he did.
:
administration to stop classifying satel- government connection -- 'Liu Chany- Ident, the White Hnu.o;c has found a
· Joseph Perkins is a columnist for :
lites (which, of course, his company ing, a licut~nant colonel m the Cmn· clever, totally deniahle, way of undcr- The San Dlqo Union-Tribune.
~·4
manufactured) as military goods, munist army, who' moonlights a.- an m_ining it.

M£RCV "'E
HOSPITAL

Diane Michelle Willbarger Butler. 26, Ripley, W.Va., died Tuesday, May
26, 1998, at Charleston Area Medical Center, Charleston. W.Va., the result
of a four-wheeler accident.
Ailousewife, she was born Jan. IS, 1972, in Columbus, daughter of Alice
Eloise Willbarger of Portland and John Eynon of Racine. She wa.~ saved and
baptized at the Racine First Baptist Church.
In addition 10 her parents. she is survived by a son, Patrick Tyler Will·
bargcr of the home; two brothers, AJ. Willbarger of Okeechobee, Fla., and
John Witlbarger of Logan; several uncles and aunts.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Jerry W. Butler.
.
Services will be held Friday. I p.m. at Roush Funeral .Home tn
Ravenswood, W.Va. with Pastor Daniel Berdine officiating. Burial will follow in Casto Cemetery, Ripley.
Friends may call Thursday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home .

IMansfield Iss• I•

Chinese influence in U.S. po·l itics··

·'

Diane M. W. Butler

.

: "'-- ,,.,., __ ,llto_ft'C!m- ..,.--ot!OpiOO.
ot _ , """"-·
- _ , _ lllldo/1 "'"l,. _.,.1111.
•
,
Et:Mor.- n. SMtiMI, "
Pcwow•cy,_Oitlo

"

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, May 27, 1998

'

Stock reporte ere the 10:30
a.m. CII!OtH provtded,by Adveet
ofGel~pole.

be open to children ages 4 to 12.
Crafts. games, treats and other activities are planned.
Garden Club
The Riverview' Garden Club will
meet on Thursday at 8 p.m: at the
home pf Janet Connolly. Gladys
Thoma.~ and Frances Rced 1willlead
the program.

Alumni gathering
The Eastern Hig~ School Class of
1983 will hold a· dinner/dance on
June 27 at the Middleport American
Legion annex. The cost is $10. Mem- Friends of the Library
bers of the class will meet from 8
· Friends of the Meigs County
p.m. to I am., and friends of the class Library will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at
are invited after 9 p.m. Reservations the Pomeroy Library.
can made by returning the reservations form mailed to class members Lodge• meeting
or by calling Anne Huffman Seidcn- . Shade River Lodge. F&amp;AM.
abel at 992-6134 or Becky Eichinger Chester, will ·meet at 7:30p.m. at the
Smith at 423·9838.
lodge hall. Work .will be in the Ma.~­
ter Mason degree.
Committee meeting
A Town and Country Expo 1998 Fun, Food and Fellowship
committee meetin• will be held
Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the secretary's will be held Friday, 6-10:30 p.m. at
office at the Rocksprin·gs Fair- God's Neighborhood Escape for
grounds. All persons interested in the Teens on Main Street, Pomeroy.
expo ~ urged to anend.
Nutritional foods will be available,
fnce of charge, for snacking while the
Movie screening
teens are at the center. Teens can play
"Apocalypse," a motion picture non·Yiolent video games. computer
presentation of Jack Van lmpe, will programs, and cards free of charge in
be shown at 6 p.m. Sunday at the the center's game room. Music is
Syracuse Church ofthe Nazarene. An played while the center is open.
ice cream and cake fellowship will
follow.
4-H car wash
The Magnificent 7 4·H Club,
Tuppers Plains, will hold a car wash
VBS set
Vacation Bible Sc~ool will be held Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Citgo
at the Syracuse Church of the station in Tuppers Plains.
Nazarene from June I to 5, and will

•
Auxiliary of Drew Webeter Post 39, American Legion. She Ia the ~;
granddaughter of the late Howard Lewrence, U. S. Navy velar·
en, and Joanne Vaughan, Auxiliary prealdent. She was et the ...,_
Memorial Day celebration Monday teklng donetlons lor the pop- ..~
py lund which goea Into • llfVIce program lor veterans.

EMS logs 14 calls for assistance
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services recorded 14
calls for a..sistance during the Memorial Day holiday weekend. Units
responding included:
CENTRAL DISJ&gt;ATCH
5: II p.m. Saturday. Pearl Street.
Middleport, Ore I Sears, Plea.•ant Valley Hospital;
9:37 a.m: Sunday, Grant Street,
.
Mtddleport, Carrol Manley, treated at
the scene, Mtddleport squad a.•sasled;
12:17 P·~· Sunday, South Second
Avenue, M~ddleport, An~ Dav&amp;S,
Holzer Medtcal Center, Mtddlepon
Vol~nteer Ftre Department ass1sted;
9.13 a.m. Monday, Greenwood
Cemetery Road. Racme, Avonella
·Evans, HMC,
.9:26p.m. Monday, Portl~d Road,
Mtldred Parsons, PVH, Rae me squad

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Opal Cummms, Pleasant
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''
3:35 p.m., Texas Road, Pomeroy1.•
Judy J&lt;rauuer, HMC, Pomeroy squad
assisted;
~!
10:50 p.m .. Salem Street, Rutland,
Joy Anderson, VMH. Rutland squall·'
assisted.
.,
RACINE
12:53 a.m., Park Street, Naomi··
Hoschar, VMH.
~·
RUTLAND
5:43a.m., Brownell Avenue. Midl':
dleport,' Willi:lm o. Fink, HMC,
Pomeroy squad and Central Dis- patch squad a..sisted;
p
0 b k N ·
•1 rtverLaroo
•1cen31'e59r, M;dmd·
usrs,:mg- '
1 epo ,
wrence ewart, HMC;
8 33
M·
M'
31 '
:
p.m.,
etgs
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Danville Portal, Charles Grinstead, :
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Cen- :
tral Dispatch squad assisted.
Racm~.

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·~-

..

Citation issued in two-vehicle crash

The following couples were Pomeroy; William H. Intemann, 84,
· issued. marriage licenses recently in Port Orange, Fla., and Darcie M.
the Mc.igs County Probate Court of Kerwood, 82, Ravenswood, W.Va.;
Judge Robert Buck:
·C~arles Paul Parker, 21, and Robyn
Gregory William Knapp, 35, Mid- ' Lynn Hunt, 18, both of Pomeroy.
dleport. and Sherry Lynn Wervey, 32,

• I

'•

Hospital news

Couples issued marriage·licenses

..,..

6:36p.m. Saturday, Riebel Roa&lt;j,•
Joshua Marcum. HMC.
Tuesday
Units of the Meigs County Emer'- '
gency Medical Service recorded II .
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units :
responding included:
'•
CENTRAL DISPATCH
•
12 41
0 rb k N ·
: a.m., ve roo
ursm~
Center, Middleport, Lola Barber, Vet•'
erans Memorial Hospital;
r•
. 2:08 a.m., North Second Avenue.
Middleport, Justin Boyd. Holzer
Medical Center, Middleport squad •
assisted;
··,
4:36a.m., Pomeroy Police Dcpan• ·
ment,' Paulette Weston, HMC,
. Pomeroy squad a.-.isted;
t:,
10:12 am., Rocksprings Rehabil''•
itation Center, Pomeroy, Opal Careyn
VMH;

2:38 p.m. Saturday, VFO and
squad to Pearl Street, stru~ture fire,
Roger Vmmg, dead on amval; Josh
Kauff and Dana Ireland, Veterans
Memonal Hospttal; Tyler Scarbrough
and Bobbte Scarbrough, .VMH,
Pomeroy VFD, Central_ Dtspatch
squad, Rutland squad ·asstsled.
POMEROY
.
7 a.m. Sat,urday, volunteer fire
department and squad to Pomero~M~son Bndge, motor-vehtcle ace.•·
dent~ James Amsbar~. Conme
Remme and Robert Schnetd~r, VMH,
Central Dtspatch squad asststed;
8:07 p.m. Saturday. Porrreroy Ballfields, Ashley Fields, VMH, Britney
C
De. nny. treated at ·h
t. e scene, entra1
Dtspatch squad a.•ststed.
RACINE
12·14
s d"~
B h
· p.m. un a,, e 11 ow us
Road. Helma Jackson, treated at the
scene;
6:28 p.m. Sunday, VFD and squad
to state Route 124, barge and bent
accident, Dan Pancake, Jeffrey and
Dennis Lehman, treated at the scene.
Syracuse VFD and Central Dispatch
squad a..sisted;
8:04 p.m. Sunday. Yellow Bush
Rood, John Stobart, VMH .
REEDSVILLE
Alleged shooter still under suicide watch
3:50 p.m. Saturday, Reedsville,
His alleged killer, Kip Kinkel, 15, Marvin Reed, Marieua Memorial
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (AP) Military buglers played taps beside a remained under suicide watch in Hospital;
8:33 p.m. Sunday, state Route 124,
nag-draped coffin as hundreds of paper clothes in a juvenile facility. He .
mourners said goodbye to a Thurston is charged with killing his parents, Ada Congrove. treated at the scene.
High School senior killed in the cafe- then driving to ·school, entering the TUPPERS PLAINS
crowded cafeteria and firing more
teria shooting riunpage .
A standing-room-only ~:rowd of than 50 shots before several students
900 filled the Eugene Christian Fel- tackled him.
Veterans Memorial
The other student killed, 16-yearlowship church Tuesday to remember
Tuesday admtssions - none.
Mikael N!ckolauson. one of two old Ben Walker, was buried Monday.
Tuesday discharges - Buryl
teen-ager.t killed last Thursday.
White, 'Herman Hilton, Mildred Lambert.
Holzer Medical Cenler
Discharges
May 26 - Harley
Robert F. Lawson. 56, 55319 State 124. at9 a.m. when he rounded a leftMcWilliams.
Michelle
Smith, Mrs.
Route 681, Reedsville, wa.• cited for hand curve. went leli and collided
Charles
Riftle
and
daughter.
Shelby
)eft of center by the Gallia-Meigs with an ea.•tbound pickup truck dri Post of the State Highway Patrol fol- ven by Daniel E. Gheen. 27. 50771 O'Dell. Sylvia Myers, Ethel Mullins,
lowing a two-vehicle accide~t Tues- Rainbow Ridge Road, Long Bottom. Shirley Harden, Gusta Mannon, Hen·
day on Lebanon Township Road 43
Damage to Gheen's vehicle was ry Dickens, Albert Weaver.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jason
(Rainbow Ridge).·
moderate. and slight to Lawson's
Palmer, son, Syracuse.
Troopers said Lawson was west· pickup, according to 1he report.
(Published with pennlssion)
bound, one-tenth of a mile west of SR

West Virginia's only Bottle Show Charlie at 74().992-S088 or email at
. and Sale will be June 26-27 during perrycola@eurckanel.com.
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room.
ALL FLATS It
Regatta member Charlie ·Perry
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HANGING BASKETS
admission and appr11sals' during '
$5EACH
show hours, plus local botdes and
stoneware will be on display. .
4 IN. POTS 50e
Highlight to this year's show is an ,
Houra:
.Mon •.sat. N,
antique botde 1111d advertising auc·
CIOHCI
SUnday
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Show hours are 6-9 p.m. June 26
and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. the following
112·5778
SYRACUSE
day. For more information, contact

•

~

LITTLE MISS POPPY • Sarah Lewrence, two-year-old daugh·
ter of Howle and Elizabeth Lawrence, Ia Little Mise Poppy for the

MASON,
W.VA.
773·5583

�•

The Daily Sentinel.

Sports

·

... . . .

.

..

·

·
Page4 .
Wednesday, May 27, 1998 ·

••

•

Joh~son's. homer propels Giants t~ 5-2 win over R~ds
By JOE KAY

Rueter (6·3), who went six-plus
innings. Robb Nen pitched the ninth
for his 12th save and the Giants' ninth
victory in 13 games.
At 30-22. San Francisco is eight
games over .500 for the first time this
season and has closed in pn NL Westleading San Diego.
·
"We needed it and we wanted'i!,"
manager Dusty Baker said. "We
wanted No. 30 today. The top clubs
in both leagues have hit that 30 mark.
We wanted it."
• The slumping Reds need something from their offense, which has
been held to two or fewer runs in five
of the last six games. Overall, the
Reds have lost nine of II to fall into
last place' in the NL Central, trailing
Houston by a season-high 9 112
games.
.
In the last three games, no Reds
player has managed more than one
hit. The Reds are 3-for-31 (.097) witb
runners in scoring position in the last
six games.
"We scored two runs. We're gaining on them," manager Jack McKeon

ClNCINNATI (AP) - Brian
Johnson has a knack for coming
through at nail-biting time.
Heading into a game Tuesday
against the Cincinnati Reds. Johnson's last four regular-season homers
had come in the seventh inning or later and had either tied or won games.
Make it five straight dramatic
homers for San Francisco's caicher.
Johnson hit a two-out solo homer
off Mike Remlinger to tie the game
in the seventh, and Bill Mueller
added a three-run shot later in the
inning as the Giants rallied for a 5-2
victory.
Last season, Johnson hit three
clutch homers in S~ptember. including a pair of game-winners that
helped the Gill{lts clinch the NL West.
He has two homers this season. both
of them tying games in the seventh
inning.
"I'm not sure why that is," he
said. "I just hope it continues."
The Giants continued on their roll
behind Johnson, Mueller and Kirk

joked. " We got nine hits, too. Now
we need to find a way to bunch them
together."
The way Remlinger (3-6) was
pitching. it looked like two runs
might be enough. Two terrible fastballs changed everything.
Remlinger, making his first
appearance since he pulled a groin
muscle on May 16, gave up nothing
more than an RBI single to Jeff Kent
in the first inning. The left-hander
took a 2-1 lead and a one-hitter into
the seventh, then retired the first two
bauers.
1
He fell behind Johnson 3-0 and
made his first big mistake. He threw
him a fastball down the middle, right
at belt level. Johnson was waiting for
it.
"There's no reason to throw anything but a fastball there to throw a
strike," Johnson said. "That's what I
was looking for-. something in the
zone. I put a big swing on it." .
"At 3-0. we let him hit," Baker
said. "There's nothing to lose. He
came through. And Rueter's two-out
infield knock was huge. That's what

..

·-

Notes: The Giants are 5-3 on theit' .
we tell our pitchers: You never know to hit a three-rim homer is Mueller.
. when you're going to get a rally That's what happens when you get nine-game road ' trip, averaging six"
1
behind (in the count)."
runs per game.•... Right fielder Ch(is
staner."
Remlinger threw 134 pitches, 32 Jones got a cramp in his right leg,
Rueter followed the ·homer with
an ipfield single. Stan Javier singled of them in the seventh when he stan- while chasing a double in the seventh
and Remlinger went to a full count on ed gelling sloppy and got knocked and bad to leave the game. While a
trainer massaged Jones' calf, Bonds;
Mueller. With Barry Bond~ deck, around.
"
I
felt
I
could
finish
the
iiming,"
came
over from left field and jok~ ·
Remlinger didn't w~ .to. walk
Mueller, so he threw hani a belt-high Remlinger said. "Then I got behind ingly rubbed his other leg, · ihen '
the catcher. The biggest thing was the reclined on the field next to him.·..:
fastball .
Same mistake, same result. Rueter at bat. I've got to get him out The Reds went without an error for
·
only the second time in the last II
Mueller's fifth homer became the right there."
Rueter allowed six hits over six- • ga~s. Coming into the game, their '•
game winner.
"He's got a one-hiller, two out, plus innings to extend his success 49 enor.; were the most in the majors. '
nobody on, then all of a sudden: against the Reds. In his last seven ... The Reds have had back-to-back ·
boom, boom, boom, boom." McK- appearances against Cincinnati. hits only three times in the last three .
games.
·'
eon said. "The last guy you'd expect Rueter is 5-0 with a 2.04 ERA.

By The Associated Preu
Even when they don't play well,
the Yankees usually win these days.
Andy Pettitte was wild again
Tuesday night. New York 'failed to
hold 1-0 and 3-2 leads.
No matter. Paul O'Neill hit a
'three-run homer .that erased an
eighth-inning defiCit and New York
won for the ninth time in 10 game$,
beating the Chicago White Sox 7-S.
"Pettine was not very good," Yankees manager Joe Torre said. "He
w!llked a hish wit'!' all over the jlark,
· tiut . managed to get the double
plays:"
·
New Yorlc, which backed Pettine
with a pair o' double plays, improved
to 35; 10, the third-best .in Yankees ·
history ucl tied for the fifth best in
theAL. ·,
.
.
''This is a good Yankee.ballclub.
We sent out 1!- kid right out of college
to face a guy who pitched in the
Wodd Series," White Sox ~~~~~~ager
ierry Manuel said. "When battling
ihose type of Odds, we're going to ·
sisy positive:·
·
:, Jim Puque, a 22-year-old left··
~r who became the first 1997
dra(l·pick in the majon. was 10ne by
lite
Chu~k Knoblauch doubled
ti~ Keith F®lke ( 1-1 ) in the eighth.
; With the Yankees trailing 4-3,
Jeter was hit by a pitch and
0~ Neill followed with his founh
liqmer of the &amp;e;~SDn.
: - "I was waiting for a· strike,'~
~J:'Ieill said. "He doesn't want to
walk me." .
·
: At Comiskey Park, Mike
Cameron homered off Jeff Nelson (2t) in the bottom h;alf of the eighth aod
Mariano Rivera got five outs for his.
lOth save in 12 chances.
: Pmque, ':"ho played for UCLA l~•t
Ieason, allowed two runs and five haL• l
four-plus innings. '
,· "I was nervous, .. he said.
l fi01t walked on the fJCid, I thought
J!d . . . in a major league stadium
before blit never played in one. I
smiled." ·
· In other games. Baltiroore beat
$eaale 8·3, Torpmo beat Boston 5'2
ind Tampa Bay beat Olikland 7-2.
•·
Orlelai 8, Marlnen 3

plckad off first base to end a rundown In the mttt ' ·
Inning of Tuesday nlght'a National League.game
In Cincinnati, where t~a Glanta won 5-2. (AP) •

GOTCHAI - San Francisco flrat baseman
Charlie Hayet (lett) puts the tag on the Clncln·
nat! Reds' Reggie
.
. Sanders after Sanders was
.

AL standings
Eulrm

Divi~ion

Boslon ..... ............................. 29
Toranto ...................... ..... ..... 21
TIUllp.1 801y ........................... 23

20
24
21

II

t4''l
ll

.-149
.404 '

6'·/
ll''!

.J%

9
10'•.·

Hockey

~I

Wtlltm Olvl'llon
.. ......
..........~1 IK
A•aheim ............ ............... .... 25 24
~111: .... ......... ...... ....... ........ .2~ 2K
Qulanll ......... ................ .'...... 21 2V

.~Ill

J67
.6.13

•

~10

4~1

9

ur'!

,420

Tuesday's scores

Dall; r~

~ritJ; 1i~J

Future pmes
ThundaJ
•
;u BuiTaln, 7 : ~0 p.m. !HSI,N)
.friday
Ottlltlll :11 lk1ml1. 1 : ~0 r .nt. (f_"iPN)
Salurday
WashinJion at DuiTnlo, 7JO Jl .nt. (£.1\PN)

.- MinBtsol:t (Millun J-41 nt Texas !Rurkcu .l -·H.
·
·
• N.Y. Yankec'i (McndoZOJ ~ -I ) al Otic1~u Whih:

901. (Eyn: 1 - ~). K:O:'i p.m.
"' Kans/U Cit)' (Rosado 0-4lut Anuhcim fqlivnrvl'

lOI), IOJl p.m.

Thursday's games
&lt;~ Chicago

White Sox (5irutka 6-41 nt Octrnit
('fbom~on J-."i). 7 :0~ 1'-fl''
.
' CLEVELAND (Durha :\-4) at Tumnto (Carpcnlir I-OJ. 7:0:'i p.m
• Scault (Mo~ 2-~) at Tampa Dny !J. JulmMln 2l
7:0l p.m.
Texas (Wiu 4-2) ar Bahimon: (Dr;thck 4-.~J . 7 : 0~

'1,

P:"'.
•Boslon (Wnkefitld 6-IJ ill N.Y. Ynnkc.:~ (W.:Us
•n.7 : 3~ p.m.
niL standings
Ea11tfm Dh-l11lon

.WI. fl:l.

.\dania .......... ,................ JH 14
New York .... .
. ...... ..... 21 20
Pbiladclphia ................... .... B 2~

. 1 .~ I

.479

'

\

,j

' 19

10':

2"

.~60

.l ':

Milwauka: ......................... ... 24 2~ 4'KI
Pln~butJh ............................. 24 2K ·,462

7

22

ONCINNATI .... .................. :!.\

. ~10

29

..J.f2

~
'Wnlt-m Diwhion
San Di~Jtl .......................... :.. 32 20

.615

San Fmnd•~u ....................... ~o 22
U. An~lts .......................... 2~ · 26
Ct!lonl&lt;lo ............................ll, 29
Arizona ................... ........... ... l6 3~

.

.

tn RudlC!'Icr

llf lit\'

•
K'·,

0/\KLANI&gt; ATHLETICS : F.xl~ntktl tile o:nutmo:t of Gr;Miy Fu~1n. t!iA."t:ltll' of M:nulittj!: lltTnu~h
!he 199'1 JICalillll,
TAMPA ltAY DEVIl. RAYS : Rdcn sctl OF
Jcrmnc W:1llnn. Pla..:t•d l' Jnlm 1-lal"-'fiY ''" lllC 1~­
tl:tJ diMthlcd li~l. 'f'tncha~tllht· ct•ntmcl nf (.'Tim '
l..:1kcr l'rumi:Atrhamllf the lnh.'rnalitmall .cal!lll'.
TORONTO HI.Ul-: JAYS: ~J!R.'l.'tl ht lt: rtm wilh
N11tktn~tiiAal,~~t

. ~77
,4')()

.4.11
.314

PCL.

Audiovox 440 .
Hand held phone

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I

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Buketball

•

Football
N..NMI•I FDOibd Ldt•t
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Exlcnded the
"onlrnct of WR Kctnaa McCardell. Sla.~U CD

Today'• plllell

SIR Frnlkltco (Gardner ~- 2) m CINCINNATI

C-11 Toylor and RB Tuvl1111 Bonks,

PHI~ADELPHIA EAG~ES : NAmed John
{Prinl 0-0), 12JS8.m.
.. Gotllef di~ror of oolleJt: Koulmg.
PhiiAdelpiUa ( race 2·~) 111 Cbir.:AJO Cubt (~. SAN F~ANCJSCO ~9ERS: A!rccd to ter?'•
... l-4) 2.20 p m
w11h DE Chris Dolenwt. S1tned DT Brer11son BuckJA
'
• •
. • .. ~ 1)
11 florida !M odows 4-- ntr lftd DE Troy WiiiiOft.

N.Y. M'dl CYOihu _.,..

111

e
H

SEAm.ESE.AHAWkS: Named Evan KardinJ

corporlllc sa5ts manqcr. ·

ouston

&lt; T - 1 (V..,a 1·5} ar AllaMa (Madd•x 6-

Milwaukee

WAS~INOTON REDSKIN$: Sianed C Mart

Fisebcr.

~

--

·w••t VIrginia
101 - 5I, ,304/~235.5
o.o.t.lrort "!'own c.... •
JCW/3.£5-99)
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~O......JG4/7U.t511

215

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!0&lt;/l&lt;l·....
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._...._

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Wai·Mort 304/o\124·6912

1315 FOUtlh..........,. 304I.S22·2J!IS
Hllnlingkln Mal JO.IIi'36·813 t
tt. 60 fOil Xloi/7J0-2:w

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Danwilll Plo&amp;a Xlo4/369·580ol

Wflt·Mort It!. 00 Eott J04/1J3-4966

381 Moll! 54tw1J40/266·607l

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M..-l•n•

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7 o40/J7,4-Jl-"
Wai·Mttrt 7101376'91."

Ohio

3417~~

IIOOIE. S.$trwt740/S9.._.100

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Slt:OIId SlrMI7.0/Wl-1070

..._,.,

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'" ~ Moa 740/947-eno

Kentucky

........

117W'...... 606/325-2lS'

Well._,. ~fJZH159

""'"""""'ollpool """"""""·""' ...................110.0 0 - ...

an.,-............... """""' ... - ... ...,,.__ ....... ...., ...... m.dod """"""' ......
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Woi·Mort 740/1194·3801

1502EotMrn,t,-7110/441 ·~7

32 Ellftom SIMI JOA/4~·6692

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'l'fot.Matt J04/371·71:W
J04/o\12HJ.S5

c..;._....,..

.,........

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(W-.t :1-ll. 8:0$ p.m.
Colotado (Kilt 5- ~) 11 St. U.is {Stoulemyre ,__

'

Ground
BeeI
lb•

(4·Rolls) lat•. ftsHe

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.•

Umlt 1 With Coupcin &amp; Atld'l. 110 PurchaM

(GILLO'II)

IGA 2%

Fresh Picked Flori•a

Sweet Corn··

lk

c

-

.
.
'. Spons physicals will be held on
l'riday .JuneS for anyone wanting to
play iports in the Meigs l...&lt;lcal School
pistrict for the 1998-99 SCI\001 year.
The physicals are {or studmts in '
irades 7-12 .aild will be giveh at Vet~rans Memorial Hospital from 8 a.m.
gntil II p.m.

rll ~ rSDURGH PUtl\'r~S : Tmn.d cm:d I.HI'
Jeff Waii;K:t frum llle I~ .' In Ilk.! 60--d:ty,di ~u hkd li ~l.
llJIII.'Cd LHP Jcrf T:thllh ttn lhc I ~-dlty dt~ahk.'lllijl ,
Purdt&lt;l~d lhc t:(tlllftll'l of .\0 1\mmi-. Rnmirt'z frur\1

..:noch.

; San Dit&amp;o 12, Arizona. I

PhUburlh (SchMidt 7-1) ,llf

r

Nal...._l ••llkt'lb.l AIIDdeUen

TIJCI'bly's IICOfH

?:o!Op.m.

•

•

N;t~h v illc r•f IlK.·

(Any Size Pkg.) USDA

--

• . fr-J ·-.-::

.. CheeSe

NL games •••

ARIZONA DIA.MONOBA{'KS: R~·L· ntlcd I.HI'
HfrniD Vul.t-.:1 frnm '"t.:lp" uf1he PCL.
HOUSTON \ 'il oHY.'.: Si&amp;•-.e,l RHP· l .ll Den:~

NBA. : Susr-:ndt'd lntli;ma P;~~.:cu G Jak-n RtliC
fiK one game for. lc~wing 1hc ben~b lllta durin(! :1
k:uftlt :&amp;Jo'linsl lht: Oi(IIJO Bull• uft May2.~ . Fined
Chkup;o G Run Hai'J'II!r S.UOO fnr iriili ttlillJ II~ alk:r~:alion. IIKii:ana G RcJ~ic Mil~r S2.~ for n.:J:•Ii•
ulin11 and pushin~: Harper, ;md Chicago cm.:h Phil
J*=kMll S10.000 fOf \.'Umn~ems about 1111: uffiduring:.
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS: Fir&lt;d &lt;1&lt;·•~.: Knrl.

San Frano.-i-.-o ~. CINCINNA112
N.Y. Me1s 10. F1Mtl:t6
AtlarMD9. Monne:d ~
HIHIIfoA U.IM AnJeln 2
Milwaukee l Pillsburf,h 2

~~

.

for one year.

for one year.-

mcrna -

.

Muyll.

9'·:

/'

•).7~ p.rn.
,
"
Los 't1\e~~~.5 ~~~•fon . ....)

amonth

Meigs sports ·
physicals slated

110~-ilON REI) SOX: Pl:\t:t.-d 28 M:trk 1"-•rnk~
nn l!'lt.' I~ -&amp;Jay di~•hl~'tl Iilii. R~·cnllcd RHI1 Jtic Hutl~o n !'nun Pawlut.'ktl nf the lntd'nalit•naliA':t~u.: .
.'
MINNESOTA TWINS : Placed RHP Ro h
Tcwbbury ' 111111.' l~-d;1y llis.~hll:d lis1, n:lm:tt.1ivc 111

Slnnf,lfll.

Ct-ntral Pi•i~iqn

O.ic;~,:n ....................... .........

Ncrit~ Rndnpu:z
tiomtll ....:: t~UC :

K '~

Houston ................................J2 19 . .627

St. Louis ............. .................. 2~ 24

LtatYt
111\I.TIMORE ORIOLf:...~ : 1\cliYill~~l RHPTary
Mnlhcw~ !'rum the 1~-dny di~•hh!tlliNI. nr,li·m~tl

l.HP Mark Ht'lklrid.snn.

.~74 .

1\.tonff'tai .................... ........... IK. 32 ..160
Ftorido .................................. l7 34 .\.U

a month.

8MSehall
A~ntriC'an

KHI'

·PROU
407 PURL ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760.

'

Transactions

i:1l p.m.

trw

.

.

.

•

Today's games

;

1-1

Wa~ hinl!lnn

• Tnmpn Bay 7, Oakland 2
l- Bnllimorc ~. Scanlc .l
Toranto ~- Bostnn 2
CLEVELAND Y, IXtmil 2
~ N.Y. Y;m1~ 1. Chi ~.:a~o White Sm.~

10

m

210~minutes

SO minutes

Tuesday's seor••

J. l&gt;.!1rui1 I:

W~veGotit!

.

NHL conference finals

.

'H-~tns .

,

.

460
.4:'il

{)elmil ................................ . 19 2K
Chicago .................. .......... .... 19 29
..,

'

!CI"k J·6J.l :20 p.m.

.m

..
Ctnlnl Dt.ision
. iLEVEt.AND .......... •· ... 29 21
MinneSOfa ............................. 22 27
........ .................. IK

.:'\92

Col(lf'tldo (Wright 4... ) nl St. Louis JMercktr :l3). I :40 p.m.
'
PhihK!elphia (Sr.:hillin&amp; ~-~) m Chi~:apo C·ubs
Montreal (Ptt•ano 0-0) M AUuntn (IJ. M11r1inez
1-l). NO p.m.
.
CINCINNATI (Win~:~~ler ~ - 2) 111 U1s An~les
(R. MMinez6-2). 10 :0~ p.m.
Arizona (AndeDOfl 1-6) ut San FrandNCo {0ntwin4-2). 10:0~ p.m.

pa11imore ............... ............... 2J 2H

Knn.&lt;~~City

lil

'·

MISPLAYS DRIVE- Detroit outfielder Luis Gonzalez mlaplaya the
drive by thl Cleveland Indiana' Brian Gil• that goea off the wall In:
thl third Inning qf Tueaday night's Amtll'lcan League game In Clevtt-z
land, where the Indians won 9-2 In part because Gllea' double scorect
ttammatet David Juatlce and ll(lanny Ramirez. (AP)

.,m,1c

p.m.

Thursday's aames

tam
l!:J. £&lt;1.
New Yotk .............. .. ....... .....J~ 10 .m

Devil Rays 7, Athletks 2
Mike Stanley clrove in three runs
· Scott Erickson (S-5) gave up one
Rookie
Rolando Arrojo (7-3)
·
with
a
horner
and
a
double.
and
visrun and five hits in eight innings, and
Joe Caner homered as Baltimore iting Toronto extended its · winning allowed two runs and five hits in five
completed a 3-8 road trip. Lenny streak to a season-high four games. innings with seven strikeouts. ·
Quinton McCracken, Paul SorJuan Guzman (3-6), staked to a 4Webster a8d Robeno Alomar each
rento
and ,Miguel Cairo all homered
o
first-inning
lead,
allowed
~wo
runs
·
had two R.Bis for the Orioles, who
for
visiling
Tampli Bay, which had
have won three of four following a and six hits in seven innings. Randy
Myen pitched a perfect ninth .for his been 0-3 against Oakland.
nine-11ame losing streak:
Tom Candiotti (4-S) gave up four
Jeff Fassero (5-2) pVc up six runs 12th save•.
runs
-three corned - and nine hits
Ilo!oton's
losing
streak
reached
a
and seven hits in 2 '113 inninas. his
in
five
inninp and the Athletics made
shortest ~ since May 3, 1997. season-high four as Steve Avery (II) allowed five runs and six hits in three errors, raising their total to a
Seattle had lost I0 of its last 14.
leasue-leading 45.
four innings,
Blue Jays 5, lled Sox_%

time

4). ft':IOrt.m . .
Son OteJO (HIIchcock 2-0) at Anzona (Andy
Benes~_.), 10: 3~

at

Yankees beat
White .Sox 7-5; Orioles win".
.
AL roundup

Huskey double(l home the first
"l'lltake 20 wins every month,"
two
runs in the inning, then doubled
Chipper Jones said. "¥ou'll have a
pretty good season if you win 20 again to drive in the final three runs.
(See NL on Page S)
games every month."
Javy Lopez hit a grand slam in the
seventh, capping a five-run inning Meigs Legion
that turned the game into a rout.
Andres Galarraga added a two-run to hold tryouts
shot for the Braves, who improved Thursday
their NL-best record to 38-14.
"I'm really surprised when we
The final tryouts for the Meigs
lose," Galarraga said. ''I don't warit American ·Legion Post 39 Baseball
to sound cocky or say anything, but Team will be Thursday at 6 p.m. on
as soon as you !lei to. the park you the Meigs High School Baseball
look at the lineup. you see one of the -'Field.
best pitchers and you have a·good
For more information call J~rry
feeling about winning the game."
Oavenplin at992-7323.
In other NL games. it was New
The Legion team will open up the .
York I 0. Florida 6; Houston 13, Los · 1998 season on Wednesday, June 10
Angeles 2; Milwaukee 3. Pittsburgh at Oak Hill.
·
2; and San Diego 12, Arizona I.
Mefs 10, Marlins 6
· · Butch Huskey had five RBis. all
in a nin.e-run 'sixth inning, and New
York rallied from a 5-l deficit for its
fifth consecutive victory.

s

tened the exit of Worrell (2-6). who changed to a single and two-base
lowed five runs and seven hits in 3 error the next inning and changed
CLEV~LAND (AP) The but a headache for the ngers. Detroit
Detroit ngen hope. they have as . had won nine of 12 before getting 213 innings.
bal:k to a triple after the game by the
much success in their new stadium as swept in this ~o-game series:
How did Fryman see it?
official scorer.
the Cleveland Indians enjoy 11 Jacobs·
"Buddy would enjoy it if the sit"I didn't," he said. "I thought it
· Notes:· Damion Easley extended
Fij:ld.
uation were reversed," lndiaas man· was a double, and I just put my head his hitting strcal( to 16 games. tying
Maybe someday they · can pay ager Mike HltJIIOVe said of his good down and kept running. I got to sec- 1the AL's longest this season, with a
ond and saw there was SOI1)C confu- single in the founh.Hunter's triple
back the Indiw for all these bealinp friend and counterpart.
they've endured.
With the Indians already leading sion. l still havefl't seen what the ball that went past Ramirez to the wall
was the third questionable scorinR
, Travis Fryman joltC!I his foniaer 4-0 in the fourth, Fryman hit a shot did."
Fryman, who,played seven sea- call of the game. Brian Giles' drive
team with a controversial homer, and to the top of the 19-foot wall in left ·
the Indians defeated the ngers 9-2 off starter nm Worrell (2-6). A fan sons in Detroit. is hilling .420 with to the warning track in left was
live homers and IS RBls in his last dropped by Luis Gonzalez in the third
Tue~y night for their 200th victo- · reached over the yellow home run
ty at the Jake since it QIICned in 1994. line and appeared to catch the ball 13 games, raising his average from but'wascalledadouble. Giles'bloop.197 to .258.
er in the fifth was a routine play that
The ngcrs are trying to build and carry it over the fence.
Bell came out to argue with Rich
Jaret Wright (3-3) allowed one run went off Cruz's glove at shonstop ....
momentum for the opening oftheir
new stadium, which they hope will be Garcili, the same umpire who ruled a and 10 hits in se\&lt;Cn innings, shaking Hunter left the game with a slight
fC!Idy for the 2000 season. They fell .. ball hit by New Yott's Derek Jeter off an early liner~ff.his pitthi~g ~ muscle pull in his left leg; and first
to 3-24 at JacQbs Field as the Indians . was a homer in Game 1 of the J~dlegs and strikmg· out sax With baseman Tony Clatt "tweaked" his
ly one walk.
shoulder diving into second base.
improved to 200-110 (.643) at the AL championship series. Jeffrey
Maier,
a
12-yeir-old
fan,
hid
clearly
k~
w~re
~ivi
C~'s
liner.
in
Bell said neither injury was serious.·
ballpark - with about one out of
clllried
it
over
the
right-field
wall
at
the
th1rd
hat
ham,
Wnght
saad,
·
...
Cleveland's Kenny Lofton, in a 3every eight coming against the
Yankec Stadium.
'"Where didn't it hit me?"
for-21 slump and smashing his bat on
ngen. .
·
"I couldn't really .tell, and I
"It caught my little finger, hit my the ground after nearly e:vcry out. w.S
"I really feel if we played a couple of more games here, we'd be all . haven't seen the replay," Bell said. ri~ leg and killd of ricocheted off 1-for-4. He has been bothered by a
right," said Tigers manager Buddy "But I had to so out .IU!d ask them my left leg," Wflght said. "It stung strained right hamstrin11 bulkept it
a little bit."
•
quiet. ... Lofton threw out Hunter at
Bell, who played for and coached the what was going on." .
This time, replays show«\ the fan
,The ngers avoided a shutout with · third on Randa's single to center in
Indians when they occupied an old
stadium kAown ~ the Mistake by the missed and the ball cleared the fence Joe Randa's sacrifice fly in the sev- the fifth, and Giles tllrew oul Clark at
on its own. In any event. Fryman's enth that followed Bri31) Hunter's · the plate on Andy Tomberlil)'s single
Lake. .
eighth homer mad'~ it 5-0 and has- triple. The hit was first ruled a triple, · to left in the second.

Scoreboard
Baseball

The new place has been nothing

By KEN BERGER

Braves cruise .by Expos 9-3;
Brewers slip ·past Pirates ·3-2.
By The Aaaoclated Press
Denny Neagle is a real homer.
Neagle improved to 15-1 at Turner Field, pitching seven strong
innings in Atlanta's 9-3 victory over
Montreal on Tuej!lay night.
Neagle (7-1) ~ve up one run and
seven hits to extend his remarkable
home record over the last four sea¥JnS. Since the sta11 of 199S. when he
~as with the Pinsburgh Pjrates, Neajle is 30-3 in 52 home stans.
; The left-bander pitched well
· ~spite arriving at the park with a
·!tomachache and fouling ·a ball off
Lis right foot in the fifth.
~ "I feel like I'm right on pace to do
)'hat I did last year," said Neagle, a
20-game winner in 1997. "If I dupli·
~ate last season. I'll be more than
~appy." .
The Braves were happy after
Improving their May record to 20-5.
The 20 victories are an Atlanta record
· '(or May and match the most wins for
ln Atlanta team ih any month.

The Dally Sentinel• Page

• Middleport, Ohio

l_n dians-tame Tigers in tallying 9-2 win

·.

•

Po~roy

Wednesday, May 27,1998

: &lt;Continued from Page 4)
· ~ major league record for .Rills in
II!' inning is six. achieved 12 times
stnce RBls became an official statistic in 1920..
.
; It .was the biggest inning for the
Metssince Aug. 16. 1988. when they
sl:ored nine runs in the first at Slit
F.Jancisco.
.
:
Alti'OI 13, Doclpn 2 .
' · Pill Spiers hit a two-run triple to
hlghlight an eight-run· fifth inning,
altd Houston won for the fifth time in
~ven games.
.
.
• Thny Eusebio had ,two singles 111[\1 •
stoi'CI) twice in 1he inninc. which
~gan wiih the store 2-all.
. .
.~ Shane Reynolds (S-3) allowed·
two "fURS and se~ven hits in eight
innil)ll ape! also drove in . a run.
1"*1 Valdes (4-6} pve up a c - ·
hip ·10 ru• in 4 213. inninp.

• . ••••• 3, ,.,.,.-2 •J01e Valentin, Who III'IICk out hi•·
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gle in the ninth innin&amp; as Milwaukee
!napped • flve-aime io.IDJ lriak. :
The 8(eWm, who had been 0-2() I

when lllllina after eiaflt lnnlnp; •
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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wedn~.

Stars beat Red Wings 3-1 to tie series
energy our of !heir game."
Hitchcoek said Hatcher is the key
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
ro geaing the Dallas rough stuff
DALLAS (AP) - The Dallas going.
Slars rhink lhey may have found a
"I think the nasrier and harder
way lo .ranle rhe defending Stanley Darien plays.lhe beller il is for us,"
Cup champion Detroit Red Wings; . Hitchcock said. "We are prepared to
The Srars hit and hounded the Rea pay !he price ~metimes with penal·
Wings inro critical mistakes Tuesday ties."
night ro even their Western ConferCarbonneau scored into an emply
ence series at a g~me each wirh a 3- net wirh II seconds left to pur !he
1 victory.
, • game away ~fter Derroil had pulled
"Our game is really a pursuil goalie Chris Osgood.
game," said coach Ken Hitchcock.
Bel four dominated rhe third period.
"We have ro pursue rhe puck hard making 10 saves. The besr was a pad
and hit We created rhe tempo and save on a breakaway by 'Kirk Maltknocked them off their game."
by at II : II after Mike Modano
Bob Bassen; Greg Adams and Guy turned lhe puck over.
Carbonneau each scored a goal and
" II wa.~ very intense from rhe
Ed Bel four made 27 saves for lhe stan." Belfour said. "We wanted ro
Sum.
make up for tharla.~l game. I think we
Games 3 and 4 of the best-of-sev- did. Maltby tried a fancy move on
en serie,..will be played in Detroit on me, but I took it away and put the
Friday night and SundaY.. ·
puck in the comer."
"We gor physical with them,"
Hirclicock said rhe Slars had rrouDallas defenseman Derian Hatcher ble believing Bassen had scored his
said. "That's how we have to win. first goal of rhe playoffs.
·
We have to work and bang. We're not
"The feeling on the bench after.
going to our-finesse lhem, for sure. Hassen's goal was half !he guys
We just have to hitthem and lake lhe weren't' sure it ·was a goal," Hitch-

NHL playoffs

STROKING the return to Japan's AI Sugyama Ia America's Venus
Wllllsme during the ucond round of the French Open today In Paris.
Williams won 6-0, 6-2 to move on to the third fOUnd. (AP)

Wi'lliam&amp; sisters
win;" Agassi, ·Korda
exit French Open
By JOCELYN NOVECK

So this French Open was a chance
PARIS (AP)- Powered by huge for lhe newly slimmed and lanned
serves and delicale drop shors, Venus Agassi lo show lhe- world he was
Williams rolled inlo rhe lhird round ready 10 win a big one again.
.. .of lhe French Open roday, rouring Ai
II wasn'r to be.
Sugiyama 6-0, 6-2.
Agassi lost his first-round match
Sugiyama, ranked 19th in rhe 5-7. 7-5,6-2,3-6,6c2toMaratSafin,
world and Japan's besl player, didn 'I an 18-year-old Russian who had to
• hold her serve once. Bur she did win rhree qualifying marches jusllo
• break Williams lwice in !he second make ir into the French Open. Just
set ·
lasl monlh, Agassi had bearen Satin
The eighth-seeded Williams. vast- . in straighr sels in a Davis Cup march
ly improved since she firsl .Played ·in Allan Ia.
here- lasr year, served big, hilling one
Agassi, who had 82 unforc¢
at 118 mph ·in lhe firsl game of lire errors, lumed up al lhe posl-malch
second set
news conference wilh an ice pack on
After Ihe march, she even rried ro his righr shoulder.
. speak a lillie French. "Je suis Parisi"Something
is
obviously
enne." she said on French TV
inHamed," he said, saying he had hun
Last year at the French Open, it while serving in the first set.
upsets were so frequent that by the "Anyrhing above my shoulder I
time the semifinals rolled around, slaned Sll)lggling wilh. I jusl didn'l
there was only one seeded. man lefl close ourrhe poinrs. ''
and rhe roumament wa.~ won by the
But surprising as Safm's victory
world's 66th-ranked player.
was. the real shocker came from
!• ha.~n'rtaken long for rhe upsets · another qualifier, Mariano Zabaleta
to start this year, either. By rhe end of Argentina, who ousted lhe secondof the second day of play Tue!lday, - ranked Korda irian exciling five-set
bolh Andre Agassi and second-seed- srrugjle.
ed Petr Korda we~ hisrory.
KOI)!a, the Ausrralian Open chamThis time. the conquerors were pion, rallied from a rwo-ser deficit
justas unexpected as lasr year. Agas- before tiring in the final ser and lossi fell to the world's 116rh-ranked ing.6-0, 6-2, 3·6, 4-6, 6-3ro Zabaleplayer. Aad Korda, who could have ta. who leaped for joy and !hen, wilh
overtaken rhe world No. I spol wilh rears in his eyes, c~anged into an
a victory here. losl 10 rhe 213th- Argentine soccer jersey. ·
ranked player.
Among the women. sixth-seeded
Like Pere Sampra~ and Maniila Monica Seles looked focused and
Hingis, Aga.~si has .won every Grand ready in a speedy 6-0, 6-2 roul of her
Slam except the French Open. ·
Australian opponenl, Annabel EllHere's what he doe~n't share wilh wood. It was Seles' firs! match since
lhem: he fell as low as No. 141 lasl herfntherdiedofcanceron May 12.
yearandha.~bcenworkingeversince
"II was just too rough for me to
on a comeback. rising ro No. 20. bur stay ho~." she said. .
srill wirh a long way ro. gO.

CHICAGO (AP) -A Rose will
be missing from the Indiana Pacers
bench for Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals, a series 9.f grear finishes and big shots thai has become
a whine fest over officiaring.
Reggie pushed Michael. Michael
gets all the calls. [)ennis' picks are no
more 'illegal than Rik's. Scollie's roo
rough on Jack. Ad nauseam.
Back and forth, be it physical or
J)sychological, the Chicago Bulls and
Indiana Pacers are looking for an
edge with the emotional best-of-seven playoff even ar two games each.
"The Bulls are nor used to losirlg," Pacers coach Larry Bird said.
"They're used to walking through
these playoffs. We're giving them a
lillie more of a challenge than they
probably though! we would."
The Pacers enter tonight's fiflh
game short-handed. Backup guard
Jalen Rose has been suspended for
one game after leaving the lx:nch during a scuffie betwe-en Reggie Miller
and Ron Harper in Monday's Game

J. LOPEZ

DENVER (AP) - Western Ath·
lelic Conference commissioner Karl
Benson was sleeping when the call
came. More resrless nighrs are su~ to
follow.
Colorado Srare presidenr AI Yates'
call woke up Benson on Tue!lday to·
tell him Air Force. Brigham Young,
Colorado Stale, UNLV. New Mexico,
San Diego Srare. Utah and Wyoming
plan lo leave the WAC after the 199899 academic year.
''The 16-team league was nor
goinJ: to work." New Mexico arhleric director Rudy Davalos said. ."It

Coaches set
.dates for Meigs
glr~s' cage camp .
The 1998 Meigs girls baskerball
· camp will be held from June 8-12 at
Meigs High School. The cost of the
camp is $3S, and no family has ro pay
more than $tiO if more than one girl
lltCOds the camp. ""
·
Grades 4-6 will hold camp from 9
am-11 :30 a.m. Grades 7-8 will be
from noon-2:30 p.m. Grades 9-1 t
will be ~ I p.m. ulllil 3:30 p.m.
lllsiructon for die camp will be
COIIdles Ron Lopn. Darin I.Qa111,
Mid:" Childs and Miele Davenport
and senior members of .rhe Lady
M.-den learn. Each camper will
receive instruction in all fundamenWI of the aame and will receive a
free amp r-shin and a basketball.
Applicllions are available 11 1111
achools in the Meigs l.oclll School
DiSirict. for more information call
Roo Lopn at992·21S8 (school) or
' 992-2723 (home). •

Page7
Wednesday,
..
. May 27, 1988
... ..

Great sex can be mastered- if partn·ers are wHUng to learn~

cock said. "It had slarted creeping
" We had our chances on lhe powinto· our heads we couldn't 'score. er play," Detroit coach Scorry BowFmm there we felt a lor more com· man said. "This is going to be a lowfortnble and confident We needed an scoring series. I e~pecled ir to be
ugly goalro fight back into ir."
close and it look.~ like ir will be. It
Adams put Dalla.~ ahead 2-0 ar seem~ to be a big advantage to score
8:48 of the NCCond period.
first"
"The puck kind of hopped up on
The Red Wings had six power play
me," Adams said. "I wa.~ kind of mad chances.
.
at· first because I had a clear patch. I
"We lei Dallas off the hook," Bowjust wen! ahead and shor it The resuh man said.
was nice." .
Derroit righr wing Darren McCarDetroit scored il~ only goal in rhe ty said the Stars wouldn't be denied.
second period when Vyacheslav . "You have to give them high
Kozlov converted a pass from Tomas marks for ,what they diq lonight," he
Holmstrom. Kozlov,.scoritig his fifth said. "They knew they had to win
playoff goal, sent the puck belween and they did. We messed up a lor of
BeJ'four's legs:
opportunities and our special teams
Ba.~sen scored 5:56 into rhe game.
snuggled. Bu~ give them some credOsgood tried to clear the puck behind it"
his net, but Grnnl Marshall interCartionneau said thai now lhe Srars
cepled and fed B.Ssen just outside the know how to win, rhey have lo do il
crease wilh a perfect centering pa.-.. again.
·
" II wa.~ big to gel the lead on
"I tl\ink we're going to have ro
Jhem," Ba.~sen said. "We were firing play the same way, only harder rhan
lhe puck tonight from all angles."
we played tonight," he said. "They'll
It ·was crucial for the Stars 10 score he al home with ,their fans behind
• first Tliey are 8-1 in the playoffs in them. They play with a lor of configames in which lhey sctire lhe first dence in Detroit Hopefully we can '
ROal.
win one."

compassionale, intelligent and communicativc, and he worships the
ground I walk pn. Our sex life is jusr

Ann
Landers

so.so.

IW7. Loa NJC)a TlfM:II
Syftdin~ llld Crulan
Sytldtcw.

Dear Ann Landen: I read lhe
letter from "Lucky but Confused in
Snnla Clarira," who was considering
marriage 10 a man for whom she had
lit!le passion. You told her to date
olhers and grow · up. I would have
given different advice. ·
.
My firsr marriage was.ro a man
abour whom I WI!$ desperarely passionare, but IQ years of knock-yoursocks-off sex didn '1 compensare· for
rhe serio"us Haw.;; in our relarioitship.
The man I am now married to is
romanric and commiued. and we are
perfectly compatible. He · is kind.

By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Hun'lane Socl·

etv

physical defense Scollie Pippen was Iauer - running along the sideline Miller..said: " It wa.• one of ·rhose
allowed to.play on Mark Jackson in . toward midcourt before Indiana as.'is- things where everyone wanled 10 he
rhose games.
lanl coach Rick Carlis!e pulled him macho, stick !heir chests forward. bur
" We've got 10 give credirto Lar· back.
nolhing really happened: Typical
ry Bird, the way he fought for
.. Bird claimed Rosl was merely NBA fight" .
favoritism from lhe officials after lhe heading to the scorer's table to Cheek
Miller's late-game shooting,
first two games," Jordan ·said. "I into the game.
despite a sprained ankle, brought the
guess ifs .all about joslling for lhe · "Jalen got a lillie excited and got Pacers vicrories in bolh games in
position of who can inHuence the ref- down there .roo quick," Bird said Indianapolis after the Bulls bleY! sizerees the most"
today. "The only punch I saw was able second-half leads.
.
Without· Rose, the Pacers will he Harper hilling Reggie in the. back,
Miller. whose defen.~e has been
wirhoul one of· rheir top reserves. which I wouldn't even call a punch." labeled "chicken-fighring" by JorHe's averaging eighl points a game
Rose wa.• also fined $2,500. Harp- dan. k nor complaining. aboul the
and ha.~ been a Iough defeoder of Jor- er wa.~ ,peAalized'$3.500 for iniriating . officiating.
dan wirh his size and long arms.
a fight by yanking Miller dow~ a.•
"I've always said I'm trying to gel
League rules mandare a one-game they fell near rhe Bulls bench and away with as much as possible, so
suspension for throwing a punch .or Miller wa• fined $2,500 for reraliat· y0 u haven't heard me ·say anythin·g
leaving rhe bench during an alterca- ing by pushing Harper,
aboul rhe officials," Miller said, ·
lion, and Rose was punished for the
"'J'!Iere were no punclles thrown," "I'm going to stick with lhat"

Today, heartworm~ tan be fo~nd
in· nearly pan of the United Slates,
and if lefl ·untreiued. heanworm
infestarion is nearly always faral,
particularly in older, debililalcd animals.
In southcasrcrn Ohio; our dogs
are' far from safe, because mosquitoes, which carry the disease and
infect other dogs. are found in farm
ponds, tire dumps, swamps, and in
all out major bodies of water-lhe
Ohio River, Raccoon Creek, and the
Hocking.
Heartworms live primarily in the
hearl of rhe dog, where malure
·females releaSe lhousands of tiny
larvae called microfilaria (liaby
heanworms) .
These may be · acrive for .yea~
but do nor develop funhet without
an intermediate host - the mosqui:to.
. The mosquito ingesls the micro: filaria when il bites an infected dog
lind incubares rhem for about rwo

"Lucky" should hang on ro her
man. Passion and super sex are a Jot
like sneezing. II feels terrific while ·
you're doing ·,:; bur when il's ov~r.
it's over. Nin~ly·nine percent of a
successful marriage has little to do
with rhe rime y0 u spend in bed.
"Lucky" should ask herself rhe
same question · you always rell
women who are' considering divorce
-· "Would you bt better off with him
or without him~" Or, 10 put it another way, can she be happy wilhout
~nock-your·~ks-pff sex? -- Been
There and Done Thai in Gairhersburg, Md.
Dear Galthersbura: I agree -opl for the man who has good char-

.

.

weeks. When. the insect biles another dog, it passes along rhe infected
larvae, which continue to develop
and grow. The larvae grow inro
adults in the hean rissue, eventually
finding rh~ir way to rhe animal's
bean. ·
·
The disease is usually witlioul
symproms in the early stages. Then, .
as time goes by, the dog may lose
weight and slamina and develop a
chronic coughing; evenrually he. or
she becomes shorrwinded and has.
trouble brearhing, which often caus-:
es pain .
I
Whal is · happening is thai large
numbers of heanworms (if you cap
slomach it, your veterinarian may
show you a jar of these rhings) begin
lo reslricl blood flow to the lungs,
kidneys, and liver.
This stresses the lltan and causes
organ .failure. In acute infections,
symptoms appear suddenly· and
de~th may occur in 24 lo 7~ hours.
Fortunarely, rhere are·heanworm
prevenratives on the· marker (including some that prevenl hookworm, as
well); and once rested and found
clean, your dog can safely be pur on

acter, and teach him how to satisfy OK, but ir never sizzled. While daryou, Grear lovemaking is part ing after rhe divorce, I discovered
instinct and pan communicating lhat a willing teacher and acoopera·
what you enjoy. Great sex can, in live panner can make sex fun and
lime, become less exciting, bur a exciling. lf I had known thar earlier,
relalionship that embodies re~pect, ir might have saved my marriage.
Catonsville, Md.: Sex is a
ll!lmiration and mulual inrerests as
.well as physical attraction .has rhc learned skill and an art, and it takes
time to become good ar it You
besr chance ro endure.
From New Market, Md.: You should have . suggested instrucrion
were not very sympathetic to manuals, counselors and videos.
Brentwood, Tenn.: I hope
"Lucky bur Confused." My wife is
less !han passionate abour sex, but :·Lucky" will not give up on her
we are the mosl loving couple I boyfriend and leave it to fate to·
know. In rhe 20 years we've been bring them back rogether. She
together, we have been best. friends should make a conscious effon · 10
put some romance inro rhe relationas well' as lovers. .
. Taco~, Wash.: Dating others is ship. How aboul weekend getaways
nor the solution for "L.uc.ky bur Con- and candlelit dinners? Maybe the
fused," and in !he end, she may lose poor guy doesn'r know how to be
him. Afrer a long marriage. mY wife romanric and creale passion. She
and I divorced. Our sex life had been should teach him what rums her on.

There is some 'controversy about
preventative.
flowever,: infccrcd dogs cannol the necessity for testing and.treating
be cured this way; in fact. adminis- cats prophylactically, for cats. too.
terfng prevenrative ro an infected · can ger .hearrworms.
animal can cause shock and even
Veterinarians in our area do not
death. So inhcr measures are called generally push for resting and medfor, including confinertoeril and/or ication because few, if any. cases
have heen found in this area, hut
hospitalization and medication.

Montreal: Great sex doesn 'I last wilhout ·being crazy about a man in
forever. but real love does. Dropping . bed. He lusiS afrer me, and I fake it.
p. panner when things go wrong If I had irto do over again, I would :
doesn't solve anyrhing. That kind of nev~r marry him.
,
·rhinking is immalllre. Marriages
Is thar Ann Landers column you .
based on sexual impulses are sure to · clipped years ago yellow with age?:
fail.
For a copy of her most frequenlly
Elmira, N.Y.: Did that unful - requested pOems ami essays, send a
filled woman in Santa Clarita try sex self·addressed, long, business-size
manuals, massages, lingerie, X - 'envelope and a check or money ;
rated movies and mood music . order for $5 .25 (this includes•
before giving up? I recommend posrage and handling) to: Gems. c/o:
rhem.
Ann Landers, P.O. Bo}( 11562,;
Houston: My advice to "Lucky Chicago, Ill : 60611 -0562. (In Canabur .Confused" is DON 'T DO IT! da. se nd $6,25.)
I've been married for 15 years ." but
To find out more about Ann ·
I've always known somerhing was Landers and read her past·
missing. I though! I could make it columns, visit the Crearors Syndi-'
work, bull was wrong. Passion can: cate
web
page
at:
not be lear.ned. Either you have it, or . www.creators.com. ANN LAN-,
you don 't I cannol bear the thought DERS
(R) COPYRIGHT 1998·
.
of going rhrough the res! of my life
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC . .

.

moSI make that option available if
the clienl desires it.
Call loday · for an appointment
with your veterinarian to have your
dogs rested
. The ver will· draw hlond and
then c~amine it for microfilaria or
the presence or anrigens . .

Your veterinarian will tell you
rhat once animals were put on pre·
vcntative jusr 'before. durin g, and
after mosquito season.
or late. however, more vets sug-

g.csl thai preven(alive be adminis·
tered year-round for maximum pro·
tccJion.

-

The Monthly
roger

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c:ENT!i cur (5-u.a. AVaJ

WAARER OR GOtD KIST FAn

Whole Boneless BOneless/Skinless

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1'0111111.

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•

4.

''I don'r care whether they come
with a whole team or not, ifs just. a
matter of what's right and just." Bulls
coach Phil Jackson said Tuesday
.when he was filled S10,000 by rhe
NBA ror criricizing the officiaring a
day earlier.
.
Jacbon, comparing Monday's refereeing to the 1972 Olympic gold
medal game when lhe Uoiled Slales
• - "'
'"1;· ··.,.~
.,;;..·.
losl 10 lhe.Soviel Union in a controversial finish, conrinued to question
JTS NOT JUST FOR BOYS-'"- girls- clay June 3nl. For niore In(ormation .call Cheryl
ir Tuesday.
.
pnctlclng their putting on the practice~ get. 1'homlla .. the Meigs County GoH CourH.atll82·
"ll's almost impossible.to play the
tlng raady for the 1998 Meigs Junior Golf 6312 or C.rol McCullough at 1182-5322.
game at this particular level if you
League. The League will 'tarl play on W.tneacan'! be consistenl on the calls," he
said. "Whafs the norm? I don 'r what
lhe norm is. It's day lo day. ObjecThe Meigs Junior. Golf League
~ Jeasue is for boys and girls
livity is just refereeing the game."
Cheryl Thomas at the golf course al
Jackson and Michael Jordan com- will slart on Wednesday, June 3 at lhe berween the ages of eight and I 6. For 992-6312 or Carol McCull011gh at
plained about a series of calls fol- Meigs Counly (JoJf Cou.rse. Regis- further informarion you may call 992-5322.
al 8:30a.m.
lowing Game 4, and. Bird expecls , rrarion will
!heir comments to have
effect
tonighl when lhe series rerums to rhe
United Center.
"When you have one of rhe
league's best coaches and besl players complaining., I'm sure they'll take
norice," Bird said.
•
•
Jordan refused comment Tuesday
afler praclice. Bur following Monday's :;cries-evening 96-94 Indiana
wa.~n'tthe fault of the commissioner victory - won by Miller's ~-poinl­
or·any school. II was juS! one of !hose er - .he claimed Bird wa.~ able ro
unmanageable lype numbers."
sway rhe officiaring after the Paeers
' In deciding ro abandon !he WAC. lost the fir.;tlwo games.
rhe eighr schools cired rhe loss of traThe Pacers were unhappy with the
ditional rivalries, ri'iing travel co&lt;ts
and insufficient revenue growth. The
WAC is the nation's l3fllesl collegiate
league. SP.anning 3.900 miles and
four rime zones.
"We've had our growing pains.
and we've had our own meinbers
question .how operable it is. We've
bc!en our own worst enemies. at ByJIMCOUR
SEATTLE (AP) - Gary Payton
limes," Benson said. "I'm obviousand
Vin Baker will have a new coach
ly disappointed we didn'r have more
nexr season. Ge-orge· Karl won 'I he
liMe to make il work."
back.
The rebel schoo!s said they will
Karl. 47, was fired on Tuesday tile rhe paperwork to leave the WAC
lwo
weeks afler his Seaule Superbefore Sept I a.~ required by league
Sonics
were knocked out of rhe
bylaws. They also will a.'k rhe NCAA
to recognize the new unnamed con- NBA playoff~ by the Los Angeles
.Lakers.
ference immediarely.
·
· ".You've g01 a group of eighl insti· - Part of the reason for-Karl's depar- .
IUiions that are commilled to muing lure was a lack of !rust, team ·presia new conference work," said Yates, denl and general manager .Wally
who also is chairman of rhe WAC Walker said:
· "I did say to his agent (Bret
board of direcrors. "We've spenr
Adams
of Columbus, Ohio) la'il
mosr of our rime in conversation try-·
ing 10 respond to riM; question. 'Is . Monday morning lha~ if word of our
!here a way 10 make lhis 16-leam conversarion gets our, I can only
conference wort.?' Our conclusion in assume lhat George doesn't really
allrhal was thatthere was nor.'; · · wanllhe job.".Walker.!l}lid. "And il
did get out." ·. ·
· . ·
Fresno Slate. Hawaii. Rice, San
. The SoniCli hope to llave a new
· Jo~ Srare, Sourhem Mer_h(!disr.
head
coach by lhe rime of lhe NBA
Texa~ Christian. Te.xas-EI Paso and
dran oo June 24.
Tulsa remain pal'! of the WAC. bot
Names lhat .are being menlioned
Tuesday's developmenr cast rhe
as
pos.~ible
replacements for Karl are
league's future in serious doubl.
former
NBA
head coaches Paul
· "Norle·dtus had any knowledge
Westphal,
Bob
Hill and Bob Weiss.
of rhis particular elTon," Hawaii
President Kenneth Mortimer said; Weiss was a member of Karl's staff
in Scanle.
"We are in a siruation oow where we
Because Weiss has been in Seatare lrying lo analyze where we areal
tle. he might have lhe inside track to
this time ... .
replace Karl .
.• , •

.;&gt;;'

an

Sanies
fire Karl

'•

•••

.1"~.· I

By Bob Hoeflich

~
~

';,_

•

Meigs JGL to start play Wec:tnesday - - - - - - - -

Six universities to leave WAC
after 1998-99 academic year .
By AARON

.

.

NBA slaps Pacers' Rose
. with suspension
.

By RICKGANO

The Daily Sentinel~

By The Bend

May 27, 1998

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How was your ·Memorial people I knew.
I leave the
Day weekend, Bunky '!
cemetery always wondering:
·"Whar the 'you know whar'
Undoubredly, you found
enough cookin" to keep you is rhis·all ·abourT'
occupied.
I'll bel you probably did an
· Remember when Memorial _. nuldoor barbecue over rhc
Day was Dccorarion Day and weekend-between the rainswherever il fcll'in rhe calendar: or.arleru;r a bir of a picnic.
thai was when it wa.• observed.
Ah yes. Memories arc made
Now !hanks to .govcmmcnral of Ibis. ·
rechnology, ir · is observed on a
Monday every year. ·This is ro · ·Former Pomeroy residenls,
make for whal we've come lo · Jane and Bill Snouffer. who arc .
know as a "long weekend".
now living ar Bay Si. Lewis in
Li kc you, I kepi on .1~ move Southern Mississippi. came in
over !he weekend. ariending the for rhe graduarion of rheir
Pomeroy High School Alumni granddaughrer, Michelle Rams-.
Reunion at Meigs High School burg.,who wa.• a member of the
Meigs High School graduating
on Sarurday night
.
Tradirionally, I have done cla.'5. Quite a trip, bur on the
Ibis for years 10 rake pholo. of . other hand .• quire an occasion·.
Jane and Bill returned lo
alumni reunion classes.
AI the pholo scs.•ions, I saw a Mississippi Friday. They indi·
(ew people I knew and a lor thai cared !hey arc real 'bappy in ·
!heir new home area. Their son,
' I didn't' know.
However, it looked like bolh Gary. also a former resident of
groups were enjoying ·~ gcr- Pomcrc.y. lives nearby:
rogerher · which leads me to
believe rhal perhaps ·il is 1rue
' Remember ralented Vicror
thai "old friends are rhe best Gcnheimet of Meigs Counry?
friends, afler all".
Many of you will. AI any
And did vou rake in the r;lle. Vicror will be observing
grand openin;: of the new Wal- his . I02nd bi":~hday on May 28.
• Man Srore in Galli• Counry For the pasr several years, Vic.• which also was a weekend ror has been making his home
·: event'!
·wirh his daughlet in ColumbUs.'
· I did and 1 was impressed • ' Cards and nores will reach
wirh the size of rhe srore and nf him at 3075 Wcsrwick . Road,
· · course, thar makes for a quanrj. Columbus, Ohio 43232.
. ry of merchandise-all you
Wirh rhe exception of havin;
have to do is find whar you're some difficulry walking, I
· · looking for.
understand rhe former resident
However, there were &amp;lor of is doing welL
employees aboul and !hey
seemed happy ·to · direor cusMeanwhile, back 10 "Decoromers to rhe proper locaJions.
ralion Day", I suspecr some of
I also visiled a couple of . you will remember when we
cemele[ies-Beech Grove in didn't have all of !he floral
Pomeroy and Riverview in Mi~- pieces .offere\1 for decorating
dleport. ,
graves.
.
Both appeared ro ha~e
And. you might recall, thai
undergone some special mani- we depended on lhe peonies in
curing for Memorial Day and I !he yard ro provide that show of .
like to think thai all ofthe ceme- allention. And often by lhe li~
leries .across the CO!Jnly looked the peonies were cut and laken
as gCJ!Kl.
·
·
ro rhe cc;melery, aboul all dull.
Semehow I seem ro lake on remained were rhe stems';
a serious comPosure· when I We've come a long way-or .
visit cemerenes. I read a .lot t~f have we? Do keep &amp;miling.
monumenrs and reflect on rhe

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•

D'OGEk

Grade A

Large
Eggs
..
fut

~· ..

·

Plus Many More .. .

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Pige I • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Se!'ltlnel • Page 9

•

Wedn•day,May27,

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

STORE HOURS
Monday thru

Sunday
IU·lOPM

When a 'mole' is not a mole,
it could be skin cancer ____ _

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANDTIES.
PRICES GOOP THRU-SATURDAY, MAY 30, ·1991

• GARDEN SEED

•

1998 Martin Street

Pepsi

JoeWIIaon
(614) 992-4277

Near Cheater on St.

~ BISSELL
.·

740·985-3831

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

SyraCUII 892-5776

Room Additions • Roofing

••

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

~

.

" . oxy-

j

•

_.

740·742·3411
4121111·
-L.;....___;;_..;.,;;_
_______..,:1,:MO::;.,C;,.I

•

:=:;;IA;:::C=II=I:::;M;D=WI=B:;;C;::LI=II=C=.:::;

•

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.

.

$ 00

2~1

BBQ Sauce

.,

.2 /$1 00

15.250Z.

30

NORIHERII

.

S.R. ) 248 one mile lhru
Chedtl. 'first drive on right

'

·'

White lath ftssue

going up Chelle\' Hill. Look
kids'

clolhet, baby atulr; men's,

4ROl,l

women'a clolhel, glaaiWIII'e,
dec:onllivllltems. Great Slut!.

•

79

4

~

.

Potato ·

WICKS
HAULI.NG

•Room Additloni

C.hips

:~:;t~::le:lumbhig
",Rooftng
·
otntartor a. Exterior ·
,~~t~:ncrete work

•
'•

·!FREE-ESTIMATES)
v.c. YOUNG 10

(740) !185-4180 .

Joe N. ·sayre

FrH Estimates

(614) 992·3838 I
12/'IM!n

THE

Tuppers Plains

Rn-•ble Rlltea

JOI£8

ftlll IIRIICI
•~=-~

• ~::::v
0

Open 24 Hra. A Oey
7 Day• A Week
Hot Breakfast
Bl•cult Sandwich,

20 Vrs .. Exp. • lns.-Owner: Ronnie Jones

Limestone,
Gravel; Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

IliA

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Ill!!:

Stop In The Store

:

:

W.L

I

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-1'·740•949·2015

'
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~nr netlll•

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740-992-3987

FrN Estimates
Owner: John Dean

12~••·:c;::.~;~

..

Call

n,

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•
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DDIGII
Computer Graphics
Designs .
Alllandacaplng -6
Lawn Service•
•Commarcl1l
•Relldentlel
awn.r, Mickie Holl&lt;!fl
Che1t1r, Ohio
740-185-4422 -

.'

'·

HelpWanted
- STARSEARCH ..

I

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

L. HOLLON

CLASSIFIEDSI

.TRUCKING .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel .
Dirt· Sand
'

005

Peraonela

ADOPTIO,.: Loving a child with

all of our hearts, providing_ a safe
and hal(y _home, close e11tended
family. fun, education, and all the
best life has to offer is our most
heartlett wish. Help with expens·
es. Please call DIBne &amp; Jim ,
i (800) 903-9955:
~~=:::::=:-:-::::::::-:::::--:-

. . 985-4422

·-

Chester, Ohio

J1

mr

t t ,._{:

.,,,,.Ji

Singers, Bands. Songwriters. E\~41

All Styles lAgos. Major Roc11rcl·•1;

Label E»eect's. Seeklrig New Ai!.f" ~
tlsts, Coming To Huntington ,

9f1.1·.;..

..

427-5490, 901-427-9514.
.• •
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.
A Part Time Position Is Available ~
For A Licensed Professio·nal'l'o..,•
Provide Group Therapy On A
Contract Basis. Experience 9e·
qulred In Group Work, Exp•l·
anca Prata.rred In Chemical l!e·
pendency And /Or onenders
Groups. Please Send Resurre~ ,, ,
To : Per1onnel, P.O. Box 454 , Gal:
llpolls, Ohio _.5631 Before JUne
10, 1~ .
.,. t·,. ,
• •

APari·Time, Contract Posllioo 1!;- •-

I Available to Facilitate A won(•. .•'
LONELY? CALL TONIGHT! 1- en's Support Group, And To Pro·

to0·370.A401 EXT. 2737, 12.111 vide Educa!lon To Ar.ea Hjgh .
PER lltN. MUST BE 11 VAS. School Students. Tho Ideal Call:•'
SERV-U 11M45-M:M.
dldate Witt Have ExperlenOjl
Working With Women In Crlsl,$, 1
Be Supportive, And Be Comfol1· ·•
Giveaway
40
able With Public Speaking. Intel; · •
1 Year Old Blick Labrador Long tstod Applicants May Apply iJ:~'..•·-

OPENING APRIL I

Oliio River
Campgrounds and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
New &amp; used ltema. We
Buy - Sell - Trade: Toole,
llahlng equip., TV's,
CB'a,' ater~i - little bll
of everything. Located
on Ohio River Camp·
grounds, Sl. Rl. 124,
Recine, Ohio.
740-949-1012

Haired Mixed, GenUa. Good With
Kids, Needs Room To. Run, Water
Bowl Chain Included. 740· 446·

Personnel, P.O. Box 454, Gall•po·
lis, OhiO 45631 .
.• ·; •

AWell Established And GroliJirtti'•:
1240.
Company t&amp; Seeking Heao/y!('
2 ·6 Week Old Calico Kittens, Equipment Mechanics. Must
740--141·1707 Cal After 4:00P.M. Have A COL. Willing To W'll'k
Overtime, Ability To Troubleshoot.
8 Week Old Ktnons. Partially Lit· Diagnose And Repa ir HeiN)f' ..
1erTralned, 7~9935.

Equipment . Good Communi,;,; • ,

Blonde Labrador Mi.la Puppy,
Free To Good Homol 740·446·

lions And Written Skills, Abnlt)/' .,

9290.

To Keep Accurate Records N'IU1. 1
Reports. Must Have Own TOols

Howard L.Writeael

Free 9 Week Mixed Bread Black

locate. Excellent Benefit Pactoage-,

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Pari Black Lab And Golden Retriever To Good Home, 740·446·

Puppies, Wormed, 740-446-0577.
7123.

.

.

Pasture And Hay, Must Taka

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
· FREE ESTIMATES

Botn, 740-441Hl924 .

Pup.ples Mixed Breed, 740·446·

388·9147.

160

5/26/tfn

I

Lost and Found

Lost: Brown Dachshund With
White Patch Or Cheat &amp; Broken

Heating &amp; Cooling

·Lost: female Cocker spaniel,
blonde , hair ,recently cut, Rio
Grande" University vicinity, call

"Done r ig~llh e nrsl time."
"Pr iced right alllhe time ."

Lost: two Labrador retrievalS,
COrnlloliow Rd., Rutland vicinity, It

or more weekly clipping coupons

at home. Free recorded lnforrM·
liOn. 1· 800 .466 9222 11&lt;1. 6865.

'":' ~ ,

Cooking ,&amp; Cleaning For Etdp~, 1 :

Home For A PrOiesslonal Gldfl'l·' •'
our Portrait Party, Call 800-426·

8363.

740-992·3618.

found please call740-742-2223.

· SA LES
· SERVI CES
·I NS TAL LATI O N
DON NITZ

70

Yard Sale .

.. ._

ECHOYASC:ULAR
TECHNOLOGIST

_. I', I

.• .. ,,

Jackson General Hospllal, R'~ .
ley, wv. has a luii·Ume openiHgi' '"•
for a Radiological or UltrasQUnp_.tr'
Tech with Previous Vascular a p~ , ,
Echo experience {NO CAtt.:, . •·
Phone 30&lt;t-372·2731 ext. 264 or
reply to : Personnel Dire~~
Jackson General Hospital , "'PO ,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Box 720, Ripley. WV 252~1 1.'• •
t•l J' l, ,•
27th, 26th, 29th, AI 38 SmJthOrs. EOE.
Furnllure. Appliances. Dolls, Ell. VENDING rio. ·lluot Soill 1 ' · •
Clothos &amp; Many Olhor ftemst
By 815 20 LoceiiOns. $8K. $2ol!fH) ·•;
-t/Mo. Income. 10001.. Finane\.WI. it
5128th. 29th, 30th, 6:00 A.M.Till Good
Cradtt. 800·380·2831 'tilt." .
7:00 P.M. 2741 Neighborhood 4114.
Road.
E11perlenced Aulo Mectlardc,
AlJ. Yllnl Soles llull
Atleast 5 Years E»eperience, otfhl.':l ·t
J1t Paid tn AIMllco.
tact: Eon Between 9:00 A.M. ~OQ.. , :,
QfN)IJNE: 2:00p.m.
P.M. 740-388·9518.
,. ' 11 ., •
tho dly tilt ld
II to run. Sundoy
Full lima bookkeeper, 740·843·

1-740-742-2842

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

ldl-. 2:00p.m.

F!idrf.llanlioY tclltJan

7/22/tln

COUNTRY CANDlE
SHOP AND MORE

. many new acenta
•Bring In your ode! a &amp; .
tndl 1nd we'll 1'11111
them ·.
•New spring pottery

5211 .

.. ..

• 10:110 o.m. Sotunlly.
May 26th-? Rt. 7 South &amp;·Miles
BelOw GallipoliS.

Furniture Delivery, Fuii·Ume. ,161·•.: · !
mediate Opening. Apply Llles_tY,r, •
Furniture, 856 Third Ave. Galilpb&lt;·1' ..
lis, Oh. No Phone calls please! ,.J,, .-; .·!

Thura, Frl, Sat, Tools, Antiques,
Metal Fireplace Set. Bed&amp;,
Clothes, Toys , Crafts , Wood
Trash Box, Truck Mal. House
Wares, Knick Knacks, Battery

Nefl!ded Energetic, Kind And ,

Riding Toys, Etc, 1914 State Ro·
ute 141, Gollpolls, OhiO.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

-come try one ol our

J&amp;LSIDING 6
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • Soffit
• fjiKio • Seamless
Gun.r • Roofing

Busy dental olllce seeking enlfly,slastlc Individual to fill a de'Dtdl
assistant position. Will train,Jti ...\:
terested persons send resume to~, ~
P.O. Box 704 , Pomeroy, 011ie •·

=COI::iplo=,7~40-44641l.:...;,.:...;,::S~1._ _....._, :
Tall, Petrie VICinity, Call 740-379· iarn $104 -$200 Plus Free Ptr~ ... .
2119.
tures Invite Your Friends To YOur .

DON'S

Set.1o-t
SL RL 124, .
MlnaraVIIIe, OH

EEO Employer. Send ResumtT-alvA. "t
CLA 434. clo Gallipolis Daily Trl~~ " i
une. 825 Third Avenue, Gampo~"~
lis, OH 45631 .
..;11~ :;. ;

9870. 740--146-33911.
4!1769.
r • ._ ·
To Good Home: 4 Puppies. Found C..h For Coupone. up to $2od" .- ~
Atong Road , Cannot Keep, 7o40·

949-2168

Open n-.-Frl. 11).6
Cloud Spn. &amp; Mon.

•

And Possibly Be Willing ro Jj~

Dedicated STNA's (Pa(I·TI&lt;ttrJ

Interested In Caring For Peqple _,,. .
In Our Speclallzed Alheimers Urm ·.
Day ~nd Evening Shins. Must! fM:J ,;,
Sensitive To The Needs or Th~ . , I
Elderly And Those With Alzheini'· ,.
ers And Dementia . Please APP!'t
In Person At Scenic Hills Nur- 2 ':
Center, 311 Buckrldge Ad .. ~kt ·t

""'·Oil 45614.

. :. .

Needed: Experienced Mat\lr8 , .. : ,
Pianist AI Growing Church' lrf
Galllpoli&amp;, Must Be Availattrt· ·... ·
Sunday Mornings &amp; EveniOQ,_, ., t ·
Compensalkm Provided. Send Interest LeHer I Qualilicauons To:

'

P.O. Box 345, Gallipolis .. OH

45631 .

I

• Raplac-nt Wi!ldows
• 5lotionary Docks

• Blown Insulation
• Goroges • Decks
z.t II 24 Pale ~ilding
starling ot $5995
740-9112-2772

SoturdiV. May 30, 11-5. St. Rt. ~.

ono mile tnru Choator, llrat drlvo

on right going up Cheater hill.

Look ror liglll. Klda outlldt 1011.
kids clolttas, baby stun, men and
womon'o ctolhea, gliiiWira. dec·
oratiYI ttoms. GrootiiUfll
Progressive Long ·Term Cart
Ftclllty Specializing In Alzholm·
Auction
80
ei"J Care , As Well AI Skllltd
and Flu ...rUt
And Rthob SorviCOI HOI Ro·
~~~~~
w1rdinQ: OutQolng
'Poalllona
· For
Auction ;s(l
,' Friendly,
AndOpen
Dodiqotod
limo ouctlonltr,
RN'1 (f'on·Tifnl). PltiM ~ly In
auction
ltrvlct.
Ptr~on At Sctnlc Huts Nursing
166,0hlo a Wool Vlrglnlo. 304· Contor, 311 euckriCIQt Rd., Bid·
773-5185 Or 304·173-S..7.
Will. OH 45814.
Scenic Hill• Nurotng Ctntor Is
10 . Wanted t1 Buy
Now Acctptlng Appllcetlono for
AbiOiutt Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll· Dlroctor Ot Stoll Dtvtlopment.
ver And Gold Colna, Proof..la, Temporory Futi-Tirnt l'oeklln For
·Dllmondo, Antlq.. - r y . Gold Tho Monlha Of July Through DtRingo. Pro-1930 U.S. Curroncy, c:tmbtr. Coottltcotion: LPN. Pleaot
Sterllna, Etc. lloqultlllonl Jtwtlly Apply In Poroon At SceniC, Hllll
• M.U . Coin Shop, 151 Second N.nlng cen. M·F Bt_, 8:30 •
AIIOnue, Go._,..., 7-*2142.
..:30.•
-- -

1

I

•.

110

Cheater

~

•Excavating

I

·.

Ucensecl &amp; Insured

~~~~u~::=::~h

ft 7In4 OrdtraAcctpttd
L.___0-_36
_7. :-r.v,: :.838=-:.: ;'" : ·;~·
f.'

~ftft~ft@ft~~~~~.

•B•••••ntl

t

. Commercial S. Realdentlal

.~ 27 v.ra. axp.
Phone

•Septic Syst11111

..

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

.ji!IJ Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

BICKIOiu•
lOIII SIRIICI

·I

m

Hot &amp; Cold

SERVICE S

COMPETrTION

985-4473

FOOD MfiRT

·Trim

EMPLOYMENT

St. Rt. 248

740-667-6092

CHESHIRE

a o

Wanted To Buy :
Homes. 740·446·0175,
5965.

BlUM LUMBER

Rentals

Basebitll-FootbaiiBasketbaii-Siar TrackVideo Games &amp;

Buick Pontiac. 1900

Call for Quote TQday

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE .
ESTIMATEES

· Now has Beanie
Babies- Still

.614-742·2138

GAWPous, OHIO 46831

CARD·Box

1 1/2 mile south of

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

Jl 'S

Win A Bankroll
· This Week
Powell's Super
v-.lue

Free·cash!
I

•

Um11to111 Hauling
House 6 Trailer Sltll
Lind Clearing 6
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utllitl11
Estimates

';::::;:::;:;:;:=::;~·-;:::====;-:::1:-=~
YOUNG'S
!Limestone~~~C~tret~~ft~~
CARPENTER SEVICE
Low Ratti)
ft
COIIftDC!IOI ~

Reg. $2.79 Size

' YARD SALE -

EXCAVATING CO.

SAYRE
:,TRUCKING
Hauling, ~xcavettng
· &amp; Trenching
Umeito.ne 6 Gravel
Septic Syatame
Trailer &amp; House SHea

-(all 614•843•5426

KE SE·LL'S

51111rno.pd

HOWARD

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me •
do it for.you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
leave message.
After6 p.m.

• Vinyl Siding • Garages

;om'::.~hlo

'

Pllllftll

LONG'S
CONSTROaiOrt

.s· 39

29c

LIIDI'I

POMEROYI Ott

• New Homes • Pole Buildin'g s
• Room Additions

Chapter 13

4/30/98 1 mo. pd.

614-992-5479

c

Blfan Morrison
(740) 985-3948

Attorney AT Law
.
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio

.

113 w. 2ND ST.

F,. Ealtmalft
No Job Too Small

William Safranek,

.JEFf.· WARNER INSURANCE

·HUNT'S

Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commarclal end
Realdantlal

Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

· • ·• 360° Communications{

· Over 20 yesrtJ expsrlence.
Free 'Estimates ·

Chicken Noodle or
To111ato Soup .

14.25-

9:00.12:00 s.tilil&lt;day

Chapter 7
Fo~ lnform~ion

•

CAMPBELl'S

1U5~

9:oo.4~=~ttaya

...

~Bobcat

KRUPTCY

CELLULAR PHONES
'-....

ASST. VII.
1101.

~

~·
AIIVANCID DIWIIAIK IYITI!III. INC.

ASST. VU.·33·3t 01~

Large Eggs_

..

·' .' Septic &amp; Clatern Tanka
· Water line- 100' thf'\1 1000' Rolla ·
Sewer Pipe. 3" thru 8", 011 Pipe &amp; Regulltora

....
i.iii.UJ Z2

P/8 Contradors, Inc.

3/1

7401985-38;3~

·House
Coffee·

·GRADE A

• House washed
~ Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $100
• Hedges trimmed • Gutters cleaned
Call' now fori
lawn care program.

s~!:~ PWII!~pe~·~~n~.~~~!,83
;

{740) 66N904

SPECIALS

State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

.
.
4" thru 48" pl11tlc culvert lri stock
Full line ~f water ~'~rage tanka .- "

Brush Removal,
lnltlll New· Bed•
No job too amall.
Mon.-s.t.

MAINftiUCI

A

o.tdoor Pewar Elflllptle•t A•stdatlan: Certified 2 Cjlt

C·

Flowers,

F,..EatlmatH

' •Mowers •Chain siwa •Waadellera •Aulhorlzld
'
&lt;.
·
Dealer For: .
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McColloulifl
•Echo •Ryobi•Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear /
·
AND OTHERS!
·
'..LI.
·~'
ltfn• &amp; Stnitltll: M11ftr Strvke T-lan .;1

..

Mowing, Mulching,
Pruning
Clean and Install Gutter

·ao An)'W!N,..

•

Parts and Service//

$ 49

·.tandscaplne

992·5513

614) 949·2804

.

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

Free Estimates

9(4/TFN

_....

.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

~

·(~S$!. YARIEnES)
5.75 oz.

e ·-· .Ielk·•••••••••
. Gl~ $1ft·.
Sk1m

flew Construction &amp; Remodeling

Welding Supplies • Steel Sales ·.
Stick • Tig ·Aluminum Wttldlng ·~

.I
I

Maxwell

For uses on Pole Barns, Garages,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Conltructlon
Custom Engineering

.

Gravel, Sand,
Umeatone, Dl.rt, Top
Soli, Anything you
need to haul.
No job too small,
Some too big.
740-949 4802
740-949-4903

J

$1.25 per running foot ($39.40 per sq.)
. 3' Wide x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths

R~

PICKENS
HAULING

SUISI'I' ROME
COIS,.RUC,.IOI

RUIA,.OR
REPAIR-._
.

:Agricultural • Industrial • Automotlv'
· •Re-cores • New Radiators
Accet Regulator .Repair

La.ys .
Potato Chips

15 North Main Strati
Rutlond, Ohio 45775 Dill: featuring
Amish
Plant11,
G~
ChHHI,Soft
Trees&amp;
s,rvelce .
Shrubs
Cream
Open: .Mon.-Fri. t-1
-(740) 742-7405
Sat.
Sun. 12-4

Sm~h

ern A....nue, Gallpolis.

9" Rib Pattern

·open Dally 9·5

4118/1 mo.

BUILDERS, INC.

· Garages • Replacement Windows

NR

At. 7

Clean Late Model
Trucks. 1990 M odeta

IOOftll MD IIDIII

Sunday 12·5

.,

&amp; Mt. . Dew
Products

Panalaa, Cabbage,
Broccoli, Ceullft-,
Hanging Baskets,
Phlox, Azllell,
Shrubs, Spruce Tress ·

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

"Bullll Your Dream" ·

&gt;

fomeroy, Ohio 45769

2 ss

BORDEN

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

•GRASS SEED

•

•
•

'
''

.8 PK. • 2~ OZ.

Vegeta.bles

'

99

Mt. Dew or
Dr• Pepper

STOKELY'S ASST. VUIEIIES

toyS,

Plumbing

992-6576.

warn PIIITID lftll.

HU8BIRDS
GREENHOUSE

•FERTILIZER
·~CD

Pepsi,
Diet .P~psi,

lArry Wrtaht

forligns.
Kids' DUtllde

M8J

~ooflng

·.

Remodeling

(No Sunday

toocss.

9-5

(:ustom Homes

614·992·7643

Society Scrapbook

.

-,

FREE ESTIMATES

I

SATURDAY, MAY

. hOusehold , Osby Martin,

211ters -

.Community
:Calendar

.

Antiques &amp; clean u'ed

wi ll buy one place or

291 SECOND St.

Question : I have a mole that has dermatologist soon so thai a correct
been on my arm for many years. diagnosis can be:made.
Now, I have many lillie new ones
For the rest of my reader.s, the
TURNS 100Susie
lhal
are
just
hanging
on
by
a
thread.
question
is when should a mole or
Kerwin of · Reedavllfe will
other skin growth prompt a visit to
obeerve her 100111 bjrthday on What can I do for them?
Answer:
To
a
physician
the
term
the doctor.
ll8y 21. A family celebration will
"mole"
means
a
specific
type
of
pigSince we all have moles on our
falle place on Sunday, May 31, at
l]lented
skin
growth.
More
properly
skin,
this can .sometimes be a diffi.
the Eden U. El • Church on Rouie
1241rom 2 to 4 p.m. Family and call~d a nevus, this £rowlh .may be ·cull decision.
Here are some tips to help identi·
friends ere Invited to join In the raised above the surface of the surrounding skin.
fy potential skin cancers, the scariest
celebration.
·
A mole may be preSent at birth, type of skin lesion :
but most develop with the passing
• A skin lesion that has recently
years.
changed in appearance (not comIn fact, the majority of us ulli- pared to last year but compared to
mately develop at least 25 of them. last month);
Moles arc usually less than 114 inch
. One thai has an irregular border; .
.
· across and have a darker pigmenta· · - One thai have changed in color,
.WEPNESDAY
tion than the surrounding skin.
particularly gouen darker;
CHESTER Shade River
In addition to the ''raised rriole" I
·- One where the color fades into
Lodge, F&amp;AM. will meet on mentioned earlier, they may be Oat, the .surrounding skin instead of ha\1·
Wednesday evening at the lodge or even hanging from a stalk.
ing a distict border; or
building,
with
IWO
fellow
crafts.
They may be smooth, rough or
- One thai has become pai'nful or
.,
even have hair growing froni them. started.itching .
THURSDAY
The junction between the mole and
May is Melanoma/Skin Cancer
RACINE - Racine July 4 Plan- the surrounding skin, both its change . Detection and Prevention Month.
ning _Commiuee meeting Thursday, in texture and color, is quite distinct Therefore, I suggesnhat in May you
6:36· p.m. at the fire department
In my practice, I' ve notice that recruit the l)elp of a spouse or very
annex to make plans for the upcom- most non-physicians use the term good friend and examine every inch
ing' celebration. Ail individuals. mole to deScribe any type of clearly of your skin. including your back,
. ~1nesses and organizations wanti- defined area of different appearing between your toes and other areas
ris-to assist are welcome to auend.
skin.
where "the sun don't shine."
Therefore. I'm concerned thai
Any "mole" that fits one or more
. PQMEROY-AAandAI-Anon, your "mole" may actually be some- of these criteria should be brought to
Thunday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart thing quite different, There are a the allenli.on of your doctor.
He or she may recommend that
Ca.!fM&gt;lic Church, Mulberry Ave., number 'lf "non-mole" skin growths
that can look like an inl)ocenl mole the entire. growth be removed if it is
Pomeroy:
lo an untrained eye.
small, or that a part of it be excised
The most serious of these, of so that it can. be studied under the
roMEROY
Meigs Local
Board of Education, regular meet- course, is cancer. ·One million new microscope.
Fortunately; · your moles · may
ins, .Thursday, 7 p.m. at district's. skin cancers are diagnosed each
ceniral office.
·
·
year, so they are quite common. actually lx; moles. In thai case, you
Many of these ·were first .thoughtlo can just leave them alone.
·
Your doctor, however, will prob.•PGMEROY - Meigs County be a mole.
Democratic Executive Commillee
Early detection and ·removal of · ably suggest removing them anyway
mdting Thursd~y. 7 p.m. at Carpen- skin cancer almost always produces if they are o~er 112 inch ip size, are
ters Hall for an ••rganizational meet- a cure. This is true even for the most frequently irritated by clothing or
mg.
1 serious form of sjdn cancer, activities, or if you find them cos·
melanoma.
·
metically ojectionable.
··
So what can you do for · your
·
:reMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Commiuee meeting "moles?'' The short, answer, in your
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. in the County case, is to see your family doctor or
.
.
Coun Courtroom. Ail newly elected
"Fam!ly ~edlcine" is a weekly
con\miuec persons should' plan to
column. To submit questions,
at!Cild. for swearing-in.
.
·,yrite to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
'
Named to dean's lht
U~tlverslty College or OstcopatiJic
.POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Paul Epperson of Pomeroy was Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Jleta picnic Thursday, 6:30 p.m. ar - named to lhc dean's list at DcVry lnsti- AtiJens, Ohio 45701.
lhe jlomc of Joan Corder. Drinks and tutc ofTcchnology in Columbus for lhc
·tab,!civarc will be furnished.· Mcm- 1997-1998 school year. bcr.t are lo bring covered dish and
He is a student in the Ekx:tronil:s
lawn chairs.
·
Engineering Technology program. Par.
.
tidi*es in pl1lp'llll'l
•
ROCK SPRINGS - Tqwn and
Gene Lyons of lhc Meigs County
Couqlry Expo 1998 commiuec . Emergency Services dcpwtment n.'L-cntmceling, 7 p;m. al the secretary's ly completed a week-long ClllCIJlcrk:y
ofli~~ on the Rocksprings Fair- medical dispatch instructor course at
·gi'OIIIIds. All persons interested in Hocking College in Nelsonville..
the l!xpo arc urged to aucnd. .
All'red UMW
Nina RobinsOn led the program.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers "BrwjJ's Childrtn." when Alfred UMW
Plain$ Veterans of Foreign Wars met at the home of Aorcncc Ann
Po:tt 9053 will meet ThurMiay, ?JO' SJII.'rk:errcccnlly. The business nlCI.'tp.m. Name drawing will he held.
ing opened with pmycr ·by Pastor
•··
.·
• . .
Sharon ~- and wckome by
REEDSVILLE - . Riverview.· · President Nellie Parker. Sarah. Caldwell
Gaf4cri Club, II p.m. at the hqme .of and Mrs.~ !Cponcd oit the UM:W
Janct .Connolly. Gladys Thpmas and spring n;trea~ ht:ld at The Plain.~ .. ThciHusband/Father
Frances Reed will lead program.
ma Henderson, Mrs. Caldl"CII and Mrs.
Doddel'l!r, Hobart M.
P:dcr rcpiX1Cd on their visit to Chester
l/l0/2S-11/17195
POMEROY - Caring and Shar- UMW; wJ.m, Sarah Holman gave a
SK
2/C US Navy
ing Sllpport Group, I p.m., Meigs rqnJ on her mis.•ions journey with a
Muliipurposc Senior Center. The group lo wurk a1 a clinic in Honduras.
We bold you Ill qur fhoughll
' topi~ will be cancer.
Spencer ~ed sandwic~. pickles,
and meiiiOI'tel rorever.
BugleS, and cake during the social hour
FRIDAY
lo those mentioned and to Elcaoor
. LONG BOTIOM - Builders Boyles. Charlotte Van Meter. Martha
• Wife: Beulah, Daughters and
Quartet will sing at the Mt. Olive Poole, and a guest Santh Massar. Pas.
Families
CDI1)inunity Church, Long Bouom, tor·Hausman gave grace.
Friday, 7 p.m. Pastor Lawrence
The next meeting will be held
Busll invites the public to allend.
on June 16. Past&lt;r Hausman will ~
as the.,.-ogmm leader and Van Meter as

.- l

Rull Moore owner,

2526.

24PK.

Associate Prokssor
of Family Medicine·

l

Antk\u... top prlcel
lno Anllquos, Ponntr&lt;"'.

.·''

Coca Cola
Products

John C. Wolf, D.O.

,,

.....

....----------....,~-....---,· •: •·

tlmi/p
edioine

~rr 'N' CARLYLE~ by

1998 :;:

•

�•,

Page 10 • The-Dally Sentinel

.,•

Wednesday, May 27, 1998

May.21, 1998
AlLEY OOP . . - ....

~tdneeday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11 ·•

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
ALDER
110

HelpWanted

320 Mobile Homes·
for Sale

420 MobiiB.Homas
for Rent

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

14 X70 3BR. $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 permo Free air &amp; froe lllllrl·
lng. 1-888-928-3428

2 &amp; 3 bedroom. mobile homes
S260·S300, uwer, water and
lnlsh lncludld. 740-992·2167

AI real estate advertising in
this newspaper is sub}ect to
the Federal F$ir Housing Act
or 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise "any preference.
limitation or discrimination
based on race, cotor, religion,

14x70 3br $999 down. $198 per
mo. lree air lllllrtlng. 1-800-69t8m

2 bedroom all electric trallll In
Middleport. $300 per monlh pius
deposll. 740-992·3194.

"COOL DOWHI"
Central Atr Cond!tlomng. Free Es·
hmatest II You Don't Cal! Us , We
Balh Losol 740-446·6306. 1 - 80~·
29HJ098

sex familial status or national

Huge 28x80 38R, 1 (12 balh .
SlarUng al ONLY $39.999 Many
opllons available. 1·888-928·

Now Hiring: Will Slaff, Apply In ,
Paraon At Mogle's, 39 Court l
Slteol. Gallipolis.
.'

.

Tochnlcol T)'plol - A CommuniiY
Monral Health Agtncy Serving A

Thrtt County Area Is Seeklng

'

Candidates For The Posllion Of
Fuii·Timo Technical Typist Muol
Havo Tho Ablllly To l'IPe 80
wpm Appllcanl Musl Hovo Tho
AbiiiiY To •Tranocrlbe From
Recorded, Handwflllon And Draft
Malerlalo. Ouoilfled Appllcanl
Must Also Poasasa Strong Word
Procooolng Skills In WordPorlecl
5.1, 6.0 And MlcrosoU Word .
Send Resume• To. Manager Of
Human Resources, Woodland
Centers. 3086 Slate Route 1eo,
Galllpoil!• Ohio 45631 EOE /AA
Ernpla\'er.
Yoconcy: Cuotodlon HS Diploma /GED. Cuslodlal, HousekeepIng, Maintenance Experience 1
Ablllly. Contoct: Gallla -Jackson
-VInlon JVSD 740·245·5334 EXI.
201 By !5127/98. EEO.
.WILDLIFE JOBS TO $21.10 MR.
Inc. Benefits. Game Wardens ,
Security, Ma~ntenaee, Park Rang·
eta No Elllp. Needed. For App.
And Exam Info Call 1·800·813·
3!SS5. EXI. 8475. 8 A M. • 9 P.M .. 1
Doyo fda, Inc

180 Wanted To Do

origin or any wnention to
make any such preference.
limitation or discrimination. •
This newspaper wtll not
knowmgly accept
advertiSements tor real estate
which IS in vlolatron of the
law Our readers are hereby
rnformed that all dwellings
adverttsed '" this newspaPf:!r
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

310 Homes for Sale
94 acres with two story three
t&gt;e....,m hOme, 1 &amp; 112 balha, full
basement, asking $135,000, 740843-5453.

Convenient Racine l~alion, out
ANY ODD JOBS
of h~h waler, 3BR, ona balh, plenShrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
lng, tlower beds, landscaping, ly Slorage, reduced $37,950. 740.
sidewalk
edging ,
mowing,
949-3228.
etc .. Free Estimates. Call Bill ·
Double wide. 3br, 2 bath, only
304-675-7112
$1 ,325. down. $205 per month.
1·600-691-6777
•
Child care prov1ded, next to Mid·
dleport park, reasonable rates,
For Sale By Ownar: Bulavllle Pike,
cal740-992-6926
Brk:k, Monon Building. 3.6 Acres;
35 Ferguson Diesel, 740-448·
Oapandable Lady Will Do House4286,
cleenlng. 304-675-8738.
OOn's Lawn Care, Free Estimates,
Reasonable Rates, 304·674·
0672

Oon't throw your hard earned
money away? Rooftng, painting,
carpentry, tawnmowlng, etc Top
quality, free est1mates Russ
ThJrnar, 740-992·9049.
Expertenced carpenter will do remodeling, decks, vinyl siding,
plumbing. Free esllmates. Call
Jim Shull. 304-675-1272 References upon request

/

GOV'T PORECLOSED Homes
From Pennies On $1 Delinquent
Tax. Repo's, REO's. Your Area.
Toll Free (1) 800·218·9000 Exl
H-2814 For Currenlllsllngs.
House for Sai,e 5 miles put of
GaiiNpohs, Close lo Elks Farm. 3
BedrOom Home. 740-446-3406
Middleport. 3 bedrooms, 2 ba1hs,
many extras. must see to appreciate, please call 740-992·2019
aner6pm.

Divorce Forces Salaa·Take over
payments, 2br, 2 bath, ttnanclng
available. 304-755-5~.

3426.
Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bldrooms. SiarUng al $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 740·G859621 .
LIMITED OFFER
1996 Doublewldt 3br. 2 b&amp;lhs.
$1 ,699/down $259/mo: Only at
Oakwood Homes Nitro, WV 304·
75!&gt;-5885.
NEW 3 BEDROOM
($18,995)
OAKWOOD HOMES Barboursville 304-736·3409
Make 2 Payments Move In No
Payments After 4 Years, 1·800·

aaa-&amp;862
CREPO)
Sal up on lot. BaSI Offer. 80Q-3836862
Monarch, 12x60, remodeled, located on rented lot. can slay or
be rnavod. 304-882-3435
Moving Must Sell: 1965 Valiant
14x65 Asking $2,500 740·367·
0508
Moving · Priced to sell 14x80
Holly Park, many extras. 304·
675-2359
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
Include&amp; 8 mon1hs FREE lot rant.
Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187.08 per
manlh wllh $1075 down Crill 1800-837·3238.
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 Iotti
Still under warranty, ownar fi ·
nancing available
304·755·
1191.
New Doublewlde 3BR, 2 bath
$1,325 Down &amp; $205 permo t-

888-928-3428.

Furniture repair, refinish and res·
toration, also custom orders OhiO
Valley Reflnishmg Shop, Latry
PhiUps, 740-992-11576.

House tor sale in New Haven,
WV, 3 bedrooms. $35.000. 740.
992-5841

Older mobile homa In RUIIand. our
ot high water, all utilities, two lots,
$8000. 740-742-2070.

'Gallipolis, Point Pleasant Area·
Palnllng, Odd Jobs, Loghl Construction, 304--675·1978, Or 740·
4-46-8897.

126 Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy, 3
bedroom home. newer roof, newer
furnace &amp; 1'101 water tank, new
paint outside, •handy man special". $10,000 firm, 614-237-1162

Single Poront Program. Special
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes. P1ymenta •• low 11
$110 C&amp;ll now 304-755-5885.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your lOgs to the mill just call
304-675· 1957.
K&amp;S Remodeling Paonllnt. RoofIng, Call 740·446·6964, 304·675-

6021 .
Malher Of 4 Will Babysll In My
Home In Gallipolis, References.
740-441-o244
Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·
su:ance. Bidwell. Ohio 614-3889648, 614-367-7010
Will baby$11 In my home, $10 day
to&lt; one, $15 dliy tor IWO, 740-94924631eM rne ...ge
Will Babysit In 'My Homo Or
Yours On Nlghls &amp; Weekends
Call Me For Services, 740·446·
9787
Will dO alterallon or repairs: plus
window treatments and etc, call
s.nr~y 740-992-3220.
WIII do babyallllng In m~ home.
across trom Mk1dleport park, any
shift 7~992·5073.
Wtll haul junll: or trash away $351
p~kupload 304-1175-5035
Will mow yards, clean out altlca.
garages, basemen1s. Will haul
junk or trash $35 • pick-up load.
304-675-2647.

FINANC IAL

" 210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bus1·
ness with people you know. and
NOT to send money through the
malt until you have investigated
lho oflerong
FREE
CASH
GRANTSI
College. ScholaiShlps.
BulineSS Me&lt;llcal Bills.
N-RCaHToll Free
t-800-218-9000 E&lt;l. G- 2814
VENDING: FO&lt; Sale, H~hly Prof·
ltable And Very Simple Call For
Free Brochure. t -800-821Hl782

230

Professional
Services

Livingston's basement waterproofing, all basement repa~rs
done, free eaumates, lifetime
guarantea. 1Oyrs on job experl·
.... 304-675-2145.

Loaded 28x80, 3br, 2 112 bath
wllh all opllons. only $2.499.
down, $362. per month. Free air &amp;
sklr1.1-118&amp;-e91-6777.
Loveiy Country Home On SR 7
South With A Breathtaking River
View Very Prlvale Salting On 2 11
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes
From Gallipolis 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2
1/2 Baths, Hardwood Floors. 2
Fireplaces, New Heat Pump, New
Kitchen, Many btras. Won't Last
Longll $t10,QOO,.

Call Vlrglma L. Smith Realty At
740-446·6806 Or Call Cara At
740·245-9430 For More lnforma·
liOn.

Middleport, beaullful two story, 3
br, 2 bath, large I r &amp; 1r ' oak
doors &amp; lrim, Smllh's cuslom oak
cabinets. Jenn-alr range, dishwaahlr. detached garage, by appolntrrient, 74Q.992·15243,

I ':---:.:...:....:.:....:._____

New housa 1 1600sq.h 3 bdr Laklnarea.304-773-5177

Older 4bdr, modern centraj heat,
A/C. basement detached garage
on 2.77 acres, on 22nd Slreet 10
Polnl Pleasant $60 ,000. 304738-1618
Remodeled 2 atory, 2 king size
bedrooms, new vlnyt windows. detached 2 car garage, large COrnE!r
lot. lnvlllng nolghoomood, drasllcally reduced, appointment only,
740-992-6737, 740-982-3041
Spring Vallay Area, 4 Bedrooms,
LR, DR. 2 112 Balhs. Largo Famly
Room, Large Kitchen &amp; Break
Nook Recently Updaled. 740-4468212.
Ttlree bedroom, bath and half. In
Middleport, can 740-992-3465 aile&lt; 5:00 or anylime -kanoK.

320 · Mobile Homes
for Sale
12x65 2 bdr, good cond. 304-937·
2929

18x80 3br. 2 balh. $1.325. down,
$205. per mo. Free lfr &amp; skirt 1888-691-!lm
1985 Holly Park 14x65 2 Bedrooms. N.ew Carpet.. CA. 8Jtt0
Stol Bldg . 14 Ft Awn1ng, Park- · $13.500 080. 740-448-1083
After 3

REAL ESTATE

310 Home• for Sale
2 -3 Bedroom Homes And 1 vac-

ant Lot, Rontal Property Good Income. 740-446-7473
•

3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, rrt-tevel
wlfo lonlly room. Clolt to hott&gt;ifll.
550 Joy Orive. 740-448-1251, af·

·~-

3 ·Bodroomt. 1 lolh, LR. FR.
~llcllon, Laundr1 Room Wlm 3
A~r••· Sulavlllo Plkt, 740.441·
(10311.

3 Or 4 Bedroom Ronch 24•~4
Gorgo FR With Fireplace Inter!
Kllcflon Oak Clblnol, Foncld In
Yard /Oock $85,000 740-245·
..... Or l.llwl ..., • .
3br, IIYing roam, TV roam, one
"IMI, foncod bockyord, ouftfdt
ttonlgl. newly
graa1
-lion, low 10'1. 801 Moltman
Circle. Pt. Pteo11n1 304·875·
2733.

-IOd.

Special 18x80 3BR, 2 bath
$ t .325 Down. S205 Mo. Free aor
&amp; free sklrllng. 1·800-691-6777
SPRING SPECIALS

S411Dawn
UFIUdRoloo
11_...,__11
$17,116 on 3BR.
Frwo Oallvwy l Sol...
Only AI

Oofr--

Nitro, WY. 304-TIHIII

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $899/down $189/fi\O
Frto Sol-up &amp; Otllvory. Only 3
Lohl Only al OakWOOd Homos NItro 'W. 304-755-5885.

340 Business and
Buildings ,
Commerctai·Offlce or Retell, 87
Mill St. Middleport. t ,450 Sq Fl
$400 mo (or subdivide to 1,000
sq fl. for $30000 mo.) Corner
. Building (740)-992·6250 Acqul·
sttions (next door).

Properly In Gallipolis, 60x100 Or
50 Ft Fronl 60 Fl. Lenglh, Mini·
mum. 740-441-1504 Aller~Wan1ed: 200 -300 Secluded Acres In Ohio. Wllh All Mineral
Rlghls. And No Qevelopmenl Polonllal Craog Landoleld, 60410
Apache. Washlnglon. Ml 48094.
Phonl 810-766-1439
We Buy Land: 30 ·500 Acret,
Wo Pay Cash. 1·800-213-8385,
AnlhOny land Co

RErHALS

BUYINAPAIL

!'·ZFinoncilng
CIIFinlncol.lnt

1·100-948-5e78
Frao Sol-up a lloMiy
Dlocounl Mdblle Homo Parlt a
Acca10orloo WaJtr Healora, V~
nyl Sklrllng Kilt $299. 9~. An·
chore. Wood Flbtrglofl Slopo,
Roof Coalinga, ooora, WlndoWI,
Plumbing Elactrlcal Suppllto,
Blocking Wood a Wedges And
Morol Call Bonnotl's Mobile
Homo Supply At 1-740-418'9416.

a

a

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furntshed anti unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740992-2218.
2 Bedroom Apt Stove and refrlg
Included. 74 Court St. Gallipolis.
740·441'·2583
2 e&amp;droom upstairs apt. 304675·
2849.
2bdrm. apts , total electric. appliances furnisned, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
A.ppllca11ons available at: VIllage
Green Apls. 149 or call 740-9923711 . EOH.
3 rooms, bath, unfurnished, nice
location, no pets, references &amp;
deposit required. 304-675-1090.

456 112 Second Avenue. Gallipolis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
$425/Mo., $225 Deposll. UIIIIUes
Pald7~129

2 bedroom house, clean, carpet·
eel, stove. no refrlpfator. no In·
lidO poll, dOpOtll required, 740.
882-3090.

3617,

3 BR 12 Ba $300.00 a monfl,
738-7295

304-

I •I BEDROOM HOIIEI FROM
•4.aot Local Gov'l. &amp; Bank
Aopo'a Call1·800·522·2730 X

1708.

'

•

Thr" bidroom houae end two
oodrdom_ 1ra11or In Polntroy, $250
month tach, $50 depotll 740·
fi43-S218.
•

46-lncti big scraen TV wilh free
VCR . Only $10 down delivers to
your door Call Home Products @
1-8811-252-1602
6' Plcmc Tables $8,900; A Frame
Wrth Swinging Bench $169, 1361
Clark Chapel Road. Bidwell, Atter
s·oo 740-389·9443
Beanie Babies For Sale $10 &amp; Up
Sell Only No Trades, 740·446·
9767
.
Solons GS14XL Riding Mower. 14
HP 44 Inch CUI Asking $900, Call
Deytome 740-446·3310, Evenings
740.367-0468
Bolens Aiding Mower, Briggs Mo·
tor, New Battery, N"ew Belts, 740·
245-5964.
Brand New! Great Gift! CO/video
storage unit B-lack and cherry
Never out of box. $125. Holds up
to 940 dlses, also holds tapes
Call 740-992·6636 afler 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not included
Bunk Beds W1th Mattresses Very
Good Candi1oon, $225, 304-6754784 After 5 PM

Computer system with free printer. Only $10 down delivers to
your dOor. Call Home Products 0
1·688·252-1602.

For Lease: Apartment In Gallipolis Overlooks Park. New Ap pliances. Well Kepi, 740-6967174.
Gracious H~ing. 1 aDd 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apar,ments In Middlepari From $249-$373. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Opportunities.
NeWly Remodeled 1 Bedroom,
Furnished /Unfurnished, Down·
stairs, Utlhlles Paid, No Smoking,
No Pols. Perking. 6 Monlh lease
$200 DeposW, $300/Mo. 7~-446Now Ta~ing Appllcallons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townnouse
Aparlments $295/Mo .. 740·4480006.

Dressing table, bassmet, &amp;trotter,
swing, playpen, baby bed. &amp; car
seal. 304-675-4548.
Four Sets of Truck Lilt Forks
$100. IO $125 00 A Se11 740·379·
2655
Free pamcorder-w1th purchase of
52-InCh big screen TV Only $10
down delivers to your door. Call
Home Products @ 1-888-252·
1602
G.E. Washer. $75, G E Eloc1ric
Range $7S; Zenith Console Tv,
like New $200, Stereo Console
$1 OO; Drop Leaf Table &amp; Chairs,
W1th 3 leaves, $400; 740-4460119.

Gold Chain Link Neeklace For
Sale, Valued AI $250 Will Take
One bedroom apartment in Mid· ' Reasonable Offers, 740· 446·
dlepor1, all u1HIIIes paid, $270 per 9787
monlh, $100 deposll. call 740992-7806.
Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repairs.
Prob!ems!1 Need Tuned? Call the
APT AVAILABLE NOW
poano Dr. 74D-446-4525
Twin Rlwrs Tower now accepting
appllcaiiOns tor 1br. HUO subSid· Hot tub, like new, seats four, 740lzed apt . for elderly and handJ· 99:2,5949
capped EOH 304-67!&gt;-6679
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp;. Aebuill tn Stoek.
450
Furnished
Call Ron Evans, 1·100-537-9528.

Rooms

470 Wanted to Rent
Wanlod· To Ronl With Or Wllhoul
Option To Buy 2 -3 Bedroom
House, Fenced Yard, WJO Hook·
Up Garage JOr; Basement OptiOnal In Game County, Have Ref·
erencas, 740-446-9632.

490

For Lease

3800sq.ll building localad an Rl.
35 Henderson, sullable for manufacturing, wood working, storing
or sales, will finish to suit. 304675-6446.

510

Household
Gqods

Appllanct•·
Rocondlllonod
Washers. Dryers. Ranges, Aefrtgrators. 90 Day Guarantee!
French Clly Maylag, 740-4467795.
.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dr¥eu, refrigerators,
ranges. Sll:ag!JS Appliances, 76
Vine Stroel. Call 740-446-7398,

1·800-499-3499.
Like New Living Room Sulfa,
Sola, LOVIIIIt, &amp; Chill, Early
American Accesaortes Are
,._ _ $950, 740-~1141--1•84.

Polly's- &amp; Uold'Fwnllura
WI now hl¥t Army SUIJIIuolll
2101-Avt.
Open 9:30 - 5:00 Mon·Sot
304-675-SOFA (7832)
Uold Furniture Store Bilow Holiday Inn In l&lt;anauga . Beds,
Couchea, Dressers. Tables,
D11k1, Lampo And Morel Open
M -T -W. 14H. 740-448·4782.

530

Only $10 down delivers a complete living room SUite, bedroom
and dinette to. your door-plus a
free 25 · ~nch TV. Call Home Pro·
ducts Ill t -888·252-1602 .
Pomeroy Thrift Shop now buying
large outside 1oya and baby
ite'ms, walkers, toddler car seats,
e1c. Tuesday through Friday. 740992·3725.
Primeitar - ISO oil lnstallalion.

Flrsl month free including tree
HBO Free promoiiOn wtth rebale,
800-263-2840.
Refrigerators-Only $tO dow, de·
livers to your door. Free ml·
crowave. Call Home PrOducts 0
1-688:252-1&amp;02.
Aiding lawn mower with your
choice of a free push mower or
weed eater. Only $1 0 down delivw
ers to your door Call Home Pro-

duets o 1-888-252·1602

Ron Up Desk, Not An Antique
$475. Anllquo Floor Lamp, Olher
ltem!l, 740..367-7C01

1 llldroom Mlllllt Homo for ronl.
Clean, nice yard, $250/Mo
12oo Deposit. 5 mlnulta from
town on NtigfrC&gt;orhood Rd. 2 Rol-

Buy or till. Rlvorlne Anllqull,
11~4 E. Moln SlrMI, on AI. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours . M.T.W. tO:OO
a.m. 10 8.00 p m., Sunday 1:00 10
8 :00 p.m 7~0-992·2526, Ruos

Sears Armadillo chain link fence
380', two gates, p• high, tak~
down. S800. wilt sell halt $400,
740.992-5181
STEREO COMPONENT&amp; (Carven. Hefler, Harman Kardon) 740..
258-6380.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan At Home
Buy Dlrtol and SAVEl
CommerciaiiHome Unlls
From $199.00
Low Monlhly Poymonls
FREE Color Cal&amp; log
CIU Today 1-800-711.0158.
Timber)ack Skldder tn1 , Truck,
Prenllce Loador. 740.258-9301 .
Waahtr &amp; dryer pair With free vacuum cleaner. Only $10 down
dtl~rs to your door Call Home
Prortui:!a 0 1-866-252-1102.
Walerllna Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
S37.00 Per 100: All Brass CornproUion Fltflngs In Sloek
RON EVANS •ENTERPRISES
Jackson, OhiO. 1-i00-537·9528 '·
Wol~hl

Dlstrlbullng Hllch, 1,000
lbl. $150. 740-448-8786

Antiques

Moore owner.

Ludwrg Drum Set With Cases Call
After 4 PM. 740-448-7496

Scooters, Electric' Wheelchairs,
Sales Rental, Trade, New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 740o
446-7283.

420 Mobile H0tne1
for Rent

eronoos Required, 740-446-9342.

40 barn beams, hand hewn, 740843·5211.

Efficiency Near Waimart, 740·
448-2515.

IIOVINGI
2 Btclfoorn - · No Pels, $2501
Mo., II 5o- Dopoell, 740·448-

3 .Piece Living Room Suite . Love
Seat. Couch &amp; Chair: 2 Staetftex·
R'eclmers; Kitchen Table &amp;
Chairs; WhirlpOol Refrigerator, All
In Good Condllionf 740-3792720, AFTER 6 P.M.

Complete living rc:Jom suite with
free matchmg lamps. Only $10
down delivers to your door Call
Home Producls Ill 1-686·252·
1602

410 HouseaforRent
~ &amp; 3 bedroom, In Pomeroy, S300
per month, dlpo1U required, no

113 carat, round diamond solitaire,
si•e 6. paid $800, will lake $550.
Marquis wedding aet 112 carat ,
size 7., paid $1400, will take
$1250 , wedding gown with 'J&amp;II
sl•e 7, paod $700 will lake, $300.
740.367-0286 or 740-949·2461 .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES1 52 'lfestwood Drive
from $279 lo $358. Walk Ia shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Eqwl Housing Opporluri1y

MERCHANDISE

2 Bedroom HouM BUfkhart Lane,
Golllpolla, $340/Mo., WID iotookUp, Deposll Roqulrod, 513-5742538 .

No Poymoolll Until Jo1r 1998

monlh, $250 deposll, 740·992-

11052.

Wanted

UNBELIEVABLE $499 Down S/
W $999 Down 0/W only al (OAK·
WOOD HOMES) Barbourovllle

awno..·

two bedrMm trailer, $300 per

wv.

llarn--lpm.

Anonllon Mobi~ Homo
Areas Largftt Inventory Of Inter·
lherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps,
Air Condilloners, Forn1c11 &amp;
Ports. Hugo Buying Power Moans
Tho LOWIOI lnolalled Prk:t. Elly
Over Tho Phono Bank Flnonclng.
CaH Bannoll'l Mobl~ HOmo HTG
1o CLG 1'*lo-a72-~7.

TWo bedroom trailer In Gallipolis,
$37~ plus dopooll, no pelS, 740446-4313.

. Circle Mt:llel Lowest Aates In
Town, Newly Reinodeled, HBO,
(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
SMALL BUSINESS,,
Cinamax , Showtime &amp; Disney.
Weekly Roles, Or Monlhly Aales,
COUNTRY ESTATE)
63.95 Acres. Approx. 8 Acre Construction Workers Welcome
Lake, Mobile Home Wilh large 740-441·5698, 741l-441-5167.
Add On Den. Gallla Counly.
County Water And Electric Steeping rooms with cooking.
A.lao trailer spac, on river All
$2,100 Per Acre, 7~-389-8678,
hook-ups. can after 2 00 p . m.~
304-na-5651 . Mason
3 Bedroom MatHie Home With
411:8 Porch, Fa1r ConditiOn, Must 460 Space for.Rent
Movol S2,50074D-441-1821
•
Mobile home site available bel ~
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
360 Rssl Eslats
740-385·4387.

948-5678.

ova-.

Brand new two bedrOOm mobile
home. refrigerator and range, curtains, nice Racine rural setting,
1325 month plus deposit, trash,
water and lawn care, no pets, references required. call 740-9492696.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

pets, pay own utitiUea, call 740·
992·2381 Monday lhru Frldoy

ABANDON HOME Make 2 paymenta, auume loan, owner fi.
nanclng
304-755-7191

&lt;2br trailer w/expando, nice yard
In Camp C,onley $3!0 r.1o.
aduiiS 304-675-5091

3867.

1s1Jime B.,Y.,., E·Z Financing
2 or 3 Btclfoom, Around $200 per
month . Call cnldlt line 1·800-

304-738-~

•

a

·

J

Wqdpmpeupr
09 You Need A WGrd Procauor
For Some Buslnels Work Or
1\taybrt A Colege Bound Slud&amp;nl.
If So Call 740-245-5443 For
More Information
~

Block, brick. $ewer pipes , 'illlnd·
ows,. lintels , etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande. OH Call 740-2455121.

Pets for Sale

560

A. Groom ShOp -Pet Groo inlng .
Featuring' Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad
741)-448-0231 .
Adorable Auslralllan Shepherd
Pups Tri-Coklrad, $100 , 740·4~
1032
A.KC Chihuahua Female, 8
Weeks, Will Mature To 5 Pounds,
Shols, Wormed, $200 740·2566162.

720 Trucks for Sale .• • -.

9 K 9

Fair P1g Hampshire 1 112 Year
Old Brood Saw 740-379-2126.

1981 Frelghltlner wJih sleeper; · 1
1984 Timp, reefer Uajler; 1979 '
Kenworth w1th sleeper; 198•
Freightlfner wllh Sleepflr: caD San·
dy 740-992·3220 or leave mes·

• KQ J 9
EMI
• 10 4

AI&lt;C Siberian Female 12 WeekS t
Vet Checked. Shots &amp; Wormed,
S1 oo. 740.379-2383 Kalhy
AKC While German Shepherd
Pups Sf 50, 740-256-6444.

• 10 4
.. . 7 6 52

.

1961 Chevy 4K4, 350. Run&amp; Good '
740.446·2751. •
~
"

Full blooded German shepherd
puppies, two left, male and female,
$75, 742·2735.

1994 Chevy 4K4 shQrl bed, :rt:Js?
aulo. very sharp, $5,200 or 0116~
740·742-7200. 740.742-2675

Sheltle I Year Old, FemaJe With
Papers. $250. 740-441Hl119.

570

Musical
Instruments

67~·5091

1980 ·1990 HONDA CARS FOR
$100 Sel•ed &amp; Sold Locally This
Month Call 1·800-522·2730 Ext
4420.

1~80 -1990 Trucks For $1001'1

FOR SALE: CONSOLE PIANO
Aesponstble Party WanteCJ To
Ma)ce Low Monthly Payments On
Plano. See Locally. Call. 1-800 268-6218
Kimball Artist Console Plano, EK·
cellent Con~l~ton $1,200, 7404411-~51

580

1~78 Thunderbird, one owner,' rebulll engine. $1.000 . 080 304-

Fruits &amp;
VegBiables

For saiEJ red &amp; white -sweet potato plants, call 740-742-2773 or
740-742-2220
Slrawberrles, P1ck Your Own, i;all
Claude Winters, Rio Grande. Ohio
740-245--5121
Strawberries: Taylor's Berry '
Pa1ch. 2864 Kerr Road . 'Bidwell
740.245·9047

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1982 AMC Splrll 6 Cylinder. Aula:
Su11r'oot, Too Many New Parts To
Menllonl Was Asking 5800. Will
Take $650 Firm. Call 740·388·
9325

land Rotary Setter $2.750, Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn 7 40-446 ~
2412 Or 1-800·594·111 f.
450 ~ase Dozer Power Angle &amp;
Tilt Blade· 614 Actuet Hours;
$17,000, Firm 740-245·5439 ,
Evemngs
5.9%flnanang on Used Tractors,
Ford 5030-400 HRS .. Ford 7040
4WO WI Loader-1370 HRS, l&lt;ut&gt;ola M5030 SOHP-800 HAS. Carmichael Farm &amp; Lawn , Inc Call
7~-446-2412 or 1-100-594-11 11

~-

1995 Kawasaki 4 Wheeler 300 ,;:q:
WD, Excellenl Condition, •74~"
446-4996. Aller 5 P.M
tji.•

~-750 Boets &amp; Motol'l ' ,~

• •It:!;:

for Sale

.~ .

14 Fl. V-Bouom Boat New ~": •
vanlzed Tre11er 10 hp, John4~~!
Molor. $1,200 00, Will Separ41!, ·1
740·245·9109
1.... • -

.

.

cury, 16' Starcraft With 100 HP ""'~
Mercury $1 .000 Poeco . 740-4415l"'&lt;

4412.

1

'

.

THE B()RN LOSER

•

1987 Corvette all power, new
brakes &amp; lores. $9.000 304-576-

3086
1989 Sunb~rd, red, lour door, air,
body in good condition, runs
good. $1300. 740-992-6824

1991 Bonneville $3.900.1080
1987 S-10 1ruck $2.500 lOBO
1987 BassTracker Pontoon .
50HP Mercury $4,500 lOBO
304-675-7652
•
t991 Camara AS. Automatic, Air,
Many Extrast Good Condition
$6,QOO Value Sacrl1ce For
$3,900, 740.448--8627
1991. Cutlass Carouon 14x70 3
Bedrooms. Ex.ceHent Condltlon ,
$12'.~00. 740-245-9480

Selzod Cars From $175. Porsches. Cadlllaca, Chavys, BMW's,
Corvefles Also Joops, 4 WD's.
Your Area. Toll Free 1·800-a18·
9000 Ext. A-2814 For Curren1

usrings.

• ,

tion. 740·245-5519

'
:

:-:::::-:::---~--------1'

~,., ~1'10 Y.J)V£..,

OOW~Tflf.~
&amp;Oii'IC.?

1

11'1 Wf. Nlf\lll'\ INNINC.!

·:

1987 Fourwlnns 215 Sundowner ·• •
211/2ft To many eKuas 10 men: :.(t:t;
11on $11,500. 740-387·0594-eve.·~..:C
740.992·6196 days
. 'I

-----~~-----'

I

1994 24 Ft. Pontoon Boat, 23
lncn Floats. No Motor, With Tan·
dem Trailer $2.195 304-882-211\J
Waakands Or 614-279-7056.

•
::
1
r
I

1995 Bayllner 20Ft. Cudd)t 4.3 1
Mr&gt;rcCruiB&amp;r Call 7o(Q-258--6160.. •
71:-99:-:6~M~a.;.ra..;d;.:a:..;..19:.:_:F::I..:W.:.:._IIh:::::;4,&gt;4~; ::
MercCrulser EMC&amp;II8f't Condltloo,· , ~
Call740-258--6110.
" • '
:::-:=-::-:--:-:----.:..·- - 'r
6 HP Evinrude Molor. Good """' •~ )
dlllonl $:tOO. 740..388-8183 -:~_.,..

-

BIG NATE

..:!

Bass boat. 16 ft Bass Tracke; 11~ ~ ~
50hp Mercury motor, Hummi.nO--"~ ..
bird , 10- 4 Fisher Finder, Mlnn~- ..11
kota Trollrng motor. anchors ••2 • ,:
batteries, fully equipped, covet- "' "
Good cond. 304-675·3313 or 740' - •
448-9340
. • I

--:-----::=-------~·
.. •

_,J

Kawasaki STS Jet ski, still under ·,
warranty, thfee seater. 83 horsepower. bought new July of '97, It
three matching Kawasaki skt
vests and trailer all go with It
740-949·2203 or 74o-94iiJ •
2045, will consider 1rade for~ a ~ .
l'i '
i•
:good~~pom~.:.oo.:.n:.:oo.:.a:.:t:.:..___~~·

t

'

Auto Parts &amp;
Accesaorlee

:--:~::--:-:--:-..,.--.,...,,...-:&gt;.
"-

TAAI~ ~IC£,00i: ...

WilD~ Wlloit-41~?

...

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57 Anger

DOWN

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2

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,

3 Oct. 31 ntiCI
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12 Molt

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20 Fender

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21 Van Gogh, for

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22 Dennll ""' -

Animal

23

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24 Furagenua
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25 Colortal

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27 Billy buggy
28 Frantic cry
28 -of Merch

29

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33 Actor Shertl .•

..

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abbr.

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.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ,
ee.brit)' Cipher cryptograms are cre11«1 from quotation• ~ lamoue people, Plfl anc1 presen~
Each ~ In 1M Cipl'l8l' atands lor •nolher Todly's due AI ~s C

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PREVIOUS SOL(JTION: "All Cennis courts look ahve." -

explaining his preference for goll over tennis.

.•

.

Bradford Orllman,
/

·• .

"'
'

::::

r::~::.' s~~~lA-~£~s·
. ltii!H loy CLAY I.
__:;..._..;__..;_..:._
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SCilt..M Lns ANSWI'IS
Flimsy· Clove - A,wash - Mighty - WITH LIFE
If you can wol'k your way through college 1n all probability you will be able to cope WITH LIFE. '

-·

IWEDNESDAY

1993 Dulchman like New;~~
Sleeps 6, Laadedl $10.000 7~
245-5616.
., ....~

SERVICES
1

&lt;,

IASEMENT
•t. , · I
WATERPROOFING
• '·
Unconditional hleUme guarantH. •
LOC!'I references fvrnlshed. Ea. •''f
labiiBhtd 1975 Coli (740) 444·
0670 or 1·800-287-0578 Ragero 1 .•
Waterproofing.
• ' ...
' _,~ '"":
:A-pp-1,.-la-nc_e_P_a_rt_s_A_n_d_S_e.._rv_lce.....,.:'A...,li '~&gt; , j ;,
Nama Brands Over 25 Vears Ex•r,: t1""'
perience All Work Guaran111d- r ,1
French Clly Ma~1ag, uo-448~ • •
' .. .._,.

~~

C&amp;C General Home Malft- . r
lenance- Painting, '\lin~! aiding - ....
carpentry,_doort, windowl. ~ ··.1
rnobl~ hom&amp; rapelr and more. 11w
•
tree esllmale call Chal. 740·982' ' ·"'
6323.
• ~,i.~ '1

..

Electrical lnd .. ; ~ . I

;;:::::::::::R::-ef::r-:'lga:-:::nt:':'t~lo.n~~:....:&gt;: ,-.
r

Raaldentlal or commeretal Wirl~ ~t
new seMee or rtpalrt, Maattr Li t •' #'t;
cansed electrician. Rkl.tnout -"' J
Eleclrlcal, WV000308, 304·17S.r' :':&lt;
1789
•
. ,j

~· .. t ·~

MAY27l

,,

'r .

~~

..

\

Norih

Pass

'

1980 1611. Chasla pull cam~oiil"l.~
sell-conlained, air, 9.1 deer tr;t~~.,.
maunl, very nk:e. 304-67!&gt;-77~-. ,.

7795

-~

27 - IIIIa Kappll
30 Acta II. . .

35Maxlcan

·'·'
. ~•

1
1976 Coachman 21 ft. camP. : .•
Bath, air, stove, refrlgeral
1 ~
Sleeps 8. $3000. '740-367-116 I •
eves 740-992-61~
, ~-.: ~

Home
Improvements ;

=~-

23 Apnnlnt·
hOulll

MUCH PONCII

790 _ Camperi &amp; : :~-· :
Motor H~• : ;;.,.~

810

20

88 SIIOrllllrd

SOMEON&amp;~D

.: ·, ~ 1

·-··

ss AllOW

•

.

~11.

c-

34

By Phillip Alder
.
The next stop on our 1\meric;m
tour is-- _I !mow you've guessed it!- aeveland. It is a city best known,
I suppose, for lake-effect snow, the
Browns (that were and soon ·will be
again) and the Indians (this year's
World Series winner?).
.
Yesterday, I mentioned that Bob
Hamman partnered Mike Lawrenc;
When th" Aces were first formed by
Ira J. Com. Jr.·Afler a few years, he
staned to play with Bobby Wolff.
They won nine world titles, but the
partner11hip was dissolved last March.
Now Hamman is paired with Paul
Soloway (who had played for the
Aces in the 1972 World Team
Olympiad, replacing Billy Eisenberg, when he voluntarily left the
team).
This deal, from the 1969 Vanderbilt final in Cleveland. was defended
accuf!llely by Sbloway. (He won the
event with partner Gerald 1-Jallee and
teammates John Swansi&gt;n · arid
Richard Walsh.)
Against four spades. Hallee led.
the bean six. (With three low catds in
partner's suit, when you have not
supported. it is best to lead the lowest, thus denying a doubleton. If yQu
have supported, lead the highest to
deny.an honor in the suit.) After winning with the beart jack, Soloway·
switched accurate2 to the spade
four.
·
After winnina n hand, decla.rer
· led the club Io. Hal lee -d(Opping the
seven to sign[fy an even·number of
cards in the suit. This told Soloway
IQ duck this trick and win the c:lub
continuation. Nqw Soloway compleled an excellent defense by returning the spade 10. The dummy was
dead. and declarer had to lose two
more heart triCks at the end: one
dow II.

Now gas lank• &amp; oody pens. D &amp; •
R Aulo. Ripley. WV. 304·312' • ~
3933 Or1·80Q-273-9329.
.~· ·~•
Wanled 10 buy· good 700 R4 ...,.:. · •
tomatic transmission tor a 19~~
Chevrolet A.slro van, 740·7~~~
•

11

Opening lead: • 6

4 BF Goodrich all lerrain TA ratAi· . "l
als, 31,00 x 10 SO, Nke new 5350.' • ~
740.949·34~1
•
j

8ullwltle

_.n
11-o.b

YOU PR08AEIL'r'
OAANK TOO

MUST SELLIII
, " o! ~
19 11211. Deep ·V. 6cyl. 190hp" •
Mercruiser Inboard Motor, Trailer: ,1 ~
Ltle Preservers &amp; Bumper ONpt•' •
$2,500. 740-446•3814.
" .,,._!A
.........
-~. •J.

760

West

PEANUTS

ssooo.

.. :

.

-·

t5' Glastron Wllh 115 HP Melt-~!

1965 Bayliner Open Bow t9 Foot
Good Condition Runs Goo,d ••
$4,500, Leave Message If Not "
Home, 740·367-7068.
-~ ,-...

a

•

• ;;!l'l'

1987 Chevette t,.utomatic, Air
Conditioning, Low Mileage. Runs
And Handles Ex.cellentl 740 ·2 45~
5984.

1991 J1mmy V-6 All Power, A.u tofnatic, 4 WD, 2 Doors. Excellent
Cond1tlon $10,000, 1988 Monte
Carlo SS V-a. Sunroof. Aulomatlc.
Case 300 Tractor With Mower . EKcellenl Condttlon, $9,000; 1983
Chevy C·10 112 Tan , Full Size
Portable Gasoline Hobarl Welder
Electric Concrete Mht:er, Ha~ Ele: PI!'I'·Up V-8. Aulomallc. Exr:el~&lt;ml
~ning Cond1t1on, Needs
vator On Wheels. 740-245-9212
~ody Work $3,000. ' 740-446·
Fa'rmall Cub Tractor W1th Cultiva- 7473 . .
tors &amp; New Side Dresser, 740J::1 Pontiac Grand Am LE. ma·
258--6350 .
~. two door, automatiC, cold air,
400 Farmall, gas, excellent condi· , , lour brand new tires, $2995,
hon, new llras, fast hl1ch, $3200; "' f40-"992·6824.
740-985-3902
l.,~f----~:.::...,....---.,---'1992 Chevy Lumlno. cold air, till,
· John Deere 7000 4 Row NO Til tr"so· ASS, electric windows. Pl.
Planter Exec Oond :Z-AC 333 4 loaded, 105,000 miles, extra
Row Atr Planters, Older John sharp , maroon, 4 door, $3995,
Deere 6 Row Planter. John Deere 740·992·6624.
2600 4 Bonom Plow 2·John Deere
12·14 h Olsk used Rakes, Square ~ 1993 Camp:ro, new style, 38,400
Balers, Round Balers 6 5% fl ·
miles, loaded, ex cond. $9 .500.
nancing· on used Round Balers &amp; 304·675·:l187,
Mower condilioners . New ldta
Round Baler t year old with Net 1993 Chevy Astro Van CL Load·
WrapfNew Holland 472 Haybme ed Towrng Package, E~~:cellent
E)( cond . new Holland 474 HayCondition. 85,000 Miles, $8,500
Sharpl740-446·92t&amp;
bme EM . cond . Carmichael's
Farm &amp; lawn, Inc Call 740·4461993 Red Plymouth Sundance 4
2412 or 1·800·594-11 11
Doors. 124,000 Miles. AC, 4 C~John Deere Bailer Wll&lt;tcker Exc IInder, Automatic, $2,000 080,
cond ,
$3.200.
Grlnder- 1 740-256-- 1233.
$1,000.Soay Sheep Mlnlawres, , 1994 Cadillac Sedan o,vmo
Rare1 $400,00 each 740·256"" Pearl White Exterior, Tan Interior:
6230
42.000 Miles; Like New. $19,500
John Deere Skid Steer Loader • Call 740; 446·2058 , Aller 8:00
A.ll Sizes and Atlachmen'ts in
P.M
stock 7.5% Financing Available. 1994 Camaro Z·28. 6 Speed
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. s d d 3 o T
Call 740-448·2412 or 1-800·594I an ar • 5 l 1 V-B. T· Tops ,
CO, Air, Tilt , Cruise, 55K, One
1111
Owner $13.000 740 · 682-32~2 AtOliver 550 and assortment equi~r ' ler 5 PM.
ment 4 K for sale or trade, aher 3.
1~5 Dodge Neon White, 34;000
740-843·5509.
M1les, Aulo. ·Atr, CrUISe, Till, PowYour A.rea Bush Hog Dealer For fir Door Locks, $5,600 740·379·
9384
Parts, Rotary Cutters. Loaders
Tillers, Finish Mowers, Elc Car:
t 995 Plymouth Neon 4 Doors,
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Green With Spoiler Automatic,
Balwaan GallipoliS &amp; Rio Grande.
Air. 57,500 Molts, $4,500 OBO.
Ohio On Jackson Pike 740-4467~·258--6340. 740-256·6461.
24120r 1·800-594·1111 .
'
199(1 Monte CarlO, Blade, Leather,
Your Area John Deere Deater Loaded, 33,500 Miles, Reduced!
For Residential And Commlrcial 740..379-2666
Lawn Equipment. Compact Utll11y
Tractors From 20 To 39. HP All Cred1t Problems? We Can Help.
Sl~es Of 4 WD And 2 WD farm
Easy Bank Financing For Uoed
Tractors, Hay Equipment , John VehiCles, No Turn Downs. Call
Deere Skid Sletr Loadare. •Chock Vickie, 740-446-2897.
Wllh Us Abour Financing Ao Low
As 2.9% On Lawn Traclors And
RJ's Aulo Sa~a
low Rale Financing On Now And
7~-8611-1!03 Office
Used Equipment carmlchaol'a
740.742·2357 Rosldence.
~~~m Lawn Clalllpolls, OH 7401989 Chevy S-10, 4 cylinder 5
...,.2412 1·800-594-1111
speed, $1000; 1991 Sonoma
pickup, 5 speed , 85,000 mueo
$2995; 1989- Dodge Splrll, 69,oo0
630
Livestock
miles, automatiC, air, $1850· 1988
1 4 Year Old, Reglaterad llmou· Ford Tempo. 4 cylinder aulomellc.
aln Bull, Punch Bloodlne. Appr... 108,000 mlloo, $1500. loca1ed on
1100 Pda., $850, 740-256-6350
SR 124, Wllkeovole. Ohio
.
4 year old Rtgltlered Walkor
gelding, 11 112 henclt, t&gt;eauJitul
confOrmation, lalflor 3 Un\eo and
prooenl WO&lt;Id champion: 11 year
Old quarter horae, gelding Palomino. 18 1/2 hands; 740-9'49-4802

~ ~C

----------~----~~
16' Baja Ski Boal Excetlenl Candl--

Speed, AC . 94K, $1.895 Cook
Motors, 740..446-0103.

1 -New Transplanter Lelt -HOI·

-

'

41 Ala llllal
11
fi'OIII
cold aymptOma
.. Except .

· The new partner
in olden times

..

1991 HQnda 2sox • wheeter

~

41 bne - - Jdnd

38-

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 260
V6 Good Condnlon, $1,800 Or
Besl Oiler, 740.992-4556.

1989 Bereua V-6 , Auto, AC,
$2,295; 1990 Caval1er 2 Doors. 5

610 Farm Equipment

FENCE·BREAK !I

Motorcycles · &gt;~ ~

Of New Slulfl740-441-1419.

1111
3•

IT'S TIME FER MY

1986 Chevy As1ro Van, Clea~. Good Condlrlon. $3,500 740-8402
I ~"

&gt;

Salzed And Sold
Locally This Monlh.
,~
Trucks, 4x4's, Etc
• (1-800·522·Z730. X 3901.

Seuth

1993 Chevy full ·slze Sllverada•...eMt cab, 350, auto, ex cond ·
304-576·2494

740

42 ~ ol

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

: '•
:,
'
.,
1991 Chevy S-10, TahOe pack- age , 6 cyl , 5 speed, custom
wheels, 4 new tires. only as,eo'o· :
aclual miles, $3250, 740·992··
6924 .

Blue Point Siamese K1ttens $50,
740-446-4412.

ttAPPV JAC~ 3X FLEA COL·
LAR: kills. fleas, t1ck, anA mites
wllb.Qu.t systemic potsoning J· D
Norlh Produce, 740·446-1933
cwww.hapf&gt;Yiacldnc com)

9AQJ73
• 8 7 5
• A 43

:

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs · :

1977 c;o,veHe Whl1e. W11h Tan
Interior, 350 4utomatic, Good
C,ondlllon, 50.000 Miles. $9.000
dtlo. 740-446--1021
.

... , . . .

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South
IIIAKQJ7
.. 10 8 4
tAKQ
• 1.0 8

~ •1

Beautiful Ddlmauan puppies.
$125 each 304-937-2929

Full Blooded POodles, 6. Weetcs
Old. $150. 740-448-8726

• '53 2
.. 6 52

1982 GMC Suburban 3/4 Ton
Diesel Excellent Condition ,
$6,000. 7~-44tHi130 .

1990 Ford F 350 Olesol, CtiW.
cab, with ground effects, loadeft,
excellenl cond~lan, $14,500, 7411~~
949-2217 anytime.

•71 0 Autos for Sale

West .

sage.

640

TRANSPORTATION

• 9 8
tJ~832

1988 G M.C. S15 4 Cyllnder. 's '
Spead, Phone 740-256-1102.

AKC Registered Shih-Tzu pup- Mixed hay, $1 a bale ou t of field,
pies , 6wks old, first shots &amp; Langsville! De.tder area, 740-742-·
wormed 2malesl2females. 304· ; 2885, 740-992-7409
675w4183 or 304·67S.1275

0$-27-ll8

North

.

Aafse Your 041y Oki Dalfy Heifers
$40 + Feed Guaranteed 740-24&amp;&gt;
5464

Hay &amp; Grain

• ~dill

12 '!filii II . . _ 4l Dog. for tlllort

Upion Used Cars AI 62·3 M~e·s •
South of Leon , WV. Financing
AvaiBble. 304-458· 1069

Quality Registered Black Angus
Bulls t 1· 16 months . Certified
He.rd Cummings Angus Farm .
304-675-6246.

tool

: Tnld
"':.

14 01dciiiiC1
15 IIIIICII

7 Year Old Gald1ng Horse Gentle,
Good Trail Horse, $800, 7 A!"QUS
Cross Cows W1th Calves S.600·A
Pair, 4 Fa1ntmg Pigmy Goals 3
Due ~nyllme $100 Each. 1 Billy
$50, 740-256-6230

French Alpine Goat Buck 1
Weeko Old, $50 740.992-7778.

1 Palloli-

Arlana10 Coua-.1 with
11111111

..

630

Building
Supplies

·=.

ACAOSI

PHILLIP

&gt;

· acquired through experierice will be could bring your family closer
lursday. May 28, 1998
utilized advanlageously loday in two together as a unit. Each member will .
benefit in some way from these new
Persistence and !!eC:Ond efforts situations.
·
·bonds.
•
will bring you quality accomplishVIR~ (Aug. 23-Sepc. 22) You
AQUARIUS
(Jan. ·2!)-_feb. 19)
mcnts in the year ahead. When you ·may be rn for a pl~t surp_rise ·
see things you ~illy want, you'll be · loday when you discover something The light ~ncl loving fOOCh yoli're
prepjlfed to go ·aflet them.
you thought wQUid be very costly is able to put on serious sttuations will ·
serve as a tonic today for people
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Being much less than you anticipated.
you're involved with. .
with old friends ia familiar surLIBRA (Scpc. 23-0ct. 23)
· PISCES (Feb. 20.Mim:h 20) If
roundinss will give you grut plea- I
:foday's events might further
you've
~n · planninll a shopping · .
sun; today. They are like cilmfortable delineate strons bonds in· an imporspree,
this
is a JIOOd day to cut loose
'slippers thal .can't . be taken otr or tanl,. long-lell!l rel~ionship you
ud
eJtplore
the mall. You'U have a
tepii!J:ed. !'now where !O lcMik_for already treasure.
·
rom~e and you·u find it. The · SCORPIO(Oct.:z.4.Nov.22)Your sharp eye for barpi_n~ and excep1\stfD'; Graph Matchmaker in!lllntly persona! workload millht be a bit tional buys.
ARIES (Mtucli21~April19) Even.
'reveclla*hich signs are romutically heavier than.usualloday beciuse of.
thoush
you won't deliberliely seek
perfect for you. Mail $2.7.5 to Match- things you .take on for othen. You'll
-·"-- r:J0 I h'II news~r, P.O
.,.._.,
. . BoX derive true joy and self-worth llom out challenaes or conrests today. the
· more dilftcull the obs&amp;acle, the more
1751, Murray Hill Slllion, New beina helpful.
"
·
Yort;NY·I0156.
.
. S...GmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. .pride you 'II derive from overcoming
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You 21) In situations where others see it.
miallt .be better .I!CJuipped 10 handle fail~~~e~~ and . reversals~ you'll see . TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
iliffinltllliaMIIIIIS ·u jcJu aealize hope ~ inspiration. Y9Ufl is a posi- · Today you may see ~pie evidence
· loclay; The ate of your accamplieh- t1on·10 be envied. u it lOads to hlp- .of the esiCCJII your peen have for
you. When you make a commitment,·
IIICIIII may aurprire you.
'pincsa ud succeu.
·
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Specill
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) companions c:u buk on you 10 fol•
.knowledge and e~tpenire you·ve. Cum:nle are Jlrcsently stirring~~·• . low through 10 the encl.
•••

•

•'

�1

•

Page 12 • The Oai!J Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

Wednesday, May 27, 1998

~--~~~--------------~==~~~~--------.~~~~~= -

Thursday
Weather

Mystery author speaks at Middleport Literary Club meetihg:
~~~za~h Wetzel, gue~t speak-

er rom

edma, entertamed and

CathOliC Women's
Club honors mother

Mass at 7 p.m. preceded the
May gatherin,g
sa&lt;:oal of the Catholic Women's Oub
hrld recently in the church hall . .
A short business meeting was
c. "ducted, and reports were given.
h was announced that the CWC convention will be held in Steubenville
on June
The ewe picnic is'
sched.uled for June 9 at the. Blackwood residence. Spouses are wei- .
come.
The program opened with a
. hymn, "Immaculate Mary," sung by ·
members led by Phyllis Hackett.
President, Kris Harris, welcomed all
present. Anna Blackwood read
"May Traditions," and Lisa Averion .
spoke on the Miraculous Medal and
Novena, and the group shared a
funny memory of their mothers. a
closing prayer, "The Memorarc,"
was read in unison.
, ,
A blue and white motif was car-J
ried out at all tables with candles and
· flowers . Each received a book of
devotions and a medal.
Refreshments of finger sandwiches, cookies and punch were
served by hostesses lisa Averion,
Anna Blackwood, Alice Freeman
and Ann Layne.
Also attending were Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz, Kris and Bobbi Harris,
Jamie Deem, Janice Curry, Rhonda
Lyons, Kat~leen Wells. Doris Mertz,
Danielle Peckham, Deborah .Woodyard, Cecilia Mitch, Sandi Mitch,
Dottie McGraw, J3Jle Beegle, Anna
Blackwood, Andrea Hudson, Kim
and McKay Ia Barrett, Susie 'Stewart,
Betty Stivers, Diana Bartels, Dot
Neutzling, Joanne Tattersqn, Barbara Tatterson, Phyllis Hackett,
Rose Sisson, Mary Kunzelman,
Esther Frecker, Loretta Beegle, .
Shirley Houston, Martha Hall, Ann
~olburn, Elsie Sutherland, Vera
Buchanan, Dorothy Thompson,
Wendy Hamilton, and Billie Brake.
Mrs. Kunzelman was honored
with a plant as the eldest present,
Kim Barrett as the youngest mother,
Dorothy Thompson as the mother of
the ·most children, and Ann Layne
and Cecilia Mitch as the moiher of
the most great grandchildren.
mo~her- daughter

enlightened Middleport Literary
Club members and their guests
rHecel.ndtly IwhenGthelly ml.et at the
o ' ay nn :n a :po os.
Follow:ng lunch, new president Jeanne Bowen commended
past pres:deM M~tha Hoover for
her le d h1 d
h
a ers P ur:ng ~ e ~ast tw~
. years. Bowen also pa:d :nbute to
recently , deceased HeJen Hay.es,
the clubs oldest me~ her.
She then mtroduc~d .the speaker who prov:ded a f:tllilg culmo -

nation 'to the year's .theme of
mystery fiction .
.
Wetzel is ' the author of a
recently published mystery,
"Deadly Arts", and has another
almost ready for ~ublication .
A former Enghsh teacher herIf h
se , s e created a sleuth who
teaches Enghsh in a parochial
school.
.
ThiS character, Introduced in
"Deadly Arts", will also appear in,
her next book .
•

Wetzel described her methods
in writing a mystery and iri creatlng characters and. plots.
She began by telling of her
early desire to write and of her
first commercial writing .
Beginning with verses for
greeting cards and the short
fillers found at the ends of
column£ in newspapen, she went
on to 1·: rite Op-Ed pieces for the
Akron Be11con Journal and to
doing some ghost writin·g. • · ·

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low:60

Wetzel admitted 'that 1 wriier be able to withst~nd rejection.
::
needs to po'ssess a well-develHumor has always been found ··.
oped ego and se wants io see her in her writing, even in mysteries, :·
name on her work.
stated Wetzel.
:
. In mo.ving on .to writing arti·
T-hat sense of humor sparked .:
cles for magazines and short sto· her presentation describing· her :~.
ries tha.t would bear her name, d 1
·
•
eve opment as a wr:ter to .an
she found that a writer also needs appreciative audience .
to .be stu~born enough 10 keep
Mystery lovers may soon see ~
try:ng until she fmds an editor more of Elizabeth Wetzel's books ;
astute enough to apprecia•e her on the shelves 'of bookswres and ·•
work .
libraries.
In .the meantime, she needs 10

Tomorrow: Cloudy.
High: 80; Low:60

-,

.

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I

"News policy

· · , In an effort to provide .our reader-• • J!hip with current news, .the Sunday
• Tunes·Seritinel will not accept wed. · di)lgs after 60 days from the date or the
• event.
. ·; \\aldings submitted after the 60dey deadlilllf will appear dwing the ·
. ' weet in· The Daily Sentinel and the ·
, . (,llltipolis Daily Trillune.
,1tt:ticles
• All club
and other
news
in themeetiags
society seaion
must
be
~ within 60 days of occur•· f'IICC'· All birtlldays must be submitlid within 60days ~?f the occurrence.

,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Teens caught ·in North Carolina after school incident
By wire and atelf reports
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. (AP)
- Two Point Plea.ant High School
students were caught vandalizing
their school on videotape. They were
arrested in North Carolina on
Wednesday with 20 guns in a stolen
cior.
The boys, ages IS and 16, allegedly firjld two shots at a vending
machine in the school, when cla&lt;ses
were not in session, Mason County
authorities said.
Both were being held by police in
Ashboro, North Carolina. said Sheriff Troy Huffman..
"One student was suspended and
the other was in school," he said.
. "The boys committed various

.....
.
Dally from 11 a.m.-1
· .J p.m.-7 p.m., . · ·
·
·
· if there Is more than 3 customers In liRe at register, we will open another register.
"C)~ GET YOll IN, GET YOU Ouf &amp; GET YOU HOME TO TilE MORE IMI'ORTAN1'.111LI\IGS IN UFE!".

a

SINGlE lOLL
' .

ROCKY TOP
24 PACKS

BOUNTY
.
TOWE.LS

SOFT DRINK·S

..,sJ;.,
cJ.S•·

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)Ill till \\11 '1'111\1 1111 I'll\

ASSORTED FI,AVORS

s

s

1/2

I
I
I

I
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I

GALLON

KUFT

CANTON lAP)- A nine-yearold vows to shoot a classmate who
doesn't want to be her frieQd. A 15year-old warns he'll bring a gun to
school and "shoot everybody."
These threats have been heard at
lwo sehools in Ohio in the past week
and authorities who want to address
fears of school violence are ~ing the
situations seriously.
· Both of the students who made
these latest thrcats now· may face
.charges.
"We have to ao that exua mea·
·sure. And even though it would be
easy to criticize us for arresting a 9year-old. wluil if someone were to get
·hurt?" Raid Jack.'!Ofl Township Police
Cllld' pbilip:;Paar ~Wed.,.~~·
""'1'6111!1! Ill" 'ttk! !iu&amp;urbaft 'CIIIft!lr '
IOWiiildj)CIIIuJid'llle9-year-old Lake
Cable Scllool girl with aggravated
menacing.
·
She allegedly told another girl last
week thai "ifl had tishotg_un.l wouldshoot you." Police said they tiled the

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Local
:.-:school officials hoping.forhelp deal·
:: :ing with a $16.5 billion building ·
.: :problem won promises of'future aid
·: · ·-but no actual DIQney- from state
.-·:lawmakers.
·
· • • The Senate Finance Committee·on
~ :Wednesday added a $300 million-a·
. ·year IOU to an otherwise fairly routine bill that makes technical changes
and minor adjustments to the current
·state budget and next year's educa·
tion budget. The legislation. which
cleared the comfllittee-on a '8,4 par·
ty-line vote, wa' expected to go to the
full Senate today.
The bill contains a section requiring future governorS to propose -' ·and future lawmaken; to con~ider­
spending at lea~t that much for six
: .years on state school-building aid.
The OIOIICY is intended to help
· • ·whittle away building woes the Ohio
. · Supreme Court specifically cited last
·. · ·year when it declared lhallhe state's
method of paying for education was
unconstitutional.
Backers of the. idea ~~ay it's the'
final piece of the state's response to.
the court's order to fix the school, funding system, even thoogh no actu: al1110ney is attached to the legislation
• olnd the state Constitution specifical: ly says that lawm:ikers cannot bind
~ future lawmakelli 10 do anything.
:
Maybe they can't constitutionally
. require future lawmakers to approve
t ihe money. conceded Sen. Gene
:- :waus. R-Galloway. But if the
·supreme C1,111rt approves the.81ate's

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charge in part because the child had

a troubled history.
"We can't predict what someone
is going ·to do or not going to do,"
Jackson Juvenile Diversion Officer
Larry Durian said. "I think because
of. what has been happening around
the country, you'll see police departments acting more diligently now."
Authorities in Findlay are deciding whetherto tile charges againstthe
15-year-old who threatened to bring
a gun to school.
The teen-ager. whose name was
not rele&lt;~.sed. was confronted May 19
by a teacher with a threat of suspen-.
sion for giving anlither student a bottie containin11 urine. He alle~edlv
~: . "If I get expelled for this,
I'd just come in the tl&lt;:h&lt;iol with
ma~:hine guns and shoot everybody."
The boy w&lt;~.~ then suspended from
Millstream East Vocational School.
He latertold police that hewn£ "only
joking."
·
"These kinds of things will be tak-

.

I

6 PACK, 12 OZ. CDS

Unloaded rifles, shot guns and pistols were found. Ammunition also
was recovered, he said.
Huffman said the boys would be
brought back to West Virginia on Friday. They were scheduled to be
charged today with grand larceny,
discharging a tirearm on school property and breaking and entering, he
said.
In a related string of incident&lt;, an
employee of Bob Evans Farm Canoe
Livery, east of Rio Grande, reported
to the Gallia Sheriff's Department
thai late Tuesday or early Wednesday ·
morning that subjects believed to be
the same juveniles eniered the canoe
building and removed a van key. The

.·.Lawmakers hold
.. out promise of future
·schoo~ building a.id
.
..
. .

Ll.

FOOOLANO SPECIAL COUPON • t ]2i1
I
EffECTIVE 5 2l TO 5, 30198

f~lonies."

&lt;:

van was reportedly ransacked.
employee wrote down the license we don't do something and someThe male subjects then traveled to plate number of the vehicle the sub- thing goes amiss ... if we do someSpeedo's PizzaofRioGrimde, where jects were traveling in. and called it thing and nothing happens, all we're
they reportedly broke·in through a into the Gallia County Sheriff's out is some m~ney. "
rear entrance and removed ;tcasbreg- Department. Deputies found that the
The county's elementary, middle
ister containing $200 in ones, fives, vehicle was stolen ·OUt' of Mason and' junior high schools also plan to
tens and change, according to Village County.
check their doors carefully and mon·
Marshall John Vance.
Meanwhile, fears over school itor students closely.
Vance also suspects the juveniles safety .have led Kanawha County
The measures are a reaction to
removed a Tribune newspaper box school officials to beef up security at - recent school violence nationwide.
all nine county high schools.
Fears over school safety have esca·
from the BP station in Rio Grande.
The school system ha&lt; hired one lated since two students were killed
Authorities alerted area busin~ss­
es to watch for subject&lt; paying for officer for each high school. And offi- and more than 20 injured last week
items with large amounts of change. cers on Wednesday began patrolling ill a high school in Springfield, Ore.
School .and law enforcement offiSuper America, 601 SR 7. Gallipolis, parking lots and checking locks on
cials decided to call off Sunday's
told deputies ihat two male juveniles doors.
"We're between a rock and a hard graduation at St. Marys High School
entered the ·store at approximately
5:20 a.m. and paid for ga&lt; with plaee," said Bill Walton, principal of atier a bomb threat surfaced, turning
chanJ!e out of a coin bag. The South Charleston High School. "If

away about I00 seniors and their
families while the building was
searched. No bombs were found.
The ceremony h&lt;~.&lt; been resched.·
uled for 7 p.m. tonight. .
In Putnam County, upset parents
met with school offi~ials Wednesday
to discuss the decision not to suspend
a fifth-grader at West Teays Elemen·
tary School after he allegedly threatened to kill a vice principal there.
"There is nothing wrong with my
son!" said Deneene Chafin, mother
of accused Barry Chafin. "It's all
lies!"
Principal Bruce Faulkner declined
to comment on whether any action
would be t:iken. Chafin Wa£ in school
Wednesday.

Student .threats being treated
seriously across the state

I

FOODLAIID CEREALS 3 FOI

-

~

Bulls .
wallop
Pacers
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

Esther Wright presented with 50 year pin at
Chester D of A meeting

"' • •

Sports

Meigs band honorees, Page 8
Reds edge Giants 7-5, Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 8

10:

Esther Wright was presented a
50-year pin at the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
_ _
Wright was esconed to the ·alJar
by the nag bearers for the presentation.
Ella Osborne presided over the
meeting which opened in ritualistic
ronn with pledges, prayer. the
National anlhem, and scripture rrom
John 15.
It wa' noted that Dorothy Myers
has undergone eye surgery, and that
Ruth Zcngler and Evelyn Zimmer·
man have been ill.
The death of John Gundy or
Logan, and Irene Frederick. past
chief judge, were reported.
An icc cream social will be held
at the next meeting. ·
Julie Curtis thanked those who
attended her parents' 50th anniversary celebration, and it was noted
that Mary and Gary Holter attended
Greta Riffle Davis' graduation from
law school in Morgantown, W.Va.
A ceremonial followed the meet·
ing. Members formed a circle with
Elizabeth Hayes seated in the center,
Helen Wolf sang, "Just One Little
Candle," and Charlotte Grant read,
"I'll Pain't You a Rainbow." Goldie
Frederick read, "Life's a Pauem"
and JoAnn Ritchie ended with "A
Prayer."
Erma Cleland told how the D of
A began in 1934 and gave highlights
of the first three years.
Flowers donated by Francis
Aorist were given out , al&lt;·ng with ·
.fruit baskets from the lod,· .
•. Members enjoyed a f'd, white
' . and blue cake. decorated i&gt;y JoAnn
· Ritchie, and punch and ice cream.
·.. ' Anending were .Qpal Holton,
... Esther Smith, Charlotte Grant; Thei(Jla White. Julie Curtis, Laura Nice,
·'::Esther Wright, El.izabeth Hayes,
· ·' Everett Grant, JoAnn Ritchie,
Louise Staats, Erma Cleland, Mar"• . •garet Amberger, Mary Holter, Gary
'· Holter, Mary Barringer, Goldie
• llrcderick, Doris Grueser, Opal
· , Eichinger, Marcia Keller, Helen
' : : wolf. Jean Welsh and El.la Osborne.

•

May 28,1998

I

en seriously by police," Lt. Chuck
Wilson !laid Tuesday. "We'll be askingthejuvenileprosecutortoreview
the reports to see what charges are
appropriate."
A police report said some instructors at Millsueam East began locking
outside doon; to their classrooms af~
the 15-year-old was suspended.
Hancock County Prosecutor
Christopher Betts did not respond to
a message Wednesday asking about
possible charges.
A Crestwood High School student
. in Mantua, southea~t of Cleveland,
ha~ been suspended and could be
eKpelled after being accused of mak- .
ing a list of more than 20 MUdeniJ and
· teachers he wan~ dead. .. ~­
School official~ never saw d!e list
but based the May 15 suspension on
accounts from several other students,
District Superi~tendem David Sin· gleton said. He wouldn't reveal the
boy's name, age or grade level.
Two days earlier in Mentor. a 16·
year-old wa.~ sentenced to 180 days
in juvenile detention rot drawing up
a hit list and threatening to harm nearly two dozen students at his high
school. He wa.\ suspended and faces
an expulsion hearing next month.
Police said in each instance theY.
had to investigate any threat involving guns and violence. even if the stu- ..
dents insisted they were joking. The
deadly school shooting 1&lt;~.~1 Thursday
Conllnued on page J

BARGE LOADING FACILITY • Ground waa
cetemonlou1ly broken Friday morning on an
Ohio Rlv1r barge loading tac:lllty near Apple
Grove, In Letart Townahlp. The 11te will be ullld
by Tommy'•
Trl'!lportlng, Apple Grove
Dlvlalon, owned by Tom Nlchol11011 of~·
Nlchol1101'11e building the fac:lllly to 1'11C8ive junk
tlrea from Melga 1nd aurroundlng counties tor
traniPQI'I by barge to Memphis, Tenn. where
the tlrea will be pi'OCelaed to be ullld tor till
material. Prnent at the ceremony were, from

nre

education plan. future . legislators
woold risk losing a legal challenge if
they didn't spend the $300 million, he
said.
,
Democrats on the committee were ·
incredulous.
"You cannot spend a promise."
determined. although the buildings
said Sen. Judy Sheerer. D-Shaker By BRIAN J. REED
will be re;tdied for the new school
Heights, before Republicans rejected Sentinel N-1 Staff
The
students
have
left
the
four
term
in cao;e the new Ea~tem Elea Demoeratic plan to spend $300 milschool
buildings
in
the
Ea~tem
L.ocal
menwy
school building is not ready
lion in real money on school buildSchool District. and in the case of the for students in August.
ings next year. '
Crews will begin the most intenThe move was similar. to one three elementary schools, the students
are
gone
for
good.
.
sive
pan of the renovation of Eastern
made in the Republician-contro,led
The
la~t
day
of
school
for
the
stu·
High
School right away, Well said.
House last week. There, leaders
bowed to pres.&lt;ure from conservatives dents in the district wa• Wednesday, .and guidance, administrative and
to protect an eKpected budget surplus and teachers will complete their last maintenance staffs have been reloand decided not to tuck S160 million day of work today. Meanwhile. !ilaff cated into the existing elementary
for school-building aid into the bud· and· materials from the high school buildings to perform their summer
·
·
get correction bill. Instead, the House building are being moved out to tasks.
In the high school. construction ·.
promised school dislricl\ that law- accommodate major construction
crews will begin convening the busimakers would find the money later . work.
According
to
Deryl
Well,
district
ness education area into the -school's
- probably in the next state capital
superintendent, the fates of Chester, . new media center, restoring the exist·
improvement budget.
If the Senate approves the bill, the Tuppers Plains and Riverview Ele- ing library into two cla~srooms. com·
House will get a chanee to consider menaary Schools have not yet been pletely renovating the chemistry lab·
differenees between the two versions.
· House Speaker JoAnn Davidson
said she had not spoken with her ·
Republican caucus about the IOUs.
~~ .that she had no problem with the
odea. .
.
•
"Senator (Richard) Finan and I
have had discussions about what -we
believe is the minimum amount that _
we want to pdt in future capital bills
for school facilities. I am very comfortable with the language," said
David'iOII. R-Reynpldsburg.

left: Letart Township TNitee .Chrla Wolfe;
Rac:lne Mayor ScoU Hill; ROICOII MUll, M1lg1
County Communil'; lmproftllllnt Colpoiatlooot;
Melga County Chamber ot Commetc:e P,..ldent Sue Malson; Melga County Ecoriomlc
Dlwtlopment Director Ron Me~; Nlchollon; •
Gene Jetferllnd HOWIII'd f1'111k; lnd B.J. Ervin,
on the bulldozer. Nlchol1101'1 hopea to hire two
employeea during the OPirlllon'l llart-up
phue and then to expand aa bualneaalnerea•

.. .

Eastern school project begins in earnest
oratory and reconfiguring the front doubled in ~ize. is nearing compleoffice and administr~tive area .
tion, placing the project slightly
The building's heating and venti- ahead of schedule.
'
lation system will be replaced with a
As for the .three elementary buildnew system, which will include air ings, community input will be 11011ght
conditioning the classrooms. aiKI after conmuction is complete. to
plumbing work in th.: science !abo- determine the fate of the buildings.
ralories will necessitate the removal Well said that several agencies have
of the floor there.
e&lt;pressed inierest in ,using the variCosme* improvements .. new ous buildings for various purposes:
terriiZzo-type noor tile. new ceilings. Gallia/Meigs Head Start ha' pro-·
fresh paint and lighting will also be posed using the Tuppers Plains buildinstalled throughout the building, ing for a center, for e~ample.
where students found bare ceilings
Well said that he anticipates that
and noors last fall.
Both projects are f)n schedule or a committee made up of school
slightly ahead of schedule. Well said. board members and community
The complete renovation of the lob- members will•-onsider the fate of the
by area in the high school, which ha.• buildings.

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentine

2 Sec:tions - 16 P•11es
Vol. 49, No. 26

shoots bleach at students on·bu•

~ . CLEVELAND (AP) -Twenty~ 'eight children on a school bus were
:: l:hecked a1 hospitals afler a teen-age
': :.X,y carryina a large rsquirt gun
:i• :fiprayed what apparently was bleach
:;: ill them.
: : ' The bus carriCd about 40 middle
;-1tehool students home after ..chool
· when the boy entered as the door
• · ppened at a stop. and he started
~ . squirtina thloughoul the bus Wednes' • day.
, • · The chikb!en on the bus were tak· en to either MefroHealth Medical
' . Center or Rainbow Babies and Chi!-

drens Hospital as a precaution. No
serioius injuries were reported.
The bus driver, Darryl McDonald,
iold police the boy squirted bleach
and then jumped off the ~Mid 1'1111
away. Police apprehended the boy a
few hours later.
··
The boy came on the bus as the
door opened. the driver told television stalion WEWS. "He ju111ped on
the bus and lllarted squirtiRJ everybody with this bleach," he said.
The driver also said the youth had
in !be past thrown things at the bus,
such as Wiler balloons and eggs.

Lotteries

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............... belt lhop. n. building ••
owt ld by IMry Motwoe. Thltlun Alcina fire.
flglltera, lllllled by the lyrecu• 1 VFD,
fiRPO!Idld .t o the ICII•, Hllllld. Cet• of lie
tire ... not deiSt mined. (Alaine File o.,.rt-

. OLD LOC:ICftOUie
No lnjlsr'-NpCM1Id It 1111 tlrl wlllclltullld two """" of
the locldlouM M lie old Ohio Rlwr locklllnd
dim n111' As al 18. Raalt• Vtt11u1*1r File Dlper".ment Cipllln loan Hlllllld the fire WM cont81ned to two roam. on the poulld flaor of lie
old building ~. bad been converted Into

mentphoto)
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I

•

OJI!O
•
Pick 3: 974; Pick 4: 6393
Super Lotio: 3-8-20-38-39-47
Kldter: 536949

w.yA.
DI:Uy 3: 479; Dilly 4: 9202

0 19911 Ohio Valt.y l'lololloloi .. c..

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