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Monday, May 3, 1999

Pomeroy • ,..lddleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday

After 38 years, Grissom's Mercury C1!psule located ·
By MARCIA DUNN
. But at least they know now where
AP Aerospace Writer
it is and they're thrilled about Satur·
CAPE CANAVERAL , Fla. day's discovery.
lost at sea for 38 years, astronaut
The only U.S. spacecraft ever lost
Gus Grissom's Mercury cap•ule was following a succcssfu_l mission, it's
found over the weekend by an under· still shiny in spots with an intact win- .
water· salvage team that had been dow and the name "Liberty Bell ".
searching forthe spacecraft for·near- clearly visib le. Even~ke crack
ly 'two weeks.
that was painted on the exterior, to
Liberty Bell 7 is still 3 miles replicate the real Liberty Bell, is still
hcnearh the Atlantic's surface and vtsible, as are the singe marks left by
about 300 miles offshore . The cable the explosives that blew out the
to a remote·oper~teJ rover that had hatch following splashdown on July
been used to identify and photograph 21, 1961 .
the capsule snapped in the rough sea
" It looks to be in beautiful condi·
Saturday night. Salvagers arc return· tion and certainly capable of being
ing to Port Canaveral and will have recovered, ·· sn1d Curt Newport.
to wait for another few weeks or even leader of the e•pedition .longer before gomg back to recover
Liberty Bell 7 sank to tbe bottom
the spacecraft.
af the ocean following Grissom'~

successful 15 -minute suborbital
flight. The explosive bolts that blow
open the hatch detonated prematurely, and helicopter rescuers were
unable to hft the waterlogged space·
craft from the sea.
·,
Grissom nearly drowned, but was
pulled to safety. He insisted until his
death in the Apollo launch pad fire in
1967 that he'd done nothing wrong,
although some questioned at the time
~ and still do.- whether he bumped
something or even panicked.
Gnssoin's widow. Betty, said last
month that she hoped her husband's
capsule would remain buried in ·the
Atlantic. She resents not being consuited from the sran about the salvage
effort and does not want the spacecraft being restored by the Kansas

toung 11. 'l'h1s 1s 11,' " Newport s~1d
by phone Sunday from sea. ~·There
was.:t_lotof shaking hands and slap·
ping each other on the_back and JUS I
~OIIU,illulating each other and JUS!
staring in disbelief at this spacecraft
in front oJ us, us being·I he first to see
it since 1961."
Newport, 47, had made two previous attempts to find the capsule.
The former.space station worker ~td
not have sophisticated enoug h equtp·
ment or enough time on his first two
tries in 1992 and 1993. ·
.
"This was really a difficultthmg
to find, "· he said. "If you could see
what the terrain is like down there,
you could understand this capsule,
had it fallen somewhere else, could
easily have been obscured from the.
sonar and we may not have seen it at

Cosmosphere and Space Center, as is
the plan.
Newport's expedition had uncovered 88 possible targets .in tbe '24square-mile area that he pinpointed
prior to seuing sail on April 19. The
team encountered trouble with the
sonar during the first several days,
but finally got it working. The first
target they looked at with the rover,
on Saturday, ended ·up being the 7foot titanium and aluminum capsule.
Newport said the team .followed a ·
trail of the·capsule's corroded heat
shi¢1d up a hill. That led them to the
capsule, propped upright on the ocean
floor. It emerged out of the gloom as
a dark shape;. Newport thought at first
it was airplane wreckage.
· " I remember sayi ng, 'Oh, my ·
God, I C'lJI't believe it. That's it. We

Retr'.eat ends ··n tragedy for church group'

all hough it 's doubtful the film could
be salvaged after so long underwater.
The hatch wo~ld hold the ans_wer
too one _of the b1ggest ofAmencan
spa&lt;e fltght. Newport estimates the
hatch ~ould be as much as a mtle
from ltberty Bell?; he plans to spend
a day looking for it when he returns ·
for the capsule.
.
Before Newport and h1s team can
recover the spacecraft or search for '
the hutch, they must obtatn another
remote -operated rover like the one
that sank .Saturday. That could take
several ~ecks, sa1d M1ke Quattrone,
senior vtce pr~stdent. for the ~lscovery Channel, whtch IS financmg and
ftlmmg the exped1110n.
"We arc . absolutely ecstatic',"
Qual!rone s31d Sunday. "When he
gets back, I want to find out what ·

~~~hf;:c~~:P.~~~:~si~~~~~~;ei;

all!·
:: ;PU have to understand," he
.
·., 'o ued, ''what we d1d was find unheard of.
·
..
.
.
.
. , .
:'' , -·so' ething in water half a m1le deep·
For lhe record, Newport's lucky '
· By PE!E HERRERA .
,
What do you do:? the mtdst of a tragedy hke thts? mtntster ~leM~- · er than the Titanic and it's smaller charm ts a stuffed .lamb. one of hts
Assoctated Press Wr.tter..
.
. .
..
non satd m a prayer. .There ts nothmg pretty about death. We don t·pr~tend than one of the Titanic's boilers.,
dog's favorite toys : It's on the ocean
ARTESIA, N.M. -;.S" gtrls traveling home after a week~nd retreat wuh to know .why. these thmgs h,~ppe.n ..~ut we do know that you, l'•t!ler, ~now
TIYo cameras and a tape recorder floor attached to the rover that sank, .
fellow ch urchgoers were ktlled when a camper. broke away from a p1ckup, what llts hke to watch a chtlddte.
.
.
. .
. that sank with the capsule could shed so Newport will have to wait a while .
truck and struck the bus 1n wh1ch they were ndmg,
.
The dead gul s wer.c 1denufted as Tahtha Beaman, 17; Sara Enghsh, ,15; li ht on wh the hatch blew too soon before he gets it b~ck.
A seven th person drivi ng a pickup truck behind the church bus also was Sara Johnson, 13; Megan Flynn; Heather Dauman; 'and Ashton,Qutby. The · ig••llljy!l_ll••••••ll'!l'~•'!ll~'!ll•••••••. .
ki lied in Sunday's acddent on mountainous terrain on U.S. Route 82 in Arte- other gi(ls,' ages '!'ere not avai lable.
•
.AI
ft
sia.
There was no information available about the pickup driver who was.killed
5MIIIpllllll ...,ig rPIII.I MIII
The westbound pickup truck swerved and a secti on of the camper being and Balderston said it wasn'tknown ~hy the other pickup_ truck swerved._
towed hy the pickup ," tore alo ng the side oft he bus," sta te police Capt. John
Three people were 1n cnucal cond1 t1 on and three were m senous condJ·
l'llllll_illf
Balderston ,a 1ct Sunday. The girls, ages 12 to 17, were ki lled instantly.
tion at Alamogordo and Albuquerque hospitals, officials said. Twenty-one
.T urbo'
22000
·n,e young victims were among about 80 people from Green Lawn Church others people were treat~d and released.
,
· of Christ in Lubbock, Texas, who had spent the weekend at Pine Springs SumCongregant ·Sarah Johnso n said her daughter was on the trip to Pine
Most Advan~ed Tanning.
mer Camp, an isolated, mountai nous retreat in lincoln National Forest. The Springs Summer Camp but es~apedinjury..
. , ,
camp near Mayhill is abo'ii! 150 mi les southwest of Lubbock. .
.,. "Every one ot tho~e k1ds.ts. nunc, J U ~t as if l had the.m myself,'·' she said.
Back at Green Law n Church, hundreds of teen-agers and parents sobbed. · rhere are no words ... Rtght now, we JUS! need·t.o pray. We know that they
he ld hands and sang hymns after word spread of the acciden t.
are tn a·bener place and .H's up to us to be there tor the parents.::·

It

Bed. ,

·Bo~y of Everest pioneer located by climbe·r s •·
~

.

.

'

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By DAVE HOWLAND
they reached the summit 29 years blown away by that,'' Hahn said. · lory and Irvine would have taken.
Associated Press Writer
hefore Sir Edmund Hillary and Shcr- "We didn't wan t to disturb him, he'd · Hongbao described the 'body as
BOSTON - . Members of an pa Tenzmg Norgay.
been lying there for 75 years, but at "English .Dead," and indicated its
expedition seeki ng to determin e
They found the body Saturday but the 'same Lime we thought what be t· . vintage clothing broke to pieces
whethcr,F.nglishmen George Mallo- haven' t yet found the came ra or evi- . ter tribute to the man than to try and when he touched it.
ry and Andrew Irvine. were the iirst Jence to prove they had reached the find out if he had summiu ed Mt.
The body was ' found 'on a snow
to rc"c h the summit of Mount Ever. summit, Po!lerfield said.
Everest in 1924:"
terrace, just. below thl; SJXlf ,\Ybere an
. est say they have located Mallory's
The expedition is bemg docu. The body was found about 2,000 . ice ax believed to be· lrvlnii)J, ~as
b&lt;xly nearthe top of the world 's hi gh· · men ted by the .Boston-based public fee t from the windblown 29,028-foot found in 1933 .. The ax ·. had •~ ·
est peak .
television show NOVA, and is spon- summit not far from that of a Chinese notches on the llandle,' 'whicl\i~._l&lt;
'They fountJ a name tag se wn into sorcd by PBS and Po!!erficld 's com: climber, whose accounts were used how Irvine marked his equipmeilt.;"' \• .
his duthing, " said Peter Po!!~rf1eld , pany. .
·
·
by the NOVA crew to· try to locate Two days after'Hongbao t()\d his sto·
cdi t.&lt;&gt;r of mou ntainzonc.com , a Seat~
. Expedition leader Eric Simonson ·Mallory and irvine.
ry in 1975, he' died in an avalanche
tic-based Internet company relaying and fell ow climber Dave Hahn, who
Jochen Hemmleb, a 28-year-old on Everest's North Face .
. di spatches from the climbers.
. was the first to come across the body, Gel'man. climber and Mallory histoThe climb; which began on March
Eigh t climhers have hecn lookiog . described their excitemenl over. the rian, chmre a location for the team to 29, is being made in si~ stages. The
for the.hodics orthc men _ who dis- Interne t.
search bas.ed largely on a report mountaineers establish camps at ever
appc"rcd in 1924 _ and a camera
"And so when we realized that it from the climber, Wang Hongbao, of higher altitudes, and then descend to
that could con tain picture~ · provi ng was George Mallory, we were really a body·on the North Ridge route Mal- base camp as they become a~climat·
.....,,
ed to the thin air.

.

Mly4,1tMIO

Eastern adv~nces to ftnals, Page 4
Prison not a nice place, Page 7
Purple Heart recipient executed, Page 12.

Tod1y: Sunny
High: 70.; Low: 5CM
Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 5CM

••

'

Meigs County's
Volume 49 Numb&lt;'l 23S

Mtddlcport •

By JIM FREEMAN
.·
.
Sa tllnel ~ 8tllff
. Pomeroy Village Council was asked Monday night to
c:onsider reestablishing a polic:e department auxiliuy. ·
Meeting with council was Polic:e Olief Jeff Miller who
discus&amp;ed the. feuihility of reorganizing 111 .auxiliary,
which be said would help young people jUJt out of .the
police academy earn valuable experience and assist exist·
mg officers.
The auxiliary officers would not be paid.
~~Ilk• a o.~e-m~ car tum into a two-man car for no
llddttional pay, he aid.
.
·
Miller was instructed to further investigate the matter to
determine what, if any, liability the village could face and
answer other queadons including insu~ uniforms and
workers ~JlCIIII!Ition· · .
. .
. He wd.he 1111icipatea havmg about four or five people
seJ'IIe as auxiliary cif6QC111,
.
.
In addition, cooocil voted 4-2 to authorizo Miller to give
confisCated vehicl~· blck to the tow truck dri~ers. For several_mon!'W.• oounetl mem~ have _asked Miller to pursue
gettin' rid of the cua. \bling epnst _the measure were
counc:al mern~ Dave ~111'11 and Geri.Walton.
Mdler al~ 1181d the pohce department has received "tons
of oompllints" over the hole.-' Spri~g ~ Mli~ ~treeb.
Mayor Frank Vaugh111 said the VIllage 11 &amp;Willing Com-

munlty Development Bloclc Grant fundinsl'rom the ooun- odors em111ating from the
ty to complete a water line pro~ lhll would repair the · IICWer are affecting hia renlll
·wa10r ~creating the problem. He aaid the county has not proiiertiea.
·
reloued the money for ill. project.
During · open dii!Cussion
·'
Street Superintendent Jade Krautter aaid the l!treel -.Ballard almmeiued he i;
. depll'lment can not fix holes there until the water leak il ltlempting to get lldditionil
stoppe!l or diverted. Yaugh111 said be will direct Vdlage 'playground equipment 111d
Adrnin~llor John Andcnon to divert the flow, allowing rcncing for Butternut Pak.
the repmr.
·
.
.
Oluncilm111 George Wright
· Vill,age businesswom111 Annie Olapman asked COI,Incil ' brought up a slip Oil Union
to reconsi~ i~ action ail~zjng the police department .to Allenue that is.covering a sideUIC the auditorium for polu:e offitea. .
.·
· walk.
There are not many plac:ed for oeople to meet in town,
In other business, council
she sild, lidding lhll oouncil shOuld CIOIIIider waiting until also:
·
other spao)e is fOUJIII for the police deplrtrneni.
-Approved the first read:
'NAYLOR'S RUN LAKE'- At
one ,_lldetrrt
COuncil took no action~ her requeal
.
ing of 111 ordinance granting neighborhood 11'1 Pomeroy hu dubbed • IOng--atandlng wlltllr · •nd : .
She alaO noted th
. at repatrs
mllde to wooden )lll1a . Columbus-Southern. Power pot hole !II the junction. of Spring •nd M•ln •beet.~ •• ".Neylor'• Run
of village hall, ftJn)lerly Pomeroy High School, iridUding · aitd Ohio Power ·Company a Lake." A drlv•r I• •hown here ~otllltlng th. ob8tllcle while • n•rby ·
windoW rr.mes lind the fiiC8de. ·
. SO-year fr111chiie. The fran- •lgn ctlutlon• •IJ•In!ll ftehlng or awlmmlng. . ·
..
.
·
.
Fire alief Ouis Shlllk. reported the fire departmenJ chise will repiiCIC one granted in 1949 and it was noted that two weeks of vacation.
..
responded to ~4 ellis com~ of~ slnlctule fires, five the.~iJe ~not grant ,the !"""Pillies excl~ive rights
- Approv'ed a request to bid painting of the out.ellis for. uaistanoe from netghboring ~Ia, one to ICI'Ytce the vtllage.
.
side of the water tank on Breezy Heights .
.
auloplabile fire, two motor-vehicle accidents, one: brush
-Approved the mtyor's report of $,10,071.
- Approved a request from · the. Meigs County .
fire, one false al1m1111d one JWCUe call.
· - Purehaed two mowers and a trimmer for use al the Tourism Board for a $2 000 donation.
Council also mel ~th David Wil~ coneeming ~ · cemetery.
.
, Also present were ~ierk Kathy Hysell and counproblems on East M11n Street and Skinners Run. He wd
- Agreed to pay Krautter and Wes Manley for ctl members Scott Dillon and ,l arry Wehrung.
n
.
eed

Proposed. plant
.econ.om I.e bo.o st t.o s.cloto• County

:Jvfotfier's 'Day Special
IJuy 3 Sessions At Regular Price
·Get Second 3 Sessions
112 Price

COUNTRY TANN
.99:&amp;•5756

Good Afternoon

Today's ..

..

elocation:

Saturday ·
9 a.m. 'to 9 p ..m.

~

2 Seetlona • 12 Pllael

waII St.reet surges past
·
f ·
f·
·
11 ,000 or the . irst time

to.have. good, permanent jobs.
NEW YORK (AP)- The markers just keep inflationary. The National Association of Pur· down. Richard Qipps, chief markei strategist ~or
"They deseJ'IIe a chance," . tumbling.
.
·
chasing Management's index of manufacturing . Legg Mason in Baltimore, said thai wiiS a sign
she said.
Two more reports of an ebullient eeonomy activity declined l.S percentage points, to 52.8 that the stock advances may not hold.
Loc:al officials aaid Sun is attracted pushed the Dow .Jones industrial average past percent, in April, That indicated that the manuflic· · . "The financials are one of those groups that ·
10 the area because of the good work
11,000 today. The index of 30 blue chip stocks turing sector is expanding, but at a slower rate. we probably should watch here because they are .
force, ·the Wheelqsbllrg coal tcnni- cl~ at 11,014.69, up 22S.6S for the session and .Analysts had expected the index to rise 2.2 per· an indicator of what the bond mark~ is.likely to :
na1 and the availability of rsil and mukina ill ·(ourth new high in five tradina sea- c;enl.
·
do," Cripps said. "I'd say their mixed showing js

~5~~~~~~~~~

river
slana.
If alltransportation.
the details can be worked out,
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 composite rose,
Sun would like to break ground on
but the NIISdaq composite *"lined as investors
the project this year, said Bob Wal· contlnuec! to shed technology shares.
ton, commissioner of. the Southern
Even by the compressed standards of the mod·
·Ohio Port Authority and chlinn111
em sta~:k market, the latest Dow milestone
~=~E====~~:I · ita economic development commit· arrived with remarkable speed. The .Index closed
tee.
. at 10,000 on Marc:h 29, making Monday's close
The company .has requested SIO the faalelt rise between 1,(J()()..point markers in
milli011 to $12 million in infrastruc·
history, By comparison, it took four months, from
blre improvements.
October 1996 until February 1997, to move the
Lotter ips
.The biggest single item would be a Dow 16 percent.from 6,0()() to 7,000.
new
inteR:hange- which could cost
"It is truly remarkable; It's breathtaking," slid
omo
$9 million - off state route 52 at the ·Hugh Johnson, market strategist at First Albany
Pick 3: 2·5-3; Pick 4: 9-2-2-7
Ohio Furnace ROlli entrance to the Corp. "I didn 'I suspect that I would be talking
B•ekeye 5: 12·14-22-34-34
plant. The t:ompany willis 111 inter,
about Dow ll,OOO this year,letaloneallhe beginw.yA,
change that would include an overning of May."
.
· .
Dally 3: 9·7-1; Daily 4: 9-8·8·3
pass ac:rou the Norfolk Southern
The Dow was pushed higher by manufacturing·
0 1\199 Olio \lttlty l'loblllbl• Co.
Railroad tracks tO improve safety: .
111d iridU.trlalshares after Investors got two fresh
1!;~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!.._~---------..J reminders that the economy is strona, btlt .not

=

e.·~:~
Th
.
...

Children's
Hour

Sunday
1 p.m~ to 7 p.m.

..
.

• App_
o inth-lents:
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·'

'

•

f!

-

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Pediatric patient, Lauren Lanter, tbe daughter ~f
Barry and Angela Lanier ofPoint P~nt, receives a
check-up ·by charlotte Foremrm, ~ MSN, cs, FNP, tbe
family nurse practitioner aJ. «The Children :r Hour."
.

'

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•

...
'

'~~ot:,t···~·!

;,.,

• '

l!,

•

,'

1 •

• f;

't

Twisters

••

-

.'~ '

·-~ - ·······W·

...

1'"

And the Commerce
Department
reported
Americans'
personal income
rose 0.4
percentthat
in
Marc:h, but their spending kept pace, leaving the
nation's savings rate at a record low.
After the purchasing managers' report, bond
prices erllied early losses. The 30-year Treasury
. bond was yielding 5.66 percent late in the day.
The strength in the bond market helped push
m111ufacturing stocks higher, said William Meehan, chief market analyst for Cantor Fitzgerald.
"We aot a nice bounce off the (manufactunng)
report, which came in a litllc bit weaker lhan
expected," Meeh111 said.
The Dow· was led higher by such industrial.
stalwarts as Minnesota Min ina &amp; Manufacturing.
United Technologies and Goodyear.
Oil stocks, which have benefitted lately from
strong oil prices, were also big winners today.
Financial stocks were mixed. DOw cmitponcnt
American Express was up, but Ciligroup was

not
indicator
thatbethis
can that
conlinue toa strong
go higber.
It could
an market
indication
the .
DOw is ov~rstating'"' lhe market·~ strength.
Meanwhile, Internet stocks took a _drubl1ing as •
investors continued 11151 week's strategy of liking •
profits. AOL was down sharply in leading volume.:
on the New York Stock Exchange. Microsoft was
sharply lowet 'in leading Nasdaq .volume.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 rose 19.4!1 to .
1,354.63, and the Nasdaq composite index fell ·
7.27 to 2,535.58.
·
.
Adv111cing issues outnumbered decliners by :a,
2-to·l margin on the New York Stock Exchange; ·
with 2,024 .up, 1,011 down and 526 unchanged. ,
NYSE volume totaled 80S.67 million shares as
of .4 p.m., vs. 934.4 million in the previous session.
. ,
Tl)e ~YSE composite index rose 9.88 lo ·.
644.18, and the American Stack Exch111ge com- posite index rose 9.70 to 786.67.
. , •

ar thr~ugh· _ Oklahoma, Kansas, 41 dead:

By TIM TALLEY
··
Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keadnalold NBC's "Today" show. ·
·
homa.
.
. ·•
. ·
·
·
A810Cillt8d ·PrM• Wrltltr
.
'
"It cenainly looks like a hup battle has taken place," hC said. "There are
At least half a dozen other.tomadic storms formed over five hours Mon- .
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Devastating tornadoes too numerous to entire llei&amp;hborhooda to the aouth of me that are no lonpr there." He esti· day evening, mainly in central and northeast Oklahoma. Some sprouted fun· ',
count roared acrosa Oklahoma and Kansas, killina at least 41 people and mated tha death toll In his state would wind up at more th111 40; .
. nel .clouds, but there were no immediate reports of widespread dama~e~ or
bringing destruction to cities •nd small towns llike.
·
RoWIIIIKII'9WI of houiea were reduced lo rubble. Cars were tossed allout deaths. .
.
. One un.usually large and powerful twister (ormed about 45 miles south- and Crushed. NaruraJ .aas spewed from ruptured lines. Power poles were
The system also spawned twisters ·in north and west Texas, but did no
. west of Oklahoma City on Monday eyening, killing 29 pe(,ple and injurin&amp; reduced to kindlina and broken, twisted wires flullered In the breeze, '
· major darnage .there.
,
hundreds u ·it moved north and eiiSt;cutting a path half a mile wide.
Hospi~ in the Oklahoma City meb'o area treated S63 people for lorna· . . In Oklahoma, the main tornado formed ncar ChickiiSha, abou~ 45 miles · ·
"It looks like the Murrah Building, but instead of nine stories tall, it's do-Riated Injuries, pollee Clpt. Charles Allen said.
southwest of the capital city. It skipped its way across the flat Oklahoma .
spread out over a lar&amp;e ~a," said Oklllhoma City uaistant fire chief Jon
This momina, a tornado warnina was in effect for in north-central Okla· countryside, toppling trees, power lines, outbuildings 111d caB until it ripped.
Hansen, referring to the federal·builcjina bombina four years ago.
·
. into south Oklahoma City.
.
·
•
About 150 milea norlh, a tornado spawnecl by the same storm system
·
The National Severe Stonns Lab in Norman said the l()mado may
tossed mobile homes like tin cans, damaged houses llld killed at least
have'bCen a mi.le wide at times. Weather seJ'IIice forecaster David Andra ~
five people in Wichita; Kan., and Its suburb of Haysville.· Hospitals
prediCted the twister would be categorized at lest an F-4, lhe secondreported treating more than 80 people.
·
strongest tornado classification, with winds between 2CJ7 mph and 260
Fred Irvin of the Sedgwick County Emergency Preparedness Office
mph.
·
·
said early today the initial count of 10 deaths proved wrong when au!horIn Ka.nsas, Wichita's tornado tore ti 10-mile path that reached 3 1/4
itles realized victims hid been counted twice. But authorities still felled
miles wide. Smaller twister.; struck Sumner and Butler counties, as wen .
more dead would be found.
·
liS other pariS of Sedgwick County, but none caused substantial damage·,
. "It is worse than what you can see,".said Bob Thompson; a batlllion
or injuries.
·
:
chief for the Sed&amp;-,vick County Fire Deparbnenl "We'll probably find
Kansas Gov. Bill Graves declared a state of disaster for Sedgwick;
more deaths. I don't think we've seen the end of il"
County, while Keating declared a state of emergency and activated twO ·
Several mobile homes in.south Wichita were blown into a lake, ll'lliil
National Guard units.
slid.
·
.
·
·
·
.Janies Lee Witt, director of·the Federal Emergency Manigemeni,
Chill Harris wu with seven people inside his mobile home .in
Aaency; was·to survey the damage today,
.
·
Haysville when it wu flipped over and demolished. Two of his compan-·
In Moore, Catherine Meyers hid under a mattress when the stonn:
ions were critically injured.
·
hit her home,
·
:
· "I have no trailer," Harria-·1aid. "We all rolled In ii. It wu the worst
·"My mattress didn't help me," she said, bleeding fr9m her head •
experience in my life."
·
and arin . "I aot hit four or five times on the held by somethins. l've lost: ·
In Oklahoma. the dead Included 11 people in the community of Bridge
a lot of blood."
·
'
Creek, about JO miles soutllwest of Oklahoma City, said Ben Frizzell,
Mary Pat Faris, who weathered the ·storm in her bathtub, wore a
. •pokeaman for t,he state Offiee of Emergency M111agement.
- A torrltldo Min r I d at eMir one-1'1811 mile nightgown at Del aty ):ligh School and waited for word about missina
Thereat died In Oklahoma City and nearby Midwest Oty, Moore, Del wide OOWI'I thf
,.... Nlwa•tltlit, OldL Monct.y enning. More family members.
·
··
·
·
aty 111d Norm~n .
'
...,.40 peopll
to h.w liMn kAIId by tile powtrful atorm
'"I' heard it," she said. "I hear!l .the popping and then I heard the•
"We have whole .comm~nlties that simply aren't there 111ymore,"
In Kiln..._IfNI OklllhomL
·
trees crunching and then my house was gone."
· '

-w•wm

.I

. ·~

Smglc Copy. 35 Cents

·. By BRIAN J. REED
·
given permission to experiment with a special program could be used to finance the project. 'I'm; .
S.ntl1181 N-.e .Steff
.
sealant on an area of lhe stonework. Wright said commissioners took no action to approve any
WOU
The ~e.i" County:~minissioners. discussed · that th~ sealant might help preventthe e~i.on.
work yesterday. . : ,
.
the possabil1ty of p81nting the extenor of the
. Wnght also suggested that the commtsstoners
. The cOmmissioners approved a $2,500 transfer
Meip County Courlhousc when they mel in reg· consider painting trim on the courthouse with a .froin their rental account into the Juvenile Coun
ular session on Monday afternoon.
contrasting col!u, such as a muted green or blue budget to aiver the C:osts of paying assigned
POKfSMOU1'H (AP) - State officials say a prQPOSed $1 billion coke·
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton said that the color, to improve the appearance of.lhe building counsel fees.
'
prm:essing pl111t is just the thing job-starved Scioto County needs to get on front facade and weal side of the building were ' ·· from a distance. ·
Juvenile Court Judge· Roben Buck met with
the road to economic developn~ent.
especi~lr in need o_f repair! and suggested that the
W~ghl recommended, th_at decorative comi~es the.board to discuss incre115ing costs of assigne'd
The project .being considered for a 1,000-acre site ill the Ohio River commJsstonerw begm looking fo' fund$ to pay for and sdls around lhe front wmdows of the butldmg . counsel in the court, due 1Q new state regulations
hamlet of Haverhill hinges on whether Sun Coke gets the infrastruct\lre the work. .
·
be painted with the brighter paint, noting that it which allow court-appointed counsel in virtually'
improvements and tax breaks it wants.
·
"
The commiss~ners have received on~ estimate would make the building more noticeable from every case which is processed in the court.
··
And state officials and community leaders holding a news briefing on
for the work, wh1ch places the cost at Just under the river.
Buck said that the changes in the law were :
the projea Monday appelled eager to provide them. ·
S30,000. That estimate also includca aandblasting
'Thornton hilS also ~uggested lighting the cour- made to allow for better representation of juvenile · .
Sun Coke also consillered i Pittaburgh site, but company officials
of the Ovll War.Vcler1115 monument on the west thou. from the ground so that lhe building and defendanta, but have also resulted .in the assign· .
say, Haverhill, about 120 miles .Outh of Columbus and a few.milea east
lawn of the property,llltdbluting of the stone on dome are more attractive at night.
mcnt of attomeys'in some child ~ustody and visi· ·
Portsmouth, is their prefFfecl 'choice;
' • · the street level and on the lllj~nt pounty jail,
Commissioner Janet Howard slid yesterday tation cases, as well ..
·
•
.that the cost of paintinathe building could be paid
The commissioners also approved payment of
"'I'Mcpltult-would ilupc;t hi!it coat. ln;brick OVCIIt'ttl bae -out linii'Uriltietol ' IIIICI pllintin8 IJNI:-.tllaule-llilcl·aolc~Cri ck,J!ne.
and form coke, which is l.ed In ateel produCtion.
Pomeroy QlulldliiWI Oeorae Wriaht illet wilh f~Vm the county's Community Development bills in the amount of $217,058.28.
Scioto County desperately needs ihe jobs. About3,100 people are reg~ the commia,ioners brieH.y to discuss the Block 'Grant .fonnula program, while Thornton
Present, inoaddilion to ,lcloward and Thornton, ·
istered u unemployed and the jobless rate of 9-4 percent is .more than dou• stonework, whi'h he uys ia in need of restor.live . 111apsted meCting with Treasurer Howard Frank were Commissioner Mick Davenport and Oerk .
ble the state average of 4.3 percent.
.
work. in order to prevent erQslon. Wright WIIS · to see if proceeds from the county's investment Gloria Kloe5 . .: ·
"This (coke pllllt) will b,ring some hope,"said Jacque Leac:h, manag·

·

Monday - Friday
5:30p.m. to 10 p.m.

Pomeroy, Ol1io

Pomeroy.to consider po_lice auxiliary

er~h~~~g::~!:~'!c;.peopleintheare~whoarecapableand

·eH.ours:

Hometown Newspaper ·

Commissioners discuss courthouse paint job

.

The Children's Clinic· "
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

outlast the ·
Diamondbacks 4·3
-Page 5

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Commentary

Tuesday, May 4, 1999

,. 2
TUeedey, Mey •• 11111

Death Notices

The Daily Sentinel Kill the thought of legal euthanasia
By JOIIflh Plrldnt

'EstiiDfisli:d in 1948

111 COurt Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio . ·
740-002-2158.• Fu: 002-2157

CommunitY Newspaper Holdings, h1c.
ROBERT L WINGeTT
Publl1her
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Q~ner•l

DIANE HILL

Controller

Moneger
•

from.,...,.
aiHfNHf,.,. ol top.
ohMW» ot l»&gt;nff Pftble.,.....

&amp;cit--·....,_

7be Sentinel ••laam~~•,.,.,. ro,. Nttar
R. Shoff , . , . poll ..,.,.. or
h~ rr. W
l)opodloftwo.,.,..__oll_ybo-.d.

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CJft

Phyllis Ohlrich was eutha·
nized by her husband last fall as
she lay in her hospital bed. He
_believed she was terminally ill
with cancer. So, to put her out of
., her misery, he pumped a bullet in
her cranium.
Alas,"Ohlrich 's hubby made a
fatal mistake. An autopsy found no trace of ca~­
cer in his -wife-of S7 years. As it turns out, he sent
his beloved to a premature death.
This. tragic story from
Hebron, Neb., resonates all the
way to California; where the
Legislature considers legalizing

don 'i want to die.
Indeed, how many stories have been written
about patients afflicted with cancer ,or some other
terminal illness, who have been given so many
months to live, on it to find that their illness goes
into remiSsion? If doctor-assisted dealh were
legal, some of those patients might very well have
sought lethal medication. They would have been
robbed of months, if not years, of fruitful life.
And even the terminally ill who are not misdiagnosed, who truly are within six months of
death, who actually request doctor assisted death,

WiiUam R. Dean

Ohio weather

Then there is the most ominous threat of lepl·
ized euthanasia .. that the law ultimately will be
abuaed. That some terminally ifl or incurably ill
patients will be sent to hasty deaths without their
knowledge or consent because someone decides
they are better off dead than alive.
Advocates of assisted death, like Aroner,
pooh-pooh'the notion that legalization of assisted
death could ever lead to involuntary euthanasia.
But they conveniently ignore the real-life situa·
tion in the Net~rlands, where euthanasia is effectively decriminalized.

William R. Dean, Salem Street in Rutland, died on Tuesday, May 4, 1999.
Arrangements are under the direction of Casto Funeral Home in Evalls
W.Va. Evening visitation will be cond~cted at the Birchfield Funeral Hom~
on Wednesday, with times to be annoa,mced.

Wednesday, May !)
lor

{~

IMCH.

Golde.n Stansbury

'I

Golden Faye Stansbury, 94, of Carpenter, died on Monday, May 3, 1999,
at the Russell Nursing Home in Albany.
She was born on January 14, I 90S in Dexter, daughter of the late Daniel
and Anna Carpenter Cleland. She was a bomemaker, and a member of the
Carpenter Baptist Church.
· · Surviving are a son, Larry Jay Stansbury, Reynoldsburg; a daughter and
son-in-law, Wanda Lou and Harold Oxley, .Pomeroy; a sister, Neva Taylor,
Barberton; a brother, Sylvain Cleland, Rutland; two daughters-in-law, Louis
Stansbury and Loretta Schm'ilt; a son-in-law, Ben Gryctko; nine grandchildren, 10 great grandchildren, and four great-great gra. . . ildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Asa Dale
Stansbury; two brothers, Henson and Floyd Cleland; three sisters: Freda
Davis, Flora McClure and Ethel Bowman; and a great granddaughter.
Funeral services will be· held on Thursday, May 6, 1999, at 1 p.m., at
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in Albany, with Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Burial will follow at Rawlings Cemetery. . .
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to ·
9 p.m.
·
·
·

[ iiiinifl.i&lt;iJwiffl · •

-

uassisted death ."

While 'lawmakers for the
nation's most populous .state are
- · _ , . , . p h o M - s,_ny. -~~-·• . ........... - o r r - . ,.U It&gt;: ...,,. lo 1M eflltor, .n.. S.ntlnel, fl1 CocM1 fl.,
not prepared, as yet, to allow
- y , Ott/oG.,_;., FAXf» 7f0-ZII7.
.
mere lay people .. like Ohlrich's
husband -- to kill terminally ill
patients, they are quite ready, ft
appears, to allow doctors to
assist the terminally ill with hastening their deaths.
Indeed, a measure sponsored
: America hu a tradition of prayer.· The National Day of Prayer, designat·
by
Dion Aroner. a "progressive"
't;d since 1988 as the first Thursday of May every year, is a great opportuniDemocrat
~mblywoman from
~ for Americans to Ul).ile in recognition of our incredible need for God.
Berkeley,
would
allow doctors to
Appropriately, this year's theme is ·~Light the Nation .... with Prayer" and is.
prescribe
lettial
medication to
~ased on the words of Jesus found in Matthew 5:14-15, where we read: .
terminally
ill
·patients
who so
· "You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither
requesi
it.
do people light a lamp and put it under a bowk Jns.tead they put it on it 's
Aroner modeled her proposed
~land, and it gives light I() everyone in the house. " (NIV)
. .
legislation
after an Oregon Iaw,
: It is only the working of God within our society, our laws, our judgments
.
which
was
approved by that
and our hearts that America will again know the healing of God's power
state's
voters
two years ago. If
upon our land.
the
Legislature
enacts its own ·
. On May 5, 1988, the tOOth Congress of the United States passed a bill,
assisted-death
law,
euthanasia
signed by President Ronald Reagan, "to provide for setting aside the first
. Thursday in May as the date on which the ·National Day of Prayer is cele- advocates are optimistic that legbrated." Although the annual event was established by an act of Congress i~ islatures in other states (22 of
1952, it did not begin to gain. momentum until a specific day was set aside which bave previously rejected
to observe' it. Now, 10 years later, particip~lion in the National Day of Prayer assisted death measures) will
join the death-on-demand band~ontinues to grow and become a vital part o( our American heritage. This
are harmed by legalized euthanasia. Because
Indeed, _a study commissioned by the Dull:h .
wagon.
1ear's obsewance will be Thu&lt;sday, May 6.
,
almost
all
are
suffering
from
clinical
depression,
Ministry
of Justice found that of 3,000 deaths
Aroner says that the qbject of her legislation is
Meigs County's·observance .·or the National Day of Prayer began on Sunday with the beginning of the Bible Reading Marathon at the pavilion on the to "provjde people suffering from terminal illness according to a study of terminally ill patients pub- · from euthanasia in !990, i third were involunlary.
And that's just the percentage of involuntary
with the peace of mind to know that if their symp- lished in the American Journal of Psychiatry. ·
l~vee in Pomeroy. A prayer vigil at the Pomeroy United M.ethodist Church
As
far
back
as
30
years
ago,
·
p
sycbiatrist
Elisa·
mercy killings to which Dull:h doctors admitted.
toms
become
so
severe
and
debilitating,
or
their
began at the same time. These two activities will continue daily, 8 a.m. to 8
beth
Kubler-Ross
identified
live
stages
of
the
If a nation boasting only half the population of
pain
so
great,
they
have
the
choice
to
en·
d
their
p.m., Monday, Tuesday, -Wednesday and concluding at 10 a.m. Thursday,
dying process --denial, anger, bargaining. depres· California sends a thousand patients a year to
¥Q~
..
. suffering."
This is artful language. After all, what person. sion and, finally, ·acceptance. Assisted death, she unwanted dea!hs, it is not hard ·to imagine at least
·. - At 7:30a.m. on Thursday there'w ill be a.prayei breakfast for public offi· that niany yearly euthanasia victims in 'the Gold'
. dais .and members of the clergy at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church. of compassion could possibly oppo~e a measure says, interrupts this process. .
"Lots of my dying patients," she related more en State when and if assisted suicide becomes
f. rom II :30-12!30 p.m. we will ijnite in prayer at the courthQuse steps in that means to provide peace of mi~d to the termirecently,
."say they grow in· boundS and·leaps and · law.
·
nally
ill?
And
what
humane
person
doesn't
want
Pomeroy. Please plan to join us for five minutes or for one hour. Public ·
finish
all
the
unfinished
business.
"
While
That's
why
those
who
value
innocent life
to
alleviate,
if
not
altogether
end,
the
suffering
of
prayers will be offered on behalf of national, state, and local government
euthanasia
advocates
suggest
that
hastening
the
should
be
extremely
troubled
by
the
euthanasia
those
in
the
final
months
of
their
lives?
leaders, and for churches, families, schools and communities. At 7 p~ m . a
But
what
euthanasia
advocates,
like
Aroner,
death&amp;
of
terminally
ill
patients
is
somehow
combill
wending
its
way
thro~gh
the
Legislature.
If it
Concert of Prayer will be held at the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in
.
passionate
and
humane,
KublerRoss
says
that
·
becomes
law,
it
will
not
be
long
before
euthanasia
never acknowledge is the very real danger that
Middlepor;t.
: .Abraham Lincoln had this to say about 0\lling upon the name of the Lord: legalization of assisted death will ultimately lead assisted death is "cheating them of these lessons" is legalized throughout the country.
":Unless the great God who assisted (President Washington) shall be with me to the hastened deaths of not·only terminally Ill they learn at the end of life: She likens assisted Capyrlght1'" NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
!o "taking a student out of school before
JoMph Ptrklnl It • columnllt for The 81n
and aid me, I must fail. But if the same omniscient mind, and Almighty arm, patients who request lethal medication, but also death
final exams."
Diego Unlon•Trlbulll.
·
patients
who
are
not
terminally
ill
or
who
really
th~t directed and protect!lll him, shal! guide and support me, I shall not
faii ... Let us pray that the G()(j of o r fathers may not forsake us now."
This May 6, decide to become involved with millions of Americans on
their knees, as they intercede for oOr nation. You can make a difference.
Steve Bthl By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON .
of the show. "They allow us to look
"Picturing the . Century," runs
Some are famous: ·
.
.
SyrtCUM
Auoclltld Pr- Wrlt•r
through July 4, 2001 at the archives.
-Lewis Hine, documenting back in history, freeze a moment in
\VASHING:roN
(AP)
In the last half of the 19th ccntu- child .labor in American industry time, and imagine ourselves as part
Well I saw Bill Clinton's dog and pony show Tuesday afternoon on Fox Through 100 years of upheaval and ry photography was important, but recording or, in the signature image of the put .... Looking at historic
News. To him, more gun control is needed to prevent any more school shoot· creation, the handheld camera has bulky and slow. American photogra- of the sh~. a powerhouse mechan- photographs helps us imagine what
ings. This does not surprise 'me in t~e least. Ask yourself if these proposals recorded the contrasting moods .of phi:rs preserved Abraham Lincoln's ic working with an outsized wrench, it .was like when the first airplane
or any !lf_the other 21,000 federal, state and local gun laws would have pre- the 20th century in billions of pho- w.eary profile, showed t~ horror of .the arch of his hack mirroring the lOok off, when a landing craft ramp
vented thas.
·
· tographs, from generation-spanning Civil War battlefields and ~incecl curve of the steam· pump he is work· fell open on D-Day, or. when the first
human · being stepped onto the
The part that really frosted me about his little speech,was how he lam- family albums to images of indelible Congress with their images that the ing on.
moon."
natural glories of the American West . -Dor!hea Lange, recording the
pooned and put down people that are part of the so-called "gun culture" (I · graphic power.
The images collide and meld.
The federal government has been were treasures worth preserving.
bread _ lines, worJ- camps and .
guess I'm part of that). He brought up West Virginia and other rural areas of
Men shower in a municipal bath ·
Everything sped up in the 20th migrants of the Great Depression.
having gun racks in their pickup trucks and their love of firearms. He said taking and collecting photographs
in
New
York City in 1903. A mail·
from
the
century's
beginning,
using
century,
and
the
government's
use
of
·
-Ansel
Adams,
whose
photothat we need to change their attitude on guns. ·
man
delivers
in rural Maine in 1930.
the
camera
to
document,
investigate,
photography
was
no
exception.
graph
of
the
silver
curve
of
the
Well, I don't know abou everyone 'else but I'm a staunch believer in all of
Demonstrators,
decades apart,
advocate,
promote,
propagandize
There
was
fast
film,
fast
developing.
Snake
River
below
the
Grand
Tetons
the Constitution and that include.s the Second Amendment. .
demand
votes
for
women
and an enil
and
Nst
show
the
look
and
feel
of
small
cameras
aitd,
towards
centuis
in
the
archives
because
the
lnteri-'
For the liar-in-chiers information the rural areas don't have the crime
everyday America.
· ry's end, .digital photography to or Department commissioned to the war.in Vietnam. A World 'War
· problem. He's bad-mouthing you too, southeast Ohio.
&lt;&gt;
The
National
Archives
·holds
.
select and transmit images by com- Adams in 1941 to install a series of II Flying Fortress disintegrates in
I personally don't need some fornicator telling me I need to change my
flight over Germany. Nine black
more
than
8
million
photographic
attitude.
'
1 puler almost as fast as snapping a photo murals.
Wqrld War I soldiers display their
prints,
negatives
and
slides
and
shutter.
"Photographs
are
created
delibIn light of all the scandals this president has been involved in (including
French
medals for gallantry in
Some of the photographers in the erately; they seek to convey meanpossible.treason involving nuclear secrets to China), he is the one who needs transparencies in one giganticAmerarchives show are unknown, includ· ing and suggest an interpretation of action. San Francisco lies in earthan attitude adjustment. For the people who own guns and voted for Clinton, icon family album.
Now, curators have culled the ing those who recorded the Easter a particular moment in history," says quake ruins in 1906. A rugged U.S.
I. would be ashamed.
·
Lowell W. Rogtrt collection for the best, choosing 190 Parade on Fifth Avenue in New York Bruce I. Bustard, the National Mail Service pilot suits up for the
.,
Ntw HIVIII, W.'w. images to reflect the · energy, in 1900 or hardscrabble 'Steadman· Archives curator who assembled the winter of 1926. A long line of
tourists slide the snowy slopes in
achievement, tragedy and humor of Avenue in Nome, Alaska, in July of show.
the century as seen through the pur- that year with prospectors standing
"Old
pictures are
time Mount Rainier National Park In
:· I ani writing this letter ,in regards to the speech in the Democratic Party poses of government. The show, · near the Horse Shoe Cafe.
·machines," he wrote in the catalog 1917.
t~at Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes made the other night I agree fully
with Mr. Lentes, that parents should take more responsibility for their chi I·
dren's actions, but through the lawmakers taking away the authority of .parc;nts correcting their children at home, and taking away' the authority from
- t~e bus drivers ancj teachers in the school system, and taking prayer and God B11,J1ck Andti'IOn and Jan Molllll'
Y2K Technology Problem .. since last fall, planning drills and simulating
out of the schools, even the law itself has lost its-authority, when criminals
Y2K breakdowns. Just this week, Barnett plans to
Committee.
The story our goyernment doesn't want you to
~n be tried and found guilty and receive very little punishment for their
"This problem is take some military and FBI pcilple to the World
know was broken not by a major TV network -or
c;rimes.
.
·
.
everywhere and nowhere . Trade Center to develop possible responses to a
national newspaper. It was encapsulated instead
. I hope you don't take this wrong, I am not for mistreating children by any by a front-page picture, which ran in February on
.
all at once," Bennett told stock market crash.
ljteans, or the teacher will sometimes bring better results than · hours of the front page of a small Virginia paper called
Later this ·month, the federal Emergency Manus. "We can only take a
t~reatening what you are·going to do; knowing that you won't be allowed to.
snapshot of portions of agement Agency wi)l also hold a national "table
"The Poiomac News."
•
·
1: rea!IY love children, and I believe all children really want from their par·
infrastructure and attempt top" simulated scenario drill •• similar to the
Captioned "Y2K riot training," . the photo
ents as love, and for parents to show authority over them.
.
to provide the most accu- " war games" played out in the military - which
depicted a Marine private trying to "force herself: When children know that no one is .allowed to correct them, they will do backward through a line of Marines during a civil
rate infoimation we can. will pull together all emergency and military
a: lot of things _that children normally won't.
unrest exercise at Quantico Marine Corps base" But there is simply not sufficient time to under- resources. FEMA, along with the National Guard,
Bob Richmond outside Washington.
stand where all the problems ·are soing to surface, is responsible for coordinating state and local
.
Mkldltport
In this .case, unfortunately, a picture was not · so we must be practical and prepare for the responses to , Y2K problems .while the State
Department will i:over international social prob·
worth a thousand words. In fact, · a Quantico worst."
lems
..
In
the
worst·C8$C
scenario,
public
alarm
spokesman denied the story and says the-Marines
•
·
But
it is a small agency within the FBI, quiet·
spreads
rapidly
as
vital
services
such
u
·health
were not, in fact, preparing for civil unrest. BUt
By The Attoelatld Prn1
· Today is Tuesday, May 4, the 124nd day of 1999. There are 241 days left the reporter (and photographer), Dave Ellis, care, .public safety and utilities are temporarily ly created by Janet Reno recently, that will be the
disrupted by computer brea.kdowns. The stress, of federal authority for any national Y2K repercusstands by his story.
in the year.
.c&lt;iurse, is on "temporary." The technology exists sions.
"They
told
me
what
the
exercise
was
about
Today's Highlight in History:
The agency, The National Domestic PrepuedOn May 4, !942, the Battle of the Coral Sea, the.first naval clash fought and then asked me not to report it," he told us. to repair every line of computer code and every
embedded
chip
that
malfunctiollB
u
a
result
of
the
ncss
Office, is now up and running .. and prepar"(The
Marines)
w.ere
worried
that
people
would
. entirely with carrier aircraft, began during World War II.
ing
-despite the fact they don't officially exist;· : .
date
change
-eventually.
Most
experts
suggest
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter, Minuit landed on present-day Manhattan think they were painting heliCOpters black and
Congress
hu .yet to approve its budget.
·
that
people
prepare
(or
Y
,2K
like
they
might
pre·
·
training for a huge government crackdown at the
Island.
·
· •
·
UNDER
THE
DOME
-Who
says
Republipare for a winter storm.
·
In 1776, Rhode Island declared its freedom from England, two months millennium."
Thomas Barnett, director of a Y2K seculity cans are humorless? The GOP "Theme Team," a
Such
is
the
great
dilemma
behind
preparation
before the Declaration of Independence was adopted.
.
project through the U.S. Naval War College, group of conservatives who get together once a
In 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, a labor demonstration for an for the·phenomenon know u Y2K: No one knows spearheaded · the effort to have the military week· to dii!Cuss strateay. is still havin1 fun with
exactly
what
will
happen
·to
our
technologically
8-hour work day turned into a riot when a bomb-exploded.
respond.to 1100ial unrest.
.
Hillary Rodham Clinton's description of a "vast
In 1916, responding to a demand from President Wilson, Germany agreed dependentlivei when computer dates (011 forward
"We
figured
eventually
the
Department
of
right-wing
conspiracy'' out to get her husbind.
to limit its submarine warfare, thereby averting a diplomatic break· with from "99" to "00" at midniaht on Dec. 31. Yet Defense would look·away from their computers
A recent Theme Team nier advertising a lunplanning for the worst-cue ~cenario carries the
Washington.
.
and frenzied effortl to rcpalr computer code and cheon added a "Conspiracy note" at the bottom:
danger
pf
inciting
panic
and
becoming
a
self-ful·
In I n7, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was founded.
see the whole bi1 world," Barnett told our associ- "In related news, a special meeting will take
prophesy.
·
In 1932, mobster AI Capone, -.nvicted of income-tax evasion, entered fillins
This might explain why m01t military folks we ate Kathryn Wallac:c. "It is becoming generally . pl_ace in ·the Linda Tripp Auditorium after the
the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
·
talked to claimed no knowledge of any Y2K·•pe· aa:cpted now that the computer problems won't Theme Team meetins to view a special, two-part
In 1961, a group of "Freedom Rider~"le(t Washington for New Orleans cific preparations. But we have learned that the be the worst of (Y2K) but rat~er the social prob- film: Part 1 -- 'The National Security Breakdown
to challenge racial segregation in interstate buses and bus terminals.
·
U.S. military is quietly planning a sophisticated lems that will eu&lt;:ade from the computer mal- in 'the Executive Branch, 1993-Present'; Part 2 ..
In 1970,0hio National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war protesters at social-response network in case civil unrest funcllons." ·
'Efforts to Cover it Up.' The secret conspiracy
l&lt;ent State University, killing four·students and woundidg nine others.
·
Barnett s•ys his team hu been coaching every handshake is required for admission."
should erupt. It wu confirmed to us recently by
. In 1980, Marshal Josip Broz lito, president of YugPSiavia, died three Sen. Robert Bennet, R-Utah, who chairs a special branch of the military -- indeed even the Marines Copyright t ..., unit~ FM!uro lyndlcato, tnc.
days before his 88th birthday.

l-etters to the editor

..

W. VA.

Light the nation.... with prayer

Faye Wolfe

By Tha AssOc:lated Preaa
Showers and thunderstorms are likely across Ohio at least through
Thursday as a low pressure sy~iem approaches from the west.
· But the. unseasonably warm conditions will continue, with highs on
Wednesday near 80 and Thursday around 75 .
·
Ovcrn i ~ht lows will be in the mid-40s, the National Weather Service
said.
.The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 91 degrees in 1949 while the record low was 31 in 1986. Sunset
t~night will .bc at 8:28 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:27a.m .
_
Weather forecast:
.
: Tonight. ..Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s. Light southeast wind.
Wcdnesday ... Partly cloudy. A chance· of showers in the afternoon.
Highs near 80. Chance of rain SO percent.
Wednesday night...Showers likely, with a cha.nce of thunderstorms.
Lows ncar 60.
·
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... Shuwcrs· and thunderstorms likely. Highs ·in the lower and
mid 70s.
·
·
Friday.. :Partly cloudy. Lows in thG50s and high_s in the mid 70s.
Saturday.• Mostly cloudy with ~ chance of showers. Lows 50 to 55 and
70 to 75.

Gov~rnment is secretive about Y2K plans

Today In .Hi·story

•

I

•

'

_,

._____ :

Woman charged in abandoning
newborn in trash goes on trial ·
. LEBANO~ (AP) - A woman · who gave barth prematurely and
abandoned her newborn daughter in ·
a trash can was suffering from a personality disorder and should neil be
held ~untable, her defense attor- ,
ney satd.
Deborah Mackey has pleaded
innocent by ~ason of in~nity to
charges of chald endangenng and
attempted murder. She does not dispule that she abandoned her baby
Dec. 14 in the trash can at the
~ratnkhlin factorhy where she wllor_klled.
u s e says s e was .menta y 1 at
the time.
Wh h
·1
en er Ina resumed today in
Warren County Common Pleas
Court • a psyc ho1og1st
• was to testt'fy
that Mac key, 39• expenence
·
d a psychot'
· d
d 1 t t h ·h
ac epaso e an os ouc wat
reality, said lawyer Donald Oda Ill.
On Monday, a Franklin police

Me. I. gs· 'EMs l'o.gs 10 ca II s

Clinton needs attitude change

.Children want -love, discipline

Faye Wolfe, 77, of Texas Road: in Pomeroy, died on Monday, May 3,
1999 at Veterans Memorial Hospital following an extended illness.
She was b()rn on February 17, 1922 in Meigs County, daughter of the late
Amos and Leora Black Donavan. She was a homemaker and a member of
the Mt Hermon United Brethren in Christ Church of Pomeroy.
·
. Surviving are her husband of 57 years, George Alfred Wolfe of Pomeroy;
a sister, Mae Smith of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents; she was preceded in death by three brothers: Gilbert,
Philip and Clinton Donavan; three sisters: Alice Beaver, Amy Eynon, and
Nana "~nie" _Yates; a"d infant twin siblings.
.
Servaces wrll be held on Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Mt. Hermon Un'ited
Brethren in Christ Church in Pomeroy with Rev. Robert Sanders and Rev.
Don ~mbs officiating. Burial will follow in Mt. Hermon Cemetery.
Fnends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at the Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland.

Showery activity to begin
on Wednesday afternoon

Government photos capture the century

/.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

... Units of the Meigs County
Emergency
Meilieal Service .
record ed 10 calls for assisiance
Monda~. Unils reaponding incluCJed:
'
CENTRAL Dlsp·•·rcH
,... Nurst'ng
·5:17 a.m., Overbrook
C~nter, Middleport, Helen Davis,
treated at the scene,·
·
··12:15 a. m., West Main Street,
Pctmeroy, motor-vehicle accident,
Donald Little, Roger Braver and
George Stobart, refused treatment,
Pomeroy squad assisted; . .
•
12:31 p.m., Spring Avenue,
Pomeroy, Joyce Double, Veterans
Memorial Hospi tal, J'omeroy squad
a•sisted;
1:46 p..m., Forked Run Boat

Ramp, Leonard Pakstoil, CamdenCl k
ar
Memorial
Hospital,
Reedsville-squad assisted; ·
3 :35
· p.m., Park Road, Darwin,
Ann Griffith,
refused treatment; ,
OS
11 :
p.m.,
Street,
M'ddl
Ch Broadway
1
1
eport, ares Young, VMH.
POMEROY
!O·.JO
.
a.IJI., Johnson Road,
Ramona Roush, Holzer Medical
Center, Central Dispatch squad
aSI!asted;
I p.m., · Maples Apartments, .
Angela"Lucas, treated at the scene;
11:()9 p.m., Texas Road, Faye By DOUG ALDEN ·
Wolfe, VMH.
Aleocllllld Prill Wrltlr
RIITLAND
COLUMBUS (AP) _While eco2: 19 a.m., Metgs Mane 31, Jerald nomic incentive programs benefit
Keyes, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
companies that are drawn to the state,

'IRONTON (AP) - A chemical
tank caught fire early t'oday at a
fa~tory in this city along the Ohio
River.
Workers were evacuated from
the AlliedSignal Inc. plant, and

surrounding streets were blocked
off.
·
No injuries or other evacuations
were reported.
The lire started about 5:30 a.m.
in a tank holding napathalene, an
ingredient of mothballs, said Joe
Dotson, plant supervisor.
.·
The plant, whkh employs about
40 people, _makes the. chemical.

iVSPS 1U·llfi0)
Community Ncw1p1ptr lloldlnp; Inc.

'

Pu_bli$lled ~ve ry afte moun, Monday through
. Fnday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley Publisl'lina Company. Seeotld claM
f)()Sll&amp;e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
MemMr. The ~al.ed Press· and the Ohio
Newspa~r A\ .,ociation.
·~
PUJtm•tu: Send atldresa ccrrections to The

Daily Se ntinel, 111 Coon St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4l169.

SVBSCRIPTtON RATES
B)' Carrier or Motor Route
One \Yeck ....•... .••.. 1................ . . .S2.00
Orte Month ...••..•.•...••...•••.•. .•...••. $8.70
One Year.. ,; ..~ ..........................:. 5104.00

Grant rec/eved for

Th~ Appalachian Regional Commission has awarded a $40,000 grant
to Meags County to help promote Meigs County artisans and their crafts.
The fun~ will be u~d to help form a Craft Association and craft promotion proJects. Accordmg to U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, 15
new jobs arc anticipated a5 a result of the grant projecr.
"I a~ pleased that the ARC chose to fund this worth y projeci," Strickland saad. "It will help create new jobs and promote the region's distinctive Appalachian culture."
County Commisisoner Jeffrey Thornton said that the project has been
in the planning stages for two year~
·
"This is great news for Meigs County. The next step will be meetings
th';'ughout the ~unty so that all of our_crafts pe!!ple can be inv.olved."
. 'Thts ~a.nt wall help market our area to promote our craft industry,"
saad Comassaoner Janet Howard.
-·
.Th~rnton said that the commiss~oners had been searching for "a mechanasm to promote the county and ats crafts products. A series of meetings
were held with local artisans, who formed a group of 50 people.
Local grant [Jlnds in the amount of $10,000 will be added to make a
total
cost of $50,000, Thornton said.
·

Burlingham Modern WQOdmen
The Burlingham Modem Woodmen Camp 7230 will hold a Mother's
Day potluck dinner Saturday, 5 p.m. a1 the Woodmen Hall. Meat, salad, rolls,
pop, coffee and lea wall be provided. Each mother will receive a Hower.

Clerk's office to be open

given c:mier each welt.
No au~ip tion by mail permitted In areas

where home carrier ~ice is av11ilablc.
P,Ublilhc:r reaerna the ri&amp;lJtlo adjust rates dur·
lng the aubsctiptlon period. Subnlptlofl rale
oh.nges mty be Implemented by changing the
d_urAiion of the , utmcriptiori .

·

Larry-Spencer, Meigs County clerk of courts, announced that his office
~ill be open Monday while the computers are being worked on. It had earher been reported that the office would be closed while the work was going
on.
·

League to organize
An or~nizational meeting of the Monday evening ladies league will be
held at the Meags County Golf course, Monday, 5 p.m. A short business
meeting will be followed by a nine bole scramble. All substitutes are also
invited to parti~i~te in the scr"".'ble. League play will begin May 17 at 5
p.m. The format as match play wath two-person teams. Teams who want to
participate or anY.one who wants to play on a substitute basis may sign up at
the clubhouse or call 992-3710-992-6130, or 949-2530.
.

Songfest planned
A son~est_ will be held on May 15 at 7 p.m. at the Old Dexter Church.
The pubhc IS mvated, and singers are welcome.

~ntlque

show planned

·

.·

Marietta Band Boosters will sponsor the Marietta Antique Show on Sat'

ur~ay from 10 a.m. _to S p.m. The sbow will be held at the Marietta Senior

Hagh School cafetena, on Davis Avenue off State Route 60 at the north end

o~ Marietta. Dealers from Several states will be offering quality antique f~r­
natur~ ~d ~nes. Food and home-baked goods will also be available.

Admassaon as a _$3 llonation; there :will be -a drawing for an antique door
pnze. For more mformahon call (740)373-2956 or (740)373-1152. ·
·

To sing at Center

·

Juhio~ a~d Rita White will be playing at the Meig; Senior Center, Thursday, begmnang at 5:30 p.m.
· .

DAVtomeet

administration will follow up and take
some of the recommendations and
observatiollB made in this study to
develop economic-growth incentives."
Study director Donald Iannone,
director oftbe Economic Development
theireft'ectonlocalcommunitiesand
the state's economy are not clear, the Program at Cleveland State University,
director of a stale-!!ponsored study told said the Slate's policies were popular
overall, but how much tbey benefit the
a slate committee.
.
state
and local treasuries directly hasn't
The $500,000 study won't be.combeen
tallied.
pleted for three weeks, but a 28-page
"This is the first time this compresummary of the study was presented to
the Ohio Economic Development hensive of a study has been done,"fan·
Study Advisory Committee, which none said. ·1'
Many of the policies involve giving
called for a look into state policies in
short-term
tax breaks in hopes of longJune 1997.
term
payback
that the study said .
"One of the purposes in this study
was to lind out what our total invest- should be monitored more carefully.
The study also recommended cutment in traditional economic development programs was - which we did- ting and gradually eliminating the state
n't get an answer to, " committee tangible personal property tax. ·
Ota!rman Sen. Otarles Hom, R-Kcttering, said Monday. "Hopefully the
Legislature will follow up and the .

Hospital news
· Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions ~ Paul
Pearman, Middleport.
Monday discharges- none.
Holzer Medici! Center
Discharges May 3 - Zelda
·
Strausbaugh.
(Published with permission)

I!!.J!Qf~
Casual Outdoor Furniture
'''fhe mo&amp;r comfortab~ ca1ual furniture on ehe market. '' Our
exclwive uPerma·Wicker'" ProVide&amp; a n.a tural ..give" for the total
body comfort and Ita yo cool even after long hour. in the •un.

/),, ·, for.!.!.t'l .ll 11111 '/'/,is

·"'""It"..

SINGLE COPY PRICE
l&gt;aily.. .......................... ............. 33 Cents
SUbscribed not deJirlna to pay the ca'rrier may
r;mft in •dvNK'e dlrectto The Daily Scnt.lnel on
a three, si..: pr 12 month buis. Credit will bt

Association

Report gives state economa·c
development m"lxed· marks

·chemical tank catches . f"lre

The Daily Sentinel

d~tective testified that Mackey ·said
she had been ·planning to give birth
and lhen offer the child for adpplion.
.
Detective Rick Thacker said
Mackey also told him she was sorry
and had no explanation for why she
dumped the baby. ·
·
" I wasn't thinking straight for'
some reason . I just panicked. There;
is no excuse fo·r what I did. I know'
it's w'rong, .. Mackey told Thacker in
a taped interview from the emergency r\)Om at Middletown Hospic
tal.
Mackey cried as prosecutors
played the tape in court.
·
CO-workers said she 'told them .
that day that she felt ill, then left the
paper products factory and went
h
orne,
A cleaning woman found the
infant.

Local b·r iefs:

lltn. ')f/,

TRIVIA
Before ~une Lockhart joined ahe
cast of Lns.&lt;ie in t 958, the pari of
Timmy's mom , ·Ruth Martin , was

played by .(::torts Leachman.

MAILSUBSCRIPTIOM
Inside Mdp Couni.J
13 \Yeeb........................... .$27.30 ..
26 Wceb ................... ........ .$~3 .82
52 Wecks ... ,... ...................J10S.S6
R11n Ouulde Mdp Ceunt,
13 Weeks ....... ..................... Si9.zs
2«i Weeks\.,,................... l....$56:68
52 Wc:ekl,o:o 11...................... .Stq9:72

DECISION
TODAY

.,

YoUr ~rl«don of 1 bily manum eat
should be mode now whUe .U ...,
hen to panlcipott In tht~oice.

Reader Services
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Let our apuienct help ro• aute
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C&lt;Qrrtetlon Polley

Our m•ln co11nn I• •II ttor1n " lO be
I~Mratc. If 70U knoW of •• e~K;' .. 1
llory, coli lilt oowo1110m ol (1ot0) 9922155. We wilt cho:&lt;k yool' tnlonnatlon
lftd Mike I. torrcclfo•lr WlmiDledo

Low 8-acl&lt; Chair Sale $99
High Back Chair Sale $109

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Sports

The Daily. Sentinel

Tuuday, May 4, 1999

Tuesday, May 4,199fF

By JOE KAY
The score was tied at 3 and the
CINCINNATI (AP) - Aaron Reds hadn 't scored since the first
Boone isn't an exceptional bunter. mmng when Darren Holmes (2· 1)
He does know the perfect lime for came on to pitch the bottom of the
one.
nmth.
Boone saw Anzona th~rd baseHolmes got a stnke on Boone,
man Matt Williams playing back and who took a .179 average to the plate.
pushed a bunt th at way Monday That's when the Reds third baseman
ntght His infield single started a took advantage of hts counterpart.
ninth· mmng rally that gave the
"I kmd of took my time to see
Cincmnati Reds a 4-3 VICtory over where they were p aymg," Boone
the Dtamondbacks,
said "When I saw Matty playing
Mike Cameron broke out of an o. back, I said, ' If they get a strike on
for-13 slump with a bases- loaded me, I' m going to drop one down "'
single to wm it, but Boone 's good
Holmes had the only pl ay on the
judgment - and n1ce tou ch on the ball. and he couldn't get off a throw
~u~t - made it posSible
after slightly twi sting h1s ankle wh1ic
: " Boonie had a heads-up bunt, " getting to 11
manager Jack McKeon said " We
That was just the start of a bad
haven 't done the little thiDgs as mmn g by Holmes, who won two
much as we'd like, but we really games last week but couldn ' t get his
haven ' t been in many buntmg Situa- smker to stay m the stn ke zone
tiOns."
.
Monday.

Eastern blanks Southern 3-0 in Division _Ill sectional openef.
The Eastern Eagles broke a score·
le!is deadlock m the s1xth mnmg to
caprure a first round DIVISIOn Ill &lt;ectlonal softball tournament wtn
Monday n1ght at Racme, where 1he
Eagles cla1med a 3-0 wm .
All three runs came m the stxth
innmg
All the.excuemcnl of a great game
was 1n the a1r as a large crowd turned
out to cheer on their favorne team ,

Addmg to that cmot1on was a great
p1tchmg battle that developed
between Eastern's Stephante Evans
and Southern's Kim Sayre
Eastern ( 11 -8) threatened m the
first w1th a Valene Karr smgle and an
Ang1 Wolfe walk , but those two were
left stranded Southern put one run ·
ncr, Laramc Lawson, on With an

Both clubs went down In order
over the next two innmgs, but m the
fourth Eastern threatened w1th a dou·
ble, a Wolfe sacnfice, and Evans
walk Sayre worked through the
mmng unscathed
Sayre reached on an error m the
Southern fourth , but saw a smke out
and 1-3 ground out end the frame.
error, but she too never saw home Eastern's Damelle Spencer led off
plate
the fifth w1th a walk and advanced all

the way to thtrd , but Sayre fanned
two of the next three batters to put
out the lire.
'
Fmally, in the stxth, Karr Jed off
With a SIDgle, Wolfe reached on an
error, Suzy Milhoan had an RBI SID·
gle, Evans had a sa.nfice for an RBI ,
and Chasatie Hollon had an RBI SID·
gle for a 3-0 Eastern lead.
That was all that was needed as
Eastern rolled to the b1g WID.

Eastern goes to M1ller tomght, buf
advances to the sectiOnal ftnals
agntnst the wanner of the Belpre -~
M 1ller game
·

Karr led Eastern With two s1nglcs
and a double , Mtlh oa n smgled ,
Spencer smglcd twtce, and Hollon
smgled.
Southern's lone hit was a sixth
IDntng siDgle by Lawson that broke
Evans' no-hit b1d Evans fanned five
and walked none as Eastern made
four errors
Sayre fanned eight and wa lked
three

"

lnnlnal2lllb
Eastern .
()()().003 -0=3·7:4 '
Southern ............ 000·000·0= 0-1·3
Batleries
,,
Evans (W) and Karr
Sayre (L) and Davts

"'

Meigs baseball crew beats Alexander 9-5.:
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Me1gs scored at least one tun ID
every IDmng, and held off an
Alc•ander comebac k allempt ID
defeatmg the Spartans 9-6 1n Tn·
Valley Conference Ohto DIVISIOn
baseball ac11on Monday evemng
The Marauders ( 11 -9 overall &amp; 95 ID the Oh1o DIVISIOn) JUmped out
on top 1-0, Jerem1ah Bentley opened
up the top of first wtth a smgle
Adam Bullington followed With a
double to score Bentley
Tommy Roush reached on a
Spartan error and scored on a N1ck
Dctwiller double to gtve Mctgs a 2-0
1n the top of the second
The Spartans (9- 15 &amp; 6- 10) cut
the lead to 2-1 ID the bouom of the
second IDntng Moore doubled and

scored on a double by Buckley
In the third mnmg Bentley singled
moved around on ground outs and
scored on a passed ball for a 3-1
Me1gs lead.
Me1gs added two more runs in
each of the fourth and fifth innmgs.
In the fourth. Humphreys smgled,
and Roush walked Humphre ys
ended up sconng on a bat k and
Roush came IDto score on a stnglc by
Beha
In the fifth IDDing Me1gs made II a
7- 1 lead when Ramsburg siDgied and
Jeff Brown followed w1th a two run
home r4n over the left-center field
fence.
Me1gs looked to be m control
when they scored an insurance run m
the top of the m when Bentley
reached on a field ers chotec

,,

Bulhngton followed with a double to
make 11 8-1
Alexander came back 1n the bot·
tom of the stx th wtth three runs to
pull to wtthm 8-4 on a smgle by
Warren, a walk , a douhle by Grigsby
and a WIld pttch
.
Metgs scored thetr ninth run of
th e game ID the seventh 1nn1Dg
Humphreys smglcd, and scored on
another double by Dcttwtller
The Spat tans came back m the
bottom of the scvc nth •mnm g 10 score
two runs and loadccj the bases olf of
Bentley .But E11c R1chmond came on
to record 1he laS! out and ptck up the
save
,
Bentley was the wmnmg pncbcr
g1vmg ur stx hits, walkmg 10 and
stnktng out 10. Bullington and
Dcttwdlcr each had a pair of doubles

for Me1gs. Brown added h1s home
run Hum phreys added two smgl es ':
Ramsburg, Bcha and Mart m each':
added a smgle.
,
Jordan was 1he startel and lose~;~
for Alexander Warren came on in thc!i
fifth mnmg and fimshcd. The tw&lt;,
gave up II htts , walked two, hit J1..
hatter and st ruck out f1ve.
';~
McLmn, Buckley and Gr~gsby
the Spartans w1th doubles. Jewell: ·
Hawk and Warren added singles
:
Inning ll!1illi
Mc1gs
... . 111 -22 1-1=9- 11 -0
Ale xander
010-003-2:5- 10-2 .
Batteries
.,
Bentley (W), R1chm0J1d (7 &amp;
save) and Humphreys
Jordan (L), Warren (5) and Jewell;

Baseball Tornadoes
whip Eastern 11-0

on a smgle off the bat of Tawny
Jone s.
Alexander btJtlt thctr lead to 6 I
10 the third inning But Meigs started
thetr comeback 1n the fourth mnmg.
Abby Hams and Spaun both walked,
Amy Hysell , Brandy Tobm, Jones
and Bethany Boyles each followed
with a smgle to pull Me1gs to w1thm
6-5.
Me1 gs ucd the game m the fifth
mmng when Hysell smglcd m Hams
who had walked to lie the score at
s~&gt;

Metgs scored a pa1r of runs m the
SIXth mnmg to post the w1n
Stephame W1 gal and Btooke
W1illams both smglcd and Hams
doubl ed m the wmnmg run s
HyscJ I was the wmmng pitcher on
a five h1tter She struck out seven and
walked SIX
W1gal had three siDgles lor Metgs
Harr•s went two for tw o wnh a double and a smgle. Jones and Hyse ll
added two smgles Boyles, W1fhams
and Tob1n each had SID glcs.
Kmg was the starter and loser for

roundup
By The A••oclaled Presa
After winning six m a row, the
San Franctsco G1ants are now
streaking m the opposuc duccllon
The G1ants lost thc1r fourth
SJraight Monday n1ght when the
Pittsburgh Ptrates ralhed for four
runs in the ninth mnmg for a 9-8 victory Bnan Gtles tted 11 w1th ht s sec·
9nd two-run homer of the game, and
Q1ant Brown delivered the wmnmg
s~~~gle at Three Rivers Stadium.
" It was one of tile best games
I' ve ever been in ," said Jason
Kendall, who went 5-for-5 for the
Pirates " I hope to play ID some
playoff and World Senes games hke
lh1s someday ''
San Franctsco's Jeff Kent also
went 5-for-5 and became the first

' "

"

Alexander She gave up 12 hus,;
walked SIX and struck out lour.:
Tullius led Alexander With (WU Sm'1
gles Branhan added a tnple
•
What's nut? Me1gs w1ll host,
Jackson 1n the first mund of the sec·
t10nal tournaments Wednesday at 5.
p,m AdmiSSIOn IS $2

road tnp like th1s and come out 7-4, I
thmk you ' ve got to be happy,"
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove
sa1d.
The lnd1ans get a day off today
and, desplle the~r performance
Monday, they really do need It
David Justice sat out Monday 's
game with a sore neck, Omar
VIZquel was benched With a sore
nght quadnceps and Wtl Cordero
continue$ to have problems wtth hiS
nght wnst smce bemg h1t by a p1tch
Wednesday VJZquel and Cordero
could both be headed to the d1sabled
list
Hargrove 's IIDeup Monday had
Sandy Alomar at designated h mer
lor the ftrst t1me th1s season He had
only one healthy player on the bench ,

Scoreboard
Snn I mncm u

Baseball

Co lm iolu

16
1'1
1..1
10

S.n1 11H:gu

IQ

I.ns Angeles
Arll UIIJ

AL standings
l!

New Yur k

16
15
14
12
7

Turofllu
r.mlpa Bay
Bo~ton

B1lmnore ............. .

•

L

g

12
11
ll
17

CC'nlral DiviSion

CLEVt:I ,I\NU

Ill

n

Cht cil~o
Odrml

12
10
10

Kansas C11y
MmrJ:Wia

7

10
14

l'&lt;.l.
667
SS6
519

!ill
l'

.um

,.

292

9

no
~5

46 1

JJ

415

l:'i

400

1"

,.'

1
K

Weuern n,,lslon

Tuu

Anahe•m

12

12
14

Stalllc

12
12

14
IS

14

Oaklartd

B~

4112
462
444

2
1
1'

Monday's scores

400

5

I o~

1'\ul!t'le~
San IJICj!O f.J

(
Kansas Cuy (Suppan I 1) ill Tampa DPy lAivara
l· ll. JOlpm
2·2) at loronto ( Ha llad&lt;~y 2 11

(Mhclo.J 1·.1) 7 0.5

pln

New York (Mendoml l} ar Mmnescxa (Uncoln
04} 80lpm
at Bo1ton (Rapp l · l l 1 0~

, pm

ChJCII80 (Navarro 1-2) II Oaltunore (Ertcbon 0
3) 705pm
Kansa1 Cny {WJtallck 0- l) a1 Tampa lhy &lt;Rupe

I

6

10'
11

1

2'

i
•

'

729

t l·h:&gt;U! Iflll
It M I RRQ ~OI:I

29 IIJ
l!'i 2\
19 ~0

004

14
I!

l ~f1

0) I 10 jl!n
I l) 31 Chicago (Mulholl md

2·0), 220 pm

U:n

Ang~ les

I ~

•·I'IIOC'n lx

H
23

19

Sac r ,IIIII:IHO
S!.':tlll~

S:m D1rgq &lt;Stw nc~ O JJ a1 Ph1l.Kielphu1 ([lyrd 2
21 l O~pm
Mi lwaukee fKarl 2· 1) oii'IQ1"1da (M e 1Kiow ~ 1 l}
1 O!i pm
St l..o1u5 (Bouenfidd 4 0) at Aillllllli (Su"Jh:.t .a.
(A513CIO

lS
41

)· l m1bnol
x-1 A L..1keu
x

Colo• 11lu IK1It: 2-21iii Um 1go \1.1111 5Wlll ll l I OJ
2 20 pm
los Angelt'S fValdc:s 1-0) :11 Montrenl (l'~van o 0
41 10~ IIIII
Sm Dn~r.•&gt; [\\i ll• nms I OJ at l'h iiRdclp hla
(Luewcr I 21 1 05 p m
M1lwau lr.: ee (lldrrd fl I l ,11 l lond.1 lSiHil he J () 'I
7 O"i p m
~lin I r.m!!lsl&lt;) (C.K irt.: 1 2) at Pm5burxh (Stl va 0

U'ett!l I 1)111 Momrcul (V~t~Uel I

IJ 7 05pm

San Francuco (Este~ 2-2) al PIUJhurfth (Schourelr.:

John.ou 2- 1) at CINC INNA11 (Avery

1 2J,70.Sp m
Houton (Bergman 1 1) 111 New York (Jones 1 0)
7 1j pm

715

6'

25
28
J9

Gu lden Slflte
LA CllppC'1 5
~
,
It d uu.:hcd plnyotl berth
) Chnchc.•d d1\'mOn ltlle

Basketball

i S8

"

129
612
~ \1

"i \1

479
419
I118

lWt

lY L

'" M1 anu

\2

I fi

'" Orlando
11 P1'11 h:uk lphm

12

_.New York

Z,1

17
21

lfi

l~

IJOiiOn

IIJ

10

Washtng!nn

II!

lJ

New Jeney

l"i

q

Cc nlnl Oh lsum

Chicago

12

17

)() 18

29 20
21 2 1
24 24
22 16
ll l f&gt;
1.. 16

-·-

WK~TERN

5
9
9'
12
14'
26

Monday's scores
w.1hhwgton 113, New Jeney 102
New York 9~. Bolton 88
Detron 115, Oncaao 71
Sacramento 112 Denver 104
Go lden SIIIJC 91, Vancouver 83
LA l..nktrs 115, DaU11.1 102

Baseball
Amrrlun L.n&amp;Ut'
AL Su!pentkd lktrull f{HV Onan MLJorhler for
11: 11 day1 fOf docton n&amp; baSC"balls a(tt'r btinll ejrcted
from a 11arne on May I
NEW YORK YANkEES Plnced RHP Jeff
Nelkltl on the J5,day diSabled h&amp;l Called up Jay
len mer from Columbus of the Inter national l..ea&amp;ue
SEA.lTlE MARINERS Placed I HP 11utch
Henry on the I 'i-day d1 u bled list Purchased the co n
1rac1 of LHP Sean Speocer rro m Tncoma of lhe
Puufk Cuanl...ensueTAMPA DAY DEVIl RAYS Pluced RHP Juho
Sa mana on the I$ day dt~abled lnt Recalltd RHP
Ryan Rupe from Orlando orche Sou1hern Leaaue

NaUonll J..eape

CINCINNATI REDS Recalled RHP Steve

Pnlftl from lndJanapohl orthe lntemalional L.eaauc
COLORADO ROCKIES Sen! OF J'al Watktns

Tonight's pmes
Atlanla ot P.hanu, 7 30 p m

to Colonwki SpnnJI or the PCL Recalkd. INF Chrll
Sexton from Colorado Spn~p

Phrladcrplna at Chulotle, 8 p m

FLORIDA

CLEVELAND at lndlanp, 8 p m
Toro nto 01 Mdwaukte. 8 .30 p m.
M1nncao1a Ill Hou slon , 8 JO p m
L A Chppc:n at Utah 9 p m
San An1omo at Portland 10 p m
Dmllu at Seatlle. 10 p m

MARLINS: Pl"ed RHP Ale&gt;

Fcm..dez on lhe IS·dlly 41sbaled lh;t Ret ailed RHP

Rafoel Medina from Calpry of the PCL
NEW YORK METS: Opuoned LHP Rtao

Bdtran to Norfolk of the International L.easu~
ActiYII.Icd RHP Rtck Reed from the 15-day disabled
list

Wednesday's reKUiar-seasfln Rnales
CLEVELAND 11 Toronto, 7 p m
Deu-oh a1Pbilldelphla 7 p m
Chnrlone nt BOMon. 7 p m
Milwaukee at New JerKy 7 30 p m
Wash•neron at A1lan11 . 7'30 p m
M1am1 at New York 8 p m
Orlando at Oucaao. 8 30 p m
Hou!ll.on at De1wrr, 9 p m
Minnesota at Phoem ~. IOpm
Sean\e 11 LA Chppen , 10 .lO p m

Basketball
Natkm•l B••ketball AIIQ(:i•llon

CHICAGO BULLS Placed 0 Randy Drown on
the tnJured list Acltvated 0 Charles Jone s ,

NEW

JERSEY NETS Signed C Gheorghe

Mureaan (01" lhe reman"ldef or the season

Football

National FooiW Leque

Vancouver at Sacramemo, 10 :W pm

NHL first-round playotTs
Monday'~

All anile llhlslun

Charloue '
CLEVELANIJ
1oromo

Transactions

MIAMI DOLPHINS Re·lllncd 00 Mike
Sheldon co a ont•yt'ar cootract
MINNESOT.A. VIKINGS AniiQIJnced the rtiiB·
nndon of Jeff Diamond, HniOf v1 ce fl!CSidem offoot
boll operation• He w111 rem11ln wuh the ~ lub ~s 1
co n5uhnnl throuJh Jan l l

Hockey

EASTERN CONH:RENCE

"Detrou
)(·Mllwuuket

P.iusburah at New Jersey 7 l Op m
St l..ouiS Qt Phoem11, 10 'O p m

1l

l b~

Hockey

NBA standings

}l· lndmn:J

TontRht's Rrst-round finales

10
11

~2 1

Portlandat lA La~n IOJO pm
San Antomo al Oolden Slate. I 0 .lO p m

Jt Ad{lftll

-'

I'

42

Pac:lftt Ulvl!llon

Today 's games

4} 80lpm

!ill

,,

~5

1

705 pm

NL standings

16

VunwUI cr

i

O·Ol. l Ol p m
Oakland (RoJers 0 2, ot Toronto (F.Sl.'Obnr 2 OJ
Seaule { Fu~ero ().1) 1M CLEVELAND (Hurbn 2
0) 7 0!ipm
Anal.eun (Sparks 0-.J) rtt Detroit (Wenv~r l - J 1
70~ pm
New Yot'k (Pemue ().I) a1 Mmne1111a ( H ~wlunl I

• U1nh
t S IIJ A n10mo

Pirutxugh IJ Sa11 Fra nc:mu K

Colorado

Coi(Jraclo ~ San J o~e l-OT Coloru&lt;io wm~ ~em:~

lY L l'&lt;.l.

l&gt;CI IY~ I

(JNC INNA1 14 Anw111 i
New Y&lt; lrk
lfou stun ~
All ilnla 4 ~ ~ J..ou1 s 2
Co loro~do fi OuLago I
M1 lw 1ulr.:et' h llnnd,J 4 ! l l)

I 2) 705pm
Am:ona (Jt

Wednesday's games

Mld"ul Division

Iwn

Da ll1s

1 Mulllreil l 0
Phllidelph11 l

Wednesday's games

7~pm

(Jklllna2~ l )

1

740 pm

Tonighl's games

Teus

1

Hous ton (Hampton 2 I) at New York (l...c1 1er I 2)
7 10pm
St Lmm f M er~ker 2 I) nt Atlan11~ (Mudt.Ju:o; 4 0)

0.1caao (S1rutka J.)) 111 Ballunorc (Guzman 0 ])

DelrQII

-l'i\

n

Am;onn (i)aal 2 2) m CINCINNA II Were 2 0)

Tampa Bay 14, Detroit b
kanus City 4J New Ymt J

Analle•m (H•Il IPI) ar

12
I&lt;

'

1 05 pm

toronto 16. Seattle 10

(()qUi l l

-

I) 7 Q"i p m

CLEVELAND 10, Te1.a5 4
Oakland 12, 80110n II (10)
CbiCIJO 8, Anaheim I

Oakland
70.5 pm

59 I
5?7
'IIIJ

Monday 's scnrcs

Eastern Uhbilm

:rom

II
II

score

Natiuntl Hotke)' Leaaue

Nf;W YORK RAN GERS Arquared RW Drnd
Smy1h from th e Nuhvllle Predaton for future co n
lldt!UIIIODI

WI

-

'

6~\

62!

I'

~91

1

~6~

4'

SOil

1

4'18

9.

458

9

26~

CONFERENCE

"

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, 1'hen You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel
I.

DIAL

992-7834
Hoher Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

Jalbert Cabrera.
The lndmns ended up With 16
h1ts, and they scored m SIX d1fferent
mnmgs
Lofton 's thtrd homer of the year
and second of the series capped a
four-run sec ond 1nnmg. but the
Rangers tied 11 111 the thtrd Lolton
broke the tiC With a sac nftCC ny m
the fourth and he scored on ""fravts
Fryman smgle m the fifth
Manny Ramtrez h1t a two -run sm·
gie ID the SIXth, giVIng htm a major
league-leadmg 34 RBis on the season; Lofton added h1 s fourth RBitn
the seventh and the lndwns' ftnal run
scoted on tlurd baseman Todd Zelie's
error m the eighth
Lofton, who had hcc n 0-lor-12
smce homenng Fnday. went 4-fur 5
to raiSe hi ~ average to 369 - well
above the 282 he htt last year
He 's among the AL leaders m
average, htts, on-base percentage,
tnples, steals and muhi-hll games
"Kenny worked very ha1d m the
of! seaso n and ve1y hard m spnng

tratnmg , probably as nard as I 'vc
ever seen h1m work, " Hm gruvc sau..t.
'He pa1d a lot of uttcnu on to detail,
espectally with hts htttmg, and I
thmk we ' re scemg th ose effmts pay
off.' '

·-~

.,..
.!

.."

Rangers ~

don 't let them all fall off," Wnght
sa1d "After that , you try to put if
behmd you and start over "
Wnght got out of the Jam w1th
two stnkeouts, then faced the mmt.
mum over hts next three mmngs. ''
The Rangers dtdn 't do mucll;
agamst rehe , ers Mark Langston or_
Steve Karsay e1ther as they neve~ ,
had another runner get past first ,
Te xas al so commttted a season-high
four errors and allowed a homer for
the e1 ghth stra1ght game
.
"It was not a cnsply playeil
game ," Ran ge IS manager Johnny':
Oates sa1d
·
Te xas. the AL West leader, finIShed Its seven-game homcstand 3-4.
agamst New Yot k and Cleveland, the
other two diVI "i to n leaders
'
'" I know we can play With these,'
guys and wtth lhc guy s who JU St
left," Oa1cs sa1d " It JUSt remams to
be seen tf we can at the end "
·:
The Rangers arc off today, then
open an ctght ·game road tnp
Wednesday 111 Boslfln
••
M1kc Morgan (4-21, who left th~
stad1um early the p1ev1ous two day s
wtth stomach flu , lost h1 s secon&lt;t
stra1 ght smcc becommg the maJors'
first four· game wmncr
P1tclung on three days rest for the;
first ttme smce July 1992, Morgan;
gave up five runs - four earned on c1ght luts over three mnmgs. He
struck out three and walked one.
" I don ' t make excuses," Morgan..
smd. "Once I take the ball, I' m ready

I

I,

~

I
I

I,

11

WARNER HEATING &amp;COOLING, INC.
(304) 675-7254

Ripley, WV
(304) 378-5940

Is Offering A FREE
Space Guard Air Cleaner (Valued AI
$400.00)

With Purchase Of

lENNOX. Equipment

.

I

J
j

I
There has never been B better
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•Save up to 50% on energy btlls.
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•Preseason savings through
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, Heat Pumps Heat, Cool and Save

WARNER HEATING &amp;

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the cycle But 11 wasn't enough for
the NL West-leading Giants, whose
lead over lhe Los Angeles Dodgers
was cut to a half-game
"It doesn' t get much tougher than
thts," manager Dusty Baker said. "It
takes away a httle bit from what Jeff
d1d "
The Ptrates trailed 8-5 eptenng
the mnth before rook1e Warren
Morris homered off Robb Nen, who
had converted 13 consecuttve ~11ve
opportunities dating to last season
" It felt good to getll gotng," sa1d
Morris, who won the 1996 College
World Senes w1th a dramatic ninth·
mning homer for LSU "We could
have JUSt checked it off as another
'go·get· 'em-tomorrow' mght , but
we dtdn 't. That was spec1al."
Aftor AI Martm smgled, Giles
tted it one batter later with his moth
homer of the season Kevin Young,
who also homered earlier, walked

won 11 wtih a siDgie up the middle
"Th1s IS the kmd of wtn you put a
star next to," Brown sa1d " It 's
exciung for the players, n's exc iting
for the lans It's exc1tmg for every·
body "
In oth~r NL games, it was Los
Angeles 7, Montreal 0, San Otego 9,
Philadelphi a 3; New York 5,
Houston 3, Atlanta 4, St. Louts 2,
Colorado 6, Chtcago I , and
Milwaukee 6, Flonda 4 m 13
mnings.
Padres 9, Phillies 3
Ruben R1vera had three h1ts and
three RBis , mcluding one of t~e
longest homers tn Veterans Stad1um
history, as San Diego snapped a fivegame losmg streak.
Rivera's second-mning homer
traveled 46 feet and landed ln the
next·to-highes
k ID left Only
two other player , Ptttsburgh's
Willie Stargell m 1971 and the Mets'

red mto that area. R1vera al so htt a
two-run double m the e1ghth, when
the Padre s sent 10 batters to the plate
and scored stx runs
Mets 5, Astros 3
At New York, R1ck Reed pttched
SIX solid mnmgs m hts first start'
smce corntng oft the diSabled ltst to
lead the Mets to the tr stxth stratght
wm
Reed (2 -0), makmg h1 s firSt start
SIDCC bemg placed on the DL wtth a
slightly torn ca ll mu scle Apnl 12.
allowed three runs and five htts
Turk Wendell pitched two scoreless
mnmgs ID relief and John Franco got
three outs for h1s lOth save as the
Mets snapped Houston 's four-game
wmnmg &gt;lreak
Braves 4, Cardinals 2
At Atlanta, the Braves extended
Mark McGwtre's homerless streak
and ralhed for thetr sixth stratght
v1ctory when pinch-httter Bnan

" I am not goiDg to miss thiS place
one b1t ," sa1d Wells. who won't
make another v1stl to Seattle until
after the Manners move 1010 Safeco
Field on July 15 " It 's never been a
good park for me "
Delgado went 3-tor-3 w1th solo
homers m the second and ninth
mnmgs, h1 s 12th career mullihomer
game He also walked and was htt by
a puch
· " You know what , I' m gmng to
miss th iS ballpark, " Delgado sa1d
" For some reaso n, I see the ball pret·

d1dn't let Manners rook1e Freddy
Garcia (3·1) out of the thtrd mnmg.
Delgado led off the second w1th
his seventh homer of the season
before Cruz, a former Manners out·
fielder, hit a two-run homer to put
Toronto ahead 3-1. The Blue Jays
added s1x runs m lhe th1rd.
Dav1d Bell added a solo shot and
Davis hit a two-run homer 1n the
moth off Thomas Davey Dav1s has
seven homers this year and f1ve
career mult1homer games
In other AL games, 11 was
Oakland 12 , Boston II ID 10 inn1ngs,
Kansas C1ty 9, New York 3, Chtcago
8, Anahetm I, and Tampa Bay 14,
Detrott6.
Athletics 12, Red Sox II
At Oakland, John Jaha's basesloaded walk m the lOth mnmg made
Creighton Gubanich's histone first·
mmng grand slam merely a footnote.
Matt Statrs homered to 11 e the
game 10 the mnth (or the A's, who
tratled 7-0 after two mn111gs and
were bchmd 11 -6 m the c1ghth
In the IOth, Ttm Rames led ott
um e ''
• with a double off Ktp Gross (0·1)
Shawn · Green and Jose Cruz Jr. and Tony Ph1lhps was 111tent10nally
also homered for the Blue Jays, who walked Reliever T1m Hankkala

ty good here , and when you hit the
ball here tl cames."
Delgado wasn 'I the only hnter
who saw the ball well Monday night.
Seattle 's Russ Dav1s homered
tw1ce as the teams combmed for nme
homers. The 16 runs were the most
Toronto has scored and Seattle has
allowed smce the Blue Jays beat lhe
Manners 16-2 last Aug 19.
Wells gave up home runs to
Davis, Butch Huskey and Rafael
Bourntgal m five inniDgs. He
allowed seven earned runs to push
h1s ERA to 6 39 in s1x stans for the
Blue Jays, who reacqutred h1m 10 a
trade from the Yankees for five-time
Cy Young Award w111ner Roger
Clemens on Feb 19.
" It was k1nd of embarrassmg
going out there like that when they
score you that many runs," Wells
sa1d after he got h1s f1rst wm m more
than tw o weeks
·""I hke to go e1ght, mne IDDings.
I'd like to get one of those m once m
awh1ie. Today was very embarrass·
mg , but my hitters p1 cked me up b1g

threw a wild puch and then walked
M1ke Macfarlane to load the bases
One out later, )aha walked on four
pitches to end the game.
T J Mathews (4-0) p1tched a per·
feet lOth for the w111
· Boston's Gubamch made the most
of hts first maJor league htt by mak·
mg n a grand slam, bccommg lhe
first player to do that 111 17 years
"I was tellmg the guy s the other
day 11 would be real good to get your
first htt, your first RBI and your first
homer at the satne ltme, " Gubamch
sa1d
Royals 9, Yankees 3
At Kansas Ctty, M1ke Sweeney's
three-run homer capped a SIX· run
SIXth mning as the Royal s spltt the
four-game senes w1th the team that
had beaten them 12 stratght ltmes
The Royals had 44 hns m the four
games and outhomered the defend·
111g world champiOns Il -l
Scott Serv1ce (1 ·0) got the wtn
Orlando Hernandez (3-2) took the
loss
White Sox 8, Angels I
Maggho Ordonez hn a thtce-run
homer and drove m four run s at
Anaheim , and Frank Thomas became

Avalanche top Sharks 3-2 in OT, win series

Rebates Up To $500.00 or 6 Mo. Sam.e A• Ca1h

Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sports Wrllter
If Dav1d Wells had hts way, the
Kmgdome would be shut down
1mmed1ately. Carlos Delgado w1shes
he could play there every day
Delgado homered twice, drove 10
live runs and set a Toronto record
wtth five runs scored to bail out
Wells as the Blue Jays beat the
Seattle Mar~ners 16-10 Monday m
thetr fiDal game ever at the
~ingdome

Jaret Wnght (3·0) won Jus second
stra1ght, although he almost d1dn 't
make 11 out of the thtrd ntnmg, when
he gave up all four Texas runs on two
walks and a throwmg en or.
"Right there , you're thmkmg a
couple of wheels have come oft, to go ."

Chester, Ohio
985-4222

" The last five mntnp were better
I threw almost all fastballs , wh1eh IS
good. It's JUSt a matter of haVIng
some control with that pjtch "
Steve Pams, called up from
Tnple-A Indianapoli s to replace
struggling Brett Tom ko, allowed five
h1ts and three walks over 5 1/3
inntn gs Jay Bell had a sacn fice fly
111 the thtrd 111n111g and Dam1an
Mtller htt a two-run homer to lie tt m
the fourth
M1ller got 111 the lmeup because
catcher Kelly Stmnett became stck
before the game Miller ended up
w1th a smg le and h1s second two-run
homer m two days
Anzona 's Lu1s Gonzalez smgled
m e1ghth mniDg off Scott W1lhamson
(2· 1), extendmg the longest h1ttmg
streak ID the maJorS thts season to 17
games
The Diamondbacks fell to 5-6 on

theu 13-game road tnp, wh1ch start·
ed on Aprtl 23 m San Dtego and has
taken them to Houston, Mtlwaukee
and Cmc1nnau
" It's been a long tnp, " Gonzalez
satd " It feels like we' ve been on the ,
road forever Fourteen days or what·
ever It IS feel s hk e a month already " '
Notes: Home plate ump~re ;
Kerwm Danley became hgh1 -headed
and was replaced by second base '
umptre Ed Montague after the sec- ,
ond IDmng Danley was taken to a
hospital for a precautionary exam
and kept overn1ght .. Gonzalez IS
25-lnr-63 ( 397) dunng the meak
He has reached base '" all of h1 s 22 •
F~rst base ump1re Bob:
game'
Davtdson - known for cal hng balks~
- called one on Dennys Reyes m:
the stx th It was the first balk by a:
Reds pttcher thiS season
•

•

,l
J's
,.,
•
hi.

;F.

tr'!
1in
'I

~y

if

~
h~
g.

. .iit

e1ghth 1nmng

McGw ~re, who hasn' t homered 1n

;~

more than two week s, went 0-for-4
w1th a walk and two stnkeout s He
has n"t home re&lt;l smce hnun g h1s fifth
ot the season on Apnl 18
Dodgers 7, Expos 0
Chan Ho Park and Alan Mtlls
combtned on a seven-hitter as Los
Angel es gave manager Davey
Johnson h1s I ,OOOth caree r wtn wtth
a v1cto1 y at Montreal
Park (3-2) struck out e1ght and
sca ttered f1ve hils m seven mmngs
Alan Mill s p1tched th e last two
mnmgs to complete the Dodgers'
second shutout of the season
Johnson, who has also managed
the Mcts, Reds and Onoles, ranks
f1fth m career wms among act1ve
managers
,
Brewers 6, Marlins 4
Fernando Vma's two-run homer
m the 13th mnmg gave Milwaukee

ever at Pro Player StadiUm for a: ~
Flortda Marhns game
•t s
Mtlwaukee •mproved to 10-0 all· : c.
ttme agamst Flonda The Marlins: •
have lost s1x strat ght games and ntne , •'
of I0
•
#
Rockies 6, Cubs I
Bnan Bohanon unproved to S-0
and Colorado used " lt ve run &gt;~xth IC
mmn g at Wngley F1cld 1o stop
Ch tcago's fi ve- game wmmng streak
Bohanon went ctght ·plus 1nn1ng.'
allowmg five htts and one run . and
al so had two Singles and an RBI
Vmny Casttll a had two doubles and
a smgle for the Rtlck tes, who fiD ·
•shed wtth 12 htt s
The game Wit!&gt; delayed lor five ,
mmutes 1n the bottom of the etghth
when fans littered the field wtth
debn s after a controversial ca ll at•
second base

c•

Blue Jays down Mariners 16-10 in guests' Kingdome finale

"Me1gs .
010-412-0=8· 12. t .
Alexander .. .. . ..23 1·000·0=6· 5· C.
Batteries
Hysell (WP) and Harr1 s
King (LP) and Sams

Indians cruise to 10-4 win over

and got 11 up ID the atr. It eastly
cleared the head of nght fielder Tony
Womack and deflected off the wall
for a smgle
The walk-a1ded rally let the
slumptng Reds emerge from a three game losing streak They scored only
four runs whtle gett111g swept 111
Atl anta over the weekend and were
hming 236 as a team , the lowest 111
the maJOr leagues
Andy Benes got them rolhng ID
the first mnmg, when he gave up a a
pair of walks and two Singles The
Reds went up 3-0 on Edd1e
Taubensee's bases-loaded groundout
and Barry Larkin's two-run smgle up
the m1ddle
" I had a bad first inn1ng," sa1d
Benes, who hasn 't made it to the seventh mmn g 1n any of hts SIX starts. " I
was out there p1 ck111g and piddl111g
aar."
.
He got the fastball he expected around.

PiNational
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After Pokey Reese's sacnf1ce
bunt, Holmes intentionally walked
Mark Sweeney - the Reds' top
ptnch hitter - and tried to get ptnch
h1tter Hal Morns to hit a double-play
grounder All four of his pitches to
Morris were low
"My smker doesn ' t usually smk
like lhat, " Holmes s81d. " If I get two
or three inches, I' m lucky Tontghttt
was hke a foot. "
That brought up Cameron, who
hadn't gotten a h1t smce last
Thursday. When Holmes missed
With his first p1tc h, Cameron knew
the odds were 10 hiS favor
"I knew_ he had to throw some·
thmg over the plate and wtth tbe
infield drawn m, anythmg's poSSI·
ble," Cameron sa1d " I had to get a
bail I could dnve and get it up ID the

-*

Meigs softball crew downs Alexan.d er 8-6
By DAVE HARRIS
Abhy Hams hu a two run double
m
the
SIXth to dnve 111 the wtnnmg
TOSSES GEM - Southern's Benj1 Manuel struck out 10 and
1
uns,
"
as
Mctgs defeated Alex ander 8lOlled a one-hit shutout to help the Tornadoes tally a 11·0 win over
m
Tn·
Valley Conference softball
6
Eastern Monday. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
actmn Munday cvemng at Albany
Me1gs wtth the wm ts 16-3 overall
and 11 -3 111 the Ohw DtviSion
Alexander fell to 12-8 and 11 -5 m
the Oh10 DIVISIOn
Alexander took a 2-0 lead m the
first mnmg Metgs cut the lead ID
half m the top of the second mmng
Juhe Spaun walked and later scored
The Southern Tornadoes scored Southern scored two runs m the
five runs m the first mmng and never fourth when Adam Wtlhams reached
looked back en route to an 11 -0 vtc· on an error, Adam Cummgs tnplcd
tory over the Eastern Eagles Monday and BcnJI Manuel Stngled
n1ght at Eastern.
Eastern put two runners on With
Southern IS now 12-5 overall
no ouiS m the second, but left them By JAIME ARON
ARLINGTON, Texas0 (AP) BenJI Manuel was dubbed Dr. "' K"' stranded as lhe last two batters took
Pl
ay
1ng for the last ttme on an II ·
after hts 10-stnke out performance call thtrd stnkes
for the Tornadoes. The semor hurler
Southern plated four more runs m game, three-ume-zone road tnp, the
Cleveland lnd1ans sure d1dn't look
gave up JUSt one hu and walked JUSt the seventh to seal the game
lhree of the ever-patient Eagles 1n h1s
Eastern's only h1t was Josh worn out
Kenny Lofton had four hils and a
best outmg of the year Freshman Brodenck"s double
Chns Lyons suffered the loss m a
For So uthern , Cumtngs had a season-high four RBis. Ftve other
decent effort, but rece1ved no defen- tnplc and doubl e, Manuel a siDgle lndtans each had two hits All nme
sive support He gave up I0 hns, and double, Davis a smgle and dou- starters scored The only one who
walked four and htt one.
ble and siD gles by Adam W1fhams, dtdn ' t get a Jut was J1m Thome In the first 1nnmg, Southern plated Jam1e B&lt;~ker, Chn s. Randolph and and he walked four umes
The result was an tmpresstve 10-4
five runs on an error Doubles to Kyle Noms
VICtory
over the Texas Rangers on
Adam Cummgs and BenJI Manuel, a
Eas1ern goes to M1fler tonight
·
Monday
that split a four-game senes,
Jesse Little walk, a Jamte Baker sm- Inning l2tilb
sendmg
Cleveland
home wnh a 7-4
gle, a J B. Boso walk and a Jos h Southern
500-200-4= 11 -10-2
record
on
its
longest
tnp of the year.
Dav1s double made the score 5-0
Eastern
O&lt;J0 -000·0=0-1-5
The
lndmns
also
played
m Boston
The game was sttll close gomg
Manuel (W) and Cummgs
and
Oakland
mto the fourth mmng at 5-0, but
Lyons (L) and Brodenck
""Any ume you take a convoluted

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

l
Boone, Cameron drive Reds to 4-3 win over Diamondbacks

Pa~.C

·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By ROB GLOSTER
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - After a
decade of frustration, Theo Fleury
fmally made 11 past the first round of
lhe NHL playoffs again
He could hardly contam hts
excitement.
Fleury. acqutred from Calgary m
a late February trade. had a goal and
two assists as · the Colorado
Avalanche wrapped up thmr first·
round playoff series agamst the San
Jose Sharks With a 3-2 overtime vicfory Monday mght.
• Rookie Milan HeJduk scored
(3:12 mto overtime as the
~valanche, who won all three games
111 San Jose, moved on to a second·
round series wnh two·t1me defend·
lftg champ1on Detrott. Colorado won
lhe senes 4-2 over the Sharks.
• Fleury, who scored the game's
clpemng goal and assiSted on tbe
~ther two Colorado goals, punched
ljiS fists m the atr after Hejduk 's lhtrd
~oat of the playoffs - two m over11me
, And when Fleury reached the
lftcker room, he npped off h1s unt·
form as though he was rippmg away
)iears of frustration. After winnmg
the Stanley Cup when Fleury was a
rpok1e in 1988-89, Calgary has fatted ·

to make 11 past the f1rst round siDce
- and dtdn't evep reach the playoffs
the last two years Fleury was there.
"I haven't been out of the first
round m 10 years It feels unbehev·
able," satd Fleury, who scored lwo
g&lt;lals tn Colorado's wm m Game 5
on Saturday "It feels great that I'm
able to practice tomorrow for anolher senes."
After Colorado survived a fourminute penalty early m the overtime,
Hejduk slid the rebound of Joe
Sak1c's shot past Sharks goalte Mtke
Vernon for the winner.
"The situation was a 3-on-3 The
puck was on the boards, I was in the
mtddle. I went to lhe net and Jooked
for· the rebound," Hejduk said. "The
puck came nght to my stick. It was
the perfect rebound."
The two remaming series 'will
conclude Wtth two Game 7s tonight,
with Ptttsburgh at New Jersey and St.
Louis at Phoemx
Already advancmg to the second
round were defendmg champion
Detrott, regular·season pomts leader
Dallas , Buffalo, Toronto and Boston.
The Avalanche opened the Sharks
senes wtth two wms at San Jose. The
Sharks rebounded to win the next
two games m Denver to even the

senes, but the Avalanche finally won
at home Saturday to take a 3-2
advantage m the senes.
"We played well, but it wasn' t
good enough. We d1do't wm a game
at home. We took 11 to them the firS!
10 mmutes (of overt1me) and then
they took over," sa1d Jeff Fnesen,
who gave the Sharks a 2-1 lead with
8 09 left m lhe thtrd penod
But Friesen was penalized a
mmute later, and Sand1s Ozohnsh
slapped a shot past Vernon to ue the
game 2·2 w1th 6.31 remamiDg m the
thtrd penod.
"We had a chance to WID 11 and
d1dn't. It's d1sappomting when you
come lhal close agamst a hockey
team like that ," satd Friesen, who
asststed on B1ll Houlder's goal late tn
the second period "We had them,
and then we let them get away."
On Monday ntght , the Avalanche
were right where they' re most com·
fonable - on the road, m overtime
m the playoffs
Colorado went 23-14-4 on the
road this season, and won all three of
the games m San Jose m a senes that
was delayed three days by the school
shoolln&amp; at Columbme H1gh School
in suburban Denver
And the Avalanche have now won

mne of thw last 12 ove1 lime playoff
games- 1nclud1ng both of the overlime games m the senes agamst San
Jose
Vernon had 30 sa ves lor the
Sharks Patnck Roy, who got hiS
103rd playoff vtctory, made 27 saves
for the Avalanche
But the Aval anche know they
can' t count on wmnmg all thetr
games on the road m the next round
of the playoffs
, " We lost two games at home ,"
Roy sa1d " If we do that against
Detroit. we're in trouble "

four homers and a double for a
record 18 total bases as the Braves
beat the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets
Fteld. At the time, Adcock was the
fifth player 10 the modern era to
homer four times 1n a game Five
players have done so smce,
Adcock played on the Braves'
World Senes champ1onsh1p team m
t 951 and National League pennant
wmn~r in 1958.
A teammate of Hank Aaron,
Iidd1e Mathews .and Warren Spahn,
Adcock's best season was 1956,
when he hit 38 of his 336 career
homers and batted .291

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Tim Scites and Delman Cheney

for their outstanding sales
performance in April.
Scites and Cheney
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have shown exceptional personal Sat" ConoutiJint
effort and professionalism in their automotive
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many loyal customers and the Turnpike family.

Adcock was perhaps best known
for lurnmg a perf~c t game mto a loss
for Pmsbllrgh's Harvey Hadd1x on
May 26, 1959, at M1lwaukee.
Haddix reured the ftrst 36 batters
he faced - 12 perfect mnmgs In the
13th, the Braves' Fehx Manttlla
reached on an ertor and moved to
second on a sacrifice by Mathews
After Aaron was walked mtcntional·
ly, Adcock homered to end the no·
hitter a~d wm the game
The score was listed as 1·0
because Adcock 1nadvertemty passed
Aaron on the base pat hs

---- -·- •.

Protect the itnJ]grtant
people in your -life.

CONGRATULATES

URNPIKE

195 UPPER
__ _,_

the first three mnmgs, dn vmg m four
runs, and Jose Canseco had three
RBis.
'
The Devil Rays scored 1w1ce dur
1ng the first mnmg, three Urnes m the
second and thtrd and added s1x more·
runs m the fourth to take a 14-6 lead
Esteban Yan ( 1-0) threw four
scoreless mnmgs tn rehef, altowmg
two hils and sinking out lour
W1fhe Bla tr (0·4) took !he loss for
vtsttmg Detrmt.

TURNPIKE 0{ GALLIPOLIS

former m(ljor leaguer Joe Adcock dies at 71
By ALAN SAYRE
: Joe Adcock, who broke up base·
bllll 's longest no-hitter and shares the
maJor league record of four homers
ilt one game, ~ted today. He was 71.
: Adcock had Alzheimer 's diSease
ajld d1ed at his home in &lt;;:oushatta,
l..ta., at 3 15 a.m , satd h1s daughter,
Jan Adams.
: .The first baseman came to the
'9•Jors ID 1950 wtth Cmcmnati, and
was traded to the M1lwaukee Braves
i6 1953, the team 's first year in that
cjty.
1 On July 31, 1954, be had the most
ptoducuve game m \11 story, hitung

Chtcago's career leader m e&gt;tra-base
htts
John Snyder (4·1 ), p1tched a fourhuter for h1s fir st complete game of
the year and the second of h1s career
Thomas' first -mnmg double was
lhe 588th extra base htt of h1s career,
toppmg the club record of 587 set by
Luke Appling m 1930-1950.
Ttm Belcher (1 -2) took the Joss
Devil Rays 14, Tigers 6
Dave Martmez smgled m each of

r~

"

..

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•

Mercury
740-446-9800
•

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p
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Tuesday, May 4, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Clinton, in peace bid, gives Chernomyrdin some leverage
By BARRY SCHWEID

rules that shielded the official's identity.
•
. Etrierging from the 90-minute Oval Office meeting,
WASHINGTON (AP)- Russia's diplomatic often- Chemomyrdin said, "We got closer to a diplomatic solusive to bring peace to Kosovo is gelling an unexpected' tion." He did not elaborate, except to say that he and the
boost from President Clinton. He is offering both a president discussed "the circumstances and the condipause in the deadly NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and lions" under which NATO would pause in its air assault
negotiations on a peacekeeping force for 1\0sovo.
on Yugoslavia.
Ointon made the offer Monday with softer rhetoric
" I am not trying to drag this out," Clinton said earlithan he has used since NATO began its air campaign er, before meeting first with Chernomyrdin and then
March 24. The message. is one that Russian mediator with the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who secured the weekend·
Viktor Chernomyrdin can take to Belgralle,the Yugoslav , release of three U.S. soldiers who had been held captive
·capital, with a little more leverage than the former prime in Yugoslavia for 32 days.
minister had on his two ·prev.ious rounds of talks with
Clinton signaled his readiness to pursue a diplomatic
President Slobodan Milosevic.
.
solution even as the Senate was voting today on a move
There was no announcement, though, of Cher- by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and a bipartisan group of
nomyrdin's plans, nor did he inform Clinton. He was other senators to authorize the president to widen the
due to meet today in New York City with U.N. Secre, con~cCain, a 2000 presidential hopeful, conceded
tary-General Kofi Annan.
he didn'"' have the votes to prevail, complaining that
Clinton, meanwhile, was flying to NATO headquar- Senate leaders had conspired with Clinton to give the
ters in Brussels,' Belgium, tonight for an update on the crisis "short shrift."
air war from NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana and
Clinton on Monday held fast to the. four key U.S.
theri to Germany to meet with U.S. troops involved in requirements for ending the conflict in Yugoslavia:
humanitarian efforts and with some Kosovo refugees. .
-TIIat Milosevic withdraw the estimated 100,000
A senior U.S. official told reporters at the White .Serb troops currently in Kosovo, a province of Serbia,
House on Monday night that the diplomatic process the dominant republic in Yugoslavia, .
could take weeks.
'
--Safe return of the hundreds of thousands of ethnic
"lt's not so~ething th'at is going to result in some Albanian refugees uprooted from their homes.
magical breakthrough," he said at a briefing held under . -A~ptance by Belgrade of an international securi-

AP Dlplom•tlc WrHer

Littleton changes
By ANJETTA McQUEEN
AP Educttlon Writer ·
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The classroom-clearing
bomb threat•, rumors and other scares that followed the
.Littleton, Colo., school shooting took their toll. Students· spent hours standing outside in parking lots and
football fields; SAT exaiT]S were postponed; some ·
schools sh'ut down altogether. .
Apparently none of the threats in the week after the
April 20 Columbine High School sh~tings were substantiated. But schools took to heart what in other.times
and · circu.instances might have been dismissed as
annoying pranks.
..
Copycat threats typically appear about a week after
the event that inspired them, officials admit, but the
scale of the Littleton massacre has changed .the ·rules.
"Now, you will take every single kind·of threat as if
you know· for certain it's going to occur because you
don't have any choice," said Bruce Hunter, of the
American Association of School Administrators. "It's
considerable trouble, but it's worth it."
.
Schools nationwide are making the same call, even
realizing they're at the mel'l=y of copycats with bomb
threats that turn out to be bogus. The student gunmen

rul~s

.. ...... -= .·

- .·-=··..-·-

ty force to protect the refugees and Serb and other
· "There has to be a clear commitment to let the Koso·
minorities in the province.
vars come home," Clinton said Monday.
•
-Restoration of the self-.rule for the Albaniana who,
In an effort, meanwhile, to at least win Russia's supuntil a year ago, made up about90 percent of Kolovo's port, Ointon said the J!elcekecping force that w~uJsl
1.8 million population.
move into Kosovo should be endorsed by the Umted
At the same time, though, gestures of compromise Nations and be broad enough . to include Russia"!.
surfaced in the president's remarks at a joint. news con- Ukrainians and troops from other countries the Serbs
ference with Japanese Prime Minister Keizo Obuc:hi, were inclined to trust.
who on a visit here pledged $200 million in assisiance ·
He said NATO "has to be part of it," but otherwigc
for refugees. '
·
· .
"there is room for discussion within limits."
·
On the one hand, Clinton rejected Jackson's demand
Milosevic so far has insisted it would accept a force
that NATO should end its bombing and that continuing from Russia and other .friendly or neutral countries that
.the attacks after the soldiers were freed showed "an also is very lightly armed. . .
arrogance of power."
Administration leaders said Ointon had not softened
· Release of the three Americans is not reason enough, U.S. conditions for ending the airstrikes against
Clinton argued. Milosevic must reverse what he has Yugoslavia, which in 41 days have failed to break Miladone to the ethnic Albanian refugees.
sevic's will.
·
:
But the president di~ offer a pause in the bombing,
"It's exactly what we've said , all along," nationf_l
provided Milo~vic accepts his demands and begins to · security adviser Sandy Berger said. .
'
pull out the Serbs troops in a way that shows he means
Clinton took some heat, 111eanwhile, from JacksoJI,
to withdraw virtually all of them.
·
who visited Ointon on Monday and urged him to rele~
That reinforces a similar offer made by the .United 'two Yugoslav prisoners of war as.a goodwill gesture. •
States and the NATO allies at their summit meeting here
"Those little steps in the right direction can spare all
last month to suspend the bombing if Milosevic present- of us a long and bloody war," Jackson said afterward.;
ed a verifiable scheme to both withdraw Serb troops and
On Sunday, Jackson sent the president a copy of a letparamilitary units and reversed what the administration ter he had received from Milosevic in,Belgrade. Accorctand much of the world has denounced as "ethnic cleans- ing to the senior U.S. official who briefed reporters tfe
ing."
letter "has nothing new in it."
· •
~

.

.immediately after taking office last July Was a positive
indication that Japan will weather its woes. ·
.
"You have been in office less than a year, but
already you have taken important steps in meeting the
challenges that face you, and· reaching the goals that
unite us," Clinton said. "With the right choi~es, Japan
and Asia will emerge stronger, more open~ more democratic, better adapted to meet the 21st century."
As the two leaders met in the White House, the
administration announced a package of new trade
agreements in which Japan pledged greater efforts to
expand saleS opportunities for U.S. telecommunications companies, drug manufacturers, lumber compa. nies, banks and brokerage firms and energy companies.
The agreements were part of a two-year effort by the
administration to force Japan to deregulate its ecrinomy
by removing trade barriers. The United States maintains the barriers are a major reason for America's trade
deficit with Japan, which climbed to $64 billion last
year, part of a record overall imbalance of $169 billion.
In announcing the deregulation measures, Deputy
U.S. Trade Representative Richard Fisher said it will
be important for Japan to follow through on its commitments, not only for American business interests but
if Japan is to succeed in endi11g an eight-year period of
stagnant economic growth.
"The emphasis in this is to help Japan turn its economy around and pull up its socks," Fisher told
reporters. "To do that, significant .deregulation is
mandatory.".
. At the White House arrival ceremony, Obuchi said
Japan's businesses and industries are now starting to
shake off "an overhanging stagnant rnood" and said he
would continue to take steps to keep that momentum
going.
,
"Our economy is· showing an emerging sign of
change for the better," Obuchi said. "I am determined

to ensure a successful . revitalization of the Japanese
economy, through overcoming with · unwavering
resDive any obstacle we may encounter in the
process."
Obuchi, who acknowledges joblessness 'in Japan is
likely to deepen, says he is doing all he can .but that it
will take time to ·reverse the worst reccsaion his coun- ·
try has cxperienc~d in 50 years.
"At present, the United States. is perfectly healthy
and never catches a cold, but on the other hand, Japan
has been ailing and . losing its vigor for the last 10
years," Obuchi said Saturday in a speech in Chicago,

'&lt;

ITime Out For Tip$1

Lawmakers warn of sniper rifle sales
By JIM ABRAMS
· ·
. effective 'at distances of 7,500 yards.
.
.
AI80CIIttd Pre.. Writer
Most deer hunters, by contrast, shoot at ranges of ISO
WASHINGTON (~) - Milit.ary sniper rifles like to 200 yards.
··
those. used to stop Iraq• tanks durmg. ~~~ Gulf War are
Gast said that because gunmakers are not required to
now m the han~s of thousands of ctvtltans: mcludmg provide information on the caliber of weapons they sell,
suspe_cted ~erron~ts and drug dealers, accordmg to con- it's not clear how many of the high-powered weapons
gresstonal mvest1gators.
. ,
are i~ circulation . But one major producer sold more
. Ag~nts. fro~ the General Accounting Office, the than 2,800 to civilians in the 1987-98 period, he said.
mvesttgahve wmg of Congress, found that long-range,
The Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearnis has
armor-piercing .50-caliber. rifles are readily available tracked several of those sniper rifles to a Mexican drug
·through dealers, gun shows and the Internet. Buyers cartel, suspected terrorists, a mentally ill cop killer and
only n~ '? prove that they are 18 years old and don't the Branch Davidians du~ing the 1993 siege near Waco,
have a cnmrnal record.
Texas. ·
.
·
The agents also told a Dem~ra~ic-organize.d. hearing . ' "There is a subculture growing in this country about
, ~on(lay th.at sellers_ of armor-ptercmg ~~mun1tron used the use of these weapons," said Tom Diaz of the Viom the l!"mtautomaltc weapons )\'ere .,vtlltng to.do bust- lence Policy Center, calling them "the ideal tool far
ness wtth them even when the ag~nts, pretendmg to be assassination and destruction."
buyers, sai~ they wanted to attack armored limousine.• or
Diaz urged Congress to pass legislation putting .SO~
"take a heltcopter down." .
caliber rifles under the same restrictions imposed on
.GAO agent ~obert Hast satd the long-range weapon~ machine guns and weapons of war, and banning armorgam~ populanty after. they were used to attack Iraq•
piercing ammunition.
·
·
tanks m the 1991 Pers1an Gulf War. The ~capons are
Rep. Rod Blasojevich, D-111., who commissioned the
highly accurate up to 2,000 yards - meamng a marks- investigation with Rep. ilcnry Waxman, 0 -Calif., plans man could stand at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington to offer legislation restric.ting sales of the weapon.
and hit a target at the Pentagon in Virginia - and can be
·

•.. GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• THE DAILY SENTINEL
IF YOUR BUSINESS IS INTERESTED.
IN PIRTICIPIJING. IN THIS
SPECIAL SECTION CALL:

Pleasant Valley Hospital

992•2·1'55

Health line

.

'(304) 675-2828
'-------·--.

- ----

,

--- -. -·-·---·.. -------••

. DIVE "IRRIS, EXT. ·104 OR
KATHY WILLIAMSON, EXT. ~ 05
BEFORE MAY 10, 1999
"

~

May is known as National Tourism Month and research indicates that cultural or heritage tourism is the up and coming style
of travel.
Thirty-seven percent of trips worldwide include visiting cultural and historic sites and participating in heritagt festivals and
events. One-fourth of all tourists include historical activities in
their travels. These visitors tend to stay longer and spend more
money.
· · .
·
.
In :today's world, even business travelers are inclined to ,,
lengthen their visit to include more of these activities. With our
Appalachian l!eritage and culture and our unique landsi:ape, we ..
can take advantage of this growing trend.
It is important that communities that want to present the heritage aspect of their region do so in' an authentic way. Genuine
and accurate details are essential in order to create sustainable
tourism growth - not just short-telTI) development.
Tourist attractions, whether they are parks, historic sites.
museums, gardens, etc. should partner to ,offer discount ·prices · 1•
for events and activities. llley do not have to be centered on one
theme. Provide package tours to make things easy for the consumer to decide what they will do. The tours can include seyeraltype! Of activities or.tllemes. For instance,y.9,u may offer ft~ip ;,,.
to a wo~king farm. a small in~ustry, 'all art fflllseum, a cyJiq!'la ,' '"
inn, a craft mall ·and a state park. IFhey may, not have a&lt;centrat •
focus, but tourists may want to visit all of the 'them, especially if
the price is somewhat discounted.
An important benefit of culturaltoqrism is. that it is nOt sea~ .,
son specific. People can become involved in• the uniquo',JO::al ;:~
community at any time of thi: year. Looal residents may want to' .:.; '· '
promote indoor fairs and festivals during the winter months to
~·
capit~lize on this idea.
·
Entertainment is an important aspect of heritage tourism ~: :\1
Local musicians, dancers and artists-at- work sfiould be availalile ··
for the travelers' enjoyment. Since tourists tend to eat, sleep, tour
and shop, offer them things t.o see, places to go, things to do,
comfortable and clean places to stay, restaurants that. serve the
local cuisine and sh,opping qpportunities to buy qafts and souvenirs.
.Find a niche that goes with your community's personality,
then market it slrategically. We have so much_!o offer in Qur' arc:a
because of the hills, the Ohio River, the outdoor ·activities and
our local heritage. We can supply Appalachian crafts that will n9t
.·
only tell our tale about our ancestral traditions and skills, but can
,.,
also become 'viable economic opportu11ities ..
·
Visitors coining into our area will be happy io shop and discover the wonderful arts and crafts that we have in our region.
With love for the art and talent for the craft, residents can cash In
on the tourism trade.
'

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19

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

one word about your boyfriend's
attitude toward this mother-i n-law
from hell.
Will he support you in your fi g~!~
to be free of this woman's interlef!
ence? What's the record so far~
Unless you are absolutely certain
that he will always he pn your side,' I
would advise you to think seriouslY.
about what your life would be like if
you married this man.
•·
Forget to save some of yo!!'
favorite Ann Landers columns~
"Nuggets and Doozies" is th~
answer. Send a self addressed, long,
business size envelope and a. checlo;
or money order for $5.25 '(thiio
includes postage and handling) t4'·
Nuggets. clo Ann Landers. P.O. Bor.
11562, Chicago, Ill . 606tl -0562 . (I~
Canada; send $6.25.) To lind n~l
a mother-in-law who tries to run ffi),' more about Ann Landers and rca(l
life. Please advise . -- MOTHERED her past columns, visit the Creatois
OUT IN IOWA
Syndicate web page at www.crc. ·
DEAR IOWA: You don 't say atots .com.
•

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ATTENTION!

.RACO's yard sale proceeds to fund scholarships
·The annual spring yard sale to he by Kathryn Han, a discus~ion was stand.
held May 20-21 at Star Mill Park held on the Flower Festival, Y(hiclr '
- Sponsor a drop-off collection
was planned during a meeting of was considered a succesa, with rcc- ~of canned goods and non-perishthe Racine Area Community Orga- ommendations for next yeir'i festi- · able items on Saturday, June 5, at
nization held last week. ·
· val which will be held Aprl1 ' 22, the corner of Tllird and l,'earl
The sale will begin at at 9 ~.m. 2000, at Star Mill Park. 1l1e group streets. All items will be donated to
each day. Those wa~tlng to donate . expressed its appreciation to the the Meigs County Cooperative
items should contact Frank and • donors and. panicipants who con- Parish Food Pantry.
Delores C.leland at 949-2071; Oat~ tributed to the festival's success.
- Sponsor'the sixth annual frog .
and Kathryn Hart at ·949-2656; or , !11 other busines~. the llrDio'P jumping contest at the Fourth of
David and Ann Zir~le at 949-2031. .voted to:
,
,July celebration . Senior division
Pick up service is available and
- Donate $200 for limestone prizes will be $100, $7~ and $50 for
proceeds wil.l go , to· the RACO for the· Star Mill Park par!Cing ~lo1 first, second and third place,
scholarsllip fund for Southern High and roiidway.
,
res~ctively, while junior division
- Purchase cases of paper tow- prizes will be 540, $25 and $10.
, School seniors..
The RACO scholarship commit. ~Is : . tbil~t paper and oishw,ashinJ
The secretary's and treasurer's
tee will meet soon to choose the ' detergent for use at Star Mil) Park, .reports were .approved as read .
four recipients of the S~O&lt;! ~cholar- .,
- ,furchase six purple apd gold I Libhy Fisher gave the pra~er
ships. There are 14 apphcantst A ,. flaga to ·be displayed.' :ltirougllou( . 1/efor~ the 6:30 .p.m. meal wuh
May scholarship ·dinner is being town during ball games.
· David Zirkle leadtng the Pledge of
planned. Awards day at the school
, - Purchase a ~CC@. flaJ&gt; IO be , Allegiance to adjourn. The next
is May 21..
·
displayed -on th_e flag \x&gt;le tit the meeting is May 25 at Star Mill
During the meeting conducted Star Miii •Park ball park conc~~fi~Jn Park .
·
.
•

•'

'

CBS set to announce Gumbel's return to morning TV
l·

NEW YORK (AP) - Bryant
Gumbel's farewell to morning !•levision was apparently short·lived. ' ·
Two years after leaving lis co-host
of NBC's "Today" show, Oum""l is
..,..S 's
expected to take the helm of CB
last-place morning show, , "This_
Morning." The netw(lrk plan~ to"
announce the decision at a news conferencc later today, network execurives speaking on condition of ·
anonymity said Monday.

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"''

CBS i;' not likely to reVeal a C()host for.Gumbel. Net-,vqrl&lt; e~ecL~~ive~ .
have sejloriedly con~ick:red ABO'~
Elizabeth Vargas and Deborah
Norville, who was briefly Cluniliel's
pertne
·' r'on "11bday." ' "'
'
Ouiilbel has largelY ~11, 1\ff. the
alrsince the cancellatiOil'ofhts newtmaaazine, "Public Eye with B.ryant
Gumbel," last year. He left "Today"
after I5 years in I997 to sign a Iuerative contract with CBS.
'

To offer story suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips

992-2156

'

'

0

The ·Sentinel.News Hotline

WIOSTIN BROOKS CREMEANS
BIRTH ANNOUNCED - Derek
and Chtl- CrtmNnl of Mindtn, Ll. ennounce the birth of •
eon, Wnton Br~. born on
M•rch 3, Ht ~·lghtd •.ev•n
pouncle, five ouncea.
M8ttrntl. grtndp•rent• •r•
R._y •ncl C.rolyn Dl8glt of Min·
dtn, 1.1., lrld j)llttm•l gr1ndp11r·
tntl lrt Dan •nd Barb8r• Crt~~~·of Rutt.nd.

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rcered to teach it.
planned a trail ride and camp-over, Heart as a heart'exposod . encircle~
4-H Club News
The Silv.e r Spurs
Members volunteered past pro- and noted recognition planned for with a .crown or' thorns. On one
The Silver Spurs 4-H . Club ject books, ribbons,· awards and Rachael Downie, advisor. ,
occasion, she said. Christ gave si'.
R. J. Leach, News Rcporicr
meets at the Lone Oak Farm and at other items for an Ohio 4-H Week
Margaret 12 promises that H ~
the first meeting elected offi'cers, display, possibly at the library.
would grant to all those who vener:;
~ecided on dues, received basic 4Emphasis will be on educating and Bashan Reamers
ated His Sacred Heart and received
the Bashan Beamers . met communion on nine first Fridays.
H horsemanship books, and several · informing the public, and provid· other books.· At ·the second club ing a time for visiting with each recently at the home of Cindy St: Margaret was born July. 164 't
meeting members were reminded other, renewing old 4-H friend - Mayles with officers being elec ted died October 1690 and was ca norrthat for basic 4-H horsemanship ships and making. some new. ones. and dues seL Refreshments were ized to sainthood in 1920.
~
· projects they must learn the ten Refreshments were served by. the served.
Mass celebrated by Father WafBrandi Dailey, News Reporter . ter Heinz preceded the monthly
parts of the horse and for horse sci- leaders.
.ence projects they must learn ten
meeting. · Curry presided with
horse breeds and their origin.
Pleasure Riders
members giving the pledge to thi:
Shawna Clark, news reporter.
Members of the Pleasure Riders
flag . Officers reports were .given by
4-H Club attended the Equine Catho!lc Women her program· Barbara Tatterson and Wilme
Mansfield. Committee reports were
Whiz Kidz
Affaire in Columb!Js April 9 and · on SL MarJaret Mary
··
The Whiz Kidz met earlier this 10. They attended clinics by John
Janice Curry presented a pro- also given.
year at the home of Shelia and Lyons and on Saturday went to the gram on St. Margaret Mary at .the
It was reported that the club h$
Marvin Taylor with siKteen mem- Pfizer Musical Freestyle.
recent meeting of the Catholic · been contacted about serving se"'
bers and three advisors present.
On April 19. members met' to Women's Club held at Sacred eral · weddings this summer, ana
Business items discussed were ·discus a .trail ride and camp-over at . Heart Church.
members agreed to serve thent.
to keep the same dues as last year; the home of ·Pam Milhoan in June .
As noted by Curry, St. Margaret Also discussed ·were ·several Qtho&lt;
keep meeting day the sam'e -Sun- Next meeting will be on May 17 at is prominent in the Church as she money making projects.
days at 2:00 p.m.; and sell candy the home of Clara Baer on Forest had been given instructions by .Our
Following the meeting an\1 proRun
Road.
Lord personally on His wish .that gram, refreshments were served to
bars for 4-H. .
Project lesson was on health, ·
Earlier this year club members His Sacred Heart be venerated the members by the hostesses.
child care, and leadership. Some met at St. Paul Lutheran Church for throughout the world.
Elsie Sutherland and Kristine ·Harexpressed interest in CPR training meetings. They elected officers,
Curry said ·that Christ revealed ns.
and a parent who is certified
. . volun- discussed the Equine Affaire, · to St. Margaret Mary His Sacred

BY BECKY BAER
Mtlga County Exten•lon Agent
Family · •nd Conaumer Sci·
encettiCommunlty Devalopment

BDI,.IOI 'II

In onution on
Bealt~ ·ca,
orlw,ne!

f

boyfriend and I are getting along.
The phone calls aren 't the only
way she butts into our hves. She has
questioned the amount of time we
spend together and what my parents
think about it. I tried planning a
party for him, and she decided to
take over the guest liS!, the menu and
everything else. (I ended u'p cancel'
ing the whole thing.)
She has made it clear that her son
is not to move out of town. no matter how good an offer he gets.
because the ' family must ''stay
together."
Although I am a college graduate
and earn $50,000 a year, she thinks I
should go back to school and get a
doctorate .
Ann, I want a future with this
man , but I don' t want to end up with

'' ~

the second stop on his U.S. tour.
Despite his efforts, Obuchi said, the unemploymeni
rate in Japan is 4.8 percent-twice the rate to which it ·
is acc~stomed - and Japanese companies can be
expected to cut more jobs, a sobering thought for workers in a land once proud of its promise of lifetime
employment. ·
Taichi Sakaiya, Japan's minister of economic planning, said last week that the country is content to
"achieve growth in a timely and flexible manner"
under the strategy Obuchi now .is pursuing, "and then
sec if anything else needs to be done."

WILL BE HERE WEDNESDAY,

•

~

these trips. I am afraid this child will regular basis by a competent theranever have a chance in life unless he pist. He must noi be allowed to grow
can distance himself from his jail- up thiR!ting jail is a "normal" or a
bird father.
"good" place to be. He must underIt's not as if Roy has turned over stand that it is a place people are sent
a new leaf. The last time my hus- when they break the law. Please, for
band went 16 see him, Roy threat- ·the c~ild's sake, talk to your husened to kill his stepfather. I have no band, and try to gel the boy into
doubt that he would do it. What do counseling at once. He needs help.
you say, Ann? Will these visits harm
Dear Ann Landers: My
the boy? This is very troubling and boyfriend and I have been together
is starting to cause a problem for almost two years.
between my husband and me. Please
Generally. we have a great relaadvise.-- DARKNESS IN
tionship, except when it comes 10 his
DELAWARE
mother. She has started calling my
DEAR DELAWARE: How sad· house three or four times a night.
that the 4-year-old's first memory of (we do not live together.)
his dad will be associated with
Most of the time, she calls about
prison. Now that the child has seen nothing - she heard a funny story
his father there, I see no. point in . about a neighbor; she saw something
stopping the jail-house·visits, but do good on TV and so on. ·
Whenever I visit my parents, she
ask ·your husband to consider making his trips with the boy less fre- calls me at least twice to find out if
quent.
·
''e~erything is OK." She al~o calls
' :That child should be seen on a our friends to find out if my

·v.t,~

rra

1

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.

Clinton warns Japan· to reduce steel imports
"ey SONYA ROSS
A..ocl•ttd Pr. .• Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- President Clinton warned
Japan today to reduce its steel imports "on a ·consistent
basis" or the United States will act to block those
imports.
Following a meeting with Japanese Prime Minister
Keizo Obuchi, Clinton told a news conference the·
. United ·States would act to keep Japanese steel out of
I).S. markets if those imparts continue to exceed the
levels ex·isting prior to the Asian economic crisis.
"We will take action if steel imports do not return to
their pre-crisis levels on a consistent basis," Clinton
said. "Playing by the rules of trade is the best way to
sustain a consensus for open trade."
The Commerce Department said last week it had
determined that Japanese steel companies were engaging in illegal steel dumping - selling abroad at less
than home-market prices- and that tariffs of up to 67
.percent could be imposed on hot-rolled carbon steel, a
widely used product.
·
Such tariffs, which could be imposed retroactively
to mid-November, effectively would price that type of
steel out' of the U.S. market.
Clinton said it is important that Japan respect both
the principles of open trade and fair trade. "I h,ave
fought for both objectives. It will help Japan adapt to
the challenges of the new global economy," Clinton
said. ·
Obuchi did not directly address Clinton's warning,
but said Japan was "swiftly ,and boldly taking every
measure in order to address the difficulties we arc facing and to achieve Japan's economic recovery:"
The steel troubles aside, Clinton warmly welcomed
Obuchi to the White House for the first official visit of
a Japanese prime minister in 12 years. He said the fact
that Obuchi v.:ent to work on economic problems

Page7
Tueeday, May 4, 1999

Child should not .grow up thinking dad's prison is a nice pia~~ to be

Dear Ann
stepson, when he visits, and my husband has
"Roy," was recently sentenced to I 5 agreed.
years in prison for selling drugs. He
I don 't think it's appropriate for ·
has been in and out of trouble for his the boy to see his father locked up.
entire life, and I cannot say one good Everybody whitewashes the situaword about him.
tion and tries to make it seem like
The last time Roy was out of jail, Roy is away at college. They tell the
he got a young girl pregnant, and she kid.how nice the place is, how goOd
had a baby boy. When the federal the food is and how well the guards
agents raided their home, the baby treat the prisoners.
was given to Roy's mother and stepBy the time the child is 10 years
father to raise. That child is now 4 old, !le will think jail is a pretty nice
years old.
place to be. I am really bothered by
Here's the problem: Roy's mother this.
,
has been ·taking the boy to see his
I cannot do anything about RoY:s
father in prison. Now, Roy wants my mother, but I am shocked that my
husband to bring the child with him husband is willing to talt~ ll)e boy on I

for sc)lools' reaction to pranks

who shot to death 12 classmates and a teacher before
Teachers can't keep lessons on track because most
The courts appear to be coming down on pranksters
killing themselves apparently had planted explosives at older students simply don't come back to school once ·too. An 18-year-old yo~th, who was not a student, fac"
the 1,800-student school.
it's cleared, said Barbara' Bullock,, president of the fines of $2.6 million and 1,782. years in jail on doz"11s
"Some schools bave been more sensitive about it, Washington Teachers Union.
of charges in a phoned bomb threat that forced the evac;but when it comes to security measures there's no such
"It's really interrupting instructional time," she said. uation of 66 schools in Schuylkill County, Pa.
•
thing as overreacting," said Jesus Villahermosa, a "But God forbid the day you decide 10 ignoreh."
Hunter predicts lawmakers will join schools in
deputy sheriff in Pierce County, Wash., who advises
Some officials blame the scrutiny. Nervous parents cracking down on thre.ats and pranks: A Delaware legl$schools on security issues.
and a glaring media arc watching every step, they say. .lator wants stiffer penalties for bomb threats, at least 'x
Villahermosa said at least 14 people statewide were
"These shootings are not the rule," said Villaher- . months in pri.son for a first time, five years aft.er tha~1
arrested last week for bomb threats to schools.
mosa. "We need to quit focusing on them." Hil added
Some worry moro about schools' reaction to kros
Elsewhere:
.
that most school security issues involve non-custodial that aren't making threats, but are somehow being a~- An Internet thr~at of a shooting Friday kept home parents, turf battles that bring kids from other .schools ciated with the Colorado l(agedy because they're wearall but 300 of the 2,100 students at a suburban Phoenix and drug dealing and abuse.
ing black trenchcoats, much like the killers' social
high school. Students feared that the April 30 anniverBut since Columbine, said Hunter, "You can't say clique.
. sary of Adolf Hitler's suicide would spark a shooting. that you're not going to react anymore."
The American Civil Liberties Union is representi!lg
The Columbine killers struck on the. Nazi leader's birthIn the short-run, they say, they'll have to empty the 11 Brimfield, Ohio, students who were suspended for
day.
.
.
buildings. Long-term, they hope peer pressure will take contributing to a Website for so-called Goths, a subc'!_l- In Charlotte, N.C.,.on. Friday classes and SAT over. Enough canceled track meets, tests and band per- ture of black-garbed youths that has been assoctatcd
testing scheduled at four schools were canceled. Police formances might make enough other kids sick of their with the Colorado teens.
'spent the weekend sweeping middle and high schools to peers' pranks.
·
'
"People just need to really take a deep ,breath/' sald
make sure campuses were safe.
Villahermosajust.nabbed a student who's pulled the . Ann .Beeson, a national staff attorney at. the ACL.U.
- District of Columbia schools, which received fire alarm at his school about a dozen times in the past "There's a real danger that any ktd that ts not mar,nthrce days of threats last' week, had to evacuate all 146 two weeks; some buddies turned him in.
·
· stream now is going to be considered some. kind Of
schools on one day.
"They just got so tired of it," he s~id.
threat ,~'

By. Th~Bend

The Daily Sentinel

•

"This Morning" has run a consistent third in the ratings behind
"Today" and ABC's "Good Morning
America. " 1l1e ABC show raised the
stakes in the morning news competi110' ..
u earlier this. year when it brought
CHarles Gibson and Diane Sawyer in
as temporary hosts.
CBS also intends to unveil .plans
to4ay to build a new storefront studio for "This Morning."

•

..

AREA HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATESOF 1999

O:n Friday, . May 21st, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with photographs
..
.·
of high school seniors graduating this year. ~~:
·Now through Friday., May 14th, Drop Your . :;:
Photo Off at The. Daily Sentinel or At Your
High School Office to Be Included In This
·Special Edition, At No Charge.
.

·,

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(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

*************************
Any Professional, Business, Individual .or Civic
. Organizations who would like to have an
advertisement in this speCial edition please

Call992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104
·. Kath Williamson Ext. 105
·,

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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Communi'ty
Calendar
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Midtlleport
Village Council, special meeting,
6 :30 p.m " to discuss perso nnel.
POM EROY Immun ization
Clinic, Mei gs County Health
Department, I to 7 p:m . Children to
be accompanied by parent/guardian
ami have immunization records.
RUTLAND ___:_ Rutland Township Trustees, 5 p.m. Tuesday at
Rutland Fire Station.
ALFRED - Board of Orange
Townshi p Tru stees, Tuesday 7:30
p.m ., home of the clerk , Osie Foil rod .
POM EROY - Salisbury Township Tru stees , regular mee ting ,
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. town ship hall o n
Rocksprin gs R_oad.
POMERO Y - F.O .E. Auxiliary
Tuesday, 7:30 p .m.

m~e ting ,

BIBLE READING - ldabelle Markley, Coolville, a member of the
Eden l!niled Brethren Church, is shown here reading from the book
of Psalms during the Bible reading marathon being held In conlt!nction w!th National Day of Prayer activities. The Bible reading
marathon, being held at the Pomeroy Levee, will continue 8 a.m. to
·a p.m. through 10 a.m. Thursday.
.

~cine

UMW plan

for mother-daughter banquet

MIDDLEPORT - Middlep ort
Masonic Lodge 363, R&amp;AM , Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Work in E.A. degree.
Refres hment s.
'

SYRACUS E - Syracuse Village
Co uncil , 7 p.m. Tuesday, vjllage
hall. , instead of Thursday, r~ lar
·
mee ting time.

Plan s were fin a lized fo r the mother-daughter banquet to be held at WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Townthe church Friday when the Raci ne United M e thodiSt women met
ship Trustees , town hall , 6:30 p.m.
recently at the ch urch
·
Wednesday.
Members are to repo rt at the church Saturday morning at I 0 a.m . to ·
d ecorate and set up tables and do other tasks . They are being asked to
THURSDAY
bring all their stuffed bears to be used for decorating . CHESHIRE ~ Jl.evival, 7 p.m .
President Lee Lee presided at the meeting whi c h opened with everyThursday
through Saturday, l'oplar
one repeating the Lord ' s Prayer a nd the UMW purpose-. Karen Walker
Ridge
FWB
, State Route 554. Spe·
gave the secretary's report and several thank you notes )&gt;!ere read.
cial
singing,
Nonna Taylor, evangeThe treas urer 's report was give n by Clara Mae Sargent. Other than
list. ·
the regular mo nthly donation s, a c heck was sent to the ~ed Cross for
the Ciricinnati torn ado victim s and also to the Meig s High School burn
MIDDLEPORT
Evangeline
victim Jeremy Rowe.
.
Chapter
172,
O.E.S
.,
.
Middleport
It was noted that Martha Dudding and Lee attended the Athen s Di sMasonic
Temple,
Thursday,
7:30
trict IJMW retreat held at The Plain s Me thodi st Church on April 10 . .
p.m .
Mem~ers se rved a dinner o n _April 20 to the Alpha Delta Kappa
sorority, and will serve the C o -Op appreciation banquet at the church
May 17, 6 p .m . The church will provide the meiH and beverage. UMW FRIDAY
CHESTER - Hymn sing, 7 p.m .
members will be instrumental in taking charge bf the dinner arrangeFriday, Harvest Outreach Church,
ments.
Two missionary names were se lected from the prayer calendar to be Riebel Road , Chester, featuring
- sent cards and Alice Wolfe read a letter received from a missi o nary sta- Gabriel Quartet , Harvest Time
tioned in Anchorage, Alaska, who had received a card from the group . . Singers from Wet Jefferson, and
·
local singers.
Judy Pape, program le11der, highlighted detail s from the Bible story
" Two women free the Israelite s". She_al so read the poem " Endless
POMEROY - Mother-daughter
Spring" · and "Showers of Bless ing" by Helen ~teiner Ri ce. A prayer
banquet
, Zion Church of Christ ,
from a mo ther' s day blessing card closed the program .
State Route 143, 6 :30 p.m. Friday
-Refreshments were se rved by Cindy Winebrenne r with members
Potluck, program to foll ow.
~ ig~ing get well card s.
Atte nding were Melissa Harkne ss, Etta Mae Hill , Clara Mae SarSATURDAV
gent. Opal Diddle, Karen Walker, Marilyn Bogard , ·Margie We st, Chris
BURLINGHAM _ Burlin gham
Hill , Jud ~ Pape , Martha Dudding , Ali ce· Wolfe, Cindy Winebrenner and
.
Modern
Woodmen
Camp
7230
Lee Le.e.
:There will not be a meet ing in May , so the next one will be held June Mother 's Day potluc k dinne( Saturday, 5 p.m. at the Woodmen Hall .
28, it .was no ted. C hri s Hill will ha ve the ptogram and re fres hme nts
. Meat salad, rolls pop coffee and
·
will be served by Op~l Diddle.
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tea prov1ded . Each mother to 1ece 1ve
a nowcr..

Remember When?
A special seCtion devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"

your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples,etc.
To •be
published

.Friday,
M~y 28,~999

in

The Daily
Sentinel
Scott Wolfe
Southern High School
Clauof19n

VIcky Dent Pumphrey
Meigs High School
Classof19n

Special .recognition for 50th, 25th &amp;: lOth year.
(19491974 1989)
$6.00 per photo or $10/couple.
Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
'
·
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769
"

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Deadline Fri. May 14- 4 PJil

Public Notice
PubHc Notice
5.5
D;itct•
aiid
VIOiitiOnt:
Ill thinly eprlld ihi
SEPTAOE REGULATIONS rttidUt from HWigt dll- Delecte or violation• on eurfac• or tha ground.
pOIII
ayttema
within
Mtlga
FOR MEIGS COUNTY
lfrvlct vehlcltt and/or Pooling of Hpllgt will not
SECTION 1: Gtnerol County unl11t auch pereon equipment 1114Y CIUH IUI- be permUted.
Ia
rf9lolertd
11 1 ltWf91
Provlilorla
7.1 o Baplagt WIIIH 111111
cleaner by tha penelon of lilt vehicle Tl91.1 The Board of Health of tank
latretlon until the dtltcla or not be dltpoHd of by dlaDepartment.
Any
·
perton
the Metgo County General
vlotaUona are corricted, If chlf'llllniO or on any ditch,
Health Dlolrlct (the Board) eerviCingthllr own HWagl ouch vlolatlona are contld· dry run, pond, take, atreem,
dl1poul
tyalam
1nd
dt
..
IInde that It It In tht public
ertd a public nutunca or 1 cave, elnkhOit, mtne, g1'8vel
heolth lnttrllt of the rttl· poelng of the eapllge on hulth huard.
·
ph, or quarry.
their
own
property
and
In
1
donlt of Melge County to
1.11 lleptege ahell not be
SECTION 8:
Saptagt
approved
by
the
manner
manage 111 own htollh hazDllpotiiJI,arld Application, appllld In ara11 when 11M
Department
will
not
be
ardt and public health nul·
permtnent or temporery
Ptrmlt, and lntpectlont:
aanc11 th1t may occur In required to be regloltred.
8.1 General Sllttmtnt: No· wttei ltbltt art within
3.2
To
obtoln
rf9ltlrallon
the Hrvtngl of aepllge.
pereon thtll apply, permit forty-tight .(48) lnchtl of
1.2 The Board dlrecta that to engage tn 11wage link or cau10 the dlepoul of lht IUrftCI. .
no pereon ehall tranaport, ttrvlclng within Malga 10ptage on land In ·Melga
7.12 Tht rata of dlapoeel
tho a.-wage tank
atore, utt, or dlopoae of County,
ahall
not exceed twelve
County
unlett
the
cltan~r muot ltrat complete
atptago, bwage oolldt or an application lor reglttrl· Department hat lttutd •
thouaand (t 2,000) gollona
per ecrt per year. In no
other retldual matter form lion and aubmll II to thlt permit lor that tilt.
the treatment of private rtl· ·Depanmant. Tha appllca·
6.2 Application lor ·site event thell poota ol weetu
fdtnlflf ltW&amp;ge eKCiipl lion thall be accompanied Approval: To obtain a per- be 1llowtd to accumulate.
through the requtrementl by 1 Ill ellobllehed by tho mit to appty aeptaga to 1
7.13 No pereon thlll
of tho Melge County Board Boord. Each !lllddlllonal aile . In Malga County an 1ppty, permit, or cauu the
of
Heolth
Soptage vehicle uaad for Hrvlclng application mutt bt flied
oppllcotton of 1ap1tge to
land during _,,.. weath-Regulation.
raqulrao eaparataloa ealab- and ahllllnctude the follow·
er
condlltona or In llllurll·
lng
minimum
Information
llthtd by the Board.
1.3 · Per1ont engag'ed on
3.3 The Board may require and any other reaaonabla ' ed llelda.
7.14 No pereon ehall
tho bualnttl of towage . tha 10wago link cleaning Information· dHmtd
applr., permit, or ceu.. lht
tonk cleaning ehall comply ·compony to obl81n 1 bond aary by tha Department:
with the . Melga . County prior
to
reg111rallon A. fhl application ahlll be appl cation of aaplag• to
algned by the reglattred tend auneet or before ounBoard of H_ealth Septage approvol .
Regulation and ahall pro3.4 Reglelrallone lteuad HWigt tank CIHntr and by riH..
7.15 All rtgllttrtd ttpllgl
vide
the
Health under Jhla regulation thlll the land owner where "P'
haulart mutt ·obtaln wrllttn
Commlaoloner auch Infor- be valid lor the ·year luued tail• 1110 be land applltd.
mation ao may be required and tKplra at 12:00 mid· B. Tht addrtll or ltgal permletlon from 1 wttlt
dtiCrlpllon or lht propoaed water treatment facility 11•1·
on tho forma provided by night on December 3111.
till.
.
. lng that the watlt water
tho Molgo County Health
3.5 Application lor renewal ·
Dopartmen!. All ttwage of regletrallon •hall be auf&gt;. c. Sollt map of the tand- lrtllmtntleclltty will accept
that( llpllge lor trtatment
tank cleaner• who service mltted to the Department_ dlapoul area.
dlapotal
during
dlopoaal ayttemolnalda or before the December 3111 D. TMt holea may bt and
requlrtd to -rmlnt depth 1dvere1 weather conditfont
outside of IHt District and expiration date.
to bedrock or water table•
or ehould an emargoncy
dlopoae of the . material
SECTION 4: Servicing:
E.
Location
or
bodte•
o1
within the·Dhitrlct mualalto
occur. A copy of thlt per·
4.1 Vehlcteo, tmplementa,
comply with thll_regulation. contalnere; and all other wettr and wellt within 500 mloalon thlll be eubmltted
1 .4 Sewage tank claanlng equipment ehall bt opera!· . feet of the ltn·dlapoaal to th• H111th Department 11
the time of regletrallon or
companlao shell oubmll ed In auch manner aa not to lrll.
monthly Information to the cauee 1 hllllh huard or F. -Dtlcrlptlon of · the renewal.
')JIIIIhod of land appllcatton
7.18 Tht Department
Malga County General nulaance.
· requlrtt Immediate nollll·
Health District, outlining the' . 4.2 Any accldantaltplllage to be uHd.
G. Provide a map or akllch calion ol any aplll or emerfollowing: aource, type, and ahell be cleaned up and the
amount of toptage, dltpos· area dl1lnfected aD •• to J of the 1111 ahowtng lltlda to gency Hpllgetand appllct·
be ueed lor land appllca· lion mtdt by the a1pt1ge
at area, weather conditions. render the eplllaga harmaoll conditione and other •••• to humans and an~ lion; Including: (1) total hauler. II the Health
acraage for aach field; (2) Oepartment 11 cloaed, noll·
ouch pertinent Information mala.
dlatencea ·from homea, flc.idon mutt be made dur·
deemed necaaoary by the
4.3 The property being
Boord of Health. Thlo lnfor· aervtcaa thall be 1111 In a propany linea, roadwaya, lng tht next butlntll day.
bulldlngt, wella, eprlnga,
SECTION 8: V1rltncaa:
matlon shall be on forma tanltary ccindltlon.
cleterne, fence
linea,
e.1 Tht Boord mey hear
praacrlbad by the Board.
4.4 Water uead lor llulhponde,
•nd appaolt ond g1'8nl IndividFailure of the seplage lng tanka or other aewage 1treama,
cleaning company to sub· contalnart ohall be dla· dralnoge dllchtt. (3) Lind ual varloncM from !hit fill·
uuge (Cropa, etc.)
ulatton whln II 11 deter·
mit these reporta may )uop· pooed or In tho eame mane.:t FH: The oppllcatton mined that no aubotanllal
ardtze operating Ileana•. ner •• tha waattl.
ahall be tubmltttd II laaet hnlth huerd •• a likely to
Repone 'Will ba aubmlned
4.5 Dltchlrge of waltaa or
quanerly wllh,.due datoo of lhiohlng water Into ·, lake, thirty dly1 prior to the doll occur thertlrom and unntcMarch 1, Juna1, September etream, or other aurface or ollntencled·uHior land die- aaaary hordohlp might
pout. A '" mey be alllb- rttult In otrlct compllanct
1, aile!' December 1, reapac· underground
water
llthtd by lht Board to be with thll regulatton. The
lively.
·
resource thall be ctult lor
remitted with lilt applicaImmediate auoponelon of tion. Each addltlonol aile roqutlllor 1 varttnca thall
be flied In wriUng with the
SECTION 2: Dellnlllona:
reglelratlon.
may require 1 10parate Itt Board and ohall bt conoid·
2.1 Board of Health or.
4.6 Altttnate or expert- aa aatabllahad by - 1ht ·
ered by lht Soard .II their
Board: The Metg1 County mental mllhodt of dlopoul
Board.
next regularly echadultd
Board of Health appointed will
bt
Individually
8.4 Ac;tton by the Health m11tlng.
,
under provlolone or Section ••-•ed, and lhall m111
Department:
.
The
SECTION 8: Ptnellltt:
13709.021 · of tha Ohio Departmenttpproval.
9.1Any peraon who vloRevleod Code.
-4.7 Non blodegredoblt Dtpartmentahall review the
2.2 • Dapanment or Health malerlala_mull be aepartl· Information contained In laltl tny provlelon of thlt
Department: The Mulgo ed lrom the ..ptage H lilt the application, lntpecltht rf9UIItlon ehall be Jn VIOIItill tn the prMenct or tht IIon of Section 3707.48 and
County General Health ttptage It to be fond
Dlotrlct.
·
applied. Such materlala land owner and/or tha appli- aub)tct to lha penaltltt pro2.3 Holding . Tank: Any muet be dltpoatd ol tn 1 cant arid approve or di"P'· vided by 3707.99 of the
facility, , dpalgned to be manner approvad of by tha prove the 1111. II the ell• ta Ohio Reviled Code. Eoch
not approved, the property and every violation 1hall
watertight, which Ia used Dtplrtmtn).
owner
and the applicant conatlluta 1 - oaparate
tor lhe 11orage and dtcom·
SECTION 5:
Vahlcla
poallton of human excre- ·Jneptcllon, ldtnllllcallon ahall be provided rea10na all-.
-g.2 Tht - r d may auoment or other waatea In llq· and
Equipment for dlupproval.
6.5 Site tnapectton: Any pend or 1'1'/0ka any raglould form .
Requlremtnll!
under
leaued
2.4 Nulunca: Any condl·
5.1 tn1pectlon: Any per· peraon who haa applied lor lratlon
lion of teplago thai 11 ton engaged In aervtng and received a permit pur- Sactton 3 or any permit
potentlatty ln)urlouo to the ·ahall permit their whlclll euant to thla Slp!aga . laoued under Stcllon 8 of
health, ttlaty, comfort, or · and equipment to . be flf9Uhdlon thlli be dHmed thla rf9ulatlon. Befort an¥
to have given conatnt 10 IUCh IUtpenalon or IIVOCI·
property ola per~on, _or thai Inspected upon requell· at
· pollutaa wattra oltha otata. any ttmt and place, •• amy reaaanable unannounced Uon ol 1 rf9111rtUon or per·
2.5 Poraon: Any Jndlvld- bt daolgnaltd by the lnapecllont of their land by mille mtdl, tht Board ahall
ual, partnarahlp, copartner- Deportment lntptellont of repreltnlltlvaa of thl give 1 written notice to lht
ahlp, llrm, company, cqrpo- all vehlcltt uHd lor 11rvlng Department for the purpoee rf9lllrant not permit holder
ration, aaaoclallon, Joint mey bt made 11 11111 quar·- or determining comptat- that tha Board conttm·
atock company, truat, ttrty by the Dtpartmtnt and unce with thlt rf9uletlon. pltlll the auapentlon or
may revocation of the 11me and
aotata political eubdlvl· In conJunction Vjllh raglo- Tha . Deportment
tlon;~tate agency anlt any ·tr•tton renewal. Vehlclat lnepect each permitted tile gtva rea1one thertloro.
other legal entity or their which dettrmlntd to con- II qutrtorly. Any pormll Such notice thoU appOint 1
with
equipment holder who refuted or Inter• lima lor 1 hllrlng bl!ort
legal repreaentallvo, agonto form
raqulrementt
of
the ltrtt with lht rttltonabla tha Board ancl will be 11nt
or attlgna.
2.6 Potable Water: Water Dtpanmenl
will
ba lrilpecliona Hllor)h In thla by certilled and uncertllled
which Ia tatlolactory lor approved lor Mrvlng In r19utlllon ehall forfeit tha mall. Tha regtatrant may
permit. Fllrtharmora, lha praunt 1uch tvldenca 11
· drinking; culinary, and Mtlga County. All vehiCIII
domeollo purpoaeo.
uttd In ttrvlng may ba Department may lmpoat lhay dtllre II the hearing.
2. 7 Privy: Any unitary, requlrtd to have 1 currtnl mort r11trlcttve condlltona Altar he1rlng 11M evidence,
atarlaee device for the col- Ohio Highway Vahlola lhtn thoat conlolned In lhll lha Board thlll decide lht
regulation lor lht PUJPOH malltr In euch manner 11 II
action and otorage of lnapectlon Slicker.
of
preventing or tllmtnallng 1ppeare Jull an right and In
5.2
Equipment
human excrement but not
Including commodt'l or Raqulremontl! All vthlclao a nulunct or a health hu· ICCOrdlnCI with rf9ulotlon.
SECTION 10: EHtcl ot
end equipment uHd In ..,_ ard.
other portable riCipllclea.
e.&amp; Expiration of Ptrmll: Partllllnvalldlty
2.8
Property Owner: vtctng ahall contorm to the
All Slit permlla ltautd thall
10.1 II one pert, ttctlon,
Peraon or tntlty the! allowt following:
be valid lor one y..r from paragraph, or provtaton of
A.
Vehlclat
and
equipment
the application of uptago
on . property under hit/her ehall ba dttlgntd and main· lht data ·taauad. Upon the liMit regullllona ehall b1
talned In good repelr 10 •• . expiration of 1ny permit ad[udged by any court com•
~wnarahlp or management.
2.9 - Regtetrent: Any ,per.- not to craall a public nut- undor thle 1ectton no fur· petenl Jurledlcllon to b1 ·
ther 11ptage thall be Invalid; euch Judgement
ton oarvlclng aewege dtl- oance or health huard.
poul ayelema and holding B. Vthlcltt and equipment applied until a new permit ahall not alltct, lnvalldllt,·
or nullity the ramlndor ol
mull be alortd In 1 monntr lor lht 1H1 lnued.
1 volld Melge County ragloe.7 Sutptnalon and . lhtlt
rf9ulallona, but ah1ll
lhet
Will nol CIUtl I nul·
tnollon.
2.10 Retldtnllal Sewage tenet ond thtll be uHd lor Revacatlon Parmi!: A per- be. conllntd to thll portion
Dtapo111 Syattm: Any lap- no other purpoait. · All mil may be 1uapanded or lmmedltltly Involved In
lie tank, oeroblc treatment tankt utlllztd In lht han· revoked by lht Board when aatd controvaray.
SECTION
11
tank, prllly or holding .tank · dllng of aaptagt ahall be · 11 te determined that the
Ultd Ia lrHI ltwtgi ·from ellectlvtly HCured on tech landowner or ttpltge tank Mlactlloneouo Llwe and
cleaner haa lolled to comply Rf9UIIIIont
reoldtntlal dwelllnge.
truck.
2.11 Sami·Publlc Sawige · c. Each tenk on a vehicle with lhlo regulation.
11.1 In addition to ·t he
Lind rtqulrtmtnta 111 forth In'
Treatment Facility: A prl· ehall be tlrcing enough lor · SECTION 7:
vately owned · treatment all proctlctl conditione of 1\ppllcatlon Rulee lor lhl.. rtgUiellona, all Land
facility that provldll treat· operation, bt leakproof, Surface Application or Dltpoul IIIII lhlll be .
menl lor property open and and dttlgned to- be kapt Subeurfact InJection:
maintained In compll1nco.
7.1 Sept1ge ·dltpoul Ia with · all oxletlng 11811 and
ICCIIIIblt lo lht public. tightly clottd to pravonl
Thea• laclllllll tnclirdt, but tplllagt Of' IICIPI PI odort not permitted on land uHCI local lfllulll, ordlnancat,
ore not limited to churchea,- ·while In tranall or alorf9t. lor paaturtng llveatock dur- codaa, and rf9ulatton•
reatauranta, achoola, parke, tank• ahlll be conetructad Ing lha ·currant growing
SECTION 12:
EHacttve
and _atorea.
·
of aullablt mattrtala a'nd ttaton or any cropland
· 2.12 Stpllgt: Tht mixed property mounted on lht uHil lor growing v.geta· Datt:~
12. I
raguletton 111111
liquid, acum, .and tolld con· vehicle.
bt•• tnttnd•dtohuman be elltctl
n 4-14-811 and
lng tha 1hall ropltca y p,.yjoue
ttnta of ttptlc lonkt, o. Pumpt ahall bt odtqlll!ll conaumptlon
lrtallon unlta, prlvltt, and lor tht required .atrvlct. current crop ~ r.
regulation governing the
7.2 Stplaga hall not be atrvlclng ol Mplttt adopt·
other typel of on-1111 trill• Pump tnllallallon ahall be
menl or holding eytltmt dttlgned to prtvtnl back- applied on olopeo grtaler tel by lha Melga County .
lor domtallc ond or com· flow
and
leakage. then twelve percent (12%1.
Board or Health.
7.3 Stptagt 1h1ll not be
merclal un1t1ry waaltt. Conntctton1 ahlll be proUpon • motion made by
Septage thall not Include vided with wetertlghl ..ala. 1p,..d on anow aov1red or Otna Jtlltra, Prtoldant o1
waata materlala lor gre111 E. DliChargt VIIVII on troztn ground Whtrt alopea tha Boord o1 Health and ·
lrapt or lndutlrlal wallet. . tank• 1h1ll bt wallt'llght exceed two percent (2%).
HConded by Jim CIIHOI'd,
7.4 Slptaga 1hlll not be Jr., VIet Prtlldtnt o1 the
·2.13 Sepltgt Hauler: Any and 1h1ll be tocattd and
per10n who tngagtt In the conatructtd ao 11 to permit applied within thrH hun- · eo.d of H111th, the ragutocolltcllon, tranaponatton, unobotrucltd dlachllgt drod (300) lui of panda, llona were . 1dopted · for
laktt, t1r11m1, wtlla, cia- Metga County a1 of Aprll14,
and dlopooal of lht con- Into lht place of dlepoul.
·
ltnlt ol eewagt dlepoul F. Ho- and piping oholl be lerna, or eprlngt.
11H. Thl Boll'd rtlpondtd
7.5 Stplage ·ah11l not be •• followa;
eyattma.
olortd and lllltd ao 11 to
.
2.14 Servicing: Tht clean· pravantloakage or dripping applied within on1 hundred Oane Jallera, Prtaldant,
(100) 1111 of Primary, f!lc!lrd of Hufth.y•
lng, removing, hauling, In trtntlt.
alorage, and/or dltpoaal of
5.3 Vehicle -ldtnllllcatlon: Secondary, or unimproved Jim CIIHord, Jr., VIce
·
The name and addr111 of din rotdt.
111111111· .
Pruldent,
of Health2 .Is
Stle: Contlguoua the company muat bt . 7.0 Septage ahall not be yea
land In common ownerahlp ·ahown on each etcle or lht applied Within filly (50) IHI .Ann llarrtll, Member, Bollrd
lor which an appllc1110n lor truck. Tht rf9111rallon num· ol any property Una. A mini· of Hltlllh·yaa
mum dletanct of one thou· Joann Crtap, Member, . : :
one HpiiJII hauler to apply btr
IIIUtd
by
lhl
Hplllll hat been tubmll· Dtpartmonl for tach vahl· und (1,000) fHI trom any lolird of HMith--ytt
. · ·
,ltd. .
.
rttldlnllll dwelling, buill· One Board v-noy•
.
cia mutt 1110 be ahown on
· 2.18 Subeurfoce ln)lctlon: both tldta a!ld the r11r of neat, or aroa uttd tor· Jaan Jtlltre, P'"ldent
tncorportllon Into tbl toll the vehicle. All ttllero lind
Jim Cllllord, Jr., Vlca
rtcrMuonal pUrpDHI.
with plow or equipment numbero mu11 be 1 mtnl·
.
7.7 llepltga nil not be Prteldtnt
•r,•clllcally daelgned lor mum · of lour (4) tnchea In applltd In ,,.., aubftcl to Annllltiii,MIIIIbar
p acemanl of • liquid below height and mull bt of -con· trequent flooding . .
Joann Crlep, Member '
• toll aurfact.
traetrng color. 7.8 Btpltgt ehall not be Jon D. Jacoba, RS,' Dtputy
SECTION 3: Reglatrallon
5.4 Canlllcltt Ranawal: applied within tha water Health Commloelonar
Of SIWIIII Tank Cltantra:
E1ch year the Dep•rtmant ahed of a pond or ltke Margie ·8. lAwton, ,DDS
3.1 lfo · Ptrton ehall Will IIIUI reglllt'ltlon whiCh llt'WI II lhl IOUrCI Httllh Commllllonar '
rtmovt. traneport, etore, or rtntwol cartlllcalta lor olany potable wlllr eupPfy. 41 271TC
dl1po11 ol uptage or other plactmtnlln vehlclll.
7.t Bepteit walle mull 5) 4, 11 2TC
PubJic

Notice

·'

Tuesday, Mav 4, 1999

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Pomerov • Middleport, Ohio

_

Public Notice

nee••

r.

lU~mern~Ot:!r

Name
School
Year
Nickname

Tuesday, May 4, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

HOW4RD
EXCAVATING CO.

I&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc
Rutland, OhiO

Ume"'N"'rwd'

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings , Roofing, Siding
uSpecialiaing In Los llome•u
Cmnmet·dn.l &amp; H ~sil l c ntiul
28 yra. exp . . ·
Licensed &amp; Insured

llap!'nr
ilu/t./o•er &amp; Backhoe
Service•
lluusc &amp; Trailer Si t•i
Land Clearing &amp;
Gra&lt;jlng
s,.,,,ic Syrrerm &amp;

Phone 740-992-3987

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps; convertible &amp;vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

.~~~~~~n~~~~~

1740) 992·3131

MYERS

CREDIT

PAVING
WV

wiiaviYIIG!!!

Henderson,

We Do...

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

•Parking Lots
•Basketball Courts
_•Driveways
•Grading Work
•H!Iullng Stone

CaU A Urrle One

DRIVEWAY STONE

OHice

Cell Phone
f?llEE ESTIMATES
Cont. rWV003506

HORSES
Oity, Sell, Trrdn or Bo(lrd

Larry'• Lawn
'

Care

AIIO Riding LIIIORS

noor ·n~u~w

'

' Free Etdmtt.h!l
'Prolesalonal Routine Lawn
Makltenanct and Monk:urlng

Farma
740-6 ·3290

$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

'Residential &amp; Commerdal
'Shrubbery Maintenance

Lost Puppy
On Flatwooas ltd .,
Lab/MiK, Black, with .
White markin~s on each
· paw, tip of fail, and
a~ross chest
·
Row••• for Her Ratvrn.

SAYRE
TRUCKING

1-740.742-2803 or
1-740-446-3622

Hauling
Limestone &amp;Gravel
Ressonable Rat's

JUST IN riME FOR IIPRJNG REPAIRS
AGA GAS, lNG. IS OFFERING A SPECIAL ON OUR
.

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT
CYLINDER , AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILl . OF GAS FREE PIUS AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAl' Pill$ THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
· END OF THE PROMOTION . THIS IS A IAJIIIG
OF UP'JO $100,00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZ~D AGA DEALEn FQR
llETAILS. ALL"SIZES AltE NOT AVAILADLE •·on
OUTIW; HT SALE. TillS 'SPRING SPECIAL WILL
END J UNE2 1, 1999. ·

POMIROY MACHINIIHOP
. 250 CONDOR ST• .
POMEROY, OHIO .t$769
PHOHE-740.992-2406 OR 304-415·3555

Jo~ N~

Sayr,
740·742·2138
3(11/i9TFN

110

Overbrook
Center ·
333

Page Street,

Middleport
hat~ part time

positions for

LPN's availallle ;
for all shifts artd
Anyone interested
please stop

by &amp;

rtUout an

WANTED: Due to n:cent•upanslon, B.C.S. currently has
opening in Meigs County:
I) 33 lim!Wk: 8 am Satlbru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
. required;
21 25 hrs/Wk: 8 am·8 pm, SatJSun;
51 Emergency Relief (substitutes): hoUI'!I scheduled as
needed;
,
We are searching for compassionate professionals with a
team vision and a desite to teach ·per50nal and community skJlls to individuals with men121 n:tardalioa. The work
environment I~ Informal and rewarding. The requitements
are: high school cllplomJ/GED, valid drlver;s Uceose, three
years good driVing experience and allequate automobile
Insurance coverage. B.C!:.S. olfers comprehensive training
In the Deld Q( MRIDD. Starting salary: $S.SOtbour.
Interested appllunts need to specify position or interest
and send resume to:
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES
, P.O. Box 604 ,
Jackson,

on 44S.64o;o6o4

All appUcants must be post-,marked by 5/6/99. Equal
Opportunity Employer.

Gil INHOUSE

005
20 Yrs._Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

(740) 985-3677

CANDLE· MAKERS
We now have 30 NEW
Candle making·
fragrances! II
•B(rdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

"THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP'"
Tuea· Friday 1o-e
Sat 1D-4
Rl124 Minersville, Oh
892-4559

BANKRUA CY

For Information ,Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Sahnek, Attorney At Law
(740) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

)

Start Dating Tonight ! .Have fult ...
p1ay1ng the OhW Dating Game, 1·
800-FOMANCE. eldenslon 9681 .

lllesday • No lip
Wednesday • Men's League
lbundty. Mixed league
lttrti1 1

n•• r:n P.M.

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1IKIO St. R!. 7 South
Coo/viii•, OH 46723

• Roofing

COMMERCIAL tll1tl RESIDDITIAI.
FREE ESTIMATES

814-992·7143

'-Power
Washing
Homes, Decks
&amp; Moblle Ho!118S
P,alntlng, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Ext"rlor
1.5 y,.., E:a:pen.nc•

742·1701

, No Sunda Calls

TRI•RAR MOilLE

Howard L Wrltesal

POWER WASH

ROOFING
NEW•REPIIR

l'rudtl-r..-ttou-.mollllt
llcmlt dICltt-drtiiWiyt

Equ;llllllf Clllntcl• Dip 1

JEFF STElHEM
PHONE: (740)~11

EMAIL:
BTETIIEM@EIIREKANET.COM
FREE ESTIMATES

GuHers
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FRI;E ESTIMATES
949-2188

Refuse Service

A ltKal~ owned 1ompany wilh over 28 yrs
experien11 has now extended our 1overoge area to
indude oil of GoNia Co. and portions of Meigs,
Vlnlon &amp; Lawrenu 1ounlies.

1-800-967-4774
At0U011r....,_,b

4/ZTFN

Quality

Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios

Agricultural Ume,

Parkin@ Lota

Um11tone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

25 yrs experience .
Free Estimates
740.742-8608

. 985 4422
Cheater, Ohio
,......,.,

:Missed 'By:
1Vi(e :Mildred ·
cfiifdrell :Mary,
rpatty, 'Bobby,
]a11el ?-' tfarnilies

Yard Sale

========:::;"
Gallipolis
: :;:
&amp; VIcinity

.,

3 Families At 1939 Cha!nam St:.l '
May 5, 6, &amp; 7th. Furnitu re , Chllct:"f'
rens Clothing. An1tques.

:.::::::...:::====---~~ ~··
6LJ. Yant SliM Mult

.. ·:'":

Of!PL!NE: 2:00p.m.
"" cloy - ....... od
II to run. Sundly
«&lt;itton . 2:00p.m.
FlidoJ. ~ tdltion
• 10:00 e.m. S.turday.

.. ~
' "'
:~
•\.
·~
:~ ·

Garage Sale : 167 w ooalanO..:..
Oriv&amp;, 514th, 5th, 6th, 7th , 9 A.M.,.,.:
5 P.M. Lots Googiesl
·~
Garage 5&amp;18: May 1st, 3rd, Thru ;:
7th , 1.2 Miles Out Route 21~~.
~

VarieiY 01 nems.

R. L. HOLLON CONCRETE
TRUCKING CDIINICTIDN
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

70

a. Peld In Adv1nce.

CALL IODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMEDIATELY

Garage Sale : Tools, Good Law~·
Mower, 2 Air Condll loners, Levi'.,:

EIC. May 6lh, 71h, &amp; 81h , 9 To il'.' -

432 HedgeWOOd Ofive. GallpOJIS. - •,.

----~------~--~··~
Home Interior, Ll Toys, Couch ILS..:..
t&lt; lda ClOthes_. Dishes. Etc . 322i ~- ·
COf'8 Mill, 5J3n:t-7!tt, 9·5.
•,,
Pearl &amp; Lilla's Yard Sale : 513rd. '~
7th,- All week . a-? 6 t.-ttles Routt'~·
7 South. Misc.
-~

May 71h 8th, 9-7 7909 Stille Ro-ute, 7, Rear, Cheshl,., Nice Clottr.t .
lng, Household Items, Mise:.

:.-·&lt;

£...

Moving Slle : Thursday 5/6th
Friday 5/Tth . To ols , EQuipment, ~ :
Housthold Hems, Follow Sign~ ...:

Off~U=mt~B=utt=~='n=&amp;=H=~=2=1=8·=-~:~

WJOS
TV 27
For Free
Profl"am Guide .
Call 992-27~7

31712- flood.

ward.(304)67f&gt;-7399.

To The Residents
· of
Gallia County!

trials limlf! wor~td o111
far .o11r goor/
'TO ~11ow il. brought J{im
g/JJty wfitn '"'

catr sfiarr.

----------------~
Free Daffod il s • You Dig-. ·. ~ '
1304)895-3703.

Lost female Siberian Husky, blue
eyes , one blln~. Tanner 's Ru n1 ,
RaCine area, c:hHd's pet, 740·9493128.

'Tiit ligfiltwd-lempomr)'

·wr,,,, J•'"'

2 ChcJw P\'PPies, two months olD, . o
7-40-985-3835.

Lost: Dog In Galllpoll!!l Ferry Area
around Bea l• School. 6 months '-.
old . Black/White Ch lwawha . Ae·. :. ·

-Complete Auto Seroice-

Local
Television

can ntl&gt;tl' compal't
fit&lt;s in srort
for "' no ltmguagt

1 Female Calllco Killen, Black &amp; • ·
Orange, 740-256-6253.
·

Found: key, downtown Pomeroy
vk:inlty, call 740-992 ·2155 to 10
between Bam-Spm.
- ·'

Racine, Ohio

PARft

INC.

New Homes • VInyl
Siding •New Garages .
• RQplacenient Windows ·
• Room Additions

52954.State Rt. 124

AG

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

"mil ofg_oltl

lfi&lt;')'

Giveaway

Near the 338&amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

Marty's

If )'OU L'OIIId su mt t10J111
- yo11 'd ~11ow llie j&gt;ain
is erasttl
You lttO uiJt~ 'l wa111 mr to ·
ellfr ltavt tfiis placa
if yo11 could only
sre mt nom

40

. Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
740·992·3470

BISSELL
BUilDERS,
'

J-(i~fan·

- - - - - - - ' - --'

Phone: 740-843-5572

In Mill

Your prnytrs !i01J11
all betn QIISHOtrtcl;
1'1 ;e finally arriV&lt;cl.
'11ft fieoling rfial
fiad btt1i Ji/ayed
lias now bern rtnliu d
:No onr is in a fi1my
rfierrs no scliednle ra fi£ep
'lf!e'rt all enjoying Jesus,
jnsl .&lt;ilting al J{is feel.

mt• 11 0111,
, J'ru sran.ling
Ia// and wfio/;
if YD" co11ld "' mt now,
y011'd ~now 1'1oe Sl'en

' 9:00.5:30.

Limestone,

lleglns1atWHk

. 740127-a••

cOul~ src

Items . $1 .oo bag sal a eVery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday 1,'

Fourid: .A Set Of Keys On lower .Garti81d, Cllll To Identify, 74().4ot6- /
I
0028.
•
1

Joseph Jacks
740·992·2068

If you

u

Former-"Velvel HturllfWr"

In :Memory 0{
'Dares Vi'rnoiJ
:May 4· I99s

If rou could set mr t!OW,
I'm wal~iug

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Slimson, Athens
740-592·1842
Quality clothing and househOld

WICKS
HAULING

ROIERT IJSSEll
·CONSTRUCTION
•New Homas
•Garages
•Complete .
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
.985 4473
7

Yard Sale Belmont Dr. Furniturg..,;..
and Other Household Item ~
~ onday, Tuesd_
ay,&amp; We dne sda~-~ .
~

...

00 ~

,&gt;I"'.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlaport
&amp; VIcinity

'

:~;

..,.

---:--,..--.;...-,::..,..,..;-·-

All Ylnl Belli Mull Be Paid tD;Advonco. O..dltno: 1:OOpm I~

dey before 11'11 •d 11 to

rurtf'.

Sundav • Monday edltlo111t".. 1
IOOOpm Frldoy.' '
·
"""
Friday- 133 Butternut lwenu t".~·
Colltctlble&amp;, lamps, tabl·es, lug.-• ~
gage, ctoctc&amp;. cabinet. old dlshe•r..

,.,_.

Jinena, muCh

mucn mort.

:•... ·

Olgtntlc IIIII HundraCII Qf;~.

OUr SOrt'VIVS

1/

. ..

FOund- set of GM car keys. Yet·- ·
lowt:MJsh' Rd &amp; 338 area, call 10 ICJ, · :
7-40-949-2117

WINDOW SYSTEMS
FORMERLY OF 110 COURT STUn, POMEROY
IS 'NOW Loc;ATED STATIIOUTI U
6 MILES NOITH OF POMEROY AT COUNTY ROAD 11
VISIT OUR OFFICFJSHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 800·291-5600
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY DIRECf PRICES

YOUIII'S
CIRPEIITII SEOICE

llama! Mutt ••• to bellevea.:u.
Gla..W:tre, 'women't plua alze~ \_ ·
household misc., antl~u:.~

•Room lddfiiOnl I Rima dating

ry, (21 riding lawn mowero. apo,.,
equipment. Must IHI Mu1t aeltt ~
May 7th, 811\ &amp; 9th, Friday jhrG..,

Unda's Painting
like the pain out
of painting, and let
me do It for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6. pm

'""' Olrlgtt
•Eltctrlc:all Plumbing
•flooftng • Gulttrl
•VInyl Siding ' Pllntlng
ofllllo • Pon:ll Dtdtl
FIW Elfimlfel

V.C. YOUNG Ill

. 740·985-4180
FrH

lt2-e215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yra. Lo~al

l:stimates

I
'

can relieve.

debtor or finoncial obligation• and arrange a fair
distribution of asseta. Debtor• in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property fpr hi• or her personal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothes , and
household good1.

1

.(

Peraonala

--------

Dave's Garage

.· (Ume Stofil.
Low Ratia)

llli5UII(/('rSIOOtf

'

TFN • '·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

INSURED OW'NER

ri1io ' 11'&lt;!'1\' lind

YOUR MESSAGE
-CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00PER DAY.

-

·' '
·' ·

tt2·5776

KEITH MYERS

• Lonsboltom, Ohio ·

...

HUIIUD'S

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

01110 «117111

-rd

c,,..."Uuow

SYIUCUSE

Summer Le•gue ·

Fr66·Estimates

Help Wanted

B•~

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
.$5.75 &amp; Up
•Geraniums, Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Trees ·
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open_
9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

'77MJOO

{)

110

.. '

. Progreulve top line.
.Uc: I DD-50 , , _ ·

Muon Bowlin&amp;
Lanea

()

EOE

0

..''-.-,

60 Lost and Found

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
•.Plumbing

application.

0

_. .......

7:00AM ·8 PM

E•ebul••

Help Wanted

weekend&amp;.

0

'

30 Announcements

'Serving Meigs 11'4 Gallla Counties
in Ohio and Mason County In VN
•o.r IMIIt Tt IIRt TM Ltell .....

CYL INDER PACKAGES

....
,.,
-....
.••

Pomeroy Eagle•
Club Bingo On
· Thursdays

Light Haulina

RUTlAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
G.UN SHOOT
SUN., hOO PM'

(304) .674·3311

~

,...

.

AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pom•roy,OH
Paying ~.00
per game

992~5455

.-.
-.'"'

2111170 Bashan Roed •'
•
Racine, Ohio 45n1
..:
740-949·221.7 '••.
Slzss 5' x' 10'
•
to 10' lC 30'
•••

.............dell
Pallo c• .a.ac~~ea

HOUri

Landscape Material,
Thpsoll &amp; Mushroom
Compost
up to 8 ton

(304) 675·2457

SELF STORAGE

.

40 742:.S888
Don' Need A Bw One

·No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

HILL'S

• • wa Care • lulp

Mon- Fri 8;30- 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

John Dean; Owner

Urililier·

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

'

records, appMances, bootla,

..

Sunday, 8am·Spm, 34120 Stolt,, '
·Rout• 7 North, Pomeroy acro11"
· from the Skate-a-way &amp; ba-ldl~l..
111o SIJ18 Hlghwlly Go-.
• M:,

Rtlner{Hudson huge gara.oe ..~ ·
May 6, 7 &amp; e. Tackervlne Rd ..--~
Racine. Toota, dolt&amp;, coltectlbl.., .
FTWac:.
,., •

Yard aalt· 3 ml\4is from
on 248. Wed. Mev 5.

Chaltat~
~

'

�\

Pt~ge10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, May 4, 19?9

T't.iesday, May 4, 1999
OOP

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIOOJ:
PHILLIP
ALDER

80

Auction
and FIH Market

NO OIIIIIICKS

8111 Moodltpaugh 4uctloneerlng
Complete Auctioneering Servlc·

"

Conalgnmenl auction· Mill

Slrttt Middleport Thursdays

Oh io License 17693 7-40·969·
2623

Rick Pearaon Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
aucllon
service
Licensed
186,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or ~-n:l-5447
Every Saturday Nig ht 7 PM ,
740-2~9

Wedemeyer's Auction Service

GaiJilolls Olllo 740-379-2720

90

•

EXTRA INCOME NOWI

,

Envelope Sluffing ••• $600· $800

-ryffae DeiaiiS SASE to
1375 Coney Island Avo
Brooklyn Now York 11230

Alll!nue; Gallipolis 740-446·2842
AnUques ~

top prices paid RiverIne Antiques Pomeroy Ohio
Russ Moore owner 740·992·

2526
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac 1900 East·
""Avenue, Galipotls
Want To Sell Yo x Stuff? Call Rlv
erskfe Auction And lei Us Sell It
For Yoo, 740.256-&lt;3989

Professional
Services

Now taking applications lor Orlv

er&amp; at Dominos Pizza Gall1pohs
and Pomeroy Storn Only, 740·

446·4040
cuhier, well established bust
ness Send resume to The Da1ly

SonUnel PO Box 72 975 Pomor
f&gt;i OH45769
App And Exam lnlor Call 1 BOO

Abtolu!t Top Dollar All U S Sll·
ver And Gold Colna, Proofsets,
Diamonds Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre· 1930 US Currency
Sterling, Etc AcQUisitions Jewelry
• M T S Coin Shop 151 second

35 New Machines With Htgh
Traffic Locations! Earn 1OOK

230

Postal Jobs to $18 35/Hr Inc
Benerlts. No E~eperience For

Wanted to Buy

AREA PEPSI/COKE IIDUTE
Yearly 1 800·627-9519

International Inc

Part time office work part time

RIVERSIOE AUCTION BARN
Crown Clly

Buslnesa
Opportunity

210

8f3·3585, E11t 8826 8AM·9PM
7 Daya fds Inc
Recreation Director Full l'1me
High schOol degree or equlvaf
ent As&amp;o clate Degree preferred
Certification In accordance
regulatory agen c1es governing
center Comprehensive benefits
package wh ich Includes 401(kt
Point Pleasant Center State Ao
uta 62 Route 1 Box 326 Point
Pleasant WV 25550 A Genesis
Eldercare Network EOE

Carper and Upholstery Cleaned
without 'Steam' OJ Ab sorben t
Compounds Soaplan Anti·Ae ~
soil Detergents used IIICiuslve·
ly Sale for all fabucs Fast drying (1 ~ 2 hours) E!lmlnates 0\'tr
wetting Guaranteed Work Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675 4040
Jor Free Estimates!
Ooes Your House S!dlng, Oectc:
or Driveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing 11 the an~
swerl Call CJ•arly Clean at

(G04)675 4040 lor a Froe Eo·
hmate

-

No Fee Unless We Winl

1 888 562 3345
WALL·CEILING CLEANED EX·
on repainting In·
use the eJCcluslve
V53 Power Wall
ProteC1s pa!nt
retarels Chalking
odor aanltlzes
Clearly

REGISTERED NURSE Jackson
General Hospllal Ripley WV
Needs full lllhe RNs lor CCU or
Med/Surg Current WV State ll·
cense Previous relevant e~n­
ence Reply to JacKson General

Techs STNA s

RESUMES UNLIMITED Oilers

SSIMake Monoyll$$ Work At
Home • Auemble Products
Easy Work E11cellent Pay Free

Detollll Send S A S E To Nat I
Homeowrker s Association P 0

Box 675 Ripley WV 25271
Are You Energetic Motivated
And Caring? Scenic Hills Nursing
Center Is LooKing For Individuals
Who Are Currently State Tested
Nursing Assistants To Work In
Our Comprehensive Care Facility
Please Apply tn Person To 311
Buckrldga Road Blelwell OH

45614
Anenuonll
Work from home

Earn $500·$4000 PTIFT
1-6()0.863-1635 or
www startahomeblz com

Avolloblo , _
()pportunltiH

Co Orlvonl &amp;Owner Oporators
New Pay Package

Pay 31 Cents !Mile
•Pius 2 CenlliMHe Bonus
'Trap Pay !Stop And
LayQwrPay

·s~a~lng

·o~roct

DeposR

"Oualt comm

•BcBs Modltai/Dentsl Nlslon
'401K

Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388·
JaOO
The Me1gs l ocal School Dis trict
is currently seeking appltcat1ons
from certified applicants for As·
slstant varsity Football Coach
Freshman Football Coach (~ po·
sit1ons) 7th &amp; Bth Grade Football
Coach Boys Ass is tant Vars 1ty
BasKetball Coach Boys Reserve
Basketball Coach Boys Mldd!e
School Basketball Coach (:2 post
lions) Assistant High School
Track Coach Wrestling Coach,
Girls Assistant Volleyball Coach
Girls' Middle School Volleyball
Coach Girls Ass istant Middle
School Volleyball Coach Girls'
Mleldle School Basketball Coach
High School Cheerleader Advl·
sor, Middle School Cheerleader
Advisor, Student Council Advisor
and Quiz Team Advisor lor the
1999, 2000 school year Applic·
ants must hold a valid Ohlo
teach ing certificate and for
coaching positions must meet
certification requirements of Ohlo
fo r sports meelicine and CPR
Persons Interested should con
tact Bill Buckley Superintendent
Meigs Local School Olstnct, PO
Box 272, Pomeroy, Ohto

•Home Most Weekends
White Glove· part time help, 19·
20 .hours week $6 00 per hour

•Assigned EQuipment
EOE MIF

740·742·2679

RMrly For A ChllltfiO?

Conll..l Freight Corrlel'l
Call Bovd 60Q.220 2421
Shirley Spoors 304-675-1429
Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hra S25K SBOKI Vr 1·800
•76-8653 X 1n1. www 1cwp com
Cosmetologist Needed Business
Growing, Guaranteed Wages

P1ua More 740-446-7287

Benelltt Game Wardens Secur·
ltv. Maintenance. Park Rang8rs
No E11p Needed For App And
Exam Info Call 1·800 813·3585

Ext 8827 8AM·9PM 7 Days Ids
Inc
Wildlife Jobs $21 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardens,Securlty Maintenance Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For App /E11am

Into Call 1 800 813 3565
Ext 6827, BAM 9PM 7 Days

DIIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Ids Inc

Cla11AOTR
Single Driver. late Model Ken
worth&amp; With Reefers West Coast
Carrier
Team Straight Truck Late Model
Frelghtllners Wllh Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements
800 Mile Radius, Home Deliver-

los

Both Positions

Golllpollo Caroor College

180 Wanted To Do
Appro&gt;Jad Master licensed Elec·
tric lan WV025956 Free Esti
mates for Resldenllal Services

lions Remodels, 740-441 1316

-~Pay

Heatth Insurance Available

WOrl! Well With The PUblic
For Mora Information Call 800

437-6784, Hra 8 30 AM ·5 ~M
Eaay Work! E11cellant Pay! AS
semble Products at Home Call

Toll Froe 1·800· 467·5568 Ext
12170
Hlnng
HEAVY EQUIP OPERATORS
AND CARPENTERS
2 Years Eoperlence
Necesaary CaN 1 B()O.a:J!I-6518
Bo-nBOOAM ·500PM

Child Care Provider has an
Opening lor a child three or older
12 years E11perlence Call (740)

4410359
E &amp; S Lawn Service Design, lm
plementaUon. and Service
Available for Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free esti
matea Satisfaction guaranteed
Greg Mtlhoan 3041675 -4628

Care Cllenta Houra Monday Frl ~

day, tl-4 Some w..kend And On
Coli Work Previous Homo Health
Experience Preferred 2 Years

AYonue, Ook HIN, 0H 45656
EOE
In Stare Food Demonstrator~

Ntodod, All Areas Of Ohio &amp;
WVA 330-535-1749
Jewelry Saloa Rotall Salas &amp;nd
Computer Experience Required
Acqulalllon• Fine Jewelry 151

Second Avo Galllpollo Apply

Monday lhru Friday

'

304 675 1957
Interior &amp; eJtterlor painting, lawn
service, haul trash, Junk demo
lion house barn, &amp;htld 591 9617
Interior &amp; Exterior Painting E11·
perlenced, References, Reason
;~aJea~tor ,Free Esllmate
Mother ol three, 1B years expert
ence, DHS oerlifled wilt babysit In
my home Have referances call
740 992 6718 ask lor Kethl
N8ed a Baby Sliter for the Su,;,.
mer?? Oay or Evening&amp;! (740)·

441 ·0543

Need Your Lawn Mowed? Call
Erin lor the lowest prices In town!

Call Now, Llmlled Opening•
(740)24H4ll4
Will do babysitting In my home

In Mooon, wv

(~)n3-606t

UTTLE CAESARS lo Now HIMng

FINANCIAL

All Poaltlona, Drlvera, ln·Stort
And A111111nt Manager Poal·
tiona Available Drlvets Earn

Hourly Wogo + Tlpo &amp; Commlo·
llonsl Ploaoo Apply AI The GaiN·
polio Lillo c-...

210

Medical Proceaaor FT JPT No

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Exp Noc Wllllloln PC Roq Etrn

40K Coli aoo-ee3-7~
NHd help oprlng clolnlng, • or ~
doyo In May, $8 00 hour, HO·
742-2t79

29t0 Mewdowbrook Drive 3 BR
Ranch LA. FA w/Gas Fireplace
Newly Remodeled In 1998 E11
tenslve Landscaping $74 500

161180 Vinyl Shingle

Loan, 1·800·383-61162

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

bile homo 740-992 5039
1973 Ramaela 121160 Mobile
Home 2 Bedrooms Central Air
Range Top Oven And Refrigerator Good Condition, Call Aflfr
6 00 PM For App9lntment, 740·

racommtnda that you do bultl·
ness with people you know and
NOT lo aand money through the
mall until you have Investigated

lheofllw1ng

Royal

Co&gt;Je,

14X74.

3 Houses On 81rch Lane 1 New
Buck, 2 Older Rentals, 1 Ac Flat
Ground Swimming Pool 36x46
Garage Building Near K Mart,
$180 000 Rantala &amp; Home Occu·
pled, 740 446 1822 Leave M&amp;s·
sage H Necessary

Roofing, Vinyl Siding, Porches
Included
and
landscaping

eloctnc, 12x65. 740 742 2603
Low Interest Rates For 1st Time

storage bulldlnga Two apart

Make 2 Payments No Payment
After 4 Years 304 736-7295
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer sklrllng
dalu•e steps and setup Only

$20$ 1 Year Warranty Air Condl·
tloner 14,000 BTU s. 220 $250.
Skaggs Appllancts 76 Vlno
Str..l Galipolls, 74o-4411-7398

Antlquea

Pomeroy Houra M T w 1o oo
am Ia 800 pm, Sunday t 00 to

Middleport, Oh no pets, 740.992·

6 00 p m 740·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required , no pets. 740·

0583

To List! Excellent Condition!

Oakwood Homes Barboursville

(304)675-2548

WV $499 Down Slngla Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide, 304·

3 Bedroom House. Fence 740·

Christy s Family Living- property
for sale, 202~204 N Second Ave·

nua. Middleport Four 2 bedroom
apartments two commercial units
39 511116', brick old Firestone

building Asking prlco $69,500,
make offer, income $1620 month,

call740·992·4514 ask for ChriS
Martin
Commercial Building in Hender
son For Sale or Lease Call

(003)3611-9436

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·•48·2588
EQual HoU'olng OppQrlunlty
Christy's Family Living, apart·
menta home &amp; trailer rentals,
740.992·4514 apartments avail·

apartments at VIllage Manor and
Alveralde Apartments In Middle·

Shopell3 800 740-387.5QG7
1No ·I teO CARS FROII 1500
Police Impounds
And Ta•
Rape's For l.:lstlngs Call 1-800·

319-3323 EKI f'l20
1980 Muatang No Motor Or
Trans, Aluminum Wheels~ 740·

245-0114Atter 5 ~M
1981 Cutlass Runs Good Needs

Little Work $350, OBO 740·441·
1984 Plymouth Grand Fury 318
Leaw MassaQt.

Johnson a Uaed Furniture /Ap

$1,ll00 00 740-446-4939

pllonces, 140·448·4038, 740 44111004 5 Miles Out Bulavlllo Pike
011 35 Right On Koelar Road Blua

1987 Ford Tempo Fair Condition,
$350, 740-448-9526

Modern 1BA All Utilities Paid
E11cept Electric GaUipoli&amp; Ferry
Area $250 month + Dtposil

Prime Downtown Gallipolis Loca·

Runs

Good

-

Mileage Looks &amp; Runa Greall

$1,ll00 {304)675 2949

1988 Dodge Dynasty 4 Coors,

Aulom&amp;tlc. St 500, 740-448·9582
1988 Pontiac Grand Prix, two
door automatic, elr, very good

condition 116,000 miles, $2000
740-992·7888
1989 Dodge Shadow 4 Doors
Automatic, Many New Parts

$2,000, Also 4 Cylinder Aulomat

Troybllt HorH Roto Tiller Eltclrlc

lc Ttana &amp; Rear End Drive Shaft

Start ·F\Idlng_ Mower, Gravely
(Commercial Type) eo· Cut Ra

For Ford Ranpor $100 740·258·
6988

North 3rd Ave

2 Building Sitos loll oil Route a3

bedroom, unfurnished apartment
deposit &amp; references, 740 892·

Fila Any Vehicle ·5' Drag Blade •
Troybllt Chipper /Shredder 16
And 24 Extanalon Ladders 740
258 8696

Shape. 4Cyl 5Sptod $4 000
1985 Buick T Typo Regal 3 8SFI

air conditioners
new Lawn Boy lawn

Daoh Cllmalo Control (304)875·
15771576·2092

$ t5 ooo an Acre

5 Acres Blacklop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew
Gallla County
$32 000 More Acreage Available,

740-388-8678

1,1999,toJuly1 1999 Buy3
Iota, get the 4th free Spacial
Sate Companion and Individual

Grave Martcero (304)576 2779
leautllul Home llt11 1Acrt 5
Acr1tl, and 6 ACrea 10 mllea
from Pt PI Public water Pri·
{~)675

Now Taking AppllcalionsWast 2 Bedroom Townho!Jae
Apartmentl, Includes Water
Si!f:wage, Trash, $31 !liMo , 740·

44tHl006

Appla Grova Memorial Garden Ia
now offering a limited lima apecia! on Cemetery Lots from April

YOlO

0165

5911/458·1542

eEAUTIFUL

Are Permtued "Leave All Your
Cares In Town Buy Yoursen A
Piece Of Ground" lots Start At

$8,750 5% Down Land Contract
Now Available Call Foo Frat
Mops 1-801)-213-8365

36Q

On
droom Apartment In Pt
Pleaeant Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No Pats Phone
(~)675-1388

Ont tltdroom apartment In Mid
dteport, •~allable tmmtdlatety

740·992·9133
Oflt bedroom tpartment In Mid·
dltport, ant bedroom furnlthed

houstln Gollpolls, 740.992·9191
Spaclou• New Apartmenl, With
Attachtd Garage 2 Bedroom&amp;
Nice Lawn References Required
Ctoae To Holter's, $385/Mo • Plus

DeposR, 740·448-2801
Tara Townhouaa Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Floors CA, 1 112 Both, Fully Cor·
petod, Polio. No PWts, Least P1uo
Sacurlly Deposit Roqulrod, ~40·

~I. 740-4411-0101
RHI Eltate
Wanted
lWin Rlvlra Tower now accepting
~W::-t-::B-uy-:-L-a:'nd:-:3::0-:5:::0:::0 -:A~o-re~o·,l applications tor 1BR HUD oub·

We Pay Cash 1-B00·2f3·8385,
Anthony LaNl Co

oldlztd apt for •~rly and hll\d·
lcappOd EOH 30+875-6879

I

11rm 740 992 6154

1990 Nlssan Stanza. Exc•nent

760

1991

Plymouth Blazer, Nice

Used 2 t/2 Ton Heat·Pump &amp; Air

LeBaron Convertablt S2 ,000,
1994 Toyota Camary Excellent

Unit

$400

{~)e75-W5

Wotorllne Special 3/4 200 PSI
121 ,95 Por 100, t• 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100. All Bran Com
prelllon Flftlngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jlci&lt;SOn, Ohio, 1·6()0.537-9528
WHIT!'&amp; METAL DETECTORS
Ron Alliaon , 121 o Second Ave ·

nul, Gallipolis, Ohio 740·448·
4338

Building
Suppile•

All Steel Building Warehouse 1
Arena Blow-Out 8011100 70xt00,

80x125, 100x150 30·50% 011
0 8 0. 901).378-3754
Block, brick sewer plpll, wind·
ows, lintels etc Claude Wlnlers,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740 245·
5121
•'

18,600 1992 Dodge Shadow,
Sport $1,200, B&amp;O Auto Soloo,
Hwy180 N 740-446~188, 7411'
446-6885
111!12 Dodge Spirit, 4 cylinder automatic, air, new engine. trans,.,.
able warranty, $:11:500, 740-742·

22581oava mao1994 Dodg• B·250 Luxury High·
Top Trade Winds Conveelon
Van, 1 owner! 1992 Cavalltr ~
Door, AutO 'A/C Cook Motors.

{740)-446.0103

1994 Plymoulh Sun&lt;ranco, 4 Cy·
IInder Automotlc, AC 87 000
Mllto, 12,400 OBO, 740·25e1293

1994 Pontiac Sunblrd LE 67,00!)
MIIH, $oi,OOO, 740·441.0132
1995 Buick LeSabra Cuatom 4
Doors , Blue Loaded, 7o40·682·

7512

'

North

'

Auto Parts a.
Acceseorlea

2•

Pll88

Pass

Pau

u.u•.v.,, ARe MAKIN6 A

I'M NOT 60RE I

COMEBACK:' TfiAT'5 M'&lt;
NEW PIHL050PJ.I'&lt;

UNDERSTAND IT ..

NO ONE EVER

REALL'( UNDI:RSTt\NDSI
A NEW PI-IILOSOPil'(

trim
21Scltcllarahill
-~tnlon
28 Broeclway'a
longellrunnlng30 Gelhet er I ol
grain

rlval
36 Lake
Michigan
36 Forthcoming
31 City In Texu
3t Frankfurter
4D Hoal811?
42 EIIIAihtn
country
44 Conductor

Prevln
41"-tt

50 8un.l81k
52 8o41ndl ol
heellllon
53- -jortgO

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograme 1111 crealed !rom QUOUIIIOf\1 bV famous people paat ano present
Eld'l'iitttM In the cipher ltlndl kw another TCII:Uiy'.s due Y ttqtMis L

ZAN

K A V L,

'JUNIIMUN

ZVRLN,
EG
NHRGVUV
WXJPABW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "My athletes are always Willing to accept my adv1ce
as long as 11 doesn'l conflict wnh their views · - Lou Holtz

AS UV L I

I I I 1I
2

I

E NCUL

I II P
~o-,..;L.....,...O_H,...;.E_V,...-~1 : "'~

You can telfwho was ra1sed
1n the 30's and 40's They st111
turn off lights when they •• -.-

I I I I' .
•

•

A

~
A

P~ I NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

Don I f&lt;1 stllng by high priCt!t
Shop the clduofitd srct100

My s 1sler hates housework She told me she made a
resolutiOn not to vacuum unt1l someone 1;wents one you
can RIDE ON

MAY 41

ITUESDAY

Wheel with slide out room c:entr~
air &amp; heat, m~erowava oven, Iter:
eo, self contained, holding tank~
1 water, 3 waate, 5th wt1ee1 hitch,...
electriC levelers, bad!: rear stabi- ,

llzer )acko, 5th whftl otond an&lt;f:!
cover for camper, ulld very Unle, '

tabiiShed 1975 Call 24 Hro (7.40)
448·0870, 1·800·2~7-0576 Rog

era Waterproo~Wtg .

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brande Over 25 Yura Ex
parience All Work Guaranteea

French City Maytog, 740·446
7795
C&amp;C

General

Homa

Main-

tenance Painting, vlrt)ll siding

carpentry doora, windows, baih~
mobile hOmo repaW and more For
rree sallmatt coli Chel, 740 992·
6323
llvlngston'a elaatmtnl Watfr
Proofing,, all battment rapalra
done, fret tlllmttea ~ lllettrne
guarantee 12yrs on Job expert

tnca (304)!95-3887

•
ASTRO·ORAPH

Uncondillonat llftllma guarantee
Local references furnlahed Es

.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Realdential or commercial w6rfng ~
new 18rvlce or repairs Maater Ll·
cenaed electrician Ridenour

Elsctrlcal WV000308, 304-875
1786

3

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LET7ERS
TO GET ANSWE~

'

BASEMENT
WATEAPROOFINO

~uorod

THESE SQUARES

1995 Nomad Deluxe, 30 Flflb~'

Home
Improvement•

the chuckle

by f,llt'\Q tn the mtsstng word!

1978 Chevy motor home, 23', ·~!'
condition, everything Works ca;Jr.

810

0 E U

SRPGUP'N

BPVCHETPRCZV.'

•

SEHVICfS

RGM

NCEPHN

BZUNN,

AGBYXMUM

CRNNAEGN

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
Genrus • Entry - Quota • Oefrne - RIDE ON

'

-

,,r,::::..

L......J-..L-,l.........JL......L......J you develop from step No 3 below

''WOLVE5
ARE

-~

•

12 MUMol

24 Automobile

•

1978 Chevy motor home, 23'., ak'•
conditioned, everything wor~.:

740·898·0502

10 P,copltcy
11 Turna-

22=gong

...,-,-C--,,A_,.T-,-E-V,--,0~,-5-,1 ;::mplete

New gaa tanka '&amp;

call740 898 0502

2 ~lmed
3 Very poMible
4 Actreu Hagen

Hurolt
• Novelli! Jong
70vml lgl.. e.g

City

\

Campers &amp;
Motor Homea

I Cheney at
horror ftlclta

51mpresMo

1 JICOb'a l • -

l

V

eve Joints, 740.245-5877

DOWN

East

My second deal from the March
tssue of the ln1ernaltonal Bndge
Press Assoctalton Bullettn occurred
dunng lhe Icelandatr Festtval. played
tn snowy ReykjaVIk tn mtd-February.
It looks as though four hearts w1ll
make because of Ihe favorable trump
pos1t1on IllS nonnalto start w1th low
to the queen, planntng to finesse lhe
10 on the second round Do you see
any way that East-West m1gh1 defeat
the game'
West was Bamel Shenkin, a Scotsman who hves tn Boca Raton, Fla
East was Zta Mahmood, a Pak1stanr
who d1v1des h1s lime pnmanly
between London and New York
Ftrsl, Shenkm dtd well 10 find a
spade lead, declarer captunng Zta's
kmg Wilh h1s ace Declarer unblocked
the kmg queen of diamonds. z,a
playmg the seven and etght, h1s
htghest cards, as an attempl to send
hts panner a sun-preference Signal for
spades (ThiS techmque of sendmg a
su11-preference s1gnal wtth useless
cards IS now standard for ex pens )
Next Soulh led a trump The
repon says, "Shenkin paused for a
momenl " That sounds wrong
Shenkm usually pauses for qUite
1some lime' Eventually, he wen I 1n
wnh the ace, Zta droppmg the Jack as
anolher Suit-preference Signal for
spades Getttng lhe message, Shenkm
gave hts partner a spade ruff Back
came 1he club I 0 In desperalmn,
declarer tned the ktng, so he went
two down mslead of one
In the other room, Ch1cagoans
Ralph Katz and Steve Gamer made
four hearts when West led the clUb
ace The swmg gave Garner Katz,
Shenkm and Zta lhe Victory and the

Wednesday, May 5, 1999
A change in your philosOphy and
ltow you do lhina• could be respon·
sible for the sreat succ:eu tiiOit lo in
• the offin1 for you in the year ahead.
It will be 1he resull or IJI'OUndworlt
you've already laid.
TAURUS (April 2().May 20)
Organize your usipmenll before
begtnntng today if lltey are more
numerous than usual And If you're
in lite posmon to do so, exenlioe your
aulhorily and stan dcleptlna some of
them oul Oet a jump on life by
u~dcrstandtng the inOuences that'll
aovern you In 1he year ahead. Send
the required refund fonn and for r,our
Aslro-Oraph predtctlons by madins
'S2 to Aslro-Oraph, clo this newspa·
per, P.O. Box 17S8, Murray Hill Sla·
lion, New York, NY I0156 Be sure
10 state your Zodtac sign
GEMINI (Moy 2t-June 20) Hid·
den opp,Qrtuntltes could be abound
loday. If you're olen, you mtJhl be
oblc lo profit from an arnnpment
someone else has al,..ady puliOJedt·

er,

,
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) If a

frtend or yours needs someonc 10
staild I!P for him or her, don't be a
coworcl and say nothinaln feu. Ul
others know euctl~ wheno you 1land
nn 1he i~!Uie

LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22) Todlty will
he beuer chan tornotTOW for further·
ina your worldly llltbiUono, 10 set
clefinuc aoals now and punue lhem
viaorously whtle lhe upeciS rovor
you
,
VIRGO (Au@ 23·Sept 22) You're
lhe one who can inspire ochers today
w1th your boldne10 should cholll•na·
ina conditions develop thai c:_ould
elfecl everyone in your aroup S~lthe
e ..mple and they'll follow.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. 23) If
somethtna you believe needs chana·
ina for the beeler, by allmeana, II:!_&lt;!!I
tl Don 'I lee your destiny be toll·
!rOlled by lite vlciultudu of lifo.
SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24-Nov. 22)
Doll 't be I'Ciistant if some of your
Clllltplniono offer SU1pl1ions for
a&lt;'i" nles tha aren't in harmony with
Y• ur IdeaL Their dtouahll could be
more run ror 1he Jl'OUP chan yours
SAOmARIUS (Nov 23·Dec

21) AIIICk loday hkc a wtnncr and
not the undcrdcltl, and you con fare
rallter well in mOll sltuauons, even
~then lite slak~s are 111ore tmpteosive
than whal you usually deal wtth
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)
l!specillly when involved wuh soctal
iasues today, you can be the catalyst
thll binds Olhen toaether Oct on lite
stkk and orpnlr.e somelluna erclt·
ina.
AQUARIUS (Jan 2().Fcb. 19)
lbla is 111excellent day for finallttna
• islltlea or matters pertatnina 10 your
family. home or operauna hue
llealn early to close up all the pps
and put thlnas to rest
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Make arrangements today lo visit
someone you've been eaacr to con·
lliCI who hun11 been able lo comelo
you This penon will happtly ao
Ilona with your plans.
·
ARIES(Man:h21·Apnii9)Atm
hi&amp;h and don't be afraid 10 assert
yourself 10 ael whal you want when
, strtvona for an importal!l c....,.r OOJOC·
dveloday. You can be both bold and
amicable a11hc SBme lime

sl AHanla Braves(Uve)

\.

•

component

Budget Priced Tranam laslons'
and Enginea All Types Accesa :
To Over 10,000 fransmlsslona ,

Turbo Hypartech Chip Digital

01for Call ~-675 3515

550

740 992 5956

~n~
27 LMtgllt

31 Tmtk:jMI

PEANUTS

For rent family type river camP~
site for lull hook up for campif101
trailer, water electric &amp; sewer call'

25ActrMI-

411 u..-

,...u_
21 Ryan or nlley

Kept,740·256 1378 Allor 9 00 Pili :
Baja 218 Like New garage Kepti
Phone 740 256-1378 after 9PM •

51 !liCk
54 Conelder
55 Schoolroom
Item
5e Showa acorn
57 011 the ohlp

Gui~QM

$3,400 pme

Baja 2 t 6, Like New Garage

1990 GEO PrlsmExcellant Condl·

12,500 1992 Ford Fnllva Au·
tomallc, $1 300, 1890 Honda Cl·
vic CRX St 500 1990 Chrytlor

Two Gate Post Two 6 1t8 Chain·
Link Gates With Hardware Best

Condlllonlng

t995 24' SunTracker Pontoon 10

HP Mercurt 740·245 9258 Or AI
Gallipol~ Boat Cllil
,

$12900 740-74.2·21105.

4575
(304)882·3772

other-· 740 992 7143

790

lion Runs Graau 12 500 oo (740)
446 4794

in Mason

~I

Groat Call740·446·2107, 740·
245-8184

5' Bruah Hog •• Wood Trailer
With Sides ·• Lawn Roller Snow
Bear Snow Blade Electric Blade

Middleport, 2

a Mlnnkotar \32 lb Thrust $450.

AJC , Sun Roof, P S , P B , Runs

bUilt Engine ·42' Gra10 Catcher

DB Garage, Basement (3o.a)675·

12Ft FlshMaster John Boa1Jt\l

~ peril 0 &amp;~
A Auto, Ripley, WV (304)372 •
3933 or 1 6()0.273-9329
'•

lion No Pets $300 + Utilities
Refaranca Required 740·446·
0008

10 112 Acres, 3BA, C A , 2BA,

Cond $1,800 00 080. Mon To F,rj
740·379 9232

1988 Chevy Corolca , 2 8, High

Pike, 740 ·448·8308, 100·291·
0088

(304)e75-13711675-323Q

Camara,

1987 Toyota Ctllca GT 5 Spaed

latera. And Related Materials For
You To lnllall Your Own Or We
Can Furnish A List 01 Dealers To
lf\atall For You If YouJlpn't Call
Ua We Both Loael m ;lJactson

tunttles

Good

Coli Ron Evans 1·800·537 llll2e

Ing Equlpii)Ont, Duct Work, Reg·

port From $249·1373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·

P$int,

1987 Gland Am V·8 Auto PS
PB, AC, Tilt, &amp; Cruloo Looks
Good, Runs Good $1 500, OBO
740.441 1083

We Are Proresslonal Installation
And Servtee Supply We Sell
Wholesale To The Public We
Stock Janltrol Heating And Cool-

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom

Original

CU IN 4DR Full Power, $800
OBO (304)67H570, AllOr 5PMI

PRO, LS, SUPPLY

able. IUmlshOd &amp;unlurnlshed

Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apl

Lola &amp; Acreage

Miles

Nice
m11ea

Grubb's Plano- luning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Thnad? Call the

PRIMESTAR
FIM DIIIC1 Sjloclal
Coli now t-6()0.263 2840

.)lt)T

a. Motora , ;
for Sale
~

1063

House On Loft

U..li'\ 1-\t::. Wl'0

(.N..I'\

750 Boata

1987

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

TO

1886 Suzuki 700 lntrudar Ad

710 Autoll fol' Sale

lng Wedge Now 1595, Soli $400
OBO, 740-256-6888

Repalred, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

l !:£N..I Zc\)
1\E W~i'I'T

Chrome Linle M»taga E11caflant

1990 Suntracker Party Hut, ~8 &amp;
trailer, new power head (less ihM
40 hr pn It) new canvas o~~
completely enclosed, storage
canvas &amp; aluminum framing tin'
der carriage aluminum aklrl &amp;

JET
AERATION MOTORS

T~I'I'Lf.':i

ft-cr. Of
OffiCL (JQ:£".~ .

1973 Otds Omega 49 ,ooo Actual

plano Dr 741l-448-4525

&lt;::vrn\IJNL'(

~llli'l'

$10 50000. 740-441-Q872

(304)695 3161

Goll Clubs. Top Flight Tour

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

2e Acres Mil 8 Slall Hone Bam

TRANSPORTATION

[l&amp;t&gt;IOWI-\1~

lf.I:.J'\N, N

(7401·2511-1102 Ask For Junloc

Graphite Shafts, 3 Through Pitch

A~Fflt YOU
,,.,.,·r
~eFuse

Little Work $1 ooo (3041895•

Commercjal culvert 20 long, 12

Pats Deposit, $400/Mo • Roler·
Apartment, Gallipolis Farry 'Oa·
posit
Ra~ulred
No Pets

Rfglstered Black·Angua Yearling

Bull out ol 9·FB31 Fullback,
(304)!75-2098

•

AN

178 Triumph Motorcycle Needs

1988 Ford Tempo XL
Clean ~ 80 000 actual

740-949-2087

"//
/I,

I- 4.

THE BORN

388·9418 After 5 PM

Firewood in dlllerent lengths and

~ PET S~OP

Motorcycles

1961 Harley Low Rldar Too MuC!t

$1 500, 2 112 Ton $1,350, 2 Ton
$1 250 Tilt Above Includes Nor
mal Installation If ~u Don t Call
Us wo Both loser 740-448-6308
Or HI00·29Hl098

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

(~)675 · 2949

(740)·245·5872 or (7401 387·

METABOLISM

•

92 ooomlle4, looks &amp; tuna gri"at(

3161

Livestock

20 BerriCita
furnlahlng
21 Early Briton
23 Drlvwa' org.
24 Nile quwn. for
lhorl

.

able 740.992·7551
:lli=9::1.:..::C:.:h::e=v.:.:::C:.:o:..nv_e_ro-:lo-n-:V:-o-n.'
FUii Size Mark Ill Loadtd l
$6 500

18 Plano placo
17 Pub brew
11 Actor -

•1 Diving bird
43 Lltmb
peeuclonym
45 Site· 411 Claulc81 ·
lead-In
47 1!'1 mlgltller
then the aword

By Phillip Alder

automatic, too many new parts. to I
nat asking $5500 prloa II neoott·:

5'/2 Ft, xtO F1 2 Inch Ball 14'

CQOLQOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed

3711 EOH

Gravely Riding Traclor 12 HP, 50"
Mower Deck, Gooel Condlllonl
$1 800 74()-.UI-1785

a. 4·WD8

Fair Pigs tor Sale! Excellent Blood
Unesl For more Information Call

gauge call740·992·5623

2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances furnished laundry room
tacilllles. close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apls t49 or call 740·992·

PhOne (004)895-3874

730 Vane

.:.,9.:7,:.9..,C'"hovy:.=.,.:,l2;,..:.to-n-:4~W=D-:P:::S:-=PB:-i

630

Beige Tweed sora /Love Seat,
Nice $200, Refrigerator /Almond
Excellent Condition, $200, 740·

160, a mlleo North or Holm Hos
pltal (740) 446 3185

•wo models with Super Steer,
will turn shorter than a 2WD
Keefers Service Center St At
87 Pt Pleaaant &amp; Ripley Road

740

Patel No Peta In Gallipolis 740·

2 Bedroom Apartment. Rio
Grande Area, Close To College,

00

5pm-7pm

ples Call740-441·1982

7806

~00

$80 00, lhrH month free programming Limited time onor. expires 5I

Apt lor Rent Water And Trash

you pay gas • electric, $200 per
month $100 deposit, 740·992·

4WO Same Specs 16

Corne s .. Tho Now TN55 85 75

Air SLT Pkg, 24.000 mllto As·'
s..ne Bolance (304)675-7842
!

111!15 Dodge 1/2 Ton 4 X 4 74~·
256-6920

month (740)-367-0611

2 bedroom apartment In Middle
pon we pay wa1er. sewer &amp; trash

Brake lnd PTO 13,500 oo. 3010

1998 Ford Ranger Super Ctt1}
Four Door 4 0 Liter, V·8, Auto ,.,

Shennlu tractor, 4 wheel drive
25hp , diesel live power 6 fln!ah
mower, 740 949 2375 between

'-MAZING

388·1100

tame specs 22,900 3010 2WO
42 PTO HP, 1 Remote Wet

13 One wllo wooe
14 IIMqullle
0'-1,11 Acid
neutrallur .

From a chilly island

Hl85 Ford Explorer, 4DR, 42~,
Loaded, Mint Cond , Sand·
In &amp; Out By Owner (304)e .
6055
•

14 Ft Stock Trailer 2 5116 Ball
H MB 740·44&amp;9528

Breakthroughlll Lose 10 ~ 200
Pounds Easy, Quick
Fast
Dramatic Reaulla 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sam-

1 Bedroom Partley Furniture
Apartment Utilities Paid! $300 00

120 900 00 4630 55PTO HP

37 Bmell duclc
40 lil8t
Qet I'MCfy for I

~

34A-

1989 Kenworth T·600 C25H P Wi t
Jake Brake 9Speed 400 Rears •
DoubleBunk, Needs Repairs :

1993 Joop wrangler 37,ood
Miles, S6 000 74\)-44Hl132

446 1170

(304)675·5733

3930 4WD 45PTO HP, IU.Tur
bo Syncho BXB Ti'ant F And R
Shuttle Large Pump 2 Remote• 4
outlets, 2yr Full Warranty

7 __
.. IMkMpSirt
..

-10-louiPuzzle

Operung lead. • 5

MI.HTY &amp;OOD II

Auto Sola, Hwy 160 N 740·.US..I
6189 740·446-6865
:

monts Call (304)773 5835 Allor
5PM

Tires, Side Boards &amp; Ramps 740..

THEM CRAYONS MUST TASTE

ta c Runner $3,000 1989 PI~
mouth Voyager Van $1 100, B&amp;D ~

West
Pass
Pass

I 9

4•

$10000080 (304)675-5570

Ford new Holland Traclor Sal•

1 T...t

»WWit34-11-

Pass

I

717 Field

• 8 7 4

A 7

Soulb

~ARNEY

•,

Gravely Tractor with four attach

5199. callt-800 77!1-8194

1 Bedroom Apt All convenlenc
ea Unfurnished. Private entrance 4th Straet PI Pleasant

ton Wheal Spray

•

• J 7 3

32 -Aviv

ACROSS

Vulnerable. North·Soulh
Dealer: East

Lo't(,

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandlae

18" Dlr1cTV Sololllto Syot•m•·

$279 oo Per Month Plua Utilities
740 446·2957

Left On Loan (304)722·7140

350

1124 E Main Stroot on At 124

Nice 3 bedroom mobile home in

ences 740..245-5053

From Galllpollo Double Wldos

ad, 740·882·45U aok lor ChriS
Marin

Range S95 Frost Free Rafrlgera
tor $150, Freezer $150 Washer
$20S, 1 Year Warranty Dryer

992·2167

Nice Home Set Up on Lot Make
2 Payments, Move In 4 Veara

Nice two cadroom home with
basement Mulberry Haightl, Po
meroy, $50 000 firm 7o40·992·

appliancea &amp; dithwaahar lncfud

Waahar 195. Dryer $95 Electric

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned, $260·$300, sewer,
water an~ trash Included 740·

Apartment, 2 Bedrooms Dining
Room, Kitchen, UtHlly Room No

Reatrlcttd Realdantlel Lots Lo·
cated A Comfortable Dlatance

$52 ooo, beautiful 50x201 lol, all

Balow Holiday Inn, Konayga Stop
And SM Us. 740-448-4782

$250 month, $150 doppsl1, 740·
742·2714

Shape, 74~3514

•

• Q tO 9 as 3

•K

• K2

or. 2 WD $3 500. 1991 eoog. 314,
Ton Pick Up 13.200 1969 Toyo·•

ChOpper (304)675-1858

New And Ulld Furniture Store

14x70 two bedroom total electric,
12x55 rwo bedroom total electric,

$200 74 per month with $1150
down Call1·800 837·3238

2292

Pomeroy. one bedroom home
needs cosmetic repairs. $12,000
make oflar Syracuse· double
wide. 4 bedrooms, block founds·
lion, newly remodeltd, carpet,

14x70 two bedroom tratlar in Mid

8il8S,

340 Business and
Buildings

menta which are completely fur·
nlahed Pteaae call 740·992·

20 8

1-86S,.818-0126

dloport $300 per month, 740-992·
5039

2 Bedroom Apt on State Route

381H1504

Larga family home for sate on ten
lovely acres Four ~droo,ns , two
and one half batha, two flreplacea
formal Hvlng room and family
room, four car garaga and two

633-6937 740-388·8591

Good selection of used homea
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

Central Air/Heat Pump Large Ll3t
at corner of Belle &amp; SandHill 3 5
miles out 2 Car Attached Ga rage, separate garage, 26)(80,
3doors paint room Lots of ator

$199,999 {803)366-943tl

Regrigerator

East

So•lb
• A Q8 8
9KI0865
• K Q

1989 Jeep Wrangler Hardtop Eix
ceilent $4,900, 1993 Ford EJCPior·~

610 Farm Equipment

Well
•J7654
9 A 9
• J 9 32

t885 Chevy Blazer Good Shapo~.!
Low Mile. 74(}256-1102
''
Milos. (304)675 8980

1986 GMC 2 Ton Truck, 300 Gel·

$350/Mo , Includes All Utilities.
Doposl1 ROQUirtd, 1·888·640·
0521

385-9621

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

114 Condor Street $250/Mo ,
$150 Deposlr, 2 Bedrooms, 304·

Buyers Limited Time Available,
6()0.383-6862

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740

• J 64

~~304~)6=95-~3~1~61~--~-:::~

PJckup Trudl for sale Auto

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

1 Bdrm , Extra Nice First Month
Free With One Year Leue

3 Bedroom 2 Full Bath, Shingle

EEK&amp;MEEK

'

Washers dryers refrigerators.
rangu Skaggs Appliances 76
VIne Street Call740~446~7398

1994 Skyline/Supreme 1"'x74·

1996 14X80 Dutch Mobile Home

Non
116-04tll
• 10 3 2
• Q~ 2
+ A 10 6 5

1988 GMC 1/2 Ton , FuH SLZ:I, •

18 Ft Gooaeneck Stalk Trailer
John Deere t.tT Tractor W1th Cuttlvatota Turning Plow, Good

992 2216

Loovo On Lot 121,900 OBO 740245·9834

740.742-2050

Cub ft (good) Couch &amp; Love Seat
(nice) (304)675-8165

Call Alter 4 PM 740.215 1302

Full Baths Total Electric t.tay

1977 314 Ton Truck, S700

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

440

1996 14Ft x72 Ft 2 Bedrooms 2

Jack Russtll female puppy, brown
and whlte short haJr, amaM breed,

n95
GE

$10 500 00 740·245-9120

Stay) DlnlngRoom Utility Room,

For Sale By Owner 4BR 3000
Squara Foot Houaa • Car Ga·
rage 5 Acres Vary Secluded

Your Home Is Just A Phone Call

5858

Garden Tub, C/Air,-TotaJ Elect
Kitchen-Island, Walk-In Cloaet &amp;

720 Truckl for Sale

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washer&amp;, Dryert Rangel, Aefri·
graters eo Day Guarameel
French City Mayteg 740 446

oklo Potsl 741J.682-9032

New Qas Furnace !Heal Pump 2
Porches Many Extras! Asking

3BR 12BA VInyl&amp; Shingle Roof,

cellont Condttlori, 74(}4411-6491 ~

mation

Rabbits, Call Evenlngo, 740·268·

(~1682·2246

1994 1exec Sunshine Mobile
Home, Three Bedroom•. Two
Bathrooms Watk-In Closets Utili·
ty Room Electric Heat Pump, Re·
frigerator ~nd Stove Included,

Dog Obedience Classes Now
Forming The Right Paw Training
Center 740 446·1864 For Infor-

9350

Polch $14 000

330 Farms for Sale

For Sale By Owner 3BR 1 1/
2BA large family room &amp; olflce
upstairs totally remodeled, new
root guttering, water aoflner &amp;
tots or extras 2912 Anniston
Orlve PI Plaaaant (304)675
2608 Leave Message on Ma ·
chme

Household
Good a

51 0

Buy or sell Riverine .-;nuquea.

1991 14•70 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,

Birds, Pond Supplltl

$250,

Nice Small 2 Bedroom, 5 Room
House Near Centerville /Thur·
man Gallla Schools. County Wa
ter Included Plant A Garden.
$3!50/ Mo , Plus Deposit, No In-

Cormld&lt; Road 740·44HB44

For Sale By Ownar Well Main·
tained 4BR Bl·level 3BA large
FamilyRoorn w/Fireplace, Livingroom Kitchen {All Appliances

(304)862·3772

MERCHANDISE

Underpinn ing &amp;

736-3409

EJCcellenr start up home Owner
pay closing cost 3BR w/Baae·
men! ElectriC Heave A $32,000

eo, Deposit No Peto (304)e75·
5182

land Stove

0618

Story. 3 Bedrooms 2 112 Baths
Near Holzer Immediate Posses·
siOn 740 44&amp;-9672

6908

Clean Efllc•ent 2BR Referenc·

530

2 bedroom mobile home. total

740-992 3537

cations lor lots on site (304)675

2Baths, Skylights In Kitchen Is·

3 Bedroom Farmhouse on 1 acre
Collage VIew Dr $33 coo 00
3 Bedrooms 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Years Old 281130 Attached Ga
rage 12x24 Building , Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed 69 t/2 Acre• Or
Wi!l Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs Co

New Mobile Home Park at Galli·
polis Farry Now accepting appll·

Small 2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
$200/Mo Plus Deposit Bob Me·

$29 ooo OBO Call (304)675·
6821

2186

Bualnesa
Opportunity

1961, 14X65 Trallor 2BR, HI
A C , 1 Bath, Appll&amp;ncO&amp; 2
Porches 1OX24 PI PI , $6 000
(304)77:l-531916pm 11 pm
1990

New Haven 2Bedroom Home,
Garage R!ver Frontage referenc·
as, Deposit &amp; Lease (304)934·

Assume

u

28 000 Mites, Bal Fact Warr Ex..,

Fish

Away, 904-736-7295

able, 740 992·1042

(304)675·5143 alter 5PM

EXCEbLENT CONDITION: 2

Mid -Surg Experience Required
Send Ae1ume To Oalc Hill Com
munity Medici! Center Attention
Branda McKenzie, 350 Charlotte

(304 )675 2533

992 3551 or 740 992 3041

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul vour logs to the mill )ust call

Skilled Nursing Care To Hotno

2103 MOJ.Jnt Vernon Avenue 3BA
1 1/2BA Family Room, Garage
Central Air, Patio. Porch, $77 000

Cozy two bedroom home located
In Mason, W:Va • affordable, alu·
mlnum siding Anderson wtndowa,
Immediate possess!on Call 740

moaellng (740)44H40t

Hotzer Home Care Of Oak Hill
Community Medical Center Seek·
lng Full Time AN To Provide

121165·Master Craft two bedroom,
one balh gas heal, $4000 negotl·

Wiltake Payo"l (740)·256·9382

ago S160 ooo shown by appt.
{304)675·5400

Elec tric Maintenance Service
Wiring BreaKer BOIIBS Light Fl11
lure, Heating Systems, and Ae

An EQual ()pportu01ty Employer

$22 000, rental unit 740·992·

rooms 2 Full BathS all Electric!

Pleasant Brim&lt; Ranch 3Badrooms 2BathS Basement Two/2
car garages Acre Lol (740)441·

Carpentry Decks Porches Addl·

GoodMVR

nue Middleport, finished bulld!ng
large lot w!lh _goldfish ponds,

1995 14K72 Ft Fleetwood 2 Bod·

By Ownar SandHill Road/Point

Todayl 740 446-4367 1·800
214 0452 Reg 190·05-1274B

(304)675-7927

Atleaat 25 Years Ofd
Alllast 2 Years Exper~ence

I Ox50 trailer South Second Avt·

More Very Nlcoll(~)675-6055

out lots lor $69.000, HO 992·
2704 740 992 5696

(Careers Close To Home) Call

ClsuBOTR

ThiS newspaper will not
know1ngly accept
adver11sements tor real estate
which is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwel!lngs
advertised In this newspaper
are avallabte on an equal
opportunity basis

By owner 725 Page Street Mid·
dieport house &amp; 3 Iota, must see
to appreciate, wtll seU house with·

Business
Training

140

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It Wlegal
to advenise ·any preference
hmitaiiOn or d 1sc r~mmat lo n
based on race color religion
se11 fam ilial status or national
origin or any Intention to
maKe any such preference
limitation or discrimination "

(740)·245 9667

Wlldlllo Jobs to 121 60/Hr Inc

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Asl&lt;lng$10500 7 - 1 8
'
1997 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded.-:

Sun 1·4PM Mon-Sal I tAM
BPM Fish Tank/Pet Shop 2413
Jackson Avenue/Po!nt Ple•aanJ

7462

2452

LPNs AN's Stop

by 995 Jackson Pike 1201 or
Call (740) 446·4188 for more information Global Recruiters

Help Wanted

110

(004)675-2063

1980 141165 electric 2 bedroom,
2 lull baths very good condition,
$1 t ,000, call evenings 7&lt;40 949·

Restuarent Managers, Radiology

Ready To Go May 16tn 7411-379·

Three bedroom home with lots of
etosel space clOse to school, on
corner lot, storaga building one
bedroom Jental home Included,

18i7 Cavaher, PS PB, 42,DOQ.t

Mll11 Cruise, Tilt CD Player:

AKC Aoglotorod Lab Puppltl
2663

74(}992-6154

7~0-742

5 AKC BOltr pups
8101

410 Houaes for Rent

Spnng Valley, 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom 2 112 Baths
Uvlng Room Dtnlng Room Eat in
Kitchen Lg Family Room 740·
245-9337

245-9392

HospiUII PO BoK720 Ripley,
WV 25271 EOE

ErJPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Restored VW:torian home situated
on' 12 acres, Vdlaga Middleport
secluded and private. appoint
ment can 740-992 5698

4514 ask for Chris Martin

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

•

HENTALS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Ohio

Pomeroy•

I

�Pege12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Tuesday, May 4, 1999

'Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

'Gopt,er 1:-iill': ·the last-stop for Florida's outlaws
ByRON WORD
A. .oclated Preu Writer
RAIFORD. Aa.- After killing Chic;ago Mayor Anton Cerrnalc in a failed ·
as~sin&amp;!ion altempr on President-elec( .Frankl.in Roosevelt, a 33-year-old
ltahan bncklayer wound up in Aorida's electric chair a month later.
" Viva ltalia! Goodbye to all poor people ev~rywhere'" Giuseppe
gara said when asked for his final words. "Push the button t Go ahead, push
the button!"
.
·
Zangara an? other killers like him are buried alongside rapists, thieves
and other cnmmals 1.n orderly rows under aged pines on the grounds of Union
Correctmnal Instnuuon. More than I ,000 inmates in all have found their final
resting plac~ in the. cemetery known both as "Boot Hill " and " Gopher Hill."
All d1ed m Aonda pnsons. The1r grave markers give nq hint of the crimes •
that led to them spending .their final days behind bars. Their plots are marked
W1lh concrete slabs beanng hcense tag-shaped metal plate. stamped in' the
pnson's motor vehicle tag plant with name, date of death and Depanment
of Corrections number.
Zangara, who emigrated from Italy to Hackensack, N.J., is the most nolo·
rious criminal laid to rest here. He fired several shots at Roosevelt's car in
Miami's Bayfront Park on Feb. 15, 1933, missing the president-elect but fatally woundmg Cennak. He was quoled as saying he did it.because he hated
all -official s and rich people.

zan.

· Weather

Thiny-three days later, on March 20, Zangara was put to death in the al suit of civilian clothes. The cost to taXpayers is $940 for emb~lming, cas- ·
swiftest legal execution this century, according to Blaise Picchi, author of ket and clothing, said Debbie Buchanan, a prison spokeswoman. Cremations
the book , " The Five Weeks of Giuseppe Zangara: The Man Who Would are $425 plus $55 for a pouch to hold the ashes.
..
About 70 of the graves an: those of indigent residents ofAonda State HasAssassinate FOR."
Like relatives' of many of the other criminals, Zangara's refused to claim pital in nearby Macclenny.
·
·
. .
his body. On his tombstone, his name is misspelled "Zangana Giuseppe"
About once a week on average, a prison work crew under the dtrecuon
•·
·ofComctions Officer Jerry Br:yant will dig a grave and then sometimes servoand the date of his death is·Jisted incorrectly as March 30.
Seventy-four of the 240 1nmates executed in Florida's electric chllf, are ~ ·~~~~as the unclainied bpdy of an inmate is laid to rest. .
buried in the ~emetery, about 50 miles southwest of Jacksonvillt.
if. ,,
IfdM -family requests .it, the deceased Is cremaled, aqd the remams of .51
Among them is Frank' John son, the first person to die in the Jtaie'$ tlec· creiiUIICd inmates are buried here. When the old graveyard filled up, a new
tric chair. Johnson was executed Oct. 7, 1924, for the fatal shooting ofiOCC: ' one apcned in 1995 abou! a mite down the road . .
motive engineer Atley B. Terrell during a robbery in Jacksonville. , , .
Bryantll;eeps a book listing the names of the dead and the location of their
'lbe first inmate buried in the cem~tery was lust ice Rice, •.black w~aied ' gi.v~.
.
.'
.
on Oct. 30, 191 3. He was followed by Samuel Small , a white who dtCi!l pn •..Ail inmates get a simple funeral , said Robert Clyatt, one of 12 chaplams
April 10, l914. Unlike many ~emcterics of me time which segregated g/t!Ye$\• ,w'ho rota~C-perforrning )ast rites. ·
.
.
·
·.... · • :; '',ll's ' ~ty much \ike otherfunerals, excepr we don '! have any singing,"
. by race, R1ce and Small were buried side by side, .
Another notonous cnmmalmterred here IS Ollis Toole, who &lt;.'ont'!!l.sed • ·. said Oyi!t, a Freewill· Baptist who usually reads from the Scriptures and
and later recanted his . inv~lvement in t~ 1981 slaying of 6:-y~-old ~~ deliwra • .short message.
·
.
Walsh. Toole, on.ce a ~1dekack of Texas kill~r Hen~ Lee Lu~, d~ed tri. ~.- •. ~ ' "lt's 11ot as elaborptt Wthere ~e no mourners," he sajd. .
m 1996 after.bemg d1agnosed as havmg carrhosas of the hyer. He was~~ .(,-~ TbD o'I\'IY guard bufied 6ri Boot'H\11 is W.H. !'fettle$; who died .of a heart
er charged wuh the Walsh death.
.
·; ', ·_ljtaclt 1111 March 31, 1953,,at as,e 26. He had no family to claim h1s body.
The deceased get a sample wooden co~n w11h metal.h;endle_s and a~~: .•~ ~ .~~only upright heiodstone in the cemetery.
• ... · ' Itsays simply : "Gone But Not Forgot~n.: ·

•

.'

because our people were in need."
Housed in clean, relatively spa·
cious' quarters, these refugees are
among the luckiest of 60,000 ethnic
Albanians who have reached Tirana
from.lhe mountainous area bordering
· Kosovo.
.~
Even before the influx, the Alban· ·
ian capital was bursting at the seams.
Post-Coinm.unism immigration from
the countryside has swelled Tirana's
. population from 250,000·to perhaps
600,000 over the past decade, strain·
ing water and power supplies, and
spawning shantytowns on the city's
outskirts.
While most of the refugees have
been taken in by Tirana families.
about 4,500 live in "Magic Town,"
a camp that sprawls across a sports

•Potential petit jurors
:chosen for May term
The following were listed as Jr., Middleport; .Larry V. .Romine,
potential members of the May tenn Pomeroy; Kevin Sheppard, Racine;
· petit jury ofthe Meigs County Coun
Cindy A. Smith , Middleport;
of Common Pleas:
Steve W. Hudson, Middlepon; TereJoshua Paul Witherell, Pomeroy; sa Renee Dralce, Pomeroy; Forrest R.
Christopher K. Becker, Middleport; Teaford Jr., Racine; Doris J. Bailey,
Coy B. Starcher, Pomeroy; James A. Middleport; Joseph Paul McElroy,
Sisson, Pomeroy; Roger W. Hayman, Pomeroy; Linda Lane Broderick,
Long B'ottom; Isabelle S. Heitger, Pomeroy; Michael J. Frymyer,
Pomeroy; Kathryn Jean Dodson, Shade; Betty Sue VanMatre, MiddlePomeroy; Dorothy Sue . Loscar, port; Misty D. Markins, Pomeroy;
Coolville; Josette Dupree Legan, . Robert Earl Trussell, Reedsville;
Racine; .Clara Belle Riley, Middle· Robert L. Cunningham, Syracuse;
port; Arthur Carroll, Long Bottom; Judy A. Riggs, Reedsville; Ralph
Doreen Smith, Middleport; Mary Herman Werry, Pomeroy; Sheila M..
Jane Grogan, Middleport; Raymond McDaniel, Rutland; Cheyenne
Edward Chandler, Langsville; Mary Michelle Newman, Albany; Ruth F.
Jane 'Workman, Pomeroy; Tarnmi Koenig, Reedsville; Raymond F.
Laine Barber, Reedsville; Stacey C. Jewell, Pomeroy; Sharon Ann Singer,
Shank, Racine; Helena H. D'Au· Long Bottom; Teddy Allen Warner,
gustino, Albany; Raymond Lee Pomeroy; Kathleen M. Cleland,
Wilcox, Middleport; Travis W. Cain, Racine; Charles Louis Cunningham,
Albany; John Mark Haggerty, Mid- Pomeroy; William E. Tippie, Syradleport; Rebecca Jane Hill, Racine; cuse; James Leslie Hess, Pomeroy;
Jack Hilton Shiflet, Rutland; Zane M.
Candy Sue Arix, Pomeroy; RusThomson, Shade;
.
sell Lee Haning Jr., Albany; Mildred
John Marion Yost, Rutland; Bar- Marvine Bowen, Pomeroy; Leota M.
bara S. VanCooney, Portland; Debo· Massar, Reedsville; Dorothy M.
rah Leah Shal]l, Racine; Ethel M. Reeves, Pomeroy; Harvey D. Hens·
Nicholson, Rutland;ludith A. Arnold, ley, Syracuse; Raymond John Ward
Middleport; Bruce J. Reed, Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Scott William .Brinker,'
Diana .Carol Kimes, Reedsville; Po_me[oy; James Michel Mourning,
Pauline G. Kennedy, Pomeroy ; Tim- Mtddleport:. William R. Myers,
othy D. Brinager, Racine ; Michelle Pomeroy; Doris A. Buchanan,
Ann Sayre,. Racine; Angela Michelle Reedsville; Faye Elizabeth Schultz,
Manuel, Racine; Bobby J. Campbell , Pomeroy; Jerod A. Moore, SyraMiddleport; William J. Roush, .cuse; Russell B. Combs, Rutland;
Pomeroy; Cathy Ann Hammon, John Edward Clonch, Pomeroy; ·
Pomeroy; Lela.Delores Hawk, Long · Robert Eugene Klein , Pomeroy; Jay
Bottom; Lyle D.. Nichols, Tuppers · W. Harris, Middleport; Jennifer Rose .
Plains; Crystal L. Jewell, Rutland; Yeauger, Racine; Martha S. Mayer,
Danny W. Davis, Rutland; Susan Pomeroy; Vera Jane Holliday, Rut·
Louise Suttle, Long Bouom; Walter land; Sonya L. Wolfe, Pomeroy;
D. McFee Jr., Middleport; Jeff Neil Renee Richard, Pomeroy;, Frederick
Durst, .Reedsville; Juanita L. Milton Tuttle, Pomeroy; Patty L. CarGuinther, Racine; Christina D. Perry, son, Middleport;
·
Albany; Nathan Roush, Syracuse;
Michael
Thomas
Burke,
Nathan Lynn Brady, Albany; Vir- · Coolville; Robert Lee Snowden, Rut·
gil E. Westfall, Long Bottom; Stacey · land; Mary Ann Winebrenner, Syra·
· Marie Vickers, Pomeroy ; Mary A. cuse; Johnny R. Klein·, Tuppers
Hart, Reedsville; Helen L. Hemsley, Plains; Victoria Lynn Cundiff,
Pomeroy; Paul E. Pe~ry Sr., Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Juanita Yvonne Frederick,
James L. Brewer Sr., Middleport; Racine; 'E. Loraine Venoy, Pomeroy;
Aoyd A. Graham, Syracuse; Gary Bonnie Jean Williams; Pomeroy;
Lee · Howard, Pomeroy; Misty R. Tony R. Dugan, Rutland; Althea G.
Hayman, Syracuse; Edith M.. Cogar, Morgan, Albany; · Judy Dell
Syracuse; Frances Bernita Maxson, Humphreys, Pomeroy; Timothy Lee
Reedsville; Larry L. Crites ·sr., Hill, Racine; Shannon Marie HubReedsville; Michael Lee Lambert, bard, · Pomeroy; Todd Shannon
Rutland; · Victoria K. Nottingham, Bastin, Albany; Charles F. Chancey,
Racine; Ocie D. McCune, Rutland; Pomeroy; Margaret L. Kennedy,
Betty J. Hawley, Middleport; Renee Pomeroy; Carl 0 . Smith, Reedsville;
D. Todd, Pomeroy; Michael Andrew Linden John Kelly, Middleport; Nan·
Bailey, Long Bottom; Michael D. cy Jean Smith, Pomeroy; Opal J.
Smith, Syracuse: l,.inda L. Y;onker, Kauff, Pomeroy; Peggy L. Mullins,
·Pomeroy; Karla J. Demoss, Racine; Rutland; Ronnie Gene Johnson,
Harry E. Johnson, Pomeroy; Joyce N. · Racine; Rosalie Story, Pomeroy; Jack
Cline, Middleport;
K. Spires, Syracuse;
·
·
Roy E. Miller, Po~eroy ; Jeffrey
David L. Parsons, Middleport';.
A. Hill, Long llouom; Ricky Wayne. Heather· Michelle Wise, Pomeroy;
Morris, Pomeroy: Ronald Allen William James Mahaffey, Albany;
Keyes, Syracuse: Betty L. Bell, Kimberly Beall, Portland; Jeremy
Racine; Frank Harold Fitch, Middle- Wayne Barber, Coolville; Amos
pori; Bertino ~ozingo, Rutland; Boone Cross Jr., Reedsville; Peggy
George Napier, Tuppers Plains ; Lee Ellis, Middleport.
Melissa J. Goble, Racine; George K.
Church, Reedsville; Mona K. Ervin,
Racine; Margaret K. Gloeckner,
The following couples were
.Racine; Randy A.. Wheeler, Racine; issued marriage licenses recently in
Rebecca Ann Bentz, Racine; John N. the Meigs County Probate Court of
Ginther, Long Bottom; Jack L. Cum- Judge Robert Buck:
mins, Racine; H. Glenn Brown, RutKevin Shawn McGuire, 28,
land; Denise D. Qualls, Middleport; Mason, W.Va., and Cynthia Sue Den·
Stephen Adam Jenkins, Pomeroy; ney, 29, Middleport; Jason Conrad
Bennie J. Wright, Pomeroy; Ardis R. Blair, 23, and Therese Dawn Bise, 20,
Waggoner, Albany; Charles F. Perry both of Vienna, W.Va.

and amusement-park complex.
The camp has scores of prefabri·
caled houses and hundreds of tents,
but the nine-member Elshani family
- who ned Kosovo after Serbs
shelled their village and burned their
house - prefer the can vas-covered
back of their t!Uck.
"I had a big fann, a good life,"
said Sulejman Elshani, .30, eating
breakfast on the grass near a rocketship ride. " We'd go back now if we
could."
Many refugees stay initially in the
Sports Palace, Tir~na 's largest arena.
But conditions there are unpleasant;
crews ·periodically sweep through
spraying disinfectant.
"You can't even breathe there,"
said Sabahat Devolli, 29. who along
with her husband and two sons
moved into Kotorri 's building.
"Here, it's not exactly like home, but
.it's nice."
Kotorri,-44, supplies the refugees

with food he buys himself - most· and providing telephone service.· But
· ly pasta and rice. There is enough to Red Cross workers say it is hard to
eat, though little in the way of fruit, spread word of the program because
vegetables or fresh milk, Mrs ..Devol· Tirana's ~efugees are so si:atiered .•
li said.
Kotorri also has bought textbooks
The Red Cross also ov~rsees the
and supplies for the ground-floor distribution of food to refugees stayclassroom. There is a morning ses- ing with local families, provUUl\g a
sion for younger children, an after- 30-daysupplyofbasicratiQnstoeach
noon session for older ones, lliughl by registered refugee.
·
volunteers.
.
There are widespread suspicions;
Autura Dema, one of the teachers,' however, that profiteers are diverting
~aid the children are way behind in some of the aid. The Red Cross says
their studies, even forgetting lessons · it knows of no large-scale corruption,
learned earlier in the year in Kosovo. and suggests that most food aid sur"They like to l~am," she said. " It facing at markets comes from
helps them get over their traumas." refugees bartering for other com-..
One pupil, 11-year' old Elvesa modities.
Gas hi, lost a brother and sister on the
The focxJ..aid program is sup- ·
chaotic journey to Tirana.
pose&lt;! to be extended to host families,
"S.~e says she cri~s all night fot!' many of them poor, but this hasn't
them, Mrs. Dema Said.
· • happened yet on a broad scale.
. . The International Red Cross is try;; · "We're very aware ofthe need for
mg to reumte separated· re(ugees: ;i aasistance to host families," said
broadcasllng names over the radio ·"' Ellen Svennes ·of the federation of

By MICHELLE LOCKE
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
SAN QUENTIN, Calif, - A Viet·
nam veteran who .received a Pui]Jie
Heart on death row was executed by
injection early Tuesday for beating an
elderly woman to death.
· Manuel Babbitt died at 3:37a.m.

EDT, a day after his 50th birthday, 'll spllto!he skin on her 'foreheld to the
after all his court appeals were• bone. Het frail heart gave out under
denied.
the"attack.
·
·
.
Babbitt was ~enlenced to death for _
Babbitt said he dldn '·t remember
killing Leah Schendel in ·q980. ~He l"'hat happened that night,.cr the folwas convicted of brealcipg into.'he~ . tlowing:. evening when , he attac.ked
apartment and hammering her with another woman, breakigg clff wlie,n a
punches that broke her dentures and
·
·

Volume 49, Number 236

'

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnal Newa Staff
Jean Craig of Middleport and John W. Blaettnar of
Pomeroy will advance to the general election in Novem·
ber as the Republican mayoral candidates following
Tuesday's Republican primaries.
.
Craig defeated Samuel A. Eblen with a 'vole tally of
1231o 84, and Blaettnar, who served as Pomeroy Mayor
several yeais ago, defealed Kenny Klein with a vote of
131 to 37.
In Middleport, where 213 Republicans went to the
polls, Oerk!l'reasurer Bryan Swann received 155 votes,
Councilman Stephen Houchins received 155 votes and
~nald L Stivers and Bernard D. Gilkey, candidates for
the board of trustees of public ,affairs, received 155 .and
15 I votes, respectively.
.

.

A Tirana economist, Zef Preci,
said the government must take action,
"Albania's image ' could be
destroyed if the government can't ai&lt;l
the families housing refugees," 'he
said. "People will send the refugees
:
back to the camps."
Kotorri would like government
help for his ~e lf-made refugee cente'
but doesn't expect it. .He retains a
skepticism of bureaucracy acquired
during Albania 's Communist era,
when he spent 12 years in jail for
alleged anti-state activities.
Now, he is a one·man relief
agency for · his guests, even. hiring
some for his furniture and bakery
busi nesi;es.
"I hve wit(J them , with their problems," he said. ''l'do what I can to
ease their suffering."

Slivers was appointed to that board late last year,
along with Craig and Myron Duffield.
Duffield and Robert Robinson, both Democrats, ~ill
appear on the November ballot Robinson has .filed as a
candidate for village· oouncil. No Democrat filed for
either mayor's post.
In Pomeroy, 177 ballots were cast, and Qerk!l'reasurer Kathy Hysell received 158 votes. Council mem·
bers Scott M. Dillon and Geri Walton received 133 and
113 votes, respectively. .
Monday was the filing deadline for independent can·
didales, and none filed, so candidates who advance to
the November election will be unopposed unless write· ·
in candidates (ile .before the September 13 deadline.
· Craig, who has served as chairman of the t&gt;oard 'of ·
public affairs for the past six months, said W~nesday

rves
ngs
anniversary with ·memorial markers
KENT (AP) ...:.. Kent State University has begun marking the places
where four students were killed by Ohio National Guard fire during a Viet·
nam War protest on May 4, 1970.
In January, Kent Stale's board of trustees aulhoriz~d the insltalhlti011 of
markers in lhe parking lot spaces where the students died on this northeast. I
Ohio school's campus.
Although oonstruction for the memorials isn't expected to start for
weeks, lhe school's a~minislralion decided to seal off the parking lot spots
for Tuesday's commemoration.
·
.
Each of the s~ces was deooraied with a triangular granite marker with
the name of one cif the students and the date of the shootings . .
The markeNJ, which will be removed today, will be officially dedicated
Sept. 8.
An overnight vigil· and the ri~ging of a campus bell also marked the
anniversary of when the National Guard opene~ fire to queli a can1pu:s 1
protest. In addition to the four who were killed, nine students were wound·
ed.

he.

friend iushed to. aid.
The fomier Marine was turned in
to police by his brother, Bill, whose ·
suspicions were aroused after he
found items stolen in the Schendel
slaying in Manuel Babbitt's belong·
ings. ·
·

Sentinel

•

•

I .

morning ibat she will begin preparing immediately for
the mayor's position.
·
''ll's.a long. hard roe to hoe, and it will take a lot of
work," Craig said. "I'm going to begin right .now in
familiarizing myself with the exact workings of this vii· ·
lage, because you can't enter office in January and say,
''OK, now I'm going to be the mayor."'
·
Craig said that she \viii also continue to work closely
with oouncil members.
,
..., want to .instill in the council members that they are .
the legislative body. The mayor should lJe a leader, and
a helpmate to council, but council members must make
the decisions."
Blaettnar, too, said he was already looking at projects
that he feels need addressing. and said that the village
water system must be a priority. According to .Blaettnar,

a seoond well for the system should be built.
·,
Blaetlnar also said that recreational opportun iti es,
including repairs to the park on Mechanic Street and the
bike and walking path now being considered.
"I have worked with ·practically all of the oounci ..
members and they're good people, so 1 don't anticipate
any proble~s." Blaeunar said.
Voters in the villages of Racine, Rutland and Syta·
cuse will elect their mayors and council members in
November's general election, because those officials 1'\111
on a. non-partisan basis.
·
Board of Elections officials last night said that tiN;
turnout of Republican voters was lower than they hW:I
anticipated. With 3,178 registered ~epublicans in the
two villages, the voter turnout of 390 was calculated,at
just over 12 percent.
·

Dedicated poll worker takes duty seriously

: Today's

.

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Craig and Blaettnar win Republica·n mayor's contest~

WASHINGfON (AP)- Sen. George \binovich and his allies in the
over what's to become of state tobacco settlement money are optimistic about
the prospects for getting Congress to see things their way.
AI issue is whether the federal government can .take a portion of the more
than $206 billion in settlements to be paid to sl~ by tobacco ~panics,
whether it can dictate how states spend their windfalls, or whether the money
is kept off limits to Uncle Sam. ·
.
·
.
\binovich, R-Ohio, has been one of the leaders of an effon to enact "hands
off" legislation.
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R·Texas, inserted into a spending bill an
amendment that would accomplish thai goal in the current fiscal year. So a
·
lobbying effort by Voinovich
governors, mayors and state legisla·
tors has switched to the House'Senate
conference committee which is creat·
j
ing a final version of the bill.
Groups which oppose letting the
federal government get any of the
2 Sections • 12 Pages
tobaccq settlem~nt money staged a
news conference Tuesday designed to
7
C.ICnd•r
•how . the depth of their alliance,
Clapllled1
9&amp;10
which includes active participation by
groups representing all levels of state
Comlq
11
and local government.
Editorials
"It's unconscionable for the federal
government to try lo take whit
belongs to the states," \binovich said.
"We need to keep this provision in
· the bill."
. ·
\binovich, Hutchison and other
senators have beliten back an attempt
OHIO
to order the states to spend half
their settlement money on programs
Plck3: 3-8-3; Pkk4: 1·2·0·9
to reduce smoking and assist tobacco
Buckeye 5: S·IO.I9·20·31
fanners.
W.VA.
They said the states should be trust·.
Daly 3: 4-S.Si Dally 4: 9·9·S·4
ed
lo ac! responsibly with the money
01'199011lo\'olky
they work!'(! to receive.

~

•

Hometown Newspaper
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.

By KATHERINE 'RIZZO
Allaoc:laWd .,_Writer

'

-Page 4

Meigs County's
';['"••&lt;1··~r~·'

Senator thinks victory
In fight over settlelnent dollars

.

Cincinnati tops
Arizona 6-4

•

Pu.rple .Heart recipien,~!J~~~ by lethal injection

Marriage licenses.
.

.

Eastern diamond squads win, Page 4
Letting go of anger, Page 7
Meigs variety show, Page 8

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70s; l:ow: 50s

Red Cross societies. "But for the
time being we've had to prioritize the
refugees.'' ·

May5,10118

Today: Showers
High: 70s; Low: 80a

Albania's crowded capital making room for refugee.s
By DAVID CRARY
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
TIRANA, Albania - A Greek
bank was just about to move into
Dilaver Kolorri's new office building
when war got in the way.
Kotorri 's family occupies a top·
floor suite, but the Tirana busi ness·
man has turned over the rest of his
three-story building to houseguests
·- 220 refugees from Kosovo . ·
Instead of offices for investments
and loans, there is a communal
kitchen, an improvised school, and
room after room filled with dis·
placed families and their belongings.
"I was going to get $6,000 month·
ly rent from the bank," Kotorri said.
· "Then catastrophe struck our Kosovo brother~. I cancel~d the contmct

Wednesday

•

paint.
"It will be better than it was," she said, adding. "I
don't know what I'd have done without my family."
She renected on changes in the voting process, not·
ing that the work is easier today. In the past. poll work ..

t'JHENS (M)- An Ohio Uni·
versity sophomore has been defeated
in his attempt to run for the City
Council Jlresidencr.
·
Patrick Shea was beaten by
Council President Guy Philips in th e
Democratic primary.
·
Philips received 435 votes, or 58
percent of the total, while Shea had
315, or 42 percent
Philips 'will nin for a third term as
council president in the Nov. 2 gen·
eral election.
''i~~.
He said he had anticipated a close
'"
" race against Shea.
·
"I was extremely concerned I've
always h~d tremendOus support
from Ohio University students and
this till)e l was running against an
Ohio Univerrsity sophomore," he
said.
,
Shea, whose hometown is Ketter·
DEVOTED POLL WORKER- Roae Slaaon, a ing. is a member of the university 's
poll workar at Pomaroy'a Firat Precinct, 1howed student Senate.
up tor work Tueaday after driving from Gallon
Earlier this year. he had criticized
attar a tire damaged har S.Cond Street home In council members in this southeast
February. Slaaon, a poll worker IInce 11158, Ia Ohio oollege town when they voted
expected to move back home (n a few WJeka.
to revise the city housing code.
ers used to tally the ballots by hand and then report the ·
~e' revisio~s inc_luded a ban
results 'Jo the board of elections; today the ballots are agamst students practice of ~lactn g
counted automatically at the board of elections.
couches on porches of privately
"We used to work until 2 o'clock in the rooming," owned homes used for student hous·
she said. ·
·
. ing.
~--------------~

-·

Top Meigs county students honored
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel N - Sblff
The accomplishments of 48 scholars·
were celebrated at the 15th annual Meigs
County Academic Excellence banquet held
Tuesday night in the Meigs High School
cafeteria.
. John Costanzo, superintendent of the
Athens-Meigs Educational. Service Center,
congratulated the young scholars on achiev·
ing academic excellence and encouraged
them to develop positive self-coneepts, to
be solf-directed, and to continue to work
toward their potential .
·
"As scholars you have the ability to
affect the· lives of other people," said
Costanzo, suggesting thai their intellect carries a responsibility which when applied to
research and human development projects
can bring health and happiness lo others;
· He cited rules for sucx:ess as laid out in a
recent research project which included
"have faith in God, have faith in yourself,
work hard, be oonsis.tent and dop ~t give up."
More than 200 students, parents, friends,
and school personnel attended the banquet
which honored the top students of Eastern,
Meigs and Southern School Districts in
grades two, four, six, junior high and high
school.
Jesse Little, a senior at Southern High
School, was selected · as recipient of tlie
Franklin B. Walter AII·Scholaslic Award.
He was presented 1 plaque by Costanzo.and
· Bob Barton, vice-preaide'nt of the Athens·
Meigs Governing Board. Other nominees
for lhc award we~e Stephanie Evans from
Eastern, and Bridget Vaughan from Meigs.
LitUe, son of Connie and Doug Little,
will be one of 88 sch~lars in Ohio to be hon·

Jolnthe
Aaaoolatlon .o f lAnw c.mara In Ita annual .food drlw on Satur·
day. The aniluil - n t Ia the largaat of Ita kind In the nation, and
all food oollec!Wd locally will go to local food t!anka, In Polnwoy
to the Melga UnltM Methocllat Cooperatl~ Pariah. Poatal cu•
tomera are aaked to place non-perlahable food ltema (but no
gla•la,.) at their l'llllllbox•·on Saturday tor pickup, or to drop .
Jtama at the Pomeroy Poat otnce. Lllat year, ovar 1,800 pounda ·
of food wu collacted In Pomeroy. Pictured with Mayor Fr.nk ·.
V.ughan, who algned a proclamation tor the day, a,. letter car·
r1ere Jim Pulllna and Carl Carmichael, and Pomaroy Poatmaater
Charlft Grim.
·
.
••

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa St.ff
Nothing it seems can keep long-time Pomeroy First
Precinct poll worker Rose Sisson from her post.
Sisson has resided in Galion. with her son and daugh·
ter-in·law, Alfred and Alice .Sisson, since Feb. 12 after
her Second Street home was damaged in a Feb. 9. fire.
The fire, which gutted a neighboring home, caused
extensive damage to Sisson's home .
Tuesday morning, Sisson showed up for work at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church where Republican citizens of
the First Precinct .were nominating their choice for .
mayor. Her son drove her down and plans were for her
to return to Galion Tuesday evening.
Residents of the First Precinct had voted at the audi torium in the Pomeroy Municipai .Building. However,
after Pomeroy Village Council voted to use the audito·
rium · to house the police departmen~ a new polling
place was required.
That was when the church volunteered its· meeting
room, according to Jane Frymyer of the Meigs County
Board of Elections. Ironically, the new polling place is
located just across the street from Sisson's fire damaged
home, which is currently undergoing extensive renova·
lions.
Sissonh.as lived liil'omeroy all of lter11fe"ind has
resided on Second Street since 195S. She became I poll
wor(&lt;er in 1956 and in the las143 years has only missed
work one time - thai due to an operation.
Her reason for returning Tue~ay : !'I wanted to see
the people."
She said lhe Lutheran church basement is a comfort·
able polling place and that she has received many good
oomments aboui the location.
Meanwhile, she is looking forward to returning to
her home iri about three weeks. The house will have·
new siding. new roof, drywall, ·carpet, fixtures and

Student loses bid
for Athens city
council oresidency ·

ored at a recognition banquet in Columbus
on May 12.".
·
Small trophies were presented to each of
the scholars.
Meigs students honored were Erinne
Kennedy, Bradbury; Daniel Bookman,
Harrisonville; Jert:id Wyatt, .·Pomeroy;
Bethany King, Rutland; James Wallace,
Salem Center, and Dru Reed, Salisbury, all
fourth graders; Renee Bailey, Patrick ~w­
ell, Katie Reed, Chesler Wigal, Sarah
Wilkes, Melinda Chancey, Kayte Davis,
Michelle Runyon, Emily Story, and Eliza·
beth Wilfong, Meigs Middle .School; Der·
rick Bolin, Christopher Dodson; Carrie
Lightfoot. Adam Shank, Stephanie Wigal,
Lacy Banks, Tricia Davis, Jessica Johnson,.
Rebecca Johnson, Tamra O'Dell, Rebekah
Smith, and Bridge! Vaughan, Meigs High
School.
.
ored at tha Melga County Academic Excellence banEastern students recognized were Erin quet Tueaday night were preaentad trophlea by Bob
Weber, Tyler Lee, Derek Baum, Cody Dill, Barton, vice prealdent of the governing board of tho
Canie Crow, Canie Wiggins, Eastern Ele- ·Athena-Melga Educa~al Service Center. Erin Weber,
mentary; Juli Bailey, Joshua Kehl, Stephanie a fourth
at Ealtam Element.ry, waa the llrat to
Evans, John Proffitt, and Jessica Marcum, racalve a
'
·
Eastern High School.
. Southern students honored were Miranda
McKelvey, fourth grade. Portland; Sara Q
Cammarata, sixth '!lrade, Portland; Jawb
· Hunter, fourth grade, ~yracuse; Ashton
· Brown, , sixth grade, Syracuse; Brandon
Smith, Southern Junior High, and Jonathan
Evans, Brenna Sisson, Jesse Little, and Kara
King. Southern High School. ·
. Jody Howard, Talented and Gifted Coor·
dinator for the oounty, gave the welcome and
introduced the superintendents, ~ryl Well,
Eastern; William Buckley, Meigs. and James
Lawrence, Southern. The invocation before
the dinner was
by Robert Barton.
- J1aM Uttle, aenlor at Soutt1ann,
waa 1 the
of tha Franklin B. · Walter AllScholaatlc
The plaque pr1aanted by John
Coatanzo, auparlntendent of the Athena Melga Ceil·
tar, lett, and Bob Barton, vloe prealdent of the Center'agovwnlng board.
•
RECOGNIZED- Top e.mant.ry and middle achool
acholara In Melga Local ·recognized at the Melga
County Academic Excellence .banquet Tueaclay night
Included left to right, 1utad, Erln!M Kennedy, Daniel
Bookman, Jerod Wyatt, l!lethany King, Dru Reed and
Ren• Bailey; and atandlng, Katla Reed, .Cheater
Wigal, Sarah Wllkaa, Kayte Davia, Michelle Runyon,
Emily Story, and Elizabeth Wilfong. ·
~~-----,-,

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>wolfe</name>
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