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•
'•

Florida citrus office weighs marketing ~ampaign·'s impact

-

very important," Linda Hawbaker,
the department's school marketing
direct or. told members of the Florida
Citrus Commission at a meeting
Wednesday.
Marketing officials dusted off a
1996 television commercial popular
with children and young adul!s and
also held promotions at schools that
proinise&lt;j a visit from ·an Apollo
astronaut for the school whose students drank the most orange juice.
Citrus officials in the near future
also hope to have an Intemet Web site
attracti ve to children and teens and a
partnership with a sports event geared
toward the age group.
With kids drinking an average of
a,bout eight gallons each year, children and teens already drink more
orange juice than the average consumpti on of Americans, about 5.5
gallons each year.

ing on children between the ages of
6 and 18 in Grand Rapids, Mich., and
Nashville, Tenn.
'
For years, the Depanment of Citrus h~s sponsored a program that gets
sc~ool cafeterias to serve orange
JUICe. But the new campaign marks
the first ' time the department is
appealing directly to children and
te~n -age rs to drink more orange
JUice.
"This age group is large ·and is

the Senate to investigate why Gener"Nobody ever suggested that
al Mills and Kellogg are raising
cereal prices when fann prices are grain prices were behind our action,''
he added. "Grain is just one of many
declining.
cost
factors affecting cereal."
"There's a short circuit in the ecoDorgan asked the Senate Agriculnomic wiring here," Dorgan said.
lure
Committee lO investigate the
"Fanners suffer big losses growing
issue.
the grain, while cereal manufacturers
In a letter to the chairman, Sen.
reap big profits tQilling the same
Richard
Luga,r, R-Ind., and Democgrain iniO breakfast cereal. The famratic
Sen
. Tom .Hark in of Iowa, the
ily farmer is being cheated out of a
ranking
minority
member. Dorgan
· fair return."
·
General Mills is raising cereal said producers are stru ggli ng to surprices 2.5 percent, an increase some vive in the wake of a general price
analysts say will cause retail prices to collapse.
The big cereal manufacturers,
rise by I0 cents a box. Kellogg raised
meanwhile,
arc returning profi ts of
prices 2.7 percent in December.
around
30
perce
nt, even before the
General Mills defended its move.
"The current average retail price foi latest price increases, Dorgan said.
"Fam1ers deserve an answer to the
. a box of our cereal is about the same
issue
of widening margins, especialas it was in 1993 , while average conly
as
they
are likely to he blamed for
sumer prices for food at home since
then have increased about 3. percent
annually," said Austin Sullivan, Gen- the retail cereal price increases " he
s.aid.
'
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - U.S. eral Mills spokesman..' .
0 -N.D., wants

ATTENDS TRAINING- Cindy
Sexton, owner of Mane Designers Full Service Salon in Gallipolis, re'cently aHended Red·
ken's Divisional Training for Per•
fo rming Artists In New York. For
two day,., she interacted with
Redken performing artists from
ti't e northeastern region of the
U.S. Training was offered in hair
r. olor, hair design , business
development, new scientific
technology ·and beauty trends.
$exton has been an educator lor
, Redken for live. years. For an
appointmen! at Mane Designers,
call 446·2933.

Wcother

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: eos; Low: 40s

Meigs County's
Vo l'""" ·l"

AKRON (AP)- Ohio's biggest industries are using money to get the
attention lawmakers in lhe debate over opening up Ohio's electric utility
industry to competition.
Ohio industries have oulspen\ the state's five invesiOr·owned electric
utilities more than 3-to-1 in campaign contributions since 1994, acconding
to a computer analysis of 1.1 million contribution necords by the Akron
Beacon Journal.
The newspaper's analysis showed 60 companies and trade groups contributed more than $5 million, mostly to help elect Republican candidates.
At the same time, the utilities gave $1.5 million to slate campaigns, lhe
Beacon Journal reported in a story Sunday.
Most Ohioans stand to see a savings of Ito 2 percent on their electric
bills in a deregulated market. But it's the industrial cus10mers who most
actively support deregulation because competition is expected to lower
their rates, which are already about half of the rates residential customers
pay, the newspaper said.
The Bcaccn Journal also reported !hat:
- Utilities, especially FirstEnergy in Akron, strongly dislike the proposed legislation and are preparing 10 fight it as it moves through lhe Ohio
House of Representatives this week. A Senate version passed wilh a partyline vote - .Republicans for, Democrats against -early Wednesday.
- Some companies with a presence in northeast Ohio, including Canton's Ttmken Co. and Ford Motor Co., have been at the forefront of
financing c.ampaigns since 1994. The top two political donors are Cincin·
nati's Procter &amp; Gamble and Nationwide Insurance Co. of Columbus.
- Aultm~n Health Foundation, also of Canton, as well as associations
representing Ohio's bakers, bankers, cattlemen, jewelers and teal-estate
agents, are among the lesser-known entities vying,for cheap electricity.
More than 50 trade associations and businesses have joined the Coati·
for Choice in Electricity to lobby state lawmakers for an electric
·
deregul~tion plan that meets !heir
needs.

to Armco com mon

. orice of A K Steel coni mon stock durini the trad ing period is hetwee n $22
.tnd $26.44 a share. Otherwise. there
wdl he an adJUSt m~nt.
lnclu.ding $185 .9 mi.llion of Armw prcfcrrcJ stuck and $256.4 million

uf Armco debt. the deal has a total
value of about $1.3 bi llion.
The companies expected the deal
In dose in the third quarter.
.ArmcQ was founded in 1900 'in
~!1 ddletown as the American Rolling
. Mil l Co.

Dr. Sport, 4)(4, preferred equipment pkg,
SOHC eng, P. moon roof, sport pkg,
cass w/multi disc changer, leather, low
lmiles.
one owner.

Good Afternoon
----

Today's Sentinel

Pulitzer Prizes for books of fiction were awarded to Booth Tarkington for ".Alice Adams" in 1922
Edna Ferber for ·"So Big" in 192S
and Pearl S. Buck for "The Good
Earth" in 1932.

2 Sections • U Pages

.

~~~=~2=~::~~1 .1atcr

9-4-7; Dally 4: 5-6-2-4
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BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SeniiMI Nfta Staff
The value of friendship;, the warmth of memories, and the challenges of life
after high school were themes of the valedictorian and salutatOrian speeches al
Meigll}ligh School's 31st Annual BaccalaUreate and Qlmmencement cxerdses Sunday afternoon.
· Before a standing-room only crowd in lhe Larry It Morrison Gymnasium, .
Bridget Vaughan, valedictorian, and Tricia Davis, salutatorian, called on the 149
graduates ·to look back, reflect, get prepared to accept the unexpected, and then
move ahead
.
Using Edwand Roland Sill's admonition to "be satisfied with nothing but the
bes!" lhe salutatorian defined !hat as me811ing not what "society deems as lhe
best" but rather what makes lite indivi~~al happy.
.
Vaughan reflected on the importance of friendships and memories and the
role they play in adjusting~ the "changes of tomorrow" with the inevitlble ups
and downs of moving to a new stage in life - ooUege, anned forces er jQbL
She said that.one of lite most important changes takinll place is that after 13
years together, graduation day marks the last time that lite clsss wUI all be
together. "We now foce changes in our lives," said the v!!'edictorian who went
onyearsto cite significant and insignificant eveniS which have iM:curred during thole Trlcll Davia, Mlutldorlun .led

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playoffs

-Page4

fine.
He said he would hold a hearing, calling for
witnesses and evidence, to determine Pri ddy '~
indigency if he continued to maintain that he
unable to pay a fine .
Furthermore, Crow told Priddy he was lutky
that the court was bound by the prosecutor's
plea agreement, otherwise he would have faced
additional prison time.
. Priddy made no comment during -the proceeding. ·
Wamsley, asking that no fine be levied, stated that Priddy has been cooperative with the
state in this mauer.
·
SENTENCED - Fred M.• Priddy, anted
st left, of Rutland w•• •ntenced thil
morning to eight ye1r1 In prlaon •net
lined $15,000 In the Meigs County Court
of Common
Hels shown herl with ·
hla 1ttomey, Jay W1msley of Athena,
Hated at right, 1nd court Bailiff MlchHI
Can1n, standing.

PI•••·

.

·

1986 is that now we
are finally out on our
own: We are able 'to
choose our future and
paths we will take.
Only we can make ic
happen. There is no
one there now to
guide us along. It IS
all on our shoulders
now!'
Valedictorian
Jesse Little challenged his classmatcis
to "walk the path le:;s
traveled by" and to
"use·· graduation as a
s(epping stone on the
course that ultimately

.
.
proceulonal; SH$ Hnlors 1re ahown here walt·
lng their tum to m1rch Into the Charles .W.
Hayman Gymnlllum st Recine during Sunday night'• combined bltccalaureste and leads to success."
"if there is
comm-ntaxerciH.
one thing a person
takes with them ·after my speech IOni&amp;ht
let it be these: believe in you~lf and
Continued on pqe 3
ADDRESSING GRADUATES 'RtiV. Rick Rule of the .Rfi!Cine First
Baptist Church Ia ahown here
lddr811lng members of the South·
am High School Cll• of tow. C::lt·
lng numerous exampl• of people
who succeeded despite ldvel'llty,
he told the ciiH; ~Don't .V.r lllten
to aorneooe who tell• you ~ou can't
do aornttthlng."

Erick Johnson, Jessica .Jobnson, Rebecca Mae Jobnson, Marc A Jones,
Stephanie Irene Jones, Mallhew Alan Justice, Rebekah Dawn Karr, Kristina
Marie Kennedy, TtmOihy Justice King. Olarles Andrew Kitchen, Thom'\'i
Kopczinsky.
.
Carrie Michelle Lambert, Jennifer Melissa Lanbert, Robert Keith Landers.
Sarah Beth l...ai'kins, JesSica Arlene Laudenmil~ Kelli Dawn Lightfoot, Lester
Carl Lowery, Tomas Ja~hua Lynch, Stephanie Angeline Roberts-Lyons. Dwight
Thomas Madison, Patrick Eugene Martin, Heidi Elizabeth Matson, Jessica Sue
Matson.
'
Stacy 1.. McKnight, Tonya Michelle Lew Miller, Amos Alan Mills, Benjamin
1.. Mcylden, Adam F. Moodispaugh, Victor J. Morris. Jr. II. Penily Marie Napper,
Tamra Lee O'Dell, aaytool' Ohlinger, Alyson Nioole Pauerson, Kenneth
Matthew Pavich, Rochelle SUZ7l11111C Pavich, Stefani LaDonna Pickens. Macie
Renee Piera:, Jodie Melissa Pooler, Michael'lidison Pooler, Jr., Jobn W. Post, Jr.,
Roger Jason Preast,'Trentoo Qualls, Ryan Ray Ramsbuog. Josiah Tyler Rawson,
Racltcl Renae Reeves, Bethany LeeAnn Reynolds.
·
Leslie Renee Richard, !'lie Shane Richmond, Tttiany Dale Richmond. Ki111·
berly Ritter!x:ck. Angelo J. Rodriguez, Franoo Daniel Romuno, Michelle Nioole
=~~~~:~~=: Roush, Jeremy Jay Rowe, Tttiany Marie Savage, Cortney Justin Scaotcrry, Chad
prooeasiOMI oJ
Into E. Scltuler, Jason E. Sears, Jerald David Shuler, Bonne' Joyoe.Smith.
.._ _.__ ·
1 for
Rebekah Lynn Smith, Robby Aaron Smith, Shannon Eugene Smith, Brandy
31 st
....:__.b.
lite
chall
ahead
h
'd
th'
'II
be
di"'-·lt
u
·
U..
lJirry
R
•
....,.,...,n
Gylmnas
um
the
Sl]i'-'-,
David Anthony S•••,.
.
Leigh
_ ....,...,. mg
. .e~gCII . 5 e 581 • m115 wt
. 'UUI ll&lt;)rlle mes 1nd commencement progr1m.
. ·
..... Adam Sorrell, Daisy May ,s.........
.....-~
--. .......,..,
~-~,
because now many decisoons will be made wtthoutthe help of pareniS or teach·
·
·
·
Stanley, Bella Stegall, Bobbi Jo Stewart, Russell William Stewart, Allision
ers. '·
,
·
Following lhe proo:esional and Nllional Anthem by the Meigs Marauder Nioole Streetman. Julian Hiroshi Swann. Melisha Diana Swisher, Adam M. ThyDavis stt 1ssed the importance of integrity and being true to yoursell "Unless Band. J11011 Andrew Harris gave thei~vocation, Vaughan, president of the senior lor,l..isa 'Illylor.
you're perfed, you'll be able to heir !hat voice tell you thlt what you're about to ~ e~ the~ and lenntfer Mehssa Lambert, class treasurer, made
Jeremy Adam Thomson. Stephen R Thornton, Shawn Keegan 1ibbeus, Oysdo is wrong. But as we
our owti decisions, we must stand responsible fer lite mtroductions.
.
.
.
. .
tal. Rae.Tippie, Oayton Tromm, Oark A v..nMatre, Bridget Marie \lwghart,
their ramifii:alioui."
·
,·
Selections by the band directed by Toney Dingess included "In the Shirung of . Frances Lorraine Walker, Kimberly Dawn Wells, Melissa D. Weny, Bltbara Whit."Meip High has given us lhe time to form lasting bonds and true friendships . lite .Stars" by Robert Shekloh, and the alma mater, :~· and Gold" The .tington, Adam D.. Williams, K,a,ey Michelle Williams, Sara Jane Williams, Jared.
thlt will survive~ and ti111e,'~ said lite salutatorian, who nolcd lhal"every· Mctp HIP ~chorus 5;1"1 "I'll 'lllke You~
. ,
\\bods, Shari Renee Wrigh4 Jonathan David Wyatt, Jason It Young. and Irena
penon wilh whom we come into oontaCI will have an influence on our lives, and
&lt;;:!• hononuians .recoiJni2cd wm Lacy ~- Banks, Krisan Nioole Brown. E!nilova Zaneva. ·
that lltere is no friendship, no love, that can ever aoss out path without al;fecting M~~ ~U. Melt&amp; Ann Holman, ~tea Jo~ Rebecca_ M!IC Johnson, 1:.'11':!~----...,....-------~
us in some way." ·
·
.·
Krillina Mane Kennedy, Tamra Lee 0 Dell, Stefant LaDonna Pickens, Franco
.
Olniel Romuno, and Rebekah L,ynn Smith.
The class wu presented by Principal DeMis Eichinger to Jobn Hood, president of the Meip Local Boand of Education, who awarded diplomas to the
graduates. Stefani LaDonna Pickens, class secretary, read lhe class roll, and
Alysiln Ni'cole PatteniOO, vice president, g&amp;\'C the symbol of graduation. Tomas
J0111t1111 Lynch hlld lite benediction before the recessional played by lite band
Members of the graduating diSS were JeMifer Rose Anhur,l..acy Marie
Bankl, Cindy Renee Barnell, Jamie Barrell, Keith Lee Barrell, Jeremiah Lee
Bentley,,David Michael Bottomley, Cinda Bratton, Tabitha May Broob·Ohler,
Krillin .NK:ole Brown. Thomas Wesley Burson, Elizabeth Ann ~1,. Donald P..
Carnahan, Ausdn Paul Carr, Jimmy Joe Caruthers.
San Melian Castellano, Tracy Shalene Coffey, Timothy Eugene Colem111,
Rebecar Lea ColiiM, Kelly Michelle Connolly, Denise Ann Cotterill, llcn· .
j1111in Paul a-, Melissa Darnell, John Michael Davidson, Tricia Kay Davis.
Slaney It Day, Sarlh.Bcth Dean, Ryan E. [)ill, Paul). Ditty, Mea111 c. Drummer, Owles Egers.
Phillip Lee Erwin, Jr., Jessica Susan Evans, Benjamin J111tes Fowler,
- M1ny ~lhlpa .,. 1111c1e In high IOhool. Brandy LyM Ganpcr, Jerod Daniel Gil~ore. Randy Dale Haning. Daniel J . .
Some endu,. through the y....., otherl don't. 11leH bop, f1om Hlllnan, J11011 Andrew Harris, Edson DaVId Hart, Robert M. Hart, Tan Lynn
the left, Dlvld Stlllta Tom Burton. ..rohn Post, ·PhiHp !rWin lrld Hawley, Jennifer Blaine Heck, Ointon Bill Hendricks, Jessir:a Renee Hendman,
A
-To gat I'Mdy
the prcioce~llklonal
Jonllthln Wyatt of th~ 18111 llelgl High School gradilltlng clllei Chasity Renee Hess, Melissa Ann Holman, Steven Ray Hoover, Jr., Ointon grldUIIIon -*!mea tak• the touch of 1 mother. tter. Christy
.
Ramsburg tlkn 1 final look It her 1011, Ry1n, 0111 of Melga High·
..,. IU,. their frllrldlhlp will endu,. delplte the dllfllrent pll1h8 Lee Horn, Amber D. Huddleston.
they tlke In life. .
··
Jonalb111 l)ler Humphreys, Dwight W. Icenhower, Justin Gray Jeffers, School'l gl'lduat..

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ed to be satisfied w1th.nothing but the best

Meigs graduates challe

96 l:AVAI.IER ·.
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___________,.,..._____,,_____ ___ __._,_._.•..
..

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s h ~trc

98 EXPLORER·

,

a

fica tion fonn before the deadline,
which is noted on the fonn . Please
keep in mind that there were 29
applications from Galli a Cbunty, so
please contact me for certification at
740:446-7007 as soon as the pur;
chase is made, or the curing structure
is buih •.whichevcr the case may be.
Call of the·week- Last week,
for the first time since I arrived in
Gallia County, producers were discussing weather that was "too dry to
set tobacco. " There's no doubt that the
rain received last week was critical
for many crops already in the ground,
as well as those waiting to be set.
However, after three years of what

local producers called, "unusually"
wet planting seasons, I am inclined to
award this the comment(s) of the
week. Good luck with a safe and successful planting season.
(Jennifer L. Byrnes Is Gallla
County's extension agent lor agrl·
culture and natural resources,
Ohio State University.)

-

S111qlc Copy - 3~ C&lt;:!nl s

During sentencing, Crow disagreed that Priddy, represented by Athens attorney Jay Warns·
ley, was indigent and should not be fined.
"! personally believe he is not indigent,"
Crow said, before handing down the $15,000

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"Don't ever listen 10 someone
who tells you you can 'I do something."
That was the message given to
the 48 members ·of lhe Southern
High School aass·of 1999 during
baccalaureate and commence•
m~nt exercises Sunday evening in
Racine.
·
Speaker Rev, Rick Rule of the
fonntH" college studei1t Racine
First Baptist Church cited
gets four. years In prison numerous examples of people
UMA (AP)- A fOITRa' Bluffton who overC8llle adversity in their
College sbulent has '-t senlenot!d to lives including ~ve.rty (~braham
School Hnlor Chrtata Circla
four years in prison for setting a fire Lincol~), debolttatmg tll.nes~~s Is shown· here galling ready for
last year !hat sevaely burned her (Franklm I?· Roosevelt), disabth- Sunday nlght'a grlduation with
roommate.
ty (Ludwtg Von Beethoven), some 1Nistance from teacher Btlr·
Michelle Maaingly, 20, could have le~ing di~rders (Albert E.in· b1ra Beegle, l.rt, and gulclanc;e
been sentenced to 10 years in prison stem) and httle formal education counHior Shirley Slyre.
·
fer starting the Sept 24 fire, which ;!he (Benjamin Franklin).
Salutatorillli Kyra King briefly refiectMattingly,
·nttma suicide
the Columous
adn!ilted was
attempt.:..' 'C&lt;I on lhe grad~ 'Hchievements
subwb or Whitehall, was ientenced · cautlonell' them to usci their new freedom
Friday by Judge Richard Warm! of aiJd responsibility wisely.
""We had to learn wheh ·to say 'no'
·Allen County Common Pleas Court
when
we really wanted to say 'yes'," she
She had pleaded guilty to aggravated
said.
"Responsibility
became a word ihat
arson Mardll2
Her roommate, Christina Andulics, each of tis will kriow for lhe test of our
took lite wibtess stand wearing a skirt. lives. ••
She cited lhe wordS or Ralph Waldo
that showed leg injurieS from bu{I'L'I
Emerson
whQ.said, 'The reward of a thing
and skin grafts. Andulics suffered secwell done is to have it done."
ood-degree burns on her hands and
Ml think !hat fits us perfectly," she said.
legs from the fire.
"!'he reward we get for being here since

.

~ 7 50

-harchnidcrs, ir' th e average clos ing

Rainfall .g ives pepper producers
(Continued from 01)

. .

48 graduate from Southern High School Sunday

-

Armco with AK Steel Corp.,
the pnncipal subsiJ1ary of the holdI ll ~ cqmpany.
TI1c &gt;tuck-swap Jeal was va lued at
'~ &lt;2 million by che companies, or
n~c• rgc

PRIZE
- Gallipolis Career College admissions rep.resentatlve Jack Henl!on, right, presented Katie Stroop of Gal·
lipolis with a clock radio, won ati a prize In a drawing during the
recent Ohio Valley Expo. Summer quarter at GCC begins July 5.
For more Information, call 446·4367 or 1-800·214-o452.

A Rutland man who pleaded guilty last week
to a felony charge of possession of marijuana
was sentenced this morning on the charge in
Meigs County Common ~leas Court. ·
Fred M. Priddy, 47, 36103 Loop Road, was
sentenced to the maximum prison sentence of
eight years and fined $15,000 by Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow 111.
He was then remanded to the custody of
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Priddy pleaded guilty on May 17 following a
plea agreement reached between him and Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
Under the agreement, Priddy will face no addi·
tiona! charges in the matter and Lentes did not
seek to levy a fine on Priddy.
Priddy was arrested April 27 after a search of
·his residence and other properties yielded more
than 20,000 grams of marijuana.
During the search, officers confiscated
dozens of vehicles; firearms, and other items
they believe were involved in criminal activity.

-

that their ho:1rds have agreed to

;.

Hometown Newspaper

-

Tl1c two companies said Friday

... .

;

to next round of NBA

MtdcHeport • Pom t• t oy Olno

Nu111llf'1 ;' ,,,

.

nation's ftl'th-largc!'&gt;t ' steel mak9r.
woth yearly revenues of $4.1 hill ion.

.

Sports

Priddy sentenced to 8 years, $15,000 fiLne

:· MIDDLETOWN (AP) - A pro(inscd merger of AK Steel Holdin gs
Corp'. with Ann~:o Inc.. its former
parent company, wouiJ l'fcatc the

TVC track results, Page 4
Homesick coll-ege students, Page 7
Finding a united voice, Page 6

Today: Cloudy
High: 601; low: 40s

Area's Best IJsed tar Selection ·

Armco may merge
again with AK Steel

Mly24,111W

-

By MIKE SCHNEIDER
Associated Preas Writer
LAKELAND, Fla. - Hoping to
build a base of lifelong orange juice
drinkers, the Florida Department of
. Citrus is testing a marketing campaign aimed at children and teenagers.
During the first three months of
this year, the department spent
$450,000 on television ads and a
series of promotions in schools focus-

Monday

Sunday, May 23, 1999

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

�•

•

•

,:Commentary

,... .2

•

Monday, . . . . 1il0

'£sta6fislid in 1948
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740.ev2·2156 • Fax: 11112·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGEIT
Publlther
DIANE HILL
Controlt.r

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

from,...,.,_ on • broH,.,.,. Ottgplc.. Short ,.,.,.. (jt)D wotW or ,._,) Mv. lhll bN1 clulnw ol t.lng pc"'''-11«1.
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Thl Sentinel w.tcG~M•I«t.,. to lh• «&lt;ltor

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SJ~«IIy

vrou. alflcla or tanw. 11•11 to: Uff.,. to "'• «&lt;ftot, 'TPN Sentinelj

PomMoy, OhiD U16fl,· or, FAX to T«J-gfz-3161.

111 Cout1 St.,

:. Inflation is not a
joke, says the Fe.d
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AP)- Do they have fun at meetings of the Federal Open
Market Con•mittee?
·
It's possible, but those who attend seldom reveal such trivialities. They
are, it is said, too busy worrying.
You might think this is sad, especially in an economy where so many peo·
pie are having such a good time. Butlhe Fed's ,only doing its job, which is
to see that the good times don 't become bad.
·
They cjo this by setting short-term monetary policy - . they being the
seven governors of the .FederaJ .Reserve System, the head of the New York
Federal Reserve Bank, and presidents of four other Fed banks.
When the economy gets too hot .for its own good - such as, for exampie, when demand exceeds supply- they nudge interest rates higher. When
it 's too cool; they lower rates to generate heat.
The only humor most people can associate with such meetings is the
· .crack by Fed Chairman William McChesney Martin (1951-1970), that just
' as the party gets going, the Fed takes away the punchbowl.
Last week, the Fed again threatened to take away the punchbowl. Flick·
~ring signs of inflation were showing up, said Fed Chairman Al.an
'Greenspan. No fire yet, but he suggested we cool'it.
· Inflation has been mOderating (or several years, right under the watchfu.l
eye of a sometimes disbelieving Fed. But in recent months prices·have been
·stirring for some commodities, especially oil. · ·
1
That flicker, while perhaps only a temp\}rary thing, has been joined by
· other factors, most importantly a bottoming out of the Asian economic col'lapse and a continuation of high consumer demand.
·. Oil price' are basic to U.S. industrial m.ight. While ind~stry so far. has
··been · able to absorb higher energy prices, additional increases could force
companies to raise prices to maintain profits.
.
For its part, an Asian recovery might exert pressure on prices·by shrinking excess global production. And continued heavy spending by consumers
might strain supplies and lead to higher prices.
To the FOMC, such signs are akin to a message flashing on the comput· er screen or the ringing of the telephone as the neighbors become upset by
' ·lood noise at a late hour.
·
·
: . lnsomerespects.itisindeediateintheeconomicexpansionforsomuch
ninth year, and to many people

:~~i!iio~~i~~e;;~~!:!~r~r~'~!~en~~~~~~e~~

lly JIICII ~n
and Jan Moiler .
WASHINGTON •• In the
early 1990s, as government
investigators were searching
for an explanation of the Penlagon's propensity to buy
$600 dollar toilet seats and
$500 dollar screwdrivers,
they found a c:Qmpelling clue: Overly cozy ties
between the Department of Defense and its out·
side contractors. The wheels o.f these wulcful
~als w~ being creased by former hip-rankingofficers who retired into.. lucrative jobs with
defense contractors.
Although the Pentagon saw plenty of bad press
over th~se incidents·· and now pays less for its
screwdriverS ·· the revolving door is still spinning
throughout the gov.emment. .
..
Take the DeJlilrtment of Agriculture, for exampie. The most recent USDA.
·
employee to draw criticism is Ann
Marie McNamara, ·formerly a top
scientist in the agency's food safe- .
ty and inspection program who
now works for the food company
Sara Lee.
At the time she accepted the job
with Sara· Lee, McNamara was .
investigating a Listeria monocytogenes outbreak that the Centers for .
Disease Control and Prevention
had linked to her new employer.
The contamination causeq more
than 100 illnesses. 21 deaths and
six miscarriages.
· "It is unsettling that someone at
this level at USDA would do this,"
Heather Klinkhamer, program
director for Safe Tables Our Priority, ·told the Detroit Free Press. "It
makes you wonder how objective
she was in her duties, when she's
negotiating to be an employee at
.. this company." McNamara was
unavailable for comment.
McNamara is hardly alone.
Througho'ut the government, top
officials routinely leave behind
their watchdog roles to take better·
paying .jobs with · the ind 11stries
they once regulated .. There is no
Jaw against this, and it's rarely newsworthy
enough to mention. But the accumulated effect of
this revolving door may be more insidious than
the. age-old tradition. of former members of Con·'
gress trading on their access as lobbyists. •
For one thing, anyone who lobbies Congress
must disclose their clients and the issues they're
working on. But those who lobby federal agencies
face no such requirements. And while former
members of Congress are mostly valued for their
· connections, ex-bureaucrats bring expert, inside
knowledge of the agencies they once worked for.
·
·

But not to the Fed. And maybe not to those folks who raised families By LAURAN NEERGAARD
'amid the double-digit inflation of the 1970s and the recessions that followed. · AP Medical Writer
· During the long eXpansion, structural improvements were· made in the
WASHINGTON (AP) .- It's
American economy, the most sig~ificant being advanced technology that · commonly called ringing m the ears,
, .at lowed companies· to hold down prices and still profit while paying work· but for millions of people who suffer
: ~s more. Price-cutting became rou(ine·and expected.
tinnitus, the sound that plagues them
• : . Much of the higher take-home pay went for purchases. The savings rate may instead be a buzz or hiss or chirp
: .fell while consumers loaded up on stuff, merchants thrived and stocks or high-pitched whistle.
. :Soared ..People felt confident, buying houses and cars at record 'rates. Still,
An estimated 50 million Ameri: :prices didn't rise; productivity saw to that.
.
.
cans hear those phantom sounds con: · ·The decade of the·1990s has been so extraordinary that the whispers ·of a tinuously, although for most it's just
: :Oew efagrow louder, which in itself is considered by some to be a warning an annoyance. But for 12 million
• J;ign. Add it to those already cited.
people, the incessant noise becomes
: · While not particularly enjoying the scene, the Fed refrained last week d~bilitating enough to seek medical
: :Crom putting a damper on the party. But, Greenspan warned, if the celebra· help, according to the Americ!IJI Tin- ·
· }ion doesn't cool down, the Fed will be tempted to act.
nitus Association.
.:: That would be June 29 and 30, the next meeting of the FOMC, where the
· They can suffer sleep deprivation
; j()kes will be few and the worries many.
or depression. Tinnitus can ruin farn·
••
·
ily relationships. Occasionally, it
even pushes sufferers·to suicide.
!:
.
There is no cure- and tinnitus is
; 8y The·Associated Press
on the rise, due in part to ear damage
; : Today is Monday, May 24, the !44th day of 1999. There
221 days left from our increasingly noisy society.
• jn the year.
.
.
Loud ~oise is a chief culprit in tinni; · Today's Highlight in History:
·
tus, as anyone whose ears have rung
;: On May 24, 1844, Samuel F. B. Morse tran smitted the message, "What at least temporarily after a rock con•)lath God wrought!" from Washington to Baltimore as he formally opened cert can attest.
.
; America's first telegraph line.
But an Emory University prof"!'·
~: On this date:
sor says many patients can retrain
~ ThOUQ
L.o~~oln819, Queen Victoria was borp i~ their brains to recognize: their ear-

:Today In History

are

ht

;for Today:
~·

,.

U

'Alan z"s

th~nu~~~~·~~:,!rs~e~~;e~~;c:ai~~~d~~
Baltimore and Elliott's Mills, Md.

ADMISSION

LONtRS

' corporate
their duties ' and· rep!&amp;Qed ·them ,with
meatpackers.
.
Rodney Leonard, who headed food inspection employees.
• , ·
.
.
.
Taylor then left USDA for another brief stint
under Lyndon Johnson, told our associate Ashley
Baker that TexasA&amp;M is "notOrious for its indus- with King &amp; Spalding before taking his current
try connections. The whole thrust of their pro- job with M!)nsanto as vice president of public pol·
gram ~as been deregulation." One of the rewards icy.
.
for Texas· A&amp;M was to become the train1ng
Says Monsanto spokesman Lisa Watson when
grounds for FSJS workers, using a multi-million tisked if there is a conflict: "There's an office of
dollar grant from USDA to train meat inspectors: government ethics, and they hav~ very detailed
"Musical chairs is part of the history of the .rules. And all of the tenets of those rules have
department, particularly in meat and poultry been observed ...
inspection," said Leonard. "People come out of Copyright 1WI, United Feature SyncllC81e, Inc.

ringing as no .more annoying than the noise, like an explosion, a concert or
refrigerator humming in '!le back· pulsating boom box, a plane taking ·
ground of your home.
off, lawn mowers and 'other power
It's called tinnitus retraining thera- tools.
py, and the key is using other faint
Even one-time exposure to a real;
sounds, sometimes called "white Jy loud noise commonly causes ternnoise," to adjust how patients' brains porary tinnitus. But chronic exposure
perceive and react to the abnormal . risks persistent ringing in the ears.
sound.
Experts say the best protection is pre"It's very simple," explains Pawel vention - tum down the volume or
Jastreboff, who introduced the wear earplugs.
approach in the early .1990s but now,
But tinnitus isn't a novelty of the
as director of Emory's new tinnitus super-loud 20th century. It's been
center, is training numerous doctors described for hundreds for years. And ·
.to use it. "All of our senses, includ· it can be a side effect of numerous
ing hearing, are based on contrast medications, or the consequence of a
from background.... If you introduce blow to the head or an ear infection.
another sound, then the first sound
Scientists are studying an area of
seems to be not as loud."
the brain called the auditory cortex
He fitS severe patients with small that helps process signals from the
hearing aid-like devices 10 deliver ears and behaves abnormally in tinnifaint sounds, like running water or a Ius sufferers, in hopes of understand·
low hum, for up to 18 months. Over ing what makes the. ringing continue
that time, their brains arc supposed to so maybe it could be blocked.
become so used to focusing on the
But Jastre\X&gt;ff says for now, "it's
new sounds that they're not paying possible to help really a majority of
attention to the ringing.
patients" with sound therapy.
Doctors don't understand · what
· Patients who have a strong emocauses tinnitus. But they do know tiona! response to the ringing seem to
. thatthem~t common trigger is loud . suffer most, so he teaches them about

how the ·~n ~mea IOUild. and·
ways to (:ope,·helping them to relax.
Then Jastreboff introduces sound
therapy. Some people iry 10 mask tin·
nitus with louder noise, but he stresses very faint sounds; too low·to inter·
fere even with a telephone convel18·
lion. "You'll never achieve habitualion· if you block tinnitus," he con·
tends.
In fact, the noise is so faint some
people forget they're wearing the
devices. "I've had some people jump
in a swimming pool and make a total
mess cif their sound generators," las·
treboff said.
The patient's severity determines
th~ sound.
.
Some succeed with hearing aids to
amplify everyday sounds over the ear
ringing. But the majority get the
behind-the-ear sound generators,
emitting just enoup noise for the
brain to sense.
Jastreboff has published · studies
&amp;uggesting the approach helps up to
80 percent of patients get significant
relief. Studies from Britain and Australia also suggest it helps, although
not quite as much.
.

It d.oes.n't say the lawyer has to be awake

In 1881, some 200 people died when the By Nat Hentofl
,
lions, constitutional ·violations colleagues felt any shame that people were con·
Canadian ferry " Princess Victoria'' sank
Since 1995, the Texas Court of Criminal
or other serious injustices may demned to death while their lawyers slept. It is
near London, Ontario.
Appeals has been responsible, under Texas Jaw,
never come to light and ·be not fair to blame the judges, McCormick said.
r,. •
In 1883, the Brooklyn Bridge, linking for appointing "competent counsel': to represent
remedied," Bript charges.
Elisabeth 'Semel broke in to remind Judge
"~
' .
Brooklyn and Manhattan, was opened to inmates on death row in state post-conviction pro·
Texas leads the states in exe- McCormick that the courts, including his court,
(
traffic.
ceedings.
cutions ··over 170 since 1976, "have independent supervisory power to enforce
Jn· 1941, the German battleship "BisIn February, federal judge · Orlando Garcia
with 20 inmates having been the Constitution, and when ·legislatures fail to
marck" sank . the British dreadnought called the appointment of an inexperienced
dispatched last year. There are fund qualifiC&lt;:)Jawyers, it is .the responsibility of
'
. .
"Hood" in the North Atlantic.
lawyer in a Texas case "a cynical and reprehensinow over 400 on death row, the court not to allow this miscarriage of justice."
In 1958, United Press International was ble attempt to expedite (the inmate's) execution at
and their prospects are indica!·
Stephen Bript then noted that the Louisiana
· -Anton Chellhov, Russ- formed through a merger of the United the expense ofall semblance of int~grity. ~·
.
ed
by
'Bright
when
he
emphasizes
that
"even
Suprenie
Court did rule that when a particular
•
len euthor-dremstlst Press and the International News Service. ·
On the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals itself, when shocking injustices have been brought to . defender .program had overwhelming caseloa~,
(1860-1904).
In 1976, Britain· and France opened ~ dissenting judge, Morris Overstreet, said the the court's attention, the court has upheld death prosecution of those defendants could not cohlln·
transatlantic Concorde service to Washing- court's refusal to hear a capital case because a sentences."
,
ue until the legislature provided sufficient funds
, ton.
.
lawyer had failed to file within·the 180-day dead·
When the court refused a stay of execution on for effectivc .counsel. And the legislature then did
In 1977, in a surprise move, the Kremlin ousted'Soviet President Nikolai line "borders on barbarism because such action a' defendant's plea of incompetent counscl, Judge fund a statewide defender program.
; P&lt;;Jclgorny from the_Communist Party's ruling Politburo.
punishes the appli'cant for his lawyer's tardiness." Overstree~ dissenting, warned that his coll~es
Thirty-six years ago, the Supreme Court, in
·
.
In
1980,
Iran
reJected
a
call
by
the
World
Court
in
The
Hague
to
release
Stephen
Bript,
who
has
represented
defen·
would
"have
blood"
on
their
hands.
Such
'soft
Gideon
vs. Wainwript, ruled unanimously that
1
I tlte American hostages.
dants on death row for 20 years, points out that on crime" judges do not do well in Texas elec- the Constitution requires the appointment o(
~ Ten years ago: China's top army command published a Jetter strongly the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals "has upheld lions. Overstr~t is gone.
counsel for indigent defendants. Counsel who are
~ supporting hardline Premier Li Peng,.who was reportedly locked in a power at least three death scntences from Houston in
In March, the University of Maryland School not able to stay awake during the trial was .not
;struggle with rival factions who opposed his strong stance against student which the lawyer fcir the defendant slept during of Law held a session on "Tile death penalty and what the Supreme Court had in mind.
; prptesters.
.
·
.
.
the. trial."
.
. the right to counsel." Among those on t!te panel
Curiously, al"'oup the national preas is pay: ··Five years ago:' Four men convicted of bombing New York's World Trade
Presiding over one of those trials, state district were Michael McCormick, prealdinaijudae of the ina persistent attention to Texas aovernor Qeorge
,, Center were each ·sentenced to 240 years in prison. The. United States and judge Doug Shaver.explained that "the Constitu· ·. Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; Steph.!n Bright; W. Bush, no re)X!rter, so far as ll!Jtow, has asked
:·Japan agreed to revive .efforts to pry open Japanese markets to u.s. goods.
tion docsn 't say the lawyer has to be awake." and Elisabeth Semel, the director of the Am~rican him to ·comment on hisstate's wholesale .violation
) One year.ago; A Greek film, "Eternity and a Day," won the Golden Palm Bright notes that this gives new meaning to the Bar Association's death-penalty representation .of Oideon and the Sixth Amendment •• with the
; at the 51st Cannes Film Festival, while the runner-up Grand Prize went to term "dream team."
project.
··
. resultant "barbarism" of the criminal juatice sys~ "Life is Beautiful," directed by and starring Italy's Roberto Benigni.
Bript adds that the Texas Court of Criminal
Judge Mc(:ormick, answering· Bright's tern in the Lone Star State. Does Gov. Bush have
Today's Birthdays: Comedian Tommy Chong is 61. Singer.Bob Dylan is Appeals, in assigning "completely unqualified charges, noted that it is the Texas legisl.ature that anything to say about this? Will the Sunday·
,. sa. Actor Gary Burghoff is 56. Singer Patti LaBelle is 55. Actress Priscilla and incompetent lawyers," has appointed some has the power to provide adequate funding so that morning television talk-show hosts or guests
:Presley is 54. Countty singer Mike Reid is 52. Actor Alfred Molina is 46. who "file pleadings that fail to present any qualified lawyers ·can be persuaded to defend eventually ask Bush that question?
;'Singer Rosanne Cash is 44. Ac'tress Kristin Scott Thomas is 39. Actor- issues."
indigents on death row, and that in other respects
Nat Hentoff Ia a nationally renowned
!dancer Gene Anthony Ray is 36. Rock musician Vivian Trimble is 36. Rap"Many of those being put to death in Texas the legislature sets the ruleS •• like the 180-day authority on the l'lrat Amendment and the reel
·
· the1r
· de adl'tne •·~r fil'
of the Bill of Rlght8.
;per-recording executive Heavy Dis 32. Rock musician Rich ~obinson
(The ·have never h-"
... a competent ·1awycr review
I tng ~ppea1s on-. an . attorney has
. CopyrtglltiWI
Nl!WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN
· Black Crowes) is 30. Actor Billy L. Sullivan ("Something So Rjght") is 19. case at any time. As a result, wrongful convic, been appotnted. Bnght asked htm 1f he and h1s
·
~ :.

....

lY.ll

What he

.....

~~~ believes."

j,

Pt. Cloudy

I

~

Herman Lawson

.1 ColumbUII 144·/IZ"

Showtrl

T·ltonN

Alin

F1urrJM

••
.

""
"·"' ..."
leo

..., . . .

Cool, cloudy conditions
nue through Tuesday
I

Herman L. Lawson, 88, of Pomeroy, died on Saturday, May 22, 1999 at
tlie Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
He was born on September 6, 1910 in Gallipolis, son of the late Albert
and Clara M. Jones LawSQn. He was a cabinet maker, and was retired from
Columbus Showcase.
Surviving are two sons and a daughter-in-Jaw: Robert L. Lawson, Columbus, and Edwin E. and WJIIowdene Lawson, Arizona; two daughters· and a
. son-in-Jaw: Clara M. and Orrin Buckley, Columbus, and K.ltherine A. Stewart, Columbus; a brother, Charles LaW1Qn of New London; Wis.; two sisters.
· ·-Rulli Young, Columbus, and Lois Ferguson; Columbus; 11 grandchildren, 23
·great granc)childi'en arid 3 great-great grandchildren.
· Besides ·his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife, Mary F.
Hazlett Lawson, his second wife, Goldie Lawson, five brothers, two sisters,
. and his stepmother, Carrie Lawson.
A private family burial will be held at Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens in
Columbus. There will be no visitation.
Memorial contributions may be made to a favorite charity. ·

By Tha Aatoclatlld Pl'ltss .
.
.
The cold, wet weather is expected to continue across Ohio on Tuesday.
Temperatures may not climb out of the 50s, forecasters said.
.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s.
·.
·
Conditions should start to improve slightly on Wednesday, the Nation.
al Weather Service said.
A high pressure system building in the west should bring conditions
back to normal later in the week.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 90 degrees in 1975 while the record low was 36 in 1956. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:47 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:09 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Variable cloudiness. Lows in the mid 40s. West wiru;llO to 15
mph.
Tuesday...Variable clou!liness. A .chance of sho~ers in the afternoo~.
Highs in the mid and upper 60s.
. Tuesday night.;.Mostly cloudy with a chance pf showers. Lows in the
upper40s.
·
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 70s.
·
Thursday... Partly cloudy with a chance o( showers. Lows in 'the upper
40s and highs in the mid 70s.
_
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in the lower
70s.

"9!leVISIOn carts

Repair kits offered

"'
5251 ). The model numbers are on
the .inSb'llction ~klet that ~.ccompa.~I~S the cart, and the. name Saud·
er 1~ o~ the caste~ or on a metal
plate ms1de the cart.s door.

WASHINGTON (AP) - ,The
·manufacturer of some 2 million oak·
television carts that pose a danger of
lipPing over is offering a repair kit to
keep them upright.
Sauder Woodworking Co. of
Archbold, Oh'io, has received 13
· reports. of carts tipping and televi·
sions falling - in one case fractur·
ing the skull of a 3-year-old girl, the
.federal Consumer Product Safety
Commission said Sunday.
"This.is a hidden danger that you
.might not be aware of until it's too
.late,'' said commission chai..Woman
Ann Brown. ·
The ready-to-assemble carts can
. hold both a 1V set and a video cas·
,sette recorder.
They feature a swivel on which
.the television can rest atop the .cart
.and a bottom shelf with hinged double doors. ·
Involved in the recall are carts in
brown oak (model 5155), black .oak
.(modei50.5S) and white oak (model

Wilma
Stover
.

52 \\lecb,., ................. ,,,,,,.$10S.S6

-Ou-MolpCOUiy
13 \¥1eb ........................... .S:l9.2S
3' \¥eeti............. ,............. J56.68 '
5lV..b ..........................StO!it.n

Carleton Mentott.l Schol•rshlp •ppllcBtlons sv.llllbiB
Applications for the 1999 Carleton Memorial Scholarships for hiper
education are now available to qualifying residents of the Village of Syracuse from Janice Zwilling, Carleton College Board of Trustees secretary.
They can be obtained from Mrs. Zwilling at her Third Street residence,
or at the water department office in the Syracuse Municipal Building.
Deadline for returning the completed applications to Mrs. Zwilling is
June 21. Applications submitted after the deadline date will not be coasidered.
·

Announcements:
Season tickets on sale
Season tickets for admission to London Pool, Syracuse, are now on
sale. Through June S, those who buy one ticket at the full price of $25 for
the season can purchase a second ticket for half price. The tickets·will be
on sale at the pool from 8 a.m. to 3:30p.m. each day. Brenda Neutzling is
the manager for the pool which will open Memorial Day weekend.
A community music and praise session will be held at the RL~S
Church located on the Portland-Racine Road. ·The public is invited to
attend the Friday, 7 p.m. event. Several groups and individuals to provide
music including The Whites, The Daileys, and The Carmel Chur~h
Group. Refreshments will be s.. . ved.

Homecoming planned
The Snowville United Methodist Church homecoming will be held at
11 a.m. on June 26. There will be a picnic luncheon.

Board meeting changes ·
The May 25 meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education has been
canceled. The regular meeting on June 8, 7 p.m., will be held at Meigs
High sChool.

Club to meet

.

Group sets session

Caring and shanng ~upport group will meet ·Th.ursday at 1 p.m. at the
Meigs Multipurpose Center. Speaker will be James Soulsby on telephone
·
scams and·£raud. ·

Continued from Pill• 1
never quit, no matter how bleak the
circumstal\(:es. Do not allow others
to bring you to a· lower level.
Remember Phillipians 4:13: 'I can
do all things through Christ, which
strengtheneth me ~."
.
Little quoted Theodore Roosevelt
who said, "Far better it is to dare
mipty things, to win glorious lri·
umphs, though checkered by failure,
than to take rank with those poor
spirits who neither enjoy much nor
suffer much, because they Jive in the
gray twiliptthat knows not victory
.nor defeat."
Ashli Cecile Davis, class presi·
dent, gave the welcome, followed by
an invocation by Rule ·and the
Pledge of Allegiance Jed by Jody
Hupp, student council president.
Choir members, directed by
Choir Director Greg Vance and
accompanied by Jocelyn Bailey,
sang 1 Will Come to You and Just

AA will meet in open session at the Syracuse Carleton School Tuesday,
Remember.
Following the addresses. students
7 p.m. and again at 7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 161 Mul·
were recognized by Principal Gor·
berry Avenue, 7 p.m. Thursday. AI-Anon will rrieet at the same hour.
don Fisher. Honorarians recognized
were TereSa Dawn ·Bush, Jennifer .
Lynn Carleton, Christa Nichole Circle, Joshua Craig Ervin. Suzanne
Michelle Evans, Virginia Marie
· "The objectives are, simply slat· ·
Howerton, Jeremiah Ryan Johnson, · By TOM RAUM
.
ed, not easily achieved,'' Albright
Tara Michelle Norman, Jason Paul All80clatlld Pl'lt88 Wrltar
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Two
said
in Senate testimony last week.
Roush and Kimberly Lynn Sayre.
months
into
NATO
airstrikes
against
A
more optimistic assessment
The seniors were presented by
Yugoslavia;
Clinton
administration
came
from
NATO's air commander,
Superintendent James Lawrence to .
officials
insist
the
bombing
is
work·
Air
Force
Lt.
Gen. Michael C. Short;.
Douglas Little, member . of the ·
Southern Local Board of Education, ing. A little more time, a little mo(C who S!lid' in an interview in today's
patience, will finish the job.'
Washington Post that he believes
who presented diplomas.
But
what
if
they
are
wrong,
and
Serb forces in Kosovo will be routed
Receiving diplomas were: Jason
Yugoslav
President
Slobodan
Milo~
by bombing raids ·alone within two
Thomas Allen, Timothy Scott
sevic
refuses
to
budge
as
his
country
months .•
Brinager, Teresa Dawn Bush, Robert
crumbles?
He
has
shown
few
signs
"If you are getti.ng pounded ~Y. BThomas Card, Jennifer Lynn Carof
capitulating,
and
diplomacy
has
1s
and
B-52s and A-lOs are chasing
leton, Christa Nichole Circle,
you every day, and if you know that
Rebecca Nicole Congo, Bridget not worked. ·
With
the
Serbs
dug
in,
even
some
·
every
time you move you are liable
Renea Cross, Ashli Cecile Davis,
of
the
most
ardent
supporters
of
to
be
hit, at some point your spirit
.Sara Beth Ervin, Joshua Craig
NATO's
air
war
have
begun
to
will
break,
particularly if you are not
Ervin, Suzanne Michelle Evans;
express
reservations
or
at
least
getting
any
help from Belgrade,"
Tiffany Jeanette Gallagher,
admit
the
going
is
tougher
than·
Short
told
the
newspaper.
'
Woodrow Wilson Hall Ill, Julia
expecied.
Some
suggeSt
the
adminisDanielle Hensler, · Harmony Jane
A universal exposition was held
Hill, David Troy Hoback, Virginia · tration appears indecisive, The pace
in
Brussels, Belgium, in 1935 .. It
Marie Howerton, )ody Raye Hupp, of the military operation also has
attracted 20 million visitors.
·
Josie Elizabeth Jarrell, Jeremiah come' into question.
''I
think
the
Apache
helicopter
Ryan Johnson, Michael David Johnson, Robert Lee Johnson; Kara.Ruth has become sort of the symbol for
ineptitude right now," said· Sen.
King,
Joseph
Biden of Delaware, the senior
Patricia Jane Lawrence, Jerry
John Lewis, Jesse Clayton Little, Democrat on the Senate foreign
Michael Brent Manley, Benjamin Relations Committee.
The . 24 .attack helicopters were
Ryan Manuel, Regina Jo Manuel,
Lisa Ann McGhee, Jerrod Ray . sent to Albania several weeks ago
Mills, Jennifer Kay Morris, David wit)) great fanfare, but they have yet
Richard Nance, Tara Michelle Nor- ·to be used in Kosovo.
Daily damage reports from the
man,
Sarah Belinda Rot1ls, Jason Paul Pentagon and NATO headquarters in
Rouah, Kimberly Lynn Sayre, Billie Brussels detail the allies' successes
Jo. Sellers, Jessica Renee Smith, since the attacks began March 24:
Travis Richard Smith, April bridges, military buildings, airfields,
PHANTOM MENACE JPG)
facilities,
all
Michelle Snider, Jessica Michelle communication
7:DQ, 8:~ 6 12:15 FAI/SAT
·
Theiss, Mitchell Allen, Walker, smashed.
7:00 I 8:40 SUN-ll;IURS
Such tallies do not really reflect
Trisha Irene Warner, Adam Charles
IIAnNEES SAT/SUN
Williams, Matthew Christopher Wil· the situation in the Serbian province,
11:00,1:40.4:20
says John Hillen, an analyst with the
son and Rebecca Sue Wolfe.
NO
NO BARGAIN NIGHT
private
Center
for
Strategic
and
LOST &amp; FOUND (PG13)
Photo helps family
International Studies. He likens the
7:20 I 8:20 DAILY
find missing member . reports to military briefings during
CINClNNA11(AP)-Anewspaper the Vietnam War.
photograph helped reunite a man with
"We're told, 'We hit three bridges ·
relatives who had mt heard from him in today.' That's as .irrelevanl to what's
31 years.
.
actually happening in Kosovo as the
~m Jones, 63, has tived for nine ·.
· yeara .in a downtown boarding house, daily body count was to what was
happening in Vietnam," Hillen said.
the Fort~ Hotel. The OncinSecretary of State Madeleine
nati Enquirer published a front-pejlC pic7:00 I 8:20 DAILY
Albright
and other administration
tuno of Jones with a story Thursday
. MAnNEES SAT/SUN 1:00 I 3~
about the pellllin¥ sale.of the 112-year- officials continue to say the airstrikes
old building that houses low-income are taking a heavy toll on Milosevic's forces and will eventually force
tenants.
One of his daushtcrs. who tives in him to agree to NATO's peace terms.
Hig.bland County about 50 f11ilcs north· But administration officials also are
- of Cincinnaii, saw the picture and aware of time pressures.
rccognizod die tilther ~ losl al • 3.

Two months into bombing, more
questions about U.S. strategy

~~1-

D&amp;H
Garden Center

113160 s. R 338

Portland, Ohio
(740) 843-1252
.
.

Reader Set v1ces

\Viety of 'liees, Shrubs, Flowers,
Ptrennials A Annuals Amish Furniture,

Corre.."11on Polley

BirdHouses

&lt;OJOtera • llllllorlel II to bo .

O.r -

.

Praise time set

Southern High School ... . AA to meet

Meigs EMS logs 28 calls

The Daily Sentinel

•

......... llr•• u.w "' ....... I• •

.....,, rail ... - · - •• (7..) , , .

215!. We wll dJock rowr lift.......,

old

•*

1 c:om&lt;tlll

i

H womolld.

NIWI Dapartniantll

no •t• •-ber 11 tn-2155•.o.,.n•n•e•~•••n:

Gncrat Mo. . .t ................ _....J:aL UOl

Ntw~ .............................................Ext. 1.101

.

or ElL UN

Othlll' &amp;.vices

. Atlwtl1Joloa................. ...............Ext. 1104

Clacalat.............:.:...._ ..,, ..........lxl. 1103 ·
~ Ad&amp;.............................Eai.lfotl

,,

..•

Local

. The Riverview Garden Club, 8 p.m. Thursday at the home of Delores
frank. Program by Maxine Whitehead.

Wilma L. Stover, Cheshire, died on Sunday, May 23, 1999 at Holzer
Medical Center in Oallipolis. Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Puneral Home in Middleport.

Units of the Meigs County Emer· department to Middleport Hill,
gency Medical Service recorded 28 brush fire, no injuries reported.
calls for assistance Friday, Saturday
POMEROY
and Sunday. Units responding
12:06 p.m. Friday, VFD to
included:
·
Pomeroy Pike, automobile fire, no
. . CENTRAL DISPATCH
injuries reported;
1:50 a.m. Friday, Pooler Road,
8:54 p.m. Friday, VFD to ·spring
Tuppers Plains, Viola Garder, Veter- Avenue, brush fire, no injuries
ans Memorial Hospital;
reported;
•
10:46 a.m. Friday, Pine Orove
7:32 · a.m. Sunday, Country
Road. Racine, Howard Newland, Mobi.Je Home Park, Myrria Unrows,
. VMH;
VMH.
R;\CINE
1:08 p.m. Friday, Fifth Street,
11 :30 a.m. Friday, Elmwood Ter·
Racine, Ivan Powell, Holzer Medrace, Opal·Cummings, PVH;
ical Center;
,
6:08p.m. Friday, state Ro11te 338,
3:35 p.m. Fri4ay, Riebel Road,
Chester, Sarah Hill, treated at the . John Rhodes, treated at the scene;
8:4C} p.m. Friday, Broadway and
scene;
12:35 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy Vine streets. Vicki Norman, VMH;
9:.52 p.m. Friday, Condor Street,
Police -Department, Anthony DoerPomeroy,
Chris Haner, treated at the
fer,.treated at the scene;·
1:17 p.m. Saturday, Ash Street, 5cene.
RUfLAND
Syracuse,
Donna Smith, HMC;
(IJSPS 113-Hil
11:32 · a.m. Saturday, . Salem
COIQIII!Ihy NN'Iflper llalt'ap, IDe.
4 p.m. Saturday, Counlry Mobile
Home Park, Darwin, Myrna Lin- Street, Charles Eads, HMC. Central
Publilbed every ofternooo, Mondly t!Houp
Dispatch squad assisted;
rows, treated altlie scene;
Fridly, Ill Ccut Sl., p..,.,.y, Ohio, by 1be
Obio VAlley_ Publilbi•&amp; Comp~~~y. Second clUJ
·.5:46 a.m. Sunday; Village Manor
7:26 p.m. Saturday, West Main
pollaJII paid 11 Pomeroy, Oblo.
.
Ap~ments,
Middleport, Darlene
Street,
Po~r!)y,
motor-vehicle
'aci:iMllllhm 1'tie Alloclalod Preu ud die Oblo .
Jllt:WJPII)el'
Auociation.
Johnson,
VMH.
.
4ent,
Todd
Evans,
tre.ated
at
the
. , . ._
__
lddJell correcltOIIt 10 The
SYRACUSE
scene;
Dolly Seolinol, ttl C..n St., Pome10y, Ohio
45769.
•
4:40 p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
· 12:12 a.m. SJ!nday, West Main
SUIISCRIPTIO~ RATES
Street, Pomeroy, James Biggs, treat- Rehabilitation Cent~r, Pomeroy,
Shelley Otworth, VMH.
ed at the scene;
One~-~:.~~~-~~200
One MOOMb ................................$8.70
TUPPERS PLAINS
5:35
a.m.
Sunday,
Carleton
One Yw. ................................ St04.00
2:48
p.m. Saturday, Union
Syracuse,
Maxine
Varian,
Street,
' SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dlily. ........................ ,,.. ,, ......... 3S Ccntl
Avenue,
Pomeroy,
Neal Bonecutter,
HMC. Syracuse squad assisted;
Subecriben not de:lirinato pay tbe carrier may ·
VMH,
Central
Dispatch
.. squad
.7:19 a.m. Sunday, West Shade
,remit in~ direcnD The Dlily Senlinel on
Road, Chester, Juanita Spencer, St. assisted; .
• three. lix or 12 montb buis. Cndil wiD be
&amp;Jven &lt;arrif:r ueh week.
3:37 p.m. Saturday, slate Route
Hospital, Tuppers Plains
Joseph's
No Mblaiption by mail permlned in areas
124,
Daniel Young, VMH;
squad
asSisted;·
wberc borne carrier 5er'l'ice i1 available. .
Publilher meMt tbe riabltO adjllll ra1es dur·
4:20
p.m. Saturday, Success
8;03 p.m. Sl!nday, Wehe Terrace,
ina the .ut.aipdon p~riod . S.blalption fltt
Road,
Kyle
Sinclair, Cabell-Hunl·
Pomeroy, Lisa Haggy, VMH;
cbMipo lillY be impttOIODIOd by c:blnaiiJ Jilt
ington
Hospital
via heliCO)ller ambud'""lon of lbe IUblcriptoo.
9:39 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Middleport, lohq lance;
MAJLSUBSCRIPTIO!I
6:49 p.m. Sunday, state Route
llllldtMolpC..oly
Nelson, Pleasant valley Hospit~l.
124, Elva Reed, Camden-Clark
13 Weeki.......................... :J27 .30
· MIDDLEJIORT
26 w.eu ........".................553.82
6:05 p.m. Friday, volunteer fire Memorial Hospital.

'"'
I;

J •

o• ••· ~••
.....
~ny

Th era p·y for
1·.· g ·ng
1 . . ··n
1. the
. torm e· nt·ng
.• r·n
;. ...e·ars
.

.

-

[ Manlltold [44'/80'

SHOW
$~

Nellie Maude Carney, 106, Middleport, fonnerly of Charleston, W.Va.,
and Tornado, W.Va., died Sunday, May 23, 1999 in the Overbrook Center,
Middleport.
.
Born Feb. 14, 1893 in Kaylong, W.Va., daughter of the late Jacob and
Adeline Reynolds Cower, she was a housewife.
She was also preceded in death by her hiiSband. Ivan Carney, the owner
of Carney Furniture in Charleston, in 196.8.
.
.
Surviving are a foster son, Dale Raines of Charleston; a SJSter-m-law,
Dorothy Roberts of Charleston; and nieces and nephews.
Services will be 10 a.m. Wedneaday in the Fogle~ng Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va.,' with Luther Raines and Earle Newmiller offiCiating. Burial
will be in the Grandview Memorial Park, Dunbar, W.Va. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Tuesday, May 25
forecast for

GUN

FELON~

Nt!llie Maude Carney

Ohio weather

That can be a big help to corporations looking to industty, slay two or three years, do a httle more
slide away from a cumbersome regulation or tearing down, and then leave and go back to
enforcement action.
'
industty or to consulting."
Because neither the USDA nor Sara Lee have
But USDA, it seems, is rather uninteres.ted in
been able to pinpoint the source of conlamination potential corlOicts of interest. Before commg to.
that prompted the recall, the company also said it the agency, Michael Taylor had worked for the
will voluntarily pay $1 million for resear&lt;;h on Food and Drug Administration. "0il~ at FDA,
how to improve meat inspection. The research Taylor decided •• over strong obje~tlons from
will be conducted by a group of uns~cifieq "out· public health advocates ·• that genetically modiside scientists"·and a second team at 1Georgetown fied foods need not be labeled as such .
University.
·
Taylor's past provides a possible explanation.
Dr. Uatet Crawford, executive director of' the Before joinjng the FDA, Taylor had worked ·at
Georptown fOIICI safety center, is' also the former Kina &amp; Spaldina. the D.C laiV firm that.reprt·
administrator of the USDA's Food Safety and sented Monsanto, the leading producer of geneti·
Inspection Service. Crawford carne to his USDA cally modified seeds.
post from Texas A&amp;M,the Department's pipeline
After leaving the FDA for the USDA, Taylor
for food inspectors. Upon leaving the Depart- ·worked closely with meatpackers to develop and
ment, Crawford spen~ four years working for the implement the most radical •• and detrimental ··
National Food Processors Association, a consor- changes to·meat inspection in 90 years. The new
tium of food processors 1111d buyers that includes rules have s!fipped hundreds of inspectors from
·
·

COLLECTORS $=:;:PSYCHOFATHS $ ~

Death Notices

Weathe·r

The Daily Sentinel Revolving door·between watchdogs, industry

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May 24,1999

OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, MAY 29
1bts week stop in and sign up for drawtn$s of

Rocky Boots and an Amtsb 2ft. Glider Cbatr.
(Need not be present to win)

AI trHs and s~rubs •• Northen grown.

. . .,,.,.""Of"" ..

:I5, 4:05, 7:01, '=45,

..

�;Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, May 24, 1999

NBA playoffs

.

.

6

Dlvlsien
San Fr~~mco , .
.. .. 25 19 .568
Ariz.ona .... .. ... .. .
24 21 .5\3
Los Angeles .......... .... ...... 22 21 512
Colorado ...............
.. IH 22 450
Sa~ qrcgo ....... ................. 17 25 .405

AL standings
Eastern Division

fum

Bo~ton

L

~

.

&amp;1.

. . 26

17

.605

24

18

.17 1

Tampa Buy
.. ..... 22 22
Toronto .........
.. ......... 21 25
Baltm10rc ...................... 16 27

. ~00

New York

4' ·

10

Central Division
CLEVELANI&gt; ................... ~0 ll
Kan~ns City
... .. ..... 22 10

.714

.524

8

Chkag.o ... .. .. . .. .

21

.475

10

. Denoil ........ ...... ....... ... . 19 24
MinncJ0\11 .......... ... .. ..... 16 27

.442
..l72

II ' :
14' :

.. . .. 19

.. ..... .. 2 ~
...... .... .. 21
. ... 21
21

..

Oaklnnd .

.488

2

.477
.477

l ':

2':

N~w

Bollon I0, Toronto 8
CLEVELAND 7, De1roit 4
An!lhelm 4, Tampa B:.y 0(10)
MlnneSO(a 8. Oakland .~
Kansas Cil)' !5, Sea.tle 4
New Yorit 8, Chicago 7 (10)
Bnllimore 15, Te:cas 6

g 5 games
TeAu ~Clark 2-3) at Tampa Bay, {Arrojo 2-4) 7:05
P·Q ·
(B ld .
' &lt;n ___Luso") Ola wm 2-4) ttl CLEVELAND
. \,fUUUI;n 2..., • 7: p.m.
T~ato (Well54-4) II De'trotl (Moehlcr4-J), 7:05
p.m
. , Boston (Rose 1-0) 11 New York (lrabu 1-2), 7:35
p.m.
Seattle (Fusero 2-S) at Minnesota (Perkins 0-3).
8':05 p.m.
·
·
.,_

auesday's games

Texu (Oiynn 0-0) at Tampa Pay (Witt J-ll. 7:05

p.m~ .. ~ ,j -ue .5·3) at CLEVELAND (NIJY 4-

Toronto (Halladay 3-2) at Dcuoit (Miicki 1-4}
7:0.5 p.m.
'
Booooo &lt;P"''""" J.2) "' New York &lt;Hemandoz +
4), 7:Jl p.m.
Seattle (Halama 2·2) ac Minnesota (Rath 0-0),
8:0l p.m.
Baltimore (Erickson 1-.5) at Anaheim (Olivares 43). 10:05 p.m.
• KllliAI 91y (()quill C:.J) at Oakland (R~ 3,2), IO:Oj p.m.
,

.

~m Dtvilktn

f!"rido,................................

L &amp;1.

17 605
19 .5611
20 ..524
28 · ..H7
.I J Jl
295

:"'
CencniiiM¥islon
"'"".. ................................ 26 16
Cbicqo ,, ...........,.....1............ 2.\ 18
$&lt;. Louio ......... ,....... 1............ 2J 19
!,:INCINNATI ...................... 21 19
Plaobwp ............................. 21 ll

!lll

Tursda~

J. I) at Philadelphia (Bennett

·
New York (lsringhauscn 0-0) at Pittsburgh
(Cordova 0-2) , 7:05p.m.
.
Flonda (Snncher. 1-4) m Chicago (Lieber 4- I) ,
8:05p.m.
·
Atlilllil (Giavme J-4) ill Milwnukce (Woodurd ).
4). 8:05p.m.
·
Colorado (Bohanon 6-l) ·;~t Houston (Reynolds
6-.l), 8:05 p.m
San Otego (Ashby 5-2) at Arizona (Andy Belk's
2-S). 10:05 p.m.

Montreal (Hermanson 3-4) at Philadelphia
(Ogea 2·3), ?:OS p.m.
New York (Yoshii 4-3) at Pinsburgh (Benson 32), ?:OS p.m.
Los Angeles (K. Brown .5-:2) at CINCINNATI
(Parris 2-0), 7:0S p.m.
.
Aorida (Meadows 3-4) at Chicago CTrach'sel 24), 8:0S p.m.
·
·
Atlanta (Maddu~ 4-J) at Milwaukee (Abbott 05). 8:0!5 p m. ·
Colorado (Kile 3-3) ut Houston (Hamp~on 5-1),
. 8.05 p.m •
San Frandtco (Brock 4-3) a. St. LouiJ (Jimenez
2-4), 8:10p.m.
· San Diego (Hitchcock 3-3) at Arizona (Johnson
4·2), IO.OS p.rn.

1.11:

.488 ·

·4'
.5
1

c

Iuol

Ea!tern Conrerence
}l I SQWPII G[

COLUMBUS ...................... 6
D.C................................... 6
Tampa .Bay ........................5
NY-NJ .............................. ..4
New ~&amp;lmnd .................... .3
Miami ................................3

.1 2
J 2

14
14

~

]
5 2
6 1
7 2

9
21

9 10
8 8
1 8
5 II

Jl6.
7
16
1J

II
10
20

Wtstem Conference
Olicago. ...........................6 ) 0 IS · 18
1
Colorad0 .......:..................... 6 2 2 14 14
1
D:oll .............................. .5 S I IJ 14
6
Los Angeles ............ :.......... 5 5 .~
9 6
6
San Jose ........................... 6 4 6
6 10 15
Kans11.1 City ,.... ~ .................. 1 9 0
3 8 19
NOTE: Three potnll for victory, ooo point for
1hootou1 win and ztro poims for ·Joss. Shomou1
(SOW) is a subsel of wins.

· Saturday's seores

Hockey

Sun!I•Y'• sco"""

.

New York 90, Atlania 78: New York leadl serie1
J-0 .
San Antonio 118, L,A. Lakcrs 107; Stm Antonio
w.ins teriel 4-0
Porlland 81 , Uttth 7.5; Portland lends ~os ~-I

The ruture
Torn'hl
Atlanta nt New Yock. 8 p.m.
U~nh .

8 p.m.

Wtdn~:lday

New York n! Atlanla. 8 p.n1 .. tf·neceunry
Thursdty
.
Son Amonio at L.A. L4kers. TB/\. if l'eeeuary
· Utah IH P.onland. TBA. if ne~ssnry ,

·Dr. at.phen L
Wllooxan

(aaou from Captain D's)

GaWpolls

Welcoaae"

(740 J 446·J8t6
. . If

·

(800) 815·2999

By JOE MACENKA

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) -- The
15th annual running of The .Vinston
reaffirmed that one of NASCAR's
quietest stars is also one of the
brightest.
Terry Labonte has built a.successful career on stock car racing' s top
series by minding his own business,
staying in the background and waiting for the right chance to make a
. late-race move . He used that formula
in Saturday night 's all-star race, and
it paid off with the second victory of
. his career in the event.
"We did not have a car capable of
winning this race," crew chief Andy
Graves said. "Terry won the race,
basically."
Graves will get no argument from
Tony Stewart, who appeared headed
(or what would have been the biggest
victory of his already impressive
rookie season until Labonte inter·vened.
S!ewart charged from last to first
·.in the 21 -car field, but when he
·lpoked in his rearview mirror with
six laps remaining, he didn't like
,what he saw.
"As soon as I saw it was Terry,"
Stewart said, "I knew I was in trouble ."
His concerns proved well-founded.
Stewan's team had rushed him
through his final pit stop by changing
just two tires for the JQ..Iap sprint to
the checkered flag. Labonte's team
opted instead to give their driver four
.tires, and even though the move cost
him extra time in the pits, it gave him
all the additional traction he needed
to chase down Stewart on the 1.5mile, high-banked tri-oval of Lowe's
Motor Speedway at Charlone.
Labonte stayed a safe distance
behind Stewan for five laps, then
moved in when he sensed the leader
was vulnerable. Labonte pulled
-alongside him with five laps remain.ing. and Stewart tried to make his car
as wide as possible ..
It wasn't wide enough. Labonte
powered past, and the race was effectively finished . Labonte wasn 't
threatened the rest of'the way, and he

•Evening and Saturdly
appointments al'llll,ablr
• Medlcart/Medlcald
Mll'ltlnsunmceAcceptcd

SHAVER REPAIR
FRUTH PHARMACY

.V

NBA playOffS ... {Continued from Page 4)

••'..

"

... -•

"

'

. . .... . __,

3.200m run: I. Holly Boderick
(Eastern ) 13: !3.60, 2. Leah Harris
(Federal Hoc king) 13:2 1.50, 3. Faith
Henry (Wellston) 13:47.60, 4. Leslie
Cunningham (Belpre) 14:11.10, S.
Kim Smith (Aieunder) 14:24.30, 6.
Vanessa Locke (Belpre) 14:38. 10
Discus: . I.Melinda Meredith
(Belpre) 103- 11. 2. Jessi Withem
(Alexander) 96.2. 3. Jessica Brannon
(Eastern) 92.7, · 4. Jamie Linscolt
(Federal Hocking) 92-0, 5. Elizabeth
Sowers (Vinton Counly) 91-7. 6.
Katie Dillon (Alexander) 89-0.
1600m relay : I. Federal Hocking
(Chelsea Clark, Courtney Springer,
Alyssa Barber, Megan Leus)
4:3 1.90. 2. Vinton County 4:32.20. 3.
Alex-ander 4:42.80, 4. Belpre
4:49.10, 5. Wellston 4:52.10, 6.
Waterford 4:54.30
'
Shot put: I. Jessica Bray (Miller)
32.5, 2. Elizabeth Sowers (Vinton
County) 31.2, 3. Jessica Brannon
(Eastern) . 30.8, 4 . Jamie Linscott
(Federal Hocking) 30- 1. 5. Rebecca
Dalton (Nelsonville-York) '29-9. 6.
Amanda Birt (Alexander) 29-0,
Hi gh juinp: I . Fuli James ·
(Alexander) 5-0, 2. Bobbi Lent
(Trimble) 4-10, 3 (tie )- Michellc
Rauch (Waterford) 4-6. 3 (tie)Tcrclla Waderker (Federal Hocking)
4-6. ·5. Amber Vansickle (Eistn 46, 6 (lie)- Whitney Karr (Easte 4-4.
ti (lie)-Kelly Six (Trimble 4-4, 6
(lie )-Jamie
Simmons
ederal
Hoc king) 4-4
Long JUmp; I. Fol&lt;. James
(Alexander) 16-2.50. 2. Calah
Gilders (Federal Hocking ) 15-0.50,
3. Terella Waderkee (Fede ral
H'!ck1ng) 14-7

FREE INSPEC'TI()l\

American
L
eg On baSeball
practice Tuesday'

• HeadAches
• Sport Injuries

South of Silver Bridge

•' It/

r

.

N•tlonal Hodtey Lope
BUFFALO SABRES: Recalled G Mnr1in Biron
from Rochester of t!le AHL.

• Neck and Back Pains ·

•Locared .t/2 m~~e"Walk·lnl

.Terry Labonte wi.n~
The Winston all-star
race, $207,500 prize

(Wellston) 123-7
1600m run : I. Lmdsay Walburn
Shot put : I. Owen Hawk (Wellston) 5:44.40, 2. Krosta Oches
(Alexander) 47-4, 2. Troy Stewart (Federal Hocking) 5:55.20, 3.·Amber
(Wellston) 45-9. 3. John Griffin Baker (Eastern) 5:56.0, 4. Alverna
(Trimble) 45-0, 4. Zach Odenthal Hess (Federal Hocking) 6:04.00, 5.
(Nelsonville-York) 42-9, 5. Mike Holly Broderick (Eastern ) 6:14.20.
Ewing (Wellston) 42-9, 6. Matt Holly Arnold (Waterford) 6:22.60
Katterhenrick (Nelsonville-York ) 42400m relay: I. Vinton County
5.50
(Jaclyn Palmer. Knsti Hayes. Rysta
High jump: I. Josh Arnold , Herrold , Lindsay Montgomery)
(Waterford') 6-0, 2. Sean Reyes 54.60, 2. Federal Hocking 54.80, 3.
(Belpre) 5-10, .3 . Randar Luts Belpre 55.40. 4. Waterford 57 .50, 5.
(Wellston) 5-10, 4 (tie)-Jeremy Jones Trimble 58.00, 6. Eastern 58.00
5-10, 5. 4.(tie)-Andy Baker (Federal
400m dash: I. Megan Leusc hel
Hocking) 5-I 0, 6. Dan Whitlatch (Federal Hocking) I :'02 50. 2. Calah
(Fede(al Hocking) 5-8
· Gilders ( Federal Hocking) l :04,30.
Pole vault: I. Andy Baker 3. Kristen Dixon (Vinton County)
(Federal Hocking) 11 -6, 2. Zach I :05.50, 4. Sara Hartley (Miller&gt;
Meadows (Meigs) 11 -0, 3. Nalin 1:08.60, 5. Alisha Sargent (Belpre)
Arthur (Wellston) 10-6, 4. Jesse 1:09.30. 6. Rachel Reffert (Vinton
Noland (Waterford) 9-6, 5. Jon County) I:09.50
Rutter (Waterford ) 9-0, 6. Chris
300m low hurdles; I.Foli James
Withem (Federal Hocking) 8-0
(Alexander) 49.20, 2. Chelsea Clark
Long jump: I. Jeremy Jones (Federal Hocking) 51 .40, 3. Bobbi
(Nelsonville-York) 18-9.75, 2. Erick Lent (Trimble) 51.80, 4. Alissa
Johnson 18-9.25, 3. Nalin Arthur Barber (Federa l Hocking) 52 70.
(Wellston) 18-8.75, 4. Josh Finck Leslie Whitlatch (Belpre) 53.20. b.
(Mi ller) 18-6, 5. Eric Coffman Erica Starr (Belpre) 53.90
(Tri mbl e) 17-7, 6. Sean Looney
ROOm ' run: I. Megan Leuschcl
(Alexander) 17-7)
(Federal Hocking) 2:34.80. 2.
Girls' competition
· Lindsay Walburn ·(Wellston) 2:39.60.
Team scores: Federal Hocking 3. Amber Baker (Eastern) 2:41 .90. 4.
160.33,
Vinton
County
69 . Krista Oches (Federal Hocking)
Alexander 68. Belpre 58. Eastern 2:42.30. 5. Misty Arm strong
46.33 , Wellston 30, Trimble 23.33. (A lexander) 2:45.0, 6. Holly Arnold
Waterford 23, Miller 15, Nelsonville- (Waterford) 2:50.10
York 3
·
200m dash · I. ·calah Gilders
3,200m relay: I. Federal Hocking . (Federal Hocking) 28. 10, 2. Lindsay
10:29. (Leah Harris. Alverna Hess. · Montgomery (Vinto n County) 28.20.
Megan Leuschel, Krista Oches) 3. Janie Simmons (Federal tlocking )
NEW MEET RECORD. 2. Belpre 29.00. 4. Tara Mullens (Vinton
II :09.90, 3. Alexander ! I :20.70, 4. County) 29 00, 5. Christi McDonald
Welfston II :21.30. 5.Vinton County (Be lpre) 29-00, 6. Miranda Willis
II :22.70, 6. Waterford 12:35.60
(Trimble) 29.30
··· lOOm hurdles: I. Foli James
'
(Alexander) 15.60. 2. Julie Ciccrchi.
(Belpre) 17.20, 3. Jessica Campbell
(Waterford) 17.20, 4. Amber
Vansickle (Eastern) 17.30, 5. Wendi
Gaskalla (Federal Hocking) 17.30, 6.
Alyssa Barber (Federal Hocking)
17.80
100m d as h: I . EfiCa
·
Sc1or
·
(Belpre) 13.10, 2. Calah Gilders
(Federal Hocking) 13.60, 3. Brianna
Mansfield (Federal Hocking) 13.60,
4. Rysta Herrold (Vinton County)
13 .70, 5. Lindsay Montgomery
(Vinton County) 13.70, 6. Tiffany
McDonald (Nelsonville-York) 13.90
800m re1ay:
· 1. y 10
· ton County
(Tara Mullens, Rachel Reffett , Rysta
Herrold, Kristen Dixon) 1:56.20,
Federal Hocking 1:57.10. 3: Trimble
1:58.70, 4. Waterford 2:02.00, 5.
Alexander
2:04.50.
6.Eastern
786 N. 2ND2:04.90

l1·

• Automobile Accidents
• Work lnjiiries

Indiana 89, PhiiGdelphia 86: Indiana wins series

Josh Close (Waterford) 17.60
1600m run : I. Jed Tuten
(Waterford) 4:38.80, 2. Jacob Arnold
(Waterford) 4:45.90, 3. Matt Boyles
(Eastern) 4:47.10. 4. Pat Klein
(Belpre) 4:49.40, 5. Ben Dunfee
(Federal Hocking) 4:5 1.20. 6. Jesse
Reynolds (Vinton County) 4:57.40
400m relay: I. Wellston (Chris
Hutchinson, Brad Young, Erron
Brennan, Shawn Brennan) 44.10
NEW MEET RECORD 2. Meigs
46.90, 3. Belpre 47 .10, 4 . Federal .
Hocking 47:10, 5. Alexander 47.60,
6. Nelsonville-York 48 .60
400m dash: I . Clayton Mayle
(Federal Hocking) 50.70. NEW
fv!EET RECORD 2. Brad Young
(Wel lston) 52.00, 3. Erron Brennan
(Wellston ) 52.40, 4. Angelo
Rodriguez (Meigs) 52.50. 5. Trent
Shriner '(Belpre) 54.70'. 6. Bill
Savage (Vinton County ) 55.20
300 intermediate hurdles: I. Zach
Meadows (Meigs) 41.50, 2. Shaun
Simpson (Federal Hocking) 43.50, 3.
Mkhael Chaney (Federal Hocking).
43.90, 4. Adam · Blaney (Miller)
44.30, 5. Jemiah Ream s (Belpre)
44.70, 6 . . Bob Martin (Wellston )
44.70
800ni run : . I. James Stanley
(Meigs) 2:03.70. 2. Brandon-Lackey
(Federal Hocking) 2:06.40, 3. Mark
Waller (Waterford) 2:07.50, 4. John
Witherell (Meigs) 2:09.00, 5. Jesse
wound up about 15 car-lengths ahead Reynolds (Vinton County) 2: 1'2. 10,
at the checkered flag.
6. Pat Klein (Belpre) 2: 13.10
· Stewart later said he probably had
·200m dash: 1. Zach Jarvi s
angered Labonte by trying to. stave (Federal Hocking) 23. 10 2. Clayton
off the decisive pass.
Mayle (Federal Hocking) 23: 10, 3.
"I just went in there and pushed,'' Josh Finck (Miller) 23.50, 4. Angelo
Stewart said. " I was racing him hard . Rodriguez (Meigs) 23 :80. 5. Troy
I wasn't going to givC'it to him."
Stewart '(Wellston) 24:00, 6. Steve
whose
low-key Roddy (Belpre) 24:10
· Labonte,
demeanor has earned him the nkk3,200m run: 1. Jed Tuten
name The Iceman, broke into a smile (Waterford) 10:08.20. 2. Dusty
when told of Stewart's concerns.
Weidner (Alexander) 10:08.40, 3.
"Why would I be mad at. him? I Jacob Arnold (Waterford) 10:27.40,
beat him,'' he said. "If he had run me 4. Matt Boyles (Eastern) I0:33.10, 5.
in the wall, I might have been niad ai John Boggs ((Wellston) 10:47.30, 6.
him. No, he's a good competitor. . Ben Dunfee (Federal .Hocking)
He'sagoodg uy." · ·
105720
: .
The victory was worth $207,500
1600m relay: 1. Wellston (Bob
for Labonte, pushing him to the Martin, Ra11dar Luts, Erron Brennan,
verge of passing the $21 million Chris Hutchinson) 3:32.80 NEW
mark for a career in-which he also . MEET RECORD, 2. Federal
has won 21 Winston Cup races and Hocking 3:34)0, 3. Meigs 3:35.60,
two driving titles.
4. Vinton County 3:43.00, 5.
His latest triumph came in a race Alexander 3:43,.40, 6. Belpre
in which he staned 13th and, based 3:46 .20 .
·
on his practice ru~s before 'the event,
Discus: 1. Matt Katterhenrick
didn 't expect to do very well.
(Nelsonville- York) 139-1. 2. Joe
"We didn 't think we were that Canter (Trimble) 135-6, 3. Owen
good,'' a surprised Labonte said. Hawk (Alexander) 126-1 , 4. Matt
"We didn'tqualify that well and did- Riley 125-8, 5. Mark Waller
n't practice that well."
(Waterford) 125-1, 6. Mike Ewing
He almost didn't get a chance to
show how good he could 'be.
Labonte's Chevrolet Monte Carlo
emerged from a 10-car wreck on lap
12 with some minor sheet-metal
damage, but Graves said the car actually ran better after the crew pounded out the fenders.
After that, it was up to LabOnte to
put on another one of his vintage performances. As has often been the
case in the past, Labonte proved
again that good things come to those
who wait.
When he got tC) Victory Lane,
Labonte stepped out of characte1· and
showed a lot more emotion than he
usually does. He jumped .onto the
roof of his car, raised. his fists to the
skies and cheered.
"We were pretty excited," he .
said. "It was a big surprise for us to
win. We were real, real excited.
These guys worked hard all week for
this one."

!:

hntle, AHordablt Cart For:

Saturdoy'o scores

106, Meigs 84, Wellston 82,
Waterford 65, Alexander 34, Belpre
32, Miller '30, Nelsonville-York 29,
Trimble 16, Eastern 10, Vinton
County 8
3,200m relay: I. Meigs (Angelo
Rodriguez, Josh Hooten , James
Stanley. John Witherell) 8:37.10, 2.
Feaeral Hocking 8:44.40, 3.
Waterford 8:46.90 4. Wellston
8:49.30, 5. Bel).. . 8:56.60, 6.
Alexander 9:24.80
lOOm dash: I.Chris Hutchinson
(Wellston) 11.20, 2. Josh Finck
(Miller) 11.40, 3. Clayton Mayle
(Federal Hocking) II :40, 4. Zach
. Jarvis (Fel!eral Hocking), 5. John
Haggerty (Meigs) II :80, 6. Steve
Roddy (Belpre) 11.90
110m hurdles: I. ·Zac]J Meadows
(Meigs) 15.30,· 2. Adam Blaney
(Miller) 16.20, 3. Clayton Mayle
(Federal Hocking) 11.40, 4. Trent
Shriner (Be lpre) 16.80, 5. Andy
Baker (Federal Hocking ) 17.50, 6.

raised their playoff record to 7-1 . games last season in its series against
:Shaquille O'Neal had 36 points and Houston.
;1'4 rebqunds for the Lakers.
·
Knicks 90, Hawks 78 ..
.• " It 's very embarrassing,'' O'Neal
At New York, Dudley had 14
~aid of being swept by the Spurs . . points and 12 rebounds in one of his
\•!Every lime I get sent home, I get · best games. in a Knicks uniform,
~Jttbarrassed.l hate saying, 'Well, we while Latrell Sprewell and Allan
~layed hard.' No, now it's over."
Houston added 17 points apiece and
•:
Pacers 8!t, 76ers 86 ·
Marcus Camby contributed 15.
At PhiladelP,hi~. the Pacers shook ·
The Knicks committed a seasonpff a 10-minute field goal drought in low ,eight turnovers, held the Hawks
)he fourth quarter and got another to II points in the third quarter and
;clutch shot from Reggie Miller down coasted through the fourth to move
the stretch to advance to the Eastern within one victory or their first con"
tonference finals.
ference finals ·appearance since
: 'Tve 'got a veteran team on my 1994.
!hands," with one thing on 't'he'ir
After denying published reports
rtunds, Pacers coach Larry Bird before the game that he contacted
said. "To win a championship."
Phil Jackson about coaching the
Indiana improved to 7-0 in the team, Knicks president Dave
:Playoffs and advanced to the confer- Checketts changed his story during
,ence finals for the second stratght the second half and admitted contact;year and fourth time in si~ seasons. ing the fonner Bulls coach .
:. : Ch~is ' Mullin h~d 16 . points,
"While I've never met or spoken
40cludmg a three-pomter wnh 2:02 to Phil and or (his agent) Todd
n~ft that was the Pacers' first field Musburger, thro~gh an. intemiediary
jgoal of the fourth quarter after 13 ·we dtd talk to Phtl among other peo~traight misses - since 2:12 of the . pie at one point ... to see if there was
'lhird period.
·
any interest,'' Checketts said through
l: Trail Blazers 81, Jaz:t 75· . a spokesman. "There was (interest),
; · At Portland, Ore, Isaiah Rider and we left it that and said we'll see
;scored 24 points and Rasheed you at the end of the season."
Knicks center Patrick Ewing said
.Wallace intercepted an in bounds
f,!!ss from Utah's Bryon Russell with he would ask to be traded if Jackson
,1~ seconds left as the Bl~rs pushed was hired as New York's coacb.
i~e Jazz to the brink of elimination.
·
l· "We deserve to be beat by thi'l- Mei~S
ii:am,'' Jazz coach Jerry Sloa~ said:
. ~~They outplayed us the entire way. I
j:an live with that. I can't live with
!be fact that (We) aren't going to
cbmpete. I thought they had all the
ROCK SPRINGS - The MeiJ.s
energy to do what was necessary ...
American
Legion baseball team w1ll
, However, Utah has been in a simmeet
and
begin
practice on Tuesday,
ilar position before. The Jazz were
May
25
at
the
Meigs High School
down 2-1 in 1ts first -round series
baseball
field.
~ith Sacramento before rallying to
· ~in the final two ·games and advanc- , Anyone wishing to play but .
unable to attend should contact Jerry
!~g. Utah also won the final two
OavenpoJ1 at 992-7323.

em

Portland 97, Utah 87
San Antonio IOJ,·L.A Lokt:rs 91

1\tt!lday

t:

MLS standings

. NBA conference semifinals

Portland nl
.619
.561
.l48
.525

Soccer

National Lea1u~
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Oplioned INF
Hanle y ,FrillS. to Tucson of the PCL Ret·alled RHP
4
. Bobby Cho11inurd from Tucson.
"CHICAGO CUBS. A.;:tivated OF Glenallen H1ll
from the 1~-day disabled lisLOpti oned LHP ·Ray
King und OF Do Porter to Iowa of the PCL:
COLORADO ROCKIES: Placed INF Kurt
Abbon on the IS-day disabled list Transferred RHP
·.Kevin Ritt fron1 the IS-day disabled list to the 60·
dny disabled list. IJesignDtc:d RHP Da11id Wainhousc
for assignment. Purch~d the 'contracts af lNF Chris
Pelcrsen and INF J.R. Phtllips. frOm Colorado 1
Springs or the f'CL.
•
FLORIDA MARLINS: Au1gncd C Jeff H:uley
to Kane Cou~ty oftJ:te Midwest League.
·
HOUSTON ASTR6S: Placed 3B Ken Caminiti
on the 1!5-day disnbled list Recalled INf Doryle
Wnrd from New Orleans of the PCL.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Claimed RHP Jim
Pittsley off waivers from Kttnsas Cily and added him
to their 40-man roSier.
NEW YORK METS: Activated OF Rtckey
Henderson from !he IS -day disabled list. Optioned
OF Mike Kinkade 10 Norf1.1lk of the lntemationill
league, Signed UJP Mau~w Ruebel to a minorleaaue CODITICI.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Optioned RHP Clint
Sodowsky to Meqthi1 of die PCL. Recalled RHP
Rick Heiserman from Memphis.
SAN DIEGO PADR~ : Placed OF Tony Gwynn
on the I !5-day ditabled list Recalled OF Mike Darr
(rum Lus, Vega of the PCL.

Basketball

I I:

.lll
12

Baseball

1·1). 7 : 0~pm

4-0

NL standings
~

Buffalo nt Toronto. 1·JO p m
Wtdnt!ldaJ
Dalla.s nt Colorado. 7:JO p.m.
ThundaJ
Toronto at Ruffalo. 7:JO p m
·
Friday
!Jai!IU at Colorado, 7..l0 p.m.
Saturday
Toronto a! Bufralo, 7:30p m.

Houston 4 . San Franci~eo I

·)),7~~

\\llaftll .................................. l6
New Yorl&lt; ............................. 25
Pllillldelphia ..........................22
)!40ouft1 .............................. IJ

New York 5, Phiktdelphin 4
Colorado 7. Arizona 6
Piusburgh 6. Aorida 5

1\Jesday 's games

Toni ht'

rJD.

Colorado al Dallas. 7..l0 p.m.

(Bati~ta

Transactions

future

Chicago 5. Atlanta 1
Milwnuk~e 1.' . Monuea14

Montreal

Thu~ay

San Jose M Colomdo. 9:30 p.m.

Thnl~~:hl

Tonight's games

Sunday's scores

""

Th~

CINCINNATI 6, San Diego 2
St. Louis 8. Los Angeles )

Saturday's scores
BoJton 6 , Torolllo 4
Detroit 6. CLEVELAND 2
Texas 8. Baltmtorc 7
DH: New York 10. Cllicago 2; Chicago l ,
York I
.
Annhetm 8. Tampa Bay 6
Minnesota 2, Oakland I ( 10)
Seanle 7. KansttS C11y 4

Wednffiiay .

BuO'alo :'1 , Toronto -4. Buffalo lellds senes 1·0

Sunday's scores

0

Muuni at Dallu. 8:30p.m

.

Sunday's scOres

Pillsburl-h II. Flomla 4

En~land

This week's agenda

Colomdo 2. Dallas 1: Colorado lends se ri e~ 1..0

CINCINNATI J. San 'Diego 0
Los A_ngdes 10 St Louls 1

. 5 .~5

20
22
B
2J

Sunday's score
los Angeles •I. Ne~:Y

Saturday's score

San Fr;mr.:isco -'. Housron I
AtlantOl 4. C hi~.:ag o 2
.
MoiJIICill 12. Milwauket: 4

\\leilt'rn Division
Tr~t ;~s.. .
s~aulc .
Ann~im

Hockey

Jones over the . wall in right-center
CLEVELAND (AP) The for his third career grand slam. .
Tigers dropped , the ball and the
"He hit a 2-1 fastball , and he hit it
broom .
a mile," Jones said. "We played
Detroit
left
fielder
Juan great this series and then I slunk it up
Encarnacion had two routine fly at the end."
balls. bounce out ·Of his glove in the
The Indians did little right in the
eighth inning Sunday, and Omar first seven innings. They couldn 't
Vizquel hit a gflllld slam in the bot- touch
Detroit
starter Justin
tom of the ninth to rally ihe Thompson; Cleveland starter Banolo
Cleveland Indians to a 7-4 win over Colon had a throwing error that gave
the Tigers.
the Tigers a run and miSsed a tag at
"The game was ours," Detroit the , plate; and both Vizquel and
third baseman Dean Palmer said. Fryman made bad decisions on the
" But I've walked .off the field here basepaths.
with this same feeling lots of times.
"For seven innings, this was not a
These guys are the best at comiog fun place to be," Hargrove said.
back."
.
"But we got ourselves off the hook ..
rhe Indians. are indeed good at
Hargrove gambled by .pinch·hitthis come.from-be~)nd stuff.
. . ting Thome in the ninth for Diaz,
. Sunday's victorfmarked the 17th who had already replaced Chris
time this season that Peveland has Turner behind the . plate. Had the
come back to win'. iit also gave the game gone to extra innings. Jolbert
Indians their· 30th win and averted Cabrera, a reserve utility player,
what would have been Detroit's first would have been catching for the
sweep in Cleveland in eight years.
first time in his career.
Vizquel couldn't remember ever ·
.. , saw Jalbert trying on the gear
hitting a game-winning homer, not and I thought, ' uh oh, "'said Fryman,
even as a kid in Ven'ezuela.
who after looking around the dugout
"It felt great 1" said Vi1.quel. "It figured he 'd better volunteer. "Mike
was like J ·never wanted to get !O ' asked me if I had any e~perience and
home 'plate. I wan led· to keep enjoy- I said, "Me' Yeah, I liked Johnny
ing the moment. "
Bench as a kid, that 's about it. We
The Indians; who have thi s were either going 10 win or lose it ·in
bizarre ritual of pummeling any the ninth. We weren't playing for the
teammate who hits a -game-winning lie. "
homer' when he .reaches the· plate,'
Paul Shuey (3 -2) pitched the ninth
gave il to Vizquel good ·when he slid for the Indians, who before scoring
in home after connec'ting off Todd seven runs in the final two innings
Jones (0-1 ).
·
had been limited to seven runs in
"We had some hungry guys wait- their previous 25 innings by the
ing for me ," he said. '\) tried to stay Tigers.
low and avoid some of the punches."
Detroit hasn't swept the Indians
· The Tigers. who wrestled and since June 28-30, 1991 , and was
shoved the Indians during a bench- seeking its first sweep in Cleveland
clearing • incident a day· earlier, sin¢e June 5-7, 1990.
wcren 't so lucky.
"We held them in check for a lot
Leading 4-0, Detroit 'was six outs of innings,'-' Parrish said. "You just
away· from a sweep when .hope to d!J it for one more and get put
Encarnacion. dropped two routine fly of town. No doubt it would have
balls in the eighth to fuel the Indians ' been a huge boost for us, but we
rally.
·''
·
can't let it deflate' us."
"I don't think I've eiler seen an
Detroit first baseman Tony Clark
outfielder drop back-t.o'back balls," was still "groggy'" after getting h1t in
Tigers manager Larry Parrish said. the head with a pitch from Janet
"I don 't know if I've seerl two in the Wright on Saturday and was kept out
same inning."
.
of the lineup. Clark was examined by
Encarnacion, who didn' t want. to one of the Indians team doctors and
talk after the ganie, fgllowed an error is day-to-day with a bruised head.
by center fielder Gabe Kapler, with
Notes: Thompson gave up two
two comical and costly plars.
measly singles in six shutout innings.
First, he dropped Kenny Lofton's ... Jones had been .17-for-17 in save .
sacrifice fly, allowing the fndians to opportunities dating to last season. ·...
close to 4-2. Then be cH)sed his Cleveland has won six times in ils
glove too quickly on Vizqael 's Hy, last at-bat this season - four at
giving the Indians runners !at second Jacobs Field.... Vizquel's last grand
and third with none .out.
slam came on June 18, 1996, against
Reliever Doug Brocail pitched Boston's Aaron Sele .... The Indians
OU\ of the mess by stniking put have hit five grand slams in their last
Roberto Al&lt;imar, Manny Ramirez I~. games.
and getting Wil Cordero to pop out,
but by then the momentum had
swung to the Indians.
Cleveland didn 't needlany help in
the ninth, getting consecutive singles
by Travis Fryman and David Justice
•
to open the innins.
;.
. "As soon as we got the leadoff
The Wilma Blevins Fundraiser
guy on in the ninth I thought we had Golf tournament will be held on
a chance to at leasr tie the game," S.unday, May 30 at th~ Franklin
Vizquel said.
Valley Golf Course in Jackson.
.
Richie Sexson's single made it 4The scramble tournament begins
3 and pinch-hitter ·Jim- ll10me, bat- with a shotgun· start at 8 a.m.
·
ting for catcher Einar Diaz. then
The entry fee is $50 per player
walked before the Tigers cut the and ·$200 per team. Lunch will 1k
tying run down at the plate on a pmvided.
force.
·
For more information, call 740Vizquel then drove' 'a pitch from 286-4903.

Wilma Blevins
golf tournament
set for May 30

DC United 3, Miami I
Tampa Bay I. COLUMBUS. 0-SO
Oucago 3. Kansas Cuy I
Colorado 2. New York-~ew Jersey 0
Snn Jose l. Dallas I-SO

Atlanta a1 New York, TBA. if necessary
'
SltUrdly
Ponland at Uiab. TBA. if necessary

NHL conference finals

Philadelphia 9. New York ]
Arizona 8. Co lo1ado J

6' ;

son showing may not. have been a
fluke after all by beating Utah 81-75
and taking a 3-1 lead in their best-of7 series.
New York,' behind a strong effort
from reserve center Chris Dudley,
defeated the Atlanta Hawks 90-78 to
give the Knicks a 3-0' Iead in their
sencs.
The Knicks have a chance to wrap
up their series toni~ht, while
Portland can close out its ·series at
Utah on Tuesday.
Spurs 118, takers 107
At Los Angeles, Duncan finished
with 33 points, 14 rebounds and four
assists to put the Spurs in the Western
Conference finals for just the fifth
time in team history.
Duncan went 11-of-14 from both
the ·field and foul line as the Spurs,
who finished the regullll' season with
31 wins in their 'final 36 games,
(See PLt\YOFFS on Page 5)

Friday

zO:
5
7

Saturday's scores

1':

4S7
.J7l

J',

llentlnel Correapon~nt
Federal Hocking had a clean
sweep in the Hocking Division,
while Meigs won the Ohio Division
boys' championship and Vinton
County claimed the Ohio Division
girls' crown in the Tri- Valley
.Conference track championships on
May 15 at Athens High School's
·Rutter Field.
' Top individual boys' scorers
.included Zach Meadows for Meigs
with 29 112 points in the Ohio
.Division, and Clayton Mayle of
· Feder~! Hocking with 26 poinls.
Foh James of Alexander was the
top g~rl scorer w1th 40 pomts m the
Ohio Division . It is the fourth
-stra1ght year she has won that award.
,Cala]J Gilders of Federal Hocking
had 34 ·points in the Hocking
DIVISion. ·
Boys' competition
· Team SGores: I. Federal Hocking

By TOM WITHERS

Pacers, Spurs ,oust
Sixers ·&amp; Lakers;
Knicks, Bl_azers win

W~stern

By DAVE HARRIS

Indians beat Tigers
7-4, :avoid sweep

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Bruce injury). "
Bochy was in no mood to praise the
Eddie Taubensee went3-for-3 and
·cincinnati Reds for their current hot drove in three runs. Michael Tucker
~pell.
had thrc;e hits and scored three times.
· Instead, the S,an Diego manager . and pinch-hitter Dmitri Young deliv fumed over his club's offensive short- ered a two-run single for Cincinnati. "
comings, Sunday after Steve Avery
Reggie Sanders. traded 'away by
and Scott Williamson combined on a the Reds in February, had both hits
two-hitter to. help the Reds prevail 6- for San Diego after breaking an 0-for. 2 for their seventh victory in eight 22 slump. The Padres lost for the
games.
sixth time in eight, games.
Bochy called an 18-minute closed
Williamson struck out six for his ·
door meeting after the game to con- fifth save. The two hits were· the
sidcr the plight of the Padres, who fewest for San Diego since last Aug.
had just lhree hits in losing to the 13.
·
"I don't think that (losing) ·has
Reds 3-0 the previous night. Their
lineup has been missing starters Tony become accepted," the Padres' Dave
Gwynn and Wally Joyner due to Magadan said. "But it gets to the
.injury during the week.
point where you feel like you're
"For us to get two or three hits a . going down without a fight."
game, .there's no excuse for 1t ,"
Matt Clement (Q..5) remained winBochy said. "You can't keep giving less .in eight starts this season. He
credit to (opposing) pitchers. For us gave up five runs .and five hits in
•to play · that way. we ' re cmbar, seve n innings.
rassed ."
Taubcnsee, who has gone 9-for-21
· Reds manager Jack McKeon. for- in hi s last six games, was inserted
merly with San Diego as general into the lineup when Brian Johnson
· manager and man ager. could sympa- was sidelined by dizziness.
·. ·thize with Bochy about the downfall
" I sa id, 'Fi ne, I'm ready,'·
.of last year 's NL champions follow- Taubcnsce noted. "I w.as JUSt put in
ing the free-agent departures of the lineup a little late ...
standouts Kev111 Brown, Ken
Tucker got a two-out triple in the
·&lt;::aminiti and Steve Finley.
seco nd when backpedaling second
"You run into peak and valleys." baseman Damian Jackson collided
McKeon said. "You win a champi- with center fielder Ruhcn Rivera and
on ship and all of those players dcfc91. tumbled over him, losing the ball .
.Your expectations can' t be that high. Taubcnscc singled home Tucker.
Sure, I' feel sorry for Bruce . He 's
Tucker and Taubensec hit two-out.
?oing a heck ot; a job."
RBI doubles in .the fourth.
• Avery (3 -3) gave up two runs and
The Reds made it 5- 1 in the sixth
Jwo hits in six innings, overcoming a with the help of an error by Jackson
career high-tying six walks. II was his and a walk, After Taubensee was
first start since May II, when he left intentionally · walked to load the
? win against Milwaukee because of bases, Young hit a two-run single.
" I wanted to open up the game
a blister on his left m1ddle finger.
: "I didn't feel all that comfortable and went with the pinch hitter.''
or strong,. but r was able m get McKeon said. "It makes me look like
ihrough it. And it was a good win for a genius. but of course, I' m not."
ps, " Avery said. "I just tried to keep
Cincinnati added an unearned run
them off balance. I tried to throw off Ed Vosberg in the eighth on a RBI : y
'
strikes as ~ell as I could, but I was a single by Taubensee.
·
AP Sports Writer
;!IItie .erratic. It was a tough adjust" We're building confidence,"
Break out the brooms. The
ment ~ettingback out there (after the Avery said. "It's still early in the Indiana Pacers and San Antonio
year. There's plenty of time for this Spurs both posted sweeps Sunday.
team to get even better. We're so while the New York Knicks moved
much better over the two weeks. We one step away from joining them .
The Utah Jazz, on the other hand,
~~;~re~[ferent - ~uys cdntributjng in
are once again in a familiar position
on the verge of elimination.
. The Meigs Junior Golf League
Triple whammy
Indiana took care of Allen Iverson
will get underway on Wednesday . NEW YORK (AP) - Real and the Philadelphia 76ers to
June 2, at the Pine Hills Golf Club. Quiet, leading with 12 feet tb go, advance to the Eastern Conference
. Registration will be at8:30 p.m. with lost .the 1998 Belmont Stakes and a finals with a 89-86 victory.
tee time at 9 a.m.
chance to become racing's 12th
San Antonio's lim Duncan &amp; Co.
· The league is for ages 8 through Triple Crown champ. ·
.
moved into the Western Conference
high school.
Victory Gallop won by a nose, finals by making short work of Shaq
For more information call Carol making Real Quiet one of 14 Triple and the Los Angeles Lakers 118- 107.
McCullough at 992-5322, Debbie . Crown near-misses, including staThe Portland Trail Blazers
D~vis at992-5921 or Cheryl Thomas
·
blemate Sil\'er Charm.
showed that their strong regular seaat 'the golf course at 992-6312.

The Dally Sentinel o Pege 5

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Meigs boys' track team captures TVC Ohio Division 'title

P~e4

.

:Reds record 6-2
victory over Padres

JJieigs Junior .
:Golf League
to start June 2

Monday, May 24, 1999

.

.,

�•

P9 6 • TM Dally Sentinel

Monday, May 24, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-'~,'-By Th,e Bend

"Fractured ·political right wing seeks united voice on issues

.....

8y MIKE GLOVER

Other strategists argue that the divisions among social conservatives mere.
ly reflect a movement that has grown into an established force in GOP polA. .ocllted Preaa Wrher
DFS MOINES, Iowa- Far from speaking with a single voice, social conitics, shifting the entire parry to the right and influencing even centrist candidates.
5ervatives seem unable tu settle on a consensus Republican candidate ~s the
"There's no Arlen Specter or Pete Wilson in the race this year," notes
· 2000 presidential campaign takes shape.
Gary Bauer courts them and former Vioe President Dan Quayle seeks to Christian Coalition head Randy Tate. referring, respectively, to the semitor
l'rom Pennsylvania and the former California governor.
lay claim to their allegiance. Commentator Pat Buchanan has rallied them
There are other divisions as well. New polling conducted for congressional
i'n the past, while talk show host Alan Keyes has the potential to win suppon. Sen. Bob Smith of New Hampshire plays all the right notes . Publish- . Republicans showed voters view the GOP as increasi ngl y out of step, which
could pressure some candidates to moderate sharply conservative stances.
.er Steve Forbes sounds appealing themes.
New Hampshire 's Smith contends that conservatives could bolt the parBut none has become the anointed candidate of the right.
ty
if
they are abandoned once more . He has raised the possibility of a thirdSome worry that could dilute the influence of conservatives over the GOP
party
effort by conservatives. but most consider that unlik ely.
nominee and ease pressure on mainstream politicians tO cater to conservaThe clout of social conservatives varies from stat~ 1to slale. but most stratetive issues. Others sec a general election bonanza that could end an eightgists believe about one-third of the Repuhl ican primary vote in key early states
year absence from the White House.
comes from social and religious conservatives.
"It's a. huge force, but even a big pic out into 20 pieces gets small pretty
When united. they can exert enonnous pressure on contenders for the presfast," said Ralph Reed, a former director of the Christian Cualition who now
idential
nomination, forcin g them to the right both (n rhetoric and in the GOP
counsels Texas Gov. George W. Bush, a potential Republican presidential canplatform.
didate. "That\ what has happened so far to religious conservatives."
But in this cleotion oyde. they arc badly divided.
"Nobody is going to get the entire pro-family vote," said consultant Greg
" I think it"s more splintered," said Richard Schwarm,
a-former
Iowa GOP
Mueller, who is aligned with Forbes.
·
.
.

chairman who is supporting Bush. ··There are a number ot conservative can·
didates in the field who have records which are not only occeptable but can
be enthusiastically embraced by socia l conservatives."
Ed Gillespie, a consultant in the camp of Rep. John Kasich of Ohio, one
such hopeful , said; "The candidate who had the greatest potential to galvanize support was tbe first one out, and .that's (Missouri Sen .) John Ashcroft.
That left a vacuum."
Reed, the former Christian Coalition leader, observed; "It's a combination of no one being able to get to a critical mass, and there are so many peo:
pie vying for that crown that.they are just cannibalizing each other. There
were a lot of people who had the opportunity to pick up the Holy Grail." •
That has had a noticeable effect on others in the race.
_
Elizabeth Dole is talking about gun control, while Bush made a point of
. •
noting that voters are not ready for constitutional bans on abonion.
"Elizabeth Dole and Governor Bush certainly seem comfortable staktnS.
themselves out as moderate, and you didn 'I see that in 1996," said Steve:
Grubbs, a fonner Iowa Republican chairman who now consults for Forbes.
Past elections have featured a conservative candidate making an unexpectedly strong early showing, Grubbs said. "You might not have that kind
·
'
of national surprise this time, " he said.

~

Repairs HMOs not covering some popularly-used drugs~
on tap·
for space
station

plans have also restricted ooverage of prescribes, or the medication they them to prescribe the lower cost
By PHIL GALEWITZ
"I tried it ... and it works," he said::
some of the top-selling drugs in an have trusted for years to lieep them drugs and sends notices to members
AP Business Writer
When Aetna staned to excludi:':
NEW YORK - When Aetna inc. effort to control costs. For example. healthy.
telling them how much they could .Prozac in ianuary, it's policy appliea:
posted a bettec-than-e xpected first- Paci fiCare doesn't cover either of the · "I feel like I've been penalized," save by switching.
only to new members.
· •
quarter profit last month, the na~on '~ top two sellin g choles terol-lowering said Barbara Lampert, 52, of suburBut such steps can be a tough sell
"It came dowt\ to cost," said Hanleading health insurer trumpeted its medications, Zocor or Lipitor. Oxford ban .Chicago, who had to switch because of pharmaceutical makers' chak, Aetna's drug program managsuccess at curbing skyrocketing pre- Health Plans, a major HMO in the insulin medications when .she joined heavy consumer advenising and fre- er, noting the company believed the
Northeast, charges some members a Aetna in 1997. ·
sniption drug cpsts.
quent sales visits to physicians' alternative drugs it covers are equalHere's Ae.tna 's secret In January, premium for the leading allergy drug
Aetna and other HMQs say tney offices.
in benefit.
:
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
it stopped routinely covering some of . Claritin l'or adults.
Df!en make exceptions to allow mem- ·
"It takes more of an educational
Despite the grandfather clause:'
{AP) - The Russ ian half of the
HMO drug costs arc expected to bers to get coverage for excluded effort on o.ur pan," said Dr. Nicholas Aetna's decision struck a chord in the.
the most popular medicines for many
international space st.ation is so members .
soar 20 percent this year. primarily drugs if the preferred drugs don't Hanchak., Aetna's drug program man- mental health community.
·~
noisy that astronauts will wear
ager.
Need Pro~ac for your depression? because people arc using murc mcd, work or cause severe side effects.
. "I think this is terribly risl&lt;y ant!;
'earplugs when they ·drop off sup-, Sorry. Want the No. I U.S .. choles- icines and the situation is expected
Some consumers have· no com- even the HMOs' doctors must know'
Lampert, for example, was able to
plies later thi s week.
terol -lowering drug Lipitor'! Too bad. only to worsen. Ovmill health care persuade Aetna to pay for her Lipi- plaints after being persuaded or these types of drugs are not inter.':
Blasting fans are making parts
Want the world's best-selling pre- costs are expected to ri se only 5 per- tor nnd another diabetes drug, forced 10 switch drugs by their health · changeable," said Jim Coleman, r&gt;
of the Russian-built Zarya control . scription drug, Prilosec, to treat your ce nt.
plan.
Rezulin.
coordinator with the Recovery lni '"
module as loud as a busy highway. ulcerc Uh-uh.
HMO executives say they have litThis spring, Paul Frons tin's h~ahh · tiative, a Cincinnati mental health
But consumer advocates say
And over on the space station's
These· are among the Hi6 pre- tle choice but to reduce nccess to patients often have to work too hard insurer, the George Washington Uni- advocacy group.
.
.
American-made side, the commuscription drugs that Aetna U.S. many high-priced new drugs to keep to get the drugs they need. And most versity Health Plan, wanted to charge
Tight restrictions on drugs irkc
nication system is on the fritz . ·
Healthcare requires most of its mem- annual prc·mium increases in single consumers simply skip the appeals him more for the allergy drug Clar- many doctors as well.
The visiting shuttle astronauts
process because they believe it's itin that he'd taken for four years. So
bers to buy themselves, or pay for at digits.
"It's one of the biggest problemS:
will spend much of their time
But
that
reasoning
is
of
little
a 'higher co-payment than the drugs .
skewed against them or is too cum- Fronstin, a Washington D.C.-based · I have in dealing with manage&lt;t
repairing the 6-month-old space
comfort 10 many consumers who are bersome.
Aetna favors.
·
employee benefits researcher, care," said Dr. Lee Mc&lt;;ormick, a
station, already a fixer-upper.
Aetna also calls doctors to ask switchCllto a newer drug, Zyrtec.
Nationwide, most large health used to getting the drug their doctor
Piusburgh family doctor.
- Liftoff is set for Thursday, one
week late because of hail damage
to Discovery's giant fuel tank.
All seven' astronauts are taking
earplugs to wear inside Zarya. The
DALLAS (AP) - A medical ·
The suit· accuses the company that Pennsylvania, said he had no idea that Di. Robert Tenery Jr., a Dalfas oph- documents cited by the Morning ·
earplugs should also help the crew
researcher says he would not have made the ·"fen" half of the drug com- Wyeth financed or edited his article. thalmologist and chainnan of the News.
sleep better aboard Discovery, written an article promoting . fen- bination hid health risks associated
Oflicials at Wyeth, a division of . American ~edical · Association 's
Excerpta, based in Belle Mead,
· which is in a constant state of clat- · phen had he known it ,was paid for with the drugs. The company alleged- American Home Products Corp., council on ethical and judicial affairs . . · N.J., planned to submit most of the ·
ter but less so than Zarya.
and edited by the company ~hat made ly tried to . play down or remove defended the articles.
The fen in fen-phen refers to papers to inedical journals owned by·
The astronauts should be able to
half of the popular diet drug combi- descriptions of side effects from the
"This is a common practice in the Pondimin (fenfluramine) and Redux its parent company, Reed Elsevier
hear any alarms that go off in Zarya
nation .
articles, The Dallas Morning News industry. It's not particular to ·us," (dexfenfluramine), both sold by Pic, the newspaperreported.
even if their ears are plugged . At
"It's ~eally deceptive," said Dr. reported Sunday.
Wyeth spokesman Doug Petkus said. Wyeth. Phentermine, the otherhalfof
Wyeth officials reportedly said in
the very least, said commander
Albert Stunkard, whose article was
Only two .of the 10 articles .paid " The companies have some input, it the combo, is not made by Wyeth and depositions that the two published
Kent Rominger, they will be able
published in the American Journal of for by Wyeth actually were published ' seems, in the initial development ·of .. is still available.
articles were reviewed for fairness by
to hear warnings on their batteryMedicine in February 1996. "It sort in medical journals before the com- the piece ... but the proposed author
Six million people in the United independent panels at the jounials in
. powered speaker !1\icrophones,
of makes you uneasy."
pany pulled the drugs from the mar- has the last sav."
States took Pondimin or Redux. Indi- which they appeared.
,
which they'll carry over from the
A lawsUit clairns that Wyeth- ket in September 1997, when studies
. However, medical e~hicists and viduals who took the weight-loss .
"The anicles were ·not written
shuttle.
Ayerst Laboratories·hired ghostwrit- linked the combo to heart valve editors of prominent me&lt;jicaljoumals combo have filed thousands of law- with a slant toward selling the prod.
The noise level regi sters just
ers (or articles . promoting obesity · damage and an ,often-fatal lung dis- criticize\lthe practice.
suits nationwide.
uct," said Dr. Jo Alene Dolan,
·over 72 decibels in parts of Zarya
"What they're doing here is clearWyeth and a company it acquired Wyeth 's former associate _director 9J
treatment and then used prominent ease. Plans to publish the eight' oth(Russian for "sunrise"). Acoustic
researchers such as Stunkard to pub- ers were canceled.
ly an advertisement, but it's couched . hired Excerpta JY!edica, Inc., to write clinical affairs, in a Jan. 15 deposiexperts say that's roughly equivalish the works under their names.
Stunkard, of the University of in a scientifically valid paper," said the 10 articles, according to lawsuit tion. "The articles are written with
lent to a busy highway ora.turncd,
.
. .
.
fair balance."
up TV .10 feet away.
The space shuttle limit is 68
dedbels, although it 's exceeded
that on occasion because of unusuBy BETH GARDINER
voice, tp say, 'No, I don't want to have don't ·need them or other reasons.
And .the wife ·of a 71-year-.old man
with schizophrenia and depression, is
aiiy loud payloads, · said Jerry
Associated
Press
Writer
this
."'
·
,
Opponents
of
court-ordered
care
who
shot to death two people at a
grateful
authorities
forced
him
into
Goodinan, a NASA engineer who's
YORK
When
Robin
.
NEW
say
Others
argue
that
some
people
rare
but
well-publicized
violent
Mormon
library in Salt Lake City last.
treatment after spending several days
in charge of space station acoustics.
One crew even returned with tern -' Simon hears talk of forcing the men- must ·be coerced into treatment to acts by the mentally ill point to a loitering at New York's Pennsylvania . month said he was not taking medi tally ill to take psychiatric drugs, she . help themselves and to protect poten- more urgent problem; an underfund- Station two years ago.
cine for schizophrenia .
porary loss of hearing.
remembers
the
13
times
she
walked
tial
victims.
ed
health
care
system
that
often
losOutpatient commitment is rarely
"I
was
hanging
around
in
Penn
The asironauts who connected
to
be
confined
of
recent
crimes.
by
menused
even in states where it's legal,
into
hospitals
only
A
series
es
track
of
troubled
patients.
They
say
Station
...
licking
the
floor,
literally,
at
the first two pieces of the space stawill.
against
her
tal
patients
two
police
officers
court-ordered
treatment
is
at
best
a
and
authorities
differ in how they
4
o'clock
in
the
morning,"
he
says.
tion in December told their colshortsighted fix, at worst a violation "I know if I'm in that kind of posi- force patients to comply.
She
was
given
chemicals
designed
·
killed
at
the
U.S.
Capitol,
a
shooting
leagues it was difficult for anyone
The issue has been a hot topic i~
tion I would require that kind ofbelp.
in Zarya to hear someone speaking to treat manic depression, personali- spree at a Mormon library in Salt of civil liberties.
People leaving mental hospitals Some people need it."
Lake
City,
a
woman
pushed
in
front
state
legislatures.
-ty
disorder
and
alcoholism:
Now
age
from the Unity module just next
of a New York subway train - has .. are wafking out into a void, often,"
42
and
a
mental
health
counselor,
she
In
Maryland, a state task force on
The
idea
has
gained
popularity
door.
worries about proposals to require set off an emotional debate on the says Ira Burnim, legal director at the because of recent headline-grabbing outpatient commitment was createa
Judge David Bazelon Center for crimes committed by mental patients after a schizophrenic man shot a
treatment for psychiatric . patients ISSUe .
"For the short term, it's not
About
35
states
have
laws
that
let
Mental Health Law in Washington, off their drugs.
lawyer in Baltimore.' A Maine leg;
nearly the kind of noise that would · who stop taking their medication. .
to
take
anti
-p.&gt;yjudges
order
patients
D.C: "You're put on meds, you're
" It gives me a sick feeling in my
In July, Russell Westo,n Jr. alleged- islative task force rejected outpatie11t
dama'ge our hearing," said
stomach to think that some people chotic drug~. The outpatient com- doing fine. but there's no services ly killed two police officers at the commitment as unnecessary in 1991;
Rominger. "I guess at this point, it
could go through what I went t)litment laws are designed to help available for you once you walk out U.S. Capitol after he was discharged Nevada did so last year, instead
would be considered more of a nuiLhrough, or even worse," Ms. Simon patients who stop taking drugs the door."
from a Montana hospital and sfopped approving more money for mental
sance than anything."
the
belief
they
because
of
side
effects,
Jay
Oliver
Sax,
a
53-year-old
health services. ·
~
says.
"You're
taking
away
their
taking medication.
The concern is for astronauts
'
who will be cooped up in the space
station for three to . four months.
The first permanent crew is
.
.
.
'
expected to move in early next
or not it is in the national interest for Surveillance Act," Marlin said.
tssue. .
.
spying ts still unclear. "We cann~. ·
By
J.IM
ABRAMS
year.
T d
·. H
· Wh1le Shelby and others declared overdramatize conclusions that are
her to Conll.nue," he said.
. 0 n ues ay, a specta1 ouse pan• h'15
ld be be
f
·
To make the station quieter and . Associated Press Writer
Reno has lorig been. under lire el chaired by Rep. Christopher Cox, t co~
I ~orst case o espt- . not conclusive yet," he said, adding ·
WASHINGTON
Lawmakers,
thereby safer, Rominger and his
including a normally staunch Demo- from GOP lawmakers for her r~fusal · R-Calif., is 10 make public its' report onage tn U.S. htstory, Rtchardson that the United States has 6 ooo·
crew will install 15 foam covers
cratic defender of the Clinton White to have an independent counsel detailing how Chinese stole or oth- told on ABCd's "This Week,'' that the strategic warheads to 23 for the Chi~
over air-circulating fan's, ducts and
· obta,ne
· d ·sate11-lie an.,A nuc 1ear content an extent
"
' nvestt'gate charges the Ch1'ncse fun- erw1se
vents in Zarya while docked for . · House, say Attorney General Janel t
Reno should resign, or at least con- neled il!egal contributions to Clin- secrets ovenhe past two decades.
nearly six days.
Cox, . interviewed on NBC's
sider doing so, because of what they . ton's 1996 presidential campaign.
Goodman hopes the mufflers
This time, the issue is. the Justice " Meetthe Press," said 'the revelations
call the administration's . tepid
will get Zarya's noise level down
response to alleged n~clear spying by Department's refusal to approve FBI in the report "were so stark, so grave
to the 60 decibels intended for the
requests for a wiretap,of Wen Ho Lee, and so it)lportant," and the espionage
China.
entire space station, or at least
The coinments,. made on the Sun- a scientist at the Los Alamos, N.M., ''continues to this very day." .
·close. If not, permanent crews will
Senate Majority Leader Trent
day television talk shows, came as a nuclear ·weapons laboratory who is
have to wear earplugs inside the
special House committee prepares to suspected of passing secrets to Bei- Lou, R-Miss., said satellite and radar
module - hardly a desirable way
·
..
technology; supercomputers, nuclear
release a report detailing China's jing. ·
to live.
Justice Department spokesman warhead designs arid advanced rockquest for American military secrets.
•
The potentially dangerous din
" I believe the Justice Depanment Myron · Marlin said Reno had et technology have entered Chinese
existed long before Zarya, the first
is adrift." said Sen. Richard Shelby, reviewed the decision and fully sup- hands. "I do agree with others that
. station component, was launched · R-Aia., chainnan of the Senate Intel, poned it. "The Justice Depar!ment some heads should roll," he said on
by the Russians last November.
·
,
ligence Committee. "I believe that cannot and must not authorize intru- CBS.
·The Russians simply did not pay as
Energy Secretar)i Bill Richardson,
the attorney general ought to resign sion by the government into the lives
much auentio~ to acoustics as the
and she ought to take her (op lieu- of its citizens when the evidence pre- who was credited by Republicans for
sented as in' this case fails to meet the taking forceful steps in recent months
National Aeronautics and Space
tenants with her."
standards
established by the Consti- to bolst\'r security at the national labs,
' Administration would have liked,
Democratic Sen. Robert TorricelGoodman said. (The Americant~tion
and
the . Foreign Intelligence urged lawmakers notto politicize the :·
li. of New Jersey, appearing. with .
Shelby on CBS' "Face the .Nation;"
made Unity module, for instance,
also said President Clinton should
has a noise level of 58 decibels.)
VETERANS MEMORIAL MEDICAL CLINIC
talk with. Reno about possibly step.
'
pmg down . .
.
.
Other problems have since
"There
is
something
wrong
when
_- cropped up aboard the space staFREE Diabetic Screening
the United States Congress on a
- tion: a U.S. communication system
Wedne1day, May 26, 1999
bipartisan basis has so little confi: isn't relaying data back to Eanh
dence in the chief law enforcement
8:30 A.M.-11 :00 A.M.
: and Russian batteries aren't chargofficer of the United States," said
: ing properly.
Torricelli,.who customarily supports
administration policies.
\::5~
Screening Test,
_ Aight director Paui 'Hill likens
" I think it's time for Presiilellt
Nutrition and Medication Educational Information
- the space station to a new car that
Clinton to have a conversation with
: nCeds to go bai:k to the dealer for
· Call (740) 992-3632 to Pre-register
the attorney general about her abili: tweaking.
ty to perfonn her duties and whether

Fen-phen's maker a·ccused of buying good· notices

The Daily Sentinel
Page7
Monday, May 24, 1999

...* .

:Toughing it out at college not always a good idea for 'some
homesick students.
.
her fragile state to her parents and
jumped to her death from a sixth
floor window. College is not the
place for anyone who is emoti onally
unstable . Take that girl home at
once.
Seatde: Back 'in 1963, I staned
attending a large university but was
terribly homesick. I · became
depressed, and my grades began (o ·
falter.
My mother wanted me to transfer
to a school in my hometown, but I
opted instead for a small college in a
nearby town . I stayed there for two
years and then went back to the uni versity to finish my degree. Smaller
schools within driving distance of
·home can l&gt;e a good solution .
·
Tampa, Ela.: Whe n I went away
to school. I was desperately unhappy. My depression prevented me
from concen trating on my studies.
so I started skippin g classes and

Ann
Deu Ann Landers: I read the teract the original medication and
letter from "Virginia Beach Mom," began spiraling downward. .
whose daughter, Maya, . wanted to
One day, I sat in my dorm room,
come home from college but whose put ori my favorite music and picked
husband insisted the girl "tough it up my pocket knife with the thought
out." Please allow me to speak from ofslitting my wrists.
personal expe~ience.
When I realized what was hapMy fre•hman year at Tulane Uni- pening: I ran to my boyfriend's
versity was difficult, and I became room . He held me for over an hour
depressed. I was afraid ' to go home as I cried in · his arms. Together, we
and admit to my parents that I could- called my parents and told them I
' n't handle college.
needed to conic:_. home. They immeI wanted to prove I was strong diatel.y drove 900 miles to get me.
enough to "rough it out"J saw a docI checked myself into tbe psychitor who put me oh several kinds of atric ward of a fine hospital and
medication . I suffered side effects . received excellent treatment. I was
was put on additional drugs to coun- ·eventually able to return to coUege

missing assignments. Because I was
so lonely I got attached to a
boyfriend who was the wrong type,
and I began drinking a lot. When I
failed my final exanis, it was a relief
to drop ·out of school. Maya' s mother should trust her instincts as a parent and bring that girl home .
Roseville, Calif.: As the parents
of five college graduates, we went
through every form of home sickness. During the first critical year,
homesickness • manifested itself
through overeating, academic probation and failing classes.
Our solution was plenty of weekend home visits where the kid s studied in their rooms and did their laundry. They also had a personal 800
number for ·free access to Mom or
Dad 24 hours a dpy for iate-night
stress sessions and emergency infoT-matiori .
Care packages with lots of home-

made goodies are always appreciated, and believe it or not, visits to tl.e
campus for special occasions are
welcome.
· Parents should make college a
family experience. Please don 't print
our names . We don ' t want to embl(rrass the kids.
Have trouble sleeping at night
aod don' t want to get involved ill.&amp;
novel ? "A Collection of My Favori)e
Gems of the Day " is the perfect bedstand mate.
:
Send a self-addressed. lon}l .
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for $5.25 (thls
includes postage and handling) tlJ ;
Collection . c/o Aon Landers, P.{).
Box 11562, Chicago, .Ill . 6Cfi (j 0562 (in Canada, $6 .25 ).
:
To find out more about Ann Lan ders and read her_past columns. visit
the Creators SyndiCate web page .'at

www.crca.tors.com .

:Most frequently asked questions about Social Security and divorce
;BY ED PETERSON

on your ex's work recbrd at age the booklet, "Soc ial Security;
.Soclal Security Manager In 62; for widows or widower's bene- What . Every Woman Shoulj]
.Athena ·
·
fits at age 60; or for disabled wid- Know."
·
_ The latest statistics indi cate that ows or widower's benefits at age
:50 percent of today 's marriages 50-60. You may· qualify for a ben;':"ill end in divorc.e. Following are efit at any ., age if your ex is Top .ten services on Social Secu·
.the most .frequently asked qlies- deceased , and you are caring .for rily website
.
;tlons about..'the impact of divorce his/her child who is receiving benThe Internet has become a con:Qn Soctal Se~urityytotection.
. efits : You may qualify for retire- venient option for many people
- _ Q. I am divOrctng my husband ment benefits even if your ex is not seeking services or information
:after three year of marriage and receiving them if you have been from their Social Security office.
By accessjng Social Security
:now I' ve discovered that I have divorced for at least two years.
-cancer. Shouldn't I be able to get Your ex must be eligible for retire - Online, Social Security's Internet
.Social Security on his reco,d?
men~ benefits but he n~ed not be Website, you can find the location
. k No. You need to have been recetvtng them.
of your nearest Social Security
..tbarrted at leastlb y~ars before yo,u
office, apply for Social Security
Q. I plan to apply for retirement ' benefits, find out how much you
can get beneftts on your husband s
Social Secutity earnings. record. benefit at age 62 on my husband' have credited to ·your record or
Also you must be unmarned and earning record. How will this change your name on your Social
not enptled to a benefit on your affect hi benefits and those of his Security records. The Internet
own record that exceeds one-half present wife?
. Website is www.ssa .gov.
of your ex-spouse's benefit.
A. If yru' receive benefits on
. Social Security Online', Social
your ex's 'work record it does not Security 's Internet Website, houses
Q. I jut recently became affect the amount of any benefits one ·of the largest collections of
?ivorced after 20 year a a house- payable to his lJresent wife .and online information of any govern·Wife. I know I have not worked . kids ,
.
ment agency, and it's good way
:enough to qualify for Social Secuto access basic information and
rity on my own record, but will I For more information on benefits services.
~ose the protection I had on my
available under Social Security for
The most popular offerings are
husband' Social Security record ?
divorced spouses, you should call listed below.
,
. A. As a divorced spouse, y.ou Social Security's toll-free numRequest for Earnings ·and Benemay qualify for retirement benefits ber(l-800-772- 1213) and ask for fit Estimate Statement.

a

Application for a Social Securi ty card.
· Frequently asked questions and
answers abourSocial Security programs.
The Social Security Handbook,
a basic reference to Social Security program s. The mo st widely used
publi c forms .
Publications on retirement, disability and survivors bene tits and
Supplemental Security Income for
the aged, blind and di sabled .
These are among some 100
publications available in English
and Spanish. Full text of offictal
agency rulings.
. Social Security Teacher's Kit, a
teaching aid for high scho.olteachers. Summary of the trustee's '
annual report of the Social Securlty trust funds .
Brief factsheets on more than
two dozen specific aspects of
Social Security programs. · Sixty
years· of Social Security history
with text and photos. ·
, Users may download , copy and
print material from Social Security
Online and redistribute it to others
free of charge. There are no copyright restrictions . ·

The Community Calendar is day. 117 Memorial Drive,
published as a free service to non- Pomeroy.
prolit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special event s. The
RACINE - Southern Local
calendar is not designe&lt;J to pro- Board of Education. Monday, 7
mote sales or fund raisers of any p.m . at Southern High School,
type. Items are printed as space . Racine .
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run .a specilic number of days. TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO . Tuesday,
MONDAY
630 p.m. at Star Mill Park.
POMEROY - Dedication of
markers on Morgan Raid route
POMEROY - Meigs Area
across Meigs County Monday, II Holiness Association, singspiraa.m. at Bradford Cemetery ; II :45 ti on, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
a.m . at Hil and Church area. Church, 7 p.m. Tuesday.
' .
Recept~on at Mei gs County
Museum Pomeroy, 12:30 to 1;15 WEDNESDAY
p.m, Dedication of markers to
POMEROY - Free diabetic
Portland Park, 2 p.m.
sereeni ng. Wednesday, 8:30 a.m.
to II . a.m. Veterans· Memorial
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Medica l Clinic. To preregister,
Eastern Local Board of Educa- - call 992-3632. Nutrition and med.tion, .special meeting, Monday. 5 ication information also available.
p.m. at the office. Purpose to close
ou~ contract with building conMIDDLEPORT ~M iddlepon
tractor.
Literary Club. 12 :30 p.m.
Wednesday, Iron Gate Restaurant
POMEROY ~ Veterans Ser- . in Point Pleasant. Last meeting
vice Commission, 7:30 p.m. Mon- he fore summer break.
.

Debate sill raging over medication for mentally iU

Lawmakers say Reno's job at -risk over Chinese spying

.f

·EDI
ELIIIBIL
PRO
r

ti1 ®&amp;GJa

CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
·(740) 992·2117 or
(800) 992·2608

•

•
'f\
..

Jumbo Fisb Sandwich
Plus Chips

'

IGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
.

$3.29

00

---

99.2·5829
992·4250

ST. RT. 7 North

.'

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

•

••

'

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II
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•

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•
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•

�Page 8

Monda.y , May

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• The Dally Sentinel

24, 1999

Monday, May

trimmed with dog or cat fur could be
purchased at retail outlets in the
United States horrified American
consumers and resulted in more
Dog and cat owners, humane calls and letters to HSUS than any
people everywhere, are horrified by other issue in the 45 year history of
the recent revelation of the Humane the organization, which is the counSociety of the United States that cats try's best-known animal protection
agency.
and dogs are inhumanely ki lied In addition to · support from
for their fur. But the reaction has
been, I am happy to say, immediate. HSUS, Burlington Coat Factory, a
Repre semative Jerry Kleczka, D- leading national clothing retailer, is
Wisc .. introduced a bill (HR 1622) supporting the legislation and hopin April that calls for a ban on the ing for its prompt passage . After all,
impon, expori and sale of dog and · those happy ads on TV · with the.'
cat fur and requires that all fur and whole family rejoicing at being·
fur-trimmed garments
labeled .to equipped with winter coats would be
indicate the accurate species compo- pretty hard for the socially consition.
scious consumer to stomach~
Mr. Klcczka said that the "current
HSUS investigators documented
law ,does nothing to stop the sale of the international trade in 'dog and cat
these deplorable products," and "we fur in an 18 month investigation that
should end this inhumane treatment led them ultimately lo China and the
of dogs and cats once and for all." Phillipines. Investigators conserva·
tively estimate that two llJillion dogs
And so we should.
The revelation that coats and toys and cats in those countries arc
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society

be

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Grimm

-SHENEFIELD-GRIMMLANGSVILLE
Deni se
Flower girl. Verontca Grimm,
Mari e Shenefield and · Jer emy : si,ster of the 'groom. wore a navy
·Shain Gri mm were united in mar- . dress · with white lace trim and
riagc on Feb. · 20 at the Rutland matching lace socks. She carried
Church of the Nazarene with th e a white lace basket of red and
Rev. Lloyd Grimm Jr. officiating white rose pcials.
the double ring ceremony.
The best man was Israel
The bride is the daughter of · Grimm, brother of the groom, staCarl and Lue Shenefield and the ti oncd. in Colorado . Groomsmen
. gra nddaughter of Rex and Cather- were Tim Grimm. brother of the
Shcnefic.ld of ·Langs"illc.
groom, Chester, Tyson Rose,
~:: The groom is the so n of Steve Chester, and Don· Smith, Colum; -and Janice Grimm , Pomeroy, and bus, both cousins of the groom,
· Bob Grimm of Vienna, W.Va. He and James Hess, Sistersville ,
' is the grandson of Raym ond and W.Va.
Lydia Smith, Pomeroy, and Lloyd
The . ring bearer was Ryan .
· and ·Fern Grimm, Middlep ort. .
E'sparza, nephew of the bride. He
, . Given in marriage by her par- carried a white .lace ring box
· ent s and escorted by her father, which held the bride and grooms
·the bride . wore a formal white wedding bands.
·gown of Italian satin , The off-theThey along with the groom and
shoulder, A-line, princess style th e bride 's father wore full dress
· gown featured long tunnel fined tu'xedos with coordinating black
sleeves, fitted bodice and a semi pleated trousers with white shirts
. ·. cathedral length . train. The gown and matching black bow ties and

::me

3nd

white

ro ses,

ste phanotis.

baby 's breath and gree nery.
Lauric Esparza. sister of the
bride . of Alb any was th e matron
Of hv nor. The ot her atten dant s

wcrc Crystal Vaughan and Bridget V;iughan , cousins of the bride,
both of Langsvil le. and Marlo
White a nd Angie Logan of Middlcporl.
Thcy wo re navy, floor length
gowns witl1 matching sa tin gloves
and sapp hire and 'diamond , earring s. gifts of the bride .
The bridesmaids carri ed bou , quets of li ve pink and white
·' roses , baby ' s breath , ivy and
: ~cccntcd with navy ribbon.

By KIA SHANT'E BREAUX .
Associated Pll!Ss Writer
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) With thousands of pro wrestling fans
looking on, a 33-year-old scion of a
Canadian wrestling family plunged
50 feel to his death as he was being
lowered into the ring . ·
Owen Hart, who wrestled · under
the nickname "Blue Blazer," fell
Sunday ni ght as he was bei ng lowered by cable from the ceiling during a sold,out World Wrestling Fed.
.eration event at Kemper Arena. The
event was· on pay-per-view nati onal
television , but the fall was not
show n. .
.
Hart was given CPR inside the
ring as the announcer haltingly told
the audience that the incident was
not scripted. The wrestl er was pronounced dead at Truman Medical
Center.
"We at the WWF are saddened
by ' the tragic accident that occurred
here tonight," said Vince McMahon
Jr., the president of WWF. "We have
no answers as to how this happened
yet. We will shonly... .
Some witnes.ses s.aid the cable
snapped, while others sa id · it
appeared Hart was somehow disconnected from it. They said his head
snapped backward when he hit one
of the padded pieces •of metal that
hold the ropes toge ther in each corner of the ring .
c

ves ts.' The groom wore a whi.te tie
and ves t along with a pink. rose ·

and stephanoti s houto nni ere . The
oth ers wore a single pink rose
,boutonniere.
SALT LAI\E CITY (Ar)- Did
As a gift to the hride. the, your ancestors incllJde pioneers .or
groom sang "I Do Cherish You" immigrants, villains or soldiers,
afler he· recited his wedding vowS princesses or tailors? A Web site
to her:
that officially kicks off Monday
Mustc was presented by Alison and offer s access to the largest co lRo se and Janic e Grimm. solo ists. lection of genealogical data in the
and Roberta Meyer. ptanist. Reg· world may help you find out.
.istcring g ue sts was Linda VaughThe site, put up by the Mormon
an .
·chu rch, co ntains links to 400 mil A recept ion was held at ll_oyal lion names of people who lived
Oak Resort. The wedding cake dated back to 1500 - many with
was a three-tiered foun)ain cake family pedigree .charts. The
wi th tw o s ide cakes. It was deco- Church of Jesu s Christ of Latterrated with sma ll blue roses and day Saints' will add millions more
surround ed with mini carnations names later this year from its
and baby's breath . The meal and records on 2 billion dead people.
cake were se rved by the Star
The Web site has been accessiGrange of Langsville .
.
ble since it began testing on April
Mr. and Mrs . Grimm re side in . I, with improvements made along
Vinlo~.
the way. Church President Gordon .
B. Hinckley will formally unveil
the site and roll out an improved
version Monday in Salt Lake City.
Even before the kinks were
worked out, the site was hit. The
test site received 2 million visits

··we thought it was a doll at
first, " said 15-year-old Robert
McCome. "We thought they were
just playing with us. We were really
shucked when we found out ihar it
was no joke.,.
Hart fell as his inatch introducti on wns about to begi n. The TV
audience was being shown a montage'.of clips of Hart.
"He was moving pretty fast (as
he fell)," said Jesse McDonald, who
was sitting near the ring. uHi s chin
and neck hit the top rope:" .
The arena fell into silence.
Commentator Jim Ross repeated.ly told the 14,000 fans that Hart's
fall was not scripied, as professional
wrestling matches openly are.
" What happened kind of was
really a mirror image to a circus
going wrong, with someone falling
off the high wire, or falling off the
trapeze," Chris Jericho, a star with
rival
World
Championship
Wrestling, told Toronto radio station
. The Fan. "That's the way you can
sum up what we do. We're almost a
live-action circus act. Ancf ·toni'gln
one of our guys fell off the high
wire, and the net didn't catch him. "
Hart, known for his acrobatic
stunts, is the son of fotmer wrestler
Stu Han. All seven of the elder
Hart 's sons w~nt . into wrestling,
including Brel "The Hitman" Hart,
a WCWstar.
·

RtiCUOd i!/171119 Blld&lt; 1..11&gt; p,_,,

Appr0• -2 months ft(nlll , whlJI

many of us consider members of the ·
slaughtered for their fur every year.
The animals are housed in family are being cruelly slaughtered .
.
deplorable conditions and then to provide a luxury item.
Obviously, we have a classrc
killed, horribly, for their fur. Investigators also documented that dog and case of the profit motive at work.
cat fur is dyed and processed to Animals are expendable, panicularly in countries whose economic
resemble fur from wild animals.
.
What do yo.Y look for? Dog fur infrastructure is wobbly.
The fashion industry (.witl) the
products may be labeled as Gaewolf, Sobaki and Asian jackel. Cat notable exception of people like
fur products are often sold as Wild· Olcg Cassini, who also rescues
cat, Goyangi and Kat;renfelle . abused horses) does not care .
Most of the members of thal ·
They're out there!
Investigators believe that many industry will do whatever it takes tQ
of the full-length dog and cat fur make us feel that what we wear is
garments they saw are also sold in more important than what we artl,
Russia and Eastern Europe, and an that we are not good enough as we
unknown quantity of dog and cat fur are - in our flannel shons and cottrim has been exported to the United ton dresses.
You know what to do: write, fax,
States . Through DNA tests on items
processed from domestic retailers, or e-mail your senators and repreHSUS investigators confirmed that · sentati ves now, to let them know
dog and cat fur is being sold now in your position on animal-related
issues. Your input will make a difthe United States.
·
The new legislation addresses the J:erence.
shocking reality that animals who

foet-chell . No 10 Tag•. (7•01·

258--

.

4. ExpefeB!~£~ ~~~J,t\~ly 0~ 1!!$
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
'
•Patching
•Busine115
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts ·

on its first day, as m'any as the next
most popular genealogical Web
si te gets in a month, and has had
more than 7 million hits per day
ever since.
For more than a century, the
Marmo~ church has dispatched
members throug hout the world to
hand- copy and later photograph
and microfilm parish and civil
records . The records , now all on
microfilm. are stored. in a granite
vault 'in the Wasatch Mountains 25

Call For Free Estimates

20 Yr8. Exp. • Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

DEPOYIAG
PABft

B~~rcbul••

$5.75 &amp; Up

COMMEROAL and RESIDENTIAL
'

FREE ESTIMATES .

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

SYRACUSE

992·5776
!lr.IOTFN

'
'

VI

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

-

....

--- VILLAGE ORDINANCE

, , ORDINANCE NO. 659
, An Ordinance granting
. '[Franchise) to (Columbus
, Southern' Power Company)
: ·(Ohio Power Company], Ita
·auccoasora and aaalgna,
· 'the right to acqulra, con-

meana of overhead or

under,g round conductors,

.......

Jeremy .L. RousJt
949-1701

with all the necaaeary or
desirable appurtanancea
[and appliances, Including
electric oubatatlona], lo
render public uUIIty service
In said VIllage and to the
lnhabltanta thereof by eupplylng electric energy to
said Village and the Inhabitants' thereof, and persona
or corporations beyond the
llmlta thereOIIor light, heat,

son or persona, firm or

flrma, corporation or corporations.

SECTION IV.
, ·,ate tn the atreett, thoroughSaid grantee shalt oave
the Village harmleoa from
larea, alleys, bridges, and
any and all liability arlolnrj
· public placet of the VIllage
· · ot' Pomeroy, State of Ohio,
In any way from Grantae'a
· and Ita eucceaaora, linea
nogllgonce In tho erection,
lor the [trenaml11lon and) power, or any other purpo•- maintenance, or operation
distribution of electric enar· es or purpose lor which of aald linea lor tho dlatrlb- •
gy to the VIllage of alactrlc energy Ia now or utlon (and tranamlaalon] of
Pomeroy, Stale of Ohio, and may hereafter be uaed, and electric energy.
·
the · lnhllbltanla thereof lor the tranamlealon (and dll· SECTIONV.
light, heat, power, and other trlbutlon) of the oama withWhenever uld Grantee
purpoaea, and lor thetrana- In, through, or acroaa aald shalt be being the erection
ml..lon (and dllltl~utlon} Village 01 Pomeroy, State of or Installation of any linea
ollhe aama within, t~rough, · Ohio, ·
or equipment, It ahalt
or acroaa aald VIllage of SECTION II.
promptly and diligently
Pomeroy, Stile of Ohio.
Sild linea, appurtoriancn proaecuta tho work to aom·
Be It ordained by the (and appllancea) shall be Rlltlon and IIIVI lhl
Council of tho VIllage of conatructad 10 •• to Inter- et,._ate,
thoroughfare•,
Pomeroy, Stile 01 Ohio:
lora aa IIHia aa poaalbla altaye, brldgea, and public
wlth the traveling public In places where auc~ work Ia
- SECTION I.
. [Columbua
. Southern Ita uaa of the atraata, thor- dona · In a a good condition
:,Power Company). [Ohio oughlaraa, alleya, brldgn, of rapatr aa before euch
: , Power Company), Ita auc· and public placea. The loca- work waa commenced.
. . caaaora, and aMigna (hare- tion of all poln, or con· SECTION VI.
·' ,!nailer called "Grantee', are dulls, ahall be made under
Wherever
In · thla
. · hereby granted the right the auparvlalon of the prop- Ordinance, reference Ia
privilege, lranchlaa, and er board or committee of made to the Vllttgt or .the
· authority to acquire, con- the VIllage government.
Grantae, It aholl be daemed
: •· atruct, maintain, and· opar- SECTION Ill,
to Include the roapecllva
... eteln, above, under, IICJOII, The rlghll, prlvllegaa, and auccaNora or ••lgna of
• and along the tlraall, thor· lranchlaa hoireby granted aHhar; ond all rlghta, prlvl·
oughlarea, aliaya, brldgea, ahall be In Ioree and affect lagea, . [lranchlaaa) ond
.. and · public placaa (aa the lor a period of one year (1) . obltgatlona haratn con- .
now exlll or may yeara from the date of the talned by or on behlll of
; hereafter be laid out) of the paaaaga of thll Ordinance. Mid VIHega, or by or on
Village of Pomeroy, S - of The rlghta, prlvllagaa, and behalf of Mid Grantll, ahall
, Ohio, linea lor the (trana· lranchlaa hereby granted 1M binding upon, and lnaur~
; mlaalon and) dlllrlbutlon of ahall not be conalrYcted to to the benltn ol the rnpec·
IXCIUIIVO and lhl live IUCCINOI'I or llllgna
~ aleclrlc anergy, aHher by . bl
.: atruct, maintain, and oper-

St. Rt .. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Custom Spray
. •Vegetables •Corn
SHADE RIVER
• Soybeans

IS::!!!l. ,

• Jhomaa Nicholaon, alai.,
Dtlendanta
' IRI·SIAIE MOilLE
CaH No. 89 CVF 44 .
NOnCEBYPUBUCAnON
POWER WASH
To: Thomaa Nleholaon,
whoae 1111 known addraaa
Trucks -tractor
· Ia 41188 Hilla ROid, Trailers - ·decks - drtveways
· Pomeroy, OH 48789, prtiunt
acldraaa unknow~, and
Equlpm8f11 Cleaned &amp; D~reased
C. Ann Nlcholaon, whooa
JEFF STETHEM · ·
' laat knowe addraaala 41188 PHONE: (740) ~218
, Hilla Road, Pomeroy, OH
EMAIL:
: 45781, preatnl addreaa
unknown.
STETHEM@EUREKANET.COM
You are hereby riotlllad
FREE ESTIMATES
that y.ou have bun namaa
38782 Sumner Road, ·
. 1)afendanta In the action
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
entitled RDICDI Mille, at 11,
Plalnlllla, va. Thomaa
Hlaholaon and C. · Ann
Public Notice
Nleholaon, Dtt.udanw. Thla
a~lon hu been aaalgnad
· Call No. 89 CVF 44, and Ia · the 24th day of Mey, 11189,
. pending In the County Court and the twanly·a.lght (28)
DI·Malga County, Ohio. Tha doyo for anawar will
• obJect of the Complelnt commence on that data, In
· damanda writ ol raatltutlon the oaM o.l your flillura to
· agalnat the Detandenta, enawer or olhtrwlaa
. Thomaa NlchOiaon and c. reapond •• requaatad by
· Ann Nlcholacin end coata of the Ohio RYIII of Civil
thla action.
· Procedure, Judgment by
' Yciu are required to dal•ult will lla rahr;lerad
anawar the Complaint agalnat you and lor the
within twanty-alght (28) relief demanded In the
daye alter tha . laat Complaint.
pub,llcallon of thla Notice, Dated lhla 15th day C!f April,
:which will 111 publlahad · 1889,
once each. weak lor alx (8)
. Angle 8111811
IUCCIIIIVI WMkl. Thl 1111
Deputy Clark
publication will be niada on · . (4) 11, 28, (5) 3,10, 17,, 24

Call 985•3831 ·

AG SEIMCI!" ·

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery ·. Plus.. Inc
Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
. boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon- Frl S:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

·,

H&amp;H .

FULEY

Construction
Ught Commercial &amp;
Residential
New Construction &amp;
Remodeling

FREE ESTIMATES
. 17401667•6992

Quality Crlfflnlmhip
Guarutu4

WJOS
TV27
Local
Television

Gt~ft

80 '

Auction
•
and Flaa Market·:

.

Complete Aucl!onaertng Serrlc·
Street, Middleport, Thurad~a .
Ohlo Licenu f7t593 . 740·n.9·

2623.

Free E•timate•
740-742-3411
Bryan Reevea
Sutan· ReeiJea

•

Rick Pearson Auction CompAny,
full time auctioneer, comple'te
auction
ser¥ice.
Licensed
t66,0hlo· &amp; West Virginia, 3p4-

n3-5785 Or JO.I-n3-S.U7.
Ever~ SatUrda~ Night 7 P.M.,
Crown City. 740-256-6989

YOUR

CONCRETE
CONNECTION
Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

U.•dJtw

Septie Syaeenu &amp; .Ucilllie•

· (7401698·9407

CaU today about •pedal

pri&lt;e• thm July on
Quality Built l'lowe•

Remember
Cklallty Is Job One
Need A BY! One
CaU A Liltls

o,..
DRIVEWAY STONE
Landscape Material,

me

"·

Power

SELF STORAIE

Washing

291170 Baahen RCNid
Racine, Ohio 45771

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
f'ainllng, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp; Exterior
15 Yro; Expemnce

Help Ua Celebnte The zoolla
~OIRUUancL

A Special Souvenir Edition WaU Be Included In The
Sentinel In Mid-July.
.:Many stories and pilotograpils of significant.events relating to tile
ilistory and development of'Rut/pnd will be featured in til~ publication.
If you prefer an alternative to regular advertising copy, perfiaps you
migfit consider an ilistoric account and piloto9,rapils of your business.
We will be ilappy to assist you in designing an ad.

740.949-2217
Slzee 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

--

Houra

' 742·1701

7:00AM·8PM

IEIIOYm

·

,QUAUTY WINDOW SYSTEMS
'

'

. FORMERLY OF II 0 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE Roun 33 .
6 MILlS NORTH Of .POMEROY AT COUm ROAD II

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

. . VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

992-4119 OR 80()-291-5600
VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACfORY DIRECT PRICES .

j.

Antiques, top prices paid, Rr..-er·
ina Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740·992·
2526.
'

d0 1 ti
t

For You, 740-2~989 .

or you.

EMPLOYMENT
SER VICES

740' 985-4180
Free Estimates

110

Help Wanted

I$$Make Money!$$$ Work At
Home - Aasemble Products.
Easy Work . Excellent Pay. Free
Homeowrker's Assoc iation,

CREDIT

AVON! All Areas! To Buy

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

WOIRYINI!!!
No Embarraeement ,,
You're Treated with Respectl
~~~ for Instant AD1oro•v1

YOUNG'S
CIIPEIIII SERVICE
•Room tlddlltoMl Rtmodlllrig
oNawGingu
•l!flclltcll &amp;Plumbing

or

Sell.

Shirley Spears, 304-675-1429..
Avon Prodllcts: Start your own lrt·Home Business . Work Fle•ible
Hours, Enjoy Unllrrilled Earnings.

1-688-561·2666:
Carpet cleaner/helper . Mechanic
aptitude helpfuL Valid drivers II·
cense &amp; ability to read map. Must

be able to move furniture. Reply to ·
PO Box 453. Pomeroy, . Ohio
45769 or 74()-992-6788 .
Computtir Users Needed . Work·
Own Hrs. S25K ·SBOK/ Yr. 1·800·
476--8653 X 1n1. www.1cwp.com
Orlver-Attentlon

Slon tmmoclllllfyt
Application! Proce!Ud
kl 2 Hourt
long Haul and regional Drivers
Training program avd ror
COl school glllduates
BMujrements:
6 monthS OTA exper.

or"'""

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
RHsonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

740·742·2138

Limestone, Gravel,
Sand, Fill Dirt,
Agriculiural Lime,
Mulch, Top Soil
(Low Rates)

740·992·3470

· oos

Start Dallng Tonight! Have tu n
playing lha Ohio Dating Game, 1· 800-ROMANCE, olrtenslon 9681 .

30 Announcements
N8W' 'ro 100 Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson. Athens . ,

7-40-592·18&lt;12
Qual ity clothing and household
llems . $1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday tnru Saturday

9:00-5:30.
Reward! $750.00 for the arTest of
persOns - who broke In&amp; Stole
Tools Property or: Ronald Miller.
261 Pickens Rd . Patriot. Oh .

(740)· 379·2160 NO Ouostlons
Ask!

40

Giveaway

1 Dog House to give away. For
size dog. IMulated .

madiu~

(004)882·2155.

3 females &amp; ·1 ·mate, ·Squtr... l Oog
puppies, wormed, first shots, 740992-6718. '
31l2 old male pup. , 1/2 Cocker
Spaniol o('&lt;l 112 Golden Retriever.
Shots, wormed. (100)-446·6231
6 month old German Sheppard &amp;
Austrlallan Sheppard Mixed. Out-

side Oog. (304)61~80.

of
GaiDa County! ·

Refuse Service

A locally owi.ed company with ovet 28 yn
experie111• has now extended our coverage ilrea lo
indudi all of Golb Co. and portions of Meigs,
Ylnlotl &amp; lawte1111 caunties.

·

CALL TODAY TO BEGIN YOUR
GIRIAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

1-800-967-4774

..

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! ~s·

semble Product&amp; at Home. Call
Toll Free. t-800-467·5566 Ext
12170'
Excellent opportunity to join the
long term heanh care field . LIcensed Practical Nurses. Rot.al·
lng shifts. Intermediate care canter. West Virginia licanae tequlred . Apply at Point Pleaunt
Center/Genesis Eldercara, State
Route 62. Route 1. Bo• 326,

Point Pleasant. WV 25550. EOE. ·

•Pallo • Parch Dlc:kl

To The.Residents

Continental
· Express, Inc
18001·293-0700
18001·695-4473

t -900-226-5889 El&lt;1.2708. $2.99
Per. Min. Muat be 18 Yrs Old,
Serv·U{81&amp;)-&amp;15-8A3&gt;1

To Good Home. (30-1)675-254().

8112-82111.
· -oy,Ohto
22 yro. Local.

Productivity·Bonuses

Ffee Internet Access!

2 Female Calllco l&lt;ittenill'wlns.

,., Eld '""'

"Dental P!an AvaBable
•40.1 K and llle Insurance
'Obtainable 5alety and

Personals

•Roofing • Qutlll'l
•VInyl Siding • Pllltllng

V.C. YOUNG Ill .

~Years of age
good drMng record
•Patel Health Insurance

ANNOUNCEMENTS

:!/I 1199 TFN

We Deliver ·

992·5455

P.O.

Box 675, Ripley, WV 25271.

WICKS
HfiOLiftG lftC.

Compost

5/11 1 mo.

HILL'S

Ste~l,ng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. GaMipolls, 74P-.4-4t-2842.

INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message.'After 6 pm

17401698·.6029

up to .8 ton

"A

Absolute Top Collar: All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofaata,
Diamonds , Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,

Want To Sell Your Stuff? Call Rlv·
er15ide Auction And Let Us Sell II

1bpsoll &amp; Mushroom
Light Haulins

Phone (740) 593-6~71

Wanted to Buy :

out
let

Thke
the
Pain
painting, and

*New Homes
•Additions
• Remodeling .

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales Representative
Larry Schey '

90

Unda's Painting

of

Bulldo•er &amp; Backhoe
Seroicer
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
. Grading

Wedemeyer's Aucllon Serv(ce,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740-319-2120 .•

Clian Late Model Cars Or
Truck&amp; , 1990 Modele Or NeWer,
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 Eastern Avenue . Gallipolis.

r-

u.~!~!~!:l!e~~

For Free
. ProfP'a'm Guide

Don~

. I

1:00pm Friday.

Details! Send S.A.S.E. To: Nat'l

99a-Z'7Q 99S-U01

· ••IIi•

VInyl Sldlng-Roofa.Dieka-:

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTIO

..,,_

.'
-ifoi-=-="'::'.,;,!"""''"il

All Yord Sole! Mu!l'tle Pill~ Jn
Advance. Dud line: 1:OOpm tiMI
day b•fore the ad 11 to r'jlft,
Sunday &amp; Mondey edition·

u . Consl.gnment auction- ~HI

40 742-8888

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by ·Larry Wright

·
Call
·
992·2155 tnd Speak With
Dave. Harris-Ext.
104
.
or Kathy Wllllamso•-Ext. 105
June 11.

Pomeroy,
· Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Now ConllrUCIIon &amp;

.. CaU 992-2727

•

·

· 10;00 o.m. Sotunloy.

Rorn-tng-Kitcllon cablntll

1 mo.

of aald VIllage · whether
eo axpraaa or not.
·
SECTION VII, .
Thla Ordinance ahall 1M
accepted by )he Grantee
within lixty (60) daya from
the date of the paaaagt of

Pallid In Cc!!Jncli, thla 17
day of May, ·1999.
John W11-. Praaldant of
Council
·
Kathy Hyaell, Clark of
Council
Approved thla 17 day of
May, 1999 ·
Grant Vaughan, Mayor of
the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio
CERTIFICATION OF ORDI·
~~i~cfuANSJl~D BY VIL·
I, Kathy. HyHII, Clark of
the Council oltha Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, do harally
certify 11 lollowa:
That the following Ia a true
copy of an Ordinance No.
11511 al)lcted by the Council
of the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio, on the day of 17 May,
1999.
Kathy Hyeall, Clark of
Council of the VIllage of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
(II) 24
(8) 1 2TC

odllfon- 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Moncloy -

,Sill MoodiSpaugh Aucllonter(ng .

ftftC~~~~Ct~ft~~ ·--::74=o=-7=42=·8=s=o8~

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

a

Council of the VIllage of
Pomeroy, Ohio, horaby
reaervea the power to grant
similar rights, prlvltegea,
and lranchtaeo to any per•

ft
fJt

~

··:~~$~====;=::~~~~==
Public Notlca
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
' - -·

Cht1ter, Ohio

•. '

1o to run. SulKier

885-4422

I.DUIIll.SunutHorrut. com

Full U.ne Of Water Storage TankaSeptic &amp; Cletern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru !!", Gas Pipe &amp;
Regulators
OPEN:
9:0().4:30 Weekdays
9:00-12:00 Saturday

Bo Plkf

um..

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY Sunset Rome
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783 ·
Construction
740.985-3813
4" thru 48" Plaetlc Culvert In Stock

AI.&amp;.''"'-In--·

Df&amp;DlM; 2:00p.rD.
the cloy - t h e od

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
tone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

1""'""'""'"

. New Homes &amp; Rem deling
Garages, ·Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding
,"Specializins In Los Horrwo"
11
Commercial &amp; Residential
28 yra. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ~
Phone 740·992·3987
~
John Dean; Owner

..... Certlfted

Get the latest in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel

Electric &amp; Water and or Full Hook-Up
Acroas from Forked Run State Park and
close to Fork Run Boat Ramp

~ft~~~ct;;r~~~~c
ft) J.D. CONSTRUCTION ~

·LawliC..·Dnlp
............ Plaallag
-IIIIJchlag
·lalllalng ~ I Brlcll
..... Ccmatracllaa

•NewHomea
949-2168
•Garages
•
&lt;12TFN
•Complete
Remodeling
Public Notice
Stop &amp; Compare
· IN THE COUNTY COURT OF ·
FREE
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO '
ESTIMATEES
Roacoa Milia, II al.,
'
PlalntiHa,
. 9$5-4473

miles so utheast of Salt Lake, and thing from immigrant ship passencop.ies are at'the Mormon Family ger lists to homestead records to
History Library near the temple births and deaths. To verify their
downtown.
online research, users can lo.ok at
The church's goal is to help microfilm of the original records at
members find names of ancestors the library here or by ordering a
to baptize by proxy, an ordinan,ce . copy at one of the church's 3,200
that Mormon s believe gives the Family Hi story Centers worlddead the opportunity to embrace wide.
the faith in the afterlife.
--The site also has what amounts
EDITOR'S NOTE The
to a card catalog to the church's genealogical site can be found at
Family History Library - every- www.famllysearch.org
·

1-740-667·3083
1-740-667-3316
$550.00 Yeor
$12.00 Night
$1 0.00 Primitive Camping

RIVER81DE AUCTION BARN '

. HillARD'S
GIEINHOUSI

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
· • Rooflng

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thuradaya
AT 6:30P.M.
' Main St.,"
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 coverall
$500.00 Slll!rburlt
Prograulvt top lint.
· Uc. 1 00-50 ""-

Gallipollt
&amp; VIcinity

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

740-256-8147

BUILDERS,
·INC.

B•tUU., C•n:u•buru

•Geraniums, Azal~s
•shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Car~
Open
9-5 Weekday Sun~ay 1-5

phone:

B~$ELL

· HanglniJ Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage

Coolville, OH 4!1723

Gutters
Downspouts
· Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Jerry L. Preece
Crown Citv, OH 45623

NOU&gt; Open For
Spriri(J Sea•on
· Complete une 01
Vegelable &amp;Bedding Plants
All Fltdl $8.50

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 Sf. Rf, 7 South

,.

Mormon church begins putting genealogical records on Internet ·

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL

·P~ving

Howard L. Wrltesel

.

Yard S.le

70

'Ita 117-GIII

OWEN H~RT, PICTURED top with his brother Brei 'The Hit Man'
Hart, shown ln .a wrestling match.
"I dido 't see it, but from what l talked to Vince McMah.on yet, but
can gather, somebody s!tpped up," somebody was ·careless or missed
the 83-year-old father said from the something or else Owen would still
family home in Calgary, Albena.
that he was planning to leave it when
"You don't gel up 60 or 70 feet in his contract was up.
the air without being properly
·Survivors include his wife,
anchored down ," he said. "I haven't Martha, and two young children:

Lost and Found .

60

Wrestler Owen Hart plunges to death in front of fans

.qppliqucs . . ·
, Th~ bride's headpiece was ·a
: wreath o f roses a nd pearl loops.
and fel l int o a doub le layered
.illu sio n fingertip veil. She carri ed·
·a casL:ading houlJUCt of llv,e ink

The Daily Sentinel• Page 9

What Interesting·Trim on your Sweater:

Wedding

was acccnLcd with a lencon lace,
seed pearls, clear sequins , and

24, 1999 '

Give Away , Mixed Bread Pups

To Good Homes! 7--4412.
Female' Kinens Ready to go end

Excellent opportunity to join the
long term health cart field . Olrec~ ' .
tor of Nursing. Intermediate care
canter. Have four or more years
of nursing experience and possess a valid West VIrginia RegIste red· Nurse license. Comprehensive benefit package available. N&gt;Piy by forwarttlng resume
to Point Pleasant Center/Genesis
Eldercare, State Route 62, Route
1, Box 326, Point Pleasant, WV

25550. EOE.
E~tperlenced Carpenter Wanted ,
Must Have Own Hand Tools &amp;
11anspor1atlon. l304)675-2478.

Global Aecru&lt;tars Needing :
STNA'S &amp; LPN'S for more lnfor·
matton call: 1700)-446-4188 or
stop In 995 Jackson Pike, 1201,

Gallipolis. · .

Gtoi»IRocrultoro
Needing :
RN's For Otrwctor of Nursing Po.

sition$ In Parksrburg. w.. and

Jackson. Oh. For. mora lnbrma·

lion calt t700f-446-4188 or Stop ·
In 995 Jad&lt;soo Pike ,t 201 , Galli-

of Month. (700)-44t-o932

polis

Full Bloodad Mala Rat Terrier,

Wanted:
Housekeeper for Busy Hou&amp;ehold; One da~ Per Week, Pretei-

Approx 3112 years old. To Good
home iempermental1 (74())·44452780
Gas range to give awltf, 7~·992·

78&lt;11 .
Klttens · Biacle and White ·to ·a
good home! ~other .Is a good

He_,

ably Friday. Send Resume, Roleronces and Hourly wage Aoqutremanta to : CLA P.O. Box 41-4,

'li.GoiHpolls Dally Tllbuno. GalllflO·

Its, Oh. 45631

·

Mousort CAll' (7-'0)·388-801 &amp; af·

Jewelry Salas Retail Sal11 and
Computer Exportonco Roqulred.

ter 5:pm

AcqulslUons Fine Jewelry. 15.1

l&lt;lttena. Whatever Slz:e or Color
You 're Looking For, Wa Have

Only 12 Lolt.l304)67!!-11832.
Mate IIIII Shottio CofNo to •. gooa
l)ome Jn the country. 304·6753802.
Six Week Old Killona. (304)882·

3ns.

Second Av 0. Gallipolis. Apply
Monday ttwu fi'Xtay.

LocofTIL&lt;C~&lt;tng Company Settdng
Qualified Tluc- Driver!. Good
Pay And Beneftta. Send Rooume
To: Driver, P.O. Box 108 Jack·
son. Ohio •~o; Or Colt 1-1.-o,
285·1483 To Scho&lt;luto An lntor-

t---·- ----+,r

�0

Pomeroy •

Mld~leport,

Ohio

Monday, May 24, 1999

,

•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally ·Sentlnel• Page 11 ·

,.,.

ALLEYOOP

, ~'.

-

. .•'

PHILLIP
ALDER

·'
560
~ocl&lt;&amp;prlngs

Medical Proc:enor FT /PT No
Exp. Nee. Wll 1lWn PC Req. Earn
COIIIKJO.e63.7440
Mental tM•Ith Specltllat-permanent, full·tlme position with
aou\hlrn Ohio agency Minimum
requlrtmtnta Include maater'l

dogrH, bot proltr Ohio licensed
paychologllt whh Ph.D . H )'88f1
rolatod OJIIOrlonce, LISW, lPCC,
or lSP Ruponslbllltles Include
tvaluatlont, asnsamenla, re·
port&amp;, eonsultatlons, and all aspects ot thl'rapeullc acUvlllet,
working primarily with children
Will be work ing In Jackson and
po11ibly Gallla countltl CompetltNe salary and benefits Two
reference from previous employera required Call· Career Con-

nections,

( 740)· 594·~94 t

Now taking applications tor exportenced grill &amp; prep cook App~

AI Harfs l&lt;ountry KIIC/lln.

Wanted Summer Route Drivers
L.ocal Routes. Good Payl Please

Call t-(800)·545-4423 ,
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc,
Benefits Game War~ens , S.Curl­
ty, Maintenance, Park Rangers
NoExp Needed For App./Exam
fda tnc: •

140

Business
Training

~actne,

Ohio between the hours ot 2-4

No 'phone calls pleaso
DtfKkH" of Pltlent Accounting

positiOn available at Oak Hll

COft'lrnunlly Medical Center Qual·
iflcatlons three years business

olfieo ...,.rtence, knowledge of
hospital potlant acoounllng . and
Bachelor's In accountJng A•
sponslbRitles dlrectfon/super
wtsjon ot patle,t accounting offiCe.
ad billing functions , and account
receMtbfe manage11111nt tf Interested please send resume 10

Dak Hll Community MediCal Center, Attention Brenda McKenzie,
3511Charl0ne Avenue Oak Hill,
Olr 45656

EOE

Person with positive altlludes and
excellent work ethic Ability to appty service techniques, telephOne
sk•lls and computer skills, to work
well wllh clients 1-on-1 and comP.Iete multi-tasks with attention lo
i:letall Complele benefits pro·
gram Send Resume : ClA· ~72. %

Gallipolis Dal~ Trlbono, 825 Third
/We • Gallipolis, Oh. 4563t .
Postal Jobs 1o $18 .35/Hr. Inc

Benefits, No experience. For
App and Exam Into Call 1-B00-

813·3585, Eat. 88t2, 8AM·9PM,
7Days tds.lnc.
Reliable Person To Live In With
Elderly Male Room, Board, Sal-

ary SUppllod. (304)895-3942
AN Position. 3 Days Per Week,

Goltlpollo c.- cotooge
(Caroors Close To Home) Cal
Today! 740·446-4367. t-8002t4-0452, Reg 190.fl5-t27~B

DISplay BoKEts, Free AsmlsskMlll

F1ntt Time In Area Very Large
Asortmentl

cell

References Has Private
Room And Full care In Her Home
For The Eldert~. For More Info

'Medical, dentol and

1997 14x70 Trailer· 2 Bedrooms,

2 Baths, Must Selll $19,500
(740) 388·0434

This newspaper Will not

1997 Ooublewlde on 2 112 Acres

accept

3BR, 2BA , Storage Bldg , Dirac!

a&lt;t.oertlsernents for real estate
which Is In viOlatiOn of the
law. Our readers are hereby

TV Satellite, $57,000 Will shOw

between 5PM· 8PM (304)458·
t033

lnfom1ad that all dwellings

t997,

advenised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time Avallabll,
800-383-8862
Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

REAL ESTATE

$3995. Quick delivery Cell 740·
385-992t .

310 HomH for Sale
2 Year Old Frame Home: 2 Sed·
rooms, Kitchen/living Room Utll·

plemantaUon, and Service
Available for Sprlhg Clean up,
lertlllzlng and planting Free estl·
mates Satisfaction guaranteed.

Greg Milhoan 3041675-4&lt;328
Electric Ma lnterunce Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes , Light Fl)[·
lure, Heating Systems. and Re·

modeling (740)441·t40t
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call

30HI75-t957.

Available (304)875-2949

Interior &amp; Exterior Painting, Ex·
parlenced, References, Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate,

740-388-804t

Area, 112 mile from 35 ThurrMn
(740~682-6347

(304)875-2533.
3 Bedroom, Split Entry, Brick
Home on Route 2, at Mt Alto
Built-In Kitchen, Olnlngroom, LA,
3 Baths, FP, Woodburnlng slove,

on naarly 5 acrea tand

(30~)895·

7 Years llld, 28•30 Attached Qa.
rage. 1~x24 Building Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed , 69 1/2 Acru Or
Wtll Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs Co.

740-992·3537.
Beautiful Country Property,

~

Bedroom, 2 Baths, Famll~ &amp; UtilIty Room. Cenlral 41r, Half-Acre

lot (304)675-30301675-3431
By owner, 725 Page Street. Middleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appractate wilt soli house with·

out lots for $89,000, 740·992 ·
2704, 740-992·5698
Don't wan To Buy, 3 Bedroom
Home In New Haven, Good Con-

dttton, $32 ,000. Appraised
$39,000 (304)682·3772
EXCELLENT CONDITION: 2
Story 3 Bedrooms, 2 1/2 Baths,
Near Holzer, Immediate PossesIlion, 740-446-9672

life Insurance. •ongo~ng tralftlf'O
For Sale by Owner I S t23.000.
and CEU opportunllles •Oppor- ,Jims Drywall &amp; Construction
arlek Nlcl family nolghborhObd
lunlty for advancement Arbors New Construction &amp; Remodelf 3 bedrooms, 2t/2 batha, FR, lR,
weat 11 a leading provider of Drywall, Siding, Roots, Addl- gas fireplace Recently remo·
Subacule Care we are seeking tlons Painting, etc , ~30o4)874·
deled , and updated! (740)·4•1·
an organized leader with excel· 4623 or (304)574-0155.
064t
lent problem solving skills for our lawn mowing and Odd Jobs! B~
Great Location!! large Roomy
18 bed subacute unit Previous or Small! Call: SIIYe Conley High
House. I 78 Acres, Privata . 6929
experience a plue but would con· SChool (740)
alder an outstanding new gradu•
446-2158
Stela Roula 586 (740)·245-9448
ale Call Debbie Long, AN to In- Mary's Daycare, low rates, llexibte
House For Sale: 2219 Oak St.J
1ervlew for this opportunity Ar· ~ours, 18 years experience.
Pt Plsaaant $28,000 (304)695·
bors west, 375 W. Main Street. Open 24 hours per day, 7 days
3082
West Jefferson. Ohio 43162 per week Openlnga ror fuN 11me or
(614)879-5t03.
part tomo chlldfon, or ff you need a • House For Sale. Centrally Locatday, evening or night out CPR
ed , 2321 Jefferso{l Avenue, Pt.
Scenic Hills Nursing Center Is and llrst aid certified, certified
Pleasant (304)675·t368 or
Now Accepllng Appllations For nursing a&amp;~lstant, all meals and
(304)895-3t84
The Position Of Social Services snacks provided, now accapJing
Director, LSW Please Send Re·
age children. Call 740-742Large 8 Rooms, 21fl Baths. Well
aume And Salary Requirements I ' ~~~~~~:_____:_
Equipped Kitchen , Appliances
To Charla Brown At Scenic Hills 1
stay
2 Woodburlng Fireplaces,
Nursing Center, 31 1 Buckrldge Need sitter for the summer? Cay·
Water &amp; eleclrlc Heat AC
Rood, Bldwoll, OH 45614.
care with a pool Open Monday Hot
( - O f EOE)
thru Friday, oak tor Kelly, 740· 1t/2 m/1 In city of Gelttpotls, All&lt;·
Scenic Hills Nursing center Is
currently accepting applications
For a Day Shift Treatment Nurse

(Weekends Only) Ptea01 apply ot

867-8480, TUppo" Plolna area
Painting, Ibn service &amp; plumbing
Low rates C811740-591·9611

311 Buckrldge Rd Bidwell, Oh
45814

Yard work· rnowilg. hedgesr wind·
owa, gutters, palnUng, call 740·

Seeking Certified Nurse Aides

992·3t93 or 740·992·7821 ask
for Dana or leave a me&amp;IBgB

Part Time. Rotaltng Shifts West
Vlrgl,.la c•ruucatlon requ ired
Apply at Polnl Pleasant Center/
Geneaia Eldercare. State Route
82 , Roule 1, Box 326 , Point

P1Mur11. WV 25550 EOE.
Skilled Nursing Facility seeking
experienced candidates for MOS
position lnlerestad AN or LPN
ca,ndldates should have experience In aaaesament, documenta·
lion, Slate Carllfk:atlonlllcansure
regulllllons, good communication
akllls and effective member at
resident care team E•cellent
Benefits and exceptional staff Ia
an exc:ellent opportunity for the
right candidate for personal and
profenlonal growth. Submit rt·
aume to: Rocksprings Rehablllta·
tlon Canter, 36759 Rocksprings

Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ATT.
Carol Greening, ~N. Director ot
Nursing Equal Opportunity Em·
plorar

Somoono 10 fl)llld tho night with

1he elderly, mldnlghl·8am. 5 day&amp;
110r week, $tO per day, 740·992·
50311 or 740-992-441 o
Substitute and two(2) Teacher's
IJdll For Summer Program Part,
lime employment with no fringe
bentflta. Houra are Monday-Friday Teacher's 4idea -one, from

7 30AM·12 30PM and one, from
11 .30AM·5·30PM. Substitutes .
hOurs vary from 7'30AM·5 30PM
Must be at least 18 ~ears old
wllh a HS diploma or GED Experience working with children

protorrod Mutt be able to read.

wn-. and UH OOt'rect

gt~~~mmar in

tpeaklng and writing Send re·

ourno to. Children's VIllage, Ma·
aon

County

Vocational -Teeh

Clnler, Ohio River Road, PI
PlooNnt, WV 25550 by May 28

eoe

vacaney for Prtachool Super·
vllor StbnM letter of fnltroot, roaume, references and copy of
current certificate to John Conatanzo, 507 Richland Avenue,

Sullo 101, Athonl, OH 4570t
~ le .Ainl15, tm.
vacancy lor Speelll Educotlon
~1or. Wwnll ol.irtlor·
I l l , - · ..- . a n d copy
o1 curnnt corllftcOio to John conatonzo. Supertntondonl, Athena·
Malgo EducatiOnal Borvtco Canlor, 507 Richland Avenue, llullo
toe, Alhtna, OH 4570t Doodllno
11 Juno 15, 1899.

FINANCIAL

210

Bualneea
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING CO
recommends that you do bull·
neas wfth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll ~ou have Investigated

the offering
All CASH BIZIII
Get $20 Bll-lor $t2 5011
$500 ·$t,500 /Wk EaS)'I
Free S5 Sl"'''lef lnv Roq
1.!JOO.B97·9888, 24 Hr11
Business tor sale· well estab·
liahed carry-out busin11a, beer,
wine, tobacco, lonary &amp; state II·
quor agency, good location on
busy Middleport street, for more
details can 740-992-6879 or 740·
892·2929, owner financing or other options avaNablo

lng &amp;t89,00Q.OOI ShOwn by Ap·
polnlment11(740) 448-«1159

Family Home, With' Pool 2 Car
Gaogel Apt. Albany, 1 Miles O.U
Me1g8 Mine, 740-698·7t50
Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 aer88, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and privata, appoint-

ment, call740-992·5698.
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom , 2 1/2 Baths,
Living Room, Dining Room, Eat·ln
Kitchen Lg Family Room. 740-

24!5-9337

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
.... Amazing• ... • 5 Bedrooms, 2
112 balhs, over 2.000 sq. II , for
leas than $400 mo Fraa Delivery
&amp; set t.IJ00.948·567B

1985 1•x65 ft 2 Bedrooms, CJA

Furnace, Now Appliances. (740)·
446-275t
14•70 Fleetwood Trailer t999, 3

bedroom, 2 baths, half-furnished,

Pleaso contoct (740)·379·2728 or
(740)·379·2734
bedrooms, 2 Baths, like New1
Must be moved, Includes 2
porches. $14,400 or best offer

Call (304)773·9t07 or (304)773·

VENDING: Lazy Peraons Dream
Few Hours • Great Income
Priced To Sell free Brochure

18xl0 VInyl Shlnglo, Assume
loan, 1·8flG.383.6862.

230

Profe11lonal
Servlcee

Upholstery Cleaned
•steam" or Absorbent
Soapleaa AnU-Ra·
used exclustveI
Fast dry·
I
o.ver~~~:~~:~ ·. Guaranllld Work. Call
I Clean 11 (30~)675·4040
tot Free Estlmalest

Doos Your HouH Stdlng, Dock,
or DriveWay need 1 cleaning? If

ao, Pressure Waahlng Is the an·
swart CAll Clearly Clean at

(304)875·4040, lor a Frot Ea·

limite

TUIIHIDDOWNOH

IIOCtAL 8ECUIIITY -?
No flo u.- w. Wlnl
1-188-1182·3345

WALL.CIILINQ CLIANID U·
PERTLY·sav.. on rape1n11rtg In·
dottnttoly Wo u11 tho ••clualvt
Von Sohrldor V53 Power Wall·
Ctoonlng 8yl10m ProtiCII paJnt,
ltl¥11 glass , retards chalking

Anti·MIIdow. no ador, aanttlzoa.
Fret 11tlma11a. Call Clearly

Cllln at (304)e'l$o4040.

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE tot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting
deluxe &amp;tapa and setup Only

$200 74 por month with $tt ~0
down. con t·800-837·3238.
New Bank repos only 2 left we
finance call304·722-7148
Please Help! ~ Bedroom 2
Baths, just take over Payments!
1-688-736-3332·

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom moblll """"'· 740-992·5039

1975· t2•65

Hoi~

Park 2-bed·

room, Total Electric , like New
through outl Free Delivery and

Block·UPI $7,950 00 (740)·446·
0175 (304)-675-5965

1165 Nouoll•. t4•70 with 8x20
ExplndO, 2 Bodrooma, 2 lull
baths, Fireplace, N•w Carper

(740}448-3493
1111 Skyline Ptnocrook t4X70,
21edroom, 1lath, 3 Ton Heet·
Pump/Central Ak, Slllrtgted Root,
E~coltont Condlt)on. (30~)075·

Pats (304)875-5162

(304)n:l·5861.
3 Bedroom House h1 Henderson.
Clean References &amp; Depolllt Aa-

qulred $300 month
t972.

(30~)675·

4vailable· 11cluded farm home
near Dexter. deposit and lease

raquwed. 6tH59·7959

Beautiful Alvtr VIew· Nice Two
Bedroom, 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street. Stove &amp;
Refrigerator, Basement, One Car
Garage, Washer !Dryer Hook·Up,
Deposit &amp; References Required,
No Pets, Rent Olscount Call 740·

992·5502
Rent Rr 160 Near North GaHia,

$400 00/month , Deposit $400.
No Petst Reltrence. After 8:Q0pm
(740)-446-6495

420 Mobile Homea
'for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. alr
conditioned $260-$300, sewer,
water and trash Included , 740-

992-2t87.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home In Port-

or Area . No Pets . You Pay All
uumes, Depoan &amp; References

Required 740.388-9182.

WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide. 304•
736·3409

330 Farma for Sale
28 Acres MIL, 6 StaU Horse Barn,
3 Bedroom House, Fence, 740·
3118--6504 •
Small farm (52 acres) with mot"JIIe
home, self sufficient with natural
aprlngs. 2 gas producing wells.
some timber, $68,500, 740·992·
3564
Waterloo, Approx 43 Acres, 2 yr

old 2 story w/10 Rooms. 3•Baths,

2 Stairways, 2 C&amp;r Garage,
36'x36' Barn, 28'x40, Metal Bldg.,

20 x86' Shed, 18'•24' Mo1al &lt;la·

raga $155,000 Plus more land
Aval~ble

Willow Wood, approx 47 acres,

Factory Bulh Home-2 ytAII old 7·
Rooms. 2 5 Bath's, Stone Fire·
~In

Family room $t20,000

Chesapeaka. Approx . t5 Acres

wilhla Bi-level . 7 Rooms, 2 5
bath&amp;, FlreplaceiFamlly Room

Wetbar Satellite Dloh , 32,,48,
Garage/Workshop Just Minutes

td1own $159,900.
Chesapeake. Approx. 4 S Acres,
1 Story w/6 Rooms &amp; Bath, Nearly New Roof &amp; Windows are 2
years old It Absolutely Shines.

$135,000
•
Wall Realty· Realtors (740)·888·
7069

350 Lote l Acreage
1 Acre land wanted to build onl

(740)·245-!5682
t Aero Lot toll For Site In Mooon,

$15,000 (304)882·3772
1 Building Silo laf1 o1f Route 33
In Mason. $15,000 &amp;r'l Acre

(304)862-3772.

Beda Complete full and Twin,
Couch, Desk, Living Room Suit,
Refrigerator and Girts Bicycle.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

3 Bedrooma, 1 bath, 2nd road off
At 325, Andrew Rd First Trailer
on Left $350.00 month, Deposit!

(740)·448-6345

740·446·1279

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, 110 pet&amp;, 740·

992·22t8
1 Bdrm

Extra Nice, First Month
Free With One Year Leaae

8 oo p.m 740 ·892·2526,

~uss

MoOft OW!\1(

540 Mlace11aneous
Merchandlae
r350 Watt "mpllfler with built In
Crossover also lnctudee Speak·
er box loaded w1th 1·12" JL and
4-10" Jl s two(2) . 1" Tweeters
also Included $900 00 OBO

(740) ·245·5 t28 or (740)·379·
94561..o1Mt Mesaage
18 HP Sifrl&gt;ltclty lawn Mower, 44'
Deck .. Low Hours, Good Condi·

lion Call alter s :pm (740)·446·
3430

11" Dlroc:TV Sotelllto Syotemo·
$69 00, one month free programming t.lmltad time offer, call 1·
BOO-779-8 I 94

2 ~acing Go-Karts, one 2 Stroke,
$t,OOO. One 4 S1roke , $800. t
Set ladder Racks tor Ford Van,
3 Air COnditioners New Fireplace

Insert $250.; StO Bod, $300.
Truck Toolbox, New, S2SO 8Ft
Ladder-Rack, $300 Used Wind·
ows,Aiumlnum Triple Glassl$25.

ea .. Basketball Sot/Complete,
$60 Fi\le a••10' Aluminum Col·

umnol$75 11 (304)875-4004.
Air Conditioners, Used DUferent
Sizes, Guaranteed! 740 -886·
0047

AMAZING

METABOLISM

Breakthroughlll Lose 10·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommendtd Free 5am•

plea ~atl 740-441·t982.

$375 00 Monlh All Utilities Paid I

PM740-446-2398

COQLDQWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed
$1,500, 2 t/2 Ton $1 350, 2 Ton
$1,250, The Above Includes Nor·
mal Installation. Jl You Don't Call

er, $300 mo (740)·367.fl6tt

U• We Bom Los•! 740·~.
Or 1·800-291-0098.

2 Bedroom Apartment In New Ha·
ven lor rent (304)882·2119, da~-

Craftsman Riding Mower, 15.5

To University Of Rio
ca"'""s, 7-t0-2.. 5-5858

$57 69, Anchors $5, Coors &amp;
Windows, Gil &amp; Electric Water
Hearers, Plumbing &amp; liltctrlcat
Parts, lntartherm, Miller &amp; Coleman Air Condttlo~or• &amp; Heat

2bdrm. apta., tolal electric, ap·
pllances turnlshld, laundry room
fadlltles, ctoae ro school In tow,

Appllcatlono available al. VIllage
GrHn AP11 t49 or cell 7~0·992·

Pumpa. Bonnon'o Mobile Home
Supply, 7&lt;0·..6·94t B Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Electric Stove. 2 yaat'l old Enter·

3711. EOH.

tatnment Contor, $350 00 Com·
putor . _ $35 oo Kitchin tablla;
$35 00 (740)-4o48-3224

4 ·Bedroom Apartment• for Low

Grubb's Plano- toolng &amp; repairs

Income Famtllla. Call lor lncomo
Llmtts Avallabll now 10 qualified
Cal· (740)-446.()25t
883 Third Avenue, Gallipolis .2
Bedrooms, $300 00 Plui Utllltlll
and ona monlh Depoaltl (740)·

Prob~ma?

Nood Thned? Call the
plano Dr 74().448.4525
JET
AE~ATtON IAOIO~S

Repolrodl Now &amp; Robollt In Stock.
Call ~on Evans, HlQ0.537·9526.

245-9595

5 4crea Bltacktop Frontage &amp;
lake VIew, Gatlla CQunty,

Apartment tor rent In Middleport,

Johnson's USed Furniture !Ap-

$32,000 More Acreage Available

no pats, 740·992·5858

740-388·8678.

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

pliance&amp;, 74Q.446-4039, 7~0·4-46·
t004; 5 Mills Out Bulavlllo Pike
35 Right On KMtor ~Old. Blue
On loft.

&amp;ACRES
In tho countY. Only $9,1oo.oo wittt
COunty Wator,Woods,
Boautlfullll DoUble w'dls are Per·

-dow&amp;.

mined.
5% down lln&lt;l Conlrae1wlth Approvod Crodlt frll Mapa. Going
tall, calllbday, H800)·2t 3-8365

6 Mllea from Town State Route
141 Road Frontage, Co Water
(740}379·2830 After 5·00 pm
Almost 5 Acres On Blacktopped
Jim Hill Ad 17,500, In Muon
County Septic Tank, City Water
Access Cave On Back OJ Prop-

lily. Must Sell. Call
2446.

3t~·294 ·

lAUNER LAND
7-t-14112
Golllo Co.: Hun1ersll South Oft

SA 218 Williams Hollow Rd 88
Wooded Acres Wllh Stream,

$45.500. Public Water. Friend~
Ridge ~d, t5 Am8 $14,000, City

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
lrom $279 to $358 Walk to &amp;hop

&amp; movies. Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing Opporlunlty
Christy's Family Living, apartme('lts, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740-992·4514, apartments a\lall·
able, furnished &amp; oofurnlshed
Gracious IMng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle-

port. From $249·$373. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Opper·
lunltlel

On SR 325 , Nice 5 Acres

$18.000, P1A&gt;Ifc waoor

Tap (304)875-30301875-3431
Trailer Lot For Rent1 (740)-448·
7834

380

Real Eetete
Wanted

We Buy Land. 30 · 500 Acroa,
wo Pey Caan 1-800·213-8365 ,
Anthony lend

HENTALS

t990 Royal Cove. t4X7~. 410 HouHI for Rent
2Botna. Skyllglltl tn Kltcnan. Ia·
land Slovo, UndorplnnlflO &amp; Your Home II JUII A Phon1 Colt
Pon:fl. 114,000. (304)eiH2-4e.
Away, 304-731-729&amp;.

2,000 GaJion Water

Tan~

$800 00, 427 Chevy Truck
Motor,$750.00 Mise
Steal

Bea,rns. Pipe, VIbrating Tamp flts

4WO ...Sama Specs 18,500 QO .

Come Seo The Now TN55, 85, 15
4WD models with Super Steer,

will turn shorter rhan a 2WO
Keeter!_ Service Center St At
87, Pt~:~leasant &amp; Ripley Road .

Ph011!1J:J94)895-3874
Power King tractor, 14 hp .• 48 ~
deck, scraper blade, plow, cultl·
vators, potato plow, runs and

looks good, $2000, 74q-949·2246.
S~tllulldoro

&amp;tNrco

30'x40'x8', Painted Steel Siding,

1050

'

'•
t9B9 S·10 4 Wheel Drive, $3500. &gt;

&amp; brakes, 6200 miles like new, ;

$8700, celt 740-992·2596

,

•
~

1992 GMC Sonoma, Extended
Cab. 28,000 miles, New lllther
Seat;Tool Box E11ce1 Condition! "

~

(740) 446-4385

t995 Dodge Dakota SLT, • Whl ;
Or, 8 Ft Bod, V-6, 5 Spd, 147,000 •

1995 Ford Explorer. 4DR,43K Ml, Loaded, Mint Cond., Sand Color ~
In 6 Out Aunnlng Boards. All \
Detlector Front and Rear, Air
FronVRear, Radio FronVRear,
Cruise, Tilt, leather Seats. Roof

Rack (304)675-6055

t996 GMC Sonoma. 39,000
mites, Asking $8 ,000 00 (740)·
388-00f 3

88 Toyota 4 Wheel Drive, Pick- •

Fair Pigs lor 58111 ExoeUent Blood
Unesl For more Information Call.
(740) · 245 · ~672

or (740) 387·

0563

(304)57~~9,

Aher 6PM

years old $700 001 (740)·367·
7227
TRA :~SPO fHATION

710 Autos for Sale

1992 Chevy Astro van (EXT), 5 ~
dOOr, 66,t 52 mttos. blue whh 1&gt;1u0 '
Interior, Gltrlm package, air, ami •
fm caaatue, clean, rear doorl .,,

dlmaged, asking $3400, cell 740'; "
992·1506 diYI or 7~0·949·264~ '
evenings
~

"•
------~--~----~·
1990 Honda Gold Wing s E Trike ~

740

Motorcycle•

~

7371

1980 ·1110 CARS FROM $500
Pollee

Impounds,

And

Tax

Ropo'o. For listings Call 1-800·
3t9·31123 Ext. 4420
1864 ,yh1Vy tamaro. 30&amp; engine,
euto, .• 11 or trade for amal pickup
ol eqUII value, 740-949-2094

750 Boats l Motors
f9r Sale

"

198~

Buick Grand National
73.000 mll11, Aoklng $6.500.00
(740)-446-46t9
t987( Ford Mustang, $t260 t9B6
Chevy Van, $t250 (304)675·
8693.

For rent· dock site with 2 cement :
patios, ctty water, call 740·992· ,

1990 Cougar, high miles, runa

eve Jolnlll. 740·245-sen.

New Auto Body Part&amp; &amp; Acces! "
aorles Transformers Auto Parta.

(304)875-3324

2045
tl93 Dodge Colt, 5 Spoed Good
Condition, t09,0oo Miles, $2.300.
Q!lO 740·25&amp;-t233

evenings.

For lhe first lhree monlhs of the
year, I am very busy teaching class·
es. So, books for revte w and readers'
ma tl pile, up, awatlmg mod·Apnl
when thmgs finally quiel d own ~l's
start by lookmg al the books.
Forsl os "Eddte Kantar Teaches
Modem Bndge Defense" (Masler
Pomt Press ). TI!i s covers the basocs of
defense, so ts al an mtermedlate lo
tnlermedJale-plus level (There's no
such thmg as begmners' defense, tl
seems lo me ) A s always wtth a Kan·
tar book, lhe lexto's wnuen m a lovely s1yle And I approve of hts ustng
ace from ace-kmg, so there are no
tnck· one ambogutltes afler a ktng·
lead.
Thos deal would t~st even sophts·
1tca1ed pairs. How should the defense
go again sl two spades?
Weslleads the heart kmg As you,
Easl, ho ld the ace, ot looks nalurallo
e ncourage a contmuauon by stgnalm~ with Ihe eoght H owever, take two
seco nds to s urvey lhe dumm y Look
a1 lhe doamond pos oloon You would
hke pa nner to swttc h to lhat sun at
lnck lwo Gtve your sode a c hance by
droppmg the heart two al tnck one
It shouldn't be 100 dtffic ull for
Wesllo find lhe dtamond swttch You
' take, say, dummy 's none wtth your 10,
re1urn a low hean to panner's queen,
and cash 1wo more dtamond lncks
Thai's live m, bul whe re 's number
sox? Lead the 13th dtamond .. u
effects a trump promotton for your
so de
Kamar concludes, "Don'l leave
lhts deal unttl you are sure you under·
sland what happened here ."
The book is $22.95 postpaid from
Baron Barclay Bndge Supphes. Call
(800) 274-2221 lo order.

43T---

.... ....-.

WATERPROOFING

Maln-

guartntet 12yra on )ob exptrl·

Livingston 1 Baaemtnt Weter
Proofing, 111 bllement repalra

dont, fru ntlmatoo, lltollm•

onoo (304)fi95.3Bel'

Profeaatonal, 20yra. exptrlence

with all meaonory, brick, block

a

Building
, " 1997 Honda, Coupe, Bpoct11
Supplle.
Edition 2 Door. Fully Loodod,
=a:-IO-Ck:-.~b~ri~Ok.;,.;H.:W.:I:.;r,;.p~lp;,:e_l_,-w:-ln~q.·· l ~~·.500 . (304)~82·2823, After

atone. Also room eddltlona, g•ragea. etc Fr11 tstlmatea

owa, lll'ltela, etc Claude Winters,

840 Eltctrlcel and

(304)773-11550.

Refrigeration
Rooldontill or commorclal wiring,
now Nrvlca or ropolrl. Mootor U·

Ctf'ltd electrician

Ridenour

Elactrlcal, WV000301, 304·175·

1781

'

'

45 TV 111M aiOI :"
47 Aulllar~

4801d-loi:

Tlltl-

41 Hondlt or
HytiiiCIIII

soc..u-

52~.,....

!54 .,.._ Miller '

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Cempoe

c.letltlly Cipher~ . . crNted fnm quatdona by r.mou. peop., . . and .,..n
Elf*l
In 1M . . . .a.ndl for II'IOit'lef Todlly'• CftHt H tqU111s V

•0

WGMN

CDMMLT

X F L

ws

KDM

N LX

CDWIILXCDUU

CDWLCOUU
ASFM

WZDMNULY

WXDT

0

ESSXCDUU,

HDI L W

EST

GMXS

DIIY
E T L L.'

.'

KHUUHI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I wanllo be known lor who I am on lhe rnslde 1oci,
no11ust how I look wrthoul a shin · - Fabio

TIIAT IIAII.Y

PIIIUI

O faur
a-ranae lot1ero ol
acramblod -.Is
low 10 fonn favr _.do

0

''

ELAVUD

I IIIIP

I

I.

PRHYA

....-~-C--M-C-E---.1 ..~,'
1 I' 1 I I

.'

Granny to her grandchildren, "Get 1n step w11h yourself
. . . - - - - - - - - - - . and you won't have to worry
RAy E T T
aboutthe·----- ·

I

I

'

tloo chuckle quoted
by llll•ng In lho .,;.,.,. - ·
t.....;.I.L..-.1.-.L.-1..-L-.1. vou develop
lr0111 111p No 3 bolow

I LOVE TI-lE
ANNOUNCEMENTS ..

••

PIINT NUMIUI!O UmiS IN

•

UNSCIAhal AIOVf UllfiS

T..SlSQUAIU

I' I' I" I' I' r I

10 GU ANSWI!I

SCIIAMoLETS ANSWERS

0

Dampen - Saute· \MJeat ·Pursue - PASS THEM
If all the cars tn the country were placed end to end,
some fool would pull out and try to PASS THEM

ROBOTMAN

I MONDAY

--------------------~
810
Home
Improvement•
'
----~-;--~--~~-;
BASEMENT

460 Space for Rent

.,

.-at

'

8323.

1998 Deep Purple Chevy C1v1fl·
er (304)875-707t .

worker: lbbr. ":

J

Upstairs Three
At 651 Second
tls.' Nexr To library,
Plus DepooR, No Poto, I
Die Or Judy At 740-441-7323.

.'

23f.:"~lly

41 Uncanny
' •
42 Word on lrlell · '
col!ll
•

•'

tononct· Pllntlng, vinyl aldlnlt.
cerpantry, dOora, Wlndowo, bathS
mobtte """"' -~ and moro For
frH eotimeto coli Chit, 740·1192·

Rio Grande. OH Call H0·245• t997 Plymouth Br,ozo, lo1d1d
St21
•
$7,600: 1990 GR Cherokee.
Petl
for
Sale
..
''
$14 ,995 .00. t992 Goo Storm,
560
$2,000, 740-258-8012.

'' ~E ROLE OF SO AND SO
WILL BE PLAVED TOOA'f ~
SO AND SO...THE USE OF
RECORDING DEVICES AND
CAMERAS IS FORSIOOEN "

ASTRO-ORAPH

in dellil wilh your mate. It miJht sur-

TueSday, May 25, 1999
You could lind younelf unusual·
ly luclcy in the year ohead with
friends all types, whether they are
old pals or brand new ones. They
could help you mike your dreams

or

come true.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Because you .,. an open-minded
individual, you c:ould meet 101neone
who others misinletpret or miljud~
and see lhc po1ential in him or her.
Chances are you'll become friendl.
Tryins to patch up 1 broken
romance? The Astro-Ontph Ma~&amp;h·
maker can help you understand whal
to do lo mike the relationship work.
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
Holl Slalion, New York, NY 10156.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Be
alerl for peculiar opportunities,
because today could hold a number
of 1hcm which, if tsl&lt;en adv111ta~
mishl be very rnc111inpul to YOII
financoally.
LEO (July 23·Aus 22) When rae.
.ins a decision today, il mlaht prove
Vrfri hclpCullo diiCUu your dilemma

or,

prise you how petceptive your spouse
is aboullhe problem.
VIRGO (AUIJ. 23-Sept. 22) In
stranae places and with unramiliar
!inns, the type or work or service
you're aeekina mtaht be round Let
your fingers do the watkins when
searchrng ror some kind or unuoual
experttse
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct 23)
Throu&amp;h sood communication and a
haof.rellow-well·met allilude, you
can achoeve a personal objective
loday. So. relhcr than dwell in lhc
commen:lal world 10 p what you
want, minate,with friendl.
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22)
Thinp mi&amp;ht not 1111110 pop for you

today unlit wwll into d)tt afternoon, 10
don'l lei early morni•l ltlpalion
stop you liom movin1 rorw~ with

yourpl181.
SAOnTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Even if II lint IIHIIOOne's propouiiOUndlpJCy 10 you, hear1hia
penon oulln totality. When you slart
to ~t lhc complete pichn. it may
turn out 10 be sontethin1 Vrfrl inler•

auna.

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-lan 19)
Indifference or delays could deprive
you or makins some substantial pins
financially. 'lbd!ly's opporntntties will
he as Ocetins u lhcy are unusual.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
The important 1hina is lhat you
underatand what you are doins today
and not wony about ir olhcrs do as
well. Advance your setr-inlereots ia
the manner lhat hesl suits you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) lust
because a partnershrp tn1!J which
you're invited loday IS conducled
alona unconventional lines, doesn'l ·
mean il's of no value. If all is on 1he
up-and-up, think or il .. an adven·
ture
ARIBS (Marth 21 -April 19)
Don 'I faint Someone who is usually
in opposition 10 all or your ideas or
po!icla mi&amp;ht aurprilinaty and unex·
pectedly join fon:ea with you today
in Mlpporl.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You've aot whal II takea to ~ehie\re
an important objeeli&gt;e, bul il mosht
tsl&lt;e an imasinalive metbod or lacli&lt;
10 brina II about. Don'1 be arreid to
dlacad onylhtnJ thai doesn' l work.

0

37::1:.--:~
31Arnbulltnce

good condition, $4000, call 740: "
992·5024.
:•

Home

- •

,,
, '
311~ . .•

----------~~~--1978 Dodge motor home, 20~ ~

General

22 Ellheualed

f' _ ,

2t Group ol flwt •

30 Sup M1 in
A-

'

SE RV IC ES

•" ~

.......

0

tobtlahod 1175. Col 24 Hf1 (740)
~46·0670, 1-800·287-0&amp;78 Rog·
ora Waterproofing •

550

1-.1

1' Farrow
Acii'M8

noblernlln
"
24 Talk~
"•
25 lnhabiiMia: .. · 1
.;
21~
-:~
21 European
biKkblrd
: :
211 Etclter'l

i

Campara l
1
Motor Homes

Unconditional llfellme g~arantH
local ref111ncea furnfahed Es·

EOH·304-e7!5-8679

music
10 Dealre
111onofHoeh
12 Word on a

orgeni• Chll7 Put forth
3t!IMdl40 UMSt-·a I Paature-.nd
g s-hill, In
42 Aploca

r...a .

\,

Groen House (740)·245·9558
(740)·245 9332

asking $3200 OBO, 7~0·992·
1506 d1ya or 740·9~9 · 28~4

s lAbor

North

------~--~-------Budget Prh:ed Tranamlnlona :,

1993 Dodga Spirit ' 4 Cyll~dor
lOaded $2,500 (304)675-3773

Slanata

5 AliA rn"*ortmllbtbar•

311 Doclltre IMW

Auto Parte l
Acceeeorlee

and Engines, All Types, Accea, '
To Over 10,000 Transmllllons, ~

der automatlo, grHn metallic wllh
black Interior, 82.000 milts, air,

I-lAVE 'fOV HEARD ANV
ANNOUNCEMaiTS? !
ALWA'(S LIKE THE
ANNOUNCEMENTS

5956

760

8111
34 OcctiiNnCI
311 - dantt8

1---f;,g,..:::l.,..:.-1;::,',..;1...,:.-.--1 G C01111&gt;ltte

1989
Cadillac
Fleetwood
Brogham. $4,500.00. t984 Cadit·
lac 5evlne; new engine $2,750 00
1911.~ Cadillac Coupe DeVIlle, 2
door. $2,000 oo (7~0)·448·8001
Alle...,ltont Shlpal

i993 Ford 'Mullang LX, &lt;4 eylln·

Weal

85 Polarlua Trallbaas 4-Whe,lt(

250 RIES $1,500 00 (304)•875·
5et2

sldlzed apt for elderly and hand·

And Seo Us. 140-446-4712

~pl

730 Vent l 4-WDe

with. any purchase of $10.00 or
morel At The Hollybrook Farm

t Year Old Black lab. , .tOO
(304)875-t972, After 8PM

!{()

light&amp; $t5.500 00 (815)·367, '
7444 Eve Weekends (7~0)· 448&gt; •

appllcetlona tar 1BR HUD aub·

New Al;ld Uled Furnllurt Store
Solow Hofldly Inn, Kanauga Slop

KJ 00\t-l(&gt;H"" ~l'IOi Tllf ft\OVIL oc u~ TO (:,(I 1W
DIDt-.1\ KNOW UIE.

1 WENT 'ID~'.:&gt;T~W~,W.E.
f'IIN.\iOto\ II'OW£• ,...-o::Y""-&lt;1
OVE~ 11-\e:.

846t

C&amp;t

Houaehold
Goode

...

Joints Runs Groatl $1,800. 080
(740) 992·8978 or (740)· 388·

Twin Rivera Tower now accepllng

510

II"

Brakes, CB Joints and Universal

French City Maytog, 740·446·
7795.

MEHCHANDISE

THE BORN LOSER

Up, 4cly, 4sp, am/pm At Wheels '
33' Ttres 4'tnch ltft, now: SI10Ckso

448-3481.740-446.0101

740.385-4387.

•

with a 1998 California Sidecar '
Sport tnke Cover. Convertlon Kit ~
46,000 miles Extra Cttromt an~ .,;

peted Patio, No Pets. Lease Plus
Security Oeposlt Required, 7o40·

Mobile tJome Jlte avllllble bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

.,

}

Appliance Parts And Sarvtce· All
Name Branda Over 25 Year• E11·
perlence All Work Guaranteed,

lcapped

~
1

Milas, $4,200 00 080 740·256·
t233

630
44t·1182

&amp; EARNEST

•

1997 Dodge Diesel 1 Ton, ~·~
Ram 3500. Asking $25 000. Call .
Alter 4 00pm (740)·441-1)996

3 Nice Angua Purebred Springer
Heifer, torm Anju Stock (740) ..

4

cowbot

By Phillip Alder

'

Galvalume Stool Roofing , t5.•8'
track door, 3' walk door, $6.688
Erecledllro~ HOfSI Bulldlrl t·
(800)·352·t045

Llveatock

home
33 IAgertdary

2=.-ffi'E~
3 Sha, ln
Cllarbourg

After the courses

1988 Chevy PICk·Up, Shor' ,
Wheel, V·8 $2,000 (304)458· .'

Ford new Holland Tractor Sale

$20.900 00. 4630 55PTO HP
SA"'!' spec• 22,900. 30t0 2WD
42 PTO HP, 1 Remote Wo1
Brake.- tnd PTO 13.500.00. 3010

tta.. dlnnar 11

Opening lead; • K

0

t990 Ford lariat F·150, PB, PW, •
PL. PC. aorvlm. bed liner. now linls •

3930 4WD, 45PTO HP, 192 Tur·

MY •ARDEN
HOE II

~

Vy'hool DrM (740)·388-9183

t986 Chevy Cargo Van, $2,000
(304)4511-1050
~-

bo, Syncho 8)(8 Tran1 F. And R.
Stluttle Large Pump 2 Remotes 4
outlets, 2yr Full Warranty

27~

32

1 Egypllan

J

4t ll' Cot Hoe. Water Pumps t 8f1
Trent Foot $3.000 00 (740)·043·
0122 8.00·4110 aftar 5 oo (740)·
843-~18

23 Fall poocodor?

--SOON AS I PATCH

•

790

PRIMESTAII
FrM DINCI Spoclel
Call now t·fl00.283-2640

PATCH

1968 Ford Ranger Fac:tory 390 ~'
Foid 9,000 Tandem Dump Truck, Coli
(740)379-2196
•
6~.000 miles· $38,500. Cat-5531

Floors CA. 1 112 Bath. Fully Car·

eo.

7045.

1983 Ford Shorr WhHt Base 4

•ARDIN

1991 Cullas1 Clerra, 4 door. V-6,
air, 74,000 miles, $2800, 740.949-

Sewage, Trash, $315/Mo., 740·
446-0008.

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Sheep Foor

11

Now goo lanka &amp; body porta D a
R Auto, Rtploy, WV (304)372· ,
3933 or t-800-27~9329
·,

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, tnl!ludea Water

Melga Co.: Rutland, Whiles Hill
Rd, 11 Acres $14,000 or 9 Ares

Restored .

grul, IOOkl good, V·6, $2t00,
740-949-2838 or 740-949-204!.

(740)-446.fl390.

Schools

Eaall~

Memorial Day Salol M1y 23·3t,
1999 Any Hanging B01ke11,
$t8 oo Perennial 4 Pock·~.oo. t·
Fr11 Flat ol China Pink• or Pansy

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dleport, one bedroom furnished
house in Gallpolla 1 740-992·91 91

$12.000 Public Water Danville,
Briar ~ldga Rd 7 Acres $13,00Q.

Largtt metal wan1robe, recliner,
two 22 riles. 740-849-3228

TODAY { THINK
I'LL HOI MY

1983 Ford lruck 1/2 ton Stepslde, ~

$1,500 00 (740)·256 t280

Bo• $3 ooo

ztu-·-

OOWN

Vulnerable: East·Weal
Dealer: East

8ou11i

00 Oay Ph (740)·448·
l)lh9. Ew Ph (740)·256-1~52

Small, QIJarter, Mare Sorl'll 8

lion
RoofI Paint
Paint
2 :t:;~~~~~~~
Bedroom Apartment,
$25Aluminum
2t. 5 Gal Flbered
White Roo

$250 00 por month plus $100 oo

Farm Tractor UF Furgerson 30

215 Track Hoe $3t,OOO 4511
Parts trailer S1,800, 16ft Trent

• 52

11 WOIId Cup
eport
17 Watchea
11 Nucpttyalclat'a unit
20 EICtrlcltl unlta

• 75 3

~995. 740-7~2·2357

302 Autom

Cat-

•AJIS2
• A Q 10 4

• 10 4

GraduaUon speclall· 1994 Pontiac
Clfand Am, tool groan, 4 door, V-6
automatic, alr, 72,000 miles,

720 Trucke for Sale

~oller·$31 ,000

7111cHivaue

• K 10 8

1 Row tObaCCO Setter, 2 presser,
1,000 Stlcko, Priced Cheapl Plus
BOO Lba. Base to Rent Calf aftar
5:00 pm (740)-44t.fl54t
$~ , 800

• J.

Soulli
aAKQ55

(740)-44t.Ot76

610 Farm Equipment

• AQ J 4
Eu&amp;

• 8 s 2
• a1 e3

na Shelby, Fully Loaded! 106,000
miles $2,800 00 leave Message

Olacounl Mobile Home
Ports &amp; S\.lllllv
Huge Inventory

Vinyl Skirting Kllll $299 95, 5 Gal·

• 10 , 2
•KQ9

bo. SMOO OBO (740) 992 8976

Graduation Gttt 91'Dodge Oayto·

FARM SUPPliES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

For Sale 13 Year Gelding Ten·
Walker
S1 ,000
nessee

7806.

cllpo~L(304)77:J.!5040.

Bl~ .

Kohler Engine. Elactrlc PTO 46'

Inch Dock 740-245-5575

Weal

(740)-388-8ol&amp;t
St5000ooch (740)·388-00t3

Deposit Required. Ai1o One
Room and Bath $ 125 00 Call ·
(740)·446-2477
1-Bedroom Apt , utilities Included,
Furnished or unfurnished! $300
mo 2-Bedooms all Electric Trail-

2 Bedroom Garage Apt In Clifton

1 Male and 1· Fema't,

CD Ttlle and Cruise, PW, PL'I .
Sunroof, esp, E:.cell Condition
New transmlsskm and clutch Tur·

miles, aun roof, leather, always
garegod. St3,500,140-949-2877.

Case Window, Alr Conditioner,
Works Goodl $150, can After 5

~

AKC White Gorman Shepherd

92 Mttoublolll Ecllpoo. GFX All
Wheel Ortvol Turbo, am/1m Stoma.

papers, Shots and wormed!

1 Bedroom Apartment Overlook·
lng City Park! lafayette Mall.

2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port. we pay water, sewer &amp; trash,
you pay gas &amp; electrk:, $200 per
month, $100 deposit, 740·992·

"KC registered Golden Rttr!Mr
puppies , excellent family pets,
$250, 740·992·7562 altorepm.

05-2WII

• I 4 3
• 7es
• KJ 9

5PM

1·88U18-0t28.

Babybad, Playpan, Sw (ng, Car
Seat, Stroller (304)675-4546

tlme, (304)682·2326, .,.ntng

Nor11a

93 Mercedoa t90·E , 72 ,000

Utlllt~s.

$279 00 Per Monlh, Plus
740-448 2957

AKC Registered Doberman Pup.

pies. Black &amp; Rust $275
(304 )458·t 090/A58· 1 OU, Afllr

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
a.m to800pm , Sunday tOO to

-~

-

AKC 8011er pupa, 7.t0-742-

8t01

No

Antlquee

...
....

ACROSS
1 lhllhl ... root
13 Di11atved

Pete for Seta

Beegle Pupplla, lull

530

__; ~.

.. b'lCe
14 .........
15 Anllaotb

Washers. drytrl , relrlgerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliance&amp;. 78
VIne Street, Call 740·448-7398,

$t 00 (304)675·3773

440

Oakwood Homes Barbours'llllle,

~

Appllancts
Reconditioned
washers Dr~r&amp;.
gratora. 90 Day
French City Maytag , 7.$0· .U6n95.

74o-446·9742.

2 BR furnished home in Mason
No pall Reference s required.

Used SlnglaWide. Around $tOO
per month ce11 t.SQ0.948·5678

(740)-448-0175 (304)-675-5M5

740-38Nl583, 740-245-507ll.

2 Bedroom, wiSa&amp;ement &amp; Ga·
rage Deposi t &amp; References, No

Trailer For Rent &amp; Lot For Rent,

Lot For Sele Suitable for Mobile
Home or Building Site ApproM·
tmately One Acre Land . Water

Uonlng, Underpinning, Extratl

304 578·2438

Delivery and Set Up. Call f.800·
948·5678

1978·14•70 Kirkwood 2·Bed·

1976 Schul1l14•80..2 Bodroomo,
Very Goad Condhionl Atr COndll·

00 Mer 6pm (740)-643-29t6

Mobile horne for rent In Racine,
no pelll, 740·992·5858

Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Financing Into Take 10%
Off U81 Price On Cash Buytl

rooms Plus Den. Total Electric
Recondition llkt new! Free DeiNery and Block·Upt $8 950 00

~

Rent Busier New 1999 14x70 2
or 3 Bedrooms Only $995 00
Down, $195 00 per month Free

14•70 Oakwood Mobile Home, 3

~t55

(800)-820-6782.

Make"2 Payments No Payment
Attar 4 Years, 304·738·7296.

ty, Bath. Baseboard Heat, 112

3 Becttooms, 2 Bath Ranctl House

E &amp; S Lawn Service. Design, lm·

Traitor. 2 Bedrooms.

lOll $25,000 (740)·388·0434

Meal Planning And Wheel Chair

Accesiilble

1~x70

2 Baths, Must Salll With Cleared

740· 256·6342, Also Nutritious

Hlggo Contracting Roollng, Vinyl

·~otK

6055

368t

Siding 15 Years Experience
Free Estimates Reterenc11

pey.

&amp; Range, Very Nice!! (304)675·

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue. 3BR
1 1/2BA, Family Room, Garage,
CentraiAir, Patio, Porch, $77,000

On Bonus Drive to wast Jafferson, OH (25 miles lrom Colum-

plus one 3· 11 P shift each week
and you will receive •$650 oo
per week •vacation and holiday

In Closet, Range In Island, Book-

Call, Total Electric, Ba~Wind·
ow. Sky l ight. ClAir, With Retrlg

to advertise ·any prvturence,
limitation or discrlminat100
based on race, color, religion,
ex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
llmltaUOn or discnmlnahon •

lng 740-441-1318.

$650 00 Per Week, $t,OOO Sign·
bus) 3 times per week. Work 7P·
7 A every Saturda~ and Sunday

olt966 whk:h makes h llegal

knowong~

Skyllno/Su ·

Siding , Sl!lngle Aoof, Garden
Tub, Hutch, M/Wavo Cab, Walk·

Carpentry. Remodeling Additions,
Decks, Porches, Drywall, Paint·

CNA With 20 Yro E•p And E•·

2 Bedroom House In Galllpotls.

preme,/14x74 3BR ,2BA,VInyl-

$39,500 00. (740)·682·9032 or

Ch ildcare provider, DHS certified,
18 years experience, have three
openings Middleport- Rutland
area, catl740-992-6718.

742·2795

By Ownor· t994

AM real estate adven.lsing In
this newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fair Housing~

180 Wanted To Do
Boonle Bolly Show
Sunday May 23. t999, t o:oo to
3 oo Holiday-Inn Route 7/ Route
35, Gall1polls, Curren!, Retlfoes,
Pillow Pals and Attic Ttreasns
Starti ng AI $5 00, Paf10nallzed

1992 ax70 Redman mobile
home, 3 bedrooms, storm wind·

$325 ,00 Month Includes .Water
and Gamage DeposJt. Reference,
No Pelll (740)·6U·Ot22 B 00·

owa &amp; heat PU1!1&gt; Included. 740·

Into Call 1-800·813· 3585,
Eat 88t3, 8AM·9PM, 7 Days

M·~ g.

5 EOE/M

Rellabllltatlon Center

I&amp; now accepting applicatiOns lor
pari time houukteplngl laundry
and dietary aide positions Must
be able 10 'NOrt all sh1h&amp; ana weekends Apply In person to fill out
an apptlcatkm or tend resume to
Rocksprings RenabUIIatlon Cen·
ter, 36759 ~ock sprtngs Ad , Po·
meroy. OH 45769 EOE

____________________________________________________
NEA Cro11word Puzzle
; :2

rrns (CCI

"

�:-P•12 • The Dally Sentlnei

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May 24, 1999

;~----~~~~----------------~~~~~~--------~----~~~~~

.

~Toledo goes to the ,extreme in trying to keep Jeep
.BY JOHN SEEWER
Aaaoclated Pre. . Writer
TOLEDO- The neighborhood where Mary Ebnght played tag and spinthe-bottle, where she got her first job and where she mel her husband and
:raised her two daughters is nearly gone.
: Already gone are her mom 's house and the neighbors on either side. The
·:Only world she knows has been bulldozed to make room for a giant Jeep
:~sembly plant that will make a new line of Cherokees.
:· "I try not looking out the kitchen window anymore because it gets you
:So depressed," she said. "Everything in my lif~ happened here."
.; Within a few months, the Ebrights will ijSC the $122,500 settlement they
"11re getting from the city to move into a new home in an unfamili ar neigh:borhood. The city is spending $35 million to relocate the neighborhood's 83
&lt;families and 16 businesses.
:: It's part of an incentive package worth about $300 million - one of the
·
:-nation's
most lucrative packages ever given to a corporation. State and local
·!ax breaks account for $185 million.
· . DaimlerChrysler AG, Jeep's parent company, is spending $600 million
h
1
d
h $600 ·11 · h
f b" h" ·
· ·
1
. on t e new p ant an anot er . m1 10 on rc ur ts mg Its extstmg pant
·here -tL- oldest operatt"ng auto plant in the United States
·
'"'
·
.. In exchange, the city is putting about $75 million into cleaning contam·
: inared soil at the plant site, installing water and sewer lin es. relocating rail.

Tuesday

road lines. and building a new ruad called Chrysler Drive.
er said the costs will have a minimal impact on the city's budget.
•
There are other incentives including free land and reduced taxes. OrigiTerry Lodge, a.lawy.r who r~prcsented three families forced out by the
nally it was sajd the city's investment would be $20 million. .
Jeep project;'thinks the city went overboard with its financial commitment.
The pay otT. the city says. is the 4.900 jobs that will stay at Jeep and 26,000
" It's abs~. The city could have done much beller," LodJ~e said.
spinoff jobs that will be created by parts suppliers and other companies dealH th. k d
· th
d 1 f'
J
ld
d 1M
ing with the automakcr.
city :pir~n~ to;::•~:~up~~onomy an ayo •S at eep cou sen
~
Overall, the plant will have a $1 billion impact on the northwest Ohio area,
' "If there's trouble in the sport-utility industry, this town 's in for a world
said Mayor Cany Finkbeiner. who was instrumental in securing theleep deal.
f h .. Lod
"d
o urt,
ge sat .
::
··Fifteen years from. now, people will look back. at this and say what an
ConmuctiOII at the plant along Interstate 75 is well under way and on
outstanding bargain this was." Finkbeiner said.
·
schedule. The, highly automated ope~tion is expected to open in Januarji.
Known as "'The Glass Capital of The World ," the city is home to three 200 1.
'•
:
of the nation's largest glass makers - Owens-Illinois Inc., Owens Corning
There are WOITies thata more efficient plant could lead to fewer jobs. Uni _
and Libbcy-Owens-Ford Co.
,
·
.
ed Auto ' Workers Local 12 President Bruce Baumhower thinks overall
Its proudest product. though, is the Jeep, which first rolled off the assem- employment could end up as low. as 4,500 workers _ a cut of 400 jobs. •
bly line here in 194 1. Originally made for the military. nearly all of Jeep's
w
But now the only sense of urgency near the plant construction site is amonv"
1 and Cherokees arc ·built here.
rangers
.
"' Had we lost Jeep. it wo uld be li.kc Detroit losing the Tigers. It would be the neighbors looking for a new home.
like the Yankees leaving New York. " Finkbeiner said. "We don"t. have a major . "There's just a lost, empty feeling ·around here," said Mrs. Ebright.
•
lea•ue spons team. Jeep is a ma1·0 r part of our identity.
Only a few homes remain. Most have been bulldozed. Piles of din anij
c
shallow pits in the ground that once were basements and cellars remain. " Had we lost Jeep, the psychological impact would have been very great."
Vandals have shattered windows in the unoccupied homes that are stilJ
To cover the cost of keeping Jeep, the city borrowed $27 million from standing. The few residents who remain try to protect their property with signs
the fed eral government and sold off land it owns in the.suburbs. But Finkbein·
.
. .
saying "Still occupied'"
·
••

The Makah hunt. oiT Neah Bay.
Wash ., had the consent of the United
States, which has long opposed commercia! whaling but says "subsistcncc whaling" solely for survival is
different.
Whalers see tqe hunt - .the first
U.S. kill outside Alaska si nce a 1986
worldwide ban on commercial whaling - as an admission that growing
whale populations no longer merit
'blanket protection.
· Anti-whaling groups want to keep.
the moratorium, and some arg ue that
whales should never be hunted
because they arc intelligent creat ures
that feel pain.
Both sides agree the ban has
saved many a whale after decades of
indiscrimin ate commercial whaling

- for whale oil and other products
that now have sy nthetic equivalents
~ that raised the spec ter of extiriction.
Humpback wha le populations arc
now growing at 10 percent a year and
number more than 8,000, the commission says. Bowhead populations.
growing at 2 percent a year number
9,200, while gray whales - the type
killed by the Mak.ah, which came off
the endangered list in 1994 - number 22,500; up 3 percent a year.
The most numerous of the great
whales are minke whales, at 1 million, and pilot whales, ai 1.4 million.
"At the meeting this week, the
United States will present a report on
the Makah ·hunt.
Like many tribes, the Makah gave

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy

High: 80s; Low: 40s

Meigs County's

NO RAINCHECKS
I

SUPERIOR~$

.

Com~issioners discuss Hobsa~

Bridge with county engineer

Hot Dogs

c·

SUNBEAM GIANT
SAHDWJOI BREAD
79C 24oL

CAMP'S

Ice Cream
$

.1/2 gal.

39

,

12 oz.

FAMILY PACK .

Limit 4 please

CH:EESE NIPS

c

c

12.5-13.5 oz.
Limit 3 DI811S81

LB.

u.s. #·1

SNYDER'S

Russet Potatoes

Potato Chips
$ 09 ·

c

10 lb.

. Lindt 2 please

Boz.

Ap les
31bs.

.

COCA C:OLA, DIET COCA COLA

c

12 oz cans

-_ Sprite
$· 99

r·

or Borden Skim ·Milk·

$ 89

-.. STOKELY

To·mato Juice
4(1

oz. .

Umlt 2' please

Gallon

69

SUNSHINE

..

4

Dog ·Food
·. Limit 2 Please $
99
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
..

·V

·'

·-

----- --.---

,,

·-:::--"-:---·-· --·- -.· -- .

By BRIAN J. REED
Senllnlll " - Stall

pu
M)IRJIETlrA (AP) .- The bpdy of a mlll).,who drowned in the ·Ohio
River was found Monday three days after he was last seen clinging to·a log
and calling for help. .
Search teams had been looking all weekend for the victim, thought by
witnesses to be a teen-age boy. The body of Eugene Wright, 20, of Marietta was found about 20 feet off the Ohio bank and was taken to Morgantown, W.Va., for an autopsy Tuesday, said officer Clyde Armstead of the
West Virginia Department of Fnvironmental Resources .
Armstead said the river is considered West Virginia territory for poten·
tial crime investigations.
· It was not clear what Wright WM doing in the river Friday, Armstead
said. It was a warm day with clear skies. The weather w.orsened during the
weekend search, with rainstorms Saturday. By Sunday, swift current and
murky water kept·divers out of the river, but did not halt dragging opera· ·
lions.
·

Judge overrules death recommendation

The Village of Middleport will likely rename the
Middleport Pool after one of its biggest supporters Arnold Johnsori- wllo died last week.
At Monday night's regular meeting of Middleport
Village Council, Jean Craig. a member of the Middleport Board of Publi&lt;;Alfain, read a tribute to Johnson,
who died suddenly on Thursday, and suggested that
village council rename the pool in .loltmon's honor.
Johnson served on Middleport's Parks and Recrc•
ation Board and was a volunteer for the Middleport
Youth League.
·
He alao worked for the Village on a contract basis
~ a building inspector.
Johnson•WIS praised by Oaig. acting mayor Sandy
lannarcl.li and .b)- IXlUIIcil members for his dedication
to the village parks system and the swimming pool,
is managed by his wife, O.Cri.
Craig said that Johmon had spent the day before
his death at the park. painting the swimming pool aitd"
performing other tasks.
Council agreed to contact village attorney Unda
Warner to ensure thcni were no restrictiom on naming
the fllcitity Iller Johnson, and will likely act on the
change next month.
,
. .

spending money on the project until TRAC members
have complied with all requirements of the openmeetings law in their deliberations. Bush is also
barm:l from participating in discussion or votes on
the project.
.
The 12-mlle; $56 million road would have
replaced. existing U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwin;
completing·a long-delayed project first considered in ··
the l9Sn..
"We are ple_ased that ODOT and (the council) .
have agreed to this temporary resolution of some ~f
the issues involved in this case," said CASH
spokesman Todd Acheson.
. TRAC coordinator Michael Cull said transportalion officials expect the·project to proceed as envisioned, although it will be delayed.
. ODOT District 10 spokeswoman Nancy ~edigo
said the agency has stopped work orders to all con-

sultants involved in the projeCt.
· -·
She said the order does not affect the nearby
JUvenswood Connector project from Five Points to
the Ohio River bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va.
ODOT maintains MOnday's actions will not llignificanUy delay the Athens-to-Darwin project, Pedigo said.
. "This is the completion of a stateWide corridor,
we're not going to give up that easy," Pedigo said.
"It's not just about trying to get emnomic clevelorr
menl into Meigs County;_that's just icing on the
cake."

Meanwhile the TRAC has scheduled a special
meeting to hold an executive session to meet with
attorneys concerning disputes involving the TRAC
that are the subject of pending court action. The
meeting will be held Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. at the
ODOT Central Office in Columbus.
·

which

Johnson was also remembered with a milment of pursue these possibilities in the everll that one of the
silence, and aprayer led by Courn:ilman Roger Man· villl!gt wells is shut down or becomes disabled.
.ley.
- .
Shutt said that the EPA seemed satisfied with the
In other business, lannarelli reported that work on progress made during the past few months, because
the pool wa still underway, and thai it was set to open the boanl of public affairs has been able to l5llfC the
_by Memorial Day, or shortly therCaftcr.
EPA that p10g1ess is being made on their mandated
Jay Shutt and Becky Hayes of Aoyd BrowncAsso- Improvements.
ciates and Craig met with council in executive session
Craig annouoocd that the village's new jetter had
to discuss contract negotiations, and later, in open ses- arrived, and was being tested for use. The machine
sion, disaiSsed a meeting on Monday afternoon with will be used to clean the vtllage's storm and sarutary
EPA officials in Logan.
sewer lines. ·
Shull said that the EPA has reviewed the village's . . Courn:il held a final reading on an ordinance outlift station evaluation report and the proposed lining penalties for excess refuse and high w~ on
improvements which have been approved by the private propeny. lannarelli said that enf01cen1ent of
agency, but noted that the village must cootinue to the ordinance will begin immediately.
.
seek funding to oomplcte' the improvements.
It was also noted that the vtllage has 61ed tts first
· The vili9'S Water System was also subject of lawsuit to collect delinquent Water charges.
discussim at ~ EPA inceting. and Shutt said that the
lannarelli ~ that a second meeting about
EPA told village officials at the meeting th~ ~wells the village's Neighlxxhood Watch ~ will .be
will not be approved in the areas where CXIsbng wells held on June 8 al 7 p.m. at the American Lcgwn
are in use, beamse of problems with vt&gt;lalile organic Annex.
compounds and other issues.
.
Plesent at the meeting. in addition to lannarelli and
The boanl of public affairs has been .investigating Manley, w~ Council members Rae Gwiazdowski,
the possibility Of purchasing water from the village of Stcv~ Houchtns and Robert Pooler, and Unda BroderPomeroy and other water systems, and Shutt said last ick, who served as recording seaewy in the abscnoe
night that it is important that the village ~tinue to of Oerk Btyan swa:.
..
.

a

WOOSTER (AP)- A Judge rejected a jury's death-sentence recommendation and instead sentenced a killer to life in prison without chance of
·
·
parole.
Judge Mark K. Wiest sentenced Gregory D. Crawford, 37, in the robbery and bludgeoning of Gene 0. Palmer, SS, at a barn near the victim 'p
. home last luly 23. He died two months later.
In rejeclin&amp; the death sentence for Oawford on Monday, Wiest of Wayne
County Common Pleas Court said he was "not finnly convinced death is the
appropriate punishment"
.·
· · Crawford, an ex-convict who wM living in Valley City at the lime, was
arrested Aug. 11;). Police had received lips that Oawford had been seen walk- '
log near IJ,Ie Palmer home in nearoy Congress Township on J~l~. 23. . ' . .
·
Oawford's fingerpnnts were found
By BRIAN J. REED
craftsmen who were interested in participating.
on Palmer's van, which was found in
SealhNI
Newe
Std
Thornton 1\as stressed that the program will
an Ashland parking lot three days
A
grant
from
the
Appalachian
Regional
focus
on original high--end durable crafts prodafter the robbery.
Commialion
will
help
Meigs
County
artisans
ucts,
such
as woodworking products, which
The jury deliberated two days
form a guild and market their works around the appear to be prolific in Meigs Count)', rather
· before convicting Crawford of aggranation and beyond.
·
than novelty aaft items.
vated murder, aggravated robbery,
1 Section • 10 haa
A
$50,000
grant,
sought
by
Meii$
County
The development of the artisans guild will
burglary and car theft. The same jury
Conuilissioncr
Jelfrcy
Thornton
over
two
yean
help
tho5e participating to share marketing
later recommended the death penalty.
6
felspder
ago. will allow aaftsmen to join together in an · strategies IS well as share in a windfall of pogwllleds
71c8
Ex-student sentenced effort to market their products throush a motional opportunities.
1
UMA (AP) - A former Bluffton. brochure and website, and, llier, a full~lor catComlg
!I
Thornton noted that any crafts to be considCollege
student hiS been sentenced
alog.
·
. ered for the project will be "juried," or deterl
EJ!Itodals ·
to four years in priaon for IICtlin&amp; a
Justin Diddle has been ~ppointed as ooiirdi- mined ippiop late in tenns of quality and mar,
Loyl .
3
fire last year that severely burned her .nator the project, runded through the ARC~s · kct appeal, bj a panel of aaft expens.
·· SPOrfl ·'
415
rooinmllle.
Entrepreneurial, Initiative program, and will
The cumnissioncrs have compiled a list of
Michelle Mattingly, 20, could have
3
Wqtber
work with economic development people and some SO crafters.who have cApt Man interest
been scntenced to 10 years in priaon
the commissioners til ensure that Meii$ Coitn· in joining the guild, and asked that others interfew starting the Sept. 24 fire, which
Lotteries
ty's best aafts are reprc:acnted in the catalog.
esled in participating contact Diddle at the oom· .
she later admitted was a suicide
Diddle his been emplo~ by the cumnis- missioners' office, at 992-2895. They may also
OIQQ
lltempt.
sioncn • a conlrlcl employee, and will likely reach Diddle at the economic development
Mattingly, from the Columbus
Pick 3: 8~·7; Pkk4: 9-8·1·3
work rc.lhC fint year of the two-year prop.m. office, at992•.5005.
·
MEET ARTISANS - Commlulone.-. Ja~
suburb of Whitehall,-wuset:ttcnced
llllckerc 5: 6-4-12-22·32
CommiaiOIICIS 'Thomton and Janet Howled
The program Will be operated through the Ho-rd and Jeffrey Thornton met Monday wlli
Friday by
Ricllud Warren of
WJ'A.
met with a group of inte!Jtlled craftspeople at a economic development and tourism offices lrtlAne lnteruted In partlclpetlng In the llhllla
County
Common
Pleu
Court.
Allen
011117 3: 6-3-S; DaUy 4: H-7-S
mcctina on Monday cvenina. and diiCUIIICid the beca•* of the importance of Appalachian crafts C_o unty'a Entrepreneurial Initiative gr~~nt, whlih
She had pleaded aullty to aaaravat·
project with c:andlcmakcn, qullters. a builder of to the county's efforts in attracti!lg industry and will market locally·I!Mide crab on the lna&amp;tllmi'MI.tt ed 11110n March 12.
musical iMtrurnenll a.peinta and several wood- visitors to the county, Thornton said.
· through a brochure and catalogL
,

Today's Sentinel

PRICES EFFECTIVE MAY 25, 26TH, 1999 ONLY

_,

Lcntes said Priddy earlier served a federal sentence and got out of prison
Sentinel Newe Stllff
in 1994. "We've been trying to track his activities since he got out," Lcntes
Agents participating in a press conference Monday afternoon displtiyed said. Although he suspected Priddy was trafficking in drugs, "knowing it and
more than 150 pounds of marijua~a seized earlier from Fred M. Priddy, Rut- proving il are two different things," he said. "We didn't catch him making
land.
,.
The agents were among those· par"An investigation regarding his cus.ticipating in a press conference held at
tomers is not finished," .Lentes added.
the Meigs County Fairgrounds which
. Tobin described the drug bust arid
also included Prosecuting Attorney
resulting forfeiture IS perhaps the
John R. Lentes, Sheriff James M.
largest in southeastern Ohio.
Souisby, Middleport · Police Chief
He said Priddy was very cooperative
Bruce Swift, and Pat Tobin, head of
with investigators, and presented. ~o
narcotics for the Ohio Bureau ofCrimsides of the 47-year-old Priddy, porinallnvestigation.
!raying him both as a l!rug dealer and
Priddy was sentenced Monday to
as a indulgent family man and grandeight years in prison and lined
father.
"He cut his loses and made the best
$15,000.
deal he could for himseif. Meigs
The agents, who asl\ed not to .be
identified, displayed the drugs which
County is the winner... and Fred Prrd- ·
were stored in plastic trash bags and
dy is the loser here," he said.
A total of 995 junk cars belonging to
black duffle bags.
One BCI agent estimated the drugs,
Priddy are being crushed and sold for
weighing about 163 pounds, were
$45 apiece, l:entes said. The cars will
worth approximately $500,000. A
be crushed within two weeks. Other
small amount of cocaine was also
property seized will be auctioned
shown.
sometime before July 4.
:
Lentes said practically all of the
DISPLAYING DRUGS - An agent of the Ohio BCI displays a Lentes said he was satisfied with the
marij~ana came from Mexico instead brick of compreeaed marlluan!l conflecated from Fred M. Priddy, eight-ye~ prison . te~m Pri~dy
of betng grown locally.
Rutland. The druga were ahown et a preM conterenc• Monday recetved. He got the max:mum pnson
AlthouJ!h southeaste_rn O~i.o is afternoon following a Mntenclng hHrlng In Melga County Com· time; he couldn't have got anything
more," he :wd, refernng to comme'!_ts
somewhat tnfamous for tts manJuana mon PI••• Court
farming, one agent who assisted in the
made during Priddy 's sentencing. - ..
investigation quoted Priddy as saying -there is too much risk involved in
"Eight years is a long time," he added.
.
;•
growing the drugs locally. :
"I think that the important thing the people in the county need to und(r!ie wanted nQ local involvement, the agent said.
stand is that this. is about law enforcement and sending a drug dealer off 10
Tobin said stopping drilgs at the Mexican border is practically impossible. prison," ~e said. "Any financial benefit is secondary to making the commU;
due to the amount of traffic crilssing the border both ways, partially as a result nity and its children safe from peaple like Mr. Priddy."
of business stemming from the North American Free Trade Agreement.
The drugs will ultimately be destroyed, Lentes said.

Good Afternoon

. Reg. or Bite Size

.,

'·

Meigs artists to form Art1san Gu1ld; ARC
grant tQ -fund organization, promotion ·

)i

UNITED VALLEY BELL 2% Milk

By JIM FREEMAN

Middleport Council considers tribute to Johnson
•,

(Asst. Flav)
Reg. $1.79

FRESH MICHIGAN

Law enforcement agents display confiscated drugs

T.

NABISCO 8.PK TOASTETTES

Chicken Drumsticks
UMit 2 pkg.
piHH

.

4/$

. 15 01.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

U.S. 33 project halted one day before final approval

Porll &amp; Beans
.

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New• Stllff
. Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason discuSsed the status of the
replaiJ!'ment of the Hobson Bridge with the Meigs County Commissioncis when the commissioners met in regular sessi,on on Monday.
The board approved a trims fer of funds within the engineer's budget so
that the county's portion of the project funding cduld be closed out.
According to Eason, the county's highway fund will have spent nearly
$250,000 toward the project.
.
The county's share included engineering work, interim repairs and
contribution of bridge credits, which the county receives when it funds
bridge proje~ts.
·
.
The transfer.for the bridge project was one of several transfers, total·
ing $89,394; approved by the commissioners for the highway department.
The other transfers will enable the highway department to close its Ohio
Public W9rks bridge projects from last year, and to make a final payment
to the Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation.
County Commissioner Jeff Thornton discussed with Eason the possi·
bility of increasing the amount of Issue II funds requested by the county,
so that townships and villages c:Ould have access to the. money for their
own road projects.
The Issue II program is generally used for hot inix road projects and
other road improvements, and Eason said yesterday that most township
roads are not in adequate condition to apply hot-mix asphalt. and noted
that trustees would likely lack the resources needed to prepare roads for
hot mix or to maintain them.
Commissioner Janet Howard noted that township projects could be
"linked" with county Issue II projects so that improvement funds could b;e
more efficiently used for road i mprovemcnts. .
In other business, the commissioners opened and accepted a bid from
Mobbs Telecom of Coolville in the amount of $24,866 for a new in-house
telephone system at the Dep8rtment of Human Services. The board
approved the bid after review by DHS Director Michael Swisher, who was
present at yesterday's meeting.
· ·. .
·
.
Swisher noted that the systerri now in use at the agency is over 10 years
old, and th11t there have been increasing maintenance problems with the
system. ·
.
·
·
The commi~~Sioners also approved a bid from Rose's Excavating of
Racine for a water line extell5ion on (Jilkey Ridge Road in Bedford Township. The bid, for $30,962, is part of a project funded through the Community Development Block Grant formula program and will involve
With final approval of a neW U.S. Route 33 from
extending water lines from the Tuppers Plai115-Chester Water District to
Athens to Darwin only one day away, the Ohio
serve ho)l~Chol~ on the road who now have no !iCcess to a Jlllblic water
Depeitrne.tt of Transportation "and.an Athens-based
anti•hi&amp;l\way
group agreed Monday to ~te ·~
system.
'
.
Howarc! reported that a new toll-~~lephone number was available · project.
.
' •
l'or areas in the C91Jnty who must make a toll charge in order to contact the
An .agreement between ODOT"s Transportation
courthouse. The ~umber is (8'77) 992-2895, and may be used to access all
Rcview Advisory CoUncil and the Coalition Against
\X)unty offices, Howard said. ·
Superfluous Highways, signed by Judge Dan Hogan
In other action, the commissioners:
of Franklin County Olmmon Pleas Cowl, postpones
%JAppointed Commissioner Mick Davenport to serve as the ·county's
what w.. expected to be the TRAC's final approval
safety coordinator for workers compensation;
of the project ~csday. .
· %JSet next week's regular meeting fcir June I at 3:30p.m., due to the
CASH alleges the TRAC did not comply with
Memorial Day holiday;
'
Ohio's open-meetings law in its·deliberations and
%JApproved payment of bills in the amount of $299,817.88, with 232
fwthcr alleges that TRAC member G. Kenner Bush,
entries.
·
·
former publisher of The Athens Messenger, has a
Also· present was Clerk Gloria Kloes.
conflict of interest since he is a member of a group
that supports the project.
The order bars the council from taking action or

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

FESTIVAL ·

Atlanta to advance to
conference finals

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume '19. Number 251

:~

-Prices Good 'uesday, lay 21th i Wednesday, May 21th ely

I

Knlcks sweep

•

up whaling decades ago as stocks said Scott Smullen, a spokesman for among smaller countries, e~pecial~
dwindled and the grueli ng hunt~ · the ' National Marine Fisheries Ser- in the. Caribbean , where it provides
became fruit less. Now ,tribes in Ton- • vice. He said ·the United States will heavy doses of foreign aid- but ,h
ga, Japan and elsewhere want to call for more research into the.effects still doesn't have. the two-thirds
revive traditional whaling.
of global warming on whale food majority needed to scrap the ban. · ·
"The animals are beginning to . supplies.
thrive, that's why it's starting up
Whaling supporters acc use nonAlso at the conference, member
again," said Kathy Happynook of the whaling countries of deliberately stateS will consider vioiations- sucfl
1
World Council of Whalers.
slowi ng ·developmept
of the plan.
as the alleged killing of a lactatin~
Whaling countries led by )apan
Eugene Lapoin)J!, head of lhJ! humpback and her calf by a tradiwill push this week to resume com- Florida-based Worlil Conservation tional whaler in the Caribbean counmercia! whaling under a 1994 plan Trust, said nonwhalers are doing try of St. Vincent and the Grenadine~.
that sets strict catch limits and pro- , "everything possible to stop the The commission allows St. Vin~ent ·
vidcs observers on ships.
completion of the work." . ·
two humpbacks a year, but not suck'
But the United States and its
·A compromise put.forward by Ire- ling calves or females accompanyir(g
allies ·_ Australia, Britain, Ne.w land would ban whaling everywhere them.
•
Zealand and France - say the num - except along coastlines, but most
ber of whales is still too low to·ease. anti-whaling countries say the proJapan takes more than 300 whales
the ban.
posallacks details. '
. a year for scientific research allowed
"We arc adamantly against it, "
Japan has been winning allies by the commission.

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Indians fall to White Sox, Page 5
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Time Out For Tips, Page 6
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}Commission wrestles with group's ·renewal of wh-a ling
•. ST. GEORGE'S. Grenada (AP)
:·- When a Makah Indian's harpoon
: burst through the hide of a gray whale ·
. off Washington state, it drove home ·
: a question bedeviling international
; officials : Now that some types of
· whales are back in large numbers. do
: they still need to be saved?
. The widely publicized hunt last
· week provided a dramatic prelude to
: the annual meeting of the Interna: tiona! Whaling Commission. starring
:Monday on the Caribbean island of
·Grenada.
· "'The U.S. has 'no integrity now. I
: thi'nk we're on the threshold of a
· major escalation in whaling," said
: Pa~l Watson of the Washington-·
: based Sea Shepherd Conservation
: Soc iety.

Sports

May25, 100D

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