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.
Page12 • Tbe O.lly Sentinel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..•

:;Solidarity takes aim at modern-d~y slavery
BOS'ION (AP)- Charles Jacobs
'wu wortina as a manaaement con"'SUUtant in 1993 when he read an anJ.
cle dill changed the focus of his life.
Now he helps to buy slaves.
: Jacobs heads a group that purchas-es f~oin for slaves sold in northern
:Africa for about $50 a person . lbe
practtce has been I criticized by
UNICEF and other groups as encour.
aaing slavery by crearing a market.
.Qut Jacobs scoffs at such sugges-

operators in Pakistan and bonded rights activists say civil war has led
farmers in India.
Arab Muslim nonherners there to
. After Jacobs read about the prac- ca pture and enslave black villagers
tice: he was inspired to proselytize ~ho pnu:tice Christianity and tradi·
agamst slavery. He co-founded the ttonal tribal religions.
Americ~n Anti-Slavery Group in
. 'Christian Solidarity conduc ts
Somervtlle, Mass.. which raises clandestine bush Rights to southern
awareness about the issue and funds Sudan to redeem the slaves. Once
for_Christian Solidarity International, they are free, the former slaves are
a relief organization in Switzerland.
usually given a medical check, then
Christian Solidarity actually does returned back home.
the dangerous hands-on work of buyThe story of Abuk Dcng Akuei is
•
11•~·
mg slaves from middlemen . The typtcal of those recounted by Amcri·
· Human rights organizations say group says it has freed at least 800 ~an Anti-Slavery; A Christian girl in
millions of slaves are sold around the since 1995.
her early teens, Akuei was captured
.world - as prostitutes in Thailand,
So far, the American Anti-Slavery by an Arab militia that raided her
charcoal workers in Brazil, brick ·kiln Group has raised $35,000 . to buy Sudanese village in 1997. She was
slaves in war-torn Sudan. Human sold to a man who beat her, mped her,

..

forcibly circumcised her and made
ber work in the fields and sleep with
his cows and goats. She was returned
by Christian Solidarity.
Although the goals of Christian
Solidarity and American Anti-Slavery Group may be noble, their work
has its critics.
UNICEF said the newly-freed
slaves usually aren't monitored after
their release, so ther-e'is no guarantee
they won't be enslaved again. And
the organization said . paying for
slaves doesn 't address the underlying
cause of slavery in the Sudan - the
ongoing civil war. .

----

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TRAC considers no highway projects; ODOT director defends U.S. 33 project.
By ,JIM FREEMAN
.
Michael. Cull.
.
Sentinel Newa Staff
.
· Cull said TRAC had a five-minute open. session
· Th~ Oh10 Depart~ent of Tra.nsportation's. Trans· before going into executive session to talk with its
port~uon Revtcw Advtsory Counctl to~k ~o action dur·
att~rneys . " A~terwards . the group came out and
mg tts meetmg held Wedn~sday morn!ng m Colum~us. adjourned, takmg no actton.
.
The ·"':RAC was I? constder fun~ing numerous htgh·
The TRAC. was ordered by a Franklin .Coun~y Judge
way proJects m~ludmg a new portton of U.S. 33 from . to t~ke no actton on.the Athens-to-Darwm proJect, but
Athens_-to-Da_r_wm and the U.S. 33/1· 77 Connector the group declined to single out the Athens-to-Darwin
from Ftve Pomts to Ravensw~. W.Va. .
.
projec!, considering no h!~way pro)ects at all.
Instead, the. TRAC wen! ·~to exe~uttve sessto!l
Met~ County Commtssro~er Mtck Davenport and
ap~arently to dtscuss a lawsutt ftled agamst the organt· Economtc Development Drrector Perry Varnadoe
zatwn by two Athens groups opJ?Osed to the relocatign attended the open portion of the meetina along with a
of U.S. 33 from Athens to Darwm..
. ,
repreaentati~e of Congressman Ted Strickland:• offi~~·
T~e groups alle~e the TRAC vtola.\ed Ohto s open Also atte!ldmg was Thdd ~tcheson reprt)Senling Ctll·
meetrngs l~w and further mor~. clatms. that TRAC zens Agamst Superlluous Htgh~ay~, one of the groups .
member G. Kenner Bush, fo~mer pubhsher of Ti!e opposed to the Athens-to-Darwm hrghway.
Athens M~ss~ nger, has~ c~nfltct of m~rest du~ to hts
•:1.liked that they didn't c~nsider _the either highway
me.t:nbershtp man orgamzatton supportmg the htghway proJects and leave·ours hangmg." satd Davenport. .
prOJect.
. .
·
.
.
Cull said TRAC's. lawyers filled · the _group in on
The TRAC met Wednesday mornmg, but discussed where it stands legally and where it needs to go
no htghway proJects, according to TRAC coordinator
. "They're trying to make sure everything from here

Petro: No i.rregu
es
school group's books

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NEW YORK (AP) ~ Jerry .
Springer's bodyguards may be
· looking for new work.
The television distributor for
"T~e Jerry Springer Show" issued
an order forbidding fights and has
replaced some scheduled episodes
wtth tamer shows. The actions are
apparently another fallout from the
recent school shootings.
·
"We will produce and distribute
a program that we feel is responsi ble - no violence, physical confrontation or profanity," Springer
syndicator Studios USA said in a
· statement on Tuesday.
All three ingredients he.lped .
rocket Springer's talk show to the
.top of the ratings, with episodes
often degenerating into hair. pulling, fists-flying donnybrooks.
Springer had no comment on the
order, a spokeswoman said.
·New programs will have to meet
the no-violehce standard · and
noruns will be edited to take out
any fights, Studios USA said.
"We will inform stations that
:we are not providing any Jerry
Spnnger program if tl\ese standa.rds cannot be met,·" the' company

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By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS (AP) - State Auditor Jim Petro has given a passing
grade to the financial records kept by the coalition of sch~l districts that
I SlfCct:ssi'u ly challenged Ohio's school-funding system.
An audit of the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Fund•
ing for the budget years ended June 30, 1997, ·and June 30, 1998, turned
up no problems with either figures or record keeping, Petro said in the
report dated April 15 and released to the media Wednesday.
Tl)e coalition, which represents most of Ohio's 611 school districts,
reported income of $651,626 in 1997, and $625,388 last year- mostly
from dues paid by the districts on a per.Stud~nt basis.
The largest single expense in both years - $116,833 in 1997 and
$402,344 in 1998 - were legal fees paid to the Bricker &amp; ECkler law firm
in Columbus.
.
•' ·- ~
• "All that audit shows is tbai'W.,re as clean as a hound'ftooth," said
William Phillis, the coalition's executive director.
"
Phillis has complained in the past that the audits were politically moli·
vated and intended to embarrass the coalition in the wake of the 1997
Ohio Supreme Court riding declaring the state's school-funding system
unconstitutional.
Sen. Gene Watts, a Dublin Republican and one of the coalition's harsh·
est critic in the Legislature, said the
serve a legitimate purpose.
Good Afternoon audits
" I was trying to dramatize to peo·
pie .;. that 1hey are using taxpayer
dollars · to. sue the state o( Ohio,"
'
Today's ~elttirtell Watts said.
"That money could have been
2 Sections • 12 Pages
spent on textbooks or other things
instead of tying up the stale in
Calendat
12
court."
'4
Classifieds
9&amp;10
The Supreme Court, which is cur·
u
Comics
.rently reviewing the Legislature's
Editorials
2
response to its order to fix the way
the
state pays for public sc~ools,
3
Local
also
·ordered the state to pay the
Soorts
4&amp;5 coalition's
legal fees.
Weather
--- -------So far, the coalition has received
$800,000 from the state, Phillis
Lotteries
said.
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They ·were replaced with shows
about tall people and street kids. ·
"I just think you're seeing the
reaction lo Littleton, to last week's
school shooting and the reaction to
.lenny Jones," said Richard Kurlander, an eKpert on syndication for
Petry TV.
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Ohio" · according to Pomeroy attorney Steve Story cochai~an of the Southeast Ohio Regional Cou~cil's
Route 33 committee.
·
·,
·
He said it is "ludicrous" that Bush's membership in
SEORC would be considered a conflict of interest and
added that Bush was appointed to the TRAC to repre·
sent the region.
"(Bush) was the perfect cand idate," Story said. "The
allegations from the CASH people that he has a con·
flict Of interest is ludicrous. He knows all the projects
in the region, not just Athens-to-Darwin."
· "We are trying to drive home the point that this .js
not just a little stretch of road·for Meigs County," said
ODOT spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
. "This will eventually be a major four-lane highway
connecting Columbus to I· 77 in West Virginia."
Cull said that U.S. 33 is one qf Ohio's maj or corridors, adding that the Athens-to-Darwin project has
enough merits to stand on its own.
He said he is in the process of scheduling TRAC's
next meeting.
· ·

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The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency has
approved a bank erosion repair project for state Route
338 at Antiquity.
The agency announced Wednesday .that it has
authorized water quality impacts associated with the
Ohio Department of Transportation's plans to stabilize
state Route 338 along the bank of the Ohio River at
mile marker 2.04 and Ohio River mile 239.
To.gain approval ODOT applied for and received a
SeCtion 401 water quality certification from Ohio
EPA.
·
.
'
ODOT plans to relocate a .9-milc segment of state
Route 338 away from the Ohio River and place rip· rap
along 1he bank to prevent the road slipping into the
river. ODOT will also pia"!' rock structures into the
Ohio River to provide additional habitat for fish to offset any adverse impacts caused by the project.
The $I .5 million project is scheduled to be con·
tracted Feb. 1, 2000, with actual construction to begin
next summer.
.
.
· The Antiquity section of state Route 338 has been a
p~b,!ern .for ODOT for many y~ars; ~hlo · River traffic

COLUMBUS (AP) The
prospectofnearly40percentof0hio's
fourth-graders being held back in 2003
is prompting the state to substantially
lower the score ui pass the reading proficiency test
But Sen. Gene Watts, R-Dublin,
creator of the state's proficiency test
system, told The Columbus Dispatch
for a story published today this does .
not-amount to a "dumbing down" of
the test because so many fourthgraders are failing il
The problem slllms from the current
standard. Because the threshold to pass
is so high. fourth..graders who might
need only mild remediation in reading .
would be forced to repeai a grade,
Watts said.

Votes on China espionage expected in House and Senate
By tOM RAUM
Aaeoclated Pree, Writer
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Attar·
ney General .Janet Reno said today
Justice Department aitd FBI subordinates should have come to her
two yearngo when they disagreed
over whether to wiretap a nuclear
weapons scientist suspected of spy·
irig cfor Cl!ina.
"Where theno is scimething seri·
ous where (FBI Director) Louis
Frech disagrees with 11\e findihgs
(of Justice officials) it should be
discussed at my level," Reno told
her weekly news con.ference.
Janet
Congress is moving quickly on
legislation to beef up security at nuclear weapons
labs and to impose new restrictions on technology
exports in the aftermath of a House report on
alleged Chinese espionage.
.
Debate was expected in both the House and
Setjate today on a raft of measures prompted by
Tuesday's report by a special bipartisan House
panel.
Reno explained th~t when the FBI 6rslsought
to wiretap Wen Ho Lee,~ l&amp;iwanese·born scientist
at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New

Mexico, the application for a war..
rant was rejected by Justice's Office
of l.ntelligence Policy and Review.
"The facts presenllld in 1997
were insufficient to support a find·
ing of probable cause" to believe .
that Lee was knowingly engaged in
clandestine intelligence-gathering
on behalf of a foreign power, Reno
said. That is the standard required by
the Foreign Intelligence Surveil"
lance Act ofl978 and by the Consti·
tution.
Reno explained jhatthen-Assis·
tant FBI Director John Lewis comReno
plained about that decision to .her
and she asked Justice's Executive
Office for National Security to review the deci·
sion. Dani.el Seikaly of that office agreed with the
earlier decision and his ruling was transmitted to
the FBI, Reno said.
.
Seikaly never took the matter up with Reno or
with the deputy attorney general, she said.
·
~·1 assumed since I did not hear again from the
FBI that it was resolved to their satisfaction,"
Reno said. ·
fndeed, a senior FBI official has said the bureau
itself doubted it had sufficient evidence for a war·

rant. This official said agents basically had three
facts: the Energy Department listed Lee as among
those officials who knew about the W-88 nuclear ·
warhead that Cl!ina had obtained data about, that
Lee-had traveled to Cl!ina to give lectures and that
he had once telephoned another laboratory scientist under suspicion of spying, this official has
said.
·
Reno repeated she has.not thought of resigning
and said she was told by White House Counsel
Cl!arles Ruff that she has President Ointon's con·
fidence.
.
She has named a senior career prosecutor to
examine the entire Lee case, going back to 1982,
to see if any mistakes were made that can 6e cor·
rected.
"We can't let that kind of technology slip·out
again," said House Speaker Dennis Has.tert, R-IlL
Both houses are expected to attempt to attach
amendments related to tbe China inquiry to bills
authorizing $288.8 billion in defense spending for
the fiscal year that begins Oct. I . The legislation,
in different forms. is before both chambers.
Senate leaders worked late into the night
Wednesday to try to come up with a set of proposals that would win wide bipartisan support. They
were expected to continue the search for common
ground today.

11

nation is counterproductive
lm.ade victims·of civilian.s, former President Carter says.
"We have become increasingly inclined to sidestep the tim-e-tc:stcdl
Ipremises of negotiation, which in most cases prevent deterioration of
situation and at least offer the prospect of a bloodless solution," f"•rl•·rl
,,.,..,.,,. in an op-ed article today in The New York limes.
The "decision 't&lt;i attack the entire nation has been c~::~~~~~~~~~:::l
our destruction of civili8n life has now become senseless
Isi\•ely brutal," he said.
·
Carter cited the prolongation of the bombing campaign·and the
·
effects of anti-personnel cluster bombs to hospitals, homes and human
The United Nations is m~ant to handle international conllicts, but
tcutrrent ones are domestic, leaving a "peacemaking vacuum" often filled!
powerful nations that pay attention to disiurbances that affect th.em,
Carlllr wrote.
That attention involves recruitinll at least tacit support in some forum,
prc&gt;vicling a dominant military force, presenting an ultimatum and
ltai;ing punitive action against the.entire country.
,, .
"But this flawed approach. is now causing unwarranted sufferll'l
!"str-enl~thtmirlg unsavory ~ellimes," Carter said.
25,000 sorties Oown by NATO forces and the 14,000 mls·
said
and bombs launched on Serbia have not provide a clear indication
JSU&lt;oce:os in the current conflict.
Carter said the strategy has left NATO three choices: "to corttlnuel
ever more targets until Yugoslavia (including Kosovo and
almost totally destroyed, to rely on Russia to resolve our clllem·l
indirect diplomacy, or to accept American casualties by s.e11d·l
military forces into Kosovo."·
. .
So far, we are following the first, and worst, oJ)tion - and seein to
lnltJvitiQ toward including the third," he wrote.
.
The. former president is chairman of the nonprofit Carter ·Center
' '·
which monitors conflicts around the world.
·

WASHINGTON (AP) -·
Rubin spoke hours
The State Depertment called
before Caitadian F'Qreign Sec·
on Yugoslav President Sloboretary Uoyd Axworthy was to
dan Milosevic today to surrenmeet with Albright to discuss
dec to the lntemalional War
Kosovo and other matters. He
Was expected to issue an
.Climes Tribunal for Uial. lt .
Said Milosevic's indictment
appeal for NATO to choose its
by the Uibunal should build
bombing targets in Yugoslavia
support among Serbs for endmore carefully to avoid dam·
ing the Kosovo crisis on·
age to hospitals and other
NATO's terms.
civilian sites.
Spokesman James P.
Yugoelev Preeldent
"At this time, we have
Rubin, spealdng to repor1trs
Slobodln Mlloeevlc
to make doubly certain that
shortly after the announce:,
· the military taigets that are
ment of the indictment in the Netherlands, said the chosen ""' chOsen vety 'carefully and that every
United States hiS long held Milosevic personally effort is,made to ensure·that collalenJI damage is at
and politically responsible for the conflict.
the absolute minimum," said James Wright, a senior
"The Uibunal's prmecutor has now said she official in the Canadian Foreign Affairs Departmenl
believes he is criminally m~pon5ible as well," he
Germany shares that sentiment and sent Foreign
said.
.
Minister Joschka Fischer here this week to oppose
· ~ubin would not speculate whether Milosevic sending combat troops into the conllict
now will be even more unyielding in oPposition to
Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou met
NATO's demands for endine the conflict. .
Albriaht on Wednesday and Clllled again for a
"There is no way of knowing. It's an unknow· bombing pause to encourage Yugoslav President
able thing.""Rubin said.
.
Sloliodan Milosevic to accept NATO's terms for a
He added: "Webelievethatmakineitcleartothe IICitlemenL
people df Serbia that it is their leadenhip that has
Albright wllnled Miloscvic on Wednesday thai
brouaht this crisis upon them will help build support ·any lfiiiCCSSion against the &amp;(lve\'nment of Montene·
for ending the crisis on NATO's terms." ·
gro, the' smaller of Yugoslavia's two republics, was
At another poin~ he said the United States hu "unacceptable."
never intendod to neaotiate NATO's terms with
In an interview with Montenegro state television,
Milosevic and does not intend to chan,e that policy Albriaht said the air campaign against Yugoslavia
now. R~ia has been a major conduit with Mii08C· would intensify. AI for ground troop6, she said: "No
vic.
option is otttbe table."
/.
' He said the United States has been the main
After ~ling with her, Papandreou said a tern·
provider of evidence to the Uibunal but has ~ways pclrary bombing suspension could promote diplomaviewed thll body's activities as independent The cy and eventual approval of a U.N. Security Coun·
administration, he added, ha always "U!Jed them to cil resolution on a sealemenl

great emphasis in working on the diplomatic front
and being helpful," he said.
. '
Resisting. but also complimenting Greece . for
endorsing NATO's demands, Albright said the
bombing Would end only after Milosevic accepted · ·
those demands and started carrying them out. ·
Alluding to the differences within !he allia!\"1';
.Albright said, "There are a variety of ideas" among
the diverse 19 NATO member nations.
·
In Moscow, meanw.hile. Russian mediator Viktor
Cl!ernomyrdin, the principal diplomatic channel to
.Belgrade, urged an immediate end to NATO
airsttikes, now, in their third month, and said the
escalation of anaclcs while negotiations were under
way was unprecedented.
He said in an opinion piece in ·today's Washing·
ton Post that Moscow might bow out of talks if
bombing continues, as well as cut off other cooperation with Western governments and delay nuclear
arms control reductions. .
·
.
"It is impoS8ible, to talk peace with ·bombs
falling." Cl!emomyrdin wrote. "This is ~lear now.
So I deem it necessary to say that, unless the rai.ds
stop'soon, I shall advice Russia's president to suspend Russian participation in the .negotiating
proc:css. put an end to all military-technological
cooperslion with the United States and Western
Europe, put off the ralification of START' II and use
Russia's ve"' as the United Nations debates a resolution on Yugoslavia."
Cl!emornyrdin, however, was continuing to mC!'t
today in Moscow with Deputy Secretary" of State
Strobe Talbott and Finnish President Mariti Ahti·
saari to eKpiOre an approach to Milosevic, who has
re~ to withdraw Serb troops and paramilitary
units from Kosovo and to accept NATO and otltet
peacekeepers to protect refugees returning to thCi(
homes after a settlement

'

'

.
I

on one side, and the shifting of cliff rocks on the other,
have long played havoc with the adjacent highway, as
well as with 'homes at the base of the cliff, according
to ODOT. In addition, the roller coaster-like ride
through the 11pper end of Antiquity is well known to
local residents.
ODOTbegan talking to property owners last fall to
acquire property for the project.
While the discharges are not allowed to eKceed
state water quality standards for the protection of
human health. or aquatic life, Ohio EPA believes the
project could cause limited degradation to the existing
· water quality of the Ohio River, the agency reported.
Ohio EPA was required to solicit and evaluate comments regarding the technical, social, economic and
environmental impact of the project and issues related
to. lower water quality. All comments received were
considered before a final decision was made, Ohio
EPA stated.
Issuance of tbe certification can be appealed until
Jun~ 10 to the Environmental Rc-:iew Appeals Com ·
ll)i!ISi'/n 236 E. Town St., Columbus OH 43215.

state to lower passing
SCOre fOf fOUrth-grade
·testfng for reading

1

NEW YORK (AP)- By following a pattern, of culling short llCIIcel

6C $5!!Lls
9
·

on is done right," he said.
Meanwhile, ODOT Director Gordon Proctor,
recently appointed by Governor Bob Taft, told the
Columbus Disp~tch . that the portion of U.S. 33 from
Athens to Darwm wtll almost certainly be completed.
The project is part of widening and straightening Rt.
33 between Columbus and •1•77 in West Virginia and
has unanimous support from elected officials along the
route, he explained.
County commissioners from Fairfield County, near
Columbus, clear to Jackson County, W.Va., including
West Virginia Gov. Cecil Underwood, have encouraged
the stale to construct-the project.
·
. . "Maybe we missed . a ,comma or dotted an "i"
tmproperl~, .but we can go back and take care of that,"
Proctor satd, referring to the lawsuit.
Proctor said Ohio will continue building highways
at a record pace over the neKI four years but still won't
keep up with traffic demands, according to Proctor. ·
· Proctor has visited Meigs County at least twice. in
recent years and is considered ." a friend of southeastern

~rt~~-~;~;~:~y~t!~.!:,-~0 lwednes:danoyt. · w~~ai;s""e""nt·"·n.,e Milo_sevic called upon t_
o surrender an.danswer war cri_mes charges
· By GEORGE GEDDA '
·
follow the evidence where it · "Gieeee, being in the region and feeling the
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fu~r~th~e~e~rro~~~====~
Auo
clet.d
P,... Wrbi'
leads."
direct effects of what's going in the region, ha&lt;i put
~

ICfforr:s. the NATO strike on Serbia has been counterproductive

·

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Antiquity road project gets environmental OK

$249
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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

12•PK. 12 OZ.

$ l 9 .. JO:ESTOWN SPIUL

-Page4

used furniture, appliances, Oowcrs and other mise iteail.
Store hours: Mon thru Fri 9:00am to ,3

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU May 29, 1999

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED .

White Sox 6-2;
Ramirez drives In
59th RBI

We oft'tr new and used clothing, new gilt itelll$, candles, tool!, new and

~

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Cleveland defeats the

•

Accepts Credit Cards

ECKRI~H BRATWURST OR

· Susie Kerwin will be I0 I year~
old Friday, May 28. A card shower ·
1!4s been planned in her honor. Cards
ate to be Sent to Ms. Kerwin"at Eden
United Brethren Church, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772.

Dodgers beat Reds after shakeup, Page 5
Child visitation dispute, Page 12
Millennium Crusade
for Christ, Page 6.
.

Twda,., . J - Itt

· STORE HOURS
Monday ••ru
Sunday
8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

. Jerry Springer
told to tone
down fighting

fo observe birthday

May27,1 ~

Refreshments will be served ..I door prozes wt11 be given 1Mf doi~.

p..0 w·..E L L' 'S

DOUBLE COUPONS

Weather
Today: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: soa

Plans made for~~~~~~--~------~----~------------~--------------­
COCA·COLA
.:'Rutland
celebration
Plans are already underway for
!lutland's 200th birthday celebration, to be held in August.
.. The community will celebrate its
bicentennihl during its annual
·"Come Home to Rutland" home·coming celebration on Aug.ust 28. ·
· The theme for the celebration .
will be " 1799- 1999: Old Stories and
' New Beginnmgs," according to
. Marcia Ellion, who will once again
be in charge of the hemecoming cei. ebration.
·
In an· atten•pl to make the birth_day celebration successful , Elliott
·and oth~r volunteers. are seeking
·entertainers and other paiticipanrs.
· The event will begin with a hymn
sing on August 27. Entertainment
will be the key to the day 's festivi - ·
_- lies on the 28th, and will be planned
.from noon unril 8 p.m. Dancers are
' on the slate already, but other enter·iainers - sihgers, dancers and other
·llllents- are invited to perform for
the celebration.
A flower show will .be held. as
;will an art show and a craft show, in
.the Civic Center. Historical displays
· 8110 planned, and the homecoming
' committee asks that anyone with
' interesting historical photographs
contact Elliott.
' there will also be a parade at II
·a.m.
GliJ1leS are planned for children, ·
1111d those who have lived in Rutland
.. (or 70 .years or longer will be hon.ored. A special honor will be con. veyed to a prominent resident,
l;!lliott said, but the honoree has not
.•yel been determined. Elliott said.tbat
community input on the honoree is
being sought.
A new feature for this year's celebration is a farmers' market, and
anyone who plans .to have produce
to sell at the market is invited to participate.
Anyone who wishes to contribute
to the celebration by performing, or
participating in the other events
planned, is asked to contact Elliott at
742-2233 as soon as possible so that
plans can be made early.

Thursday

Wednesday, May 26, 1999

'

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.,

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�..

Thursday, May'27, 1999

Commentary

Death
Notices
'=R=--------=w-=-=--....,....----_J

Wednlldly, Mey 11, 111811

AccuWeathe~

''

, 1l1e students of the Meigs Employment Tlai ning Program of the University
of Rio Grand.e's Meigs Center would li~e to thank the community for support in
our efforts to raise money for a headstone for Antigone Rutter, daughter of student Bonnie Rutter..A yard sale and bake sale were held' at the center on May \4
and almost half or the money .needed was raised through sales and donations.
y.'ithout the help of the many individuals, businesses and organizations that con·
tributed this would not have been possible. Anyone wishing to make a donation
inay still do so by calling the Meigs Center at 992-6420 or by stopping by.
'

JIIBnne Jindra
.
eoordlnator, Meigs Employn~Mt Training Program
foflddleport

Praises special ed teacher

.

I am writing this to the MeigS County School Board. My son Roy has been
in Pomeroy Elementary for three years and has had three different teachers each
year. I know each year every student gels a different ~i:r; but these kids in
iny son's.class are in self.&lt;:ontained. These are slow kids. They need one-on-one
help. Every year. my son has a hard time, but this year he has had a great teacher:
Mr. Ramey. He doesn't Jet the kids give up. He makes them work. I know how
· special classes are because I was in them. I never had homework I just worked
jn class, but Mr. Ramey makes them have homework and·they work just like a
regular class, arid my son has come along way. But we don~ know if Mr. Ramey
will be back next year and I am worried that my sqn will not go forward but fall
9ackWard again. So please bring Mr. Ramey back next year.

Plltty Llludennllt
PomMOy

•

---

--~--.......11·

_,.,.30~

'

0

0

Inc.

-l ~

0

0

KV.

•

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w_VA.

'

Cloudy

~

T·stCII'TTII

Rain

~

. A benefit to help with Pam Cheadle's outstanding medical expenses
wtll be held Sunday, June 13, at the Columbia Township Fire Department
on State Roule 143 near Carpenter. Drawings and a Chinese auction will
be a part of the fund raising activities. The event will begin at I 'p.m. with
prize drawings at3 p.m. food will be served at the benefit which is being
sponso(ed by the community.
·

Recorder's officf;l closed

Obituaries,· ~
.
.

.

.

The Meigs County Recorder's Office will be closed Friday at noon so
employees can attend the funeral of Carroll Teaford,, the father of Kay
Hill, recorder's office employee.

.

.

State Route 554 closing

1

"" -

ll.pi:UIJdlntt.

"""'-

•••»•lWDiliMitlatJJ

.._..

.

State Route 554 at Cheshire will be closed all day Tuesday
work on a· railroad crossing.

Lewis Kenneth 'Kenny' Smith

Sunny skies, warmer .t
temps set for weekend t

Announcements:

Benefit planned

Obi•••- 'po~o~ ra, awt•* ::• •
11oo-. ~
.,.pelll•hld•aaqutArtto n'nrmmad.t..-. s tflt4..,.1tafoun lll11n1Mn

0~ -~- ~-·

Sunny Pl. Cloudy

10

allow

Memorial Day services

Lewis Kenneth ~Kenny" Smith, 40, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, May 25,
The 109th annual Memorial Day services will be held at Burlingham
1999, at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
Cemetery Monday at 1:30 p.m. The Rev. James Ditty, pastor of Hope
He w.S born July 15, 1958, in Gallipolis, son. of Ruth M.. Manley Smith,
Baptist Church, Middleport, will be the speaker. There will be' instrumen·
Middl~port, and the late Lewis J. Smith.
·
·
tal and vocal m~sic by Denver Rice, Junior White, Colleen Brickles and
He is survived by his wife, Penny Sue Landers Smith of Pomeroy to
Keith Ashley, allloi:al; and Dr. Bill Cuckler, Athens; and Frank O' Brien
By The Aaaoclsted Press
· .
. ..,
whom
he
was
married
Nov.
19,
1976;
a
son,
Kenneth
Michael
Smith
of
and
Joe Colburn of Columbus. Feeney·Bennett Post 128, Ameri can
Suorny skies and warm .temperatures are back just in time for •MemoriPomeroy;
a
daughter,
Kimberly
Sue
Smith
of
Pomeroy;
his
mother,
Ruth
M.
Legion,
will participate with .a gun salute.
al Day, which for many people signals the return of summer.
Smith
of
Middleport;
a
brother
and
sister-in-law,
Michael
Glenn
and
Cindy
It will be chilly again tonight, thanks to the clear ,skies, with tempera- ·
Smith Qf Middleport; three sisters, Dorothy Ropbins of Pomeroy, Mary
tures dipping into the 40s.
: ..
John Elswick will speak at the Poplar Ridge Free Wi II Baptist C.hu rch
Dean and Angela Smith, both of Middleport; special friends, Don Lanning .
,On Friday, the mercury will climb lnto t~e upper 70s and low 80s aided
near Cheshire, Sunday at 11 a.m. following Sunday school ai 10 a.m .
and
Ernie
Miller
of
Pomeroy
and
Gary
Smith
of
Vinton;
several
·nieces
and
by abundant sunshine. On Sunday and Monday, highs could reacH 85.
nephews.
.
The record-high temperature for this date a' the Columbus w~ather staHe was preceded in death by his father, Lewis 1. Smith. - .
tion was 94 degrees in 1911 while the record low was 34 in 1961. Sunset
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 29, 1999, al the Midtonight will be at 8:49 p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:07 a.m.
;,
Units of the Meigs County Emer11:40 a.m., Dusky Street. Marj~·
dleport Nazarene Church. Officiating will be the Rev. Odell Manley and the gency Medical Service recorded five ry Ferrell, Holzer Medical Center,
Weather forecast:
;
Rev. Bob Stewart. Burial will follow in Pratts Fork Cemetery. Friends may calls for assistance Wednesday. Central Dispatch squad assisted.
Tonight...Clear, Lows 45 to 50. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph, ~ecoming
call
·on Friday, May '28, 1999, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home,
light.
.
•
.,-l
.
Middleport.
·
Friday...Sunny and warmer. Highs 80 10 85,
Friday night...Clear. Lows 50 to 55 .
7:21 a.m., Rutland, George Murdoch, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Holzer Medical Center
.
. Extended forecast:
. •.
Discharges Ma.y 26 - Lionel
AKRON (AP) - · The body of ihe death.of Hannah Hill of Akron,
t te Route 124.
Saturday... Mostly clear and waim. Highs in the mid 80s.
· 9:18 a.m., sa
Racine, Donald Sllafer, Pleasant Gilmore, Helen King, Charles Sttt·
Sunday ... Mostly clear and very warm . Lows 55 to 60 and· highs in the an 18-year-old woman missing for whose body was· found Wednes·
Valley Hospit~J •. Syra.cus~ squad pleton, Ruth Brown, Jerry Bates,
mid and upper 80s.
.
.
.
· ·· a week was found in the trunk of day.
assisted;
·
·
Jeremy Davis.
Memorial Day... Partly cloudy and continued warm with the.ahance for her parked car, whicil had been . Police received' at least two
ticketed by police five days earlier calls from neighborhood residents
3:09p.m., state Route 7, Tuppers
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
and had her name on it .
last week about the abandoned car . Plains, Tony Jones, Camden-Clark Willard, daughter, Pataskala.
No arrests have been made in and an officer went to the scene
Memorial Hospital, Tuppers Plains . __&lt;_Pu_b_l_is_h_ed_w_i_th_pe_r_m_i_ss_io_it_)..;·_
·
Friday and .ticketed it.
CLEVELAND (AP) -· The
The daughter
on them
squad assisted;
One residept who called police
:shooting deaths of an elderly couple after failing to hear from them.
6:05 p.m.,' South Second Avenue, . Britain 's Alexander Fleming
( 188J . J955), a haclcri nlng i\1 . d!'·
last week heard a report on the Middleport, Emma Jacobs, VMH.
were an apparent murder-suicide,
Lt. Richard Petrencsik said there
covered
penicill10 in 1928.
woman's disappearanc~ and called
' police said.
'was no.sign of forced entry.
SYRACUSE
The bodies of Waller Jones, BS,
Police said the preliminary
and his 78-year-old wife, Lucille, inve$1igation indicated "the deaths
' were found by' their daughter near were the result of ll·m3:er-sujcide.
cdtone~'s
i$ch Other in their hOme WedneSday·· &lt;The"'Cayahogl · Cbu
' afternoon.
.office inust rule on the use of the
deaths.

Services planned

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls
unltsc~~~t~~~:~*c"

Police find missing 18-year-old dead

·Hospital news

call deaths of elderly couple

During battle, father and sons wore
'animal skins and attacked their foes
with murdewus shout s -and snarls.
'Hence', the phrase to '"go berserk.''

~7,150*

.'

520 W. Main St. •
Pomeroy, OH
Phone 992·2588
Gallipolis •.446-0852
·
'

The Daily Sentinel

~1,850*

(USPS Ji3.Ht)
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·Published every aftemoon, Mond.y throu&amp;h
.Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Valley PublisblnJ Company. Second class
poltlp paid at Pomeroy, Oh1o.
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highway halt

president who hasn't voted for a'Bush or a Dole SQ
you expea in a preliminary year for well-respected
nanteS like thai to.be high up."
·
:
"Therc - almost completely untested candidates in the natiooal arena," he. added. "There'll
come a time when it all settles back down to earth
.ancl' the question will be not who has the mo51
famouS Jut name or who has the most money, bul
who'si'CIIdy to be president."
·
The·question also will be who can win. Alexan,
der's 6111 run didn't pass that test. He quit eariy,
after a SIIWC3Sion of primlll)' defeats. His best 1996
showings we~t: third place finishes in Iowa and New :
Hampshi~t:. 'fhe.Jatter haunts him. "The race in '96
w11 over when Bob Dole beat me by 3,800 vcites in
New Hampshire," be rcc:ounted. Pat Buchanan won
that prlmouy. By Alexander's reckoning, if he'd fin·
islted second, Dole would have dropped out, the
rtiQC would have been between him and Buchanan,
"and I would have won."
Adually, Dole beat Alexander by 7,609 votes,
according to the final, official figures.
The theory is • shaky as the nl!mbers, but it goes
to his currcnl campaign game plan, whid! concentrates on olpllizing for the first cau~ses in low•
and the filii primBI)' In New Hampshi~t:.
WiJIIJr R. ~ ..a prtl'dMr end lpeelal,
OOtJMPGIIC,.nf for nt. Alneii!Md ~. ,_
,.,ortsd on Wssll*'lfotl lnd fllltiOtllll polmc. for

,

0

;Letter to the Editor:

was the first in a series of 26 money events in May
and June.
Neither that, nc:ir poll ratings of 5 pe"'"nl and
lower, nor Bush's elfly lead and $7.6 million raised
by March 31, wrings an admission of frustration or
weariness from Alexander.
.
.
"!·don't wony,l just get up and·go," Alexander
said.
"Sure I get tired, but I enjoy what I'm doing. I'm
doing it for a purpose: ... So that keeps me jiOing.~
And he certainly keeps going. "My clay is basi·
cally working on what I have to say, what I believe,
recruiting d!llirmen in Iowa and raising money." ·
And then doing It apn the next day. Running for
president at this poin4 he said, !lleaiiS driving two
hours to Ottumwa, Iowa, to see a dozen people,
sometimes with a flat lire to delay the trip back to
the Des Moines hotel. ·
·
For all of it, Alexander said he's muc:h more
comfortable seeking the presidency now than the
first time. "I mean, running for president of the
United States is not like stepping up from alderman
to mayor or mayor to governor; it's like taking on a
new life."
An· old one for him .now, but new, and a scverc
test, be said, awaiting Bush and Dole, the Jeade11 in
the Republican presidential prefercnoe polls.
Alexander said their ranking is understandable.
"There's not a Reeublican under 4S who's voted fa~

.,,
,,

.,

Motorcycle accident Injures Racine man
A Racine man was injured in a motorcycle accident Wednesday on
~~~~~JRr~~rt~~ near Racine, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Don_ald W. Shaffer, 22, was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the Meogs EMS followi.ng the 9:15a.m. accident, according to the patroL:
Troopers said Shaffer was eastbound when he lost control o( the
motorcycle as he attempted to avoid collision with a deer. Shaffer laid :
down the motorcycle and it slid off the road, the report ~id . · ·
.
The motorcycle was moderately damaged, and Shaffer was ci ted for
no motorcycle license and a helmet violation.

Lewis Kenneth "Kenny" Smith, 40, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, May 25,
1999, at Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
He was born July 15, 1958, in Gallipolis, son of Ruth M. Manley Smith,
Middleport, and the late Lewis J. Smith.
He is survived by. his wife, Penny Sue Landers Smith of Pomeroy to
whom he was married Nov. 19, 1976; a son, Kenneth Michael Smith of
Pomeroy; a daughter, Kimberly Sue Smith of Pomeroy; a brother and sisterin-Jaw, Michael Glenn and Cindy Smith of Middleport; three sisters,
Dorothy Robbins of Pomeroy, Mary Dean and Angela Smith, both of Middleport; several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held Saturday, 2 p.m. at the Middleport Nazarene Church
with the Revs. Odell Manley and Bob Stewart officiating. Burial will follow
in Pratts Fork Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

ol Columbuo lso•f78• I

•

·Clinton slips, but GOP blows its chance

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correapondent ·
.
·
WASHINGfON (AP) - With barely a ripple of ·
support in the early Republican polls, Lamar
Alexander insists that he can vault from the field
when the real 2000 competition begins and the
questiOn isn't famous names but who's ready to be
president.
He is, the fo(J11er Tennessee governor, secretary
of education, and two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination says; and the
favorites, Texas Gov. George Bush and Elizabeth
Dole, have yet to be tested.
"I'm patient, about it," Alexander said in an
interview with The Associated Press, referring to his
persistent, dogged quest- begun in 1995, with no
noticeable pause since.
,
· In the preseason ·polls,.his nam~ ranks near the .
bottom of the Jist of 11 GOP prospects. declared and
undeclared. His campaign was in the red, 8CQOrding
to his March .3ll'eport to the Federal Election Com·
mission. Alexander said his fund raising is going
fine now, while declining to give numbers. He said
that tbe q~tion isri 't who has the most moriey but
who has enouaJt to run effectively in the first contests of 2000, and that he will.
He took in $784,773 iri the first three months of
the year, but raised more than that at one kickoff
dinner Utis month in Nashville, Alexander said. It

0

'

Ohio editorial voices:

For Alexander, it takes patience and get up and.go

IMonen.td lso•1711• I • .

0

~

Lew .• s· Kenneth 'Kenny' Sml"th

MICH.

IND.

amsley

Local briefs:

-

Graveside services for Rosemary Wamsley, 6J, of Little Hocking. who
. died Tuesday at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, will be
held at noon Friday at Gravel Hitl Cemetery in Cheshire.

Friday, May 28

By Ben w.tt.nberg and

And, of course, the sizzling post·wlf eooncimiee or powerful hold over them. Fear of exposure as ·
Dllnlel w.tt.nberg
.
Ute ':IDI and 'SOs gave ""'ns more money and con- authoritarian squares haunts m~y of kl&lt;!ay's
After Unleton and, now, Olnysumer clout
boomer parents, a fear revealed m the hornfied
ers, willingness to take on HollyThday, the cultural circuits continue to multiply. exclamation familiar from a thousand bad boomer
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
wood has become the test of seri·
More movie theaters, moo: television d!annels, siteoms and personal essays: "I'm turning into
740..982·2150 • Fax: 8112-2157
ousn= and JXllitical manhood for
cheaper consumer electronics alld, of coune, the my mother/father!"
·
liberals. Ukewise, standing up to.
Internet have all done their plrl1n enhancing the cui·
Shy of establishing the authority and discipline
the gun lobby has become the test
tural autonomy at teen-agers.
that might instill respect and, yes, a bJt of salutary
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
of seriousness and political manAI the same time, with ihe rise of the two-earner fear in their children, they often resort instead to
hood for oonservatives.
.. couple, parents spend tess time at home and, a strategy of friendly, egalitarian complicity with
ROBERT L WINGETT
But while the NRA and Tinsel·
inevitably, Jess time monitoring the movies, music, Utem. To exercise the influence of an adult, they
Publisher
town are taking it on the chin, one vast and mighty concerts and pmes tlleir ltidl ~~e ~· their are foi'ced to assume the guise of a somewhat
bloc of voters has been Jet off the hook: all the soccer money on. Bu4 under !be Jaw, pren11 retain vtrtually oliJcr, IOIIICiwhat more worldly peer.
.DIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Controller
moms
and
Dockers
dads
raising
this
generation's
chi
I·
undlecked
authority
within
the
home
to
monitor
and
The
easiest
way.
for
busy
working
parents
to
General·Manager
. dren.
control how their children spend their mooey and obtain this p5eudo-complicity is to buy it ··with
If there is a useful symbol ofa larger social failure time·· if they clloose to exerase il
a broad-minded tolerance of their kids' cultural
in the Littleton massacre, it is a symbol or parental
Advertisers and rctail~ salivate at the size and tastes and plenty of-money to underwrite them. In
TM Senli nel WfllcomN J.ft.,.. t~ th• «&lt;liM from ,...'*,. on • IH't»d rtlll~ of lopJet. Shorl l•tt•fl (300 wotU OT l•n) h•w ttt. bHt chan.:. of Nlng pubJIM«&lt;.
dereliction: Eric Harris' pare!!ts apparently did not consumercloutofthe60millionAmericantlknowna5· 1hus pandering to their children, busy dualTyp«&lt; ,.,.,.. .,. ,.,~and all may H Hill«/. E•ch •hould IMIIHH • .Jgnaf.,.,
realize that Eric and Dylan were making pipe bombs Generation Y: They know, that today's children and income parents may also allay their own feelings
MJdrN•, and d•yflma phone numbM. $pM:Ify • data If th.,.'• ~ ,.,.,..,H to • ,.._
vlou• artlc:l• or I•H.,. Mall to: Latt.n to th• -.lltor, . 'Th• Sentinel, nr Court 81.,
in the garage on their play date~!.
adole5oents have far more money and spendin&amp; of self-guilt for spending so much lime on the job
Pomtroy, ·Ohio 457U: or, FAX to 7~H2..Z157.
Critics have labeled the aestheticized
violence and chic nihilism found ·in
today's youth-oriented mass entertainment "cultural pollution!' In the spirit of
the metaphor, they would regulate or
By The Associated Press
.
punish the "JXllluters": stricter enforceExcerpts or recent editorials or statewide and national Interest from ment of R ratings at theaters and video
Ohio newspapers:
stores, restrictions on violenl advertising
imagery, and voluntary restraints. on oon·
Akron Beacon Journal, May 21
tent by the entertainment industry. Newt
Cracks in the NATO strategy for returning hundreds of thousands of ethnic Gingrich·even called for exposing movie
Albanians to their homes in Kosovo appear wider than bomb craters in Bel· and video-game makers to liability lawgrade.
.suils.
·
It is time to try a pause in bombing.
..
.
But while exposure to violence in
Serbian leader Slobodan Miloscvic has derilanded a halt to bombing so that large concentrations may .,become
a diplomatic solution may be attempt"?.
.
. ·' .
"toxic" over time, the pollution
NATO. of ~ urse, wants M1losev1c s head. The problem IS, 1t has never had metaphor is an evasion. It implies that
a workable m1h~y plan to get1t. .
. .
. .
.
· just as parents are by themselves helpless
. NA~O doesn t have to abandon 1ts obJectlves.•f. 11 halls. the bo~btng and ·. to prevent the exposure of their children
g1ves doplomacy another chance. It can enter negottattons wh1le !llaking clear to to air or water pollution, so too they are ·
Milosevic that if he doesn't acoe~~ to NATO-Russian P;Cacekeeping protection helpless to limit their children's oontact
for the Kosovars and show a w1lhngness to compromose on other 1ssues, the with entertainment violence. Bul are
bombing will resume, redoubled.
they?
Unlike pollution, exJXlSUre to violent
The {Willmlghby) News-Herald, May 23
.
entertainment is voluntary. Indeed, con·
John Demjanjuk seems destined for a fair day In court and ultimate justice on. sumers pay for the privilege of contami·
what he did' during and after World War II, whether or not he is innocent or nation by "cultural pollution." And since.
guilty, whether his prosecutors unfairly dogged him or not.
the vast majority of teens remain partly
Even after he was sentenced to death in one case, the Israeli Supreme Olurt or wholly financially dependent on their
overturoed the verdict against the retired Seven Hills auto plant worker. The parents, parents are directly or indirectly,
court found reasonable doubt he was the infamous "Ivan the Terrible" of the tacitly or otherwise, subsidizing "culturTreblinka extermination camp.
al pollution."
.
Even after he was stripped of his American citizenship in another case, it was
Of course, policing the viewing and li~tening of autonomy than tl1eir predecessors. Maybe they have and so little at home.
restored after it was found the Justice.Department had badly bungled Its spuri· defiant and resouroeful ""'ns is not easy. And tecluto- too much of both.
. Show me a country of aggressive kids, and I .
ous case ·against hirll as the Treblinka gas chamber operator.
Maybe parents need to retake the purse strings. will show you a country of passive parents.
logical progress is not helping. It never has.
.
Demjanjuk may have been railroaded by prosecutors, as his supporters say,
Technology has been the ally of teen indepen· They could cut or condition allowance money for
S.n watt•nberg I• a s•nlor fellow at the
but he went before no kangaroo courts in either co.untry. The checks and bal-. dence at least since the mass production of automo- starters: demand receipts, demand more work AIMrlc.tn Ent.rpr#H ln.tltut• snd Is the
ances system worked in his favor both times.
biles after World War I gave them the mobility to around the house or more · schoolwork in modarwtor of PIJS'a "Thtnk Tank." Daniel
escape the supervision of parenis and neighbors. The exchange for money.
Wattenberg, who wrate this week's colThe (11ffin) Advertiser-lnbune, May 24
Arc today's baby-boom parents up to the task? umn, writes T8flularly for . Th• Weekly
appearance of transistor radios arid portable record
: If you carne home from work and found that your kitchen appliances were players aftet World War II aided the rise of an inde· Maybe not. The · anti-authoritarian, non-con- Stllndard and /s a contributing editor for
gone, replaced by another brand that might be more expensive to operate, you'd pendent youth market (read: rock and roll) in music. formistideals of their own youths still exercise a George. .
be furious. You'd call the police, who would waste no time in tracking down the
culprit. Prosecution would be swift and, quite likely,judgment w(\uld be severe.
; But if a long-distance telephone company illegally switches you to its service, it is an entirely different story.
ing that no option h• been taken 9ff the table. I'R· fiaJtL
: The practice of switching people's Jong·distance telephone service without By Morton Kondracke ·
Public
support
is
slipping
for
both
President
CJinviously,
he'd aliowed everyone to believe he had
An ABC Ne~ poll showed that adults faV&lt;?r
!heir permission is called "slamming." It's illegal, for obvious .reasons. Yet the
~n and the Kosovo war, but congressional Republinixed ground troops; certainly he never contr~ stronger gun controls by 67 to 31 percent and fil~or
~ourts and federal officials, rather than simply treating the practice as the crime
cans
are
in
deeper
trouble
over
guns
andlhe
budget.
.
hawks like Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who pum- c;ltecks at gun shows by 77 to 12 percent.
it is, are negotiating with telephone companies over uslamming." That's ridicuAs
lc;&gt;ng
as
people
don't
pay
attention
to
the
Albameled him for the policy. If there's been a dtangc in
Wl!ile Senate Republicans were messing up OJI
lous.
nians
Clinton
has
allowed
to
be
slaughtered
inside
Clinton's
stance,
it
seems
mercly
rhetorical,
mll)'be
guns
last week, tbeHousewasputtlngitselfinslta'pe
: Deqiminalizing the practice of "slamming" will encourage its practitioners.
Kosovo,
he'll
probably
spin
any
diplomatic
seHiedesif?1ed
••
at
last
••
.to
pu~
preasure
on
Yugoslav
f~
~
another ~~ diaaster oil lbe bw!get b~
Prosecuting those who break the Jaw, on .the other hand, would bring an end to
ment
into
a
victory,
.
Prestdent
Slobodan
MtiOSCVIc.
sticking
to domelticbudget capt! !hat would tnvolye
ihe practice very quick)y. What 's wrong with simply enforcing the law?
It's harder for Republicans to explitin their deepBut Apache helicopters have yet to fly .in combat, billions of dollars in real program'cuts, despite the
dyed opposition to gun control in the wakeof one .and ground forces that would give aedibility to . ftld that the government is running a $120 billion
The Columbus Dispatch, May 24
school
shooting after another. And again they've set Oin~~·s hint have not been moved into position·· surplus.
. The Ohio House is expected to vote this week on a reworked bill that should
themselves
up for Clinton to w,in another budgetary and presumably they'd take weeks .to get therc.
This is the downside of the GOP effort to one-up
create a safety net for consumers when their health maintenance organizations
endgame.
Right
now
there
are
only
12,000
to
'15,000
Clinton
and "lockbox" 100 percent of Social Securefuse payment for doctor·prescribed treatment or medicine.
Ciioton's
job
approval
rating
has
dropped
10
NATO
troops
stationed
in
Macedonia
and
Albania,
rity
surpluses.
The overall budget surplus is derived
Stripped of counterproductive language that would have given Ohioans the
right to sue. their HMOs, House Bill 4 now is ready for serious consideration, points since the impeachment·inflated high of 66 far short even of the 28,000 once called for as peaa:· from Social Security, so l!flCnding none of it requires
percent in late· January, according to the Pew keepers.
program cuts.
)llbeit with some possible improvements first.
·
ReSearch
Center,
and
his
rating
on
foreign
policy
has
NATO
Secretary
General
Javier
Solana
is
schedBut even GOP appropriators are howling 8illllur
The redrafted version would create an independent external review for con·
dropped
from
56
to
46
percent
since
March.
•·
uled
to
come
up
with
his
new
estimate
of
whit's
party's
policy. "I think we're headed for anoth8o""sumers who daim their HMOs have wrongly denied payments.
Support
for
NATO's
airstrikes
against
Serbia
has
needed
for
a
Kosovo
occupying
force
now
that
the
debacle,"
said Rep. John Poner, R-111., chairman of
The proposed review process would outpace by a long shot any like-min~ed
dropped
from
62
pereent
in
April
to
53
percent
now,
war
and
ethnic
cleansing
have
taken
place.
A
British
the
House
Apptoptiations subcommittee on Labor,
litigation. Those who would argue that insurance companies would be more
motivated by the threat of a lawsuit than a prompt external review ignore the and enthusiasm for sending in ground troops is official said the nCoess&amp;ry number might be 45,000 Health and Human Services and Education, who has ·
and that it was "urgent" that NATO get those sol- been told to cut S.I0.7,billion ~ the ~7~ billion
critical weeks, months or even years between ni:cessary treatment and a settle· down from 51 to 44 percent.
Clinton
actually
deserves
even
worse
disap,
·
diers
in place and ready to move.
.budget for eduattion, health. and job lrlirung pro.ment. This bill addresses. consumers' needs for .immediate action, forcing
proval
for
failing
to
send
in
gmund
troops
to
rescue
This
official
was
optimistic
that
Milosevic
evengrams.
·
· •·
·
~o mpanies to act in a timely manner.
·
·
the Godforsaken Kosovars -- or even assembling tually would be bombed into !I(Xlepting letms NATO
The debacle Porter nofers to is a repeat oflast
ground troops to menace the Serbs and prepare for could call a victory. If that happens, Clinton willrcpo · year, when Congress failed to pass appropriationi
entry into Kosovo.
· re.sent his policy as vindicated. Most people proba- bills and lumped money !or many _feder~ agencie$
While NATO has been bombing from 20,000 bly will have forgotten how more than half of House. into one monstrous ommbus funding boll that not
. feet for the past nine weeks, losing nary a pilot in Republicans, Jed by Majority Whip Thm Delay, R- only broke the budget .caps but became larded with
by
comba~ the Serbs have had time to devastate and Texas, wanted to withdraw U.S. forces and hand
faL
·
· It is frustrating that a small'special interest group can hold (the Athens-to- dispossess the Kosovar population, murdering Milosevic tlle victory. .
.
Clinton cleverly threatened to veto the measuf~:
.Darwin) project hostage with legal delays. They are grasping at straws with no maybe 25,000 while tens of thousands ITJOre face
But people won't forget •• because Democrats over one Cducation item and Republicans, fearing
regard to the citizens of Meigs and Athens counties that want much-needed death from hunger and exposure.
won't Jet them -- that Senate RepublicanS stouUy blame for a govemm shutdown, caved --giving
progress and si mple safety of travel.
.
The United States used to be the leader of NATO, resisted mandating background d!ecks at gun shows Democrats the 9JlPOrlum
label the GOP antiI hope they can sleep well at night because people's Jives and livelih,l&gt;ods but lately it's Britain who has been insisting on and pawn shops.
education and win the 1998 el ons.
could depend on this new highway. I would hope that they would reconsider and preparations to enter Kosovo under "semi·permis~
. RepublicanS stem to cany a fatal gene that
The 2000 elections are a long way off, but con·
abide by the wishes of the majority of the people in the area that this projecl sive" circumstances, meaning if Serbian forces are impels them to do the wrong thing politically when- ·gressional·Republicans are not helping their side.
deserves.
·
·
in disarray but their dictator has nOt formally capit- ever they are in the spoUight •• like insisting on
·
ulated.
impeaching ctinl()n instea4 of ju5t censuring IUm, or
(llotton Kondnlcke Is M8CUtlve editor of
flick Davenport
last week, finally, Clinton did get around to say·· shutting down the government in the 1995 budget Roll Cllll, ~ -P"'»' of Clip/to/ Hill.)
Meigs County Commissioner
Pomeroy

. osemary

Ohio weather

'EsttJbfislid in 1948

:Community helps purchase headstone

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

,. 2

The Daily Sentinel Blame violence on family dynamics

:Commissioner frustrated

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SS•Z9

9f2·5129
' 992-4250 . '
ST. If. 7 Nort• "
Po•eroy, Ohio

• Dual Alrbags
~

Rear Spoiler

• Well Equlppedl

• AMIFM Stereo
• Trtletlon Control
• Nicely Equlppedl

�•

•
•

Sports

. '·

•

The Daily Sentinel

By TOM WITHERS .
Last week in Chicago, the
·CLEVELAND (AP) :rhe Indians, currently on pace to break
Indians' scoring machine hasn't the 1931 New York Yankees' record
slowed much, and now it's finding for runs in a season, scored 39 runs
new ways to pump out runs.
- 13 in each game - and batted
"Manny Ramirez went4-for-4 with .403 with six homers to bludgeon the
a homer and Dave . Burba pitched White Sox during a three-game
seven strong innings . Wednesday sweep.
Cleveland wasn't as proficient in
night, leading Cleveland to a 6-2 win
the
White Sox.
two of three at Jacobs Field

Co lorado (Brownson 0-0) at Philadt:lptlia (Byrd

Easlern Division

:r..m
Boston .

:1!: L

New York
Toroo10
Tampa Say
Balti!T'IClU

1'&lt;1.

. 27 18
. .... . .. .. . . .25
. 24 25
.21 25
17 2R

600
.568
.490
.468
178

Centrul Division
........ ..\2
........ 22 22

"

. ~00

2~

..... _19 27
. " ..... .17 29

4M

.J6Q

"

CLEVELAND ..
Karisus City ...
Chicago .... .. ..
Detroit ....
M i nn~ som ..

. ........
,

W~&gt;~t• rn

Tell.as .... , .....
Oallnnd ..
Seatt lt! ...
Anuhei'm .

.. 20

.7 11
413

!l.ll
I ·~

5
.6
10

.,
II

IJ
15 :

20

56~

2J

.500

)

D

500
47R

.1

1-l

'

WedneSday's scores

New Yon.: 8. Uu5ton :i
Seanle I I . Mmnesota J
Te~n s 8. Tampa Bay 6
CLEVELAND 6, (:h rcago 2
Toromo 9. Detroit 5
Onkl :lllll J. K:.n sns Cit Y I
llah imore J . Amlhcim ·2

Today's games .
· • . K.1nsas Ciry (Wita$kk 1-J } ill (lal..lw11.J (Rn~cr ~ 1;}. 4:05 p.rn:
·
• · Chi tago /Snyder 6- 2) .11 Dclroi t (\Vcnn~r 'i -1).
J:O."i p.m.
• ' Boston {Rnpp 2-2 ) at Ncw York !Ckmcns .\·OJ.

1:tl5 p.m.
• Baltimore (Gulman 1-.ll u1

head with our bats."
Ramirez, who leads the majors
with 59 RBis, hit three singles and
his 13th homer for the Indians, who
finally figured out Mike Sirotka (2·
6) and improved to 5- I against the
White Sox this season.
Burba (5- I) gave up two runs and
si.x hilS in se&gt;en innings, and escaped
two
with inning-ending double

t\nt~h~lm

4:30p.m. Friday
ChamfHonship: I p.m. Saturday

1- 1). 7:05p.m.
HOUston (Lml:l 8- 11 at Pittsburgh £Ritchie J-3),
7:05p.m.
Ariuma (Daal &lt;l.4) at New York (Reed .l -IJ, 7:10
p.m.
'
·
Llls Ar~gele s (Driefon S-2) at Alianta (0. Peru
2-2). 7:40p.m.
San Otego (Clement o;SJ at Milwaukee (Eidn!d
1·2 1. R:05 p.m

At Piqua Hardman Field
Hamilton Badin vs. Lancaster Fairfield Union,
I ;JO p.m. Friday
Loveland vs . lipp City, 4:30p.m. Friday
Chan1pionship: 1 p.m. Saturday
AI Lancaster Beaven Field
ATHENS. vs . WllShington _Coun House. 1:30
p.m. Friday
'
Byesville Meadowbrook vs . Dover, 4:;i0 p.m.
._
·
Friday
Champion5hip: I p.m. Saturday
'At GYUon HeiR Park
Rocky River vs _ Columbus DeSales. I ::\0 p.m
Friday
'
Sandusky Perk.ins vs. Bryan, 4:JO p.m. Friday
Chainpionship: I p.m. Saturday

Ohio H.S. high school
regional tournaments

!Hi ll 1· 31.

!0:05p.m.

Ohio {AP) - Pr~iring for the
baseballtnurnnments:

Division "I
s\t Solon Community Park Complex
Westlnkl! vs. Cuynhog_a Falls, I :30 p.m. Friday
P:u-ma Heights Holy Name \ ' S. Eastl ake Nonh
~ .~0 I) 111 Friday
( 'h:nnpionsh•p: 1 P.m. Smurday
• At Cunlon Thurman Munson Sladium
Nonh Cruuou Hoo\'er \'§, Akron Gnrfield, I : ~0'
p 111 Fml:ry
,
Ow,·e Cuy. n . ,Nt:w Philadelphia. 4 : ~0 p.m
l~ n d a y
,
Ch&lt;mwinnsh ip: ! p.rn. S;rturd~y
,\1 Lc\\i~lown Indian Lake High Si:hooJ
Dublin CniTman vs . Vandalia Butler, I JO p.m
J-mh•y
' l.kfianct• \ ' S Toledo St Frands. -':JOp.m. f-ridDy
C.:hmnpionshrp: 1 p.m. Saturd[ly
At O"ylon Wrighl Stale University
P14ua YS . Cincmnatr Elder. I :JO p.m. Friday
Cm~· ,nnnti Mncllcr \'S. Oxford Tulnwanda. 4:JO
r m Fridny
Championship : ! p.m. Saturday

Division II

•'
Friday 's games
.
• !llew Yor k (Pl"lti tte 2-2) at Toronro (Corpt!ntcr 34}, 7:05p.m.
• Bosron (Wakefield 2--'&gt; at CLEVELAND (Wrighl
4-2). 7:05 p.m.
: Chltago (Navarro 2-.J) at Detroi t (Thompson 15). 7:05 p.m.
, Min nesota (Radke 4-]) at Te11 as {Sele ~-4), B:35

At Chillicothe Memorial Stadi um
Mnrion Pl e=:~s ant vs . WH EELERSBURG. I :JO
p.m. Friday
4
LUCASV ILLE VALLEY vs. West Latayeuc
Ridgewood. -':XI ~- m Friday
Chumpionship: I p.m. Saturday
AI ~bssUion Wa~hlnJillon Hl1h St'hool
Midd lefield Can.linul vs . Akron St. Virk:ent·St.
M:"'Y- I :.' 0 p.m. Friday
Campbell · Memorial vs . App le Creek
W"ynednle. 4 : ~ 0 J1.m Friday
·.
Championship: I p.m. Satu rday
·
AI Hllbhom Dick Sllaffler Park
Ci nrinnali Nonh Colle~ Hill \'S. Cind nn:~t i
Madeiro. 1:JO p.m. Friday
Marion Ri ver Valley vs. Vcuai ll e3. 4:JO p.m.
Friday
"'
,
Championship: I p.m. Saturday ·
AI Findlay Fill&amp; City Mtmorial Field
Lima Central Calholi c vs, Doylest ow n
Chippewa, I :30 p.m. Friday
. Genoa vs . Attica Seneca Ensl, 4:]0 p.m. Friday
Championship: I p.m. Saturday

Cbamp1onship: I p.m. SaiUrday
At Um-. Bath Hlah School
Cridersville Perry vs . Elmore Woodlll&lt;R. I :30
p.m. Friday
Edon vs. Oregon Srritch, 4:..\0 p.m. Friday
Championship: I p.m. Saturday
At Monroe lAmon·Monroe Hl&amp;h Srhool
Middletown Fenwick vs. Cincinnati Cou.nll')'
Day. I : ~Op . m. Friday
.. . '
Fori Loramie vs. St. Henry, 4 : .~0 - p . m . Friday
Championship: I p.m. Saturday
At Elyria Hi&amp;h School
Kidron Central Christian vs . liffin. Culvert. 1:30
p.m. Friday
Southington Ch11lker \'5. Gates Mill s Gilmour,
4:;\0 p.m. Friday
Championship: I j;l.m. Saturday

Wedn~sday 's

Aorida .. ......... ................. ...... l 5 32

.51 1
.34 t
.319

C~nlrll Oi\'ision
Houston .............................. 29 16
Chicago ................................24 20
CINCINNATL .................... 22 20
St. Louis .................. .. ..r .. .... 2.l 21
Pittsburgh ............................. 22 24
Milwaukee ......
. ...... 21 24

.644
545
.524
.523
478
.467

Westun DiVision
Sun Francisco ........... 27 ' 19
Arilona.. ...
.. ... 27 21
L.osAng~les... ..
. ... 2] 22
Colerado...
.. .............. 18 25
S\n Diego .......................... 17 28

.587
.56J
:511
.419
.37M

Mootreal... .......................... 15 29

.I

.574 ·

Gl1
1'1
4',

12

13 ~

Nalional Hocke)' Ltaaue
CAROUNA HURRICANES : Tmded 0 Francis
Lemrd to Philadelphia for a 1999 eighth-round drat'r
l'kk.
.
NEW JERSEY,. DEVILS: Named Larry
Robinson un istantl'OEteh
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Signed C Petr
Mikil.

4'.,
S'A

5'•,
7''r
8

'l
3'r
7':
'9 11

Chicago 6, Florida 4
Montre:!l 5, Philadelphia 2
New York 5, Pi11sburgh 2
Los Angeles 9, CINCINNATI J
At lama] , Milwaukee 2 (I 0)
Houston J. Colorado 2
San Fraru:i n·o 7. St. Louis 6
Arizona .l S;m Di~go 2 (I I)

&amp;.

Meigs football
linkfest posts
list of winners .

ers covering topiCs ranging from bas- able at the door on June 14th [ro m 8 ·
to 9 a.m. For more information. call
ketball fundamenta ls to motivation
·Please contact vars ity boys' head Stout at 992-2158 or 992 ,6600.
coach Chris Stout, as soon as possible to s ign · u·p. or mail checks and
Tennis star Serena Williams
names or campers to Chris ~ tout . developed her game by practic- ·
1415 Glenn Street, P.O. Box .39 ." ing against such accompli shed
Syracuse Ohio 45779. Please make
partne rs as John McEnroe and
chec ks payable to /Meigs Basketball.
Pete
Sampr~s .
Regi stration will also be avail-

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Tuday's games
{Vtd dcs 4-2) nt CINC INNATI
4-4!. 1 2 : ~5 p.m. ·
Atl:u1t n !Mi llwood -I·,') at Milwaukee tKart 5-21 .
1:05 p.m.
Colorad o tB .M. Jones 1 - .~) at Houston (Holt O-·
6). I :J5 p.m.
Sarl F•·and sco tGard n.:r 0-4) :u St Louis
tAcc:vedo .'- I ). 1:40 p.m.

Member F.O.r.6.

{ H n rn1 ~ch

P.O. Box e:ll
Pomeroy, OH 45751

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Qellpollo, OH oiM31
Tupptr~ ~11111" OH .&amp;5183 7&lt;0144WMII

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Friday's games
,St. Louis IO iiwr 4- Z) nt Chicago (Tapnm

' .

QUALIFIES FOR FINALS - The Meigs Marauders' Zach Meadows··
(center) gets reedy to clear the first hurdle in the boys' 110-meter ·
hurdles in Wednesday's Division II regional semifinal action at :
Zanesville High School's Sulzberger Stadium. Meadows' 15.1-sec-.
ond sprint earned him a third-place finish In the first heat and the
second lane In Friday's finals. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne) .

15,850°

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his head down following 1hc 36-pitch
By JOE KAY
Lewis let a throw from catcher Brian up inside."
CINCINNATI (AP) - A coach· Johnson deflect off his glove as Eric
Adrian Beltre's two-run homer sixlh inning , which was his last.
"I told him I thought he did a
ing shakeup and two crucial errors Young stole third. The ball rolled finished off the rally. Raul Mondesi
by Cincinnati third baseman Mark away and Young scored for a 2-0 hit a solo homer, his 17th, in the decent enough job and that if we
ninth inning to regain the National make the plays, it's a different
Lewis got the Los Angeles Dodgers lead.
headed in the right direction .
The Dodgers took control by League lead. Sammy Sosa had drawn story," McKeon said. "We should"ve
The disappointing Dodgers won- sending 10 batters to the plate for six · even with his 16th homer earlier made two or three plays that inning ,
but it didn' t happen."
der if they' ll stay on course this time runs in the sixth. "Three balls went Wednesday.
"You' d like to try to get out of it.
Afterwards,
McKeon
gave
Tomko
or make yet another U-turn.
Lewis' way and he didn't handle any
with
a liule less damage, but it's
a
pep
talk.
The
right-hander
had
·Lewis set up five unearned runs of them well.
hard,"
Tomko said.
·
walked
off
the
mound
slowly
with
Chan Ho Park (4- J 1led off wilh a
with his two errors Wednesday night,
helping the Dodgers pull away to a 9- grounder to Lewis, who caught his
3 victory over the Reds. Los Angeles cleats as he set his foot to throw. The
got only its third victory in 10 games result was a wild throw to first for an
after firing ·pitching coach Charlie error that left Park on second base.
Hough and replacing him with
White then saw Lewis playing
Claude Osteen.
back too far and bunted in front of
The pitchers weren't the only him for a single ihat really got the
The , annual. Meigs Girls' Childs and coach Mick Davenport.
Applications for the camp may be .
rally going.
B sketba · camp will be held on June
ones who got lhe message. ·
picked up at any school in the Mei"gs
"As far as I'm concerned, if I put 7- I at eigs High School.
'"Everyone in the lineup is capaSessions for girls in grades 4-6 in Local School District . For more
ble of doing more than their slats a bunt down and the lhird baseman is
say,'" · said ·Devon White, who hall playing behind the bag a liule, if it's the 1999-2000 school year will be information, contact Ron Logan at
two hits and scored twice. "We've a good bunt he won't throw me out," from 9 a.m . . until II :30 a.m. for school at 992-2158 or at home at
grades 7-8 will be from noon untd 992-2723.
got to be consistent, which we White said.
After Young doubled home Park 2:30pm and grades 9- II from I p.m.
haven' t. been all year .
The Mei gs. Marauder basketball
"It's been a roller coaster ride so for a 3-2.1ead, Lewis tried to make a . until 3:30p.m .
far. Hopefully we'll stay consistent backhand stop on Gary Sheffield's
Cost of the camp is $35, no fami-. camp will be held June 14 through
and start winning some games.'"
hard-hit gro"nder. The ball bounced ly will have to pay inore than $60 ,, June 18 from 9 a.m. unt il noon daily.
The Reds have won most of their past his glove for a two-run double. more than one girl anends the camp. Any student entering grades 3-9 this
"You have · a 50-50 chance of Each camper will receive a Meigs · fall is eligib le 10 all en~!.
games over the past two weeks,
Instructors wil l include member&gt;
pulling out of their rut. They ' d won catching aground ball, " Lewis said. camp T-shirt and a basketball . To
eighL of nine and had a chance to "Sometimes you· catch it, sometimes make sure that each girt ·gets aT-shi rt of the high school and junior high
'move four games over .500 for the you don 't. It's a reaction play. You and a basketball the . week of camp. coachi ng staffs as well as current and
try to make the right decision and Applications need to be turned in by former Meigs High School players.
first time since 1995:
The cost of the camp is $40 per
A bad ni ght ,by Lewis ended the. sometimes it goes your way, some- June 1st.
times it doesn't. But it still bums you
Instruction wi ll be in all areas of camper, this includes five days of
surge .
·
the game. lnstruc!Ors will by varsity instruction, a carilp T-shirt and vari"We hadn 't played that bad · of a
game in a long time," manager Jack
girls' head coach Ron Logan , assis- ous other special prizes.
The camp wi ll also include speaktant coach Darin Logan, "coach Mick
McKeon said.
Brett Tomko (I -2) gave up a
career-high eight runs in six innings,
but five of them were unear.ned ·
because of Lewis ' errors .
They started in the first, when
The Meigs Marauder ·.football
team hosted their sixth annual golf
tournament ·on May 8th at the Pine
Hills Golf Course (formally Mei'gs
County Golf Course).
The tournament was won by the
(Continued from Page 4)
learn of Mitch Roush, Larry Powell,
TAURUS LX .
Now that his brother-in -law is Terry George and John McDermitt.
leaving, Burba was asked if his wife The team posted a score of I I under
AlTO, Ala, V6.
.;,...-_...would take over the catching duties. par.
01111
..
'" No,'" he said. "My daughter,
Two teams finished tied for sec. '11,775" .
Madison . She hits like Manny ond place with a score of 10 under
Ramirez. I try to pitch "her tight and par. The two teams had a chip off for
0
she hits shots right back at me . Every . second place with the John
day she says, "Come on Daddy, let's Krawsczyn, Adam "Krawsczyn; Clay
play hit and bat. "'
Crow and Danny Crow winning tbe
The Indians, who have been play- chip off. They defeated the team of
ing hit and bat with the AL all sea- Scott Wickline, Kyle Wickline, Todd
son, are now staning to pitch, .too. Lisle and Dono Lent.
TAURUS SE.
Burba's outing followed a solid stan
Twenty four teams took pan in the ·
by Charles Nagy on Tuesday, and tournament.
LEATIIER, MOOIIIOOF, CD
once agaiwCieveland's bullpen shut
For the first time in several years
IIIP
TOTAL IEFOIE
,
·
it down late.
the weaiher cooperated. "I want to
'" That's kind of the way you draw thank the area businesses who supit up," Hargrove said.
. ported the tournament;' Meigs foot:
Chicago manager Jerry Manuel ball coach Mike Chancey said. "II"
ad!Rils its tough for his team to com- was our best toumamen so far. We
pete with the Indians.
raised more money than ever. This
"When we play these guys every· helps us do more for our kids."
thing has to go right," he said: '"They
have too many weapons . Ramirez hit
everything we threw. We have to
play almost perfect against them ."
NEV
Ramirez, who entered the game
among the league le)lders in six
t999 RANIE.R SUPERCAB
offensive categories, padded his slats
V6, XLT, AUTO, All, CRUISE
with his first four-hit gaine this seaRiverside Golf Club in Mason
son. Continuing an RBI ·tear from recorded ,its eighth ace of the year oq
last season, Ramirez has 165 RBis in Sunday, May 23rd.
.
his last 139 .games.
Foster Grinstead of New Haven
" If he continues this pace," said aced the 120-yard seventh hole. It
Hargrove. "People will have to look was his sixth h[)le in one of his
at him as one of the maj or forces in career. Foster helped build and
baseball today."
,
design the original nine holes at
Paul Shuey pitched the final two Riverside . He was playing with
innings for his third save.
Riverside owner, Gary Roush and
Rookie Mark Johnson hit his first Bob Oliver of Mason.
career homer for Chicago.
Foster U!ed ' a Titleist ball and · a
Sirotka had beaten the Indians wedge for his feat. The seventh hole
with a four-hitter in his last stan was not one of the holes that
against them ~ last July 19 - and Grinstead designed.
entered tbe game 4-0 in five appearances vs .. Cleveland.
· The left-bander, who allowed
ni.ne hits in five -plus innings, made a
fielding error on Einar Diaz's tapper
iO: front that allowed the Indians to
· score three runs in the fifth and overccime a 2- I deficit.
'" It wasn't just any one play or
any one pitch tonight, " he said. "We
pretty much got oulpitched and outplayed, Not by much, but that was
·
"the difference ." ·

u:.:"::•

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.

Wednesday's scores

Los

Hockey

6111 Annual Clultmeer -/lpprecialit~n ·1JtliJ
Iridal}~ maiJ 2Bih ·

NEW CHEVY CARS &amp;VANS
.609

Nalkmal Fool ball' Leaaue
SEATn.E SEAHAWK S: Announced Fritz
Shurmur, defen!live coor..linamr. is taking a leave of
absente for h~ idth rensc:ms.

.f ~

Lt-:1sue.

Hot .Dogs

Eastern Division
18
20
22

score

Dodgers cruise to

-·-

Football

Baseball

AI Our 'P1mer11J l1eali111

NL standings
:1!: L 1'&lt;1.

NaUonaiiAaaue

' A.mtrican Leaau~o
.
BOSTON _REO SOX: Dcsign~ucd C Mandy
Romero for assignment Ca lled up C Creighton
Gubinach from Pawtucket of the lnternniiono l
League. Signed C Bl')'an Bornowski.
CLEVELA'ND INDIANS: Extended the contrac t of LHP Rich Rincon through 2001.
omoiT t iGERS: Pl;~ced 18 Tony Clark on
the 15-daydi5ilbled li it . Purchast!d the contract of OF
Lui~ f1olonia !from Toledo of the International
,
,
Lcagu!!.'
SEA.lTLE MARINERS: Claimt:d RHP Frpnk.i~'
Rodrijucz off waivers from the Minne$0(a Twin~ .
TAMPA HAY DEV IL RAYS : Placed RHP
Ro land o Arrojl¥ 3n the 15-duy disabled tis!. Reca lled'
LHP Mike Du.,.,all from Durham of the lnlematioMI

NHL conference finals

• Kansas Ci ly (Appier 5-2) at Anaheim (SJlarks J.
4), 10:05 p.m.·
' Tilmpa Bay (Alvarez 2-2) a1 Seau le (Garcia 5·1), '
lo:05 p.m.
·
• Ba ltimore (M ussina 7- 1) at Oakland (Hcredili .14), IO:J5 p.m.

.. ........ 28
Ne\f York ............................. 27
Phifjtdelphia ........................ 2.l

Transactions

Hockey

· ,.m.

Iwn
Atlanra .........

Toronto at Buffalo. 7:30p.m.
Fritby
Dallas ar Colorado, 7:30p.m.
Saturday
Turonto 11 Buffalo, 7:30p.m.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Meigs High School to host
yo th basketball camps

LOS ANG£LES DODGERS: 'Fired Charlie
Hough, pitchinJ coac~ Claude Osretn pitch·
ing t:oacll.
PITI'SBURGH PIRATES: Agre-ed ro rernu with
RHP Mike Williams on a two-year contract extension
through rhe 2001 sea11on.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Purchased the con·
tract of RHP HCathcliff Sloc~mb from Memphis of
the ~acific Coasl League. Opliom:d RHP Rick
Hei~rman to Memphis. Transferred RHP Matt .
Morris from the 15-day di sabled list 10 the 60-day
- diSllbled list

The future
Toni &amp;hi

Frid•y

'

Working .with pitching coach Phil
Regan , Burba changed the height of
his leg kick and hands during his
·windup. Also, before coming to tbe
ballpark, Burba has been getting in
some light throwing at home - having a catch with his brother-in ,law
who is in .from out of town.

Dall.l$ ] , Colorado 0; Dallas leads series 2- 1

At ZanesviUe Ganc Municipal Stadium
Toronro vs. Mon-a I Ridgedale, I :30 p.m. Friday
GLOUSTER TRIMBLE vs. Peebles. 4·30 p m.

'

Division III

plays. After allowing 19 runs, 27 hits
and 14 walks in 25 innings over his
last foyr stans, .Burba decided it was
time for some drastic adjustments.
· "I made a lot of changes in my
mechanics and it paid off," he said.
" I was tired of gelling behind hincrs.
I wasn't,going good for about the last
four games and I needed to do something. "

Division IV

Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin n Sakm,

6-21. 7:0.5 p m.
,
CINCJNNATI!Av(. ry J . j ) 11.1-lorida (Dempster

COI.U~!FIUS .
11,199 stat~ regional

Dh•lsiun

26
.2.\
........ 2.\
...... 22

from Chicago, but in Wednesday
night's game, the Indians scored one
run on a double steal and two more
on sacrifice flies.
"I don't wantto"say we struggled
to score runs," Indians manager
Mike Hargrove said. "~ut tonight,
the offense wasn't like it has been.
And that shows our versatility. We
don 't have to beat a team over. the

]:20 p m
'
At Struthton C"m~ Park
Snn Frnm:i~eo (On.1. 6-2) a1 Mom~al (Vazquez
Cu1ahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit vs . Canfield. 1:30
2-3). 7:05p.m.
p m. Friday

AL standings

Thursday, May 27, 1989

Page4 . ·
Thursday, May 27, 1999.:

Cleveland Indians tally '6-2 victory over Chicago White Sox

Baseball

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. Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

--.-

--· " .

Thursday, May 27, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 27, 1999

Mu sic, both by a community
choir and special vocal ensembles,
will be featured each evcnins of the
Mill enni al Crusade for C hrist to be
held June I through June 5 at 7 p.m.
each evening in the Meigs High
School G ymnasi um.
The SO-member co mmun ity
numerous
choir
representin g

churches across the county under the
direction of Marty O'Bryant will be
singing each evening.
Special singers at the services
will be the "Gabriel Quartet" on
Tuesday, " Earthe n Vessel s" o n
Wednesday, "Eternity" on Thursday,
and the " Builders" on Friday. On
Saturday youth night will be
observed with the " Puppets with a
Mi ss i ~n", a youth ministry of the

Charleston Mount ai n Mission
Church in Charleston, W. Va .
Plans have also been made for
pre-service music to begin at 6:40
p.m. for the enjoyment of th ose who
come early:
Evangelist at the non-denominational area-wide event will be the
Rev. Charles Swigger, who has been
in the · mini stry for more tha~ 40
years.
· The Gabriel Quartet is from Dex- ·
ter and consists of Mark. Coleman of
Cheshire, tenor; Rick Kearns, lead ,
and his wife, Stacy Kearns, alto, of
New Haven . W. Va .; and Paul
Anderson of Dexter, bass. Mark's
sister, Carol Coleman, is the piani st.
and Harold Gibbs of Mason plays
bass guitar.
The quartet was organi zed in
1975 by Anderson and o ver the past
25 years has traveled extensively.
Their message over the years of
"s inging the gospel 'til the trumpet
sounds" remains the same .
Wedne sday's featured si ngers
wifl be the Earthen Vessels, a gospel
trio that has been singin g together in

the region of Ohio, Kentucky and
West Virginia since Sept. 1992, and
have appeared at many festivals,
hymn sing and other events in the

area.
Their name is taken from II Cor.
4, verse 7, and the group us composed of Duane and Diana Bing of
Addi son and Rief Herman of Middleport. Members of the trio all
I;&gt;Clong to the Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church of Middleport. Their
first recording is due out sometime
this summer.
"E ternity" , a Southern gospel
music group from Point Pleasant,
will sing at the Crusade for Christ on
Thursday night. Formed in 1993, the
group co nsists of Randy and Lisa
Searl s and John and Denise Bonecutter, with Roger Deweese as the
group's drummer. Hi s wife, Olivia,
signs for the group.
Both Mr. and Mrs . Searl.s and Mr.
and Mrs. ijonecutter sung with several other groups o ver a period of
years before "Eternity " was organi zed .
The group first recorded ''Living ·

Proof' in 1994 and it included an
original cut, "The Twelfth Hour" by
Randy Searls. In 1996 another
recording was done and entitled "I
Will Praise the Lord" which included another original cut by Randy,
"Living the Right Life." Another
recording session will be held by the
group this summer.
Friday night's featured singers
will be the Builders quartet, organized 39 years ago with the original
members, William Arthur, bass and
Ronald Arthur, Sr., baritone and bass
guitarist, still with the group .
Charles Bowles joined the group in

1964 as tenor. and Kenneth Jarret
carne to the Builders as lead singer
in 1970.
They say their " real passion" is
close four-part harmony. Since tire
death of Trudy Arthur in 1995 after
providing piano accompaniment fo r
the group for 25 years, the 'accompaniment has been supplied by Charles
and Ron Arthur on rhythm and bass
guitar. David Fields recently joined
them to play banjo and lead guitar,
The builders currently have four
recordings out and another project in
the making, and perform about 150
programs a year.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

NOTHING RUNS
LIKE A DEERE"

Millennia/ Crusade for Christ planned for June 1 - 5 at Meigs High School
. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

.Gallipolis

AuOSllrom Gallia Auto Sales an old Itt. 3S West

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Noteble: Gordon got his
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_ , . . .....,....:Jeff

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THE GABRIEL QUARTET -Featured at the opening service
of the Millennial Crusade for Christ will be The Gabriel Quartet,
composed of, left to right, Mark Coleman, tenor; Rick Kearns, lead;
Paul Anderson, bass, Carol Coleman, pianist, and Stacy Kearns,

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,_

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Last week's ranklri&amp; Is 1n paremheses.
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St. Rt. 248
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BUILDERS - Friday night's special music will be presented by
the Builders' quartet composed of Kennalh Jarret, Charles Bowles,
Dave Fields, Ron Arthur and William Arthur,, left to right.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
How ate provisio~als deler·

•

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1. ( 1) Dol• Jorrett
2. (3) Jeff Gordon
3. (2) Bobbj

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10. (-) John Andreltl

'

Been there, done that .

FROM LAI TWEEK
WINSTON CUP IERIES

.

Terry Llborite won The Wjntton for a seconc{ll~ora
after ttte first, wnk:h 1$ kind of Ironto, Iince t.abot
holds
·the record for years (12) betWeen Wlnaton CUll l:llioil.....,ohiPI.
For one segment. the all-star race wu a baiUI between Jeff
GordOn and Dale Earnhardt at lowe's Motor ;;pee~•Y In Conc::ord, N.C. Then Tony Stewart, wt'!o had-staruid laat 8nd Cotten in ,
the field Only tty wtnn.ln&amp; the Wtnaton Open, c::ame to the front. In
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not hold oil Labonte, who h"!i \:hanlfld rour tires at tha break.
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car crash Of the first set~ment. Stewart, by the wey, drove thtouCh
that m~lee brttttantty.
·

ETERNITY - Singing Thursday night at the Crusade for Christ.
will be this gospel music group, left to right, front, 'John Bonecutter,
Randy Searls ahd Jeff Harrison, and back, Denise Bonecutter and
Lisa Searls.

EARTHEN IIESSELS - The trio of Riel Hermann, Duane and
Diana Bing will sing Wednesday night at the· Crusade lor Christ at
Meigs High School.

IUICH GRAND NAnONAL
Matt Kenseth held off Dale Earnhardt Jr., rain and darttness to
capture first place at Nazar.eth,"'Pao
The event Was delayed tw6Ce for more than ftVe nours by rain
and shortened because of. darkness to "168 of the 200 laps.
Kenseth's third victory ties him with Mark Martin for mOst in
the series this year. Earnhardt, tne runner-up, remains wlnlen
·after winning seven times In 1998.

In-floor radiant heating best suited· for new homes
By POPULAR MECHANICS
A Hearst M~gazine
For AP Special Featpres
Radiant heating for your home is
hot-water · based , like a baseboard
system. But unlike the base board
. setup. radiant heating utilizes tubin g
under the fl oor to carry and di sperse
the heat.
·
While radiant-floor heating can
be retrofitted into an existing ho me,
the ideal in stallation· is in a new
home designed with radiant floors in
mind . This is because the most
effecrive radiant systems feature
tubing imbedded in concrete that
. helps · retain 'heat between boiler
cycles.
A prime c andida~c for a simple
in -floor radiant system would be a
slab-on-grade, single-story home
situated in the northern half of the
country. In this case, the only added
structural cost would be a l-inch
layer of high-density foam insulation board laid beneath the floor and
along the inner surface of the foot·
ing. The radiant-heating tubes would
be ti ed to the wire mesh commonly

used in concrete-slab construction .
All tubing c~ds would go to a
central utility closet where they
would connect to the zoned heat
source. Add quality windows, plenty
of insulation. a few well-placed.thermostat~ and minimal carpeting , and
you'd have a very comfortable home
wfth a !Doderately expensive, but
very efficient, heating system.
But what if you want a basement
and , perhaps, a second story? Radiant hydronic heat can be built into
these homes, but it's going to be
more expensive. The cost increase
comes not so much from · upsizing
the system, though this will be a factor, but in adding thermal mass to
the upper floors . While basement
iubing can be installed in the con t rete-slab floor, the upper-floor
loops will be most effective embed·
ded in I 112- inch-thick gypsumbased mortar slabs. This·type of slab
is laid over the framed floor with the
tubing in place.
Because this thin slab adds
roughly 14 pounds per square foot to
the floor. beefed-up framing is often

D&amp;.H

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ca'r pet cleaning a breeze!

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(740) 843-1252

JUST PLAIN FOLKS:
Just Plain Folks will be on hand .
during open Hou~e to serve samples
of their products

••••••••••••
1.

Fannpa

wnat NASCAR tourlrc series wUI hold four

• IIDTI Tony Stewart - 241h
at Indy, No. lin your heart.

r.ces this year at New Hampsnlte
International Speedway?
2. What fourth-iefleration driver &amp;ot his start ei&amp;nt yemrs
ahead of Adam Petty?
s. Whet Geor&amp;la tractc IBW Bill Elliott his start?

• IIOT: Ernie lrvan - another
week, another wrec;k.

'89 '&gt;PO~Iii)OOM UtMIMPfGds 9fXIQ 'I :·Jr
UOliiWIH ,(qQOg "E :UIJIS "'UON "';)6118 \ilql 'J

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newsteners. on-line chats ,
members-only discounts
AODIIUS: RHFC. 4730 East
Indian School Road , Bo:\ 120238. PhOenhc. ArlZ . 85018
WDSITE:
www.roohOmaday.com

Lowe's to raise wheel fences In wake of tragic crash

Call us for all your

U to 21 feet in Miaht. AI an Indy
RacinaLeque""""theV11ionAiR
, N~RThllwoek
SOO, a arindlna «alh retultcd in
· CONCOIU).N.C. - lowe\Motoc tim., wheels and cha11i1 p1rt1
SPMd'!ftY aMOUnced a cotiii)R:he"O· bounclna into tho 1.5-milc !rack's
alve 11fety plan it hopn will erwure fourth-tum 1randstand. The wheel
fan•fdyinlhewakcofthiarnonUI'I , fmcewillbclreeclliahcrthanthoM:
Indy Racln&amp; Leap'dil&amp;ltcrthll left atlndianipOiia Motor Speedway, Ihe
threefanadeld.
woctd'lmoltfamolllveaueforopcn"We've been workina on thissinoe Mlecl can. Althouah 1~ new fencr
literally lbe day after the (May I) wunoc in place I~ lime ror Saturday
aceldent," aald ipC«fway prcsidcnl nlpt\Winstooall·llll'tace. WlleelH.A. '"Humpy" Wheeler at a M1y 18 er said it will be in place in time for
Pftll conQrenoe.
the Coc..Cola 600 this SuAda)'.
.
I
"What we've come· up with,
X
think, Is fairly revolut~nuy."
Wheeler Aid the wheel renee, · ANDREWS OUT: Mh:hael
IOCited I!OIJ the 4-foot-hi&amp;h coocrete Krane fun llu abruptly fired P1ul
barriers borderina tho outlide oftht Andrewt, the crew chief of hl•
rKina aurfac:e, will be ra_~ted ttom Win•on Cup tam. In a ~ that

ly-Dutton

travel needs

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740..992-4233
800-795-1110
202 W. Second Street '
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I

~ t0119"TM Galton (N.C.) Glztttt ,

011t11111MC1

apparently slems from Kranet'Uu '
diaappointment with early-aeuqn
performance.
Jeremy Mayf'teld, the team'l 30)'Car-old driYer. is only 13th in the
acuon point scandinp. After q_ualifyina ~eventh or better for lhe
scuon's fim rour races, Mayfield
has had only oftc qualifyina effort
be Iter than 27th since Ihe March 21
racut DartinJion.
And~ws, who won I ch1mpi·
onship in 1992 with tho lste Alan
Kulwicki. latched on immediately
'With D1le Earnhardt Inc .. where be
will take over crew-chief duties for

"We lrt' 1r1teful ror Paul's contrib!.nion&amp; and wilh him the belt in·
the fUture," ilotcd Kranef\w in a
atttemcnt.
SAICO CHANGE; Conic Stott
is oul u crew chief for Sterlina Marlin' 1 Team Sabco Pontiac. Stott had
been cKW chief since April 1998. A
release used the repetitive term
"mutual for both parties.. IO descrjbe
the move.
Tony Glover, manaae·r of Feli.~~:
Sabates't~ugperation.

,1

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.

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..

Speedwey crowd. Gordon
SQuindered the alt-star 1
race for the second year
In a rCN~. Lebonte and
Gravea tot to come to tne

will like

press bOX afterward.

~ l.lfMrUI Pr*'l s,Mic... {8001 ~734 • For flfHM ...... ~ MI'J 24, 1M • DniiJ't: C•t8Grlphlcllnc., ,S wuot1. f'll."

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ADVERTISERS!!

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Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information
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the Lowe's Motor

Steve Park." His replacement at Glover lnd M1rlin M)R a number or
Pcnskc-Kiuefula is Pit• Sospcnw. r~cet while jllirtd 11 MOI'Jan42, who 1111 boe11 with 1he tetm, as McCiure.
'"car chief," Iince December 1997.

·-·

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• ... the leading dry
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c:harclrc tour~ ..... not
' two. Since Mltf Graves
IIJada 11\lt declllon for
Terry labonte, ~te
won The Wlnston, opt
ronr Stewart end not Jolt
• Gordon. SteWart,_

ATTENTION

ADVERTISERS!!

992·7028

• In the end, The
Wlnlton WIS abOut

OYer 11 crww cMeffor the time beiflJ.

ATTENTION

175 N. 2nd Ave.
Mlddle,.rt, OH .

..

lt

are complex.
0/lffore Jiron 40 cars that try
ta qualify ~a ch wetk, 36 are
placed in th~ ra ce by rh.! ir
qualifying speeds. The remaining six ~pots In the race are
called pmvislonllll.
Pro11isional startlilg posirion s
3 7-42 are awurded to qualified
car owners.
Car Owners are credileti, with
jour pro~lslo'lal mming posi·
lions . .After eight qualifying
tJttempts,- one add_itionai_ proviSionlll-ls awarded up to a maxilfttim of eight during a season.
Unused provisional.r do "no I
carry over frpm year lo year.
For lhe firsl four .roces, provisional slarJing positions are
based upon the piYVfoul· year J
owner poinls. Beginning witJr
the fiftlr race. the pro~iSi onals
are based uport tire current
y~r i OWI'Itr points.
A paJt·damplon proVisioPial
(potllion 43) is ollailable to..tlre
most recent WiiUton Cup champion who was 1mable lo make
the field, provifJed the car
own~r has not ~Jtceeded the
pro~isional maximum. A post
dlampion must ha~e participat·
~as a dri~er during the preYioau yellr.
If more than one past champion is in rJeed of"a pro visio nal,
car~wner polnls an used lo .ret
the plm'isionals, and the po.rl
champio'l pro11isiona/ will be
used o11/y if the most recent
poll champion would not quail·
fy oJJrerwise.
If this provisional is not required by a past champion, it
wff/ be mDde a~ailable .to tit~
next eligible car owrJer.

AROUND THE GARAGE

INGELS CARPET

. (Need not be present to win)

Dodle driver

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OPEN ROUSE SATIJBDAV, MAY 29
This week stop in and sign up for drawings of
Rocky Boots and an Amish 2ft. Glider Chair.

over

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CRAnSMAN TRUCK IIRIU
Jack Sprque ended his cloattM·no-&lt;:l&amp;ar sueak with a vict~ry
In his Chevro6et truck at I·70 SPeedway In Odessa. Mo.
Sprague, the 1997 series ch,mplon. made a bll Step toward

required . This adds expense to the manufacturers now offer alternative
system and a second story can dou- solutions. One of the most popular is
ble the cost. But .the real money is in . the staple-up.system. Here, the radithe thin slab, itself. If a self-leveling ant tubing is stapled directly to the
gypsum-based product is used, underside of the floor beiween the
chances arc that a professional crew joists. The joist spaces are filled
will have to install it. If you happen with foil -faced fiberglass insulation
to live near a company that docs thi s balls, with a· minimum· of 2 inches
work, you might get by ·with ari between the foil· and the-tubing: The
investment of $1.25 per square foot insulation reduces convective heat
- just for the slab.
loss and the foil face bounces radi.This as•-umes a fairly large instal - ant heat back up to the floor. Anothlation . Homes of 1,500 square feet er variation, called sandwich over
or less will ·cost more. And, if you framed floor, places the tubing and
live 50 to 75 miles from the compa- insulation between two flooring layny that installs the slab, the per-foot ers. While these two variations are
cost could be as high as $3 - before nearly as comfortable as concfete or
any heating equipment costs enter thin-siab installations, the absence
the ledger. The final price could of the thermal mass takes its toll 'in
approach $5 per square foot.
heating efficiency.
For this reason , and to accommodate a variety of retrofil situations,

Call 992· 21 5$
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy 'Ext. 1OS
For more
information

Call Now And Sign·Upl
675·3398 or l·SQ0-766.0553
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High Speed lntern-.t
Access With Cable
Modems!

CABLEVISION·

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Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. ~ 05
For more information

C0Mf1UNICATIONS

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.

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-- ~

Thursday, May 27,
Thursday, May 27,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

1999
The Daily Sentinel •

1999 :
70

I

Painters and carpenters can suffer from 'tennis elbow'
while forcefully grippmg. In your
case, this is the nearly constant back
and forth motion you make while
gripping the paintbrush handle .
TI1e treauncnt for epicondylitis is
predominately the avoidance of
additional injury. The body will heal
the injury in due. course . It is impor-

fimtly
~edicirze
Associate Professor

Ohio
Unlv•ralty
Coli~• of

of Family Medicine

Medicine

John C. Wolf, D.O.

Question: I'm a painter and I've
had troubl e recently un the jub
because o f pain in my elbow. When I
went to the doctor last week, he said
that l have tennis elhow. Docs thi s
sound like the right diagnosis to you·&gt;
~un you rc&lt;.:ommcnd any cXcn..:iscs
to help my e lbow pain''
Answc~: The elbow is a complicated structure involving the upper

atTn Oor'2 (humerus), two lower arm
bones. (radius Jnd ulna), ligame nts
that suppon the joirit , mu scles and
thl.!lr tendons that move it, blood vessels that ·nourish Jl anti nerves that
coordinate all th is act ivi ty. Disordl!rs
or any or these 'clhow l"lllllponcnts
cnn rausc pain . Therefore. a L:li!TCL:I
diaun\)sis is essent ial.
l cnnis elbow is a SJX'( ific c~Jndi ­
tion wi th inllammati on - at the
ut ta..:hmcnt point to the humerus o f the

mu scle ~

that arc ·used to !lex

th e wrist and turn the pal.m upw ard .
Thi s ·i:-; on the (lU tsidc (la teral .;u r·

tant to maintain sufficient activity to

O•t.o~thlc

keep good muscle strength and joint
flexibility while avoiding additional
tnjury.
Many treatments arc used for epicondy litis. Anti-inllammatory medi ci nes such as aspiri n or ibuprofen arc
often prescribed; but my expe rience
is that they don ' t help a great deal. A
non ·clastic band worn around the
muscles of the lo)'ler arm is frequently tried. This largely serves to remind
the person to be mindful of the things
they do rather than promoting healing. Surgery is occasionally used for
those with the most debilitating.cases
of epicondylitis. This should. only be
co nsidered as a treatment of last
resort. Unfortunate ly. none of these

f'acc) of' the elbow jqint. This point is
called the lateral epicondyle, ·and
therefore , the medica l tenn for tennis
elbow is lateral epicondylitis.

As in your situation. most

indi ~

viduals ll'hO have tennis elbow do
not play tennis. Painting with a
painthrush is actually a more common cause of ''tenni s elbow" than i·s
playing tennis . Carpenters and others
who use hammers also commonly
suffer from this disorder.
As you.'might imagine, the name

"ten nis elbow" carne about because
the co ~ditiOn was first de sc ribed in
tenni s players. Regardless of the.

treatments consistently works beuer

:.1cti vity. the inllammation of tenni s
clhow results from repeated strain
injuries. In tennis rlayc rs it l:Omes
&lt;.~hout hccausc of forceful grippi ng of
the .racket while us ing a backhand
sw in g~ Non -tenni s p!aycrs who

than ti me itself. Most people suffer
with this for up to nine montlls
despite the treatment they receive.

"Famil)' Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
·
Ohio 4570 I.

dcYclup tennis elbow do so because
they have rcp~atcdl y performed a
similar arm and wris t move ment

..

Holzer Meigs Clinic
Certified Mammography
• Mammograms conducted at11.CJ•(.Zetr JI.Jr~iaili8 '

• Outside physiciam and selfs~iJ~~~~~~
• .Films read by Hotze, Clinic, J
lf,a:~•I&lt;J~rj.ats.£
• ·Appointments·~sual~y a:_vai:tat1te ·!{!
.

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'
The Best Care Is Prevention! Call today for an appointment.

Holzer Clinic...
Keeping Our Promise!

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

(740) 992-0060

Public Notice

Public Notice ·
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE le hereby gtven
11111 on Seturdey, Mey 28,
1Mt, II 10:00 l.m., I publiC
aelt will be lltld tt 211
AellrCIH Strtll, Mklcllaport,
Ollto to eall for c1111 1111
· loll-Ing colltt.r.l:
.
19114 CAROUNAMOBILE
HOME 14X&amp;5
CMHRKNC14384
The Fermer• Benk end
uvlnge
Compeny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, re...,., the
rtght to bid atlhta eala, .end
lo withdrew lhe ebove
collateret prior to eel,.
Further, The Fermer• Bank
and Sevlnge Compeny
" " ' " ' the right lo relecl
eny or all bide eubmlllld.
the above
Further,
colleterat will be aotd In the
condition It le. In, with no
-exprou or Implied
warrenltoo given.
For futlher Information, or
lor an appolritmont to view
prior to eale contact Sheila
tl 1192-2136.
(5) 19, 20, 21, 26, 27, 28 8TC

Ohio 45778, llled In lhle
Court of Pltlllon to ldOpt
Tyler J. Goble, d.o.b. July
27, 11183, bom In Orllnclo,
Ftorlde, end thtlheerlng of
said Ptllllon Will be hed
btloro the Probtle Court •t
Court end Secondo Slrell8,
Pomoroy, Ohio 457&amp;, on
the 19th doy of July, tttt, .
111:30 o'clock P.M.
WITNESS my olgneture end
1111 ol said Court, lhla 4111
dey of May, 1999.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
By: Judith R. Slooon,
Depuly ~lork/Notary PubliC
(5) 8, 13, 20, 27
(8) 3, 10 8TC
Public Notice

l••nc&lt;"

ectlon. EIIAC 8ppNII mull
to be collected or
be II led with: lnvtron- remeln In iony pl01ee to the
mlntel Revltw Appeeta demego or preJudice of othc-JIIIon, 231Eell Town ere
the public, or
Street,
Room
300,
ollelrucl,
Columbue, Ohio 43215. A
corrupt or
copy of the 1ppeel mutt be render
or
terved on the director Impure, ony
woter
within 3 cteya IIIIer filing the eour~~.
tppelll wHh the ERAC.
(c) No pereon ohell ow•p ·
Flnel 111uenoe ol or othorwlll place any
Certlflcetlon
trllh, refuH or olhor mat•
()hlo Dopertment of rial In 1 otrtet or catch
Trenaportetlon
lllltln ·or oewor through on
Lltlrt TWP. OH ltoued Opening eltuoted In 1 otrttl.
Dele 05/11/18
(d) No paraon oholl obenThlo flnel ectlon not don, dlac:ord, or knowingly
precodod .by propottd permit to remain on preml•
octlon end It oppaeleblt to •• under hlo ot~~er control,
ERAC. Ptrtelno to 410 gerbege, troeh, rubbleh, · ·
certlflctllon,g111 nt, pretelne weote, uheo, cone, boltlu, ·
to Huntington Dlttrlct Corpo wire, peper, certono, boxu,
eutomoblll palll, lumituro,
01 E- 1 ("'
gleH, or anything eiH ol
.,
unolghtly or untanltery
Public Notice
l.n••tur~.
(e) All exterior property
AN ORDINANCE TO
1,..1 end preml111 ehell be
AMENDING SECTION
melntolned In a clean, taft
121.01 OF THE CODIFIED
end Hnltlry condition frn
ORDINANCES OF THE
lrom eny eccumulotlon ol
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPOIIT, rubblell, gorblgo, or enr,OHIO, MOOIFYJNG THE
tiling ellt 11 deac:rlbed n
. PfiOIIIITION AGAINST
HOllon 521.08(d).
,
THE ACCUMULATION OF
(!) In the .event of 1 vloleAN'i OFI'I;NSIVE
tlon, the Vlllqe Building "
MATERIAL ANO
tneptctor, or lila agent, ·
MODIFYING THE
ehell give notice to . tho
PROCEDIIRI! FOR THE
owner of the. lot or lend, or
NOTIFICATION OF .THE
occup..,t or poroont hav•
OWNER OF THE
lng charge of the promloea
OFFENDING PROPERTY.
upon which the violation
WHI.REAS, The Council ol occuro, to cooea auch vlot•
the Vlllqe or Middleport don within ten doyo of ouch
deolr11 to provide mort notice. Each day after tho
hebltueiiMng condition• to ten-doy period on which the
the Vlllqo'e 1111ktonta.
ollenalve contlnull may be
WHEREAS, It Ia -mod to dnmed o ooparale affenbe In the belllntarell.ol the olve.
·
cltlane of the vlllqo, to Ill
(g) Whoever vlottloo thlo
fourth • procodurt to doel ordinance ehall be qultty ol
with offenolve eccumule· • minor mltdamoanor, If he
tlone end rubbleh.
or lht hoe no prior convlc- .
WHEREAS, Section 731.05 tlon under thla ordinance, II ..·
OhiO R••
-·ltld Code· ' " ' the offender prevloualy haa
fourth certllln procedur11.
beon convicted ol an offtnNow Therefore, Be II tlve under this ordinance,
Ordelned by the Council of the ncond conviction shall · •·
Tile Vlllqo of Middleport, be a mledtm11nor of the
S1811 of Ohio:
fourth dogrH; If the offend- .
Section 1: Thll etcllon er prevloutly hot beon con- . ·
521.01 ollht codified ordt- vtcted two or more tlmoa ol ·
nencee Ia htNIIy amended an offenet under thlo ordl·
to reid II lallowe: ·
nance, tho third and auba•
llloreloro, 1111 It ordained quont convictions shall be •
thet: 521.01 UTTERING mlademeanor of lht third
AND
DEPOSIT
OF dogreo.
.GARBAGE,
. RUBBISH,
Section 2: EIIICIIYt Dote:
J~~~~;r~mn ehell, with- Tlllo ordlnence ahall take
•. ~ lawful IUihorfly, place effect and be In force lrolodm
""'
end liter tho eirllall per
.
or 'dlapoee olin any menner ·
. upon eny public property or . allowed by law.
Section 3: All ordinance•
upon tho Prtm1••a 0 1 In .conlllct herewith are
enother, eny popar, traall, hereby ropealed lneoler aa
gerblga, weate, rubbloh, auch corilllct exlata.
-luH, Junk or eny eu~
·
••
otance
or mllorlet which -II Duly petud th.la _24_th_d.e y
......
ol May, 1999.
or mey _,.orne no.x1oue, l Sandy lennarettl, Preoldant
oflenotve, lnlurloua, or.den- of Council
niorouo to the public heaHh,
Comrort llflly
AlTEST:
(b) No ~n ahett CIUII Sendy lennarelll, Acting
or ellow treoh, gerbege, ~~~nee NumberOI-88
rubbl·~ ....... or
'
""' •••u
'
(5) 27, 30 2TC
eny other noxious,
or offenalve mettrlela or aub-

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Construction tools:
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• Fully Loaded!

5/28-29, 1999

.,.8)(81, Tagt, Tl11e Feea extra. Rebate Included In ule' price of new vetVcre lilted where appNcabfa. "'*On approved c:r~lt. On
aalec1ed models. Prices Good May 27·30th. Not retponslble for typographical errore. ':Vehicle ahown wtth equlpnwnt from an
Independent supplier. See the owner's manual tor Information on atterattonl and warrandtl:
·

Cash only
Good Times presents
"Thunder" ·
CornS' listen &amp; dance to
some grBat muslcl

Sat. May 29

West Vlrglnls'a f1

And Custom Van Dealer.

Pontile, Buick, Old1,

Monday • Saturday II am ·II pm

-epm

9 pm - 1

and Auxliliary
CHICKEN BAR-B-QUE
Sunday, May 30 serving at
11 :00 Homemade Ice Cream

Free Estimates
Contr1ctm Welcome

'

Free Internet Access!
1-900-226-5889 Ext2708, $2.99
Per. Min. Must b8 1BYrs Old,
Sarv·U(619)-64S.8434
Start Daling Tonight! Have fun
playing the OhiO Dating Game. 1·
SOQ-ROMANCE, extension 9681 .

30 Announcements

On sate.1740·441-1995.

\

740-592·1 842
Quality clol_hing and household
llama. $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:00.5:30.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning ·

f.EI.. :lOVED

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

'

949-2168
oi/2TFN

DEPOYIAG
. .
PIRft .

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-iH Parts
Dealers.

QUAUTY WINDOW,SYSTEMS
FORMULY OF II 0 COURT STREET, POMEROY
IS NOW LOCATED STATE ROUTE 33
6 MILES NORTH OF POMEROY AT .COUNTY ROAD 18

2 year old Bo:cer, Female .
(30ol)882·3625.

VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOWS AT
FACI'ORY DIR~CTPRICES

Light Commercial &amp;
Residential
New Construciion &amp;
Remodeling

Call today about •P••chol
price• rhru July on
QiUJlity Buih Horue•

TRI·STITE MOilLE
POWER WISH
Trvcks - tractor

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

IT•••"•~ • decks - drivEIW&amp;)•SJ

Equipmellt Cloantd &amp; Degreased

. JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 1185--42181
EMAIL: ·

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agtlcultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

FREE ESTIMATt!S
38782 Sumner Road,
, Ohlo45769

985-4422

HILL'S

Cheater, Ohio
11l/2

SELF STORAGE

WltiW.~uiatetHome.cOIR

Sunset Bo••
C•atrucUon

211670 Ba~J~an Road
Racine, Ohio .45771

Ntw ConotrucUon'

Sizes 5' X·10'
to tO'x 30'
Houra
7:00AM ·BPM

740~949·2217

ROBERT BISSELL
CONST!RUCTION

Linda's Painting
lake the pain out
of painting, and let
me do it for you.
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm leave
message. After 6 pm

0

I

•

'

•NawHomel ,
•Garages .
•Complete .
. Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473·

, · CIIPENQR SERVICE
•NtwGtrwa
1~::~~: a ~lumblng
1•1
AGutter~
A Ptlrt11ng

a Porch Dtckl

n

,.,.~

Hn"ns ,

V,C. YOUNQ Ill
fl92.e21S
· Pomeroy, Ohio

•Bulldozer Co

' Backhoe Serulces
&amp; 7Htitft Sif11
;Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

·II••"

:se~~:~:~~:.~~ties
"

1740169H029

We
Deliver
I
'

Sq~d,

22

Local

YOUR . '.

CONCRETE
CO"N.CI.ION
(JU1Jiily Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios

Parkln1 Lots

25 yrs·experience
Free Eallmatea

740·742-8608

St. Rt. 7

TUppers Plains, Ohio 45783

740-985·3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanka·
Septic &amp; Clatern Tanka
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gaa Pipe &amp;
Regulator•
OPEN:
9:oo.4:30 Weekdaya
9:0G-12:00 Saturday

Fill Dirt,

Agricultural Lii'JU!,
Mulch,
Top S~il.
,,
(Low Rates)

740-992-3470

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

ReuonabiB Rates

............... llrlck
Patio Coaatnctloa

Jo'f N. Sayre .
74Q•742·2138

Lud•;••...-u...

0 [&gt;

FREE ESTIMATES
614-992·7843
No Sunda Calls)

....... .

. . . . . C.IIIIId

.I~J~~~y:.L.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
ATS:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,.OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$&amp;00.00 Sterburat
Progreaatve top nne. · ,
Uc. 100-50 11n-

Roush

~ J.D. CONSTRDCTIOI ~

.tA

ft
ft

C

M:...llfil:o.M:...M:....t~n..t~n..t~n.M:....IIfil:o.M:...M:.M:..
lll.!!J ll!lJ lll'iJ W!!l w&gt;!J W!!J III!!J 00!!1 w!!J lt1!iJ

HENDRIX CAMPSITE RENTAL
'.

'
0Ptb

9-5 Weekday,Sunday 1-5

IUIIIID'S
IIIII!IIOUSI
SYIUCUSE

t92·1776
3/:lOTFN

Black and tan pups,. 740·742·

2495 or 74()..742·3906.
Black Lab F'ema le with While
Ups ·on feel. 6 we8ks old. To
good home only. (304)675-4302.
. Camper Gas Relrldgerator &amp;
Camper Gas Furnace: (304)675·

3!129.
Choice of Free Klnens

to

good

home. Variety/Mixed . Ready to
00.(304)675-4241.

Cockatiel to give
3-177.

away. (304) 662·

Free Firewood, You Cut, &amp; You
Haul, 740-245-51 16.
Free: 2 Goat.s, II Yo u Can Catch
Them, 740·446·3277.

Two year 'old ReglsWed male Po·
meranlan. 740·992·3354.

60

Lost and Fouhd

Lost- large size well marked adult
male Beagle , Portland/ Great
Bend area, tast sMn running with
bla ck &amp; whi te dog . His name Is
Snoopy and his family misses
him. I lound please can 740..84"3·
5148.
Lost· male, 651, 7 month old, dark
brown/black, white front paw. Col·
lie/Shepherd. Side HUt/Loop Ad
area, $50 reward, 74Q..742·2080.
Lost : Siberian Husky Female .
Blue Eyes . Answers to Pretty
Girl. Lost In the Mason area. Re·
ward . 1304)773·5972 or aJter
12,30pm(304)773-9135.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL Vord S.ln lluot

· Be Pltd tn Advo....,,

DEADLINE:.2:00 p.m.
the dey llofofllht td
1110 run. Sunday
Odlllon - 2:00 p.m.
Frldly.llondor Odttlon

Pt. Pleasant ·

To The ResidentS
of
Gallla Countyl

Genera .Refuse Service

·

local~

owned co111p0ny wtlh over' 28 yrs

axp81ience has now extended our coverage area to
lndude oil of Gallla Co. ond portions of Meigs,
Vinton &amp; LawrltKt IGUnlies.· ·

CALL TODAY TO IEGIN YOUR
GARBAGE SERVICE IMMEDIATELY

1·800-967-4774.
AtGUnr ........,ll

•

&amp; VIcinity
6 Family Yard Sale. 12 miles on
35 at Harmony ' CI'Iurch . Bikes,
Lawn Furniture. Toys, Clothes.
8 tnlles on Route 2, N. Lots of
Old Stuff. Friday, Saturday, Sunday.

.907 27th Sl. Thursday,Fridav&amp;
Satu,rday, 9·2 :•5PM. Nice ltllngs.
priced cheap.

00 6 miles. lo•ow signs.

Estate Sale: 208 Maple Avenue .
Rio Grande . Frlda)l May 28th,
Saturdav May 29th, 9 To 2, Dish·
es, Kitchenware, 4ppllances, lift
Chair, Recliner Jars, MI5C.

Friday /Saturday, 9·? .Household
ltims, Dishes, Knick Knacks,
Clothes, Toys, Tires, Rims, Avon.
11247 S.R, 7 SoUlh.
Fridav. '9 A.M . 1840 Graham

School Road. Gallipolis.
Garage Sale

2.

Flmllles: Lots 01

Misc. llems. Friday, Salurda)', 8·

e. 41 Hilda Dttw.

May· 28th: 8~? Jackson Ave .

May 28th , 9AM·? Be llemeade,
across hom NewHope Church .
Furniture , clothes, dog crates.
and much more.
Rain or Shlnel clothing, goll
clubs, 2·glas.s show cases,3·sln·

gla

display

units.

tools ,knlves,guns. turkey ~ails . &amp;
decoys, porcelain dolls,Furbvs.
jeep parts, desk, 18speed MountainBike &amp;carrier. Tasco Tale·

scope, '87 Dodge Oaytona!Pacil·
lea, '79 Jeep 1ruck · 4:c4
Auto .Trans ., very nlcel
&amp;
mlsc .ltems . 2 1f2 mi .. aut Red ·
mond Ridge Road . Donnie Ser·
gent Residence . May 2Bth·31 st,
9:00AM tin ? .

80

Auction
and Flea Markel

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering .
Complete 4uctloneering Servic·
es . Consignment auction· Mill
Str(tet, Middleport , Thu rsd'\ys.
Ohio Ucenu lll7693. 740-989·
2623.
Rick Pearson Auct ion Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Licensed
lll66,0hio &amp; West VIrginia , 304·
773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

RIYERStO£ AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Nigt)t '7 P.M.,
Crown City, 740-256-6989

Wedemeyer 's Auc tio n Servic e.

Gallipolis. Ohio 740.379-2720.

Call 1· 888 ·253·8901. Free tuition
available. No e&gt;&lt;pene.nce t'leces ·
sarv. COL Ho lders cart T-aoo-

958-2353.
ExCellent opportunity 10 join tne
lo ng term heanh care field . Licensed Practic al Nu rses . Rotstif!Q shifts. Intermediate care cen·
ter . West Virgin ia l icens e re·
qu ir.ed . Apply at Point Pleasant
Center/Genes is Eldercare. State
Route 62 , Route I , Bo:c 326 , ·
Point Pleasant. w'v 25550. EOE.

E~tcel tent opp ortunity· to jom the
long term health care field .. Oirec·
tor of Nursing . lmermedlate care
center. Have tour or more vaars
of nursing e:cperlenca and possess a valid West Vuginla Reg ·
!stared Nurse license. Compre·
henslve benefit pa ckage ava il·
able . Apply by rorwa rding 1esume
to Point Pleasant Can ter/Genesis
Eldercara, State Ro ute 62, RoUte
1, Box 326, Point Pleasant , WV
25550. EOE.

Expertenced Carpenter Wanted . .
Must Have Own Han d Tools &amp;
Transportation. (304)675·2478. ,
Experienced secretary, honest , ,.
reliable, must be able to do llllng; .•
ledger. IRS &amp; state taxes , und ·
resume to P.O. Box 27 . Pomeroy,
Oh.45769.

90

Wanted 1!1 Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins. Prootsats.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 US . Currenc)',
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Awonuo, Goll~~ . 140.446-2842.
Antiques , top prices Paid, River·
lne Antiques , Pome roy, Oh 10,
Russ Moore owner, 740-992-

2526.

FULL·TIME EXECUTIVE ·
SECRETARIAL POSITION
AVAILABLE:
Compeitllve Salar; And
Exceptional Fringe
Benefit Package
Requirements : Prior Secretanal
Experience; Typing 70 wpm: Pro ficient In Word Pracess1ng A,nd
Spreadsheets; Computer E~eper l ·
ence ; _auaiUv Oral And Written

Communlcailon Skills.
Only Qua lified .6:ppl1can1s Nee4
Apply To HOlzer Clinic. Human
Relations Department: 90 Ja~·
son Pike; Gallipolis, Ohio 4563.1•
1562: Fu To 740 ·446·5532 ; Ot

Call 740·446:51 89. Equal Oppor;
tunity Employer.
~
· · Global R8Crulters Needing : : ~
STNA'S &amp; LPN 'S for more infQt"l
matron call : (7 40)· 446·41 88 o(
stop jn 995 Jackson Pike. t20'1.
Gall~lls.
•

Globlll AKrulterw
Need1ng :
AN's For Director ot Nursing Po- :~
sitiOns in Parkernurg. W'l. and ~ :

JaCkson, Qh_For more lnlorma·
tion call: (740)·446-4188 or Stop
in 995 Jackson P 1~e ,I 20 I, GaiJi· '
polis

~

~etp

Wanted:

•

Hou sekeeper lor BuS)' H.ouse ·
hold, One day Per Week , Prefe fl
ably Friday. Send Resume. Reier:
ences a.nd Hourly Wage Require ;
ments to : CLA P 0 Box 474 1

%Gallipolis Da1 ty Tribune. Gailipo'
lis. Oh. 45631
•

Jawelrv Sales AataJI Sales and
Comp·uter Experience Aaqwed.
AcquiSitions Fine Jewe lry. 15t
Second Ave . Gallipolis. Applt

.

Buying Standing Timber. 740·256· .
6172.
Late Mode l Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick· Pontiac, 1900 East -

Clean

em A~nue, Gallipolis'.
Want To 'Setl Vour StuH? Call Riv·
erslde Auction And Let Us Sell It
Fof\\lu, 740-256-6989.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Monday thru Friday.

,

lo~al Truck 1ng Company Seek1ng
Qual ified Truck Onvers . G00\1
Pay And Be nefits . Send Rasumtt
To: Dr iver. P 0 BOJI t 09 Jaclc~
son . Ohio 45640. Or Catt 1·740;
286-1463 To Schedule An Inter.

view.
Medical PfOCI:ISSOr
FTIPT.No e:cperlence ne~ ssary :
Wilt train. PC required Earn 40K •
CaiiBOQ-~:).7440

Medical Pr oc ess or Fi /PT No
E:cp. Nee. Will Tr&amp;in PC ReQ. Earn
40K Call 800-663-7440 .
•

Neat Responsible People To P1c~
Strawberries Apply In Pars on,
Salurdav. May 29th , 8·12~
Taylor's Berry Patch, Kerr Road
Now Hiring: Dom ino's Pi zza o[
Point Pleasant Good pay. lle.~~ i ,
ble hours . Mu st be 18 or over:
Team members a ~ly 1n person.
NURSING SUPERVISOR /MDS
NURSE 1.. RN Unh Manage! ,
MO.S RN Coordinalor: Holzer
Se nior Care .Center. 70 Bed LTC
Is Looking For AN's Wifh Super; ·
visory, Assessment. An d Com;:
munie ation Skilts·. Mus! Have.
Knowledge 01 PPS , InfeCt iO n•
Control, 4nd MOS2. 0. Oh 10 L1 : ~
cense Req. Apply AI Or Sf;lnd Ae-' ~
sume With Cover Leiter A.lt ni:
D.O.N. At 380' Colonlal Dr ., Sidwell;:
OH 45614 Or Fax 740·446· 1346 .
EOE. ·
.

1:

11 0

Help Wanted

AVONt All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Sh&lt;tey Spear&amp;, 304-675·1429.
Avon· Products: Start your own In·
Home Business . Wo r k Flexible
Hours, !Enjoy Unlimited Earnings.
1·888·561-2666.
Bartender Wanted : 740·441 -

1428.
Carpet cteanerlhalper. Mechanic
aptlh.lde helpf1,1t. Valid drivers II·
c..ense &amp; abiltty to read map. Must
be abt.e to move furnlrure. Aeplv to
PO Box 453, Pomerov. Ohio
45769 or 740..992·6788,

Director of Admlssioni : ~otZt;:"
Garage Sale: 1638 Cherry Ridge I·'S•nl•o• Care Center, a 70 Bed
Road , Friday, Saturday, May 28th,
, Is looking tor 8 position of
291h, Noon To 5:00P.M.
Dlracto.r ol Admissions. 'vou will.
mar~et our LTC and will review
May 28th, I 29th, 383t Neighbor· all appllcaliona lor admissions ·
hoOd Roact Lots Of Ever}1hlng!
and direct family relations and
May 28th , Thru 30th , 8:00 Till
social services 'duties. Position
3:00, Centenary. Everything!
requires a college degree . LSW
Monday, Mav 31st, Tuesday
June 1st. State Route 850. Bid·
well . Computer Printer, ExE!Jrcise
. Bike: Seeper. Jeans Boys !Youth)
Shoes, Clothes. Knlck· Knack.s ,
Watch For Signo.

1800)·695 ... 73

Above Dr. Doctor's Office . Nice
comfor ters, curtains, bab)' Items,
carpe t, e:cerclser w/we ights .
Name brand womens ·clothes .
Utile girls sizes 314 , Household,
misc. &amp; much more.

-1 MO e.m. S.lllfdoy.

Frida~. S'aturdily, 1432 Brick
School Road . Across From Ad·
davilla. Raine Or Shine, Furn'iture,
Junk Bike, Clothes. '

Spl'infl Seaoon
Complete Une 01

.

1-7.40-667-3083
1-7.40-667-3316
$550.00 Year
$12.00 Night
$10.00 Primitive Camping

Electric .,\ Water and or Full Hook-Up
Across from Forked Run.State Park and
close to Fork Run Boat Ramp

Noao Open For

We. HonorI Golden
Buckeye Card

3pm, 1303 Bridgeman St. Rustlce

~rl.

To good home· healthy female
cat. friendly, spayed &amp; dec/awed,
current on shots, 740-992·n27.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
. .tA
ill!!i Garages, 'Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding i11!!J
"Speciali•ing In .l-og Home• "
~
Commeo·cial &amp; Reoidential
111!!1
'2S
yrs.
exp.
.
Licensed
&amp;
Insured
~
1
1 .tA
Phone 740.992·3987
· iili!i
John Dean: Owner

(;.·

sus ·&amp;up ·
•Geranlumt, Azaleas
•shrubs ·l Trees

old to new. 478 Sycamore Sl.,
MI&lt;!Otepo".

good hOme. 6 weeks old. For
mora Information cal l: 304·458~
1069.

fluffy, 740·

Siberian Husky, Full Blooded,. 4
Months Old . Black Striped With
While. 7&lt;Q-446-0580c.

.......,:......~.-.~;;;;;;:......, · 111.!!1 W!!l

Vegetable &amp;Bedding.Plants
All Plat• SUO
~;rr~t.ul·• IN~ C•m•'Hanglng Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage

Sat.. SUn, Mon .. a lOt or everything

6 Beaullfui, active, kittens. to a

free kittens, cute &amp;

740·441-()118.

949·1701
'"
B~.S.~Ll BUILDERS, .~~~~ftlf;jftftft~ft~
Sldlng.•New Garages
• Replacement Windows
· • ApomAdditlons
• Aooflng

water dept.)

Community Sale : G4nville Ridge,
June 3rdl4th. 9·8PM . 8 1/2 miles
long, 17 houses , 31 fam ilies .
Frorn Pt. Pleasant. At. 2-RI. 87 .

5

992·5597.

Aonweller Puppy, 10 Weeks Old,
Male To Qualified Home Ontyl

• M..chlag

3/11/99TFN

NewH!~~;. Vinyl

neutered, declawed; 740·992·
7843.

Mother Cat And ·4 Kittens . Call
After 5:00Pm. 740-446-9305.

- . . . . Care- ......

, Hauling
••
Limestone
&amp; Gravel

'"'

4 year old black and white collie.
licensed, shots, spaved: gray' cat,

Kittens and cat to giveaway, 740·
992-7505 .

'SAYRE
TRUCKING
.'
.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEHllAL

Bryan Re"""'
s,..anReeveo

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

J Limestone, Gravel,

04Mdlty 11 Job"One
99a47D

Qu.lltf Cralt111mhlp
Gumntee4

I "

' ·WICKS
HAOLI"G
I"C.
'.

Remember ·

FREE ESTIMATES'
1740) 667·6992 .

u•!
T l 'J'
j

1 mo.

•New Homes ·
*Additions
* Remodeling

Construction

Free Er;timates

Call 985·383•

SMITH'S .

H&amp;H

740-985-4180

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Cheeter
We Custom Spray
•Vegetables •Corn
·
•Soybeans

992-4119 oR soo;~91-5600

...

...

SERVICE

VISIT OUR OFFICE/SHOWROOM THERE

,...,

Large l'nslde sale to senle estale.
Sal. May 29th, 9·6, tools , aula.
househOld. misc .. oil Rt.7 on Bar
30 Road , (past Tuppers "Plains

1 or ~ year old part Shitzue/Part
Pomeranian . (304)69S.383t.

';\1' '

Driver -Attention Start lmme ~
dlatelyl Application• Procested In :2 Hours or Leu Loog
~ Haul and regional Drivers Train·
ing program avail. lor COL school
graduates Ragy lrem ents : 6
mOnths OTR e~eper 23 Yea r s of
age good drtv lng 1acorc:: 'Pa id
Health Insurance ~Denta l Plan
Ava ilable '401K and tile In ·
surance "Obtainable Safety and
Productivity Bonuses Conlinenta4
Expre~s . Inc (800 )·293 -0700

Drivers wa·nted Earn $30,000•
1st Year: 14 Day COL Train 1ng .

,biJys.

Giveaway

gree, LSW Preferred But Not Re· ~
quired , Good Communrcatlon '
Sk ills And Knowledge Of Loog:
.Term Care Requirements. APP'-.' •
At Or Send Resume With Cover
L-ener To Roger Hltll&amp;, NHA, 380
ColOnial Drl't8, Bidwetl , OH 45614
Or Fa:c 740·446·1346 EOE.

Home Interior, etc

Hills. Syracuse . Home Interior.
· ·clothes. ttresl rims, bed liner, curtains, sheets. knick knacks, lots of

·

Bed lTC Is Looking For Position ;
Of Director 01 AdmiSBIOnJ.. You
Will Markel Our LTC And W1tl·
Review All Applications For Ad · •
m1ssions And Direct Fam11y Aela· •
bans Ana Social Services Dullea :

Dnvars needed to transport carli
to &amp; from aucllo.ns. call 740·992 ·
6088 between lOam &amp; 6Pm.

40

Ask!

DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS
Holzer Sf!lntor Ca re Center, A 7"0 •

June 28, 29 , 31 . 9-?. two 'mnes oU1
SR. 143. Pomeroy, rurnlture. com·
pulers. baby clothes. guns. toots ,

Saturday May 29th, from 9am to

tens , Rsward Your Children For
A Good SchooJ YsarJ 740-441 ·
1707.

1000 St. .RI. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45123

Huge two lamily· May 27 lhru
June. 4, 9am -6pm . Pierce rn idence, one mile north p_ast Por·
!land Park on SR 124. Clothing,
stone jars, bellies, knives. clgar·
ette lighters , COf!'lputers, cook
books. toys. dishes, much more.
.

Rewardl $750.00 for the arrest or
persons who broke ln&amp;Stole
Tools Property or; Ronald Miller,
261 Pickens Ad . Patriot, Oh .
(740)·379·2160 NO Questions

2 Bobtail Ma les, 2 Femlile Kit·

I

\

Friday 28th&amp; ' Saturday 29th, 3
fami ly garage sale. rain or shine,
lormerly Jo's Gift Shop, 3202 Sr.
124, Syracuse. reproduction
spinn ing wheel , reproduction
lamp, bread box, toys, playpen ,
high cha1r, lots of nice clothing.

Peraonals

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West SJimson, Athens

FRALEY
EXCAVATING

.

005

5125199 2 mo. pd.

' •..
I'

Sill I mo.

Albany, Ohio

.Business ·is good and Lulglno'e Inc- In Jackson,
I Ohio continues to expand. Lulgino's Inc ..is hiring for
rt 11~11-tln·1&amp; and part-time In the following· positions:
Production
$6.1 0
Warehouse
$7.05
Sanitation
$7.30
· Maintenance
$8. 15-$10.10
Lulglno'e Inc. offers a ·comprehensivE! benefits
package Including, Medical, Dental and Optical
Insurance, 401-K Pension Plan, paid vacation and
holidays for full-time employees. We will be in
Pomeroy at the Gallla/Melgs Community Action
Agency on Thuredey, June 3, 1999, to conduct
Interviews and facilitate possible transportation
arrangements. Call Lulglno's Personnel Office at
740-288-5505 to schedule an appoi,ntment. ·
Equel Opportunity Employer

rural offering Acute Care, Long Thrm Care
and B~havioral Health has an immediate
opening for a Director of Pharmacy. Ohio
license_required. Salary commensurate with
experience. Send resume to: Veterans
Memorial .Hospital, 115 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, attn: Human
Resources.

"

Help Wanted

Positions Aeqwres A College De· .

All Ytrd Sel.. Must Be Paid tn
Advance . Dltdtlnt: 1:OOpm 1ht
dey before lht ed It lo run ,
Sundey &amp; Mondey edition·
1:00pm Frldoy.

Going Out Of Business Sale,
Everything 50% Off, Thursdav.
Friday, S;uurdav. Tuesday. Galli·
polis Beautv Supply, 314 Second
4venue, Gallipolis. AI( Shelving

•

I

Computer User&amp; Needed Work
Own Hrs S25K ·SBOK/ Yr. 1·BOO·
47&amp;-8653 X 7777, www 1cwp com

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

ANNOUNCEMENTS

No Embarraeament -·You're Treated with Rnpac:ll

1•100·311·3391

Free Eolilnale• •
740-742-3411

VETERANS 'MEMORIAL
..
HOSPITAL

Phone:

[STOP: WORRYING!!!

Sitl;,; &amp; Sl#lil

YOJI'll SAVE MONEY
II TH£ CUSSiflfDS

Phone (740) 593-6671

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced
·

'GUnERS

Wanted

,

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A

CREDrr

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS

.

• Color TV &amp; VCP
• Air Conditioning
• Power Window• &amp; Locka ·

.

IJerrv L. Preece

1740) 992·3131

Gorogoo

.

Gall! poll•
&amp; VIcinity

Saturday, 9·6, Childrena Toys,
Nlckn•c&amp; , AntiQue&amp;, Clorhlng ·
Cnidlren, Adull, Men. 146 VInton
.Street C.ntervt!MI V~Jage .

AND THAJ'S NO BUlll

Call For Free Estimates

Romocltllng.KHchon Ctbtntll •:
Vinyl Sldlng.Rooii-Diclca- ·

• Fiberglass Running Bdl.
• Custom Alum. WhHII ·
• Loaded!

11 0

Garage Sale: 52 Spruce &amp; 48
Spr~. friday &amp; Sati.Wday, ~ .

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

•Paving
•Lots
•Sealing
• Drives
•Striping
•Private
•Patching
•Business
•New &amp; Resurfacing
•Playgrounds
•Tennis &amp; Basketball Courts

Se"'ice•

* Full
Brand New 1999 Chevy
Size.Conversion Van

821,950*

820 95o

every Saturday
Night 6:30 p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post128
Starburst $1100.
Door Prize $600.
S1000 cover all for
145 peof.le or more.
argame
based
attendance.

,.

lepJipr

House &amp; Trailer Sites
.Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septie Syatema &amp;:

i,. 1Tc•·

COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBUC NOTICE
The following eppll..tlone
end/or verified complelnta
were rocolved end the
following drell, propoeed,
or final lctlone we111 luued
by the Ohio Envlronmentiol
Protection Agency
Ital wnk. "Actlone:
the
edoptlon,
Public Notice
or reptel ol orditro (other
than emergoncy ordore);
PUBLIC NOTICE
lhe
leouenct, daniel,
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, May 29, modlflclllon or· revocetlon
tttt, at 10:00 a.m., a public of llcenoeo, permltl, ltlltl,
aale wilt be held t1 211 Well verlonctl, or certlllc1t11;
Second Street, Pomeroy,. and tho epprovet or
Ohio, Tht Fermtre'a Bank dloepprovol of plena end
and Savings Company epoclllcotlont- •oren
parking lot, to 1111 for celh Actlono": ore wrtltln 11111menlo ol the Director ol
tho following colltltrel: ·
Eilvlronmenllt
Protoo-llon't
1998 KAWASAKI 4X4 ·
(Director'o) Intent with
ATV JKALFB1XWB528441
Tht Farmers Bank end rtoptct to the loouence,
Saving•
Company, den lei, etc. of 1 permit,
Pomeroy, Ohio, re11rvee the llcenet, order, etc. Inter·
right to bid elthle aele, .and elled pero0 ne may oullmlt
to withdrew the ebove written com mente or
prior to eale. requtol I pubic metllng
Further, The Farmer• Benk regarding draft ..ectlone.
and Saving• Company Com menta or public
reaorv11 tha right to re[ect meeting requo1ta mull be
eubmlllld within 30 diY8 ol
any or all bide aubmlllld.
tho above notlce ol the drift octlon.
Further,
collateral will be eold tn the "Propo11d Action•" are
condition It Ia In, with no written etotementa of the
expreu or lm plied Dlrector'l • Intent with
r11poct to the l11u1nce,
warran1t11 given.
For further Information, denial, modification, revocation, or renewal ol a
contact Tim at 985-4289.
permit, llctnll, or varlence.
(5) 28, 27, 2a 3TC
Written comment• and
requ 11t 1 lor 1 public
Public Notice
meeting regerdlng a
propoood ectlan mey bo
IN THE MEIGS COUNTY
COURT OF COMMON
eubmltted within 30 deye ol
PLEAS PROBATE DIVISION notice of tho . propolld
In the Malter of the
ectlon • An .dludlc.tlon
Adoplton. of:
hearing may be held .on a
Tyler J. Goble
propoud ectlon 11 1 hearing
roquett or obJection lo
CASE NO. 301168
1 ed "" th OEPA Wlthl
.PUBUCATION OF NOTICE
.rece v •r 1 ·
"
NOTICE TO THE
30 deyo of l11uence of the
UNKNOWN FATHER
propo11 d ICII on. Wrl
· -n
You are hereby notified commontt, requeote lor
that on the 15th day of public moetlnge, . end
December, 1998, Raymond a dl " dl ell Ion h11rIng rt·
Lea Goble rllldlng at 2399 queete mull be 11nt to:
Water Street, Syracull,· H11rlng Clark, Ohio Envl•
Ohio 45n9, end Cheryl Ann
ronmtntel Prottctlon
Goble realdlng at 2399 Agency,
Box 1041,
Water Street, Syrac:uae, Columbul,P.O.
Ohio 432te.1049
(Telephone: 114-844-2128).
Announcements
"Final
ectlona
ol the Actlont"
Director ere
which
ere r'-----------+-----~---effective upon lt1uence or • KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
atettd elloctlve dete·.
Pureuent to Ohio Rtvlaed
Code Section 3745.04, 1 .
flnel acilo!l may bt eppaaled to the Environmental
Review App11to Commleelon (ERAC) lormerly
known I t the · Environ·
mental Botrd ol Revill.¥) by .
1 pereon who h11 1 party to
e proceeding before 'h'
director by llllng en eppeel
within 30 deya ol notice of
tho flnol ectlon. Purouent to
Ohio Revlud Code Section
3745.07, a llnal ecllon
laeulng, denying, modllyrevoklilg, or renewing a
peirmlt, llceneo, Qr vorlanct
Regu
not preceded by 1
.
propoaed ectlon, mey be
payout
on
eppteled Ia the ERAC by
filing en 1pp111 within 30
dlyl of IIIUinCI Ollhe final

a

4.&amp;~~~~~~¥JMron~

BuUdooer &amp;: Backhoe

BINGO

*.Size
Brand New 1999 Chevy Full
Raised ROof Conv. Van

Yard Sale

Public Notice

Public Notice

Page 9

Preferred but not required . good
communicat ion skills and knowtedge or long term care requl ff!l·
ments. Apptv at or send resume
wltn cover le.tter to Roger Hittle ,
NHA 380 Colonial Or.. Bidwell.
OH 45614 or lax 740-446·.1346 .

.

NurlJ ing Supen11sor/MDS Nurse :·
1 AN Unit Manage1. 1 MDS AN ~
Coordlnalor. Holzer SPmor Care_
';.
Center, 70 Bed LTC . ts 1ook 1ng :·
for RN 'S wit h supervisory, as-.~
sessmenl , and commu('licatlon""'
aktlts. Must have knowledge of -:
PPS , lnlactioh Con trol, and ..
· MOS2.0, Ohio License. AeQ. ap - ..
ply at or send resume with c:over ....
letter Ann : D.O.N . at 380 ColOnial·~
Or .. Bidwell , OH,. &lt;45.614 or Fax ":
740.446·13"6. EOE.
'

•

OWN A COMPUTER?
PUT IT TO WORK I
$25 ·$75 /tk PTIFT

.

''

•'•

t-188-588-3718

~

www.worl&lt;·from-home.nelllunn

•l
·Part-Time ' 7·3LPN, E:cperienced -~
Paid Olfered . Apply In Person At: :,.
Scenic Hills Nursing Cent er, 31\ .

.BU(:I(Hdge Road, Bldwe4i, Ohio. • , : ,

.. ,.. . .
~

.•

'

'\

.

�·--- .
Thuraday, May 27, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...

~-

,.

_
•

'
T'hureday, May 27, 1999

The Daily Sentinel• Page1!1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:ALLEY OOP

IRIDOI:

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

~ ::ld~':'-v
chore

180
Po stal Joba to $18 3S/Hr Inc
Benefits. No experience For

App and Exam Info Call 1·800·
813·:3585,

E~~:t

8812 BAM 9PM

"(Day&amp; Ids one.
ijahatlta Person To llve In Wtth
&amp;lderty Male Room Board, Sal
ary SuPC&gt;oed (304)895 3942
,.uponsibte Child Care Provider
lj1 Mv Home For Two Children M·
E. 8·5, Tara Estates Area Subm1t
kener Of lnteresl. References &amp;
Wage Requirements To CLA 24
~Jo Galhpohs Da1ly Tnbune 825
Third Avenue Gallipolis OH

45631
AN Poslllo n •3 Davs Per Week

$650 00 Per Week $1 000 SognOn Bonus Drive to West Jelfer·
son OH (25 mites from Columbus) 3 times per week Work 7P
7A every Saturday and Sunday
plus one 3-11P shift each week
,and you will rueive '$650 00
per week ·vacation and ho liday
pa~ "401 K 'MediCal dental and
life Insurance •ongomg tralmng
and CEU opportunities 'Opper
t'unlty lor advancement Arbors
west is a le adi ng prov1der of
Subacute Care we are seeking
an organ1zed leader w1th axcel
tent problem sotvmg sk1tls for our
18 bed subacute unit Prev1ous
expanence a piUs but would conSider an outstanding new gradu
ate Call Debbie Long AN to m
terview for th is opportun ty Ar
bors West, 375 W Mam Street,
We st Jellerson Oh1o 43162

Georges Portable Sawml!l don't
haul ~ur logs to the mill just call

304-1175-1957
lntenor &amp; Exterior Pa tnting Expenenced References Reason·
ab le Rates For Free Esumate,
74().388 8041
Jims Drywall &amp; Construction
New Construction &amp; Remodelf
Orywall Siding, Roofs Addi
lions, Pamtlng etc (304)674·

-1623 or (304)674-Dt 55

Restored VIctorian 'home altuated
on t2 acres Vlllagl Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint

ment, call 70-992-5696
Spring Valley 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,

320

Mobile Home•
for Sale

••••Amazing•••• 5 Bedrooms, 2
1/2 baths over 2 000 sq f1, lor
less than $400 mo. Free Delivery

Pa1ntlng lawn service &amp; Wumblng
Low rates Call740-591·9617

14x70 Attanlls Mobile Home, All

&amp; Set 1-800-948-5678

Yard work· mowmg hedges wind·
ows guners painting call 740·

992·3193 or 740-992 7821 ask
tor Dana or leave a message

FINANCIAL

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

0175(304)-675-5965

recomme nd s that you do bu sl
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
matt until you have mvestlgated
the offering

1976·14•70 Kirkwood 2 Bed
rooms Plus Den Tota l Electric
Recondition ltke new! Free Deliv·
lfY and Block-Up\ $8 950 00

2 BR furnished home In Mason
No pets References required

230

(740) 448-D175 (304)-1175-5965

Professional
Services

1981, 14x65 2BR, Electric, HI
AC Refrigerator, Slove Living room Suite &amp; 2 Porches, $6 000

(304)773-5319, .......\ngs

Call 1·(800) 545-4423
WE NEED OR!VERS
New EqUipment
Good Pa~

KELLI TRUCKING, INC.
Call
74().286-0879

740.288-0209
We Need Drive rs New Eq uip
men! Good Pay Kel/1 Tru ck1ng ,

Inc. Cell 740·286-0879 740·
288-0209 4014 Vega Ad Thurman, OH 45685
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardens 8ecurl
ty, Maintenance Parle Rangers
NoExp Needed For App /Exam

1nfo can '-800 813 3585,
Ext 8813 SAM 9PM 7 Days
tds,lnc

Business
Training

GIM\poUo Can111r College
(Careers Close To Home) Call
Today! 740-446-4367 1·800214-0452 Reg 190-05-12748
180

Wanted To Do

Carpentry RemodeBng, Add1tlons,
Oecks, Porches, Orywatt, Paint·
~g.

740441-1316

1987 Clayton Mobile Home,
t 4x70, Stove &amp; Refrigerator All

1994 14x70 Sunshine 3 Bed·
rooms , 2 Baths Blue Carpet WI
o C/A $15,500, Must Be Mowtdl
Wheels Are Available , 937-37940 15 • leave Message

WALL·CEILING CLEANED EX·
PERTLY Saves on repainting In·
dellnltely We use the exclusive
v on Schrader V53 Power Wall
Cleaning System Protects paint

By Owner - 19i94 Skyhne/Su·
preme,/14x74, 3BR,2BA,VInylSiding. Shingle Root, Garden

t.~~~~~a~ss~re~t~ar~d~s:
no odor, sa
c:h:al:k:ln~g~~
ni tizes
Tub
In Closet,
Hutch,
Range
M/Wava
In Island,
Cab Walk
BoOk·
Clearly
c ~ E
B
ase •Oial lectrlc, ayWindow Sky Light ClAir, With Retrtg
&amp; Range , Very Nlcel! (304)675

_so_s_s.:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
1997 Ooubtewtde on 2 112 Acres
3BR, 2BA Storage etdg Direct
TV Satellite, $57,000 Wilt show
between .5PM-8PM (304)4~81033
---~--~---

All real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes It Illegal
to advertise 'any preference
!Imitation or dlscnmlnatlon

I

based on race color religion,
sex fam•llal status or national
ongln or any Intention to
make any sucn preference
limitation or discrimination~
ThiS newspaper wKI not
knowrngty accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch 1s lfl vlotat!on of the
taw Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised mthis newspaper
are avattabte on an equal
oppor1umtv basis

j;:lll References Has Private
Room And Full Care In Her Home
For The Elderly For More Info

740·256·6342, ,r,\so Nutritious
Meal Planning And Wheel Chair

Accessible

E &amp; 5 Lawn Service Oeslgn~ lm·
plementatlon, and Servrca
Available tor Spring Clean up
fertllldng and planting Free esU·
mates Satlafactlon guaranteed

M1111oan 3041675-4828

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month With $1150

down Call f-800-637·3238
New Bank repoa only 2 left we

finance ca\1304-1'22-7148
Please Help! 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, just taka over Payments!

1-1188-738-3332
or 3 Bedroom&amp; Only $995 00

REAL ESTATE
310 Homaa for Sale
124 l&lt;lneon Drive Gallipolis, 3
Bedrooms Fully Equipped Kitch~
en Basement $57 900 740-446·
2158

3 bedroom hOuse 2 !uti baths,
family room targe utility room 2
car garage attached separate 3
car garage, pool , 3 acres, phone

740 843 5350
3 Bedroom, Split Entry, Brick
Home an Route 2, at Mt Alto
Builtin Kitchen , Olnlngroom LA
3 Baths FP Woodburnlng stove
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895·

3881
3 Bedrooms 2 Bath Ranch House
7 Years Old, 28x30 Attached Ga·
rage 12x24 Buildin g Barn &amp;
Tra ctor Shed 69 1/2 Acres Or
Will Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs Co

740-992·3837
3BR House 2 car garage 1 6
Acre University Lane (Behind

Armory) (304 )675-5375, after
530PM
5 rooms, one bath full basement
with shower, well maintained".
$40 ooo, 699 Broadway Street,

Ohk&gt; 740.992-7319

By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 tots must see
to appreCiate, will sell house with·

out lots lor $89 ,000 740-992·
2704 740 992 5696
Cute 5 Joom home fut! basement,
Lennox heat pump, central air,
Anderson tltl ln windows, good In
sutallon vinyl siding front and
back porches, mce level lot, good
neighborhood Mason, WV, call

7'40 992 3041 or 740 992·3857.

CNA W\1h 20 Yrs Exp And Ex·

Low Interest Rates For 1at Time
Buvers, Limited Time Available
8()0..383-6862
---------Good selection of useb homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Stanlng at
$3995 Quick delivery Cell 740·
385·9621
-'---------Looking To Buy Good Older
Homes, 1-800·383-6862.

Rent Buster New 1999 14x70 2

Mldd~port

140

(740)446-3493

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1 888·582·3345

Pleasant wv 25550 by May 28
EOE

Wanted Su mmer Route Drivers
Local Routes, Good Pay! Please

1985 Nausha 14x70 w1th 8x20
Expando, 2 Bedrooms, 2 lull
bathS, F1reptace New Carpet

Pets (304)675-511!2

(304)n3-5881

3 Bedrooms. 1 Both In Ga11\polls
Nice Yard With Fence &amp; 2 Stor-

age Buildings Central Heat &amp; Air

Lease &amp; Deposit $525/Mo , 740·
441-5118,

Trailer For Sale Office Trailer
10K40 All Electric &amp; A C

(304)675-4123, after 6 30PM
used SlngleWide, Around $100

per month Call 1-800·948-5678
Oakwood Homes Barboursville,

WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Oown Double Wide, 304·

736-3409
330 Farms for Sale
28 Acres MIL. &amp; Stall Hor.. Bam.
3 Bedroom House, Fence 740

38\Hl504

some timber, $86 500 740·992·
3564

G40 Business and
Buildings
Commerc1al Building For Lease

Sma\1 Business Or Olf!Ce In High
Traffic Area , Across From WaiMart On Corner, 740·441-5118,

Or 304-634·0540 Leave Mes·
sage
Office suite In high traffic, visible
location Two private offices,
bathroom and small reception
area ADA accessible 0111ca or
commercial building on Jackson
Avenue, 2 rooms plus bath VIs·

lble with parking (304)875-67741
674-4688

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 Acre L01 !Oft For Sale In Muon,
$15,000 (304)882·3772
3 Acres 315Ft Road Frontage,

Nk:e 2 Bedroom House For Rent,

Free

Ea1lmat11

References

Aval-. (304)675-2949

Sl31, $8 &amp; Up

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs

Problems? Need Tuned? Coli the
p"'no Dr 740-446-4ll25
JET ~

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. Now • Rebuilt 1n Stoci&lt;
Call Ron Evene, HIOil-537-9528

Housing Opportunity, 740·

Johnson's used F

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249·$373 Call 740992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunllles
Mason lydia Apartments is now
accepting applications. located
on Anderson St In Ma&amp;on. WV
Equal Housing Opportunity. 2
bedrooms all electric, appliances furnished. trash removal paid
by owner laundry facilities lo·
cated at complex If Interested,
stop by to fill out application or

cell (304)773-5529, 1eave mes·

Pilot Program, Renters Needed 1·

800-383-8882.

itura /A p-

pliances 740 .WB-40
740.4461004 5 Miles Out Butavllle Pike

0" 35 Right On Keeler Rood Blue
House On Left
Kubota Tractor (Dif'lll) Model

B8000E 12 5 H P. Oiiltrhauled, 5'
Blade. And 48' CuUI'oods 3 Pt
Hitch Mowor $3,5~'060 740·
446·1458
Large metal wardrobe. recliner,
two 22 rifles 740-949-3228

Memorial Day Salol May 23·31.
1999 Anv HanginG, Baskets,
$18 00 Perennial 4 Pack·$4 00 1·
Free Flat ol CI'Jina Plnlw .or Pansy
with any purchase of $10,00 or
morel At The Hotlytu:ook Farm
Green House (74 0)·2 45~955 6

(740)-448.0390

3000 PSI3 G PM Alter 3 PM
740-441·13SS
Promotion Call now 1~88·265·

F-D-~Iol

Coil now 1-600 263-2640
RCA 25' Color TV for-"Jale $50
(304)675-8051

Lease, $325/Mo 740 682-9032,

house in Gallipolis, 70-992-9191
Twin Rivera Tower now accepting
applications for tBR HUO sub·
sld1zed apt for elderly and hand·

Sch oolbus, Pallet DoU~. Snow
Blower Electric Sewe'f\Cieaner,
used Gas Weed Earer!~vacuum

Mobile Homaa
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hOmes, $1r
conditioned $260 · $300, sewer
water and trash Included, 740·

992·2167
2 Bedroom In Mason

$295

month+ Deposit (304)675-n83
2 Bedroom Mob1la Home local·

\capped EOH 304-875-8679

Pumps (740)-446·4782

Two, 1 Bedroom Apt, with AC In
Point Pleasant Call evenings

Two professional Wolle tanning
beds, 74D-992~13B5 after 7pm ,

(304)615-4975

740 385-4387

deposit IS275

470 Wanted to~Rent

a month

740·388·

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Refer·
ences, $235fMo , Includes water

$100 Depos•• 7411-448-3817

$37 00 Per 100 AU Brass Com·

Mobile home stte available bet ween Athens a!ld Pomeroy, cal l

ed 1 milo out Sandhill Rd $250
9971

Wotorllna Special 3/4 200 RS1
$21 95 Per tOO 1' 200 PSI

460 Space lor Rent

Warner Fenced Yard, Nice
Kitchen 513·851·0100, Or 740·

550

441-3896

2 Bedroom Mobile Home tn Port·
ar Area No Pets You Pay Alt
Utlllles, Deposit &amp; References

2 Bedro.oms, 2 Baths, In Crown

City /Mercerville Area, 740·2561686
Mobile home for rent In Racine

no pots, 740-992 5658
Nice 2 Bedroom Trailer In Small
Trailer Park, Deposit &amp; Referenc·

11 Required, 70-44&amp;-1104

510

Household
Good•

n95

Vary Nice 2 Bedroom Trailer
Cen1ral Heat fAir. Deposit And
References Required , "No Pets

740 446 0893

Washers dryers, refrigerators ,
ranges Sll;aggs Appllanc:es, 76

740·742~

8101
AKC Lab Puppies, 740-3711-2883
AKC Registered Dober!JIIn Puppies. Black &amp; Rust. $2,00 OBO
(304)458-1 090/458·1 0~4 alter
5PM
A~C

regiStered GoldeOJRetr\svar

AKC Roglotorecf Goide!l,'~etrlsvor

Washer, $75, Cell After 5 30 ~M
740-448-90e8

Apartment•
lor Rent

Pets fpr SaiB

While Whirlpool W•sher. $75,
mort Dryer, $70, White Kenmore

530

$250 740-992-7562 alte(_~m
l='upptes Have Shots "''Ready To

Go\ $200 Each, 740.2S8'1084 1·
888·258-3814
AKC Sheltte, Famate, 5"Months,
Nlcel~ Marked Shots, Wormed,

Antiques

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

258-9309

992·2218

Antique Bottle Advertising Sale

1800 a Mode1, $950 00 (740)·
•

1 Bedroom Apartment $350/Mo

&amp; 2 Bedroom Apartment $4501

Mo. OVerlooking Cl1y Park! Lofayeno Mol1 All UtilitieS Paid\ Do·
and Bath $150 00 Call
24n

(740~446·

1·Bedroom Apt , ullllties Included,
Furnished or unfurnished! $300
mo 2-Bedooms all Electric Trail

or, $300 mo (740)-367-Q61 1
2 Bedroom Apartment In Now Ha
ven for rent (304)882·2119, day
timo,(304)882·2328 l\lllring

2 bedroom apartment In Middleport we pay water sewer &amp; trash,
you pa~ gas &amp; electric, $200 per

month, $100 depoolt, 740-992·
7806
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Campus. 70-245-15858

3711. EOH
4 -Bedroom Apartments for Low
Income Families Call tor tncome
Limits Available now to qualified

famOies Call (740)-448-0251

415 Deep. Dozed For Doubtewkfe
Trailer &amp; Water Top, $7 .ooo. Call 683 Third Avenue, Qo\1\pol\a 2
740-258-1789
BedroOms, $300 00 Plus Utilities
ditlon, $32,000 Appraised
3 5 acre lot for ule· river v!ew and ono month Dopooltl (740)·
$39 000 (304)882·3772
and out of l1ood plain. Locoted on 245-11585
SA
124 just out of Syracuee Wo· Apartm•nt 1 Bedroom 76 VIne
EXCELLENT CONDITION: 2
Story, 3 Bedfooms, 2 112 Bathl, tar &amp; sewer available Can brelk Street, GID\po\11, 740-448-7398
Near Holzer, Immediate Poases- In smaller loti, $30 000 7•0-992·
4561
Apartment for rent In Mldd..port,
s\on, 740-448-9672
no poll, 7-10-992·5858

Do n' t Walt To Buy, 3 Bedroom
Home In New Haven, Good Con·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drlvo
from $279 to 13e8 Walk to lltop

ceive first month'a rent frH Call

740·982·4514 a&amp;k for Chrlo Mar-

~"

'I

$1 000.

Point Siamese Klttena,

Four Fainate Sheep &amp; !=our
Lambs, $550 (304)675 5492

1983 GMt Utility Van, 6 Cylinder;

RepQ's For Listings Coli 1·800·
319-3323 Ext 4.420

Sport trike Cover Conversion KIP.
46,000 miles Extra Chrome an4

lntorklr $1.500 740-446-8158

(740)·245·5128 or (740)·379·

740-258-11995

9456 Leave Message
8 x12' Treated Porch wfRalls,
$150 Set of live, 15• Chevy
Rima &amp; Tires $175 (30 4)87S-

Hand Fed Tame Coc~ateal Ba·
bles Different colora &amp; prices
Also bonditd pair Nanday Conuoro &amp; Provon Pairs of Cocka·

Air Conditioners. Used Dift•rent

Mate Chinese Pug t:fed All Shots,

SIZes Guaranteed! 740·888·
0047
AKC Regloterecf miniature Pinch·

740-448-1117
570
Musical
Instruments

tremety healthy puppies 304· 773-

Ibanez SRSOO ban actiw. etec·

teals (304)882-34381

tronlc&amp; 24 Frat Kn~k, b"'CII COl·
or now condition( S500 'Roland
XP-60 l&lt;e~board, new condition,
new modal Stand Included

$800 (304)773-6180

FARM SUPPL IE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

Case Window: Air Conditioner
Works Good! $150 Call Alter 5

PM 70-448-2398
Complete Satellite System, ElCCellent Condlllon 740..388-9060

CODLDOWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace Complete Duct
Syetmea I Furnacea, ,Heat
Pumps Cer11flod lno1aller. If You

Doni Call U&amp; We Bo1h Lou\ 740
4-48·8308, 1·800-29HI098

Discount Mabie Home
Pans &amp; Supply
Huge lnvan10ry
V\0)1 Skirting K\11 $299 95, 5 Gallon Alumlnunl Flbored Roof Paint
125 21: 5 Ga1 White Roo! Paint
$57 89 , AnchOrs $5, Doors &amp;
Windows, Gas &amp; Electric Water
Parts lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps Bennetts Mobile Home

Supply,
D1tlo.

740 · 4~8 · 9416

Ga\1\poll&amp;,

Ohio Volley Bank Wilt Olfer

1989 Ford Mustang LX $1250
1986

Chevy · van

$1250

(304)675-6693

tlayij,

74o-

1990 Cougar, high

F~r

750 Boats &amp; '-'otors
for Sale

1991 Cutlass C\erro 4 door. V6.

1994 Yamaha Waverunner 3
700cc Excellent Condition, LOJ¥

$3500

Hou11 $3 200 740-4-48.0226

n.ooo OBO

1993 Dodge COlt, 5 Speed, GbOd
Condltk)n, 109,000 Miles, $2,300,
080 740-258-1233
1993 For(l Mustang LX sedan, 4

-:

25 HP Sea King Boat Moto&lt;, Runo
$75.00 740-446 ·7881 Aller
500PM

1992 Oldsmobile Clara Real
Ntco $3,695 (304)773·5188 or
(304)875-4893

1Q93' Ponl\ac Grand AM. Tool,
Loaded\ $3,900 oo (740)386·
1992 Covsllor, Auto,/£, $2,495,
1994 Dodge High Top Trade·
winds Custom Van, Cook Mo1ors,

740.44&amp;-0103
1994 0\dsmobllo Cu1\aas Su·
preme Re~ 24,000 Miles. (740)·
448-6464
1194 Pontiac Grand Am, air,

Ford new Hollanll Traclor Salt
3930 4WD 45Pjr0 HP. 192 Tur·
bo Syncho 8Xa' Yrans F And R
ShutUe Large Pui"P 2 Romoles 4
outlets, 2yr 'l'u11 Warranly
$20,900 00 4180 55PTO HP
oorne opeco 22,poo 301o awo
42 PTO HP, 1 Romo1e We1
Brake. 1nd PTO 13.500 00 3010
4WD Same Spoco 18,500.00 .
Como S.. Tho New TN55, 15, 75
•wD models with Super st.. r.
will turn shorter than a 2WD
K•eftrl Service Ctn1er St . At .

17, Pt Pleasont &amp; Rlpfly Road .
Phone (304)895-3874
Hydroltc hose Making setup with
cutolt saw hose crimping ma ·
chine, with large section of crimp
ond &amp; hOse &amp; pdaptors (803)366·

9436
Large assortn;tenl of bolla &amp;

binds (803)386-9438

1996 Dodge Stratus. 4

ooo

f

FOf rent· dock site wilh 2 cement
patloa, c tty water, call 740 -992,·
5956
Sea Doo Wave Runner A 1 Con

dllk&gt;n With Troller, 740-446-1012
Auto Parts &amp;
Accaaaorles

'

1997 Ford Ewplorer XLT Loadod,

•

bo $8.500 OBO 1740) 992·8978
(740)·388-8401
Graduation Gift 91 'Dodge Dayto-

na Shelby, Fully Loadtldl 108 000
mites $2,800 oo Leave Mesiage
(740}-441.0178
•

810

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncar~dlti onal llflllme guarantee
local references furnished Ea-

tabl~hod 1975 Coli 24 Hrs
~48·0870 1·600·287·0578

(740)
Rog-

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands OVer 25 Years EM·
parlance All Work Guaranteed.
French City Maytag , 740·448-

7795

C&amp;C

General

Home

Main·

tenenc e~ Painting vinyl aiding.

carliorpentry, doors, windows. baths,
bite home repair alid mora For
frea esumate catt Chat, 74G-992·

ence (304)895·'l887

'

Rift's AernodeHng &amp; New Homeo50 yeara. 111per1ence Fr11 tali·

1981 F· f50 F01d Lariat 4 Wheot
Drlvo, Runs Good $1 200 OBO
740-388·8890
•
•

mates 740-742·3315, 740·753·
3711

1987 Chevy S·fO Blazer, 2 8 V8,
,r,uto, Fully Loaded, Cold Air
Nice Cond $4,800 (304)875 3824
1987 Ford F· 700 With 54' HI
Ranger 70-448-1012

53Litrge

contal-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
C.a.brity C'Pt* crypt~ at11 CIM1Ifd !ram quaCIItlcn by tlm«U PtOPII, pqt and PNHIIt
&amp;en . . . In lhl ctptwr lllndl tor II'IOhr Todly'• cbf R ~ C

'J'SW

AWWC

J'SW

JPJXHXWI

DWHVI

YWEYZW

PJBXHTWB . '

KJPJ

BE

UWZZ

REYO

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or CO'!"merclal wiring,
new wvlce or repeira Mast,r Ucenstd tle~trlclan Ridenour

Eleclrlcal WV000308, 304·8751788

PG

DWCIVJO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Don't refuse to go on an occaaoonal wtld·goose
chase; that Is whal wild geese are made for • - Henry S Haaktns

....
'=!:t:~· S@\\&lt;RllA-~£~s· ••••

--~--~

•

14!014

~,

CLAY

POlLAN_;;...__ _ __

...., _ ....... of
four ~~:rambled wonlo

low to form four WOf"ds

I

URTSY

I P
15
~Il I l~l::,'

E-r.--r:N
~
One not so smart fellow to
•
•
• _
h1s fnend "Our world IS chang. - - - - - - - - - ; tng so fasl no one can be wrong

l

.

.

.

.

. V

~~:~,~r: .•~. chuc~,. quo•ec~

by f1ll1ng 1n the m•umg words
No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESf ~QUARES

~

I•

I'

•

I I

. , UNSCR,r,MBLE LETTERS I
FOR ANSWER

Shop tltt clossl(ftd stcrlon

lTHURSDAY

Quote from a famous Italian "No one can be lonely
when eat1ng spaghett1 because tl requ11es all of your
ATTENTION.

MAY 27l

.'

guarantee 12yrs on job e~eperl­

390 4·barrel. powertraln, axlea

36 Chap
38 Cry of
trtumpll
3tllore
cherlahed
40 Rapier
42 Foench fltm •
-ani
44 Squander 49 Room Ina
harem
50 Covar wtth
turl
52 Farm
female

•
"

1971 Chevy Pick·Up, 305, AT. Livingston·• Basement Water
$2,000, Good COnd\1\on 70-441- Proofing, all bailment repalra
done, free estlmltea lifetime
1794
1975 Ford 4X4 for parts Good

wooe

35 Rellroad
locomotive

SERVICES

1328

720 Trucks for Sale

30Benev~

SCI"M-LETS ANSWIIS
I
Potato - Ensua • Canto • Ntnely - ATTENTION
Oon'r ,., stunr by hirh pnmr

ASTRO·ORAPH
Friday, May 28, 1999
.
Look for your eamina capactty to
be considerably enhanced in the year
ahead because of the s1ronJ effort
you' ve exened tn !he pas!. Your
rewards could finally be comina
home to roost
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A hap'
py attitude will enhance the quality of
your work today, so treat ali your
tasks as labors of love IF they are of
the marketable var1cty. it could brin&amp;
abQut a larger profil. Oct • JUmp on
life by understanding the tttHucnces
that ' ll govern you tn they- ahead.
Send fm your Astro-Graph predic· •
uons by mailing $2 to Aslro-Oraph,
c/o thts newspaper, P.O Box 1758,
Murray Hill Stauon, New York, NY
I 0 IS6 Be sure to state your zodiac
Sign
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
possess an envtable touch today of
betng able to command and tnsptre ll
the same time 11us Is truly an art
form that can make others hke and
·desire youdcad Use 1t
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) Some·
tomes our psyche tricslo tell us some·

,,

thtng and thts could be one of those
day$ when ltslentng to your intuitive
percepttons may be wiser than listentnl to your loa•c Follow your pt
feehnas
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)
Althouaft the en1tre day ts senerally
apt to be a rather pleasan1 one, your
m""t destrahle tllld tmpelhna inv&lt;&gt;!ve·
men1s mtght occur towards eventns.
Look fmwaid to the close of a fine
day.
, LIBRA (Scpl 23 -0ct 23) Be
1rateful for wha1 you already have
today and you 'II open the door for
Munlnc:ent PrOvide~• to enter your
space once IJoin. Chances ore thonas
will ovea 1et beltcr.
SCORPIO '(Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
Chum and sincerity ano your tw~.
bell tWeiS today in effectively helpinl to advance your peno111i interests. Be both d1piomatlc and f!Jrth.
riahl
SAOITI'ARIUS (Nov 23-Dcc.
21) I&amp; looks ltke you could be Cupid's
prime waet today u he Sinal•• you
out for romance. love and Involvements with the opposile pndcr.
CAPiliCORN (Dec;, :U-lan. 19)
lo

'
Circumstances
moght avail themselves today for you 10 s1rengthen an
alliance with someone abQut whom
you care a areat deal The events will
further btnll your ties
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
Because ,you know how to lead by
example, subonhnon1s wtll be
encotii'IJ«&lt; 1oday to upgrade the1r
performance by observtng !he
rewards for good conduct.
PISCES (feb 20-March 20)
Don't think you're wearmg a pa!r of
rose colored glasses loday, you 'II
actually dtscover and be seemg the
bri&amp;ht spots tn hfe where they actually eli11.
·ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19)
You're atfted today with betng able
to handle or manosc si1uauons for
othen with which !hey can't cope.
K1ndly, you'll put your talents to
aood uses
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20) All
partnenhtp arrangements could he
extremely fortuna1c tor ynu today,
whether they involve busmess associa1es, romanuc mlcrludes or .$tmply
teamlna up for a game of 1cnms

,,
•

.

34 One who

,

ers Waterproofing

CO Tille and Cruise, PW1 PL'I,
Sunroof, Ssp EMcell Condition
New transm lsa5on and clutch Tur·

28 Ed"or I
notat1on

condffion, $5,1100, 70-i92-558f '

1997 Grand Am GT, white , 50,000

92 Mitoublshl Ec1\pse GFX All
Whoel Ortve\ Turbo am/1m S111rno.

cand- ·

1980 Coachman 31 traveltratlar,
custorn buill to live In lull size reo
frigeretor, 2 twin beds real goc)d

mltoa, $10 500, 70-949·1701

Lincoln Avenue

8 Raced

5 To bl,ln

24 Outdoor
OM8l
26 Coamonaut

e

i

ROBOTMAN

1984 Chevy 24 Ft Motor Hom~

$700. Has lnopectlon Sticker,
Runs Good. (304)675·3838 2213

7E'-t
varletiH

L---l~...L~.L---l~...L.....J you develop from llep

1978 Dodge motor home, 20'1
condition, $4000 coli 740j

SeN.COn!Sinod, 70-446-e93a

84 Ford Escort Station Wagon~

4~~b

34 Clllchlng a
gllmpae al

.

Now gas 1anks &amp; body parts D •
A Auto, Ripley, WV (304)372,
3933 or 1-&amp;Q0-273·9329

740.448-6491

1998 Pontiac Trans -Am, Navy
Blue Metame, 5 7 Liter, LS 1 En·
glne, leather 1nterlor, 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Olac CD
Changer, Fully Loaded! Will Take
Pay Off. 740-446-4548

at- Dlua one

8
l---i1r.:s. .:E:,I. .:G: . . ;:LI:,7..:ITI.:..T-..---11·;,;._

PEANUTS

'

Campera &amp;
Motor Homes

--

33 DCV1P

9 Fr'8quentfy, to
Pot
10 Tacked
11 St081
12 Jolno Weight
Wlllchert
·
19 VIchy woW?
22Uata01

Tijuana

e Paracii-

Eut

By Phillip Alder
John Dryden wrote, "He mvade s
authors hke a monarch, and whal
would be theft mother poets 1s o nly
VIctory m h1m " Who was he cnuclzmg?
In today's deal, how dtd East-West
manage to defeat four hearts? Why
was thts a Pyrrhtc vtetory for the
defenders?
Soulh opened wtth a weak 1wo
bid, showmg some 6 - 10 h1gh-card
pomts and a decent stx-card sutt
North wtsely went for !he I0-1rtck
game , note that five clubs has three
losers.
Afler cashmg the dtamond ace,
Wesl may have been tempted 10
swtl,ch to a trump However, to stop
decl arer from enJoymg dummy's
c lub su1t, the defense had to attack
dummy 's trumps, forcmg ruffs So,
West s w1tched to the spade Jack
Then East returned a dtamond,
Soulh s mne bemg covered by West 's
10 and ruffed th the dummy.
Declarer cashed dummy 's club
ace kmg , five, queen South called
for another club
East was tn the spothght Wesl's
club queen enher was a smgleton or
promtsed the Jack 100 Thus there was
a temptatton Lo dtscard Yet tf East
had done tha1, the con1rac1 wo uld
have succeeded. Wes1 wms wnh the
club Jack, bu1 cannot conunue dtamonds wtthout seiLing up South's
Jack Workmg Lh1s out, East ruffed h1s
partner's trt ck and played another
diamond, forcmg dummy to ruff
a gam
As dummy was reduced to one
trump, declarer couldn't enJOY the
clubs South attempted to crossruff
home , but West's hean e1ght became
oromoted m the process. one down
That was excellent defense, but
East-West can make four spades by
guessmg the diamonds
John1 Dryden was commentmg
about Ben Jonson

New Auto Bodv Parts &amp; Acce~
sarles Translormera Auto Parle~

790

32

1 "OtThN--"
2 llooe alu11111ah
3 c..-nt-

All pus

eve Joints, 740.245-5877.

(304)675·3324

DOWN

(ln'MI*I)

21 btvlng bird
31 Uat-endlng

A victory, but
only so far

door,I·!~~C=-~-==-=~1

$9,500.

27-down

•

28 000 Milas Bal Fact Warr Excellent Condition Price Reduced !I

(740)9411-2383 Melleofllr

..,

OON'T FIZ£T ~~ \llf. ~\B\Ui'(
OF ef.tt-16 LND Off, T~..

01 Sale CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.

atr, 74,000 mites $2800, 740 9492045

1992 Corsica
(304)576-2749

~

Third Avenue, Qelltpotls, OH SOld
To Highest Bklder "As fa ·WheM
Ia" Without EMpressed Or lmpllfCi
Warranty &amp; May Be Seen fly
Calling The Collection Dept .{t
740- U1 ,~ t038 OVB Reterva&gt;
The Right ~o Accept /Reject AWj
&amp; All Bids, &amp; Withdraw Items
From Sale Prior To Sate Terma

great, lcoka good

1991 Ford Tempo
(304)675-1832

THE BORN LOSER

KtE 1042933 At 10 00 AM On
6112199 At Tha ova Annex. 1(3

1989 Ford Thunelerbtrd, sliver w/
gray Interior 73,000 mllea, very
clean, air amlfm cess , good trres,

$3,195, 740·992·1508
949-26441118S

•

Sale By Public Auction A 199.7
Polaris Explorer 300 AT'tt/
1073432 &amp; A 1996 Kawasaki

Full Blooded Himalayan Kittens,
$50 Each, 2 Males, 2 Female&amp; ,

992-11897

8.5 Polarlus Trallbasa 4·Wheeler
250 AlES $1,500 00 (304)·875·
5612

1988 Buick Grand Nallonat
73 000 miles. Asking $6 500 00
(740)-446-4619

er boM loaded wlll'l 1-12" JL and
4·10" Jl's two(2), 1• Tweeters
also lncludtct $900 oo OBO

leather jacket, 1BW, $40 740·

Ljghto $15,500 oo (815 )·387·
7444 Eve Weekends (740)-44&amp;7371

198"' Chevette Diesel, N8w En·
glne, Excellent Condttion, Body &amp;

$150 (304)675 4679

Alfred Angelo wedding dress,

Motorcycles

1990 Hondo Gold Wing S E Trtk4
with a 1998 California Sldecao

Crossover aloo Includes Speak·

size t 8 $350 OBO, vel\, $20,

740

+-

.

Tax

59
mliest Price
(304)675 39~ 1

era, three mates one female, eK·

;

(740~245-5589

1910·1990 CARS FROM $&amp;00
And

PAY/lOLL.
l&gt;fPi.

94 Jimmy, 4 door, SLT Loadedl
leather lnter~or, 82,000 Mile a•

Autos tor Sale

Impounds,

-

1992 Chevy Astro Von (ext),$

door, 66,152 miles, blue wlblue I~
tartor, CL trim pkg , e cyl , veri
clean! rear damage, $3,300 080.

1978 ~MC Matador, 39,000 actual ml\as, garage kapt, fully loaded,
$5,000 OBO, 740·949-2293
Pollee

YOU GIT A

STANDlN"
OVATION
II

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

I

740·992·1506• days, 740 ·949'

Terrier Male, 10 weeks old

2029

Runs Great, 70-258-6180

2844...s

110

lEST 80SSlP

5

YOJfS Old $700 00\ (740) 387·
7227

.350 Walt Amplifier with built In

Merchandise

THAT'S TH'

t990 Nlssan 4x4 , 4 Cylinder,
Speed, New Wheels On 31"
Tire~

Nortlt
49

~C~~~WDira

- O~rtn

1986 Ford F-250HD XLT Lariat:

Small, Quarter Mare Sorrel 8

•K

25 Depend (on)

m-'"

55 Begin a day
55 Ia atrald al
• 57 Make aloWer

Opening lead· • A

4x4, 460 4 speed k&gt;aded, $40(».
70-949-3403
'

70-288-5395.

Weal
Pus

29

Automatic 78,!iOO Mtta~ WhJie
With Ladder Racks $3,9s5, 740·
446-1021
~

Outstanding AngUs And Chlan·
gus Bulls, "Reaaonably Priced,
Slate Run FJ!rms, Jackson, Otllo

cruise, 80,000 miles. $15500 080,
740'787-4501

540 Mlscellanaou.

8oada

45 lndolanl
51 Str.nuoul
54 llualcal

20 Hlumf21 CetchM
23 - Paulo
24 Blll-li{lnlng

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Vane &amp; 4·WDs

730

a

9AQ8713
• J •• 2
• 52

I EVER
HEARD !!

(304)578-3259, At1er BPM

WorrT)ed And Litter Trained
1100 00 Each 70-367-7123
CKC Registered Jack Russell

Hoa1ers Plumbing &amp; Eloctrlcal

Chr!S1y'' Family Living· School
day ~peclel pay depooit &amp; re-

Jackson Avenua/Poin( Pleasant
(304)875-208:1.&gt;!

:::;:;:;:_::;;:,::;;,~~~~--· I Blue

5360

2bdrm apls , total electric, ap·
p1lanc11 furnished, laundry room
faciNlles, close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740·992·

Walker

4

•K

For Sa1o 13 Year Gelding. tennessee

ea 7 •

• .._..,

fabric

Eat
• Aa•
• 52.

s.tdla

8481

0583

1994 Cavalier, Auro. •AC. $3,495;

1 Bdnm , Ek!ro Nlco, First Month

am to600pm,Sunday 100to
8 00
740·992·2526 AU&amp;I

(740) 245·5872 or (740) 367·

Pups, P\cf&lt; 1·Mole arntJ ·Female,
Left! (740) 245-9213
Pond·jp upptles

QJ

(740) 992·8978 or (740)·386·

8408

Sun f 4PM Mon · Sot flAM·
8PM Flah Tank/Pot SMp 2413

$279 00 Per Monlh, Plus Utilities
70-4411-m7

Fair P~&amp; 10r Salol Excellent Blood
Lines! For more Information Call

AKC White German Shepherd

Fish, Birds,

1 124 E Main Street on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10' 00

R..dyTo Cut, 7-10-245-9393

,. OpenwO&lt;k

•s
• a 54 s

A K 10 7

88 Toyota .t Wheel Drive, Picki
Up, 4cly, 4sp am/pm AI Wheell
33' Tires 4'inch lift, new Shocks,
Brakes, CB Joints and Universal
Jolnl&amp; Runs Green $1 BOO 080

32 Acres Of Good Clean Hay

Budget Priced Transm tsal ona
and Engines, AU Types Accass
To Over 10 ,000 Transmissions,

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,

Free With One Year Lease

oughbred Mare 740-2.58-9364

2644IVIS

Needed, 740-992-5088

J 1f • 7 5
I4

Ram 3500 Asking $25,000 CaM
alter400pm(740)-441-0998
•

3 Year Old 18 Hand Thor-

AKC TOY PDODLt&amp;, Had
Shota Wormed, 7 l'iflil_ka Old,
1350 oo Each 70-379'1108 t

And Auction. 8126th 9-4, Point
Pleasant Armory Quality Dealers

.

1997 Dodge Diesel t Ton 4x4

LlveetoCk

760

1 l!drm Garoge Apt , Very Clean
And Private. Lease Plus Utilities
70-448-3664

• A 10

Rack (304)615-6055

cyl , aulo, lOa! melalllc wA&gt;k ln1tflor. 62 000 miles $3,000 OBO,
740-992·1508 dayo 740 949·

$125 No Checks, 70-~182

\llctortan Style Love Seat, Uphot·
sterad Last Year Burgundy f

In &amp; Out Runn ing Boatda Air
Deflector Front aM Rear, Alt
Front/Rear, Radio Front/Rear',
Cruise, Tilt Leather Seats , Roof

1990 Honda CRX 5 Spoed, AC,
Good Project Carl $700, 740388-8972

puppies uceuent farh,ity pets,

Whirlpool Dryer, $85, White Ken-

30'x40'x~·. Pointed Stoat Siding,
Galvalume Steel Roofing, 15 x6'
track door, 3' walk door, $8,888
Erected\ Iron Horoe BUilder&amp; 1
(800)-352-1045

740-949-2838 or

Vine Strait, Call 740·446·7396
1·688·81 8-0 128
While G E Washer $75 , While

1995 Ford Expk)ror, 4DR 43K Ml
Loaded, Mint Cond , Sand coto/

RIO Grande, OH Call 740·245·

5 AKC BoMer pups,

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Relrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cit~ Maytag, 740·448·

Slor.ge Bulldlnt Sjloce:

5121

560

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Remodeled, 2 Bedroom All Elec·
tr~. 4 M\101 From Holzer Hosplta1,
sA 160, 740·446·2565, After
400

Bujldtng 1
Suppllaa

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows lintels. etc C~ Winters,

ME 11CHANUI~E

Required 740-388-9162

440

pressk&gt;n Fittings In Stoci&lt; ;,
RON EVANS ENTE~rAISES
Jackson, Ohk&gt; 1-800-537 9528
Wooden Dinette Set ~ Sale
$175 (304)675-183~,
'

House Within t 5 Milas Of Borg

$8,000 080, Mutt Sell! 70-446-.
1100

PA111ESTAA

Now Taking Appl ications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water

• Q

1994 Ford Ranger XlT, 68K
Miles, AC AM / FU CaaSIII B,

Trent Foot $9,000 00 (740)-6430122 8 00·4.00. after 5 oo (740)·
843-2911

630

• K J 10

1i93 Chevy S·10 Tahoe Plctc up
PS. PB, AC. 2 8 V-6. 5 Speed
60 OOOm11as $5,800 (304)8751240

Water Pumps 18ft

15 DleNgard
1e Punctual
Louie
17 TV'a - Pup!H 47 Orammy Award ~+-7-+=-SF-P

•Q

•

;:£~

41

Q Pool atlella
45 Dolly Pllrlon
acceaaooy
4e Comtdlan

Alriclt

Tool Box , Runs Good , $1 ,BoQ1

740 742·3080

TRANSPORTATION

Relrjgerotor Work Goodl $100,00
(740) 256 1651
'

420

otiB Cat Hoe

Pressure Washer North Star

2123

q

1990 Dodge Dakota P.U 5 ~

Registered Llmousln Bulls Red.

One bedroom apartment in Mid·
dleport one b•droom furnished

70-882-6347

Ford 9,000 Tandtm Dump lhock;
83,000 miiOI· $31,500 Cat-553
Shelf' Foot Rofler·S31,000 Cot·
215 Trock Hot 131 ,000 4511
Part a 1ral\er I 1,800. 1111 Trant
Bow 19,000 2,000 Gallon Wattr
Tank 1800 00, 427 ChiYy Truck
Motol, $750 .00 Mloc
Stool
Beamo Pipe. VlbraUrla Tamp fits

Black, Pol1ed. 9 Month&amp; To 2
'mars. 70-367 7800

Prlmntar- ,,. OlrteWI Summer

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,

720 Truck• lor Sale

...

.0 "'-'~•

...""" ..

13 Drunk
14 VKdon In

610 Firm Equipment

(740)-245-9332

No Pots. Application Deposit &amp;

Equal Housing OpportunitY
Siding 15 Yaort Exporltnce

Galtla Maf'M)( Apartment, Now Ac·
cepting Applications For 1 Sed-

Sewage, Trash $315/Mo, 7404-48-oooe

&amp; movies Call 740· 446·2e68

Higgs Contracting Roofing, Vinyl

740-446-4839

eluded Low Deposit Required
HUO Approved (304)675·2053

posit Required Also One Room

Small farm (52 acres) with mobile
hOme, self sufficient w1th natural
springs, 2 gas producing welts,

tu~

1st

Oown, $195 00 per month Free

Delivery and Set Up Cal1 1 800948·5678

B..nle Bable! For
70-258-6909

Apartments, House Duplexes 1

House For Rant (304)675-87:20

Babybed, Playpen, Swing, Car

Frenchtown Apartments , Now
Accepting Applications For 1
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand
!capped. Equal Housing Oppor~

&amp; 2 Bedroom Some utilities in·

992·5502

RTABOLISII

qulrod, 740-441 0952

sage in no answer (FmHA} AI ·
ways accepting applications
even when vacancies do not eM·

Beautiful River VIew Nice Two
Bedroom. 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp;
Refrigerator, Basement, One Car
Garage, Washer IOryer Hook-Up,
Oepostt &amp; References Required.
No Pets Rent Discount Call 740·

AIIAZtNG

Breakthroughfll Lou 10· 200
Pounds Easy, Oulck, Fast
Dramatic Results, "'(00% Natural,
DoctOf Recommended Free Sam
plea can 74o.-441-1982

seat Stro\1er (304)875-4548

E~uot

2 Bedroom, w/Basement &amp; Ga·
rage Deposit &amp; References No

Business
Opportunity

F1111t Avenue, One And Two Bed·
rooms, From $275 ~$350/Mo , Sa
cur!ly Deposit. References Re·

~

1975· 12x65 Holl~ Park 2-bed·
room Tota l Electric L 1ke New
through out! Free Delivery and
Block-UP! $7,950 00 (740)-446

210

Christy's Family Living, epart·
ments. home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·992·4514, aparlmants avail~
able, furnished &amp; unfurnished

For Elderly And Handlca pP.ed ,

and Garboge Dopoo•. Reference,
No Polo\ (740)·843·0122 8 00·
4 00 After 6pm (740)-1143-2916

bile home. 740·992·15039

540 Miecellanaoua
Merchandise

Apartment•
for Rent

room HUD, Subsidised Aportmen1

RENTALS

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

Must Sail\ A'klng $14 000, 740
_388_8_~_35~-,---'-----

Truck Driver To Haul New &amp;
used Empty Trailers Hook &amp;
Drop 74 0 441-Q266

We Pay Cash 1-800-213·8365,
Antltonv l.and Co

$32.5 00 Month Includes Water

timato

(304)675 7201

We Buy land 30 ·500 Acres ,

(740~379-2734

45614

Taking Applications, If you are a
reliable clean hard-working de·
pendable person come JOin our
learn Melinda's Restaurant, formally Millie&amp; in Polnl Pleasant

Acre Lot Or More. 70-24iH633

410 House• for Rant

Electric, 3 Bedrooms 1 1/2 Baths
Centra l Air, $8,000 Firm Cash
Only, 740 446-4207
t988 Redmond Danville 14t70
Also , Has Expando, Very Nice,

Substitute and two(2)~Tea c he r s
Aides For SumMer Program Partti me employment w1th no fringe
benefits Hours are Monday Fri·
dav Teachers A1des one !rom
7 30AM·12 30PM and one from
11 30AM·5 30PM Substitutes •
hours vary hom 7 30AM-5 30PM
Must be at leas t 18 year s otd
with a HS diploma or GED Ex·
perlence working w1th children
preferred Must be able to read,
write and use correct grammar m
speaking and wrttlng Send re ·
sume to Children s VIllage Mason County Voca tio nal-Tech
Center Ohio River Road Pt

Wanted To But 3 Bedl'bom
Home Good Condition, On 1

14•70 Fleetwood Trailer 1999, 3
bedroom, 2 baths, half furnished
Please contact (740)·379-2726 or

Does Your House Siding Deck
or Dnveway need a cleaning? If
so Pressure Washing 1s the an·
swerl Call Clearly Clean at
(304)675·4040 for a Free Es

Someone to spend the night w1th
the elderly midnight aam 5 days
per week, $10 per day 740·992·
5039or740·992·4410

Real Eet.ta
Wanted

Electric 740-245-9633

Scenic Hills Nursmg ce nter IS
currently accepting appltcatiOns
For a Day Sh1ft Treatment Nurse
(Weekends Only) Please apply at
311 Buckndge Ael Bidwell Oh

pos1t1o
candidate
n Intereste
s should dhave
RN or
eKpert
LPN
ence In assessment documenta
lion State CertificAtion/licensure
regulations good commumcaiiOn
sled Is and effe cttve member ol
r eside nt ca re team Exce llent
Benefits and except onal staff Is
an excellent opportunity lor the
nght candidate for personal and
professional gro wth Sut'mlt re sume to Aockspungs Rehablttta
lion Center 36759 Rock'sprmgs
Road Pomeroy Ohio 45769 ATI
Carol Greening, AN , Director ol
Nursing Equal Opportunity Em
ployer

lot behind Krodel Park wtth Trait-

or Hook-Up &amp; Building (304)895-

360

(Mornber Of EOE)

Skilled Nursing FaCili ty seeking
expertenced candidates for MDS

2830

Uv\ng Room, Dining Room Eat-In

Carpet and Upholstery Cleaned
without · steam • or Absorbent
Compounds Soapless Anti At·
soil Detergents used exclusively Sale lor all fabrics Fast dryIng ( 1 2 hours) Eliminates over·
wettmg Guaranteed Wo rk Call
Clearly Clean at (304)675 4040
lor Free Estimates•

Seeking Cerllfleel Nurse Aides
Part T1me Rotallng Sh lfls Wes t
V~rgln1a cert if icatiOn re quired
Apply at Pomt Pleasant Center/
Genests Eldercare State Route
62 Route 1 Box 326 Point
Pleasant WV 25550 EOE

141 5 30 Acre '£states Surveyed , Mareh 1999 7-'0-379-

Kitchen Lg Family Room 740·

245-9337

440

6 Miles From Go\1\po\lo 16312 On

3004

Need Sitter lor the summer? Day
t; are w1th a pool Open Monday
thru Fri day, ask lor l&lt;elty, 740·
667 6460 Tuppers Plams area

(614)b79 5103
Sc en tc Hilts Nurstng Center Is
Now Ac:ceptmg App11a11ons For
The POSitiOn 01 Certllled ActiVI
ties Person Please Send Resume
And Salary Req u•rem ant s To
Charla Brown At Sceni c H11ts
Nursing Center 311 Bu ckr1d ge
Road B1dwell OH 45614

350 Lot. &amp; Acreage

Wanted To Do

-- -·-

37E_ _ _

ACIIOSS

",I

�......

-~-

- - _i;·_~By
The
.-

· -~

.

Bend

T~e

Daily Sentinel

Page 12
Thursday, May 27, 1999

..

Ex - wife should allow son to visit his father in foreign country .- but go with him
am still reeling at the stupidity and ·young daughter, who suffers from
They had a te(J'ible time in school
potential danger of that decision.
attention deficit disorder You were but made tremendous contributions
I allj having difficulty putting this right to suggest that the fiance speak to the world. Children with ADD
injustice behind me and am worried to the doctor who diagnosed the girl. need parents who are understanding
sick at the prospect of the upcoming
But you missed the mark when and'patient.
'
summer visit. I wou ld ce rtainly you told her to )&lt;eep the guy because
"Unsure" should talk to someone
appreciate hearing anything you her child will grow up and be gone whd has walked in her shoes. She
have to say.-- BAFFLED AND soon and she co uld be alone.
shoJtd not marry a man just to avoid
He requested that our son be BEATEN BY FAM ILY · COURT
Children with ADD have been beirig lonely, Her child's needs must .
allowed to visit him . I refused IN POMONA, CALF
through enough pain. They should- be addressed. I hope she will reconbecause it did not seem like responDEAR
BAFFLED AND it 'I have to endure a cruel stepparent sider. staying with this guy and give
sible parenting to send a minor outBEATEN : You have tl)e right to who has no understanding of their her llaughter every opportunity to
side the country to visit a ·fugitive. I appeal the judge's decision, and I
problem . My daughter is 13 and has have a balanced life. -- UPSET IN
believe my ex-husband truly loves urge you to do so. Also, consider
ADD.
SAN DIEGO
his son. but heaven only knows what anqther. lawye r. Meanwhile, I have
She is a joy 'to me, but raising her
DEAR SAN DIEGO: , You've
he would be teaching him about the feeling that you do not trust your
has been hard work. Even so-called written a letter that will give hope .to
integrity and accountability
husband to return ·your son should norrmil children don't pay attention all ~ents whose children are strugThe matter wa5 taken to family you allow him to go to a foreign all the time, don· t do chores its soon
glin~ with attention deficit disorder.
court. llosL The judge said he could country to visit. By all means. go
as they are asked, and can·seem lazy. Your• answer was more thorough
not see any relationship between my with him.
Kids with ADD are like this all the .than,~Dine, and I an\ grateful to you
ex-husband 's criminal hehavior and
Dear Ann Landers: I'm writing time. Albert Einstein and Thomas for M-iting.
.
hi s ri ghts as a (ather, nor did he think about "Unsure in Baltimore," whose
Edison are thought to have had
Dear
Readers: Remember that·
it strange that my ex did not appear . fiance did npl get along with ·her ADD
humqro~s letter suggesting other
in court for fear of being arrested. I

Dear• Ann Landers: My story
begi ns like a million others. I married in good faith , but after the first
few years and the birth of a child, it
was apparent that the happy uniol\
had gone to hell in a hand basket.
Because I djd not want to raise our
ch ild in an abusive and crazy home,
'I got a divorce. Family court awarded me custody. My husband was
given vis i_tation rights.
.
Last year, my husband fled to a
foreign co untry to avoid prosecution
. for income- tax evas ion (si·x counts
·and millions of dol lars with a ring of
other criminals).

"drugs" besides Viagra that might be
helpful for men? The list included
such gems as "Directra," for men
who· won't ask · for directions, and
"Projectra," for men who have difficulty finishing household repair projects. I just learned the author of that
delightful essay is Barry R~bin , a
writer in Downington, Pa.
Ann Landers' booklet, "Nuggets
and Doozies," has everything from
the outrageous!~ funny to . tiJe
poignantly insightful. Send a self
addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money order f6r
$5.25 (this includes postage and
handling) to; Nuggets, c/o Aim Landers,' P.O, Box 11562, Chicago, Ill.
60611 -0562. (In · Canada, se rrd
$6.25.) To find out more abo ut Ann
Landers and read her past -columns,
visit · the Creators Syndicate we~
page at www.creators.com.

-----Community Calendar-----

r...;===;;;...-=_._...,...,...,===========-'

Dear Aunt Maude , ·
party hours. Seems that every! . th ought about yo u yes terday body knew everybody in the
as I drove, throug h the bu sin ess entire hi gh sc hoo l .back in th ose
· sec ti on oi· Middleport. Orange day s. Somehow · it · just does n't
and black i.lags I ~ned the street as work tha.t way today. Oh well.
a welcome ges ture to the Middl e- you know they do say that bigge r
port High School Alumni who is better.
Incidentall y, I ran into Bob
will he holdin g th eir annual
reunion Saturday night.
The Parker out at Pamida,and he tells
fl ags are an impress ive sight me his wife, Fran, is rec uperating
whi ch should really warm · the from surgery on both eyes. It 's
he.arts of the alumni who attended been diffic ult but she is ge tting
high sc hoo l ' neat h the Orange along well-just takes time , you
and the Bl ack.
kn ow.
Alth o ugh yo u ne ver talked .
I believe . you probably met
much about education, I feel cer- Fran and Bob on one of your vistain th at at one tim e you did men- its here. A nic;e couple and Fran
lion th at you were a graduate of is one of my favc;&gt;rite piano play ~
Middleport High . Probably so. ers.
.
You certainly didn ' t get all of
Fran and Bob are enjoying
your wisdom and knowledge retirement these day s. They siart
from th e "sc hool of hard knocks". · their day s late and end them late .
Nope. Some of those dedica ted. Whatever works.
teac hers at Middl eport Hi gh obviIt 's too bad you aren ' t getting
ousfy gave you a hel pi n' hand .
back to Meigs County for the
By the way, Cinda Sauer Har- alumni, Aunt Maude. You ' d be
ri s me ntioned that . the high pleased with the appearance of
school 's class of 1964 which will Pomeroy these days . The town is
be markin g its 35th anniversary decked out in a variety of decoraSaturday night will be havi·ng a ti ons which make it quite attrac . sp~cial party for class members tive.'
and their spouses Saturday after The decorations have bee n in
noo n from I to 4 p.m.. at the place for. a month or so no·w and I
Middleport fire station . Cinda am abs olutely amazed that there
says that special party was a last appears to have been no vandal.minute thing· so hopefully all of ism to thi s point. That would be
the class members will gel word a shame. Getting the town lookbefore Saturday.
ing so good has been a lot of
Cind a asked if you would pass work and destruction comes so
on word about the part y 10 a easy and there . are people who
classmate Johnny Brightly who, destroy with absolutely no purit seems, lives in yo ur nec k of the pose.
I believe the Pomeroy alumni
wood s these days.
Perhaps , yo u· can locate him who .will be coming into iown
and adv ise him of the party since thi s weekend for their reunion
th e class wants to rea lly good will be pleased to see the old
turn ou t Saturday afternoon as · home town lookin' so good.
well as Saturday ni ght.
Well, Aunt Maude , I' ll close
Cinda say s muSi c and refresh - for now. The biggie , of course, is
ment s will be featured at the that you try to get in touch with
party and th e class is in vit ing Johnny Brightly. I' ll appreciate it
other Middl epo rt High grads Who and I know Cinda will too. And
were in school there at the same no matter what, Aunt Maude , do
tim e as the Class of '64 to sto p by try lb keep smiling .
the fire stati on also during .th e

".
The Community Cale ndar is
POMEROY - Town and Coun- meetipg, 1·607 Nye Ave ., Pomeroy, Ave.
published as a free service to non- try EXPO, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at · open discussion.
profit groups wishing lo announce 'the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
SUNDAY
, meetings and spec ial ev~ nt s. The
SATURDAY
RACINE - Meigs Coop hymh
·calend ar is not designed to promote FRIDAY
STIVERSVILLE - Hymn sing, sing, Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Racin.e ·
sales or fund raisers of any type .
PORTLAND- Lebanon Town- Stiversville Community Church, Pentecostal Church,
i
Items are printed only as space per- ship Trustees, 7 a.m. Friday, town- 7:30 p.m. Saturday night. DelivMONDAY
mils ·and cannot be guaranteed 10 $hip building. ·
ered aQd Joe McCloud to sing.
RACINE - Racine America'6
. be printed a specific number of
POMEROY
Closed
AA
big
Legion
Post 602, Memorial Day
d.ays.
·· .
POMEROY- Caring and shar- book tudy meeting, 8 p.m. '. services, 10 a.m. ~onday at Veter' ng support group, Thursday, .(
Church •. 161 Mulberry ans Memorial Park i~ Racine.
· p.m. Meigs Senior Center. .James
Soulsby, sheriff, to speak on teleTHURSDAY
phone scams and fraud.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
You are invited to tfie grand Up,enirlq
Garden club, 8 p.m . Thursday, FRIDAY .·
home of Delores Frank. Program
PORTLAND - RLDS Church
BARGAIN
'
by Maxine Whitehead .
located on Portland-Racine Road, Located at 503 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio
co mmunity music and praise sesTuesday, June 1st thru Saturday, June 5th .
POMEROY - AA meeting , sion . Public invited, Friday, 7 p.m.
................ Cutt:bia
also At-Anon, 7 pm. Sacred Heart Music by The Whites, The Daileys,
~
at 9aoe a.m. Tue8daJ',
ut
·
Catholic Church, 161 Mulberry and The Carmel Church . Group.
Ave., Thursday.
. R~eshmanls will ·be served.and door prozes ~I be given away daily.
Refreshments.
•
~ ~ olfer new and used clothing, new gift ltt!J!S, candles, tools, new and
POMERQY - Preceptor Beta
POMEROY - Decorating for
used furniture, appliances, flowers and other mi.lc Items.
Beta Chapter, Beta . Sigma Phi Pomeroy" Alumni Association ban..:·
Store hours: Mon thru Fri 9:00 am to 3 pm
Sorority, picnic, 6:30 Thursday, quet, 6:30 p.m. Friday, at Meigs
~~
t, ami C,_Jr u •Ill
home of Joan Corder. Members to High School. cafeteria,
Roger
Mlll11ey/Owner
Donna MeadowS/Manager
take covered dish ,
10
......
•
'
992-3894
POMEROY - Woman 's AA

----

c.n-117

.J-•

·. 'i'

q~

Sign class offered

This Memoria] Week-en or the Best in Summertime eating!!
Florida

• Autoinii!C
Air Conclllonlng

• I

Red, Ripe

• Vortec 4300 V-6 Power
• ZR2 Suspension Pllg•
• Power Windows a Loclul

• AMIFM Casntht
• Alumln1111 Whitis
• Loldedl

~5,950*

1' 151XTR~ME
I•

.

.
• Air Conditioning

• AMIFM Cuaette

I,

•
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 254

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Man pleads in fatal Athens County crash
20,
teen
whose body was put In car trunk
By M.R. i&lt;ROPKO
Aasoclllted Pre" WrHer
AKRON (AP)- The family of an 18-year-old Akron woman found
slain in the trunk of her car says there was.nothing they knew about her character or friends that might have lead to her death.
"-We were fairly dose growing up, and I have a lot of good memories of
her," said Justin Hill, 21,lhe brother of Hannah Hill. "She never would hurt
anyone. It's so hard to comprehend that somebody would want to do something to her."
·
·
But police on Thursday charged a ml!" she knew with aggravated mur~

.

.

Bond was set at $2 million for Denny Frederick Ross, 20, of Akron, during his.appearance in Akron Municipal Court. He pleaded innocent
·Potice Maj. Paul Callahan described Ross as an acquaintance of the vic.tim. He said Ross became a suspect lifter Akron police detectives began
interviewing friends of Miss Hill.
Detectives interviewed him Wednesday nigh~ then obtained a warrant
and searched his apartment at 3 a.m. Thursday. Ross wM arrested there.
Callahan said there is a possibility other charge&amp; could be filed against
Ross. He said no other arrest is anticipated,
.
"-We do know he wM an acquaintance of Miss Hill's. But how close the
I re'latioruihipwas, we're not aware of thai," Callahan said.
Summit' cbunty Medical Examiner Dr. Marvin Platt has supplied autopsy results to Akron police. But Callahan declined to discuss the cause of
death. He said some autopsy results are pending lab work,
Nor would he discuss any possible motive. Ross is on probation on his
· guilty plea April 21 in Summit County Common Pleas Court toJiatficking
in cocaine.
·
Miss Hill's body was found Wednesday in the trunk of her par~ed car,
which had been ticketed by police last Friday while police were supposed to
be searching for the vehicle. She had been reported missing Thursday of last

The driver of a car involved in a Feb.
14 crash in Athens County which claimed
the life an 18-year-old Long Bottom
woman pleaded guilty Wednesday morning to charges of involuntary manslaughter, driving while intoxicated and criminal damaging.
Pleading guilty wM Teddy Carpenter:
21, Athens, who was facing a trial in
Athens County Common Pleas Court on
charges
, of aggravated vehicillar homi.

cide, aggravated vehicular 85Saul~ reckAuthorities stated that Carpenter was
less operation, leaving the scene of an the driver of a 1994 Chevrolet Beretta
involved in the wreck. According to a
accident and breaking and entering.
The crash resulted in the death o( State Highway Patrol report, the car was
Jenifer Sellers, a 1998 graduate of South- , traveling eastbound on Johnson Road
ern High School, who was a passenger in · near The Plains at an estimated speed of
Carpenter's car.
85 miles per hour when it .slid off the
. The prosecution will recommend Car- road in a curve, went airborne and landpenter receive a j.year prison sentence, ed on its top before sliding into a creek
permanent operator's license suspension near the entrance to Athens High School.
and restitution.
Jenifer Sellers

Racine veterans memorial seeks expansion . Syracuse man dies
Racine Ameri.can Legion Post 602 is seeking to dou. ble the names of local veterans displayed at the Racine
Veterans Memorial next to the post across from Star
Mill Park. .
.
Currently 266 names are now on the monument and
the post hopes to have no fewer than S32 names by
Memorial Day next year, according to project chairman
Tom Wolfe.
Wolfe said many people mistakenly believe that veterans must be or have been members of the American
· Legion to have their names on the monument.
The requirements are tbatthey must have been a res-

ident or former resident of Meigs ·eounty, he said. Veterans status must be determined by a copy of the veteran's DD214 showing rank, name, branch o[ se rvice and
dates of service, ~e said.
·
The cost of putting a name on the monument is $100
with checks payable to Racine Veterans Memorial
Fund. Checks can be mailed to Racine Home National
Bank, c/o Kelly Eichinger, PO BOX 68, Racine OH
45771.
In recent years, the American Legion has developed
the area with the monument into apark featuring a shelter.house and picnic tables.

Racine teen crowned Miss Ohio
. Erica Amott of Racine was aowned ·1999 Miss Ohio
River in pageant ceremonies held recenUy at Marietta College.

after car-motorcycle
· collision Thursday
A 30-year-old Syr~cuse man
who worked with the emergency
medical services in Meigs and Gallia counties was killed Thursda~
when the motorcycle he operated
collided with a car at the intersec;
tion of state routes 7 and 143.
The Galli a-Meigs Posi of the
State Highway Patrol identified the
victim as Mark A. Phillips, whd
was airlifted from the scene of the
5:20 p.m. crash by MedAight to
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Hunt.
ington, W.Va., where he was pronounced dead.
Troopers saicl Phillips was
:;outhbound on 7 when ·a north~
bound car driven by Qinton B;
Hendricks, 18, Rutland, failed to
see the oncoming motorycle and
attempted to make a left turn onto
143 in front of Phillips. Phillips:
motorcycle .struck the right rear of
Hendri cks' car, ejecting Phillips
from the moiorcycle.
The motorcycle was severely
damaged and towed from the
scene, while the car driven by Hendricks, who was not injured in the
crash, was moderately damaged.
Troopers said an investigation
into the accident is co.ntinuing. It
marked the second traffic fatality
of the year in Meigs County, the
patrol said.

She will now represent Monroe, Belmon~ Washington,
Mtigs and Athens Counties in the Miss Ohio Scholarship
Program, June 11-19, at Mansfield.
The Miss Ohio River pageant is a local preliminary to
Miu Q!lio and Miss America Scholarship Programs.
w~~
,
Erica is the 19-year-old daughter of Jenna and John
Three people called police dispa~ehers about the car Tuesday night after Amott, and a graduate of Southern High School. She curseeing a television report about Hill but were told to call back in the morn- rently attends Columbus State Community College where
ing. The next. morning a city worker callc:d police who then found
Hill in the she is majoring in early childhood deveiOpmenL
.
In the competition held at Marietta, Erica presented a
vocal solo. ·She was the winner in both the 'swimsuit comCallahan said lhe handling of lhe case by police is under invcsliption.
"-I'm not going to malCe ·any eXCU5eS. I've !'tile~ ~Thare's ' pe\(tiound interview portion of the contesL
c:OOtellant's' platfOrt!f it hflping a\ildre(l grow and
wme human error there," Mayor Don Ptusqilellic' said.
'--;·
·
in
conjunction
)!lith that -ohe hils started a program called
He admi11ed that he ·has had problems wil!lthe Safety Commli'nicatlons
"Esteem
Team.,
The program is geared to teach self
IDiivision- ajoint dispatching center for police, tire and emergency medawareness and self appri:ciation to young children:
·
ical services ., - since it opened in 1995.
.
In the Miu Ohio pageant at Mansfield, Erica will be
·The victim's mother, Kimberly .Hill, silid the last time she saw her participating in the talent, swimsuit, evening wear .and
daughter wa5 May 19. She recalled that her daughter was speaking with interview competitions. .
·
someone on the telephone, then at about 10:30 p.m. di:cided to leave in her
Contestanla between the ages of 17 and 24 compete for
car.
more than $40 million in scholllf'hips annually, thus mak"-She .seemed a little scared;" Mrs. Hill said Thursday. "-As her mother, ing the Miss Amerjca Organization the world's largest
I could sense it. It's jusllhe way she acted. She pulthe phone back on the scholarship program for women . .
Mlaa Ohio River 1999, Erica Arnott
thing and said, 'Bye Mom, I'll see you later."'
Mrs. Hill and her husband, Elza "-Ed" Hill, said they do not kno~ Ross
and were not aware that their daughter knew him. They described their
point is reached, a NATO-led force on Kosovo's
For now, the Qinton administration still hopes
I da.ugttter as a charming, friendly person who was anticipating an opportu- By ROBERT BURNS
AP
Mllltlry
wrt111r
.
Perimeter
could
move
in
and
finish
off
the
Serb
milMilo5evic
will cave - either agree to NATO's
nity to get a full-time job.
WASHING'ION (AP) - O.arles Wald was itary without resorting to full-scale warfare. They demands or simply to give up and pull his troop&amp; out
reviewing yet another F-16 fighter jet's video tape of !lilY it could be done by summer's end, in order to ge! of lhe southern Serbian province, allowing the
WESTERVILLE (AP)- An eighth-grader who rubbed poison ivy on yet another 2,(JOO.pound N.(J'() bomb turning yet the hundreds of thousands of displaced ethnic Alba- refugees to return under the protection of a peaceher science teacher's chair has been suspended for the rest of the S;Chool another Serb army barracks into yet another fireball nians back into their villages before the onset of keeping force.
· .
1-vt:~~r, the
said.
.
in Kosi&gt;vo - yet more evidence, he claimed, that winter,
·In pursuit of that aim, NATO w~lanes are
An11ela Pharo, 14, believed the teacher treated her differently because NATO is winning and Slobodan Milosevic is losing.
Trainor, who co-au.thored "The Generals' War," accelerating the pace of attacks and taking the w11r
ts ...alan, explained her mother, Angie Pharo. The family, which is Viet"You've got to wonder how much more he can on the 1991 Gulf W;lr, called the British approach closer to Milosevic. bn se~eral .rece.nt days: NATO
namese, is fighting the suspension.
take," mused the Air Force major general in what "clever and very doable," although the NATO force bombs have'targeted a pn:s1denhal v1lla outs1de Bel·
The I 0-day sus~nsion from Her- sounded like a hint of ITustratioq.
should assume the Serbs would not just roll over.
grade that includes what Wald called a command
itage Middle School in this ColumIndeed, after more than nine weeks of bombing.
U.S. intetugence officials claim Milosevic's mili- and control bunk~r. M1losev1c apparently was not
bus suburb began on Monday. The what more can NATO do, short of a ground war, 10 tary advisers have told him they could hold out there, but Wald srud .the .at~ks would ~ert htm to
last day of school is June 4.
break the Yugoslav leader?
against a NATO-led ground force for months by using the fact that NATO IS h1tllng hard at h1s levers of
Officials declined to say when the
Milosevic's indictment by a United Nations tri- guerrilla tactics of hit-and-run attacks in Kosovo.
power.
incident took place or discuss a pri- bunal for atrocities in Kosovo might make MiloseMilosevic is !!pending much of his time in
Before the NATO bombing began in March,
2 Sections - 16 Pages
vic even less likely to capitulate, retired Marine bunkers supplied with food, water and electriciiy, many in the Ointon administration had believed that
Thursday.
·
Corps Lt. Gen. Bernard Trainor said Thursday. That, acwrding tb American inteiUgence reports that say. bombing threats alone would bring Milosevic back
The teacher, Tom Northrup, did in turn, raises the likelihood that NPJ'O will have to he has lost touch with the reality of conditions fac- to the bargilining table to settle the Kosovo crisis.
not develop a rash. He had earlier go beyond airstrikes alone, he said.
ing lhe Serb population.
When that didn 't happen, they expected that a few
pointed out to his class that the
If NATO cannot break Milosevic's will to resist,
Wald, too, wonders if Milosevic's military com- days or weeks of bombing would do .the trick.
· leaves near the school were some- what then? AIIOIIIC point, many argue, the cumula- manders are giving him the full picture of the bomb Wrong again. '
· •
thing to avoid.
·
live damage from bombing Serbia end to end will damage, but he doubts it would make much differAs far back as April 6, Pentagon spokesman
· virtually paralyze Serb military and police forces in ence even if they did tell him how badly Serbia is Kenneth Bacon said of Milosevic: " He's rattled." ·
KOtSOVO. They will lose the ability to fight effective- being pummeled.
Six days later, Wald ~!aimed; "He's starting
The Daily Sentinel
ly either the Kosovo Uberation Army or a NJUO"He's a lot more willing to sacrifice his people to hurt."
will not be
led international force that might enter Kosovo to and capabilities," Wald said, "So once again, it's
On April 27, the NATO commander, Gen. W~­
llonday MJ that
Lottenes
return refugees to their homes.
,
hard to judge his will, but. it certainly isn:t h~ to ley aark. said; "The noose ... is tightening." And on
employf!e• C.n ob.l.enre
Britain is making a case to its NATO partners- judge how much of h1s capab1hty 1s be1ng May 24, N.(J'() Secretary-General Javier Solana
ORIO
without
alttlplcte sucass, so fat -that when this destroyed."
told an interviewer Milosevic was "cracking."
the
llemorlal
Day
.
ft0411·
Pkk3: 2-S-7; Pkk4: 2-Q-1-S
li
' '
.
O.ekeye 5:4-12-16-22-28
W.\'A.
D1111y 3: 4-8-6; Dally 4: 8-2-2-2
c l'l990hlo Vlltey Pubtllllt.. Co.
· WASHINGTON (AP) - A new
In the norihem hemisphere, there is
laser-produced map of the red planet · a huge basin that dips down' to about.
shows that Mus is a land of CJttremes, six miles below the average elevation
with the liighest, lowest and smoothetsl of MillS.
land fonns found in the solar syslem.
Maria Zuber, a professor II MassaA three-dimensional map of Mars, chtisetts Institute of Technology and a
drawn from measurements taken by oo-aulhor of the mapping project, said
the Mus Global Surveyor program, the basin "is consistent with the foralso shows the planet to be pear- . mllion of a plst ocean."
·
· shaped, with towering volcanic moun,
Whether o~ not Mars ever had
llinS in thnoulh, and a smooth low- . enough water to fill such a basin is still
land in the north.
unconfirmed, she said, although the
There'allboul19to 20 miles differ- area is amooth and fealureless, as if
·
TOURISM
- Aaalmnt
CIIClC between.the highest and the low- sea tapped for an eternity.
. . . Vl111880, joined by Nicholl! M~, South.-! Ohio
est poinll on Mus, about 1 1/2 times
Zu.ber ~d Mars probably hM quite uv. to the Ohio Btcantsnnl•l Comml. .lon, paid • vlalt to Melga
tha
of elevation seen on t:larth. .a bit of water, trapped .beneath ~ · County Tuaeca.y •fhlrnoon to •ttenc11111 lnfonMI o•lhll'lng aponNid David Smith, a NASA scientist north and south poles • tee. She esu- acnc1 by the Ohio Bicentennial Comml.._lon. Plans for painting I
and the t.l.u)har of a study appear- niated thai the combined deposiiS of blm to commemonde the 2003 blcent.nnl•l ·•ncl tfle etrorta of
ina today in lhe jQ~Jmal Science.
water at the two poles would equal SOUtham High Schoollltudenta Jim Alley, Joah a..riiOII, Melt WitSmith Mid that Mteroid or other about 1.5 limes the water frozen in the _.., J .R. H•Uand O.K. Smith, directed by tiiiCher Aaron s.y,., to
space rock smulted'into Mars billions glaciers and lakes of Greenland.
....aore two Pomeroy corporation atone were 111n000 the 1ten1f
of yan qo and blasted out 1 crater
That qu1ntity, said Zuber, would dlacuaaed. Attending were, pictured above, V.111aeo, M~.
deeper thari Mount Everest is high.
equal about 40 pera:nt of the amount Meigs EtC Gr•nt Coordln,e tor Juatln Diddle, Miu'y Powell of ""
On the other extreme is 1 volcanic of liquid water estimated to have once Cheetw/Shllde HllltorlCIII Aaeoclatlon, County Tourlam Director
mountaiJI, called Olympus Mons, that flowed on Mars. She said much of this Karin Powell, merchllnt Bobble Kerr, Chllmber VIce Piwaldant 101n al11101117 mila above the averwater was probal!ly "lost 10 space" Judy Wllll•m•, County Comnllsaloner Jeff Thornton, Pomaoot
!'f': elevation of Mus, makinJ il the over lhe 4 billion-year history of the Mli'Chllnt. Aaaoclatron Praaldent Annie Chapman Md tourtam
~in the IIOiar system. · planeL
committee member Patty Plckena.
'

· • Sport Su1penalon

~~I

Brand New 1999 Chevy
8-Serles LS Extended ~b
•CruiHITIH
• Aluminum Whetla

&lt;

*Brand New 1999 Chevy
s-Serlet Pickup
.

...

D"

Laser ry~apping shows Mars
Is pear-shaped, experts say

• Nlctlr Equlppedl

.

' XTREME Appell'lriCI Pkg.
•1S" Aluminum Whllll

• Well Equlppedl

,.,..._..ta-

-.=

2 LOCATIQNia·
MILE NORTH OF POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE, MASON, WV
PHONE (304) 773-5721
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

-Page4

Today's Sentinel

• Aamotl KIJIIII Enlry
1 Tof:aur L-.cJI · .

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Ctllltle

Remember Bob~ Stocks Each Retail Store
Daily W'ath Plants Fresh From the -Greenhou.se.
We Still Have A Great Selection Of Your ·
Favorite Bedding Plants and Hanging Baskets.

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; LQW: 60s

Student suspended for polson Ivy attack

~· crilhttlflllt

• Vortlc 4300 V-6 Power

Variety of Colors

Brand New 1999 Chevy
8-Serles LS Ext. Cab 4x4

Brand ~w 1999 ·.
CheVy ZR2 4X4 Pickup

Jumbo

6 1/2 Inch Potted Geraniums

Healthy bones, Page 8
Astronauts gear for docking, Page 12

Portland eliminates
Utah to advance to
NBA conference finals

Good Afternoon

~8,950*

.
·~~

Juicy"

Half-Runner

qa,950*

British film. ·star Juli e Christie
was born in Assam, India, on April
14, 1940.

.

Yellow Jackets to hold "Meet the Team", Page 7

Today: Sunny
High: 801; Low: 501

Sports

NATO insists it's winning but asks how long Milosevic can hold on

• VQrtac 4300 V-6 Power.

•

May 28, 1IMID

Weather

m

The Meigs County Adult Basic
and Literacy Education Program
meet on Thursday evenings from
6:30 to 8· p.m. at the Pomeroy
· ABLE Center at 33105 Hiland
Road , also known as the Community Action /JTPA Building .
Thi s is a 12 -week course ,
beg inning June 3, and is open to
persons age 18 or o ver. Since
space is limited to 12 , interested
persons must call to regis ter by
Tuesday, June I.
The class is free . The number
to call is (740) 99 2-6247, Mon day through Thursday, from 9
am. to 2:30 p.m. or Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday from 4
to 8 p.m.

Picnic Head uarters
Fresh Vine Ripened

~~

'

Come On Over To Bob's•• .-

"Great

....

. Friday

an

:MOO EASTERN ''VENIJE,

GAWPOUS, OHIO
PHONE (740) 44&amp;-1171
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

. I

,,

,, "

·hi•

4

••

I

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