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•

Page 12 • The Oai!J Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

Wednesday, May 27, 1998

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

Thursday
Weather

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

er rom

edma, entertamed and

CathOliC Women's
Club honors mother

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

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

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

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

Today: Sunny
High: 80; Low:60

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

Tomorrow: Cloudy.
High: 80; Low:60

-,

.

'

I

"News policy

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

,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single Copy. 35 Cents

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

.....
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Dally from 11 a.m.-1
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"C)~ GET YOll IN, GET YOU Ouf &amp; GET YOU HOME TO TilE MORE IMI'ORTAN1'.111LI\IGS IN UFE!".

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GALLON

KUFT

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

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

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charge in part because the child had

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

.

I

6 PACK, 12 OZ. CDS

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

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

Ll.

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

f~lonies."

&lt;:

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

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

Student .threats being treated
seriously across the state

I

FOODLAIID CEREALS 3 FOI

-

~

Bulls .
wallop
Pacers
Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs County's

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

"' • •

Sports

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

10:

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

•

May 28,1998

I

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

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

nre

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

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

.. .

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

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentine

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

shoots bleach at students on·bu•

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

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

Lotteries

IIURf.-

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

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

mentphoto)
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Pick 3: 974; Pick 4: 6393
Super Lotio: 3-8-20-38-39-47
Kldter: 536949

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

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

�Thursday, May 28,1998

Comntentary.
. The Daily Sentinel
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'Collapse'
a.n

--

and SqUad Cf.l.tl'ci•ed

is
Europe is comina biCk.
Latin America ~ suqina. Alilnl Me
tatruclllrinl· The &amp;lobal eccnomy is
hilling on six ..- seven cylinders. W'tll
everyone live ~y ever Iller in a
Friedmanesquc world?
Not quire. There is 1hal hrtina
boom-and-bust, lll!lltet-and-bu.~iness
cycle. Looking at lhe 9000 Dow,
Friedman says: ''There will be a(~
market) collapse, lhere will be recessions. 'l'hings arc not soing to go on
always as weD as they n now. They
can't There is no possibility. But that
(is) a laiipaay cbeck. The long-nm
pospect is very favonblc." Friedmln
also notes !hal goYCI1UIICIIt-oriented
economists, like his JOOd friend Galbraith, hid lhe picnR all wrong.
Says Galbraith: "We are Mving a
characteristic. classical s~ulllive
episode, mergm and acquiSitions, a
multiplicalion of stock mul&lt;et institutions, and muiUIII funds. We have f.mom mutual funds than we have inlelligence to cover, and a speculative situation in common stocks - all of
whic:h should give us pause." Gal·
braith knows lhe eccnomic dialogue•is
on Friedmanire tmain, but if and as we
have a crash, a depression, a recession
-- the lllllltet will lose prestige, and 50
will his good friend Friedman. The
government will !hen provide Gal·
braithian help. ·
•
· How to inla'plet lhe remarks of ·
these eco11omic luminaries in their llle
80s? .
Alrematives: (I) They've seen a lot,
heed !heir words; (2) scary .......
like "collapse," "depression" llid
"speculative episode" trip too easily
from lhe lllOUihs of econOmists; or (3)
they don't Fl it; Ibm hu been funda.
mental change; this mul&lt;et-driven
boom isn't going to collapse.
.
I lean, only barely, towlld alternative 3.
BaiWao .,.,.,a..,......,
at the Aw•kw EIApalle IJllti.
lute,lltbe.....,..ri."V-.MaJRr
Mlllt" 81111 II tbe bolt rl. tbe weekly

IND.

launches

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~
• ~. ;;. Concerning the May 22 article penaining to Livia Nyc Simp~on-Poffen!b!liJer's 1909 book The Battle of Point Pleasant, it must be poin'ted out 1hat
"'ti!Was not the fii'St battle in the American Revolution, but rather the conflict ·
Lexington, Mass. on April 19, 1775. Unfortunately, this claim is from the
ult of. attempting to link oneself to an impo"ant event· in the past and was
iStirted in I889 wilh 1he publishing of Virgil U:wis' book The History of
.~st Virginia.
.
t ·.:When western Virginia counties decided to detach from the Confederacy
!dJring the Civil War, West Virginia found itself cut from Virginia's Revolu~i!tnary past. Only by stretching credulity can one accept the resulting claim
;)~~~put the battle and its relationship to the Revolution. While many of lhe
!:sr.&amp;wnee panicipating in the battle were anned with British supplies, it was
•iiDl the Crown thatinstilated lhe incident. It was the plan (known as Dunl:morc•s War) set in motion by James Murray, Earl of Dunmore, that intimi·
td'ated lhe natives into protecting their homeland and hunting grounds from
;Oilining white agricultural advancement.
t, ~.
Juan Lisle
!Y ' ·
·
SyranR
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• By The AIIOCIIted Prell

in the lower 60s.
Saiurday... Partly cloudy with a
: &amp;utheastem Ohio
chance
of ·showers and thunder·
• , This afternoon... Mostly sunny.
• Highs in the mid 80s. West wind 5 to stortns. Highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday... Parily cloudy. Lows in
. •to mph.
•
.
• Tonight ..Ciear. Lows in the low- the lower 60s and highs in the mid
80s.
.
er 60s. Light and variable wind.
Monday... Partly cloudy with u
: • Friday... Sunny. Highs in the upper
. I!Os. '·
.
'
chance ·of showers and thunder·
slortns. Lows in the lower 60s and
Extended forecast ...
· Friday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows highs iti the mid 70s.

}tot and sticky on Friday
' By The Aaaoclated Prell .
._. It's warming up across Ohio.
•·. · And it will become sticky. too. as
the humidity increases on Friday
under temperatures in the upper 80s.
the National Weather Service said.
. .. Overnight lows will be generally
• h'lthe 60s.
, • The record-high temperature for
:ihis .date at the ·columbus weather
' 51Dtion was 94 degiees in 1911 while
the record low was 36 in 1971. Sun·
set tonight will be at S:50 p.m. and
sunrise Friday at 6:06 a.m.
Across the nation
. A ~~ionary front moving off the
Atl:intif coast meant clearing ;md hot
weather for most of the East today,
while rain was .threatening parts of
.tile swe)!!jripg Midwest and ~e West.

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f~Omeroy
pride lacking
Dear Editor,

·t=::

ldl'k
·
he
fP
d heM ha Soc'
I e to wnte to 1 town
orne roy an .t
ere nt
_1ety
~ • howHt'JhuhnSc~~l sadw-mnaotnytopeevoepnleseewetheret·rresctumhoomlgcotloorstheof paluurpmlemanodf
. '""' ~·~
Jllite or a banner welcoming them back being displayed. Only two stores
IJiowthepurpleandwhitellag-FabricShopandAnderson's··Thanks'
:•:As Middleport flew the colors black and orange banners high. Then you
~r why people feel the way they do. You talk about commu~ity pride.

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~ICfC was it?

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abt:wdOUneserockets.
Moreover. U.S. hawks determined 10
have Olina replace the Soviet Union Ill
America's stralcgic adversaiy took lhe
. opportunity 10 denounce the Clit*lrl
Admi · .. . pol' of
ntS1rlllton s
IC)'
"enpge-

== ::~~;:ketsau,:: g:; au=lelau==~~ =~=.1:-•rr:.-:~
madesurelhiiiOiinrsesateDite-launcbersworted,it'salsotruethattheUnited
States needs fore~ to put its sateJ.
lites iilto orbit bec!Mtse it doesn't have
enoughlaunchersofitsownandOiina's
are ct&gt;-w.
--.--

The vay same day that the House

elusions, Gingrich has made the rip.
policy choice in crellling.a IJit*tjsan
IICiect commiaee 10 investiple Olina-

61peu;entina0alluppoll-and58percentiUIJPOI\bappoiJ ..t... ofupecill
JIII*'C'IIOr. Whlll the case needl, lhough,

I * - and
the lead role fNiti'J is.-...~.
from BilliOn and latdil• it to Rep.
""~ Kotakwlue II
lite
Ollis Co• R-Calif.
..-.... J a..- .....,. ..._ 1 =.:=~J:
41 1 f'*•
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·-C....;.;:-)
Oingrich abo lw dtuwl thlll the ........,.. .._
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taking

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By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
ening probepideiitic hit the py commwtity firs1, tized to the pain and sufferina they
a
••
..u
Nna
Service
lems
of
the
••
then the intravenous drug IIWI and inflict on others by the violence thlll
WASHINGTON - It's an epi- youth of this
finally the hela'Oiexual community, proliferate in the mass media. Too few
•
demic.
nation
is
she lllid. In the same way, the youth of them live in homes where sclf-dilThat's 1111' word people an: starting growing fast.
violence that fint hit poor inner city ciplinc and rapCc;t for others ans held
to use to de~be the string of school
Tyio
neipbodJoods is now lllminl rural out IS lhe .eel melllft of a penon's
shootings that have shatren:olhe false wee~s aao.
communities into killin1 ftclds.
worth.
·
sense of security of people who live California
•
The poverty and despair of AJneri.
~UII as young people ans now inuft..
JIY The Asaoclated Pr•••
outside America's urban core.
Rep. Muine
ca's ghenos didn't CIUIC the epidemic daled with 11J9Yies, music and tetCvi;~ Today .is Thursday, May 28, the I 48th day o~ 1998. There are 217
Small towns and rural communi· Warm
of urban youth violence. They were sion shows !hal glamorim bad behavillays left tn t~e y~r. .
.
tiel arc experiencing "the second called on the
simply the kindling lhlll made the ior, they 1111111 be exposed to the corn;.
: Today's Highlight In HIStory :
-wave" of this . •
th 'ole
Clinton
inner cities most vvlnenble to the peting idea of RlpOIIIible behavio(.
• On May 28, 1934, the Dionne quintupl'cts -Annette, Cecile, Emiidemic ~atJon .-you :VI nee
WlciNm
adminillntion
5fMlb
ignited by our nation's monl Doina 50 may not be u 11- u
. lie, Mari.e and Yvonne - were born to Elzire Dionne at the family. farm · ~:ner ci~
· · in ~~::C:':~edm: to declare a
and sociil decline. Likewise, lhe via- discoveriiiJ 1 ctn for - · but )I
1ft
Ontano, Canada.
p1e of
1 · de
·
~ 0 th' d 1 .
· . cou
ean ago. n us Vastallllg public: lleltlth emcraency to combat lent ran~p~p~ of younpten in five f.- as the health of our llllion is con;.
n IS 1 e.
wak
urder bee
lhe lead'
•:
~ In 1SJ3, England's Archbishop declared lhe marriaae of Kina Henry
e,:death ft blam:
lng lhe IU!Ji•l fi!C of AIDS infections smalltownuince Cktobcr is roolld in cemed it's just as imponant.
among
Afric;an
Amcric1111.
Bl~~eks
the
social
toxicity
thai
threatens
us
all.
While
the
Clinton
administnlion
J1111 to Anne Boleyn valid.
~
1 , or ac ~-agen.
The chanJing 11111n of the Amai- has bemoaned the .-.1 shootinp al
~ In 1863, the first black regiment from the Nonh left Boston to fight the 'Theout
. halehom80s~deearly ••~· ~ constitute 3' percent of· """!" tJDS
Jn he C' 'I W;
·
Y
ICI
ra~ tn .,....,, · cases in people between the ~p~ of can family and lhe debililllina i11lu- . small town schools and the lfOIVi~
numbcrofyoungblackAIDSvictinls;
• ~n
,.:'sierra Club was organized in San.Franc;iaco.
America almost doubled staned with 13 and 24. And black babies make up ence o f - media on childrea n
I WhoppiiiJ 63 percent of pedillric
the
c;ripplin1
fon:a
thlll
•ve
liven
it
has yet to ~lze either for the
" In 1937. Pre1ident Roosevelt pushed a button in Wuhinaton, D.C., ~ one. ~aht ~:rc lhouJht wete
1
rise
to
the
youth
violenc:c
...........::..
......
,
_
..
_
menace
u• they n.
:
AIDS - · Overall, African Amcri·
~:;~
·· nalint that vehicular ll'iffic could cross the just-opened Golden Gate ~~~~-~:~.:. o.bonlkh ~ cans
comprise
just
I
2
pen:enl
of
the
If! 'd
• C J'&amp; '
UllUW ...... ,
WCC on
1,
just as the HIV virus 1w liven us
The public health of thiJ l1llliolt
ae
1n a hornta.
·
•
N'Jhtl' "Even uall
llllion's
poptlatiotl,
bul3'
percent
of
AIDS.
To
IIOp
the
latest
wave
of
depends
heavily on the well-beint of
, In 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of Britain.
~ thlll
y, we
to
all reponed AIDS CIICI.
youth
violence
1111011J
white
childn:n
our
childien.
Left to be COiiiU1IIIId ""7
;, In 1940, durint World War II. the Belaian army surrendered to ~ "The·---'
AIDS
........_...
....
"
There's a «million betll&gt;een the liiKI 11em lhe
~ ad'
G
~
JC.
_...... .wave
.
..,._,_ amons u"' scourp of AIDS and tbe J'lliiiJ
t•ll 1n1 ennan . orces. .
.
.
· violencci is now
·ng out into Spread of AIDS 11110111 blacks atid the young blacks, ihe fedenlsovemment cult of violence they will 1111f-dcllntet
•;- In 1972,1he Duke ofWtndaor, who had abdtcated the En1hsh throne . Americ • holl
and I-de
·
15 U ~ .
marry Wallis Warfield Simpson, died in Paris at aae 77.
.
cu . ·IICI, youth violence that Ml illfected white llllllltmt both as public health ~· in a spasm of .diw:n:ed bodies and
pncies.
mincls.
:~ In 1977, J6S people were killed when fire riiCed through the BevFr· the~
w.n.:vemty publtc health kids in America's smalltownl.
Epidemics ''lencl to affect a ·most
Whll's needed is a maisive camAnd so, too, will the country.
~ Hills Supper Club in Southaate, Ky.
. ,
~ IMI'• 10, ci.e need for fedaal . vulnerable populilion first and then a paiJII to llem ihe violenc:C and scJf.
·
officials to procllim a public health second and perhipt even a thin!," destructive behavior of youns people.
enterJCIICY to deal with the lifc-threal· Protlrow-Stith nplained. The HIV Too 111any of thi:m have been delensi-

rroday in history

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day. to give the newspapers time to
appeal. A new trial date was not.set.
Ch:id Kister. 27, was accused of
taking $1,750 from a United Mine
Workers oflical and promising to
silence critics of a proposed Buckingham Coal · Co. mine. He was
charged with extortion and theft.

Summer sessions at Meigs High
School will begin June I and continue to June 26 with courses in gener·
al English I and II and integrated
Math I.
Sessions will be held 8:30-11 :30
a.m. and noon-3 p.m.
Session one is for first semester
make-up courses and runs June 1- 12

Kister is a spokesman for the Ohio
University Campus Greens and has
protested the reopening of a road in
the Wayne National Forest. He said
he accepted the money in December
from Locai 1340 President Don Nunley but made no promises. He said he
did not want to refuse the money·and ·
considered it a,llonation to the en vi. ronmental cause.

while s~ssion two is for second
semester make-up courses and runs
June' 15-26. The cla.1ses are designed
for sludents who have not completed
the requirements necessary for a
passing grade.
For more informalion, call lhe
high school' at 992-2158.

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls

Stocks

u:s.

·G'aiilpolls livestock auction results

Veterans Memorial Hospital;
12:44 p.m., Sellers Ridge Road.
Portland. Vincenl Gray, VMH.
Racine squad assisted;
.
8:30 p.m., South Secotid Avenue.
Middleport, Mary Neutzling. VMH,
Middleport squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
2:12 p.m .. Beech Street. Rhonda
Stover. VMH;
9!56 p.m .. volunteer fire depa"ment to Hudson Street, brush fire:
POMEROY
I:09 p.m .. Second Street, Becky
Deweese. VMH.
RACINE
I:27 p.m.• VFD and squad to state
Route 124. structure fire at Ohio River Campgrounds, Larry Monroe owner. no injuries reported. Syracuse
VFD a.~sisted.
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:34 p.m.. VFD to Tuppers Pl,ains
Fire Station, au1omobile fire, Greg
Carpenter owner;
9:38p.m., Sumner Road. Chester.
Leonard Koenig Jr.. St. Joseph's Hospital. Central Dispatch squad assist-

ed. .

.' The Dally Sentmel

•

..~·;;;;;·d;i·~;;a·;~·;.;·;~;;;!'k~ '

rcntlt i•llfv•nce dircd 101'he Daily Sentinel on
I lhlcc. oil or 12 mooth buls. Cmlil will he
· iJ-...,OOcod&gt; week.
No .-rl'"loo by moil pc~mlnC\1 In on:as

I . home Clrrie:f JCNic:c il IYiillhle .
. _ Ntlilhcr I'CIC~N dtc ripa 10 ldjltll rMCI dur·
~ his t1tc sublaiplion period. Sublcriplion rate

· wnafs may tK implcri1cnled tty, chanainJ lhe

: ''durali&amp;t of the INIMc:rlptiOr..
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Student threats ...

MAfLSVascaJmoN
t-MolpC~

•.. ,ll-.lu.............. ........... J21.30

.,

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161'"'-b ............................531.82

__ ...,..c...,.

52~ ,- ........ - .........-JIOS.56

~.

.~.......................... .$29.2.&lt;

I

26,!«11............................$56.68
5211fCCb ..........................$109.12

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Reader Serv1ces

COrractlon Polley

-ow .Jato tboctn 1ft· 111 -

.,

LIOfiAIIDO DICAPRIO

MANIC

LEONARDO DICAPRIO IN
PO"

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

441-0123

H~

Hospital news

'

._,...; lfyoo kaow ofoo emwlo •
_,, .-It t1te _....., at (741) 992•
.lW. Wo. will ~lledi year lofonudon
~ ..~~eo ciMrecdotllfworroaled.

,,

Newa Depai biNilll
'l1oo -

- - II 992-1155, Dtpllri·

edet ••• ll'f::
•~ Mo•opr .......................Ext.

1101

'!-....,.,................................;;;:·~:: :::
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f~ &gt;~Other

SIW.c•

Aol•.. ll 1 ................................ Ex1.11N
Clot I II ................................. Ext. 1113
C IW M&amp;............................. .Exl. 11110

MONUMENT,'
• - " ' Ct'IMI'IINY

. Father
Pbaien,Andrew "Andy"
7/19/37-7/4/96
Seaman Navy
1bank yon Cor the wonderful
days we shared toptber. My
pnyen will be wkh you u1tll
we meet again .

fllhiNWJm Inti

120 w.IIAID at. .:. rum.o,, o
Phaae llft.IS88

__

vtntoo- s• 880S

..__..;...

Galllpolla .:.. 4-cll-0851
.._,._,

Always in our thoughts,
Michael, Brittany, Gina, Nikkie,
Danielle, Karen, Delcie, Thunder
,,,.,.,. Jason

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PCI-11' .
.v

Jtack Sale; Satur:.ay. June
13 II
•
a.m.
: For free on-farm visits, please
call 614-446' 9696.

Is ID be

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Continued from page I ·
and operaling as normal. We p.r'\·
in Springfield. Ore., only inlensitied tected everyone in the building," Df·
a national trend of closer altention to cy said. "The building is absolute~
safe. There is no reason for pani~~ :
school threats.
But a.' word of the threat spre~!l
Meanwhile. in Wauseon in norththrough
school. students began cio(west Ohio, dozens of parents pulled
their children from classes.at a mid· ing parents and parents began calliOg
die school on Wednesday after learn· school officials. By afternoon. abjiqt
ing someone had sent a threatening · half of the 640 studenls in gradeSS
message on the in-school compu1er to 8 had gone home. Darcy said....
"I am sur~ we have kids and pnfsystem.
ents
who are nervous because of dirr
The message. discovered late
society
today." he said.
"'
Tuesday, said "School is going down
School
ot'ticials
were
working·rb
with a big bang on Wednesday."
Burr Road Middle School Princi · track down the identity of the persoh
pal Richard ·Darcy said police and wlio sent the message. Dl!.rcy said lie1
".,
sheriff's deputies searched the build· believes it was a student.
ing Tuesday night and found nothing
unusual. : ~ e said he wanted to hold
KANAUGA DRIVE -IN
classes as usual on Wednesday.
--we wanted 1o keep schools open
1'111., lAT., SUN.
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529

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- none.
· Wednesday discharges- William
Watson. Robert Hoover.
Holzer Medkal Center
DIKharg~ 1 · May 27 Mary
Mollohan. Mrs. Jason Palmer and
son. Juanita Turner; Betty Perry.
Robert Jefflirs,'"'
Birth - Mr. ·and Mrs. David
Faro. son. Gallipolis:
(Published with permission)

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TITANIC

Re1ired Major Knrl Russell of the
United States Marine CO&lt;pS was ~
guest speaker at the Racine Memor·,
ial Day ceremony in Racine. His first.
name was inadve"enlly misspelled iO: •
a repo" on the event in Tuesday'S:
Daily Sentinel.
~

Scipio Township Trustees
Camp set
•·
The Scipio Township Board of
The Eleventh Anoual Tornadc(
Trustees will meet Wednesday. 6:30 . Basketball Camp will .be held u(
p.m. at the Pageville Town Hall.
South.:rn High School June 1-5. 199ft;
from 9 a.m. 10 12 noon for grades 3·
Orange Township Trustees
II inclusive.The cost of the camp i&lt;
Board of Orange Township $35 for pre-registration and S40 th«t
Trustees meeting Tuesday. 7:30p.m. . day ot' the camp. The camp is opert
at the home of Clerk Osic Follrod. 10 all area elementary athletes.
:
Alfred.
Checks should be sent to Howi"
Caldwell. P.O. Box 263, Racine:
R&amp;c:ine OES
Ohio 45771.
•
Racine Chapter 134 Order of 1he
The camp is limited to grades 3-S ·
Eastern Star regular meeting will be inClusive and players will be placeq
. held Monday, 7:30 p.m. with degree near their own age group. For furthe(
work on two candidates.
information. please call 740-949•
2954.
•
•
Racil)e Council
•
Racine Village Council will meet Boil advisory lifted
.
:
Monday. 7 p.m. at the municipal
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis•
building.
trict has lifted the boil advisory fo~
Bradbury Road, Neece Road and
Bible Camp
Middlepo" Hill water customers. •
r
Middleport First Baptist Church is .
having Space Mission Bible Camp Immunization clinic
!
June 8-12. 6-8:30 p.m. for youngsters
The Meigs County Health DepaJI·
ages 4through eighth grade:
ment will offer a free evening immll.
nization clinic on Tuesday. 5-7 P·'l"
Lebanon Township Trustees
at the Meigs Mullipurpose Center,
The Lebanon Township Board of Pomeroy. Each child must be accOIJl~
Trustees will meet Friday, 7 p.m. al panied by a parent/legal guard(an
the township building.
with immunization record. For m9r'e
information call the health depqo;
CoJTeCiion
ment at 992-6626.

Summer school to begin June 1.

:r~ay~s li.vestoQK .report .

Thelma Jclren

P0111eroy
Claaofl,58

Heavy rain that soaked the Carcausing llash floods in South
Carolina in particular. was moving
off shore early today and fair. d~
wea1her was expected to lake . its
place a.~ far inland as the Ohio Valley.
·
Some showers and thunderstorms
were expected in Florida.
A low pressure system in th~ lower Mississippi Valley was foreca.~t to
bring rain and some severe thunder·
storms·through tonight. with damag·
ing wind gusts, hail and heavy rain·
fall.
Sifl\ilar nasiy weather was also
foreca~t for the northern and western
Grea't·Lakes. while showers and late·
day thunderstorms were in store for
tile ~~ntral Plains.
olina.~.

ATHENS CAP) ·- An Athens
County judge has refused to revoke
subpoenas issued to two reporters
who may have to testify at rhe trial of
an environmental aclivist accused of
taking money in exchange to drop a
ligh1 against a coal mine .
Editors of The Athens Messenger
and The Athens News said they
would talk with their attorneys about
what action to take after Wednesday's
decisiop by Common Pleas Judge
Mike Ward. ·
"Our ·repo"ers are not on trial,
after all.". said Karl Runser. managing editor of the Messenger. "They're
reporting the nellis as they see it and
hear it."
·
The judge also delayed the trial,
which was to have started Wednes-

Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included: •.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I: I 3 a.m .. Nonh Second Avenue.
Middlepo". Larry Hendrick. treated
·at the scene:
•
- "
2:17 a.m .. Ove'rbrook Nursing
' • COLUMBUS. (APl....,. Indiana~: over300lbs. 15.()().17.00; Center. Middlepon. Maxine Philson,
Ohio direct hog prices aC selected under. 300 lb~. 21.00-26.00, few
. buyina Jlllhits Thursday as provided 2.9cOO._
.
:by the U.S. Depanment of Agricul·
~~!1rna1ed, recetpts: 33.~.
•blre l\4arket News:
PJ,ii:e~ from Producers Uvestock
Am El• Power ...•.••~.............~••.45
• , BatTOWs and giltst mostly 1.00 As!;Qflat•on •
Akzo ..:..........~ ...................... 104~
lower; .demand ~ight to moderate on
'fl\ursday s trends:
AmrTech ,,............:.... ~ ...........43~
ra I'IIOderare movement.
Hogs 1.00 lower; sows 1.00 lowAshlar)d 011 ............ ,..............49~
1·2. 230-260 lbs. coun1ry er; ca\t!e .50 to 1.00 lower.
•T&amp;T ..................v .................&amp;O'. Si1111ma~ o~ Wednesday's auc-. Benk One ....•...... ~ ............ ;....56'•
1.points.41.50-42.50, few 43~00; plants .
Bob Evans ............................19'h
·
t1ons at Galhpohs nne! Mount Vei}IOn:
J&lt;4;l.00-44.00.
Borg-Warner .........................56'A.
t.lr U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 38.00·
Hogs:
.
.
8roughton .............................16'1.
4l.OOJ·:Wl-230 lbs. 34.00-38.00.
M~et hogs; 30.50-44.50; lighl
Champion .............................12'1.
•' '· Sows: Mostly 1.00 lower.
sows 2~.2S-28.2S; heavy sows 28.50Chlrm Shpa ...........................5,..
., · U.S. 1-3, 300-400 lbs. 24.00- 29.50., "
City Holding ..................... :...... 44
Federal Mf:)IJUI .............:......... 55'4
· 2S.OO; 400·500 lbs. ' 25.00-26.00;
Fee~r pigs; 41.00-48.00 head;
Gannen .. ~ ..••...•..........,.......... ~65 1~
, 500-600 lbs. 26.()().28.00, few over 32.50 cwt. and down.
Goodyear ..............................67\
600 lbl29.()().30~00.
All 111lars 29.00 and down.
Kmarto ...................................1a~.
Kroger .................................. 42~.
Land• ·e nd .............................31'1.
Ltd ....... ;...................................32
'1
t
.
.
Pro1\icers Livestock Mar~et Oak Hill FlnJ .......................:.. 21\
~· · ·.
•
.•
·
repo" ~!/?,In Gallipoli~ for sales con- ova .......................................3&amp;'~
3
ducted pn Wednesday, May 27. .
One VBII•Y•~·•••••••••••oo•••••uoooooo34 /•
PIOpltl oonooooooouoooooooooooooooooo,.oo30
·
(USPS UHMl
Feed)'r.Canle.
.
Prem Flnl ................ ;..............20'·
' • I ... ~· Co. N-pt·
. 200:301111 St. $84-92, Hf. $76-$88,
............................... 55'1•
300-40QI;. ~t. $80-$92. Hf. $78-$84 . Rockwell
AD/Shell
...............................
56~
l'loblllhOd ,.• ., oftcmoon. Mond.ly lllmugh
5()().6501 St. $72-80 Hf. :$68-$78
fridoy, Ill Coon 5&lt; .• Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
sears ....................................60'·
Ohio ;\'alley Nllishina Company/Ganncu Co.
650-800# St. $68-$75; Hf. $58·$74.
Sh oney' .a ................................4'/rt
'
Soooadct... ,..~ago paid atl'pm&lt;roy. Ohio.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $37-S44
Star Bank ............................. 60~.
'.·-!!Or.
'fhc Atuociatcd ·, _ •'"' the Oltio
Medium/Avera•e
$34-$39.
Wendy'8 .............................. .23~.
Ne~pc:r ~ialion .
L
t
' · P•,..#rr: S...t .....,,., """"'""" to The
Thin/Ltglit $28-$33. Bulls $44&gt; Woarthlngton ............,......,.... 17'/.
Daily Scnlincl, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
$5 1
·
• ~l769,, '
•r.
·stock· reports •re the 10:30
••
stJBSCRJmoN RATES
Back Tti The Fanns:
.
e.m. quolea provided by Advest
l • · ~. By Carrlflor Motor • ·Cow/Calf Pairs $435-820; Bred ol Gallipolis. .
·
. o..:
Wrek .................................s 2.00
Cows. $625:$880·. Bred •ows.
2·7"
()ne Monlb ................................ SR.70
.,.
v0..: Ym .................................. suw.oo
750: Bally Calves $25-57; Goats

America's smaller communities getting taste Qf urban violence

••

..

::!
:r~~~~~~Y ~
stop further U.S. satellite launches

committee's five Repit.lic•• will be
tlomilllMd by 1111ion1J seany. defense
and_iJWclti~ eXJIIIIIII, ,, . . .n1•
fi_.__._ nL
- - ou""' to ''"'low
• ..,. ...... .....,,....,_ .... '"'
::.:::." in lllllling their dne pawel
Bipatisan select COIMiitleel haY&amp;
become Congress' traditional of
ing of fcxr Danoam and dne ~
licans. The Iran-Contra J*1C1 J.t IS
Danoaau and 11 Rcpublicani.
In the spirit of those probes - In
which the nationiJ intaat was put
above patisan 111vJ111aF _ it .WOJid
help if Oingrich and 1f1!use llanocrWc
1eatcr Dick Ocphadt (Mo.) QOUidll&amp;tee ·
that the JIIIIC!'S lead DanocrJ11 was cochlirman and atlowal to play a role llirilillll' to ·those constructively plll)'ed by
Sens. Howad Baker, R-'lenn .• in w.,.
I * and Sen. Waren Rudman, R·N.H.,
in Jran.Contra.
~ in thai spirit, SenMc ~
J.ealei' 1rent Lou, R-Miss., ouaht to
RICOIISider his decision toappoilt WI aliRepWiican task force to oversee &lt;l1inf.
I * investiglllions.
The JX*nC)' of 0Jint1p1e iJ ..._.

Athens reporters may still testify In
extortion trial of area activist

:Today's
weather foreca~t
.

::S!!~ ~=·~~~~.:;;::= =~~~-=·con::

China policy by declaring that "every
met with Soviet the New YOrk Times ~ Ptesida•
mWJ, every woman and every child may
leaders even · Ointon might well be guilty of the hip
be jeopardized" by it. "Was it treason? I
Kondracka during the depths crimes and misdemesnols required for
don't know. I hope not." ·
of the Cold War. impeachment His offenses woukl be
Other Republicans, including House Ointon, following a policy staned utider considenlbly worse than havinsscx with .
Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., also . former President George Bush, is an inu:rn and lyi11J llboul it
,
have leapt from a disponle 31Jl1Y of cir- "engaging" China on the bet that prosBut we're f• •• very fll'- from hav·
cumstantial evidence 10 the conclusion pcrity and ties with the West evaudly ing proof m.t Clinton knowinaJy
that the president allowed sensitive mil- will turn it loward market-oriented allowed militay secrets to llow toOina
itary rechnology to go to China in rerum democracy.
and thai he did so in ~ for .illegsl
for campaign conlributions.
If the bet fails, China may beconte a OUnese c;ontributions andfor legal soft.
Demanding documents on rechnolo- military rival, but it is stralcgically f• money donations from U.S. Slllellite
gy trnnsfers last week, Gingrich said, "If inferior to the United StaleS. Whaas mogul Bcma-d Schwatz to the Danocthe president does not act quickly and · 'Moscow once hid 1housands of high- ratic Jlllfly.
decisively, my presumption is that we acancy nuclear warheads tJqelal on
The White House, of COUiiC, denies
have a genuine breach of naalonaJ secu- ~ Unired Stares, Olina hu only a few that its rechnology-tranafer policies
rity for conupt pOlitical JIUillOSCS."
dozen inaccurate ones in its arsenal - damaacd lllllional SCCII'ity, tMI officials
In other overreactions to Olinagate and lhe United S1a1cs still has 1housands there knew ofOUIICIC IIIICqlU to inllurevelations by the New. York Times, in its deumnt fm:e.
ence the election. and tMI Schwanz's
Republicans have called on Clintoo to
Mcnover, while itiiJIIy be that U.S. contrillutions aiTected decisions 10 IIJow

Ha(ry M. Deem, 72, LaCrofi, died Tuesday, May 26. 1998. at East Liv·
erpool City Hospital.
Rom Feb. 27, 1.926, in Ponland. son of the late Thomas and Margaret
Lemley Dee. he was a Protestant by faith and a long-time employee of the
former Crucible Steel Company. He was an Army veteran of World War II
where he served in the Pacilic Theater.
He wqs a lifetime member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post66 where
he once served as commander. BPOE 11258 and the American U:gion Post
374.
'
He is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law. Bonnie ~nd G. Don Hill
of Kissimmee. Fla. and Kathy and Gary Czech of East Liverpool ; son. Jer·
ry M. Deem of East Liverpool: and ;even grnndchildren.
.
He was·preceded in death on May 30. 1991, by his wife. Thelma L. Deem.
to whom he was married on Dec. I0, 1947. and by 1wo brothers. Howard·
and Thomas Deem.
Services will be held Friday. II a.m. at Dawson Funeral Home. East Liv·
erpool. with the Rev. Gotdon Hall officiating. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery with full military honors by the Tri Stale Veterans Burial Group.
Friends may call today, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

a

Zealots hurting U.S.-China relations

~~~ghe~=~tt!~

Harry M. Deem

..•

...................... "'l'l*lk
'lllall."

Gillilan family reunion
The f11111ily reunion of Elbert.and
Della Gillilan will be held at 1he
Kyger Creek Power Plant Clubhouse
on June 7 with lunch beginning at
noon. Friends and relalives welcome.
Bring a covered dish.

conditions and

. t--n----!-e....
:
IToledo I 84• ..

Friedman and Galbraith
booinina.

Letters to the editor

~.araF.dtt•.~tore, far from Revolutionary

Friday, May 29
MICH.

~

f

·Meigs announcements ·:

OHIO Weather
Accu Weather• forecast for

WaliiHtbetg
The phrase
the welfn stare, the milled CCCIIOOiy,
Conservative, libertarian, mone- "commanding
the regulared SIIIC, social danoaacy
tarist economist Milton Friedman, heights"
was
anddemocnttic'socialismsrew -: JI'OS111 Court SlrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
almost
86,
and
liberal,
sometime
selfSoviet
dictator
perity grew. That also happened in
'·
114-1124158 • FIX 912·2157
declared socialiSI, Keynesian econo- V.I. U:nin 's. It
:America, Asia and elsewhere. Such
· mist John Kenneth Galbraith, age 89, refer.&gt; to the sogrowth was called "inexorable." Gov·
agree on two ideas that seem contra- called strategic
ernments gave out goodies and created
dictOI)', but are not:
sectors of an
~ who would. inexorably, vore C... ·
(I)
That
it
is
appmpiate
to
describe
economy:
bank·
those
goodies, and nue. ·
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
lhe short-1enn economic situation in ing,
electric
But the trend was exonble. By lhe
dire rerms like "classical speculative power, commumid-1970s it was governments thai hit
ROBERT L. WINGETT
episode" (Galbraith) and as quite ready nications, transthe wall. All-wise direction from
Pullll8her
for a "collapse" (Friedman).
ponation, steel, Wattenbert
bureaucrats on the commanding
(2) That the economically opti- coal etc., which
heights shouldn't have · permiued
mistic stOI)' told in the new book "The the government had to control, said ongoing "sta&amp;flalion"- slow economDIANE HILL
.• CHAAL£HE HOEFLICH
Cooimanding Heights," and subtitled _ Lenin. Ultimalely the Soviet Union ic growth combined with sli!Jing inlla; o.-I~~~M~ger
• Controller , "The' Bailie Between Government and directed most everything economic, tion. But it happened.
the Marketplace That Is Remaking the including palhetic old ladies with twili
In America the wall-hit was reme·
World," is essentially accurate. It's brooms who swept sidewalks. But it died by restructuring, downsizing,
hard to call a book about economics wasn't only totalitarians expanding lowertaxratcs,deregulalion, privatiza.
"exciting," but Pulitzer Prize-winning their economic reach. As Yel)in notes, lion and other stralegies making it casauthor Daniel Yergin and collaborator England's democratic welfare state ier for markets to do w1111 they do best:
Joseph Stanislaw tell their stOI)' wilh controlled railroads and steel -- and create wealth. Reaganomics preached
narrative flair and excitement: After travel agencies and pubs!.
"the magic of the ·market." Ted
playing defense for decades, free marFriedman, Galbraith and Yergin Kennedy helped stan airline deregula·
kets are beating back government con- agree about why public control grew. tion. Elizabeth Moler, fmner Democtrol, everywhere.
The 1930s global Depression sent out ratic chairman of the Federal Energy
11~'0
To see how this ~ircle is squared- a message (incorrect, says Friedman) RcgulatOI)' Conunission, told Yergin
'"'' UUI'
W' n
li5.'
how the world can be rosy and a "col- that commercial manets hid hit a · this about deregulation: "We'~e teachDear Editor,
,
lapse" is coming ·· watch the PBS wall. The next message came from able."
Europeans only slowly got themes· This is a letter regarding the terrible tragic fire that occurred at 98 Pearl weekly program "Think Tank" during World War D and showed that govern·
Stteet, Middlepo" on Saturday, May 23, 1998.
the weekend of May 29-31, as Fried- ments, like America's, could do sage, although Prime Minister Mar' .My husband and 1were there froll\ the start, as we reside across the street. man, Galbraith and Yergin offer their national economic planning, and slay garet lbatcher sang out loud and early,
=!'his was such a terrible thing; it is one incident, because of the way the Mid- views. (Consult television listings for dragons.
with guidance from the "mad monk,"
dlepo" Fire Department and Middlepo" Rescue Squad conducted their jobs times, or call your public television
. So it wenL Yergin wrires about "30 the "Minister of Thought," Keith
and took their time arriving. we, and probably alllhe other onlookers, will slalion.) I moderate the session.
glorious years" in Western Europe. As Joseph. Today, Europeans see that
NEVER forget. Because of their delays in arriving, I feel I'm speaking for a
li.4V
=--=~or--r--. there JR only
lot of people, the two fatalities could have beenjavoided .
~
a
hundred
I've always believed that when you have a fire, and when people's lives
if
points in a
are at stake, you don't take the long way around getting lhere. That's not the
hundred perfirst time Middleport Emergency took their time showing u~. if at all. The
cent.
and
o~ly person I could sec doing his job properly and not wasting valuable time
when govern·
was Officer Tim Gillilan. As far as I know he was the only law enforcement
ments grab
.person there, and the only one who knew what was what. My hat is off to
extra points,
ypu, and I commend you on what you did.
it's hinter for
·, I reponed the fire at 2:30p.m. and if it hadn~ been for a bystander going
businesses to
·on in and bringing the little 3-year-old out, he would have been the third
compere. The
fatality.
Asian "miraThe fire department arrived about IS minutes after my call. I told them a
cle
:sguad was needed; Middleport finally arrived 20-2S minutes later. this is not
economies"
-~table when human lives are at stake. Again, my hat is off to Pomeroy;
lasted Ianier .
tliey arrived fii'St and canie IS fast as they could. My opinion, Middlepon
iM2r
but hit the wall
c;ould have and should have been there in no longer than five minutes; they
~...
with a louder
_just had a short way to travel. In my opinion Middleport Fire &amp; Emergency
thud. • --=-.!ilsplayed such unacceptable and such ridiculous rescue and fire disposing
PI~ ~ -lAlL ON 1\II:'DoNI&lt;cls
"''"""""
· tictics that day, I don'1 feel any one bystander that observed would feel differently. I even had one man named Keith Petrie tell me he volunteered to ·
go in and get the other two and was told he would be arrested.
:- This is what I really don't understand •• fi~men h~ve non-flammable
slits, but wouldn't go inside and dispose lhe fire and carry the people out I
~lieve Middleport was too interested in playing with their ladder truck.
; In closing, I'd like 'to say just this •• if the almighty bu!;k is far more By Morton KondiiiCIII
ment."
The was banning Olinese lan:hes of U.S. ·
;nponant than volunteerin&amp; to save a humin life, the people on the fire and
"Oiinagate" deserves a thorough
Weekly Stan· sa~.elliles, ptpn _and 1011\C J.tio comemergency (Middlepon)' better hope and PJ1Y to God above nothing like this investigalion, but not knee-jerk damage
danl bra11ded it , munications went dead in. ~; U.S.
••ver ""-ns
·
to U.S.""'"',_
""'--·.-'""' of
" r~:a~e,
'--ause a communications slle
,,...,... to !hem. It is a sad and pathetic llit.uation.
.~.., disn¢on
.....
. llire
...
, Jackie F1fe U.S. s8lellite
or talk oftmlson.
~."
went off course, demonslrlling the
;~ ;- ,
'
. Middleport Unfortunately, it's getting all of the
Those
iJnponancc of Sllellilei for U.S. Com~
above.
who overreact mat:e.
j~ ;
Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., demon- .
fail to remanAll this does not mean winkiiiJ 111

••l".l.llepo·r t

r

Ttuadly, 11-r 21, 1MI

By

'EstUli.sflei in 1948

.

Page2

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

�Thuraday, May 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.:.

The Dally Sentinel ' Page.5 ••

~----~~~~~--~=---------------------------------~----------------------=-------~--~--------------------------------------------~------------~--- ••••·~

Eighth-inning rally helps Reds. notch 7-5 win over Giants

Bulls whip Pacers
106-87, lead 3-2
in Eastern finals
NBA playoffs
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
CHICAGO (AP) _ 11lese were
the Chicago Bulls playing like it was
1996 or 1997 again. There was no
whining; no first-quaner doldrums,
no wishy-washy finish.
This was ruthless.
The Bulls had been challenged,
and they responded like it was final ly time to get serious.
.
With an attack that was qutck,
decisivo; and devastating, the Bulls
wiped out the Indiana Pacers I 06-87
Wednesday night in a gall14! that was
nowhere near as close as the final
score indicated - even with a 19point margin of victory.
"We took it to them. we wanted to
see how they'd respond," said
Michael Jordan. who scored 29
points to reach an even 35,000 for his
career in regular season and playoff
games. "They didn't respond like we
expected. We just dominated."
Indeed, they did.
An early 14-0 run gave Chicago a
double-digit lead, there was a 25\ point differential befqre, halftime and
1
he ~ rth
a 33-point buIge ear Y 10 1 ou '
By the time the end came, Jordan was
having his knees iced on the bench.
Scottie Pippen was already perusing
the bo~ score and little-used Bull_s
like Jud Buechler and Dickey Simpkins were padding their stots.
"Tonight we just came out a little
more hungry, came out more aggressive and more determined -and it
showed on the scoreboard, .. Pippen
said.
Jordan shot 12-for-20 with seven
rebounds and four assists as he led
the team in sco'ring for the 13th time
'in 13 playoff games. Pippen finished
with 20 points, eight rebounds and
seven assists arid Toni Kukoc added
19 points as the Bulls avoided their
first three-game losing streak with
Jordan on the team since the fall of
1
~~ Pacers shot only 34 percent
and made just 23 baskets - two
mO..e than the "playoff record-low of

2r.

"All 11 guys who suited up should
be ~mbaJ'rasscd," said Reggie Miller,
w(!a had 14 points to share high-seering honors with Travis Best.
•"Deep down 1 thought they we~
gding to come in and hiy jt all on the
line." Pacers coach Larry Bird said of

.-,_

•

his team. "But tonight they just didn't play. For what reason I have no
idea...
'
The Bulls took control midway
through the first quaner with a 14-0
run , turning a 10-7 deficit into a 2110 lead.
Gone were the smug smiles the
Bulls wore through the first four
games, replaced by the cold stares of
fierce competitors. Even when the
referees slapped Pippen and Dennis
Rodman with quick-trigger technical
foul s. nothing could take away from
the Bulls' focus.
Pippen. Jordan and Kukoc scored
all the points in the early 14-0 run.
and Chicago led 29-16 after one
quarter.
A layup by Jordan gave Chicago its
first 20-point lead, 39-19 with 7:15
left in the secpnd quaner.
Rik Smits scored on a 10-foot
jumper with 6: 171eft, giving Indiana
its first basket since 8:24 remained in
the first quaner.
Chicago responded with energy
and emotion, getting · three-point
plays from Luc .Longley and Ron
Harper to up the lead to 25.
The third quaner quickly became
showtime as Indiana failed to mount
any kind of a comeback. Kukoc had
the highlight-reel play of the night,
throwing an around-the-back pass to
Jordan on a 3-on-1 break for a dunk
by Jordan that made it 74-45.
A jumper by Kukoc with 2:491efl
gave Chicago an 80-SO lead. The
Bulls were up 31 heading into the
fourth and held l~eir largest lead, 8956. with II :39 left in the game.
"Tonight was uneKpected dominance," Jordan said- "We dido 't
expect that. We took it to them and
wanted to see how they would
respond, and they didn't respond like
we expected. We just dominated
them."

"It was a dynamic first half in

terms of aggression." coach Phil
Jackson said. "Friday's game is
going to be a different matter. We're
going to have to perfect our game,
bring it up to another level. That is
the goal and aspiration of this team
right now.
Game 6· is Friday riight, and the
B~lls will _be !~king to clinch ~eir
th1rd stra•g.ht tnp to the NBA Fmals
and a posstble se~ond _three• peat for
- thet~Slxth c~amp10nshtp t~1s decade.
Game 7, 1f necessary. ts Sunday

Utah's walt close to two-we!Jk mark

. ·'

Sloan calls Jazz
'lazy,' -'complacent'
By GREG BEACHAM
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- If the
Utah Jazz aren't willing to work hard
in the final week before the NBA
Finals stan. coach Jerry Sloan says
he'll go back to basics.
"If I can't get them to work, we'll
go back and do the stuff we do in
training camp," Sloan said Wednesday after the Jazz huffed and puffed
through a workout. "We'll go back to
square one. We'll stan all over again.
I'll go back to rim touches and all the
running and all the drills."
Sloan wa~ furious at the Jazz. who
are in the midst of a I0-day wait
between the conclus1on of the Westem Conference finals and the stan of
the NBA Finals.
He called his team "lazy" and
"complacent" and claimed that ·~all
but thr.ee or four of them ore out of
game shape already."
Did 'the Jazz really lose all their
conditioning at their MemoriaJ .Day
barbecues, or is Sloan over-reacting?
The truth is probably somewhere in
between, but Sloan never misses a
chance to prod his players to work
harder.
· After all, with the Chicago Bulls
and the Indiana Pacers still slugging
it out in the Eastern Conference. the
Jazz are trying to maintain a game
focus through 10 off days. That's a
task Sloan admits is difficult for any one.
"But I don'tthink the effon was
TO THE HOOP- Chicago's Mlchaal Jordln (left) goes to the hoop even close to where I expected it,"
with Indiana's Reggie Miller and Rlk Smlta on him during the llrat Sloan said. "It's amazing to me how
quarter of Game 5 of the NBA Eallaril Conferencallnala Wednesday you get into this business .. .- and
night In Chicago, wheralhl Bulla won 1~. (AP)
you'd think people would be excited
to still be playing."
He had two points, seven rebounds
night.
Sloan's outburst, which came
and
five
fouls
in
22
minutes
...
For"Chicago comes out and plays
shonly after the players ~linked
mer
Bulls
and
Cubs
broadcaster
Jack
strong all the time, that's why 'they're
silently out of practice. was the first
champions," Bird said. "I'm sure Brickhouse brought out the game
sign that the Jazz may be losing their
we'll bounce back. Knowing this ball . ... Smits accidentally elbowed
edge just three days into the longest
team. they bounce back pretty well. teammate Chris Mullin in the head,
break between games in franchise
drawing
blood.
just
10
seconds
into
They won't want their season to end
history.
the game- .. . Mullin commilted a flaon a·note like this."
"It's sad when you've only got
grant foul by smacking Scott Burrell
three or four guys who could piny a
in the head on a breakaway, and Dale
full game after going .this long in the
Notes: With garbage time coming Davis was whistled for a flagrant for
season." Sloan said. "I can't get one
early, several players saw their first elbowing Kukoc on a pick. Davis
action of the series and had their also was called for a technical foul.
full practice out of everybody. I
highest-scoring games. Mark . West ... Jalen Rose sat out his one-game
don't know why we can't get up and
and Fred Heiberg of Indiana, who suspension fbr leaving the bench durdown the ,floor. There were guys
hadn't played in Games 1-4, scqred ing a scuffie in Gall14! 4. "Yes. we did
about ready to die out here."
2 and 6 points, respectively. Dickey miss Jalen, but not that much." Bird ·
The Jazz held an extended film
Simpkins of Chicago had four pqit;lls, said.
session in the morning, but Sloqn .\"as
and Jud Buechler of Chicago was 0for-4 from the field with no points ... .
Rodman. who arrived at the arena an
hour before tipoff, came off the
bench for the fourth time in the series.

....
.' '

peeved when he tried to play a simulated four-quarter game during practice. He said most of the Jazz begged
off after only 2 112 quaners.
''When you get tired after two or
three quarters. I don 't know how to ...
simulate a game or keep us ready,"
Sloan said. ··Maybe we equid ride .
around town in a convenible. That'd
be nice."
Sloan has been involved in basketball his entire adult life, yet it still '•
infuriates him when other peoplo. •
panicularly young players. don't take '
the game as seriously as he does.
••Me. I'm excited to hove nn
opportunity 10 play at this level," · Sloan said. ··It's really embarrassing '
that you even hove to talk about . ,
this.".
:
The Jazz won't know the ide·ntity , :
of their finals opponent until Friday '
night at the earliest. Game I of the .. ,
Finals will be played, Wednesday at ·
the Delta Center.
•
The layoff prevents Sloan from · .: '
tailoring his practices toward a spe- .. ,
cific opponent, something he admits
is troubling- but not nearly as trou-.
bling as this fitness issue.
"I haven't watched any of the. ,
(Eastern Conference) games," Sloan , . ,
said. "We just have to wait and see. · . :
We've done some of our homework.
to get ready for both teams."
Sloan also doesn't believe the •
extended down time will be benefi- ~
ciallo his team, even though his th~
stars - Karl Malone. John Stockton ~
and Jeff Hornacek- will all be able
to rest injuries.
·· ,
"If you're playing, I don't see
where this (time of!) could be an
edge," Sloan said. "~ou take two or. , '
three days off. and you. see i s
difficult to keep·your body in
ki
of condition you like."
Sloan has been at his job I ng
than any · NBA coach. During
break, one of his colhiagues - . !
'George Karl of Seattle - was dis, , ,
missed.
.
"I hate to see any coach lose his '.
job." Sloan said. "So many teams go
backwards instead of forwards when. ·,
they tire a coach because the players·· v
have to evolve with the. new coach, t
and that takes a while to happen. It's . "
tough to krlow what owners are : .
thinking about sometimes/ , · .. ' " n·r.:

'

..

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.
.

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.'

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•

have the weigh! of a city.. likc New
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - The York weighing on him after his rook·
crowd begins to . break up around ·ie season. which culminated with a
Jaret Wright, who is wearing cutoff stunning show in the playoffs last
sleeves and looking more like a rock October. Still, he was expected to do
big things in Cleveland, like show the
singer than a pitcher.
The Cleveland Indians' right-han- way back to the World Series and win
der . has answered more questions it this time.
After a rocky stan to his sopho·
dealing with ••potential" and "expecmore
season that raised questions
tatiolls." A few feet away. someone
about
his ego and commitment,
who knows more about those things
than most is quietly piling food onto Wright appears back on track.
"I have no eontrol over what peoa plate.
·
pic
expect of me Qr what they're
Dwight Gooden is asked w:hat .he
goingtowriteorsayaboutme."said
thinks about this Wright kid.
''I'm very impressed with him," . Wright, who went seven innings in
Gooden says of the Indians • 22-year- his third consecutive strong stan
old ace. "He's asllldent of the gB1114!, Tuesday night as the Indians beat the
always asking questions when he's Detroit Togcrs 9-2_ "I' put enough
not pitching. The way he 's adjusted .,n:ssure on myself to succeed. Some
right_froin the stan says a lot about things you might not ag~ with, btll
hirn as an individual,"
· lhat's how it is."
Wriaht (3·3~ al!owed one run in
, J.Jnlike Gooden. Wright didn't
'
. •.

•

f.lalt on trash talk between
Sabres, Capitals doesn't last

.

l!alttrn DI:""L

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Ka- Cliy ........................... 19

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29

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.•' .

CINCINNATI (Tomko S· l) Lll L(ll
10 :0~ p.m.
.
St. Louis (Ayb:. 2-3) :tl Su Dics,o {Hami.llon
3- ~). 10:05 p.m.
Aritona (Blair 2·1) al San Frandsto (Ei1e1 3·
~). IO:J~

p.m.

1-4),"7 ,0~

'tl•u

Chh:qu al lndiaM. 9 r .m. (NOC)

·Suoday'scame
lndiiula 1t1 Chicago. TBA (NBC). if necessnry

Hockey

m Tnmp:t. Bny (Snurkkt1

p.m.
(S.Ie 11-2) 11 B•lii.,... (Juhno 0-1),

7:J:'ip.m.

Ootd.nct (Siein I·Zl ~'"'"' Cily &lt;R•I'l' 4-4),
! :M .m.
.
At:lm (Finley 4-2) nl inneJOta (tluwll.ins J.

'

NL standings

Gr.ont Hill. b.l\Yetball p~1ycr

The Daily Sentinel
lilt S

Ml ~lii'IC I

,,

It all starts with newspapers.

.ll: L

Fridoy'spme
Saturday's M•m•

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Fron&lt;loco ....................... JO
LooAnaeteo .......................... 26

2.1 -~
26 -~
Cotondo ............................... 22 :10 .42.1
Arilona ................................. l6 J6 .:108

Wednadlty'o KOI'ft ·
CINCINNA117. Slll-111&lt;0 $

PN....Iphio 10, etotarao Cftbo $

N.)'. Mob 8, Florida 2
LooA...... J,HooKool
A I - ), Mooual 0
llil-ilee .1, 2 ( 10)
S.. Loooio %. Colerodo T
Son Diqo 6.1111-·

Tod1y'1pnt11

Colorodo • 51. Loulo, 1,40 p.m.
l'lllildolillio·• Clol- Cobo. z,zop.m.
Montmi 11 AdiMa. 1:.0 p•.m.

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6~

10~
16~

Amtrkan IA'IIW

Sa1Kkrs un Ill( in;1etiv.: liAI.
,
COLUMBUS GACiERZ; Fired Pn1 KniJIII.
conch. and Jon S1uckey, MSillaat c~h . rtlm~d
RnllcnJ. Rotrinsun cooch.

a IWO.)'Hf CODUIICI.

CaNdian Foothat.ll Lt•~ut

HAMILTON TIGER·CATS: Si,lk.'t1 SR TiirL'l
JayPuni ;ud LB Moh McEtwain.

.

CHICA&lt;k&gt; WHITE SOX' A1....t '"'""" l&gt;ilh
LHP Jim Abbtw1 oo a minur-k:aguc CUflfnM.'I .
CLEVELAND INDIANS : SiJ•etl OF Aaron
. Gor&amp;lnier 111M1 RHP Jason fiU'1UCr 10 nlinor-katut
~onlrnciJ .

MINNESOTA TWINS' RO&lt;oll&lt;d LHP Dan Serafini from Sail Lake of die PCL.

.'ODI.hall Lnp
,
NEW YORK CITYHv\WKS: A ~quircd OS
Khcv in Prall from Milwaukee for WR Bryan
RL&gt;evn. Acquired OlrDL Wilt~ Bazile from T:nr
Bny t1nd WR-08 Charlet OuYillloo from Nashville

li'lf Wlunaoo'nsidttaltnn~ .

HO&lt;!key
Nlllonol llodleJ

•_

!.&lt;-

CAROLINA HURRICANES' Sil.... F Rolloot
Kron to mfour-year contract uten1lon. thro.Jh
200~.0:\ . Announced 1he rrsi,nation or Jim. Loria.
direaor ofpublit.: and commun11y ~latloM.
COLORADO AVALI\NCH~ : Annouii&lt;Cdlhc

Nollalul ....J,..
NL: Su1pe1tded Chica~u CuM C S111kly Mnr·
Iintz for 1Wo r.ames oDd Atl1m1a Br.IYn OF Cunb
Pri.Jt for n~ JIIAI&amp;dur lbeir ac tion• In a fi~hf on
re1if,nation of Marc Cmw(ard. a*:h.
P.hyl.'i .
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Ap&lt;ed 1 o - with
An.ANTA BRAVES: Si&amp;~ C Javy l.opet to RW GreJ Phillips on • dne- ~ar conlra'f.
all!.n!e-)'1!11' comrxt txteuion lhruuJh 2001 .
CHICAGO CUBS: Ploced C· INF Tyler Hour·
Amtri&lt;on Hockq Lopt ·
ton on lhe I~)' disabled lisl. Renllc-tl RHP Jullin
' CINCI~NATI MIGIITY DUCKS' N"""" Eric
Sprier from Iowa oltht PCL.
.
Graurich :md Benjamin Weber ~~~:count uccwdvn.
·COLORADO ROCKIES' Plil&lt;ed RHP Kevin
RitE on 1he 1~-dlly disabltd 1111, retroZii\'e to May
Soccer
18. Purth:.sed 1M CMlrai:l of RHP Davlct'Waln·
hou10 lrom C - Spriop of rile PCL.
·
M•J-r LMa• Setur
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIESo P,r&lt;ho,.d lho
MLS: Si&amp;ne.IJ: Carkn Hefmos illo and auipal
conrr8c1 of LHP Robert Dodd from Scra nlon- him tn 1he l.ol An1e16 Galuy.
WIIkot·B"'"' ol ihe lnlmlllllltlllll.eqoe. S.M LHP
SA N JOSE CLASH: SiJI'Itd F FmntiM-1' Uribe
Gr&lt;a Whi- outtiJIM to Oea-w- or""' Flori- 1011 muhiyear•,:oncra:t.

das,.,.._...

ST. LODIS CARDINALS' Plomt RHP Mike
Busby ud INF [Jav..S Howlfd Oft the 1!·day dll·
tiM. ltocotled INF l.oio
OIOd RHP Ri&lt;h
Clooolioro lrom Mnool&gt;io of 1ho PCL.
SAN DIEGO PAbRES: 5eflll OF James Mouton
to LM Vq• on • rehabiliiMiM 111ianme11t.•

oro.a

-t._.

1-800-817-1094

or

Vnilfd SIIIH Bukttt.ll LHaue
ATLANTA TROJANS: AelelUt'd G MarL'tll
Grnn1. F Mkh;~ l Maddo.11. and G Penha Robiftlkln.
Si'ncd F Omrlie MaM, F Andre Lewis and Ci Bri:m Htlrnlem.
ATLANTIC CITY SEA&lt;IUU...I:i ~ Aclivated f
Charles Mac(ln fwm the in~1ivc lis1. Relea~~~:t.l F
R~uie TnwnsenJ. Plill.:ed C Lee Wilton OR 1hc in- '
·!k'livt list
CAMDEN POWER: A~dvaled G OuificiJ Yul·
lie fromlhc inaclivt: li•l. SiJncd F Ira Newhll:.
LONG ISt.ANO SURF : AIJiiYII~d G "4 iltc
Campbell. l'lik~ cd F Darnell McCullnch· nnd G Junie

PrtlniL,..

WuhinJIOO a1 Buffalo, 7i:l0 J1.nl. (ESPN)

Duo ball

r.:t.

C..Cnlllhlolon
H~ ................................JZ 20 .615
2, 2J . ~9
St~o ............................... 26 Z~ . ~20
Mli-llee ............................ 2~ · 2~ . ~
CINCINNA11 ........,.............24 29 .4$3
Pi-... .............................24 29 .4:13

.

NortiMm

SIOUX CITY EXPLORERS : Claimed RHP
Chris Hill off waivers from Sioux Fall1. PIIM:cd P
Denny Gumel on the disabled lilt Plat.-cd P Tc•m
Myers oo lhe vnlunla")' retirullitl.

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Si&amp;ned CD 'Eric
WarfieJLim a 1hrce·ye• 1.·onwa1.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS' ll&lt;·•iBIIL-.1 OL Ben
Bortkk&gt;nln a one-year L"tlfUm&amp;.1.
WASHINGTON REOSKINS: Si~rk:LI WR ra1

Transactions

Allal'lll .. ..., ............... " ........... )\f 14 .7.\ 6
New YOtk .............................28 20 ~'iM~
Phl . .lploia..........................24 2.~ .490
M-..1 ............................... 11 JJ .3:\J
Fl&lt;!riiio .................................. 17 J~ .327

it in 5porh yo•1 h.l'o~c I'J use your hc.1d ''\ .,:,.11 ·l'i your body. He 'NaS "
.1nd
1
St.1rt r!:ading to your kids tod.1y. They're never too young. And e ncour.1~~ 1I1Pm t0 re,1d a ncwsp.1 p~•· ~·very d.ly. Newspaper 5
educAte and inform like nolht~ ~fse . Who kn~ . the het~d. start you ~·ve could one d1y help mal-e your child " kin~ or the hitr:

NurdMilSI IAqut

Artnatt

BMiml Dlvlllon

l'la

•'

CATSKILL COUGARS: TnuJcd I 8 ArnJrt
Keene 1u AUenluwn for OF Andre J"hn50fl. Sia!M'd
RHP J~remy Cluu5e and C Doua AJtpel.

10

DolbJ a1 Detroi1. 1:30 r .m. (ESPN)

.

.

KALAMAZOO KODIAKS: SIJnt.'tl OF lt~ll.it

Nation•l FovthaH i.JqH .
CHICAGO BEARS: SiJned t.ll A..... Cu!Hno

Wasl'li!IJIOII al nu«ukl; 7 : ~r.m. IESPNt

4), ~~~p.m.

u

308 East Main Street

..

kmpson. INF-OF Min Soo Ki'm, 38 kJr Rltwland.
C Youn1 Kim and LHP Ouis Zulltc. Relc::1sed C
Eric Sivmaon and RHP ~011 H11u~r .

Football

Tonl~ht's pme

7 ,q~

Bollon (t..o.: 0.3) at N.Y. YMkcel (Co~ 6-1).

De Sentinel News.lotUne

Don Teate Motors. Inc•.

Fronll.rr IAque

NUL conference finals

,

p .m.~

m.1~e

106. Indiana H7: Chkllll' lc:k15 ~~ertcl

Frld•y'l games

··;.:

like a normal guy." Many don't tury. His 6 113 inning performance been high. I think he's handled il ..::
know about the endorsement deals be should have been good enough to well."
.
turned 'down to keep his bead straight. · give Cleveland its first World Series
Gooden is the point of reference , .
"He had offen to do ·different title since 1948.
for promising young power pitchers
things this offseason. but he kept it to
With Wright out of the game, the who hav.e squandered potential. ·
a minimum," Gooden said. "He had Marli11s tied it in the ninth and won 'Overwhelmed by fame and tempted ·':
to work out and keep things in their . it in the-lith. Butthe Indians thought by drugs, Gooden never recaptured "
place_ To hear · him say ihat. that they'd finally found a dominant No. the dominance of his first two sea- "
shows that he's on the right track."
I starter. a son of Bob Feller with sons in New York. Now sober. with , .
Wright was the one solace the grunge rock playing in the back- much less velocity on his fastball and ..
Indians carried away from the crush- ground.
sociallife, Gooden stand' in the lndiing loss to the Florida Marlins in
"That sort of talent invites that," ans' clubhou.o;e a.~ a constant reminder
Game 7 of the \\;'orld Series. Bare~y manager Mike Hargro~c .said. "There to Wright.
old enough to have a beer, the ktd have been limes when I thought the
Careful. kid- Not so fast .
was given the ball instead of sup- expectationsfromthemediaweretoo
"I know myself. I know what! ,
posed staff' ace Charles Nagy in the high. But Jaret's been a kid that can do," Wright said. " I just want to , .
lndians'.biggest game in half a cen- througho!tt his life. expectations have stay right there with it."

Basketball

Frld•y's 1ame

Todoy's games

~ · S)..1:0:1p.m.
Snnle ~R.John10n 4- .~)

·

NBA conference finals
Chi~aau

~0 While Sox {lk.'ft 2·~) Ul Dclroil (S~L"f 1
2· 1a:):Nl5 p.n\.
EVELAND (C(IIon ~ -;4 ) 111 Toron1o {C'Iemcru: ,

When I w:as growinR up my d.1d t.1ught me th.11 to

·

J-2

arica,o While Sox 111 t:lclroil, 1:0.'i p.m.
CLEVELAND ot Torotto. 7:'" p.m.
Seauk at T"'!'f''I Bll)'. 7 :0~ p.,m.
Tp.M a1 Bul11mott. 7:()!11 p.m.
Bo11on al N.Y, Yankee•, 7 : ~~ r .m.

'

.
Angeles

Wednesday's score

Mi•na:Ota6. Texas~
Otka,o While Sox 11. N.Y. Ynnkea 9
Cily 4.A......Im 0

"Enoouraqe yoUr child to read a newspaper every day, ancr . '
Get the latest in sports n~ws from the one day·that
. child will gxow up to be king of the hill."·. :~
Da~ly Sentinel .
a gre&lt;Jt athlete and a s:reat i·eadet: He .1nd my mom 'helped me tr.un nv '"''1rj tJ1 -rc.v1•n~ to me
t'!~chinP, me to re-. d.

Mendoza gave up live runs on nine ·
hits over three innings, his shortest , ,
outing of the year.
.
Notes: New York 's To no Maninez. · _•
sidelined since Ia.-. Friday because of , ,
a slight sprain of his right shoulder, ,,
did not take balling prJCtice Wednes- , .
day but may be hack in the lineup
Thursday. ... Yan~tees infielder Scott
Brosius did not stan because of a . ' •
tight left calf and thigh. His status ,
was day-to-day. ~ .. The White So~ . :
have reached a tentative agreement . ,
with left-handed pitcher Jim Abbott . ,.,
on a minor league contract. Abbott 1
has not pitched in the majors since.
1996. when he went 2-18 for Ana- , ·,
heim .... The Yankees had won eight ··
straight games against the White • ;
Sox.
...,

STOWN JOHNNIES ' Rele•"d RHP
Paul Mngrini and RHP Dan Snceringff.

·

Houllon (Hampton 6-2) nl Cnlorado (A1tudu 4-

6

.420

Clii,,.. . . ................... . . ....

•

~-)). Ul~

Basketball

.620

\

'-J

.

FloridD (Hemandel 3-3) 01 Milwaull.te (Judtn

(Park 4-3),

v.

992·2156

7,Ql pm.

Wed-ctay's scons

2,800 B.C.

Williams followed wiih his seventh
home run for a 5-2 lead.
Belle hit an RBI double, Ventura
had an RBI single and Nonon added
a sacrifice fly in the third to tie the
game 5-5.
Belle's three-run 'homer with two
out .in the founh off Wi !lie Banks
made it 8-S.
After 0' Neill hit a run-scoring
double off James Baldwin in the
sixth. Williams hit a two-run triple oiT
the center-field wall to .put New York
ahead 9·8.
Durltam tripled and scored on
Caruso's single to tie tloe game 9-9 in
the bottom of the inning.
Chicago staner Scott Byre'gave up
siK runs - none earned - on three
hits and six walks over five innings.

H~RRISBURG SENAT6RS' Pla.:ed P J"oo
he d~sabled .list. Si&amp;ned P RodJM.'f Sleven·

Adanta (Gilwi~ 7-2) a1 Oicaso CuM (Wood
~-21. ) ,20 p.m.
·
·
N.Y. Me11 CReed ~1) at Ptlilodelphiot (Bt.-n:h I·
21. 7 : 0~ p.m.
.
Montreal (Pterez 4-3) a1 Pilts"bur1h (Ueber 2-6).

JOt;.

i·
Cllllrll D1¥1ct1VELAN0 ......................29 21 .~!00
Ml-a .....................,.......2J 27 .460
Chi ....................................20 29 .408
lleflllil .. ................................ 19 28 .404

I I 1•-•t rtap for bridet-10-be
became popular around lhe year
t200. Weddil'l rinat date bact
to

~ .

T•...,Bay ........................... 2J 21 .460
B~lllr.xe ................:....... rr ·l~ 21 .4~1

TRIVIA

''It was a tough at-bat." Boone

Pomeroy, Ohio

Frld•y'spmes ·

s..... .................................. 29

The Sabres have had their troubles
against Capitals goaltender Olaf
Kolzig. who made several key saves
in Game. 2 after allowing the first
goal. Kolzlg is second among playofT goalies with a 1.71 goals-against
average and leads with a .948 save
percentage.
.
Buffalo' went into the series leading the league by convening 25 per
cent of its power-play opportunities
in the playoffs. but the Sabres have
convened one of II in the two
games. Washington has scored on
just one of 12 opportunities in the
same situation.
"We knew they were a good penalty-kii.Jing team." Buffalo coach
, L.indy RufT said. "They were the best
penalty-killing team during the regular season, and it wasn't a nuke. We
knew tougher times were ahead. but
-we have to get better, •.:_

muc:h funher,

.
•
'.

TorotMo .. ...............................27

it. ••

TRIVIA

down Cameron's triple, but said he
expected to be able to.play Thursday.
The los.' was only New York's
iounh in its last 16 games, while the .
White Sox ended a three-game losing
streak.
"We had a couple leads - 5-2
and 9-l!," New York manager Joe
Tone said_ "We kept fighting back
but we couldn't get the guy to put the
Band-Aid on it. It's flllstrating-''
Greg Nonon hit an RBI double in .
the Chicago second and scored on a
wild pitch by starter' Ramiro Men,
doza for a 2-0 lead.
The Yankees loaded the bases with
two out in the third on two wallcs and
a throwing..error by third baseman
Robin Ventura. All three runners
scored on Caruso's error, and

seven innings. the tounhtime in five
starts he's made it that far. He has a
3. 1~ ERA in May after a rough April
in which the World Series phenom
went 1-2 with a 6.23 .I:RA. lnnineending strikeouts with runners pn in
the fourth ·and siKth against Detroit
seemed to symbolize Wright's com·
ing of age_
"That's what they teach 'you coming up," Wright soi4. · ~When you're
butt's on the line. they want you to
take it to another level. It feels good
when stuff like that happens."
In away. Wrightbuilttheseexpectations himself. Despite a baby face
and follically challenged cheeks. he
makes it easy to forget he's only 22.
But instead of basking in his sudden fame - which already has
exceeded that of his father, Clyde, a
little-known left-bander in the 1970s.
- · Wright spent a laid-back offseason
in his native California "hanging out

CINCINNATI nl Lot An~lu . IO:«r.i p.m.
Arizona tit San Frandsco, 10 :0~ p.m.

Base ball

Nt"/ Yorl&lt; ............................ .J~ II .761

he had a shutout in Gall14! I. Tile Capitals also had 39 shots in the second
game after testing 11,asek just 19
times the first game.
"You just try to get a lot of rubber
on him and a lot of screens and lot of
tips," Capitals forward Dale Hunter
said. "It's harder for him to defend
against that. You can make the sweetest play in the world. and he can S\Op

enough to score a couple of runs_"
Scott Sullivan ( 1-2) pitched out of ";•
a
two-on,
none-out threat in the ,. • :
said. "He made some good pitches .
He was throwing sinkers ofT the eighth, and Jeff Shaw pitched a per- '~·
. plate. Fonunately for 1114!, I ended up feet ninth for his 15th save.
Notes: Tile Giants averaged 5.9 :·winning the battle."
When Tavarez got to a full count, runs per game on the road trip. ... :~
Darryl Hamilton went 0-for-4, ending
he threw nothing but fastballs .
" He beatll14! with my best pitch." his hining streak at eight games. ... . :·
Tavarez said. "I just put it in the right The Reds went 2-4 on their homes- . -~ :!
spot. I wanted to get it more inside. land.... Cincinnati has committed at • ~
He got it to drop in· over the shan- least one error in 10 of its last 12
gall14!s and leads the majors with 50 : ~;
stop's head."
Poole couldn't believe the inning. overall.... With the addition of their : . :
''Barry hits a ground ball. Young· latest staner, the Reds have now had : ,
hits one off the end of the bat, Julian a Priest, a Nunn (Howie Nunn, 1961 · comes in and jams him and he 62), a Church (Bubba Church. 1952. bloops one over tlic shortstop," Poole S3) and a Saint (Randy St. Claire,
said.. "They put it where we weren't 1988) pitch for them.
games.

Latest deeds of Indians' ·Wright invites comparisons to Feller

'
1\L standings

...

'

.

"I called for the ball. I should've go up 12-9.
CHICAGO (AP) - Mike Caru" I haven't had an outing like this
so's hitting made up for his shaky had it." Caruso said- "I had to (make
up
for
it)I
didn't
want
the
game
to
in
I
don't know how long." Nelson
fielding on his 21st birthday.
said. " It's frustrating."
· Caruso committed a three-run be decided by that."
Bill Simas ( 1-1) picked up the win
Alben Belle hod three hits and
error, but had four hits to help the
Chicago White Sox beat the New drove in four runs for the White Sox, ·with two innings of relief. Karchner,
York Yankees 12-9 Wednesday night. who snapped the Yankees' four-game who came off the 15-&lt;lay DL on Sun"That was a huge win for us," said winning streak. Belle had an RBI day after recovering from a hernia
Matt Karchner, who pitched the ninth double and a three-run homer. his operation; got his fifth save of the
lOth of the season.
season.
.
10 convert his 20th straight save
The
White
Sox
scored
three
runs
"Tonight
was
the
old feeling
opportunity. "We needed that in the
again," Karchner said. "Hopefull)',
worst way_ We battled, made a few in the seventh to break a 9-9 tie.
Cameron tripled off Jeff Nelson I'm blick."
mistakes in the field. and the pitchNew York's Bernie Williams sin·
ers made a few mis&amp;akes. But to come (2-2) with one out, Chad Kreuter
.walked.and Mike Cameron scored on gled.rripled and homered. driving in.
back and win was huge."
.
Caruso. a rookie shonstop. went a pa.~sed boll by catcher Jorge Posa- a season-high five tuns. Williams hit
a two-'run homer in the thiril. an·RBI
4-for-S but made his II th error in 38 da on a 1··1 pitch to Ray Durham.
Durham
then
doubled,
scoring
single
in the fifth and atwo-run triple
games when he dropped Paul
Kreuter.
One
out
later,
Durham
·
in
the
sixth.
·
. ..
O~Neill's bases-loaded, fly ball ·in
He hun his left knee chaqing.
scored on a wild pitch to put Chienshallow left in the third inning.

•

ton goals the Sabres claimed should- ·
NHL playoffs
n' t have counted in the se~ond game.
"Everything beside the 20 guys on
By BUCKV GLEASON .
'BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - The the ice· is inconsequential," Sabres
snjile on Matthew Barnaby's face forward Dixon Ward said. "It's fun ny. but nobody even talks about what
was similar to the one that made '
Washington Capitals coach Ron Wil- happens on the ice anymore. It's the
conches yapping and talking about
soil so angry in the firsr place.
the referee~ or the layoffs (between
This till14!; Barnaby was laughing at games)."
the temptation of answering whether
All the off-ice distractions have
the Buffalo Sabres and the Capitals
come
with the t~ams preparing for a
were through heckling one another in
the Eastern Conference finals which high-pressure game.
Buffalo had won eight .straight
continue tonight with Game 3.
before
losing in Game 2 in WashTemptation almost won.
ington.
The Sabres have not lost in
~As much a~ we want to say things
about Ron Wilson and he wants to four playoff games this year at
say about us. it has no bearing on Marine Midland Arena. where they
what happens out there." Barnaby haven't played in 18 days.
"Any time you come home, you're
said Wednesday. "It'it does. it's very
minute. It's fun. though. It's excit- going to be excited," Sabres forwnrd
.
Curtis Brown said. "The crowd is
mg.
Wilson took the first shot when he going to be cheering for you instead
called the Sabres "chicken" before of against you. and you can draw
the first gall14!. Buffalo won. Barna- some energy from that."
The Capitals evened the series
by annoyed Wilson while celebrating
when
Tndd Krygier. who grew up a
hi ~ tyiRg goal in Came 2 in taunting
Sabres fan outside Buffalo. scored in
fashion, pressing against the glass in
tho final minute of regulation. Wash- ovenime in Wa~hington's 3-2 victo·
. ' won.
.
'
ry on Monday night .
mgton
Washington effectively rattled
On Wednesday. it appeared both
te31J1s would be quiet until Barnaby Sabres goaltender Dominik Hasek hy
getting in front of the net and roughstarted mentioning names.
"I tried to resist. but it's just my ing up the goaltender in Game 2 after
personality." Barnaby said. "You
cati't stay ofT ihat, it's too much fun."
So far. the series has been a talc of
thr\!e videotapes.
Jlldldl ..._.., (77N Simpk Ufo) IIIII
Wilson· s chicken remark came
her huoband, Robert Dul•erte
(Mazlmum SecMrity), met while
(luring practice while the coacli was
woctin&amp; on OM Uf, to Uw.
wearing a microphone for a local
television station. He didn't realize
the com1114!nl would wind up on the
air,
"I did (the station) a favor," Wilson said. "I wa.~ 1101 treated fairly. I
asreed to be miked with the stipula·
tion that if I said somethinslnappropriate. it wouliln't be shown_"
Another tape worked to Wilson's
· advantage after he appar)ently
replayed Barnaby's celebration duriiiJ intermission in Oame 2. The third
tape showed two calls that weren't
made. leading to a pair of Washini!-

Jim Poole (1-2), Julian Tavarez and
Reed.
Barry Lorkin started the rally with
a single, his third hit oftbe game, and
Dmitri Young singled one out later.
Lorkin 101 causht in a rundown
between third and h01114! on Willie
Greene's grounder. allowing the runners tel advance to second and third.
Tavarez carne on needing only one
out to end the threat. Boone worked
him to a full count. fouling off two
pitches with two strikes. before hitling a soft liner for the double that pot
the Reds ahead. Chris Stynes added
an RBI single·.
Boone was in 6-for-39 (. IS4)
slump over the last II games when
he came to bat. He wound up producing the Reds • third victory in 12

Caruso's
four-hit night helps .White Sox beat Yankees 12-9
.

Epstern Conference finals to resume tonight

~

each other one more till14! instead of
going to his bullpen.
Bad decision.
" You know. usually I don't second; guess myself. but I had (Steve)
Reed warming up with Reggie
Sanders up," Baker said. "That's
what let them back in the game."
Sanders hit a .two-run homer. cutting the lead to 5-4 and improvins his
career statistics against Gardner to 9for-16 with tliree homers.
Still. the Giants had the lead and
a, bullpen that led the NL with a 1.99
~A. And ·it was facing a slumping
lineup that had only orle hit in its last.
21 at,bats with runners in scoring
pOsition.
The Reds pulled it out with some
clutch at-bats and some luck against

Scoreboard

'•'•

•

eighth.
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- When Bret
Instead of a satisfying 6-3 road
Boone's soft liner landed in left-cen· trip, the Giants packed for ho1114! havti:r field for a two-run double with ing to settle for a S-4 mark and a feeltwo outs in the eighth inning, the ing that they let one get away.
Cincinnati Reds had to remember
"This wasn't a bad trip for us."
what it's like to celebrate.
Charlie Hayes said. "But it would
"It's been so long since we got a have ileen nice to get that game
two-out base hit- I can't remember today."
when." manager Jaclt McKeon said.
It looked like it was well in hand.
after Boone's double set up a 7-5 vic- Brian Johnson and Barry Bonds hit
tory Wednesday over the San Fran- two-run holl14!rs off Eddie Priest, who
~isco Giants.
was making his major league debut.
The Giants just dropped their · and Giants starter Mar~ Gardner
heads, muttered under their breaths took a 5-2 lead into the seventh.
· and accepted a bullpen breakdown
He gOt two outs around a walk and
that doesn 'I happen very often. either. was clearly tiring when Reggie
The stingiest bullpen in the National Sanders came to bat. Sanders usualLeague let the Reds avoid a three- ly hits Gardner hard, but manager
game sweep by batting around in the · Dusty Baker ~ided to let them face

'

~·

Collet~&lt;'
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FERENCE: Annouocal ifs ~hunainJitln&lt;tmt In lhc
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will include Andcoon. Blurrrun. fmnltltn , Hanom-.
Mm"lw:'lcr, Mounl Sl. Jmtph. Wllb:L'h nnJ Wilm·
hlllt'n.

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Page 6 • The Dally
Sentinel
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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WHIRl: _ . . Glen (N.Y.)
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RACI! IIICCIRO: Ron , _ ,
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~ Camp will be held It Soulhem each day in lht: form of camp comHiah S&lt;:hool June 1-.5, 1998 from 9 petition such u P.I.G., free·duow ·
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The camp ia limited io plldes 3llip llld hish school principal Oor- 8 incl•~ve and playen wiD be piKed clltn the 11m hurdle In the bova"11~ hurdltilln the Dlvlelon
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2. WhiiWOMWUIIICitDhllci_.,Fontles"*'IPWIIPGQWil7
3.. WNIIh . . . lllnllt'. -n. •••
~

'••·

~

said. " I guess playing this touma- meniS around the- world and more
ment as defending champion, I have than $4 million in this country bdt
an edge over everybody else. I feel hasn'tcapturedthefancyofmostgolf
·. fans.
lhat much more confident."
Singh, 35, has captured Jouma-

......l~pl- ............. "' ...... _
.....,lljoow'

•

~

· every year just to keep up," he said.
But don 'I be misled. .Although
·Singh is nowhere 10 be found among
the lop 10 in' driving distance or
pulling, the other 104 players at the
Memorial won't overlook him.
_ "I have &amp;JICJS~~iye anitude,"_S_i~h

1. -

'•

I.

.

breaks every week and who makes
the most putts."
The native of Fiji said the top
playen have also been equalized by .
improvements in club desisn and
technology.
_ "I have to lake lwo steps forward

TRIVIA

992-2155

..
•

.

Woods, Emie Els, Justin Leonard. 1
Colin Mcinlgomerie and Davis Love
meJIIS, it's hard to dominate on the Ill.
PGA Tour these days•
"Few guys really stand out now,"
In an era when almost every play- said Sing~. defendins champion of
er spends hours prliCiicing and then lhe MeiiiCli'WToumament thai slarls
follows that up with weisJ!t training today. "Duval.is playins well. Tiscr
and conditioning, there isn 'I much of is obviously playing well every week.
a gap between the top few players in and Emie is playing good, so those
the world,
guys rally stand out: And even then.
Vijay Singh ousht to know. The they can't win every week. So the
numbers lilY he is among the best, standard of play is so much harder. It
although not even avid fans would boils down to who getS the riaftt

... e......

Pomeroy

Acceeaorles

' DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) - As evi·
depced by 19 winnen in 20 touma·

Eva••••"I.-·-.,., ......
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rank him with David Duval, Tiger

: ~The II th annu8i 'l'oii.MiO Basket-·

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Daily
Sentinel

lhreil

IllS had a better m:ord, winning
times to twice for Woods and finishing first irt one major and second in
another, while Woods has not senously contended in a major since win- ,
ning the Masters last year.
:
"I enjoy being put in that catego- •
ry," Leonard said when asked how he'
fell about being mentioned as one of
the best playe"' in the world. "There
are a lot of good young players out
there winning toumameniS, and that
speaks well for the future·of the PGA
Tour."
And right now no one can argue
.that Leonard is as good as anyone
playing the game.

f.ornado Basketball Camp
to .s tart Monday
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Pon111ca ond we've go1
Chevys. Som«Jmn we'l
taJc ilboul diflerent lhJnga,
you " ' -• maybe- 111m
Dear Cloarlie,
hlllory. .
. - . 25 poloa. 18 .......
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Ha ha compelad In
171 lOP 51, 321op 101,
HOW DIO YOU CIU
• widt Slorllaa Mad in docidinl to
&lt;banp•
men cor.-utive - ·
$18 million I n - ITMnD 1111 AAIIliiiGf 'I
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ldlld ofJ11WW up .......ct n, •
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· M did BoDilY· I ~ .
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lnl-.clln I going tO
two Winlton Cup champ!w1111 my dad. When ·
Olllhlpa, 12 ve-- (11184
HBtDRICIVRidc'aj&amp;llt a
1 - a little oldar, 11baut
and 181181, Ia the wtdelt ·
fiNIII guy. ll.doeln, 111111ter - · we llllled r.clng
nwgln tftlea.....
whit hlllkl you 10 do; quarter midglta. Thatachieved.
yau'l do 11. Ha _,, Ilk
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yau ID do antlhfna hi ·
mila IMI named Corpue
Rlr
lnd . .
1eat one,_ In-" ot
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Alii I : -IMIY
the put four umae, or
I diM for 111m until I rwtn. Speedwl)', • _,lllod~
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People llllnk thlll blcao•
called lllllllrled ..
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Corpue, . . . . llln for •
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· AGE: 34
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WIFE: Kim
lhip. NGbody - ' d racJna ..., In Moo-.~- CHILDREN: Juatln (t 7),
do 1ha1.•
San Antone. W. ~ ll1d
Ktlll., (will bo 15 on
DO YOU 8t1ARE
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June 1).
INFORIIATIOII WITH
.,_ back to aaphllt ll1d
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IIOMEI OWN: Born
YOUR llllmllll1101111'17 _, the dwnplonahlpe 11
111d1111Md In Corpua
"Not much. SomalloiiM... Moo-.- $an Antone
11*11 CociJ.Cdl eoo.
Clntl, Ttllllll; IJ.w In
do, bUt Kdlpeloda on
In 1970 and 1877."

4A4k

Sea Ul for Ycu ~
Power Tools &amp;

1

Dear NASCAR This Week,

t. ...._, IIOJ'IId pt

Blct&lt; on top

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I've been a - fan of
Stcrlint Marlin for yean. bui

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roce atl-70 ~011 In
~Mo.. " " " " ' -~~~a row. out-&lt;lullng Jot ·

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team pta. AI for die driver\
olwo, i t - tam-loolam on
an individual basis. Moot driven
.-;.. a ia1ary oi.., with o
peroent~p of tho JIUI1I 1110110)',
but inn-....., dto..,...
ment is nill a mllf« of public
record. Most moohanics m on
IIJailbt lllary, but 101110 lim

--·-d!Mgod
In-"-""'' - - two.-""'
COla 800, NASCNI'olongool

-

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.

players who&amp;e names appear above
Leonard's in the World Golf Rankinp.
Leonard. who came onto lht: PGA
Tour fulltime in 1995 and got two
second-piKe finishes lhat year,
picked up his first vi~lory 81 the
Buick Open in August of 1996. just
a few weeks before Woods turned
pro.
And since Woods emerged on
tour, Leonard has almosl kept pace
with the biggest nllllC in golf, winning four times to Woods' seven.
Each has a major championship.
Over the last 12 months, Leonard

BY RUSTY ai.ER

' .'
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y-.

He tlu also finished second in the confidence to he high. He cllllC
PGA Champilllllhip. second lhis YU1 from five strokes back on the final
a11'ucson and eighth in lht: Masten. day lui July 10 win the Brilish Open
Through it all, the ~ -year-old lhen came from five back apin in the
Texan has remained remarkably last round 10 win Ibis year'a Players
unchanscd - a hopeful sign that he Chanipionship.
will continue to add to his growth as
Forptabout sood young playen,
1 player.
forget even about great youns play" I don' t think I' m very different .ers. now when the wk. turns to who
as a person," Leonard said Wednes- :the best players are in the world.
day 81 Muirtield Village on the eve of Leonard's name comes up very
today's fJCSt round of the Memorial. quickly.
"My expcclllions are a little high- · Ernie Els, Tiser Woods and Davis
er. but they were high before," he Love Ill - all in the field lhis week
said. "My confidence is higher."
81 the Memorial - Greg Norman and
Leonard IllS good reason for his Colin Montgomerie are the only

·:

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Dear NASCAR This Week,
When they announce the
pune dw a driwr wins for any
"""'• is dw dtoi!IOIIO)' dto driwr
Jdl? Do the mcmbm of the
lam fiOl I peroentlp of it?
· Doalhoownerofdle.-car
JC1 a P"'"'llta,o of die pitno?
Do all ICIII1I lim die 1U110
ldUp for wlmi•• .......?

t idwtAL
-ION CWO-

.

nupt

. Blank
tie ihe look J.NNrd 1
keeps 1111 his face, bullhe kind of aolf ·
he hu played lhe 1aat 12 monthlbls
ceitainly IUI1Ied headl.
A year qo. Leonard wu oae of
many sood young pllfen in an
impressively deep mlenl pool on lhe
PGA Tour. This
Leonard comes
into the Memorial ToumllliCnt
reprded as one of the beat playen in
lhe world.
·
Sii)Ce leaving lht: nin-shortcned
Memorial with a 46111-place finish 12 .
response.
months ago, Leonard has won the
"This is my blank look," Leonard Kemper Open, the British Open and
said withoul mclcins a smile.
the Players Championship. .

By RON IIRAK
DUBUN, Ohio (AP) - If Jualin
~llnl ever dec ideo 110 leave JOif, he
mlaflt WIIIIIIO c:onsider playing carda
for a living. The grim-faced Texan's
poker face is so well known lhat even
Leonard WI make liaftt of iL
Asked aquesdon he clearly didn' t
think was a very good or at least one
he wanted to answer, Leonard just
slmd,al lhe qliClltioner.
:"You dQn't like lht: i dea?" the
questioner asked, trying to gel a

Despite lack of .top-10 status, Singh seeks respect in Memorial

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1616 Eastern Ave~ Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-3672 .
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Thurlday, May 28,1998

By The Bend
Ann
Landers
IW7. L"s
SyndiUI~
Syno.hl'~\1.' •

An1.: k~ T1rn~'

Jlld

Cr .:.~l .•l~

Dear Ann Landers: A reader
who signed herself "Totally Anony-'
mous" complained that her recently
retired husband has no hobbies and
i~ driving her crazy. I have two suggestions : ·

I
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I) She can tell him if he knows so
damn much about cooking and
cleaning. she will quit doi ng both
and the jobs arc his for the rest of his
life.
2) ·Go out and huy a computer
and put him un lhc Internet. I can
guaranlcc her that she wi II not sec or

hear from him for months on end. ·
I know what I am talking about
because it happened 1n me. -- Bye
Bye Forever in Texas ·
Dear Bye Bye: So it happened 10
you. too'' My mail tells me tli:u the
Internet may become the principal
hmncwrcckcr or the next century.
Wi(al is a hobby for many has turned
into an addiction for others.

Meigs County Libraries offer readers something exciting for summer

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel
Thursday, May 28, 1998

Finally, there are safety concerns.
You may have he~rd stories of boas
' workin~ their way through plumbDear Ann Landers: You've ing systems in apartment buildings
printed several lcners about how and lizards wrapping themselves
cheap and easy it is to keep snakes. · around a car's engine block, not to
You menlioned that pythons crush mention the harm a reptile can do to
their prey. Not true. Snakes suffo· a pet or a small child.
cate their prey by constriction, gradI don't mean to discourage peoually limiting muscle movement ple from having reptiles as pel~ I
until breathing is&gt;impossible.
just want 10 spare some innocent
Second, it is neither cheap nor creatures unnecessary harm bec~use
easy to keep snakes . Reptiles arc their owners are misinformed . Your
high-maintenance pels. They require readers who arc interested in reptiles
sun lamps and other heat sources, should do some research with their
food and nutritional supplements. local zoos before buying. -· Reptile
plus a lot of room to wander. sun Enthusiast in New Jersey
themselves. shed and exerci se .
Dear Enthusiast: Forgive me.
Many people who thought it was hut I am more interested in the safecool to get an iguana didn 't know ty of my readers 'than in the wellwhat to do when it grew 10 he 6 feet being of reptiles. I would not recomlung:
mend reptiles as pets for any nnc
Feeding snakes can he C&lt;Jmplicat- under 16 years of age. As I' vc said
cd. Sometimes. you must stun or kill repeatedly. I would rather have a
their rood -· especially rats. Then. canary. At least they sing.
there arc medical concerns. SalmuDear Ann Landers: I' vc enjoyed
ncll a. infection affects reptiles just as your column for more than 30 years.
it does humans. Reptiles arc also Now. I'd like to give something
prone to mouth sores, internal para- hack. Here's a story I found in Cursites. skin ulcers and other diseases. , mudgeon's Corner, a local newsle tAnd nol all vets will treat reptiles.
ter I also enjoy:

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY - Under sponsorship of the Meigs County P.riends of
the Ljbrary, a new n:ading program
for young people will get underway
at the Meigs County District Public
Library and its branches at Middlepan and Racine on June I.
Carrying out the theme, "Stamp
into Reacting", the new program will
give young people from pre-schoOl

President Coolidge invited some
Vermont friends to dine at the White
House. They were worried about
their table manners and decided 10
do everything President Coolidge
did. The meal passed smoothly until
coffee was served. Coolidge poured
his coffee into a saucer. The guests
followed suit. He added sugar and
cream. The visitors did likewise.
Then, Coolidge leaned · over and
gave his to the cat. •• Andy in
Evanston. Ill.

through grade 12 an opponunity to
earn a ·free book selected from a
library list.
Young people may register for
the new program at the libraries in
Pomeroy, Middleport or Racine
beginning Tuesday, May 26. Partici·
pants will be given booklets and
each time they read· a book and
return it to the library, they will

Day"; "My Visit to the Dinosaurs";
"The Chronicles of Narnia";
"Sylvester and the Magic Pebble";
"Where the Wild Things Are";
"Anne of Green Gables" and "Maniac Magee".
The new year-round reading pr&lt;&gt;gram is under the direction of Amy
L. Miller, head of the libraries' chiI,
dren 's services.

receive a stamp to place inside a
booklet. When two booklets have
been filled the participants will have
their choice of a free book to add to
their home libraries.
Volumes included in the free
books which participants can earn
are "The Whipping Boy"; "Missing
May", "Sarah, Plain and Tall"; ''The
Little House"; "Shilo"; ''The Snowy

Summer jobs may require special wag·e reporting
BY ED PETERSON, Manager
Social Security Office, Athan1

NEW PROGRAM - Marjorie Walburn, Middleport, secretary-trneurer of the Malge County Frlenda of tha l,.lbnuy, 11 pictured with
some of the boob which young people can earn through th1 new
• stamp Into Rndlng" program being etarted at the Melga County
· Dlltrlct Public Library In Pomeroy and HI brenchea In Middleport
and Racine.

Is life passing you .by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet, " How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lone·
ly." Send a scll~addrcsscd. long,
husincss-siw envelope and a check
or muncy order for $4.25 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Friends. c/o Ann Landers. P.O. Box
11562. Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada. send $5.15.) To lind out
more about Ann Landers and read
her past columns, visit the Creators
Syndicate web. page at www.creators.com. ANN LANDERS (R)
COPYRIGHT 1998 CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.

Young people in summer jobs
should be aware that, while Social
Security tax is automatically deducted from your earnings in most jobs,
some types of summer jobs require
special reporting. These include jobs
where you earn tips, jobs where you
work around someone' s house and
jobs on a farm.
If you work at a job where you
make $20 or more per month in cash
tips, that income is covered by
Social Security. That means you and
your employer are required to pay
Social Security and Medicare taxes
on this income. And, reporting tips
and other income now will mean
more Social Security benefits for

THURSDAY
RACINE - Racine July 4 Plan·
ning Committee meeting Thursday,
6:30 p.m. at the fire department
anneK to make plans for the upcoming celebration. All individuals,
businesses and organizations wanting to assist are welcome to attend.

Meigs Band members honored at banquet

POMEROY- AA and Al-A non,
Thursday, 7 p.m . Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave.,
MEMORABIUA - Realdentl are Invited to vlelt the Middleport ·· Pomeroy.
'
Branch of the Malg1 County Dletrlct Public Library at 178 South
Third Ava., to,vtew an lnteraetlng diiPIIY of World War I memorabll·
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Ia. The wide variety of lteme from the flret World War are from the Board of Education, regular meetcollect~ of Mra. Pat Mille of Middleport and originally were among
ing, Thursday, 1 p.m. at district's
the baloj;glng1 of her flther, the late Raymond (Mickey) Sherman, central office.
and her uncial, the lata George Sher!'lllln end the late Cllranca Middleton, alt of whom eerveilln tha war. Many of tha·dleplay :1rtlclee
POMEROY - Meigs County
ware found quite recently etored In trunkl In the attic at the home
Executive Committee
of tne late Mr. and Mrl. Th011111 Middleton In Mlddleport.,AII!ong the Democratic
meeting
Thursday,
1 p.m. at Carpen·
Items n photo booke of campa, particularly Camp Sherman, greet.
ters
Hall
for
an
organizational
meetIng carde, dog tag1, e carton book, eervlce lnllgnlae, an ash tray
made. from emmunhlon, a cooking unh, 1onge of the era ae well 11 ing.
numerou1 ottler ertlclee. Pictured with the display; which will
POMEROY - Meigs County
remain In place until after May 30, Ia Wendl Max1on, 1uparvleor of
4
Republican
Committee meeting
the •lddllport'Brancli. • •
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you and your family later when you agricultural workers in the same tax would be deducted.
To make sure you receive credit
retire, or if you become disabled or year. Your employer should be tak·
die. ·
ing money out of .your wages each for all your earnings, you should
When you earn tips, you must time you gel paid and sending .it to request a Personal Earnings and
keep a daily record of the tips you the federal government to cover Benefit Estimate Statement from
Social Security al least every three
receive. This includes tips received your payment to Social Security.
If you work as a babysiuer or do years. When you gel your statement,
in cash direclly from customers or
from other employees and tips ot her work in another person's check it to be sure it's right. If you
household (culling grass, painting, find an error, call the special tolladded to a credit card charge
. If your tip income totals $20 or gardening) you also need to earn a free number listed on the form to get
more in a month. you are required to certain amount before your wages your record corrected.
To get a statemenl request form,
report the amount to your employer. count for Social Security purposes.
Your employer is responsible for How much depends on how old you all you have to do is contact the
reporting the correct tip and wage are.
nearest Social Security office or cal,l
information 10 the Social Security
If you are age 18 or over, you our toll-free number: 1-800-772Administration and the Internal would need to earn at least $1 ,100 1213. Ask for the Rcquesr For Perbefore your employer would need to so~a l Earnings And Benefit EstiR.evenue Service .
If you get a job doing farm work, deducl Social Securily taxes from male Statement (Form 7004). Or
you will need to cam at least $150 a your wages.
you can download an application
year for work to be counted for
If you arc under age 18, your . from our Internet Website at
Social Security purposes if your wages as a household worker arc not hnp:llwww.ssa.gov.
employer paid at least $2,500 to all covered under Social Security, so no

Thursday, 7:30 p.m. in the County
~ourt Courtroom. All newly elected
committee persons should plan 10
anend for swearing-ln.
POMEROY ;_ Preceptor Beta
Beta picnic Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at
the home of Joan Corder. Drinks and
tableware will be furnished . Members ar~ to bring covered dish and
lawn chairs.

a.m. and 6 p.m. All welcome . Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. will be the
guest speaker.

Frances Reed will lead program.
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge, F&amp;AM, Chesler, will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall . Work
will he in the Master Mason degree.
FRIDAY
.
.
LONG BOTIOM ·_ Builders
Quartet will sing at the MI. Olive
Community Church, Long Bouom,
Friday, 7 p.m, Pastor Lawrence
Bush invites the public to attend.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church, Pomeroy, revival starting
Sunday, continuing through, June 3.
Dr. John Hamblin of Pontiac, Mich.,
speaker. Services, Sunday, 6 p.m.
· and Monday through Wednesday, 7
· p.m. Special singing nightly.

ROCK SPRINGS - Town and
Country EKpo 1998 committee
POMEROY- A free Fun, Food
meeting, 7 p.m. at the secretary's
SYRACUSE- "Apocalypse," a
office on the Rocksprings Fair· and Fellowship program will be held motion picture presentation of Jack
grounds. All persons interested in Friday, 6- 1'0:30 p.m. at God's Van Impe, ·6 p.m.. Syracuse Church
· Neighborhood Escape for Teens on of the Nazarene. Ice cream and cake
the Expo are urged to attepd.
Main Street, Pomeroy. Snacks. fellowship to follow. Public invit~d.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers video games, computer programs.
FOREST RUN - Fifth Sunday
Plains V~terans of Foreign Wars Music is played while 'he center is
hymn sing Sunday, 7 p.m. at Forest
Post 905:' will meet Thursday, 7:30 open.
p.m. Name drawing will be held .
Run United Methodist Church near
Minersville. Guest speaker will be
SATURDAY
DANVILLE ~ Special services thC Rev. Keitt\ Rader. Pastor Chad
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 8 p,in. at the l!ome of at the Danville Church of Christ Sat- Emrick invites the public.
Janet Connolly. Gladys "H.omas and urday. 7 p.m. and Sunday, 10:30

ss than five minutes and you'll
be hooked on the 400 Series!

•
SENIORS RECOGNIZED - These senior members of the Melge High School band were honored at the Melge band banquat held ,
last week. They are, front, Scott Sellers, Mike Parker, Hyung-Do Kim, and Michael Leifheit; second row, Cortney Haley, Brandee· Gilmore,
Melissa Ramsburg, Sara Craig, and Jeeslca Wheeler. Back, Michelle Bissell, Danlelle Grueser, Wendy Shrimplln, Amanda Napper, Kevin
,._,, Lauren Anderson, Amy Smith, Danlelle Peckham, Sarah Grueaer and Krlaten Welt

T~e versatile 400

Series
liquid-cooled, 20· to 22-hp
engine and 54- or 60-inch mowing deck.

Includes Riders, LX lawn
Tractors, GT, 300, &amp; 400 Series
Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors, F500
Front Mowers, and all
attachments.

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40 I n.ttl e r

•

51

til

47

BrootJJ

til

Sllow Blower

54

lrt

.

Froul BIHtl e

It's easy to get attached to a 400 Series Lawn and Garlfen Tractor. With over 25 different implements to choose from. the 400 is designed to work on more than just your Lawn or garden.
With the Quik-Tatch implement
system that lets you grit hooked-up in minute~. you can change attachments as fast as you change your mind. No tools needed. Whrch means the only
problems you'll have with 400 .
and Garden Tractor Is deciding what to get attached to . . Get hooked-up with the best lawn equipment. See your .19hn Deere dealer today

a

SPECIAL AWARDS - presented to theie members of the Meigs High School marching band. Front, Jessica Wh8elar,
~ Haley; Michelli Bissell, Brlll'ulea Gilmore, and Melissa Rameburg. Second row, Sarah Grueeer, Mike Parker, Scott S.llare Kevin
MIChael Leifheit, Danlelle Peckham, Wendy Shrlmplln.
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668 PINECREST DRIVE

Boy Scouts of America plan camp summer program
•

will happen form 8:30a.m. to S p.m.
on a daily ba§is. Cub Seoul sessions
begin on June 8 and July .12.
For more infonnlllion on any
the program contac:t you unit leader,
or call the Boy Scout otftce 523-

3408.

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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(740) 446·2412 ,

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The Tri-State Atea Counci I of the three-week camJiing season for Boy leaders will participarc in ,such
Boy Scouts of America is proud to Scouts. ages 11 - 17, a two-week day scouting activities as hiking, canoeannounce that Camp Arrowhead, camp season for Cub Scouts, ages 8- ing, rincry, archery nature horse:
lot4ited on Blue S'ulphur Road, Ona. 10, and a one-week Webelos camp manship, motor boating, etc. Special
WCst Virginia will lie open again this for 10 year ofds. Boy Scouts Camp evening activities include campfires,
su'mmer for the Scouts and Scouters sessions begin on June 21, June 28 chapel services, rappelling, BMX
and July 5.
.
or the Tri.State area.
biking, etc, .
During camp, boys· and their
;-'The proJrams will include a
For the Cub Sc,puts the activiril:$ .

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9age10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, May 28,1998

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~-~·------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------------------------~···

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Racine-Southern Alumni banquet held at Southern High School~

·The Racine-Southern Alumni
Banquet was held Saturday at Southern High School.
The welcome was given by
S'outhern High School Principal
Gordon Fisher with the invocation
by Paul Beegle. A special tribute to
retired teacher Carl Weese was presented by Roger Birch and retired
teai:hers Gayle Price and Edna Price
were honored by Carla Shuler.
· · Minutes of the. reunion last year
were read by Shirl~y Johnson who
also asked for volunteers to help
plan the program next year. Ann
Boso and Lisa Woods agreed to do
sb.
A patriotic theme was used for
the program and those participating
illcluded Carroll and Margie Cleek,
Qixie Sayre, Carla Shuler and
Shirley Johnson. All members who
had served in the Uniied States
Anned Forces at any time were rec9gni7.ed and gave their branch of
~rvice, rank. and years served. ·
Two scholarships were given by
the Alumni Association. Gordon

Fisher announced the winners who
were Lindsay Smith and Jennifer
Yeauger.
Carla Shuler also recognized all
reunion classes as well as all other
graduates attending.
•
Yearbooks for 1919 and 1920 ·
donated by Ann Boso and Shjrley
St~bart Roberu were auctioned by
Dan Smith with the proceeds going
into the scholarship fund.
Special recognition was given to
Ms. Irene Miller Hayman, class of
1924, as being the earliest graduate
present. Ms. Lois · Moore was the
alumni who had travelled the farthest, havin,g come fro.rn New Mexico. Both were presented gifts from
the association.
.
Everyone joined in singing the
school Alma .Mater and the benedict(Ot_was given by Paul Beegle .
y rhose reunipn year graduates
. attending included the following:
1933 - Harold Roush; 1938 - 'Clifford Beaver, Frank Cleland, .Raymond Furbee, David Yost, Robert W.
Beegle, Hazel Hilldore McKelvey

and Dixie Spencer Smith;
1943 - Kathryn Sellers Heater,
Doris Pickens Jackson; 1948 - Betty
Roush Johnson, Mary Simpson
Shuler, Betty Pickens Harris, Lois
lhle Moore, Helen Sayre Hill, Ann
Patterson Boso, William Shelton,
Virgil Norris. Opal Cozart VanMeter ·
and John T. Wolfe;
·
. 1953 - Dan Smith, George
Theiss, Joann Brewer Daniel, Eileen
Wickline Hamlin, Eliubeth Diddle
Fisher, Harold Circle and David
Hill; 1958- Waid Fo~ter, Shelba Hill
Foster, Lawrence Theiss, Deorge
Donahue, Don Miller, Linda Mallory Hill and John Pape;
1963 - Jess Wood '"d Kay Willford; 1968 • John Warner. James
Harden, Sharon Yates Cretsinger,
Joyce Quillen, Pam Cleek Diddle,
James Lawrence and Karen Johnston Bowens ;
1978 ~ Herbert Erv.in; 1983 Tonja Salser Hunter, Melanie Weese
and Jerry Wolfe ; 1988 - Donita
Manuel ; 1993 - Ray Proffill Jr. and
Mary Smith Proffiu.

Three Meigs Counly students .
have been presented lhc Alwood
Award for Excellence from the University of Rio Grande.
Danielle Grueser of Pomeroy.
Lamar Lyons II of Tuppers Plains
and John Mark Malson Ill of Racine
will receive scholarships covering
.full tuition. The awards are based on·
scholastic achievement, aptitude lest

scores and leadership in ocademic
excellence. The. award is presented
in honor of the university's
founders, Nehemiah and Permelia
Atwood.
·
Grueser is the ~aughtcr of Danny
and Debprah Grucser of .Pomeroy
and is a recent graduate of Meigs
High School. She plans to study
education at tbe .University of Rio

LAMAR LYONS II

JpHN MARK MATSON Ill

T~ird grader Kimberly Casto
~warded full-tuition to URG
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1

Kimberly Castor of Long Bot-

lOrn, a third grader at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School, was given a
full-tuition scholarship to the Uniyersily of Rio Grande at the Eastern
'J..ocal honors reception held recently
at Eastern High School.
! Her name was drawn from a hat
~ontaining the names of the district's
honor students and the scholarship
was. presented by Dr. Barry Dorsey, .
president of the University.
_
1 Sliidents who achieved honor roll
suuus for the entire 1997-1998
~hool year were honored wilh
fwards at the reception.
, Presented awards were : First
grade: Samanthia Balcer, Benjamin
!luckley, Crockell Crow, Herbie
Grate, Casey Hannum, Jaela Kirby,
Shannon Nelson, Kyle Sargent,
ICatie · Wilfong, Danjelle Barnhart,
Zachary Carson, 1ina Drake, Derek
Griffin, Alexis Hirzel, Amanda
Larkins, Rebecca Owen, Katlyn
Sauvage, Heather Brooks, Candace
Collins, Scou Frye, Mallory
Gulhrie, Matthew Hoskin, Ashley
Life. Anthony Putman, and Amber
)Vhile.
1 Second Grade: Megan Broderick,
tourtney Collins, Lindsey Grale,
Alex Kuhn. Kara Osborne, Jackie
· ~mith , Tyler Wolfe, Daniel Buckley,
ftyan Davis, Cassie Hauber, Chris
Laudennilt, Trista Putman, Sarah
Wach1er, Niki Young, Nathan Carroll. Kyle ·Edwards, Kelsey .Holter,
Zack Newell, Kyle Rawson and
Morgan Werry.
.
: Third Grade: Stephanie Baker,
Jillian Brannon, Kimberly Castor,
)essica Fisher, Hannah Pratt, Britlney Watson, Brillany Bissell,
Samantha Brown, Kayla Collins,
Jason Marcinko, Derek · Putman,
Erin Weber, Sarah Boston, Jessica ·
Buckley, Ryan Davis, Alu
McGrath, Trista Simmons, and

WINS SCHOLARSHIP - Kimberly Castor, a third grader at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School; was preaented a acholarahlp to
the University of Rio Granda during academic honors ceremonies
at Eallarn High School taat -k. Alao pictured are, 1-r, Dr. Wayne
Whhe, Dr. Barry Doraey, prealdant of the the UAG, Klmberly'a moth·
er, Lesa Sidwell, and Jake Bapet of Rio Granda~
Amber Willbargcr.
Fourth Grade: Brian Caslor,
Andrew Mcintyre, James · Will,
Christopher Davis, Shawn Reed,
Amanda Windon, Nicholas Kuhn,
Sarah Wiggins.
Fifth Grade: Ken Amsbary,
Christopher Carroll, Carrie Elberfeld, Ross Holter, Bryan Minear,
Darren Scarbrough, Krista White,
Briuany Barnett, Cody Dill, Andy
Francis, Kalie Hoxsie, Sara Pore,
Casey Smilh, Chelsea Young, Derek
Baum. Adam Dillard. Jennifer Hayman, Jessica Kehl, Jaime Reed. and
Morgan Weber.
· Sixlh Grade: Jessica Boyles,
Alyssa Holter, Hollie Rose, Chrissie
Gregory, Jonathan Owen, Stacy

Smilh, Brittany Hauber, Sandy Pow·
ell.
•
Seventh Grade:
Miranda Buckley, Nichol Honaker,
Jennifer Thoma, Carrie Crow, Lcann
Marcinko, Chelsey Wood, Sonya
Frederick, Tyler Simmons and Brandon Werry.
Eighth Grade: Tamara Bissell,
Lindsey Cros!, Garrell Karr. Sara
Mansfield, Stade Watson, Bradley
Brannon, Tina DeLaCruz, Tiffany
Kidder, Kimberly Marcinko, Holly
Broderick , Ben Holter, Chrislopher
Lyons, and Danielle Rucker.
The event was funded through
grants through the Eisenhower and
09.als 2000 Grant programs from
Ohio Department of Education.

were

C~bbage

Patch Kids turn 15,
but still hold childlike charm

•

newsletter for Cabbage Patch collec· By NICOLE L. GILL
tors .
Gannett News Service
"(Dottie) used to wri1c for anothWith names such as Edgar Lou,
Kevin , CC, bouie and Melvin Dud- er newsletter, bu1 i1 didn't give her
ley, Cabbage Patch Kids endeared enough scope," \Yilhitc says of her
tHemselves to their "paren!S." They Kid made by Colcco Indutries in the
wcren 't .slim ·like Barbie dolls, bul early 1980s.
Children and parents alike were
chubby like real children.
It's ·been 15 years since Cabbage attracted to the dolls for a variety of
Palch Kids hii the scene when they reasons. ·t . ~
"f initially was attracted to them
became the No I. selling large doll,
because
I hey didn't do anything,"
a~d h~':e stayed ther~. says Sara
Rosale~ of Mattei Inc., the doll's Wilhite says. "They came with a
m'anufaclurer si nee 1995. The first name, birth certi ficatc and adoption
mass-.JlUirketed
dolls,
which papers.,Jt was up lo the 'parenl' to
replace~ the original st;~ft-sculptured provide 'qrealivity .and imagination
(aces with vinyl on a soft body, sold · to do something with it.''
fQr less than $30 and now can be
To · commemorate the 15th
~orth up to $700.
anniversary of Cabbage Patch Kids,
~ The paren1s of 20- 30-year-olds a special 15th anqiversary edition of·
~~o~ ~II too well how hard it W!IS to the Cabbage Patch Kid wil,l be introg~t those dolls during the 1983 duced i'\ the faU.
Christmas season. There were long
"It's a nostalgic return to (the
lines and fights as parents b'attled to 1983) doll," says Beth Gilbert, .a
get wh.at few Cabbage Patch Kids spokesperson for Mattei al Manning,
Selvage &amp; Lee.
·
"':ere qQ StOre shelves.
"We wanted to do something kind
; ,, "TI)e Cabbage Patch Kids are the
fU'St toy.s that sel 1he benchmark for of special for lhat," says Xavier
1~e toy craze, 'goua have, must . Roberts, the mastermind behind the
have' loys for lhe 'holiday season," Cabbpge Patch Kids. "And do the
~ays Rosales.
same thing lhat kind of started it
.
What made them unique was lhat ow·· ·
tl]ey could be "adopted." Birth cerThe doll will be just like the 1983
iipcates 8fcompanied the dolls wilh doll, Oilbert says, with the vinyl
fWne, ~fo6tprfnl arid 'f'mg~i-pii~t Oft facc:;, yarn -hair. cloth body and
lliem. All a new "parent" had to do ·"outie" belly buttoro. II will also be
IY,as se11d in lhc adoption papers 10 lhe oriJ!inal size - 16 inches, four
the central adoption agency, and the inches,. larger lhan the cun:ent dolls. ·
''baby" would he "legally" theirs.
"'tn- addition. to the anniversary edi- ,
And i1 is because of that simple lion Cabbage Patch Kid. Mattei is
concepl thai collectors of these dolls sponsoring
a
"memorable
ahound.
momen1s" essay contest. The winner
Pat and Joe Prosey of Lconard- will receive a "$15,000 savings
iawn. ~d .. !Jcgan collecting Cah- hond as well as 15 Cabbage Pa1ch
eagc Pa1ch Kids in 1985 when they Kids. each one being one of a kind,"
adopted Kevin. Thirteen years lalcr, says Mattei 's Rosales.
.licy have more than 4.000 Cabbage
Gilbert describes the contest as·a
e:otch Kids.
call for "90 million plus parents"to
: "We didp'l start when lhc cra&gt;.y tell "their story of whal their Kids
t.:raze started." Pat Proscy says. Bul mean to' them, how they're a part of
Clncc they adoplcd Kevin, they need- the famil~,"
tid a girl Jo go wilh him. And so on .
tTo enter the coolest, send a
'flld SCI on. .
500-wor~ . or less essay before July
• To hear Prosey. 50, talk, Kevin 31. 1998, ~o: The Cabbage Patch
migh1 as wclll&gt;e her child. "He has Kids Post Officcl, 6500 Wilshire
llis ow~ little room. his own bed, his Blvd., Suite 1900, Los Angeles, CA
11Vin pets.''
90048
, , For ~nn 'Wilhite, ~ college proFor more information call the
li:ssor of 15 years in the midwest, CabbagC'I~~lc~ Kids hodinc toll· free
tlci head "cabbage" is Dottie,' who at I (877) CPK-KIDS.
iJ also co-editor of a monthly
•
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microwave at high 6 to 7 minutes Or
unlil barely fork tender, rearrangins
potatoes after 3 minutes. Alternately
thread cooked polatoes and squasft
on six 8-inch skcwen. Combine
margarine, garlic and oregano, brush
half of mixture over vegetables.
Place on grid beside steaks. GriP
kabobs 10 minutes, turning once ancj
brushing with remaining margarine
mi~ture. Season with sail and p:w.cf
to taste. Serves six.
·

Yocurt pops (Fun ror Kldl)
·· Stir and spoon your favorite
yogurt into a popsicle maker ancj
freeze. If you do not have a popsiclc
maker substitute a small plastic cup
with a plas•.ic spoon inserted for i
handle.
(Thll artldt II provided 11 a Nr·
vice or lht Me~ ~ounty Hql~
Department's Preventive HniiJI
Service Grant, Jackie Stareher1
toordln•tor and Sharon Smith;
81Slslant coordinator.)
'

CI.OIU111' INCLU..
ALL FLATS It
HANGING ·BASKETS

$5EACH
41N.POTS.....:Mon.-88LN,
Cloaed Sunday

IUIIIIDS

1111110.1
SYRACUSE

1tN771

full

If you are walking, do not worry
if you can not go live miles. Maybe
you should set yoor goal at two
miles for now, and gradually wort
up to five miles. If walking is not for
yoo, look for activity that is convenient and furi, l(OU arc more apt to
stick with something that you enjoy.
These good ha,bits will help in your

Our line Up:

Quality Prescription Senice
at Competitive Prices•.

~

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Hendricks host Racine missionary society gatherinij
The B.enha M. Sayre Missionary
Society of Racine met recenlly at the
home of Nondus Hendricks. Ten
members aucnded .
Barbara Gheen had devotions,
titled "God Is in Control," using
Psalm 27 : "The Lord is my Light
and Salvation, whom shall I fear'?
~e Lord is the stronghold ~~ my
hfe, of whom shall I be afratd.
She slated. that Chrislians are
responsible to stand up for good in
our land.
Margie Grimm gave the prayer.
Thank-you notes were read from

Karen Stoner. scholarship recipient,
and from 1he Ladies' Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospi tal. Mu·rrow Indian Children's Home. Emma
Adams and Linda Grimm.
Lillian Hayman gave a report on
"White Cross Quota:· filled and
mailed, stating that bandages had
been rolled ~nd sent to a hospital in
Zatre.
Reports on the sick lisl were
updated and get-well cards sent lo
George Sellers. Rev. Lusher, Linda
Grimm, Sara Hollon, Dormhy .and
Ralph Badgley, and to a chtld hn by

a car whit~ riding a bicycle.
A collection was tak~n and dispersed to Carrie Bdl Brown, Larry
Jones, Feed The Children. Kodiak
Baplist Mission and lhc Meigs
Counly Senior Center.
Naomi Stobart had 1hc program .
and used a playlel, "White Fences or
China,", about a missionary socic1y
sponsonng a young chtld '" Chtna
for many years .
When she -was grown, she
received a scholanhip to study in
America and came to the church to
meet all the ladtes who had scm

money for her supporl, a&gt; king the~
to continue to support children. ···
The socie1y took interest in the
program because they _,upporl 'lrr
ynung girl in lhc Murrow lndimr
Children's Home.
Refreshments were served !\i
Martha Lou Beegle, Barhara Ghi~1
Lillian Hayman, Mildred H 1
Gcraldtnc Cleland. MarJone Gn
Emma Adams. Florence Adams.)
Naomi Stobart.
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Military News Notes
Thomas Liter
Thomas B. Liler, son of Richard
Liter, Long Bottom and Pam J.
Ables. Pomeroy, enlisted in lhe U.S.
Air Force recently through the Air
Force recruiter in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Upon successfully completing

the Air Force's six-week basic milit~ry training at Lackland Air Force
Base near San Anlonio, Texas, Airman Liter is scheduled to recci ve
technical training in the mechanical
career field . He is a 1995 gradua1c of
Eastern High School,

Eric Hill
Army Private Eric I. Hill has
graduated from One Station Unit
Training (Osun at the U.S . Army
Infantry School in Ft. Benning, Ga.
The !raining combines basic military
training and advanced individual
training.

During AlT. soldiers rccciv•.
inSiruclion to become qualifi
light-weapons infantrymen and in'
rect-firc crcmen in a rifle or mo
squad.
He is the son of Ronald B. Hi I
Pomeroy. and a 1996 graduale
Easlern High School.
•

·ANTICIPATION.
We're about to
give birth to a brand
new perinatal unit

Recently, we·made a big decision.
We're going ahead with an all
new maternity unit at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital. We see it as
an investment for the future, an .
investment in our area's families
and families-to-be.
The rooms will be state~of­
ihe-art, ~ real showcaSe environment for you and your baby. Best
of all, it's a place where we can
practice the very latest bi£tt!ing

techniques and our own very spe·
cia! brand of traditional warmth
and caring from a first-class,
committed group of nurses and
physicians.
In all, undertaking this
renovation project is our way of
saying that quality maternity care
and the future of Athens and
Athens County families has never
looked brighter.

"

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Uplt $5.N OH ••r prescrlptliL 1·
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filHJlH~
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Swisher &amp;·Lohse Phar•acr 1
Explru &amp;-13-88

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prescription. ;

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We honor most · third party
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prescription plans. Your Swisher i
&amp; .Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck, ,
Ken &amp; Ron, are here to fill your !
prescription needs. ·
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O'BLENESS

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Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Drive, Albens, OH 4570 I
614-593-5551 • www.obleness.orc

A hospilsl w~ can all ·
CEL1!BRATE TURNING 15 a doH almllar to the 11183 VIRion
be offered to collectora.

TIN

SHOE PLACE

.

fruit. Pilgrims said they were an
abominalion, classed with cardl,
drink, etc.
Thomas Jefferson was growing
them in Monticello in 1774. They.
were though! cancerous until thll,
19th century. They were listed in
seed catalogues in Maine in 183~,
Campbell's started marketing lorna-,
!oJ soup in I S95, and Buprees liste,d:
them in 1888. For 1ruck farmer~,
they are a money-making crop. -:,
Belly Dean attended the OAGc;
Judges Council at ·Shawnee Sial!:
Park at Portsmouth. A luncheon was
enjoyed and a State forester . con_-,
ducted a wildflower tour in the afl~t
noon . A plant sale was held a1 1!\1:1
end of the day.
,1
The next meeting will be held 011
June 3- lhc annual picnic.
'

I .

ne

A family picnic will-be held it I
A Health and .Harmony Fair,
p.m. on June 14 at lhe home of sponsored by Healing Heart
: Helen Blackston and Peggy Har- Helen ana Harold~lackston. Every- Herbals, will be . held at 32654
ris, who are retiring from the Mid- one is lo bring their own table ser- Mt:Cumber Road in Rutland.
- · The day will provide in formadleport Child Conservation League, vice, drinks and a covered dish.
The
Longaberger
basket
was
prelion. products and services that conwere honored with a surprise party
sented
to
Cheryl
Frazier
of
Bidwell.
tribule to health and happiness,
at the Rock Springs United
Refreshments of vege1able and according to Cindy· Parker of HealMethodist Church.
· Mrs. Blackston and,, Mrs. Harris cheese trays and a cake were served ing Heart Herbals.
Classes are scheduled throughout
j.yere presented with aifls and flow- 10 members and guests: Megan Dyer
and
former
CCL
members
Peggy
the
day. beginning at II a.m.,
ers from the members and guests,
bod Nancy Morris composed "A Houda.,heh, Clarice Kitchen. Janet through 7:30 p.m., on topics includDuffy and Ann Colburn.
.
ing mushroom cultivalion, wild ediTribute" to Helen and Pen~The !raveling prize was won by bles, soap making, aromith(rapy,
: Devotions, ''The Gift," was taken
from "Chicken Soup for 1he Soul," Linda Broderick, and the hostess gifl herb walks, worm composting and
·slretching for de-stress. .
and real!_ by Nancy Morris. The was given to Kathy Dyer.
Items for sale will include
lneetins was opened by Kathy Dyer,
healthy foods. crystals, culinary and
E-ident, wilh the Pledge of AIJe.
medicinal herbs, aromatic candles,
,gi~e and the Mother's Prayer.
bio-degradable soaps, and books.
, A short bulineu meetins was
A $5 enlry fee admits visitors to
held and a thank-you note was
all
classes and giveaways. Children
'received from NIIICY Morris for a
will
be admitted at no cost.
planl aentto her durin• her il!ness.
CCL holdl party ror retirees

Overweight is one of lhc major quest for a long. healthy. and proheallh problems .in America today. ductive life.
An estimated 32 million adult Americans are affected. The overweight Grilled herb muslard steaks with
problem is on the increase as Amer- sea!Ontd vegtlable kabobs
ican eal more and exercise less.
2 we)l-trimmed boneless beef top
Why be concerned ahoul your loiq or rib eye sleaks, cui I inch
weight? Because, if you arc over- . thick
·
weight, you arc endangering your
Salt
ove~all health. Being overweight
Herb Mustard
greatly 'increases the risk of Hyper·
2 large cloves garlic. crushed
lension (high blood pressure) dia2 leaspoons water
betes, gall bladder disease, and may
2 tablespoons Dijon-style l11US·
afso increase. your risk for some lard
kinds of cancer. Eating a diet rich in
I teaspoon dried basil leaves
fruits and vegetables, cuuin~ down
112 teaspoon p:ppcr
on saturated fa!S, and eatinr proper
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme leaves
serving sizes is equally as important
I. In 1-cup lass measure, comas physical aclivily. ·
bine garlic and water, microwave on
What arc the secrc!S? We some- HIGH '30 seconds. Slir in remaining
time have a hard time believing that mustard ingredients, sprcail onto
simple changes made in diet and hoth sides of beef steaks.
lifestyle, such as a lower fat dicl and
2. Place steaks on [!rid over mediwalking on a regular hasis can make um ash-covered coals. Grill top loin
a powerful difference in our health steaks uncovered 16 to 18 minules
and well-being, but they often do. (rib eye steaks I to 14 minutes) for
Exercise is absolutely esscnlial to a medium rare tum occasionally.
heahhy, happy life. To get the bene·
3. Season steaks with salt, as
fits and keep horedom from creep- desired. Carve steaks crosswise into
ing in, alternate your workouiiiCtiv- thick slices. Makes 4 servings (186
ities. Now that warm weather is calories, Rgrams fat per serving).
here. try light gardening instead of
walking. If you have access to a Seuontd vqelable kabobs
swimming pool, try water aerobics,
6 small (3 oz. each) red polaloes;
it is easy on the knees and provides halved
increased loning and muscular bal2 teaspoons minced oregano·
ance. How ever you cll'oose to leaves (fresh if possible).
2 medium yellow squash, cut into
change your exercise .program,
remember the rule, CHECK WITH one-inch pieces
YOUR DOCTOR FIRST BEFORE
3 tablespoons margarine, melted
STARTING A NEW EXERCISE
I large clove garlic, crushed
PROGRAM. Take it slow, change
Salt and pepper, as desired
dlles not happen over night. RcmemPlace potatoes in a micmwaveber wh~n. you are eating to cat slow-. safe baking dish. Cover and
ly, it takes several minutes for the ·
brain to tell the stomach that yoo are

GRILLS
- Grilli at Dave Diles Park In MiddlepOrt
recently replaced by members of students In the Meigs
'filgh School welding claiS, using materials danal~ by Banka Construction Co. Pictured from left are Kenneth Eblin, Instructor, atu-danta' Eric Toops, Jlmmw Caruthers, Curtua Jeffers, Eddy T~ader,
and Br'lan Young and Sam Eblin, a member of lha Middleport Recrelallon committee.
·
' 1'

Grande. Lyons, the son of Lamar'
and Shirley Lyons orTuJliiCrs Plains,
who also plans to study ctlucalion, i•
a graduate of Eastern High School.
Matson, a Southern High School
graduate, and the son· of Marie an&lt;~
Sharon Matson, plans to major jn
clcmenlary cducalion.
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The hint of the month was that
coffee grounds around azaleas will
produce more vibrant colors.
Lula Toban's .program was from
"Blue Corn and Square Tomaloes."
The tomato is Ohio's stale vegetable. Potatoes, tobacco, petunias
and tomatoes are of the night shade
family. which is considered poisonous.
For 300 years. people would n01
cat tomatoes. 'fhe leaves, stems and
green fruit conlain a substance
called "IOmatinc" which is toxic.
Boiling sterns and leaves into a tea
makes a spray that will kill aphids
on plants. When the fruit ripens, the
toxin is gone.
Tomatoes are considered an halian dish. It is one of the three most
popular vegetables, b'ut is actually a

.

student~ .

Fun, food and fitness go together .for healthy life

DANIELLE GRUESER

A discussi.on of spring activilies the Meigs County spring meeting,
and the welcoming of two members where plans for the regional meeting
highlighted the May meeting of were compleled. Meigs County was
Chesler Garden Club, held al the , the host. Baskets were made for
table decorations and the Chesler
home of Judy Bunger.
"Vines Twine" was the theme.
club was in ch~ of lhe coffee
The roll cfll was naming -of a hour.
blooming vine: moonflower, clemaBea Vacca and Sally Ingles were
tis, wisteria, biltersweet, sweet peas welcomed as new members.
For April sunshine, Edna Wood
and passion vine.
Tulips that were planted at remembered Opal Eichinger. For
Chester school by the club and stu- May, Judy Bunger will remember
dent council were very beautiful Maye Mora.
The annual picnic will be held at
when in bloom, it was announced.
' Seven members of the club lhe cottage of Dorothy Karr. An aucattended the Region II Spring tion of garden-related items will be
held. It is a family picnic.
regional meeting on Apr.il 25.
The club will plant the urn s at the
Bcuy Dean· hosted the .Region II
officers meeting at the Chester Unit- Chester Cemetery for Memorial Day
ed Methodist Church. Pal Holter and do the tables for the Chester
Lula Toban and Beu'y Dean attended Alum.ni Banquet.

Other non-reunion year graduates • Roush; 19!15 . Lillian Powell Weese; Robin1011, Cory Williams and Jac~
attending wer,: 1930 • Emm~ 19!1ti • Don Hill, Ruby Holter 1\un- Proffitt.
.
Servins as hosts and hos~e~~es fo(
Adams and W,lma Styer; 1932 - er, Janet Beeale Roush and Shirley
Thereon John~on and Elma lhle Beeale; 1957 • June Proffitt Twner, the evenin1 were Mary Grace Cow~
Louks; 1936 - Mary V. Easterday; Robert Euler, Don Johnson and dery, Shirley .Stobart Roberts, . Lee
1937 - Mary Lew Pbilson Johnson Claudia Shields Roush; 1959 - Codner and Carroll and MarJie
and Paul Sayre; 1939 - Ralph Ours, Nadine Roush Euler and Shirley Cleek.
The dinner w.- served by the
Paul Moore and Wayne Roush;
Johnson;
1940 ·Delores Cleland and Ken1960 • Patty Roush Pape, Mary junior class of Southern Hiah
nelh Theiss; 1942· Paul Beegle and Stobart Cowdery and Mary Eider School. Members of 1he alumni
Martha Waterson Beegle; 1944 - Hill; 1%1- Shirley VanMeter Theiss board include Gordon Fisher, Carla
David A. Brewer; 1945 • Myrtle and Jim Pape; 1961· Allen Graham; Morris Shuler, Roger Birch, Joan!l
Easterday Holter, Audrey Hoback 1963 ·lim Oiler; 1964 ·Linda Van- VanMeter and Shirley Johnson. Abo
Boichyn and Pauline McMurray Meter Bailey, Ted Bailey and Judy assistinathe board were Dixie Cirete
Williams; 1946- Herman R. Carson, Cozart Pape; 1965 - Roger Sayre, Sayre and Betty Beeste Carpen1e12 ;
Donating flowers were Tyrant
Delores Jean Miller Fister and David Gordon Fisber and Lola Proffitt;
Sayre; 1947 ·Maxine Sellers; 1949- 1966 • Dixie Circle Sayre. Larry D. Brinager Greenhouses, Karen's
Howard Ervin, Ernest Shuler. Car- Circle. Gary Willford, Linda Adams Market and Greenhouses, Marshall
roll Cleek and George M. Sayre;
Evans and Denny Evans; 1967 - Roush Greenhouses, Darrell Norris
I~· Della Johnson Sauer, Bar- Paul Black and Ray Proffiu Sr.; Greenhouses, Dallas and Donn11
bara Gainer Norris, .Ruth Bradfor:d 1969 - Carolyn Manuel Robinson Hill, Pine Grove Fanns, Carmel Val·
Frank and Aaron Wolfe: 1951- Mar- and Carl Robinson ;
ley Greenhouses, Art Hill Green..
garet Foster Cleek and Mary Brad·
1'71 • Peggy Proffiu. James houses, Hubbards, and Peny Hill
ford Carson; 1952- Gene Wells, Joe Proffit! and Don Smith; 1976 - Lee. Greenhouses. Other donations. were
Swain, Gary Gibbs ·and Marilyn COdner; 1977 • Lisa Allen Woods: . by Home National Bank, Fannen;
Brewer Beall; 1954 - Joyce Hart 19116 • Dixie Dugan Wolfe; 1992 • · Bank and Medical Claims Service.
Manuel, Shorley Powell Shively. Jerry Smith and Robin Manuel; 'The flowers were given as special ·
Shirley Slobart Roberts and Norman 1997 • Jamie Evans; 1998 • Nikki gifts and door priles.
·.

URG's Atwood Award goes to three Meigs

'

Lula Toban presents program to Chester Garden Clue

Thu!Wdly, U.y 28, 1111:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

t.

.•;

~

•

bt prowl of.'

.,

�Page

12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May

Thursday,

28, 1998 '

'

~------~----------~--------~--~~~~~~~------------------~~---- .

Southern FFA

Numerous awards were won by
the Southern FFA members at the
District 10 Officer Training Session
and Awards Banquet held at New
Lexington.
David Roush received first in the
area of Sales and Service, and Diversified Crop Production. He worked at
Wendy's and Wai Man to receive the
sk;ills necessary to win the Sales and
S~rvice award. He worked the last
three years ·on a truck farm and also
assisted with hay production. cabbage, com. and tomatoes which were
the basis for Diversified Crop Production. •
, Dean Hill received first in the area
of·Floriculture. His project consisted
of raising 500 flats of pansies. He
alro assists with his family's greenheuse operation.
_ John Matson received first place
irt Placement in Vegetable Producti~n . He spent the last three summers
working at Sayre's Produce.
Jessica Sayre received first place
in'· the . area of Entrepreneur Fruit
alldlor Vegetable Production. She
biltped run a crew and made many
other decisions with the family run
operation' raising pumpkins. tomatOes, cabbage, peppers, hay, sweet
c9m and field com.
.
• Andrea Neutzling received second
place in the district in both Specialty' Animal and Reporter's Book. Her
project consists of market and breedir1g rabbits.
,,Courtney Haines received fourth
for Treasurer's Book and Bill Coe
pl~ced second in the Beginning Prepared Speech Contest.
• The Southern Soil Judging Team
placed fourth in the district.
' In the area of Cooperative Educa·

r~s

District _10 honors

Matson wins State

FFA Degree

lion, the Racine tenin placed third.
The Southern-Racine FFA Farm
Management Team placed second in
the district with Philip Hamm plac- .
rng second as a high scoring individual.

The Southern FFA's new constitutional-officers underwent an intensive training session by the state FFA
officers. The Southern FFA officers
for 1998-1999 are President Courtney

Haines. Vice president D.J. Smith,
Treasurer Josh Larsen, Reporter
Andrea Neutzling, Sentinel Chris
Proffitt. Secretary Sandy Smith, Student advisor Steve Smith and Historian Kacy Ervin.

Daily Sentinel

Roofing

Deem, Parkersburg. speed. $30 plus
costs; Patrick E. Doyle, Grove City,
speed. $30 plus co5ts; Timothy D.
Lawless, l'lethlehem; Pa., speed, $30
plus costs; Edward K. Cromwell,
Troy, Mich., speed, $30 plus costs;
Michael J. Snyder. New Columbia,
Pa., passing a stopped school bus,
$20 plus costs; Robert L. Hanson,
Louisville, Ky.. speed, $30 plus cosL~;
Carissa M. Cole, Lakewood, speed.
$30 plus costs: Jeffrey A. Bissell,
Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Anita M. Thomas. Reedwille, failure
to control, $20 plus costs; fictitious
registratiOJl, $20 plus costs; Douglas
K. Coen, Shade. speed, $30 plus
. costs; Brian A. Cunningham,
Ne~ark, .speed, $30 plus costs; Lin·
da S. Edwards, Rutland, seat belt, $25
plus costs:
Linda S. Edwards, Rutland, stop
sign, $20 plus cOiil~; Man Gawiel,
Beaconsfield. Quebec. speed, $30 ,
plus costs; Kevin C. Hicks, Newark,
speed, $30 plus cost~: Gisela K.lsner,
Lowell. speed, $30 plus ·costs;
Michael L. Smith, Pomeroy, seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Bruce E. Steiner,
Athens, speed, $30 plus costs; Shawn
M. Thoma.,, Albany, seat belt, S25
plus costs; Frank M. Bentley, Jackson, unsafe vehicle, $20 plus costs;
Harold D. Porter, Vincent, speed. S30
. plus costs: Gary E. Gibson. Huntington, seat belt, $25 plus costs: Ida
'M. Peters, Rockbridge, speed. $30
plus costs; Frank R. Mamhout,
Racine. speed. $30 plus costs;
Richard H. Horsfall, Simpsonville,
S.C., speed, $50 plus costs.
NeW planet?
·
•
WASHINGTON
(API
Astronomers using the Hubble Space
Telescope says they have seen what
may be the first planet found outside
our solar system, a discovery one scientist called "unbelievably exciting."
ScientistsatNASAsaidthesighting challenges conventional theories
about the birth and evolution ot'
· planets, and offers new insighL~ . into
the formation of the solar system.
The object. found within a starfonning region in the constellation
Taurus, is about 450 light-years away
from Earth and was flung about I30
billion miles from twO starS that eject·
ed it. A light-year is about 6 trillion
miles.
•
"The results don't directly tell us

1998 Martin StrHt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"
JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

JoeWllaon

113 W. 2ND ST.

(614 992-4277

614-992·5479

Call for Quote Today

BIUMLUMBIR
15 North Meln

· Plants,
TrH&amp;Ia
Shrubs

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(No Sunday Calls) .

2J1alt2/ltn

breaki~ news

: HUBBARDS
.
.
GREENHOUSE

l

I
I
I.

l

CLILUD'S OUTDOOR

Panatn, cabbage,
Broccoli, caullfl-r,
· Hanging Ba1keta,
Phlox, Azalea8,
Shrubs, Spruce Tren

I

!

''
\

••
I

~EM

On ChargeS
MUNICH. Germany (AP) -In a
closely watched case about control·
ling the Internet. the former head of
CompuServe Germany was convict· .
ed Thursday of being an accessory in
the distribution of pornography even though prosecutors had argued
at the end for his acquittal.
The pilot ca.o;e against Felix Somm
began a.~ an auempt by German
prosccuton; to hold lntemet-acce,ss
providers respon~ible for the materiat they relay.
But in their closing arguments,
Munich prosecutor..- reversed themselves and a~ked the court to acquit
fonner CompuServe boss Felix
Somm, agreeing with his defense that
il wa.~ unreasonable to have expected him to block illegal material with
the technology then available.
Nevertheless, the Munich district
court convicted Somm. sentenced
him to two . years probation and
ordered him to pay 100,000 marks
(dlrs 57,000) to charitY.
·
Judge Wilhelm Hubbert said
CompuScrve had let "protecting the
young ... take second place to maximizing profits" and he wanted his
vendict to deter other Internet-access
providers from following that path.
. Federallawma~er Joerg Tauss of
the ·opposition Social Democrats
called the verdict "a catastrophe" that
wotild serve "to ruin the Internet in

EMBER

Sunday 12·5

!I

Syracu. . 982-5776

J

DADS &amp; GRADS
0 ·Watches (Selko &amp; Pulsar
0
D

0
0
.0

: ROOFING
JIEW·IEPAIR

1998 Sdver Dollars
KeyChains
Money Clips
Diamond Earrings
Gold O.ains &amp;Bracelets
Up to 50·70% Off

.
•
I

••
'·••
'·••
I,
I,

.....•

And Much, Much Morel

p

E

Gutters
. Downspouts
: Gutter Cleaning
•
Painting
:FREE ESTIMATES

,•

949-2168

.

«?LEAN HOUSE
: WITH THE

Saptic Syatlmt .
Trailer &amp; Hotlll Sltn

.ReaaoMIW RIIIN
Joe N. Sayre

FULLV INSURED

1740) 367 -0266

1·800·950· 33 59

·Trim
·StUIIIP
Grinding

20Yra.

ftf;t~~C:ft~ftf;rft~ft .

et JD COiftRDCftOI ft
. The Racine Gun
Club .Fishing
Derby on
'June 6th, 1-12·

~3

LEVI'S SHORTS

Prizes &amp;Food for Kids
Members may bring a
guest.

3

AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Now Delivering
CHICKEN DINNERS
992·9200

,.ou .....

c

RLDSCHURCH

YARD/BAKE SALE
SAT., MAY30
9:30am - 4:30 pm
at BILL'S TIRE SERVICE

•alt•

pl

I '""

••

1:li1Mfn

•

THE CARD Box.
1 1/2 mile south Of

Basketbali-Star ThickVideo Games &amp;

SENIOR CITIZEN
DISCOUNT

• fttf110VS1

~

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

-.

Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
111!!1 27 yrs. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

a

· .

l;t·

Phone 740-992·3987

~

ft
ft'

a

FrH Efilmatn
Owner: John Dean

'•

Ill'!!

~ftftftft~~Ct-ftCft
.
'

~

.

.

Abandoned Mala Cat, Black I
Whlto, Very Friondty, In Neod 01
Good Homo Only1740--14&amp;-3897.
Blonde Labrador Mala Puppy,

Free To Good Home! 740·•48-

9290.

Farm dog 10 good l'&lt;&gt;mo. Weimaraner/ Boxer mi x, not good with

9/4{TFN

Designs
All Landscaping &amp;

Lawn Servlcn
oConlmorotal
•Rnldlntlal
awrw, lllclt!D Hollon
. Chtaler, Ohio

'Done righ t the ~rst l i m e.'
·Priced right 11ithe lime."
·SALES
· SF RVICES

Miled coon puppies. one mh:td
German shepherd puppy, 740-

742-o:!02.
Pari Black Lab And Golden Ra·

trlever To Good Home. 740·448·
7123
.

~~•.u;~:Y MuSI Take

Peach XT Personal Compuler
comoo wuh Monllor &amp; Prlnllr .
740 387 7 54

~:,~work.

.

Take me pe1n out ot
palnll119, and lei me
do It for you.

·lrJST,~L L ATIO N

DO N NITZ

lnlellor
·Belote 8 p.m. .
leawmnuge.
Afler8p.m.

1740) 985-4180
F101 Eatlmalsl

·

Lost· female Walker coonhound,

red collar wllh p!t,IOUI owner's
phone number, call 740·992·
Lost: male Shettle. blOck , gray,
white &amp; tan. teg tattooed. Shade
aroa. "Magic", reward, HO-a981085.
Lost : two· Labrador retrievers.

Cornhotlow Rd., RuUand lllclnlly, il
iound p1oa11 cau 740-742·2223.

,LOST: White gold necklace w/

stone In New Haven area. Senti·

'70.

Yard Sale

Gallipoll•
lo VIcinity
242 Magnolia' Dr~o (Behind Cln·
ama) Mon, June 11!, 8·5. Dining
Table Wllh Chalfl, Clolhlng,
Toys, MISe.

I All Aroea
SpoorJ, 304-675-1•29.

I Shlrlo,

APart Tlmo Poaltlon 11 A'allabla .
Contract Buts. Expartance R• •
qulred In Group Work , Expert·

enca Preferred In Chemical De-

pendency And /Or Olltndori '
Please Send Resumes
To: Parsonnel, P.O. Box 454, Gal·
llpolis, Ohio o\5631 Before Jun.i
10, 1998.
AWell Established And Growtnw ~
Groups ~

Company Is Seeking Heavy •
Equipment Mechanics. Mu.~t ....
Have A COL, Willing To Work
Overtime, Ability To Troubloshoot.
Oltgnou And Reptlr Heav.y ·
Equlpmenl. Good Communlca·
To Keep Accurate Recorda And·
Reports. Must Have Own Toolt ·

And Possibly Be Willing To Re· ·
locale. Excallant Benellt Package,
EEO Employer. Send Resume To:o•
CLA 434, clo Gallipolis Dalty Tri!). .
uno, 825 Third A'anue. GalllpO·
lls, OH4563t .

t''·

ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC. It
seeking Therapeutic Foster Par~
ants lor the Barboursville and Pt.
Pleasant areas. Free training , 24
hour support, competitive relm·
bufsement and the opponunlty"10::.
make a dllference In a chll~" d
life . For more Information wrltt J
Action Youth Care , Inc. Thera·
peulic Foster Care Program PO
Bo• 74 Prichard , WV
call :l0Ua6-5712 EOE.

2~5~5

or
' '

'

Busy dental oHice seeking enthu-'
siastic Individual to fill a dental

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Ramodellng
Stop Compare

a.

FREE

7~

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP AND MORE
•Como try on• ol our
many new eeenta.
•Bring In )'OUr odclal
IInde and we'll refill
them
.
•Newtprlngpolltry
Open lUH.'-Frl. 1o-6

CIOMCI Sun. Ilion.
s.t.1H
· St Al124,

Mlnerovlllo, PH

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • Soffit
• Fcncio • Seamless
Gulltr' • Roaling
• t.pla-nl
• SlalioiiDI 'I Docb
• Blown lnsulalion
e Gu:cg11 • Decb
2A. 2A Pol. Building
slci I~If at $5995
7411-982-2m

w...a-.

,_

Penor!&amp;IS .

ADOPTION&lt; L!l'ling I child wltil
11 of our 1101r11. piOIIidlng • lifo
and IIIIIY - · ciOH ••tondod
!emily, tun, I(IUCIItoft, end oH tho
...., lito 1111 to ollel Is our moat
......,." wt&amp;ll . ..._, wttll eo.
PlooH cell Oleno &amp; Jim,-

P.O. Box 704, Pomeroy, OhiO ·
45769.
·c '!
,. '
1

Carpenter /Foreman Comm. Ex·
perience Req. Salary Nee . With

ElfPOIItnte, HI00-711·7179.

t

,,'~

Ctth For Coupona, up to $200•-"
or more weekly dipping coupor,lj

at home. Free recorded lnlorma~'
lion, 1·8CXH66-92.22 IIICt 8885. .. .,

"

.

Invite Your Friends To YOUr' ,
26th, 29th, At 38 Smltfte,.. lures
Home For A Profaaalonal Glarn-- 1
Furniture. Appllonctl, Ootla, our
Portrait Party. Call 800-42~-. ,
Clotllea I Many 0ti1or ttemal
-----.., •
5/2eth, 29th, 301h.'8:00 A.M. Till ~631&gt;.;,;3~.-ECHO
VASCULAR
· 7:00 P.M. 2741 Neighborhood
TECHNOLOGIST
·' ' '
Road.
27111,

Be Paid

in--

DF!QLAE: 2:00p.m.

tho doy ........... "'
loiD run. Sundoy
odi11on - 2:00 p.m.

Ftldoy.llonfiiV
-10:00 a.m. Bmlnlay.

Frl I Sal 9-? 8844 ROUIO 518, In

Rodney.

Jackson Oeneral Hospital, Rip ...
ley, WV. has a lull-time openlniJ '
tor a Radiological or Ultrasound ·
Tech with Previous Vascular irld'' 1

Echo exporlonco INO CALur. · ~
Phone 304·312·273t ,xt 264 pf ,

reply to; Personnel Director,
Jackson General Ho~plrat . H&gt;' l
Box 720, Rip loy, WV 25271 : l

~EO~E~-----------~' '
'e.:parlanced

Auto

Mechanic,·

Atleast 5 Yair&amp; Experlenct, Cqn.'

1act ea~

BeMMr&gt; 9:00
P.M. 740-388·9516.

A.M. ~:00

·· ~-·
Amby Lane.• Out Rl . 160; Kids
Oothea, Ml&amp;e.
Full lime bookkeeper, 740·84!May 28th-? Rt. 7 Soulh 6 Miles · 5211 . .
t: .~

May 291h. 30th.

Furniture Delivery, Full·tlma. tmJ

8:30-4:00 No Ear'-'

ly Sales! 204 Kineon Drive,
Cleaned The Attic And Base·

mont.

modlo~

Opening. Apply Llloatyle ,

Furniture, 856 Third Ave. Gall_,g.
i&amp;, Olt NO Phone cals pilal81

Trash Bole , Truck ·Mat, Houu
Wares, Knick Knacks, Battery

Installer -2 Years Experience .
Helper -No Experience Necee·
&amp;ary,· Apply In Person, Comtott '
Air Systems lne., 407 Third Avtr l
nua. Gallipoll&amp;, Qillo.
1• ,
NteDed Energattc, Kind Arwf,

ult 141 , Galipolls, Ohio.

Interested In Caring For Peopfl ~

Thurs. Frl, Sit, Tools, Antiques,
Metal Fireplace Set, . Beds,

Clothes, Toys, Cralto, wood

Riding Toys, EIC, t914 Stale Ro-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yanl Sileo lluel 81 Paid In
AdWIIJ!:I- Ooodllno: I :OOpm 1110

dar before the td Ia Ia run,
Iunday I

Dedicated STNA'o (Part·Timo) .
In OUr Speclalizod Athelmo,. Urill
Day And Evening Shifts. Mull Be ,
Son&amp;lll'o To The Needs OJ Tho1
Eldony And Th018 WHh Atzhein\-

And Dementia. Plea&amp;e ApptJ! ·
In Person At Scenic Hills Nursing ~

8f5

Center. 311 Buckrldgo Rd., Bier: ·
...... OIU561..
I.
I

Mondtr edition•

1:otipmFtidoJ.

Community yard sates- June HI!,
Milo Hll Rd., Racine.

Friday, May 29th. 9:00 am·? 'IWo

miioa from SA 7 on Forosl Roo Rd.
Uttle gtrre cklthes. toys. aiiOf'ttd

""--··
---S.-.mite.

May 211-30. Jomle Humphrey Ill·
ldence, 39211 SR 143. Treadmill,

Sauway. May 30. 9-~. St 111. 248.
on right going up Choator hilt.
LOok lor signs. Kids outSide toys,
kida clotho&amp;. baby stuff. men and
women's clott,ea, glassware, dee·
orotlvo llomo. Grooti!Uffl
.P t.Pieaeant
&amp; VIcinity
2915 Brook Oti'l behind VIllage
Pilla. May 29 I 30 from Som-?
80
Auction
and Flea Market
one mile thru Ct'ltater, lirtl drive

Rick Pearaon Auction Company,
full time tuctionHr, complete
auction 11rvlct. Licensed
168,0hlo &amp; Woat Vlrglnlo, 304·
n:l-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy
Alltolull Top DoNor: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Colns,..Proofsttl,
Diamond&amp;,· Antiquo Jowotry, Gold
Rings, Pro-1930 U.S. Currency,
SIO!iing, Etc. Acqu~·- ..._lry
· M.T.S. Coin ShOp, 151 s..:Qnd
-... Gelllpollt. 740-44e-2842.
Andquu, top prlc11 paid; River·
lno Anllquol, Pomoroy, Ohio,
Rust Moore owner. 7'40·992·
252$.

.....

,.,.,

Aftlorl AI Goillpolla II Curron1iy' '-.•
Afnpdng Appitcollona For RN'I. :i:t
Wo Are Loolrlng For Hotd Worit; "
lng Doponclallio Appileonla. Muij "
Hove An Ohio AN Llconao. E• ,-r,

perlence In Long Term Care IlL' ~
,. ...,ld. 8tnlflta Ala ~·-· j ~

1
Anilquo&amp; I ellen u&amp;od lurnhura, II You Hevo Any Quoeliona! ' '
Piooao
Contocl
L111
Short
At.v,
will bu~ one Plica or complote
houoohold, Oaby Martin, 740· 740-&lt;148·7112. Applleotlotll Will ~;
Bo Aeeoptod From I P.M. -4:30 • ,
IIH578.

P.M. Mondoy _,..,

1(1001 - -·

tOIIILYf CALL TOIIIOHTI I· CIHn Loti . Modo! Cera Or
ltuck&amp;, 11110 MOGlia Or - · ·
~......, liT. 1717. " ·"
Pill IIIII. IIUIT II II Ylll. Smlih Bulcll l'antllc, 1900 Eall·
RfWoU ltl ••• lti4.

427·5480. 901-427-9514.

Earn ·$104 -$200 Plus Free Pie:··

Below Gaillpolil.

1-740-742-2642

005

All Styles /Ages. Major Record
Label E11ect's, Sttklng New Ar· .....
tlats, COming To Hunting ton, 90h .

- ~ ' lions And Written Skllll. Ablllt)l

Frl May 291h, Set 5/30!11: 9·4 14

·-.

N

For A Licensed Professional To
Provide Group Therapy On A ·

Heating &amp; Cooling

985-4473

••a••

N

Kittens, ·7 Wttka Old, litter

DON'S

74N67-6092

Computlf'.Graphics

HalpWanted
-·
STARSEARCH
COli PETITION
Singe,., Bands, Songwriters, Etc'. -

assistant position. Will train. !»·. :
terestad persons send resume t~ ,

Renlals

•Room Addltlona
•NtwGaragta
•Electrical &amp; P'umblng
•Rooting ·
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alio Concreto Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-6216
Pomeroy, Ohio

110

AVON

'caii304-882·2790.

ESTIMATEES

YOUNG'S
· CARPENTER SEVICE

SERV ICES

omalldlldron, 740-742·2221.
Free 9 Wook Ml•od Brood Slack
PuppiH, Wormed, 7~77.

ALL 'ltnlloloe lluot

(614) 992·3838 i

Basebali-Foolbaii-

o101)

J

Umt1tont Hauling
HouM &amp; Trailer Sltn
Land Clearing It
Grlcllng .
Septic Syatl!ll &amp;
Ulllltltl .
Eittlmatoa

Tuppers Plains
Now has Beanie
Babies- Still

614-742-2138

IN1mo.

GAWPOUS, OHIO 45831

TWO LOCATIOHS· ·
~~
and _G ,.p., Galllpolll ·.·.i
.......
•
,.111111 St.,lllddloport
112-GSO
:]

I

Umtito_ne a Gravel

Brian Morrlaon
(740) 185-3848

.,•

n

Hauling, EXcavating
· 1o Trenching

ftiBI IUIICB ·

fARGE SELECTION OJ'

.,

•Bobcat Sirvlce

JOlES

·'
·~

.;:utlwe

·EXCAVAtiNG CO.

Athena, Ohio
4/301911 1 mo. pd.

•Concrete
oJ.IIasonry
•General
Commercial and
Relldentlal

tar 1hllnod, 740-446-9935.

. mental value . If found , please

992·5513

HOWARD

P/1 C01tradors, Inc.

OLASSIFIEDSI

!

LEVI'S SHORTS ·

614-592·5025

I

•Mowera •Chain Saw1 •Weedeatera •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlggt &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
,
AND OTHERS!

Er~PLOYMENT

8 WHI&lt; Old Klnena. Partially Lh·

6357

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

William Safranek,
Attorney AT Law

!i2t/lln
.

Parts and s,rvfcell

Chapter 13

FIW E•llmat.•
No Job Too S"""'

·-.....
•
': ..

t7fcq
zs•
•t
•
/t.
U t wns ~~
Low!

.

I

SHOP AtqUJSTIONS BEFORE
YOIJ SHOP i\NfMIERE.ELSE

'f19{_'£ J'E/W££1(!}'

who have prayed,
spoke encouraging
words and did kind
dead&amp; for me over
the past wHk&amp; and
months of . my
lllnen. Thank you
Ylrymuch.
Robert Smith

Jotoward L Write..l

S•nested Retail Prke

0

(As I _ps_n't talk) I
wish to thank all

naCIIB MDWBR CLIIIC.

Ba

Agricultural e Industrial • Automotive
•Re-corea • New Radiators
Oxy· Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

For Information Regarding ,
Bankruptcy contact:

,.,

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE

Agricultural Ume,
umeatone • Grawl
Dirt • Sand
'

RIDII,.OR REPAIR

KRUP!CY

·open Dally 9·5

Roy (George) Lawrence gave IIIII welcoming
'j
addrna aa membora of the poat ( 1-r, Kenny "
T1NIIM, Don Hupp, George Nelglor, Paullloora, ·
Clen~~~c:o T. (Tom) Wolfe, Gone Mille, and David · · l
Yost) atand at attention In tho background.
l

.-----------------------~-----.

• House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $1 00
• Hedges trimmed • Gutters clttnect
Call now for a
lawn care program.

Chapter 7

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

State Route 338 ; At VIne • Riclne, Ohio
tJ14 949-~804

·. SPECIALS

Card of Thanq

R. L. HOLLON
:_\TRUCKING

lriiP &amp; Stratt• Master S.vki Teduidan
o.ttlotr Poww Eqalflllllt Assodtillon: Ctrtlflotl2 Cycle

MllllftiiiCI .

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SE.4,SON

II

.....

740·742·3411

liner

Soli, Fill Dirt
. ' 985--1422
To Good Homo: 4 Puppies, Found
•
Che&amp;tlr, OhiO
Along Road, cannot Keep. 740·
614-992·3470
388-9147.
.
::=:;===:;;~.:==;;:====~~61) Lost and Found

-

Free Estimates

yellow, 1 calico, 1 black.

..-. 30U7~.

Top

Roofs • Decks • Garages

fiUI.l.JillaJ

I

WICKS

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Minor Repairs • Cabinets e Siding ·

1•740·949·2015
'I

(Limo 'siilnt&gt;·-....
Ll!WRataa)

HAULING
·

New Conlfructlon &amp; Remodeling

•Septic Systems
•Basements
•Excavating
. ',

...

Sarv•Jc•
Cr11am

SUNSftHOMI
CONS,.RUC,.ION

II 'S
BACKHOE liD
DOZil SEIVICE.

~Chile!lal,

Open: Mon.-Fri. 11-9
Sat.
Sun. 12-4

CALL

COnVI'Cted

Autlend, 'Ohio 4I77S Dell: fealturl1ng I
.
Amlth

• KillOna, 1 gray/white. 1 gray/

Trained, 2 Ftmalao, 1 Male, 740245·5101 .

Chestar

Room Additions • Roofing

614-992·7643

985-3301

StRt.248

Garages • Replacement Windows

·To offer ~o~ suggestions, r~ ~e99lil•21-t!!6·
t.J
ard offer news tips

VETERANS HONORED • The Racine Amllrl·
can Laglon post celebrated Memorial Day Monday will! a 10 a.m. ¥emorlal Mrvlc:o and 21 gun
salute •t the newly constructed Vaterana
Memorial at the legion poat In Racine. Gene

POMEROY, OH.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

•·,

ma ..

Rib Pattem
$1.25 ~r running 1oot ($39.40 per sq.)
3' Wldt x 10', 12', 14' &amp; 16' Lengths
For uttl on Pole Bams, Garage•,
Storage Buildings &amp; Porches
ROOF TRUSSES
Southern Yellow Pine Construction
Custom Englnttrlng

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

: :;
·Public Nollce
. Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
••
PUBLIC NOTICE
Iunde In ordor to complete·
Pa111d by· the Vlllego . -=c:-o-m-m-:l....;ll,;;l.;;;on.;•.;.;r::.:;;e;,;p;,.p_ol_n_t3
In compllonce with thelmpro-...,.
CounclloiPo-ror,OIIIo monL
·'
Amended Sec:tlon 31t.11 ol
Wheroae, addltlonel 1111111111 day ollllay, 1111.
lndlvlduelo lnterollocl In } ·
the Olllo llovllod
In the form of A11111:
Kathrttraell
bolng cone1......
..._ .. 1or thle ·~•
......,. COde, •1 monlae
~--•eurer
'
•
1u11 and co111..,.copr o · II." "1• ero nooo1 1ary In ..... ~ n•-·-·
appolntmont
d
..,.
tflo annual nnanclll report ordor to 111ako tho FI'MIIVaughan,llayor
requeettng .:':flll~to':ton·:~
allhlp Countr Ia available Improvement• ·alfordoblo, John Mutilli', Preoldent
from:
.,
lor pullllo lnlpoctlon et the thlreloro,
15)21, 21 2lc
ll ld A. Adld
·~
office ol the llolge Countr
lo II AIIOivod Tllat:
Dh~
~
Aaullor, · llolge County
Thl Vlllego ot P0111et'11J'
Public Notice
Gallla-.laclcaon 11~ 11, :~ .
CourthouH. Tllo Auditor's .lfllllr lor 1"' CDIO Wallr
1o11n1 ol.....,h401
•
office houro ,,. llondav and lenltary Sower
PUBLIC NOTICE
v
•
•;:
' Com til
The eighteen member
DnlgAdiiDtlcM
~'
1 11 - 4 30
IIINFrldayd,ath::JOa.t&amp;l
toh
...
!'0:
"_.-..
fundl,
Galllwacklonlletaelolnl
-lllntaiHHithhm"''
;
'
_
'
p.m. an
o • •P ono
4141ocond . _
•{
01 Alaohol, Drug AHictlon
numllar Ia 740-112·21A
VIllage Umlnl laloio' ..,. llentel Helllh ...-.•cee
P.O. 1u 114 : · :!.
.., 2111c
John Andereon, llo and
"··o
....., OH
~
111
..,
llerobv 11 euthorlzod to Ia .,...lnlld llr tho Director.
-....:!:"'11• 411831
•-Public Nollct
melco 'ouch applloetlon to al tho Otilo Dapwlllllnt 01
r ....... : . , . . . . 30112
I; .
t~,,,
............
o-lea
Mentel
H . . lth
(4
Tho
Board
etrlvae
to
1
...
,...,,_,
·maintain • · llelenood •z
III80LUl10N IIUIIIIIR 1.11 and elgn any •nd all eppglnten), tho Dlreotor of
,
_ ..v 1a, 1•
..
repro.•ontatlon11 of com•
....8110
-- ......
docum111te tilat m•r · llo the Ohio Dopllrl111ont ol munlt
Wllorooe, tht Y.... NqUirodln ... pncllaof Alcgholandllrug'ddiDtlon welc r mam are ltld ;?.
C.Unoll 01 , _ , dnii'M Heuring funding lor title ........_. (4 eppalntm) 1M - ••!m•• minority or 1-:
to
lmprow,..ntl to proJocl, •nd turlhor 11o n ... Colnty Commleelg,_ -•~pll • •
,-:.
tho_t'l...........
I'WDhtdlhet
In Gall... Jaokoon and llllii.21,3Utc
~
wlloroae, lht coote
'11111 roeolutlon 111111
lllolge Countlll 110 t-.;;...~-.-......- - - - .
~':!~~·=yslliCJII·
. -~i;ulencespe~~li
it~oclated with fUOII olfact lmmocllatoly ~= ~l..nt•-••lw.!ncyurre.:t~
Lifllr things ·
:;
0
.
290-.,.N
.
••
2.,N
D•--•9ili9iii2i.·31ii6iii84i.i--...iMiiiliiDiiD•LEiiiiiP..iiO.RT-...
tmprova~~~a~~~a
w111
ne
...
pae
....
or
at
...
01rt1oet
·
·
•
l'Vo
h
~l
{·'
11
three days, one yell' probation, 1
ell8to tho IIHtnowlnt of tlmul sod 11r lew.
ftllocl llr a Mlllgt County · arr
rl ••ct
~d

s

CELLULAR PHONES

9"

"BuiY Your .DNam"

te~trial r~G~e1~u~1a~ny~.'~'~a;:===1~~;;;;~~~~~1ea~t~n~·~e~e•~~~~~e~ry~d~a~y~,~o~n~F:~in~e~}~ew~e~lry~;;~~ •--;

na K.$20
Clark.
failureCox.
to speed.
plus costs; W.Va.,
Gregoryscat
L.
about
any
·yi~ld.
plus Pomeroy,
costs; T. Shane
Ramsey,$30Parkersburg.
planeL•the
likepresence
Earth." of
said
Susan TereChillicodle, seat belt, $25 plu.• costs; . belt, $25 plus costs; Melinda L.
bey
Toild s.Cundiff, Racine, expired reg- ••- - - - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - .
istration, $20 plus costs; Fran 0 :
MtEwen,Gallipolis.specd,S30plus
costs: Gloria P. Castrodale, Dublin.
---' ·s30 pIus costs : Davt'd C.
s.,..w.
F.tllrards PI810
• Ci
bel 15
--:T
•
tty; seat
t.
plus costs;
FOB ~ a ar.. • a DJES
-Brian K. Taylor, Columbus, speed.
I"llml"' -'I"'D a.nLV
SJ6 plus costs; Amber L. Wolfe,
Albany, seat belt, $25 plus costs:
AND
•
William M. Rea Jr.. St. Mary's,
BO"S ..__ GJB•Iii:!
"a. .....,. $30pluscosts Darrel
•
-'I"'D
~
w.·:;_·•,.....N
t'
'lie
taJ.:,,.
h
E. ll"''rty, e sonv1 , no
•g ts,
$20:plus costs; David T. Rustemey- '
, - .....,. $30 pi
,
er, Gall ipo1u, •...-.
us costs;
.J.
Chtfstine c. Olmstesa, lacbonville,
UIOm &amp; We•tem Wear
..., .....,. $30 1 -•· Samson
N ......
s.......,
Pus.........,;
"'--t R !land. 11
1
trot
N· """•
• u
urc o con •
IS James E. Cou nts,
$20 _pus
I cos:
Sy~use, speed, $24 plus cosls;
Ge9tJe E Sellers Ra!:ine stop ·
$20' I .
•R
li W&lt; Sign.
pus costs: usse
ooten, i

Plumbing

IIIII I iD I I 'I'·
laafllll UD IIDIII

.

Meigs County Court cases settled
-'The following ca&lt;;es were settled restr.aining order issued: Charles D.
recently in the Meigs County Court Johnson, Racine, seat belt, $25 plus
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.. •
costs; drug paraphernalia, $50 plus
, Fined were: Shellie R. Maurer, costs;
Middleport, speed, $30 plus costs:
Debbie A.. Aker, Mason, W.Va.,
D&lt;~n V. Hill Jr., Racine, speed. $30 driving under no insurance suspen•
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs: sion, $200 plus costs, three days jail
l(qthleen L. Somerville, Wintersville, and $100 suspended if valid operaimproper passing. $35 plus costs; tor's license presented within 90
Richard D. Jay, Huntington. W. Va, . days: 'fictitious tags, costs only:
spctd. $45 plus cosL~; GeneS. White- expired tags, $20 plus costs: Bill J.
side, Scott Depot, W.Va. speed, $30 Roush, West Columbia, W.Va.,
plus costs; David A. Fry. assault, $50 plus costs, three days jail
R~enswood. W.Va., seat belt, $25
suspended, one year probation.
plus costs; Roger D. Cotterill, Rut- restraining order issued; Joey Roush,
land, seat belt, $25 plus costs; stop West Columbia, assault, $50 plus
sign, $20 plus costs; Marvin A. costs, three days jail suspended, one
Grayson, Wooster. speed. $30 plus year probation. restraining order
costs; Marion R. Reeves. Springfield, issued: Martin L. Woodard, Pomeroy,
sew belt, $25 plus costs; Stacy S. driving under suspension, $200 plus
·~owe II. Belpre, speed, $30 plus costs, three day~ jail and SI00 susc(l,ts; Colleen Raber, Atwater, speed. pended if valid OL presented within
$30 plus costs; Robert W. Under- 90 days; stop sign, $20 plus costs:
wOOd, Harmony. W.Va.. speed, $3Q . Linda L. Pridemore, Pomeroy,
plus costs: Michael K. Yarbrough. spee'd, $20 plus costs; Sue E. BarnColumbus, speed, $30 plus costs; han, Pomeroy, stop sign, $20 plus
William P. Herman Jr., Hilliard, costs;PeggyJ.Musser,Pomeroy,drispeed, $30 plus costs;
ving under no insurance_suspension,
, Russell E. Gortner, Wooster, $200 plus costs, three days jail and
sp;,ed, $30 plus costs; Marlene $100 suspended if valid OL presentSwartz. Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, ed within 90 days, one year proba-.
StO plus costs; John E. Lutz, Piqua, tion; Chadwick E, Still, Belpre, seat
s~ed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, S25 belt, $25 plus costs: Ted Horton,
plus costs; Nicholas M. G~tman. Bartleu, possession of drug paraColumbus, speed. $30 plus costs: Bri- phemalia. $50 plus costs; Neil D.
aMa D. Gilmore. Rutland, seat belt, Giles, Albany, speed. $21 plys costs;
$ t5 plus costs; David B. Johnson, Paul W. Dalton, Columbus, reckless
Pcimeroy. seat belt, $15 plus costs; operation, $100 plus costs; speed,
Chris R. Hodge, Columbus, speed, $10 plus costs; Kenneth Mohler,
$3.0 plus costs; Bobbie J. Meadows, Middleport, disorderly conduct, $50
Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs: suspended, costs. six months probaJo~n H. Hen&lt;letson, Gallipolis, speed, tion;
$30 plus costs: Todd E. Dickson,
Brian R. Arnold. Pomeroy. disorMarietta, speed. $30 plus costs; · derly conduct, costs. one year probaDavid 0 . Carothers, Columbus, tion, restraining order issued;
speed. $30 plus costs; Larry D. Dwayne Qualls, Pomeroy, disorderN~ace II, Huntingon, speed, $30 ly conduct, $100 suspended, one
plus costs; Tracy L Haid, Cot- year probation, costs, restraining
ta&amp;eville, W.Va., seat belt. $25 plus order issued: Marion Snider. Racine,
costs; Sandra D. Day, Point Pleasant, disorderly conduct. $100 suspended,
W.Va. failuretoyield,$20pluscosL•; costs; Keilh Pickens, Racine, disorJeiry L. Wolfe, Racine, speed. SJO del:lyconduct,$100suspended,costs,
plus costs;
one year probation, restraining order
'Gary A. Bailey. Loveland. speed. is.~ued; Helaina M. Foit, Middleport,
$30 plus costs; Jerry W. Well. Shade, , seat belt, $20 plus costs; Andrew M.
s~~· $30 plus costs; Brian W. Raike, Point Pleasant, speed. $30 plus
Smnh, Leon, seat belt, $25 plus cosL~; Kelly J. Powell. Racme, seat
costs; Lorene D. Coggins. Middle- belt, $25 plus costs; Ernest E. Beall.'
port. speed, $30 plus cost.•: DavidS; St. Albans. W.Va., speed. $30 plus
~Donald. St. Thomas. Ont.. speed. costs; Wendy R. Gatewo¢. Oak
$30 plus costs; Amilda S. Noll- Hill, speed. $30 plus costs;
Thompson. Gallipolis, speea. $30
Larry J. Harrison, Poquoson, Va..
plys costs; Clwles L. Smith Jr., speed. $30 . plu.• costs: Claudia M.
Pomeroy. speed, $30 plus costs; Don- Radermacher. Saint Clair. Mich.,

.

Remodtlhig

360° Communications

The Sentinel News DotUne
6)

Ma J

Custom Homes

'Get the latest in sports news from the~ .
..
DISTRICT FFA AWARDS- The Southam FFA
students 1hown here - e recognized recent·
ty at the Dlatrlct 10 Officer Ti'llnlng Snllon and
Award• Banquet held at New Lexington. They

Giveaway
10 Tfi'anted to au, ~·
1 '/tor. Old Block Ubrodor Long J 1 o Auto Pert&amp;. Buyln(
Haltod Mired, Gonllo, Good Wilh wreclctd or a•lvlged -..hiCitl.
~ldo. Neodo Room To Run, wa..,
Bowl Chain tncludod, 740·448· 304-173-5033.
.1240.
wanlod to Buy Junk AUIO'I any "
Condition. 7~
2 -e Waok Old Calico Klllono,
7~1-1707 ca1 Allor•:oo P.M.
Wanted To Buy: Uaod Mobll!t- ,
Ho.,.., 7•o-..6-0175. 304-875·
2 Ynr 01~ Mlnlaturo Collie, Fo· 15965.
'
malo, 740-3N-81ol0.
Wonlod: Aulo' l In Any Condition,
Cell 740-388·9062. Or 7.0·••&amp;·

40

John Matson, son of Mark and
Sharon Matson of Racine, recently
received his Stale FFA Degree at the
Stale FFA Convelllion held in Columbus.
This de3ree is presented to the top
two percent of FFA memben in the
state. Selection is based on supervised agricultural experience pro..
jects, grades, and FFA, school and
I'
com munity activities.
MaLson has ~rved. a~ president of
the Rac ine-Southern FFA Chapter
where he has also been a member for
four years. This year he placed first
in the area of placement in fruit
. and/or vegetable production in District 10 FFACompetition. He has also
been involved in soil judging, envirothon, sales and service, farm management and many odler contests and
activities.
His SAE project consisted of a
garden plus over 1, 100 hours of work ·
study on a truck farm owned by his
FFA advisor, Aaron Sayre.
He is a senior and· plans to attend
JOHN MATSON
the University of Rio Grande this fall.
He alsp was awarded the DcKalb at the Southern Local Awards Assem- '
Award plus the senior agriculture key bly.

are, from left, David Rouah (diversified crop),
And1'81 Neutzllng (small animal care), John
Ma'-011 (placement), Jessica Sayre (fruits and
vegetabln), and .Dean Hill (florlcuhure).

·The Dally Sentinel• Page 13. -::

..

Pome~oy •MiddlepOrt, Ohio

May 28,1998

.. -...GIIpol&amp;

I '~'.
H .,..J

-ATGAWI'OLa '

170 P1140. . DfM'' r ,...,1
Gllpol&amp;, 0H 45131" I ~1

�r..

•

Thurldlly, May 28,1998

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

tlay 28, 1988

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

NJ:A Cto11word Puzzle

•

PHILLIP
ALDER
110

Help Wanted

. POITAL.IOII TO t1UiiHII.

l~~j~.

Benlllla. NO EX~&gt;trlenc.. 1'1&gt;1
App. And Eum Into., Cell 1·800o
113·3~8~. Ext 1474, I A.M. ·9
P.M.. 7 Doyo tdl,lnc.

long -Term Care

Progrttal~t

Focility Specializing In Alzhelm·
lr'l Cart, As Well AI Skilled
And Rehab Services Has Fie·
warding Poaltlons Open For

Frtonctty, Outgoing And Oedk:aled
AN's (P.ort·Timo). Please Apply In
Aerson At Sctnlc Mills Nursing
Center. 311 Buckrldgo Rd .. Bid· .
well, OIU5614 .
Scen ic HUll Nursing Center Is

Now Accepllng Applications For
Director Of Staff Development.

Al1 real astare aaveniSing In
thio newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing N1.
ol1 9e8 which mal&lt;es ~ illegal
10 advertise "any prefervrQ,
limitation or discrimination
based 011 race, color, 181~n.
sex familial status or nat6onal
Origin, or illly lntenllon to
make My SUCh preference, •
limitation or diSCrimtnatlon."
This newspaper wll not
knowingly acoept
advenlsements for real eslata
which is in violation of rha
taw. Our readers are hereby
lnlormed thet •• dwelll1'91

Temporary Full·Time Position For

The Months 01 July Through Do·
ctmber. Ctnlflcatlon: LPN. Please

Apply In P.oraon At Scenic Hills
N.ning Center M•F Botween 8:30
-4:30.

advertised tn this newspaper

are.available on an equal

STNA'I

opportunity basis.

Arborl At Gallipolis Is Currantty

Apcopllng Applications For State
Teated Nursing Ass istants. we
Are Looking For Hard Working
Dependable Applicants. Benetlll
Afl Available. If You Have Any
Ques1lonl, Please Contacl Lisa
~on At 74D-446·7112. Appllca·
Ilona Will Be Accepted From 8
P.M, To 4:30 P.M. Monday · Frl·

310 Homes lor Sale

WILDUFE JOBS TO 121.10 IHA.
Inc. BanefUl. Game Wardens,
Security. Malntenace, Park Rangera. No Exp. Neet:tad. For App.
And E&lt;am Info Call 1·800·813·
3585, Ext. 6475. 6 A.M. • 9 ~M., 7
Doys IdS, Inc

180 Wanted To Do
ANYOOOJOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed. muJch·
ing, flower beds, landscaping,
sidewalk edging , mowing.
etc ... Free Esllmales. Call Bill

Reasonable Rates, 304·674·
4872.
Don 't throw your hard earned
money away? Roofing, painting,
carpentry, lawnmowlng , etc. Top
quality, lree eatlmatll . Ausa
Thumo&lt;, 740-1192·9049.
Experienced carpenter wiU do re·
modeling. decks, vinyl · siding,
p·tumblng. Free estimates. can

Jim Shull. 304·675· 1272. Rafer·
enc:os upon roquest.
Furniture repair, refinish and r11·
.toratlon. also custom orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, larry
Philips, 740-992-6578.

GallipoliS, Point Pleasant Area:
Painting, Odd JqDs. Light Con·
structlon, 304·87&amp;·1978, Or 740·
44H897.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don'l
haul your. 5ags to tl'fe mill just call
304-875- t 1157.
K&amp;S Aemo•ellng Pain!lng, Floollng, Call 740-446·6964, 304-67~·
6021.

Mother 01 4 Will Babysit In My
Home In Gallipolis. Aeferencas,
740-441-o2«.
Protessloinal Tree Service. Stump
Removal, Fret Estimateat In·
surance. Bidwell. Ohio. 6U·388·
- · 114·367-7010.
Will.bobyiH In my home, S10 day
lor Ofle, $15 day lor two, 74Q.94t2483loMmetllgO.

•cooL IMlwtW

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Mon-581
11·8. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
2'13 Jackson Ave . Po int Pleas·
an~ 304-!75-2063.

.cen~oJ Air Conditioning. FrH e..
-11mtt011 If You Con't Colt Ua, Wo
Beth L.oHI 740-44e-630e, 1·800o

Blue Point Siamese Kittens $50,
740-448-4412.

MerchendiH

' 2111-0098.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobllo homos
$210· $300, oowor, wottr· ond
ltlllllncludld, 740-98;!·2t67.

Largo $lloctlon of used homto. 2
or 3 bOdrOOinl. Starting 11 S299S.
Quic k dellvory. Call 740· 315'
· 2 bedroom all electric trailer In
9621 .
Middleport. $300 per month ptuo
UMITED OFFER
dopoolt, 740-992·3194.
1998 Doublewlde 3br, 2 batha.
$1,699/down $259/mo. Only it 2 Bedroom Trailer $220/tJio., lftOakwood Homes Nitro, WV 304~ 1 ctudoo Wotor, $100 Otpoo l~ No
Poll, 740·446·3437, 740·441·
755-5885.
1367.
NEW 3BEOIIOOII
($18,995)
. Two 2 Bedroom Tniller On Bob
OAKWOOD HOMES Barbours· MCCormick Roed, $275/Mo., Pluo
Depoelt, 740 44.8 8848.
&gt;111e 304-736-3409

113 08111. round dllmond - ·
. size e. paid
will $550;
Marquis w.ctdlng HI 112 carat ,
' slze 7, paid $1•oo, wl'l lake
St250; wedding gown wllh voll
slzo 7, paid $700 will take, 1300;
740-387o029e or 740-94&amp;-248(

saoo.

· 3 Piece Living Room Sullo: Low·

. See~ Couc11 &amp; Choir; 2 Staoll1e&lt;

t Aecllntro ; Kllchon Tobit &amp;
; Chllr1; Wll~ ~alrlgorator, All

I'"2720,Good
Condlllonl
AFTER I P.M.

I

40 bam btama. hend
843-5211 .

740·379.

~n. 740-

3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch 24x24
Garge FA WUh Fireplace lnserl
Kitchen Oak Cabinet, Fenced In
Yard /Dock $65 ,000 740-245·
5946, Or Leave Message.

1862.

Convenient Aaclne location, out
or htgh water, 38R, one bath, plenty storage, reduced 137,950, 740-

Moving : Priced to aell. 14x80
Holly Park , many extras. 304·
875-23511.

949-3228.

New 1998 1.tx70 lhrta bedroom,

Boonie - • For Sete $10 &amp; Up
Soli Only No Tradaa, 740·446·
Brand now two bedroom mobile
9787.
homo, ratrlga~tot and range, cur·
tllnt, nice Racine rural setting,
Bclens QS14XL ~ldlng Mower. 14
$328 .month ptus depoSit, Jruh,
water and lawn care, no pets, ref· . HP 44 tncn Cut Alklng $900, Cell
Daytime 740-448-3310, E-lng&amp;:
erences required, call 740·9•9·
740-367-()481
2696.
Botens .Ridlng Mower, BrlgQo MoTwo bedroom mobile hOme, gas,
tor, Now BoHory, Now Botta, 740$300 mont11, $300 deposit, 740·
245-8964.
742·2814.
Brand Newt Greet Glhl COfllldeo
440 Apartments
· ·storage unit . Black and cherry.
Hover OUI ol t&gt;ox. $128. Holdl up
lor Rent
to 940 dltca, also holds tap11.
1 and 2 bedroom oPartmenls, lur·
Coli 740·992·1836 ahtr 6 pm .
ntshed and unturnished. aecu'rity . COs&amp;~notlncluded.
.
deposit required, no pets, 7•09112·2218. .
Bunk Btds With MattresHt Very
Good Condition, S225, 304·875·
2 Bedroom Apt, SIOve and ro~lg 4784 Altar e P,M.
Included. 74 Court Sl. Galltpotla .
740-441-2563

Double wide 3br. 2 bath, only
St ,325. down , $205. par monlh .
1·800-691-67n.
For sate By OWner: Buta\111" Pike,
Brick, Morlan Building, 3.6 Aerts;
35 Ferguson Diesel , 7.tO-U6·
4286 .

Monarch, 12x60; remOdeled, to·
cated on ranled lot, can atay or
bt moved. 304-692·3ol35.

Includes 8 months FREE bt rent.
Includes skirting, deluxe sttPI
and sotup. Only $187.08 pel
month with $1075 down . Cal11 ·
800-837-3238.

NEW BANK IIEP0'8 Only 3 lehl
SUII under warranty, owner fl .
nanclng a..llabto. 304· 755·
7191 .
Now DoubiO,.IdO 3BR, 2 bath .
$1,325 Down &amp; $205.por mo. f·
888'9211-3426.

Ia• Plcnlo Tlbtoo $8,900; A Frame

' Whh Swinging Bondi $169; 1361
Clort. Chopel ~oed, B-H. Allor
5:00 740-388-9443.

Seamslr81"' will do atlerlllon
repairs; plus window treatments
and ole, call Sandy 740·992·
3220.
Will do babyaitllng In my homt,

aefOU from Middleport park, any
thill. 740-992·!1073."

~aglotered Chi· Angus Butt For

Salt, 740·985·3334, Or 740.985·
3838.
Registered mlnlalure mare to bat

CFA Rtglsttftd Himalayan Kit•
tens, Elltrl Nice, 740-446-3188.
CKC Reg. Re11orrler PUf'PI&amp;I, six
wotkt old, shota and wormed. cal
740-84!H175 attar !lpm.

In lall. $600. 304-675-3992.

640

Hay &amp; Grain •

s

Ml&lt;ed hay, 1 a bale out or lflld,
LangsviNel Dexter oroa. 740.742·
2695, 740-992·7409.
TRANSPORTATION

Full blooded German ehepherd
pupplto, two left, mala and tomale,
17~.

742·2735.

HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAR; kill&amp; fleas, tlcll, 1DJ1 mites
lllllwrl systemic poisoning. J 0
North Produce, 740.-.U8· 1933.
(www.hoppyjacklnc.com)
NOTICE
Froncll Clly Pel G,_lng

-Dponl

Proteulonal Grooming by Ap·
polntments. Over 15 yrs. experi·
enee, evening appointments
ovallablo, 65Q Second Avo. Gal·
ltpolls, OH. 741).446.1528.

Sheltlo 1 Year Old, Female Wllh
Papers, $250, 7~t 19.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vagetsblea

Greenhouse planll , St. Rt. 2 N
near the end ol Jericho Rd. Stl
dozen.
•

Strawbtrrles, Pick Your Own . Call
Claude Wlntlf", Rio Grande, Onlo
740-245-5121 . .
Strawberries: Taylor's Berry
Patch, 2884 Kerr Road, Bidwell .
740-245-9047.
I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LI V ES TOCK

1974 Plymouth V.ltant, loc:1ory air,
lactory 318 mopar, 69,000 orlglnot
miles, wtillrade lor trucil: or cargo
van In good condition, 740..992·
7063.
1977 Corvette Whit•. With Tan
Interior, 350 Automatic, Good
Condllloo, 50,000 Mlloa, $9,000
080, 740-«6-1021.
1978 Thunderbird, one owner,

di

11
·17•

1888 Suzuki 4x4 250c:c 2 Whe,t
Drtvo With ~acko, $1 ,400 740·
379-231!6.

• Q

r&amp;-

bultt engine, $1 ,000 . OBO. 304·
675-5091 .
1980 ·1980 HONOA CARS FOR
$100 Seized &amp; Sold Locally Tllla
Month. Call 1·800·522·~730 Ext.
4420.
1960 ·1990 TfVCkS For $100111
Stlzed And Sold
Localy Thla IIOfllh.
ltucka, 4X4'o.'Eic.
1-800-522·2730, X 3901 .
1982 AMC Spirit 6 Cylinder, Auto:
Sunroof, Too Many New Parta To
Mention! Was Asking $800, Will
Take $650 Firm , Call 740·318·
9325.
1982 Cutlus Supremo, 2 D. ~
VB . Good Condtlton , $1 ,800 Or
Bost Offer. 740-992~.
1987 Ohevalta AutomaHc, Air
Conditioning, Low Mllelgo, Runs
And Hangtos Exceltontl 740·245·

Doll--

• Q. S2
Em

ITS~

1990 Ford F 350 011111 , crow;
cab, with ground effects. loaded.,
IXctfltnt COndition, $14,500, 74()-,
949-22t7 anyllmo. .

~

...

AJI2

t'. 5.

t SI

Kl

1991 Chevy S-10, TahOe pack·'
age, &amp; cyl., 5 speed. custo"'
wheel&amp;, ,. new tlrea. only 85,000

.I

S•U ·

BARNEY
THIS IS FER
.DOCTOR
.lLLtt

aW

t963 Jeep Cherokee 4 WD,
~ufl. ~11110 Qood, 6 Cyllndtr, $5001
Frm, 740-441.Q616.
•

8ouU!

a•
Pass

YOU GOT CHAN.I
COMIN!!

FINANCIAL

1 lllatrlclln

caer.•ny

I 'GoMI
IIIII
ol .... 3 'l'alwullll 'u lt

II
...

31Ciwllrl

3llrldll ......
Co I tun
'II 9· 111\I(II!Y.
• llilln Mdllill
-4DIIollbtlau.d 7 Zlll Zlll-

,=.....,

Wnt Nertlit
Pau

••
Dbl.

'Pau

I

By Phillip Alder

12~

:w

1981 Honda 70CC ·4 Whee'-1.
Good Condition, $1 .~oo, 7-td·
367- ?283, Ahlr 5 P.M.
:

---

1989 KX 125 Din Bike, 740·245l
5789.
.
'
1890 Hartay Davtdlon Ultra Clas•

ale With Molchlng Pull Behln~
Trailer $14,500 740-25&amp;-9227.
•
1991 Honda 250x 4 Wheolor Lot&gt;
01 New Stuffl740-441·1419.

viONI&gt;fR IF
YOU MISSfl&gt;

YOV, TU~/'#OfF ..
NbCT

1994 KIW8Hkl 300, $2200, 7401

-t,O ·

MIL.fS'

. . .&gt;· 'lS
I 1-1 ,;..v ,=s·

•

1'HE BORN LOSER
'~i!f.l!) ~ t-lf:W biiZfaiVE 00 .,
!:it?:." ~'( m:x.EDJI!E

~ WIU..NOW f!J!~
FmJI~OM

N.L.

(.C.)Mru~ ~ '·

Eff€Lil'/(.II'.'#E.I)IRID'!

&gt;--'-

=

I

tiE'!!... HEY, W~lT A

'

. You IC.NOW WH/I.T I

HEEO! I IIEEI&gt; SOt£
SQ!tT Of SI.N TO
'rE!-i- l1f. ._,HETHEil

J~NNY IS llE"LL'l THE
••. 61~1. FOI'.

,o

ME!.

s•
All pua

t~;,

.

230 ·Proleulonal
.Servlc:M

Uwingston'a ba~tment waltr·
p1ooflng, atl. baltmtr,t repairs
done, free tsrlmalts. lifetime
guarantee. 1Oyra on job 11ptrl·
.... 304-ll75-214~ .

HEAl Eo,T ATE

_...,on

w-

u

MIIIVTE! JUST,._~ X

WAS SA"''\liG THAT, I

PICKEO Ul' THIS ClliEZ·

OOOOLE ... NtO LOCMC.
,._T IT!

;:1

Pau

IOtlllllton) •'

ibr.

llwing fOOn1 , TV room. ant
IMI, fenced backyard, outaldt
a!Ofogt, newly romocteled. groll
-11011. low
801 Moloillln

Hoof!:

eao.

Clrcto, Pt. Pltlllnt. 304·875·
2'133.

-001!1.

4yr otd, 20181q .ll. Copo lily
011
2.29 ICIH,
3 full
llalhe,
hlr,_
lloorl-In·dlnlnQ,
room 1 toyer, oak cabinet• 1,
trim, 24130 dolochtd garogo,
12x24 buHdfng, lotllld 2 t/2.
mfflt out JorJy'o Aun Aoed In'

'

t4 ocroo with two olo;y lhruj
IJICiiOCIR-. I &amp; If.! - . Ull
bll ........... lt36.000. 740-,

aaoo.oo • - . -

r.eoo••-·

.

...

TID··,:·

.

.

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......
...
Chra•

21 Onnl tile ,;.
d wllll'

23~-i.,,

31llln. In
llltlo1d

40~plrll

·

Which city in the United States
has the best climate? Several places
would receive votes, but surely the
runaway winner would be San Diego.
It has a stable climate, not 100 hot. not
too cold, with lots of sunshine. ·
Today's deal was declared in San
Diego in 1979 by Mary Jane Farell.
She was recently eleaed into the
American Contract Bridge Leape's
Hall of Fame. along with Dorothy
Truscott, Billy EiSenberg, Johnny
Gerber. Alvin Landy, Sonny Moyse,
Peter Pender and Dave Tn:adwell.
Mary Jane's play was n:levant
only because the deal occulTed in a
pairs event. At most tables, East was
in four spndes, scoring 620 after a
nonnal guess in diamondS. (As South
had bid at the two-level, he was more
likely 10 have the diamond ace.) So,
if Mary Jane went only two down.
losing 500, she would rc«ive a
"'top," whereas dlrce down, minus
800, would be a "bottom."
After cashing the spade ace, West
switched 10 the diamond three. Reading the position correctly, Mary Jane
played low from the dummy and
· duc.ked East's 10. A lnlmp back now
would have collected 800, but East
tried to ca~h the spade king (which
was silly, given West"s jump raise).
Mary Jane ruffed, played off the
club ace, and led her heart queen.
When West played low smoothly,
declarer called for the ace, ruffed
dummy's final spade in hand, and
exited with a heart. East was endplayed. Whether he led away from
the diamond kins or conc:eded a ruff.
. and-discard, Mary Jane had only one
di1m0nd loser and a cold lOp. Or
should that be "comfortably wann .
top" in San Diego?

'0

411Wo1c
42 llilllllll
43 Extra
tl4 lrll
ant

.c..lnUII0•n.-

47 .l:oup d' -

·I

10
12 ,....,.
Alley- -

'~

113 'wrwth
--

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•

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•'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'•

by Lule campos

f,

OIAebily CIP* Cl= .,.. .,.. eNIIId from qiiOid CII by IIITIOUI people, pu1 tnd p!WMnt
E-.
In 1M eiptWIIWidiiOr tnOhr. T.,._ au..· L trQUIIIs G

.,
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A N· U Y X

YU

KR

SF J A :
.)

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TIIU

GJANUJP

WH
J

,,

X F II G 8 Y J
II X J - ~
~REVIOUS ~ION: "h's better than a poke In the eye wnh a sharp stick. •
I m V8fY happv. - Poet Charles Wrlgllt, on winning the Pulilzer Prize.
J
I F•J

WNY8 P J G U. '

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WDID

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SUIIMY
i

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~.~;:B~RO:;: 0:;T~,.f,.

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Overhallrd on college campus: ·statistics can prove any,.--...,..-,-----. thing. even the -- - - -!"

I

I

SPAROT
..-r~~..~-r~"r5-f.~-r~-l O

1·-.1.-.L-..1-.JL....-1--1

•

Complelt the chuckle quoled
by filling In the . milling wordo
you develop from llep No. 3 below.

I
1

••

.,
,1

PIINT NlloWHD LlnEIS IN

" " S9\!AII!

IIIII!

.,

SCIAM Lm ANSWIIS
Clunch - Olden - Knack - Sonata - LOAN SHARK
while going over our monthly bills my husband
sighed, ·A credit card i8 just a laminated LOAN SHARK"

.,

·'

•

1

I- ~~~Su....:pp..:....N~••:........,..,.

'

211-Pop
27 floww holcllll
21 - ftq
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. 310 Hori1n for Slle

11 lllwtllan
'
ltlllrU-c· -r
211 'l'viiOI r:i/ pMy I
211WnGUI- '

24 - Mo.t ...... :
II Europe

1

INOTICEt
OHIO VAL.LEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bual·
nesa with people you know, and
NOT 10 Hod monoy t11rough tno
mall until you have invealigattd
1111 otlorlng.

11 =Ioiii 0111-

EMt

790.

Bu1lnes1
Opportunity

12 ....... lllllclr
13 Adrllllc, lar "

22 Exit
·"
23 WIN I*Mfl ',"

l

-··

-

ITI Palltnou8

The best
climate, a
great player

mv'!tl

r

Will haul junk or trash awt~t: $351
picltiJI) toed. 304-875-5036.

DOWN

a1

Motorcycles
•

a

17 "' h1'n
'a
m 111 pllll

Opening lead: • A

t884 Chivy 4x4 snort btd, 305 ~
IUIO, vary sharp. $5,200 or 080,,
740-742·7200, 740-742·2675.

304-77:l·~34 .

s

u=-.uy

Vulllerable: 8oth
Dealer: West

':

1985 Gold wing lnterllate
loiS ol &lt;:hromo. 50.000

• Q 10

"c..,_.

•AJJOI75

1983 Chevy 4x4 li .Fl. Bed 35il'
Engine Heavy 112 Ton $2 .~00'
740-379-2366.
:

740

21 ceo.e,e.

t At 5

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa .
1181 Chevy 4X4, 350, ~uno ~

o

.

SouU.

••

11 Coy I , •

·=. . . ::eu':t!!l
....
21ll!illltr . .

•KQ154
9 KI
.
t K J 10 I I

'

acluat mites, $3250, 740·992J
6824.
1993 Chevy lutt.slu Sttverad&lt;l
ext. cab. 350 , auto, ex. condo
304-578-2494.
•;

"

:-r

7.

:=:"«#'

!Ioiii

2011oNW:.dng
. 21
,~a~am

9 A J I

~tDPrculaLM.._..

UllomftW.

11 GrMk peitlc

• 10. 3

1988 Q.M.C. 51~ 4 Cyttndai, ~
Speed, Pllono: 740-251!-1102.
'

740-448-275t .

Indian

ta-

llude

i

710 Auto• for Sale

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

=

•.

992-7863.
.
" :
Older mobile homo In Rutland, out 2 Bedroom Partial Ulllltles 1 Da·
51164.
t995 Kawasaki 4 Wheettr 300 2: .
of high warer. an umtuea, two 1011, • pooh, 21~ Spring Avenue, Pomor·
Dressing table, balltnet, stroller,
WD, Excollont Condition. 740•
610
Farm
Equipment
$1000, 740-742·2070.
awing,. playpen, baby bed, &amp; car
1987 Corvette all power, new
oy,OH.
.
446-4996, Alter 5 P.M.
..... 3()4-875-4548.
l&gt;lakts &amp; tires. 19.000. 304-578·
450
Case
Dozer
Power
Angle
&amp;
3066.
•
House tor sale In New Haven , 81.... P.oronl Prog-. Spaclat 2bdrm . epts., total electric, ap·
Four whatfer
oalo: 1987 K.,
Tilt Blade, 614 Actual Hours.
WV, 3 bedrooms, $35,000, 740· ' llnanclng on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom pllancea furnished, laundry room E·Z Qo Qoll Cart Also, 5 HP Qo $17 ,00 , Firm 740· 24~·~439,
waaakl Pralrle.•x4." llkl' new, 140homea. Paymenta aa low 11 lacllltlta, close to school In lown . Can, 740-245-5769.
1968 Sunl&gt;trd, rod, tour dOOr, ar,
992·5641.
992-4003 or 740-992~59 .
Even
.
1110. Cal now 304-755-MIIG.
body In good condition, runa
Appttca1tona avallobto at : VII lege Four Stta of Truck LIU Forks
Immediate occupancy· cozy two
good,
$1300:
740-992-6824.
Groen Apts. t49 or call 740.992· $100. 10 $125.00 A Sell 740-379· S.8%F nclng on ·Used Tractor1,
750 Boat• &amp; Motora·
bedroom, large leVel lot, central Special 18x80 38R, 2 bath . 3711 . EOH.
Ford 5 30·400 HAS .. Ford 7040 1969 Barone V·6, Auto, AC,
lor Sale
; ,.
S1
,325
Down,
$205
Mo.
FrH
air
2655
air, Mderson windows, newer fur·
4WO I Loader·1370 HAS .. Ku· $2.295: 1980 Cevolfer 2 Doors. 5
nace , aluminum siding, located in &amp; 1roe sklr11ng. 1.6QO.II91-&amp;m.
3 rooma, bath, uOfurnlahed. nice G.E. Washer, $75; Q.E. Elaclrlc t&gt;ota
50HP·800 HAS. Car·
M11on. colt 773·992·3557 or
location , no pets , references &amp; Range $15; Zenith Consolo T.V.. mlcha I Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. Call Spoed, AC, 9.4K, St ,895; Cook
SPRING
SPECIALS
Motora, 740-~103.
740-992·314,.
dopoolt required. 304-875·1090.
7
2412ori ·80Q.594-1111
Like New $200; S11rao Console
l411tllowft
t.tFixod126 Pleasant fUdge , Pomeroy, 3
458 112 Second Avenue, QatUpo· $1 00; Drop leal Tobit &amp; Choirs, 8N Ford lractor, nlco ; s2 •500 • 1989 Camato loaded, 11·8, 740·
With 3 Loaves, $300; 7.00-446.1-Poybedroom home, newer roof, newer
Ill, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances, 0119.
304-675-3824.
2::.4.:.5·.:.5;.:78:::9·:...__ _~--15' Glastron Wllh
$17,tH01138II,
furnace &amp; hbl water tank, new
$42~/Mo., $225 Deposit, Uttllllea
eury, 18' Starcralt
Free Doflvory &amp; 1111-up
Cau
300
Tractor
With'
Mower
1989
Chevy·
Cevall•r:
AC,
PS,
paint outside, •handy man lpl·
Pold74Q.446.2129.
Gold Chain Link NecklaCe For Portable Gaootlno Hlobart Weldor, auto, 70 .000 mtloo. St,ooo. 304Mercury S1,000 Ptoco, 741,:"4.
clal", $10,000 ftrm, 6t4-237·1182.
Only
AIWV. 3Q4.75WtH
«12.
875 3824
NHro,
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sale. Valutd At $250 Will Take Eiec:lrk: Concreto Mixer, Hay EJe. :.
.:.
·
.:.
::..
·
·
Ofltrs, 740·U6Loadod 28x80 . 3Dr, 2 112 balh
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON R!tasonable
1978 18ft. Trt
'liOfQ!IWheels. 74Q.24S.9212.
1969 Cn~,eorslca 2.8 V-8 Hlg~
9787.
TAX8P£CIAL
with all options, only 12,499.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
motor &amp; trailer wl~&lt;&gt;~''lCC
down, $362. per month. Frao llr &amp; Now 3br $999/down $189/mo. !rom $279 to $358. Walk to shop
FarmeH
Cub
Tractor
Willi
Cuhlva·
~~"
Cll8d
For,
1950,
740rteo. Boat &amp; mo1or
Free Set·up &amp; Delivery. Only 3 &amp; movies. Cait 740·••&amp;·2568. Grubb's Plono· tuning &amp; ropotro. tors &amp; New Side Dresser, 7.t0·
llldrt. 1-88H9HI777.
ProbJemo? Nltll Tuned? Call the
shape. Aoking $3,300 torm.
Laftl Only at .O o - - N~
Equal Houalng Opportunity,
256-8350.
.
1991 Bonneville $3,900./0BO.
448-3488.
.
J)lano Dr. 740-448-4!125
Lovel~ Country Home On SR 7 .. wv. 304-755-11885.'
~e. excellenl cond~ 1987 S·tO lruck 12 . ~00./0BO.
South With A Brealhtaklog River
Efficiency Neai Walmart, 740· Hoi tub, like - · Hata lour, 740- 400 Formatt, .1987 BassTrecker Ponloon,
1994 24 Ft. Pontoon Bo~lr_ll*
v-.. Valy f'rlvato. Selling On 2 11 ' 340 Bualne.. and
Ion, 448-2515.
I
tireo,
faot
hllch,
$3200;
50HP
Mercury. $4,500./0BO.
992·5948.
Inch Fioe11, No Motor, Wilh Tan·
2 Acrn Bul Only tO Mlnutea
7
40-985-3601!.
304-675-7652.
. Bl!lldlnp
dam Trailer $2,195 304-682·21 101·
From GaHfpolis. 3 ·4 Bedrooms, 2
For Leaia: Aparlmenl In GalllpoJET .
' '!"Jelllll'\da()r81 ....279-7056. 1 1 ,'1
John
DHrt
7000
4
Row
NO
Til
-,9-9..:t_C::.eme..:
_
.
;;ro:.._R_S,-Aut-o-ma-J-Ic-,
A-1-r,
112 Bathl, Hardwood Ftoora, 2 Commerctai·OIIIco 01 Rotan. 17 lla Overlook&amp; Park, New Ap·
AERATION MOIORS
Flreplacoa, New Heal Pump, New Mill St. Mlddloport. 1,450 Sq Ft. pllancta, Well Kept, 740 ·886- ~opatred, Now &amp; RebuiM In S10c:ll. Planter Exec Cond. 2·AC
Many Eiltaal Good Condition, · 199.5 Bayllner 20 Ft. Cuddy-1-eJ
.
Kitchen. Many Extras. Won't Last . $400 mo.(or oubdtvldo to t,OOO 7174.
call ~~E-. 1·800-537·9525.
Row Air Planters, Older ""'"' ' ' $8,000 Value Sacrftce For
MerOCrul&amp;tr Cel 740-256-611l!j-&gt; ;.
l.ongll $110,000.
o.ero 8 Row Planlet, John ..
aq ft. lor $30000 mo.) Cornor
2800 4 Botlum Plow 2.John Deere $3,900, 740-448 8627.
For
rent·
downtown
O.llpolls,
one
Building . (740)•992·8250 Acqul•
1996 Macoda t9 Fl . Wlth 1 4,8f
bedroom upstair&amp; apartment,
Coli Virginia L. Smith ~oatty AI .-a (next door).'
Ludwig Drum Bel With Cuoa Cllt
12·14 ft DISk used Rakes, Square 1891 Cavalier, Aulo: Atr, Good
.
MercCrulser Excellent Condlf6on,l
pets, IN.I&amp;t haw. references. $235 Altar 4 P.M. 740-448-7486.
740-446·6806 Or Call Cara At
Baiera, ~ound Bators -8.5% Fl· Mllin, $2,500, 740·388·9082,
Cal 740-2-110.
• I.
month, S235 dopoolt, call 740·
740·245·9430 For More fnlorme· 350 Loll &amp; Acreage
nanclng on used ~ound Bolero &amp; 740-448-7271.
I
742·2837.
8 HP Evinrude Motor, Good ~ i
tlon.
Mower condillontrs. New Idea - - - - - - - - - (ATTENTION DEVELDP.EA8,
dHionl $400, 740-3911-8183. •
'
Bator t year old with Not 1991 Cuttasi Carotton t4x70 3
Graclouo Nvlng. 1 and 2 bedroom Po"""oV Thrift 'Shop now buvtng Round
Middleport. beautiful two slor~. 3
SIIW.IIUIIINEII,
Wrap/New
Holland
472
Haybine
large
ouloldo
toyo
and
baby
Bedrooms,
Excellent
CondHion,
apartmanta 11 Village Manor and
Kawasaki STS JOI okl, oiiU Ullljjlr.
br, 2 balh, large l.r. &amp; lr., oak '
COUNTRY ESTATEJ
ttems, walkeri, tOddler car Mats, EX. cond .. new Hollend 474 Hay· $12,500, 740-245-9480. •
warranty, tnree seater, 83 harl• •
doof's &amp; trim, Smith's custom oak i3.85 Acres, App;o •. a Acre Alvaroldt Apartrotnts In Middle· etc: Tueldey through Fflday, 740- blne Ex . cond. Carmichael's
power, bought new July of "9~
cabineu , Jann-alr range, dish- Lake, Mobllt Homo Wllh Largo pon. Ffom $249·$373. Call 740· 992·3725 . .
Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. Call 740·446- 1891 Geo Prlzm • Doors. Auto,
thrtt matching Kawasaki · ahf
washer, delached garage, by ap- Add On .Don, Gottlo Counry, 992·5De4. Equal Houalng Oppor·
2412 or HMJQ-5114-1111
Air, 6o,boo Milts suoo 740·
lunlllol.
.
vests and tralltl all go wllh, l•
potnunont, 740-992·5243.
368·90fl2,
740-..
6·
7278.
.
Prlmottar· $50 ott lnolattatton.
County Water And Electric
$5000, 740·949·2203 OJ 740.149'
Firat month tree Including free John DH&lt;e Bailor WIKicker. Exc
$2,100
,.,
Acre,
740-355-8878,
Now
Taking
Applications35
New house, 1600aq.lt. 3 bdr. La·
cond.,
$3,200.
Grinder· 199t Po~tlac Grand Am LE, ma·
2045 , wfll conoldtr trado l?r ~
Weat 2 Bedroom Townhoult · HBO. Free promollon wllll rtbala, $1 .ooo.Soay Sheep Mlnlawres,
kin area. 304-n3-51n.
roon, twO door, aulomatk:, cold a~.
g o o d - boll.
' ' '
Apartment• 1295/Mo.. 740·446· 80().293-2640.
Rarol $400,00 each. 740·256· tKt, IDUI' brand now tlrtl, 12995,
1
Ofdar 4bdr, ~rn central heat, 3 Bedroom Mobile Home With 00011.
..-T
IELI.III
•
Scooters, Electric Wheelchairs, 6230
740.992-6824.
AJC. basement, detached garage 4x8 Porch, Fair CondiUon, Muat
19 1~11. Oeep·V, 8cyl , 1110~P,
Slits:
Rental,
Treda,
New
l
Movol
$2.100
740-441-1!121
.
Ont bedroom apartmeni In Mid·
on 2.77 acres. on 22nd Street In
Jonn Dura Skid Steer Loader •
MercruiHr tnbolrd Motor, ll'liltr;l
llltpOr1. all utllllltl paid, $270 per Uud, Bowman's Hoinocaro. 740· All Sizes and Attachments In 1992 Cllovy Lumina, cold atr, IIH.
Point Pleasanl. $80,000 . 30~ ·
Life Preservers &amp; Bumpat. ONi.yl
·cruise, ABS, wtndowl, Pl.,
BRUNER LAND
448-7283.
month,
$100
deposit,
call
740·
'138-1116.
Slock 7.5% Financing Available . loadoG, t05 ,000 mills. extra
12.500.
741).446.3114.
7-1-tfl2
9112·7806.
Set of Broyhill and tablaa, new Carmlehnl'a Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc. she~,maroon, 4 door, $3995,
Spring Valle)~ Area , • Bedrooms,
paid $700 will Hll tor $300. 3Qol. Call: 740-446·2412 or 1·800·5114- 740.-·6824.
760 . Auto Pllrta &amp;
:
AliT AVAILABLE NOW
LA, OR, 2 1/2 BaflB, Large Family lltlflo Co.: Denville, Nloa RoiNng
1111
882·3587.
lend
t7
Acroa
$18,000
·12,000
Twin
Rlvtro
Tower
now
accepting
A~a .:
Room . Large Kitchen 1 Break
199:2 Mercury Tracer Automatic,
Nool&lt; Recently Updated, 740-448- Down + $2t2/Mo.; Or t Acres appllcatlono lor 1br. HVD aubsJd. Soft With wood Trim : Color: Your Arta Bush Hog Dtaltr For With 91 ,000 Miles, Good Condl·
$16,000 , Ctly Water. Oye,vllle, tzed apt. lor elderly and hindi·
4 BF Goodrk:h aU terrain TA ractt,l
8272.
Qold; Malehlng Chair, $150, 740.Parts, Rotary Cutters, Loaders
tlon, $3,300, 740.367-7253, AHor
Nice t1 + Acre• t10 ,500 Very CIIJIItd: EOH 304-ll75-6879.
a•, 31,00 X 10.50, llka - ·1350,
367.0156.
Tllltra•.Finish Mowell. Etc. Car: 5P.M.
740-9411-3421..
'
Three bedroom, bath and ha", In
Very Nice 2 Car Garage Apart· STEREO tOMPDNENTI (Cor· mlchael:s Farm &amp; Lawn Midway 1993 Camaro, new styli, 38,400
MkkUepotl. call 740·992·:wt5 af·
9' Flbtrgflou Wntto kuck
Gtllfl Co.: QalllpOIII, Neighbor· ment. ~- &amp; Rtlrlgtntlor, Cen- wn, Holtr, Hanmon Kordoll) 740- eo-n QaNipolls &amp; ~lo GNndo, miles. loaded, •• · cond. $9,500.
ter 5:00 or anylime weekends.
Ohio On Jackson Ptko 740·4411741)..448-4410.
-. hood Rd .. Nice 10 Acre Building tral AIC I Furnace, One Btd· 256-6360.
304-675-3087.
24t20r 1·80Q.594-1111 .
SHe $19,000. Frttndty ~ldgo, 8.5 room, Lola 01 Storage $335/Mo.,
320 Mobile
Now Dfll tarlkl &amp; body porto. tJI't
Acr.. S7 ,500 Or 1.5 Acres Pfuo Doc&gt;ool~ 1 Crodlt Roloronco. Tlmbe~ack SkiGder tnt .. Truck, . Your Area John Deere Dealer 1993 Chovy Allro Van CL load·
lor Sale
A Auto, Rlpfay; WV. 3044?l1
740 · 441·4~55 Aller I P.M.; Oayo:
$8.000.
P-loador. 7~251-9301 .
or Rooldontlal And Commercial ed Towing Package, E•cellent
31133 or 1-8CJ0.273-t329.
.. t 1
741).446.1540.
.
Condlllon.
85,000.
Milos,
18.500
12&lt;M 2 bdr, good COfld. 304·937·
awn Equipment. Compact U11Rty
Watarflno
Spoctot:
3/4
200
PSI
1
Call
For
FrH
Mapa
•
Owner
Fl·
29211.
TractOII ~rom 20 To 39 HP. AU Shorpl 740-448-9278.
Wanted lo buy· good 700 A4 ...,
Furnished
$21.95 P.r 100; 1" 200 PSI SIZII Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
nanclng Info. Take 10'% Ott Uoted 450
tomalio tranamlnion ror a 1~
$37.00 Per 100; All Bra11 Com· Tractor•. Hay Equipment, John t993 Rod Ptymoulh Sundanco 4
14 &lt;70 38R, $999 Down &amp; ONLY Pr~eoOn Celh Purcl1asM!
Chevrolet Aatro van, uo. J:..-a:.
Room !II
~FI1*1glln&amp;b*
$179 per mo. Free oif &amp; free lkirl·
3011,
'
•
..:,. ,
Deero Skid SIHr Loadoro. Check Doors, 124,000 Mlleo, AC, 4 Cy·
360
RON
EVANI
ENTERPRISES
.Reel
Estate
Circle Motel Lawall Rtles IR
lng. Hl88·928-3428.
With Uo About Financing As Low Iinder, Automallc, 12.000 080,
Town, Nowly ~emodtfod , HBO, Jacklon, llt11o, 1.80Q.537·11!121 .
As 2.9% On Lawn Tractora And 740-256-1233.
Campera I , J ~l
Wanted
14x70 3br $1199 down, $198 por
Clnemax, Showtlme &amp; .Oianey.
Low
Rolf Financing On New And t995 Dedgo Neon Whllt, 34,000
mo. free air &amp; sklnlng. 1-fl00..891 - Property In Gatllpolll, 80x100 Or WHkly Ralto. Or Monthly ~ales,
Motor
Hornet • •
Uotd Equlpmont. Carmichael's Milel, Au10, Air, Cru111, TIH, Pow·
em.
50 Fl. Front 80 Ft. Length, Mini· Conatructlon Workers Welcome
Farm &amp; Lawn Gattipotta, OH 740. er Door Locka. $5,600 740·379·
t980 1811. Chula pull co!i'Wr..J
"740-44H!69I, 740-441 ·5117. .
wooden tr..ue table with 1tx 441-2412f-800-594·1111.
18&lt;10 3111. 2 bath. $1 .325. doWn, ....,, 7~1 · 1504 Allor&amp;.
. 11tt-contal~. ak. 8.1 doer 11ilj1d r
9364.
.and corner cabinet. very
mouno, vary illce. 304-ll75-7712. .&lt; r
$20~ . pat mo. FrH air &amp; oklrt. 1·
Wanted: 200 •300 Socfucttd Ac:r· Sleeping rooms wllh cooking . chalrt
Livestock
' I
t995 Plymouth Noon 4 Doors
NU8Hm.
Alto tralltr space on rlvar. All gooG condlllon. $650, 740·892·
•• In Ohio, Wllh All Mineral
1993 Dutchmen Llko Now.
'
Green With Spoiler AUtomatic:
h&lt;lok·upo. Call oflor 2:00 p.m., 2922.
Rlghlo,
And
No
Otvtlopmonl
Po1 4 Yllor Old. Regls10red Llmou·
SIHpl
I
,
loaded
I
$10,000
7
&lt;
~
1985 Holly Par- U16!S 2 Bed·
~lr,
57.500
Milas,
$4.500
OBO,
304-n:l-5651 . Malon wv.
lin Bull, Pundl BloodHne, ApprO&lt;. 740-~340 . 740-25oH417,
'- • wprn Procwpr
.
245-58tl.
.
" ''•
rooma . New Carpet. CA. 8x10 llnllol. Craig Londeletd, 804 tO
.
Do You Neod A WO«&lt; Proceooor 1600 f'!ll., $850, 740-25&amp;-8350.
I
Stor. Bldg., 14 Fl. Awning, Part.· Apache, Waohlngton. Ml 48094 . 480 Spece for Rent
Pllono:
110.788-1439.
For S'omo Buolnou Work · Or
lane, $13,100 010, 740-448-1063
Credll
Problema? We Can Help.
SEFWICES
25 Angua And Chi ·Angui built
After 3.
Wt Buy land: 30 ·500 Acrtl, Mobllt home 1111 IVIIIObll bel· Mayba A Colflgo Bound Student. for ..le, reasonably priced, excel- Easy Bank Financing For Uaed
II
So,
Call
740'
245·5443
For
wttn Athena and Pomeroy, call.
We Pay Caoh. 1·800·2t3-53e5
tent breeding . Slalt Run Farm, Vehicles, No Turn Down1, Call
1.. Timo lluyors, E-Z Financ:lng
' Mora lnlormdon.
VICklo, 740o441!-2897.
740-31111-43117.
Anthony land Co.
'
Jadooon.
740-288-5395.
610
Home
2 or 3 -.om. Alcund S200 per
Building
monlh. Call crodtt Uno 1-800·
lmprovemants
•
490
FOLI..Mae
30 Anguo And Cht·Anguo Bulla
HEftTAL'-;
JM8.lll78.
For
Stle, Reasonably Prk:ed, Ex·
IAIIMIHT
..... hl
38001q.h. bultrllng
At
celltnt Breeding, Slate Rur,
UNBELIEVABLE $499 Down Sl
36 Hondtroon, ouh- for manuWfi1£RPIIDOFIIIG
,,
•~'
·-tlntato,
Dfldl,tto.
-~
plt)OO,
wind• Farmi, Jod&lt;oon 740-288-8385.
Down DIW Only It (OAK· 410 HOUHIIOI' Rent
UncondHJohel lllodme guaranta. ~
faeturlng, wood worlllng, etorlng 'owo,
Cfloucto
Wlnltra,
·WOOD HOMES) Borbourovillo
·
Loc11 referencta turnlthtd; E'1'J~
Of IIIII, will ltnloh IO lUll. 304· 1Alo Grondo, OH Oolt 140·245·
4 yur old ~ogtotorod Watkef
304-731-3409
·
2 &amp; 3 bedloom, In Pornoroy, 1300 175-61411.
15121 . .
tabllahed te75. con (740) 4-i~JIO
.
gelding, ra ·tt2 hondo, booulllul
ABANO
per mont~. depolll required, no
0170 Or ! ·800·217-0678. R.,_
contorma11on. lather 3 tlmoo an&lt;/
ON HOME Mako 2 PlY· pato, pay ow• utltltleo. cill 740·
WallO (ll~lfing.
•
•
l stHI Bldg. Dllllflhlp AYoll.'ln pro*ll world chempton; 11 yeor
f-1[
IICHArHlJ',f
men11, aasume loan. owntr fl· t92~2311 Monday thru Fr~ 1..
~
~
Opim
Areo
llf
Prof11
Po·
old
quarter
horN,
goldlng
P.otomt.-Jng ..,._ _304-755-7191 .
,.,..,....
•
•'
•flontlll In Booming Industry. Call ""'11112 hendo; 740-918 '102. '
11r. Sly 30!HI!II-311110.
-MoblltHornoo..r-:
·2-oom-lkwtll\ariLono
510 HouHhokl
1
1 -Old Golding Horoo aonu,
AIHoLarveot 1Mntory OllntOr· Qollpoflo, S340JMo., WID
1110
Pill for . . .
.
Oooda
Good Troll Horoo. MOO, 7 Angui
t11orm • Cotomon Hoot Pumpo, Up, Oepoon Allqutrod, 513-574j . .
Air Co,.dllloners; Furnaa.a &amp; 2531.
•
" Appltoncoo: · llocondlllonod A Groom 8hop ·Pol Grooming . Croat Cowo Wllh Ctlvtl 1800 A
Pair, ' Folnllng Pigmy Gooll ~
1'1111, Hugo BuMII'owor _..
Wuflon, llryort, ~ongoo. Aolrt· Footurlnt 't;~ loth. Don Duo Anytlmo $100 Eoch. 1 Btny
The ~ lftltalled Pr!Oe, eaay 2
houeo, Cllln, '*Pit· gralorl, to Day QuorontHI liMN. 173
t CrHk Ad. teo. 740o2Se mo:
.
Over The Phono Bonk Financlntl. ed, ,,_, no rtlrfgorolor, no In· Froneh Clry Mavtog, 740·441·
7.0 UIGat.
Celt BoMolro HOmo lffll poll, dlpOII roqulred, 740- 77111.
Folr l'lg Hampohlro 1 112 Year
• ClG t·tiXH'IHH7.
~~~~~~~30111~·:_ _ _ _ __
Upton Uud Caro At 12·3 Milot
Ofd lniOd Bow 740-37Ht21.
Soulh .of Loon, wv. Flnonofng
GOOD UIIO '"PUANCII
:tiiA 12 ..
Wothoro, dryeto, rofrlgoroiOII,
For
solo·
4
Boor·
Alplnt
l~ct&lt; lollllllo.:JCM-.1069.
7»7216
llntll. 8kogoo A,rilriCII, 71
110111. I w1&lt;1. old, t50 to .. 740·
74Ht00.
720 Trudia lor S.le
4 room colbtgo 1250. mo. Plut Vina SlrHI. Colt 740·441-73M
'"Vtpgoll. Wo fill' ullfhloo.
French Alplno Goot luok 1 1111 Frolghll!nor wllh ollepaor;
3e14-, r,.5t 11.., epm.
Ulld , ....... . _ ....... Holf.
1114 Tlmp, roolor lrlllor; tt7t
WooD Old, 180 740-tiiiFT771J,
Klnworlh wllh oltopar; ltl4 A•llflilt'*-1 or CDmiiiBFCtal wlrlnal ~l
402 E. Collogo Alo Grondo, a' doy tnn to Kan•ut•· ~· •
lar1lt biiCk Tenn. W.fk«. 11C.I· ~·Will Ifill*: Od ..... - Ill ,.,...., Mulor 1.1: •
- - . 14501Mo.. Dopoell ,... Couchu, Drn•.,•·
...11111~1 D1fmatt111 pUfiPIM.: toni ... hono, Cllf .... 740-742- ctv 14D-tt2·3120 o r - .,... conood tloctrtoltn. Alat~oul' •
Oeekl,
lalllpl
And
llotot
Opon
~1-lofO.GII21·.
lloclf)ol, WV000301, 304·17f'P'
21112.
M -T ·W.1G-4. 740 ue t712.
. ·•t2S.MIII.304«17. . ..
1711.
•' I "l&lt;.l
I
jJ

Home•

WIK do Mftly cteonlng, havo ex·
ptrltnce and references, 740·
9411-2329.

I

Rallo Your Day Old Oolry Holforo
$.tO + Feed Guaranteed 7~2.t554M.

.

1912 QMC Suburban 314 ·To~
Dltlll Excellent Condition;
$1,000, 7~130 .

l

· Will Babysit In M~ Home Or
Yours On Nights &amp; Weekends
Call Me For Sorvlceo, 740·446·
9787.

.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

AKC White Qermon Shepherd
Pupa$150, 7~256 81'1 .

Ouollly Registered Black Anguo
Bulls 11"·16 months. Certified
Herd. Cummings Angus Farm.
304-675-6248.

•

Don's Lawn Care, Free Estimates.

10!'53

Hugo 28&lt;80 3BR, r"112 balh .
Starting 11 ONLY $39 ,9V9. Many
option&amp; avallablt. 1·888·928·
3428.

·540 Mlac:ellaneoua

AKC Siberian Female 12 Weeks,
Vet Checked, Shott &amp; Wormad,
$100, 740-379-2363 Kathy. .

1111111..

l!lifltllhltl ...

1411111*•
11 • b II

toi

OependaDto Lady Will Do Housoc...nJng, 304-675-8738.

App11GIM. ~1 .

Dlvorea Forces Salea·Takt ovar
payments, 2br, 2 balh, llnanclng
avaltat&gt;le. 304-755-5561.

Three bedroom houae and two .
bedroom lrlllet In Pomeroy, S~
monlh .ooeh, $50 dopoo lt. 740·
843-!1218.

Moore owner.

(REPO)
set 14' on lol, Boat Oller. 800-383-

House tor sate at 379 Salem
Street In Rulland, 5 roomr1 &amp; bath
with gaJage and halt basement.
Out ot tl\8 flooD area. caH at 7-t0742·3506 or 740-742·2065.

Oaycare openings , any shltt,
$1.70 per hour per child, county
certified, Long Bonom. 7.t0-985·
3518.

Small, 211r conago, camp Conley
oru, $200. mo. ptuo depool1.
304-875-1!230.

3br, Camp Contoy oroo , UGO.
mo. plus dlpotlt. 394-675-3230.

House for ·sate 5 miles out or
QaiNipolls, Clo$1 to ·Elks Farm. 3
8odroom Homo, 740-446-3406.

304-875-7112.

••.ooo

BUY IN APAIL
No Paymontl Until~ 11198
E-Z Flnlnclng
call Finanoo lilt
1-600-948-5678
FriO Sol-up &amp; Ooll\ltry

·Buy or 1111. Riverine Antlqull,
1124 E. Main Strtel. 011 Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740·892·2~26, Ruu

2br lraller wJexpando,· nice yard
tn Camp Conley. $350. mo.
adultl. 304-675-5091 .

003&amp;.

ARBORS AT GALUPOLIS
110 Ptnecresl OriW
Ganlpolls. OH 45631

1 ·I BEDIIOOII HOMES FROM
Locol Gov't , &amp; Bonk
~opo'1 Call 1-800·522·2730 X
t708.
'

Make 2 Pa~ments Move In No
Paymenll At1er 4 Yeara, 1· 800·
383-1882.

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, LA, FA,
l&lt;ltchen . Laundry Room Wllh 3
Acrea, Bulavltle PJkt, 740·441 ·

day.

210

AntlquH

530

ACAOII

I
.......
Friday, May 29, 1998

dlina dtat hun your feelinp might try In career development~ today, weak
• 10 discuulhe malta' with you today. auoc:iateS couldlum out to be a lia·
. Pe..-s you meet and become Llslen can:l'ully 10 .what is said, bilil)'. Try 10 operate independently of
these all lew. ·
frlendrl with socially in the year because no ill· will w11 inlendcd.
VIROO
.
(Au1.
23-Sepl.
22)
Be
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-Fcb. .19)
ahead could play conlllfUCiive roles in
mlndl'ul
of
lhe
activilies
you
Jel
People
with whom you associate
yQui- c.,., especially if you enter
involved
in
today.
11lcrc
is
a
poui·
today
wUI
have ·a stron1 inOuence
·
into'new endeaYOIII.
' OEMINI (M•y 21-lune 201 Wide bility you mipt select aomethin1 over your productivity. If you hanl
I.·
out with idlers, you mi&amp;llt become
11111inp an: indicalcd today in the .tltat's over your bead.
LIBRA
(Sept.
23-0cL
23)
If
you
one yourself.
manaaemcnl of your te!IOUICC~. I
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
unwillin110 allaR ~li1ht
voia:ueither be far 100 exuav..,.m or are
widl
a
penon
who
rec:en
lped
Guard apinst postteuive inclinaa lriAe 100 tiBflt·fi~ted. Oct a jump on
you
achieve
somethilll
of
,
hard
tions today if 1IOI'neone you like
life by understandinathe inOuencei
feelinp
1:011ld
be
lhe
by-prodiK:t.
...,_.
10 be payina a11ention 10
lhal'll aovem you in lhe year ahelld.
Don't let dlil hlppcn.
IOI1IIIOIMI
elle. ll could make you ~
Se~ for your AIII'O-Onph predic·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Per- childish.
tidia by mailina $2 10 Astto-Gnph, lOBI with whom you'll "'f'lQ•te
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
do. IIIIa lleWiplpU. P.O. eox 1758, today miJht have peMer faith iri you
AvoidOYUil*liiiiiOdaY i f - Munay HiU Smllon, New York, NY thu you have In younelt. Replace
.you like doe1n'~ ildequate
101 "· Be 11ft 10 stile your zodiac telf-doabls with feelinp of sell· appreciation for
illl tpeeial
•ian.
·
wodh.
you did for him/her. You oould be
. CANCER (1- 2l·luly 22) ~
SA011TARIUS (Nov. 23·Dcc. millina lhe Jne~U&amp;e. '
1101 10 be 100 r~lve of people In 21) If you become ·involved in IOI1IC
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
)'0.1!!' ehaiJe llldly. Your · type of
illlripe tocr.y, )'OUr You'n: vel)' oblervant today 1!111 this
may be~ but !hey won't
. teem will be dele creel 1!111 becolnta could worlt for or qalilll you. Focus
be .well.fteeived.
on lhe vinuea of olhm, not their
of c:onvenalion for othen.
LBO (July 23-AUI- 22) Someone IOpic:
faulu.
CAPRICORN·
(Dec.
22-lan.
19)
e!oe who hit recently done some·

..:. _

.o-tic

.'

•

�Friday
Weather
Page 18

Thursday, May 28, 1998

Today: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: 50s
Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 80s; Low: 60a

Sports

May 29,1998

•

Dodgers hand f:leds 4-3 loss, Page 4
Remembering a Christian patriot, Page 8
., Stand· up to cheap husband, Page 12

Memorial
Tournament
underway
PageS

'

®Eastern High School.com

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs Lo.ca
OKs full·-tim·e.
l&lt;indergarten

~nding

still up
in the air
.

Legislators recess ·
with no resolution
on help for schools

$econd countY school district ·
adopts a/1-day, every-day classes

:
:
:.
•

HONORED - Th- Eastern graduates
received spacial recognition for academic performance. They ara, front, from left, Kerrl Hatzer, work study; Kim Mayle, home economlca,
and Bethany Cooke, art; middle, Nicole Whlta,

East~rn

French, Bnmdon Buckley, phyalcs, Engllah and
drafting, and Judy W11t, band; back, Chris
Buchanan, Franch; Kalil Bailey, English, mathematlca, buelneaa and government, and Jamie
Drake, art.

SCHOLARSHIPS - lMM Elllllm Hnl01'11
were recognized 111 echolarahlp ...Ciplenll
dJJrlrig the May 22 ·senior -rda a~~~mbly.
They are, front, Hlether Naylor; mldclle, Nicole

White; Brandon Buckley and Jamie Drake; and

back, Kalil Bailey, Chris Buchanan and Judy

WMt.

seniors earn recognition at awards assembly

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Academic.award~ and honor.; and
scholmhips from various colleges
were presented to member.; of the
gmduating class at Eastern High
School during the school's annual
.enior awards a.•sembly on May 22.

The following students were pre·
.enled awards in academic areas:
Chris Buchanan and Nicole While,
French; Brandon Buckley and Kelli
Bailey. English; ' Kim Mayle, home
economics; Brandon Buckley, drafting and physics; KeiJi Bailey, math,
business, and government; Joe

Weeks, chemistry; John Dri.ggs, current world affair.;; Bethany Cooke,
an; Judy West, band.
Senior work-study awards were
prese·med to Jason Stevens, James
McKay. John S!archer, Kerry fletzer
and David Bigley.

Gauging life's most important 'thing'
· By AMBER CHURCH
is simply fulfilling your dreams and
· ..:What do you think is the most to keep smiling while trying to
important thing in life?
achieve those dreams. Life is a .grellt
Answers frolfl students nt Eastern- thing, so enjoy it," said Heather
High School might surprise you.
Mora, a tenth grader. "My mouo is
"I think thai one of the most 'keep smiling and keep reaching for
important things is having friends !hat !he stm.'"
you love and you can always trust.
Senior Sam Pulver: "The most
They will make great memories and important thing in life is making peahelp you through rough times," pie laugh."
Freshman Cinda Clifford said, when
"The most imponant thing in life
students were recently polled.
is 10 have fun," says senior Kim
•. "I think the mosl important things Mayle. "You are only here for a shon

while, so have fun. Also, il is very
important to gel an education so you
can geta job. Without a job, you will
n01 have any money 10 have fun.
Remember: bad times don't last, but
good people do."
"Graduating high school is the
most important thing," Junior Eeron
Aldridge said. "If you don't finish ·
high school, and possibly go on to
college. you future will not be good.
· I also believe that the one you love
is an es.o;ential thing to make your life
beuer."

Jeremiah Kehl was named the
recipient of !he Holzer Science
Award.
FHA awards were presented toKim Mayle, Roben Bartimus and
Joanna Gumpf: Outstanding • an
award 10 Jamie Drake; drama awards
to Sam Pulver, Nicole While, Bran-

School page's
staffers hailed

Students who participated in the
production of "The Daily Sentinel @
Eastern .High School" were.presented cenilicates at ihe school's annual
awards a.~sembly May 22.
Brian J. Reed of Ohio Valley Publishing Co., who repons on the Ea.~t­
em Local School District for the
newspaper and coordinated the
school page for EHS. presented !he
cenificates to seniors and underclassmen who consistenlly contributed stories or phci!ographs to the
monthlypage.
~
.
SeniorsJudyWe5!,NicoleWhite,
Jamie Drake, Ki&gt;lll Dalley, Lamar
class photo that you can see.
Lyons, .Bethany Cooke and April
The freshmen plan to start !heir f'oreman, and underclassmen Cinda
own page which will include all Clifford, April Milhoan and Robin
members of the class as well as a list Barringer were presented cenificates
of !heir activities.
of merit
There is also a page which
Reed gave special recognitiOf! to
includes the prom, and you can find Jamie Drake for photography and
out about the _n'ew ~tern Elemen· Judy West for producing consistent
tary school whoch ~oUopen next Y~· quality, He also thanked teacher.; Rila
The freshmen onvole you 10 vosol ,Williams, Kathy Garrison, Angie
our website and watch for a great ·· Rigsby and Lolita Morrow for their
"Class of 200 I' page..
·
assistance in producing the page.

~
hmen 1aunc
I
h on.1ne
l" 1.61rogneue
1.1. hS,
rres
By CINDA CLIFFORD
. The Class of 200 I will soon be
online.
' The freshman cla.~s of Eastern
tJigh School is making plans to add
a page to the Eastern High School
webpage.
found
at
"www.frognetl-ehs."

If you visit !he site now, you can
~e all of the pictures of the senior
class.
T.he junior.; have created a page
where you can see individual photos
of !he student• as well as the class'
activities. They also have a group

Seniors chose Florida for annual trip
. For the first time in several years. Eastern senior.; bypa.•sed Virginia for
• Florida for their cia.~ trip.
· Members of the class left on May I5 for St. Augu~tine. Cocoa Beach.
Kennedy Space Center and Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom and EPCOT
Center.
·
Funds for !he trip were raised by !he class throughout high school. and
· cla.'l.~mates returned on May 21 with money left over. Those funds were used
for a senior breakfa.~t and luncheon prior to commencement and the balance
.could be u!ied on a school project later.
Chaperones for the trip were Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor. Mrs. Angela Rigsby, and Mrs. Terri Soulsby.
In most recert year... Eastern seniors have lr.lveled 10 Colonial Williamsbu'l!J and Vi'l!Jinia Beach. Next year's grodualing class plans to visit Aorida,
as well. so the Florida trek could become a new tradition.

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don Buckley, Chris Buchanan and
Kerri Hetzer; and student council
awards to Lamar Lyons, Judy West,
Roben Harris, Helliher Naylor, Angie Riling, Betsy Sheet~ and Christie
Mills.
Recognized a.• members of the
Notional Honor Society were seniors
Bmndon ·Buckley, Jeremiah Kehl,
Kelli Bailey, Joe Weeks and Siefani
Bearhs.
Yearbook awards were given to
Bethony Cooke and Jl,ldy West. Recognized for their conlrihuli.ons 10 the
Ea.\lern High School page in The
. Daily Sentinel were senior.; Judy
We5t, Nicole White. Jamie Drake,
Kelli Bailey, Lamar Lyons. Bethany
Cooke and April Foreman.
· National An Honor Society senior
members .were recognized: Jenny .
Conklin Haning, April Foreman.
Bethany Cooke and Jamie Drake. Joe
Weeks and Kelli Bailey were ·
announced as winners of the Arian
·band award, Brandon Buckley the
Patrick Gilmore Award. and J!Jdy
West !he John Phillip Sousa.Award•.
Office aide awards were given lo
Lamar Lyons, Kim Mayle, Heather
Naylor. Jeremiah Kehl. Brandon
Buckley and Judy West
The Navy Scholastil: Leader.;hip
Award was presented to Bnindon
Buckley.
Jerrod Clark. Kelli blliley. Chris
Buch.anan. Brandon Buckley. Jamie
Drake. Jeremiah Kehl, Kim Mayle;
Abe Rach, Lamar Lyons, April ~­
man and Nicole White were recog. nized a.• having pa.~ all five ·sec·

lions of the 12th-grade proficiency
lest.
Recognized as scholarship recipients were Jamie Drake, Marietta
College; Chris Buchanan. Rio
Grande College Alwood Award;
Lamar Lyons and Nicole White. Rio
Grande Trustees' Award; Judy Wcs!,
Ohio Universily Music Society of
Alumni and Friends Scholarship;
Kim Mayle, Ohio Valley Christian
Academy; Heather Naylor, Wa.'ihington Stale Community College:.·
Michelle Caldwell, Ohio Board of
Regents Scholmhip and Ohio Uni·
versity scholanhip; and Jeremiah
Kehl. Mike Banrum Scholarship.
Kelli Bailey and Brandon Buckley
were named winne'l' of the Tandy
Award for excellence in mathematics,
science and computer science.
Senior athletic awards were presented on behalf of the Eastern Athletic Boosters to Michelle Caldwell.
Kelli Bailey, Nicole White, Kim
Mayle. Corey Yonker, Steve Durst.
Jeremiah Kehl. Billee Pooler, Abe
Rach, Betsy Sheets. Chris l;luchanan,
Wes Sanders. Roben Harris and
Shaun Lons. The Ivan B. Walker
Award wa.~ presented 10 Michelle
Caldwell and Steve Durst, and the
An:hie Griffin Sportsmanship Awurd
to Corey Yonker and Kim Mayle.
The Top I 0 honor student~ were
Kelli Bailey, valedictorian; Brandon.
Buckley, salutatorian; and Michelle
Caldwell, Jamie Drake, Jeremiah
Kehl, Chris Buchanan, Stefani
Bearhs, Joe Weeks, Billee Pooler and
Nicole White.
·

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By JIM FREEMAN·
Sentlntl Newa St.tf
· All.:clay, i:very-doy kindergarten
will become a reality in !he Meigs
Local School District this fall following action Thursday nisht by the
Meigs·Local Board of Education.
. The move follows changes made
. to !he Disadvantaged Pupil Income
Assistance program by !he state legislature, explained Superintendent
Bill Buckley. · .
"In the pas!, ·school districts were
alloc~led m011ey based ori !he number of students in the district receiviilg Aid 10 Dependent Children.
Meigs Local Schools has historical·
ly had a high percentage of students
on AOC and thereflire received in
excess of$800,000 during the current
fiscal year," Buckley said.
·
"Schools were allowed to 'pick
and choose' from a list of 14 areas in
which 10 spend the money - all of
which were to target poor and at-risk
s!Udenls.
."Now, if you have a high per«nlage of AOC students and are poorwe qualify- you can only spend the
money in three targeted arell!l. The
first is ail-day, every-day kindergarten. ¥oil must spend all o the
-money Ill~~ "to the district.in lliii""

The "Good Buy"
Guy&amp;&amp; Gall

By EUZ4BETH NEUS
.Olnnett Newa Service

That bill would make :sure that oflhe provisions in the Patients' Bill
pmients would be covered for emer, of Rights Act - everything from
WASHINGTON - President gcincy room care, that they could external review of disputed claims to
Clinton Mepped up pre5$ure on .Con- appeal an HMO'• decision to. deny improved confidentiality for medical
grcAs Thur.wlay, urgins the pa.~sage of any care. and tho! !hey would have records - and Clinlon· said l1e was
a patient-protection law that wuuld improved access to specialists. · "grateful" for that.
give consumers more right\ and more
lt·goes heyond recoinmendotions · But those stale laws fail to apply
leeway when de11ing with managed made by the president's own com- 10 about "122 million Americans who
care plans.
.
·
missiort on health care quality by are insured lhroiagh plans governed
The law, he said. is especially p!'OJXIlling that cons(Jmers be allowed ~y ;a federal law known as ERISA.
important for women aild families, to sue HMOs and induding some which exempts their plans from state
and the White.HOUM: also relea.'led a minimum stay requirements for cer• requirements.
state-by-s~ report $bowing how. · tain medical procellures.
"So there has 10 be a na'tional
More than 60 percent of visits 10 doc()ltler bills are being considered. solutidn," the president said. ·"This is
ton are made by woinert, 'the report including a bipartisan one spon!iOI'ed U'l!Jenl. ·•
.
said. and nwty 70 ~nt of women by Rep. Charles Norwood. R-Ga.. · He spoke surrounded by women
under 65.wilh insurance are in man- · similar in some respects 10 the health profe~siOnals and lo an audiaged Clre piBII!I.
Palienls' Bill of Rights Act.
ence made up of members of
RK:ka Brown, a woman fighting
The Democratic bill is being WQillen's groups and women's health
breast cancer, told an audience !hat oppoiled by the American Association advocates - who received his call
included~ pre5idcnt how she had 10
ofHeaiJh Plans, which believes il will for speedy passage of the bill warm·
make more than 100 phone calls 10. unde11.11ine private effort~ 10 improve ly.
.lier HMO to gellhe informalion she HMO qqalily, and by bu.&lt;ines.&lt; groups
"I was heanened. II was an
nee~. and ·wasn't sure until her 'fho think .it will ~nd costs soaring. auempt ... to put a woman's face on
cancer surgery was underway !hat. it
Cli!iton said "fhur.wlay lbal the the i~sue. We were quite gratified to
would even be covered.
. Patieillil' Bill of Rights Act would have them do that," said Joanne Hus- ·
''Remember every day that ps . take tile bcttom line out of decisions lead•.director of legal and public pol·
by lhl1 this bill doel 1101 pas.~- diot ·should. be based on medical . ii:y for the NationaiPartnership on .
· ~single day sOmewhere.in Amernecessi!Y· "And if we have 10 endure Women and Families. which has
K:a theR:'s anothei" story like Ric- a smidgen more innation. bring it endo~d !he bill a.' well.
ka"s." Clinton said. "There ought not on," ht said.
The White House report alsci polntlt;&gt; ever be anOther one."
At lell!ll 44 state.~ have pa.'~ or ed out thai women make three-quar:
Although there are sevml pilient- are C91l~i!Jering bills thai echo some. iers of the medical deci~ions in.
pcotection proposals floating ~nd
·
·
American households.
:Capitol Hill •.the Clin!on adminis'lr.l·tionbacks.onecalled"ThePotient•' .
· !Jill of Rights Act." sponsored by the

'
.
1mage SpUrS SpeCUlatiOn

992·2196

Good Afternoon
Today's

742·2211

Sentinel

2 Sedionl - 12Pagn
Vol: 49, No. 27 .

fe!rrrd•r

a·uincdl
Comkl
Eclltorillt
l.oq!
Sports

Wcatbcr

12

•••
II

2
3

' 1&amp;: $
3

Lotteries
QHIO
l'ldl3: 3-8-6; l'ldl4: 1-t-7·7
•• lwjd: 8-J1-28-3l-33
.. W.YA.
Dally3: 6-8-2; Dally 4:7-2-7-0
0

\

•.

~--~~o-r--ta-t~b-o-m~b!""-· -te. s-ts_,
..

worry U.S. observers ,
WASHINGTON (AI&gt;) -:With their lit-for-tal nuclear tests. India and
Pakistan have created a new danger of nuclear war with a confrontation
!hal some consider more worrisome than the 40 years of U.S.-Soviet
nuclear standoff.
"We have a huge spike in nuclear danger," said Michae.l Krepon. an
expen on ~oulh A~ia and president of the Henry L.-Stim.•on Center, a private think tank. Others agreed.
"This is an exfnlordinarily serious situation." Strobe TalbOI!,
s.ecre!ary of slate, said Thursday. ''II is a regional issue of·
lance, complexity and. I wliuld say. danger."
The United States and !he fOf!ller Soviet Union ama. sed nuclear arsenals of far greater destructive potential than India or Pakt. would contemplate. But Wa.~hington aqd Moscow had superior com
and control of their weapons, and. ~nlike India and Pakistan. they hod o history of mutual hatred.
·
. Pakistan and India have fought three wars since 1947 and ca ciO!iC
io a founh confrontation in 1990 over ljle dispuled stale of Ka.~hmi which
borders China. The basis of !heir rivalry- deep-sealed religious differences and passionate nationalism ·- make !heir new nuclear status 11101e
I!Oubling.
"The Indian and Pakistani tests bring the possibility of actual use of
nuclear weapons closer than at any lime since 1945... said Jooathan Dean
of the Union of.Concerned Scientists.
In August 1945, lhe'Uniled States dropried two nuclear bombs on Japan
-the only times nuclear weapons have been u!ied in anger.
·
Robert Gales. who wa.• CIA director during the Bush administmtion.
said he worries !hat neither Indio nor PakislaR ha.~ had time 10 learn good
nuclear controls. ·
·
"You are dealing with rilililaries in bOih ca.&lt;es that have not developed
methods for safeguarding these weapons," Gates said. In !he U.S.-Sovi·
el arm~ race. "both sides fell relatively comfortable !hal sane people were
in charge."
II remains possible lhatlndia and Pakistan could step back. They could
agree. for example, not to test funher. not to field any weapons or not to
use them.
·
•

on ,possible rogue·planet

Democrulil:l.:adership.

Rutland ;
Bottle Gas
aup, orting llllhe

.,.. echools • youth
Stop In lnd UJ "HI"
to Dew. or Herb.

ey in !he two remaining areas," he
added.
The-move necessitates the hiring
offour additional kindergarten teach·
ers, he explained.
.
. To , address the remaining two
FULL-TIME KINDERGARTEN- The Melga bera Scott Walton and John Hood; at left, dla·
llllllld8tes concerning the use of DPIA
Local School Dl1trlct became the MCond cuslld thl lllua with Superintendent Bill
fundi~g - · reduction of class size,
echool lyallm In Malg1 County In aa many Buckley and Traaaurar Cindy Rhonemu1, at
and intervemiun/Safe &amp; Drug Free
weeki to approve 111-cley, every-day kinder- right.
Schools - the board approved _ _!!Ill~
· !!rtlfl!!!__!fo~r!:_!18~88~88!!:_._!Ma~l!!&amp;;•!lL:!!oc~ai!JBoa!!!!!!rd!!..Jm!!!III!!!Jm!:.·--=--:---------------retaining 13 teacher.;' aides in !he dis- Southern LOcal School District - . school principal on a three-year conThe board also hired Jason
trict and"b!ring I~O additional teach- . citing identical rea.&lt;10ns - adopted ~.
Bmdley Frecker and Michael Wyau
ers _at Metgs_Mtddle Sch~l m _the aU-day, every-day kindergarten.
The bcarc! also approved the as summer workers to a.~sist cuslodi·
subjects of sctence and soctal studies, .
The board awarded bids to two retirement of Linda Morris. bus dri· ans and maintenance workers.
a new science teacher al Meigs High .companies for reploeing roofs on the ver. ·
In other bu.~iness. the board:
School and an elementary gutdance Meigs High School Gymna.~ium, SalPamela Our.;! and Stephanie A~h
• Adopted a resolution to con! in·
counselor.
isbury Elementary School. Meigs were hired as summer school English ue membership in the Ohio High
'f!le cost IO !he district is estimal- .. Middle School and Middleport Ele· teacher and. math ' teacher. respec- School Athletic Association:
ed IO be approximately $791,000 out mentary.
lively, with Mike Wilfong being
• Renewed membership with Edu·
of an allotment ofa little over $1 mil. The district received a $500 000 hired as summer school coordinator, calional Technology Services of Ohio
lion, Bu~kley said. The remaining grant from the state for the ~f using grant funds to pay for the posi- 10 provide educa.tionol video and
mon"ey wdl be ~sed to Iu~d the pur- replacement Cost of the project is lions.
·
'
·
technology services at a cost of
c'hases of suppltes and equopment!or estimated al $463,200. Awarded bids
Also hired were: Jimrrier Soulsby, $1,379,95;
!he additional kinde'l!Jartens, and per- were Singer Sheet Me!al Co. and Tri- girls' seventh grade basketball coach;
• Approved the transfer of remoinhap~~ for the purcha.o;e of.four ~odu- Stale Roofing.
Cindy Field~. high school cheer- ing funds from the cia." of 1998 to
lar cla.~srooms. at M~o.gs !\.toddle
In pelliOIUICI matters. following an leader advisor; Dale Harrison, high !he High S.:hool Dr.lma Club for the
School to ~se !he addntop~lteach- executive session"to discuss per.;on- school l!irls' assistant volleyball . purcha.•e of a new stage cunain;
er.; and reheve overcrowdmg. he .nelfllllller.;, 'the board approved the coach; Deborah Mink. middle school
· • Stated its opposition to the issuadded.
recirement of Meigs High School cheerleader advisor. Tim Curfman, ing of a liquor permit for Millie's
. Meigs Local is the second district Principal Fenlon Taylor. ·effective middle school boys' ba.\kelball coach; Restaurant &amp; Produce. which is klcat·
'" the counl)l,to adopt all-doy, every· Aug. I and hired cuiknt AssislaRI lind Cryslhl !illm!9n. !!UPCrintendent's ed within SOO feet of Bradbury Ele~
day· killliergarten. La.~!. Weelr. the 1'tincrp;il ota'tlili' Elchinpr as high officc. se~re\ilfy.
. mentary Schorll.

.Ciinton ·iss.u. ~s call to.Congress ·
to OK improv.ed HMO prQtection

Evans te:2-2184

Tri-County
Ford

'area before .you can spend the mon-

'"'()No.Volloy Publlllli. Co.

WA,SHINOTON (AP) - A pin:
point of light, discovered by accident
on a lel!=scope image. may be the fim
of many planet~ WllnlnOmm will find
beyond the !!Oiar syslem. II ai!IO
lends frellh e~KDUnagc:ment for life
beyond the Earth.
Susan Terebey, a C~jJifornia
a.11ronomer. announced 'flltlriday !hal
.she found what may be an image of
a rogue planet !hal had been ejected
frolil a double star syslem 110111e ~
light-yean from.Earjh. Ali&amp;ht·year'is
about 6 trillion miles.
• N111ionlf Aeronautics and SpiiCC
Adminislralion officials Slid a rip•
ou1 peer, ieview of her fi~inJI
III'Oftlly supported 'lmbey's tnlerpretaliQn of the image 81 I pilnet, b\11
more sighllngs were needed for
ahlolute confil11llllion.
"AllhouJh lhe dal8 are wmpelling, the)', are preliminary," said
Edward Weiler, a NASA scienr:e
piopllll di~. He Slid further
wort may "prove it beyolld a shad- .
ow ofl doubt"
·

''

· . Weiler !lllid the finding boosted a
major effort by NASA to search for
Olher planets and. ultimately to ~k
evidence of life beyonil ~.
- '1'here 'is a-basic hiiiiWI i1151inct
10 find out' ... if we are alone in the
uhivme," he Slid.
If the object round by Terebey i~
confirmed as a plAnet, il ~ould
become the filii planet beyond the
solar system 10 liCIUally be sighied
and pholopphed. The ~nee of ac.
least eipt Olher planets ha.~ been
impJied by other researchers who
delected a diSiinctive wobble of the
parent stars, but they have not been

seen.
II also woukl be the first planet
discovered bv a woman. Oi!lCOvery of
other planets have been credited 10
male astronomers.
Terebey told a news (onfmnce
the planet was much tOO hot to suppon tife. bul s11e said it repre~e~~ted
an important advance in the ·search
for e~traterrcstrlallife. .

I

By !'AUL SOUHRADA
Aaaoclated ·Pr~~s Writer ·
COLUMBUS - Last year, lawmakers worked through the summer
to come up with a respon~ 10 the
Ohio Supreme Coun·s order to fix
they way lhe stale pays for public
education.
This year they've got a new plan.
They're going home.
.
The Senate concluded its business
until fa! I Thursday with a 23·9 vote
on a fa,irly routine bill that makes
technical changes and minor adjustment&lt; lo the current stale budge! aqd
ne~l year's education budget
The House then finished its wofk
by voting 82·1 S to accept changes
made 10 the bill in the ;Senate and
send il on to Gov. George Voinovjch
for his expected signature.
·
The voles, though, came afte( a
lengtliy and spirited Senate deblj[e
over the Legislature's response to the
Ohio Supretne Coun's order to fix the
way the state pays for public tducalion.
Republicans in the Senate added a
section to the budge! bill that requires
the governor lo propose spending
$300 million annually to fi~ the
state's run-down or obsolete school
buildings.
The moriey is intended to help
't'hiUie away building woes the
Supreme Coun cited la.•t year when
it declaned lhal the state's method of
paying for education was unconsliIU!ional.
.
Backers of the idea say it's the
final piece of the .slate's response to
'the coun's order to fix school fund·ing, even though no money i .
alta(;hed to the legislation and the
·stale constitution says lawmakers .
cannot bind future lawmakers to do
anything.
Democrats were thwaned in their
auempls to auach money to the
promise. Republicans also rejected
effons to prevent funher expansion of
the voucher progrJm. which allows
· some parents in Cleveland to send
!heir children to private and religious ·
schools with taxpayer dollars.
"This bill is no! wonh the paper
it's wrinen on," complained Senate
Minority Leader Ben Espy, D·
Columbus. '
·"People out !here know ... we're
good al making emply promi.es."
E.\py added. "Why don't we recom·
·mend the governor pul in $1 billion'/"
Espy chastised fellow lawmakers
for wanting to go home with the
school-funding problem still unsel·
tied.
He later delivered a leUer lo
Voinovich anil Republican legislative
leaders a•king them 10 convene a special summer session to review the
stale's re~ponse lo the coun order.
· "In addition, a special session
would enable legislators to consider
ways of bolstering aid to schools and
reducing the state's reliance on local
propeny taxes, .. wr01e Espy.

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