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                  <text>Thursday
Aptjl1' 1888

Weather

Local diamond results, Page 4
Working the night shift, Page 8 ,
Clinton: No "badge of shame", Page 16
~ .

Today: Rain
High: 708; Low: 50s

TomQrrow: Rain
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Sports

Wednesday's
NBArestpts
-Page 6

.

a1

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Meigs Coimty's

Volume 49, Number 230

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

,

. '

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Three U.S. soldierS captured, shown on Serb television
By LAURA MYERS
Aaaocllted Pren Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S. military officials confirmed today that three captured U.S. soldiers shown on
Serbian television were those reported missing several
hours earlier near the Yugoslav-Macedonia border.
The Americans had· told comrades they were under
attack and surrounded shortly before losing radio contact.
Capt. John Clearwater, spokesman, for the U.S.
Armfs 1st InfantrY Division in Germany, said the soldiers' identities were being withheld pending notification of family members, who were in the United States.
"The great news is the fact that these soldiers arc
alive and well and appear to be healthy/' aearwatcr told
The Associated Press by telephone from the unit's base
at Wuerzburg, Germany.
"That has been the greatest relief.to the families and
the other soldiers at the base."
Oearwater said he had no information on the circumstances of their capture. The Serbian television
images , showed three U.S. servicemen in combat
fatigues ·and in apparent good shape, although at least
one had abrasions on his. face.
.
Even before official I)Cknowledgment that the three
missing men had been captured, NATP spokesman
Jamie Sh~;a said at a news conference in Brussels, Belgium 'that they were part of a peacekeeping mission in
Macedonia that posed "absolutely no threat to
Yugoslavia:"
· "Any soldiers that happen under any circumstance to

be captured by the;. Yugoslav
rounded, but Pentagon offi- officials said.
·armed forces must be treated
cials said it was presumed to
The missing team was one of several Army units
in a humane way in accorbe Serb Army, paramilitary, guarding the border during the ongoing NATO .
dance with international civipolice of perhapS angry citi- airstrikes against the Serb military, now in their second
zens.
week.
·
lized norms of behavior,"
Shea said. " NATO fully
The urgent · radio calls for
At least three Army team~ had been out on a recon expects this to happen." ·
help came between 2:30 p.m. ·naissance mission together, but h.ad split 9P to engage in
Until their capture was conand 3 · p.m. Macedonia time some rough terr.ain training, the Pentagon said.
firmed, a multinational force
(7:30 a.m. to 8 a.m. EST), the
The Army reconnaissance team w.as a part of the for- •
had been conducting lin intenPentagon said. When the mer U.N. peacekeeping operation in Macedonia called
sive search for them along the
other reconnaissance ·teams·· " Able Sentry," which ended in February. ,.
Yugoslavia-Macedonia borfrom the Army's 1st Infantry
The force of about1,200 included abou~ 350 Amender.
Division headquartered in ~ans, who remained in the region foliowi ~g tile March
"The search will continue
Wurzburg, Germany, failed to 24 start of NATO airstrikes to act as a protective force.
until we find them or until we
find their colleagues, they ·
Nati onal security adviser Sandy Berger informed
have some idea where they
radioed their commanilers for P~esident Clinton, who was tracj(ing the search's
are," Col. Richard Bridges, a
- help, according to the Penta- progress, said David Leavy, a Wh ite House spok~sman .
pentagon spokesman, had said In thla photo reiNHd by !!S.,ra &amp; Strlpea, gon.
·
''We're still !letermined to push fotwar~ on our susl·ate Wednesday. "It's pretty Staff Sgt. Chrlatopher Stone, eft, and Staff An immediate rescue mis- tained air campaign and the operation will continue"
rough out there."
Sgt. Andrew Ramirez, center, go over ~pa sion was launched, involving against military targets in Yugoslavia, Leavy said.
The captured Army team with Sgt. Firat Cle.. Jamee Laahelle, right, ground and helicopter . !earns
Ointon· has cautioned from the beginning of the
had been on a daytime recon-. before going out on a reconnal...nce ml• from several NATO collntries airstrikes on March 24 ·against Yugoslav P.resident Slonaissance mission in the alon nHr the Macedonlan border on Tue• and the Allied Rapid Reaction bodan Milosevic that Americans would be put at risk
Kumanovo area, about 3 miles day. DefenM offlclala Identified the three Corps based in the Macedon- during NATO operations.
from the southem Yugoslavia c.ptured aoldlera aa Staff Sgt. Andrew A. ian capital of Skopje, U.S.
On ~aturday, an F-117A stealth fighter went down
border when they reported Ramirez, 24, Staff Sgt. Chrlatopher Stone, officials said. , Searchers near Bel~rade, the Yugoslav capital, after it was appar" they received small arms fire 25, and Spec. Steven M. Gonzalez, 24.
·. included •80 to 90 soldiers on entl~ hit with a Serb.anti-aircraft missile.
..
·and said they were surrounded," according to NATO.
U.S. Blackhawk, British, French and Italian helicopt~rs. • It was the first time the radar-evading aircraft. had
"No more was heard from the patrol," a NATO stateSearchers were unable to find the missing team 's gone down· in.'combat.
'
.
·
ment said.
·
· Humvec vehicle, which had.been traveling on a civilian
"The Ame·rican pilot, "!ho 'rec.eived o'nly minor
NATO officials didn't .say who had the soldiers surroad during part of the ..recoimaissance mission, U.S. . injuries, was rescued' .six hoyrs later.
'
~

Shooting.of beloved bloodhound bew,lders,owners
On March 2, Jijlsee, a nine-monih-old regis- ly five years, was apparently not tcsponsi_vc to phone book arr4 ·he said he 'Would meei us in 20
tered, spayed Bloodhound was outside lounging emergencies. A paramedic and registeted nurse, minutes," Fergu$on "Said.
in a field that bordered the yard of 'her owners, the ()wners knew that their dog would not sur..What the ownei'S .. hl!Ve not learned .is· why
students who live in the Dexter. area. At ·some vivc her life-threatening illjuries d!!ring a trip .to this happened. The psychological makellp of'the
point during the day, the much-loved dog was Charleston, W.Va., which is .where their vet sort of person or persons ·who would do such a
By DAVID JACOBS
·
shot
~th shotgun slugs to her head and back.
· referred them.
.
- thing has peen ..explored ai\d .assessed by crimi-'
Aaeoclated Pr... Writer
Ferguson
recalled
searching
for
the
dog
and·
nologists, psychologists, an~ others; but cruelty
Mih
slugs
generally
used
for
hunting
COLUMBUS (AP) - · The northeast Ohio city of Parma is asking the
finding
her
lying
under
a
porch.
A
registered
is difficult to fathom,"·saia Waitt. · ·
large game - entered and exited;. the head shot
state Supreme Court to unite it with a single telephone area code.
went into .the dog's jaw area and blew out the nurse, Ferguson realized .the dog was in shock
. " I bel!~ve· thai th~ people . who nve with
1A year aao. Parma ·W II split into. two~ codes- 440 and 216 _.
side
of
her
face.
The
back
shot
went
in
one
side
and
contacted
11er
veterinarian
who
refused
to
lipeee's
shooters are probably in lhe best' posiforcina 101110 rcalden~ have to dial a tl\ree-diJit prefi~t when placina a
her
back,
passed
within
millimeters
beneath
of
see
her.
.
tion
tp
.ellpliiio
this. They have pro~11l&gt;ly seen
local call. On Wednesday the aeveland suburb asJced the Ohio Supreme
.
her
spine,
and
·
exited
out
the
other
side.
If
the
When
they
called
Dave
Krawscyzn,
he
lis.
other
instances
of
w11nton cruelty. Perhaps peoCoui1 to make the community one again when it comes to area C()des.
tene.d,
then
le'ft
"his
warm
bed,"
as
they
put
it,
pie,
too,
have
alteady
been and ver:r·likely will
back
shot
had
t?ecn
any
higher,
it
would
have
hit
Parma was among 13 cities in northeastern Ohio left with split area
her
spine;
any
lower
and
it
wouid
have
hit
her
and
was
waiting
at
the
door
of
the
M~igs Veteribe
targets
Of
their
rage,
boredom, or misplaced
codes. Only Parma, Bedford Heights, and the village of Orange are chalnary
Clinic
in
Pomeroy
when
th~y
arrived
late
'
~ostility.
Do
any
.
of
uS'
need: .reminding that
vital organs.
lenging the split codes be:E
· the Ohio' Supreme Court. The three comWho did tl\is? Jipsee's owners have no id~a, that night. He immediately started IV lines, med- Thomas Dillon, who enjoyed picking off sj:iortsmunities want to be in one ea code, j16.
.
but
feel certain their neighbors had nothing to do icated the injured dog when she w.as stable men, began by shooting ·an ima.ls alongside the.
Parma Mayor Gerald
dt said the area codes are confusing beca~se
enough for surgery the next morning, al\(1 road.
.
.
with
the shooting.
.
about one-third of telephones in Parma are on the 216 eltchange and the
wprked
for
several
hours.
The
owners
are
certain
·
·
"Watch.
for
a
light-colored
truck In your
"All
the
neighbors
have
dogs
l!nd
let
them
run
remaining two-thirds on 440. He and U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Lake·
that
if
it
had
not
been
for
D11ve
Krawscyzn,
Kel
neighborhood,
watcli
for
strangers
·w.ith guns .
.
around,''
said
Jipsee's
owner,
Amy
Ferguson.
wood, obtained the signatures of more than 6,000 Parma residents OOJeCt·... l
ley
Grucser,
and
the
staff
at
Meigs
Veteripary
Any
leads
would
be
most
welcome,
and if xou
"We
don't
think
anything
about
it."
ing to the area code split.
Clinic
that
Jipsce
would
not
be
alive
today.
Forknow
ofoanythin'g
that
shou
l~
be
reported,
please
Neighbors reported seeing a strange vehicle
Pub!ic Utilities Commission of Ohio and Ameritech representatives
in the area during the time of the shooting. It was tunately, the Meigs County Humane Society was . contact the Meigs County Sherif{'s Deparfment.
said Wednesday they had little choice when it carne to dividing Parma.
.
described
as a late 1970s model yellow or white able to pay for the bin through a grant it received Let's prevent another such incident.'.'
Increased u5c of fax machines, cellular telephones, and . pagers means
from
the
Scott
Charitable
Trust.
Ferguson
sard
sheoelieves
Jipsee
was
simply
·with
two
passengers.
The
Meigs
pickup
truck
more telephone numbers and the need for new area codes, they said.
"Dr. Krawscyzn was wonderful. We didn 't used for target practice. ":You c~n definitely tell
Steven Nourse, an assistant state attorney general representing PUCO, County Sheriff's Office and the Humane Officer
even
know him; we looked up his number in the she's not a deer.._. she' has long, li'oppy ears:•: ··
both
contacted.
The
truck
has
not
been
in
were
said that in the last few years, the number of Ohio area codes has grown
the area since the shooting. ·
from four to eight. Within 10 years, it may grow to IS, he said.
The neighborhood was horrified at this vioNourse told the court that political and geographical boundaries don't
lent
act, and the owners ate bewildered. They
necessarily match boundaries of telephone exchanges, some of which date
·
describe
Jipsee as a "peopl_e" dog, "always wantback 60 or 70 years. If the Parma area was'n't divided into different area
ing
to
be
at your side or lying at your feet. She
codes, another commuqity would have been, Nourse said.
has
never
expressed any aggressive characterisSwitching Parma back exclusively to the 216 area code could result in
tics and gets along with every dog and person
about eight other communities having split codes, he said.
she
comes into contact with."
·
The court was not gjven details of why the Parma area was chosen for
"Thnt's
certainly
iny
experience
with bloodsplit codes.
. ·
.
hounds
dogs,
as
you
well
know,
who are
"You have .to draw the line somewhere," said Jon Kelly, a senior attortrained
to
be
of
service
to
people,
most
notably,
ney for Ameritech.
tracking
down
missing
persons,"
said
Alden
Henry Eckhart, attorney for the three communities, said they had little
Waitt,
president
of
the
Meigs
County
Humane
opportunity to challenge the area-code plan,
·
Society.
_
The Supreme Court did not indicate·when it will rule on the case.
Jipsee was trained at the Ohio State Canine
College in Columbus, was, and still is, devoted
to her owners. She is still recovering from her
wounds. Now, however, she startles easily and is
By .w.IES HANNAH
still rather subdued.
.
Aaaocllad Preu Wrl•
What the owners found from this ~cident
. XEJII)A (AP) .- April 3, 1974 is a ~ay many Xenia residents will never was that compassionate, outraged people shared
forget
..
RECOVERING CANINE - The ownera of Jlp..., a 10.mbnth-old reglatered bloodtheir· horror at what" happened to this amiable
'1 can remember thinking we were really going to die. It was a terrifying dog.
·
hound, are bewildered over the recent shooting of their beloved dog. VIsible here are
experience," Rebeccil Louderback said.
.
.
.
They also found that their West Virginia vet- ahotgun wound'a to the pup'a back and left aide of her fac.. The dog waa ahot twice
Louderback was among those who gathered Wednesday to mark the 25th erinarian, whom they had seen for approximate- by a gunman ualng ahot(lun aluga.
·
anniversary of a devastating tornado that struck this southwest Ohio city.
Louderback, 50, recalls emerging from the rubble of her former house when
the storm had passed,
"It was probibly very similar to the aftermath"of a bomb," She said. "It By KEVIN GALVIN
reports, including moderate politicians, trying to paign who before the airstrikes tried to !&gt;roker
was eerily quie]- Then you started to hear children crying. ~·
. Aaeocltacl P,... Writer
destroy records of wtiat their landholdings are, try- peace in Yugoslavia at Ointon 's behest, said use of
. That day marked the worst tornado outbreak in U.S. history, with 148 torWASHINGTON (AP) - PreSident Clinton ing to eradicate any historical record of their claim U.S. ground troops there should not be ruled out.
nadoes clawing through 13 states. says NATO allies and the American public need to to their own land," Ointon said: " And he has
" I don't want to see ground troops go in ... in a
The storms kille&lt;J 330 people
show resolve with the air campaign against gjven no indication that he is prepared to stop the combal mode into Kosovo, but I'm suggesting it
injured 5,484.
. .Yugoslavia, now . in its 5econd week. Despite a aggressiQII."
should always ~ an option, and,. if necessary, it
The National Weather Service growing humanitarian crisis, Clinton ·remains
Ointon made the remarks before Pentagon and should be exerc1sed," he said )\'ednesday on ABCmarked the anniversary with a po- opposed to sendin&amp; in U.S. ground troops.
NATO officials learned that three U.S. soldiers on TV's "Nightline" program.
_
gram
at
Xenia
High
School.
designed
"This air campaign is not a )(}.second ad," he a reconnaissance mission in Macedonia along the
Reflecting on World War II. Dole said: " My
Today's
to raise public awarenesS about the said in an interview 'We&lt;lncsday with CBS News Yugoslav border had' been captured by hostile generation, we stood by and watched genocide and
l Sections - 16 Pages
danger of tornadoes.
anchor Dan Rather. "It's only been-going on a few forces.
·
we promised ourselves and everybody else it
The outbreak began the afternoon
days
....
And
I'd
like
to
sec
us
keep
working
on
this
The
three
were
attached
to
one
of
several
Army
would never happen again. Now if this (Kosovo)
......;CI&lt;l•u:!e...ncla,_,r.___ _ __..s_ _ l April3 and ended more than 16 hours
and not have our attention diverted by other units guarding the border during, the ongoing isn't genocide, then I fail to understand the dcfini_C""I..,w..,...lft..ecl...,.,s_ _ __...,13""1'"'1""4 later, carving a 2,598-mile path. At things." .
NATO airstrikcs.
·
tion, and it's been going on for seven years ....
Com!g
. 15
one point, 15 twisters were 01\ the
As Serb forces appear to be pushing ethnic
din ton was visitina Navy personnel and their
"There are times. that you can invade a soverU!todall
2
ground at the same time. One wa on
Aibanians out of Kosovo into neighborina coun- families today at thC Norfolk (Va.) Naval Air Sta- eign nation or go after a ICllder in a sovereign
.
the ground for more than two hours.
tries, criticsofOinton's Kosovo policy increasina- tion to recognize their contribution to NATO's nation for his conduct, and I think this is one of
3
Local
· "Can this happen again? Certainly,''
ly are saying all air-power-only approach will not cani'paign to halt the killing in Kosovo. He also those times," Dolt added.
Spot11
H
said Dan McCarthy, a meteorologist bring Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to was meeting with Adm. Harold W. Gehman Jr., the
Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senwith the weather service's Storm Pre- the p:ace table.
A ':
I'
supreme allied commander of the Atlantic for ate Armed Services Committee, said he believed
diction Center. "But we feel confident
"The thing that bothers me abQut introducing NATO.' - ·
Milosevic was ju~t weeks a\Vay fr&lt;;&gt;m his goat of
Lotteries
.that now we have thC technology .and ground troops into a hostile situation - into KosoNATQ has requested that the 'Norfolk-based ethnic cleansing, making time too short to position
we have the knowledge that we can
YO and into the Balkans - is the prospect of never
Theodore Roosevelt battle group . - which ' ground troops in Kosovo.
.
.'
OHJO
.
.
cut the 'numlicr of deaths down."
bein&amp;
able
to
get
them
out;."
Ointon
told
t
BS.
includes
an
aircraft
carrier,
two
cruisers,
a
destroy"1'hat
option,
practically
speaking,
is not
Pkk3: 9-0-1; Pkk 4: 9·9-5-9
"
Witnesses
said
three
funnels
came
Qting
reports
that
Serb
forces
were
stripping
er,
a
fripte
and
an
attack
submarine
_..
be
sent
to
there,"
Warner
said
on
PBS'
"NcwsHour
With
Jim
S.per Lotto: 6-15-16;18-20-40
together
in
Xenia
to
form
a
massive,
ethnie Albanians of documents that prove their cit- support NATO's Yugoslavia camPaign. Adminis- Lehrer."
Kkker: 9-6-9-2-1-5
swirlina bhick cloud. When it left,
izim~hip, and slaughtering' politicians and othe{S, tration officials couldn't say Wednesday night
Ointon turned aside a request fro.J? Pope John •
W.VA.
more than 30 people were dead and · Ointon blamec;l MUoscvic.
,,. whether Ointon would approve the request
Paul II to suspend the bombing over .the Eas!,er
Dllllt 31 2-2-2; Dally 4: 5-Q-4-2
2,200 homes and businesses
0 1999 Olllo V.U.y Pul!lllllol. Co.
"We are lcting at a time when he'~ going
Former Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, Ointi&gt;n:s weekend, saying it would give Miloscvic cahc
~yed.
through. the country, killing people, according to Republican opponent in the 1996 presidential cam- blanche to step up.his aggression.
·

Survlvo·r s mark 25th anniversary
of tornado outbreak in Xenia

..

.,

Clinton says airstrikes needtiine to show results

Good Afternoon

Sentinel

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P~~ge

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.2

Thu~~Aprll1,1010

iAmerica, the world's.policeman ·

The Daily Sentinel

By William A. Rualler ·
send in a NATO force including thousands of their women and children into penniless exjle _in
· · Up until the end of the
American soldi~rs to "keep" .the "peace." Is a Albania and Macedonia? Then American pilots
Cold War. America's liberals
wealthy . international te~orist hiding in will rain destruction upon his military forces until
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(with a few honorable exoepAfghanistan? Zap his headquarters with pilotless (we hope). they are incapable of inDicting more
740-992-215&amp; • F•x: 002-2157
tions) could be counted on to
guided missiles. Does Yugoslavian president harm. Ang if some American pi loiS lose their lives
resist bitterly any projection
Milosevic refuse · to grant autonomy to the in the prOcess -- well, they knew it was a risky
of American power overseas.
Yugoslavian province' of Kosovo? Have NATO career when they signed up, and their families can
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
There we :were, embroiled in a.
(led by us) bomb Yugoslavia until he sees the be proud of their sacrifice.
long and savage struggle with
light
This pathetic neuse for a foreign policy has
ROBERT L WINGETI
the Soviet Union and its allies
In explaining this latest U.S. deployment to the supporters in both parties. The Democrats, as
· Publisher
·
· over the destiny of l~e human
American people, Mr. Clinton was careful to offer usual, are sticking by their president, and have in
race. Would mankind turn its face
free- an excuse grounded in old-fashioned realpolitik addition a lana hi~tory of supporting heartbreak·
CHARLeNE HOEFLICH
DIANE Hil-L
dom,,or succumb to a global Communist tyrannY,? for anyone still interested ·in such an analysis. If ing humanitarian . causes -- always provided no
General Meneg•r
Controller
In hundreds of battles, large and small, economic, Milosevic holds on to Kosovo, the fighting will recognizable American interest is involved. But a
political and military, the United States'its¢1utely spread to Albania and Macedonia, and thence to minority of Senate Republicans •• 16 out of 55 ••
resisted the march of Communism. And almost Greece and Turkey, and we will be dragged into a voted to back Mr. Clinton's policy, and they are
TPJ. Sentinel fH/t:om.~,.tt.,i to tht .-nor from ,..w,.. on 1 brotd ""'' of topwithout exception, tbe)nstiftcl of most American much bigger war between those two NATO pow- supported by various conservatives in the wider
b . Short ,.,.,.,. (300 wOld• ot ,.. ., h•v. , . Ntt Chlnct of IHII!f publlth.,;l.
TypN ,.,.,.. .,.. ,.,.,., 1nd '" m•y H Hit«/. Etch ettould l(lcludt ,I elgnttufW,
liberals was to oppose that resistance.
ers. All this is poppycock, as the foreign ministers community.
.
Mdr-., •nd dlytlmt phont numb«'. SfHC/fy • dttt If thM'I • ,.,.,.,c.~ to 1 ,,... •
Vietnam
was
the
biggest
and
most
obvious
·
o
f
Greeoe
and
Turkey
bave
already
affirmed.
Wherever
human
beings
are
suffering,
Amerilllout 1rflclt or,.,.,, IIMIIto: t..rt.,. to tht «&lt;ito~ ~· SeQ,tlnel, t11 Court St., '
PoVy, 011/o .fl'lU; or, FAX fo 7JtW2-2~~7. ,
(I•
example of that opposition, ,but it
::;=;;-~-,~-~,..
~'
waS far from being 'the only one. In
•
l I
.
1983 one of the biggest deri10n~trar' ' '
lions ever hel.d in New York protest-NO~~
ed against NATO's deployment of
nl'llllrll10 \ftl
the Pershing intermediate-range baltiii\M7n
IW•
.•.\j
•
f
I '- I
listie missil~s that countered · and
1DJ. YQJ QII'JIB'JJtr •
{"'
'
I
equivalent
Soviet
arvvrr
_rnrnur
neutralized
·
.
·
#WIN I 1:, ,
ucr,\.1116
I am writing to let people know about the Youth CommissiOn that we are weapons. In the -same year, liberals
r.iSRJNCilQN
working to establish in Meigs County.
led by Sen. Kennedy jeered at PresiVI
.
"'
· I have worked with ''ldds" in this county in various youth organizations for dent Reagan's proposal o~:a~e\
20 years. No. it does not seellJ possible that it has been that long. Qut each year' based weapons capable of
ven,t.
I can see the need for youth activities increasing in our county. rhave spoken ing an effective first strik ~gainst
witli other adults and some of them say, "But it has always been that way."
this country by Soviet ICBMs. Right
_ If we adults fail to help our children who will help them. Letting them through the 1980s the Democrats in
, Jen1&lt;ji for themselves in ways of recreation can often lead to decision that seri- Congress fought tooth and claw
ousl~ ' affect the rest of their lives. Teenage drinking, drugs and sex very ·against Mr. Reagan:S support for the
••
often lead to life altering situations, some of which have inCluded death. Yet Nicaraguan contras in. their struggle
this goes on. on a regular basis (according to some teens, because what else against the Communist-backep San. 'is there to do in Meigs County).
dinistas. And so on.
_ : ·I do not believe that it has to stay that way. We need change and it has to · But since the collapse of the
-begin somewhere·. Our youth need to be a part of making the changes and Soviet Union we have seen a mar:tnat is where the youth commis~ion comes in. We need 2-3 representative velous change come over \he liber.. from each of ovr high schools that are willing to find out what their peers als. Suddenly they are not only will·want and are w_illing to work toward achieving them. It will 'not happen ing ·but positively eager to deploy
dVernight but it cari happen.
.
U.!\. fgrces in all sorts of situations.
. The youth commission will work with adults from various youth agencies • Provided no American interest of the
·in the c~unty as well as the Prosecuting Attorney, and the Meigs County : conventional type (su&lt;;J1 as,prompted
Commissioners. Joined together as a task force to develop recreation and the Gulf War) is involved, liberals'
"fac;illties for youth in our county. Meigs County has a lot to o_ffer if we put are today our most hawkish citizens.
our resources together and work together to achieve goals.
Is Haiti in ihe grip of an undemo. ·. Please, _if you .are a hig.h school stude~t _i n Meigs CourtlY are ~ould_ be cratic milita:y junta? Send in our troops, and call
The real reason we are bombing Yugoslavia is ca owes them as much help as we can muster and
tnterested tn _servmg on the Youth CommiSston let us know.'ihere ts a Slm- tl ."Operatton Restore Democracy." Is our the other one mentioned •• at length .•• by Mr.·. afford: food and medical supplies, plus economic
pie application to fil! out so that we can l~arn a Iiiii ~ .more about you and humanitarian aid to the people of Somalia being Clinton. It is the reason for which liberals are and pOlitical support. But when Bismarck said the
' there may b~ an _interview process•but doh'llet any of that scare you. If you hijacked by a. local w.arlqrd? Call out the Marin~s. always ready to risk the lives of American fight- Balk~ns were "not· worth the life of a single
" really want to see. changes corn.e for Meigs County youth don't hesitate to and try to capture General Aidid. Are the Serbs. ing men and women: humanitarianism. Forget Pomeranian grenadier," he was exactly right
.apply. We need you.
·
.
. .
.
Croats and Muslims of Bosnia slugging it out for about the alleged need for some "vital American Copyrtghi1HI NEWSPAPER ENT:ERPRISE ASSN.
If you have ~ny questions about the Xouth .Commission feel free to call control of that former .province of Yugoslavia? interest"
Wllll•m A. Rueher Ia I Oletlngulehed Fellow
me. If l'in not availab)e to take your caii .Leave a message and I will r~turn Summon a "peace conference" in Dayton, bludIs Milosevic indulging in "ethnic cleansing" of the C~!!~t'tl!Ute tor liM S_tudy ot
your call. My n~mber is 992-6679.
geon the parties into an "agreement," and then in Kosovo ~-killing male Kosovars, and driving _s~eam•"("" end PoiHlcel Philosophy.
• .
.
Brenda Neutzllng
,
•

'£sta6fis/Utf in 1948

r;:::======:;:·

Letters to

the'-~ editor

{Youth commission

·icNrrr~rr

•I Columbuo l52'171'

. ,

'Women's studies
.
'!JI:h018fShipS a·vai/ab/e ·.

President Cli_h ton's anti-drug media barrage

·•

'

•

•

·.

-

VFW plans dance
The Tuppers Plains VFW 9053 will have a round and square dance Saturday, 8 to II p.m. at the hall. True Country will provide the music and
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
·

Sunrise service set
' Zion Church of Christ, Route 143, will hold a sunrise service at 6:30
a.m., with breakfast following. Th~ public is invited.

Tests indicate hazardous chemicals
in two Marion County wells
·

Marvin Kenneth "Tommy" Fry

&lt;) ~--- ~-·

l&lt;ot--

.

-

...
~

Appeals court rules laxative
Prank 1"s fl"r·s t degree felony

:::::~::::.~~~e~f:~;.roffood ~~~~:~~"Court and

Venditti, 20, faces 10 years in.
prison if convicted of a first:degree
felony, one of the most serious category of crimes in Ohio short of rnpr·
der.
Venditti was a student at the Medina County Career Center in June
1997 when he and two other ~tudents
aII eg_edl y s.havd~ 15 to 20bodosesfo_f a·
1axat!Ye, mtxe 11 tnto a w1 o toe
cream and served it to an unsuspect·

lice~.

.

Friends of the Library will meet at 7 p.m. Monday at the Racine
Library.
·

Relatives here have received word of the death of Virginia McBride Beegle, 74, of near Dayton. Mrs. Beegle, !he daughter of the late Mrytle and
· Ernest McBride of Syracuse, died Monday, March 29, 1999 and graveside
services were held Thursday (today). Besides her parents she was preceded
· COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
in death by her husband, Gilbert Beegle.
.
told the company that supplies drinking water to Marion County to cloSe:
two of its wells after tests found unsafe levels of hazardou~ c.!temicals ln
·
Marvin Kenneth "Tommy" Fry, age 68, Rte. 2 Point Pleasant, W.Va ., died them .
Ohio
American
Water
was
told
last
Thursday
not
to
draw
water
from
Tuesday, March 30 at his residence.
•
Fry was employed for 29 years at Ravenswopd Aluminium and was a the wells until additional tests confirm or refute the previous results, satd
member of the United Steelworkers Union Local #5668. He was a member EPA spokeswoman Beth Gianforcaro.
Those tests will be conducted early this month, said Jeff Steers, assisC 1999 AccuWealtter, Inc.
of the Mason County Fair Board; serving as amember of the board of directa~t
chief of the EPA's northwest district office in Bowling Green.
tors. The 1988 Mason County Fair was dedicated to him for his many years
"
We need to, .first, figure out if we indeed have a hit," Steers told The
of service. Fry was a lifetime member of the West Virginia Stale Farm MuseColumbus
Dispatch for a story published today. "We didn 't see it in any
um ·and a former 4-H leader in Mason County.
" " .
of
the
other
wells." The company has 14 other wells.
Born Nov. 9, 1930, Fry is survived by his wife Alberta M. Newberry Fry
&amp;my Pl Clo&lt;ody Cloudy
~~ T-sl"""'
Rlin
Rurrles
Steers
emphasized
that the chemicals, benzo(a)pyrene and thallium,
'Of Point Pleasant; two sons and daughters -in-l~w. Kenneth R. "Sonny" and
were
not
fo·und
in
the
treated
drinking water.
Judi Fry of West Columbia, W.Va., and Ph1llip J. Fry of Point Pleasant; a
Benzo(a)pyrene,
a
carcinogen,
was ·found in a raw water sample at
daught.-.,.and son-in-law, Rebecca M. "B.ecky" and Steve Baldwin of Mason;
and wet headed into the weekend two sisters and brothers-in-law, Nellie I. and Ralph L Durst of Point Ple~­ 0.31 parts per billion. The .u .S. EPA allows no more than 0.2 parts per bilBy The A..oclilad Pre••
ant and Eilene E. and Charles J. lyons of West Columb1a, W.Va. Fry is also lion in finished drinking water.
Thallium, a toxic heavy metal known to cause kidney, liver and brain
The warm weather will continue into the weekend as a broad southerly
survived by three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
damage,
was found at2 parts per billion. EPA regulations allow exactly -2
flow of air is drawn to OhtQ from the Gulf of Mexico, forecasters said.
Fry was preceded in death by his parents Byron Kenneth and Cora Mae
parts
per
billion in finished drinking water.
' '
· Moisture will increase as the weekend arriveS, with a chance of showGibbs Fry and a granddaughter, Amy Boggs.
Don
Mead,
Ohio
American's
water-quality
superintendent,
disagreed
ers and thunderstorms in the -north on Friday night.
Calling hours will be conducted on Friday, April 2 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
The chance of showers and thunderstorms will spread across the state
and 7 p.m. to'9 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason. Services will w1th the EPA's use of finished water standards to raise alarms abo11t
.
·on Saturday and Sunday.
be held Satu'rday, April 3 at the Folgesong Funeral Home with burial in lhe untreated water.
"It's a water treatment plant," Mead said. "All the water we have goes
Lows tonight will be around 50 degrees. Highs on Friday will be in the Kirkland' Memorial Gardens. Rev. Joe Hammack and Rev. George Hoschar
70s.
,.
through a treatm~nt proce~s. It is not pumped directly from the wells into
will officiate.
.
·
the system." ,
.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 80 degrees in 1963 while the record low was 15 in 1923. Sunset
Debra Rapert, a company spokeswoman, said Ohio American's techmcians doubt the results were accurate. She said the company will split the
tonight will be at 6:55p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:15-a.m.
Extended forecast
samples with the EPA and conduct its own tests.
.
•
High levels of benzo(a)pyrene have been found in sediments of the Llt· .
Friday night: Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms
north. Lows in the upper 40s to mid 50s.
· MEDINA (AP) - An appellate ing classmate.
tie Scioto River down.stream from Ohio American, but EPA scientists are
Saturday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the 70s.
court has ruled that a student accused
The victim became seriously ill, skeptical t~atthere' Is any link ~etween the chemicals in the river and tire
Sunday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the 50s
of feeding laxative-laced ice 'cream spent several days in the hospital and · chemtcals. m.the well, Steers sa1d.
.
.
·
highs in the mid 60s north to the mid 70s south.
to a student can be charged with a suffered permanent injury, according
Steers satd !he E!'A does not have a lot of ~n.f?rmatton about
Monday: Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers north and cast. Lows in first-degree felony.
to county Prosecutor Dean Holman. benzo(a)pyrene m untreated water, because tl usually tsn t found there .. '
40s and highs in the mid 50s northwest to the mid 70s southeast.
In a ruling issued Wednesday, the
Two co-defendants also have
"At this time, it cannot be explained how that could have gotten into
9th District Court of Appeals been disciplined. One was suspended the well," Steers said.
__
reversed a lower o:ourt ruling that for five days but was not charged . The well-wate_r !esting is part 'of aft environmental safety investigation
said Damian Venditti should be criminally and the other went 10 m Manon County by the EPA and other state and federal agenctes.
·~

.,

By JOHN CUNNIFF
TregQI' of Princeton, N.J.,'got some- !ual capital, decreased morale,
_They ll)ana_ge pe6ple, nol just
thing of a surprise when·it sought to tncreased employee stress and nega-. - retatnmg people.
I am sure you have&lt; read the articles about the jaint-effort between Mid- AP.Buelneu Analyet
.dJeport and Pomeroy to complete a bicycle -path along the riverfront
NEW YORK (AP)
If you measure turnover costs'atl5 compa- tive reputation.
2. These oompanies have a cuJ,
_I was named lhe _grant writer representing Middleport for the project In know what's good for ·you, you'll 'nics. Only five companies could
"The exercise revealed stagger- lure of caring, balanced with a tradi:
order to apply for a grant, a study ha's to be done to determine the cost The hold onto your employees-; show ·. cor:nplete the questionnaire.
ing bottom line losses in every · lion of excellence.
.,
cost for the study _will lie $14,000 to be shared equally by both towns. Mid- your appreciation and maybe even
All, however, were surprised · at industry," he says, much of which
3. All hav~ a number of avenu~1
dleport's share is available coming ·from an existing "dead" fund . Even coddle them "a btl. The stakes are the tabulated results, which included could be ill-afforded. He found the for resolving oonflicts.
•
though there are ·many ·other projects that neepto be done, _these existing · · high; they involve your. bottom line.- · such ·items as exit .interviews and connection between employee loyal4. They first take stock, then talie
monies cannot be used for things such as streets. ,
.
This·might sound like a conJra~i- severance pay, hiring costs, and lost · iy and profits "unassailable."
action. Tha! is, they know the dan~i
They can only be used for projects approve_d by the state development an view of things in this, the age of productivity while the new hire was
Carrying the investigation fur- signs of lagging -employee loyaltf
agency.
··
•
·
Continued do',Ynsizing aitd diminish. learning the job.
ther, Kepner·.Tregoe. researchers al\d have measures to deal witb it; :
- Personally I tielieve the "path would be good for our town. It will ptovldo in~ loyalty.. But you bad better begin
A manufacturer found the loss of sought information from 11 so5. They keep their eyes on hijh
a.safe area for those of you - ~ho ~~t alk daily._It would also serve as a basis for dotn~; so nght now, or lhmgs can a salaried journeyman· machinist called retention leaders, or compa- performers and reward them for per~
other p~oje~ that will show a progressive attitude on the part of our village. only get worse. ·
.
cost $102,796. The terininatio~ o( an nies renowned for their low turnover formance.
·
• Sin~e the Middleport Council is elected io represent you the people, you ·. First, losing an ,employee might · automaker's human resource man- ,fates and employee loyalty.
6. They view people managemeni
:need to let them know what you want in the way of progress. I am lnviting cost more than $10!),000, a number ager cost $133,803. The bill accomFrom interviews with these lead- as a strategic business issue. In each
_rou to come to the nex\ Co~ncd meetmg April 12 at 7:30. If ypu cannot be that falls rig~t to_the ,bottom line. panying the exit o~ a fast-f~ chain ers - Allied Signal, Cornfhg, company, employees are seen as dri)here, c~ll one of the Counctlt•.en and tell them what you want
Secondly, demoj;raphtcs s~ggesl store manag.er tallted $21,931&gt;.._
Hewlett-Packard, Johnson &amp; John- vers of financial performance.
' lf.once a_gain Middleport fails to act, Pomeroy w1ll proceed with the pro- there'll be a diminisl!ing number of
These results were ·obtained by son, Marriott International, Motoro7. These companies are .relentless
)ect for their town. Then once agam Middleport will have nothing as they replacemenu available.
using a widely. re&lt;;:ogniied quantita- Ia, Steelcase, Xerox and an unnamed in their pursuit of continuous
)tow have. • ·
,
·
That e~ployee turnover can be as tive measurement model devised by large retailer - it isolated seven improvement
: Your support is needed to make this a reality.
costly as 11 is comes as news to many the Saratoga Institute, another practices it says other companies
The bottom line is this: The
·
'- ~alrlela L Custer human resources departments, says human resources consultancy basea can use: ·
retention leaders have achieve~!
Middleport consultant Quinn Spitzer. Even com- in Santa Oara, Calif.
I. Retention leaders manage the steady growth in earnings per share
panics that keep records sometimes ' . But, says Spitzer, surprise turned . entire context in which people per- and sales per employee over the pJ!SI
·.
can't come up -with a figure. •
to ·disbelief when he added in "soft" form- strategies, ~ystems, policies, 10 years. Earn.ings of almost all
1
\_ Even Spitzer's company, Kepner- . costs, including the loss of intellec- . decision-making and other prac- exceed industry medians.
, This letter,_is directe!l to recent high school grads,·nontrAditional wome~,
re-entry women, and those women and ~en concenl~bQut equity issues
.. , . ln 1he area.
·
·: .-!JY now you know that the prosriects for professlonal otkplace _op,,rtu· By Morton Kondracke
ihis reversal •• and its potential
continues to normalize, trivialize and-distort the
· ntltes _avatlable tn'Our lovely but far-from-prosperous._ co 'ty are pretty dim.
Former
first
lady
Nancy
Reagan's
"Just
Say
meaning
for
Ointon's
legacy··
realities of drug use." He told me, "It's not so
Because you have not yet w_on the lottery; and'benevo\ent, w~althy relatives'
to successfully argue to the
much that the media glamorize drug ~se; they
)V~O leave you money for htgher educatton ·se~m to oc~ur more often liffic- ·No''' anti-drug campaign was as simple and elegant
as
a
cruise-missile
strike,
but
Gen.
Barry
president
last
December
that
ignore its consequences, like failure in school atld
!ion than in real life, it is time to think realistically 'abo'ut your futur_e. Why
McCaffrey
has
launched
the
equivalent
of
a
P~rthe
anti-drug
budget
should-be
the
tendency to get into trouble."
. ~o't take this lime to pursue a college degree and get yourself credentialed so
sian
Gulf.
War
barrage.
increas~d
this
year
from
$17.1
The
czar's office is aboutto release a stu&lt;jy -- it
you can take care of yourself?
'
McCaffrey,
President
Clinton's
drug
czar,
has
billion
to
$17.8
billion.
Oinhopes"
with
fanfare •· showing that 81 percent of
: . There is help for this. This spring, the Ohio University's Wom'en's Studdrug depictions in popular songs and 52 percent io
(es Program will be sp(Jnsori~g i!S 1999-2000 Scholarships av:filable to stu- mounted one of the largest government advertising ton's budget offioe had recomand
public
relations
campaigns
in
history
••
worth
mended
$17.2
billion.
·
movies convey no senst'bf consequences, promotdents attendins Ohio University in the fall . · · .
·
$2
billion
ov~r
five
years
··
wifh
the
10-year
goal
The
budget
includes
$8.7
ing
"a false sense of security and invul~erability."
Applicants must have a minimum grade-point average of 3.0 and pemonof
bringing
U.S.
drug
use
down
to
historic
lows.
billion
for
law
enforoement,
$3
billion
for
treatTo
counter those attitudes, the drug office is
strate financial need. All applications/nommations are due_by Monday, May
Prior
to
the
1960s
cultural
revolution,
about
3
ment,
$3
billion
for
international
eradication
and
working
through the advertising ~gency Ogilvy
10, -1999.
.
percent
of
Americans
used
illegal
drugs
regularly.
interdiction,
and
$2
billion
for
prevention,
which
and
Mather
and has, developed and placed 150
: The Ethel H. Moll Scholarship for $500 is open to any woman over the
different ads so far ··55 on TV, 100 in English
ige of 25 who is returning to college (at OU) to complete an interrupted That figure surged to 14.1 in the peak year, 1978. includes $185 million for the media ~arnpaign.
It
had
dropped
to
12
percent
when
Reagan
began
McCaffrey
told
Congress
that
"the
way
youhg
and 50 in nine other languages •• that have
~ducation and who will be a first-, second-, or third-year student on the
her
campaign
in
the
mid-1980s,
and-was
down
to
people
perceive
drugs
and
drug
use
is
perhaps
the_
reached 95 percent of the campaian 's target youth
Athens campus.
\
6
percent
by
1992.
most
important
factor
in
determining
the
rate
at
audience
about seven titnes per week.
· Applicants should submit a one;page letter stating their scholarly goal's
Right
now,
the
number
is
6.1
percent.
McCafwhich
they
will
turn
to
drugs".··
whi~h
is
the
log·
The
ads
are focus-grouped ahead of time and
$nd objectives tp the Office of Fina~ial Aid and Scholarships, Chubb Hall
frey
wants
it
back
below
3
per~ent,
"the
lowest
in
ical
basis
behind
his
campaign.
~
_
~l!luated
afterward
f9r effectiveness. Qne of the
020, Athens, OH 45701 .
modern
history."
.
As
.yet,
the
effort
has
rio
simple
slogan
like
most
effective
••
among
kids, not adults •• rea: The Elizabeth Antonucd Sc,holarship is for-5200 and Js open to any
The public relations campaig" is the newest ' "Just Say No." McCaffrey told me, :·.i•ve 'never lures actress Rachel Leigh Cook smashing up a
woman living in Athen~. Vinton, Gallia, or Meigs Counties, who will be a
part
of an anti-drug.strategy that is beginning to been big on slogans," but he and aides 'indicate kitchen with a frying pan to iUustrate the effects
~rst-, second, or third-year student enrolled in the College of Arts arid Sci-show
results among young people, the former that they are. looking for various "brands" and ~eroin can have !JD a person's life.
ences on the Athens campus of O~io University.
•
.
Army
.
f
our-star general said in an interview and it\. · "symbols" for different target groups.
Other ads Jarget at inner-city black, Hispanic
· First consideration will be given to applicants who have 'taken a W(\lllen's
congressional
testimony
.last.
week.
,
·
.(
What's
clear
is
that
McCaffrey's
media
camand
Native American kids and parents. The drug
~~es~~
.
:.
After
falling
during
the
Reagan
and
Bush
paign
is
multi&lt;!iJnensional,
involving
!ophisticatoffice
has become one of the biggest advertisers
; In a~dition, the Donna Chen Women's Equity Award for $200 jlcknowladministrations,
youth
drug
use
climbed
alarm·
ed
advertising,
efforts
to
convince
Hollywood
and
in
U.S.
minority media.
cklges any person, group, program, or activity that has most successfully
Last week, McCaffrey and the public relations
c!xpanded equity for women and girls in the Athens and surrounding areas. ingly during President Ointon's fir~ term-- earn- TV networks of, the ill -effects of drugs, creation
ing
him
savage
criticism
from
both
Republicans
of
Internet
sites
for
kids
and
parents
and
linkups
firm
Fleishman Hillard unveiled new Internet
lleligious/political groups are excluded. •
and
Democrats
in
Congress.
,
.
to
corporations
and
national
and
community
orga·
linkups
t~rough America Online and Disney ••
; For the Antonucci Scholarship and Donna Chen Award, send letter of
McCaffrey,
who
was
appointed
three
years
niza!_
i
ons.
part
of
an
overall effort that will include major
application and/or nomination, along with an explanation of why you are
ago,
reported
to
a
House
appropriations
subeom"The
ability
of
media
messages
to
shape
atticorporate
involvement and media outreach
making the nomination, to -Alden Waitt, Associate Director, Women's Studmittee
that
from
1996
to
1998,
the
rate
of
illicit
tudes
and
behaviors
is
clear,"
he
said.
"Corporate
designed
to
affect conduct as well as attitudes.
ies Program, 001 President Street Arademic Center, . Ohio University,
drug use fell by 2.5 percent among eighth graders, America spends billions,each year to market its
The campaign does need a slogan. McCaffrey
Athens, OH-45701.
~:
•
.
1.7
percent
among
lOth
graders
an4
I
percent
products
1!5
cool,
hip
and
desirable."
McCaffrey
says
that "Just Say No" worked primarily with
; Jkcause my_heart is tn the county I which I live. I am particularly interamong
12th
graders.
,
'
·
wants
to
do
something
analogous.
"
young
kids. h also worked with adults and con:
ested in encouraging young women in Meigs County to apply for either or
The-drug
czar
acknowledged
that25
percent
of
The
drug
czar's
office
is
using
its
$1
billion
in
gress.
This
campaig!l hill! many, weapons to tell
both of the two scholarships described below. Anyone may send in a nomi12th
graders
still
use
illegal
drugs
regularly,
along
advertising
buys
to
leverage
networjls
and
other
_
teens
that
drugs
will mess up their live~. but it
• nation for the Donna Chen Award.
('- .
with
20
percent
of
I
Oth
graders
and
1'2
percent
of
·
media
outlets
to
provide
another
$1
billion
worth
could
use
a
smart
bomb.
•·
- 1Questions can be directelf to me at waid(Glohio.edu or call me at work at
8th graders, but the 1§96.98 findings at least rep- of" well-placed advertising space or to address
· (Mo~on Kondr•cke It executive ectnor ot
593-4687.
.
resent
a
turnuound.
drug
themes
on
popular
shows
like
"ER."
Roll
C811, the ·n••fNlper ol C•pHol Hill.)
4Jc11111 W•ltt
Administration
officials
say
McCaffrey
cited
McCaffrey
told
Congress
that
"popular
culture
Copyrlghttttl
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Pom-y ·

Friends announce meeting .

Virginia McBride Beegle

·'!-·-c.= It pays to be nice to yoUr workers

tO sypporf bike path .

•

was placed on
_Holman satd he had tp press for
Ina! o~ the felony . charge because
Ve~dttiL refused an offer to plead
gutlty to. a lesser charge, a firstdegree mt'!lemeanor pumshable by
no ~ore than six months in jail.
.
I ~as Wtlhng to do that J~SI to
get thts ·case out of the way," Hoi.·
man said. "We tried to rc:solve this
c~ for three mo?,ths but now we're.
gomg to proceed.

-Weather sparks utility pole fires
•

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Transportation Dlatrlc:t 10 were honored recently In Columbus
with an •w•rd for Excellence In Concrete ·paving on the first
phiH of the US 110/SR 32 widening In Athene County. The 1ward
was praunted by the Ohio-Kentucky Chapter of the Amerlcan
Concrate Pavement Association to Project Engineer Don Tlllla of
Malga County, center, and to Construction Inspectors Jim Mcln·
turf of Morg•n County, left, •nd G~rge Welch of Athena County, right The 2.7 mile first phase project to widen 110132 from two
'1nu· to four lanes Ia. complete except for minor finish work
such sa Hiding.
·

CLEVELAND (AP) - About
56,000 Cleveland Electric Jlluminattng Co. customers were without
power this morning because of a
rash of utility pole fires overnight.
Roughly 40 utility, poles caught
on fire; most of them on CleveIa~d's west side and western suburbs, said CEI spokesman Todd
Schneider.
No injuries were reported but the

power outages were ~lamed for
several ~I closings.

Meigs_i;""S

injuries reported.
•
RutlAND
.3:45a.m., McCumber Road, Beulab Collier, treated at the scc;ne;

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45769.

Stocks

. 1:59 p.m., VFD and squad to
Beech Grove Road, brush fire, no
injuries reported;
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Sydenstricker, Pleasant Valley Hospital·,
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squad assisted;

•

TONIGHT

The Daily Sentinel

1o calls

me~;~~sf~~·a:~~~~e:,rb~h~::':;:; An~'~6nrti~:'P~~

'

MESSAGE INA

r~gs

Units of the Meigs County Emer- •
gency Medical Service recorded 10
calls for assistance Wednesday.' Unitsresponding included:
_,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
1:28 a.m., Beech Street, Middleport, Troy Todd, V~terans Memorial
. Hospital;
5:54p.m., Collins Road, Pomeroy,
Mary Searles, Holzer'Medical Center.
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m~et

Sulton Township trustees will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Village Hall.
9range Township trustees will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the home
of Osie Foil rod, Alf~ed.
Lebanon Township trustees will meet Monday, I 1:30 a.m. at the township buildmg.
_
·

Word has ·been received here of the death of Jesse Amott, 90, of
Rochester, Pa., who died Thursday, March 4, 1999, in Beaver, Pa.
He was born April7, 1908, in A11tiquity, son of the late Otis C. and Bertha
Roush Amott. He was·a retired employee with the Dravo Co r)ioration, Pillsburgh office. and was Protestant by faith .
.
·
Surviving is his wifC! Mary Cathe'rine Hoffman Arnou; a daughter and
son-io-law, Patricia A. and Lawrence Stowe, Beaver Falls, Pa.; two grandchtldren; a: great-grandson; a sister and brother-in-law, Violet and Lawrence
Bush, and ·a brother, William Arnott, all of Racine; numerous nieces and
nephews.
.
·,
He was preceded in death by ihree sisters, Zelia, Wilma, and Mae; and
five_brothers, John, Clark, Ira. Arthur and Franklin Arnott
Services were held at the William Murphy Funeral Home in Rochester,
Pa. with burial in Cecilia's Cemetery, Daugherty Township.

1-Manlfteld IW/74'1 •

A

;.,,ddiePortneeds

Trustees to

Jesse Arnott

Ohio weather
AccuWealhe..

AN't'MQRt!

I'D

Announcements:

Death· Notices
Thursday, Apr. 1

;;;:.;;;;-;;---::======::::::::--:-------l

IHCAS£ I'MNOI'GDTK
W1

The Daily Senti(lel • Page 3

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Sports

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The Daily Sentinel

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Page4

Thursday, April1 , 1999

The Marauders lOOk a 3-0 lead in
the first inning. Amber Vining and
Shannon -Price led off the game with
back-to-'back singles . . Two ground
outs, a walk and a Tonya Miller single made it a 3-0 game.
The Marauders blew the game
open in the third inning with six big
runs. Stephanie Wigal reached on an

error, Miller and ~bby Harris had
single. Julie Spaun then tripled to
clear the bases and Hysell was hit by
a pitch. Yining then slammed· a 'three
run home run to right center field to
give Meigs a 9-0 lead._
·
Meig s added a pair of runs in the
filth inning on the strength of four
walks, a ·fielder's choice and a Price

single to give Meigs an 11 -0 lead.
Wellston scored their only run in
the fifth on a pair of Meigs errors.
Meigs closed the scori ng in the
seventh inning with five runs on just
two hits. The Marauder hits in the
inning were a doubles by Tangy
!.audermill and Stephanie Wigal.
Hysell in pitching the no hitter,
·

struck out five and walked three.
Meigs pounded out 10 hits, Vining
led the wi'nncrs with a home run and
a single. Price and Miller each added
a pair of singles. Spaun a tnple,
Laudcm1irt and Wigal each , had a
double, and Harris a single.
Stephanie Downard was the
staiter and loser for Wellston, giving
'
:

Lyons' pitching helps Eastern baseball team .o·ut-last
By SCOTT WOLFE
Eastern Head Coach
Eastern freshman Chri s Lyons
struck out 13 Miller batters and held
a no- hitter through four innings in
leading the Eastern Eagles to a 4-3
win over the Miller Fakons
Wednesday ·night at Eastern's Shade
Prairie Stadium.
Lyons picked up the wi n in his
first varsity start and JUnior Eric
Smith picked up the save as· Eastern

Tri -Valley Hocking Division . Miller
drops to 0-2.
Lyons struck out eight of the first
nine batters he faced and struck out
nine in the first three iunings.
Miller pitcher Randy Nelson
pitched a. great game. of hi s own.
Nelson fanned eight batters, but the
middle of the Eastern lin e- up got to
him in the second . Jeremy Colem~n
sin gled, Joe Di llon reached on a
fielder's choice , then Jeremy Gillilan

S~ttb;JtE~gi;;' g~Ct•
4~2

Josh Broderick hit a two-run single
for a 2-0 EHS lead. A walk, stolen
base a'nd error led to Mi ller's first run
as they cut Eastern's lead to 2-1 .
In the bottom of the third, Brad
Willford had a two-out double, and
scored on a Co leman si ngle to make
the score 3-1. Lyons struck .out the
first batter of the fourth inning, then
hit the second batter Riley. Riley,
however, was nailed on a Josh
Broderick -to-Bradley Brannon put
out on the stea l attempt and Gill
popped out to end the inning .
Keller, the second batter of the
fi.fth inning. h1t· a bloop one-out sin-

up 10 hits, two walks and a strike
out.
Ipnjpg lll1ll.b
Meigs ....... ........ .306-020-5=15-10-6
Wellston .: ........ .... ..000-010-0=1-0-2
Amy Hysell (WP) and Abby
Harris
Stephanie Downard (LP) and
Julie Huffman

a

McCormick, as Evans hurLed a onehit game. Eva ns ·fanned . s.ev~ n .
walked and walked one as · Eastern
made ,c ight errors. Jones-suffered the
loss with eight walks and 12 strikeouts. Mill er had three errors:
Eastern goes to Federal Hocki ng
Monday.

-

Innin~

lll1ll.b

Miller ................. .... 000- 101 =2- 1-3
Eastern .................... I00- 120=4-6-8
WP-Evans and Spence r
LP-McCormick and Leckrone

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Pounding out 13 htlS in four and
one half innin gs, the Southern
Torn adoes merc ied the Waterford
Wildcats 15- 1 Wednesday 'night in
Racine to pick up their first win of
1999.
Coach Mick Winebrenner's club
is now 1-1 overall and 1-0 in the TriVal!cy Co nference. Waterford is 0-2 .
Starter Bcnji Manuel and reliever
J.B. Boso (5t h) hurl ed the win.
Manuel we nJ four innings, givin g up

.

Baker helped bring home the nex t
fi ve runs as SHS surged ahead. then
never l ook~d back. Southern scored
three more in the third when
Will iams·-walked , Cum ings had · an
RBI si ngle, and Baker had a two-run
single for his fourth RBI of the night,
the score 11 -0.
Wat~rford plated a si ngle run in
the fourth and Southern added four
more in the fourth to initiate the
mercy rule and the 15-1 win.
Williams, Ervin , Cumings, and
Baker each haa two hits . Jesse Little

singled, · Boso sing led, Manuel singled , Brandon Wolfe singl ed, and
Josh Davis si,ngled . Waterford's
-ijuck, Crock, and Moore each sin g led.
•
Southern goes to Vinton County
today, then hosts Fort Frye in a double header Saturday at II a.m.
!nnin~

lll1ll.b

Waterford
000-10= 1--3-1
Southern
803-4x= 15- 13- 1
WP-Manuel, Boso and Cumi-ngs
LP-Hu ck, Crock, Skinner and
Lang

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two hi.ts; striking out six , and walking one. Boso gave up one hit, struck
out 1wo, and walked none.
·
Waterford's Aaron · Huck suffered
the loss. Crock and Skinner came on
in relief allowing· 13 hits, fanned
.three, and walked eight.
Southern ·took an 8-0 lead in the
first inning, when Adam Williams
walked, Josh Ervin si ngled, and
Adam Cumings slammed a three-run
home run. A two-run single by ·
Manuel, an Adam Williams RBI single&gt;, and one run double by Jamie

.

24'
·' ·· Roof

Waterford
defeats
.
Tornadoes
Gassie' Harrg fired a fi ve-hitter as
the Waterford Wild cats defeated the
SouQlcrn Tornaddes 9-3 Wednesday
nigh! rn Racine during girls' hig h
school soflball action. Southern is 02 and Waterfo rd is 2-0.
Southern broke a scoreless deadlock in the second when Kara Krng
srng led and scored on a Stacy Lyons
double .
Waterford· came back wi th four
runs in tlie third as Cierra Sparlrng
sing led, Kel li Yambor re ached on an
~ rTor. Kelly Hall dol(_b led, and T
Forshey si ngled for a 4- 1 WHS le ad
S'outhcrn came back with one in
the ·ihird on a bunt single by Sayre..
two : stolen bases, and a ' Regina
Man.ucl sin gle. Waterford . matched
the run and after four th e scored
stood 5-2.
Waterford added two runs in each
rhe fifth and seve nth in nings.
Southern added a single in the fifth
as tlil: score ended 9-3.
K;m Sayre suffered the loss with
four :.trikeouts and three walks. givrng up ten hrts and nin e runs. Harrg
posted the wi n with five strikeouts,.a
wa lk and one' hit batter. Waterford
play~d ermrless baiL ·
Sout hern hitters were Sayre
Laratne Law•on, Manuel . Lyons ,&lt;and
Saratr Brauer. WHS hiuers were
Sparting with three hits, Huck and
. Hall .with two. each, and one each by
J nne~ . Forshey, and NeilL ·
'-' Southern plays at Vi nton County .
-Thursday.
lnninK .l!!t!b
.
Waterford . :.... .004- 120-2=9-10-0
Soutl)crn ......... ....... 0 11 -0 10-0=3-5-3
Wf-Hargg and Sparliog
LP-Sayre and Davis

'

advanced• to second and third on a all with singles.
passed balL Smith came on to strike
Lnms fanned 13 and walked two,
out Toth, then got Keller on a 6-3 wtlile hitting one. Smith fanned one.
ground .out.
.
Miller's Nelson fanned eight and
Eastern threatened in the bottom · walked.one.
of the sixth -and Jimmie Putman sinEastern goes to Belpre Thursday
gled. Nelson gained second wind to .and :then is off until Monday when
strike out the next two batters, the n they go to FederalHocking.
. got Lyon! on ,a-ground out.
. •,
The game was then called for Innjng l2tllb
darkness with Eastern wiiming-4-3 . Miller ................... :... oi0-002=3-4-2 .
Jeremy Coleman was }.3; Wrll Eastern ... :................. 021 •01 0=4-9- 1
had a triple, Willford a single and
WP-Lyons, Smi th ' (6th) and
double , and Oi_llon, Putman , and Broderick
Broderick sing les. Miller hitters were
LP-Nelson and Bolyard
Spencer, Riley, Bolyard, and Keller

•.

Tile "Great K-C Raceway " wtll ·Overnight, prirmtive camping is
By SCOTT WOLFE
another teenager-Boston Reed, who pm . A complete program of BORLA inclement .weather, the"Spring 50"
contin'lle
to run weekly Saturday
Sentinel Corretpondent
pilots a car sponsored by Jeff EXHAUST heat races including the will be re-scheduled for · Saturday, welcomed.
throu~hout
thesummer, feashows
The STARS National DirtCar Gordon's stepfather, Jon Bickford. ·SCOIT PERFORMANCE WIRE April 10. K-C Raceway islocated 12
Jhe K-C Anniversary show,-''The
turing
Super
Sprints,
Late Models,
Racing League will kick-off the Danny Smith of Danville, Ind. won -bonus along withthe ISKY RACING miles south of Chillicothe on U.S . Night tile Stars Come Out," featuring
Modifieds
and
Street
Stocks.
"notthern"ponion of the 1999 sched- last yeAr's Sprint opener.
CAMS dash and PRO SHOCKS "B" 23, then two miles west of Alma on the STARS LateModels and All-Star
For more rnformation, call 740·ule on Saturday wit h the "Spring 50"
The "Spring 50" will mark the Mains will preclude the"Spring 50". Blain Highway. For ticket informa- Sprints, will be Saturday, June 19,
atK-C Raceway located south of tenth time that STARS has appeared K-C Raceway's super competitive tion phone K-C Raceway- at (740) while the STARS make a return visit 663-4141 or e-mail Scott Wolfe. pubrelations
director ,
Chillicothe.
at the high-banked 318-mile course, 410 Sprint Cars will join STARS for · 663-4141 or check the K-C Raceway in the season finale, September 25, lic
atsdwolfe@frognet.net.
Promqter Eleanor Karshner has considered by many to be the fastest the two division show. In the event of website at www.kcraceway.com .
1998 .
posted nearly $32,000 in total purse 318 mile in the Buckeye state . In the
money with. $8,00Q eannarked' for previous nine STARS appearances at
the feature winner.
-K-C Raceway only five drivers have
.
'
.
K-C Raceway_and S'(ARS have fou-nd their way into victory circle
always been two key elements for an headed up by Donnie Moran with
The Golden Rockets scored a cou- ners with a double . Ewing and Eberts
•
early 2-0 lead in the first inning. Pat
exciting short track auto racing, but three victories. Davey Johnso n and By DAVE HARRIS
•
Sentinel Correspondent
Martin led off the game with a single pie of insurance runs in ' the fifth added singles.
an added marquee of 410 Outlaw Rick Aukland have ganiei-ed two
· Meigs out hit ' Wellston 4-3, but and Jeremiah Bentley reached on an inning. Mercer and Fenwick both
Bentley was the hard luck lo$er • :
SuperSprints has .sweetened the pot wins each. while Steve Francis and
dropped a 5-2 decision to the Golden error. Two outs .later, J.T: Humphreys walked, a fielders choice moved both for Meigs ,' despite giving up only
for Midwestern Auto Racing fans as Bart Hartman have scored one triRockets in TVC baseball 1 action si ngled to toad the bases, Nick runs up were they scored on sacri - · three hits. He struck out six and · ··
the trio again joins forces inthe K-C umph apiece.
.
• · walked three while hitting a batter. ,
Dcnwiller lined a single to score JWO (ices.
Raceway season opener Saturday.
In the first "Spring 50" North Wednesday evening at Well ston.
After getting three hi ts in the first Martin , Humphrey s, Smiddie and
The loss evens the Marauders runners and give Meigs the 2-0 lead.
The added attraction, a show Dakota's Rick Aukland battled toothrecord at 1-1 , both overall and in the
It stood that way until the third innings, the Marauders were limited bettwiller had the Meigs hits, all si nwhich highlights 410 outlaw super and-nail with Ashland, Kentucky's
Ohio Division. Meigs was sched uled inning when Eberts doubled and to only one hit by Brent Ewing the gles.
sprints, will be paying $2,000 to win. Steve Francis for f61aps, then drove
.
to face Feder~! Hocking in today 's. Mercer followed with a walk. Frisby rest of the way, a fourth inning Kyle loninK llllab
.
, · Stevie Francis, three time defend- off and left the field after a lap 33
home opener. The Golden Rockets then doubled to tic the game at ~-all. Smiddic s.ingle.
Meigs .... ,:............ 200-000-0=2-4-1
ing series champion cH Ashland, pass. Auk land's win of the innaugurEwing pic~ed up the win , scatter- Wellston .
.. ...... 003-020-x=S -3-1
raise their record to 3-0 overall and One out later Stevens reached on a
Kentucky will ·be out todefend his a) "Spring 50" was worth $8;000 in
Bentley (LP) and Humphre ys
2-0 in the division.
Meigs error, scorin g Frisby to give ing the four hit s, walking none and
STARS title in the familiar Arizona the STARS sanctioned even tthat
striking out nine . Frisby led the win.·Ewing (WP) and Dunn
The Marauders JUmped out to an ' Wellston a 3-2 .1ead:
Sport Shins # 15 Rocket Chassis, drew 74 cars overall and a packed
while former champion Mike grandstand.
On ly one cauti on, a yellow for Joe
Balzano of Parkersburg, W.Va. hopes
to conti nue his success' from, the Meadows ·who jumped the cushion
recent sout~ern tour.
on the 25th lap, was waved during
Olhor drivers e~pcc ted to be on •the exc iting 50-lap event. ·
hand are STARS competitors Rick
Cars from eight states fi lled the
Eckert, Sieve Shaver, Barry· K-C pit ·area, including cars from
•
. ----··
Bragdon , Bart Hartman, Davey Iowa antl Wisconsi n in addition to
Johnson . Mike 'Benedum, Todd the farthest traveler Auk! and .
Andrews, Tim Hill, Rod Conley, R.J.
Moran, who wiH attempt his
&lt;;on ley. Delmas Con ley and Gary maiden voyage in l BUSCH Grand
Stuhler.
Nati onal action Saturday · in
· Other drivers expressing an inter- Nashville, Term ., is expected to tly
' ··~tr·
-CORRUGATED
est in the event are former K-C win- back t o Ohio after his llUSCH comI,
ncr Donnie Moran , Billy Moyer, mitment and compete in the "Spring
STEEL ROOF1NG 26" Width
Jack Boggsf"'ll,d Steve Lucas, who 50" at K-C Raceway:~\ukland , now. 90 Lb. MINERAL SURFACE
8'
10'
are expected&lt;llf_join a field of the 30- driv.ing the 10-10-220 sponsored
ROUROOFING
40 regulars that K-C dre_w during last machine for GVS Racing and. last
Heavy asphan
season.
year's event inner, is also expected to
base coated w~h
A huge field of spri nt cars are also be on hand to defend hi s title.
12'
14'
mineral granules.
ex pected to get the jump on the com- Francis, the three-tif11e defending
Black,
White,
petition by working the bugs out of STARS champi on, as well as
Brown
their cars at K-C's early opein g date . Hartman and JolJnson have said they
Second-generation driver Jimmy will be at K -~ "Rac~way to try and
-Stinson , the nephew of Chargin' garner another win at the ultra-quick
Charlie Swartz, hopes to get off to track. Last year's event, which was
another good stan retaining the form pushed back one week by inclement
· of his 1997 spri nt car title. Other top weather, saw a K-C Racewl!-y record
midwestern drivers including former 75 drivers attempt 10 make the fea!!-.!lillJt!J~_J
Trusses~
K-C . champs Rodney Duncan and ture field.
Mike Bowling are out to regain itles, .
Pit gates are slat_ed to open at 4
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Wellston defeats baseball Marauders 5-2

~iUer _ 4-3

win over Miller .. Southern tallies 15-1 win over Waterford

By SCOTT WOLFE
Eastern left 12 rurincrs on base,
but still managed hard-fought 4-2 .
softball win over the Mr.ller Lady
Falccns Wednesday night at Eastern.
Eastern is now 2-0 overall and in the
.
· ·
leagae :
Eastern sco red early, taking a 1-0
lead in .the lirst as Juli Haym an
walked and scored on a b~ses loaded
walKed to Chasatie Holl on. A strikeout_,, owever, left the bases loaded.
Its senior hurler Stephanie I;vans
fo u~ the groove for Eastern, th e
game rolled right along until tl].e
fourth when Alecia Jones reached 0 n
an ·error, ad vanced · o~ an error, and
scored "on C. Leckrone 's 4-3 ground
out K&gt; tie the game at 1-1.
·
Iiastern untied the knot in the bottom: half the frame as Angi Wolfe
singjed, and scored on an RBI, single
by Juli Hayman, 2- 1.
:
Ervans sat the Falcons down in
order the next frame, then Eastern
· ign.ited a two-out rally . Evans singled ·
and ... Wolfe tripl ed her home.
· Chc~alier walked and stole seco nd ,
and Wo lfe came home on an error at
-thlf&lt;l to make the score 4-1.
Mill er's McCormick si ngled and
scored on two errors in the sixth, but
Evans fanned the next batter then got
a 4-3 ground out to end the inning.
Eas tern held on fo r the 4-2 win.
~as te rn 'hitters were Chevalier.
HaYJilan . Val Karr, Suzie Milhoan,
Evairs, .and Wolfe. Mrller hitter was

.

gle to break Lyons' no-hit bid, but
Lyons fought back to strike out
another, then got Humphrey to fly
out.
Eastern got an _inSurance run , and
the eventual winni ng run in the fifth
whe n Josh Will slammed a one-out
triple and scored on Eric Smith's
long sacrifice fly to deep center. In
the top of the sixth, after Lyons
fanned the ·first batter, the tiring
pitcher gave up a single, a runner~
reac hed on a fie lder's choice, followed by an RBI single by Riley and
loop RBI si ngle by Bolyard. With a
2- 1 count on Toth , the runners

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Chillicothe -race track to host' STARS season opener Saturday

Hysell's no~hitter leads Meigs softball ·club past Wellston 15-1
By DAVE HABRIS
' .
Sentinel Correspondent
.
Junior Amy Hysell fired a no hitter as the Meigs Marauders rolled to ·
a 15-1 win over the Lady Rockets in
TVC so ftball action at Wellston.
Meigs with the win raises its
record to 2-0 both overall and in the
TVC: Meigs will ho st Federal
Hocking tonight.

'
, Pomeroy
• Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April 1 , 1999

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Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

WizaJds, Pistons,
·e ucks, Suns, Trail
al~azers notch wins
hun ," coach Chuck Paly said.
"When you don't hitve any shooting
and you Jose your top scorer, it 's
going to be painful. We ·shot poorly
By The Aaaoclated Preas
agai n, and that 's been the story all
The Washington Wi zards made year."
'
th~ndo Magic's offen se disapPistons 87, Celtics 72
pear.
·
·· .
Lindsey Hunter scored 17 points
: Juwan Howard scored 20 poi nts in Detroit's victory at Boston.
and Washington used ·a record'-selGrant Hill added 16 points and II
tirig defen sive performance to beat rebounds, wltile Bison Dele scored
Orlando 84-·73 Wednesday night .
14 points for the Pistons, who won
The 73 points by Orlando were their fifth straight.
Paui ·Pierce scored 20 p,oints and
the fewe st· ever all owed by the
Washin gton franchise . The previous Antoine Walker had 18 points and 10
rocord was 74, by Cleveland in 1982 rebounds for the Cellics, who have
ar(d Miami in 1997 .
lost seven of nine .
· "It was a gutty effort on our·
Bucks 102, ·Hornets 94
part," &gt;aid Mitch Richmond , who
Ray Allim scored 20 points as
scored 16 pomts for Washington.
Milw au kee opened a four-game road
Terry Davi s provided an offensive trip 'by shooting a season-high 61
a~d defen sive spark for the Wizards. percent fiom the field .
He was 6-for-6 from the fi eld and
Former Charloue guard Dell
matched hi s season-h igh with 12 Curry added 18 points for the Bucks,
p¢ints. inc lud1 ng St x during an 8-0 who were 7-for- 14 from three-point
first -quarter run ihal gave the rimgc.
Wi zards the lead for good . Davi s
Reserve guard Eldridge Rccasner
also drew fo llr charge s. g ivin~ him a: h~d a career-hi gh 26 points for the
Hornets. wbo got just 48 points from
team-leading 19 this ,season.
" He was sacnficin g hi s body, and their starters.
this is a team that needs that," coach
Suns 93, Warriors 78
Bernie Bi ckerstaff said.
At Phoenix, Tom Guglioua had
: Elsewhere in the NBA , it was 21 points and 11 rebounds as the
lJctroit. 87, Boston 72; Milwaukee Su ns snap·pcd a three-game losing
I 02. Char lone 94'; P~enix 93, streak.
·
·
Golden State 78; and Portland 100,
The Suns moved · 1 112 games
Sacramento 86.
ahead of Golden State and
Darrell Armstrong scored 15 Sacramento i~ the r~ce for the e1ghth
points for Orlando, which shot only . and final playoff spot in the Western
31 percent from the field.
Conference. ·
The M~gic loS! leading scorer
Jason Kidd had 14 points, seven
NickAndcrsoninthefirsthalfwitha rebounds, eightassistsandsixofthe
stiaincd ham string. Anderson, aver- Suns ' 16 steals. Antawn Jamison had
aging 16.5 points ,' is listed as day-to- 16 points and 15 rebounds for the

NBA roundup

day.
Warrior,s.
· : " If he's out long, it '·s going_ to .
Trat'l Blazers 100, Kings"."'
""

Scoreboard
77 195 t81
San Jose ............................ 27 ~0 17 . 7t 110
Los Angeles ..................... .28 41 S 6t 169 t98
x-clinthed plmycffbcrth
y-clinchcd divi iion title
z-clinched conference title

A'nahel1f1 .............. .. ........... 33 29 II

Basketball
~BA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic

Wednesday's score·s

Dlvi~ion

New lcr!ley 7, Anaheim I
N.Y Islanders 5, Aorida 3
Detroit 21 Los Angeles I
Ch1caso 2, Buffalo I
Dallas 6, Tampa Bay 4
Toronto 6. Vancouver 5 .

l!' ). £&lt;1.

Iwn

10 688
9 ·.679
14 .548
~t:wYork
14 .5 17
n .433
eosron .................................. IO, 19 ,345
~ew Jersey .. ···'·
......... 5 24 :172

Orlando
&amp;-i iami

..... 22
............. 19
........... !?

~~:n~~~~~ -:- ········:;::::~:.·.:·.:1~

Cen1ra l Division
Indiana.......
.. ... 20 16
Atlt~nta ' . .... ... ... .................... r9 !2
De1roit
... :.... 19 ·2
Milwaukee...
.: ..... 18 12
Tor~ ·uo ........................... 15 14
C'LEVO.: L.AN D....
... 14 14
Cluulonc ,
.... 12 17
Chil'llgu .. ~ ............ , -- -· 9 21

-·-

Boston at Montreal, 7 p.m.
florida m Washington,
Pi11sburgh at Onawa , 7:3 p.m:
Tamf\11 Bay ut St. Lou i5 , S p.m.
Philadelphia at. Nush"ille , ~p . m .
Phoenix at Calgary, 9 p.m.
.. ·
Toronto at Edmonton, 9 p·m

1':

18.m.

61:\

1':

JOO

2
4':

l

7' ~

II

H ou ~ton

... .
Sa_n·to.ntonto. -·
Mm nesota .

9
10
I~

Dallas
.. ,. , ... :·:·:::::::.:::::.~. ~ ~~
Ucnver .....
. V:mcuuver . "":' ... .' ............... 6 24
N
. 2t
.15

PonlarMJ

LA . Lah·rs
Sealtlc .. ,

0

G111.!.:rr Stall'
Clt p pcr ~

..... J

..',

J~~

1',
4',

.4 .~~

lb

IOJ

,.'
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II

II

20'·

Wednesday's scores ·
Washntgtnrt 84, Orl ando 7.1-..
Octrmt 87. IJoston 72
Milwuukcc 102, Charlouc 94
Ph ueni1t 9J. Goldell State 78
Pon land 100. Sacnunemo 86

Tonight's games

..
.

lndtana m Tor onto, 7 p rn .
CtJI!!ago ut Detr(lit. 7 ..mp m •
CLEV ELAN D ai New York., UO p.m
Philadelphia ut Miami. 7:30p.m.
AthUJI&lt;t at New Jcuey. 7..\0 p m
L.A . Cl1ppcrs a1 D&lt;~lla~ . BJO p.m
Vaucouver Ill San An to,qio , S:JO p m.
Seattle at Dr nvc r. 9 p nL
Holrston at ,Utnh. 9 p.m

.Friday's g~m~s

.:

NBA bylaw.s debunk rumors
. g· and ·ownl"ng
0 f J ord· an p'Iay1n
sha' res of Charlotte Hornets

Milwaukee at BostOJJ . 7. p.m.
CLEVELAND at Phrladclphta, 7 p.m.
Vancouver at At lanta. 7:30p.m
Indiana at Otarlotte, 1'1 p.m.
Dcn\·er at Mmnesota. 1'1 p.m.
L.A . Lakm at PhQenix. 8 p.m.
Orlando it Oticago.' l'l :30 p.m.
Seaule at Portland, 10:30 p.m.
Utah at Golden State. 10:30 p.m.

:·1

Nlllonal League
·
ATLANTA BRAVES: Placed OF Danny
BauclSta and 28 Tony Graffanino on w;Uvers for lhe
purpose of givi ng them their unconditionlll release1 .
CHJCAGO CUBS : Claimed LHP Brad Woodall
off wah·en froni Milwaukee. Oj,rioned LHP Ray
Ki(lg and INF lose Nieves to Iowa of the PCL. ReEASTERN CONFERENCE
assigned LHP Doug Creek, RHP Sceve Gajkt:lwski. C
1\tlantic Division
Alan Zinter. INF Scott Scilhoviak and OF Derrick
!\' I. I l!lL !if liA Wllile to 1helr minor-league camp. Placed R'HP
f'·~'· ~ :team
... -New JerS(:y
......'40 22 II 91 220 180
Kerry Wood on che 60-day,di,abJcd list. ·
.Pittsburgh ..
.. . :.36 2!5 IJ 85 22b 200
FLORIDA MARLINS: Optioned LHP Breat
--F'hi ladelpltln
... 3.' 2.' 18 84 2lb 119
Billinl!sley 10 Cn.lgar}' of the PCL and RHP A.J.
~·. Y. Rnngm
.. .J I )J 10 72 202 2Ui
Burnell 10 Ponland o! the Eastern League. Assigned
..N.Y. lslondcn
.. 2145 9 511 72 224
C John Ro5kos to their minor league camp.
MILWAUKEE BREWE~S : Op&amp;.ioned RHP AI
Northtast Division
Reyes ICJ Louisville of the lncernational League.
x :ou;~wa ·..
........... 42 21' 10 94 217 157 .. Auigned RHP Jot Borowski and C Charlie Gr~ne
· Toronc o ........ ........... ... .40 28 6 86 237 216
ou1right to Loui livi lle. Released RHP Willillm Van
~ auffslo. ,.
............ H 2S I~ 81 188 161
Landingham
~Bosto n . .
........ .32 28 13 77 190 166
NEW YORK METS : Anigned OF Andy
............ 29 34 10 68 168 186
: ..;.Montreal ...
Tomberlin tr'l the1r minor h=aguc ramp.
~

.

.NHL standings

•

•

*Carolinl\,..... ~
:!-lot'idu ...
.Wruhingtun ·
~Tilmpa Bl•)'
,

•

Southeast Division
..... J I 28 16 . 78 Hn 192
. 27 28 18 . 72 188 19 ~
.29

~8

-·-

6

64 IK4 JIN

... 1750 . 6 . 40 .159 267

!\' I. I l!lL !if liA

• l&gt;ctro1t .. ,,..

,, ........ J8

~

6
WSc . Louts. ............. :· .J I ~.1 11
:_N(sh\'ille .'
.. .26 41 7
..Ctijc:ago ..
.. ................ 2.l 401 2

•..
• ••

82 22 1
7J 208
S9 17.'
58 17M

187
191
B4
2.\.l

Nurthwesc Dlr.&gt;ision

,

...... .,. .J926
. ............... 28 ~4
...... 28 JS
.......~ .... 22 42

;

10 8821!t
12 68 194
Ll 67 205
1,1 5~ 181

l KII
207
205
2.\l

Pat;lnc Olwlslun
~·Oalliu; :............... .......... .47 IS 12 106 21.5 ISO
-,.Pfloenix ........ .. ......... J7 26 12 86 190 178

••
...

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Tossed Salad
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Che PIB
13
Chicken and Noodles
Ham Loaf
Green Beans
' Cole Slaw. .
Glazed .Carrots
Sweet Potatoes
Roll
Biscuit
Apple_Cherry Crisp
Lemon Cake

20
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Peas
Roll
Coconut Cream
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BBQ Chicken Fillet
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Need Assi:stance?.
Have you ever needed assistance with any ·of the following ?
•Contacting other agencies
·
•Filling out forms (for example, insurance or medical forms)
. •Scheduling health and human services appointments .
•Peisonal financial assistance
.
•Tax assistance
Have you ever had questions about Medicare or had a problem chaos~·
ing a Medicare supplement?
If you answered YES to any of these questions and are 60 years of· age
or older, we have someone who can help you. Darla Hawley, Supponive .
Services &amp; Information and Referral can be reached by calling (740)
992-2161. Other services she can help with are listed below :
•Applications for Legal Aid
•Assistance filling out forms
.
•Assistance with contacting Social Service Agencies
•Assistance with Medicare questions
•Assistance with Social Security questions ,:
•Golden .Buckeye Card
•HEAP
•Homestead Exemption
•Last Will and Testament
•Library Services and Homebound Scr.iice Applications
. •Living Will
•Notary Public
•Ohio -Energy Credit
•Permanent Hunting and Fishing License
•Tax Assistance
•Voter Registration
If you would like information on' any of these services, please contact
Darla Hawley at 992-2161.

....·-

(NAPS)-The Veterans of Foreign Wars is working to help make
sure those who fought for our
country during World War II are
remembered.
The organization hopes to raise
$7.5 ·million or more to help build
a ~orld War II Memorial on the
National Mall in Washington, DC.
"It is· important that we step
forward now to help make this
long overdpe memonal a reality ."

said Thomas A . Pouliot , VFW
Commander in Ch ief. "The legacy
of those men and women who
served in WWII continue• today
in every aspect of American life." .
'!'he VFW, through its fundrai s ing effort8 1 wiH .not only contribute to the building of th e
memorial, but also will recognize
those who served in WWII and
who sacrificed to help make Amer-

.

.

.

Thursday, April 15 • Hal
Kneen, Meigs County Natural
Resources Agent, will h~ve a program at 11:00 a.m: on how to grow
y·o ur own seedlings and gardening
tips. The annual plant exchange
will be held followi.ng the program
and noon meal.
_,....
Friday, April u;. the Arthritis
Support Group will meet from
iO:OO a.m .• 11:30;..m. with Sarah
McGrew, RN, coordinator. Bonnie
McFarland,
RN, ,, Wellness
Coordinator at Holzer Medical
Center,- will present their Wellness ·
.
.
·

Program. Also attending will be a
message therapist which is one of
the services available through the
program .
Thursday, April · 16 • the
Caring and Sharing Support Group
will meet from ·J :00 p.m. - 2:30
p.m. with Lenora Leifheit, RNC,
Coordinator. The speaker will be
Kathy
Moos
with
Vision
Rehabilitation.
Thursday, April 29 • the
monthly birthday party will be
held, seniors with birthdays during
the month will be honored.

•

ica what it is today, Pouliot added. . establishing a VFW List of RememVFW supported legislation in
brance for those who died in the
world war . .
1993 to build the memorial in
wa.hington , o.c. to honor mem·
Pouliot said that time is of the bcrs of the armed forces and com·
esse nce.. While there i~ govern ment backing, the mll,)ority of the
memorate U.S. participation.
The Am erican Battle Monu - ' funds n &lt;!ede d to complete th e
ments Com~ission is the federal
me mOria] are e xp ect~ d - to come
agency charged by Congres~ with
froni priva te donations, he sald.
· If you'd like to be a contributor ·
building and raising some $100
million for the memorial..
to the WWII Memorial or sponsor
Now , the t-wQ-million-member
name.&lt; in t he VFVI List of RememVF'W which includes one million
branc e, si mp ly write to : WWII
WWII veterans, is e ncoura giflg Memoria l, VFW National Head members to contribute toward con·
o,•rl•"'" 406 W. 34th: Street., Suite
th e memori.al. and
Kansas
64111. . ·

.

.

.·· . &amp;C. ·
~...er.s
'Q"J~~

WE

.( jj)

EAST MAIN ST.

,OH.

'.

·992-3785 .

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

BOWMAN'S
HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

.

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"Serving Southern Ohio for over 23 years"

EVerythin
•g

Lift Chairs.
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds .
Shower Stools
_ Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
lki
'd ·
a ng At
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

.

the
I
Pat···ent
at
Hom'e
£Or
1

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s

w·

MDI ..ITAL

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;
Supplies
Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces

.

Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
Dressings

a..-.;.;...______________--' , ,

· THE MEDICAL .$HOPPE
,1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH

" ust Minutes

•

.

23

.

Roast Beef and Mashed
Po.tatoes &amp; Gravy Sandwich
Cole Slaw
Roll
Strawberries on Cake

'

cost from $300-$700 when used in
a; hospital setting. Medicare does
not co~er the cost of the screen·
hlas 11nd ·ure Line does not file
Insurance claims. The screenlna
will be held at the Meigs Senior
· Center and you must pre-register
. by calling: 1·800.·~4557 .

22

22

Line Screening tests will be held.

.

Chilf Con Came
Cole Slaw
Crackers
Dark Cherries in
Red Gelatin
Brownie

Meatloaf
Oven 'Baked Chicken
Vegetable Beef SOup
Pa.:Siied Boiled Potatoes Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Pimento Cheese
Spinach
·
Harvard Beets
Bread - Crackers
Bread
Bread
Peachy Creamy Pudding
Applesauce
Banana
Cookie

29

All appointments are full for 'this '
day. Another dale bas been
scheduled due . to the · large
demand for the tests, which will
be held on May 12. Non-invasive,
completely painless screenings for
vascular disease (stroke) using the
most advanced U1trasound and
Doppler technology wi!l quickly
dl:tect arterial abnormalities, y.thich
can cause inegular blood flo'w.
Each test costs $35 or you can have
ail three for $95.00. Tests using
similar equipment may range In

.I

16

Oven Baked Fish
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Tropicel Mixed Fruit

28

27

Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Cole Slew
Roll
Pineapple Upside
Down Cake

f~:s~:::;~;l~~:~:·Life

15
. Chicken and Noodles
BrocColi/Carrots
.and Cauliflower
Bread
Apple Cherry Crisp

Sweet Potatoes

20

26

Darla Hawley, right, is shown going over some paperwork wltf!
. Barbara James; left.

28

Soup

Orange Juice
Crackers
!!read Pudding

Oven Baked Chicken
Augratin Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Peaches with
Orange Sauce

•
Ham and Scalloped
~
Potato Casserole
ColeStaw
~uttered Peas
Bread
Apple Slices and Raisins ··

Turkey and Dressing Roll
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans
Bre&amp;Q
Bananas and Oranges

Meat Balls in
Baked Steak
Brown Grevy '
' Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy .
Noodles .
Buttered Peas
Tossed Salad
Bread .
Mandarin Oranges in .
Peach Slices
· Orange Gelatin
Graham.Creckers

15

The Meigs County Senior
Wednesday, April 14 • the
Citizens Center is open Monday
Stroke Survivors Support Group
., through Friday from 8:00 a.m·. to
will meet at 1:00 p.m. with Lia
4,:30 p.m. Regularly scheduled ·l"ip.ton; OT, Holzer Rehabilita.tion,
activities are quilting, sewmg,
coordinator.
·
cards, games, and pool. :Weekly
Wednesday, April 14 • the
al:tivities are line dance team pracRed Ctoss Bloodmobile will be at
the Center from 1:00. p.m. - 6:00
· tice with Paulette Harrison, i~structor, every Monday from 1:00 p.m.p.m.
2:00 p.m. and knitting circle every
Thursday, April 15 • the
Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.-noon.
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
The Exercise Room is open daily
be held from 9:30a.m. - 11:00 a.m. ·
from 8:00 a.m.-4:30p.m. for peo- Lenora Leifheit, RNC, will be
pie to use the exercise eq'!ipment. / doing blood sugar tests at a cost of ·
):,. rejnesentative from the Athens $1.00.
Social Security Office will be at the
Center on Wednesday, April 14 &amp;
'

.,.._.nl

1

. LOS ANGELES KINGS: Anigned LW Josh
Gr.cen tq the Sprlnafield of the AHL. PHOENIX COYOTES: Recalled D Brod Tiley
fmm Springfield of the AHL.

-

Br~Ji

The National World War II Memorial-

.Come Join •• for your ned aallln&amp; trip. You e~~n tltke 1Ht: C:UCH for a realb
ride
' to a bub picturesque 18ltlna-l any of the 18 Championship .,.._. iln De Tr•ll •

_ NMtiOnal t'ootbaH Lea1ue
.
ARIZONI\ CARD INALS: Signed OL Mau
Ju)'re and LB Mar\, Maddo~ .
'
IN()IAriAPOLIS COLTS: Wichdrew their oneyenr w ntract offer ,to DE Kendall Shello
NEW ENGLAND PATR,IOTS:,. Traded TE
Lo \'Ctl Puwell to Baltimure in uchange for A 1999
~ixl h - rou nd

Mushroom Ste11k
Mashed Potatoe·s &amp; Gravy
Buttered Com
Bread
Blushing Pears

19

•

.

Ull'lC for ra1ermg the s calrl~ during a game ngainsc .
· Golden S1a1e frrt March _
, 0.
,
.

12

Hamburger on Bun

8

27
Meatloaf
Baked Potato
Mixed VegBtables
.Roll .
Carrot Cake

Spaghetti with Meat Sau
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Fruit Cocktail
Cookie

:Meigs. Senior .Center April Activities:

NUA: Su sptndcd Portland F lsainh Rider for one:

•
"

••

Baked Porkette
Mashed Potat~s &amp; Gra
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Plums

Hal Kneen, Meigs Cou111y Natural ~esources Agent, is pictured
. conducting the annual planl · exchange with seniors Mary ·
Stobart, Lee Young and Leo Davidson.
The perennial plants and bulb exchange will be held this year on
Thunday, April 15, with Hal presenting programs at 11:00 and
again at 4:00 before the evening dinner. The public is invited to
altend the programs.

'

· Football

Cf'nltal 01\'lsion

Hal Kneen, Meigs County
Natural Resources Agent, will present a program on gardening and
growing your own seedlings at
4:00. The annual plant exchange
will be held, s0 bring in perennial
plants or bulbs .to exchange fbr
some different flowers for your
garden. ·
·
A blood pressure testing will
be conducted Thursday, April 29,
. from 4:15 to 4:45.

The Senior Nutrition Program
evening meal will be served on
Tuesday and Thursday with serving
from 4:45 to 5:30. This evening
. meal·is intended to provide a nutritional meal at a reasonable cost; a
suggested donation for the evening
meal is $4.00. The public is invited
to attend .
Junior and Rita White will be
playing old time favorite music on
Thursday, April 8 at 5:30.
.

APRIL MENUS.

.---~------•sr-~--------~&amp;~--------~~7~-----------8~----------~--·

.
FOR YOUR ULTIMATE GOLF EXPERIENCE
THE ROBERT TRENT JONES GOLF TRAIL &amp; ULTIMATE COACH

Bilsk•tball

WESTERN CONFERENCE

: fum

~vening Meals

EME.OUT, CO CH!

Hockey

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

'

Amer-lun Lea11U'e
BOSTON REO SOX: OptiOned RHP John
W;•sdin tu Pl!wturk.et of the lutern&lt;~ti o naii..C:ague and
~B Wilton Veras to Tn:n10n of the Eastern League~
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Optioned RHP Jnson
Ol~n . LHP Scott Eyrt and RHP Chad Dr11dford to
Chl•rlolle nf the Internati onal League. Reauigncd
RHP Mike Heathcott to their minor league camp
Returned OF Tyrone Pendergrnss to Atlanta.
CLEVELAND IND IANS: l'l nccd OF Mark
Whucn and UF Jncob Crut on the 15-day disabled
li st Accepted Of Q[lvid Miller back fr o01
Philndelphia.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Optioned LHP
Glen don Rusch 10 011\Qha of the PCL. Released RHP
Erik H:mso a and RHP A.J. Sager.
MINNESOTA TWINS: Traded LHP Dan
Serafini tO the Chicago Cubs fo r cash.
SEAlTLE MARINERS: Optioned RHP Ken
,l.1oude , RHP Rafal!l Carmona and LHP Gre~
McCarthy to Tacoma or the PCL. ~sig ned C Raul
Cha\•ez 10 their minor league camp. Released RHP
Oal.'id Chal.'arria. LHP Lindsay Qulin, RHP Mmus
Moore, INF Claudio Livtrzi ani, C Froncbco ·-· ·
Sal)tieneban and C Jttke Underwood from their
minbr leDRUCcamp.
·
,
'TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS :• Placed OF Mike
Kelly on waivers for the purpose of givi ng him hi S
uncolldllional release.
·
,
TEXAS RANGERS: Placed RHP AI Levine on
wai vers for the purpose of gi\'ing him his conditional release. Optioned RHP Jonathan Johnson tO
Ok.luhorrm of l,tte PCL. Assigned RHP Brandon
Knight I Q Ok.lilhoma.
TORONTO BLUE J,wiS: Released I 8-DH
Cecil Fielder. Opcioned ~e: Tom Davey and RHP
Nerio Rodriguez 10 Syracu~ of the lntemalional
League. Reanigned Sal Butera, third base cOach, to
their minor league complex. Named Terry Bevington
third base coach. Sent OF Wayne Kirby 10 their
minor le agu~ complex.
·

HOO

17

"'"'~
...........

Baseball

~ ~~

.200 • 15'

II · 656
I ~ .5 1,7
16 484
HI 4 .~8

"1.1t4

l'h oc1ri~
Sa cra rn~n l !l

.710
.667
567

By The Aasoclated Pres•
out five . Only three balls were hit out :
The Rocket and Randy are ready. of the infteld.
•
Roge r ClemeM and Randy
In other news, Cecil F:ielder was
Johnson tuned up Wednesday for released by the Toronto Blue Jays, a
their much-anticipated debuts on month after the 35- year-ol~ designatopening day. It did imt go so well for ed hitter agreed. to a minor league
Pete Harnisch.
contract
·
A stiff back and tbree shaky
Fielder was let go a day after ·
innings cost Harnisch 'his start in the Toronto traded for Anaheim 's Dave.
opener for Cincinn'ati . The Reds Hollins·.
instead swiiched to. Bren Tomko
· "I guess it had to do with the
after a 10-4 loss to the Philadelphia Hollins trade," Fielder said. " I just
Phillies.
.
don't understand the change of hean
Harnisch, 14-7 last season, was by the team . I'm a li,ttle disappointed,
the clear-cut choice to become the I thought everything was set , but I
No. I staner when Denny Neagle will be OK. Li(e goes on."
was sidelined by weakness in his left
Fielder Jed the Blue Jays with
shoulder. But a couple of bad starts three home runs this spring. He hit
and back problems have stopped .264 (14-for-53) with II RBis in 17
..-~him .exhibition games .
In other games Wednesd;ty: .
Against the P~illies, ·nine -of the
18 bailers he faced reached base ·on a
Cubs IS, Padres 6 ·
hit Gr a walk, and his back never
At Mesa, Ariz., Sammy Sosa hit
loosened up. He gave up seven hits, his lith home run - most in the
lW&lt;J walks and eight runs .
'·
majors this spring - and Chicago
"The ball doesn.' t have the life in scored eight times in the first inning.
the hitting area that it normally has
Sandy Maninez, Tyler Houston
and .I don ' t know why thai is,' ' he and Jose Hernandez also homered
said . "I'm not sure if it's mechanical for the Cubs. John VanderWal homeFINGER ROLL- The Charlotte Jones' Eddie Jgnes gels ready to or if my arm 's not where I think it red for San Diego.
finger-roll his layup Into the basket while Milwaukee's Ervin should be. I really can't answer
A•tros 6, Dodgers 4 .
Johnson tries to block the shot during Wednesday night's NBA that. "
At Vera Beach, Fla., Jeff ijagwell
ga1'1e in Charlotte, N.c_., where the visiting Bucks won 102·94. {AP)
The plan is for Harnisch to slay hit two solo homers·off Kevin Brown
behind in Florida whCit the team as Los Angeles lost in what might be
At Portland, Damon Stoudamire who were coming off a loss to .' heads north and pttch in a mtnor .its last spring training game at
scored nine of his 2 1 points in the Golden State. Portland is the only league game Sunday.
Dodgenown .
. .
fourth quarter as the Trail Blazers , NBA team that hasn ' t lost two
" We'll push him to the back (of~
The. Dodgers are conSidenng .
improved their NBA-best · record to straight games thi s season. . .
the rotation) and then . he.' II have . whether lO return lO Vera Beach next
24-6.
.Vlade Divac led the Kings with plenty of time to get some treat.O spring for a 52nd year or move to the
Brian G~ant and Greg· Anthony 20 points, 12 rebounds and seven ment," manager Jack McKeon said. Phoenix area . The Fort McDowell
each added 16 points for the Blarers, assiSts.
·"There's no sense in rushing him ."
Indian Community has offered to
Olcmcns and Johnson, though , build the. Dodgers a 12,500-seal stadium , five or six practice fields and
had no trouble.
Clemens, who will start for the housing if the team decides to leave
World Series champion New York Florida
Yankees on Monday at Oakland,
Phillies 10, Reds 4
worked five scoreless innings in a
At Clearwater, Fla., Curt
Triple-A game.
·
Schilling looked good in his last start
. By CHRIS SHERIDAN
best friends, he shouldn't even conPitching for . Columbus against before opening day, striking out
AP Basketball Writer
.
Scranton, the Phillies' top fann chib, seven
in
six innings. The
sider coming out of retirement.
Michael Jordan will not - and
"First of all, (Jordan) is not good he allowed one scratch hit, struck out Philadelphia ace gave up three runs,
cannot - play for the Charlotte enough to make that team win ;my- five ani! walked two.
incl~ding Greg Vaughn's homer, and
Hornets if he gets his wish and ·buys way," Charles. Barkley said. "They
... , definitely wanted to get some walked one.
a 50 percent share of the team.
nel\d the old Michael Jordan, the guy good work in and feel· strong doing
Bobby
Abreu
and . Mike
;'There's , absolutely no truth to from five or six years ago, to make it," Clemens said.
felt prelty good Lieberthal homered for the Phillies.
it," Jordan's agent, David Falk, said that team a contender.
· and. it wen\ pretty much according to Lieberihal has a 16-game hitting
of a report that Jordan was consider"He's· the greatest .player to ever· what I expected. I'm ready to .get streak and is batting .471. ·
ing coming out of retirement and play the game, and he would only do ·going."
Devil Rays IS, Indians I
becoming a player-owner for the himself a disservice. I just hope he
Johnson, wh9 will start for
At Winter Haven, Aa., rookie
Hornets.
doesn't play because he'd damage Arizona on Monday at Los Angeles, Danny Clyburn went 4-for-5 with
If Fall&lt;?s denial isn' t enough to his· legendary status."
pitched six no-hit innings. He said he three RBis and Tampa Bay chased
convince 'i'veryone tha( such a sceWhile the prospect of Jordan felt no hint of the strained right groin Dwight Gooden witli a seven-run
nario is bunk, the wording of the returning to the court was ·being that had caused him to miss his pre- · second inning.
NBA bylaws should put all remain- widely shot· down, the 'possibility of yious stan. . .
· _
Blue Jays 7, Yankees 6
ing doubts to rest. The league's con- him becoming an owner remained
"I fell good," he said. ''l'm ready
AI Dunedin, Fla., Shannon
stitution forbids players from owning open. Earlier this month, Jordan.held · to go."
·
·
Stewan s.ingled .home the winning
teams, · as Magic Johnson Jearn~ face-to-face · discussions
with
The 6-foot-10 left-hander had his run with two outs in the ninth inning.
three years ago, and thus would pre- Hornets owner George Shinn month fastball clocked at 97 mph and his Carlos Delgado, Shawn Aetcher and
vent Jordan from being a player- about buying a 50 percent share of slider at 83 to 86 mph. Johnson Darrin Fletcher homered for Toronto .
. owner even if he desired to do so.
the team, and the two have agreed to . walked four, hit a batter and struck
In the opinion of on.e of Jordan's meet again in the near future.

Transactions

8 .. 724

........ .22
...... 20
., .... 17

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday's games

!\' . ). l'.cl.

Utah .M ................ .............. .. .2·1

Thursday, Aprll1 , 1999

.'

Reds, Indians drop
exhibition contests

Anaheim at N.Y. Rangers . 7:30 p.m.
Chicago at DclrOJt, 7:.'(,1 p.m.
San Jose at Vancouver. I 0 p.m.

Midwt'st Di\'islon ·

fum

LA

Tonight!s games

60

.
WESTERN CONFERENCE

~

Colorado 3. San Jose 2

.667

.600 .
.517
.500
.414

m

•

,.

m·Holzer"

To ll l•'r•·•·

1-IIOU- 1 I :l-:..!:! Uh

MTliMT LI,TI

WMIIL CMAIIII

Se,ing The Comnumily -Willt Care For 15 Years
~1-\L.-=~. RENTALS

&amp; REPAIRS
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIRS
, SAFETY EQUIPMENT .
EQUIPMENT
HOSPITAL BEDS
UFTCHAIRS
STAIR GLIDES
OSTOMY
DIAPERS l CHUXS

HOME OXYGEN
Emct ~jl'n c y Scrvtcc

2-l Hr
{o

~

I

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I'

',

+I) .. '

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:~.:By
·-···...·. .

The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
.

-.

1

Southern honor roll posted
for third nine-weeks period
Southern High School
.
·
·
·9th Grade - Matt Ash, Carolyn Bentz, Joe Cornell, Tyler
Liule , Rachel Marshall , Travanna Moore, .and Lori Sayre; all A's.
Rachel Allen, Sherri Cummins, Amber Duffy, Amanda Huddle-·
ston, Joey Manuel, Jill Matson, Kim McDaniel, Aaron Ohlinger,
Joy 'Rose, and Amy M. Wilson .
lOth Grade- Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans, Chad Hubbard,
. Brenna Sisson and Emily Stivers; ' all A's. Sarah B.all, Garrell
Kiser, Shauna Manuel, Jessica ()lance,. Mauhew Neigler, Kayla
Pullins, Fallon Roush, ioey Sands, arid Kevin Tapscou.
lith Grade - Jamie Baker, Christopher Randolph and Brandon Wolfe; all A's. Heidi Bumpus, Joshu.a Davis , Stacey Ervin,
Counney Haines, Samatha Hysell , Kim Ihle, Laraine Lawson,
Jeremiah Lawson, Stacy Lyons, Amher' Maynard·, Julie Nakao,
Kyle Norris, Roherta.Scarberry, and Roy Tedford.
• l2th Grade - Kara King, Jesse Little, and Jason Roush; all
A's. Teresa Bush, Christa Circle, Josh Ervin, Jeremiah Johnson,
Mike Manley, Lisa McGhee and SaraH Reels .
Southern Junior High
.
,.
· 7th Grade - Bethany Amberger, Stephanie Bradford, Cody
Davis, Sarah Hawley, Kati Sayre, and Andrea Tedford; all A's.
' · Jordan Bass, Tabitha Jones, Paige Mu~ser, Deana Pullins, Joey
I·
Riffle, Mike Roush, and J. 0. Smith. , .
8th Grade - Crystal Cottrill and Brandon Smith; all A's.
Curtis Crouch, Mariam El Dabaja, Jeri Hill, Amy Lee, Alan
Moore, andTom Theiss.
·
SyracuSe Elementary
.
.
2nd Grade - . Zachary Ash, Alex Hawley, Emma Hunter,
Chelsea Pape , and Samantha. Patterson; -all A's . Merri Collins;
Megan Gray, Jennifer Hunnell, Weston Roberts, Stephanie Snyder and Jaime. Warner.
3rd Grade :- Morgan Brown, Lindsay Buzzard, Ryan Chapman, Stepha~1e Cundiff and Sarah El Dabaja; all A's. Bonnie Lou
Allen , Teddy Brown, Christopher Burkhamer, Heather Cundiff,
Jessica Durham, Chelsea Freeman, Eric Pierce, Ashley Robie,
Trenton Roseberry, and Jordan Vierheller. ·
4th Grade -, Chance Collins, Jacob Hunter, Allie Rees, and
Michael Yos t; all A's. Nick Buck, Olivia Dudding, Tyler Hark- ·
ness. Mall ory Hill. Adam Phillips, Adelle Rice and Ashlee
Teaford.
5th Grade - John Bentz; all A's. Ryan Amberger, Timothy
Ball, Robert Eblin, Linda Eddy,.Shyla Jarrell, Tiffany McDaniel.
Myca Michael , Caitlyn Nease, Chelsea Smith, and Jenny Warner.
6th Grade-Ashton Brown; all A's. Stacy Snyder.

,

Portland Elementary
4th Grade - Cameron Brinager. Miranda McKelvey, Wyatt
Musser and Crystal Shelton.
.
Sth Grade..:... Nicole Jones; all A's. Dustin Brinager. eounney Callicoat, and Kasie Sellers.
·
6th G~ade-Sara ·Cammarata an\1 Bryan . Smith; all A's.
Carnie Callicoat, Brooke Kiser, Nicole Lawson, Craig Randolph,
Autumn Reed, Ashley Roush; Liz Sandy and Ryan Smith.
Letart Elementary
1st Grade- Michaela Davis, Gabby Johnson, John Powell ,
Cyle Rees, Dustin Salser, Stephanie Shamblin,' Lindsay Teaford,
and Lynzee Tucker; all A's. Dylan Boso, Brooke Chadwell ,
Bradley Coppick, Scan Coppick, Kim Faulkner, Megan Gray,
Logan Huddleston, Alisha Lawson, Cody Lee, Cod1 Neal, Chelsi Ritchie, Charles Storms, Kasey Turley, and Kelsey Turner. .
:Znd Grade - Kevin Coppick, Christopher Holter, R11chel
Pickens, Anthony Shamblin, and Caleb Utt; all A's. Ryan Beegle,
Carmen Craig, Marvin Eddy,. Chelsea Imboden, Tosha Jones ,
Brittany Meldau, Paul Powell, and Zacli Sigman.
.
3rd Grade- Brittany Hill ; all A's. Georgena Brickles, Erin
Chapman; Megan Day, Abigail Jenkins, Samantha Jordon, Drew
Lohg, Marissa Maynard, Cody Patterson, Wesley Riffle, Whitney Riffle, Talof\ Roush
. and .Bobby Shelton.

He has a so-so job but never pays for
anything if he can help it. Restaurant
meals and movie tickets arc always
on her.
He has no ambition to attend college , and I am sure Francine -will end
up supporting him, which galls me
to no end. I am civil in Cal's presence but just barely.He const~ ntly. puts Francine
down, and I mvanably find myself
begged
defending her I have
Francine to wait another year. before
making a final commitment, but she
refuses. Her . brother just married,
and I wonder if perhaps she isn't
competing with him. Is there anythi,ng I can do? -PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR PENN.: Yes, you Cllfl
stop knocking Cal and do your darlfdest to 'find something about him to
admire. This will baffle Francine.
Do not mention the old boyfriend
you like , or she will never go near
him .
.
. Meanwhile, keer&gt; busy, and pay
as little attention as possible tb your

ddughter's social life. A 23 -year-old
woman might interpret her mother's
"guidance" as interference and
marry the guy to assert her independence .
.
.
1
Gem
the Day (Credit Sara
Weintraub, age90, Boston): "If I had
everything to do over again, I W6uld
care 20 percent less."
Is life passing_you . by? Want to
soctal skrlls? Wnte for
new bookle.t, "How to

or

Make Friends all(( Stop B~ing Lonely." Send a self-addressed, long ,
business-size· envelope .and a check
or money order for S4 .Z5 (this
includes postage and handling) to :
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, ·P.O. Box
11562, C~icago , Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.15.) To find out
more about Ann Landers and read
her past colu!Jl(!s. visit the Creators
Syn&lt;jrcate web "flage at www.c reators.com.

Meigs County Easter
services .announce-d
POMEROY
a.m. Church located near Carpen Meigs Ministerial Association . ter on County Road l 0.
sponsored Good Friday worship
Carpenter Baptist Church, 1Unservice at Sacred Heart Catholic rise service, 7 a .m. Sunday at the
Church, 12 noon. Meditation with fire station on State Route 143.
the Stations of the Cross.
Rev. Floyd Ross will conduct the
Hysell Run Holiness Church, public service.
·

sunrise 3nd c.ommunion service,
Sunday, 6 a.m.; Sunday school
9:30 a.m.; worship 10:30 a.m.
and evening, 7 p.m.
Enterprise · United Methodist
Church, silent communion, 7 to 8
p.m, Easter sunrise service, 6
· a .m. with breakfast to follow ..

HEMLOCK GROVE
. Hemlock Grove C)lurch Easter
sunrise service, 6 :30a.m. 's pecial ·
music and a skit with Pastor Gene
Zopp, speaker followed by break- ·
fast at grange hall.

RACINE
The Racine United Methodist
Church will stage "Watch the
Lamb" , an Easter Drama, on Fri day night at 7:30 p.m. at the
church. The drama will be performed by members of tile
church. A simulated church ·marketplace will be held in front of
the church entrance at 6:30p.m .
Racine First Baptist Church ·
choir to present "Death, B uri a!
~nd Resurrect.ion of Jesus Christ" .
in word and song on Easter Sunday, 7 p.m. Nursery provided.

LONG BOTTOM
Long .
Bottom
united
Methodi.st Church will have Good
Friday services at 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT
Comm~nity Good Friday service in Middleport will he held at
the First Baptist Church, 211 S.
Sixth Street, al 7 p.m. It is hosted
by the Middl,e port· Ministerial
Association.
,
.
Ash Street Free Will Baptist
church, Middleport, Maundy
Thursday service, 7 p.m.; Sunrise
service, 6 a.m.; regular services ,
10 a.m. and 6 p.m.Hope Baptist Church, 7 a.m .
Sunrise service, Easter morni~g ;
breakfast to follow. ,
Faith. Chapel in Middleport ,
923 South Third Ave., Easter
weekend special services, Friday
and Saturday, 7 p.m. and Sunday,
I 0 a .m . Harry Wingler of
Coolville, evangelist.

RUTLAND
.,
Rutland Church of Nazarene,
Good Friday services·, 7 p.m. with
play, "Look at His Glorious

CHESHIRE
United Met·hodist . Cheshire
Charge,. Maundy Thursday with
holy
communion,
Cheshire
church, 7 p.m.; Good Friday,
Addison Church, 7 plir:; Sunrise
service,
Kanauga Fairhaven
Church, 6:3o\a .m.

REEDSVILLE
Eden United Brethren, State
Route 124 north · of 'Re.edsville,
will have sunrise services at 7
a. m . Easter morning .
Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, Reedsville, Easter cantata/drama, "It is Finished", Saturday and s ·u nday, 7 p.in .

By Scott Wolfe
songs or each lick on a banj o.When
This Saturday night, April 3, the he hands his banjo over to sisters
•
Cltolo
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Lewis Family and Little Roy will Miggie, Polly, or Jani ce, you can
join the "World's Greatest" Harmon- watch as hi s .body begins to , sway
Associate Profess~r
ica player, Mike Stevens in an from side to side. You know lhlij&gt;
of Family Medicine
'1
evening of Bluegrass and Bluegrass when thi s happens you're about to
Gospel Mu s ic at Southern High hear a coupleof si lly stories and
School at 7 p.m..
jokes that possibly you have heard
The Lewis Family is knpw as the before, but you will st ill e nd up
number one family of Gospel Blue- laughing 'til you cry agai11 and again.
grass, making several appearances
Audience members find them .
on the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville . selves having so much fun watching
Questlon:,~ve,ry night my lips phannacist if you .are using a non- Joining the Lewis Family will be the the shew that they may not be aware
get very .dry, \\it:I!':So does IJIY'nose. I prescription or a prescription prod- Builder's quartet from Ripley, W.Va. ,; /of the preci sion mu sicianship and
put Vicks Oil' my lips, but 'It doesn't uct in any of these categories. Often
As documented last year, local sho.ymanship right before their
seem to do·· any good. I use .saline an alternative is available that ·caus- · Racine residents Larry and Dolly eyes. This i ~ The Lewis Family way,
, Wolfe became fri ends with the it is the old-time way, and, in most
, nose drop's .(hat help for a few hours . cs less drying .
If I aw:jl(~i\ ·in the night I usu~lly
An emotional habit of constantly nationally known group.
cases, it' s the right way .
'
need to ·use both medicines again . wetting the lips, either by licking
Long before showtime , Little
Although the Wolfes have been
What'l:an I do for my dry sore 1ips them or by frequently sipping a bev- going. to bluegrass fe stivals across Roy takes all the instruments backand nase?
' •·
erage, can cause dry lips. This para- the country for over twenty years, stage to tune and acclimate them .
Answer: As I'm sure you know, doxical response occurs just as dry · they have not only become good still very focused but always pleasthe skin of the (ips is us11ally smooth hands result from frequent h~nd friends with The Lewi s Family, but ant and alway s thinking . You can bet.
and dry 'while the tissue inside the washing. The liquid washes away Jim and Jesse McReynolds and the he' s dreaming up something to pull
nose is usually moist. Neither area some of the protective oi ls of the lips Virginia Boys, and several other on someone.
should . be uncomfortable . I don't so that they dry out easily. Usually a stars including Allison Krause and
Wolfe said. '' When Little Roy is
have enough information to know protective film over the lips suc h as Union Station.
gcning ready for the .show, l'~e
which one of the several conditions · Chapstick or lipstick is quite helpful.
"Little Roy" Lewis eve n invited found its best to let him concentrate .
The most likely cause for your the Wolfes to his hou~e while they When he's found that things are in
that can cause your sym ptoms you
actually have , so I'll go over the nighuime dry lips and dry nose is were vacationing at a Bluegrass fes- order, then he's right back out in the
most common maladies in the hope mouth breathing. The m~cosa l lin- tival calletl "The Lewis Family crowd making everyone feel right at
tlj)lt you can identify your problem. ·ing of the n ose~
· us~ally moist: This. Homecoming" in Linco lnton, Geor- · ~om.e . Many people don't know he's .
A deficiency of some of the B ' ts helpful tn m stunzmg the ""that gia.
the star of the show until the curtain
Yitamins , particularly riboflavin ' is ·inhaledo
·.
Larry said, "Little Roy is as opens.
(B2) and pyridoxine (86), can c~us.,:· ..• In the .winter t~e ~?side air is :~s~­ friendly of a person , as you cou ld
. Wolfe' s relations)Jip with .the
the symptoms you descnbe, parttc ll'--- ally qutte dry. Thts desert dry alf meet. The whole family is just.a real Lewis's led to their upcoming show
larly the ·dry lips. In fact, the painful c~n dry the nasal trssues excessrvely, down to eanh type. Now, Lillle . ~oy· this Saturday night at Southern High
. lips may be among the first signs of thereby causing discomfort . Mouth even uses me as the scapegoat for · School at 7 p.m ..and 9 p.m .
this problem .
.
~reathing often oocurs as a response
The Builder's Quartet is also on
some of his jokes, You never know
Fortunately, pyridoxine deficien- to this drying in the nose and uhi- exactly what he's going to do."
. the program to play in between the
. cy is quite rare, and the diagnosis is mately results in a similar drying of
Wolfe echoed the thoughts of two Lewis shows.
even rarer since there is ·no easy test · the lips and throat. By the time you "Bluegrass Now" author Sherry
The event is sponsored by the
to measure the level of it in the body. awaken, you have developed a dry Boyd, who said, 'Tve seen the Lit- Racine Fall Festival Commillee.
Ribonavin deficiency is more com- sore nose , throat and lips.
· tie Roy Show from both sides of the Tickets are $7.00 in advance and
The best solution..for excessively stage. -As an . audience member, $8.00 at the d0or with student tickets
mon, but it still is infrequent.
.A blood test is available to .mea- dry air is the addition of moisture . you're treated to the incredible ener- on sale at $4.00 .
sure il. Vitamin supplements taken Using a vaporizer or humidifier in gy that he infuses into each word of
by mouth are all that is necessary to . the bedroom is the easiest solution.
correct either problem, but be aware . It is a simple and inei&lt;pensi ve treat-

P!:'J
•'t
0

9

,

.'Mouth breathing' can lead to
nightJjme dry lips and hose,

that taking too much B6 (over 600
mg per day) can cause serious health
problems.
.
.
. .
· Taking large amounts of vitamin

ment
. Other conditions th3!:. cause ·
swelling of the nasaltissue-.:such as .
the common condition~ ';1 _allergic

A can cause sore lips . Thif "overd9se" can occur from frequently eat- ,
ing liver or from taking large
amounts of vitamin supplements in
iablet form. If you are doing either
of these, you should stop immediat~ly and seek the advice of your physt- ·
cian,
There are several drugs that can.
cause drying of the bps and nose .
Antihistamines, antidepressants,
cancer drugs, some acne drugs and
some stomach remedies are among
the most commonly used ones.
. You should talk to your doctor or

rhinitis and vasomotor rhmttiS, can
also produce the same uncomfonable dry nose and lips,
Try a vaporizer in your bedroom
for a few days. If your symptoms
persist, go to your family doctor. He
or she can help. you find a .s olutwn.
for these problems.
··
"Fam.ily Medicine" ~ a weekly '
column. To submit guestlon~,
write to John C. Wolfe, D.O., Ohto
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Gresvenor Hall, Athens
OH 4S701.

0

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DENVER (AP) - Worried about possible Y2K problems, the men 's
ministry Pro 111 ise Keepers is canceling plans to hold rallies at state capitals
nationwide on New Year '$ Day 2000.
Law enforcement officials in several stales have «pressed concert)S
about "the prospects of large gatherings, public safety personnel needs and
too many unknowns connected w.ith Y2K, " ProO)ise Keepers' spokesman
Steve Chavis said Tuesday . .
Members of the Christian organization are instead heing encouraged to
stay at home with their families and to practice their faith there .
The so-called ''Y2K" problem occurs because many computers are programmed ta recogni·z e only the last two digits of a year and, without repairs,
niay malfunction beginning Jan. I when they might assume , it is 1900.

Patt~rns

.

SYRACUSE
Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene", Good Friday service, 7
p.m, with "The Earthen Vessel";
sunrise service, Sunday, 7:30
a.m.; breakfast to follow.

.., Guest speaker

· the event.

,

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University-Athens
• For employees in P1Jblic or non-profit
· organizations or those interested in pursuing ·
careers in those fields.
• One evening each week beginning fall
quarter 1999.
,
• Informational meetings·to ,be·held April S and 7
7:00 p.m. in Bentley ijall, Room 233.
• For more information call 740·593-4373.
•

.

.,

.

'

'·

Justin Somarvllla

Je11loa Wheeler.

SON BORN • John Edwin and
Kristin Lynn Somerville of
Shade announce the Feb. 6 birth
of a · son, Juatln Edwin, at the
Holzer Medical Canter, Galllpolll.
.
.
He weighed seven pounds, 13
ounc11. The inflnl hal 1 brother, Brandon Foreman of Shade.
Malernel grandparants are
John -Edward and Linda . Jean
Foreman ol Ltlkaland, Fie., end
palarnel granCiparen11 era John
Edward Somarvllla of Athens
and lha late Margie Paulette
Somlt'VIIla.

TO PERFORM • Jeaslca
Wheeler of Dexter lNlll be travelIng lo N- York City W!lh ·the
Kentucky Chrlatian C~lleg• con·
. cart choir lrfCI cborale In April.
The group will perform at.
. Carnegie Hall kon April 11 al 8
p.m.
choir• will be performIng "Requiem• by Maurice Duru·
fle. The · choirs are under the
dlracctlon of Dr. Mark'Daaklnl.
Ja11lca 11 1 1998 graduate of
Meigs High School and at f(en·
lucky Chrilltan Cg(laga 1Ke 11
majoring In mu9lc aducalon.
Recently 1f!!_wae accepted Into
the jlapartmant of .Music'• Out·
reech program, "Yolcatf In
Pralea. •

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FLOOR COVERING

PORTLAND
Reorganized Church of Latter
Day Saints, Portland-Racine
Road, will have an Easter play,
"The Crucifixion ~f Ch~!st", at
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Sunnse serCARPENTER
v'ice will he at 8 a.m. with a
Mt. . Union· Baptist Church, breakfast to follow. An egg hunt
Good Friday services, 6:30 p.m .; . for the children will take place .
Easter Sur\llay, sunrise service, 6 after church services.

•

.

'Floor
Coverina Sale
STOCK VINYL·
· COMERctiL LOOP

HARRISONVILLE . --: Harrisonville Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Saturday, 7:30-p.m. at the temple . Master
·
Masons welcome. .

' STIVERSVILLE - Easter pup-- ·
pet show :".ill, he presented,Thursday MONDAY
at 7:30p.m. at the Stiversviflc Com- ·
RACI.NE
Racine Village
. munity Church.
-council will meet at 7 p.Jll. Monday
at the municipal building.
· .. PO~ROY AA meeting,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
LETART - Letart Town.ship
noon , non-smoking.
trustees , Monday, 6 p .l1). office
building.
'
' ANTIQUITY - Revival at Full
'
Gospel Church of Living Savior,
SALEM CENTER - Columbia
Thllrsday, Friday and Saturday, 7 Township trustees, Monday, 7:30 .
p.m. and Sunday, 2 p.m..Pastor p.m. at the fire statiqn .
Ralph Savll!le: !!pCaker.
TUESDAY
SATURDAY '
RUTLAND
Rutland Town· • SALEM CENTER ....:.. Star ' ship trustees, Tuesday, 5 P,..m. at the
Grange 77-8, regular meeting, 8 p.m. Rutland fire station.
with potluck supper, Saturday, 6:30
p.m.

about Y2K Promise
epers cancel New Year's
Day r'all"leS 'In-state cap"ltals

~orr"led

Anderson's .

Rutland
Freewill
Baptist
Church's 13th annual all-night.
gospel sing Friday, 7 a.m., State
Route 124, Rutland. Singers will
be Cross Creek of Buffalo, W.Va.;
Builders Quartet ' ~f Ripley, W.
Va.; Singing Hands, Dunbar, W.
Va.; Jubilee Trio; Called for
Christ of West Columbia, W.Va . ; .
Jody Sue Rife of Gallipolis;
Delivered of Reedsville, and the
Gabriel Quartet of Cheshire.

---Community C*ndar·---,THI)RSDAY
TUPPERS ' PLAINS - Town
meeting; Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains School.

PICKIN' A TUNE-Hera "Little Roy" Lewis concentrates as ~
picks a tune during last year's Lewis family concert al Southam
High School.Tha Lewis Family will perform this Saturday night,
April 3, at Southern High $chool. They will be joined by Mike
Stevens "The World's Greatest Harmonica Player~· and the Bt.~ilders
Quartet, Saturday's. event Is. •ponsored by lhe Racine Fall Festival
Committee.
·
·

Members. plans ad sales
Baer, Meigs
Again thi s year Beta Sigma Phi Extension agent, will be guest
Sorority will sell advertising for the . speaker at the Adult Ba~ic and LiterMeigs County Agriculture Soci- acy Education (ABLE) program in
ety 's county fair premium list.
. Racine , April? and April 14....
. Carolyn d~ueser, who chairs the
Her topic for April 7 at rr· a.in .
project, gave \assignments to mell]; will he "Nutrition", while an April
bers of Preceptor·Beta Beta Chapter !4 she will conduct a _"Fam!IY Bud- ·
members during a receni meeting gcting" workshop whtch wrll allow
held at the Lutheran Church.
participants to prepare a famiJy budCommittees reported on other · gel. That will take place at IQ;30 and
• 26 Oz. weight .
chapter activ\ties and it was voted will last approximately an hour and
to retain the same officers and com- 15 mmutes .
.
• I OQ% Olefm Pile
in stock
minces for a~ether year.
·
The ABLE program is located in . • I4
• I2 or I5 ft. widths
Attending Jhc meeting and the the basemelu of the Racin~ ' United
• I2 ft. width
lasagna dinner were Jane Walton, Methodist \huicli on·Elm .Street, SR
• 24 Colors
• Easy care- No wax
Clarice Kraulter, Ann Rupe, Joan 124 near Souther~ H1gh School. The
Res. '1000
Corder, V~lma Rue, Carol Adams, public is invited, according "to Pat
Jane BiP.'¥~· Donha -B;rer, Norma. Neece, ABLE mstructor.
Cusl~r. , (;:~arlotti: ',Elberfeld, Car- Correction
olyn~ qrue5er, Carol ~~1(:;:ullough,
Mary and Bob Bowles . attended
Sq. Yd.
Martha ¥ cP,hail,, Jean P~l"ell, Mar- the brrthday party for Emrly Gayle. 1-===:....;:::;::;~~~:":'=-:=::::--lr.=:=:::=:::::=:~:::=;::=:I!~!S!,--garet Stewatl, Eleanor 1liomas, and Smclatr. Thetr name~ were mcor·
Reva Vaughan, ·
rectly hsted m an earh~r acco~nt of

Cross." .

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The Qa'i ly Sentinel • Page 9

.Lewis Famil-y to appear at Southern ·High
amilp
School for bluegrass, gospel music night
edioine ·:

Thursday,
April1 , 1999
.

Those working the night shift need un_
derstanding from others

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

PageS

, ,;•

and funny and sound as if he is hav - you night owls. If it weren't for you,
ing a ball, even when he has a killer the world would come to a screechheadache or the flu .
ing halt at sundown. I'm a bi\ of a :
I get home around 4 ·a .m. Mike night owl myself - preferring to
gets home 'about 5:30 a .m. We eat work late into the n'ight and sleep
'supper together and go to lied when until noon . My energy level peaks
the sun comes up. Then, the phone around midnight The phone is off
starts to ring. People think because · the hook when I retire. If people
D~ar Ann Landers: Most of the we work at night, we have the whole think l'm ," peculiar," I don't give a
world works by day and sleepS •by day free .
hoot ,
nigh!. But many people do their jobs
Some of our friends and family .
Dear Ann Landers: My 23 -year
while everyone else sleeps . police members have actually said, "You old daughter is engaged to marry a
officers, nurses, firefighters . wait- sure have it easy. You can sleep all young man I cannot stand. She
resses, truck drivers, telephone oper- day." _W heredo people get that nuny seems very happy, and that is the
ators, cab drivers, janitors, security' · idea?
most important thing, but. the relaguarils and night-shift workers . I am
. Night workers are just hke every- tionship worries n:te.
a woman who manages a very busy body else. We spend eight hours at : "Francine" used to date 'I fellow I
• bilf, which means I work late hours work, a couple of hours comm.uting adored, but they broke up. He had all
six nights a week . ·
and running errands. ·a few hours the qualities I admired. Her current
Some people have the crazy idea .. doing marketi ng, cooking and beau has none of thern. "Cal" loses
that I get paid 10 "pany." Actually; l household chores. and if we are his temper a lot . and yells at
monitor the bartenders and have to . lucky, we get six or seve n hours of Francine. I have mentioned my condecide which custom'ers have had sleep. Will you please say a few kind cerns and let her know that if he ever
enough . l rarely get to sit down . words for us night owls' We cou ld hits her, she can come to me any Meanwhile , my husband seldom · use a linle sympathy. -SLEEPLESS time .
·
.
. gets to .stapd up . "Mike" is a disc IN NEW ORLEANS
Francine is now living with Cal,
jockey. He ts expected to be cheerful
- DEAR SLEEPLESS: God bless and they have a joint bank account

Thursday, Aprll1 , 1999

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Page 10 • Th~ Daily Sentinel
NOTHING RUNS
UKEADEERE"

Pome'roy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday; Aprll 1 , 1999

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•
Thursday, April 1 , 1999

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,.,_CIItQe I 111

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llllelt
s.W:hi ... AI£

The l?aily Se11tinel.com
Meig~ High School

2 a.

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
M8 Plnacrest Drive

Gallipolis

Aaou from Gdo Auto Sales on old Rle. 3SWest

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1999 POINTS STANDINGS

1. Jeff Burton . 909
. . , . L.lborote, 107
I . Dl!k' Jarret1 1 ~ 7
• • }ftf Gotd0r1. 790 '
ll. Teu y LaOOnte, 786
I. Mlftl M•tkl, 780
1. -.my ~ ~1(1. 170
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Marto. Martin, 79 7
Mtkl Mcl.act)!tn, 781
E1tor1 s~. 780
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Ridenour
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4 . ( 3)
5. (4)

8. (51
7. (61
8 . (91

9. (-)

10. (10)

eduCated drtver. After earnln&amp; a marketlflC

Not a big Te11.as fan

at hill local opeedway by ,1981, a!&gt;d by 1987.
he was ch8mp6on of NASCAR's Winston West
Series . .
What's more, Uttle haa a sense or numor:
He lists hla tevortte prol'esslonel atnlete as
·~Racet'.•
.

-

-

MtY 2

Cllif«nnl SoNctwly

May 15

RICtmond lnlemelloflal Raceway ·

Rlenmona, va.

Concold, N.C. '
Concord. N.C.
DIMI", Del .

. . .IOWN: Born anct railed In Spokane
waon .. INosln C!Wiotte, N.C.

pole (none), win (none)

~ Motor~.,.

Chanottt Motor ~IY

.11.1'1111

OMr DciM'IIIflltmiUonll $plldny

JlN 13

Mlc:hlp-1 Speed'lila,-

(llkt• race)

Brad\~ .

J\.N!IO
·21
S.IIS Point AICIWIY

D~l

WIIA~ DillS DRMNI'1'011 YOUR CARIER'I

M~an ~lrf

and robblna

Mich . •

••

the Ctr - thOII Ji'Ptl Of ,
thlfiCa. Those ore tnt little
thlnt• than teke1time, but as
fer •• the care ard the
en&amp;lnea, they're the same

lor me. Mark (Martin), Jell
!Burton). Johnny (Benoon)
and Kevin (Lepace).' ,

tho lltO 01 tlll!i WHk'l
,iu~e• Grind NIIIGMI
~~~
e.Th•f.OOl

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Daytona?

• HOT: Rookie Ton y Stewart,

...

'3. WhO was the first man at Daytona to sweep the pole.
(:luallf)'lng race and 500?

who aets bette r every week.·

.

8 NOT: Rookie Buckshot
JoneS, no flnls~ s higher

l96l U! SlJiQOH IIBQQJ(j 'E : ~961 Ul 91QIU~UOO
PJO.;I ll UIIUIIIOH ~JOI.lS ' Z :lPJII.fUJiiil'3 9"i1 Q ' l

than 29th.

SHJMINY

'

from pork-lnd·belns, cnc ker&amp; and"
a Coke u) steak and lobster and
caviar. Junior reltlike he really
didn't fit in anymore, and he lost a
JUSTIN, T""" - JeW
lot of the interest·llult had kept hil)l
prtsent ly Chad Little 'a crew chief,
spent yea rs ....urkin111 in thll capacity soinv. He wour1d up in a sltuatklfl
where he had a lot or outside mler·
with Darrell Waltrip on Junior
Johnson's team, and he had some
,csts with his farm 1nd • desi re to
have a family.
·
intcrcslin B remarks .earlier,this

.

N11hYIIIe Felflt!lundt,

J

tftero woo 1111ln 1814

202 W Second Stfeet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•·

"Chad (Liule, Hammond I
current driver) spends a lot of time
stu4 ~in&amp; put ..-.cc rt.(Ords, analyz.In&amp;shod: (absorber) craphs, c:ritiquin&amp;his own drivlnJ, Iistena a
lot, and wclalis all the facton well.

Ha...-

week conccr:nin&amp;lcccndary fi¥uret
and their declines.
· Johnson left lhc sport , sell ing his
team in the 1995-96 otr-scasog
after several yean or d«linc.
&lt;tJunior i:C)t ca u ~ t up in two I
things," sa id Hammond ... No. I, lbc
politics of the bi.ISineu changed

WJ~Cuproce

uernendously. Junior Is n01 really a
Rashy guy, he kccpu hin&amp;l on a
simple level, and tile spon wenl

Dear NASCAR This Weolc,
1 would l•e 10 know why ~en lit
in their e111 will belmea, on ~ lhe
nttk&gt;nal is boin&amp; plt)&lt;od.

-f. ~

Mualdl. Mklt.

7J~e drlvm don t W "'ucll
choice. nw sdwdlll~ tJl mostlmeb
dicrolu 1M natiottol anthem is p/Q;W
)rm ~ tM Pngi~tn UTI! jlml. wtt:l lt
ttks quite 11 bit ofpn!pONiion IJd
stropped if!Ju.a cw mj!ly. n.eyoo not
illlt!!fJ tul)' Ji.flf!.fJI«&lt;. For ~
~ thU lw hem tlw! stiWiotTJ

*'

~P """'Y

Adve.rtise

o~ This page

Call 992-2155
Dave Ext. 104
Ka~hy Ext. 105
For more information

_..

Fan Tips

,

• Rate fans C8ll tl'lbehirdlhe
-lot Joe Nemechet&lt;'s No. 42
ClloYtYia the BeliSoiAh ....
Stocl&lt; c... Rate at the ()Dill)lllly'o

BeliSDW&gt; RaclrC- slte:
-...beliSOUtltoom/ractrc. Tho
otl)OCt It the -~~to OOIIOCt as
many t88m '*" bel:lra tln1e MS
OL4:. 011 SlickS and mstactes cause

He studies hi aown llrenatr. and
wcalmcascs u well as thelcam'l.
Darrell had eonen to the point
where those things weren't impor·
lant to him."

.. lr you•rc not focused. you're not
succeuful ."
And Wsllri p. whose hall-of-fame
career 1w Decn in decline for m0$1
of this decade?
"Darrell lied aotten to lhe poim
where he pretly much had a mindset of what he wamcd to do in a I&lt;M
of 11ituations, and il made it difficult
to Inject new Ideas a,nd develop new
V.'lys to se1 up a car," saki Hammond.

xcaw

X

ANOTHER FUN FACT&gt;

M1n Kenseth has appeared in two
Winston Cup racn •and posled ,
top· I0 fi nishes bolh timn. He

aubSiiluted roc: Bill Elliou at Dover
Jasc year.and finished 1ixth. After
rtli~inJ; Bobb)lllbonte, Kerueth
' linished IOth IIIla year 1t
Darlinaton.

X

WOULD YOU BELIEV£7
Steve Grissom, wtlo does not current ly have a Cup ri de, fin ished in
the top I0 in boch pm'ious Tens
Motor Speedway race1. !lob~
Labonte and Terry Lablmle extended that 1tn:ak by a year thi ~ yea r.

OH YEAH! Declared third·
plac:e qu.lifler Sieve P1111: '1'e xu
is PcnlllOil COUnlry and 10 &amp;et I
good run here is real importlnt
to us."
.
lfTexas i1 Pclnnzoil country, then
why I! it not named Texoll?

afld·sori combln~on

helped live Terry
Labonte hii'/Jr~ vlotory
ot the aeuJnat Texas
Motor Speedway.

total·web

'

a......, tiY flr.t In our .....m

· Call Now And Sign·Up!
675·3398 or 1·800·766·0553
I

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CABLEVISION
COMMUNICAl'IONS

'

Marketin g Edu ca~ioh i~ designed
to be a co-operati ve work hands on
program. Students study the practices
and princ iples of mark eting in the
classroom and then apply that knowledge in the wo,rk ·place setting.
Marketing l class is slrut tured
around a modern text book 1hat
explains the practices and princip les .
of marketin g. This helps the students
understand the basic ideas and concepts of promotion; pricing and distribution Jhal marketers use today,
The students will also have a bener
. PLACES THIRD - The Melge High School
right, seated, tJ. King, Ben Crane, ' Wesley
understa ndi ng of their place in the
quiz team finished third In the TVC Conference
Thoene and Ryan Pran, and standing, Leah ·
marketing cycle, production tO concompetition this year. Judge ·Bob Buck Is
· Lonce, Jackie Buck, Mike Williams, and Shawn
sumption ,
coach for the .quiz team composed of left to
Tibbitts.
,
Marketing ll cla ss is · centered
around the work pl ace, success and
applying whal we have lea rned. Stu·
dents are presented with many dif"For 90 years, his was the domiOXFORD, Oh io (AP) - Fa ns of
Supporters of the Miami Univerferent work si1ua1ions each and every
William Holmes McG uffey wanl the .sily professor say McG uffey 's read- nant schoolbook," said Beverly Bach,
'day, so we prese nt solutions lhat wi ll
registrar of·the McGuffey Museum ln
lead to success and promotion. Stu- U.S. Postal S~rvice lo issue a com- ing texis from the 1830s taught fron- 'Oxford, about 50 miles north Qf
dents are also very active, in plann ing memorali ve stamp honorin g the Ohio tier children and conainued to influ Cincinnati.
,
and developing the Meigs County educatl)r whose reading texiS were ence generations of Americans.
Thi s won't be the first time
used
to
teach
American
children
f~r
.
Since
I
836;
McGuffey's.
Ec
lectic
Vi siaor's Guide in conjun ction 'with
Readers have told more than 122 mil - Me,Guffey supporters have sought a
the Meigs C.ounty Chamber of Com- decades.
.
"
If
they
can
put
out
an
Elvis
Presli on copies, becomi ng Ame rica's stamp honoring the educator.
merce. .
1971
,
fans
tried
10
get
a
stamp
In
Co-O perati ve Work is the labora- ley slamp, then they certai nly can, most famous teaching tool,'according for the anniversary of McGuffey;s
IOry where the students get their real make one for McGuffey," said fa n lo the Ohio Almanac .
death {n I 873 .
·
on-the-job training. Most sludents Helen We.ssel of Fairfield,
work in Meigs County at local businesses, where lhey ge t valuable.work.
experience and contribute ao the
community. Many sludents are very
successful and will continue on working for .the same company after graduation.
, Marketing is more than just se ll•
ing, it is the tol~l process of planning,
pricing, promotion and di stribution.
Each of these areas have many job
classifications whic!l are all important
to lhe production-consumption cycle
that is vital lo the world and Meigs
Counly.

~A

guitar class in p/ac;e---.;.,

·DECA.students
place in contest
During recent DECA Compelition, the M~igs students fini shed
wiah honors.
Brandy Gangwer pla~ed first in
Entrepreneurship Partic ipating; Paul
Ditty and Chris Gilkey, lhird in Travel and Touri sm Managcmena team
event; Jason Prea5t and Josiah Raw"
son,. fifth in Sporls/Entertainmcnt
Marketing learn event; Robert Johnson, fifth in Math/Communicati ons
Test; and Leslie Richard, fifth in Mar·
keting Management Individual event
Students in the Marketing Educalion Class al Meigs Vocational School
are members of DECA, a local, dislrict, state, nati onal and international
organi zation.
DECA~ stands for Distributive
Education Clubs of America, and was
developed with promoting stude nls
and their skills.- -

Something new for Meigs High School this year Is a guitar class taught by Toney Dingess,
instruml!htal music lnstruclor. First offered In January, the class is a new elective an~ Is being .
taught in the bandroom afternoons. Students receive a half credit for participation. The claas
now has nine 11tudents. Dingess said that as with any new unddrtaklng, equipment and supplies are needed. He lias asked that anyone having an old guitar around gathering dust, drop
it off at the bandroom where It will be refurbished and put to use by an Interested student without an Instrument.While the current class Is all boys, Dingess emphasized that "girls ara wei·
come." Now in the guitar claas are left to right, seated on the floor, Rusty Stewart, Robert Klein,
ahd Tom Burson; and Dwight Icenhower, Sean Fahner, Josh Lynch, Seth Rawson, and Rose
Savage, and Nick Michael.

i'

Advertise on this page

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
.Modems!

'

the help of his father.
Fred, durlna the ~fl·
aeeson, and ,the father·

ADVERTISERS!!

9f you Have 'lhe Need for Speed•..
we've go~ itlll

.' ''
''
'

\

·-~ 11 ,......11 , 1td

AITE'NTION

AITENTION

ADVERTISERS!!

SINGING THE OLDIES - Bonne Smith and Dwight
them In one
are among the vocalists In the musical. Pictured
of the scenea are Kristina Kennedy, Rebecca Smith, Melissa Wer,ry, Jolih lynch, Andrew Kitchen, Melissa Holman and Jen'nlfer
Heck.
-·
'·

the Cll to lkld Ot&amp; or control.

Uttle's crew~··~ comments o.n decline of Johnson, Waltrip
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

"""''"
X

••••••••••••

NASCAR's Bu sch Grand National Division?
2. Who won tne first Qualifying race ever held at

••••••••••••
.

,

1llmlksp -

1. Who won the first race ever held In

VJho'sNot

.-r

.Leo's Cruise
&amp;'Ira,vd

··• R4 ftorcl POltJ -

j

·~·H:,t:.:.

a

'

''I

how I drive; ,how you aet up

'

NAIICAII T1lll Woilll•1 Dutton ......... opinion:
• Just call Nemeehek a Pollyanna. He never makes l'f'lltake
and never felts to notice everyooe else's. Funny how he'a
n..., held &amp;n)llody up. AI&amp;O Iunny tow he's
won

niM NAII(lAR' r - l l t ,

800·795-1110

a•

·T~i dllference 11 JuM every.
body atopPI"I up to the next
level, aoo thot tokes a lot of.
time: l~tle tiny nuencn'
·
wntn you Dlllid iour cer1:
how IlCht you bu ua them:
whore xou put your ... llht: '

c...d Ultlo ........ - - 1111....

.

Call us for all your
travel needs

. 740~992-4233

'

TIAM AND Till- ()f;
MARliN AND iiUIINIIt ·

1

• FROM THE ARCHIVES

'

thati &amp;real rw:Ma~ion.
DrMn (lOin&amp; 160-170 """ . .
f~&amp; R...... ,...... willie wtrd).
ma canln bock of &lt;hem. (lhey)
ldUIIIy ~ ca~t up in their own
rouldle pme.
llti&gt;Wo a NASCAR member in the
. Modirted DMaioo of'New Jcrxy in
1950-51, with a Ford lftdthcna OMC
en&amp;inc in. &lt;M-y, I.., praently .
member of the A.IIIMc Collt
Okltimm Ricin&amp;
lloo .....
Ci')11;11 RM1t Fla.

DlmRINCI KIWIIII YOUR

~

'

~

WIW~JIOIITMI

Joe Nemechek v.. Everyone 111111 on the track
~emec:hek tlkel n .. his personal auty to evaluate fila co~
lea&amp;ueo on the Winston Cup circuit. SUnaay's comments were
IYi&gt;icat: "Some ca.- •• ao slOW that they Just keep Pttl111 In
tne w"' and ever)1)ody aeto bDttlenecked... , That's Juot new
n aoes. Peopie hiMI cat 10 use tllelr brains a little bn ·rnori!:

a race.•

Loo""'-

IJeW 1114 WO'd 8-.) ....,med each
.... ""'did not- each ......

eoo fPit you out ana IoriO!
about you.•

FEUD OFTHE WEEK

''fouglr ,a.l bfrirltoC

Dear NASCARThil Week:,
in
lhe The"""
; . . - beeluoe
... _&lt;UIIy
_

f

beca1J18 It can throw )IOU beck

Ron Hornaday won the season's second event at Phoenix
International Raceway, edjllng longtime rival ~ ac k Sprague.

-

MIS

.
'

·SQUARING OFF "- Matt Justice, left, Sarah Larkins and Franco' Romuno square ofJ In one scene of the musical. Looking on
are Ryan Ramsburg, David Bottomly, Shawn Tibbetts, Shari Wright
and Jason
Randy Hanning Is also In the 11cene.

X

to pay

"Ricl111 II • tllr111)' th~
need tD be verr humble 1 ,

CRA"SMAN TRUCK SERIES

•••

P~ter

WJQifT YOU?

Mat11: Martin extended"his all-time record for BGN victories with his
36th In the Coca-Cola 300 at TMS. By all rights. the vie1ory should
nave 110ne tcrMartln's youthtul ·ward Matt Kenseth. The rain-delayed
·and shOrtene&amp; Blllsch Grand National race lasted long eQOugn for
the Wisconsin driver to demoristrate the clear supefiorlty of his No.
17 Chevrolet. -Instead, lo(.enseth flnlstled 17th. -It was our lucky
day,· said Martin. "Matt Kenseth had us beat. b ~f~ luck beat him.·

...

'

wawiNYOII!I c -

BelCh, AI.

FROM LAST WEEK

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

.

him by hJs lt'fJN!fatller ~
1te wt&amp;J u slfUIJ/ cJri/d, bealwe 1M boy

Paul one week. It's always
been a stru&amp;ale; ben II')
the Bu•ch Sert11 we had a
lot or hard times ••

Terry Lat;Joote. orlglnall)' from Corpus Christi, Texas. charmed his
native-state fans with a victor)! In the Prlmestl!r 500 at Texas Motor
SpeedWay. Labonte outdueled Dale Jarrett to claim the 21st victory
of his career. The r~e. ende&lt;J under caution after Labonte' s cnevrolet edged ahead qf Jarrett's Ford with 111aps to go.

113 W, 2nd Sltttt,
Pomeroy, OH 45789
omce: 992-5479

i.:ltmokt. 11te name "Bwia~tot .. Wilt

giwlf b

nie. My whole career has

WINSTON CUP SERIES

·

'=-DO

be en alwa'ys undert1n1nced

&amp;OOkl)fl, MICh.
lriltol, Ttm.

Bnltol Motor~

»C

&lt;Xp&lt;rimad-,..,....,

Kevin Lepaao. It'~ new to

$pHOwl')', Ind.
WIOdnl Gll!n, N.Y.

.,...... Gltn IIQrnlllGnlll '

from Bu.tclr Grand NtJtlnw.IJ to WlmJo~
Cup, and Bud«~ llltll i.u tmm ~
pains. By
. lite tw~y. M drtveJ 112 ltHrll«. 1t01 a

Martin , Jerr Burton, Johnny Benson and

LOudon, N.H.·
Lon&amp; PoAci, P1.

lndl~ls Motor Sptt(twlrf

!t is difficull to ·qpgrudt a 1a1nt

~

oI

Sooom1, Calli'.

--..
NeW H.mpshlit
1nttrni\IOflll
5ptt&lt;tw'1 '
Pocoflo ~~-- ~· .

H-n,Md.

.,

CAIIIIR 11111111: 181otarta, 0 POitl, 0 .,
wins. 1101&gt;11vt ft~llh , 12 ~101, more then
$3.1 milliOn In career eamlnp

LGfC !lOAd, Pl.

)IJnf

,

..

Fans push for McGuffey stamp

c,.. ..- •• "..,.

FllliTS: Start (June 1, 1986, at Rtw.-lde), ,,

ForU'It. Clllf.

Mar 22

MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC - Hanging around a place with a juktibox waa a popular sport of the·'SOli. A scene from that time will
be depicted In a Meigs High. School musical production April 23
and 24 by, from left, Stefani Pickens; Aly8on Patterson, Jennifer
Lambert, Matt Juaitlce, Ben Crarie, Bridge Vaughan an,d T_J. Kln,g.
Trlcia Davis Is aleo In the groUp;

Dear NASCAR Thii\Veck, '
Whal\ li1e deal ~ Bucl&lt;Jhot
Jones no1 qua!Jfyina f« Dt:y1on1 tnd
Roc:kinahlm? I thou&amp;ht he YoOUid have
I &amp;ubltlneill implct on the Winston
a., circuit. 1was impreued with him
in li1e Bulcil s.riet, ""' he . . &lt;he
......li1e Olrin&gt;lel,lhe · ""'
hel not qutlif\'inl. A... """"dM! he
get the name "Buc:Uho('?

"I 've ne~Jer been In thil ·lltuatlon
.befqre. havlnl teemme~es like. Mark

~lit. VI.
Ta!JaOe&amp;e, Alii

May. J0

,

35

WftiOoooa

Br11tol, Tenn.

.Tallade&amp;l!l St1J?81'S[ltl8CtwiJV

Au&amp;-115
q . 22
foliJ.. 28

But Little has never practiCed law. The onetime all&lt;:lty runnln&amp; baCk was track Champion

1999 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

""'H 25

record: Mike Bliss, Ford,
11. 1996
NObllle: Ron Hornada~ .
Bliss. Bick,le and Spra&amp;ue are
Where: Evergreen Speedwa)l, the previous wlnller&amp; at this
Monroe, Wash.
.648-mlle Oval track.... This Is
Wlttn: Saturday, APril 3
the 100th rae~ l.n series
Defendlnl c..,mplon: Jack
history, anCI each of the fl11e
Sprague
drivers who have competed In
Quall~ln• reCOfd: Rich
· every race Is ell&amp;lbte for a
Bickle, Chevrolet. 100.397
. $100 .000 bonus for wlnnlna
moh , May 9 , 1997
this year' s event.

Fast, Friendly
Service
949-30S9

81.286

CAR: No, 97 John Deere ford T• ...,,,.
lltUe ifaduated from GoiUap Unl\lerslty's law'
owned t&gt;Y Jack Roush
.school.

Still leads points

BI\IIOI Motor Spetdwtt
Mtli1Jn1VIIIt $pHdWiy

o\uC,. 7

deifoe from Washlneton State Uniwrslty,

Showed his courage

I.Pfll 11
Apll 18

' ..,
July 3
11'.
JuiV 215

Chad Little Is prObably NASCAR's most

Crashed while leading
Mark Martin
Doli Jorrott
Due to win
Joromy Mayftold Drove through the pack
Ward Burton
Bad luck b!t him
Back In tune
Rusty Wollace '
Tarry Lllbonto
Home--state h~ ro
. SIJ&lt;th again
Tony Stowort

-•

"ec. mph, May

CAAFTIMAN TRUCK
&amp;ERIU
Comlnl u~ NAPACARD 200 ,

atiii-Joaae(2onAprll l5), Haloy(1)

NASCAR ThiS Week

•weekiV ranklngs by NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton.
Last week' s ranklna ls In parentheses.·

1. 11) Jeff Gordon
2. (B) , Bobby Lllbonte
3. (2) Jeff Burton

mDh , March 16,

•

__ Chad Little

Spr~p. 272

GrCiil Biffle, 271

Jitlt a.wn. 587

•

record : Mike
Mclaughlin, Chevrolet, 82.972
mph. March 15. 1998
Nottblt: This Is the series'
elg,hth appearance On the
.596-mlle trac k .... No one h a~
ever won th is race more th an
once .... A Ford has ne~~e r won.
... Nashville native Casey
Atwood sat on "the pole for ta,st
year's race.

N.C.~

• · PROFILE··· •

m

Kellin C~lnl~. 288

l.ljOit • .694

Ktm . . . .. 893
Jason Kelltf. 690

10. · ~ ~ ~. 110

U 3 ,566

'

Aa~t

,.lck CrlJWford. 297

oolo .....dlk,. 7118

t . Mike Skinner, 734

See us foi Your Stihls
Power Tools &amp;
,. Accessories

· Ron HMnadav, 350
Stacy Compton/ 330
MOw Houston. 3:10
Mille WIIIICt, 301

JeU Borton. 80S

1996.

NATIONAL

Coml•a up: BeUSouth
Mobility 32()
Where: Speedway USA,
Nash¥i lle, Tenn·.
When: Saturday, April 3
Detendln• champ4on: Mike
McLaughlin
Trtc:k qutllfyln&amp; ret:ord:
S~erl lnll Marlin, Chevrolet ,

2 p.m. • Saturday • CBS

• lr!"'k Strltl, NAPACARD 200

,

QAAND

ON THE SCHEDULE

0

SR124
Racine, Ohio

aaoeL .......

11

Marketing
Education,
hands-on·
.
program
at Meigs

•

.II )'IIIW ... e I YIP

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Call 992-2155
Dave· Ext. 104
··Kathy Ext. 105
For more info~mation

"

IMPERSONATORS TO PERFORM- Featured In the musical will
be Ben Fowler as Buddy Holly, and Rusty Stewart as Elvis Preslay.

Vaughan's
Speech, drama c(ass
S
ermarket
returns to era when
.
'

.

.'oldies' were new

"Swingin' into 'the Oldies" will be lhe theme of Celia McCoy's ~enlor
speech and dram a classes this spring.
•
The annual production will take pl ~ce on April 23 and 24 al 8 p.m. in
the Meigs High Schpol audilori~m . Admission w,ill be S2 for studen.ts and
$4 for adul.ts and tickets may be purchased at the door.
"The Students in the classes have been working hard .to create costumes
and props lhat fit in with the 5ds era....complete wilh poOdle skins, bob·
by socks. leather j ackets and motorcycles," said McCoy. She also noted
that there will be two special guests who are sure to spark a memory for .

the audience. .

.

•·

.

1

~

· Rehear~ai s began the first week in March. McCoy has been assisted.
wiah the music by Toney Dingess, ins.trumental music instruciOr. A pit band
has been organized and is comprised or Mamuder bank saudents with
Becky Zuspan on piano. I hey will be providing instrumental music for
the presentation.
·

•

·I General
Hartinger Parkway.
: 992·3471 · . .

.RUTLAND

BOTTLE GAS
Supporting all thtt area .
schools &amp; youth.
Stop In arid say "HI;'
to Dave or Herb.

742-2211

HOME
NATIONAL

COOLSPOT
CONVENI~NCE STORE .
Eye! .: Groceries - pen
· Family Restaurant
Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
667-6100 Store
667-6101 Restaurant .
·o wner: Bryan White

•
·R&amp;G •••
Feed -Supply
"Stuff" for Pets
Farm Animals • Stable
Joe Evens, Owner

992·2164

· 333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740)992;.6472

BANK
Racine 949-221
. 0
Syr·acuse 992-6333

0 liio !Rjver
'

.

'.Bear }
Company ·
. 992-4055

''I

Dow•i•g ChUds
Mull•• Musser
l•sura•c•
111 E- 2nd,

Pom.rov

1182-3381

OliO CUUIUY IIDIP

,,

�•
I

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

c-----~~======~==~~~~~~~r=:=~~]1=:==~~~~ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~~~~-=~W~I~LD~W~O~O~D~G~A~RD~E~N~C~LU;B
DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY •
Membera of the Wildwood
Gerden Club recently celebrated
the group'• diamond (60th)
annlverllry at the Racine Public
Library.
The club was formed In February, 1938, at Foreat Run and
Hlec1ed the forgl!l· rM-not as Ill
club flower, the maple a1 the
club trM and, aa the club bird,
the robin'.
The club 11 the third oldelt In
Melga County being formed
alter the Middleport and
Pomeroy clubs which ware
eatabllehed In 1935.
Memberahlp duea In 1938
were eetabllahed at so centa.
The club currently has nine
membera end hal ae Ita projecta
the Racine Poal Office and
Gllmqre Cemetery.
·
Dr: Frank . Porter waa the
gueat speaker at · the club'a
anniversary mMtln.g. He ·spoke
on herba.
•
Shown are, from left, long·
time membera Mary K. Rouah
and Kathleen Scott, dlughtera•
In-law of founding membera Etta
Roush and Minnie Scott, and
Evelyn Hollon. Roush Ia also tile
group 'a sole eurvlvlng charter.
member.

HONORED - Past regenta· of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, were honored at the recent 91st Charter Day :luncheon. Honored were left to right, seated, Rae
Reynolds, 1985-87 and· 1989-91; Pauline Atklna, 1997·99; and Anna Cleland, 1991·93; and ttandlng,
Phyllis Skinner, 1965-67; Betty Milhoan , 1987-89:. Patricia Holter, 1995•97; Eleanor Smith, 1993·95; June
Ashley, 1983-85; and Mary K. Yost, 1979-81. ·
·
·

Ooops! 53 years later, magazine corrects definition
of 'blue inoo/1'
..
By TOM

~IRCHOFER

Associated Press Writer
BOSTON ( AP) - A 53-yea!BJld
crro r'over the term "' blue moOn " has

JOUrnal isls red in the face.
S~y &amp; Telescope magazine has
aJmitted il made an error in an .a rti cle wlm h said " blue moon" referred
to the seco nd full moon within the
same month .
··1 hate 111 adm.it k " sa id Roger
Sin nntt , associate editor of Sky &amp;
Telescope, who blamed the goof on
an an)atcur a.ostronomer, Jam es Hug h

on Feh. 1·9, 2000.
Although Sky &amp; Te lescope 's ·edt tors think the mi stake by Pruett , of
Eugene , Ore., led tQ the modern rni sdefim ti on of "h lu c moon."· it 's
unclear where .lhc Maine Farmer 's
Alma nac came up with the rule.
The ;ilmanac ,' put out by Augusta,
·Maine-based pnn tc r Charle s E.

Na sh &amp; Son, continued publication
at least throu gh the mid-1950s but is
now defunct, satd Peter Geiger, editor of the unrelated Farmers'
Mmana10 in Lewi ston, Maine.
Though Prucn, who died in 1955,
neve r lived to see hi s mistake corrc~ted , the amateur astrOnomer's

defi nition may endure nevenheless.

at THE OHIO RIVER BEAR CO. we'r~
ready for spring with our beautiful
BUNNIES &amp; hilarious HARES!!

Pruett.

Pruett wrote a 1946 piece for the
magazine after appare ntl y misintcrrrctmg a compl ex 1937 anicle in the
Maine Farmer's Almanac which

the )ec~nd full moon within the·
same month . .
The mistake went unnoticed for
decades . A 1980 National Public
Radio story about blue moons used
th e wrong definiti on and the board
game Trivial Pursuit repeated the
error in 1986.
.
Sky &amp; Telescope, based in Cam bridge, discovered the ecror"when it
was working on an an ide about how
January and March of this year fea·lured . what would have been two
blue moons .
But by the
revised ussetl
definition
Wednesday's
much-disc
moon,
was blue- less. For .the record , the
·
ne xt by-the-book blue moon will be

992-2156

·-~-------------------- ..
I
I
I

Bra k·eDrum·s&amp;
R0t ors T
. urned

I

I
I
1
I
I

with the purch.ue ef ..... or
In and Sll the · 119 W. Second St.

992-2139

Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE II hlrlby given ·
thai on 811lird1y, April 3,
tiM, at 10:00 l.m., I public
1111 will btl held 11 211 Walt
Second Stflll, Pomeroy,
Ohio; The F1rmar1 B1nk
and· S1VIng1 Col!lplny
Pllrklnglot, to Hll tor caah
111

'

I

'

11 ~:!u~~:;:~:3~::~:
and
' I 1·Saving•
Company,

•-------·---------------.1
MilT• - n

$•1099

99

I

Pomeroy, Ohio, r•••rv••
the right to bid 11 thl1 lila;
1nd to withdraw the above
collltar•l prior to eale.
· Further, The Fll'mlfl Bank
and 811/lng Comp1ny
raMrvee the right to reJICI
1ny or 111 bide 1ubmlttld.
Further, th1 1bova collllarlll
will be lOki In t~ condition
It 11 In, with no axpreu or
Implied WIITinllll glv1n.
turth1r tnlorm1t1on,
contact Shell• 11 740-882·
2138 extenelon 122.

'l1 (4) t, 2,

Public Notice
THE FOLLOWING
ORDINANCES WERE
RECENTLY ENACTED BY
THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT: .
Ordln1nca 04-911 111 ordl·
nence imandlng orcllnlnce
number 131D-H lnd IIC•
lion t310.911 ol the
Mlddl1port oodltlld ordl··
rllnc••· Thl1 laglllltlon
111111 lh1t the dtldllna lor
p•ylngllndlord (rentiQ par·
mit IMI lholl be Fabru1ry
28 ol ••ch
. Ordinance 05-911 the annual approprlltlon• orcll·
nenca, an ordinance 111111lllhhig 8pproprl1tlon1 with·
In IICh lund.
A copy ot thiN laglllltiVI
documanll ••• on fila 11 the
Vlll•u• or Mlddllport
Clerlr/Tra•liurer•e office 1nd
avolllble for public lnlpac· .
lion.
Bryan Sw1nn
Cllrk/Tflllurar
(4)1, 8 2TC

v•••·

Public Notlco

Public Notice

All Zenith Product8
TV's- VCR'8

10% off

Sl:RAT£H &amp; DENT SALE
Frigidaire Electric Dryer
239"
S.Cu. ~t. Chest Freezer
................... 519999
.
Tappen Delx Gas R,ange ........,.........5349"
.........;........ 5

All Dinning Room

20% off

Pictures - Mirrors
&lt;:urlo!ls &amp; Gun .£ablnets

All Bedroom Suites

20''· off

20% off

All Sale Items are Cash a Carry
. Utillted
to In Stock
.
. .Products

F

Why shop Ingels?

.

.

All Restonic &amp;

• Good Product Mix
~ · Knowledgeable Staff
• In-house Service .
• Easy Financing l'erms
• Locally Ow.ned for 40 Years'
• Brand Names

Spring Air Bedding ·

10 to 30% off
Four•' Drawer Chests

Your Hometown Dealer!
~ CredHTerms ·
[]

01\\j

-

sagoo .

106 North Second Ave.
Middleport. Ohio 457110

(740) 1112·2835
'

1·1100-420-55111

STATE OF OHIO OFFICE OF
THE AUDITOR
CASH BASIS SUMMARY
PUBUCNOTICE
FINANCIAL REPORT POR
NOTICE II hereby given
thai on Boturday, April 3, THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED
DECEMBER 31, 19118
tiM, 11 11:00 1.m., 1 public
iiiiiDDLEPORT VILLAGE,
ule will btl !laiC! at 500 E11t
MEIGS COUNTY
M1ln Strnt, Pomeroy, Ohio·
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
457118, to Hll lor 011h the
TYPES
following co1111aral;
REVENUE.RECEIPTS:
1878 MARAUDER TRAVEL
RECEIPTS
TRAILER 308223
Local Tax11 .......,741 ,On'
The Farmer• Balik and
lnti'110VOrnmonlll
SIVIngt
Comp1ny,
Pomeroy, Ohio, rtMrve• Aevenue ...............::.. 122,ete
Charg•• for
the right to bid 11 thll Mil,
1nd to withdraw the llboYI S.rvloaa ................... 118;087.
Ph11e,IJcenM1,6
colleteral prior to 11le.
Further, The F•rmo·, . Bank P•rmlta.......................54,7"
MlacllllniOiil........ 12,554
1nd Slvlng Comp1ny
r...rv11 11M right to reject TOTAL RECEIPT8 ... 8t3, 183
EXPENDITURE
or 111 blda IU!imlttld.
DISBURSEMENTS:
l' l'tuitt1ar;· the 1bova oolllllrll
biiOid In the condition DISBURSEMENTS
It II In, with no axpre• or · CUITint:
Blcurlty of P1r1ona 6
Implied W1rr1ntl11 given.
For lurth1r lrllorm1t1on, Property ...,............... 380,578
Public H11lth
contiCI Shllll It 740-882•
Bervlcee .....................t4,001
· 2138 axten11on 122.
Bille Utility
(3) 31 (4) ,,.2,
servtca1 ....................... a, 1118
3tC
Tranaportltlon ....... 84,883
General
.
Govarnmant .............182,824
Debt Service .......... 80,8211
Card ot Thenka
TOTAL
.
DISBURSEMENTS ...780,192
Toll! Racalpll ovar/(undal')
Tlae Family of
DllburHmtnll ........ 142,9111
Jeilifer Ro•e
· OTHER PINANCING
SOURCES/(USE8)
Bird SeUers
Trenalara-ln
............73,1588
· who died in a ear
&lt;Jcclderu on 2-14-99
In Memory

would lilce lo thanle
et1eryone who braulflat
"'food, comforted "'
in our linN of •orrow &amp;
ft?r all lhe
monelary IPil•·

We would.&lt;Jlto lllce
. to 1hanle ..U the
ftrefilht,ra,
I
par-die•, &amp; po/ke
olflura who tJIIiltetl,
T'lutnlu lo c.........a... .
FuMrol HorJUI for th•
..fonderful Jab
they do,.., ,.
·A1ul Special Thanlu ta
SIJI. Jeffrey S~hoU far
tdl1he linN &amp; effort he
put in thll

c.a.•.

The Se~n FamUr

'

'

' .JUIT 1M TIME FOR 8PRDfG REPADW
AGA GAS, INC. IS .OFFERING A IPECIIL ON OUR
pLINDER PACKAGES

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT · A
CYLINDER , Af;A WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS fiEf ,UIS AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP ,.US THE CHANCE TO ltEGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY 1\T THE
END QF
PROMOTION. THIS IS~ IAVIIIG~
Of U, FO $ f00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
. CYLINDERS ·YOU SELECT. PLEASE · CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL ,AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WILL
END JUNE 21, 1999.

. In .M(IIIory of

Neva M. Grimm
on her 84th birthday
Aptlllst

Happy Birthday Dellrest
Mother In that belltJenly
home above Whose rmtle :
was made out of sunshine
WbOse heart Ullll mllde of

pure gold your birthdays .
wt/1 com1 and go But our
love and trU!ttUJrles ofyou

wt/1 never fade or grow
old

.:'
Your loving family

Public Notice

Tr•n•tari-Out .... (104;5114)
TOTAL OTHI!R FIN.
SOURCES/(USES) .. (31 ,01 8)
ExCIII Racelplllnd
Other Flnlnclng Source•
Ovar/(Undar) Expand. D11b.
&amp; Other UMI/Nit .... tt 8,873
Fund Cnh B111nca
J1nutry 1................. 238,828
l'und C••h B1l1n"

RETIRED
Summ1ry ol lndebtadnael
Mortg1ga Ravanua28,01t
RIYinUI Antlelpltlon
Notn........................238,870
O.W.D.A. Lo1111 ....... 2,4M
·Other Bondi 6

December 31 ........... 350,801

THE

..

TOTAL RECEIPT8 ... 4f3,555
OPERATING EXPENSES:
DISBURSEMENTS
Per10n11
Sarvlctl ................... 222,728
Contr1ctual
.

Strvlc••··············1•••••• 88,2158

Suppt111and
Mlterllll ....................ee,703 ·
TOTAL .
01SBURBEMEI\ITS ... 377,15e7
Total Racalpll over/(undal')
Dl•buretmenta........ t ouea
NON-OPERATING
REVENUEB/(EXPENSES):
Tran•l•r...n............35,337
Debt Mrv101 ........ (71,183)
TOTAL OTHER FIN.
SOURCES/(USES) .. (38,145)
Exc'" "'-lpt11nd
Other F1r11nolng Bourca•
Ovar/(Undal') Expand. D11b.
&amp; Other U•••/NII ...... ee,o22
Fund C11h B1l1noa
Janu1ry 1................. 181 ,802
Fund Calh Belaoce
December 31 ........... 227,824
R•••rv• lor Encumbr.
DICimbtr 31 ...,,,,,,,., .. 23
30 Announcements

IllGO

'

every Saiurday
nigh1
6:30p.m.
American Legion

Middleporl.
Po11128
S1arbur61 '2800;110
Doo~ Prize '500. 110,
.145 peopte or
.more wilt play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
retfular game

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-985-41180

614-992·7643

TOTAL ...,;-...............,.303,330
NON..OPERATINQ
REVENUES/(EXPENIIEB): .
Fund Cllh 111111101

'

------------~

Now Open For
Spring Sea•on

..

.'

'·

)

-=------------~

'. . ..

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ~

---~

1, •

Marty's
Power
Washing

---

.Chuckle's Kit &amp; Kaboodle

E'•timaie~

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting
Interior &amp; Exterior
15Yrs. Expe,lence

.1

742-1701

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

DEPOYSAG
PARTS
.

IIi

••-n•

'

All Make s Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Cuse-IH Ports
Dea lers.

BuUda•er &amp; Backhoe
Service•
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;

:J II111111 IIll II111111111 III III II1111111 III III IIIll I111111111 IIL:

=
-.

I.
'S!lrubtlery Maintenance
f 'Serving Meigs ~ GaJUa Counties
in Oh~ and Mason County In WI
•o•r .... •• .,. .... "" t..a. .....
1·740·742·2803 .or
1 740446 3622
•
"

(740t 698·1113

II

PUBUC NOTICE
.
Complete Une 01
G11l11-MIIg• Community
Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
Action 1gency Ia •••kina .
1p1ce lor JTPA and o~har
All Flat• $8.50
progr1m1 In q11111 County
lo:•el•d•• B•ddl"l c.,..,.i., ...
and Mtlgl County. The
Hanging Baskets
•P•~• muet provide ollloe
Blooming
&amp; Foliage
•ccommodltlon• lor tan
1)111 membtlrl, 1nd provide
$5.75 &amp; Up
•n are• lor maatlngl 1nd
•Ger!'nlums, Azaleas
tr1lnlng •ctlvltlll. The
;shrubs &amp; Trees
1p101 muat .bl 1lr·
.We Honor Golden
condlftonld, have 1dtqu11o
Buckeye Card
perking IVIIilble, meat .
hlndiCIP ICCIIIiblllty
Open
111nd1rd1, hiVI IIICiriCII 9-5 Weekday Sunday 1-5
1nd phone wiring c1pablt
HUIIAID'S
ol aupportlng computer
op1r1t1on, 1nd othtJWIII
GIIINHOUSI
provlcla 1 good working 1nd
SYRACVSE
cutlomer
••rvloa
992-5776
1nvlron1111nt.
31.!0 TFN
lndlvldUIII or buiiOIIMI
wlahlng to otter apace
1hould eubmlt 1 elmplo
Public Notice
written propoHI ep~ellylng:
1·n•m• 1nd eddra11 of the lddltlonallntormlllon.
· Proponll mu1t be
IPICI provider
·
received
by Wldntadly,
2·1tr..t addren . ol the
April 21, 1IH, Prop01111
lptceolterld
1hould be Mnt to:
3-aquere IHIIVIIIIblt
GMCAA
4-monlhly 111M colt tor the
Oltlce RIIIIIIW
period July 1, 11M through
Box272
June 30, 2000
Chllhlrt, Ohio 4~272
All propaula ~Ill fiCIIVI
• prallmlnlry review. (4) I ,2.5,8 4TC
Tho•, whiCh 1ppalr I~ ball
meet ,progrlm nMd• w!ll 1M
h ~II lit M_uslt 11 !but [drl •
ravlaw•f! turthar 1nd m1y Wileli
lbu Moe In 11 tho 8esc a.,.
.be 11k1d to 1upply
.
/!I, tilt O.Sil(lods.

Strvlcea •..•••....••....••... M,001
Bille Utlllty

8arvlcae....................... e, t 118
l'r1tnlportllllon .. :.... 84,8113
-Gt-11
·oovornmant............. 182,824
Per10n11
.
·
Barvlca1......:............ 222,728
CO"!riCIUII
,
,
Servlcal...............,..... ee,:zee
Suppll•• end
Mlllrllll .................... ae,703
· Debt S.rvtca .......... 80,02t .
TOTAL
· . .
DIBBURSEMI!NTS ... 12T,m
Total R-'pll OVII'/(U...,
DllburMmanta..;..... 245,181
Tran~ln .......... 101,103
Trartlleri-Ouf .... (104,5114)
Dlbt. Servtca ........ (75, 113)
TOTAL OTHI!A I'IN. ·
SOUACE8/(U8EI) .. (70,11114)
Exc•• rtcelplllnd ·
Other Fln1nolng Source~
Ovtri(U!I(Ier) Expand. Dllb.
A Other UMI/N~A"' 177,9115
Fund C11h llltenca
Janu1ry 1............. ~·... 411,283
. Fund ca1h 1111~
D-mblr 31 ........... 858,288
RIM/VI lor l!ncumbr.
December 31 ............... 8,101
Tre11ury lllllnca478,210
lnvlltmlnli ........,:MS...
ToliiTreiiUry
B111nce....................728,141
0\llltlndlng

Free

Free Estimates

Public Notice

'Residential &amp; Commerdal

1:i\B.·Carpenter
ti'
Haning ·

the pain out of
paintlns, and letme
do It for you
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm Leave
f}lessage . After 6 pm

Notee..........................31,111

Fr~e Ettinuttet

Siding, Soffit, Paint,
M~tal, Lamination~ Pole
Building&amp;, Den k8, Etc.

~e

Grading
Septic Sy11em &amp;
Utilili&lt;l•

.. (7401 992·3131. '

1000 St. lit. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

, . . . ,. . .3

I

o Re~twdeling'

Don't Need A Big
One Call a Little
One

• Siding
• :No Job -Too 'Big or

DRIVEWAY STONE

• New Corielruetion

Lfght Hauling
to 8 ton

'/oo Sma/(
"Call Topay"

FREE E•flmat"
t740) 992·553S.r
992-2753

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE
Racine, Ohio 4Sn1

. 740-949·2217
Sizes 5' x ·1 0'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7 :00AM· 8PM

·Jf)e N. Sayre
3/11/ll9TFN

SHADE RIVER

..

3111M/1 mo. pd.

Fol'mer-"Velvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Buy, Sell or
In lilt

,

I

~

Oog , VIcinity: 141 . 775, 7&lt;10·44011476.
.
L~&amp;t ·

white German Shepherd/
HUikY mix, blactt eye, brown eye,

Chlld'l pet, FlatwOO&lt;II Rei vtctnlty,
please call740-1192-70n.
Loll: Around Wai-Man Ring
Sentimental Value, Reward! 740-

«6-4070.

.

WedemeYe r's Auc tion Sentfce,
Gallipolis, Ohio 7&lt;G-379-27'20.

Wanted to Buy

Ablolute Top Dollar: All u.s. 511· ..
And Go ld Coins, Proof1e11, ,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

--.....Gallipolis, 7-21M2.

_An tiques, top price• paid, Rlvtr· ,
lnt Antiq ues, Pomeroy, OPllo.
Ruu Moore ownei', 740· 992·

2526.

Buying Siandlno Timber, 7..· 2~· .
0172.
Clean · late Model .. Cars

Want To Sell Vour ·Stuft? Call Rlv·
erside Auction And let Ua StU It
For 'lou, 74ll-256-3989.

4036 .

Wanted To Buy : Uatd Mobile

chain, lq Ashton Aloa. {304)570·

Homes. Call 740-448·0115 , ~ - .

·Loe1: Walker Pup, Male', L111
Seen VInton Ctmtlary Blactt &amp;
WPllte, Unle BU Of Brown, No Col·
lar, 740.31111-6536.

Yard Sale

3 Family Yard Sale: Friday 4/2/99
Only, HOUII AcrOaa ftrom FOO ·
tlland On State Route 160 , Lots

675-5965 .
Wanted : Cars, Trucks Any Con·

dillon. 740·366·9062 . 740·446·
PART.

110

4 Famuv: 2018 112 Rear Ea11ern
Ayenue ; Friday, Saturday, Fur-·
bits, Beanie Bablea ,.. Hollday Bar·
b itt , GirlS Pagenta, Or11111, ·

lncteipendenr Contractors Needed
To Oellver The, New Champion

Sizes) Toys, Huge Collection.
Tradin g Carda: Football , Hockey.
Nascar, Home CD Stereo System,
2 Tower Speakera, 1!5" Woiflllrl ,
Nucar Dleea.at Col1ectable1.

61.1;- -lluot
Bl Pilei In A -.

· New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing; Siding
"Speciali•i1111ln Los Hott,Utl"
· Commercial &amp; Residential
28 yra. ·axp.
· Licensed &amp; Insured ·

Phone 740-992·3987

tJ ·

John Dean · Owner

'

Baelll Lots Of Valitl)l.

Garage Sate : 32 VInton srrea1.
Apr1t 2nd, &amp; 3rd, 9·5.
Moving /Yard Sate : 8·6 . Thursday
&amp; Friday, ' 681 Fa lrlletd Ch urc h
Road. Not Responsible For Ac-

dclenll.

·~~

470 LeGrande . Waaner , Dryer,
Swing Set. Kerosene Heaters,
Chlldrena Clothes /Mtsc

J11i.J

~~~~lft'~f~JJ~fi~r ~ft;r
.

R. L. HOL.lON
TRUCKING

Cl.u b Bingo ·on
Thuredays
AT 6 :30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$ll00.00 Starburti ·
P.rogreaelve top line.
~~=~U~c=.11=· ~00.~&amp;0~~~~

DUMP TRUCK

SERVICE

985-4422
Choster, Ohio
.

,,.,..,.,.,

~--~-...,;=•'"-11

1

ANNOUNCEMENT S

www.thoholpsgeo2.com/no/psy·
chl&lt;&gt;t25029t.htm ·
30 Announcements

Beglnn•r Caka ~coratlng Cla si·
01 . April 6th. Call 740·446-2 I34
For Oatalla, D.J.' 1 Crall Shop,

2390 Jackaon Plkl, Gtlllpqlls.

DISPLAY HOMES
NEEDED

I.

For VInyl Sidl,ng And , Replace -

ment Windows. t OO% Financing
No ,.ppllcal!on Aeluaed Low Low·
Monthly Payments. Before A~ a
Atttt Plclutlt Plul AOvertls lng

Algi11S
Aeltast Are Required 1-86o·S36·
~95

Fret

2•/Hr.

D ietary

·

Sup p leme~t

Brochures. WrHe To ADf: Ole-

trlbutora , P.O BoK ~63. Chesttr.

W.VA

2ti0~ .

DIIIVING P05mONS

AVAILAIILE:

•

Carrier.
T11m Straight Truck. Late Model :
Frelgl:llllners Wltl'l Sle..,.,-1. Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements.
800 Mlle Radius. Home Oell\ltr·

800 437·87&amp;4, Hrs . 8:30A.M. ·5 P.M.
.

llpolla, tll-2, No Phooo CaH1.

stools, toaster, Iron , T· F11 deep
frytr, telephone, clothl.ng , tholl,
pk:tures, old ama11 chlld'li rocker ,
toys &amp; dol la, children &amp; adult
clothing &amp; Iota &amp; klts ol what nota
ln boxes.

Lako. Saturday, 413199. 9:00·4:00.

Gold Wing Cl\aplor £-3.

At Ease Call Now! 1 · 900-740·
Ext 3593, 18+ $3 99 Por
Min. Serv·U 819·6(5-8ol3&lt;4 hHp:ll

• Aoom Addftona &amp; Attrnodtllng

catd roqollld, 7..·2•7-2664.

All Ylrd Salll MUll Be Ptld In

Pt. PleaHnt
It, VIcinity ·

6500

,

Drivers wanted to deltwr !lowers. :.
no OYtHnlgh t, COL and medica l ~

General Office !Sales . Experi enced Preferred. Full -Time , Im -

Rl.ch &amp; Sand)' Butcher reaktenct .
SR 12• across from Maplewood

Perto"als

Don 't Worry About Vour Future
Let Our Psy chle1 Put Vour Mind

' .

0!1tco, Pomeroy, OH 45769.

re in ,:anceis. 'cheap' , aero sa
from the back of Powell'&amp; Super
Value. on Mechanic St.

Garage sate· rain or shine, 5 tam.
lty, Wed. Mar. 31, Thura. AprU ·1 &amp;
April 2nd, formally Jo'a Gift Shop
3202 , Syracuse. Olahtl, 'p oll, bar

7~98-3290

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEitYICE

toolS. tons 01 miiC.
3 lamlly, ~prll 1·2·3. !Oam-4pm,

1:00pm Frklly.

HDOIHoUow
F.,._

Couple or single ~rso n to move
In and cart for elderly person In
Meigs County. AH living upenl ·
11. plua .aalary. Lilt work hlatory
end 2 'ftferencu. Send name .
address and phont number be lore May 1. 1999 'o : Margaret .
General Delivery. Pomeroy Post

Clothao, All Bran·d Name, Lots 01 loG.
Mtsc l 6-7 411, 4/2, 63 South
Bolh Pos11ion1:
Fourth, Chosnl•e
AUeaat 25 Yi811 Ok1
Pomeroy,
Adeaat 2 Years Expeftenct
Good MVA .
Middleport
WIOlcly Pay
&amp; VIcinity
Health Insurance Available
234 Lincoln Hilt. March :10-Aptll 3. wort&lt; Well With Tha Pit&gt;llc
Toys. clothi ng . now bike pa rts. For More In formation Call

WICKS
HAULING

Alto Riding Llllonl

OWn Hto. S25K ·S60K r¥1. 1·800·
4711-8653 x nn.www.tcwp.com

Class BOTR

Advence . Deadllnt: 1:00pm Ute

Buy, SeU, Tmin or Bodtd

Computer Usera Needed . Work

Thruadav. Fr iday. Saturday. 9· 5.
185 Ambletlde Drive , Kerr,

day before lht ad 11 10 run ,
Sun«aay a Monday tCIItlon-

.005

.

Class AOTR:
,
Sing le Driver. Late Model Ken·
worths. With Reefers. West Coast

Clothes, Men '&amp; Clothes. Toddler

(Lim• StoneLow Rates) '

740-992·3470

7274.

Porc:f\ Sate : 83~' Tn i rd .Avenue,
·2nd, 3rd, 11-4.

Acrooo From Po11 Office.
Toys . Boanto Bab ies. womono

sao.oo

Agricultural Lime,
Llmeetono • Qrsvel.
Dirt • Sand '

'

Moving Sale: ·Friday. Sshirday.

· Mo.

FA£E

BabyaiHer Wanted , Ewenlng Shill
In My Home . 3 Weeks , 740.387-

~ast Guld tng Hand s enool On
Route 7 Trailer On Left (In Th.l

ft'
ft

CALL l·lla·IOI -1100 TOLL

II 10 Nn, Suncloy

F1tday 412. Sittulday 413. 9-5. JUit

ft

Publishing Telephone Directories
In The Ohio Valley Area. Must 8t
At Leaat te ·veara Of Age, And
Have Use Of An Insured Vehlde.
,Qellvery Starts March 23.1999.
Call Now To F=lase"'e A Routt In
Your Area . Market Olatributipn
SpeciaUSI&amp;, Inc.

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears. 304-675--1429.

April 101. 2nd, And 3rd, 5170
State Route 650, Bidwell, H , 740-

~

J.D. CONS,.RDC,.ION

Help Wanted
U EARN EXTRA CASH U

OEAQUN£: 2:00p.m.
till dey lllforW till tel

tclhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frklly.llofldly tclhlon
· 10:00 o.m. S.tuldoy,

~C~Cl~~~~ftf&amp;tftft

EMPLOYMEN1
SERVI CES

Of Good ON It! 6·7

Sola. (Now lllko Now Clothing All

relieve a

Or

Lost: Male Beagle &amp; Female Ger,
man ' Shel)nerd, wnh a chOker

IY,740-742-1050.

(740 992-4277

Cur,enc1.

Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. COin Shop. t 51 SocO&lt;ld

medium size, Nicholson Hltl Ylcini-

\ Lost tlmale g.o lden Lab. whUt ,

WilHam Safranek, Attorney At LBw
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

~

•

Jruckt , 1990 Modtls Or N•wer.
Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eaal·
ern Avenue. GallipOlis.

For Information Regarding B•nkruptcy contact:

• NIIW Gll'lfllll
• EIICtrtCII &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting
• Interior 6 Exterior
• P1lntlng .
• AIIO Concrete Work
• Pltlo dl!'ka 6 guttartng
V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112-e215
Pomeroy, Ohio

,..
'

AIVEIISIDE AUCTION 8ARH
hery·· Saturday N lghl 7 P.M.,

\ltr

debtor oroll.~dcial obligatio~• and arrange a fuir
' lo. Debtoro in bankruptcy may
diotribution of aooe
keep "exempt" propert.Yfor his or her person,al
uae. This m~y include a car, a house, clothes, a nd
hnu•ehold goods.
· ·

-Complete Auto Se~ice-

No Embarra~ment ...
You're Treated with Reapectl

Sat. April 3rd
9:30 pm • 1:30·am .

30•,. .. ..

90

old black &amp; Whitt mal•
country home -only, 740-

Joe Wilson

'

Near the 3~8 &amp; 124 split in the,Qreat Bend

!!!.!!!!!!! AD~•roVtalll**

--

', • •

c.... City, 7&lt;G-256-691l9

Ghleaway, 7&lt;10·2,56-6800.

70

BANKRUPTCY ca~

.

Sliding Glata &amp; Wood Door To

"Bufld l"our Dr•am"
. 1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'

Flick Pea rson Auction Company, 7.. :
full tlmt auctlon11r, t:Qmpltlt • .,.
auction
service .
Llctnll~ : :
. le&amp;,Ohlo t Wtat VIrginia,
n3-S78SOr304-773-54C7..
• •••

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

No CrodH • SloW Crodlt • Bankruptcy

"Symmes ·creek"

Spot,

heme or will go to pound, 740·

&amp;J

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, FIII·Dirt

CRJCDrr

Waynes Place presents

Garden

1192-o4028..

Remodeling

Custom Homes

woivRYINarrr

I Clrtlly tht fallowing
report to be torract 1nd
true, to the belt of my
knowlldge. .
Bry1n Bw1nn,
Clerk/TriiiUrar 212t11t
2 RICO 8t., Mlddlepon, bH
41710
(740) 9112-2708
tHIS II UNAUDITED
I'INANCIAL STATEMENT
(4) 1 lTC

Giveaway

.

ea . Consignment eucHon- ~Itt :• ;•
2e23.

Sheph&amp;rd/Beagle mix pupa, need

3/15 1 mo.

Dave's Garage

Arts &amp; Crafts

~em~i'Ai:AiK:~::·.:=:::

Str11t, Middleport, Thurada.va: .... : . :
Ohio Lice"'' •7&amp;93 . 74Q .. tli·• •

7&lt;10-441«08.

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Grind Feed

HORSES

Corner ol Apple &amp; Oak, Syracuao, OH
Opens Fri. April 2nd •
10-6 Dally, Cloaad Thurs. &amp; Sun .

'"TASTEWOATH SAVOAIHGI'

Registered 2 Yr. Old 01lm1tlon,
Good' Watchdog , Has Shots &amp; It
Spaye~ . Rare Chocolate Doll.

Call 98S•383S .

29670 Baahan Road

Reasonable Rates.

740·742·2138

up

992-5455

SAYRE
TRUCKING Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel

Enjay CountiY Cookl"'l And Fem-

Bill MoodiapaugPI Aucttonttrlno: : :
Con"'Pittt Aucllonetrlng Strvlc• .. •,..

3118·1618.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

'

- - - ' - - - - - :·

1I :00 Nl. TlYu 3:00PM

(30&lt;1)1!75-3030.

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

'Professional Routine Lawn
Maintenance and Manicuring

. Wood-Vinyi-Met•l

Linda's Painting

.,, Jim Reedy.

Rings, Pre-1930 U.S.

Larry'•
Lawn
.C are

Home
lmpro11ments

... . •

·111u: Snaell Dll. O:OOpm. Auction·

Found: ~Ia B&amp;ack Long Haired

Haning'~

Auct ion Frldly Night AI I P.M. :
Another Great load Of t.t.rchan. • •
diN ! located AI 241 Thltd Ave• ; : : :

Old Ame rrcan Legion building , • •
Middleport LOll of new merehanr : .. :

7

GUN SHOOT

•

Ma.rt

Gh1eawa~ :

Inc

11027.

located WltP1 1n ArnoJdJ Food

40

Rutland, Ohio

985-4473

7~0·992·2068

Carpenters ~u!\iing America

•••...-c:;.:r·•....

A&amp; DAuto Upholstary •

•

••
Auction · Saturday, April 3 , tH&amp;.• •

lly Hotpllallty By BtiiY Aon
Sheet11 Owner Arid ()peraiOr.

1110,

ESTIMATEES

.Joseph Jacks

.73711ack bore

.... c.....

J/12 t

Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experlence

FREE

· Free Estimates

Umlt 680 sleeve I

• Malclda1 ·
• letllalag Will I Irick
Plllo Coallnctloa

lilew Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing .

"A Better

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

,m

D•••P .
............. Plaallllg

Phone (740) 593-6671

•NewHomaa
•Garages
•Com plata
Ramodellng
Stop &amp; Compare

RacIne· Gun (fUuL
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sundar
12:30

• ..... ea.. •

_. BI.SSELL BUILDERS,
INC.
'

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

Vtll Building, Gttllpollo, Oh., oM
- lltl!ll, e:JOc&gt;m, colt 740-tl2·

1\M , ~.

Crown City, Ohio
7&lt;10·25H4115

Rooting • Repairs
. •Coatings •
Sidings • Painting .

.

POMIIOY MACHIIIE SHOP
250 COIIDOI ST.
POMEIOY, OliO 45769
PIOIIE-740-992·2406 01 JM-415·3555

Ranrva lor Encumbr.
December 31 ............... 8,083 January 1 ...•:..............11,013
OUTSTANDING Ja" t, 19118
Fund.c;11h BIIIIICI
Summ1ry ol lndlbtadnall
a - b... 31 ............. 81,083
. ..OUTSTANDING Dec. 31,
Morljlllll
Aevtnut ~................. 311,572
19118
Rwenua A~tlclpallon
sum~_~Y_ot lndlbladna••
Notl1 ........................ 238,870
Monpga
.O.W.D.A. Lo1n1 ... 148,188 Ravanue ...................283,511
· Other Bonde·6
·
R"'anue Anticipation ·
Notal ...... ._................... 80,41 i Notal ........................ 280,1588
TOTAL ...................... 747,421
o .w.o.A. Lolnl ... 141,334
Memoranda 0111:
Other Bondi 6 AIIIIMd
Notal .......................... 14,241
VIIU1tlon ............. 15,831,800 TOTAL ...................... Q4,eetl
Pro1111rty Tax UlvlM:
TOTAL MEMORANDUM
ln•kl• tO Mlll ................ 1.7
ONLY
OUIIIda 10 Mill ..........,7.00 RECEIPTS
MunlclP,.llncoma TIX ItO
l.oclll 1'1xel.......... 474,077
Eetlmatad
lntatgovll'llm-1
Population ..•••..• :.......... 2,725
Revenue ................... 122,8011
FadaraiC•n•ua
Ch1rgn lor
Popul•tlon ................... 2,725 Bervtcte ••.• •••.•••.•...••• 5ft,M2-.
EXPENDABLE TRUST
Finn, UCIII-, &amp; .
FUNDS
Parmlll.......................84,7ee
NEW ISSUES
MlacaiiiiiiCIUI...... 128,184
Revenue Antlclp•tlon
TOTAL
Notal ........................280,15e5 RECEIPTS .. ,.......... 1,378,738
TOTAL .....,.............. :.280,565 DISBURSEMENTS
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
CurTant:
lltcurlty ot PII'IOIII 6
OPERATIHG REVENUES:
RECEIPTS
Proparty................ ,.. 380,518
Ch•rgalor ·
· Public Ha111h
Servlola................... 483,556

Crown City
Betsy-Etllr'f
2oiaee St At 7 Souf,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

,.· • Plumbing

.

Public Notice

Optnlng Of New Rtatuarant In

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
• Dr)twall &amp;

.

Mondoy'lllru Sittulday

'.'Done right the first time "
"Priced righi" all the time "

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

'·-------- ------------~---~-.--- . ------ -·- - -

' r:~=~==i=J,=~=a= I ~~~allowi,~':; ::~0RT

.Parts Pnrs at:

POMEROY
AUTO
PARTS
I
..

I ·
I

each! I
I

Aft¥ lar.aftd brake ..... or shoe•

(304) 675-2828

9 :~: 30 .

l{emember

.... .... .''.
I I

Item&amp;. &amp;1 .00 bag salt tYtry
Thurldly Monday thru Saturday

Call me at (7 tlO) 7 tl2-28tl2 ·

• ..,,.. 949-170 I

Ice &amp; Water ·
Refrigerator

..

Need a friend In ~e bu.lne••

Jeremy 1.. Roush ·.

26 Cu. Ft

Mon., T*·· Wid., I'd. N:30
Thurs. ll-t2; 811. i-2:30

Don•s
Heating &amp; Cooling

To offer story suggestions, report late·
breaking news and offer news tips

Hea·lthline

Frigidaire

~ Lay·A·Waya

Oua11ty clo thinG and nouaehold

Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mik e Dre hel
Sales Represenra1ive
Larry Schey

+

•nd Flea Market
~---==~
Auellon every Thurt~fly, Am :

ro 'W&gt;u Thllft ~
9 WHI S""-', All'oonl
740-5911-' 1M2

. ..

. .'
..

Auction

'80

-

Pleasant Valley Hospital 24-Hour
Availability

Things are
hoppin' in here!

• FLOOR

•

30 Announcements

The Sentinel ews Hotline

. :\aid that . when a season c~ain s

lour full moons, the thi.rd is cliJM a
hluc m(ion. ,
Pruett, according ·to the magazine , mistaken ly thought that the
almanac meant that a blue moon was

Ttle Dally Sentinel• Page 13 .

Thursday, A~ril1, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

&amp; Setutdey(Aprll 213) .
26 1,6 linco ln Avenue , P1.PI.,
Back Vard. ClotheiiWatnolai Fur·
nltl.ll'l &amp; Mort. Rain Cancall

Friday

Garage Sale. 6 mUtt out Jenys
Run Road/Appt. GrO&gt;JI. April 1,

2. 3. 9-? (304)576-2e35.

La rge 3 .Family Yard, Slit . Old
dlshes fTQyt . Fri . &amp; Sal . .. 2nd
Houu right on Leon Badtn

Road. Off Rt. 07,

Pa tio Sale : 11 e Pl1111nt ,St.,
Sat. /Aprl l 3. Mtns/Women a
Clolt\lttiShOes. Olthll, curtalnll
ruga, quilt• • What /Nota, Fan ,
Carl House Palnl. cha lrt, lots ol

..,., things.

mediate Opening. Apply: Ltttil)'to

Furnitura, 858 Third A'llenut, Gal·

Immediate opening for phone op..
eratorl wa rranty cler-k. Apply ln.
person : Oon T1te Motors, 308
East Main Str11t, Pomeroy, OH.
EOE . Applications accepted
Monday, Tuesday &amp; Wtdnllday,
April 5th lhlwgh AprM 7th.

•
•

IN8TAUCTOA8 / TEACHEIII
Nee(led In Galltpol lt For An 8
Week Summer Youth Tr, lning •
Program , ( June To August) . To
Teach Beale Math, Reading, Prt
Emptoyment Job Skills And Aval· '
tlon Fligh t Subjects. Vle lt Our

•
•

Or Call H!Tek At .I·800.397-&amp;19Q

•
•

II pilya lo lose welghll 42 people
nttdtd to loae welghl now! All •
natural, guaranteed , doctor r•c·
ommendiiCI. Cal t1811-717·tlol78.

.,

Webltlo ~~ WWW.HITEK.OAO.

lPN'I and CNA 'I • RIYenaw0od
Center (formerly Ravenawooct
VIIIIQI) Ia now acctpllng appll.'
•
cations for full and pirt·tlm·e poJ I Uons ~ bcellent bentflla pack age. If lnterestld, piellt appJy In ""' ::
·pe,.on Monday through Frldly,

•
'

9AM -4PM , or write, AnentiOn : Done ue Dugan , DON 200 South
Ritchie Avenue , Rave nawood ,

'•

WV 26 164·. Phono(304)273·Q385.
E.O:E. A Gtntala EldtrCart
FAcility..

'

.•',.

Medical Proceuor

FTIPTNooxporlonctnoolluiY
wtntratn. PC ~~qulrtci . Elm 40K
Cotl80ll-M3-7440
Medical Proceuor FT I PT No
Exp. Nee. Will T'lwln PC Jloq, Eern

Vatd Salt: SaU/3, 6·11 AM only, 401( Call IOO-ee3-7440.
Mndowland
Eatlltl .· · 79 Need 7 LIICiits TO SOli ~YOn .
Hawthorne Lane. Pt.PI. Beh ind
Armory.

,.

·-48·3358.

-.

740·

.. ... ..

�Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, April1 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

Thursday, Aprll1 , 1999
~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

ALDER

TRANSPORTATION

'

Nefded 17 peopte 10 \oil up to
29 lbt In 30 days Doctor rocommended 100% natural Guar·

Buy or 1tll Riverine Antlqun,

210

Business
Opportunity

· - Cai80C)o296-64e7
No~dod Dedicated RN • WHh
Strong Supervisory Skills (Shift

Dlltoronllal Ofterodl Pleaoa Apply
In p.raon At Scenic Hilla Nursing
Center 3, 1 Bu~ridge Ar B•d·

...,OH

1983 t4X52 MansiOn, Total Gao,
2BR, New Rotng &amp; Carpet Extra
Nice Gallipoli s Ferry, Will be

INOTICE!

ready to pull $7800 (3041815·
n92

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend1 that you do b,usl
ness w1th ~eopte you know and
NOT to Hnd money through !he
mall until you have lnvt~tlgated

t983, 1.()(52 Mansion, Total G11,
Ro~IP&amp; Carpet Extra
Nlu Gallipolis Ferry. Will be

2BR Now

roady to pull $7800 (3041876·
n92

1110 otferlng

-

'Night shift, 7pm·9a

lull limo

health car•. 740 992· 023 for In·

230

Professional
Services

Now accepting applicallons for

nigh! ohlt1, El Oorlldo Adult Home
Basic llrst ani &amp; BCII required

7'0-992 5039

Economy Heating And Cooling
Factory tO Years Parts &amp; labor

7'0-245 9009

OTR Driver Needed t Year F.lat
Experience Clall A COL. Camp
Pay, Bonus Program Late Model
Conven tio nal,
740·•41·0607

Center, 333 Page St
Mi ddleport has part time poal·
lions lor LPN s available for all
shifts &amp; weekends , anyone Inter·
ut&amp;d please stop by &amp; flit out an
oppl&lt;:a~on

Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Street Middleport has lull time
pos1tio ns to'r RN \lent Nurses
available for all shifts and wee·
kenda Anyone Interested please
stop by and 1111 out an eppJication

EOE
Part ti me person wanted lor pre-w8n tlve mainte nance inspecl!ona
and repair Inspectio n and up
keep or grounds and tacHit les Ba
!IIC knowledge of plumbing etec
trloal carpentry and HVAC Ablll
ty to pertorm grounds keeping du
ties and do some lifting Inquire al
Meigs County District Pubnc U
bra ry 216 W Main Street Po

me roy OH 740·992-58t3 Appll
cations accepted unlil Apri l

to

19911
Pos ta l Jobs to $18 35/HR inc
benellts No experience For App
and Exam Info Call 1 800·813·
3585 Ext 8826 BAM 9PM 7

3600

ment $29 000 7'0-2M-6793

Doublewide On lot

Scenic Hills Nursing Center 311
Bucl&lt;ridge Ad Bidwell OH Is Now
Accepting Appl callons For
Friendly Outgoing And Depend·
able LPN a &amp; STNA &amp; Please
Apply In Pers on At The Front
Desk Between 8 30 AM 4 30

PM
STNA s Wanted Call Laura AI
Medl Home Health Private Care

1·800·48 t-6334
Total Tree Power Line Clear ing
Worker Needed, Top CUmbers,
Start Today CaH For Interview

740·256·1576
Wildlife Joba/$21 60/Hr Inc
benefits Game Warden si Securl ~
tyiMain t. nance/ Park Rangers
No up needed For APP. and
Eum Info Call 1 800 · 813~
3585 Exl 8827 BAM·9P M 7
days fds Inc

140

Business
Training

GoNipofl&amp; Coraor College
(Careers Close To Home) Call
Todayl 740 UB-4367 1-800·

214-0452 Reg t90.Q5 t274B

180 Wanted To Do
Carpentry From Frame To Finish
Decks Porches Addlllons Ae

modelS 740 441 1316
CtHt1fled daycare 2 lull time openIngs on Bailey Run Rd 740 992
3509 ask for Melissa

E &amp; s Lawn Service Design Implementation
and Service
Ava ilable lor Spring Clean up
terullzing and planting Free est1
ma1es Sat isfacti on guaranteed

Greg MilhOan 304/675 %28
Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring Breaker BOKBS Ugh! Fix
ture Healing Sys tems and Ae

modeling (304)674-0128
EKcelient Care/ Per son in my
home In co untry/mobile/non ·
smok er/ $800 month/ Nice

13041682 3880
Experienced Mother &amp; Babysitter
Accepti ng Inquiries AI 740·256·
6537 Day Shift Only At Her

Homo

'

Furniture repa ir restoration &amp; re ·
Unlshlng custo m built reproduc·
lions Li z &amp; Bennett Roush 740·
992 110 0 "ppalachlan Wood·
works
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your tog s to the mill just call

304-875·1957
Housecleaning Dependable, Hon·
est Good References Years Of
EKperience
740 445-7525
leave A Message
Interior &amp; Exterior Paih ti ng Experienced References Reason ~
able Rates For Free Estimate

740 388 6041
Lawn Mowing Service Small
Garden Tilling Clean Out Garage

Car Garage 15 M,l nutes From

3628
Mowing Trimming Weedeallng.
Tree Trimming Stump Grinding
Painting No Job Too BIQ' Or To
Small! Aelerencea Leave Mea·

sago 740-4411-8902

675-1303
6 Bedrooms 4 Bath Brick Home
Corner Lor Across Form High
School Same Block As Grade
School And Ball Field , For Sale
Or May Trade For Acerage 740

Will Do Llgnl Carpentry Work,
Ropllng, Yord Work, Land Scap·

1978 Naanua 12Ft x 65FI, Wtth A
tO~I X 16Ft Addition CIA Now
Carpal And Vinyl, Underpinning ,
Fronl And. Back Porch lnoludtd.
$6,000, 7'0-245-5503

lido I Oull Low Prieto, Low e ..
Umate 740'388-8316
Will helg..wlth elderly In their

homo In"' Pltoaan1 (3041874·
0048
Will mow 1awn1, trim , any odd

"""·hauling, 740·992·-4288

Will 11ay wllh tlderly poroon In
thllr home. nlgnto only Have
Ro~

(304)875 1898, ttlter8PM

420

Mobile Homes
tor Rant

14170 two bedroom trailer. S250
month, $160 dOPOIII no petl,
740 742 2714
2 &amp; 3 bedroom motJIII hOmes, air

ment 740 448 9182, For More
Information

15 ·20 Used Tracton In Stock
8 99% Financing Uaed Hay

$500 740-448 22e2

John Deere Tractor Financing

For sale
Furbys &amp; Furby
Beanies, call 740 742 251 t or 1

Your Local John Deere Dealer,

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Dr 740 448·4e25
JET

3 9~. Used Planters 5% Now
7 99% Carmichaels Farm &amp; LJiwn,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740·446·2412 Or
1 1100().594·1111
1984 Model Valley Horse Trailer

Rod Good Condition $1500
(004)675·1 178
230 Massey Fergusorr :rra"Ctor,
400 Houra, Diesel, Like New, Call

AERATION MOlOAS
Repalrod Now &amp; AeDullt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1·801l-537-9528

Ewnlngs 740-4411-2158

887·3516

256 6747

North 3rd Ave Middleport 2
bedroom unlurnlshed apartment
deposit &amp; references 740-992·

0185

Prlmestar ~

new dlrec1 special
free Installation 3 months free
programming limited time only, 1·

868 265 2t23

West 2 Bedroom Townhtfuaa
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740·

446.0008
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Vary Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

FlOors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Cer·
petl!ld Patio No Peta le8S8 Plus
Security Deposit Ra(lulred 7-40-

446-3481,740 UII-OtOI
Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications tor 1BR HUO sub·
aldlzed apt for elderly and handIcapped EOH 304 675 8679

PRO. I.S. suppLy
We Are Professional lnstallallon
And Service Supply We Sell
Wholenle To The Public We
Stock .Janltrol Heating And Cool
lng Equipment Duct Work ~eg ·
lsters And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
C11n Arrange For Lawrence,En·
tsrprtaea fo Install For You If
You Don 1 Call Us We Both toaet

553 Jacklon Pll&lt;e 740 446 6308
800-291 0096
Solid Cherry Coffee Table, 740

Ull-1459 Call Before 9 PM

Full Powsr S850. 7-7215
1987 Nlssan Maxi Good condl·

lion $2 500 1984 Chevy Cuslom
Van

Good condition S2 500

Space for Rent

Mobile home site available bet ..
wean Athena and Pomeroy call

740 385-43117
Trail-er lo t for rent m MIDdleport
near grocery atorea school&amp;,
churches and park utilities avail·
able new trailer only no pets

7'0-992·23t9

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jockaon OhiO, 1-1100.537 9526

550

Building
Supplies

1991 Ponllac

Flroblr~

Red V8

engine AT AC Ttop, very low
miles Greet Graduation GUt

lf!04)e75 2153
1991 Toyota Corolla excellent
condition, looks good, call 740·
1992 Red Pontiac Gtand Am

$5 500 Ploaao Call 740·367·
5055
1993 Chevy Corsica, V·6 AIC,
3 1 Lltef New Tlrea Asking
$3 200 740-388-0413
t993 Ford Taurus S3 000 I OBO

(30o4)882·3U8
1993 Gra.id AM, GT Loaded
Power Everything Muat Sell!
SS 000, 1988 Caprlca 350 Motor

Mower

740~132.

1 994

Cadillac
Fleetwood
Brougham 24,000 Actual Mllea 3

5t3-85t 0100
Want To Rent large House Prl·
vete
Setting
Rea
Rent

560

Pet• for Sale

Acquarluma with acceaaorlea &amp;

llsh, (no leakJI, 10gaVS25 20gaV
$50, 29gai/S75 (304)n3-50!i I

MERCHANDI S E

AKC boxer pupo, (brlndlo) lhr6o
male, one female, ready tor

510

Eaotor, $350, Clll7'0-992·2313

HouHhold

Goods
Almond t&lt;enmore Waaher &amp; Cry

or SHIO Both Will Separate, Whlla
Kenmore Washer $75, Kenmore
Dryer $7e, Harveat Gold Side By

doga referenoll 3 generations
here. shots, wormed, vet cheeked,

Dlack a yellow, $150 lo $200
7'0-992·3679 allor 5pm

Pa~

Cash lor 1 to 5 acres lo

Land lor building silo Call (7401·
245 5385
Livestock

lOth Annual Champion Otlve

Club Pig Solo Frklay Ap&lt;ll 9, 1999
7 00 PM Fayette County Fair·
H Ohio
grounds washington
Selling 200t Barrows Gllll, &amp; A

c

Few Select Boar Pigs Auctoneer
Merlin woodruff Sale Day t740·
335·9120 Goner ·Geneuca Don
Black. 814 871 7697 Jady Swlno
Farm, Joe Oreaback 740 884

26 Butcher Hog&amp; 250 Lbs $65
Eac~ Fair Plga $85 Each, 740·
245 9557
3 Pure Bred Hampahire Boars &amp;
Hampshire Fair Piga 740-379-

2605
Chlckent Brown Egg layera $5

APltcO, 740-256-1233
Fair Pig&amp; for Solei Excellent Blood
(7401 245 5672 or (7401 387·
0583
Market lamba For Sale! Call al·

tar400pm (740125&amp;-1534
Miniature Horse I Year Old Call

Appliance•
Recondttloned
Waahera Dryera FlarJgea Aelrl·
gratora 90 Day Guaran!eel

At&lt;C Pomeranian 6 Weeks Old

Thompoo~a

Appllonco 3407
Jacl&lt;lon Avonuo, (304)676·7388

AKC Roglstorod Female Pomora·
Orange·Seble Color

monlho old
8t95

A

S175 (3041615·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washert , dryefl, refrigerators ,

:i! Years Old . For Stud Service,

2 Bedrooms, In Porter Area De·
posit &amp; Reteteneea Requtlld , No

rangu Bkoggs Appllanc11, 7&amp;
Vine Stroll Call710·448·7398,
1-688-818.0128

Papers Available, Contact Mike

HIOmo lntorlor &amp; Other HouNhokl
Mlac011anoouo Coil Allor 3PM
(304)874-0067

AKp Roglotarad Pug pupploo, 5

2 BR Mobllo Homo, Sondhlll
Road, No Ptto Roloronco Ao·
qulrad (3Qo4)8711-383ol
1Mobllo homo lotj; ront In Roclno
no pato, 740-ttHeM

Will

Wanted to Buy

Quality Aeglltered Angua Buiii
Cummings
Angus
F111rm

Deposit, Clll After 8 740·448·
43t6

01, Allor 5, 740·245-5690, Bo·
!oro 5 740·245-5582

620

giH&amp;

nlen

2 Bedroom•, No Pets Retereno·

Sol 74().379-2757

740 U6 6783 Atter7 PM

For Sale Reconditioned wath·
era , dryer• and refrlgeratora

New And U11d Furniture Stora

-

Holiday Inn Kwgua Stop
And Boo Uo 7'0-446-47112

520

Nice &amp; Cloon Expondo, In Tho
(::olllfY, 740-2!SH574

AKC Roglotarad Golden Rotrlover
Brower AI 304·773·501 1 Or
LJiavo Meiiago
w11k1 old -two lemalea , $450

llach, threo moloo, $400 aach
080, lawn wlln DIICk lace, 740·
24HI81
AKC Riglllorod Wolmar•hor
Pupploo 4 Molt&amp; $250 2 Bluoo
2 Sllvor ~hotl &amp; Wormod, 740·
2511-1421
Avonuo
a 20011
v - Camden""""""'"
wv 251o1

""-rv
304-485-12113

1982 Footlval 14 Ft x 70 Fl 2
Badrooml. 2 Batha. CIA All Eltc·
~lc. 2 Porchoo, Vtry Good Conctl·
lion, $11,500 7'0-446·8157 Alter
HM "

Pupploo a Killlrll
FIAt Nnt of peU "-'l))IH

1

Whools, Excollen1 Condltlonl 74().
441 · 1528
1997 Honda Accord LX • Doors
Black With Gold Package PIW
AJC, Casl ette, Haa 58 000 Mllea

Z24, Sun

Massey Harrla Pony with Attach

AKC Labradore Retriever Pup·
pill Make excellent Eaater

2 Bedroom Mobile Home for

Aluminum

1996

Side Admiral $125 Coli Allor 5
740·446·9088

(304)~11-2443

Effects

F1450 5 · t8 Jl) Plow E•collonl Root
AC, Power
Condrtlon, Sevoral Chlael Plows &amp;
$15,900
Discs
Several Tracton To r~~~!!.!,~-:"-~':"""­
Choose From 70 HP · 220 HP 2
WD &amp; 4 WO J&amp;H Equlpmon1
Salas Inc Wllhsvlllo OH 740·
1
669 5101
1977 GMC a Mise Paris 740
446'-3243

Unesl For more Information Cell

AKC Lab pupf)loo. provon gun·

Automatic Power Every

Dry Fertilizer E1celtent Condition,

2 Aeglatared AOHA Horses Verv
Gonile Show Horses. 740·387·
7539

Any Slzo, Freo Estimates 740·
384-4587

wo

304·882 2343 Daytime, G04·882
2293 Evenings

Rio Grande OH Call 740·245 ·
5121
Horse Barna Garagea, Any Slylt

4

US Route 35 Henderson WV
JD 7000 No Till 6·30 Corn Plantar

Used Ult Truck Forks For Sale,
\larloua Sizes $100 •$125, Per

(304)675·9246

1982 Dodge 1 Ton Truck Wllh 12
Ft Enclosed Flberglau Bed
$3 000, Also. Mini Monster Pe·

radt Truck, Uka Now $1 800 Cal
740-448-8783 After 7 PM
19&amp;3 Chevy 4 X 4 $2,800 00
Evenings 740.379·2487
1968 Ctlevy Truck

Excellent

Body, All Original With Original
Manuela, Runs Good! 740·379 -

2928
1986 Nlsoon 2 WD Good Shape
$1 ,20Q Firm, 740.2511-1421

Hay

&amp; Grain

Ha~oy

Davldaon Sporlotor'

1200 Wlndahleld, Bagt, NMW
Battery, 2 Seats Duat Cover ••

Lots

ol

1997 Honda Gold Wing AoponJ
cado New Condition 31100 mllnl
740-258-8126

1994 Chevy Silverado 4~4 Low
mlloo 1 owner (304)876 2853
Atter5PM
1994 Goo Tracker 4•4. 48,000
Mlloa Good Shapt, S4.eoo oo
KC Auto Saloa, 740·446·8172 Or
74().25e-6251
1996 Chivy S· l 0 Standard Sl!on
Bod, Coosetto, No 1\/C, 31,500
miles, 15 800, (3041895·3808, Or
(3041895-3025
1998 F·150 XL Llkt Now, 5
Spood, AC, Undor 7 000 Mll11
Mull Bolli $14 500, 740·8823446

IT'$ A IIIGf 1&gt;1'/f, IUT IT ttA6
A LOvl l&gt;f6~f Of I&gt;IFFICVLTY.
......::.w""" I

---

Auto Parts &amp;
Acce11orle1

"f{Oio.JI-JI\') '(OlJ!Z- Tf:l

"~'&gt;wruL

' ~----~

1

f\t: :&gt;~\'(~
I W.,'( f\Jo..IJC.

~

TO Tf\E

C.ON~\ ca,.

Budget Priced Tran1mluion1\

1

OCI'ITLl~ f"'/~........~~

and Engines, All Typeo ACCIII
To Ovor 10 000 Trantmlulona
74().245-5677
Naw geo tanka &amp; IIOdy plrtl o a
A Auto, Ripley, wv 13041372
31133 or 1-800-273-9329

Weal

•

3•

Nortb
Pass

lecllons Of Late Model Auto
Parta Late Model Motors, Trana
millions Body &amp; Suaptnalon
Part• Beat Prk:ea In The Region

!

MY fEELIN(&gt;S FOR 'rot)
HAVE CHANC,E D 1: ve
DECIDED TO STOP
TI'.YINC:o TO BECOME
YOUIC. l!oOVFRIEND

Fenders, Hood&amp; Doors Wlnd,

ohltlds, Radiators, A C Condon•

sora. Over 100 Cars In Laat ~
Daya For Parts Over 25 Late
t,Jodel Repa lrablll Powerllne
Auto Syatema 740-532·0139 Or

1I

FUNNY Y WAS E~PECTI"C, THAT 50RT OF
l'.fACTtaN "FTE.~ r
SI'IID ·,o.,Pi&lt;.IL fOOL:;"

u s Toll Free 800·(82 6260 Kille
Hll, OhiO
Original 283 Englno I Shorlf
Powsr Glide Transmlaolon Oul 01
1BB4 Chovy $500 For Pair, 740·
•

AHII hitch &amp; receiver &amp; ReeM

By Phillip Alder
Tiu s d eal ISO 't IOSlTUCIIVe. It IS
btzarre w h ~e h seems appropn alc for
Apnl Fool s' Day
Three questions How many m cks
can South wm w11h spades as !rumps'
How many ca n West \loin w1t h sp ades
as tru mps 1 That s nol a p!Smnnl
(stc 1) AI a tournam ent, the auc110n
starts as m Jh c dtagra m What wo~ld
you, Soulh do, g1ven tha t you kn ow
all 52 cards'
The tical was descnbed by Htl ary
Qumlana tn the June 1997 tss ue of
Bndge Plus magazme It 1s repro
duccd w nh the pem11ss 1o n of Q um
lana and the edu or, Ele na J ero n
lmtdts
Ftrsl , suppose South ts I he dec lar·
er m three spades If West leads, .t
heart or 1he club kmg, declarer lakes
lo ur hearts and onol'club d~&lt;c.trdmg
d1amonds fro m the dummy He con ·
unucs w1th hts last hca11 throwm g
dummy's fm al d1amond East rulfs.
but the defe ndcts score on ly four
!rump lnc ks Wha! II We st leads the
spade k1ng' Dummy plays hJw O r II
West leads h1s low sp.tde dumm y

~tails w1th a low trump, Ea1:1l s
I 0 lakes the lrtck In bo th cases, West
gets mlo the du111my to c.tsh those stx
dtamond lncks 10 go wnh h~&lt; th ree

trump wmners ll's th1 ec s pades btd
and mad e '
So, 10 answer the fmal qucsu on,
alter West opens three spades, So uth
overcalls four spades' ThiS IS doubled
an d one down fur mutus I 00, wh1ch
ts bcllcr than losmg 140 (To rum th e
story shghll y, four clubs d oub led IS
also one down )

•

FOOL!

1998 25 Slroamllto, kllchon In•
AC, fixed bed
siMps 7, asking $8900, 740.992;
6159
•

ITHURSDAY

eludes microwave

~

1 Q/eSS 1\IIS IS

1996 Rockwood PopUp Campe&lt;
Bought now tool August Hao
Furnace Air Conditioner, Tinted
Wlndowa, 2 Queen Beds, 01·
nette Couch, Stove Icebox. T~·

let New IICfHnod-ln porch (,_f
UUdl Sold tor as. 700 lOki~
17,000 (740)tt2-2906
•
•
SEHV ICE S

Home
Improvements
IIAIEMIHT

WATEAPIIDOPIHO

C&amp;C

Gono&lt;OI

Homo Mlln·

tenence.- Painting, vinyl 1ldlng,

carpentry dooro, window&amp;, balho,
hQmo rapalr ond more For
tree oonmate can Chot, 740·e92·
8323

trlc brake haok·up Looka aharp,
Llvlngaton•a Beaement Water

Proofing all b111111ent repairs
dono, tree o111ma1oo, lllellmo ,
guor1ntoe 12yrs on lob export·
once (304181111-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Realdlnllal or commercial Mrlng.

now III'VIco or rlpllra Maotw L~
Clnttd liiCtriCIIn

Ridenour

EIOCiriCII, WV0003011 304·875·
1788

ASTRO-ORAPH
Fnday, Apnl 2, 1999
ln the year ahead, raise your
Sights high so thai you can really
have somelhong 10 boasl about by
your nell binhday Even if you have
'to work horder to accomphsh your
atms, u'll be wonh tl'
ARIES (March 21 -Aprtl 19)
•You're o ktnd and generous penon,
'but somelttr~fS rou have 10 say
,enough)S enoush nus could be one
of those days when an abuser or yryur
·aenerostly comes al you agatn lor
nnother favor Oet a JUmp on hfe by
.lln&lt;lcrslamling the tnflucnces that'll
you
the year ahead Send
- 1----'"' reqUired refund form and for your
Astro-Graph predtcnons by mallmg
$2 10 Aslro-Oraph, clo this newsps·
per, P.O Do• 11S8; Murray Htll Sta·
non, New York, NY 10156. Be sure
to stlto your Zod1ac slgri
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)
Should a companion seem reluctant
1o cooperate wtlh you today, check
the mirror. You m1gh1 be the one who
is too insistent on havms your own
way with overylh•ng alllhe time
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Mod·
,lj

erallon ts the formula towards lt
qualtly hfe, so reSist any mchnatlons
you may have to overmdulae in too
much or the good thmasln life today

Don't ovc15leep, overeat or overdo'
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Should there be some unpleuanl
underciJil'eniS sttrrtng bcnellh the
surface with soc1al friends today,
don 'tiel younelf gel drawn mto their
debacle Stay OUI of II I
LEO (Jut~ 23-Aug 22) Many
chtlly nights could be tn the oftlng for
you 1f you d9 not promptly resolve
any problems or d1scord which ialaktn&amp; place tn the home today Temper
conftim wtlh love and tolerance
VIROO (Aua 23-Scpt. 22) It's
greallo h,ave fatlh tn yourself, but Mt
10 the point where you get so
enthralled with your own idcu thai
you fatl to hear wioe suuesllons
offered by those who are uyina to
help today.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct 23) 811n1
both wise and prudent in the min·
qement Of yoor AI~ lodoy
extends 1101 only to your spend1n1
hablta. but tll.a llllkiel bid loAnlolo
those who are f1!J0f riab.

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) If
everything you attempt IO do today
seems hke illS usurped or ovenuled
olhen, you're better off adjus11ng
to the extsling cond1110ns rather 1han
aeutna younelf m a uuy.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Should• proJ«l youlhouaht .wu
JOiniiO be 5ntlp tum OUitO be any·
lh1n11 but, restgn younelf to the feel
that II 11 Jotna to take a concerted
elTon to succeed Keep it rolltna!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan 19)
W11&lt;:h out today or you could get sad·
died with 1 leoty us•anmenl from a
&amp;roup tnvolvcment other members
have been succesdul)y dod&amp;inl
Don't be II'IIJJ•
• AQUARIUS' (Jan :ZO.Fcb 1, In
onler tQ, prove younelf rilhl today,
you may Ill low your el(l 10 pi in Ahe
way bY lltemplillg eomethln1 lu.
advised. It cOUld very well lamtsh
your repul~ fot some lime
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Rllher than allow Jndtvtduals wuh
blued v1cws rub you the wrong way
today, try 10 avo1d their company
alto1e1her Thetr presence ts not
,worth the frustration you ' ll expert·
ence

by

a

....

jOint

42 Rolled out, u
the lido

=+=+=t~4:.~s~h~;-~·
eo Gulclltd
52 Yale grlduaN
53 -- Quentin

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C.t.onty Cipn.r cryp!ogramt are creat.ct from quocat!Onl by fa~ ~ pallt and Pf'"8'lt

eac:n..-.n.r 1n thl cipherstendllor arrom.t rodtya c1tw

Jj_f~ J

F L

AJ

N 8 A L

N8PFJYP

E8SLA
HCG

IJZZ8PPBCD

F L

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w.c~u.t.s R

8 R

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PFBCUA

WJIFLOJYIHYET
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "A rellg&lt;ous awakening wh•ch does not awaken the
sleeper lo love has roused him 1n vain • - Jessamyn West

'::~::.' S(C\\~lA-~£tfis·

.....

WDII

- - - - - - ..... "' QAT L POUJIM

'0 four
harrango lo!Jeh ol lha
ocromblod wordt bltlciw to lonn four word&amp;

I

LETSED
1 2

I I I 1 1

I RE

I
I

p p

I

A

~~'

RUQ KI

"There 1s a t1me 1n a boys
life ," a papular autho r mused ,
.
"when he has a rag1ng des1re
,....~~~~~---110 go and dig for hidden - - - - •

I• 1• •li 1• .
s

...,,rl·Ia .

T E vvE L

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

I'

•P

11!11111

f ' tCUM-I.ITS ANSWERS
Don t gel nung by fugh ptiCtS r
Shop thr cltJu;fird str:IHltl

'

onqgo

Si!6uld . Thelf - Cubit- Fr1ght · TRUTH

Motor Homes

French City May1og, 740•448·
7795

19 TlloM In
olflcl
'
22 lnlormlllon

35 Back out
36 Cauatlc
oubttan.,.
36 Sal on fire
39 "AbMn.,.
makoo
the hllrl
grow -"
40 Examined-

•

Campara &amp;

Appliance Porta And Sorvlco All

-on.

HIOward
8 Cltru. drink
10 Carelr•
11 Injury

24 Rasollalefor
26 "Animal
Hou•"
Mltlng
28 Throw off
30 Smootll
quality
34AndrM
Segovla'a

A PRINT NUMBERED
'11:11' LETTERS IN SQUARES

gtaaa topper with lront slider and

Name Branda Over 25 Yura Ex·
perlence All Work GuarantHd.

parlOR

12 Englloh elMs

8 Dlroclof

Completo lho 1hucklo quoted
. V by filling In tho '"""ng wotds
1-...L,..-..L-"'--''-_...,.,.. you ~···lop Jtom
No 3 bolow

APRIL

bug dol1octor and front bumper air
lollor, S35 OBO lull siZI Pondllln·
or Dedllner. tailgate and and·protector $155 060 full IIZI bod·
mol, $35 OBO 1991 ARE llbor,

labllahod 1875 Call 24 H,_ (740)
448·0670, 1·800·287-0878 Aog·
.,. Watorproollng

3 Fu...llghllng
aid
4 Fleh limb
5 Small boY
5 Emulasotaro
Uplnakl
7Aggraulva

1--+.17.=.,..:1-j-1=,1178

PEANUTS

num extruded running boarda,
$45 OBO wtth brackets, lull &amp;lze

Unconcllllonal ilft.ttme guarantee
Local reterence1 rurnlshed . El·

1 lrlolonllko fruit
2 Cowboy Aoy

Pass

North

On Allor Markel Sileot Molal,

810

(movie dog)
34 H1nttl't olater
37 WeoQnd.

DOWN

East

spades b1d and made
Now let 1S make West the dcclar~
er If North leads the spade ace , West
un blocks an ho n01 Ailelll.ll!ul:ly II

Ono 01 Tht Artll Largut So·

plnnel hitch whh 2' llall and Ught
and Dralle plug, $195 080 alumi-

Soulb

wath the ace and t clurns a trump
Whatever the de l e n ~e ll s three

73 78 Ford F15C11250, Including
gel tank ..,....,. (3114)812-3893
'

2§61154

27 Director
Spielberg
1
:HAnger
31 Uncle, In
AberdHn
32Cieveland
Cfll'll', lor ahon
33 -- lin Tin

wm~

New Truck Bed &amp; Tall Gate for

A.11le New Tlru, Pentel Hitch

1992 Chevy Full Size Silverado
Stopolda Pickup 5 Spd 44000
miles Like Now garage Kept
$9000 (304)675-3753

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1997 Kawooakl Jet Sk11100 cc 3 '
Suter. Aluminum Trailer. Lilt
Jacket. Excellent Shapal $5,500, •
'
7'0-992·3537

790

and runs good, $2300, 740·247
4292

~~~--------~~!L-----~~~4=~~·=··~~~---------'._~~--~

1990 18' Cheetah okl boll 130
hp Mercury 110 w/oxtru, 11111 8
$8500 080, 740-742·7101
'
~~~~~--------- ·
1990 20 Fl StraiOI Fllh I Ski :
175 HP Evlnrudo LOll Ql Extraol ,
$9,800, 7'0-24H109

an&amp;War toeve ITIMNM

1988 Ford F150 , 6 cylinder au

.l

1973 S11r Crall v Bottom Boat, •
and 6 Horse Marcury and Mlnko· •
ta Trolling, $1 0001 (740) 245· 1
M72

760

57 EllleflH

apec:lalty -

24 "Shlp -1"

Is it serious or
just a. joke?

J

2~0

Soaro 10' Aluminum John Boll
wit~ oaro Trolling and outboard
r otors S300 (304~·3448

com.,...

Instrument

$13,000 (30415711-2933

Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

lm~lun.,,_

41 Louie 01' C.rrle
rl3 ~
45 Own· Scol.
KMnpeloo
48 llfd .,....
11 Kind o1 roctc
47
pt.
17 Prlmery color 48 "Remington --·
II Nee51 INoxt to
~~~~
20 Sellorlta'a aunt 54 Golf ICOfM
21 BiloW 1 cMc:llne 55 On cloud nlnto
23 -cal
5e Ia pnHied of

Opening lead ??

TH' OFFICe

chrome

12,000 00 firm
Hoopar Equipment Trallor Trl·

tonlatlc air, 119,000 miles, Jooka

I GOT TO
STICK AROUND

1991 Harley Oavl&amp;on Solllall
Custom 5100 mlln Llkt new,

age, New Tires New Bedllner

$3 500 00 firm
.,.,
1985 Dodge Pickup Runs"&amp;ood
$900 13041895-3859, Anytlmo

BARNEY

'

condition

·--

llbbr
40 l'ooi1IIIJYlng

I Jolno to lloclc
7 Actr-. a.tty
t3 AIMkln boe1
t4 Lots lola
15 Ita capiUlla

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer West

17,300 mnoa $7 ,900 (304)576· &lt;
2~3

1987 ln1ernatlonal 466 Diesel
Dump Truck En gine Low Milo

runt groat 8 oyl $3,000 OBO
(3()4)675-8704
1000 lbs of good ml"d hay lied
with plalllc $16 oaoh 740·698· 1988 Blazor 4WD, 8 cylinder au·
2765
tomallo, /IC, PS, PB, groat lhopo,
Good Gro11 Hay $1 75 Bole 740 $3700, 740 992-7478 or 740·11(9·
2045
4411-1104
1992 Toyota SR5, 4x4 E•tondod
large round b.alts of mlxld hay,
Cab, V·6 5 Spood , Excollont
exe,of$1-5 each loaded on ~our
Condition, New Tires, 740·258ttuci&lt;, 7'0-985-3925
1504

650 Seed &amp; Fertlllzar

'

alldlng &amp;Ide gloso coat $85 noo(.
soN tor $726 OBO All came ~
1985 full size Chevy, all in grtll
conditiOn Caii740-992,1J17, Nno

Registered Black·Angus Bulls/ 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa
11-1 3 month a ol age It, I Sires
9FB3 Fullback, Ideal t 418, and 1979 4x4 Ctwvy haff ton, lull size
Sloop Eaoy (304)875·2098
very cleal}. n•w engine, no ruat
Aoglotorod Llmoulln Bull, 5 Yoara new point, $3,800, 7~·7881
Old, 7'0-4462158
198( Ford Bronco 4 WhHI Drive,
Automallc,
GOOd Rubllar, $1 500,
Special Spring Feodor Caff Salo
Saturday Aprlt 10th, AI 1 ~lA All 740-4411-2983
Conolgnmento WelCome, Cattlo 1988 Ford Cuolomlud Convor·
WDI Bo Accopttd Altor 4 ~ M On olon Von Loodod, 4 Captain
Friday, Mauling Available, Alhono Saall, Lg Solo·llko bock 1101
Livestock Solo&amp;, 740·592·2322 AM/FM Coo10no Storoo Syolom
740-698·353t
AC, new tlr11 RHII hitch, lite•

640

.

1990,

10 8 7
• 2
South
• 2
•AJ96543

Needa atlrtar, atart~r clutcn and
battery $800 (304)682 3446
'

~

I 998 Chevy S· I 0 Ektondod Cab

monls 1500 (304)e75-7930

1988 Hondo 250 4 TraCk&amp; A Tv.

...

.

.. 9 8 7 6
t A K Q J 10 9

~.

--------------~--------------------------------------~:
..tcomlng
ACROSS
••

25 Aide tt.. WIV..

East
• 10 2

" A K Q J 10

raga kept $2.200 080 (304)11711-

Runs Groall Body Good St 200

740-448-0205

saoo oo 740-4411-n32

.

750

Point Hookup Finish

4647, Rid&lt; Starr, 740 999 2611

POLE BUILDINGS

Wanted To Rent House Or Farm
Nlc:a Kitchen. Near Gallipolis

•KQ

1991 Bonnevllla excellent oondi·

lion, PB AC 3 8 engii)O, $3,700
740-949-2045

QJ 3

K

..

Motorcy~e•
1984 Gold Wing 7~·1135

740

1989 LoSable Full Power Claan
D&lt;tpandabte 740-2511-1526

Yaar Cadalllc Cortllltd Warranty
Loaded Like New, 740 4411-4254.

Block brick sewer pipes, wind·
ows lintels, etc Claude Winters,

490 Wanted to Rent

t

'1543 2

Honda Cuatom Streel Bike.
SI ,OOOOOFirm
•
12 Ft Sun glow Boat, $450 00
13041885-3270

(304)695·3929

5 Ft Grog Disk $100 00 5 Fl 3

630

$300 12 Wllk&amp; Old $300, 7
Monlhl Old $176 Nlco Easlor
GIHI740-388 111142

Pota, $285/MO '740-3811-11182

l

610 Farm Equipment
Equtpment Financing AI Low As

800o837 8217 Linltod quantities

v.a,

247·2022

Fisher Entertalnmem Center. TV
VCR , Stereo, All The Extras!

French City Maytag 740·446·
7795
I

2 Bedroom Trailer 12!50/Mo &amp;

(304)n3-5543 al1or 4PM

Pump Acllbn And Other Equip

conditioned. $260·$300, aewel
water and traah lnctudad, 1•0
992 2167
Ro,.. NO Pelt 740-446.0722

duced! For more lnformallon, cell

mat AlSo f'Qintball Gun, Tracer

One 7 x9 Garage Door With
Opener $150 One 32• Slorm
Door One 32" Outside Door 746·

(304)e75 8866

Clean, Elllclenl 2BR Retoronc
es. Dopoall No Pets (3041675
5162

1971/14X&amp;O HOIIYR&amp;rk Trallor
Total Electric 28R, Prlco Re·

Speed Mountain Bike With Hal

Nice two bedroom apartment in
Syracuse $275 per month $200
deposit utllilles not included 740·

anc01 LillO Call (3041934·
7462

1973 HIIICIIII tWO bedroom IJ'IO·

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

EX 24

0008

New Haven 2BR home garage.
River Frontage Dapoalt Refer·

(304)695-360818!!5·302~

t974 Spring Maynara Good Con·
dillon SUOO May Loavo On
Ran1od Lol 740.367.()632

lng Mowing Hou11 Painting, In-

qulrod

1964 Wlndaor 12x5~ wiExpando
3BR good condlllon but needs
painted outlldt Muat be moved

Mag 4 Inch BLSS w/ Holster
(304)882 3883

pression Fittings In Stock

Avollal&gt;te (/t 740 446 4447 Ret·

$t30000BO 1304)675-3123

Condition, New Model Stand In·

Co!t Anaconda 44 Remington

460

erences /Security Oepoalt Re·

14Jt70 Claylon Mobile Home 2
Bedroom , 2 Bath Free Lot Rent

Roland X P·60 Keyboard Now
ckKlod $1200 (304)773-8180

2 BA Houae In Bellemeade

Located Two Mllea From Holzer
Three Miles From Galllpolla

for Sale

9742

mofO)&lt; no pots 7'0-992 5858

Acre Lol LR. DR, FR ThrH /Four
Bedrooms, 2 Baths Single Car
Garage Gaa /Water Included

320 Mobile Homes

erator Washer &amp; Dryer 740 446-

410 Houeea for Rent

Family /Profesalonala Home One

Dono Jull Move lnl $128 000
74().Ulo004t

TaDie Couch Olntlt8 Set, Relrlg·

Waterline Spoclal 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 , 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Por 100, All Braos Com·

7 Rooms 46 Olive Street 740
446 3945

\lery N ice Well Maintained Brick
Home Grear Location. LA Large
Eat In Kitchen FA /Gaa FP, lg
U A Partial Beaamenl 3 Bed ~
rooms 2 112 Baths, 1 1!2 Garage
P.orchea. Pallo Everything's Been

Will do baDysiUing IQ my homo
Weal Columbia Area (3041773·
9116

Real Eatete
Wanted

229 Burkhart Lant, 2 Bodnoomo,
WID Hook·Up $340/Mq , Depoolt,
Call Toll Free 881i-840 0!121

245-9337

Musical
Instruments

Coffee

Appliances, 740·446 1004, 740·
Ull-4039 Anytime

Now Taking Applications- 35

$300 00 a month, pluo dopoolt
Nopato (304)e75·t•n

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom 2 1/2 Balhs
Uvlng Room Dining Room Eat·in
Kitchen lg Family Room 740·

570

1985 Mercury Grand Marquis
Automatic 302,
Remanufac
tured Engine Has S2 000 Mites

50% off all remain ing merchan
dlee, everything muat go this
week Store will close forever at
noo, on Sat Hurry In for the bast
deals In town Sldera Equipment

Two bedroom apartment In Po·

menl call 740.992 5600

Sorlout Inquiries Only, $300 7'0245-92t3

$500 OBO (304)e75-5480

Nice New &amp; Used Furniture And

RENTAL S

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres Village Middleport
secluded and private appoint·

Pups, Famous Snowcloud Line,

1984 Toyota Camry Good body
runs good Needs a little work

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

We Buy Land 30 ·!500 Acrea,

0 U Or Meigs Mine 740 ·698
7150

with Papors, $10 00 740 379·
9213

44~

Ground

Wo Pay Coah 1-800 213·8365
Anltlpny Land Co

Nice Family Home With Pool
Apartmenl Albany Area 7 Miles

RaDDII&amp; Podlgreed Mini Lops

319-3323 Ext

thlngl 62,000 Milo&amp;, Cullom Kit,

360

tlO appliances Included fireplace
and central a1r two car garage
porches and fence 740 949 9004
after 8pm

Dllt homo, 740 992·5039

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rlveratde Apartments In Middle·

--

Lady Who Bought Female Pup 21
4199 For Her oaughtero Birthday
From Kings Call Them, 740 448·

Poll ee Impounds
And Tu
Repo's For listings Call 1·800·

uaed , $450 00 OBO (304)875·

7~·7565

Do living room/ dining room com-

EsilmtiH, 7'0-245·9048

«e 15t9

11180 ·1HO CARS FROM $600

9924

Approximately 30 Acres Just 5
Miles From Gallipolis, All Woods
With Nice Building Lots, Electric
&amp; Water Available. Call Alter 4 30

Modular home on IOOx '00 lot In
Mason WV Th ree bedroom two
balns family r6oml kitchen com -

We Oo Home lmprovemenla
From Top To 8o11o,cn For Free

Furnished Upslalrs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References, &amp; De
poalt Required, Utilities Pa1d, 740

Golden Retriever A.KC , Puppies

AKC Whitt German Shepherd

Cheal Drawers

44 000 mlleo, $121100 080 740742·2574

3824

side /Out $1 200 OBO 740 4(6·
1845

••

West

1978 Chevy Impala PS /PB, And
Morel Auna G.ood Condition In·

For Sale Pekingeae Pup 3
Months Old Blonde 7-40·4&lt;4.64063 740-446.()319

plesCaii7'0-UI t992

Beds

.

new paint , excellent condition

Easter Bunnies! Ex cellent Pets

Or 4·H Project RaDblts 740 361·
7016

Sandy Or Steel Colora, 7 Weaks,

on Good condition $30 lor all
(304)e75-1311

t8 76543

93 Chovy 4•4 Silverado SWB,

1985 Va,maha 700 Mulma.-.
Street Bike Nice condition Ga·

Breakthrough!!! Lose 10-200
Pounds Easy Oulck
Fa st
Dramatic Results 100o/. Natural
Doctor Recommended Free SamBeanie Bab'lts For Sale Ants ,
Early Pounce Still have tags

1$97 vamahe Tlmborwollo 4WO
Atv, 12.500, (304)682·3446

1978 Buick LaSablo 60,000 Mile&amp;
$400 7'0-379-9247

2460

METABOLISM

North
04-01·98
t A987654

or 50 700 Miles Good ConditiOn
S.S1011or 740-4411-1021

0098

UB-4809

Please call740 1192 2292

388 8903

...

1995 Wlndo11r GL Automatic AI
C Door Locko, (2 000 Mllu,
$)3,500 7'0-367.0106

No Papora, 740 256·8251 740·
4411-8172

Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis Location No Pets $300 + Utilities
Reference Rftquired 740 ·446·

Approximately 3 !5 Acres In Perry
Township Phone "Iter 5 00 7.(0-

large family home for sate on ten
lovely acres lour bedrooms two
and one half baths two llraplaces.
formal living room and family
room four car garage and two
storage buildings two apartmenta
whiCh are completely lurnllhecf

References, Deposit $325/Mo
740·446·9235, 740 446.0577

1977 Corvette 350 Automatic T·
Tapa AJC. Whltlt With Tan lnteri·

5 Ft Brush Hog Never been

740.387-7465

House For Sale By Owner Pnce
Under $200 000 00 A Doctors
Home Exceltanl Cond1tlon Shown
By Appointment Serious lnqul·
rles Only Pleaael 740 446..4559

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Across From Park AC No Pets

Boston Tarrier Pups, $100 Each

Electric, Air ConditiOning New As
Low As $200 553 Jackson Pike,
9·5 740·446·6308, 1·800·291 ·

l ng Concrete Floor &amp; Lofl,
Across From Addav llle Schoot,

Altar

•

304-675-2063

clean, low miles, run1 great
prtced well below wholeaale 740·
9-92· 23!!8. 11 no answer please
leave mosoage

Blrda, Iguanas, Tarantulu mlct
Tank &amp; Pot Shop, 2413
I' ~~ck,~o_n Avo Polnl Pleasant,

3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath&amp; $199/Mo
1 30H31H295

5 250 Acre Lot With 50x70 Build·

By Owner 2910 Meadowbrook
Drive 3BR LA Den w/FP. IBA
Newly remodeled In 1998/
(Root windows siding doOr AI
C Carpet) Nice Landscaping
Privacy;
Fence
$74 500

4 000 PSI Pressure Washer Hat

a

992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunitles

740-3811-8876

2704 740·992 5696

(304)458·1 92t or (3041675-1932

080, 7'0-1192·7039

'91 Lincoln Towne Car. nice

Shot&amp;, wormod Fomalt·$200 00
Male $150 oo 740 379 2524 or
74().379 2961

•

·eo Chrysler LeBaron, $2500

New &amp; Used Furnades Gas

Lake VIew
Gallla County
$32 000 More Acreage Available,

By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
to appreciate will sell hou&amp;e w1th·
out lots for $89 000 740 992 ·

Wedneaday 7th Till Monday 12th

710 Auto• for Sale

pori From $249 $373 Call 740

!5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;

446-4794

furnished apanment. utlll11es paid
depoalt &amp; references, 740· 992

Christy s Family Living apart
menta home &amp; trailer rentals
740·992 4514, apartments avail
abkl, furnished &amp; unfurnished

rnroe bedroom 14x70, $ t 500
740-742·2545

3 br living room dining room lg
updated kitchen run basemen!
nice lot on Mt Vernon Ave 304

Beech Sl Mlddlepo&lt;l 2 bedroom

$3995 OUick delivery Call 740
385-9621

304,738-3409

car RaCI Apnl1tlh &amp; 12th Good

Diamond Back Accent

0165

Oak Wood Home&amp; Barboursville
W\1, $999 Down 7 9 Financing

3 BA 2BA 2 Car Garage 1 Acre
A Must See Letart (3041882
3518

$2 000

No Pets Lease

GOod select1on of uaed homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

down Call1·800·837·3238

Hotzar Hospital $60,000 740 388
8352

and Olher Odd Jobs (3041675·

1 Bedroom

Bank Ropo MoDIIe Homao Single

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Brld!. Home.
Full Basement Wlth Flreptace 2

Call (304)675·5 t43
5 30PM

'2bdrm apts , Jotal electric , ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities close to school In town
Applications available at Vlllage
Green Apta ••9 or call740.992
371 t EOH

800· 383·

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
includes 8 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer aklrtlng
deluxe steps and satup Qnly
$200 74 par month with $1150

2 Camping Spots On Bristol Mo·
tor Speedway Grounds For Nas·

AMAZit«i

6982

7295

11mo ottar call t 800on9·8194

/Cold Unit. Honda Engine 740·

wv 304 675-2548

lis Ferry

'1

Single Parent Program 304· 736-

1e" DlrocTV 9otolllto Syl1omo·
$69 00 purchase price with three
month free programming l imited

3 Prom Dresses Size 8 &amp; 14

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 w .. twood Orlva
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop

Wide &amp; Sectlonals Financing lil
tit As $500 Down 7'0-742 0510

12 Church Pews 10 Ft long,

2 Bedroom Apartment In Cantena~ Appliances Furnished Utili·
Ilea Paid E•capt Electric Clean -

&amp; Utllllies Inter

310 HollieS for Sale

WhKe, $950 7'0-U1.0053

Call 740--446- 1111

3 Acr•• With Double Wide In &amp; movies Call 740 446~2588
VInton N.o Flooding W1ll Sell On Equal Housing Opportunity
LaM Contract With Down Pay ~-~~;;;jjii,;j~~;;;:-;-e.;,;;;,;;

REAL ESTATE

.,.,.=....;..-:-.,---~~---:
12·VInyl Replacement Windows
Double Hung Double Pane Tilt

7606

2 Bedroom Apartment At Galllpo·

Storage Build ing Located 602
Wells Run Road Crown CHy 740
256-1193

Oaya Ids Inc

Personalized Resumes And
Much Moret Intervi ew Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388

5054

$285/Mo , 740 256 1135

2 Bedrooms 141t70 Trailer Com
plet ly Furnished Or Unfurnlahed
New furnace, CA Alao 8x18

opponunhy Daolo

RESUMES UNLIMITED Oilers

per month In Mason WV ln-

2 tt.droom apartment In Middle·
port we pll)' water aewer &amp; trash
~ou pay gaa &amp; electrlc $200 per
monlh, S100 deposit 740-992-

1994 t6xBO Sunshine MobiJe
Home Three Bedrooms. Two
Bathrooms Walk ,, ClOset• Utili
ty Room Electric Heat Pump Re
frlgerator And Stove lncludad,
Call After 4 PM 740-24!-1302

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advenisementsfor real estate
which Is in violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwelilr&lt;JS
advenised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

Merchandise

1986 t4X70 2BR tBA Clayton

44 1 1269

.All real estate adverlislng in
this newspaper Is sub}ect to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wtuch makes It Illegal
to actvenlse ·any preference,
ltmltaUon or discrimination
based on race color religion
sex 18mlllalatatu&amp; or national
origin or any Intention to
m!U(a any such preference
llmttatlon or dlscrlmlnatlo~ "

540 Miscellaneous

Point Ploasanl (3041675·21J4
(740)446-2200

1993 16 Ft KBO Fl Nice 3 Bad
rooms 2 Baths Nett Carpet
Front &amp; Ba ck' Porch E~~:cellent
Condition Must Be Moved! 740

E0 E

1 BR Apartment for rent, $27.5 00

to go Pekingese Poodl.. Mal·
teae. Mlni·Pfna Taking DepOsita
on Shlttu s Mlni·Snouzars
Shelteae
Peek · a· Poo s,

(304)e75-5480

1 BR Apt lor rent on Main St

All Electric Appliances Po!Chts
Carport 740 256-6336

O~o~ erbrook

$279/Mo Pius Utilhleo 740·446
2957

am to600pm,Sundayt00to
140·992·252~. Ru01

S8 500 7'0-256-801 t

1992 Norris 16Ft X 70FT VInyl
Wllh Shing~s 2 Bdrms 2 Battis

t 868 592 3345

Day&amp; 740..W1.0558 After6PM

1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco·
nomical Gu Heat Near Holzer,
WID Hook Up, Quiet location

Pomeroy Houfl M T W tO 00

cludas ulllltlos Call (304)773· $350740-446-6306 .

51 06 or (3041576 2t01

No Fee Unless We Wln!

992·2218

1124 E . .In StrHI, on Rt 124,

t 985 Oakwood 2 Bedroom• 2
Bath' All Electric Totally New
Plumbing, New Hot Water Tank
Some Furniture Must Be Moved!

Excellent Condition (3 04)675

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL 5ECURITY ISSI?

1 and 2 bedfoom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unlurnl&amp;hed, 1ecurlty
deposit requ ired no pets, 74t0·

AKC Roglotorod Pupploo R11dy

..
..••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

FINANCIAL

The Daily Sentinel • Page 15 ..

A well liked professor felt that enthus1asm moves the
world 1 think however, few enthus1asts can be trusted to
speak the TRUTH

,

APRIL 1 I

�•

.

•

.
Thursday, Aprll1 , 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Weather

Clinton says
·M ilitary fears its image·damaged
impeachment no by Clinton's Kosovo $trategy ·
'badge 0 f s·ham e
I

·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- about it."
dent Clinton says he-does not: see his
He also said he has no consuming
impeachment as "some great badge animosities toward those who pushed
of shame" and believes historians will impeachment "I don't wake up every
judge there were political motives day mad at those people," Ointon
behind Congress' action.
said. ·
· In an interview Wednesday with
"Any moment I spend full of
CBS News, Clinton said he felt "hon- anger and bitlet'l)ess is a moment I all)
ored" that the·impeachment gave him robbing from my wife or from. my
a chanoe to defend the Constitution. daughter or from my country or from
He said the American people saw the my friends," he blid. "I just think that
impeachment as an attempt by it's pnst us and we need to put it ·
Republicans to undermine his presi- behind uS. .!Dd we need to go on.
"We o•·" that to the American
dency.
people,
to lei it go .... All the great
"Those that did not agree with
what I had done and were furious l)lat players here, they need,to let it go," he
i~ had worked and 'that the country
said.
While the interview focused largewas doing well, and attempted to use
wliat should have been a constitution- ly on the crisis in Kosovo, Ointon
al and legal process for pol\tical endS, . also discussed how first lady Hillary
did not prevail,'' Clinton said. "That's . Rodham Clinton's ruminations on
running.for a Senate seat in New York
the way I saw it. .. :
"But I do not regard this impeach- and how his family is faring the wake
,
ment vote as some great badge of of the Lewinsky scandal.
"Given what we've been through,
shame. I do not," Clinton said. "I do
not believe it was warranted and ·J we're .,Poing reasonably well," he
said. "We're not a large family. We do
don't think it was right."
The interview, conducted at the love each other very much, and we
White House by CBS anchor Dan. work hllfd to support one another."
Rather, elicited Clinton's most · · He said he had no idea what Mrs.
detailed assessment yet of his Clinto".i wouid decide, but that it still
impeachment ,on charges stemming struck him that having a fi.St lady run
from his relationship with Monica for office was "a. highly unusual
•
Lewinsky. He WJIS acquitted by the . thing."
"And I can imagine that many votSenate in February.
The president said he . never ers in New York would wonder,'' he
said. " And ·that would be a burden
thought about resigning.
" I would never have legitimized she would have to carry in the camwhat I believe is horribly wrong with paign."
what has occurred here over the lnst ,
But, Clinton said, "I think if she
four or five years. So it never crossed could win an election like that, she
my mind," he said. " ....1 just, I prayed would be magnificent."

USDA proposes overhaul of milk pricing system
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department today proposed an over~aul of the nation's
60-year-old milk pricing system,
consolidating the current 31 pricing
.regions ·into 11.
" These reforms will help make
sure that America's dairy farmers
receive a fair price and that Ameri~
can consumers continue to enjoy an
.abundant, affordable supply of
milk," Agriculture Secretary Dan
Glickll!an said.
The changes will also "simplify ·

the wholesale milk pricing system,
making it more market-oriented and
more equitable," Glickman said.
The regions are divided into what
are called .milk marketing orders.
Milk orders were created during
the Depression-era when.dairy fa:rmers were having difficulty selling
their. milk to processors. ,
The orders, which set the minimum price for milk, essentially prevent processors from playing producers against each other to drive
down the price. .

By JOHN DIAMOND
Al8ocl..ed Pr- Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Military officials
worry that the lofty status gained by air power in
the Persian Gulf War declines with each day that
ethnic atrocities continue in Ko$ovo despite daily
NATO airstrikes.
Air .force officers and an active fraternity ·or
retired. air ~mmanders bi~terly blame _the Clinton
admimstration for. retummg to the mcremental
use of force that failed to bring Hanoi to heel in
the Vietnam War.
. "When you fly less than 50 bombing sorties
per day for seven days, you're not serious about
what you're doing," said retired Air Force Gen.
Buster Glosson, one of.the key planners ·of the
Persian qulf War air campaign. "At best it's sporadic bombing." •
..
· Officers, particularly in the Air Force, see the
reputation of air PQwer at risk in a mission laden
with restrictions imposed from the White House.
And they are growing increasingly concerned as
television images from . refugee camps provide
vivid evidence that the airstrikes are not preventing the human suffering of the Kosovar AI banians.
·
"I'm worried about us being blamed once
again for being over-promisers," said one Air
· Force strategic planner who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
No one in uniform will publicly criticize the
commander-in-chief over the campaign against
· Yugoslavia. But Lt. Gen. Ron Marcotte, commander of the 8th Air Force, underscored preconditions·for success from the air. ·
"We've got to be in it for the. long haul, ensure
that we use all our capabilities to the fullest extent
possible and ensure that our airmen have the support they need," Marcotte said.
'
The implication was clear enough: Without
that support and full exploitation of capabilities,

"Our concerns about the exorbita~t expense of the
independent counsel's investigation are well known,
but we 'II let this latest report speak for itself."
The cost. of investigating top administration officials during the Clinton era now tops $76 million,
according to the GAO 's figures.
Starr's $6.2 million expenditure in the six months
through Sept. 30 was up nearly 60 percent .from· the
$3.9. million in the previous six months, the GAO said.
The report did not cover costs for the first 2 1/2
months of Starr's investigation into the presidential
affair with Ms. Lewinsky and the cover-up. Starr
opened the Lewinsky investigation 'in mid-January
1998..The latest GAO figures start on April 1,,1998.
.The GAO totals do not break out Starr's costs for
other aspects of his investigation, such as the prosecutions of Clinton friend Webster Hubbell and Whilewater partner Susan McDougal. But those investigations
pale. in size and intensity to the Lewinsky case, which
involved a massive grand jury inqJliry that lasted
seven months.
•
·Starr wrapped up the Lewinsky investigation on
Sept. 9, 1998, with a report to Congress detailing H
possible ·grounds for impeaching the president for
lying and obstructiqn.
Jhe trial of Mrs. McDougal in Arkansas on contempt and obstruction charges is in its fourth -we~k.
Mrs. McDougal was investigated and indicted last
·May, a cost that would be included in the latest financial figures for·Starr's operation.
Starr has two court cases pending against Hubbell,
·one for income tax evasion, the other for obstructing ·
federal regulators looking into the failure of,the savings and loan owned by the Clintons' Whitewater partners. Both those cases were in the investigative stage
in the months.covered by the latest expenditures.
Independent counsels during the Clinton administration have investigated former Agriculture Secretary
Mike Espy, former Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros,
lnteQor Secretary )3ruce Babbitl and Labor Secretary .
Alexis Herman .

.

By LAURA MYERS
"At a minimum, they are entitled
As POWS, the Army soldiers· acting on behalf of the United States
Associated Press Writer
to POW status and the protection that captured Wednesday near the Mace- since the closure of the U.S. Embassy
WASHINGTON - The Clinton that provides under the Geneva Cononia-Yugoslav border could be held in Belgrade last month.
'· Swedish foreign ministry spokesadministration vigorously con- vention," Pentagon spokesman Ken· unti t e end of hostilities.
·.
demned Yugoslav plans to put three neth Bacon said Thursday. "We're
In elgrade, Sweden's ambas- woman Aasa Arvidsson said Ambascapture~ U.S. soldiers on trial, call- outraged by that," he added of amil- , sador t Yugoslavi~ forwarded a U.S. sador Mats Staffansson met with
ing for their immediate release or pro- itary proceeding that •.\ate-controlled · demand that the three soldiers be vis- Yugoslav authorities in connection
tection as prisoners ·of war from a Serb television saiil would begin ited by the lnternatioual Red Cross with the U.S. demand and that
today.
and that they be released. Sweden is "negotia\ions are continuing." She
military ''kangaroo court.:· ·

.

. Regional Briefs:
GTE wins approval to end
charges for ·some serv·i ces
.

MARION -The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has approved
a plan filed by GTE to eliminate charges for touch calling, reduce intraLATA long-distance rates and trim charges for extended local calling for
its Ohio customers.
,
The plan eliminates charges for touch-tone service for both residential and business customers. Residential customers currently pay $1 a
month for touch calling, while businesses pay $2 per month for each touch
calling line.
.
GTE will also lower rates for intra-LATA (Local Access and Transport Area) long-distance calls by as much as 27 percent. A toll call from
one point to another within aLATA is called an intra-LATA or short-distance toll call.
In addition, the company will ·reduce statewide rates f&lt;;&gt;r its Extended
Local Calling Plan. Fot example, a customer making a.four-minute ELCP
call could save as much a• 52 percent, depending ori the time of day and
distance involved.'
·
'
The Pomeroy, Racine and Rutland exchanges offer Cheshire and Shade
exchanges as ELCP calls.
"We're pleased that the commission took such quick action on our fil.
ing," said Davy M. Roach, general manager-customer operations for GTE
in Ohio. "This plan is consistent with our continuing efforts to increase
the value of the service we provide to our cu.slomers."
GTE filed revised tariffs in March with the PUCO seeking approval
for the rate reductions. The new rates become effective May I.
· Headquartered in Marion, GTE serves customers in over 80 Ohio coun.
lies.

Columb-..s man pleads innocent
to armed robbery at Legion post
CHILLICOTHE (AP) - A Columbus man has pleaded innocent to
helping steal nearly $8,000 io watches, rings and cash from card players
at the Frankfort American Legion.
.
Khalfa~i Wright, 24, entered the pleas Thursday to 15 counts of aggravated robbery, one count for ~ach person involved in the March 16 rob·
bery.lf convicted, he could be sentenc~d to up to life in. prison.
He remained in the Ross County jail on a $50,000 bond, which was
lowered from his initial $500.000 bond when he was arrested March 18
in Circleville.
An informant identified him as one of two people who held up the players, said Sheriff Ron Nichols.
·
The men ordered everyone to get on the floor, put a gun to one man's
head, then forced another man to take a bag around the room for victims'
valuables, Nichols said.
Dark masks, jackets and gloves were found in Wright's car, Nichols
said.
.
Some of the jewelry was.reco~ered. including all of the rings.

fi!1DJ
Over to Bob's••• ,
rJeautlf~l

Potted Ecuter
'jlowers 'jor 'Jour
C.ov~d Ones

Report indicates O'U to extend
airport's runway to 7,000 feet

Choose ]rom:
e Symbolic EasterLillies
e Cjragra,n t Hyacinths .
e eolorful1ulips
e jlorallizaleas
•
· e Many, many morel!

Red' e Pink e White e Lavende

declined 10 give further details.
returned safely this morning. He !md
The-.,U.S.-led NATO bombing no de1ai ls on their targets. The B-l_s
campaign conlinued. meanwhile, and arrived at Fairford from the Unit.U
u:s. officials confirmed today that B- States Thutsday to join eight B-5~
1 Lancer bombers flew missions ·,.l;lompers that have been fly ing(
against Yugoslavia for the first time Yugoslavia missions si nce the-NAtO
Thursday night. Air Force spokesman campaign began.
.
•
Maj. Mark Phillips said JWO B-1s
The llentagon was trying to deterflew from Fairford, England, and
(Contlnued on Page 3)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Newl Staff
A Hartwell Hare isn't a traditional Easter bunny ·kind of rabbit.
It's unique by design and actually
has only been made over the past
couple of years.
'
Rabbits · have always been a
favorite of Bobbi Karr, so it was a
natural for her after opening Hartwell
· House, an antique and gift shop in
Pomeroy, to bring bunnies into ner
business.
As it happened one of her employees, Marilyn Spencer, a longtime
seamstress, was anxious to try her
hand at making stuffed rabbits. Her
creations of muslin, plush materials
and fake fur were called the Hartwell
Hares,
Since she made her first line of
Hartwell Hares, tbey have become
extremely popular with customers of.
Hartwell House, the only place they
can be purchased·. In fact, Marilyn
says sometimes it's a chore just keeping a variety in stock.
At first she used a pattern and
then as she went along, she made
changes in the .design. She' does
most of the cutting out, sewing
together and stuffing ~ith (l9lyester
fill , while. Bobbi does the faces, puts
in the button eyes, and makes some
of the clothing.
All of the hares have jointed arms
and legs and most can be positioned
so that they will stand alone. ,
There are three different sizes small. medium and large, with the
large being about 2-1/2 feet tall.
Some are dressed in vests and pants,
others in fancy or country dresses,
some have accessories, others just
ribbons or homespun fabric around
the neck- "to give them character,"
says·Marilyn.

Set .t hose
clocks
ahead
one hour·
Sunday
,,

HARTWELL HARES - For lhe peit two
yeera, Marilyn Spencer hea been cresting
Hartwell Heraa for esle .. Hartwell HouM In

POIIMiroy. The jointed rabbits ere madtt of
muslin, plu1h meterlsla end flke fur, and come
In lhrae elzee. ' ·

A few have been given names and
The hares are made in a rear room
all carry the Hartwell House tag. Cus- of the store ,which also houses suptomers are invited to name their own plies for the creations.
hare, have it put on a button and
Marilyn has no idea how many
attached to ali ear when they make rabbits she has made over the past
their purchase.

·Spring
forward

two years. but she knows there are
plenly more to make. Proof of thai is
in a large roll of white plush material standing· in a comer of the sewing
room .

.

'

Bal\ll'tltolll

· yaur claclta

IIICI Wltchft
farwlnfOM
h0urll21.m.,

...

~Aprll4.

12

A few 'places exempt themselves
from daylight-saving time: Arizona.
Hawaii, the part of Indiana in the
Eastern time zone, Puerto Rico, the
Virgin !~lands and American Samoa.
For the · rest of the nation, the
change means later sunsets to enjoy
working on gardens, playing sports,
having 11arbecues or just relaxing out·
doors.

CHURCH DONATION - Delry Queen of Middleport donated
$751 Thur~y for repair work to lhe Orange Chriaijan Church
near Alfred lhet ws• deeb oyed In • flood last summer. Nancy
King, right, pre1811tl lhe check on behalf of Dairy OuHn owner
Chuck Kitchen to church member Jim Deetar..
.

UMW chief says .members are 'under assault'

ALSO AVAILABLE AT 80BS:

Good Afternoon

• Frost Proof P.ulsies • Frost Proof Vegetable Plants • Bulk Garden Seed .
• Onion Sets • Seed Potatoes • Spring Flower Bulbs • Large Selection of SOils

Today•s .SeJ:ttiilell
zSectlo~ • 1Z Pages

'•

.""",.

OJmq
. I.ocal

JW$tCONYENIENT LQCATIONS:

· Maao,n, WV
(~) 773,5721

Qalllpo!la, OH
(740) 446-1711 .
- -HouraM2!~at8 am· 8 pm ·Sun 10 ~ 6 pm

OHIO }
Pkk 3: 2-8-9; Pick 4: 7-9-6-0
Bucuye 5: 9-,13-21-30-3 ~
W,\'A.

Dally 3: 1-S-0; Dlllly4: 0-4-5-7
o t999011io Volley PllblllbinaCo.

,,

try soldiers

Not your traditional Easter bunny

ATHENS (AP) - Ohio University officials are expected to announce
next week that the university airport's runway will be lengthened to 7,000
feet, a newspaper reported .
·
· The runway near Albany in southern Athens County currently is 4,200
feet long.
· Extending it to 7,000 feet would let the airport ac'commodate larger
aircraft and the job opportunities they might bring.
. .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri"I th!nk it's g?ing tQ help out the businesses that are here and maybe
cans
will set thefr clocks ahead this
bring in new businesses. I think it's a good idea," Albany Mayor Gary
weekend
as the country switches to
Warner told The Columbus Dispatch in a story published today.
daylight-saving
time.
University officials declined to comment untill\tesday's announcement
As
usual,
some
will fo{get and
of the runway lengthening.
show
up
an
hour
late for work, ·
The next step is sec uring financing, but cost estimates and a complechurch on Easter Sunday or other
tion date were not immediately available.
events.
Warner said that once financing is available, the federal government
For most of the nation, the change
.is expected to pay for most of ihe project, with some local contiibution.·
means
setting clocks ahead one hour .
The Federal Aviation Administration has approved a design to extend
before
goihg to bed Saturday night.
the runway to 5,600 feet. But after Jesse Jackson visited southeast Ohio ·
Standard
time returns Oct. 31.
to promote its potential for jobs, university officials in Athens, 75 miles
southeast of Columbus, began contemplating extending 'the runway to
7,000 feet.

.' HARDY
AzALEAs ·
.

e

....,.en 1ne

.

.

-Page4

r

U.S·. . co.ridemn.s Serbs' .decision to

'

Knlcks nip Cavaliers
with 4 point victory

•

a1

premium is up iLl cents to $1.235.
had increased about 8.5 ce'nts a gallon in the
Across the country, prices at the pump have two weeks leading up to March 19. The Lundsoared, in part because world oil producers berg Survey of 10,000 gas stations nationwide
agreed to take an additional 2.1 million barrels found the weighted average, including all
daily off the market, and bclcausc'\of anticipat- grades and taxes, had in,creased to $1.0869
ed increases in demand for ~pring ·and summer cents per gallon in that time period.
driving.
Other regional prices for self.-serve unleadAnalysts have also pointed to (f:finery pro- ed:
..
duction troubles in California, fpne · of the
~New England: up 7.2 cents to $1.054.
largest U,S. driving markc;ts. Gas is most
·- Mid-Atlantic: up 8.8 cents to.$1.032.
expensive in the West, increasing nearly 14
-Great Lakes: up 17 cents to $1.123.
cents in the past two weeks to bring self-serve ' ' -Mid)Vest: up 11.9 cents to $1.042.
regular unleaded gas to $1.243 a gallon.
. ' -Southwest: up 14.5 cents to $1.087.
Gas is least expensive iii the Sputheast at
The association's Fuel Gauge report Is
$1.003, an increase of 10.6 cents.
based on data from more than 37,000 transacA separate survey found that gasoline prices . t'9n on March 30.

Come·

•.

Actor gets 41
months In jail
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) - A
- man who acted in "Predator." "48
Hours," and .. Lockup," w~ sentenced to 41 months in prison for
threatening his ex-wife,
But before he was sentenced
Wednesday, Sonny Landham bhist·
ed his ex-wife and the U.S. Attorney's Office in U.S. District Court
in·Ashland .
Landham, convicted Dec. I of
"-..naking harassing and threatening'
telephone calls to Bel ita Adams at
her ~wis County home, sard that
U.S. Attorney_ Ken Taylor 'conspired wit!t Adams to convict him
and earn "a big, gold star."
Landhaf!l said Taylor encolir'
aged her to make false claims that
Landham· threatened her with a
knife and a ,gun during their 14year relationship.

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Aeioclated Prase Writer
CABIN CREEK; W.Va. - United Mine Workers President Cecil
Roberts didn't take the top job in the
wellspring of organized labor think·.
'ing the enil of the union was iq·sight.
· But~ he can see its demise - an
end, he says, made possible through
a mix of cheap coal. costly pollution
controls and unrealistic demands of
environmental activists.
"J...ike our brothers and sister~ in
the steel industry, the .me11 and
women who mine this nation's coal
are under assault as never before," he
said. '" The American coal industry
might well be eliminated." ·
At Roberts' order, about 30,000
union miners across the country
planned a a 24-hour, contract-sane,
tioned work sioppagc today, originally meant to .honor co-workers
killed on the job.
This time, however, the day will .
memotiillize the frail condition• of

America's most basic of smokestack
industr.ies. :ro Roberts. the future of
the U.S . coal industry -'- and the
cheap electricity ilprovides - hinges
on several things:
· • Stiffer air pollution standards
beginning next year under the federal Clean Air Act, the firs! stage of
which co!t thousands of jobs in the
high-sulfur coal fields of northern
Appalachia and the Midwest.
• A looming international global
warming treaty ' that would limit
developed countries' e~issions fmm
the burning of {ossil fuels , espectally coal, while exempiing big producer-consumers like China and Brazil.
• Environmental cltallengi:s to the
industry's most productive mining
techniques, especially the mountaintop removal strip mining that has
been the focus of protests in West Virginia.
On these issues, the union known
for its. fierce opposition to coal operators has allied itself with the indus-

•

l
•

•

•

the Air Force should not be blamed for failure.
lgain. 'Glosson couldn't mention the word, saying
· ~ ~rikes on Yugoslavia intensified this week, only that the ••gradualism" of the campaign
so did the rhetoric from Wuhington warning igainst Yugoslavia " reflc:ctsan era we'd all rather
against expecting too much from bombs and mis- forget."
.
.
.
silcs."
.
,&lt;·
The Air Force strategtc plannmg officer
~·With respect to Slopping' ~~~ hnic cleansing~ likened the Yugoslav bombing to P~esident Johnwe.never supposed or reported that we had a si\- lion's "Rollinj! Thunder" air campatgn over Vietver bullet that would bring' tbat.!O a halt," sail! " nani that was designed to force Hanoi to t~e negoVi~ Ad~. Scott Fcy, operatiollllpirector for the . ti,tirt~ table. Then as now, such a campmgn.puts
Jmnt Chtefs of Stall.. !
·
the tnJ!tattve m the handS of the enemy, he satdAppearing Wed~y night on CBS's "60 a view echoed by Powell.
.
Minutes II" program, President Ointon said he
Dan .Kuehl, a professor at the NatiOnal
was aware of tbe military's concern over how air Defense University and an air strtke planner at the
PQWer is being applied.
time of the Gulf War, said, "The air pow~r. folks
"I understand the frustration of some of our -and I'm one of thorn- are very senstttve to
people in the Pentagon," Clinton said. "I have the criticism that;"''h, well, it's been six days and
worked very hard with them to give them the · the Serbs haven't stopped."'
.
maximum possible leeway, showing sensitivity
Air Force Lt. Col. Peter Faber satd the ·current
only to targets that miilht have JI!BI8inal benefits thinking within .the Air Force ~es aiistrikes ~ a
but cause a lot of collatenl ~amaae. I ~on't want . ~ay "to creal~ me~tal concltss10n. and paralysts"
a lot of innoknt Serbian civtlia~ to dte because m an ene~y :w•th stmult~n~ous .strtkes that d•srupJ
they have ' a man running their country that's . commu~tcahons, electrtcJtY: .mfrastructur~. and
doing something atrocious."
.
other hnks that .connect ct!tzens. and mthtary
Clinton urged Americans to "have a httlc . forces to leadershtp. But the campatgn must ope~­
resolve here" and added, "We caq ol view this as ate intensively, around the clock. "The paralysis
something that will be instantaneously success- school requires constant pressure."
ful." · ·
Retired Air Force Col. John Warden, author of
Within the Air Force•. sensitivity io criticism "Air Campaign," an influential book on air
stems in part from suspicion and distrust in other power strategy, said Clinton oppose_d the Vietnam
services of doctrines extolling the decisive role of War but apparently neglected to study the military
air power, a debate tliat dates back to Army air- lessons in that campaign.
man Billy Mitchell's promotion of bombers in the
Clinton, according to Warden, "concluded that
1920s and '30s.
that's the way we go to war. We do things like
Retired Army Gen&lt; Colin Powell this week escalating. We do things like signal-sending, like
warned that the Clinton administration may not gradualism." Warden was one of the develope.,
be able to end the Kosovo crisis without inserting of the idea of stunning and confusing an enemy
ground forces into tbe region. "At the end of the ·with simultaneous attacks on an enemy's support •
day, if you wish to seize the initiative, you may structure, an idea first tested in the Gulf War.
have to do that,'' Powell said.
,
Though more violent in the short run, Warden
• In interviews with active and retired Air Force said such a campaign may end it conflict sooner,
officers, the Vietnam analogy came up again and · and save lives.

Cost of Lewinsky inquiry stands at $6 million-plus
By PETE YOST
Aeeocleted Prees Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Boosted by the millions.
he; spent looking ·into the Monic~ Lewinsky affair,
Kenneth Starr's investigation of President Clinton and
his wife is about to become the most expensive independent counsel inquiry ever.
Starr 's expenditures totaied $6.2 million in the six
months through Sept. 30, when the Lewinsky investigation was going full speed~ pushing the cost of the
independent counsel's 4 1/2-year inquiry of the presi.dent and Hillary Rodham Clinton to nearly $40 million, according to figures released Wednesday by the
congressional General Accounting. Office.
..
Starr real aced prqsecutor · Robert Fiske, w~o ·
already had spent $6 million investigating the Cliotons' Whitewater real estate dealings and other matt~rs . ·
: The most expensive independent counsel investigation to date was Lawrence Walsh's $48.5 million, sixyear probe of the Reagan administration regarding its
arms and money deals with Iran and its secret war
-against the communis!-led government of Nicaragua.
· The former Iran-Contra . prosecutor said Starr's
cbsts would jump by many millions of dollars when he
concludes his investigation, because legal costs for
. witnesses would be included at that point.
'
"I'm sure that Starr will exceed me (in costs)
before he's through," Walsh said in an interview.
Walsh said-that Iinder the independent counsel law,
people who were subjects of Starr's investigation but
who w.ere never indicted arc entitled to reimbursement
from the go.vernment for leg;ll costs. Among th~ many
people who may fit into that category are the president
- who was impeached but not indicted - and Mrs.
Clinton.
Elizabeth Ray, a spokeswoman for Starr, said, "The
monumental effort required to conduct the investigation 9f Monica .Lewinsky and others required unusual
commitments of re110urces."
; And wliite House SPQkesman Jim Kennedy said,

·Fewer farms, anc;t counting, Page. 2
Meigs girls crush FH, Page 5
FFA members honored, Page· t2

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Income and spending growth strong in February
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Claims fell by 6,000 to 289,000. A four-week moving
Aeeocleted Preee Writer
averag~ of claims, which smoothes weekly fluctuations,
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans' personal rose slightly, by 250, to,293,750.
·
income increased at a robust pace in February.and their
Americans' spending, however, has been· supported
&amp;pending even faster, sending the nation 's saving8 rate · by more than job income. They're spending some of
into negative territory again.
their stock market gains - the Dow Jones industrial
Personal income increased a seasonally adjusted 0.5 average closed above 10,000 for the first time on Moopercent in February following a 0.6 percent gain in Jan- ~ day before retreating Tuesday and Wed.nesday -. and
uary, the Commerce Department said today. Consumer tapping into their home equity through refinancing.
That's produced the lowest personal savings rate
spending jumped 0.7 percent after a 0.4 percent rise the
month before.
sinoe the 1930s. It was minus 0.2 percent in February,
Both figures were expected.by· analysts and illustrate the fifth month in six at or below zero.
the strength of the U.S, economy during the first quarter.
In addition to wages, other income categories
Economi_sts had been expecting overseas economic tur- increasing were business owners' income, transfer paymoil to appreciably slow U.S. growth but now concede ments such.as Social Security, interest and dividends and
it didn't come, at least to any great extent, in the quarter rental income. Farmers' income fell. ,
just ended.
..
Spending was led by a 2.9 percent jump in purchases
The department reported separately .that construction. of durable goods, big-ticket items expected to last three
spending jumped a much-stronger-than-expected 2.2 or rqore years. Much of that was for autos. Spending
percent, the largest increase, ip eight months and the rose 0.6 percent for nondurable goods such as food and
fourth in a row.
fuel and 0.3 percent for services.'
Income growth has been supported by rising wages,
Construction spending in February was l.ed by a 4.7
up 0.7 percent in February. Demand for labor is strong, percent surge in government projects, reflecting a HJ.4
with the nation's unemployment rate hovering near a 29- perceht increase for highways and streets.
year low.
Commercial construction increased 3.9 percent, wiih
Reflecting that, the labor Department said today that gains in industrial projects, office buildings and retail
first-t ime claims for unemployment benefits held under stores.
.
.
300,000 l~st week for the ninth consecutive week, a
Residential construction rose 0.8 percent, including a
1.5 percentadvance for single-family homes.
·
stretch unprecedented since 1973.

Aprll2,1tee

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

Gas. .prices .jump nearly 12 cents in two weeks
WASHINGTON (AP) - The American
.Automobile Association says gasoline prices
jumped by nearly 12 cents per ·gallon in the
past two .weeks, the steepest increase since
1990. '
.
The national average price of self,serve regular unleaded gasoline increased 11.8 .cents
since March 16 to reach ..$1.088 per gallon, the
AAA said Wednesday.
This marks the largest increase since August
1990, after Iraq invaded Kuwait, when gas
prices increased 23.2 cents, the association
said. '
Prices for other types of gasoline had smaller increases: self-serve mid-grade unleaded
gas is up 11.4. cents to $1.178, and self-setve

. . Friday

.

I, ,

'

'

[ry, including longtime nemesis Arch
Coal Inc. of St. Louis, the nation 's
second,largest coal producer. '
The alliance has disappointed
env)ronmentalists, who had cpunted
on the union 's rabble-rousing reputation to put it on their side.
"Don't they understand that this.
could ~an more j!lbs?" asked Lau·ra Fonnan, a spokeswoman for the
Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition.
" If they can 't use mountaintop
· remo,val to strip it,. ti!Cy'll mine it
underground ," a .much more laborintensive method. she contends.
Roberts ·called that idea "ridiculous;'' ·
·- ,.
" If somebody could tell me how
to mine this muc;h co3l with picks and.
shovels, l'd be glad to hear it," he.
said. "But it can't be done."
Roberts, the union's president
since 1995,_said he fias an obligation
to UMW members. He accused·some
environmentalists of living in a fan -

tasy world .
" I have to liv!' in the real world,"
he said.
, 'In the real world, coal prices have
.dropped steadily since the post-oil
embargo peaks of the late 1970,,
Roberts remembers coal selling for
$tOO a ton; now it goes for $20.
Roberts also must · confront the
problems of an industrial-age union ·
at the end of the 20th century - how
to make his union grow while mine
employment rapidly dwindles, and
how to finance health care and benefits for a growing pool of retiree~:
Between 1993 and 1998 alone, the ·
number of U.S. coal miners fell from
101,322 to- an estimated 80,000,
according to the National Mining
Association .
From a pre-World War II peak of
• a quarter-million •. the number of
union-represented rpiners surik to
3(),606 in 1997, based Qn data compiled by the U.S. Energy lnfpnnation
Administration.

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