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Monday, April 5, 199\\

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Celtic ensemole, fiddler Rideout to perform at OU

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Jeremy Rowe.. 18. a senior at
Meigs High School, is confined to
Cabeii-Huntington Hospital as the ·
result of serious second . and third
degree burns received while a(tending welding class at Meigs High ·
School last Tuesday.
Jerem)"s clothing ignited duri ng
the class, and as a result he received
second and third degree burns from
the shoulders to the waist,i nclud ing
his arm~ . Fortunately, his face and
head were not burned. Jeremy was
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Meigs EMS. He was stabilized
. and plans to get him to a Columbus
burn center had to he scrapped when
it was learned that there was no room
avai lab le at· the Columbus fac ility.
The emergency unit then transported
Jeremy io the bu[ll center at the Huntington hospital.
·
At the Huntington center, Jeremy
is undergoing daily treatment and
observati on as his physician attempts .
to detenn ine how extensive the surgical and drafting processes are going
to·be.
Jeremy is the son of Cindy Rowe,
Midd leport, and Jay Rowe of Indianapolis, and is the grandson of Bi!l
and Carolyn Demos key, and Virginia
Rowe, all o( Middleport.·
No doubt many of you will want
to send a card or Jetter to Jeremy to
let him know that he certainly has
yo ur support. Communications wil l
reach him at the Cabeii-Huntingt,an
Hospital. Burn Center: Room 5175:
1340 Hal Greer Blvd., Huntington,
W.Va. 2570 1. I JUSt know that Jere'
-my is go nna be glad to hear from all
of you.

regard to Yugoslavia. Obviously, not
a good idea. Under those circumstances, it is, indeed, a bit of a problem to keep smi ling. ·

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• Superior Quality • Ufetime Warranty
• Exceptional Fabrics

.Reg, ~89...-.,......... ,,·,.... §AL~....·,$309

Reg. S429................,_2!:.l1....5339
·Reg. ·S559.......:..----~k.L.5449

30" Eledric Rangi-e-............_ ........:.~- 5309
30" Gas Range-......._ .....,__ ....,.....~.- 5319
Bw1t·in Dishwasher..........._....,....;..........~!.....s299
'" ' . . •
$
10 cu. ft. chest freezer ....- .....__..;_:,~~~••- 399
Ex.· large capadty waslir .........................~~..... s369

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CABINETS

ESy BAlAN J. REED
'nity group which has oppcded some of the district hooked up through the program, 10 more projtc!S
Sentinel NeWa Staff •
board's policies and procedures, and Randy Kidder, are awaiting the award of bids, and 38 more have
Progress on c;onnecting residentl! to the new another of the group's 'organizers; who also serves been bid out, but are not completed due to the
sewer system in Tuppers Plains was discussed when on the·TPRSD board, met with the commissioners ·weather.
'
the Meigs County Commissioners met in regular · yesterday to discuss the progress of the funding proShe also said that the program still has fund\
· session on Monday. ·
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gram and to raise questions aboul eligibility.
available, and those who might be eligible but whc
The wmmissioners aliQCBted $50,000 in ComMurphy and Kidder w~re accompanied by have not yet applied for funds should do si&gt; riglit
munity Deve!'opment Block Grant funds and approxim,tely IS Tuppers Plains residents, many of away by contacting her office and completing an
$10,000 in' Community· Housing Improvement Pro- , whom voiced concern jlbout the eligii:lilitY of some · LMI i,ncomc survey if one has noi yet been comgram dollars to assist low and ritoderate-inoorne re5idents who have benefited from the program, aild · pleted:
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households in OQ!inecting to the system, based on to report alleg~ viOlations. .
Trussell said that the average bid received by her
complaints from members of the communi\}' that
Ac!:ording to Murphy, rental properties and busi- .office has been $600 per hook-up, with three aJI\·
many poor and elderly residents coula not afford to nesses have been connected to the system through tractors performing the work based on their low
wnnect their homes as they an: required to do, .
the county's assistance program. Trussell said that bids.
The $3.2 million system is now operational, and the program allows connecting business locations to
In discussing the program, Murphy also asked
residents have begun to connect to the syste[ll. Cus- the sewer system only if the business is operated the oommissioners to consider including additional
tomers in the district are required to.aballdon their from an owner-occupied home .and only · if the funding for hoolrups in their 1999, CDBG allocaexisting septiC tanks anc! sewer systems and bear the household otherwise qualifies as low or moderate tions, but received no commitment from the board to .
lXIII of connecting their homes to the nearest tap.
income.
do so.
The program instituted by the commissioners
. Truslell said that some business locations in Tup"I still want' everyone in town to have help in
will conned 1S to 80 of the district'$ :ZOO ·cU81biilcis pers Plainsllneet llulliC guidelines. She also advised connecting to the system,.,. Murphy said. "I came
by the time of ill! compl~rion in late May, according that complaints about allegedly ineligible residents . here today hoping that you would be able to find
to County Grants Administrator Jean Trussell. May receiving·assistailcc should be reported to her office some money to do that"
31 is the deadline 'tor all customers in the district to for investigation, but she said that grant awards were
In othe.r business, Commissioner Janet Howard
be connected.
made baSed on income figures verified by her office. :reviewed the program plans for Friday's Rally for ·
Loretta Murphy, who helped organize a c:OmmuTrussell said that, to date, 20 homes have been
Continued on
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$1491~
~991~

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SALE

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$369 Oval Table· 4 Cltairs ....._ ......- ...........___. , ••5279
$889 Oval Table • 6 Chairs.....,......................._ ..., •••s669
.S1299 Lg. Taltle • 8 chai's.......~..................._ .......~'979
$569 Hardwood Table ~ 4 chairs.........................- ........5429
$5'99 Square Table· 4 chairs ......................._ .._,,~...... 5449
S929 Farm tahle • 4.chatrs..........- ......,_.....................5699
$21.09 Table- 4 chairs---~·--··..···-··...................Sf99

•319

$5591~ ·

CHEST OF
DRAWERS

4 D!awer chest..;............ s79

Reg. $109 5· Drawer chest..............S89
Reg; $169 X·L4·Qsa~chest.....5129
.
$
Reg. $239 8 · D!aowr chest......... 189

w/plstal _ _ _s629

Reo.

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ss.9 Reg.
$99

$5296...

&amp; CHAIRS .

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$319 6llll--'269

DINING TABLES

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Open Stock

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SALS

Reg.

---·
Carpet Sale
$141912....

'989

fingerprinting kits to be

· • Free No Obligation Quotes
·
• Furniture and Appliances moved at no charge ·

• FrH remo~al of old carpet &amp; pad...

Berkline·Recliner Special

M

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_!!andle operated ~lt-A-LouiJ.ger
Beauty, comfort, quality-nothing beatS a~
BerkUne reclin~ Reg. $409 to $469
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LOS ANGELES (AP) - The special effects-ladden action movie "The
Matrix," debuted atop the weekend
box office, grossing $27.6 million for
the biggest opening weekend this
year, industry estimates showed.
"The Matrix,'' starring Keanu
Reeves and Laurence Fishburne ,
came out ahead of two other newcomer~. " I0 Things I Hate About
You" and "The Out-Of-I owners." It.
also was the best opening for Reeves
since 1994, wben "Speed" took in
$14.5 million at its debut.
" IOThings I Hale About You;" an
updated, teen-centered version of the
Shltkei&gt;pe:are;an ciBl&gt;sic "The Tanting

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· ;'·:·.$.299.. '
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Choice

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d. "Anyone should

Meigs &lt;;:ounty's school
children will soon be bring- By PAUL SOUHRADA
A118oclated , _ Wrltar
ing home fingcrprinti
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio public schools, on
kits, courtesy of the Meigs
average,
got passing grades on 10 of 18 minimul"
. County Sheriff's Office .
performance
standards included on report cards
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
released
by
state
education officials, but that's not
began offering Monday
.
new child safety prog_ram goodcnough for one lawmaker.
"Scllools need to set their expectations highdesigned mostly for chiler," said .Sen. Gene Watts, a Dublin Republican
dren 12 and under,
who Is one .of the program's strongest backers in
which can also be applied the Legislature. "This poinm ou• how far we have
. to older kids.
to go and how fast we should be moving." ·
The program consists
Fourth-grade proficiency tests scores in all
child · identification kits subject areas, and math &amp;&lt;Xlrcs on the sixth-,
from Fingerprint America, ninth- and 12th-grade tests - as well as the
maker of child identifica- ·statewide graduation rate- showed up as trouble
tion and safety products.•
spoil! on th~ report cards,
Kits were distribut'ed to
Meigs County schools showed a wide variance
of
effectiveness between the Southern Local,
Sherlfl' Jl~
Meigs Local schools 'Mon·
Cindy Johneton' day and Soulsby said he Eastern Local, and Meigs County districts.
Southem Local fared betlt of the three Meigs
11 Pomeroy Elenwnta,Y will contact Southern and
districtS,.
meeting. 10 of the 18 state standards,
ere
n here examln· E~stern schools today. ·. ,
placing
it
in lhc "continuous Improvement" catekltfor children
The at-hOme fingerprint by the ing system lillli nclude~ a~l-r';fl~~~;'I~~~~~;;~-T
lllilert·tf'a office to Mllga County ink slrip with a chart for
ICiiloc)IChildran.
. the child 's fingerprints, a
.
place to attach strands
hair for a DNA samp!e and a place for the child's most recent
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By BARRV $CHWEID
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All Dlplomltlc Writer
. Parents can also include dental Information on the child
WASHINGTON · (AP) - While offerin&amp;
·arious physical characteristics like motes', Sfars or birthnt.arlks.l
Kosovo refugees temporary shelter, the Pinion
The kit also includes a medical information section whiichl
administrati~n is toughenina. tenns for a settleIndicates blood type, date .and place of birth, known allergies
ment for Yugolilav President Slobodan Milosevic,
lchlfo1nic Hlnesses, do~;tor 's name and telephone number.
demanding that he go well beyond a simple pei!:C
Upon completion of the
offering for Kosovo.
the parent may keep them in
"A commitment to cease killing and a Kosovo
safe place for futu re ref·erc1nce;l denied its freedom and devoid of its people is not
should the need arise.
accr,ptabic," President Clinton said Monday,
. All information contained
. declaiing that NATO would prevail in an escalatthe kit Is not accessible to
ina battle with the Yu&amp;Qdllav leader.
..
one unless rcleued by the
Clinton charted a coune, backed by incri!ased
ents, Soulsby said.
firepower, to expel Milosevic's force&amp; from the
Serbian province of Kosovo, return hund~ of
Soulsby emphasizes
thousands of ethnic Albaniins to their homes and
importance of the use of
allow NATO
in to ensure self-aovemment
child identifi
kit

Berber Carpet on Sale ~Trackless Carpet o.n Sale
Plush Ca.rpe.t on Sale~.Sculptured CQ,rpt:t on Sple

'Matrix; tops ticket
sales for weekend
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Meigs County Commissioners discuss sewer system progress

SALE

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[)O.J understand it correctly? What
I'm getting out of the reports is that
President Clinton is over-riding the
opinions of his military advisors in

' "The Out-Of-Towners," a loose
remake of the 1970 comedy about an
out-of-town couple in New York
City, starring Steve Martin and
Goldie Hawn, was third with $8. I
million,
"Analyze This" and "Forces of
Nature" tied for fourth with $6.3 million.
"EDtv," about a video store clerk
who agrees to let televi'sion capture
every minute of his life, dropped
from third to sixth place after losing
4S percent of its audience in its' second week .

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Good Afternoon

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PLUS! GREAT SAVINGS
MON. SAT
9:30TO 5:00

ANDERSON'S

Furniture, Appliance &amp; Floor Coverings :

Single Copy - 35 Cents

JIM FREEMAN
the village, to serve as fire chief.
not do Middleport,, but I still want to pursue i~ here in council member Larry Wehrung asked if village workers
Sentinel News Stiff
' Ballard slated lie was "also disappointed."
Pomeroy," he said.
could wprk on cleari ng brush on the river pank.
Potholes were also a subject of discussion, with some
Council also approved, at Musser's request, an operNo action was taken Monday night towards appoint·Counci l also approved hiring one cemetery worker .
ing a new fire chief i~ Pomeroy.
·
council members expressing frustration over the appar- , ating .com.mittee for the Riverfront Amphitheater com- with the option of hirinS a second wofker if needed, and
Mayor Frank Vaughan told members of Pomeroy Vii- ~ntlack of effort beirig directed toward solving the prob- prised of· Karin Johnson, Bobbi Karr, Annie Chapman, discussed sell ing impounded cars.
Iage 'Council, who met in regular session Monday nigh~ lem:
Susan Oark, Toney Dingess, Bill Quickel and Musser.
A $500 donation to the Pomeroy Youth League was
0
that he ha$ not appointed a fire chief to replace fanner
Council member George Wright commented that he
Musser also said he and Village Administrator John approved with Musser abstaining due to a possible conChief Danny Zirkle who died Dec. 2, 1998.
used a mixture of limestone and a small amount cement Anderson have met with Middleport officials concern- flict of i nt~ res t; the donation is generally used for the
Vaughan S.id he is meeting with fire department offi- to patch two holes in front of his home, and that the mix- ing water problems in Middleport.
·
program's liability i ns~rance and Musser is an insurance
cers later this week and will make an appointment after- ture appeared to be hold.ing up welllo traffic.
,
The two have raised the possibility of Middleport salesman.
wards, he said. The mayor is responsible for appointing
Ballard said it appears that village workers are not buying water from Pomeroy, combining efforts on a
Council also discussed establishing a spring clean-up
the fire chief. He also wants the department to resume compacting the patching material.
jointly owned water treatm~nt plant or even combining for later this month with schedules will be announced
making monthly reports to council concerning fire
"Why aren't the potholes being fixed?" he asked. .
the villages' respective water departmentl! into a single later.
department activities.
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He said he feels council's complaints are falling on entity similar to the Big Bend Water District proposed
Council. approved taking out a loan of $30,000 for
Council members John Musser and Dave Ballard said dtaf ears because council members "make the same · several years ago.
three years to buy' out the leases on two trucks used by
they were disappointed that a fire chief ~as yet to be complaints over and over again and nothing gets done,"
"We're talking. 1 don't knoiv if anything will hap- the water department and authorized spending up to
appointed. The village is !lOw entering a fifth month
A proposed riverside bicycle path was also discussed pen," Musser saill.
$6,500 on a used dump truck for the street department.
with Musser commenting that it now appears unsure if
Council membe.r Scott . Dillon suggested council
Following an executive session to discuss personnel
without an appointed fire chief.
r'. "I for one am not happy with this sitUation," said Middleport will cooperate with a path from Nye Avenue approve a resolqtion supporting construction of Super matters, council approved spending .up to $6,000 for a
Musser. "Something should have been4one by~-"
in Pomeroy to Dave Diles Park in Middleport.
·
Two highway from Athens. to Darwin and the used police cruiser and approved $3,200 for installing
Musser reminded Vaughan that council on March IS
· Musser said he still wants to proceed with a feasibil - Ravenswood Connector. The resolution was accepted . . non-permanent cubicles in the gymnasium, which will
approved a11 emergency resolution striking residency ity study even' if it means running the path from Nye
In other business, council member Geri Walton noted be used for a police department.
1 requirements for the fire chief. The action would allow
Avenue to the Middleport Corporation Line,
that some county-owned cars are being parked long- · Also present were Clerk Kathy Hysell and Police
Acting Fire Chief Chris Shank, who resides outside of
"I just want to make you aware that Middleport may tenn on Second Street and are not being ticketed, and Chief Jeff Miller.
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Hometown Newspaper

Middleport· Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

Now that the weather is warming,
it's more difficult to imagine the Old
Ohio frozen over. However, Richard
Freeman, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy,
has photos of the frozen riv er dated
Jan. 20, 1977 . The pictures were taken from the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

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.Meigs County's

Pomeroy
.
s
till
without·
replacement
for
late
fire
chief
BY

APPLIANCE SALE

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ti oned in an earlier story reviJwing

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$319
~__,,..,-,ol.1JI Ex.·large tapaaty clrye;r ~....... ~ ......... ~·····.······· ......
Side/Side refrigerator "~'l'"""""'~":"~"'; ....!~~.....SJ189
5489
Self·Oean Elec.
Raage
.....
,
_
_,,
...........
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. ·As you -know, these days we're
again talking about the wagon train
that made its way from Pomeroy to
· Columbus 35 .vears a.go to eQJphasize
th~ need for improving Rqute 33. ·
Bill Childs of Middleport is the
only·living member of the train's delegation around; but Emerson Douglas, ·one of the drivers in the 1964
wagon train up Route 33 to Columbus, is still alive and is a resident of
the Roc k Springs Rehabilitation Center.
According to his grandd aughter,
Gay Ami Douglas Burke of Chester,
\,Emerson, now 95, drove some of the
ponies in the wagon train. Her father,
Gerald "Hank" Douglas, not men-

Bett y Tqncy, who resides in the
Baum Addition near Pomeroy, is having some health problems. Cards will
reach her at the Charleston Area
Medi cal Center, 3200 McCorkle ·
Ave., Charleston, W.Va. 25304.

Sale
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Volume 49. Number 233

WHIRL,POOL ~ND ROPER

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th.e wagon train, was 'also one of the
wagon drivers .
Mrs. Burke recalls that she and her
mother delivered food to the men a1
the locations along the way where
they, stayed with their ponies·. The
· wagons were hauled back to Meigs
County on a truck when the trek was
completed.
The wagon train ·which gained
nationwide attentio·n is being remembered currently due to.the recent controversy surroundin g plans to
improve Route 33 from Darwin to
Athens.

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GLIDER/ROCKERS

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Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 40a

day 11-8 loss to San
Francisco

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We're celebrating 10 years of business with tremendous savings .throughout
the
store
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Local diamond results, Page 5
Ann on HIV worries, Page 6
Scrutiny surprises Bush, Page 10

Today: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 40a

Wedding and Rickett's Hornpipe.
·
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Founded in 1979, Hesperus specializes in the performance of the tradJO
tiona! music of many peoples and periods.
'
For this perfonnance, they will be joined by Bonnie . ~deout, an excePf
tiona! fiddler and a pJize winner in numerous compeuuons across Non
America and)lurope.
,
=
Tickets are $10, senior $7 and student SS and are available at the Ternpleton Blackburn Alumni Me~orial Auditori um box office open from nool
to S p.m. Monday through Fnday. Tickets can be reserved by calhng 74Q;

Jtnderson's
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Aprile, UIIIO

Weather

the tune' are still easily recofni zed today, such as Soldier's Joy, Hast~ to th~

Ohio Universi ty's Performing Ans Series will present the renowned Celic ensemble "Hesperus" with guest artist and three-time U.S. Sc01tish fiddle
champion Bonnie Rideout onApril l7 at8 p. m, in the First United Methodist
Church, 2' S. College St. in Athens.
This collaboration combines Rideout's fiddle with several of .Hesperus'
medieval and folk instruments resulting in a rich, multi-cultural musical experien ce. With fiddles, harps, hammered dulcimer, Jute, recorders and viola da
gamba, they explore the living roots of the jigs, reels, hornpipes and airs that
are extremely popular in the current Celtic revival. In this. timely program,
they focus on the earliest sources of Scots-Irish traditional music. Many' of

lOth A

Tuesday

,,

O.Uy 3: 11-8-0; Dally 4: 6-1-4-3

992-3671

0 11199 Ohio Volley... blt1hto1 CD.

· . Continued on page 3

deployment of an international security force in
the province and create a democratic political
framework in Kosovo.
Strongly hinting that Milosevic would be held
accountable for war crimes, Albright said: "There
can be no question that war crimea anq crimes
against humanity are being commitled in Kosovo.
Nor can there be doubt that the orders to carry &lt;IIUI
these acts ate coming from the top."
.• With an estimated 800 people an hour fleeing
the Serbian province, which is part of Yugoslavia,
the State Department now estimates close to
400,000 more ethnic Albanians have bCen·routed,
often by Serb troops - or even Serb neipbors since the NATO attack bega~ March 24.
Ointon called for private donatio!\$ to Kosovar
rcfuaees and offered haven for up to 20,00Q at the
outsel
officials said a refugee camp

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The statewide average figures would be goo&lt;!
enough to merit a classification of "continuous
improvement," a level awarded to districts that
ineet .10 to 16 of the standards. The top level of
"effective" districts, achieved by IS districts thi6
year, requires a passing grade on ·atleast 17.
At the other end of the scaJe, districts on " aeademic wat,c h" and .. academic emergency ..
require plans showing how tbe improvement will
be accomplished, Watts said. If the districts do not
improve, they could be taken over by the state.
All of Ohio's large •. urban districts are in the
lowest category, with Oeveland schools failing to
'meet the state minimum in any area.
Organizations representing the state's teachers
and school boards have not taken a position on the
report card program. But officials with both
.groups cautioned against trying to rank school
districts. That's because of the difference in numbers of students· and the varying social and economic conditions.

otenoug

eac

United States copsiders ·
Ointon promised an "undiminished, unccas- tanamo, Cuba, w~ich
average about one.
.u.s.
territory
and
has
been
used to care for Haitand
unrelen~ng"
air
campaign
until
Milosevic
ina
children are reported
re&gt;tei'!ICS a c;ampaign that h111 forced NATO into ian and Cuban refugees. .
.
each ·year. .
·
Other
NATO
countries
are
offering
to
take
in
the
j!OIIItion
of
seeking
to
retum
hundreds
9f
thou· . Of t,he chll~ren found,
,
sands
of
refugees
to
theit
homes
rather
than
the
up
to
SC),OOO
more.
large percentage are
Moved by Milosevic's campaian from tbe
because a recent p~otograph original aoal of keeping more from bein&amp; pushed original aoaJ of simpi,Y atoppiqg ethnic repression
out.
was · available to harch
Secietary of State Madeleine Albright ticked in KQsovo, th~ Ointon administration insism the
groups.
off the U.S. demands in a speech Monday nipt Yugoslav leader will not be per:t'nitted to succ;eed;
Parents may pick
honoring Gabrielle Kirk McDonald, who is,presi- that the resettlement is only te'mporary and the
the Meigs County
refugees will go home again. Officials also deny
dent of the war criJilCs tribunal for YugoslaviL
Office Monday through Friday,
Albright said Milosevic must pull military, the sustained NATO bombardment was having
8:30-3:30 p.m. ,
police and paramilitary forces out of K05ovo, the unintended result of helping Milosevic
There is no cost· for the kits. . return all refugees to their homes, accept the
Continued on page 3

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gory, while Eastern Local met six of the 18 st~te
standards, quilifying it for the "academic watch"
category.
Meigs Local, however, met only five 'of the
18, of the state standards, placing it in the "academic emergency" classification, the lowest rating
the new system uses.
"
The reports, sent (lut to parents this week; aim
. to point out where Ohio's 611 w.hool districts arc
meeting expectations and where improvements
are needed.
The reports, ·released Mon!lay, include petails
about test scores, attendance, discipline, gradualion rates, student/teacher rati05 and finances for
last school year. This was the second trial. run for
the program before it becomes official next year.
When the reports go out next year, underperfanning school districts will face stricter .over- .
sight froril state officials . and those that meet
expectations cou)d· be freed from some state
requirements, Watts said. ·
· The reports released Monday will provide a
good baseline to judge future improvemcnm•. he

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SEEN THROUGH a bue wlnclclw, an
Albanian m~~n
with a child In N•
enne .. the n.m bue or r.rugeee .-rlvM at
tha Petrovec Airport foro a flight out of
Mlcedonla Monday. A lnelllve alrlft It
plenned to treneport refugell tD NATO ·
m.mber-ltltea wtto hlw egrwcl tD a-porertly take in some refuge~~ to .... the

•••pe

pr_u,. on Yugoei11Y11'1 neighbors.

'

�-Commentary

PegeA2

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'£sta6fi.Wtl itll948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-082-2150 • Fu: 082-2157

Community Newspaper _Holdlngs, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCI-I
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~

U1 Court Sl.,

-Cath.olic schools:
rai$ing tuition
·.and
teacher salaries
'.By THOMA.t; J. SHEERAN

Aeeoellllecl Pre.. Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Parents of Roman Catholic school pupils may
face sticker shock as paiishes consider tuition increases for many families
' and bigger subsidies for needy ones.
· ' The logic is simple: By charging wealthier families more, tuition aid
· would increase and Catholic schools would become more affordable to
poorer families.
Clergy also see the new funding system as a way to reduce the share of
school costs subsidized with Sunday collections and to increase teacher pay.
The idea has been pioneered in Cincinnati aJd Baltimore and now has
. reached the 144 elementary schools in the Cleveland Catholic Diocese.
·. Bishop Anthony M. Pilla has recommended that pastors consider adopting
it, although the final decision will be left to the parishes.
Elementary school tuition in the range of $1,000 could more than double
·
if parishes adopt the new sliding payment scale.
.
"It's a very fair way to do it," said Cheryl Brabender, whose eighth-grade
· ' son attends the 550-pupil St. Peter School in Lorain, about 25 miles west of
Cleveland.
. . Determining who pays what would be based on rankings by
outside
agency, like those t,hat decide a family's abilify to pay college tuition. The
·Private School Aid Service in suburban Cleveland, which does such work
for 2,000 schools, said there were too many factors involved to specify if a
. ~ $40,000 income family would pay more or less.
" Tuition at St. Peter will increase from $890 to $990 next fall in the first
· ·'of what could be a series of increases meant to get tuition for most families
closer to the $2,400 per-pupil cost.
"We haven 't had any strong objections," said the Rev. Kenneth Wolnowski, pastor of St. Peter. The parish has been involved in a year-long
..effort to explain the tuition.
Mrs. Brabender said most families in the middle-income parish would be
able to afford higher tuition. "When they learned it would be ph~d-in over
'lime, they were very accepting of it," she said.
Explaining such changes is important, said Monsignor Thomas McDade,
who advises the nation's bishops as education secretary of the U.S. Catholic
Conference in Washington, D.C.
• • "The barrier is: How well is it explained? How will they comeJo understand the rationale? lt's ·going to take a Jot of teaching and ~keting,"
McDade said.
.·, Revamping tuition is a process occurring across the country but so far is
. I)Ot extensive, McDade said. Natignwide, there are more than 2.6 million
• children in more than 8,000 Catholic schools.
: Diocesan Catholic high school tuition ranges from $4,000 to $6,000 and
. don't get parish subsidies. Those schools aren't part of the Cleveland pro.posal.
.
Catholic schools traditionally have good pupil scores but limited
finances, a fact that was overcome with an earlier reliance on nuns paid as
'little as $25 monthly:
Lay teachers now hold most parochial school' jobs but their starting, pay
in Cleveland is only 60 percent of public school teachers, and the gap
increases with seniority.
. Reducing that gap is part of the thinking behind .asking families to pay
__more if they can. "We 'don't want to lose them (teachers) if tbey can't make
a car payment," Mrs. Brabender said.
At the 460-pupil St. Sebastian School in Akron, tuition is a relatively high
'$1,500 and an increase to $1,830 will allow each teacher to get a 20 percent
pay raise next faiL
, The pastor, the Rev. William Karg, has begun telling parents about the
,need to increase tuition cJow to the current per-pupil cost of $2,600. Ten
.y~ars ago the school was tuilfbn-frcc.
·
... Some parents complained, but parishioners also have aggressively raised'
money through a foundation to provide tuition aid to needy families and subsidize teacher salaries.
For Mrs. Brabender, having a daughter and son in St. Peter School was
part of a decision to find a good school with strong faith values, even if it
comes at a high price.
• "We wanted our children to be schooled in an environment that "''Ould be
.i\urturing and
have high academic
standards," she said.
.
.
.

Only one can win: Clinton or MiloseviC
.

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that air power can't stop the atrocitiesJn Kosovo
By Morton Kondreeke
eKcept, conceivably, by causing so much pain in
For President Clinton, a danSerbia that Milosevic fears his country -- or, at
gerous and decisive situation has .
developed (lver Kosovo: either he
least, his military -- will be reduced to cinders. ,
wins or Slobodan Milosevic does.
· But, as Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) pointed
out last week in an interview, "We are not bombThe middle ground is disappearing the bejesus out of Serbi,a. They held a rock
ing.
concert in downtown ~lgrade the other day to
This state of affairs is different
show hllw unscared they are."
from any other foreign policy conNATO has stepped up bombing and ordered in
frontation Clinton has faced. In Iraq, Bosnia,
Somalia, North ,Korea' and Haiti, inconclusive more planes, but McCain says the allies need to
endgames have been acceptable. In Kosovo now, atlack Serbian brid&amp;es lll!d power &amp;rids, as well as
they aren't.
government offices and military headquarters -For Clinton, the Kosovo situation resembles risking the civilian casualties that Clinton wants
·
then-President George Bush's Persiar Gulf con- to avoid.
Without yet recommending introduction of
frontation with Saddam Hussein, wheu the U.S.- .
led allies had to drive iraqi forces out of Kuwait ground forces in Kosovo, McCain argues that
or be humiliated and suffer dire strategic conse- . Clinton "should make lt ·a credible threat" and ·
stop ruling out use of U.S. forces.
quences.
In 1991, failure to win against
Saddam would have rendered the
United States an unreliable super- errA ® "', - 'l'ft)ltiK fTAA-'Tel.~cs,...., ~ ___,
power, especially in the eyes of )he HULMe
·
,
oil states of the Middle East.
_ In 1999, failure to stop Milosevic's mass murder in Kosovq will
render NATO a toothless tiger and
raise doubts about its ability to
maintain peace and stability in
Europe, especially if Russia
becomes aggressive.again.
'
· Clin)on stumbled into this do-ordie confrontation with Serbia. He
evidently thought that the mere
threat of NATO bombing would
scare Milosevic into accepting the
Paris peace deal that involved allowing NATO peacekeepers on Serbian
territory.
·
Milosevic called the bluff. And
why wouldn't he, after Clinton
repeatedly issued ultimatums with·
out consequence? And after Milose·
vic had seen Clinton respond so
mildly, so often, to Iraqi misbehav·
ior?
Moreover, Milosevic had to be
encouraged by the U.S. record In
Bpsnia, where Strbs engaged in barbaric ethnic cleansing without serio.us conscq uence -- in fact, saw its
results ratified in the Dayton peace
agreement.
I hope -Clinton's posrur,e on ground troops is
When Clinton began bombing Serbian targets
last week, he evidently hoped again that Milose- calculated: that he understands they mlly be needvic would cave quickly, but the dictator did the ed to win but wants brutal ev~ts on the ground to
opposite: He steppe~ up his campaign of ethnic make that need clear to a nervous American public.
eradication in Kosovo.
It's all too likely, though; that Clinton is resMilosevic apparently anticipates that he can
survive whatever damage NATO bombs .cause -- olute in his determination not to put U.S. ground
indeed, he's getting stronger all Serbs unify in forces into a Kosovo "quagmire"·· in which case
anger at the bombings ·- and can use the time to he just may lose his confrontation with Milosevic. •
Two of the cduntry's most esteemed foreign
butcher and 'burn Kosovo clean of ethnic Albanipolicy
strategists, former Secretary of State Henry
ans.
If Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) is right, and Gin- Kis&amp;inger and former National Security Adviser
ton intends to keep bombing for "many weeks," Zbigniew Brzezinski, contend Clinton has no
that might give Milosevic the opportunity to dec- viable choice but to win his contest with Miloseimate or drive out muth of the Albanian popula· vic.
"I don't think Clinton will be flaky on this,"
lion.
Brzezinski
said this week. "He's put his prcsiMilitary exper~ almost unanimously . agree

Ohio weather
Wedneeday, Apr. 7

dency on the line. And this has become a test ~
of the international system the U.S. presumes fO
lead."
Brzezinski favors low-level air strikes In
Kosovo, risking pilot losses; arming Albani!IJl
auerrillas; and probably
• using ground forces rto
occupy Kosovo.
. ,
Kissinger wrote [n Newsweek that "wh~it
American forces are engaged in combat, victor&gt;:
is the only exit strategy." He thinks that ground
forces may be necessary to win and "to maintain
NATO credibility."
:
Of course, there is an alternative.to victory and
undisguised defeat -- a disguised defeat.
:
If Clinton decides he can't win and wo~'t
commit ground troops, he might agree to ace~­
fire or "peace settlement" that leaves the Albanian population devastated and Milosevic In
charge.

0
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Racine American Legion Post 602 will hold a fried chicken
Sunday, 11 a.m. Dine-in or carry out is available.

Cindy L Hesson, 42, Hartford, W.Va., died Monday, April 5, 1999 in Pleas:
ant Valley Hospital.
Bom Jan. 2, 1957 in Pomeroy, daughter of the late John M. and Carol J. Russell \Yt&gt;rkman of Mason, W.Va., she was the office manager for Midwest Steel '
of Pomeroy.
She attendcd"the Fathers' House Church in Hartford, the Ma5on Chapter 15'7
of the OES, and Women of the Moose Chapter 594 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Surviving in addition to her parents are her husband, Rick E. Hesson; a son,
Tyler J. Hesson of Hartford; a daughter, Rikki Lynn He&amp;'lOn of Hartford; and
several aunts, uncles and cousins.
She was preceded in death by a brother, John Raymond Workman: maternal
grandparents, Eddie and Virginia Russell; and paternal grandparents, Raymond
and Verlie Workman.
Services will be 1 p.m. ThurSday, April 8. 1999 in the Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. George Hoschar and the Rev, Mike
Finnicum officiating. Burial will be in the Union Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
.•

Shade River Lodge

Michael W. Gilkerson

•

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...

605

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Paying the high price of

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Mothers sue Wai-Mart

'justice~

·.· .The D"''ly Senti'nel

R
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=ro:!fi:: =1i,.~;~-.nd ~. o::-1--il~~~~cai~l~cu~J~a~te~dsijeff~~ic~ie~n~~c~ie~~s;._- epo
arus ...

Camp 7230, Saturday, 4 p.m. Burlingham Modern Woodmen HaJI,
Burlingham. Robert Byers of Meigs EMS to speak at5 p.m. on preparejl·
ness for Y2 K. ·
j

DAV to meet

.• ·

Disabled American Veterans, Chapter 53, will meet April 12 with dirner at 6:30 and the meting at 7 p.m.
,

i

To entertain

Junior and Rita White will be featured at the Senior Citizens Cent~r,
Pomeroy, following the evening meal, Thursday. beginning at 5:30 p.m.
This will be their first time to entertain at the center since he sufferedla
.. stroke last fall. There is no admission charge.

Gospel sing .

.Fraud runs rampant in viatical indust

- .Obituaries
&gt;

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......

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pllklatmaunoemema •r•a•t by 1oo111 ....... -..... ObllulriM
. . publlar.d•rwqu• t Jtoaaaanwaadttholilt ·tngmaralntDrn r ,...,.
.. pro\idldlnU.I~QD 1. . 6i.. Oedt•tla1hll
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Sandra K. 'Sandi' VanMatre
Sandra K. "Sandi" VanMatre, 56,
of Point Pleasant, West Virginia ' dled ·
/
~
Sunday, April 4, 1999 at her residence.
Born June 22, 1942 in Gallipolis, daughter the late Paul D. Burns ~nd
Maxine M. Daugherty Burns, she was the co-owner of Blue Water Welding
and Construction Company in Point Pleasant.
·
She wa&amp; a member of the ~ain Str~et Baptist Church in Point Plellsant.
Surviving are her husband, Donald M. VanMatre of Point Pleasant; two
daughters, Mrs. Randy (Valerie) Russelll of Swansboro, North Carolina, lind
Edina VanMatre of Clayton, North Carolina; two granddaughters, Greer VanMatre and Shea Russell; a special family friend, Joe Gordon of Point Pleasant; six sisters, Mrs. Lewis (Cheri) Rupe of Casa Grande, Arizona, Mrs.
William (Carla) McKinney of Middleport, Paula Burns and Mike Mourn' of
Nelsonville, Mrs. Ronnie (Jan) Roush of New Haven, West Virginia, B~th
Birchfield and Tom Schoo.nover of Rutland, and Mrs. David (Susan) Hall of
New Haven, West Virginia; and seven brothers, Gary "Buck" Bums of Wilmington, North Carolina, Richard Burns of Phoenix, Arizona, Larry (Eiaipe)
Burns of Eastford,. Connecticut, Jerry ~ and J~nness Ellett of ChugitJ&lt;,
Alaska, Eddie (Amy) Bums of Wilmintlon, North Carolina, Michael
(Rachel) Bums of Cheshire, and Doug (Frances) Burns of Pomeroy.
.
In addition to her par~nts, she was preceded in death by a brother, ll-o&amp;er
Burns.
,
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, April 7, 1999 in the Main Street
tist Church in Point Pleas;mt, with Pastor Don Johnson officiating. Burial wtll
follow in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, West Virginia, from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday, April 6, 1999.
The body will lie in state in the c~urch from noon until the lime of the services on Wednesday, April 7, 1999.
,
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations can be mad!: to the
· American Kidney Association, 100 North Brand Boulevard, Suite 200, Glendale, California 91203.
'
A reception for the family and friends will be held at the Main Street Bap-tist Church following the services.
'

siP.-

Judge gives death sentence tO'
man convicted of dance killings
sentence.
By JAMES HANNAH
Befor~ sentencing, Taylor spoke
Aasoclaled Press Writer
XENIA ( AP) - A judge tixlay for about 15 minutes, reading frortl a
ordered the death sentence for a man statement he had written on legal
convicted of killing a couple at a paper. He claimed some of the victims were lying and complained that
Val~ ntine's Day dance last year.
The defendant, James Taylor Sr., he wasp 't allowed to present some
had begged for the death penalty. of his own witnesses at trial.
However, in a 15-minule statement
"I feel I've been shortchanged,"
before his sentencing in Greene Taylor said.
County Common Pleas Court, he
" You can put ,Ill• to death b~t
loudly proclaimed his innocence and ·that's all you can do after I'm dead/'
said he did not gel a fair trial.
he told Rose.
Taylor, handcuffed and wearing
Taylor was convicted of killing
jail-issued shirt and pants, aid not Ronald Rihm , 51, and Rihm 's wife,
show any emotion when Judge Carolyn, 57 during a dance at an
Thomas Rose read the sentence. Eagles lodge in Fairborn in February
Taylor was Jed imrqediately from the 1998.
courtroom afterward. Appeal of a
Taylor, 68, of Huber Height&amp;,
death sentence is autom'atic.
says he went there to kill himself in
Taylor represented himself at his front of his estranged wife but tile
trial, even though he has no legal gun went off accidentally, killing his
training. A jury convicted him of, wife's friends and wopnding another
'.
aggravated murder, allempted man.
aggravated murder and attempted
murder and recommended a death

Stocks

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The Carpenter Baptist Church, State Route 143, will have a gos~l
sing, 1:30 p.m Sunday. The Brady Family of Parkersburg, W.Va., Evelyn
Roush and Sandra Long, and Dan and Faith Hayman will be the singerS.

DECISION . ,

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sS.

:

-t. . . . . . . . . . .

..

:-1oday In History

:·

!
Potluck and Family Life Activity, Modern Woodmen 'of American,

Roger D. McClelland, 66, 2645 Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis, died Mon·
day, April 5, 1999 at his residence.
Born March 4, 1933 In Athens COunty, son of Virginia Gail Grover
McClelland of Rutland, and the late Riley Lewis McClelland, he was retired
after 39-1/2 years of service as a conductor with COnrail.
'
He was a U.S. Army veteran, and a member of the French City Old Car
· Club and the Loyal Order of the Moose 731 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
· Surviving m addition to his mother are his ' wife, Patricia i... Barker
McClelland, Whom he married Feb. 20, 1954 in Charleston, W.Va.; two
daughters, Becky (Kenny) Blankenship of Sidney, and Debbie DeLong of
Toledo; a son, Roger (Janet) McClelland of Gallipolis; seven grandchildren,
a great-grandson, three stepgrandchildren and two step-great-grandchildren; ,
his mother-i n-law, Lillian Barker of Gallipolis; and a brother-in-law, Paul
Barker of Georgetown, Del.
_
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel, with
the Rev. Clark, Baker officiating. Entombment will be in the Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. Friends may caJI at the chapel from 6-9 p.m.'Wedn,esday.

Sandra K. 'Sandi' VanMatre

din~r

Modern Woodmen

Roger D. McClelland

By The Auoclated Press
The last of the rain clouds will move·out of Ohio ionight and •lies will
be mostly sunny on Wednesday, the National Weather Service said.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s and highs Wednesday in the 60s.
Fair skies are expected again Thursday, with the next chance of raih on
Friday.
.
·
The record-high temperature for this ilaie ·at the Columbus weather station was 82 degrees in 1929 while the record low "''as 19 in '1881. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:01 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:f.Y7 a.m.
Weather roreast:
lbnight...Partly cloudy. A chance of showers early. Lows in the mid
40s. West wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday...Sunny. H1ghs in the mid 70S.
Wednesday night...Mostly clear. Lows in the lower and mid 40s.
Extended loftCIIst:
Thursday.. .Partly cloudy. A chance of showers during the night. Highs
in the mid 70s.
.
Friday•••Mostly cloudy wilh a c.hance of &amp;!lowers and thunderstorms.
.
Lows in the mid 50s and highs in the mid 70s. ·
.
~turday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the upper

•

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will hold its regular meeting Thu~.
7:30p.m. at the lodge in Chester. All Master Masons are invited to a,ttenjl.
Refreshments will be served.
'

Michael W. Gilkerson, 36, Lake Wylie, S.C., died Sunday, April 4, 1999,
at Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, N.C. Arrangements will be
announced later by Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Clear, ·sunny skies forecast
for region on Wednes~ay

•

Racine chicken dinner

Cindy L. Hesson

Sandra K. "Sandi"· VanMatre, 56, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Sunday,
April 4, 1999 at her residence.
·
•
Born June 22, ! 942 in Gallipolis, daughter the late Paul D. and Maxine M.
Daugherty Burns, she was the co-owner of Blue Water Welding and Con·
struction
Co. in Point Pleasant.
•
•
.
She was a member of the Main Street Baptist Church in Point Pleasant.
Surviving are her husband, Donald M. VanMatre; two daughters, Mrs.
Randy (Valerie) Russelll of Swansboro, N.C., and Edina VanMatre of Clayton, N.C.; tWo granr:ldaughters; six sisters, Mrs. L:wis (Chtri) Rupe of Casa
Grande, Ariz., Mrs. William (Carla) McKinney of Middleport, Paula Burns
of Nelsonville, Mrs. Ronnie (Jan) Roush and Mrs. David (Susan) Hall, both
Gf New Haven, W.Va., and Beth Birchfield of Rutland; and seven brothers,
So 'far, Clinton has rejected such a deal-- as he
Gary
· "Buck" Burns and Eddie (Amy) Burns, both of Wilmington, N.C.,
did when Russia's pro-Serb prime minister,
Richard
Burns of Phoenix, Ariz., Larry (Elaine) Burns of Eastford, Conn.,
Yevgeny Primakov, suggested a bot:nbing halt as a
· by the Yugoslav leader without a Jerry Burns of·Chugiak, Alaska, Michael (Rachel) Burns of Cheshire, and
Continued from page 1
prerequisite f9r talks.
safe return of the refugees.
achieve his goal.
Doug (Frances) Bums of Pomeroy.
But Clinton might conceivably get desperate if
''Milosevic may think he 's fin'
Appealing
direcily
to
Americans
She was also preceded in death by a brother, Roger Bums.
prolonged bombin&amp;'doesn'l produce results.and_if
ished" at that point, Bacon said of
help
the
victims
of
Milosevic's
'.to
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in tlie Main Street Baptist Church,
public support for his military campaign -· curany ~nilateral cease-fire by Milose- Point Pleasant, with Pastor Don Johnson officiating. Burial will be in the
·"expulsion
policy,"
Clinton
rently about SS percent positive in most polls -announced a toll-free number, 1- vic. "We will not be finished."
Kirkland Memorial Gaidens. Friends may call at the Foglesong Funeral
begins to Oag.
·
.
Previewing a planned bolstering Home, Mason, W.Va., from 6-9 tonight..
800-US,.UD-REUEF,
that
people
,
Capitulation to Milosevic, however, would
~ Cllll call' to donate money to non- of NATO's airpower, Defense SecreThe
body
will
lie
in
state
in
the
church
from
noon
until
the time of the serpermanently d1sgrace. Clinton anew. Not·only IS
tary William Cohen said U.S. Army vices on Wednesday.
'
governmental
relief
efforts
for
eth'
he the second U.S. president to be impeached, but
Apache attack helicopters would tar·~ic Albanians expelled from KosoIn lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations can be made to the
he would also be the president who made the
get Serb military and police forces American Kidney Association, 100 N. Brand Blvd., Suite 200, Glendale,
v~ .
world safe for ethnic cleansing.
'
, "We're doing all we .can, we that are now "open and vulnerable" Calif. 91203.
. (Morton Kondracke Is exKUtlve ~ltor ol
need more help," Clinton said. He in Kosovo. The helicopters probably
Roll C•ll, th• newsp~~per of Cllpltol Hll.)
·
safd $150 million in U.S. govern- will not be ready for action for more
Copyrtghl1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. .•
.
.
ment funds has been committed to than a ':"eek, however, officials said.
"We're going after his tanks, his
humanitarian relief in Kosovo.
DAYIDN (AP) - 1\vo mothers our stores and arc sensitive to their
At the same time, Clinton had armored units, his artillery, those who allege that Wal-Mart Stores lric. needs," said Melissa Brown, spokes·
some of his harshest words yet for forces on the ground jhat are carry- interfered with their right to breast· woman for the Benton.ville, Ark.-based
ing out this horrific ethnic cleans, Milosevic.
By ~oHph Perkin•
Mayola Williams says that her suffered an injury, the. first thing hedge their bets by ,negotiating with
ing," Cohen said ·in an Associated feed their babies have sued the retailer. Wai-.Mart.
· Mayola Williams struck it rich . dearly departed husband had but one they do is rusli to the courthouse. a liable company for a discounted
··: "We know we are up against a
"Money is not the issue. It's an
Brown declined to comment on the
Press interview. "They are going to
last week.
dying wish. "He wanted to make ·And the trial lawyers are only too settlement-· say, offer Philip Morris
•dictator who bas shown time and
issue
of
justice,"
the
women's
attorney,
specifiCS
of the lawsuit.
be targeted now and taken out."
No, she didn't make a killing on cigarette companies stop lying about happy to encourage them, holding a $40 million deal to make the Pon·
ligain that he would rather rule over
Susan Brasier, said Monday.
"However; we allow mothers to
On the humanitarian front,
Wall Street, cashing in on some hot the health problems of smokers," out the possibility of instant riches- land case go away.
rubble thdn not rule at all, someone
The lawsuit was filed last week in breast-feed infants in our stoics." said
received a report on the
Albright
Internet stock. She didn't sign a she said, adding that "this jury - such as the $81 million that MayA company in Philip Morri•'
who recognizes no limits on his
Montgomery County Common Pleas Brown, adding that the company will
lucrative contract with, say, the agreed with his goals."
ola Williams won this week.
position might very well cut a detl
·behavior eKcept those imposed by exodus from David Sheffer, the U.S. Court by Dana Derungs and her son, contioue to try to make sure workers
ambassador-at-large for war crimes.
WN BA, to shoot baskets and
So Jesse Williams was not to be
Of course, most liability suits,end with the devil triallawyel'$ and settle
-others," he said.
Devon, of Lebanon; and Jennifer Gore arc aware o(lhat.
Based on interviews he conduct- and ber son, Austin, of New Lebanon."
rebounO. She didn't even hit the blamed for ignoring the explicit uns~ccessfully '(as trial lawyer a case-- even for $40 million, even
At the Pentagon, spokesman
According to the lawsuit, Derungs
ed with refugees in Macedoni~,
. sta~ lottery.
health warnings that have appeared groups so often point out). Multimil· though they have a good chance of
The Iawsitit alleges that the mot~ers was shopping at a Wai-Mart in Warren
· Kenneth Bacon' 04;hoed U.S. resisState Department spokesman James
Williams is $81 million richer not on cigarette labels for the past 35 lion-dollar jury awards arc rare. And prevailing on appeal.
•
to any hollow peace offerinj!_
and their children were the victims of County when her son became hungry.
P. Rubin said Sheffer concluded that
because she invented anything, not years or so. The Marlboro Man even those that are awarded are
Because it is almost worth $40
either sex discrimination or age dis· Derungs said she began feeding him
because she boiJSts some exception- made him smoke himself to death.
often overturned on appeal or million for the campany to end :a
Albanians were being driven from crimination when the women were "in a completely appropriate, lawful
.u
Kosovo not by NATO bombing but denied the right to brcasl·feed their and discreet manner" when she was
al talent, not because she saved and
This is what civil "justice" has reduced by a judge (one or the other protracted lawsuit, wh-t with t!Je
(USPS
%13-Mt)
by a systematic expulsion by Serb children in a public area of Wai-Mart directed by employees to leave the
invested wisely, not because she was come . to in our litigious society. of which almost certainly will hap-; money it has to shell out for its own
c·m
•IIJ
N._per
Holdlap,
In&lt;military
and"-jx&gt;lice forces.
just plain lucky, but because a Port- Lawsuits are predicated on the pen in the Portland case).
lawyers, the amount of time complstores in 1997.
store or feed her child in the public
l'lohlllhed &lt;VCI)' oftcrnaoo, Mondoy lhrouah
Sheffer reported that Pristina, the
land, Ore., jury awarded it to her.
notion that we live (or ought to live)
But the trial lawyers don't expect ny executives have ,to spend qn
"We ~elcome mothers to shop ,in restroom.
. fridoy, 111 eo.n St .. l'omcloy. Ohio. by 111c
Kosovar capital, is being expunged
You see, Williams' husband in a zero-risk society. And that if to win every liability case. .
depositions and court am:~ea~"&amp;nc:es.
-The same thing happcne•: ,o Gore
Olllo Vllllcy Pubhabtnl Compony. Second cl"' · neighborhood by neighborhood with
Jesse, a janitor in the Portland public some harm, some misfortune, some
All they need to d~ is to win one th~, adversrse~_!,:~~~lf:· ~~~:f,--- 11-~
in a Montgo111ery County Wai-Mart,
school system, smoked Marlboro tragedy befalls an individual -- like out of, say, 100 when they are asking tamty on tl
aocoiding to the lawsuit.
'Ne~e..
..__,., Aooocillion.
..
He
-Continued-from ""9•
1
cigarettes for some 40 years. In contracting lung cancer-- the indi- juriesJor sums as large as $101 mil- and the bad will
TheJawsuil alli;g!:S thatJhe mothers
, . . ' :. Send •ddras c:oncctiotl$ to 'The
r'..,
Doi:!g Senlioel, 111 C.Urt St., Pomeroy, Ohio for their cash, money
jewelry,
"! think the state has done a real- were discriminated against by being
1997, he died of lung cancer. And vidual bears no responsibility wbat- lion.
with each news report telling the
his grieving widow, and her chil- soever for his or her fate.
,
And while they face the very real story ofa man who died of lung Clll)~ · suBSCRJ~ON RATES
. and those· who resist expulsion are
ly good job of putting information denied the full enjoyment and advandren, promptly .filed a $101 million
So if individuals suffer a real prospect that a staggering jury cer after smoking one of the comp•I! C•rrleror MOior Route
; khilled by gu~fire cJr by torching their into the hands of parents/' said Scott tages of a public place; that the women
lawsuit against Philip Morris.
injury, or perceive that they have award will be overturned, they can ny's brands for four decades.
One
uoo
om,es.
Ebright, spokesman for the Ohio were prevenled from discharging their
One Momh ................................S8. 70
School Boards Association .
dut')' and right to provide proper care
Oat Yeu......................... l......... $104.00
SINGLE coPY PRICE
The information should be used for their children; and that requiring
~~·;;;;;·;.;;;;ri,;f·;~·j;:;·;b;·;;;:J.?.:,
to start discussions within districts · that infants be fed in a restroom would
: "1Y The Auoclttted p,__ .
..mitinodv""" d""'to'Jbe DaolyS.,.inet on
about where improvements are exPQSC them to the risks ,of disease and
: .: Today is Tuesday, April6, the 96th day of 1999. There are 269 days left By Jack Anderaon
cies like stock options when purchasing a viatica!.
icy," he says. "It is too tempto tlftt, oix Of 12 moOMh bolls. C.tdit will be
....
needed.
illness.
liWft """'' oocb - t.
Am Ele Po- ...................... 4u"'
• 10 the year.
·
1nd Jan Moller
But as the industry itself has matured -- and the ing for me to tell the truth."
No
•
••
ipoiooo
by moil pcnnintd in .,...
Akzo
......................................
36~
Michael
Billirakis,
president
of
• Today's Highlight in History:
,
"Brei" can remember when he first heard the AIDS epidemic has changed with the advent of Most insurance companies
wbeR home carrier •rvice IS available.
AmrTech ............................... 62~.
the Ohio Education Association,
On April 6, 1909, explorers Robert E. Peary and Matthew A. Henson word "viatical." He was on a gay cruise and noticed potent new drugs ·- it has also becQme a haven. for only offer policies up to
hblilber ...esw. the ri&amp;fll to adjust rates durA h 011
42•
e
.................................. 1•
agreed.
1,. .., .,ltocriprion poriod. Subo&lt;rip&lt;ion "''
• became the first men to reach the North Pole. The claim, disputed by skep- two acquaintances who "were just dripping in Gucci con artists. Last week, ~e revealed how some folks $50,000 for seriously ill indi·
" " - . .,be implcmenlod by &lt;lunaina the
AT&amp;T ..................................... 77'1.
"! don't know what it is ·we're
: tics, was upheld in 1989 by the Navigation Foundation.
and designer everything."
are buying policies only to immediately resell them viduals.·
dorolioo of die IUbo&lt;ripllon.
Bank One .............................. 54'1.
.
r h .h h
Bob Evans ............................ 19'/o
trymg to accomp 1s wtl I e stan· • On this date:
His first thought was, "Who died and left them a on the secondary· market. There's also the ethical
But Bret also understands
Mt.!l;.8=~gN
Borg-Warner ....................... 47"•
dards ·we're using," he said. School
,
In 1830, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints was organized fortUne?" A mutual friend told him the two had just dilemma faced by investors whose profits depend on tliat he may never see a dlm~
'
•
,s
Broughton
.............................
10'1o
districts are improving, he added.
2730
, by Joseph Smith in Fayette, N.Y.
viaticated,.hefty life-insurance policies.
.someone dying as quicldy as possible.
'
from the sale of his policy. Vlatical companies
~
!:::!':::::.:::.:::::::::::::::::.$.5
g~smp~~
...............
:
.............
~~
What Is unclear is whether those
:
3 82
:
In 1862, the Civil War Battle of Shiloh began in Tennessee.
Viaticals may not be a well-known term outside.
Through our continued reporting, we have dis- . encourage clean-sheeting have been known' 10 stilf
52 -to ........... ,.............. .l1o:s.l6
ann P• ..........................
improvements are captured by the
In 1896, the first modern Olympic games formally opened in Athens, the gay community, but investment gurus arc quick- covered dangers to investors, viators and insurance the viators, aware that patients who arc alrc&amp;b'
;
- - Motp cooaty
City Holding ............................ 28
state report cards.
. Urcecc.
ly becoming familiar with this somewhat macabre companies that aren't listed on ally of..tht--lll!J!Icrous chgaged in fraud arc unlikely to sue for compensall-to ........................ ...S29.25
Federal Mogul .......... :............42'•
M w..u ........................... .$.56 68
Gannstt ............................:.... &amp;2~
ln 1917, Congress awroved a declaration of war against Germany.
secondary insurance market, which is dicier than an viatica! \\\:b sites.
~ tion.
'
·
52 W..to ......................... SI09.72
Kma rt .....................................
. 16''..
In 1945, during World War 11, the Japanese warship Yamato and nine Adantic City slot machine. So111etimes yields can be
One practice that cheats insurance ()Qillpanies -Th~ big problem is not whether Brei eventuallY
•
Meigs Commissioners ... ·
Kroger .......... :........................58'1.
. • other vessels sailed on a suitide mission to attack the u.s. fleet off Okinawa; extraoidinary, while other investors lose their shirts. and oftentimes the viator as well -- is a practice gets h1s money, of oourse. Most people could care
Contlnu~ trom page 1
Reader Services
Landa End ...........................34"1•
: the Oeet was intercepted the next day.
As we reported last wee~ the te~. viatical comes called "c~-5~eting." ~atients s~bmit cl~, but less wh_o ultimately benefits _from lhiJ tr.udulent
Ltd ........................................4o"'.
Roads, which will be held at the
:
In 1965, the United States launched the Early Bird communications satel- · from the Labn word mcanmg.provtsrons for a long false, medical hiStories to msurance comparues that transaction. The real problem IS for the rest of us;.
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 17 -~~gs County Multipu~ Center at_
• li .
__ - -- - -~~Ulm modem interpret••ion 1.JI!Ib O!!-!he- eli9W-!hem-!\l-bu)l--new-pg!i,;i~'Nitlt -!hc.-!9le-po~!'- ~wi.!~tu!ll)l. ~!ife-.insurl!r~-¥OV87.:= -= =·= = =42 6 p.m. The rally has been organized to
One Valley ...............................35
......... JH ., ........ II •
;
In 1971, Russian-born composer Igor Stravinsky died in New York City. notion that some_~pie'~ journeys are destined to pose of reselling the!'! at a profiL
: . _
~panics pay out these fraudul~nt claims.
.:
Peopl.................................. 22'1. demonstrate support for the U.S.
....,, . . doe - - · ot (740) li9:Z..
,
In 1985, William J. Schroeder became the first artificial heart recipien~ to be. short. The v1ab~s 1~d~try was born at the
Bret.. an ':IIV·posllive youn~ man hvmgm south~rdon Parker o~ Transamenca Corp. explams
315$. We wll deck , .. r tar...alloa
Prem Finl ............................... 14\ Route 33 project from Athens to Dar1 be discharged from the hospital as he moved into an apartment in Louisville
hc1ght of the AIDS epadem1c m the late 1980s, when em Cahfom1a, told our associate Kathryn. Wallace thai msurance prcm1ums are based on the cost qf
Rockwell ............................... 44'/• win, and members of the public are
•"" .... a cerndloa tr ,..rnotad.
: Ky. ·
' terminal~y- ill ~tients began S~:lling their life-insur- that cle~:'Shee~ng is a commo~ practice among his death, based on lUI . avC!agc Ii~c~xpcctancy. qt'
RPIShell ............................... 52"1. being urged to attend the rally.
, Ten years ago: Soviet leader Mikhail s. Gorbachev met with British an~:e pohc1es lO mvestors for an up-front payment. A , HIV·poslbve frien~. (AIDS l!llltents currently make . course, not e_veryone hves mto the1r 70nnd ~· BUt
Newe Departments
Sears .....................................44\
'the commissioners also:
Shoney's ......... ,....................... 2'1.
T1oo • • aoabor lo 99l-ZIS5. Dopart: Prime Minister Margaret Thatch(:r in london, holding d'ylong talks that ~ew bree~ of brokers emerged to handle the trans.ac: up 9~ percent ~r Vl~tor;;.) .
. '
as ~youts mcrease due 10 fraudulent ~lllms, die
- Approved MultiCom, Inc.,
-tnto. .•aR:
FlratStllr ................................93\
: were characterized as argumentative, b~t friendly.
uons, wh!ch wor":ed o_ut wei~ for all co~rned.
Li_ke many m h.'s s!tuatl&lt;?n, Brei _d1dn t have ~e cost ~s passed on to '!oncst customers.
r
Pomeroy,
as the lead inspector and
Getlorll Maaop&lt;........................Ext 1101
WendY'• ................................ 28~
• Five years ago: Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun announced his AIDS patients receiVed 1mmed1~ cas_h fo~ med1cal fores1ght to buy hfe, msurance wh1le he, was ~1111
R!ght now, the biggest loecrs ~ the_ investmi.
Now~ ............................................EXL 1101
Worthlngton ..................... ;.... 12'4 assessor for the new CHIP program;
, retirement after 24 years. The presidents of Rwanda and Burundi were killed ex~~ and creature comforts m theu dymg days, healthy. Now thai ~e s contracted HIV, he s looking Gl?na Wolk, autho! of the only Vlaticaltnves~qt
or Ext 1106
· - Approved payment of bills in
: in a my1terious plane crash near Rwanda's capital; widespread violence wh1le 1~vesll?rs generally reaped heady profits o~ce at y~ of expens1ye treatments and a very shaky ~Ide, figu~ that 1~vc:stors have lost $400 mdhor
•
Stock report• are today'• the amount of $172,793.66. ·
; erupted ip Rwanda over claims the plane had been shot down. A Palestinian . the, pat1ent d1ed. Th~ brokers made out by chargmg finiii1Cial !"lure. So he confessed to us tha! even m ~ ~o!' hfe ~f thts 1ndustrr.
.
Other Servlca
10;30 a.m. quot.. provld•d by
· Present were Commissioners Janel
.w.........................................ExL 11M
• suicide-bomber killed seven Israelis in an attack on a bus in Afula.
a fee from both pames.
though he s always been an honest person, he ts now
Thts IS a highly speculative, very looae lndut!Ar:lve•t of Gallipolis.
Howard
and Jeff lbomton, and Oerk
Ckc llllelt ................................. .ExL
: One. year ago: The Dow Jones industrial averag~ closed above 9,000
. A viatical investment "~atures:· when the viator am?ng the h~~ - if n?l tho~sands .. of AJ_DS ·try," Wo~k ~ys. "The rules being remade_every day.
Gloria Kloes.
• points for the first time. Energy Secretary Federico Pena announced his res- d1~ and the death benefits arc paid out to the ~ew ~llents w~ ve hed on the1r hfe-tnsur~ce apph':l- Many ~1at1cal .brokerr operate oul!ide of ~
lanation Country singer Tammy Wynette died at her Nashville Tenn. home pohcy holder. Profits depend ent1rcly on how qu1ck- lions. All of 11 was arranged and encouraged, he s&amp;ld, rules, w11l)out hcenses.
at age
ly the patient dies, so investors weigh life expectan- "by a Aorida viatica! company. "It's a $1 00,000 pol- Copyright 1... United ,...ur• lyncltate, Inc.

an

Announcement

Death Notices
.

'TuMdlly, Apttlt, 1. .

'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel .. Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, &lt;;Jhlo

Tueeday, April&amp;, 1999

'

,..
- --..

....

TODAY
Your selection of a family mon•nteM
should be made now while oil....,
here to panicipatc in thc~oice .
Let our capcrielicc help you crur;"
• lutina mtmDriol just for )'0•· '

'.

.JI....,...

,.Iys

ALL AGIS, ALL Tillite 14.00

..

520 w. Main Sl - Pomeroy, o :·
Phone 992·ll588
.,
Vinton - 388-8809
Gallipolis - 446-0851

�The D~y Sentinel .
.

I

By JOE KAY
62 degrees and windy at game time,
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two bat- and the ball carried like it was lhuch
ters into their season opener, the San wljlTiler.
Francisco Gian)s lost starting third
Hayes was surpri sed that his
baseman Bill Mueller to a broken game-winning homer reached the
toe .
second deck in left field.
Five Innings later, they lost a four- · "I didn't really hit it that well,"
run lead over the Cincinnati Reds Hayes said. "I guess it got up in the
and were on the verge of a most dis- jet stream. Today if you got the ball
heartening defeat - until Mueller's up, it went out."
o
replacement came through.
The pitchers helped by getti ng a
Charlie Hayes' three-run homer in lot of pitches up.
the eighth inning gave the Giants an
Cincinnati's Brett Tomko gave up
11-8 victory Monda~ that showed off dght hits and six runs. in onl y.3 2/3
their depth and rest hence.
tnnmgs. He also hn Mueller m the
" It's a feather in our cap to be as first inning, ·breaking the big toe on
deep-~&lt;~s we are," said starter Mark his leFt foot. Mueller wilf be out for
Gardner, who struggled through · 5 at least three weeks.
1/3 inni ngs. ''C harli ~ probab ly was" I · think we ' ll have plenty of
n't geared up to play at all today and offen se," . Reds manager Jack
he did well. "
McKeon said. " I said the last three
Defensively, Hayes has had better weeks of spring training that the
day s. His error on a potential double- pitchin g staff has got to do the job.
p"lay grounder set up Ci nci.nnati 's But I think they 'll be ~ett.er than
six-run sixth inning, which put the that. " ,
·
Reds ahead 8-6.
Gardner, who lost San Francisco's
But Ellis Burks tied it with a two- one-game playoff for the NL w'ild
run homer in the seventh and Hayes card last season, gave liP at least two
won it with a three-run shot in the hits in each of the first three innings,
eighth off Gabe White, who had trou- including Mike Cameron's two-run
ble gelling his pitc Hes to go where he homer.
.wanted.
Hayes' error set up · Mark
"You can't pitch in the middle of Sweeney's pinch three-run homer in
the plate," White .said. "Some days the sixih, which cut it to 6-5. The
yo u just don't' throw the ball where tying run scored on a fielder's choice
yo u want to, and this was one of later in the inning, and Sean Casey
those days."
added a two-run homer off Julian
He wasn 't alone. Opening day Tavarez for an 8-6 lead.
turned into hitters' day at Cinergy
The crowd of 55, 112 - the sevField - the Reds hit three homers, enth-largest regular-seaso n crowd: in
the Giants had two and the teams stadium hi story - didn 't get to celeCO!llbined for 27 hits and six walks. brate long. Loser John Hudek gave
Homers don 't usually pile up at up Burks' two:run homer in the sev•,C'inergyField until it gets hot. It was enth, and gave up one of the two

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE .

Ealltrn DiYision

~:~.
•••••J ~ ~~
allimore ................... ,....... I 0 1.000

Atlantle OIYision

. ...0

0

.000 • ' ·~

r'New York .... ; ............... :........ 0

1

.000

1

I

000

1

.,·Toronlo ,.......

,!ampa Bay .........................0

.

Cenlral Di¥1sion
Olicaao ....................... :......... ! o
Detroit .................................... ! 0
CLEVELAND ....................0 0
Minlllerola .... .... ..................0 0
Kansas City ..............
.....0
1

1.000
1.000
.000
.000

- ·~
·~

.000

I

~eanle.. ............

, ,.

Teus...

.. .0

0

.000

.. .... 0
0

I
I

.000
000

·~

Ctntral Dhision
Ind iana...........
......... 23 II
Allama ...........
.. ... 22 I 3
Milwaukee...
.. ........ 19 ,1 3
IJc:troit ..........
.. ...... 20 14
Toronto ................
..-... 18 14
Cl EVELAND ....... .' ........ 16 15
Cl'larloue ................. . .. 12 20
ChicaJO
.... 10 n

-·-

· Monday's scores
Jwu

Toronto {Hemgen 12- 11 1 al Mmnesota IRadkc
12-14). 8;0.1 p.m.
Oc tro.i1 (Thompson 11 -151 a1 Texa!i fSe le 19-1 1).
8 : ~ 5 p.m.
Chicago (P:uque 7-5) at Sealtle (Moyer IS-9).
10:05 p.m.
N ~w York (Hern ande1 11- •-H Ill Oukland
(Candioui 11 -16). 10 05 p.m
C LEVELAND {Wright 12-IOJ at Anahei m
(Belcher 14- 14), 10:05 p._m.
kl and, 4:05 p.m.
altimore. 1:0:'i p.111
Boston at Kansas City. 8:05 p.m
Toronto at Minnesota. 8 : 0~ p m
Dc:troit at Tuas. 8:35 r m
.Chicago 11 Scauk:. 10:.15 p.m.
CLEVELAND at An:llle1m. 10;35 p m.

15'h

I '~

J

4

516
.375
' ..\03

~ ·~

•

CLEVEl AND INDIANS: Signed RHP Ri ch
lkLucia td ~ monor- league contiact.

Nalionai Basketball A1!5oclatlon
ATLANTA HAWKS: Named Jim Washington
director of community affa.irs.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS : Placed F Travis

l!' !.

l'!y DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
· ' Despite being outhit 7-6 the
t.:feigs softball team picked up its
sixth win without a loss by defeating
Belpre 6-1 in TVC softball action
' }1onday evening at Meigs Hi gh
S~hool.

The Southern Tornadoes claimed
jM1 8-4 win over the visiting Miller
~alcons Monday night in Tri-Valley
e:Znference softball action , ·
C: • Southern (2-3) fook a 3-0 lead in
'the first inning when Laraine
Lawson was hit with a pitch. Aft~r
Ashli Davis reached on an error,
Stacy Lyons fieldet's choice brought
· home a run. Kim lhle, Kara King and
Heather Dailey each walked to bring
home two more. ·
' .Southern picked up two runs in
tlje third and fifth innings each and
one in the sixth for the 8-4 win. · .
Kim Sayre was the winning pitcher with three hits, six strikeouts, four
walks and four earned runs against
her.' Southern made one error.
Annette Jones suffered the loss
with five hits, 12 walks, six hit batters and five strikeouts .
·
Southern hitters were Lawson
with two singles; Davis two singles
and Kin g a single.
: Miller hitters were McCormick,
· !=ompston and Jones .each witll singles .

Knlaht 011 the inju~ lisa. Activa~ G Tyroim Lui:

NEW JERSEY NETSo Sianed F Mark
1
Hendric:kJQn to a.econd 10--dly collb"lct.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERSo Sisaed G Dou1
Overton to a ~econd _I 0-day conuw:t.
:WASHINGTON WIZARDS : Fired Bernie
Bic:kerstaff coacb. Named Jim Brovelli coac;h.

Football
Nallonal foolbolll.ape

MINNESOTA VIKINGS: Apeed 10 ~erms wilh
QB Jeff Geo'Jf.
PITTSBURGH STEELERSo Waived S Do
Orlando. Trllded WR JahineArnold to Grr:cn Bay for
put consideratioDs.

Nodonol-., .......
FLORIDA PANTHERS: Recalled F M.-cu'
Nilson fron New Haven of lbe AHL.
PITTSBURGH PENGU!NS o Re&lt;alted G Crais
Hillier from Svracu~e of the AHl.

10 .

Pacific Di\·isio n
Ponfand ..................... 1 26 6
LA Lakers
...... 23 12
Sc:nttle ...... ,
..... , .. 16 16
Ph oe ni ~t ....
.. ... 15 18
Golde n State .... -....... 14 19
SocmnK"'" ·.

... .... 14

19

.. .. 3

29

~

l:iJI
1

414
094

l!' J...

.I

. ...... I

0 1.000

0 1.000
1 .0001

000

0

·t.ooo

... ...........0
Central Di\'Won
....... 1

~

0 1.000

Chicago ..
.. ....... ..........0
Houston ............... .... , .. ..... : ...0

0
0
· CINCINNATI ........... ........0 I
Pinsburgll..
..... .. ..........0
I
St Louis ...
. ...0 . I

11'

B

at Philadelphia. 7 p.m
Miami a1 Toronto . 1 p.m
!£11.
ChicaJo at CLEVELAND. 7:30p.m.
Orloodo at New York , Bp.m.
New Jeney•at Wa~hinglon , 8 p.m.
Golden State 111 Hou51on, 8:30 p.m.
-----1----..,-----Socro.mento-nt_Seattle. 10--p:m-:'"""'·'1·
Vancou,·er at Portland, 10 p.m .
Phoenix at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
Ut,ah nl L.A. ~eu , IOj30 p.m.

ColOrado...
.. ................... \
Los Angeles............. .. .. ..... 1
San Francisco ........................ \
1\riaona ............. " ....... ..... ........0
San Diego ..............................0

.000
000
.000
000
000 ·

•,

•,,

0 1.000
0 1.000
0 1.000
I .000
I .000

Washin&amp;ton at"BoSlon, 7 p,m
New York at O!ar\otte, 7:30p.m.
Philadel(lhie at New Jersey, 1:30 p.m..
Atlamalll Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Dallu at Miami, 1 :30 p.m.
CLEVELAND D1 Milwaukee . 8:30 P-n:tlndiana at Chn:ago, 8:30p.m.
Denver at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Minneso4a at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
L.A. ~rs at Sacramento. 10:30 p.m.

'

sites on the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail. If It's really
cold outside rl&amp;ht now, you probably aren.' t on the Trail.
And-while we can't guarantee the weather. we

can promise you a great ~lme.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl•ntle lHvllion

l'siJil

Tonight's games
New York (Reed 16- 11 ) at Aorida (Hernandez
12· 10). 7:05p.m.
Montrtel (Pavano 6-9) at Pinsbur&amp;h {Schmidt II ·
14), 7:05p.m.
San Fratici5eo (Reuter 16-9) at CINClNNATI
(Sere 3-2),' 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia {Ogea 5--4) at Atlanta (Maddult 18(Trachsel 15-8 )

dally temperatures In the Spring at some of the eight

NHL standings

9. Pittsburgh 2
Milwaukee 10. St. louis 8

9), 7:40p.m.

These may look like golf scores-they1re not. They are

Hockey

~omn:al

l! L I lU. li£ iiA

'

x-New Jeney
...........42 22 I I. 95 228 183
x-Pitubutsh .....................36 27 14 86 232 21.0
~~;~ Pbiladelphia .. ,.............. -,3425.18
86 219 188

N.Y. Rangers .......... .- ...... 32 35 10 74 209 2ll
N.Y. Ishmden .............. 21 45 10 52 174 226

.
at Housto~

(Reynolds

Arizona IS tottlemyre 14- 13) at Loa Anaelts (Park
.
1.5·91, !O:lOp.m.

Wedntsday's games

San Francisco at CINCINNATI. 12:35 p.m.
Montreal at Pittsburgh, I :Jj p.m.
Colorado at San Dicco, ~ :OS p m.
New Yo1k nt Aorida. 7:05 p.m.
Ph lladelplt,ia 11 Atlan1a, 7:40p.m.
Chicoao at Hou•1ifn, 8:0.S p.m.
Mi!wt:lukee nl St. Louis. 8:IO!.m.
Arizo.na Ol Los Angeles, 10:3 p m.

; To get a current weather
report, check the

·Sentinel

.: =
. .__-=;...;..-::..;.:;.::.::.;:~......

.,

-----------

.

Soulhult Oiwltlon

Carolina ., ....................... J l 29 16
Florida ........................... 27 31 18
Wnsbins:ton....................... J I .19 6
Tampa8ay ............ :.......... l8 51 1

-·-

.·

78
72
68
43

194
195
195
161

194
207
20 1
277

Cent,-.1

Dlv~on

»' L I

Jt·Dcl!oit......................... .4 1 30 6
x•StXouls .......... ~ ............. 33 31 12
Chica~u ...... ,.................... 2S 41 12
. Nash\'l lle ..... .................... 17 42 7

ball. ·
Eastern hitters we re Jul ie Hayman
with two si ngles, Va'lerie Karr a single, Juli Bailey a single, Ci nda
Clifford a single and Stephanie
Evans a sin gle.
Federal Hocking hitters were

The Marauders hiked their TVC
record to 4-0 ,goin g into ~ctio n
Wednesday evenin g at Eastern.
Belpre falls to 3-3 overall and 3- 1 in
the TVC.
Meigs took a 2-0 lead in the first
.inning., on three Belpre errors, a
Stephanie Wigal double' and a single

by Tanya Miller.
Belpre cut the lead in half in the
fourth inning on a Marauder error
and a single by Ada~s to pull Belpre
to within 2- 1.
·
The Marauders closed out the
scoring in the sixth inning by picking
up four insurance runs. Miller and

Manuel hit a 4Jground out to score
Innim: .IJIIllh
the run .
· ..
Miller ..... ,..............000-002-2=4:3-1
Fort hitters ere M. Porter and D.
Southern .............. .302-021-0=8-5-1
Brooks.
Sayre (WP) and Davis
In the . second game, Manuel
Jones (LP) and Lerkone .
pitched a good game but was tagged
,
Tornadoes split
with .the loss in a seven httter. She
doubleheader with Fort Frye
fanned
two and walked four as SHS
Southern 'split a double header
made
just
one error.
against Fort Frye Saturday.
Heldman
posted the win. She
Southern won the first game 3-1
gave
up·
10
scaUered
hits, had four
and dropped the second 2-4.
strikeouts,
two
walks.
and FF made
· Kim Sayre won the first game 3-1
three
errors
.
with a two-hit , seven strikeout,- (our
walk performance. sou thern made
four errors. Brothers suffered the loss
with five hits, nil 'walks, and five
strikeouts.
. Southern hitters were Kim Sayre
with a double, Dailey a double,
Lawson a singl e, and Manuel two
singles.. ·
· So uthern took a 2-0 lead in the
first when Sayre doubled , Lawson
singled 1\ome a run and Manuel singled home another. SHS scored ·.
another insuran ce run in the fifth
when Kim Sayre reached o.n an error,
Lawson reached on an error, and

••

Sunday's defeat was the second
straight for the Wizards , endi ng an
eight-game stretch in ·which rhey
alternated between win s and losses.
Bickerstaff sounithd a now familiar
theme - his team doesn' t have the
talent to be more than a token playoff
contender.
"There is a missin g ingredient, "
he said after the game. "And the
ingredient is you have to look yourself and say, 'Do· we have the innate
ability to do those thing s?' To me, it
doesn't take ski ll, it takes an awareness of what needs to be done in
terms of, 'There's a rebound, a loose
ball, I ~a~ to get

lU. li£ iiA

iS8 2:\2 192
78 218 195
62 185 240
61 177 B8

;

Northwtst Division
y·Cqlomdo ..... :........ ,...... ..+1 26 10 92 227 191
Calaary ............................. 28 .\6 12 68 196 216·
Edmonton ....................... 28 .n 11 67 208 ll~
Vaocouver......................... 12 4!5 II ~~ 184 246
I

'

dent.' '
Glayine said. "But 'that 's the nature
: In other games, Philadelphia beat ' of the game."
Philadelphia · added two runs in
Atlanta 7-4, Florida beat New York
6-2 and Montreal beat Pittsburgh 9- the ninth against Mark Wohlers, the
Chicago opens at Houston tonight form¢r Braves closer trying to make
and Colorado, which won its season ·a comeback from a disastrous sea- ·
~pener 8-2 over the Padres on son. Wohlers walked four and surSunday night Jt Monterrey, Mexico, rendered a run-scoring double to
continues the series tpnight in San Anderson in two-thirds of an inning.
Diego's nome.opener.
· Marlins 6, Mets 2 ·
;
Phlllies 7, Braves 4
Alex· Fernandez, making his first .
• Marlon Anderson, cheered on by sta&lt;t since shoulder surgery 18
tl large contingent from his natiVI\ .months ago, outpitched former team·~labama; drove in three runs to give mate AI Leiter to lead Florida over .
~urt
Schilling • and
visiting . visiting New YoriC.
Philadelphia the win.
, Fernandez, one of the few
•: Schilling allowed all four runs holdovers from 1997, pitched out'of
and ·five hits in six innings, but two early jams and left with a 5- 1
picked up the win when Anderson lead after throwing 95 pitches in five
·Game through in the seventh with a innings. He allowed one run and five ·
two-run single against Tom Glavine, hits.
doming off a 20-win season that
Preston Wil son, st~pso n of Mets
~arned his second Cy Young.
coa~ h Mookic Wil son, drove in two
-'r'"i'here were mo~·-runs sc-orew nm&gt; witlra·sacrifiwfly-li1tdii sing! .
than anyone would have thought," .. Derrek Lee added a double and an ,
·
RBI single and scored twi ce.
\'
Expol 9, Pirates Z
Vladimir Guerrero hit a three· run
, homer in the first off loser Francisco
· Cordova and drove in four tuns for . · t~~
vj sitin g Montreal. The Guerrero
brothers combined for si x hits olde~ brother Wilton had two doubles
• 1 The Eastern baseball team was
trailing Federal Hocking 17-14 in a among his three hits - and Orlando
game suspended in the sixth inning C~brera went 3-for-5.
Winner Dustin
Hermanson
because of darkness.
' The game will be completed allowed one run and four hits in
when Federal comes to Eastern later seven innings.
this·month.

z.

Darkness halts
Eastern-FH
basebal.l game

WESTERN CONFERENCE
fum

Callaway doubled and P. Fossitt doubled her home for the 5-4 win.
Eastern had just plated fo ur runs
in the fourth M a Karr single •. an
error, an Evans RBI single, another
error, a Juli Hayman RBI si ngle and
another error on Becky Davis' hit

·NL games .... (Continued from Page 4)

Wedntsday's games

Monday's scores
San Francisco II , CINCINNATI 8
Flortds li, New York 2
Ph iladelphia 7. Atlanta 4
Los Angeles 8. Arizona 6 (II) ·

lpnjpg l!!1IW
Mill er .. ........... ..........000-00 =0: 1·6
Southern ... ....... ...... 190-0 6= 16-14-0
Manuel (WP) and Boso
Keller (LP), Spencer, Wilson and
Riley
Tornadoes split DH
. with Fort Frye
On Saturday, Southern won the
first game of the double header 9-8 iQ
an extra inning as Josh Ervin,
Manuel, Jamie Baker and Josh Davis
combined for pitching duties 'with
Davis picking up the win.
' Ervin went five innings, givin g up

'

: WASHINGTON (AP) - Bernie
Bickerstaff was fired as coach of the
~ashing(on Wizards Monday after
the team dropped to a I 3-19 record
In the shortened season·.
• Assistant Jim Brovelli was
. appointed interim head coach.
: " I felt' this team wasn 't moving in
the direction that we anticipated,"
· general manager Wes Unse ld said.
I 'This is one of the toughest deci. tions that I've had to ..make, but it
\vas my feeling that a cha~ge was
necessary at this time ."
The Wizards, who lost 90-79 to
· tvliami on Sunday, are in fifth place
in the Atlantic Division.

4'
10
II':
12'·

. ~00

lively. The combined for 14 hits, two
strikeouts, six walks and the MHS
defense made .six errors.
Adam Williams was two for three,
Manuel 3-4 with a double, J.B. Boso
a triple and singl e, . while Kyle
Norris, Jamie Baker, Russell Reiber,
Jesse Little, Adam Cummings, Chad
Hubbard and· Chris Randolph each
had hits.
Keller had the lone Miller hit.
Southern took a 1-0 lead in the
first,' then came back with eight runs
in the second for a 9-0 lead and eventual 16-0 win.

Wizards fire Bickerstaff, hire
Brovelli as interim head coach

.B1J

.455
424

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~

'·

'

www.rtiJolf.com

'

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then moved to second on a sacrifice.
Ashland rallied with two run~ in
the top of the second then exploded
for four runs in both the fourth and
fifth innings. The Eagles added three
runs in the sixth to close out the scar-

Game 1: Inninl ~

in g.
Rio Grande (5 -17) managed to
come up with only four hits in the
second game.
The Redmen play at , Urbana
. today.

Ashland ............. ,... 350-IQ0-0=9-7-0
Rio Grande .. ....... .. 000-000-0=0-4-4 '
G.am.c l: InninK Mali
Ashland .............020-443-0=13- 10-0
Rio Grande ........... 100;000-0=1-4·1

.

'

'

2
4
13':
15
18

.657

with just four hits in the game.
Joe Thomas ended a 19·inning
scoreless streak for Rio Grande when
he scored on a double by Jason King
in the first inning of game two .
Thomas walked to start the inning

two runs,' giving up three hits , strik·
ing out . two arid ~a lkin g four.
Manuel went one inning to give up
four runs . no hits .and walked seven;
Baker pitched a partial inning
with three walks and two runs
allowed and Davis picked up the win
in two relief innings . He allowed no
runs , two hits , one strikeout and one
walk .
Fort Frye had only five hits, but
Southern pitching gave up 13 walk s.
FF hillers were Bryan Boston, Eri ck
Duskey with two hits, Chris Hubb
and Adam Huck'.

Southern hillers were Adam
Williams at 3-5 with two double s, ·
Ervin -l r3, Baker a double and home
run, Manuel two singles, Jesse Lillie
a home ·run. Boso a home run and
singles by Brandon Wolfe 'and, Kyl e
Norris .
Southern had nine runs, 12 hits.
II strikeouts and two walks off even;
tual losing pitcher Jake Erb with
D4skey. coming on in relief tn the
eighth .
Southern won the game when
Kyle Norris walked, Adam Willi ams
singled , Josh Davis was walked

intentionally and Adam Cumings hit
a game-winning sacrifice fly.
Southern was blanked 13-0 in tho
second game. Boso. suffered the loss
with relief stints from Randolph.
Baker, Norris and Davis. Joel Hindy
posted the win.
·
Hindy went 3-3 to lead Fort,
while other .hitters were Erb, Andy
Long, Mark Biehl and Jeremy
Hesson .
Southern hitters were Adam
Williams, Jamie Baker. Manuel anq
Davis .

Hornsby with a single, Highland a
single, Callaway and Fossiu doubles
and Susie Bond a single.
Evans suffered the loss despite a
good game as Eastern again left run ·
ners stranded in scorin g position .
Evans gave up six hits, fanned I 0,

including eight of the first nine outs; lm)inK ll!Y!b.
and gave up just tw o earned runs.
Eastern ... .... :........ .. 000-400-0=4-6-4 .
Highl and picked up the win with · Federal Hocking ... 00 1-30 1-x=S-7-4,
seve n strikeouts . six hits and just one
Highland (WP) and Bond
walk.
Evans (LP) and Spencer
Eastern is scheduled to play at
River Valley today.
' '

Abby Harris both walked and Tawny
Jones reac hed on a si ngle. Bethany.
Boy,lcs followed with a grand slam
home run to put the game out of
reach.
.
Tangy Lauderrnilt picked up her
fourth win without a loss, she scattered seven hits, struck out five and

didn't Walk a batter. Boyles led Eagles at the plate with a pair of sin·Meigs with her home. run . Wi gal gles.
added a double . Shannon Pri ce , Inning~ .
Laudermilt, Miller and Jones all had Belpre ....... •,.......... 000- IQ0-0=1 -7-8
singles.
3
Adams, the losing pitcher, struck
out one, walked four and scattered
Adams (tP) and Mollohan
'
six hits.. Adams also led the Golden

Me~~~&lt;le~~~~ (\iii&gt;~~~go:.:ri:-6-

Southern .softballers cruise past Miller 8-4

12'·1

.742
.697
.667
.606
.324
.286
182

crushed the Redmen 9-() and 13-1 at
Stanley L. Evans Field.
Ashland scored eiglit runs in the
first two innings of tile opening game
of the twinbitl and cruised to the win .
Rio Grande managed to ' come up

.·Meigs softball team captures· 6-1 victory over arch rival Belpre

Hockey

Baketball

Baseball
1\muiun Lugue

' games
Tonight 's

3

.56~

Transactions

CINCINN:ATI REDS: Signed LHP Ron Villone
to a mmor-league contract.
MONTREAL EXPOS: Optioned RHP Shayne
Bennet 10 Ouawa of1he International League.
ST LOUIS CARDINALS : Placed OF Ray
Lankford an d JNF David Howard o'n the 1.5--day disabled lis t. Called up INF Placido Polanco and INF
Luis Ordaz from Memphi s of the PCL.
SAN FRANCISCO G!ANTSc PIOC&lt;d lB Bitt
Muc:Jier on the 15-~y disabled list. Called up INF
Edwards Gutman.

Coach Roger Bt sse ll 's Federal
Hocking softball team defeated the
Eastern Eag les 5·4 Monday night in
:fri-Valley Conference at Stewart.
E11Stern is now 2-2 overall .
· Federal scored the winning run in
lhe top of the six th inning when J.

Tonight's games

------cP&lt;ikiii
i1a;,;;'';c'P~c"'~',·;·;·· :··c::::~.... :::.::::::~

.

U'~

.250

€arplina at Montrt:al, 7 p.in. '
St. louis at Washington. 7 p.m.
Ouawa at Toronto, 7:30 ·p.m.
Boston al F1orida, 7:30p.m.
Vancouver al Detroit. 7JO p.m.
Anaheim a1 Dallas. 8:30p.m.
Nashville at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Calgary at Edmonton, 9 p.m.

Leacue

.

.federal Hocking softball crew cracks tie, gets past Eastern 5-4 ·

Milwauk~

Eastern Division

·

IO'Il

313

NatiOn~~l

Wednesday's games

&gt; The Southern Tqrpadoes put
to,gether both hitting and pitching as
they blanked the Miller Falcons 16-0
~onday night in Raci ne after split-·
tmg a weekend double header with
.
Fprt Frye.
Benji Manuel went the distance in
picking up the wi~ in five innings of
work and allowing just one hit.
Manutl walked five and struck out
ff?Ven b Southern's defense made no
errors.
Daniel Keller suffered the loss
·"'ith relief from M. Spencer and
Wi lson in the third and fifth respec-

Atllmta 77. Omloue 71 ..
Orlando I 06. Boston 99
India nil fiR. Detroit 86
Mmnesota iOO, Dallas 93
San Antonio 9.\ Golden State 86
LA ~kers Ill , Dtonver 104

NL standings

•

Boston 3. Montret:ll 0
Buffalo J, Pimburgh I
Ottawa 4, Tampa Bay 4-Lie
St. louis 2. Toronto 2-tic
N.Y. R[Ulgtrs 5, Philadelphia I
· Washington 3, Aorida 0
£ktroit1. Anaheim 2
Chicago 2, Vancouver 1
Co lorado 4, Los Angeles I

7'·:

.

Mahay for n.uignmenl. PurchaM:d the: con1rac1 or I B
Joh'n Jllhn from Vancouver of the Pacific Coast'
Leag ue.
·

en route to doubleheader sweep

·Southern diamondmen· whip .Miller 16-0, _split. DH with Fort Frye·.

breaking ball and I didn't think he hi!
it that well. But obviously, he did."
At St. Louis, McGwire started the
way he did last year- with an open'
ing-day home run . While last year's
drive was a go-ahead grand slam off
Ramon Martinez in a win, this on&lt;
.was a solo shot off David Weathel'!
in 8 10-8 loss to the Milwaukee
Brewers.
" Last year is over witb. Tum the
page, " said Mcdwire, whose rec9fd
70 homers made him a natidnal
celebrity.
·
At Los Angeles, Mol)desi hit the
winning homer off John Frascatore';
Jeff, Shaw retired all six batters 1\e
faced and was the winner.
''I'd have booed myself," Brown
said . " It's not the way 1 wanted to
pitch. But if you pitch bad and your .
team wins, it's a lot easier to take." .
Davey Johnson won in his first
game as the Dodgers' manager.
'
At St. Louis, Dave Nilsson and
. Jeromy Bumitz hit two-run homers
for the Brewers and Sean Berry hit a
three-run shot and a triple that
d f1 t d ff h 1
f
k'
·
e ec e o ·t e g ove o roo te center fielder J.D. Drew at the top of tlte
wall .
·
.
;
On a night of two rain delays thl!,t
totaled 1 hour, 57 minutes, McGwire
hit a rare 'opposite-field homer off
Weathers _ not among llis victims
last season_ in the fifth inning wi!h .
·the Brewers leading 7- 1.
.
" It was pretty obvious they were
staying away," said McGwire, whil
hit only three homers the opposite
way last year. "I think 1 shockt:d
America. 1 go to right field by ac~i-

OAKLAND AlHLETICSoDdtgnoted LHPRon

. New Jersey ill CarOlina, 7 p.m.
Buffalo a1 N.Y. Islandi::u, 1:.10 p.m_.
San Jose at Phoeni11. 10 p.1n.

•.

Monday's scores

New Yo
Tnmpu B y

Milw.,kee ...

Monday 's scores

3
6

:676 ...
.629
.594
.588

Utah ................................. B
8
San An tonio ................... ;.... 23 10
Houston .................... ,. ... 22 II
Minne ~ol a ..
20 IJ
Dallas ......
. II B
. .. ,. 10 25
Dtnver ....
Vancouver
...6 27

L.A. Clippers... .. .

nesday's games

Montreitl ....

PaciDc: Dlvl.!llon
z-Oallas .
.. ... .' .. ...471712 106 117 158
Jt- Phocnix . ·
..... 38 26 12 88 194 I 79
Jt- Anahei m........... ......... :.34 30 12. 80 203 liP
SanJose ......................... ,.. 29 30 17 75 182 177
Los Angeles ...... ,......... . ... 28 4~ 5 6 1 172 205
x-dinclat!d playoff berth
y-clinched division tide
z-clinched conference title

8¥ ANDREW CARTER
OVP Stlltr Writer
Following a sweep yesterday at
the hands of Ashland University, the
University of Rio Grande baseball
squad finds itself in the midst of a
six-game
. losing streak. Ashland

Midwest- Division

Tonight's games

Florida .

By The Associated PrHs
Rau l Mondesi saved Kevin
Brown from an opening-day loss.
Mark McGwire's first home ru~ of
the new season couldn't do 'the same
for the St. Louis Cardinals.
•
Brown gave up three homers in
his Dodgers debut - and his first
game as baseball's. first $100 million
man . Milndesi then erased the deficit
with a game: tying, three-run homer
":ith two outs in the ninth and followed with a two-run shot. in the
lith, giving him six RBis and sending Los Angeles to an 8-6 win over
Arizona on Monday.
" It gave me chill bumps," Brown
said of Monde si's first homer, a drive
off Gregg Olson on a 3-0 pitch .
Randy Johnson, who gets a mere
$52.4 million - less than half of
. GOTCHA! -Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubensee (right) lays tha Brown 's $105 milli on guaranteed !eathar on the San Francisco Giants' Rich Aurilia for the out In the got the beHer of the marque matchup
Stadium .
fourth Inning of Monday's season opener In Cincinnati, where the · at Dodger
While BroV:ri allowed ftve runs
Giants won 11·8. Aurilia tried to score on Mark Gardner's hit. (AP)
and I0 hits in 5 213 innings walks that preceded Hayes' homer in of Hank Aaron , who still holds the including a pair of solo homers by
the eig hth off White.
major leag ue record of 293 . ... The Bernard Gilkey and a three-run shot
"You always talk about replace- Giants have · won all three ·of thei r by Jay Bell- Johnson gave up two
ment parts," manager Dusty Baker . seaso n openers against Cincinnati. ... runs and five hits in seven innings,
said. "We' vc got guys like Charlie Tomko turns 26 on Wed nesday. He struck out nine and walked six. His
whp can com'\inand win the game." was the Reds' youngest opening day biggest mistake was a fourth-inning
Notes: The Gmnts put Mueller on starter since Mario Soto started in · homer by fortl)er · Diamondback
the disabled list after the game and 1982 at age 25·.... Left-haoder Ron Devon White.
called · up 22 -year'old infielder Villone agreed to a minor league
"For the most part, I felt like I
1
Edwards Guzman .... Barry Bonds .contract 'with the Reds on Monday. pitched pretty well," Johnson said.
set a National League record when The Cleveland Indians released him " I went seven strong innings. The
on ly pitch I wish I could have back
he drew the 290th intentional walk of last week.
was one to Devon White. It was a
his career. Bonds moved one ahead

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Baseb.all Redmen stand mired in six-gamle losing streak

WESTERN CONFERENCE .

Detroit II , Tens 5
BoSion 5. Kansas Ci t)' 3
Ballimore 10, Tampa Bay 7
Chic ago 8, Seanle 2
Oakland 5.. New York 3 18 inn.·nunl

fum.

l:iJI

Orlando..
. ............. .25 10 •.714
Miami ....
....................... 20 I I .64.5
New )'()rk ............................. 18 15 .S4.5
Philadelphia.........
....... 16 16 SOO
Washington ... ................ 13 19 .406

BoSion .................................. 10 22
New Jeney ........................... 8 24

' Western Division
. Oak.land ...... ...... ·
.... 1 0 I .OC()

Anaheim ................

~

l!' !.

l'siJil

m

.

National League
roundup

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ashland allows Rio one run

Page4 ·.
Tuesday, April 8, 1989 ~

Mondesi helps L.A~~
beat D-backs 8~6;
Brewers top Cards ~,

Hayes' tie;.breaking
HR helps Giants
down Reds 1t-8

~

Tuesday, AprilS, 1999

Fort took an early lead ·two runs in
the first then came back with single
runs in the second and fourth
innings:· Southern hauled back ·with
two runs in the seventh, but it was
too liule, too late.
In that final inning, .Dailey
·reached on an error. followed by Kim
·sayre double, Lawson sin gle,
Manuel single, and Davis single.
Kim Sayre was 3-4 on· the day, while
Lyons was 2-4 and Oena Sayre had a
single.

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your .
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
. Holzer Cllrilc In ·Gallipolis
Toll Freel

DIAL

992-7834

.,

�...

The Dally Sentinei

-.,-_By The Bend

-

'

···-·
" · .. •..

..

7

The Daily Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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·

Tuesday, April&amp;,

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Here's the problem. My cousin,
"Nellie," has • boyfriend who is
HIV positive. I know for a fact that
she is having unprotected sex with
him. 1 strongly suspect that Nellie 'is
HIV positive. but I have no proof.
and Nellie has never brought up the
subject. . .
When Nellie came to our house
last week, she ki ssed our baby on his

his hands in her mouth and then
back into his own mouth.
I felt extremely uncomfortable
about this, especially since the baby
is teething and any kind of germ
could easily get into the openi·ngs in
his gums.
l realize it is unlikely, if not
impossible, to transmit HIV through
saliva, but this still makes me
uneasy.
Nellie doesn't realize we are
aware of her sexual behavior since
we were told in confidence. I don't
know how to approach her about
this and am reluctant to have her
visit. Is it possible our baby will
co ntract HIV this way• Please help
me . . I am turning into a nervo'ls
wreck .. ; UPSET MOM IN CALIF.
DEAR Uf!j~T MOM: 1t is
extremely unli~ly that your baby is

touching the saliva of an HIVinfected person. For your own peace
of ~ind, you should go to t~e library
and read up on the subject or talk to
your doctor about this.
As for. Nellie, if she is having
unprotected sex with· an HIV-positive male, she is in grave dapger of
becoming infected, if. it hasn't
already happened. Don't wait for an
opportunity to discuss this, make
one even if it seems a bit awkward.
This is ·no time for social niceties.
Tell Nellie to discuss this with a
health professional ill once. That girl ·
needs help.
Dear Ann Landers: I've been
reading a lot lately about cigarette
smokin g and the liability of the
to.bacco companies and decided to
write to you.
·
About 20 years ago, I discovered
a foolproof way to stop· smoking. I

~ha:n~d~s~an~d~f~a~ce~.~Th~e~b~a~b~y~th~e~n~p~l~ac~e~d==·~~~-~Pe:;o~p~le~d~o~n~'t~g~e~t~H~IV~f;ro9m

en.e5&lt;5 t

Fret

asked a friend who is a physician to are ignoring them. Five years ag'o,
Please tell your senior readers lo
write a fictitious nole on his pre- my (n-laws retired and moved away. spend some of that inheritance a$1
scription pad as follows :
· Since then, our phone bill has tripled visit their children now and then. ~:
"Dear Mr: C.: The recent X-rays, because my husband calls them once HARTFOIU), CONN.
.
,.
MRis -and examinations reveal that a week. They never c~ll us.,We visit
DEAR HARTFORD: · Oftea,
you have double lobe lung canc~r them one week a year. The airfare is ·age calls for role reversals, and patfrom many years of smoking ciga- $750, the rental car is $300, and we ents have to learn from their chilrettes. Regretfully, this diagnosis is must take our in-laws out for dinner dren. Please take note, seniors. Halle
term inal. I suggest you get your -- which is another $125. Why don't trouble sleeping at night and dorft •
affairs in order promptly."
we visit mQre often? We can't afford want to ger involved in a neve! ? .:
I knew this memo could have it.
."A Collection of My Favonte
been for real. I placed it in my billWe hal!e ,given up things just to Gems of the Day" .is the perfect bedfold where I would -see it every day. make ends meet. If we don't visit stand mate. Send a self-addressec1,
The next morning, I gave up ciga- enough or call enough, please long, business-size envelope and a
rettes cold turkey. It was the- IM,:st remember that we are on a lixed check or money order for $5.25 (this
thing I ever did for myself and my income, too. We try very fiard to stay includes postage and handling) to:
family. Pass it on. -- COOPER in touch, liu.t my in-laws make n, Collection, clo Ann Landers, P.O.
CITY, FLA:
efforl: to do the saine. They have not ·Box I 1562, Chicago, Ill. 606tl ·DEAR COOPER: ·consider it b,een to our home once since they . 0562 (in Canada. $6.25).
passed.
retired.
To find out more about Ann La~Dear Ann. Landers: Here's
We wo.uld love to see more of his ders and read her past columns, vj,it .
another letter .about parents who parents, but we just don't have the the Creators Syndicate web page at ·
complain that their grown children money.
www.creators.com.

Time Out For Tips
If you 're 90 you probably are settling a little deeper on the
couch but not so for Pomeroy 's lively, Loretta Beegle, who made
a trip to Scottsdale, Ariz., along with her three children, as a pan
.
of her 90th birthday observance.
Loretta was 90 on Feb. I7 and along with her children, son, Ted
Beegle, Worthington, and her daughters, Shirley Houston of Syracuse and Rita Fisher of Newark, left Columbus on Feb. 24 headed
for Scottsdale to spend some time at the winter home of her son,
Ted, and wife, Linda Crow Beegle. The group left Columbus in a
snowstorm and guess what? yv'hen they returned on March !they
were greeted-by another snow ~tonn . Incidentally, this was the
first time that the four had taken a trip together.
· ·
Going. sightseeing every day, the group visited the Tonto
Nali 0nal Monu.ment Park, four miles east to Roosevelt Darn where
they viewed the cliff dwellings in the park. The dwellings were·the
homes of prehistoric Salona people who for three .centuries made
their living from nature provided by the JUountainous desert terrain.
The group went through. the remains of an old volcano where
the last battle of the Civil War was fought in West Ocotillo and
traveled through ihe desert .to see the many flowers and cactus
. growing there. They wentlo Camelback Mountain to observe the
Praying Monk on the mountain side. The "monk" was created by
the 'elements of nature-wind, rain, etc. By the way, this monk
scene is also visible from the Ted Beegle home. The Beegles
toured the Mission of San Xavier del Bar in Tucson founded in
1700, visited Sonora, Mexico and toured Roosevelt Lake and Dam.
They were in line to visit the Grand Canyon but entrance )VaS not
being allowed at the time ot their visit. ·
· And how like former Meigs resident, Sharlee Newman Clark, a
resident of Scottsdale these days to host a special birthday pany in
honor of Loretta during the lix:al group's visit. Sharlee lives near
the Ted Beegle winter home and of course, Sharlee has probably
known the Beegle family forever.
How sweet it is .......

BY BECKY BAER
Melga County Exten·alon Agent
Family and Conaumer Sciencee/ Community Develop-

ment
There are· four different types of
leaders that may appear within a
group setting. Of these four kinds,
no style is better than any other - .
, they are just different. If. we learn
abOut th~se various leaders ·and how
· they react, we·can improve tlie w,:a~
an organization operates. In fact, we .
may take on different styles of leadership depending on !he occasion.See if you can determine what type
of leader you usually are.
Analytical leaders are inclined to ·
be ·thorough, organized. cautious.
logical , accurate, patient and will
collect facts. They may be systematic, diplomatic, conscientious, con- ·
· ventional, sensitive and accurate .
Because of these qualities many

The Middleport Community Association and the Pomeroy Merchants Ass()\:iation are joining hands again to sponsor 'the third
annual Six Mile Yard Sale.
Purpose of the saleJs to encourage all residents of Pomeroy and '
Middleport to stage yard sales and this year the two-community
event will be held all day 'on both April 30 and May I.
The sale area extends from the COI'JlQfation limits of both towns.
To be a participant in the sale, residents are asked to register at
Chapman Shoes or the Ohio Valley Bulk Store in Pomeroy clr at the
Middleport Departmeqt Store, the Office Service and Supply or
The Ohio River Bear Co. in Middleport.
·
The fee for registering is $5. Each registrant will receive a yellow flag to display on sale days and they will he listed in the extensive adverlising to be published in Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties and their location will be posted on a locator map. The locator map to show shoppers the locations of panicipants will be
available three days before the sale .at the same businesses which
· are doing the registrations. Some residents may have yellow flags
from previous sales. However, they will have to reBister again for
the upcoming event or they will not"be listed in the pre-sale advertising or on the locator maps.
pur good neighbor, Cork Cleek. observed a birthday over the
weekend. l'm not saying which one, but I will say that he is now
going to find out if life really does begin at 40. There are anumber of opinions on that. Do keep smiling.

- - - Co.mmunity Calendar--TUESDAY
.
RUTI..AND - Rutland Township
· .. trustees, l,'uesday, 5 p.m. at the Rutland fire station.
·
·
POMEROY
Immunization
clinic, Meigs County Health Depanment, Tuesday, I to 1 p.m. Children to
- he .accompanied by parent/guardian
and have immunization record.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7.:30 with dinner at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta·
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Lutheran
Cliurch. Carol Adams, Ruth Riffle,
and Dorothy Sayre, hostesses.

POMEROY _ Sali~bury Town- SATURDA'V
ship trustees, 6:30p.m., township hall
BURLINGHAM _ Potluck and
:on Rockspri~gs Road.
. Family Life Activity, Modem Wood•
men of American, Camp 7230, Satur:: POMEROY - FOE Au~iliary, day, .4 ,p.m. Burlingham Modern
: Tuesday, 7:)0 p.m. at the hall:
Woodmen Hall, Burlingham. Robert
Byers of Meigs .EMS to speak at 5~ 30
WEDNESDAY
p.m. on preparedness for .Y2K.
PAGEVILLE ~ Scipio Township
Wednesday,
MIDDLEPORT
Evangeline
trustees, 6:30

times they are good at following with others and are unselfish in ope nly. Of course , drivers ~nd
directions, working on specific offering assistance. Their shortcom- expressives working with analytiassignments; being tactful and doing ings may iric.lude being ·impulsive, cals or amiables should be less
critical thinking.
monopolizing
conversati ons, assertive by relaxing. reducing
Some of these attribute ~ may becoming too emotional or miss ing speec h volume and intensity, not ·
irvading someone's space, .disagreebecome weaknc,ses, though, if they details.
ing diplomatically and allowing othbecome indecisive because they
'Thos~ leaders who 'lfe amiable
want to gather too much data or tend to accept suggestions, are team ers to talk.
Leaders who are drivers or ana-·
think about things too long.
players, tolerant, cooperative, supLeaders who are drivers 'tend to portive and calm. Amiable people lyticals can interact successfully
be direct by cutting to the bottom may he patient, loyal, stable, delib- .with expressi ves and ami abies -by
line. They seem to know what needs erate and passive.
being more sensitive.
Using more gestures and facial
to he done, are energetic, controlWithin an organization they are
ling, decisive and take action and patient, understanding, s.how loyalty, expressions, letting your emotions
risk. Their personality may be some- a good listener, work on. tedious show, demonstrating concern, being
what
forceful ,
adventurous, tasks and concentrate well. Howev- less fonnal and more personable can
demanding, daring, self-assured and er, sometimes they may be likely to help.
,
competitive. These ·leaders usually . procrastinate,
avoid
conflict.
On. the ·ilip side, amiable · or
come up with new ideas, do things become too emotional or slow to ex pressive leaders that are in a
group with drivers or · analyticals
to get results, make decisions, :;olve change.
problems and ·assume authoritative
Once you understand the. style of should be less sensitive. 'flley
positions. Possible problems that leadership that you and others ,with- should refrain from touching and
they may encounter is that they can . in . your organization use, you can · using dramatic gestures. Th_ey need
become too impulsive, insensitive, learn how to improve interaction to talk in a factual manner. It is also
impatient, aggressive and non-spe- an(! prevent friction. To do this, de- important that they don 't delay in
cific.
-· ·
emphasize your style and emphasize . staning a job. They should woik to
hard get it done and then move on to
The expressive leaders are mind- . the other person's.
..
·
ful of the needs of. others. They are
· If you are analytical or an ami- other projects.
Learn what style of leadership ·
articulate, tolerant and supponive. able leader who works with drivers
They like people and people like or expressives, you need to be more you and others within your organiza.
them. They seem to be enthusiastic, a¥enive. Lean forward, speak loud- tion use and act upon that know!:
outgoing, emotional, sociable, gen- er, have eye contact, state 'ideabn a edge. By doing this you will no1
erous, convincing and trusting. In a . positive and direct way. State your only avoid conflicts, but will alsq
group setting they are motivating views before asking for suggestions become more effective in decision;
and entertaining. Their enthusiasm or feedback. Don't be afraid to voice making, problem-solving·and reach;
·
,
is contagious. They interact well your disagreements and face conflict ing goals.

.

Middleport Literary Club hears review of
Randall's George Washington ·biography
Middlep ort Literary Club office, during which he se\ the mother died in giving her birth
members were taken from colo- standards for the Presidency.
signaled her inferior status in the
nial America to modern China as . This biography, said ,Thomas, · family.
they enjoyed two reviews at a shows that Washington was much
The pre-World War II idea that
recent meeting held at -the home more than the. father figure we are · everything Western was superior
of Mrs. Bob Ord in Syracuse.
sometimes just vaguely aware of. to Chinese encouraged her wid. In he·r re view of "George . He was a very human rugged owed father to marry a Eurasian
Washington, A Life" by Willard individualist and strong-willed woman who was a cold, cruel,
Sterne Randall , M,rs. Daniel executiYe who led the American and manipulative stepmother,
Thomas stressed the human side Revolution and founded the unloving even to her own chilof the man who led the American republic.
dren.
Revolution and founded the · · In conclud'ing, Thomas disHer treatment of Adeline was
repub!ic.
played copies of documents she unrelentingly cruel, especially as
In telling of his early life had referred to in preparing her she encouraged the other children
. which was not a very happy one, review. These were &lt;if special to bully her. Fortunately Adeline
she recounted many events that interest because they were pan of had a loving aunt who cared for
might have been considered fail - the family heritage of long-time her and encouraged her to excel
tires, but that ultimately con- Literary Club member Nan at school and become a top stutributed to the wealth of ex peri- Washington Moore, a descendant dent.
ence that enabled him to triumph of the Wa$hington family.
The Communist victories after
as a man, as a commander, and as
The second review of the the end of World Wa, II again
a ppliticalleader.
afternoon was given by Mrs. changed life in China. As the Red
As she described the early life Emerson Heighton who chose. Anny approached in 1949, the
·or George Washington, _Thomas · "Falling Leaves" by Adeline Yen family moved to Hong Kong, but
included interesting information Mah. This memoir was subtitled continued their mistreatment of
about his fami)y, especially his '1'he True Story of an Unw.anted Adeline. .
Her attempts to please her
domineering mo ther, his half~ Chin~aug~ter" and told of a
brother -Lawrence, and his wife courageous woman's tri'umph father and to · win acceptance
Martha.
over despair in a lifelong search never met with success. Her sueShe also stated that he bec~.me for acceptance, love and under- . cess carne aboutthrough .her own
one ot the most successful busi- standing.
efforts to make a new life for her'
. nessrnen in America before the
As Mrs .. 'Heighton unfolded self in spite of the terrible emoRevolution in spite of spending the story of Adeline's life, her lis- tional wounds she suffered.
his boyhood in near poveny and teners also gained insight into life
Heighton pointed ou.t that this
noi 'having very much formal in twentieth-~entury China.
was truly a story of the
education. His financial success ·.
Adeline was born in 1937 into indomitability of the hulfllln spir•
allowed him to live well, but also a family _that hall wealth·and high it.
to be generous to his family, his position . These did . not protect
President Jeanne · Bowen
church, his friends and people jn her from a childhood of emotion- . announced that the May 12 meetneed.
al abuse at the hands of her own ing will be at the home of Betsy
· The author · gave a solid family. The abuse was to contin- Parsons, and will feature a guest
overview of the Revolutionary . ue even afte~ she was an adultliv- ·Speaker from the Ohio University
War, highlighting Washinglon's ing .a successful life independent S~hool ofJourn alism.
challenges, victories and defeats, of her family.
'
Fourteep members and guest
according to Thomas.
. The reviewer showed evolving Kalhy Dai)ey, daughter · of
Although Washington had his aspects of Chinese culture and Thomas, replied to roll call with
critics in Congress and among the life as she told Adeline's story. fa~ts about colonial America or
press, his reputation remained The ancient" Chinese feelillglthat · China·. Easter treats were served
high after his eight ye11rs in Adeline was bad luck since her by the hostess after the meeting.

I

Tammy
Wynette's
daughters file lawsuit
.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Three of Tammy Wyrieite's daug_tJters filed a $50 million lawsuit
blaming the singer's death on negO gence bY her husband and her dottor.
.
'Daughters. Tina Jones, Jackie
Daly and Georgette Smith said Motiday· that Wynene died because .D_t.
Wallis Marsh didn 't monitor htr
condition closely and overpri;
scribed medication.
·' ·
They also said Wynene 's hiliband. GeO..ge Richey, didn't seel.
medical care for her after bein8
to do so by Marsh. on the day

We Give-Matur•

HOWARD' IICAVAIING CO.

Mobile Home
Owners ·Special

Savl•gs.
Our statistics show that mature·
drivers and home owners have
/ewer and less costly Iones
than other age groups. So It's
only fair to charge you leea
your ln•urance. Insure
· home and ctll' w~h Uii ant~
more wllh our ..epeelal
mutd..pctNcy dlacbunte.

Service•
'House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
.Grading
Seplic Syllem &amp;

.

'

Pomeroy-Racine
RACINE 'Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday, 7:30
·p.m. at the temple.

...

POMEROY - M AI-Anon and
non smoking group, Thursday, noon,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church,

::::

POMEROY - VA Medical Cen' THURSDAY
ler, Chillicothe, 10 provide health care
" REEDSVILLE - Free Windows · enrollment, Friday, 10 a:m. to noon
: 9S intermediate and other tidbits and I to 3 p.m. at the new Veletans .
· class, Eastern Elementary School Service Office loc:ation, 117 Memori. 'computer lab with Radley Faulk, al Driye,J'omeroy. Thke proof of mil;insii'Uetor, Thursday evening 6:30 to ~ itary services:
· p.m. through May 13.
·

r,

'

:·Healthl.ine,

• ,,.,, 9t2·313,1

'

.,

HORSES
Buy, SeU, J'n:dn or BtUird

" . PUBUC NOTICE
AIIO Riding IAtiOnl
' Oellle-Melge Community
HooiHoUow
-Watlan 1111ency 11 INking
1p1ce lor JTPA end ather
.PfO!!r•m• In Oellll County
741).698-3290
·tind Melga County. The
1
muet provldt on lee
'
'' tecommodetlont for ten
Public Notice
Iliff membera, end provide
..An 1re1 for IIIHUnge 1nd.
PUBUC NOTICE
tretnlng ICtiVItlet. Tht
Tht
Melga
C011,nty
'e pee• muet be ' olr- EnglnHr end Melp County
condJUoned, hiVe ldt&lt;[UIIe Auditor will hold public
·perking IVIlllbll, m11t mHtlngo on April a, 1891111
J h1ndlc1p ICC.. elblilly 9:00 o.m., end Ap~l18, 111111
''ttenderda, have electrtcel 11 2:30 p.m. In thl llelgl
-r and phOIII wlrtng c1p1blt County Courtroom, Secoi1CI
, ..o,f eupportlng computer Floor, , Melge County
, 1oper111on, end othtrwlat .Courthou...
' pnrvtdt 1 good working end
ThiN m-ng• ere held
1
tUIIOmlf
llfYICe In eccordance with ORC
·..,mronment.
. . 311.203, In order to modify
. ,! '· Jncllvidu.lll or bUiiiiMIII lllndlrdl governing of .....
. wlehlng lo oller epee~ property In Melgl County.
thould eubmlt 1 tlmpla A copy of 1111 propotld ·
·•Written propallll apecllylng: lllndlrd.. lhall be IYIIIable
·. ·1•nlmt and 1ddrata ol the for lnapecllon du~ng nor\ lfiiCI provider
.
mel butlnMI houre 11 tho
_2-elreet eddre•• of . the ofllctl of the county eud~
lor ond county englnHr.
1 lprlct oflartd
·•·;,.~q~~~reiMt IYiillbte
(4)8 t TC
" 14-manthly 11111 C08I lor 1111
• -ptrtoci'July t, lllllllhrough
,;,.!unt 30, 2000
· All propoul• will receive
1 pr.ellml n1ry rev Jew. __.;,.P..;;u..;;b;.;,llc,;,.,;.N;,;o..;;tl..;;c.;.e,...._
r.Thole, Which eppear t o - .
•• milt progrtm nuda will be
NOncE .
....reviewed .further _end m1y Till VIII- of Middleport
~ bt 11ked to eupply will be ecceptlng eealed
bide for the following vehl·
· lddhlonll lniOI'IIIIII(I,n. .
' · ' Prapoiel• muot be Clll.
·
.. ·received by Wldnlldey, 1818 Ford Mulling - 2 dr.
, .April 21, 111tt. Prolio..le 1818 Ford Tempo - 4 dr.
ehould be untie:
1818 Ford F-150 -4x4
'"
OMCAA
1979 Chevy I Ton Truck ·. I,:
OffiCI AIVIIW
With IHI Sclvenger unn.
o• ,
Jlox 2n
1869 . Ford F-600 . v&lt;llh
Chlehlre, Ohio 454520-0272 Drilling Rig,
;'!!') 1,2,5,8 4TC
All Vlh!CIH IO be told II
r f : - - - - - - - --"'"1' Ia with no werrentlol
· txprHHd or Jmpllld,
All bide to be returntcl Ia
Middleport Yllllltlll Hill, 237
RICI St., Mlddlttporl, Ohio
45780. Bid I Will' be eccepl111 unttl4:00 pm on Ap~J 12,
11118.
S.ndy lennerelll
Acting Meyor
Ylll1go of Middleport
(4) 8, 8, 11 3TC

r..-..

'II•••

Public Sale and Auction

,~,~::::;;~~~~~~~~~~;;::::::;

PhLIC IUCftOI
Sal:, Apdl 10,
·. IO!OOAM

I•

'

.

Located at the Meigs Co. Fairground of ST. RT. 7 ·
. .
in Pomeroy. Ohio.
I

, Thlo lo the penonal propal1y of the late Mary
Lorena Hammat and luu lreen moved from

Jl1llltlntPon, W

: ·, A.....,, coU..don ilemo, houehold a: mloc.
• :r'o l"t c:omplo!te lloting look in Sunday TmS..mlnel &lt;&amp;/4199.

•. · Dan Smlth!"Auctloneer
C..h Poelliw
ID
Re"""'Iu.,.
Will b~ he/J i,..iJs buildin&amp;.
Bring c:lwlr &amp; dre11/or U&gt;eol/aer.
The loc:alion WM """ lloted bt Sunday Paper

Racine,

Phone: 740-843-5572

Joe Wllaon
(74(1 992-4277

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Opening 01 New Restuarant In
Clown City
Bersy Rosa' Eats&lt;y
2qs&amp; St At 1 SOuth
c"""' city. Ohio

740-&lt;5W495

loc!'ated Within 'A rnoldi ~ood

•NewHomea
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

I! ·

·

.

fruth's pharmacy growth of wonderful
~ lbyal (lUstor,~er.s requires a.&lt;ided pharmaI cists staff in our area of.operation
. Each
.
.

.

~

Points

&amp;

Chester

SHADE 1UVJ!R

Grind Feed

AGsi!IMa~

Call98S·~•

NEW·REPAIR
GLitters
Downspouts
Guttll!r Cleaning
Painting.
FREE, ESnMATES

949-2188 .

.;;:;
l~-~

Stop In And See ·
~n
Old F'riend
Mike Drehel
Sales ~epresentative
Larry Schey

750 Easl Slate Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

E•linW~te•

Carpenters Buiid01g America

Hanlni'• Horne
Improvements
Wood-Vinyl-Metal
Siding, Soffit, Paint , ,
Metal, Lamin1tion, Pole

INC., ,

COMMEICIAL and RBIDENTJAL
FREE ESTIMATES ·

614-992·7843

Mixed a·ree d Pupplu, Weana a,
740-388-9.1 29, Leave Message.

60

Lost and Found

U You Found A Ring

· Lost· white G.erman Shepherd /
Hu&amp;k"y mix, blue eve, orown eye
child's pet, Flatwoods· Ad Yicintty,

pteasecaii 740·992·70n.

loat: 1 Fawn Chine se Pu g Fe ·
male In Bidwell /Porter Area, Rewardl740-388-9325 .,
Lost: Reward Offe re d\ 20 Inch
Green Softslde Roiling Carry On
Wllh Zipper &amp; Locks That Contains Valuab le Papers , If Found
Plene Call740·446·5 186, 740 ·

446-5t79.
70 ·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
A1.L Y•rd S.5H- Mutt

Be Paid In AdVance.
OfAQL!NE: 2:00p.m.
the dliy .... ""
It tQ run. Sunday

• edltton • 2:00 p.m.

20 Yra. Exp. • tns. OWner: Ronnie Jones

Ftlday, MOI!doy lld111on
• 10:00 a.m. Setutdly.

CREDit

WORRYiNG!!!

No Embarreaament ...
You're Treated with Respectl

. Call me at (7 40) 742-2842

' "Done right the first time"
· ''Priced right aU the time"·

•

Auction
and Flea Market :.

5827.

................ Jrlclr
Palla Conllncllall

DIPOYIAG
·pJRft

Don 'r Nf!ed ,( Big One

All Make• T~ac.or &amp;
Equipment Parte
Factory Authorized
Ca•e-IH Part•
Dealers.
. 1o0o St. Rl. 7 Souttt

DRIVEWAY nONE

CaU A Lilrl..

o,.,

Landscape Material

Light Hauling up to

WICKS

992·5455
_____
..

., -

SMITH'S
· CONSTRUCtiON
~· NI!UJ Corutnlf!tion

·• R"mode~
• $iJing
~

' '70o 'llig or
:No Jbb.
'Too Sma/(
"Call Today'

FREE Estimates

(7401 tt2-553J or
· tt2·27S3

.

Sill Mooc:Uapa ugh Auclloneenng
Complete Auctioneering Services . Consignment auction · M,dl
Street, Middleport , Thurs daMs
Ohio ll'cen&amp;e t7693 . 7-4 0·9 &amp;9·

2623.·

Roofing • Repairs
•Coalinga •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing
Free Estimates

Evary S~tu' rd ay N1gh1 7 P. ~ ..
Crown City, 740·256-6989

Joseph Jacks.

WedemSye r·s Auctio n Serv~oe .
Galllpons. OhiO 740-379-2720. 1

740·992·2068

90 . Wanted to Buy '

R l ~ Pearson Auction Company,
full lime aucti on eer. compilfte
au.cHon
serv 1ce
L1censed
166 ,0hio &amp; West V1rg1nia, 304-

773-578S Or 304·773-5447 .

AIVERStDE AUCTION BARN .

Ab1oiute Top Dollar: AU U.S. $ 11·
ver And Gold Coin&amp;, Proofse ~ s .

&amp; Thpsoil .

s ton

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo.On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
pergame .t.
$300.00 Covelill •
$500.00 Starbur•t
Progrilulvetop line.
Uc. I 00.50 11n tllfn

(Ume Stone·
Low Rates)

Coolvln., OH 45723

31111911 TFN

.

Auction every Tt'lursday , Am
Vets Building, Gallipolis, Oh ., 811
new ltlms, 6:30pm, call 740·992 ·

.......

740·742·2138

740-992·4t97.

.80

-lblamnce-Piaallq

Ha1,1llng.
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable RBtfB
Joe N. Sayre

Mile Yellow Flag Yard Sale.
Pomeroy -Middleport . Ap ril 30,
May 1. Register n o ~ $5.00 Pick
Up tlag. For more Information oaU

UOpmF&lt;*y.

• ..._ Cani • Dulp

SAYRE
'TRUCKING

·e·

All Ylrd Satea Muat Be P•ld 11n
Advenct . o..dllne: 1:OOpm t),e
d•y berore the ld It to run ,
Sunday &amp; Mondey ediHon·

Remember

.... ....

'

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Credlt'Siow Credit • Bankruptc;y

.N eed a friend In the bu81ness .
'

.

Yard Sale

.

(7 40) 592-5025 Athebs, O'hio

Don•s ·
\ Heating &amp; Cooling

~ Wit-Mart

Plea se Cart 7-40-446·9477. A&amp;k
For Pat. Reward!

wmams~~~~~~~l

,
,
-:=::::==:;===::::
BI.SSELLBUILDERS,

: of our pharmacies is a hometown enter: prise stressing small town commitmeni •
: and friendly~ serviee. We offer .competi·
yve , '!¥'ag~sf an~ ben~flts and ehncourage
ractice o your pro,~sion wit · responNew 1-!omes • Vinyl
, • ilities relating only to the pharmacy.
Siding •New Garages
. $en&lt;l. your resumcfto:
·
•· .
. • Replacement Window~
• Room Additions
: Pharmacy Divuion Fruth Corpordle Offi.ce,
• Roofing

·

388-9147.

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact :

(740) 691.·1713

LIIIIUIO sltevt
.~37 HCk! llort

u,,...,,"

household goodo.

tj-

Every Sundar ··
12:30
•
P•

ft

lin.

fi!)~~fi!)~

Buildinga, Decko, Etc.
Free E•limule• .,
~ Cerpentar ·
B. .-,anlng

·. GUN SHOOT.

~~ft~Cft~e;ree;cc
.~ J.D. CONSTRDCftOI ~

keep·uexempt" property for his or her personal
uae. Thi1 rnay .include a car, a hoUse, clothea , and

'Serving ~ and Golia Countlts
In Ohio and Mason County in WV

1-740-742-2803 or
1-740-4411-3622

12 Puppies. Mathe( Working Border Collie, Father Dog NeKt Door.
74().367-7287.
.

Mixed Breed Pupp ies To Glvta·
way To A Good Home Only, 1 •o-

debtor of financial obligations and arrang~ a foir
diotrihution of assetll. Debtoro in bankruptcy may

'Shrubbery Maintenance

• .., ..... 11 . . . "'&amp;Nil .....

Giveaway

Gray. WMe.(304)675-S396.

ca n r elieve a

742-1701

free

40

·5 Year Old Lhasa -Apso (dog ).

ft

Homes, Decks
&amp; Mobile Homes .
Painting
Interior &amp; Exterior
1SYra. Experience

· 'Professional Routine Lawn
Maintenance end Manicunng
'Residential &amp;·eommercll!l

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT ·

New Homes &amp; Remodeling '
11!!1 Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding l!
~"Speciali•in&amp; In Log
~
111!!1
Commercial &amp; Residential
· ~ 28 yrs. exp.
'Licensed &amp; Insured
.Phone 740.992·3987
Phone (740) 593-6671 ~
John Dean; Owner

lUarty's
Power
Washing

Can

"TASTE WORTH SAVORING\'

3/15 1 mo.

&lt;!2TFN

Larry'• Lawa

lly Hosp!1311ty By Betsy Ro n
Sheeta, Owner Ana Operacor.

YEUOW FLAG
Yf'~D SfiLE

W e Now Custom

Wr~e!!4!l

· ROOFING

tt ;00 AM Thru 3:00 PM
EnjOy Country Cooking And Fam·

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five

7/22/lfn

· Howard L.

Monday Thru Saturday

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

ROBERT BISSELL
CONStRUCTION

!
- '110 - Help wanted
•
Racine Gun Clu•
ir--,----=mmmm~-1 •••• Hollow •~.

.•

;::::--"1-- 1-~~

Etc. Acquis itions JeWEijryCoin Shop. 151 Secood
Avenue. GaNipolis. 740-446-2842.

&gt;~ernng,

• Room AddttiOM I RM!;#&lt;!!ngj

·N-o.,...
• EllctrtCIII &amp; Plumbing
• Rcaftng

.HAULING•

• Interior &amp;

Exte~or

• Pelnttng .
• AIIO ConCreto \York
• PtiUo decke &amp; gulttrlng
V.C. YOUNG Ill

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli,

Jewelry. GO;Id

Fill Dirt

992-6215

740·992-3470

Ohio

U.S~en~y .

Antiques , top pric•li paid, Rival ·
Ina Anti e~ues. Pomero y, Ot'll o
Fluss Moore owne r. 740 -992 ·

2526.
Clean Lale M o del Ccirs Or
Trucks, 1990 Model$ Or Newe r,
Smllh Buick Ponllac, 1900 Eas t·

ern Awnue. Gallipolis.

'

Want To Sell Your Stull? Call Rlv·
erak18 Auction And Let us Sell 11
Fer 'lbu, 740-2~89 .
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homes, Call 7'"0·446·0175, ·304 ·

875-5965.

HILL'S

Linda~s

SELF ·STORAGE

Painting

lllke the pain out or
painting, and let me
·do it for you

29670 Bllhlln Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740·949·2217

INTERIOR

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10' X 30'
HOUri
7:00AM • 8 PM

Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

w antea : Cars, Truc:ka Any Con ·

dillon, 740·388·9082 , 740·446·
I¥&lt; AT.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Help Wanted
1$ EARN EXTRA CASH 1$
7
4Q-985-4180
lndependenr
Conrractors Needed
' CYLINDER PACKAGES
Complete Une 01
To Deliver The New Champion
Vegetable &amp; Bedding Plants
Free Estimates
Publllsh"'O Toolopllone Directories
- Aif.-F~~
.Ulll LF A SF OR l!II RCH AS E... OU~~~~~-b-..:.:.:.:..,._j-~~::..l'lJ.. I-• ..;;;;;..._,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.,;;.J- ~~ 'L
CYLINDER, AGA. WILL GIVE YOU THE fiRS
•
Have use 01 An
E•t:l"d#' ..,.,... G•mnlw..
FILL OF GAS 'flff PUll AN AGA IDENTIFIE
Delivery Starts ::······
.
Hanging Baskets
Blooming a.Foliage
CAP Plil THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR
$:~rN:O:~ ~:;:::"D~str l buti~~
ts.'711 a up
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
Spoclaioto. tnc.
&lt;Geranfllmt Azal888
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS j Mfl
CALL 1·111·101-UOO TOLL
•shrubs a Trees
'
Of UP FO'$ f00.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
005
Personsla
_fM_E_ _ _ _ __
We Hor~Qr Golden .
CYLII'lDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
::.: ~~~~~~s~:J~·H~~~~vu~~~:~~
Buckeye Card
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FO
Don't Worr¥ Abo ut Your Futuro
I&amp; LOOking Follndlvidll811
open
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
Ltt
Our
Poychlca:
Put
Your
M
ind
WhO Are Currontly Stato Tested
At Ease Call Now! 1-900·740 ~9-5 W•kdaV Sunday 1-5 QUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WI
e5oo e.t . 3593 , 18 • s3.99 Per Nurolng 'Aulatanto To Work In
END JUNE 21' 1999.
.
Min. Ser&gt;o·U 8t9·645·843-l. http:// Our
Comprehensive Care Faelllty.
INIIAII'S ·
Please App ly In Peraon'·To !J I 1
HMIIOY IIACII.IIIOP
www.thehotpages2.con1/nllpsyBuckrldgo Road. Bidwell , OH
IIIIIHOUSI
JSO COchic:12so29thtm
4se t4.
SYIUCUSf:
1· A~ard Cook, will no longer "" -AV_O_N_I-A-11-Ar-.-.,-t-S-h-lr~loy
IIOIIIIOY,
OliO
41769
. Hl-177.
,.._7,...__2•'"'""
... 01 ..,
tet ·41S•3SSS
rosponSibll lor any debts In· Spears, 304.67 s-1429_
,
TfN
..,.....,. ...,.
c.urrld by Teresa Cook."

Now Open For .
SprilyJ Sea1on

OOA.N , ~ ­
RNER _.,.

llllqronoe lNrvl214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

..........o........ '""""'"•"

n. ",f,

· "BadW Your Dream"

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

W.VA.26034.
-Tovou Tl'rm SIICIIlPO

9 West StimiOn. Alt'Mtnl
7o60-592·HM2
Qualit y clothing and 1'\ouse'hotd
Items. S1.00 bag 5alt ~tvery
ThurSday. Moriday thru SatUJ.day
9:00.5:30 .

Ohio

-Complete Auto Sen~ice-

I

Rt. 1, Box 332, Point Pietuant, WV
or telephone (304) 675-1612.

Life Home Car

II

Fonner-"Velvel HamtrU!r"
52954 .State Rt. 124

(740) 742·8888

Public Notice .

.JUST IN TIME JIOR IPIIJNO llEPAD18
AGA GAS, INC. I.S OFFERING A INCIAl ON OUR

n.

Buiiries! · ;

f',.V,.,.

,.

'

Remodeling

Dave's

Supplemenl

Man

et2-M87

(304)
675-2828
.

Mon- Frl8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experlen!)e

UriiJii-.•

PI easan
. t v. a'IIey .'H osp1•tat
·

.

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

Bulhlos~r

~_,~will~~~~L--~~,~~~~~~~.;7~
:30~r~~====~~~~==~~~~~~
p.m.,
• . ALFRED -. orange Township
· trustees, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, home of
· Osie Foil rod, Alfred.

Rutland , Ohio ·

'' "'••··nr
&amp; Baddwe

D,lvers, a.... .
.Owners and

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, lac

Oltlaty

•

,.

.

110

•

�' . .

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

April 8, 1999

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The D1lly Sentinel •

OOP

ALDER
540 Miscellaneous
:&amp;abroltlof Wanted. Evening ShiH
4n My Home, 3 WMkl , 7~387·

-;m•.

:eltat Brot. Arnuaemlnt Co. Free
Ito trawt Must t. 18yrs. Of otdtr.
Call 740·288·2950 M·F. 8:00·
1.:30.
·-

CAAEEA POTEN'I'IAI.

• •

Cillo Based Co&lt;rc&gt;any

'

EXPANDING TO THE

..

POINT PLEASANT AIIEA
$7 HR FULL•TillE
2 P.ll. ·II P.ll.
FuN BeneiiiA

Clean -.1ona1 Environment
Mll&lt;a Customar 5enilce CaliS
Fot Maj&lt;lt Hoailh Otgafiizations

Csllbday
1·888-237-56o'7
Ext. 995
Computer Uaars Needed . Work
Own Hrs. $25K -$80K l'lr. 1-800.
"'78-8653 X Tfn. www.1cwp.com
COuple or alngle person to move
--.J.n•afld care tor elderly person In
Meigs County. All liv ing e~~:pens·
as, plus salary. List work history
•Pd 2 references Send name,
addren and phone number be·
fore May 1, 1999 to; Margaret,
General Delivery, Pomeroy Post
Olllol. Pomeroy, OH 45769.

Easy Workl Excellent Pay1 Assemble Products AI Home. Call
Toil Free 1·800·467· 5e61 bt.
12t70.
'
.
Finance Co. Is Seeki"ng A Full
Time loan Clerk. Must Posaeaa
Telemarketing And Public Rela·
lions Skills. Outles Include TypIng. FlUng, Compuler"lmput. Tak·
lng Payments, And Acc ounts
Payable. Must Be Able To Handle
Multiple Tasks Simultaneously
And Work At A Fast Pace. Bene·
llts And Salary Will Be Commensurate Wllh Ouallllcatlons. Prefer
Someone With Experience. Cill
1·888·446-3278 8 A.M. To 5 P.M.
Fult·Time And Part· Time Regis·
tared Nurse, Licensed Practical
Nurse, And Medical Lab Tachni·
clan Positions Available AI Oak
Hill Community Medical Center.
Ohio. Licensure Aequlr.d. If Interested, Please Send Resume To:
Oak Hill Community Medical Con·
tar, Attention: Brande McKenzie,
350 Ch-arlotte Avenue, Oak Hill ,
OH-15656.

EOE
FUN IN THE SUI!II
,
Travel The USA In A Rock And
Roll Almbsphere. If You 're M
leut 18, Free To Travel And
Can Leave lnwnedlately, Call Toll
Free 1-888·720·2127. 9:00AM To
5:00Pm EST April 5 To 9,1999.
Ask Fot John. . EOE.
•
General Otflce /Sales. Experienced Preferted. Full-Time, lmo
m~dlate ~nlng . Apply: Lllaatyle
Furni!Ufe. 856 Third Avenue, GallipaN&amp;, 10.2. No Phone C.Uo.

Immediate Openings; Seeking
Full-Time Person For Boolc~eap­
lng , Send Resume To : CLf\ 470,
clo Gallipolis Dolly Tribune, 825
Third ..o.venua, Gallipolis. OH
45631 .

"

Immediate Position Openings: In
Clerrcal, For Mort Information,
CaJIVIdd, 740-4ola-'4188.
Llbo18 -Immediately
Ali Shills,
luiglno's
Jackson Ohio
1·800-295-9470

ne~hborhOOd ,

-

AN's 112:00- $14.50 fHr. Based
On Experience, ShiH Dltt.rtntlal

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper IS subjeCt to
the Federal Fair HO&lt;JSing Act ,
ol1968'whlch makes ft Illegal
to advertise ..any pmterenc:e,
Umftallon or discriminatiOn
based on race, color, religion,
sax familial statWJ or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limltaiiOO at ctlscrimlnation.•

For Evenings And Mklnlghts. For

A Proteulonal Interview Please
Contact Ttmmy Price, At 740·

-148-7150.
STNA's Wantld Call Laura At
Medi Home Health Prtvatt Care
· - ~1-8334 ..

Wlldllle Jobs/$2UO/Hr. Inc.
benefits. Game Wansena/Securl·
ty/Malnte nan ceJPark Rangers.
No exp . needed . For App. and
Exam Info, Call 1·80D-8133585,E•t. 8827, 8AM·9PM , 7
clays ldo inc.
·

140

Me~andiM

Bul~lng lot lri. Syr1cuae- nice

Scenic Hilla Nur sing Ctnttr It
Currently 1\l:oeptlng Appllcallono
For FLIII Tlml And Plrt TJmt
LPN'I And RN 'o. LPN'I $9.00 •
$1 1.50 /Hr. Baaed On E-lorlco:

all ull!lliea llflil-S"13.too. Clll740-t92·m7.

1 BA APt. lor rent on Main St.
Point Pleasant. 1304)675·2174 ,
(740)448-2200.

Riverfront Camper Lots, $50.00
Per Mcnlll, Plus Ulilklol. lncll0101
launch And Dock usage. 740367-7802 •.

Nice two b.clroom apartment In

Syracuse, $275 Plf month, $200
deposit, u111111es not Included, 740-

Real Estate
Wanted

360

667-3518.
Nicely Furnlahed t Bedroom
Apartment, All Ut11t111 Paid Ex·
oept Eieclrlc, Close To Grocerv &amp;
Downstairs , Phone: 740 ·•462602.

We Buy Lend: 30 ·500 Acree,
We Pay Cash. 1·800-213·8365,
Anthony Lind co.

North 3rd Ave., Middleport, 2
bedroom, unfurnlehed apartment,
deposll &amp; rtlerence1, 7•0-992·
0165.

RENTAL S

410 HousM for Rent'

Now Taking Appllcallonto- 35
Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, rneludea Water
Sewago, Traoh, $315/Mo., 740·

Buslnaas
. Training

448-0008.
Tara Townhouse APartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2
FloOrs, CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Car·
Pallo, No Pota. lelee Plus
Depoan Required, 7-40. 740-446-0101 .

Goltlpallo C.... Colloge
(CorM" ClOse To Homo) CaH
Todoyl 740-446-4367, 1-800·
21444e2. Reg t90-05-t274B.

180 Wanted To Do
Carpentry: From Frame To Finish.
Decks, Porches, Additions, Re749-441·1316.

.-ls.

E &amp; S Lawn Se,..lco: Design, Implementation , and Service.
Available tor Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planting. frn estl·
mates. Satlsfacllon guaranteed.
Greg Milhoan: 3041675-&lt;1628.
Excellent Caret Person In my
home In . country/mobile/non·
sm9ker/ 1800. month/ Nice.
(304 )882·3880.

Experienced Mother &amp; Babysitter
Accepting Inquiries At 740·256·
8537 Day Shill Only, At Hor

Home.
Furniture repair restoration &amp; re·
llnlshlng, custom buill reproductions, Liz &amp; Bennert Roush, 1•0·
982·11 00. Appalachian Wood·
works.
Georges Por.table Sawmill. don:t
haul your logs to the mill just cau
304-675-1957.
Have 1 Opening For 2• Hour In
Home Care Ot Elderly Or Handl·
capped, 740-441-1538.

House For sate By Owner. Price
Under $200,000.00 , A Doctors
Home, bcellen£ Condition. Shown
By Appointment. Serious lnqul·
ries Only, Pi&amp;eael. 74Q.44~.

Largo lamlly hOme lor &amp;ala on tan
lovely acres· four bedrooms, two
and one hall baths, two llreplacea,
formal living room and family
room, tour car ga,age and tw:o
storage buildings, two apartments
which are completely furnished.
Please cau 740-992·2292.
Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,
Living Room, Dining Room. Eat-In
Kitchen. Lg Family Room . 740·
245-9337

320 Mobile Homaa
for Sale
1964 Windsor 12xt~5 w/Expando.
3BA, good condition but. needs
painted outside. Must be moved.
$2,000: (304)695-36081895-3025.

Twjn, Rivera Tower now accepting
applications for 1BR. HUD subsidized apt. for elderly and hand·
lcapped. EOH 304-875-6679.

Country Living, 4 Mill From Ga~.
llpoils, Large Eat·ln KttcMn. L.R.,
2 Or 3 Bedrooft')S, Front And
Back Porch, 2 Car Garage, Stor·
age Building. Plenty 01 Trees &amp;
Flowera, Beautiful )lrd _.50 Per
Month, Oeopslt And References
Aequlrad, 740.446-4254, Or 740·
448-0205.

420 Mobile Homea
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom motHie homes, air
condltlon1d.~ S260-S300, sewer.
water and trash Included, r•o-

992·2187,.

Housecleaning Dependable, Hon·
est, Good ~eferencea , Years 01
Experience,
740· ••&amp;- 7525.
Leave A Message.

1976 AUant~ 14 Ft K70 Ft. 3 Bad·
rooms , ' 1 ~2 Baths , On Rented
lot, 740-245-5871,740-245-5492

2 Bedrooms, Addison Pillli; $2201
Mo., $100 Daposlt, No 1'8ts, 740·
446-3437' 740-446--1837.

Interior &amp; Exterior PaiQtlng, Experl~tnced, References. Reason·
able Rates For Free Estimate,
740-388-8041 .
.,·

197611•X60 Hollypark Trailer.
Total Electric, 2BR, Price II•·
ducedl For more informatlon, call
(304)773-5543aller 4PM.

2 Bedroom&amp;, CloSe To Store,
Schools, Hospital In Porter, $250/
Mo., $250 Deposit, Trash, Water,
Sewage Paid, Ma1 Consider Land
COntract, 740·388·9325.

3826.
Mow &amp; Trim Reasonable Rates,
Call For Free Estimate, 740-256·
1945.
We "Do Home Improvements
From Top To Bottom For Free
Estimates, 740-245-9046.
Will Do Light Carpentry Work,
Aooflng, Yard Work, Land Scap·
ing, Mowing, House Painting, In·
side &amp; Oull Low Prices, Low Es·
Umale, 740-388-8316.

t983, 14X52 Mansion, Total Gas,
2BA, New Rolrig. &amp; Carpel EKtra
Nice. Gallipolis Ferry, Will be
ready to pull. $7800 . (304)675·

n92.

1985 Oakwood 2 Bedi'ooms, 2
Ba'ths, All Electric, Total!~ New
Plumbing , New Hot Water Tank,
Some Furniture, Mull Be Moved!
$8,500, 740-25H011.

1992 Norris, 16Ft X 70FT, VInyl
Will mo.w lawns, 'trim, any odd·. With S~lnglea, 2 Bclrma.. 2 Baths,
All Electric Apptlancea, Porchea1
jobs, hauling, 740-992-'1286.
Carport, . 741).258-6336.
Will stay with elderly person In
th,lr home, rilghts only. Have
Aelllreneoa/Expertonce.
(304)875-1898, aftlf 8PM.

FINANCIAL

2 Bedrooms, In Porfet Area, Oe·
posit &amp; References Required, No
Pets. $285/Mo., 740.388-9162.
2 BA. Moblla Home: Sandhill
Road , No Pita, Referen,ce Re·
qulred. (304~75-~.
4 Bdrms, Unfurnished, Also 2
Bdrrns., Furnished. No Pets, DeposH Aeq'd. Bollt On cora Mill Ad.
3 Miles From COllege. 740-245·
5622.

In Gallipolis, $250/Mo., Ideal For
Senior Pereon, For An Appoint·
ment To VIew, Phone: 740-4469539.
Nice 3 bedroom mobile home, In
Middleport, Oh., nc pet., 740-992·
5858.
Rio Grande Area, Close To Cam·
pus, 2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
Water, Sewage, Garbage Paid,
$300/Mo., Deposit Raqulred. 888·

840-0521 .

440

LPN'S and CNA's · Ravenswood
Canter (lormerty Ravenswood
VIllage) Is now accepting applications tor full and part·llmt po·
sltions. Excellent benefits. pack·
age. If Interested, please apply In
person Monda~ through Frkjay,
9AM-4PM, or write, ARflntlon: Do·
nette Dugan, CON 200 South
RUehle Avenue, Ravenawood,
wv 28184. Phonej304)273·938&amp;.
E.O.E. A Genesis ElderCare
Facility..

Fumllhed

Room•
Needadl Roommate To Share ~··
penses, Olacount For House·
keeping, 74Q.441-1401.

Rent

2 Bedroom Mobile Home At Kerr;
740--148-9869.

lawn Mowln.g. Service, Small
Garden Tilling. Clean Out Garage
and Other Odd Jobs. 1304)875·

450

Clean, Effictent, 2BR. A1ferenc· ·
as. Oepoalt, No Pats. (304)675- 460 Space for
5162 ..
Mobile home site a¥allable between Athens and Pomeroy, call
One Bedroom For Rent In Quite
740-385-4367.
Neighborhood! Depooll &amp; Refer·
once Requlradl $250.00 (304)·
Trailer Space For Rent. Georges
367·1550
Creek Road, 740-446-1142.

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mobile home. 740-992-5039.

1982 Festlwal 14 fl. x 70Ft. 2
Badrooms, 2 Baths, CIA, Ali Eloctrtc, 2 Perches, Verv Good Cond•
Uon. "$1t ,500, 740-446-6157 After
4P.M.

TWo bedroom apaument In Po·
rnaroy, no pels, 740-992·S858.

Trailer Space ·For' Rent And A
Camping Trailer Space For RI!OI.
G19orges Creek Aoad, 2 'Miles
Out, .740.446•3666.

-470 Wanted to Rent
Wanted To Rent: House Or Farm,
Nice Kitchen. Near Gelllpoll&amp;,
513-651-0100.

MER CHANDISE

B Prom Dreuea. Size 8 &amp; 14.
(304 )456-1821 or (304)875- I 932.

.~27.

Prlmeata r· new direct special·
free Installation, 3 months fret
ptogrammlng, llmHe&lt;t limo only, 1·
11116-265-2123.

10th Annual Champion Orlve
Cltb Pig Sell Frtclay AprU9, 19911
7:00 P.M. Faytne County Fair·
ground&amp; Washington C.H. OhiO
pRO I 3 SUPPLY
Selling: 200+ Barrowo, Gllto, &amp; A
We Are Profesalonal lnatallatlon ·
Few Select Boar Pigs. Aoctoneer.
And Service Supply. We Sell
Merlin WOOdruff SAlt Day 1740·
Wholesale To The Public. We
335· 9120, Gtner ·Genetics, Don
Stoek Janltrol Heating And Cool·
Black , 614-67HQ97, Jlldy Swlnl
lng Equlpment, Duel Work, Reg·
Farm, Jot Oresback, 740·88-4·
lotars. And Related Materials For,
4847,
Rick Starr. 740-1198-251 e.
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Arrange For Lawrence En·
s Pure Bred Hampshire Soara &amp;
terpriSts To Install For You . If
Hampshire Fair Pigs, 7•0-379You oont Call Us. We Both l.osel
2805
~53 Jackson Pike, 740.446-6308,
800-291.()098.
Fair Pig&amp; lor Solei EKcollent Blqotl
Llna&amp;l For more lntor~llon Call:
Snapper rktlng ...,_, 8 hp., ~Mr
(740)· 245-5872 or 1740) 367·
angina, $400, 740-992·3802.
·
0583
Stihl waedeal&amp;&lt; lor sale, llko
740-992·2558.
.

new,

Fair pigs lor llie, 740-995-3626.
Pygmy goats lor sale. 740·985·
4190.
•

Tobacco for Leastl 2308 Lba.
(304)57tl,2308.

auaury Registered Angua Bulls.

Waterline Special: S/4 200 PSI
$21.95 ·Per . 100; I" 200 PSI
$37.00 ~r 100; All Brass Com·
pr&amp;S8ton Flnlnga tn Stock
AON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son, Ohlo,l-800-537-9528'

Cummings
Angus
(304)67!1-6248.'

XXXX·X Yldeol, 25 new releases.

Feb. 99, world'• hottest. Think
you '"' seen ever~thlng? Best
prices. To order can 304-752-

2970.

550.

510

Household
Goods

20"Color TV w/Remote. Magnavox:. $50 . Also. Room For Ffent.
(304)674-0128.
Appliances :
Reconditioned
washers, Dfyers, Ranges, Aefrl·
grators, 90 Day . Guarantlll
French City Maytag, 740·448·
7795.
•

Bunk Beds For Sale , (30-4;)675·
7314. Cali Af1er 5PM.
For Sale: Reconditioned wash·
en, dryerf and · refr l~erators .
ThompsOns Appliance. a•o7
Jackson Avenue, (304)875-7388.
GOOD' USEO · APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 11
VIne Street , Call 740·448· 7398,
1·888-818·0128.
New And Uled Furniture Store
Billow Holkt&amp;J Inn Kanoguo. Stop
And See Us. 740-448-4792.

530

Antique•

540 Mhicellsneous
·Miii'Chandlsa

Farm.

Bulldl~

1(;00 lb. Round Bales ot Ml~~:ed
Hay, $20 tach loaded on your
vehicle. (304)675·7608'.
·

POLE BWli!IIMJI
Horse Barna, Garages, ArT'f Style,
Any Size, Free Esllmalaa, 740·
384-4587.

Good Gra88 Hay $1.75 Bale, 740·
446·11!J4.

560 · Pets for Sale

Large round bales of mixed hay,
sxe, $15 each loaded on your
truck, 740-985-3925.

12 wk. old golden retriever, haa
&amp;II ShOI&amp;,AKC registered $250.00
304-675-7349

S~uar8 bales of second cutting
good green mixed hay, eaay access day or nlghl , $1.50 each,
740-24H322.

2 Male ACK Boller f'ups,' Fawn/
Whllo. Tolls docked &amp; First
Shots.- $200. (304)882·3872.
55 gallon Acquarlum, Stand· &amp;
Accessories.
$300.
080.
(304)n3-sost .

Dekalb Seed Corn &amp; Soy Baens
For Sell. (304)675-1508.

AKC lab puppies. proven gun·
dogs, references, 3 ge:n~tatiQns
hn, shots, wormed. vet checked,
black &amp; .yellOw, $150 to $200,
740.992·3879 alltr 5pm.

TRANSPORTATION

For 8ale 1996 4X4 Four Wh&amp;il-~

Moton:yclae

Birds, Iguana&amp;, Tarantulas, mice.
Flsn Tank &amp; Pet Shop. 2413
Jackson Ave. Point Pleasant,
304-675-2083.

CKC Roglstared \'!hlto Maltese
Pupp,, 6 waeka, Shbl&amp; And
Wormed, Female. $400.00 Firm .
740-44e-IOOO. LIM Moallga.
Goldan Aetrlaver AKC, Puppies,
Shots. Wormed. Famale·$200.00
Mole· $160.00. 740·37,11-2624 or
740-31'9-2981

570

1989 To1ota Camry, 69,000
Miles, Exctll•nt CondiUon, Alk·
lng: $_3.500, 080, 740-446-4588.
1990

Lumlna ,. ee~ow

Low

Mll&amp;~: 1991

Loan Value
Oynaaty, Low
Miles, Priced Below Loan Value ,
740-446-1127.

I

1994 Four Wlnns Fling, 14', 115
hp., 15500. Fun boat. Bae II 3t9
South Third Street, Middleport:
740-992·7727.

•
T:HE BORN LOSER

with 08(1. Trolling and outboard
-1300.1304)882-3448.

BIG NATE
!

~\lOVE! I

New goo - · a body par11. D &amp;
11 Auto, Alplo'• WV. (304)372·
3933or 1-800-27:&gt;-0029.
.

1993 Ford Taurua, $3,000 I 080.
(304)882-3448.
'

'790

..

pt'atiCIIan
ogcy.

6 Snow vehlcta
7 They may bo In

22--n
(lnvlt'lld)

37 Parennlal
condldlll

thlllre .
8 NlgaUYO prolix

1998 25' Slrnmllte, kltchon I~ ·
c/~es . mlerowavt, ~. flMed bed,
oloopo 7, aoklng $6900, 740-1192·
8159.
•

one

Dorotlty
12 Throw

23~r·....,
24 Sendatone
25 Joan of
"Tho Loa!

East

Pass

North
2.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Emperor".
28

Angollc aurt.

27 Gemton rl29 Broad etrl~

30 Paycht.trllll•
37

YOU

up?

nt"T~

NOT

THE

WAY IT

By Phillip Alder
We' ve all heard "The king is
dead; long live lhe king." Well, lhal
is a big hint on how to pl ay today 's
four-spade contract What would you
,do after a trump attack by West?
Tliere seem to be I0 easy tricks
via five spades, one hearl, three
clubs and a hean· ruff in the dummy.
However, if you just draw trumps and
give up a heart trick, here East will
win the trick and push the diamond
I0 through your Icing . You will lose
one heatt and three diamonds for one
down. The diamond king will have
lived and· died in vain.
You must fightlo keep East off lhe .
lead. After exlracting lhe trumps, you
should ':Ovcnake the club ~ing with
dummy's ace. Then continue wilh the
club jack. If Eas~covers , ruff. play a "'
spade to dummy:s jack, and discard
two diamonds on the 10-nine of
clubs. Here, though, East cann el
cover. So, pitch a diamond. West may
switch to a heatt, bul you win. ,go into
dummy with a trump, and jettison
two more diam&lt;;&gt; nds on lhe estab.lished clubs. In both cases, you concede a heatt trick before laking your
hear! ruff for the IOth tri ck. You lose
only one heart. one dramond and one
club.
The club king li ved and died in an
exce llent cause. ·
As you will have noticed, an initial heart lead would have defealed
the contract. East would get' in (or the
diamond- IO ' switch before it.is too
fate. Yet how does West find that
lead? I don't know' I understand
slatting with a club, but a heatt seems
•
a shot in the dark. 1

-~

.. .

S.uh -

Mllrle

31BiooWd "·
40 HNpo
41 " By tho
nrne
to
,, ..

~lx"

'

'42Band-~
~

Arnaz

43 Formerly,
formerly

• ~.w ··
monkoy
47 Epocha

~

41--. Gerf1 I
50 M-ol:
aufltx

52 Dulcii10W11
53 That girl

CELEBRITY .CIPHER
by Lule Campos

Celtebrity Ciptwtr .:~YPtogra~M .,. cru!ed from quatattona by IMIOUI people. pasl and pr..-nt
Each lener tn 1ht cipl'lef 11andt fOr another Todly'• clue: R equa/1 8 ·

.•·

•

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AFZOZ'V

IJ C XI

J

X

A F 0 A

IZ A

XZYZO

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··-

· vozTAOACXI

HSTF

D

WJA

OOJSXN

AJ

J

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sv

W C Y· C X I . '

osvvzww

.,

ADMZO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "George Steinbrenner talks ou1 of both sides of his ·
Y(BIIet." - .Ron Luciano, former umpire

·::~:~~· S@\\~lA~ t.tfis·
loy CLAY I . POI&amp;AII
I~IIH

loarronoe lotte18 of
0 four
Krombled worda

low 10 farm l..,r wordo.

II

RE

I

....••••

~

..

.,...

v L A. G
12 I I I

.'

I
I I' I I' I

..

LINAY

1
,.....A,;._F_Tr-U;.,~L;;..,--t
1t
5
.
1 1 1 !

t

·

•

r

-

•

·

"'

Anger is a must, without it
there is indifference. which is
the mast disastrous of all hu-

cb-,o~~~.-, -~n, ; ·~"~~~-hoch'"ucl••~

_U_D_O_O_S_I___,I :n
qUOied-d•
....l _._I-· .._f_._I_._I__._f_,_ : dovtilop·' · - ""' No.·3 below.

."")"
.)';,.:
· ''
~ ~'. ~
!'......
.

Don't r&lt;r stoog by high prim'
Shop rlrt clrJsJifltd r.&lt;lilrrr.

810 · ·t! Home
~

~

l!n~tta.
,

~V'

Ell, ...

~

~-,_

· ~ ..WATERPAOOPINCI 1 • '.t.
Uncon'G(Ilonal lllotlmo guaranlae.
Local rtftrti1CII furnrahed. e..
- - 1875. Col 24 Hro. (740)
448·0870, 1-800.287·0578. AoQ"'Wallrproollng,

'
'

·

'

45 Brtl'l boby. ..

ICIAM I.OS ANSWIIS

SE RVIC ES

.

''

11 eam.mparory
of Agathlt and

St·Mala

35 Khellin gadgll 5 Senator
Kennedy

K 9 54

10 Toll

19 " -lotlu · ·
Broolca"
21 Tarun, lor

9 Soul, In

-36 NuciNr ollltck

campers a.
Motor 'Homes

1995 Chevy Cavallar 52.000
Miles, 4 Doors, Aoto, Air, $8,000,
'140-3711-9277.

1998 Pontiac Traris-Am, Navy
Blue Metallic, 5.7 Lfttr, LS I Engine, Leather Interior, 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc CD
Changer, Fully Loadedl WIK Tiko
Pay 011, 74()-448-4648.

J

Ingredient

. •,

Aviary· Lousy. Valet· Jaster· RELATIVES
Pushing back from the table the man smiled and said,
"After a good meal one can fot:give anyone, even one's /
RELATIVES."
/~
,

61

FARM Slif'PLIES
.~ LIVESTOCK

.~

proclomatlon

34 Vofnlah

---,T~UE~S~DA~Y::--_-----------:-:AP:-::R:":':"'Il!..,....
·

·wanted to buy· .etectrk: steel guitar, HaWaUaft ~fiP steel, conaotea
or .pedal 111111. Coli 740·593·
7871 .
'; •

•

TI-IANK 'r'OU,
MAIWE.Jt!ANK
'(QLJ ..

Ba15 IIddle &amp; cau: mandolin :

.,

• 10 2
• 8 7 5 3

1 Acqulru
2 Rent
3 Think
nothing - 4 CeiH. airline
dutlnetlan

Greek myth
33 Olflc .. l ~

l"'

I(OV Dl D IT, 5111: !
I'M PROUD OF '1'00 ..

DOWN

32 U.-world of

·

Jn•trilments
tlon, 7•0·843-5132, Paul Sayre,
GGe45 SR 124, ~Ottland, Ohio
45no.

HELP

WORKS~

Mualcal

guitar; viOlin; all In perfect condl·

&amp; EARNEST

Budget Priced Tranami11IOn1
and Engines, All '!'vpas, AcetOl
To Over 1o,ooo Transmllllona•,
740-245-5877.

57 Skin

The king didn't
live in vain

seara 10" Aluminum John Boat

Auto Pluta &amp; ••
Accenorln

Helicopter,

··-·lon -

Maseago. •

760

=••

H Bool&lt;~lot lttrna

31 GuiHike bird

1995 Jot Ski; 3 Seater Willi TraN-

-

55

Mltlne cap!WI

Opening lead: • 7

,,I
~ FRANK

Ou!Wiot Paul

" '

THANKY, ·
HONEY
POT

One Of ·The Areas Larg11t Se·
locllono . 01 Lalo Model Auto
Parti. Lata MOdel Motors, Trans·
m1111ona, Body &amp; Su1penalon
t 990 red Flreblrd, V-B automatic, . P1rts. Belt Prices In Tht Region
l·lops, $2300, 740-742·2367.
On Alter Market Shoot Molal,
Ftndera. Hoods Doors, Wind·
1991 Bonneville, excellent condl· shields, Aadlators, A.C. Condon·
lion. PB. AC. 3.8 engine, $3.700, sora, Over 100 Cara In Ull 30
740·949·2045.
.
Days For Parts, Olftr 25 Lata
1991 Cavalier Ala 4 Doors, Au· Model Repalrabltl, Powerllne
tom., Ale, E -. COnd., $3,945.00. Auto Syatemo. 740-532.()138 Or
1992 Cavalier,
2 Doors, U.S. Toll FrH 1100-482·8280 Kith
12.595.00 . Cook Motoro, 740· Hll, Ohio.
446.()103.
Orlglnol 283. Engine' &amp; Shorty
1991 Olds Cuttaoa: 72,000 mills, Pcwtr Qllda Trlrtorniuton, Out 01
new tlrea, brakts &amp; battery, 1984 Chovy $500 For Pair, 740·
$8854.
$3000, call 740-992·5198.

1891 Toyota Corolla. axcallent
coridltlon, looks goOdt, call 740·
247-2022.

• 10 3
•KQJ I06

West

1973 Star Crall V Bottom Boat.
and 8 Horse Mercury lnd Mlniu).
ta Trolling. $1,0001 (740) 245·
5872

1978 Cht'Jy Impala PS IPB, And
Morel Runs Good Condition In·
aida/Out, $1 ,200 080, 740-448·
11145.

1989 LoSable Full Power, Clean,
Dependable, 740-2!6-1528.
·

• '7 6

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

for Sale

AKC Registered Boxer Pup Male,
4 Months Old $200, 304·675·
2134.

•1.988 Camaro Z-28, 308 V·6, au·
tomatlc, t-topa, A/C, btack with
gray lnterlqr, $2500. 740·949·
9016.

East

t

tr. ExcellenJ Condition. 3 LHe

j

West

grut

51 Yankee
" Lou

alonglfy
28 Plallot'o petf1

•K

750 Boats &amp; Motors

,1890 20 Fl. Slrato&amp; Floh &amp; 8kl,
175 HP EYinriOie, loll 01 E-1
$9,800, 740-245-9109.

A J 10 9

•AKQ98
• A 8 5

1990, Harley Davidson Sportattr
1200. Windshield. Bogs, New
aanery, :2 Seats, Dutt-Covet,
17,300 mllu: $7 , 900. (~)57~·
2383.

1997 Kawasaki Jet Ski 1100 cc 3
Seater, Aluminum [ Tralltr, .L"e
Jact&lt;et, Excellent Shapal 15.500.
740-982-3537.·

Puppies &amp; Kittens
Full uno of petNuPJ'i&amp;s

• 8 6 3·
•

Soutb

I

1972 Dodge Dart 318 Cl, Auto,
PS, AI Original, 83,000 Mllll,
Asktng $4,300, 740-258-1819. ·.

B.V. Sculhllda Aquo~um
2008 C.amdan Avenue
Parkersburg, WI/ 2e101
304-4115-1293

,.

.'

Vllllly - ·

48 o.-1 rodlnt

·11 Actor Amechl 54 Ancient Jewlotl
20
21
25

9 1

• Q6 4 2

1984GoldWing, 740-992·1135.

AKC Pomeran_lan 6 Weeks Old,
$300; 12 Week&amp; Old 1300: 7
Months Old $175: Nlce .Easter
Glftl740-388-99-12

AKC Registered Pupplea. Ready
to go: Pekingese. Poodt~a . Maltese, Mlni·Pin&amp;.. Taking Deposita
on: Shttzu 1s, Mlni·Snouzers.
Peek-a-Poo's,
Shettiae .
(304)8711-5480

•

• 4 3 2
t A Q J 7

I,

1986 Honda 250 4 Trocka 'A, T.V.
Natdl 1~rter, ltarttr clutch and
battorv. $800. (304)882·3448. •

-04-Qf.lltl

• J 5 4 .2

EEK&amp;MEEK

1982 Honda CB 750, tow milllgl,
eltctlltnt c:ondltlon, helmet a~;td
lact&lt;et Included, 11500. call 740·
992·5818.

Jackets. (304)182·2821 . LoaH

AKC Registered Goklen Retriever
2 Years Old , For Stud Service,
Papers Avallabli, ConUtct Mike
Brewer At 304·713·5011 Or
Llave Meosage.

North

1995 Wlndl1ar Gl Automatic, AI
Door Lockl , •2,000 Mllll,
113.500. 740-367.()108. .

710 Autos for Sale

AKC Reg!ltered Female Pomeranian, Orange ~ Sable Color. •
months old. $175 . (304)875·
8195.

bNoul..

c.

740

I 000 lbe. of good miKed 'hay Hod
wltl'l plastic, $15 each. 7"0·698·
2765.

Block, brick, .aewer plpea, wind·
ows. lintels. etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121.

--

,

Shaqullle
17 Gel

1992 Toyota SA5, 4&gt;4, Eltlended
Cab, V·6, 5 Speed, EKcellont
Condition, New Tires. 740·258leo4.

96 Ford Wlndstar, loaded. undlr
warranty, 30,000 milo•. $14,600,
740-992·7557.

41 Food nan
44 Ending for

7 All •
up
13 - r 14 Actor Cotube

1892 Goo Tracker, 4WD, air, automatic, ha'rdtop c:onvertlblt,
n,ooo mliee, $5eoo , 740·99~·
5053 alter aprn.·

1997.Vamaha Tlmborwollo 4WD
A.T.V., $2,500. (304)882-3448.

, tlatlb ar

1 Spec let 1

18 Ryan and

2048.

Special Spring Fledor Caii .Selo:
Saturday April 10th, AI 1 P.M. AN
Consignments Welcome , Cattle
Wll Be Accepted AHer 4 P.M. On
Friday. Haullflg Available, A.thens
uveatock Sales, 740·592-2322,
740-696-3531 .

H1y &amp; ,Grain

..

-

-la-louwfluale

311 u r -

CMh
15 ThrM element 4S "HIIrpw

1988 Blazer 4WO. a cytlndor automatiC, AC, PS, PB, greet llhlpe,
$3700, 740.992·7•78 or 740-949-

tir: · Excellent Condlllonl (304)·
675-6858

640

. · Suppllh

1988 Ford Customized Conver;
alon ven. Loedtd. 4 Captain
Seatt, -Lg. Sota-tlke. back , ....
AM!FM Ca1101t1 SIOfOC Syatem.
At;, new tirea, Rae• hitch, e~
trlc brake hook·up. Lookt aharp,
runs great. 8 cyl. $3,000. 080
(304)675-6704.

Registered Umoualn Buft, 5 ¥0111

'Old, 7~·2158.

'

Buy or sell . Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Stroet, 'on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. IO:Qo
a.m. to 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 740·992·2526, Ruaa
Moore owner.

Apartment• ·
for Rent ·

1 Purebrad 2 112 "'•r Old Char·
tall BuH ICon Be Aoglotored): I
~· r ..red Llmaiultn "tNrttng BIJI,
C; I Allor 8:00 P.M. 740-44~·

Herold

ACROSS

PHILLIP

•

-.-..

NEA Crossword Puzzle

�.

'

..
.,age 10 • The Daily Sentinel

~orporate

Pomeroy • Mlddlt.port, Ohio

Tueaday, Apr11 , 1999

•·

.Local baseball teams win, Page 5
Ann: Is wife in denial? Page 7 ·
Inside section: Spring car care section

Today: Sunny

High: 70s; Low: 50s

you'll gain more, many more. And it sor of political science, "It would be Iowa right now,' and the polls say not months.
·
.
will be a big-time winner in New more effective for him to gil to New a whole lot,'' she said.
. "I intend to have the heanng,l'm
Hampshire."
Hampshire and buy lots oflV time."
A March poll of likely Iowa cau- going to have the hearing. So Ralph
Clark Hubbard. a professor of·
" If you're a Jongshotlike him you cus voters conducted for four televi- needs to take a chill pill ," he said in
po litical science at the University of can only seriously contest in one sian stations gave Kasich 2 percen.t, an int~rvjew with The Associated
New Hampshire, agreed .
(stale) or the other," she said from w~ ll. behmd leader George W. Bu·sh s Press in Los An~eles.
"It's a happy coincidence for him Iowa City. "If he says something in 37 percent and Elizabeth Dole's 16
"This is an issue that is important
that voters m,I'~ew Hampshire are New Hampshire · that people don't percent. ..
. ,
.
to me," Kasich sa id. " If we reform
sympathetrc tO' that particular cause like here it in a sense is falling on
Back m Washmgton, Kasr~h has welfare for the poor we ought to
- especrally Republican primary deaf ears because he's going to lose another_ corpor~te we.Ifare headache: reform it for the rich." ,
voters,and they're the ones that counJ anyway."
Nader JS naggmg hrm to sched ule
Langel, a past president of the
from hrs perspective,'' Hubbard said.
heanngs.
Iowa Soybean Association believes
But given the business-supporting
Back in West Des Moines, Eide
" He's promised me now for two that .anyohe who really u~derstood
bend of the Republican Party, "ir's said video of House B~dgel Chair- y~ars," Nader said. "Finally last the benefits of the Market Access
goi ng to be very. i ntercst i~g to sec . man Kasich and Nader urging the October or ~ove".' ber he c~ll ed me Program would wanllo keep it aliv~.
how he handles thrs rssue from alae - elim ination of the Mark.e l Access up and sard Don 1 grve up on me . . Half of American soybeans are grown
t rc~~ pe rspective,'' he said.
Program "would be a fairly damag- Before a,ny of the budget process for export, sales that help the U.S.
Thrs rs one of those rssues that ing cli p,'' but one that operativ,es statts were gomg to have corporate economy and bring in federal· tax revs011 of finds the fault line within the aren 't likely to fish out of electronic welfare hearings."'
enue he said.
·
Republ ican coal i t ion ~ .the populisrs archives· unless Kasich elevates hi s
. Kasich said he doesn't have a date
"Whatever person is goi ng to
vcr~us corporate coahtron.:· .
.
srature in that state. ,
prcked for corporate wellare heanngs help support production agriculture is
. It may be ~.good test ol hrs poht" The question is ' How much '"the House Budget Commrttee, but probably the person who will get the
rea l character, sard Nader. "If he oomph does John Kasich have in he plans to hold some !n the next few vote," Langel said.
.
holds fmn, II tests hrs polmeal char~
ac ter. If he runs away; it tests it in
.
t·r~ns
reverse manner.".
I g
I ~
I J fl
.... J
I Ui
One
indcpe
.
ndent
analy
st
said
·
•
·
~"'
'
..
K · h · h
The following land transfers were .
to' Janet M. and Ronald E. to Bryce and Kri sten Bond, Syracuse;
asr
mr g ht be t&gt;etter
off not wor- · recorded recently in the office of """"'
.
Deed, B e t ~y Louise Fit zwater to
· c bo
h'
Pin~. Middleport parcel ;.
.
rymg a ut ow IS stand plays in M . C
R
Steward
and Juanita R. Coieman,
Iowa .
. ergs ounty ecorder Emmogene
Deed, Janet M. and Ronald E.
·
Hamilton:
·
Pine to Weslev M. and Estelle M. Salem;
.
Instead,
said
Margaret
Trevor,
'
Deed,
Jani
ce
L.
Krauss,
Sharon L.
·
·t
f
1
·
,
Deed,
Aaron
D.
Owens
to
Alan
D.
Ralpll,
Middleport,
life
estate;
Unr.versr y o owa assrstant pro,es- S
R
,
1
Bordner,
Karen
Ann
and
James
tout, ut and;
Deed, Randal and Kristina S.
Hedges
to
James
William
Will ,
Deed, Alan D. Stout, Alan D. Boston to Larry H. and Bradley S.
Chester;
Luikart to Aaron D. Owens, Rutland; Yoho, Olive;
Deed, Roge r K. and Shelba Jean
Deed, Ch~ri' L. Campbell to DouDeed, Facemyer Forest Products
.
Waugh McDaniel to Larry Bartlett
glas
Campbell
,
Columbia;
to
Carroll
and
Joyce
White,
Letart;
recogni ze that every word now matA good example is the abortion
-Deed, Joseph L and 'Deloris A.
Easement, Larry yr. and ·L. Jane and Kelly Wright, Columbra;
tcrs. People arc analyzing every sin- issue:
Deed, Jeffrey C. Harris, Jeff Hargle nuance and every word ," he said.
The day after he unveiled his pres- Shepard to Jeffrey W. Tracy and Banks to Ohio Power Company,
ris, [!eborah Harris, Gary Norris and
Syracuse;
" I have to adjus t my thinking. All of idential commillee, Bush described AmberS. Bennett, Salisbury;
Donna
Norris to Jeff and· Deborah
·
'
Deed
,
Donald
C.
Shaffer
to
Easement,
Judith
A.
and
J.T.
~s h ave to recognize that there's a dif- his position on abortion : He opposes
Harris.
Gary and Donna Norris,
Charles
F.
and
Paula
Chancey,
Williams
to
OPC,
Syracuse;
fcre nl intensit y leve l.''
.
it except in cases of rape, incest or
Lebanon.
Pomeroy
parcels;
Easemeqt,
Meigs
Local
Board
of
Being governor of Texas - the where the mother 's life is threatened.
Deed, Peoples National Bank, Education to Columbus Southem
nati on's sccond- largesr state - is a That's been his position since he fi rst
City
National Bank to Charles F. and Power; Middleport;
big deal. Bein g a candidate for pres- ran for governor, in 1993.
.Paula
Chancey, Pomer(ly parcel;
Easement, Shelly Materials Inc. to
ide nt, and one the polls have named
Bush al so said he would support
Deed,
Leta
Goodwin,
Leta
GoodCSP,
Letart;.
'
the front-runner for the Republican a constitutional amendl)1ent to ban
win
McKnight
and
Carlos
McKEasement,
Meigs
Local
Board
of
nomination. is much bi gger.
abortions but doesn't believe there's
The following actions to end marnight
to
James
Reev.es.
Bedford
parEducation
to
CsP.
Salisbury;
Chuck McDonald, an Austin con- sufficient public support for that.
riage
were filed recently in the office ·
eel :
Easement, Bruce and Pnina Sabel
suhant whn waS an aide to fo nner
·
· Deed, l\1ildredAnn Krider to Joel- to ·CSP, Columbia;
of Meigs County GJerk of Courts LarGov. Ann Ri chards, knows about
Gary Bauer, a conservati ve
s uch tran sit ions.
. .
Republican presidential hopeful·;;' ta Morris, Lebanon ;
Easement, Harold Ted and Randi ry Spencer: •
swtftly called Bush's stance on abor- "'
Dissolutions asked - Laura L.
Deed, Mildred Ann Krider to Tra- Gillelle ·to CSP, Bedford;
~
As state treasurer, Richards deliv- ti on vague. " I don't see how a 'corn- cieAnn and Joseph William G. Mor- ·
Deed, Edward R., Ruth C., Spears, Pomeroy, and Harold Spears
ered a nati onally televised speech to . passionate conservative' can be ris, Lebanon;
Edward R. Sr. and Floyd T. Chapman Jr., Jackson, April I ; Raben Eric-Milthe 1988 Democratic Nati onal Con- ambiguous· about protecting unborn
liron, Middl eport, and Laurie ·
Deed, Robert A. Durst. to River to Floyd T. Chapman, Syracuse;
vention. Overnight, her folksy wit children. " Bauer·said.
Farm Inc., Sutton;
Deed, Edward R. , Edward R. Sr., Susanne Milliron, Pomeroy, April I ;
and telege nic charisma vaulted her to
An abortion ri ghts group qui ckly
Deed, Saodra and James Nelson, Ruth C. and Floyd T. Chapman to Rita Colleen Chapman, Pomeroy,'
nat.ional prom inence. That ballooned launched televrs ion ads accusing Hubert L., Judith ·and Gladys Wolfe Edward R. Sr. and Ruth C. Chapman, and Robert Keith Chapman, Middleeven more when she defeated cow- Bush and fellow presidential hopef(jl to Sandra and James Nelson, Chester; Syracuse;
. port, March ~ I.
boy-orlman Clayton Wrlhams m 1990 ' Eli zabeth Dole of camounaging anti Deed, Alice M. Ratliff Wooten,
Sheriff's deed, Jimmie L. · and
Divorce asked - Phillip K.
to become Texas' frrst woman gov- abortion positions. Kate Michelman, Alice Wooten to Frederick.( Wooten . Karin L. Young to Home National · Grueser Jr., Pomeroy, from Renee D.
e rn ~ r m half a century.
_ director of the . National Abortion Jr. , Fred Wooten, Columbia;
Bank, Olive;
Grueser, Pomeroy, March 31.
No matter how, much you try to Ri ghts Action League, sard the two
Deed, Danny B. and Cordelia C.
Right of way, GMR Properties to
Dissolution granted - David 'K.
prepare for Jt, what you can't prepare were trying to " hide their extreme Brown to. Hai-ry L. and Sharon K. Progessive Oil and Gas;.
Ramey and Teresa L. Rani ey, March
for IS. the fact th at nuances and infer- views."
Ours. Sutton;
· Deed, Bobby Joe Wolfe to Raben 31.
cnccs arc read into every st~tement,
McDonald said s.uch instant .conDeed, James E. Lucas to Evelyn L. Jr. and Deborah K. Lawson, SutDivorce granted - Sandra Lee
eve~. utterance, every action or inac- ,troversy is another element of being
E. Miller: Racine parcel; · · ·' ton;
... ·
Hoffman from Donny Ray Hoffman, ·
lion , McDonald sard.
~ national political figure.
.
Deed, Wesley M. and Estelle M. · Deed, James E. and Judy A. Pape March 31.
· .
.

Land

April 7 , 1000

Weather

welfare crusade may leave ~asich. vulnerable

too m~ny other things to talk about
wnhout having to talk about someWASHINGTON - One thing thrng that will make them mad." ,
that drsti nguishes Rep. John Kasich
" He's going 10 have some serious
from other Republicans in Con.gress cxplaming to do on this," . soybean
rs hiS assault on busrness subsrdres he farmer G"ry Langel sard from
calls "corporate welfare."
Le~~ars,- Iowa.
J:!c s got a tough ro~ to hoe_
Now . that the lawmaker from
Westervrlle, Oh10, wants to be pres- here. _agreed Em~ly Erde, drrector ol
rdent~ that part of hJS 16-year con- nauonal .~ffa r rs for the Iowa Farm
gres~ronal record could take on new Bureau .. II Kasrch prcks up steam.
srgmficance.
· then you II sec people pomt mg our
A top item on Kasich 's list of fed · where he can hurt low~. ··
eral spending he'd like to cut is the
In Iowa elections, she added, "the
$90 million Market Access Program.. rural areas arc a key... They tend to
whrch he lps food growers advertise rurn out very heavr ly.
and otherwise promote their goods
overseas.
As pre'siden't.ial hopefuls start
Kasich laug hed heartily when courting . those voters, she sa id,
asked last week whether he would be "Every ca ndidate has 10 recogn ize
bri nging up the subject in Iowa, the and make some dec isions: Do I stick
state wirh the first presidential cnu- . with my overall philosophy ... or do
cus.
1 recognize that Ralph Nader's not
"Probably nm ," he said. " Look . going to play well?"
I' m tryi ng to gel people w like me '
Nader, a leader of the campaign
''J' m not gotng to go out and beat :..tgainsl "corporate welfare," believes
them over the head, bur if they ask me it could he a breakthrough 1·....,...
• ......, ro·r
about it, I' m going to tell them wha t Kas ich.
·
my posi tion is," Kasich sa id. " Bur
" He's the only Republica n makI'm not Do n Quixnlc. l'&lt;ll not inler- ·,,,g an ·ss
f. , " N d
.d "I
. ' ue o ' • a er sar ·
estcd in tiltin g at wr ndmi ll s. 1 have thi nk it plays well everywhere in the
aggregate·, you.'II lose a ~ew and

By KATHERINE RIZZO

Alsocleted Preas Write r

Wednesday

Tomorrow: P.Sunny
High: 70s; Low: 50a

-

•

Reds come up short
In .7-6 struggle with
Giants
·
-Page4

. J

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 234

Single Copy. 35 Cents

.er,'S .#1•'ed UliJ•th' 'liecor-'e·,.
D·'""'

Scrutiny surprises contender Bush
By MiCHAEL HOLMES
·Associated Press Writer
AUSTIN, Texas -After a month
in what he calls the presidential
"bubble," Gov. George W. Bush is
surprised by the scrutiny -and th is
is.a guy who's the son of a president
and once ran a major league baseball
team.
He was a hit with 200,000 fans
when he waved the fla g to start a
stock car race in Fort Wort~, then
found a 30-ycar-old romance bei ng
di scussed in gossip columns.
·He gets I00 requests a day for personal appearances, eve n as ~i s careerlong pos ition on abort ion is under
attack from all sides.
He raised $6 mill io n in 3- 1/2
weeks b41 was rakcn to task fo r being
too slow to talk about air strikes on
Kosovo:
On the biggest po litical stage
there is, .almost not hing Bush .docs
these day s is small or insignificant.
" It's a lot easier to make news,"

Bush laughed whe n asked about
changes he 's ex pcric.nced since
announcing the formation of a presidenti al ex pl oratory committee

March 2.
" All of a sudden, I've begun to

Actions to end
marriages filed

rport
be a
for area economic development
ATHENS (AP) - Officials hope a runway expansion at the Athens
County airport will help attract business to the rural region.
The expansion of the Ohio University Regional Airport ne!ll' Albany
will be a catalyst for·economic growth 'in the Appalachian region, U.S.
Transportalion Secretary Rodney Slater said in announcing the expansion
Tuesday. .
Slater said t~at on March .17 that the Federal Aviation Administration
approved a plan to expand the airport's runway from 4,200 feet to :..ouu 1
feet.
'
.
That will allow corporate jets and cargo planes ,to land at the airoor't I
now W!ed primarily for small planes and training.
. In a news conference, at the airport Tuesday, Slater said thee:,~:::~~~~
arow$11 will support P(CSidel)t Clinton's initiative tp ..promote c
growth in ruraj An)eric~.
"President Ointon is committed to expanding economic opJportun,itic:s I
in th9 Appalachian region and other rural communities in America, and
transportation is a key eleinenl in that economic growth," Slater said.
"Ohio University's planned expansion of its airport will enable it
accommodate statc.-of-the·art corporate aircraft and be a significant cata•
lyst to growth in the state," he said.
'&lt;. Notall area residents believe expansion will have· a positive impact on
the.region.
.
·
Dale Dalrymple is ·a resident of Albany, the village near the airport. He
said Ohio University is forcing expansion on the quiet community.
"We're not against progress,'' he said. "We just don't like to"rgs 1
slammed down our throat."
· ·
·
Those who oppose the expansion make up only ~ small percentage
the community, said Ohio University spokesman Dwight Woodward.
Albany Mayor Gary Warner said most of the 970 village residents support the runway extension, although some oppose it based on concerns
about noise and pollution.
"I think it's going to help out the businesses that are here and maybe
bring in new businesses," Warner told The Columbus Dispatch last week.
"I think il'sa good idea,"
·
Larger airports are about an hour away in Columbus, Charleston,
W.Va., and Parkeraburg, W.Va.
At!tens is 75 miles southeast or Columbus.

Can you combine
a chicken, a cat, and
a dog?

No sir,WE:! ton'!.

''

How about a car,
a refrigerator, and
a chimpanzee?

Daytor- airport; should double workforce
DAYTON (AP) - A proposed billion-dollar expansion of Dayton
·
Airport would increase the airport's cargo handling capacity
and ·~able a California-based air cargo company to more than double its
l.~al work force over the 20-year expan~iori perilid, supporters of the plan
satd. .
.
Under the first phase of the plan, Emery Worldwide would invest more
than more than $300 million a:nd add ~. 700 employees ~&gt;Ver the next five
The air cargo company's investment would be coupled with a pro'"'·'"" $200 million in federal, state and local spending to lengthen one airport runway, reroute U.S. 40 ~nd buy 1,100 acres of rural land ncar the airport.
'
.
Strauss,.Emciy vice presi"We are coll)pletcly behind this,'' said
dent for ~~~port~lon and logistf(\8. "Without growth and no change$,
are at a drstlnct disadvantage (in the industry)."
City Commissioner Mary Wiseman said ""~ is confident that the city
will work with Emery to do whatever pQSSible ·to help the company grow
·
.
in Dayton.
1
week
presented
the
20-year
pfan
,;, 1 . • I ' 1
·
I•
II t.
local. cjty managers and elected officials who make .up the Miami Valley Regional Planning . Commission's
transportation committee.
I
They 'planned to present it today to
city commissioners.
3 ~lions - lO llaaa
· Under the plan, Emery would
increase employment in Dayton
rrom 4,200 to 10,260 by 2018.
Cakndlr
Overall
airport expansion 'would
CI•Uiedl
include$ 1.2 billion for a fourth runan extenaive system of new
th£
.
.
interchange
. what they have. However; he said the county
0...;.,.~ lldlool buildinS' have been rated wont in
Over the next I0 years, Emery
deserves more help from the state.
·
the
.COUIIIry
by
the
U.S.
General
Acaluntin&amp;
Olfic:e.
would double the number of Its
l
"But we 're not going to sland ~ and wallow in
planes laking off and Iandi ng at th,e The state Le&amp;islative Budget Offioe h• CSIJIIIIMid it
self-pity,"
said Simmons. " I think a majority of Vinwill take $16.5 billion to 6x them.
airport from I 00 to 200.
Lotteries
ton CountiMS are very proud of what we're able to
i\)lman said she's talked with principals of innerPortions of the plan would require
city achools.
·
do."
approval
from
the
city
and
·
from
omo
Allman said tiusloads of state officials have eomc
"They are in the same type. of facilities," she
federal aviation, transportation and
Pick 3: 7-3-4; Pick 4: 2-2-7-2
down to see Wilton Elementary School.
said. "It's not a rural problem. It's a slalewide prob-environmental
agencies.
..
.
Baekeye 5: 2.8-19-23-28
.. ..
"They'd shake their heads and they'd shake their
' Emery, a unit of CNFTransporta- 1em.
w.yA.
heads
and they 'd go. away and nothing chanp," .
SCHOOL
R!PAIRS
A
pn:hwork
of
ti&lt;ln Inc. in Redwood City, Calif.,
William Phillis. excallive director of the Ohio
Dally 3: H -1; Dally 4: S.()·li-1
moves more than 4 million pounds eoltidon for Equity and AdCquacy ol Scltot!t Flmcl- tile cowrs the noor or • grMf• achool said Allman. "They have to remember these kids
0 1999 Oblo Volley l'llbllllllq Co.
ing. said a decrepit school buildina blunts mociva- oiiMroom It Wilton Elemtntary School In imponanl When they leave here; they can't fotget
o.
f freight per day throuiJI Dayton.
'
about them. TheSe: kids need something that's fair.'\
Wllkwvtlle.
tion 'llld stymies Ieamina.
.

Whars the point
of that? ·

Well, you con save
a lot of money.

nm

How about a goat,
a weasel, arid
long distance?
I

Good Afternoon

'

I'll check into lhol. ·

roday's

.ALltEL

Sentinel

•i

The power to simplify

www.alllel.corri

•

expansion proposed for .

No sir, but we can
. combine wireless, paging,
and ·long distance. ·

Call l-800-ALLTEL3

&lt;

'

'011MALLTElCotpotlll0&lt;1. Ctrtaln sorvltes not avalable In oU

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•

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~

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