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•
•

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Aprll12, 1999

See that woman on stage doing the splits? She's 86 and still a ·showgirl
By DEBORAH HASTlNGS
A!ISOCiated Press Writer
; PALM SPRJNGS, Calif. (AP) 9n stage, 86-year-old Maryella
Evans has fallen and. she can't get
up.
. ..So two tuxedoed men gently lift
!Jer from a perfectly executed scissprs-split and deposit her in a ·
wheelchair, from · which she
resumes tap dancing.
· Miss Evans doesn 't really need
the chair. It 's just a prop in a hilari-'
ous dance number involving walkers, canes and crutches. She . did
need help, though,' gelling off the
Ooor.
This is the Palm Springs Foll ies
- an aging chorus line of former
show girl s and male hoofers that is
part shtick, part ex travaganza and
part minor miracle.
It has aUFacted a white-haired
fo llowing not seen since Mitch
Miller. Nearly every show se lls OUI.
Annual gross ticket sales top $10
mill io n.
, Emcee. direc tor .and producer
Riff Markowitz, 60, covets the spot·
light and sometimes laughs longer
at his jokes than the audience. His
stuff is decidedly politically incorrect. He tells ethnic jokes, bathroom
jokes, old people jokes and talks a
great deal about hi s prostate,
But it is the II "Long-legged
Lovelies" who truly own the show,
a geriatric Florenz Ziegfeld-meets - ·
Busby Berkeley revue now in its
eighth seaso n, replete w ith feather
dances, towering headd resses and
bulging breasts.
The dancers must be at least 50.
Most of the women are in their 60s
and 70s, with shapely gams, stat·
uesque posture ~ and liver spots

and wrinkles.
Springs when a group of c.ity offiOne is a former Rockelle, sever· cials asked him to save downtown's
al appeared on Broadway, another 800-seat Plaza Theatre, buill in
was a June Taylor dancer.
1936.
Mos t were retired or on their way
Previous li ve shows hadn't fared ·
there when they heard about audi- well , Markowitz said. But a chance
tions for the Foll ies in Palm to revisit the past - via the music
Springs, the desert resort that's been of Irving"Berlin and Johnny Mercer
home to celebrities, fonner presi- - and the inspiration · of seei ng
dents and so many retirees it 's also women their age p41ltheir legs past
call ed God 's Waiting 1!-oom.
their heads drew aging crowds willPhyllis Sherwood, 64, auditioned ing to pay up to $65 for an orchestra
two years ago at the insistence of a seat.
former classmate from New· York 's
They come in buses from AriHigh School of Performing Arts.
zona, San Diego and points
She had already done Broadway. between, arriving &lt;in . wheelchairs,
and played Vegas fo r years with pushin g walkers and lea nin g on
_
husband and bandleader Bobby canes.
Sherwood .
As for the show, the audience
" This isn 't any different than stands during the last scene, an
when I was young. In 'the dressing extravaga nza that runs a patriotic
rooms we we re catty, we laughed all gamut from the Bailie Hymn of the
the ti me," said Le1la Burgess, 62. Rep~ bl ic to the Star Spangled Ban'
Sherwood's former classmate.
ncr. It applauds wildl y, for Bob
These women arc bawdy, loud Moore and His Amazing Mongrels,
and grand mothers. While trying to all saved from the pou nd and
grab a meal l?etwecn shows, the air trained to jump through hoops, walk
is decidedly blue.
tightropes, and bark at earspli tting
Ms. Sherwood is recounting levels.
what " Mr. M." - the director
It is an audience that know s ·
Mark owitz- asked when they met. every word of ~'Paper Doll" and
" Can you walk like a show sings along with 84-year-old Dongirl?"
ald Mills, the last survivor of the
· " Honey, " replied the well -· Mills Brothers, who looks a bit
endowed r.fs. Sherwood, .. 1 can unsteady and thankful for the help.
walk any way you want. "
Later, backstage, 75-year-old
They do 232 shows per year, Dorothy Kl oss becomes serious
most twi ce a day. Each perfonnance · amid the dancers ' ribald laughter.
is three ho.urs. with some 20 cosAfter years away from the spot·
tume changes, almost as many wigs, light, "we didn 't fc,el glamorous ·
a ·dog show, a ventriloquist and anymore," she said.
guest stars including song-and"But I think we' ve all dropped
dance men Donald O'Connor and 15 years just being in the Follies.
Howard Keel.
All of a sudden we started going
Markowitz, a former television shopping and doing something with
producer, had just retired in Palm. our hair." .

Tuesday
Aprlf 13, 1toe

Local baseball, softball results, Page 4
Keeping an eye on home security, Page 6
Time Out For Tips, Page 7

Today: Sunny
High: 60s; Low: 30a

Tomorrow:.P. Cloudy
High: 60s; Low: 408

Meigs County's

•

Low-cost health coverage available for kids '~
.' Under a new federal initiative,
· t.ow-cost or free health insurance
coverage is now available to most
children, according to Ed Peterson,
$oeial ~ecurity manager in Athens.
· As a result of the initiative, each

.

.

Hometown Newspaper .

•

Single Copy- 35 Cents

:J!yMei_g s Cou.n ty Commissioners agree on road closings

STILL KICKING - Dorothy Klosa, at the age of 75; can still do the llleps - and kicks - of a' chorus girl.

JIM FREEMAN
·
·
Sentinel N - Staff
. ' Road closings, subdivision plans and wiring problems were among the
items discussed at Monday's regular meeting of the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners.
Commissioners voted to close three Scipio Township roadS including Dead
End Road, Reeves Road and Old State Route 682. A fourth road-cloSing
reques~ Grahm Road, was t.abled pending the granting of a right-of-way .to the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
.
Charles Wheeler, who owns land along Reeves Road, said he wanted the
road tO stay open lo serve as a driveway lo his trailer.
Commission President Janet Howard said the townships are not in the business of maintaining private drives ',Yhile Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
recommended the road be vacated . .Lentes said he has been advising all of
Meigs County's 12 townships to close ro~ that are no longer maintained.
' Township trustees noted the road had not beC:n maintained in approximately 50 years.
·Commissioners also voted to dedicate a new Scipio Township. Road,
Schick Road; which trustees say is needed to access landlocked property.
Lentes, repreSenting the Meigs County Planning Commission, presented
plans for a new subdivision, Buffington Landing, to be located south of Portland along state Route 124. Commissioners approved the new subdivision.
Lentes said the owners, Jeff and Deborah Harris, have obtained all the neeessary permits for the subdivision, which will include 12 building lots.
"I think this is a real good subdivision," Lentes said, noting that two roads

antique store where the auction was the ship's memorabilia.
Sjoblom's three friends died ..
held .
Sjoblom, of Finland, had pinned
When she arrived. in America,
Trainer said he would " hoard the the boarding pass inside her jacket Sjoblom headed west wtth her uncle,
· ticket for a little while and enjoy it " for the 1912 voyage. She had bor- · finally settling in Tacoma. She mar.. The passenger. Anna Sofia Sjoblom, rowed the $8 Titanic fare after she ried and raised two children in
had "kept it for a while, so J may, and three friends were bumped from Olympia, and died in 1975.
too," ' he said.
the Adriatic, another ship in the
Her pass had been packed away
· · The document - an undamaged White Star Line.
with old photographs an.d postcards
. immigrant inspection card that
Titanic sunk on Sjoblom's 18th until a widower of Sjoblom's grandserved as a boarding pass for Titan- binhday. She ma.de it onto a lifeboat niece sold it to the antique store
ic's third-class passengers- is that also reponedly carried White about six months ago, Gorsuch said.
believed to be the only such ticket in Star Line chairman J. Bruce Ismay. She would not say how much she
existence. Its· price on Saturday The pass, still pinned inside her paid or anythirg else about the sellmakes
it among
the .mo.s t valued of ·jacket, stayed dry.
er.
.
·, .

will be constructed to serve the lots, which he said are good-sized and out of
the flood plain although they are located near the river. No mobile homes will
be allo.wed on the tots, he noted.
COmmissioners also met with Oerk of Courts Larry Spencer concerning
electrical
problems in tbe
office and
for new
in

•
EXAMINE
Janet Howllrd •nd Mlck Davenport, from left,
Gloria Kl0811
and Proaecutfng Attorney John R. Lentil are lhown here.ex•m·
lnlng plane for the propoHd Bufllngton Lllndlng Subdlvt1lon
ne•r Portl•od· Commlulona1'8 81gned off on the plan• which will
provlde12 building Iota on property now owned by Jeff and Deb01'8h Harrla.
,
,
.

.

.

.

in Jam~ica on a weapons charge
'A former Shade woman hilS been incarcerated in a Jamaiciln jail, and
has received assistance fr.om U.S. Rep. Ted Strickfand in resolving her
case.

Strickland, D-Lucasville, said Friday that his office had been working
with the U.S. Cons~late in Jamaica on. behalf of the fonner Cathy Stotts,
daughter of Charles Stotts 'of Shade.
The woman, whose age is unreported, was arrested at a Jamaica airport
after an unloaded firearni was found in her luggage.'
.
The family, acwrding to.Strickland, maintains that the gun bad
stored in the suitcase and was forgotten until it was foul\(! by'. customs
a~nts in J.arnaica.
,
. _ ·
_ ' • ·
.. - _ .
The woman had left from Pon Columbus Airport, where .the guif 1\ad
apparently gone undetected.
.
She was reportedly vacationing with friends.
. Strickland said that llis office bas been working closely with her family and "lr)'ing to be helpful," while the case is pending. ·
.
Strickland noted, however, that his office was. limited in the scope of
assistance that could be offered.
The Stotts family refused to comment on the case, saying that U.S.
diplomats had advised against press coverage.

been

By JIM FREEMAN
CSMIEA president, both said the biggest stum- School/Meigs Industries employees are not union
Sentinel N-a Steff
liHng bl"''k during negotiations was the subject of members.
Meigs County Commissioners approved a new fair share fee.
Under the new contract, which will be in effect
contract Monday. afternoon with employ.etos of
. Under fair share, nan-union employees .are through June 30, 2000, new hires will be required
Carleton School/Meigs Industries.
required tO pay a portion of their w.ages to 'the . to pay fair share fees.if they do not join the union.
Commissioners, acting on the recommenda- union similar to dues paid by union members. The Existing non-union employees are exempted from .
lion of Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lenies, reasoning behind fair share is that non-union paying the fee . Union members have worked
approved the negotiated agreement between the employees, even though they choose not to join without a contract since June 30, 1998.
Carleton School/Meigs Industries Education the organization, still receive union benefits and
. Tracy emphasized t.hat money was .",never an
Association and t11e Meigs County Board of Meil- representation guaranteed by state law.
issue" with the union's members. "This is not a
tal Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.
Carleton School/Meigs Industries did not have financial issue;; she stated. "We were not asking
The tentative agreement was previously ratified fair share, meaning non-union employees do not for a pay raise."
by CSMIEA and the MRIDD board.
pay dues, althouah the union still represents them:
The new agreement also includes provisions
. _ Monday's action loc!)l ~ during tho reaular In Ohio, employees cannot waive representation · for family medical leave and cliildcare leave. ,_
"We've been pleded· .with .. thc proi:esl, and
weekjy llleeting of thcJ'rfeip~unty Board of by a!llniwt...;.... , , , . _, •.. ~' ... . . .....~---"'
Commil!lioners.
. .
. , '1'111:. CSMIEA currently h,as 33 mel'J!.beJ~ pleased with the outcotne," Sllid&amp;ha.
"I think it's . a really good contract," said
· Steve Beha, director of Car1etoh School/Meigs including leachc'rs and suptjllil s.iaff.' Tracy said .
Industries .in Syracuse, and Melva Tracy, four full -time and three part-time Carleton Lentes .

Meigs vendors face lncreasin compliance monitoring
Over the next few months, Meigs County busin.esses who sell alcohol or tobacco products will be monilored for !heir compliance with laws relating io the sale
of such products to minors.
John R. Lentes, Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney, announced Monday that compliance monitoring,
while ongoing for the past three years, is being stepped
up now. The additional monitoring is being financed
through funding·from the Ohio Department of Health.
Store owners and clerks who sell beer or cigarettes
lo underage children and violate the law are subject to
penalties of fines, license suspensions or revocations
and forfeitures, Lentes said.
The eompliance checks for sale of tobacco products
to minors are mandated under Section 1926 of the Federa! Public Health Services Act, the SYNAR Amendment, which requires states to annually conductrandom, unannounced inspections to ensure compliance.
States who do not follow the law receive a 10 per·
cent reduction in federal funding for substance abuse
programs in the first year, increasing by 10 percent a
year to a maximum of 40 percent. The put:pose of the
checks is lo help document and reduce youth acccS&amp;
and ability to purchase tobacco products, eKplained
Lentes.
·

CINCINNATI (AP)- A West Union man says State Highway Patrol
officers wrongfully accused him of bribery and violated his civil rights.
David E. Grooms has filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Coun alleging
that he was falsely accused of offering free food or other items to officers.
The officers said he did so in hopes of obtaining favorable times.for
inspections of vehicles to be salvaged.
.
The lawsuit, filed friday, asks damage~ of at least $1.6 million. Listed as defendants are the patrol's superintendent, Col. Kenneth Marshall,
and nine officers.
·
The patrol and. the officers involved had not seen a copy of the lawsuit Monday and would not discuss it, said Sgt. Gary Lewis, a patrol
spokesman.
Grooms said he made money driving other peoples' automobiles to a
salvage inspection station in Jackson County. He said patrol officers
accused him in April-1997 of trying to bribe officers.
Grooms was indicted on charges of soliciting or receiving improper
compensation. Jackson County Prosecu)or Mark Ochsenbein drc•pped I
those charges in April 1998, according to a state court document
with Grool!'ls'lawsuit in federal court. ·
'Investigators also accused Grooms of perjury for giving conflicti11ig I
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
statements about what happened.
.
·
.
Sentinel
N - Sqff
He reached a plea agreement on the perjury charges, said Geoffrey
Extension
of Qallia Rural Water Co. lines in
Damon, a lawyer representing Grooms in the federal court lawsuit.
lower Middleport to provide water to a church ,and
a business there was approved by Middleport Vi!HAMILTON (APr- There was fresh paint·on the walls and new varnish Iage Council last night.
The Rev. · Joe Owinn met with Council to
on the Doors as students resumed classes in a junior high school damaged by
request the line extenSion and hookups to the sysfire allegedly set by two teen-agers.
Principal Tracey Miller compared Monday's reopening at Wilson Junior tern for the Hobson Church he paston; and Facemyer Lumber Co. The · water lines are already
· High School with the first day of scho\ll.
·
within
a few hundred feet of both places.
Stil~ some students complained about the odor of paint and vamish.
.Council agreed to write a letter to Brent Bolin,
"It feels cleaner. It's so bright in here, not dingy-looking." said Qystal
manager, stating its agreement to' the arrangement
Backstheider, 15. "But the smell -,- it stinks."
The fire Jan. 15 caused about $1.7 since Middleport does not have water service in
·million in damage. It gutted the that area.
The matter of putting Middleport water lines
school's music room and a science
.
into
Hobson - annexed into the village about to
room above it Both ntOfiiS ano
yean aso - was discussed ·at length with Jean
beina renovated.
Craig of the Board of Public Affairs charging that
One of (he teen-agers,
CUm2 Sections • 12 Pap
mins, 17, of Hamilton, has · been the village has been negligent in that respect.
' She Said thalin 1989 when the annexation t90k,
chlflled as an adult with agravaled
place, the residents were promised water and
ar,illfl.
A 15-year-old boy pleaded guilty to sewer service. along with police protection, and
that not a "single service promised to those people
juvenile charges of l8lli1Mied arson
"
and was &amp;enteliCled to two years in has been provided."
state custody.
.
Members of council and the Board of Public
Affairs agreed that the matter of getting water into
The school serves 860 students in
all of the Hobson area needs to become a priority
the seventh tbrouah ninth grades in
this soutbwC!I Ohio city. They attend- · matter. The possibility of bclginning that by
ed dasses in Hamilton High School
installing an eight-Inch line aicroas the Hobson
while theit building was dcaned up.
Bridge when it is .replaced this spring was disLotteries
School officials said they will begin · cussed as a first step toward solving the Hobson
this week to pl10 for the last school
water issue.
.
OHIO
dance of the year. "'l'llm's an exciteCraig •uggesled that perhaps a $S increase in
Pick 3: 1-6-9; Pick 4: 4-2-9-S
men~ a IIC""JU511CSS," Miller said
water billa if left to aci:umulate over a year'stime
llllekeye 5: 2-S- 19·20-34
would help fund the project.
"We're tlylng to give evetythina
,
W.)'A. .
She ·also reported on conlllcls with other comnormal• possible appearance. We're
Dilly 3: 2-9-4; DaU,. 4: 2-6-4-4
putting back up the pictures, stu- panics reailding the possibility of providing water
0 t991&gt;01do 'ltlky ,..lf.W.,eo.
dent art work, the trophies."
to lower Middlepon. She said she has talked with
, Bolin of Gallia Rural Water &lt;;o.1 and will be meet·
.

·'

own
dren 's health insurance progr~m to
make health care more affordable
for kids who need it. In addition,
Medicaid now provides free .health
coverage to most low-mcome chi)·
dren. ·
'.'A major reason why one out of
every seven children in America is
without health insurance is that ,_.
many parents who cannot affqrd private insurance don 't know about
their optipns," Peterson stated.
"With almost all st.ates·participat- •
ing in this new Initiative, it is imperiuive that we get the word 0ut so that
parents can understand where they
can· get help." Peterson said Social
Security is joining with other agencies in helping to pub I icize the program.
·
Peterson noted that the 'national·
initiative to make affordable health
insurance available to kids is based
on studies that show the difference
health care makes when it is available at a young age. "Chilc!ren with
health insurance are more likely to
be healthy as newborns, receive
need~d immunizations ·as toddlers,
and set treatment for illnesses such
as recurring ear infections and asthma. Without treatment, these diseases can slow a child's learning and
have lifelong consequences."
Interested persons m ay call the
Ohio State Medicaid Oflice at 1800590-9864.

the title office,
Commissioner JeffThornton briefly asked Spencer if he has given any consideration to having the title office open on Saturday morning, making it casier for working people to take care of title work at the courthouse.
Spencer said he does rrot favor opening the title .office on Saturdays. ·
"I understand people's feeling;, My people have to take off time from work ·
to go places too," Spencer said.
'
Howard suggested the possibility of keeping the title office open late one
evening per week and letting employees take off early on FJiilay afternoons.
On the subject of moving the title offi~ to the oolliilyiiiuic;x, formerly the
county home, Spencer said he was not in favor of moving the title office and
hopes t~e new computer system will fit in the existing office in the counhouse.
He is currently attempting to find a local contractor to do the computer
wiring, but noted the wiring must be done under a Building Industry Consult· ·
ing Service registered communications distribution des,igner.
Commissioners also brieHy went into executive session with Spencer to
discuss personnel matters.
.
Tourism ·.Director Karin JohfiSOn asked for and receiyed permission .to use
the ci&gt;urthouse as part of an upcoming tour of Meigs County.
Thornton urged people with petitions supporting U.S. 33 from Athens-toDarwin and the Ravenswood Connector to turn in the petitions by Wednesday
afternoon st&gt; they can be submitted to the Ohio Department ofTransponation.
He noted the board has received numerous additional petitions and letters of
suppon over those submitted to ODOT at a Friday evening rally.
In other business, cam missioners approved weekly bills of $224,961.19
consisting of 183 entries and ratified a new contract with employees of Carteton Schools/Meigs Industries (see related story below).
Also attending were Commissioner Mick Davenport and Oerk Gloria
Kloes.
·.
. . .
, .

New MR/DD employees contract approved

accused him In bribery charges .

RHSAiumni
Again this year the Rutland High
School Alumni Association will
award scholarships to graduates and
the deadline for applications is May
I.
Applicants must be a 1999 high
school graduate and a child · or
grandchildren of a Rutland alumni.
The application must include a current official high school course transcript; a resu·me of activities and
career objectives; current photograph; name and graduation· year of
alumni parent or grandparents; and
the name of intended higher educa, tiona! institutional.
All applications will .be evaluated
on grade 'point average, course of
study, .and compliance with requirements, with consideration of ex tra
curiicular. other activities and career
objective.' ,
Applications are to be mailed to
.t)le Rutl ~nd High School Alumni
ScholarsHip Commiuec, Box 125,
Rutland , Ohio, 45775. ·

, -Page 4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 238

Man says Highway Patrol falsely
· PROVIDED CAR.- Rena Longstreth of Rutland, a Mary Kay tnde- .
pendent beauty consultant, qualified through sales as 1 team manager recently and earned the use of a red Pontiac Grand Am. It was
delivered. to her .at Don Tate Motors in Pomeroy. As a team manag·
er, she Will provide leadership to personal team mambera and will
work with her unit's director to meet sales and recruiting goals. Her
next goal Is director status.

Mike Cameron hits two
home runs to power
Cincinnati to 7-2 win

•

Titanic .boarding pass fetches$~ 00,000 at auction
By REBECCA COOK
Associated Press Writer
SEAITLE (AP) - An $8 Titanic
boarding pass that survived the illfated voyage .along with its passenger has fetched $100,000 at an auc tion.
The buyer was Jeffrey.Trainer, .an
Allentown, Pa. collector who is in
the trading card business.
. The price began at $5,000 on Sat, urday and zoomed to $100,000 in
less than a minute, said Cheryl Gorsuch, co-o.wner. of the .Tacoma

Sports

MONITORING . _
Melg• County V1Nidonl can expect
additional monltDrlng t o - If they are
abldlngbythelewlntheaaleOfalcohOI
and lcbtlc.cc. Wllh fUnding from the
Ohio Dlpltbi,.tlotllnllth, Robin Hllrrl-, uaiMI, with the Family and Chilo

=-~::II,

Johttt"

A~

and Nonlla ~a;:uN~dl~~
nurelng 111 the Melge CcM.R1ty I IIIIth
Depiwbl••to repnum the agenc:IM
lfM!Ivad In the compltanc:e monltor'ti'tg.

He said that staff from the Meigs County Health
Department, Youth Services Coordination with lh~
Wellness Block Grant, and from . the Metgs County
Prosecuting Auomey's Office, Abstinence Education
Program, will look for the proper posting of notices and
warnirtgs in the establishments and will use minors to
determine whether businesses will sell to an underage
person.
.
.
All minors assisting with the inspections are 15 to 1'6
years of age and have received training on how to con·
duct the checks.
None of the minors used in the compliance checks
will use fake identifications. When minors .are questioned about their age and identification, they have
been trained to answer :"I questions. honestly.
.
Vendors havmg questtons co~cemmg the compha~ce
checks need to call the Metgs County Prosecuttng
Attorney's Office.
The Coalition for a Healthier Ohio reports tobacco
use as being the number one health problem in Ohio,
said Lentes, noting that the statisti.cs are devastating.
Ohio has the highest number of male and young
adults (18-29) smokers and the thtrd h1ghest prevalence
Continued on pege 3

Water line extension in Hobson approved by Middleport Council

Junior high school reopens after fire

Good Afternoon

·Today's Sentinel

News policy----"--'---

.:: In an effort to provide our reader- week in The Daily Sentinel and the
~ip with current news, the Sunday Gall.ipolis Daily Tribune.
Times-Sentinel will not accept wed- . All club !'JCelings and other news
dlngs after 60 days from 'the date of articles in the society section must be
tlte event.
sub1billed within 60 days of occur·. Weddings submilled after the 60- renee. All binhdays must be submit~ay deadline will appear during the ted within 60 day~ of the occurrence.

nm

I

ing with John Anderson and· John Musser of
Pomeroy next week.
Cost of drilling a new well would be about
$100,000, she reported, and that's why "all
options need to be explored, so that we can come
up with the most cost effective method of getting
the water we need."
The m05t recent water samples tested higher
· for volatile organic componentS, Craig reported,
although she said it was "not alarming, but did
"move up;''
.
.
Council again rejected a request from Pat
CUSter for $7,000 to do a bike path feasibility
study. S~e suggested that the study and .possibly
some of the construction cost could come from the
$30,000in the economic development fund once it
is released 1o the village by the Ohio Department
of Development.
Council voted twice during the meeting on the ·
proposal and both times the motion to fund the
bike path project was defeated despite Custer's
appeal to "give something back lo the residents by
. adding to their quality of life."
Councilmen Roger Manley, Roben Pooler, and
St.eve· Houchins voted against using the entire
$30,000 for the project with Beth Stivers, · who
presided in the absence of Sandy lannarelli, acting
mayor, and Rae Gwiadowsky, voted in favor.
Manley then made a motion that $7,000 go for
the bike path study and the balance of $23,001) go
into the water fund to be used toward the cost of
extending lines into Hobson. That motion was
defeated with Gwladowaky, Pooler and Stivers
voting II!).
•. The Rev. Clark Baker met with Council ·to
aaain request that the alley behind the former Blue
Tartan and the Middleport Pentecostal Church on
South Third be closed. Action was postponed
pending further review by the solicitor.
Don Geary reported that Bob Byer, director of

the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service, is
interested in knowing if the siren in the old bell
tower on village hall is operational . He said that
By~r wants to set up a system for the vtlla~es
wh1ch would sound an alarm tn the event of htgh
winds or tornados. It was suggested that the firemen check out the stren and repon to By~r.
Gene Wise, who is active in Little League
activities at Hartinger Park, met with Council to
discuss programs and problems there. He talked
about addmg speed bumps on An Lewts St. :3
slow down ears as ·a safety measure, and the gen-.
era! cleanup of the park and its resi rooms. It was
noted that the st~et commissioner is in charge of
the park and ass1gns )NOrkers as needed.
Sam Eblin who serves on the Middleport
Recreation Board called for Council to act on a
motion about combining the positions of pool and
park managers wh1ch had been tabled at the last
meeting. Action was again postponed.
It was agreed ·to hire HambufJl Fireworks of
Lancaster to do the fireworks display on July 4
with the rain' date being the following day. Cost
will be $5,000 and includes the package plus the
shooter. The cost will be paid by the' village with
donations from businesses. ·
Judy Gifford mel with Council to request a
handicap space near a restaurant which she will be
opening on North Second St. in early May.
Council also heard from a Hobart Street couple
about the removal of a ba,rricade placed there by """
the .Village to settle a dispute between neighbor5 1
and authorized village workers 1o put it back .in
place. If it is removed again, Council said the
offenders will be cited into court.
Other matters discussed was the condition of
the road to Riverview Cemetery, a dump being
created on the riverbank, and street repairs.
The mayor 's repon showed receipts of
$4,637.50.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

'· ~· a

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1\IMdiY, April 13, 1111111

I Death Notices I .- Announcements: " "

'

His staff is ready, ut is Bush?

whom the son is said to hold partly sponsible the University of California at Los Angeles and
By Morton Kondt'IICke
'
~
for
former President George Bush's defeat in the John Dilulio Jr. of Princeton University.
AUSTIN, Texas - As tlieitlendance ltst at
Subjects on-the future schedule include educa- ·
1992
eleCtion.
Texas-Gov. Geoige W. Bush's latest foreign poli. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
tion,
·the environment, weapons of mass destrucThe
meeting
w.as
the
Iateal
in
a
series
of
briefcy confab attests, he has not -- as widely reported
740-8112-21515 • fax: H2·2157
tion,
"the new economy;• and ~eal th care.
.-- banned hiJ father's former advisers fro m his ings ~sh has held to get up to speed on national
The
Demoaatic rap on Bush is that " there's
polity issues before he launches his presidential
inner circle.
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
no
there
there," that he's not a serious poli~y
·
To impress conservatives, Bush political aides campaign in June.
.
An intemational economics meeting and a thinker but has charm without substance.
have put it out that the foreign policy team is
ROBERT L. WINGETT
That line was repeated bere this week :by
" Reagan, not Bush," but in fact it's bOth -- and budget-and-taxes briefing were also scheduled,
PubllahiJr
columnist Molly Ivins, who pronounced Bu~h
plus at least live more to come later this month.
some of the best of both.
" above averase... more than medioc're" but: 1'1
Bush
has
been
saying
as
little
as
possible
about
Five of the ei&amp;ht experts who briefed the govDIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ernor on Europe, the Balkans, Russia and Olina national and foreign issues until the Texas legisla- don't think he has any idea why he wants to·be
Controller
General Manager
·:
for three hours on Tuesday served in his father's ture ends its session May 31 , giving him time to president, except he's competitive."
As
might
be
expected,
his
advisers
differ.
T&amp;ey
·
·
administration. 1\Yo ·served only in the Reagan get up to speed.
Bush aides insist, with some justification, that • say he's informed, lays down a serious philosophadministration, and two were jn both.
n. Sentinel • •teG~Ma ,.,.,. to rht Kltor from ,...-. "" tbtoftd ~of topRegardless of prior service, what characterizes he can 't be expected to have fully developed posi- ical base for policy discussions and asks goOd
"'-· Shoff - , . (3IID ...,,... "' ,...) lttVO tltt _ , .,.,.,. ol -~~ pui&gt;/Wiod.
':
the group are brains, experience and a tough atti- tions on national policies while ·a state governor. questions, rapid-fire.
J)'pM' left.,..,.
11rtd all mty N «&lt;itMI. Et ch lhould ktcludl 1 1/fiNI.,.,
..,._, •nd daytl,. phon• numb«. Sp«lty • dtttlf ,.,.., 1 ,.r..no. to 1 ~
Bush's performance on Kosovo was .clearly
tude toward toreign adversaries. And also, loyalty , But when he hits the campaign trail, he 'll have to
wou. Mff«• or lfttw. lUll to: t.tt.,. to tilt «ttt01, T1t1 Sentinel, 111 Court Sf.;
to Gov. Bush. Those invited to brief him are have an agenda capable of withstanding scrutiny less than authoritative, however. His opening
Pomoroy, 01t1o 4S1P; "'• FAX to 7~1192-1167.
state~ent, which came after all other candida~s
·
.
required to endorse him and not advise any other and attack.
If ability to attract top talent is any measure, had said something, supported President Clintdn's
candidate.
·
Bush and his team were slower than Sen. John Bush will be formidl\ble. Among those on the.for- bombing but left it distinctly unclear whethe~ be
· ·· :
McCain, R-Ariz., · in adopting a " must win" eign policy team, for example, Zocllick, Rice and would support or oppose ground troops.
After being criticized as not being ready 'f!'r
stance on Kosovo, but Bush has come to it lately, Blackwill were instrumental in devising U.S. policy as the Soviet empire crumbled in 1990 and prime time -- and being misquoted in the Austin
suggesting an activist disposition.
American-Statesman and elsewhere as saying tliat
Bush also can be expected to take a tougher 1991.
the
Kosovo conflict could "Vulcanize" (npt
The Texas governor's top economic poli.cy
stance on China than the Clinton administration
Rep. Sylvester Patton knows he's got a diffi cult fight ahead against pend- or his father's administration, though not to adviser is former Federal Reserve Board member "Balkanize") Europe-- he carne around.
·
He told Th.e Washingtdn Post this week that a
ing legislation that would tighten Ohio's seat belt law.
Larry Lindsay .. and on domestic ·wlicy, former
oppose economic and diplomatic engagement.
" It's hard to battle against anything that saves lives," the Youngstown
stable Europe and the refugee crisis made it in tile
As has been widely reported, the coordinator Indianapolis Mayor Steve Goldsmith..
Democrat said last week.
Since December, when the policy briefings U.S. national interest " to win" the Kosovo war.
of Bush's foreign policy team is Paul Wolfowitz,
Fot Bush, tile pre-season ends in less Jhan tWo
Yet Patton remains troubled by the proposal to allow police to stop who served in top-jobs in the State Department began, Bush has held sessions on defense, taxes,
months.
Then he joins the big leagues. He has a
motorists who aren 'twearing seat belts.
.
the
budget,
Social
·Security
and
Medicare,
and
and the Pentagon under Reagan 110d Bush.
Ohio's current iaw says police may cite !110torists for failing to use seat
first-rate
coaching staff. His o_.in skill remains to
Under 'Reagan, Wolfowitz -- who is now dean fleshing out the content for his idea of "compas. belts only if they have been stopped for another offense, such as running a of the Johns Hopkins University School for sionate conservatism."
be,seen.·
Ia
ueartlve
edHor
or
·
(Morton
Kandraclce
traffic light.
.
•
.
That session includes brainy social philosoAdvanced International Studies -- ~rged easing
·Backers say increased seat belt use will save lives, but .Patton and civil Ferdinand Marcos out of power in the Philippines phers such as retired Professor James Wilson of Roll Call, the newspaper or Capitol Hill.)
libertarians worry about the potential for abuse.
:
when .his' hold on power became
·
Patton says he hears too many complaints from constituents who believe untenable and, under Bush, he
they were stopped for "DWB, " or " Driving While ,.lllack."
helped devise the Persian Gulf
" I belie~~C in seat belts," added Patton, originaTiy a.co-sponsor of the defense strategy.
· tougher seat belt law when it' was introduced last year. " I wear seat belts ...
The team's senior member is
I just want to make sure we don't give police officers carte blanche to stop George Shultz, the secretary of
people:"
.
.
.
state under Reagan. Shultz
David Harris, a University of Toledo law professor, wondered whether famously fought with · thenthe complaints from black drivers had 'any basis in reality.
Defense Secretary Caspar WeinAfter examining court records from Akron, ·Dayton, Toledo and the berger to use American forces
Columbus area, Harris concluded in a soon-to-be-published study that overseas, not just build them up
blacks are at least twice as likely to be ticketed than non-blacks.
with money. ·
.
. So eveo .though minorities are less likely to wear seat belts - and con-·
Others here were Robert Zoel· . sequently, more likely to die or suffer inj~ries in auto accidents - Harris lick, wh&lt;? .served in the Trell$ury
•
said he understands why nany blacks · and Hispanics 'are unwilling to Department under Reagan and as
, embrace the proposed legislation
.
undersecretary of state under
"There's a reluctance to say ' Here's more discretion' when police already Bush; Reagan-era Pentagon hard-.
have so much discretion, and it:s been used disproportionately against · liner Richard Perle and Condpleezthem," Harris e•plained.
·
·
za Rice, who was on Bush's
Rep.
Jon
Peterson,
the
Delaware
Republican
who
sponsored
the
seat.belt
·
national security staff.
11
law, said he shares some of the concerns about police harassment. But he
Also here were Robert Blackalso insists that his bill addresses those concerns.
·
will of Harvard; Washington
Language in the bill prohibits police from searching vehicles or their lawyer Stephen Hadley; an assisoccupants during stops for seat belt violations. That provision wouldn't tant Defense secretary under Bush;
apply, however, if the officer sees an open container of alcohol in ttie vehi- and Philippa Malmgren, an inter- ·
. cle or otherwise has probable cause to suspect a crime, Peterson said.
national economist who did not
" Realistically, if there is someone who is going to harass you, they're serve in ·either administration.
going to find something," Peterson conceded.
·'
The former offiCial who has
.•
On the other hand, driving is a privilege, not a ~ight, he .said. And that been most conspicuously excluded
means the state has the right to enact rules or,regulations designed to pre- from Bush's team is his father's
serve the health and safety of the public.
· secretary of State, James Baker,
Christine Link, director of 'the Ohio chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, doesn't think Peterson's safeguards are workable.
She cites U.S. Supreme Court rulings that allow police' to search vebjcles
· stopped for traffic violations.
·
·
" What~iler language the General Assembly puts into the law, it cannot
·. trump the Supreme Court," Ms. Link said. "1 think they know that. They're By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
• ·
proposing the band play the Con fed·
111
ASsociated
Preu
WrHer
eracy's "Dixie" b_ecause "we have
just putting language in,there to stop the complaints."
WASHINGTON (AP) - In the -~---------=-----------·-..::;;_ lawfully captured tl."
Now Uncoln lay lengthwise orr a
1·
most chilling moment of his crowded
evening,
correspondent had been in the audience at Ford's. A while spiking theirs.
boarding house bed across I Oth
By Tha Aaaoclated Pr...
·
Lawrence Gobright walked iryto the gunshot was heard over the roar of a
Summoned before the House Street from the theater, unconscious,
Today is Tuesday, April 1~, the 103rd day of 1999. Ther are 262 days flag-draped box at Ford's Theatre laugh line in the third act of the eom- Judici¥)' Committee,Gobright gave his breath labored, doctors shaking
left in the year.
.
and took charge of the pistol used by edy, "Our American Cousin."" The what has been called,one of the first their heads at the somber Cabinet
On April 13, 1743, the third president of the United Sta es, Thomas Jef- John Wilkes Booth to shoot Abra- president slumped forward. Mary descriptions of objective news writ- members crowding the small room.
ferson, was born in present-day Albemarle County, va.
ham Lincoln.
Lincoln screamed.
ing. He volunteered that the news Gobright sped around town, also
· In 1742, Handel's "Messiah " was first performed publicly, in Dublin,
"A man standing by picked up
Gobright got the gist of !he story, service's practical determination to picking up details of the attempted
Ireland.
·
Booth's pistol from the ground," ran into the telegraph office and be factual, non-political and impar- assassination of Secretary of State
ln 1870, the Metropolitan Museum of Art waS founded in New York. . Gobright recalled. "I exclaimed to filed "a short special" that is still .tial might have given it an edge.
William H. .Seward, .and returned to
In 1943, President Roosevelt dedicated the Jefferson Memorial. ·
the crowd· below that the weapoo quoted as a model of terse story"My dispatches are merely dry his office to tell the fuller story.
"With trembling and nervous finIn 1958, Van Cliburn became the first American to win the Tchaikovsky had been found and placed in my · telling.
matters of fact an~ detail," Gobright
possession."
"WASHINGTON, Friday, April testified. "Some special correspon- gers," he began to write, in chrono. International Piano Contest in Moscow.
ln 19_70, Apollo 13, four -fifths of the way to the moon, was crippled when
A Navy officer demanded it. 14, 1865. The President was shot in dents may write to suit the temper of logiclll order as dictated by the style
a tank containing liquid oxygen burst.
Gobright refused and held the .44 a theater to·night, and is perhaps their own organs . ... I try to write of the day. He did not mention the
gunshot until the second sentence of
In 1986, Pope John Paul II visited a Rome synagogue in the first record- caliber, silver-mounted derringer for mortally wounded."
without regard to.men or politics."
ed papal visit of its kind.
· the police.
A Pennsylvania native, Lawrence
Over four years Gobrighl had the third paragraph.
Then, sentence after sentence, it
In 1992, the Great Olicago Flood took place as the city's century-old tunThe repilrter examined the car- Agustus Gobright took his first come to know Lincoln well.
nel system and adjacent basements filled with water from the Chicago River. peted presidential b6x, observed the Washington newspaper job in 1834 ·
He had often.witnessed the presi- was all business: the mortal wound
ln 1997, Tiger Woods became the youngest person IQ win the Masters darkening blood on the buttoned during Andrew Jackson's adminis- dent's determination never. to be in the back of the president's head,
Tournament and the first player of at least partly African heritage to claim a back of . Lincoln's rocking chair, tration. The AP hired bim shortly bested in the telling of a funny story. the flight of the ~till-unknown assasmajor golf title.
·
noted the rip in the Treasury flag that after its founding in 1848.
l)ut he had also seen an agitated Lin- sin, the attack on Seward, the "wild
Ten years ago: House Speaker Jim Wright delivered an emotional defense draped the railing. Later investigaDuring the Ovil War, Gobright · coin in the Army telegraph office, excitement," the evidence of "a preof his conduct against ethics charges, declaring he would "light to the last lion showed it had been made by reported the maneuvers of the politi- his face "ghastly" in the gas light, concerted plan." ·
Booth's spur as he leaped to the cians and the "gunpowder news" of his hands and legs shaking, his
ounce of cqnviction and energy" he possessed.
"! was afterwards surprised that[
. Five years ago: Islamic militants bombed an Israeli bus, killirlg six peo- stage and escaped. .
battles. He had wrestled .with the mo!Jrnful voice repeating, " bad had succeeded in approximating so
pie and wounding 28.
J usl minutes befo~, Gobright official censor; Oftce having to water news, bad news."
·
closely all the facts in those dark
One year ago: NationsBank and BankAmerica announced a $62.5 billion had been alone at the office of The down an account of ·a Confederate
But . the second week of April · transactions," he wrote.
merger, creating the country's first coast·to-coast bank. A 500,pound steel Assbciated Press on Pennsylvania invasion .of Maryland .even though 186S was jubilation lime. ue surED!lOR'S NOTE: Law,, _ L
• joint fell from the upper level of New York's Yank.:. Stadium, crashing onto Avenue, leafing throu&amp;h a newspa- his story was clearly no news to the rendered his army to Grant on Sun. seats below. No fans were inside the j&gt;ark at the time.
per. An excited friend burst through invaders.
day the 9th. Uncoln had been · Knul8on haa reported on ConBut early in the .war, other thronged by freed slaves While visit- graaa, the WhHe Houu and Wuh.
Today's Birthdays: Former Ml"nnesota Gov. Harold Stassen is 92. Author the door shouting "that the president
.
reporters complained that the censor ing Richmond. Gobright had seen lngton'a hlatory. far more than 30
. Eudora Welty is 90. Actor Howard Keel is 80. Movie director Stanley Donen had been assassinated."
. ; is 75. Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colo.) is 66.
The story tumbled out. The friend waved Gobright~s stories through him at the White Hou~ on the lOth yaara.

Henry Junior Bush
Wednesday, Apr. 14

'Esta6{15fid in 1948

-I Toledo
- - -137"/87"
··
,
~

·liod ay ·1n H s·tory

IS ory

2

~- A ma~abre new secondary m'arket for life-insurance. poUcies
• By JIICk Anderaon

•
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and Jan Moller
Carole Hopkins of Bellingham, Wash.,
probably wishes that Ella, her 82-year-old
mother-in-Jaw, had never encountered the
young woman at her church group.
That young woman pressured Ella to
withdraw a $60,000 annuity that was drawing 6 percent annual interest and invest in a
"viatica)."
·
As previous readers of this space know,
viaticals are a macabre new secondary mar. kel for life-insurance policies. Popularized
' by AIDS patients who sold their policies for
pennies on the dollar so they could live out
theit final days in dignity, theSe investments
·make money only when the viator (or original policy-bolder) dies quickly enough.
lnveaton -, who become the primary l&gt;eneficiaries of theae insurance policies -- can lose
all or part of their investment if the viator
exceeds his or her life-expectancy.
Hopkins says that Ella was guaranteed a

'

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70 percent return on her investment, and
cash back if the viator didn't die in two
years. But after several months, Ella hadn't
heard anything from the company that brokered the deal and asked her daughter-in-law
to investigate. ·Carole quickly learned thai
the broker's claims weren't true, and that
EIIa didn 't have any paperwork at all: No
contract of receipt from a money transfer.
After some more digging, Carole learned
that her mother-in-law did have a contract,
but that her money still had not been placed
with aviator.
Company officials promised to place the
money shortly, as they had just bought S35
million worth of policies.
The company in quesli0\1 -- which
refused to return our phone calls -- only
deals in so-called "contestable"' policies -that is, those that~ younger than two years
old and thus within a grace period under
which insurers don't have to pay full benefits in case of death. Qontestable policies are

also more likely to be inspected for fraud in
light of the growing demand for insurance
policies iti the viatica[ market.
Carole wonders how $35 million worth
of policies · could have been taken out by .
folks who honestly didn 'I know they were
dyina. It's a good question, since the viati, cals market has sparkell a .new wave offraud
by shady vendors wh.o create "wet-ink'' or
"clean-sheeted" policies intended strictly
for resale. ·
Six months after Ella turned over her
money (while losing $10,000 In interest and
fees to withdraw h~r money), th~ coml;'80Y
finally pia~ her tnvestmen~ wtth a v1ator
infected w1th HIV. Th~ pat1ent had been
given five yean to live -- which might well
I!C'Jonger than 82-year-old Ella has left.
Even if Ella livea to collect her money,
there are .other p!'Oblems with the poticy.
Usted along with Ella as beneficiaries of the .
policy ~ the via\Or's mother and brother,
meaning there might be a legal fight in store

'

· The problem, in a nutshell, is that tile
when it comes time tO
industry
has chanaed dramatically since i.ts ·
collect.
inception in the late 1980s. For one; the
Carole says her
advent of protease inhibitors and other new
mother-in-law isn 'I the
AIDS drugs have :dramatically e•tended tile
only one to fall under
)ivea of 5ome AlPS patie~ts. That, in tu'm,
the prey of ~hady viathas lowered the returns for investoni who are
icals brpkers. She
basically betting on an early demise.
mentions the case of a
In the meantime, the market has expand78-year-old man who
invested through the same company -- even ed significantly even as the AIDS death rate
though the firm is not licensed to operate in has fallen. With more brokers popping up:all
the time, seniors like Ella have become ea5y
the state of Washingto(\.
Valerie Sergman-Cooper of the National targets for the less scrupulous operators. · :
Gloria Wolk, a CPA and author. of "ViatViatica! Association in Washington, D.C., a
coalition of 21 viatical companies, believes ica[ Settlements: An . Inv~stment Guide;"
the " renegade" firms -- dozens of ~hady told our associate Kathryn Wallace th•t
dealers operating without a license -- are seniors are targeted because they often h••·~ '!!'
giving the industry a bad name. Her associ - the cash to invest without a developed
ation is now helping draft legislation that ness acumen. Wolk says the viatica! agcnls
would force viatica[ brokers .• to disclose find the elderly through ·churches, hospicea
more information to inveatori, such as what · or senior group homes."
really happens to the "policies if the viators Copytlllht , . ., unnec1 Fellute Syncllcete, lniD.
exceed their life-expectancies. ·
.

•

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LClevolond [38"114"
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• [.£!&gt;!umbuo [38"186'

41 '"181.

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W. VA.

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c 1999 AccuWeather, Inc.

·

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r........ Rlin

Soony ... Cloody

Cloudy

. -

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"'

Fl..,..

,

Chance of rain ·returns
by Wednesday evening
• By The Associated Preu
Temperatures should return to closer to normal tonight and Wednesday
after a chilly couple of days, the National Weather Service said.
.
This morning, the mercury dipped to as low as 29 degrees in
Lows tonight will be mostly in the 40s, forecasters said. On Wednesday, highs will be in the 60s.
Rain is possible by Wednesday night.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather staiion was 86 degrees in 1941 while the record low was 21 in 1920. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:07 and sunrise Wednesday at 6:56a.m.
Weather foJ'eC!Illl:
Tonight... Clear. Lows in the mid 30s. Light wind.
wd
e . nesday ...Partly cloudy. Highs from 'the upper 60s 10 near 70.
Wednesday night...Cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows 45 to SO.
Extended foreeast: ·
•
'f!lursday... Rain ljkely. Highs 60 to 65 .
·
.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows 40 to· 45 and
,
·
highs 50 10 55 .
Saturday... Partly cloucjy with a chance of rain or snow showers. Much
cooler. Lows in the mid 30s and
in , he lower .and mid

.

t~~~~rtc~~~~kiifei~!h~~~~~~~~ncm~
.
money

UMA (AP) _ A man killed his
: wife last summer so he could collect

: on a $50,000 life insurance policy,
1prosecutors_Nid,.
. Phillip Wl)itaker, 24, of Lima is
: ch8Jl!ed witll one anint. of aggravated
·murder in the Aug. .28 death of his
:,y;ife, Stephanie Whitaker. A newspa· ~r carrier lound her body on the side
of a rural Allen County road. The Allen
County coroner ruled that she was run
over and dragged about 100 feet.
Whitaker's .trial began Monday in

·gs
Mel
.

Allen County Common Pleas Court.
Whitaker.told police he didn 't have
an insurance policy on his wife, assistant Prosecutor Dan Berry. said....Bul
invest,igators learned that Mrs. Whitaker, 20, was insured for $50,000, Berry
said in his opening statement.
·
" He made four or five calls to the
insurance carrier 10 make sure his wife
was covered," !3erry said. "1\Yo of the
calls were so unusual that the two
women who took them repofled them
to their supervisor."
·

·~endo
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Continued from page 1 ·
smoke, and 19 percent of high
' rate in the country, according to the school males use smokeless tobacco,
Coaliiion report.
with 12.5 million packs of cigarettes
Statistics show that each year, being ~ld every year to children,
-19,500 Ohioans die prematurely due and 919,000 ofOhio'schildren being
Jo tobacco related illnesses, that exposed to second hand smoke at
65,000 kids in Ohio become new home. Tobacco use kills ll)ore people
daily smokers, and that over 45 per' than AIDS, alcohol, drugs, fires,
~-cent of young adults between 18 and
homicide, motor vehicle accidents,
· 24 are regular smokers. In addition, and suicide combined, concluded
according to the statistics, 35 per- untes, to emphasize the enormity of
cent of Ohio's high school students 'the problem.
·
·

: The Daily Sentinel
•

The Wilton Civic Association will sponsor a steak dinner at the
Wilkesville Community Center. Saturday with serving from 4 to 7 p.m.

Geneva M. 'Dee' McDaniel

INC.

Ohio seat belt law·
triggers ·privacy fight

,- es eruay 1n

--

v_....---"i

Steak dinner planned

Henry Jun ior Bush, 56, Portland, died Sunday, April II, 1999 in ubanon
MusicFest planned
Township.
The Alexander Spartan Booster.Club will sponsor MusicFest '99 at the
Born July 15, 1942 in Wood County, W.Va., son of the late Claude and
Athens County Fairgrounds, May 22. Event will include a spring and
Ivory Armetha Wyant Bush, h,e was employed by the City of Ravenswood,
summer business e•position, art and craft show, performances by local
W.Va.
bands and culminate with a performance by.country music star Jpe Diffie,
He is survived by a sister and brother-i n-law, Donna and Herbert Casto . 7:30 p.m. at the grandstand. Cost, $12 for advance tickets, $15 on day of
·of Parkersburg, W:Va.; a~d two nieces; one nephew and a great-niece.
event.
Graves1 de serv~ces Will be l p.m. Thursday in the Browning Cemetery,
Arthritis support group to meet ·
.Portland. Friends may call Thursday, 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m., at the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.
.
The Meigs County Arthritis Support Group will meet Friday from 10
to 11:30 a.m. at the Senior Citizens Ce nter. Bonnie McFarland. RN, coordinator of the Well ness Program at Holzer, and Matt Hasseman, LPT, will
be. talking about the Wellness Program and its services.
Geneva M. "DUo' McDaniel, 82, New Brighton, formerly of Meigs
County, died Monday, April 5, 1999 in the Dawes Manor, New Brighton. ·
Spiritual Renewal '
Born May 19, 1916 in.Antiquity, .she was the daughter of the late Oliver
A spiri tual renewal. will be held at the SoUih Bethel New Testament
K. and Bertha Pickens Boyd. She was a member of the First Baptist Church
Ch ur~h . Sunday through April24, 7 p.m. each evening. Quentin Smith of
of New Bnghton and the North Sewickley Homemakers, the Ladies Auxiln, ' ~ urch i~ Belpre ~ill. be the s~er. There will be special music by
iary to the North Sewickley Township Fire Department.
Pr&lt;.&lt;:latm, Dehvered, S1ngmg Gospelatrs, Krusaders, Jodie Rife, Jennifer
She '!'&amp;S preceded in death by. her husl!and. Clarence N. McDaniel, on
H1cks, Otis and Ivy Crockran. Chil4care will be available at the church
March 13, 1978, and by four sisters and one brother.
located on Silver Ridge Road.
She is survived by 'two sisters, Helen Wider of Columbus, and Mrs. HerApplications. to be taken
shel (Eileen) Roush of utart Falls; and several nieces and nephews.
The Meigs United Mdhodi st Q:loperative Parish at '311 Condor Street
Services were he·ld at the Donald D. Druschel Funeral. Home in New
will be taking applications for garden seeds, potatoes and tomato plants
Brighton and ;burial will be ,in the Sylvania Hills Cemetery in Daugherty
this week from 9 a.m. to noon.
·
Township;
.
. ·

~

MICH.

fJtN,.,_,

Recounting
a
chilling
mome
nt
"' t ,
h• t

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Tuesday, April 13, 1999

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Judge holds Bill Clinton in
contempt in ·paula Jones case

Hymn sing planned

A hymn sing will .be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Stiversvill e
Community Church. Music will be provided by Delivered and Jcx;
McCloud.
·
.,

By PETE YOST
" I could care less. It's not
Smorgasbord planned
.
Associated
Preas
about that, it's about what
The
Bashan
Ladies
Auxiliary
are
m~k
i
ng
plans
to
have
a
smorgasbord
Writer
he did."
on April 25.
· WASHI!liGTON .(AP) ·
The judge also set
- President Clinton faces
in motion a process that
Meeting canceled
a new blot on his record
could strip Clinton of his ·
A meeting of the Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer District seheduled for
and thousands of dollars in
law license, referring the
April 19 has been canceled and will be rescheduled. ·
.
fresh legal expenses after a
president's testimony to
Loyalty
set
federal judge cited him for
the Arkansas Supreme
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053, will have a celebration of Loya lcontempt of court. HistoriCourt's Committee on
ty Day, 1 p.m. Sunday. There will be a dinner for members, auxil iary
ans believe he is the fir.;t
Professional ConduCt.
members and spouses.
chief executive to receive
Wright said she
such a penalty.
would delay enforcement
.U.S. District Judge
for 30 days to give Clinton
Susan Webber Wright conan opportunity to ask for a
A proposed cut in the state educa- may also opt 1o·take the course indi eluded Monday that the president lied hearing or to appeal.
.
tion budget could hit parents of vidually, at an added cost, ac,ording
about his· relationship with former
"I think 1t's -a vindication," said teenaged students ·with a $50 to Brenda Roush of MGM Drive
White House intern. Monica 'Lewin- John Whitehead, one of Mrs. Jones's
increase in drivers education costs.
Right, who said Monday that the
·
sky in a Jan . .17, 1998, deposition in . lawyers. "This is the first event in the
According to State Rep. John districts do not bear any of the cost
the Paula Jones case.
·
'whole proceeding where the president
"Simply put, the president's depo- was actually held accountable in the Carey, R- Wellston, a $50 state sub- of the training.
sidy for each drivers education stuAccording to Carey, H9use Bud- ·
sition testimony ... was intentionally end."
·
dent in the state could be cut from get Director Jack Hershey told him
·
false," Wright wrote. ·
Historians said they · believed the the state bud~et, and is now being ·last week that the. elimination of the
The judge ordered Clinton to pay action was a first..
considered in subcommittee hear- subsidy was being considered
Mrs.. Jones "any reasonable expenses
" I have never heard of any case ings.
because "there are a small number of
including attorneys' fees caused by where a president has been found in
The state currently pays $SO·per districts using it, and the fu nds could
his willfu.l failure to obey this court's contempt in a civil case," said Mark student toward the cost of driver be better spent elsewhere."
Roush said that she and other dri·
discovery orders" and also to pay Rozell, a professor of political science training. In Meigs County, parents
$1 ,202 as reimbursement for the at the University of Pennsylvania.
are responsible for the balance of the ver education providers have begun
judge's travel in the case.
Clinton's historical "boxscore" cost.
to eampaign in favor of the subsidy,
One option is for Clinton to use his will say in part "first elected president
Each of the county's three local which is especially helpful in poorer
.legal defense fund. which has raised impeacbed and first to be held in con- school di~tricts provide drivers edu- communities, and in households
_$45 million, to pay I~ S8!lcliqn.
tempt while in office," said Rozell.
cation through· the school through with more than one tee.nager.
Clinton'slawyers were mum, feaV&gt;
Wright directed Mrs. Jones' contracts with MGM Drive Right , a
Carey said this morni ng that he
ing their' options open until they ~ lawyers to submit within 20 days a locally-operated
program
in had given· little consideration to the
what sort of penalty Mrs. Jones statement of their expenses. which Pomeroy.
issue to date, because it was still in ·
requests. One of her lawyers said Whitehead- said could be " tens of
The firm provides both in-class subcommittee, but said that he was
Monday night it could be tens of thou- thousands of dollars.
instruclion anddriving instruction at "open to he;u:ing from constituents"
sands of dollars.
"You ha11e all the expenses related ·a cost of $160 per student. Students about its effects.
Wright, however, hinted in her rul- to seven laW}'ers who attended the
ing if Clinton attempts to contest her deposition - air fares, the time spent
findings, it could have political costs there (in Washington), the time
for a president eager to put the preparing, meals, and what i'i we
Bible class, in which Lofton
impeachment crisis behind him that· believewasthecauseandefJectofthe ·ey JAMES HANNAH
Aiaociated
Preea
Writer
explained
the Book of Revelation and
ended in J8f)uary when he was acquit- whole thing,"·said Whitehead. ·
DAYTON
(AP)
Aman
accused
urged
his
Bible students to prepare
ted on perjury and obstruction of jusSenior presidential aides, speaking
shooting
his
pastor
after
a
Bible
themselves
for the afterl ife.
of
tice ch8Jl!es in the Senate.
on condition of anonymity, said ClinNance and his attorney provided
"This court is fully aware that the ton lawyers regarded the penalty as claSs in subu!ban Dayton pleaded
no more information about the
president may have engaged in other less severe since the 'judge had the guilty to aggravated murder today.
... conduct W81J'IIIIing" punishment option of making a criminal referral · Kenneth Nance, 59, was charged motive during today 's court hearing.
and if Ointon exercises his right to against the president to the U.S. attor- .in the shooting of the Rev. Andr~w
Lofton, 65, on Sept. 16 at Chnst
·
contest the finding it would open the ney's office.
Temple Apostolic Faith Church ·in Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
, door for hearings complete with witsuburban
Trotwood.
ADMn:TED MONDAY
11esses "on all matters concerning the
Police
have
said
religious
differTimothy Wolfe, Middleport .
president's conduct," she warned.
between
the
two
men
may
have
DISCHARGED
MONDAY
ences
At her home in Cabot, Ark., Mrs.
been
the
motive.
- None.
Jones was overjoyed. "Ah! Th ta ta ta
Nance had ·sat quietly during the
(Published by permisioo)
ta. That's all I have to say," she said,
waving her hands above her head and
dancing. Asked whether she believed
the sanction against the president was
good for the country, Mrs. Jones said,
Units of . the Meigs County treatment;
Medical
Service
10:08 a.m., North Second
Emergency
recorded three calls for assistance Av enue, Middleport, Dorothy
Monday. \)nits responding includ- . Davis, Hol z~r Medical Center;
6:24p.m., state Route 681, Tuped:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
pers Plains, Aaron Shamp, St.
6:20 a.m., Eagle Ridge Road, Joseph 's Hospital, Tuppers Plains
Racine, Harold Newland, refused squad assisted.

Day

State considers drivers ed cuts

Dayton man pleads guilty to .
murdering pastor after Bible class

Hospl•tal News

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls

rred annuity

mterest you.

Kroger ...................................58\ ,

LanCia End .............................37\
Ltd ......................................... 44~•
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 17Y&lt;

.·Uf

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)OO're intereoteg in earning high interest on )Qllf saving;,

tax deferred and with no-lood,

Prem Flnl ................:.•:..•••••••••13'4
Rockwtll ..... _........................415~.
AD/Shell·~ ........,......~.............52~.

...

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then we have the plan kJr

wid1 Auto-Owners Insurance O:ropany.·

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)00

FJ111tStar .............................. ! 02'1.

ContribuO:n; to the plan can re made when

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Wendy's ...................... :.........2ff/.

.

W011hlngton ............................ 12

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it's convenient iOr )QIJ. Stop in our

-~·-

Stock reporta er,e todey•a
10:30 a.m. quotee (ll'bvldt!d by
Adveat of Oalllpoll•; · .

agency and see us roday!

Correction Polloy
Oor Nla

COIIctnl Ia 11111orleo II 10 bt
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;us. We

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wilt chock yaor

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Newa Departmenta

ne ••I• •-btr to 99l-lt55. Deport-'
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•

.BEAUIY; QUALIIT, .CRAFTSMANSHIP

' .A--Dwte~· ~
Life Home

Car

Buslnes9

7M:40W..:Iioo4•

Enduring Memorials Priced ··
To Suit YoW' Budge~
520 W. Main St. ~ Pomeroy, 0

Phone 992·2588
Vinton- 388-SGrul
Gallipolis- 446-0552

214 Emt Main
Pomeroy

992-6687

•

�-

..

Sports

The D·aily Sentinel
•

Tuesday, Aprll13, 1999

. Page 4
:Tuesday, Aprll13, 1999

NICE POKE, MIKE!- The Cincinnati Reds' Mike Monday's National League game against the
. Cameron (center) gets a high fist from teammate Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field, where the Reds
Barry Larkin after one of Cameron's two homers In . won 7·2. (AP)
·

...

·Reds tally 7-2 win over Cubs
By RICK GANO
believe in myse lf before anybody
CHICAGO (AP) - Mark Grace else could. This was one of the best
-hits in front of ·sammy Sosa some feelings I' ve ever had."
· day s, behind him on .ot hers, ·depend- .
Sosa's great feeling of a year ago,
'ing on who's pitching . With that when he and Mark McGwire ener·
.daily perspective. he offers , thi s . gized baseball with an ·epic home run
assessment of his teammate's horrid rac e, has not returned. Fans are
start to the 1999 season:
applauding his every move, but his
"I'm worried about earthquakes early struggles are magnified
a nd hurricanes, not Sammy." Grace because of what is now expected.
·said following Monday's 7-2 loss to
" I wi sh I could have a hit or
the Cincinnati Reds in the Cubs' homer every time, " Sosa said, sitting
opener at Wrigley Field.
patiently by his locker for nearly half
" He 's our horse . We know it. He an hour answering questions.
· " Now the pitchers don ' t want to
knows it. It's a matter of time. He'll
. be fine , no .question . The rest of us give me anything to hit. 1 got to be
are not going that well , either."
patient and relaKed, keep rolling.
Sosa couldn't muster a homer We're struggling, but it's still e~rly.
Monday, only a measly infield sin- A lot of people cheered me,' and they
gle, and went'l -for-4 , giving hiJTljust know I' m i'n a slump and that we can
three hits in 25 at-bats as the Cubs · play better." .
lost 'thei( fourth straight game.
Sosa came to bat with two on and
The Reds, meanwhile, were no outs in the eighth against reliever
launching balls out of Wrigley Field. Scon Sullivan with the Cubs trailing
Mike Cameron , who never lived 5-2 . .He flied out to shallow right,
. ··.UP to expectations on the city's South ending his frustrating day before a
· . Side with the White Sox before spirited, crowd of 30,092 . .
being traded. hit two homers, while
" I'm not swinging the way I'm
Barry Larkin and Eddie Taubensee supposed to be. I've been chasing
also went deep to back Steve Avery's ~ad pitches,'" Sosa said. " I've got to
steady pitching.
come and find out what's the mat. " It's .a great opp&lt;}rtuniry I have ter."
.
here to play baseball. I'm the ·same
Avery (1-1), no longer the power
·old guy," Cameron said.
pitcher he once was with the Atlanta
·"( had a tou·gh time here in Braves, got his first NL victory since
· .. Chicago last year. I put entirely too 1996. He allowed the Cubs just three
much pressure ~n myself. I had to h1ts and a run in seven innings. In his

first start against San Francisco, he
took a no-hitter into the seventh.
" I took a little while to get goi.ng
with the cold," Avery ·said of the
sunny 49-degree day.
"I know how to change speeds
now and eventually with my fastball
coming .around, I will get more
strikeouts. Once I get rid of the little
blips like walks, things will be where
I want " ·
The Cubs' depleted pitching staff
gqt another scare when Kevin Tapani
( 1-1 ), a 19-game winner last season,
ood to leave after three innings with
tightness in his right shoulder. He
didn't tnow after tha game . if. he
would miss his next start.
The Cubs alre~dy are without NL
Rookie of the Year Kerry_ Wood, who·
will miss the season following elbow
surgery, and reliever Terry Adams .is
also on the DL with an elbow sprain . .
Tapani said the problem didn ' t
appear to be major, al)d he will rest a
couple of days .and then begin some
exercises to strengthen what ill'
believ,es is muscle fatigue . Then the
shoulder soreness will be re-evaluated . · ·
.

.
'
• BOSTON (AP)- The Cleveland
Cavaliers certairtly didn ' t look like a
team battling for a playoff spot.
"It may not have been as big of
game for them as it was for us
because we' re still fighting for the
eighth playoff spot, so I can't explain
where the intensity was," Cleve land
forward Shawn Kemp said after the
Cav'aliers were beaten easily by
Boston 103.· 89 on Monday night.
Ron Mercer scored 20 of his 24
points in the second half and Vitaly
Potapenko added 19 against his for.. mer club as the Celtics posted their
fourth wi.n in five games, their best
. stretch this season.
The Cavaliers never looked like
.. they were in it from the start . Boston

.'

:~:

'

Southern error and a double off the
bat of Tommy Roush plated one run .
Two walks followed and Jeremiah
•
Bentley doubled.
anoth.er
walk
J.T.
· After
Humphreys went deep over the left
field fence . Bullington then .made it
back-lo-back home mns when he
went deep over the center field fence
to .put Meigs oh top 8-2. The home
run was the third this season for
Bullington .
Bu~ South~rn bounced right back
in the third. Kyle r,lorris walked,
Adam Williams and Josh Ervin both
si ngled to load the bases. A wild
pitch scored one run, then Adam
Cumings cleared the bases with his
third home run of. the seasoQ to pull
Southern to within 8-6.
Meigs added a run in the bottom
of the third inning to take a 9·6 lead.
Kyle Smiddie singled and Pat Martin
walked.
then followed ·.with

the second of his three doubles and
Meigs held a 9-6 lead.
'
But Southern came storming back
and took a 12-9 1ead with six big runs
in the fourth inning.' Chris Randolph
walked and Kyle Norris reached on a
Marauder miscue, two outs later
Cumings si ngledin to left field to
score one run . Manuel singled to
score Norris, and Boso walked to
load t!Je bases. This time it was Jamie
· Baker's turn to leave the yard. Baker
hit a shot to the left of the 360 sign in
center field for a grand slam homer
and Southern was on top 12-9.
But back came Meigs to score
seven runs in the bottom of the .
inning to take the lead for good.
Meigs took advantage of another
BentleY. double, · singles by Martin,
Ryan
Ramsburg,
and
Nick
Dettwiller. Two walks and t~o
Southern errors a1ded the Marauders
fortunes .
Meigs made it an 18- 12 gaJTle in
the fifth inning on singles by Bentley
and Jeff Brown. A South.ern error and
closed out the scoring with five more
runs in the si•th. Those runs in the
sixth came on three Southern errors,
a fielder 's cho'ice and three walks.
Meigs had 13 hits led by Bentley
with three doubles 'and a single.
Bullington had a single and · home
run. Dettwiller added two singles.
Humphreys ~ad a home ruri. Roush
had a double. Smiddie, Martin' and
R~msburg each had singles .
Bentley went the route to get the
win giving up II hits, striking out
nine and walking two.
Ervin had his home run and a pair
of singles to lead Southern. Cumings
added his home run and a single.
Williams and Manuel had two singles. Baker had a home run. Josh
Davis had ·a double.
Ervin was the starter for Southern .
Manuel ca111e on in the second inning
and was tagged v;ith the loss. The
two gave up 13 hits, struck &lt;lUI six
·
and walked 12.
Southern will travel to T!imble on
Wednesday, while Meigs will host
River Valley on Tuesday in a nonconferent;e game .
looin&amp; .ll!.lllb
.
Southern ............... 204-600= 12-11 · 7.
'
Meigs ................... 081-725=23-14-2
SOCKS DOUBlE - Th'e Meigs Maraudere' Jeremiah Bentley
Ervin, Manuel (2) (LP) and
watches his drive to center field go out far enough to let him get a
Cumings
double during Monday's lVC game 'lgaln1t neighboring Southern
which fell on the short end of a 23-12 decision. (Sentinel photo by · Bentley ,(WP) and Humphreys
Dave Harris)
·

••

came out quickly, moving to a 17-6
lead nearly five minutes into the
game.
After a Cleveland timeout, the
Celtics continued their fast start,
pushing it to 26-10 on Potapenko's
tip-in basket just over seven minutes
into the contest. It gave Potapenko
13 points, just one off his previous
high with the Celtics.
.
Cleveland, in . a pack of teams
playing for the Eastern conference's
final playoff spot, fell to 18- 18.
" in a game that.was ·meaningful
for us, I didn't see what I wanted to, "
. Cleveland coach Mike Fratello said.
" It wasn't tbe kind of effort I was
looking for."
'The Celtics, though, appeared to

·Eastern softball club
flogs Wellston 11-0

Madden, Adkins
win at KVD opener

fr~m

.-Indians ...

· · Rays game yesterday (in Tampa) and
got a .call to go to the airport,"
Langston said. "I rushed home, got
my baseball stuff and was on a 7:50
flight. It felt good to come in and
contribut.e ."
Indians Starter Dave Burba
allowed two runs and seven hits with
five strikeouts in 6 113 innings.
Rosado gave up six hits, walked
two a~d struck out six.
.
Notes: Former Indians pitcher
and long•time broadcaster Herb
Score, seriously injured in a nearfatal car accident last October, threw
out the ceremonial first pitch. Ssore

said he received 'thousands of cards
and letters during his recovery. "If
not for the ·prayers of all those people, I wouldn't be here now," he said.
... Clevelalid went 5-10 in extrainning games last year.... Indians left
fielder David Justice remains day-today with a strained calf muscle.
.Justice was injured in .the season
opener.... Manny Ramirez is 12-for23 with five homers in his career vs.
Rosado . ... Rincon went on the Dl
with a swollen left elbow. An MRI
revealed no irregularities and Indians
GM John Hart said Rincon could be
throwing again in 5-to-7 days.

BostO n, which led 55-47 at the
half, saw its lead sliced to 55-50
before Mercer had a pair' of baskets
and Barros nailed a three-pointer to
pu sh it back to double digits.
Cleveland closed the gap to nine

used a 9-0 run to make it to 87-:79
before Mercer na1ied consec utive
jumpers 31 seconds apart. Baoos
then hit a driving shot and B os~n
coasted the rest of the way
;
•

Meigs softball Ctf1W Qutlasts
Southern rally, notch 8-3 win

'

•
•
•

•

8-3
in
Meigs scored four runs in the bot- Southern
Tri -Vall ey
Meigs is 8- 1 overa ll and 5- 1 in t)Je
tom of the six th inning \O pull away Conference softball action Monday TVC's Ohio Division. So uthern
from a 4-3 lead and go on to defeat evening at Meigs High School .
drops to 3-4 overall and 2-3 in the
Hocking Di vision.
:
Meigs' jumped out to a 4-0 lead· in ·
the secon d inning, Tangy Laudemiilt
singled and Tonya Miller duubl~d .
Abb y Hairis followed with a si ngi e.
A walk and a Southern error mad6 ir

a 4-0 gam.c.
•
That is they way the game stood
until the top of the &gt;txth inm ng. Kj m
Sayre doubled. One out Iute r. A:.l1l: ·
Dav is singled. · Two Me ig&gt; err rs
later and the purple and go ld had
pulled to within 4-3.
But Mei gs pulled away in the bottom of the innin g. Boyles and Vining
, had back-tu-back single&gt;. 'a lieldc1 ·s

(.;hoicc and three Southern

e rro r ~

plated the runs and gave Meigs an 83 'lead. which is the way lhc game
ended .
Laudermilt, whu p1ckcd up the

win on a four hiuer. strw.:k uut

SC'.~Cn

and walked two, Harris had a pair of
si ngles to lead Meigs. Mil le r added a
doubl e. Vining , La~d er milt and
Boyles each had singles.
Sayre. who picked up the loss,

scattered six hits, struck out fi ve and
walked two. Sayre al so led Southern
at t~e plate with a double and a si ngle . Kim !hie and Ashli Davis added
·
·
singles.
Inning totals
Southern ............... 000-003-0=3-4-3
TAKES PITCH- Southern's Kim lhle takes a pitch and holds her M ~igs .. :................. 040-004-x=8·6-4
Sayre (LP) and Dailey
swing back during Monday's TVC softball contest at Meigs High
Lauderrnilt (WP) and Harri s
School's field, Where the Marauders recorded an 8-3 victory.
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

weII ston ro II s by·.Eastern 18 0

In other action:
·
·Modified
Division:
Wayne
Adkins of Syracuse and his 1972 . .
.
Demon beat Bob Potter of South
Wellston scored 10 runs in the
Point and his 1979 Fairmont.
first
inning en route to an I &amp;-0 Tti Pure Street Division: Josh
Conference loss in Well ston
Valley
Stafford of Bridgeport, W Va. and hi s
Monday
night.
,
1989 Mustang defeated Earl Adkins
Wellston
(8-1)
pounded
o
ut II
of Eleanor, W.Va. and his 1984 S-10.
hits,
getting
eight
off
EHS
starter
Junior
Dragster Division:
Jeremy Fisher of Elkview, W. Va_ Eric Smith who went two and two
beat ~onina Clay of West Hamlin , thirds innings in suffering the loss .
Smith walked si• and fanned three.
W.Va.
.
.Q uick 16 Pro Divisien: Steve Eastern freshman Bradley Brannon
Howard of Lucasville , driving a came in and did a great job in relief,
1923 T-Aitered, beat Justin Hill of fanning two, walking none and giving up four unearned runs. Eastern
Racine and his 1990 Beretta.

.

.

.

•

(3-2) made siK errors on the night.
Winning pitcher Morgan Stevens
looked like a pro, holding Eastern
hitless until the fifth and last inning
when freshman pinch hitter Jon Will
broke the no-hit bid. An out later,
· sophomore pinch' hitter .Joey
Marcinko got Easterns second hit as
tlie starting lineup went hitless.
Wellston hitters were Morgan
Stevens 3-3, Chad .Bow man 2-2,
·triples by Nick )'risby and Nathan
Fenwick , and singles by Ervin , Brent

Ewing. Jake Everts, and Andy
Mercer. Wellsto~ walked six times
and had one hit batter. The impatient
Eagles walked onl y once.
Eastern hosts Trimble Tue sday 1n a
league make-up .
lnnin&amp; tl!ll!h
Eastern ........................ 000-00=0 2 6
Well ston ............. ( I0)40:4x = 18 ,11. 0
WP-S ie vens and Dunn
LP-Smith , Brannon (3 rd) and
Broderick

'

Hous1o11 ....

Baseball
I

' .¥;jl

I

~

Milwauk~ ..

I

..

Ch'ica,o ..

Ea.!iltrn Dh·lsion

Iwn

Boston

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

:II'

.............l

New York ..., .... ~ . . .............l
Toronto ............................ .4
Tampa Bay . ........... , ........ .l
dnllimore .,.. ......
· ...... .,l
Omtral

1'&lt;.J.

L

lill

I
I

. 8J~

)

.S7 1

4
4

.429

2' ;

..l,\3

'

. 8J~

l':

Vi"lsto~

ClEVElAND
..... ..... 6
...... .J
Knns tls City ..
Minnesoeu .. .. .................... .J
Chicago ...
... .... 2
Decroil ..'..
... 1

.................... 3

S1 Louis ..... ,. ............... ....... .3
CINCINNATI ....
.. ........ 3

AL standings

I . 8~7
4 .429
4 .429
4 JB
6 .143

J
.1

J\

....

.... ....

...... .. ... 2
.. ... 2

1 .lOO
J . .lOO

•• JJ]

.429
.286

l

Wetlern 0\visiGn
.......6 I
San FranCISCO
Los Angeles .... ..... ,................ l
l
Snn Diego ....... ...............
...... .l l
Colorado .... ....
Arizona ......... ................. ....... 2 l

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

.... •

'

.857
.7 14
.lOO
.286
.l86

I
I
1
2

\\'•stern Division
.. :. 4 J
Sennle .....
.. ......... _....... 4
J
Te ... ................................. J
4
Oakland .............................. 2 5

•

I

.t :
4

•

Monday's scores
New York 8. Aoridu I
CINCINNATI?, Chicago 2
Atlanta 8. Philodtlphia 6
Snn DiegO 8. Colorado .5 (11 )
Arizona 12. Los An~k! 6

I'

. 2~

2

Monday's scores

Wednesday's games
ClNCINNATI (Hami5ch 1·0) at O.icago (Lieber
1-0), 2:20p.m. ,
Milwaukee (AhOOII 0.1) at Montreal (Btnista 10). 7:0S p.m.
St. (..(luis (Mercker 1·0) at PiU!hWJh (Benson 10), 7:05p.m
Florida (Sanchez 0- I) at New Yort (Hersbiser 0-

Todoy's games

Chicago (Porque J .Q) nl Bo!IOn (Saberhngen 1·0),
1:05 p.m
Tampa Bay (Witt· J .Q) 111 Toronto (Hamilton Q. J),
1), 7:10p.m .
,
7:05p.m.
·
A!lanta (Millwood 0-1 ) at Philadelphia (Byrd 1Balli mole (Gulmnn 0-1) at New York {Mendota
1·0). N5 p.m.
·
· 0). 7:35p.m.
Texas (Morgan t-O) at Seallle (CioodeO.Q), 10:0.5
San Dieao {Spenm-0-1) at Calorado (BobiU\On I·
~~
.
0). 11:0.5 p.m.
Anaheim ( Spar~t 0.1) at Ollkland (Oqlli11 0.0),
Lo1 Angeleri (~'ern Q-IJ .11.1 Arizona '(Daal 0.0).
10:03 p:m.
10:05 p.m.
Hatuton (Lima 0.1) at San Frm::ilcu (Est~ 1.0).
IO:&lt;B p.m.
Wednesday's games
Minrxsota {Hawkins 0-1) at Odroit (Graterol 01), 7:05pm.
Kanstu City (8111btr 1·0) at CLEVELAND (Noay
I-0). 7:05 p.m. ·
Tampa Bay (Anojn ().I ) nt Toronto (Eacabar 1.0),

Bask etball

7:0S p.m.

·

·

Bahimort (Erickson o . I) .111 New York {Cone I·

0), 7 : 3~ p.m.
·
Anaheim (Ro~rs 0.1) at Oakland (A,nlcy 1·0),
10:05 p.m.
Te:IIAI (llurkt:U 0.1) m Sellttle (Henry J ·Ol. 10:35

p.m

, ,

NL standings
E.ttem OIYilion

~vori.

.

•. -~ ~ .~ .

Atlanta ................................ ....S
Philadelphia .........................,.4
Montn:ai ................................ J
Aorida .. ,................................. 2

3
4
4

s

Centr•l Division
Pitt tburgh ............................. 4 2

.625
.SOO
.429
286

lill
I

2

2'~:

1'1\

.667

:II' L f&lt;L

IwD

Utah .................................... 28
San Antonio .................... ... 2:'1
Houston .............................. 24
Minnesota ........ ..
.. 21
Dallus......
.. .. ...... II

Oen11er . .. ...

.. ...... .. II

Vuncouver ..

. ... 7

NBA standings

II .
17
11
22
23
26

Ctnl..-1 Dl•lMn
lndiana ..................................2S 13
A.!IMIO ,.................................22 16
Deii"Oil ................ ......... ,........ll 16

.658
.579
.579

Mllwliuktf ............ ,............... lO 16 .556

4

ClEVELAND ,................... .. IS
Toromo ........ .-....................., .. 18

.lOO
.500

6

18
18

~
~

6

~I

I~

IH
,.20

778
.69-'
649
:'\S}
~06

289
. IM

llll
.1
4':
8
17
IH .
22

.. .w 29 7
..... .'\6 26 16
. ]7 291J
. ·' I J8 10

-'·Toronlo .
. 11·8uffalo ..
·llostnn .
Montreal

SoulhusiDivision
y-Carollna .
...'J JO 16
.. 28J41 8
Flonda ........
Washington .... . .......... J J 4,, 6
Tampa Bny ... ,
...1 95.' 7

-·-

771'1

.641
500
.474

4'.

4:'\9

II '
12'·
2.'

20
21
·' '

4.'\2
U9

10
11'

· Monday 's scores

c~ntral niri~iull

ll: L 'I Ct&gt;. GI GA.

. . 42 J l 7
:......,4JZ 1.l
. l7 41l :!
.. 28 -H 7

V·Dcnon .
k· St Louts
Chicago ...
N ns b~Valle .

91 2.19 197

/

()6 Ill ~
r,,l I K~

• l .7 cu. inc 3.0 hp
• Inertia chain bntk~
• Ufcllm&lt; t(ltlltlon •

. NHL standings

wunnry

Transactions

EASTERN CONFER~CE

f&lt;H&gt;ttmll

162
Jij7

208 196
l9J 186
181 216

8aseb311
Ameti(an Leagu e
,
CLEVEL!\ND IN DIANS: Plact"d L HP R1d:}
Rincon on the 15·day drs:i"bll!'d hst Purd1aserJ th~
(.:Ont ract of I.HP Mark \.!I.B~swn from ll uftal o ol Jhe
lnrernauonal League
MINNESOTA TWI NS Ntimed JHn De11n \in"
presl dclll o ( sa le5 and Pmrrck Klmg~·r dr rcL·tur nl
markeungl
. .
1
OAKLAND ATHLETICS Recrll l~d RHP Kcvrn
Jarvi s from VancOU\('1 of dll! Pae~ lio: (t't~Sf Leuguc
Opti oned RHP Brad Rr gby to Vnncouver of rh.&gt; PCL
TORONTO BLUE JAYS · Actr \'31&lt;"d RIIJl Robert
Pel"lon from til&lt;" IS-day drsahled !r!lt. Dc ~rgn&lt;~t&lt;"d
RHP Eric Ludwick (or a.u rgnment

tf0ft85_._

Natiooul t-ooch;~U J..e;~ ~:ut·
CA HUL!N1\ l'AN I HI:RS Sr ):. rwll WH l't1trrd,
Jclf•·rs to a11 Otkr shet·t
CHIC1\GO BEARS S1gn&lt;!rJ IJ I P:u.llir:~ ~nl1uu'
tn a ontt )t'M contract
DENVER BR ONCOS Su:.ned DE Cnrl Re t'\ I!~
DETROI T LIONS S1 ~11CJ 0"! !J:m~ll Hwok! tu
a ! MHC:lr l'onHa.·t nnrJ WR l·reddte Scon Rc ·~ lj!Jied
OL Arld1e h•hn~on
INDIANAPOLIS COl.TS R('leased RR La mom
Wurren and \\'R A:~rnn Btulc'
PH ILADELPHI A EAGi.ES Ag~d to terms
llo'rth TE Jmrne As.l.e• ou a lluee·)&lt;t:"&lt;lr L"(Jntruct Srgned
DT Si l·v~ M;utrn and S T 1 Cu nmn gha n• r~ a n!ll'·
~~ar c(Jntract
.
,
.
rAMPA RAY BUCCANEERS Named Wr-ndc ll
An·rr oflcn.sm· il$~15\nrH Agr~d hi l~rnu "11h L B
left Gooch or1 a fnur·y.:;u CQntracr

National Lugue
ATLANTA BRAV ES: i\nnounct\1 that RHI'
Mark Wohl~rs h:u refused to ac-cepl nssixnment. to
Richinond of the ln!ermlttonal League.
FLORIDA MARLI NS: I'IDced. RH P Al e~
Fernandez on the 15-day dis'ablerJ li st.
.
NEW YORK MEl'S . Placed RHP Rick lotted on
tf'it. 15·dn)' d• sablt d list Placed C Mike Pi:m:a on tht
15·da)' duabled list re lroacliye 10 April f(). Rteallcd
LHP R1go Bcltr~n and OF Tftn nce Long froln
Norfolk of lhc lntcmatJonOJI Leagut

Basketball

1
V

CT2.0 Ttller/Cultlvator
• l hp lttunl5th engine
• ElectroniC ignition ·
• ttl"lW pal)l

Hockey

.

National HO(k(y L~agur
·f!"LO RIDA PANT HERS · Recalled D John
lakop11i and G Todd M ~·Do n nld fr om New Hr:wc,n of
the AHL. Re asstgned 0 Peter Ratrhuk and D Jeff
Ware to New Ha.. en.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS Rt'cnlled F D1M1tn.
NabokO\' from Lowell of the AHL
NEW YORK RANGERS· Agreed 10 tcr111s to.•ich
C M~ York and D K1m Johnsson

· LTHIJO
Lawn Tractor

~ -·'-

Atlantle Dtvltlon

~ I.
y·New Jersey ....... .. ~ ........44 24
:t.·PhiiAdelphio ................ .36 25
-'· Piltiburgh ........... ~ ........ 37 28
N.Y. Ranger' .. . ..........n J7
N.Y. blandtu ..
. ... 2.\ 47

lUm

I Ell. li£ 10&amp;

11
18
14
10
10

99
90
88
76
Sl'l

239
224
236
214
1~5

192
190
213
2B
239

NorthuJII.)hlslon

y-Ottaw;L. ... ................ .44 23 U 101 236 176

(8)Husqva

(304) 675-2828 '
..
--·--~

w-.husci¥trna.com

..

Tough Name. Tough Equlpment'M =~-=;·:~;':"~""~._~;~~iiii~ijiij

'

...

2.\1
197

Monday's scores

\I~

•

l 4'J

345 Chain Saw·-1I"

Health line
•

Wednesday's games

Tonight's games

Hockey

National Ba!iktlball AS~Iatton
NBA.- Suspc! nded Utah F Karl Mal one" for-Me
tBme and fi ned h1m !.4.000 for rhrow1 ng a punch m
a !lillY on Apn l II and At lauw G Ant hony Johnson
for one game and fined him s~ .ouo lor lhrowmg. !Ill
elbow m a ~a rne on Apnl II lllld fml"d A1lanft1 (
D1kem~ Mutombo S,7.SOO ror elbftwmp m a gall'll'
on Apr1l 'J
NEW JERSEY NETS S1gned I· Daqd Va~hn
to a 10-da} l·o mrac1
..
WASHI NGTON WIZ MtD' Plat·ed F Ju11 an
Howurd on lht" li1)Ured l1~1 ArUI.!Icd FTrnr~ Mu na~
frum lhl." 1n1ur~d h JI

Washmglon al C:volina. 7 p.m.
New Jersey :11 Butfalo. 7 p.m.
NY Islanders at Tororuo. 7.JO p m
Montre:li :n Florida, 7 ·JO p m
Nashvtlle a1 DetroH. 7.,\0 p.m
Phoenix at J.)all;l ~. 8 :.~0 p rn
Calgary lll Vanruu\"1:-.r 10 p m
St. Louis :•t Anaheim. IOJO p.m

2+J

Chicago 4, Washington 2
Florid:1 2. Ollawa 0
N.Y. lslan'dt.'r.l4. New Jer:ou:=y 2
N.Y. Rangers 2. Tampa Hay I
los Anseles 4. Nash vtlle J
Vancouver 2. Cnlgnry 0 - - Edmonton S. San Jose 4·0T

Wednesday's games

Aufialo at Phil adelphia. 7 ~JO p.m
M ontr~al at TE~mpa Bay. 7•05 p.m.

Hlll~l02

Northwest Di,·islon
AJ 26 10 96 2.\5 194
y-Co lomdo.
X· Edmonton ..... . ..... J [ J7 12 J.l. 212 22J
~8J9 1 2
68 199 226
Calgary
Vancouver
2J 46 12 :'1~ 18M 2:'1J

Toronlo a1 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
. New York at Washington, 7 p.nt.'
Allanla at 8011on, 7 p.m.
Oetroil at Charlooe. 7:30p.m.
Orlando at Indiana. 8 p.m.
VancouYer at Houaton. 8:30p.m.
Minneso1a at San A.nlonio. 8:30p.m.
Miami at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m. •
CLEVELAND at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
New Jersey at Denver. 9 p.m.
Phoenix at Seaule. 10 p.m. .

Pleasant Valley Hospital

-

226
169
175
::!02

M! 20-1 199
N 201 224 .
68 200 212
-15 t7 ~ 2!t2

l'acifi( Uivlsion
1.-Dallas .....:....
. . .. SO 17 12 11 2
x· Phoenix ...................~8 29 12 88
x-Anaheim..
.. . 3.~ .\2 12 82
,.,.san Jose ..... ,,,. ........ .\ 1 .f2 17 79
I..(Js A,ngel r::~ ................. J O 4-' S 65
x·dinched pl:ryoff berttl
y·clinchcd'dh·ision title
.z.clinched conft"rence title

Tonight's games
Washington at CLEVELAND. 7::W p m.
PhiiiJdelphla at New York, k\0 p.m.
Cbic~o 111 Mi001i, 7:,30 p.m.
L.A. Llker.s at Portl~nd . 8 p.m.
Atlanca 111 Milwaukee. 8:.l0 p.m.
San AntOI'IiO at Dallas. 8:.\0 p.m.
. N~w Jersey at L.A. Clippers. IO:.lO p.m.
U~ah a1 Sacramen1o. 10:30 p.m..

()~ 263
R8 200
87207 '
71 177

WESTERN CONFERENCE
fum

Bouon 103. CLEVELAND 89
Indiana 109, Toromo 99
Ch;ufone 92, Detroit 86
Houston 95, Mlnne1ota QO
San Anlonio 94, Phoenix 77
Utah 98, Vancouver SO
Golden State 104. OtrJVer%

llll

.686 · 2~
541
ih
.528 ·
II
.389
13
.378
ll~
.278
17

17
25
27

.... 2.5

Atblnlk DlviliOn
Miami ....... :......................... ..24
New York .........................:..20
Philadelphia ........... ............. .19
Washin&amp;ton ............ ............... l4
Boston ................... ,............. 14
New Jersey ........................... 10

J~

Scnllle .. ... .. ....................... Ill
Phoenix ............................... 18
Sotramenlo .......................... 17
Golden State ...................... 16
L.A. Clippers ................... ...5

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Iu.ll
~
~ " 1'&lt;.J.
Orlando ......... .,. .... ,...............28 10 .7.l7

8
J1

Padfic Ulvililon '
.. ...... 2M H

L.A. Lakcr1

1-0). 10:0~ p.m.

Minnesotll I, Detroit 0 ( 12)
CLEVELAND S, Kansas Cily 2 ( 10)
Anaheim I J, Texas 5
Toronto 7, Tampa Bay t...
Seaule 6, Oakland 3

-·-

8
14 ':

Midwest Division

Portland .....

Milwaukee (Woodard 0· 1) at Montreal (Vatquez
0·0). 7:05 p.m.
St. Lou1s (Bottenfield 1·0) at Pinsburgh
(Schourek 0-0). 7:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Valdes 1-0) Ill Arizona (Reynoso 00). 10:05 p.m.
Hounon (Hampton 0.1) at Sar1 Fm~cisco (Oniz

444
270

WESTERN CONFERENCE

2' :

l

.571
.571
.429

Cbarlotte .. .. ...
.. ......... 16 20
Chicago ............................10 27

1
'1

ToQight's games

Annhdm

(See INDIANS on Page 5)

'

four times, the last 71-62 o n Kemp 's
reverse layup midway into the third
quarter, but the Celtics closed the
quarter by scoring II of the final 17
poi nts.
In the final quarter. Cleveland

Scoreboard

"Jacobs Field magic," said Sandy
·
Alomar.
Before Wilson 's homer in the '
eighth off Scou Service, Kansas City
starter Jose Rosado had controlled
the 'Indians, who entered the game
batting .381 with 30 doubles, six
homers and 53 runs during their win ~
ning streak.
.
"Personally, I don't like the dramatics, " Fryman said. "I'd rather
win by 10 runs. "
. Roberto Alomar made his home
debut for the Indians, but missed a
chance to end the game in the ninth
when he grounded out witi) the bases
loaded and two outs . He went !-for·
4 with a walk.
·
· Still , it was a great day '.for the
Alomars and the Indians.
"It's like a dream come true for
us," Roberto said. "For us to put on
a Cleveland Indians uniCorn\ .. : I
feel real good about it."
Jerrnaine Dye homered for the
Royals, whO had their three-game !-'winning streak stopped.
,
W1th the Indians trailing 2,0 in
the eighth, Wilson, ·best known for
his mad dash around the basepaths to
score the winning run in Game 2 of
the AL championship series last
October at Yankee Stadium, fol- .
lo~ed a walk to Lofton by lining a 3-·
2 pttch over the wall in right.
"The play iri New York where l
~ored was the. most exciting play of
my career, but this . was exciting,
too, " he said ..
·
·
Lofton and Sandy Alomar had
combined on the defensive play of
the game. in the top of the eighth. Joe
Randa. tnpled and tried to score on
Johnny Damon 's fly to left, but
Lofton cut in front of left fielder Wil
Cordero and made a perfect throw to
Alomar, who ••pertly blocked the
plate to keep tbe score tied.
defense
definitely
' 'Their
changed the game," Damon said.
"Lofton made a great throw. Stuff ,
ljke that is what makes Cleveland a ·
~ood team." ·
J,.~ngston, recalled earlier in the
day when .Ricky Rincon went on the
15-day disabled list, pitched I 1/3 '
hitless innings. Langston, signed last
week to a minor-league contract. got
out of a jam in the seventh w.hen he
got the first batier he faced ~ Carlos
Beltran - to hii into an inning-ending double play.
"I went to the Red So•-Devil

.

'

have extra incentive after suffering
their worst loss of the year in .the previous game between the teams.
In the clubs ' last meeting on
March 23, the Cavaliers routed
Boston 113-86 in Cleveland.
" The main thing for us was the
way we lost the game in Cleveland,"
Potapenko said. " We played hotrible. It was ridic,ulous. It wasn ' t pers~nally -for. me playing against
. Cleveland that made me play hard. It
was because we had played so h.orrible before."
After Boston 's initial start,
Cleveland cut it to 37-27 early in the
second before Boston restored control with a 7-0 run.
" They had a lot more effort than
us, " Cleveland's. Andrew DeClercq
said. "They played really hard and
we didn ' t even show up."
The Celtics, who shot 52 percent,
.
.
'
.
.
.
raised their record to a league-best
'10-0 .when they score 100-plus
points.
"This , by far, was our best offensive
game of the season," Pitino said .
The Eastern Lady Eagles powered Eastern runs in the fifth frame . A run
''They're
all thinking passing before
to an 11-0 inter-divi sion win in the scoring single by Val Karr, three
They'
re all thinking, 'Let' s
a
shot.
Tri- Valley Conference Monday night walks, a Chasatie Hollon Slngle, and
give
my
teammate
a shot' ."
at Well son. Eastern is now 4-3 over- an RBI walk by Wolfe with the bases
Celtics
guard
Dana
Barros, startall.
loaded plated three more Eastern
for
the
second
cohsecutivc
game
ing
Eastern pounded out seve n hits, .rusn in the seventh to make the score
of
injured
point
guard
in
place
but walked II time s to put runners in 11-0.
scoring position .
Stephanie Evan s pitched the Kenny Anderson , played all 48 minEastern took a 1-0 lead in the first three-hit shut out, walking none in a ules, recording season-highs with 23
when Valerie Karr walked after the great effort to pick up the . win . · points and 13 assists. Antoine Walker
first two · batters struck o ut. Juli Robinette suffiered the loss for finished with 21 points.
Kemp paced Cleveland wHh 23
Bailey walked, then Angi · Wolfe ''-.Wellston, giving up seven hits and II
points
an4 II rebounds. Brcvin
reached on an error to force home the runs on seven orrors. Eastern walked
Knight
re-injured his left thumb
II times and had II strikeouts.
run.
in
the game, played with it
early
Wellston
hitters
were
Both clubs went down 1-2-3 in
taped
in
the
second and third quarFrisby .
and
the ·second, but Eastern struck for Higginbottom,
ters
,
but
did
not
play the fourth.
another run 1n the third when Kristen Cogenhour. Eastern hitters were
Chevalier walked and scored on an Chevalier and Wolfe with doubles,
error on Bailey's misplayed ball. Karr. Hollon, Bailey and Hayman
Eastern scored another single run in singles, and Davis a triple.
·the fourth when Becky Davis had a
Eastern hosts Trimble today.
lead-off triple and scored on two Innin&amp;llllllll
errors to make the score 3-0.
·
Eastern ................ 101-150·3=11· 7-0
In Saturday's Kanawha Valley
Walks, errors and two-run dou- Wellston ...............000-00000=0-3-7
Dragway
season-opening action ,
bles by both Kristen Chevalier and
WP-Evans and Karr
Jr. of Middleport used
Ken
Madden
Angi Wolfe pushed. across five
LP-Robin'ette and Huffman
his 1968 Camara to beat a 1978
Mu~tang driven by Harry Hobbs of
Ona,
W.Va. to win the Pro Division .
(Continued
Page 4)

~fjndians top Royals
·5-2 in 10 innings
By .TOM WI.THERS
CLEVELAND
(AP)
.. ' Fortunately, Travis Fryman remem\)ered to touch ·em all .on his gamewmnmg homer. Good thing, too ,
because for a while last week he had
forgotten some baseball' basics.
Fryman hil a three-run homer in
the lOth inning off rookie Jose
Santiago Monday as the Cleveland
Indians rallied to win their home
opener, i-2 over the Kansas City
. Roya ls.
Fryman's first homer of the seaso n gave the Indians their sixth
: "5traight victory, and just one week
i.nto the season, Cleveland already
leads the AL Central by three games.
:·. • " I was JUSt one of a lot of
heroes." said Fryman, who in con. secutive games last week lost track
of the number of outs m an inning.
There were heroes all over ' the
diamond for Cleveland.
Enrique Wilson , starting at short·
" stop for the injured Omar Vizquel,
. h1t a two- run homer to tie it 2-2 in the
eighth inning . Wilson's third career
homer and his first batting left-hand·
ed, came shortly after center fielder
...:~enny Lofton had ·prevented the
. ~oyals from taking a 3-0 lead by
~~rowing a. runner out at the plate.
:-:
Cleveland also got contributions
-;::,;JJom reliever Mark Langston, only
.;· liCtivated before the game, and Mark
' S~uey, who h.as been unhittable this
~ season.
i
··~~is. is a very, very special
' team, satd Shvey (1-0), whose split~ finger fastball was clocked at 92
.• mph. ·:Look' at how we play the
., game."
'I
The Indians have shown few
; . flaws so far this season. E.cept that
~ is, for Fryman.
'
:
Last week in Anaheim, Fryman,
' thinking there was just one when
., t~ere were two, fielcjed a grounder
and instead of throwing it to. first
; base for an easy putout, fired ·it home
\ to unsuspecting catcher Saqdy
( Alomat.. '
• · . "That freaked me out," A.lomar
~ {!lid. "After that, we were like, 'OK,
~ 'kavis, now there's one out. Now
• 'two.' And then he did it again!" .
• •· The Indians did it again on open·
..lig day, winning their home opener
·~·~ a three-run homer in the lOth
~:blning for the second straight year.
!· t}n April 10 last season, Jim Thome's
: .6bree-run shot off Anaheim·~ Troy
•l!ercival gave the Indians an 8-'5 win.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Celtics cruise to ·103-89 victory over Cleveland Cavaliers .

Meigs defeats Southern 23-12
.. Meigs outscored Southern 14-0 in
the final three in nings to erase~ 12-8
deficit and post a 23- 12 win over
Southern in a Tri-Valley Conference
slugfest at Meigs High School.
The two learns combined for 24
hits in .the six inning game that was
called after six innings due to· the
mercy rule, and five home runs,
Southern left the yard tHree times and
Meigs twice.
Southern ~ith tke loss drops to 44 over&amp;!! and 2-2 in the Hocking
Division. Meigs with the win is 5-4
overall and 5-1 in the Ohio Division.
Southern jumped out to a 2-0 lead
in the first inning. Adam Williams
singled to lead off the game and
came into score when Josh Ervin .hit
a home run over the left field fence.
Meigs, in the' .second inning, ·had
the first of three big innings by plateight runs. Adam Bullington sinlead off the inni
a

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~·

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.. - - ---~--

...

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~~&gt;By
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.~

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The Bend

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The Daily Sentinel
Page&amp;

'• ~-.

Tuesday, Aprll13, 1999

Tueeday, Aprll13, 1999

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Leukemia claims BoxCar Willie

Time Out- For Tips

)

When having workers in your home, check your ·locks for protection

Dear Ann Landers:
dt scovered that one bedroom wmmy husband and I did some extcn- dow was unl ocked. l am positive
stve remodelmg on our home . We one of the workers did 11. although l
know and trust the contractor, but don 't know if it was on purpose or by
so me of the work was sub-contract- acc ident.
When l related thi s to my neighed to strangers. These men were in
and out of our house ~ve ry day for bor, she told me a horrifymg story
about a fnend of hers. The woman
two months.
During thi s time, my husband had had been raped at gunpoi nt by a man
Jo go out of town overntght Ol) a wh o had crawled through a window
business tnp . Before I went to sleep he left unlocked when he was there
that evening, I double-checked my earlier to do some ex1ermination
wmdows , whtch I alway s keep work. She recognized htm , and he
locked because of my severe al ler- was later apprehended
Ann , I'm sure most workers are
gtes. Thank heavens l did, because l

reputable, but it doesn't hun to be , ago, my husband and I visited my in- . hospital to have the cuts treated, not
extra cauttous. Warn your readers to laws for ·Thanksgiving. They have a to mention removing the saliva that
check the locks on all wmdows and 300-pound St. Bernard'. I asked them was in his mouth and eyes.
aoors any time a stranger has been in to please put the dog in the yard
The doctors advised us never to
their home, whether it is a repair- while my 2-year-old son, "Tommy," let our son get near that dog again.
man , electrician , plumber or con-. was in their house. We would .o nly When I told my in-laws what the
be there for two hours, and it was a doctor had said, they insisted we
struction worker.
I wonder how many burglanes, nice 4ay.
were overreacting.
.
They assured me it was no probWe have not spoken to my inrapes or murders rematn unsolved '
because there ,was no s1gn of forced lem. The next thmg I knew, the dog laws since ·- and apparently, they
entry.
CAREFUL
IN was loose and pouncing on my son. don't care.
. I feel sorry for my husband
Although he wasn't bitten,
LOUISIANA
DEAR LOUISIANA: It pays •to Tommy was horribly frightened and because this is his family, but he
be careful. However, the vast major- had scratches all over hL&lt; face and insists it doesn't bother him. He is
still in touch with one brother, but
ity of repairinen, electricians, neck.
plumbers and constructton workers
My in-laws apologized and said, his other stbhngs won't speak to htm
are trustworthy. They could not hold "We are soiry, but the dog isn't used because of the situalion with his parthetr jobs if they were otherwtse. to children." When I asked why they ents. It is obvtou~ thai my m-laws
The lesson to be learned here is to hadn't kept the dog outside as they chose !heir dog over their son. For
check the locks on all doors and had' promised , they replied , "We my husband's sake, is there anything
windows routinely. whether work wanted to see how Tommy would I' can do to fix this? --PROTECTIVE
react when he saw a dog that large." IN THE CAROLINAS
has been done or not .
DEAR CAROLINAS: Encour· Dear Ann Landers: Two years
Our son had to be taken to the

age your husband to visit his parents
alone. As time goes by, you'll be
glad you dtd. The grandparents'
"curiosity" about how the child
would react to seein g such a large
dog suggests they may be bordenng
on senility.
Is alcohol rui~ing your life or the
life of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
How To Recognize It, How to Deal
With It, .How to Conquer It" can turn
things around . Send a ~e lf­
addressed, long, business-size envelope and a check or money orderfor
$3 .75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Alcohol, clo Ann Lan ders. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, Ill
606 11 -0562. (In Canada, send
$4.55.) to find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns,
vtsit the Creators Synd icate web
page at w.ww creators. com.

Meigs Local School District announces th·ird h.o nor roll posting
Honor roll s for schools in the Kimes.
Grade 2 - Willie Barcus, Chad
Metgs Local Dtstrict for the third
·
Bon
nett Cody Cook, Hailey Ebersnine-week ~radtn g penod have been
bach,
Jen nifer Fife, Laura Gheen,
announced.
Students maktng a grade of "B" Ntkki Lawson, Catlin Leslie, Courtor above in all their subj ects to be ney Mayes, Zach Sc hwab, Tess
li sted on the honor roll were as fo l- Thomas, Chassida Wills,· Caleb
Bevan, Tara Capehart, James
lows.
Grimm, Ntc!Oie Haley, Amber
Hockman , Ltan Hoffman, Chris
Bradbury Elementary
Grade 4 - Erinne Kennedy , all Kunes, Cara Lawless. Breanne PatAs; Valerie Carpenter, David Poole, lcrso n
Grade 3 - Josh Eakins, Katte
Chalste Manley, Ale&lt; Stsson, Tan15ha Thomas. and Mtchelle Weaver. Evans, Robert Foreman, Holley
Grade 5- Samantha Cole, Trey Geary, Chris Goode, Natasha ·
Ebersbach, Anna Hanenbach, Kayla Knapp. Trevor Ntchols, Katie PatterMcCarthy and Eric VanMeter, all son, Lesley Preece, Phillip Sisson,
As , Justin Bell. Ashley Cook, Fr.ank Stewart, Patty Vming. Justm
Michael Durst, Jamie Ellis, Ashley Arnold, Austin Dunfee, Cornelius
Engle, Bnttney Jacks, Cory Shea, Engltsh, Sara Hollen, Zach Konkle,
Bobby Stone, Autumn McLaughlin, Tyler Ltttle, Breanna Mitchell,
Tiffany Stmpson , Casey Smith,
and Meha Whan.
Lacey Stobart, Alexa Venoy.
Harrisonville Elementary
DH - Patricia Johnson, John
Lamb, Bryce Laudermilt, Ashley
Kindergarten - Austm Clarida. Smith.
Ashley Edwards, Morgan Howard,
B-riaunna King , Julia Lantz and Pomeroy Elementary
Tiffany Lee, all As; Leah Barley,
Kindergarten - Ale,x · Ackerman , Jordan Anderson, Zachary BarBilly McQuaid and Chad Stanley
Grade 1 - ian Bullington, to n, 'Trevor Casto. Hannah Cleek,
Becca Don o~ue , Alisha Stevenson Christina Colburn , MetSha Deiwert,
and Hatley Wtlltams, all As; Dawn Seleena Dowell, Bntta Flowers,
Bissell , Justin Cotterill, Alysha Ger- Nathantel Gilkey, Savannah Gralaugh, Cody Htll and Justin Savage
ham , Wade Harrison, Weston HickGrade 2 - Chns BIShop. Elsa man, Lee-Anna Hudson. Dame!
Gardner, Mason Mens, Neal Napier Jenkin s, Brandon Kmg , Angel Lemand Joannah Tindon ga n, all As ; ley, Billy McAdams, Mtchael
Travts Hicks, Chntun Kennedy, , Me Kenzie , Johnathan Michael,
.Bethany Lee, and Josh Price
Mclt nda . Mtller, Jeremiah Myers,
,
Grade 3 - Chelsey Noel. Bnt- Chelsea Patterson. Bo-Dara Powell,
tany Preas! and Daniel Runyon . all GatTett Riffle , Kasey Roush, AnthoAs; Just in Gtbbs , Doug He&lt;dman, ny Rowe, Hayl ey Spradling, Katelyn
Ntcole Htll , Carne Phelps, Kayleiic Stacy. Sara! Thomas, Cody Weaver,
Slater, and Hannah Williams.
Tyler Wtll . Chmtian Woods.
Grade I - Chelsey Arms, Kay Ia
. Grade 4 - Daniel Bookman and
Celeste Taylor. all As, Cory Dtll, Bachtel. Knstcn Ballard, Shannon
.llarah Lantz, Sean Phelps, and Barrett , Joy ce Billtngs, Ashley
·Joshua Wtlllams.
Carey, Ivy Conde, James Cunmng·
Grade 5 - Tra"s Burbndge, ham , Caleh Davis, Taylor Deem.
Rachael Gardner, Nathan Naptcr, Autumn DeMoss, Enn Dunn, Kns' Josh Slater. Josh Sptres and Wtlllam ten Ebhn. Corey Fmk, Quentez GarTayl 0r.
nes, Veronica Grimm, Stephanie
Special class - Shade Caldwell. Hudso n, Ryan Jeffers , Doug Jenkms, Patience Johnson, Adam LavenMiddleport
der, Ashley Laudermilt, Maxine LitKindergarten - Brandon Cre- tle ,. Jesst ca McAdams, James
means, Taylor Dowler, Colt Kerr, McDonald, Kitty Newell, Ariel Nitz,
Shannon McLaughlin, Ravvenna Shelby Ohlinger, Enn Patterson, CeReed, Jose WIHtelatch, Tylor Cun- Aira Powell, Rtchard Reuter, Jacob '
diff, Tyler Cundiff, Dan Stewart, Riffle, Jacob Sellers, Tyler Simpson,
B'randon Bachner, OoiVIa Bevan , Ryan VanMatre, Meri VanMeter:
Valerie Conde. Nikki Davis, Misty Coty Will.
Morri sion, Dustm Nash, Austin
Grade 2 - Lacee Arms, Ryan
Sayre, Chandra Stanley, Tanner Browning, Dee Cundiff, Henry
Tackett, Chadcn Casto, Josh Fetty, Doerfer,
Lucreshta
Howard,
Michelle
Johnson.
Jonathan Jonathan Howell, Sarah Hubbard, ·
McCarthy, and Ryan Payne.
Jess ica Jewell , Whitney Johnson,
. Grade I -Andrew Blaneknship, J aela Kirby, Thomas Klein, Ricky
Kritine Davts, Megan Dunfee, Jacob Lauderrnilt, Savannah Miller, Aaron
Dunn. Amanda Goode, Megan Hal - Oliphant, Alex Patterson , Enn
ley, Cynthta Kauff, Trimly Kimes, Perkins, Alisha, Quillen, Calee
J:iKe Lynch: Jennifer Payne, Ml!nn - . Reeves, Bradley Robmson, Bridda Rt ggs, Jess ica Shetlon. Cayla gettc Russel l, Kelsey Sauters, Jaimie
Taylor, Kastle . Balser, Charity Simpson, Devan Soulsby, Josi Van- ·
Barthelmas,
Oliva
Carpener, Meter
Autumn Ebersbach, Kayla Graham,
Grade 3 - Samantha Ackerman,
Tara Jewell , Heather Kuhn, Cody Michael Ball. Joshua Carauthers,
•Smith, Shanalle Smtih, Tncia Smith, Kelsey Fi(e, Chelsea Hicks, Bradley
Bubby Wills, Kelsey Wilson, Justm Jones. Lindsay McKmney, Gregory

Musser, Cassandra Patterson, Joseph
Grade 3 - Joshua Burnem,
Rosier, Amorette Salser Molly Corinna Cross, Seth Johnson.
Smtih, Kaylyn Spradling , Steven
Grade 4 - Ryan Barnett, Cain
Stewart, Caitlyn l)lomas. ·
McKinney, Samantha Shontz, James
Grade 4 - Ashley Browning, Wallace.
Meghan Clelland, Randy Collins,
Grade S - Zachary Weber, all
Cecilia Core, Mark Cozart, Ashley A's.
DeMoss, Jimmy~ Diamond, E~an
Dunn, Rene Edmonds, Heather Salisbury
Elam, Kayla Grover, Courtney
Kindergarten - Alaine Arnold,
Haggy, Scott Musser, Casey Heath Dettwiller, Rachel Eakms,
Richardson, Britnee Satiters, Jerod William Folmer, Kayla Green,
Wyatt, Christeena Young, Ashley Miranda Grueser, Kelsey Howell,
Ntcholas Ingels, Dame lie Kmg, VtcZielinski.
Grade S - Wes Ault, Bryce toria Lawson, Dustyn Lee, Marissa
Davis, Westo'n Fife, Cody Hysell, McAngus,
Mary
Scarbrough,
Nathan Jeffers, lilian Jenkins, Jake Stephanie Smith, Connor Swartz,
Kennedy, Josh Kennedy, Letha Lau- Kelsey Shuler.
Grade 1 - Kelsey Burton·,
dermilt, Mike McDonald,. Jordan
Shank·, Joel Swann, Whitney ' Darby Gilmore, Alyss Green, Breana Hemsley, Scott Kennedy, Amber
Thoene, Jake Venoy, Josh Venoy.
. LD: -Amanda Wittig ..
Ohlinger, Bryant Russell, Amber
•MH -Gene Buckley, Kim Tnpp, Megan Tripp, Cassie Smith,
Deaver, Megan Johnson, Katie Kib- Gabriel Willliams.
ble.
Grade 2 - Lyndsey Casey,
Crockett Crow, Ruche! Davis, l T.
Rutland Elementary
Evans, Adam Fairchild, Amanda
Kindergarten - Shellle Bailey, Gtlkey, J.R. Greene, Brandon HanCameron• Bolin, Gretchen Cleland, nmg , Morgan Kennedy, Andrew
Adam Elliott, Michelle Haley, Whit- 0 ' Bryant, , Demetria Pearson, Jesney Hicks, Aaron Maxson, Tyson samyn Reynolds, Caitlin Swartz,
Morris, Justin Nitz, Braden Prater, . Kerri VanReeth.
Kay Ia Salser, Car lee Smith, ·Colton
Grade 3 - Amy Barr, Rebecca
Stewart, all A's; Austin Adkins, Brit- Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk
tany Black, Suretta Cade, Jennifer Legar.
Farley, Branden Hankla, Amanda
Grade 4 - Clayton Blackston,
Meadows, Ashley Woodard..
Shauna Clark, Raven Etheridge,
Grade 1 - · Mtckt Barnes, Dusty Andrew Falfchild. Andy Garnes,
Eads, Corey Elllptt, Hannah Elltott, Andy McAngus, Bradley Ramsburg,
Ben Hood, Brad Hood, Tanner Oru Reed, Jenntfer Smith.
Hysell, Pam Kessinger. Samuel
Grade 5 - Derek Brickles,
McCall, Maggie Satterfield, all· A's ; Travis Butcher, Chris Fields, Brooke
Chclsey Elliott, Joey Ellis, Allison O' Bryant, Becky Rader, and Chris
Engle, Joey Morgan, Dakota Oliver, VanReeth.
Adam Robinson .
Meigs Middle School
Grade 2 - Wyatt Ball, Adnan
Grade 6 -Grant Arnold, Sheena
Bolin, Clayton Bolin. Bran son CleAsh. Renee Bailey, Jeffrey Baughland. Justin George, Lilly Jacks, man , Ashley Baylor, Eric Burnem ,
Morgan Lentes, Mana Meadows,
Bruce Allen Caldwell, Miranda CasJason Morris, Eugene Pancrson, all
teel, Trevor Depoy, Rosanna Dillard,
A's ; Joseph Satterfield, Briana
Jodi Donohue, Patnck Dowell, JusWilli s.
line Dowler, Peggy Duff, Walter
Grade 3 - Jake Barnes, Taltsha
Ellis, Eddie Fife, William Frazter,
Beha, Emily Davts, Kon Pnddy, all
William Garnes, LISa Gheen, Ashely
,A's; Katie Doczi Bethany Gibbs,
Grahamn, Brandon Grover, Randy
Cassady Wtllford
Hart. Amanda King, MadiSon King,
Grade 4 Ketlah Jacks, Matthew Krawsczyn, Cassie Lee,
Bethany King, Joshua Taylor, all
Ashley Litchfield, Megan Mayes,
A's, Cayla Lee, Amanda Miller,
Came Michael, Margunette MoldTimmy Sptres.
en, Michelle Neece, Joshua NeutGrade S- Miranda Beha, Cartzling, Carl Noel, Jake Older, Christita Gardner, Tyson George_, Sarah
na Pauley, Samantha Pierce, Katie
Dawn Jenkins, Scott Tobin.
Reed, Melissa Richmond, Anna
DH/LD primary Merissa
Sayre, Adam Snowden, Courtni
Snyder.
Vanmeter, Robert Curtis Varian,
DWLD intermediate - Nikki
Brooke Venoy, Cassie Watson, Ross
Parsons
&gt;Yell, Lindsey White, Chester Wigal,
Sarah Wilkes, Natasha Wise, lenniSalem Center
anne Young, Walid Zahran.
Kindergarten - Justm Brown,
Grade 7 -Jessica Anderson,
Samantha Goble, Chelsea Stiftler, all Curtis Arnold, Ty Ault, Jeremy_
A's; TJ Quillen, Jade Wallace.
Banks, Tyler Barnes, Donald BarGrade 1 - Jordan Duncan, Brittany Frazier, Josh Glover, all A's;
Davtd Grim, Anmsha Kopec , Shane
Rose.
Grade 2 - April Oiler, all A's;
Michael Bailey, Rebecca. Canterbury, Samantha · McDonald, Stacy
Macomber, John Wilcox.

.'

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hour, and was even briefly broadca jt
for 90 mtnutes It was also the first ·
daylime drama wtth spinoff series,
th~ short-lived "Somerset" and
"Texas."
"The Tonight Show" is the only
NBC entertainment show to he on
tlie alf longer than " Another
World," which will end with a final
broadcast on June 25. CBS's "Guiding Ltght," on the air since ,1952, is
the longest-running serial.
"I thank all the people working
on 'Another World' for an incredible
job at giving their audience an
amazing 35-year run . It was a very
tough decision," said Scott Sassa,
NBC entertainment president.
" Another World" Was hurt by the
increasing desire of networks to own
and control the profits of the shows
they air. "Another World" is owned
by Procter &amp; Gamble," and the new
"Passions" will be owned by NBC.
The network also has a partial stake

.

,,

GREY JOSEPH McBRIDE
SON BORN • Mr. and Mrs.
Michael McBride of Reedsville
announce the birth of a son,
Gorey Joseph, born Feb. 27.
He Is the grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph McBride of
Zanesville and Mr. and Mrs. Don·
aid Bartelmay of Aiken, S.C.

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

. DIAL
992-7834

NEW YORK (AP) - ·Journalists
whose work shed light on financial
crises in Asta and Russta, President
Clinton's impeachment and voter
fraud tn Miami were among the winners of the 1999 Pulitzer Prizes.
Also receiving the prestigious
honor Monday were .authors of
books on Earth's geology, New York
City history and aviator Charles
Lindbergh.
The Associated Press swept both
photo' categones - something no
other news organization has done for tbe second time. Other double
winners were The New York T1mes
and The Wall Street Journal.
In all, the Montc.a Lewinsky
scandal mspired three pnze-winning
entries.
In Portland, Ore., staffers of The
Oregonian washed down McDonald's french fries with champagne to
celebrate an award for explanatory
reponing. Richard Read's series fol lowed a load of frozen fries from
'their ongin m a fteld in the Northwest to a McDonald's in Indonesia,
chrontclmg along the way the caus, es and effects of Asia's economic
woes.
The Ttmes staff, notably Jeff
Gerth, won' the national reporting
prize for a series on the sale of U.S.
technology to China despite security
risks. And )Vashington-based
colummst Maureen Dowd won comme~tary for her acerbic work on the
Clinton-Lewinsky,_affair.

''I'm just so grateful to President
Clinton that he nev~r spoke the
words, 'Young lady, pull down that
jacket and get back to the typing
pool,'" quipped Ms. Dowd, · who
once wrote of Clinton's behavior,
"these are not grounds for impeachment. These are grounds for
divorce."
.
.
Detroit-based Journal staffer
Angelo Henderson won- th~ Pulitzer
for feature writing for a piece about
a· druggist · driven to violence by
repeated holdups.
The AP won spot news photography with a portfolio of pictures on
the embassy bombing• in Kenya and
Tanzania, and the feature photography prize for a "striking collection"
of pictures of key figures and events
in Prestdent Clinton's affair wnh
Ms. Lewinsky and the impeachment
criSIS .
The tmpeachment provided
ample material for another winner:
the Seattle Post-lntelligencer's
David Horsey, who won for editorial cartooning -One cartoon, " Beltway Apocalypse, " shows " Mount
Montca" erupting in a chaotic capitol. Another had Clinton asking his
beleaguered wife and daughter if it
would pe helpful for him to say he
could feel their pam
The public service prize went to
The Washington Post for a series on
reckless gunplay by poorly trained
police that ~howed that officers in
the nation 's capital had shot and

killed more people per captta in the
1990s than any other large American
police force.
The Hartford Courant won the
breaking news category for staff
coverage of the murder of four state
lottery officials by a disturbed worker who then committed suicide.
The Miami Herald won for investigative reporting for exposing voter
fraud in a mayoral election that was
later overturned.
The New York Daily News won
for editorial writing on financial
mismanagement of Harlem's landmark Apollo Theatre .
Duke Ellington, who would hav e
turned I 00 th1s year. received a special posthumous citation for hi s
"musical gemus, whtch evoked aesthettcally the pnnciples of' democracy thr&lt;.mgh the medtum of jazz. "
For "Lmdbergh," winner of the
biography prize, author A Scott
Berg gained access.to some 2,000
boxes of personal papers and had
unprecedented access to the controversial avtation ptonecr's family and
fnends, accordmg to publi shers '
notes
"Thts ts the most exctllng day
since Anne Morrow gave me permissioQ to write the book,'' Berg,
49, satd m Los Angeles. The author
of two other biographies said he
spent a year trying to persuade Lindbergh's wtdow to agree to the project, and nine years writing it.

BY BECKY BAER
.
Meigs County Extension Agent
Fam!IY and Conaumer Sciences/Commu·
nlty Development

Btrth order is one way tv gatn an understanding of friends , family members and C&lt;?- workers. Some researchers believe how you are placed in your ,
famil y can have an influence on personality trails.
According to Lone Sutter. former ExtensiOn Agent m Putnam County,
other factors must al so be considered . These mclude genetics and the environment in which you were1raised.
.
There are no magical formulas to help us understand our fnends and fam ily. However birth order research may offer "clues" al:lbut why people tend
to be the way they are. Through yo ur positiOn m the family (birth order) you
deve lop your behavior pa!Lern . way of thinking and emotional response .
Your birth order helps determine your expectattons. your strategies for deal ing with people and your weaknesses.
Understandmg btrth order may give some insight mto a better understanding of yourself and others. Birth order placement may help you know
what to expect of others, what to avotd and how to ,get the responses yo u
want. This can be an advantage in parenting, teaching , sales and other occupations
Psychol ogiSts who have stud ted the tmpact ol birth order on personality
have found that first-borns tend to be highl y moti vated to achieve Of the
firsl twenty-three astronauts sent into outer space, twenty-one were firstborns or only chtldren.
In school, fir st- borns tend to work harder for grades than do later-barns.
They often grow to be more competitive, and to have higher educational and
career· aspirations. Any hsting of prmntncnt people. famous scholars. and
even presidents of the United Stale contatns a htgh percentage of first -borns.
Their characteristics tnclude being goal setiers, high achtevers, perfection.ists, responsible. orgamzed, rule keepers, deterrmned and very detailed .
Only children are considered as a spectal type of first-born~ They are
generally characterized much the same as first-borns who have si blings.
A gOod descnption of middle children IS that they are balanced. Mtddle
children are good mediators and have superior cooperation skills They don ' t
have the1r parents all to themselves or gei thetr own way. Therefore, they
learn to negotiate and compromise. Mtddle children often make excellent
managers and leaders because of these skil ls. Traits of the mtddle-born child&lt;en consist of bemg nextble, diplomatiC, generous, social, competittve and
peacemakers
Youngest chtldren '" the famt ly are typtcally outgomg and great at moti vating other people. They are ·also affectionate, uncomplicated and some times a little absent-minded. Studies show that babies of the famil y gravitate
toward vocatiOns that are people-oriented Good sales people are often lastbarns. They also may have the qualities of being creattve, humorous, nsk
takers, tdea people and the. type to questwn authonty.
Btrth order isn't a stmpli,stic 1-2-3 system that says all firstborns are
equally one way, all second children are another and last-born ktds are
always JUSt like this or that. These are tendenc tes and general characteristi cs
that often apply. There are dynamics within families that can change relationshtps or affect the mdtvtdual family situation . These variables include
spacing (the number of years between children), the sex of the child, physical differences, dtSabtlittes, the btrth order posit ton of parents, any blending
of two or more families due to' death or dtvorce and the relationship between
parents
Whether ratsmg your chi ldren or workmg with adults, the key IS to
remember everyone IS an mdtvidual . Birth order is merely another attempt
to gain insight into the complex behavior of human bemgs.

More companies teach workers basic skills, more workers lack them
NEW YORK (AP) - More and
more U.S compani es are tcachmg
workers thetr ABCs and 123s on the
job, according,to a new study by the
A10erican Management ·Assoc iatiOn.
Faced ;.llh a tight labor market
and a need for better-sktlled appli cants. companies are offering remedial lessons to workers who lack
baste math and readtng skills.
"It 's not as'easy to walk int o a
Kmart. Sears or Burger King and
get a JOb now, constdenng the htgher level of ski lls needed ro deal wnh
inventory or computers, " satd Enc
Rolfe Greenberg. dtrector of man agement studtcs at the New Yorkbased nonprofit man agement-education group.
.
.
The organization's January survey of 1,054 member compames.

released Monday, found that nearly
15 percent of compantes offer basic
skills programs, about the same as a
year ago But 9 percent hire appli cant s who lack basic skills and enter
them tn remedtal traming programs.
up fr~ 5_percent two years ago.

· Anybody caught
stealing from any of
the cemeteries In
Letart Township will
be prosecuted to the
full extent of this
Law. The Board of
TrustHs

Holzer·Clinic .,Chiropractic a~d Sports Injury Specialis~

Dr. Melly Ro•ll

Holzer Clinic ••• Keeping the Prorn.Ue!

CONGRATULATES

iri " Sunset Beach."
NBC also said it wanted to air
" Days of Our Ltves" and "Pas:
sions " back-to-back on its schedule.
Currently, NBC affiliates choose
wlten they want to air "Another
World."
·
The executive editor of "Soap
Opera Digest" said she was surprised by the decision.
While "Sunset Beach " is promis-'
ing, "I don't thtnk vtewers have as
much an attachment to it as the
viewers for 'Another World,"' Carolyn Hinsey said. "Soap fans, the
reason they watch soaps is because
they hate change." .
·Applegate's new show, "Later
Today," will. air directly after the
"Today" show. It will replace
"Leeza" starting in September.
NBC is canceling its " NBC::
News at Sunrise" series and giving
its affiliates the chance to program
IQCal news frOlJI 5 a.m. to 7 a:f·.

Press in 1997. " I said, 'There's
Willie in a boxcar,' and that 's
where tt came from .·~
He was devoted to singing and
promotmg old-fashioned country
music, including the sorrowful
train songs for which he 'was best
known. He never had a hit single,
but hi s albums sold well and he
built a loyal following thai made
him one of the most popular performers in Branson, where he
operated a motel and tram museum as well as his theater.
W)lile Roy Clark became the
first nationally known entertamer
to put his name on a Branson theater in 1983, BoxCar Willie, who
Jlrrtved three years later. hked to
boast that he was the first big
name to live and work there yearround .
He counseled newly arrived
performers on what worked and
what didn ' t in a conservative,
heartland town visited by millions
of tounsts each ·year. He fumed
from lime to lime about performers who left Branson, saying it
wouldn '.t last.
' "There's been about 30. 35
artists th at came into this town and
then left smce I've been here," he
said in 1996. "They don 't pay
their taxes here , they don't vote
he&lt;e. Doggone tt, 11 JUSt kind of
bothers me, So when somebody
says they 're leaving, I don't get all
teary-eyed and panicky."
The mayor has ordered nags
throughout this tounst -town of
3,700 flown at half-staff until the
funeral, wl\ich Ms. Chtlds said
would be Saturday or Sund'ay.

Impeachment, financial crises provide
fodder for Pulitzer Prize winners

TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS

·NBC cancels 'Another World,' revamps daytime schedule
AP Television Writer
. NE\V Y~K (AP) - "Anothe,
· World," the longest-running soap
· opera '" NBC hi story, will end the
·drama come June. The network is
· killing 11 off at age 35.
It was the most dramatic of several changes NBC announced to its
: morning and daytime schedule on
J\1onday. The network is adding a
daytime talk show with "Weekend,.
'Today" anchor Jodi Applegate as
·· host and a 4:30 a.m. EDT business
· ~ews show for early risers.
' "Another World". will be
' replaced by "Passions," a serial created by the former ·head writer of
" Days of Our Lives," which ts
" re)naining on NBC's schedule. NBC
is · also renewing its two-year-old
, s,aap, "Sunset Beach."
· ·· NBC's daytime schedule has
·;-m:Juded "Another World " since us
·' premiere on May 4, 1964. It was the
first soap opefll expanded to one

nett, lodi Barrett, Jessica Blaettnar, Boggs. Jessica Gray, Gregory Ki.ng.
David Boyd, Jaclyn Page Bradbury, Mtndy O' Dell, Misty Puckeu ,.Knsty
Nathan Bnckles, Alisia Burton, .Puckett, Amber Roush, Leslie RunyNicole Butcher, Kerbi Buzzard, on, Amber Snowden.
Grade tO - Cara Ash, Whitney
Kenneth Carsey, Candace Casey,
Jarme Chapman, Kathryn Cillds, · Ashley, Nicole Blumenauer, Derrick
Michael Clark, Benjamin Collins, Bolin, Kendra Cleland, Andrew
James Cremeans, Jessica Curfman, Davis, Tiffany Day, Chris Dodson,
Jaynee Davis, Meagan Dodson. Jen- Sarah Houser, Derek Johnson. Aaron
nifer Dunn, Lesle Edwards, Andrea Krauuer, Andrea Krawsczyn, Carrie
Fetty, Tyler French, Jesse Gates, Ltghtfoot, Harley McDonald, BeatBruce Glover, Ashley Halley, Nic- nee Morgan, Christopher Pickens,
hole Harper, Darin Hom, Jessica Shannon Price, Jeffrey Shank,
Howell, Randall Hudson, Michele Brooke Smith, Brandt Smith, April
Imboden, Aubrie Kopec, ·Jonathan Stitt, Ian Story.
Larkins, Sarah Lee, Aira Little, CarGrade II - Amanda Appel,
rie Marshall, Christina Miller, Bobbi Meghan Avis, Tiffany Bar.nes, Steve
Napper, Ashley Payne, Erica Poole, Beha, Lisa Bias, Guy Bmg, Matthew
Brittany Powers, Amanda Priddy, Bissell, Bethany Boyles, Stacey
Ray Ratcliff, Joshua Ray, Jessica Brewer, Jacquelyn Buck, Beverly
Rosier, Xantha Smith, Robert Burdette. Ashley Burton, Andy
Stelhan Stamper, Miranda Stewart, Doczi, Sara Fife, Stacy Gilmore.
Ryan Stobart, Sarah Stoban, Clay Marjorie Halar, Meltssa Hart, Amy
Stone, Abranda Storms, Kevin .Tan- Hysell, Michelle Kennedy, Shannon
ner, Brandt Thomas, Sue Ann Wat- Michael, Jenntfer Nease, Laura
son, Holley Williams, Bryan Wilson, Payne, Amber Perkins, Chrtsty
Angela Wilson.
Phalln, Seth Rawson, Jennifer
Grade 8 - Bridgeu Atkins, Shain, Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah
Deadra Barnett, Marcus Barr, Brook Smith, Chris Snouffer, Julie Spaun,
Bolin, Lindsay Bolin, Benjamen James Stanley, Wesley Thoene,
Bookman, Troy Brooks, Wesley Amanda tJpt6n , Adam Walker,
Call, Jassiline Carter, Melinda Brooke Wtlliams.
Chancey, Ashley Colwell, Loretta
Grade 12 Lacy Banks,
Darst, Carrie Darst, Kayle Davis, Chandy Barnell, Keith Barrett,
Peter Ditty, Maria Drenner, Michelle Cinda Bratton, Kristm Brown , Tracy
Drenner, Ashley Eblin, Juley Eblin, Coffey, Rebecca Collins ; Melissa
Amanda Fetty, Candice Fetty, Jen- Darnell, John Da vidson, Tricia
mfer Foreman, Jacqueline Frechette, Davis, Stoney Day, Ryan Dill ,
Robyn Freeman, Zachary Gilkey, Megan [irummer, Jessica Evans,
Jon 1-lalar, Meghan Haynes, Heat~er Jason Harris, Chasity Hess, Justm
Hysell, Crystal Jacks, Christopher Jeffers, Robert Johnson, Erick John Jacobs, Katie Jeffers, Kelly Johnson, son, Rebecca Johnson , Matthew JusJessica Justice, Mallory King, tice, Knstina ,Kennedy, Jennifer
Amanda Langdon, Danny Morgan, Lambert, Sarah Larkins, Kelli LightRachel . Morris, Mathew O' Brien, foot, Dwayne Madison, Tara Norlle~e Pflueger, Jesstca Preast. Ryan
man. Tamra 0' Dell , Alyson PauerQualls, Brandon Ramsburg, Jason son , Stefani Pickens, Macie Pierce,
RosleF, Jeremy Roush, .Mtchaelle Jodie Pooler, Ryan Ra'1'sburg. JostRunyon , Jonathan Sears, James ah Rawson, Rachel Reeves, Nikkt
Smith, Emily Story, Stephanie Roberts, Franco Romuno , Tiffany
Story-Schwab, Samantha Tilley, Savage, Jason Scars, Davtd Shuler,
Jennifer Walker, Andy White, Eliza- Rebekah Smith, B.J. Smith, Adam
beth Wilfong, Allison Williamson, Sorrell, Brandy Stanley, Allison
Hannah Woolard, Jenntfer Zielinski. Streetman, Ltsa Taylor, Clayton
Tromm, Bridget Vaughan , Kasey
Meigs High School
Willtam s, Rebecca Wolfe, Shan
Grade 9 - Donald Bing, Marie Wright, Jonathan Wyau.

By JOHN ROGERS
Associated Press Writer
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) - He
adopted a hobo persona and won a ·
national following as he sang of
life on the road. But BoxCar
Willie found a home in· Branson ,
where he died after a long battle
wtth leukemia.
The 67"year-old singer died
Monday evening, surrounded by
his wtfe, two daughters, two sisters and close friends , said Chisai
Childs, a family spokeswoman
and friend of 31 years.
BoxCar Willie wa.~ diagnosed
with leukemta three years ago.
After a brief remission, the disease returned last year.
Family friend Dick Ringler,
who was with the entertainer
when he died, said BoxCar Willie
knew he was losi ng the batt,le
since being hospitalized for two
BoxCar Willie
weeks m February, but never men tioned 11.
said, as well as $40,000 a year for there. logging some 10,000 hours
"He told me bow tired he was, police programs to fight crime and as a flier
and I nad to help him get out of hiS drugs .
After rettring from the serv1ce
chair, which embarrassed him ,"
".BoxCar Wtijle is a friend to he returned to performing, and by
Ringler said.
many of us and ·a good citizen of · the 1970s had developed the
Unttl his health began to fail, Branson," Mayor Lou Schaefer singmg hobo persona, complete
he had performed as many as six satd , breaking down as he with overalls, a battered old hat,
shows a week at the BoxCar announced the entertainer's death worn suit jacket and two days
Wtllie Theatre in this Ozark . dunng a Board of Alderma~ meet- growth of beard.
mountain town that is home to ing.
He said he took the BoxCar
dozens of music theaters and
·Born Lecil Martin in Sterrett, Willie look and name after seeing
scores of performers.
· Texas, m 1931, BoxCar Willie a freight train pass him by one day
But he was more than one of was the son of a railroad man who in' Lincoln, Neb., as he was stuck
Branson's most famqus perform- used to play his fiddle on the in traffic.
ers. He was al~o one of its most porch while his sun played gut tar.
"And there was an old buy si tbeloved. As a member of the
By his teens he was performing ting on a boxcar, dressed the way
Taney County Child Welfare in jamborees all over the state, but I,dress today, and he looked just
Board he raised thousands of dol- gave up show business to enlist in like a buddy of mine named Willie
lars fpr needy children, Ms. Chtlds the Air Force. He spent 22 years Wilson, " he told The Associated

Pat Hill and Mike Balch

REV. HOWARD RICKEY

for their outstanding sales
performance in March.
Hill and Balch
aa~n eonoultllnt have shown exceptional personal
_effort and professionalism in their automotive·
careers. This commitment is appreciated by their
many loyal customers and the Turnpike family.

URNPIKE
446·9100

MINISTER TO PREACH
Thlt Rev. Howard Rickey, an
ev'angall1t In the Church •of
the Nazarene, will be at tha
Syracuse Nazarene Church
for special services, April 21.·
25, 7 p.m. each evening,
except Sunday when aervlcaa
will ba at 10:45 a.m. and 6
p.m.
The mlnJatar has paatored
churches In Norwich, Conn.,
Uxbridge,
Man,
Detroit,
Xenia, and Oklahoma. He Is a
graduate. of Eaatern Nuarel)e
Collage.
He hal mlnlstarad In youth
cruaedBI,· camp meetlnga,
revivals, and •oul·wlnlog
tr.Inlng cl81eas.
Spacial mualc for the •er·
vlcaa w!ll ba preaanted by the
Syracuae Nazarene Choir,
Dabble Powell, Jody Sue Alta,
~andy Parsona, Jan Laven·
dar, Bt;ld the Proclaim trio.

is now available at
Holzer Meigs Clinic
on Fridays from
)I
8:00AM to 4:00 PM.

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.Page

8 • The. Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, ·A!H'II13;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

T uesday,

1999

Aprll13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oblo

WE!.,LINOTON . New Zealand (AP) - Xena 's going to be a
mommy, again .
Lucy Lawless, star of hit show " Xena ~ Warrior Princess.~' is
pre_g nant, she and husband Rob Tapert announced Tuesday. The
baby is due in October.
The latest series begins. shooting in Auckland next week. Pro·
duction is not expected to be affected by the pregnancy.
Lawless, 31, and Tapert, executive producer of the syndicated
action show. married just. over a year ago. She has a I 0-ycar-o ld
daughter from a previous marriage
·
LOS ANGELES. (AP) - The National EnquJrer said it wi ll
donaJe some of the $500.000 it won in a
legal battle wi th Elizabeth Taylor to AIDS

chariti es, whil:h are aino ng her favorite
"'

causes
"We have nothing bu t respec t for Eli zabeth Tay lor·and her tireless work for chari ties,'' National Enq uirer edtlor Steve Coz
said. "We arc happy to donate some of this
money to hc•·favonte cause."
Among the donat ions is a $50,000 sum
"---"' to be split between the Comprehensive
AIDS Program of Palm Beach County and
Taylor
the Emmaus House AIDS hospi ce in West
Palm Beach, Fla .. Coz said Monday.
Miss Tay lor and then-husband Larry Fort ens ky filed a libel and
slander suit again st the tabloid in 1993 over a story that said he had
threatened a neighbor in a real estate dispute. A judge dismi ssed the
case and ordered Mi ss Taylor to pay the tabl oid more than $500,000
in legal costs.

Community Calendar . '
TUESDAY
S.YRACUSE - Me igs County
Chamber of Comm erce luncheon,
Tue s day, noon, Carleton Sc hoo l
Heather Sabri e, Ohi o Consume r
Coun cil , speaker.
C HES TER The CheSle r
Township Trustees, 7 p.m . Tuesd ay, townhall.

Lodge 453 F&amp; AM spec ial meetin g Tues day, 7 p.m. at the lodge
with work in the E.A. Deg ree.

'
.
WEDNESDAY
1 MIDDL E PORT - Middleport
Utt erary. C lub , 2 p. m. Wednesday
at th e home of Betsy Parsons .. 'Sh e
will review "The Fishe rman 's
Lady" by Geo rge MacDona ld .

RAC IN E - Racine Board of
Publi c Affairs, Tuesda y, 10:30
a .m . ~ ~muni c ip al building .

PO MEROY· Red Cross
Blood mo bil e, Senio r Ci ti ze ns
Ce nter, I to 6 p. m. Wednes day.

BE DFORD - Bedford Tow n..s hip . Tru stees , Tuesday, 7 p.m.
townh all.

· RAC IN E - Southern Local,
parCilt-te acher
co nfe re nc es,
W&lt;;d nesday, 4 to 7 p.m. Parent s to
caW ch ild 's sc hool for info rm a-

Membership certificates were
awarded when the Hemlock
Grange met receRtly at the ha ll.
Rece ivin g aw·ards were Sarah
Caldw e]J , Sa ra Cullum s, and
Howa.rd Smith, 55 and 60 years;
Bu rl Windon', 60 years; Ro y
H olter, William RS adford , Harold
Bl ackston, Roy Grueser, 55 years;
Dale Kautz,50 and 55 years, and
Joan Kaut z, 25 years.
Du&lt;ing the ·m eetin g condu cted
b y Ros alie Story, mas ter, the
annual grange banquet to be held
at the Senior Citi zens C e nter on
April 30 was announced . It was
no ted that ticket s for the di nne r
are $750 for adults and can be pur.. chased from masters of all county
granges.
Projects were discussed ana itwas announced· that all eyeglasses,
soup label s, pop tabs and hearing
aid batteri es should be ttirtied in to
Nancy Well s, CWA chai rman, as
soon as possible. A large bag of
eyeglasses was donated by Gavin
em ployees, it was reported .
The grange still has c ookbooks
for sa le It was noted the Pomona
Grange ·will meet at Hemlock

DofA rally se t for Saturday
. The Daughters of Ame rica district rally to be held at the Seni or
Citi ze ns Ce nte r on Saturday \Vas a
topic of di sc ussion at recent mee tin gs of Chester Council 323.
A practi ce was he ld l'ast week
fo r the rally and members were
remin ded th at those in charge of
tabl es should be there by 8 a. m.
The loc al &lt;:O UJI Cil mee tings
opened in ritu alistic form with the
Lord;s Prayer, pledges t~ the n ag,
and . roll call s. Reported ill were
several members incl uding Dori s
Grucser, Alta Ballard , Eli zabeth
Hayes , He le n Clin e, E li zabeth
Lawrence, Be tty Youn g and Erma
Cleland. T he deaths o f Ethel Hart
and Gertrude Harm an , pa st nation al councilor, were noted
·
At the Apri l 6 meeting, a soup ·
supper was he ld, a by-l aw change
was presented , and a gift a nd cards
were presented to Erma Cleland in
o ~se rva nc e o f her birthd ay. Hostesses 'for the March 16 meeting
were Everen and Charl otte Grant

The planned program will provide a combination of a grant/loan,
depending on household income, to those very low/low income
households ~n Meigs County for the purpose of upgrading current septic
systems or mstallation of approved new systems in order to prevent
ground water and/or soil contamination in unsewered areas of Mtligs
County.
The. Meigs County Commissioners will hold a public informational
meeting oil April 19 , 1999 at 1:00 P.M . at the re.gular meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeti,ng on Aprill9, 1999
to provide public input on the activity b~ing planned in this program . If
a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled, or taped
·material , assistive listening device, other . due to a disability), please
contact Gloria Kloes , Clerk, prior . to Aprill9, 1999 at, 740-992-2895 ·
in order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated . The Meigs
County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
·
Written comments may be mailed prior to Aprill9 , 1999 to tqe Meigs.
County Commissioners, Meigs Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Janet Howard, President
Meigs County Commissioners

ta

~

and Mental Health Tech positions availJiiUJc:, p:sychiatric experience preferred but not
Contact Human Resou·rces, 115 E.
IMc:m~trial Drive, Pomeroy,· Ohio ~5769, 740-

.RJST IN TIME FOil SPIUNG REPAIR8

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Ha nging Bas kets
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We Honor Golden
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Open
9-5 Weekday Sunda~ 1-5

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gte, Ha s Collar, Alto , Mlxt&lt;t
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Rick Pearson 4ucll on Company,
auction

Free Estimat9s

(740) 691·1713

Help Wanted

WANTED:

Buckeye Community
~ervlcea has a part-time position available in
Meigs County: 33 : hrs/wk: B am Sat. thru B am
Mon; sleep-over required . Position required
teaching personal and community skills to two
· Individuals with mental retardation. The work
, q nvironment is informal and rewarding . -The
requirements are: high school dlplomi/GEO,
· valid driller's license, three y~ars good driving
experience and adequate au1omoblle Insurance
coverage.
B .C .S . offers comprehensive
training in the field of MR/00. Starting salary:
$5.50 /hr. Vacation/sick benefits. Interested
applicants need to specify position of interest
and send resume to : P.O. Box 604, Jackson,
OH 45640-0604. All applications 'm ust be
post-marked by 4/1&amp;/~9.
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dillon, 7•0·388·9062, 7&lt;0· &lt;•6· ' AN's $12.00 • $14.50 /Hr. Base d
fliRt
On Exper ience . Shift Dlrferenti&lt;G
For Ev~ n mgs And MidnigQ.ts. 'F&lt;:J
A Professional Intervie w PleBS f
EMPLOYMENT
Cori tact Tammy Pri ce , At 740'

SERVICES

110

HelpWanted-

446·7150.

•

STATETEST.ED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS

:
':

14~

Holzer Senior Care Center
.IS EARN EXTRA CASH II
Currently Taking ·Applications Fo~
Independent Contractors Needed · State Tasted Nursing Assistants;
To Deliver The New Champion E.:cellant Working En\llronmenlt
PubUshing Telephone Directories And Benel lts . No Phone Call sfl
In T~ Ohio Valley' Area. Must Be
Please Apply In Perso n At ~3 \l
At Least 18 Ye ars Of Age, An d
use Of M lnsure&lt;t Vehicle.
Oe llvtrv Sta rt!l Marc h 23.1999.
Call Now To Rtstrve A Route In
Your .-rea. Market Oiatrlbuhon

Have

Spoctalsts,

Inc.

CALL 1-111-101·1800 TOLL •
FREE
Art You Entrgetic, Moti vated ,

And Coring? Sotnlc Hill&amp; Nurttng
Center Is Looking .For Individuals
Wh o Art Currently State TeJted
N urtl ng Asaltl t nla To Work In
Our Comprehen&amp;lvo ca,. Facility.

.· Gravel1 Sand,

Top Soli, Fill Dirt
740·992-3470

005

4

Clea n Late Model Car s Or
Truc ks, 1990 Model s Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Ent·

(UmeStoneLowRit")

'"THE COUNTRY

'

Pos tal Jobs· to $18 351HA In ~
be nel1ts. No EKpe rience . Fdt
Ap p. and E~am Into , Call 1·BOf

Antiques. top prices paid. River·

Call me at (7 40) 7 42-2842

WICKS
HAULING

EEOIAA Employer

lne .AntiQues, Pomeroy, Ohio,

Need a friend In the buslnea

We now have 30 NEW
Candle making
fragranceslll
•Birdhouses • Bear
· • Wreaths • Refills ·

710.245-4909.

Avenue, Ga ~tpc;ls, 740-«6·26-42.

,Pietll Appty In Person To 311

Co lo nial Or lve . Bidwe ll. QtH ~

45614.

•

The Herald Dispa tch Ha s Twcfl
Motor Delivery Routes Avallabl~
In The Gallipolis Area Galllpoll'
Ta PoiT'ierov; New Haven, M11sonjl
D ally Deliver-y Time , 3 Hours~
Sundav 4 Hou rs . Appro.:imat • '
Monthly Prof it $948 .00 · Transf,~
poratation· AeQulred. Galllpohs T
Crown City, Daily Oe!lve r~ Time · •
Hours. Su nday 3 Hours. App ro.:.lma te Mont hly Protlt $70o .oot'
Tranaport!lltion Required ll Inter;
· es1td Ptea se Call Gary Moritz 'At

Suckrldgl Aoad , Btdwoll. OH 30•·526·2832 Or.

~···
AVON! All Aroast To euv or Sett. .
Shl&lt;toy Speo,., 304-675-1 ~ .

fiNNOU NCEME lilTS

£qui Opportaait)' . . .__..

Wanted to Buy

m amond s, Anliqua Jewelry, Gol d
Rings , Pre· t9 30 U.S. Currency.
Sterling. Etc . Acquisitions Je we lry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Dun's
Heating &amp; Cooling

CANDLE SHOP"

All App licants Must Comp(ete
The Un tverslty's Olllclst Appllca·
tion And Submit It With A Leller
Of ln'teres t On Or Berorif Apn l
19,1999 To Ms . Phyll is Mason.
PHR. Director Of Human Aesourc·
es . Untversll~ Of A to Grande .
MCSF-27, Am Grande, OH 45674
Email pmasoogyrgrogc odq , Fax

Absolute Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sliver And Gold Coins. Prool sets.

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact :

Tuea- Frld1y 1H
Sat 1().4
Rt. 124 Ml"'11vlllt, Oh .
9t2-4559

Llcense&lt;t

Every Saturday Nlgh1 1 P.M..
·Crown Cttv. 740·256-6989

debtor of financial obligation• and arrange a fair
dluribution of ~asets. Debtl&gt;r• in bankruptcy may
_k eep "exempt"' property for hia or her peraonal
use. This may include a car , a house , clothea, and
houaehold gooda.

CANDLE· MAKERS

serv ice.

oss.Ohlo &amp; Wast Vtrgtnla, so•·
n 3-57a5 or 304-773·5447.

can relieve a

"Done right the first .time ".
"Priced right aU the time"

,

Quallllcallons Require A High
Sc hool Diploma Or Equivalpnt.
Good Oral Ancl Inte rperso nal
Co mmunications Sk1lls Required
Valid Driver's Uoense And Good
Driving Reand Mandatory.

Galltpolts, Ohio 7'1().37'9-2720.

Buildings, Decks, E tc .

740-985-4180

• 5n 9.

Wedemeyer's Auctio n Servic e ,

. Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm .

6. SubmM

In Wri11ng, With Training And EXIplria nce . To Janice Zwilling' .
Clerk · Trea$tHer , At The Syra·
cuse Municipal Building Or Mall
To P.O. Box 266 , Syracuse . OH

tull time au ctioneer, complete

40 742·8888

Reme.mber

TFN

1998 Swimming Season .Are 8&amp;

ing Accepted Until May

All Yard Sllel Mull Be Plld In
Adwence. Dtldllne: 1:00pm the Licensed Managed Cosmetol6·
d1y betore the td It to run, " gist At The Hair Hut, Rio Granr;le. ·
Sund1y 6 Mondty ediUon ~ OhiO 740·245-9494.
·
1:OOptn Frlc1oy.
Now accepting appli cations lor
April 15· 5 1aml~. Bone Hollow Rd. nlght shift, E.l Dorado Adult Home
olfSR 7 bypan, ac ro ss fro m Ba sic lirst ai d &amp; SCI! reQu irea .
Leadi ng Cree K Rd . C ar stereo, 740·992·5039
basebal l cards, clothin g, lo ts of
household and mi sc. Ite ms . Now taking applications lor Orl\1ers at Oo,mmo'$ Pizza. Gallipolis
Watch for signs.
and Pomeroy Stores. Only. 740·
Carport sale·Aprll 12. 13, 14, ltrat «6·4040
mobile home on leh behinc Meigs
PART TIME COORDINATOR
Fairgrounds, cheap baby clothes,
AND VAN DRJVER
plus olher Items.
GALLIA COUNTY RETIRED
Garage aatA· 6BS General Har-.
AND SENIOR VOLUNTEER
linger, Middleport, 12th thru 16th.
PROGRAM
electric ra nge, bed sp reads, cur·
tam, baby Items, Beanie Babie&amp;, The ·University Or Rio Grande .
dishes. clothing &amp; Home lnlerlor R.S.V.P. Grantee, Invites Apptica·
&amp; misc.
lions For Tne Part· Time Coord I·
nator And Van Driver Fo r The
Garage aale· Friday, Apr1 1 16, two Gallia Co unty Retired Senior Vol·
mile&amp; out Flatwood&amp; Rd. 9:1)1).3:00. unteer Prog ram.
Ra in or shine.
Responsi bilities tnclut:le, But Are
Rlggscre st above
Ea ster n,
Not Limlted .To , Recru iting . Plac·
Thursda~. Friday, 8M&lt;4. Cheap !
lng , Ori entmg Volunteers And
Rain or shine. Mic rowave . A/C ,
Station Supervisors, Maintaining
yarn, glassware. typtWtilar.
Ne.ce ssa fy Wr lnen Repon s:
Tra nspo rting Volunteers : Per·
80
Auction
for ming Dally
Mamte~an ce
and· Flaa Market
Ch ecks On RSVP Veh1cles : AI ·
te nding Month /Quarte rly Staff
Bill Moodispaugh Auct ioneer ing.
Meetings; Assisting The RSV P
ComJUate Auction ee ring Serv lc~ Directo r With Public- Re lations
ea. Cons ignmen t auction· Mlll And Fu ndralslng Acl!v illes. Coor·
Street, Mid dleport, Thursdays . d inator Will' Also Transport Sen·
Ohio Llctn" 17693. 740· 989- lora To Congregate Meals On A
2623.
Regular Basis.

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

Metal , Lamina~io n , Pole

4 r ee Eolimate~
Carpenter
.,
B. Haning

Applications For ,Life Guard PosJ.

Mav 1. Register now $5 .00. Pick
up flag . Fo r more In formation call

3/15 1 mo.

BANKRUPTCY

EOE.

lions At Londo n Pool For Th'

· e· Mile Yellow Flag Ya rd Sa le,
Pomeroy·Middl eport, Apr il 30 •

Caii98S·383I

(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

Wood- Vinyl- Metal

Katie ring, Ohio 45429

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnlly

S_t. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Sli.ADE RIVER
Grind Feed

Willia:M.Salranek, Attomey At Law

'Haning's Home
linprovtmtnts

RNC, Vice Pres ldenl Of OperaL
lions .l.t centurron Managemen;
Gro up. 3490 Fa r Hll lo Avenu~.

Mltlon ·2:00p.m.

Joe Wilson
(740 992-42n

"Call Today"

Catpe!item Building Americ4

esa Oavls, MHA, LNHA, BSN•,

740·992-4197.

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

An

Exceptional Compensation Pack•
age. If Interested In A Challen9•
log Position Send Your Resumct
And Salary Requirements To Terr

Qf&amp;DUNE: 2:00p.m.

Remodeling

FREE Est/matts

(7401992·5535 or
992·2753

Cen1urion Management Oilers

AIJ.. V•nt s.• Mu1t

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

AG51!1MCI!"

Marketing, Financial Managec

ment, And Employee Relations,

&amp; VIcinity

. "Build Your Dnom" ·
1998 Martin Streat
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

This PosiHon Must Posse" Tho

Gallipolis

~~~~~~~~~~tift.

••

To l ead By Example And Ensur~
The HJghest Standard 01 Res lr

- - - - - - - - - ' Ability To Lead With A Focus On

~

Custom Homes

We ,..,, SeeKmg A Chall enge
Driven lndi\l'ldual W1th The Ability

Yard Sale

70

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
IIi:..
Garages, Pole. Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~
"Speciali•ing In Log HorMI"
Commer cial &amp; Residenti al
28 yra. exp.
Ucensed &amp; l_ntsui~Cr---~
Phone 740-992·3987
John Dean· Owner

INTERIOR

'

~

'

~

plication&amp; For An Admi nislrator I~

90

Complete Une 01

1-,-,

110

25' yrs experience

3/8/lt/1mo. od.

17401 992·31:111

D.H.V.
Construction
Iii I 'I' I~

larking Lots

to 10' x 3Q'
Houre
7:00AM- 8 PM

Utililieo

Po"""'y• Ohio
22 yro. Local'

FREE ESTIMATES
I~

~~~~~~~~~ft·ft~
~ J.D. CONS7RUC71011 ~

740·992·2&lt;18t .

Ser.iceo

•Roofing
•Siding
e Windows

ncnnatter luJu old you.:

'Driveways,

Sidewalks, Patios

740~949-2217
Slzea 5' x 10'

House &amp; Trailer Site&amp;
land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Seplic Syolemo &amp;:

30°/o OFF

Dave Mills •

Quality

29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1

'

l.,,;.._ _ _..,jgJII.lll

Progressive Long Te rm Care
Companf' Is Currently TakulQ Ap.:

Losl· 1 brown male Boxer. 1 white
Pood le, Baldknob· SIIversvllle
arM, 740.843•5556. '
Lost : Female Aed &amp; While Bea·

• Plus, Inc
CONCRETE 'A&amp; DAuto· Upholstery
Rutland, Ohio
CONNECTION Truck seats, car seats, headliners,

SELF STORAGE

II

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

38782 Sumner Aoac1,
' Ohio 4lol718

HILL'S

BuUdo•er &amp;: Backhoe

Ftwtflllmlfll

'

on the mn ·

.......,

$ *7ap

FREE ESTIMATES

· 10 / 2 -

HOWARD ·.
EXCAVATING .CO•.
1,111

JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 1185-4218
EMAIL:
STETHEM@EUAEKANEtCOII

Cheater, Ohio

742·1701'

' 7

-dlcltl-d11&gt;1Wiyt
Elju/pll!lnf Clllllld AOfgo INII

985-4422

Homes, Decks .·
&amp; Mobile Homes ·
Painting
· Interior &amp; Exterior
15Yra. Experience

TrucU--

TroH111-hout111-mobllt

Agricultural Lime,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Marty's
·Power
_Washing

985-4473

I

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

-

E~p.

TRI·RATE MOBILE
POWER WASH

il Ohio and Mason County tn 'IN

3/11/99 TFN

.

·ssoo.oo

Joseph Jacks

•SeMng Meigs and Gallia Counties

Reasonable Rates
.Joe N. Sayre

Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
·per game
$300.00 Coverall
Starburat
Progreaelve top line.
Uc. It (]().SO 11MIIfn

Free E;stimates

'

' Professional Rcutinel.awn
Maintenance and Manicunn!t

Hauling

Pomeroy Eagles

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

7481i'r. . .l

TFN

20 Yrs.

IIi:..
Ill!!!

992·5455

(No Sunday Calls)

'

Centurion Management Group, A.

Landscape Material

8 ton

ADIIINISTRATOR

dog·
black · German
Shepherd , In Middleport area,

DRIVEWAY STONE

Light Hauling up to

Near ns·.

Lost

IIi:..

&amp; Topsoil

614·992·7843

Equipment Parts
Factory Autho rized
Case-IH Parts
D e ale r s.
1000 St. Ill. 7 Sourh
CooMI,., OH 46723

Dowltspouts
: Gutter Cleaning

-

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions .
• Roofing
COMMERCIAL ood RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

DIPOYIAG

· Howard L. Writesel

CaU A Little One

Box 675, Ripley, WV 2527•1

740-379-2814.

$

April 7th ·
May 31st

...

Found: Spotted D og

fllf ""

I

$$$Make Money!$$$ Work At
Home · Assemble Products :
Easy Work . Excellent Pay. Fre~
Deta il S! Send S.A S.E. To : Narl
Homeowrker's Associat1on , PO,

60 Loat and Found.

S a l es R e pre se nta ti v e.

. L a rry S c h ey
FILL OF GAS
AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP "U$ THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A SAVIll
01 UP FO JOfi.OO DE PENDING ON THE SIZE 750 East State Street Phone (740) 5 9 3-6671
Athens, Ohio 4 5 701
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTAc T
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED AGA DEALER FOR l----·~·~~~~!i!~2:.:~L~~~
3112 1
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR ·
' mo.
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WIL
END J UNE 21 , 1999.
Don~ Need A Big One

Helped lupl me

for 24-hour administration of
services on Skilled Nursing Facility.
an Ohio Licensed RN, prefer ,BSN.
Ad~i~istration and Clinical experience ill
genatr1~ preferred but not required . Contact
Human Recourses, 115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 740-992· 2104.
'

Giveaway

To Goi7'1().2•5-SIIO• .

An Old Frien d
M i k e D re hel

'

After an aU n/Pl of fun
c...oruu. p(dd by olhen

~~~~::~s!~~
-

40

Sl o p In And S ee

IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYUNDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST

To have back lhal body
Thai netter 1eemed '
ro wear
Sleeping lo1e .
Jlaro...,. mornin61

In

9:1)1).5:30.

German Stlepl'lerd. 3 Weeks Okl.
Will Be GOOd Watch Dog&amp;. A..dy

AGA GAS, INC. IS. OFFERING A SPICIIL ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES

WW. no worrie1 nor

Douglas Circle,
Linda, Sue &amp; Larry

FUN tNTHE SUNI
'
Travel The USA In A Rock An~
Roll Almosphera . ll You' re At
Least 18 . Free To Travel And
Can Leave Immediately, Call Toll
Free 1·888·720·2127 , 9:00AM TQ
5:00Pm EST AprH 12 To 16.1999,
A&amp;k For Amy EOE

Items. $1 .00 bao sale every
Thu rsday. Monday thru Saturday

Regilter Now $5.00-Pick up Flag
call 992-4197

"2·5776

INs,

-To You Thrl~ Shoppo
9 West Sttmson, Athens
740-592·1&amp;&amp;2
Quality clot hing and household

8 Pupc»ea. Part St. Bernard. Part

01&amp; To bo you,.. ·a pin

In Loving Memory of
Elsie Circle
1920-1987
Precious Memories
How they linger

You. For More Information, 1·888·

sn..ass1.

April 30th- May lst

· - Complete Auto Service- ·

·-

CLASSIFIEDS!

Cautractloa

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

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

YELLOW FUICI
.YfiRD SfiLE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

P h o n e: 740-843-5572

JtOIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

II \ ortly half of e/Piy
But renu~naber too it•
1l.ice T""'"'Y
WeLoeo You

a.·

................rlcll

Racine, O h io

Gran
ge County
hall on May
7 with
Wash~=:;;:::;,~:;:::;:::==:-r-==;;::;:;;:=;:;:::~==T==:::::;::;:::;.:::;:===-r-==;:==;::;===
ington
to be
guests
. A1·
potluc k dinne r will preced e the
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Happy Ad

NOTICE TO.THE PUBLIC

.

52954 State R t. 124

COuple or aingle person to move;
In and care for ekterly per5on lOt
Matgs County. Alt living e•pen,_.
ea, plus salary. List work hlstor~
and 2 references SeM name~
addreu and p hone number be,
tore Mav 1, 1999 lo . Margaret:
General Delivery, Pomeroy Post
Office. Pomeroy. OH 45769.
:

DI AB ETIC PATIENTS: You Moy
Entitled To Receive Your Oiabellc Su~pllu At No Cost To

...... C..•IE 'p

Hamnu~r"

Fonner-"Velvet

To co m11ete
Two Meigs Local students will:
be amo ng the 800. j uni or a nd;
seni or high sc hool stude nts taking;
thei r award- wining science p ro~
j ects to Oh'io Wes ley an Universi-:0
ty's Branch Rickey Arena Satur-;
d ay to .compete for lop honors ill'
the '51 st annual State Science Day:_
sponsored by the Ohio Academy;
of Sciences.
•
. They are Kri stina M. Kennedy
of Pomeroy, a student at Meig~
High Sc hool, and Je nnifer L:
Walker of Rac ine, a student at the
Meigs Middle S chool.
Winners in the state contesi ·
will receive awards provided by,
over 90 colleges and universiti es;
professional societies, corpora~
tion s, and governmental .units :
Cash, savings bonds, trips , an~
scho larships worth more th an
$ 130,000 are among .the prizes to
be prese nted .

propoeed aQtlon miy b4i ,daye o1 llluene. of the llnlt
aubmlttod within 30 daye o1 octlon. ERAC oppeole muot
with: EnVIron·
notice ol the propooed be flied
action. An edludlcatlon monlltt Review Appulo
hearing mey be held on 1 Commllllon, 238 Eut Town
propoeed action lie illlrlng St,..t,
Room
300,
requolt or abjection 11 Columbue, Ohio 43215. A
recolv.d by tho OEPAwlthln copy of the oppeel mull be
30 daya of !nuance of the HIVed on the director
propoaed action. Written within 3 dilye efter 1111ng the
comm~lt.
requeate for appeal with the ERAC.
public
mHtlnge,
and
Final Approval of plano
adjudlcetlon hnrlng r• and opeclllcltlonl
quoate muot be unt to: Tuppero Plalne-Cheetar
Hearing Clark, Ohio Envl· Wator Dletrlct, Reedevllle,
ronmental
Protection OH l11ue Dill 03/28/11199
Aft
ftO . Box · 1049,
Thle final action not
,...ency,
.-.
Columbuo, Ohio 43218-1049 preceded by propooed
(Ttl.,hone: 614-&amp;w-2129].
actiOn end II applllllbll Ia
"Final Actlona" are action• ERAC. Route 150 Boooter
of thl Director which are Pump Stillion ReloC.Uon.
effectiVe upon leauanca or a (4) 13 1TC
otlttd
effective. dltt.
P~JIUant to Ohio Revllld
Public Notice
COde Stctlon 3745.04, . a
final action may· be apo
NOnCE TO THE PUBUC
pealid to the Envtronmonlltl
ANNUAL MEETING
Review Appeale Comml•
The Melga Metropolltln
elan
(ERAC)
formerly
Board
of
known •• the Environ- Authority
mental Board of Rtvlow) by Dlrectora will hold the
e peroon who haa a perty to Annuli Milling of tho
Molge Houelng Authority on
1 procoidlng befor.l till
1119911 7:311 P.M. It
Aprll14,
director by tiling an appeal
within 30 d.ra at notice of the office located at 117
the final action. Purauant to Eall Mamorllll Drive, Bulla
Ohio RtVIIId Code Stctlon 7, Pomeroy, Ohio. · An111111
3745.07, a· llnel action el..tlon ol otflcora will be
laaulng, denying, modify• hold. The public le lnVItid
tng, rtvaklng, or renewing 1 to attend.
permit, licen111 or variance Jeen Tru11111, Director
which It not preceded by. 1 Melgo Houelng Authority
.
propoeod action, may be (4) 1TC
appealed to the ERAC by
tiling an appeal' whhln 311

•78-8553 x 1n1. www 1cwp.com :

30 Announcements

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

Dave's Garage

POMIIOY MICHIHI SHOP
250 COHDOI ST.
POMIIOY, OHIO 45769
PHOHI-740·992·2406 01 04415·:11555

· ·c ontest winner ·
Tricia Davis o f Mei gs High
Schoo l was a winner of $500 in
the annual sc holarship co ntest of
the Buckeye Rural Electri c C ooperati ve , Inc.
Stephen Roberts of Galli a
Academy Hi gh School al so won a
$500 sc holarship, and rec ipients
of $300 sc holarships were Theresa
Davison oJ Gallia Academy and
Adam Bishop of Dawson Bryant
Hig h School. ·
Contesta nts, all of whom had to
come from homes receiving electric service from Buckeye Rural
Elec tric, were judged on scholasti c record , personal achi evement,
sc hool and community activities.
The judges sel ected one boy and.
one girl with an alternate for each.
The top wi'nn ers will represent
BREC in the statewide Ohio Rural
Electric Cooperatives, Inc., scholar ship co ntes t to be he ld tn
Columbus in May.

Computer Users Needed Work '
Own Hrl. S25K -$80K Nr t·800~'

7'1().3~2928 .

740·742·2138

mee ting with each grange to pro- COUNTY: MEIGS
PO ME ROY - Im m uni zati o n tio n .
vide meat and all members attendPUBLIC NOTIC~
'c lini c, Me igs C ount y, Hea lth
in g 10 take a co vered dish .
Tho following appllcatlone
De pa rtm ent , Tu esday, 9 to II THURSDAY
Rosalie Story and Kim Romin e and/or verified complalnllt
C HESTE R ~ Shad e Ri ver
a.m . a nd I to 3 p.m . C hildren to
·
·
were received lnd the
·11
.be
acco mp a ni ed .
by Lodge 453 F&amp;AM spec ia l meet- wt se rve as Janitors fo r May. iollowlng draft, propooed,
Me mbers reported ill we re Wal - or nnal actlona w.ro lolllid
paren t/guardian and \)rese nt shot ing Thursday. 8 p. m. at the lodge
lace B Redford and Vad a Haze l- by till Ohio Envlronm~tll
wit h work in th e F C. Deg ree .
reco rd .
ton.
Protactlon Agency (OEPA)
Story had the program whi c.h loll WHk. "Actlono: Include
d
tho adoption, modification,
PO ME RO Y - Pare nt Boos ter FRIDAY
1u ed .readings, "The American or. repeal at ardlra (other
inc
mee ting, 7 pm. Tu esday at Me igs ·
TUPPE.R S PLA INS - North'
Cree d": by Barbara Fry; " ! Kn o w than ameigoncy ordera);
'Hi gh Schoo l L ibrary. Pl ans fo r Be thel Chu rch. reviva l, 7 p. m. Some thing , Go.od Ab out You"
tho
luuance, denial,
F rid'ay thr ough S und ay. Da ve Sara Cullum s; "The Old Dinne r modlllcetlon or revocation
pro m to be made.
1
Da iley to be speaker,
llcenaaa, permlllt, 111111,
B e II " bY .0 p a1 ,,Grue_ser. Th ere ·, of
varlancll, or cartlflcatto·,
POM E ROY - Me igs Co un ty
group smgmg o f A pn I Sh owers: and tho approval or
Unit o f th e Ameri ca n C an cer S ATURDAY
and j okes by Jim Fry, G olda Red, dlupproval of plana and
Soc ie ty, Tu esday, 5 p.m. Po meroy
PO MEROY - Me igs County . and Dale Kautz . Joan Kautz read apeclflcatlone.
: "Draft
Library. Relay fo r Life mee ting . 6 Retired Teac hers Assoc iati on, " Nations Strength" Ro salie Joh~ - Actlone•: are· Wrltlltn ltlte,
'
·
m•nte of tha Director of
p.m .
Sat urday, noo n, Trinity Church .
John Le ntes . prosecutm g attor- so n, The Old Barn, and th e pro- Envlronm•ntll Protec-tion'•
gra.m concluded with s ingin g · (Director'o)
Intent . with
·
C HES TER Shade Ri ver ney, speaker.
ru)llcl to the loouan..,
"How Great Thou Art. "
denial, etc. of a permit,
licanu, order, -ate. Inter·
ailed pereone mliy aubmlt
wrl.tton
commlnll
or
roquell a pubic mHtlng
regarding draft actlona.
Comm~to
or
public
mHtlng requellt mutt be
aublnltted within 30 dlye of
notice of 1111 draft action.
"Propoeed Actlont" are
The Meigs County Commissioners are preparing an application for
w~tlltn tliitemante o1 the
Director'•
lnhlnt
with
funding in the amount of $260,000 to be submitted through the' Ohio
·rupect Ia the teauanct,
d~lal, modification, ·rtvoRur al HardshipGrant prograrri funded through the Ohio Water Pollution
cailon, or renewal of a
permit, llconie, or varian...
Control Loan Fund (WPCLF) , which ·is Ohio' s Clea~ Water Act SRF
Written. aommtn11 and
rtqUIStl for a public
program.
mnt1ng
regarding
a

.

Looking For Nice W/ f Wuh A
Potltlvt Altitude, Age 21 ·35,
With A Positive Relationship,

extract made by LycoRed Natural
·
Products of Israel.
Kucuk said this is the amount of
lycopene found in about a pound of
tomatoes; since lycope ne is not easily absorbed from raw tomatoes, it
might take two or three pounds to
actually raise blood levels as high as
were seen in the study.
"The results are significant,"
said Dr. Frank Rauscher of the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia. " It 's
remarkable that lycopene may have
both therapeutic and preventative
value."
·
Also among the study's findings:
- Cancer had spread to the very .
edge of the prostate gland or beyond ·
in seven of the 21 men on lycopene,
compared with nine of the 12 in the
comparison group.
- Levels of PSA ....:. prostate
specific antikc;n, a measure of tum~r
activity - fei)&gt;-.20 percent between
the start o f treatment and surgery in
the lycopene patients. They were
unchanged In the compari son group.
- Pre-cancerous but' worn some
tissue in the lycopene patients was
also less abnormal-looking.

9.

ii~~~"~~~!i~~iiii~~~~~Pe~~~~.~~.~~~s1~1~0~~~~~==

The next big thing in the war on cancer? Tomatoes
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
that looked for a link between can- that cancer tissue was less likely to
cer risk and food made with toma- extend clear to the edges of the
AP Medical Editor
lycopene users' prostate glands, a
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Doc- toes .
tors are aiming a surprisingly powIn all, 57 linked tomato intake sign that the operation may have
erful new weapon at cancer - the wi th a teduced risk, and in 35 of halted cancer. And pre-cancerous
those, the association was strong cells in their prostates were less
tomato .·
Many studies have shown that enough to be consider~d statistically abnormal-looking.
'"This suggests that lycopene·
men who eat lots of tomato-rich meaningful.
The data were most compelling results in a decrease of tbe tumor
food , such as pasta sauce, olre less
likely to gel prostate cancer. New for cancers of the prostate, lung and size and makes the cancer less
research takes this a step fu rther, stomach. They also suggest links aggressive," said Dr. Oroar Kucuk,
·showing for the first time that a between tomatoes and lower levels ·who directed the study.
Prostate cancer is the most comtomato extract actuall y seems to of several other tUmors, including
·
shrink prostate tumors .
pancreatic, colorectal, esophageal, mon malignancy among American
If the nc w fi ndings pan out in oral, breast and cervical cancer.
men . 'The American Cancer Society
larger studies, they suggest that the
The latest work attempted to see J:Stimates that 179,300 men will be
lowly tomato may offer a way to if lycopene is truly the key ingredi- diagnosed with prostate cancer this
both prevent cancer and treat it.
ent. Doctors tested lycopene extract- year, and 37,000 will die from it.
No one knows exactl y how toma- ed from tomatoes on men who were
Kucuk presented his findings in
toes might ward off cancer, but about to undergo prostate cancer Philadelphia on Monday at a meetmany suspect it 's lycopene, the stuff s urgery. ··
ing of the American Association for
that makes tomatoes red and already
Researchers .from the Karmanos Cancer Research. He noted that his
one of the trendiest of nutrients.
Cancer Institute in Detro it tested 33 study is small and cautioned against
Until now, most of the support men who ~ere randomly assigned to routine use of lycopene supplements
for tomatoes has come from studies take lycopene or nothing for 30 days witho ut further evidence.
Lycopene pills are widely availthat fo llow the eating habits of large ·before their o perati ons. Before
groups of people over lime. In an surgery,- the voluhteers showed· no able. In the study, financed by the
analysis publi~ hed in February, Dr. obvious signs that their cancer had Karmanos institute, volunteers were
given two daily 15:milligram capEdward Giovannucc i of Harvard spread.
After surgery, the doctors found sules of Lyc-0-Mato, a lycopene
Medical Sc hoo l reviewed 72 studies

T h e Da lly S e nti n el • Page

Bates Brot . AmuMment Co. FrH
to travel. Must be ~ly ra . or older.

1-800 ·955;
~

61 10 EX1832.

Genera l Oltice /Salts. Eicperl $
enc: ed Pralarred . Full-Time, lmi
med4a1e Opening. Apply: U testyl• '
Furniture, 856 Third A11enue, Gal~

Call 7•0·266·2950 M·F. 8:oo. ttpc;lo, 1().2, No Phone CoUa.

Personals

..

-;;jj;imln"~~;;;;p;,;l -• :30.:.:....- - - - -

Gentleman See king
ship From Nice Female
Talks,
Walks A Fr ieodshlp. Send At ·
plies To : 553 Second Avenue ,
Apar lmtnt 1403. Gallipolis. OH

position, 9am-7pm. Night po·
sillon, 7pm·9am . Oullll Include
care ol !he alt:ler l~. cooking and
cleaning, 7• 0·992·5029 lor Inte r·

45631.

-

bay

I'

·

H ea lth Management

rr

Nurtln '

S.rvtcos Is Hiring A F•II·Tlme Ott

lice Aaslat antln Our Gall l pol! ~

Oftlco. GrHt Hourt, Blnelt1s l I~
su rence, 740·446·3808 Or Vlsl'

The Otllct At 762 Second

..U., In GolipoM&amp;, E.O.E.

"

Ave ~

~

�•

-

-

-

-.

•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

..

Tuesday, Aprll13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Paga 11

ALLEYOOP

•

BJliDOI:

"16Til.EM! THE W/lolfl. WIU.. CRIJISH
UB! WE'LL ~EV£1! MAl(£ IT
1'0 SHOfl£!

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

--lmmedlate Openings Seeking
• full Tlmt Pe~n For Bookkte~
: mo. Send Reaume To· CLA 470,
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825

Th1rd Avenue , Gallipohs, OH

46631
job opening· ~ard laborer and
COL driver needed.

local Truclclng Company Seeking
Qualified Truck Dri vers Good
Pay .-.nd Benefits Send Resume
To· PO Box 109 Jackson , Ohio

45840, Or Call 1·740·286· 1463
To Schedule An lntlfVIew

e~~:perlenced

Chester Oh • apply at Baum lum-

Excellent Opportunity To Obtain
Employment In The Trucking In·

WANTED : Buckeye Community
Services Ha s A Part· Time Pasl·
l io n Available In Meigs Co unty
33 Hrs !Wk s A.M Sat Thru 8
A M Mon . Sleep .OVer Required
Position Aeqwres Tea chi ng Per·
sonal And Community Skills To
Two Indivi duals With Mental Re·
tardallon T!'le Work Environment
Is lnlormaJ And Reward ing. The
Req uirements Are High School
D iploma /GEO, Valid Driver's Ll·
cense, Three Years Good Driving
Experience And Adequate AUtomobile Insurance Coverage
B C S Offers Comprehensive
Trainlng In The Field Of MR/00
Starting Salary $5 50 /Hr Vaca·
tlon /Slck Benefits Interested Appflcants Need To Specify Position
Ot Interest And S&amp;nd Resume To
P 0 Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640-0604 All Applications

,dus1ry

MuS1 Be Post·Mar1&lt;ed By 4/1M19

ber 01 calt 7-'0-985·3301
- E~tce11ent

opportunity to JOin the

-long term heatth care fiekt

Reg-

Istered Nurse position available

for Intermediate care cenler Must
have West Virginia license
Point Pleasant Center, Stale RO·
ute 62, Route 1, Box 326, Polo!
Pleasant, WV, 25!5!50 A Gane&amp;ls

Eklercaro Networl&lt; EOE
FREE TRUCK
DR1VER TRAINING
II You Ouat1fy Gall•a -Metga Community Action Agen cy Can Pay
Vo ur Tuition And Re lated Fee s
1o Attend A !S -Week /200 Hour

TruCk Driver ·Training Will Obtain
Their CLass A COL And Have An

GMCAA Currently Has Available
Train ing An d Retraining Funds
For Unemployed And Underem·

ployed Ellg1ble

Res~ents

Of Gal·

li a And Meigs CountieS Funds
- ill.re llmlted·SO II You Are Interest

You Shoukf Apply Now To QUalify
You Must Be A Gall1a County Or
Meigs County Resident , Be 20
Years Old Or Older And Meet
JTPA Title II Or Til le Ill Guide·
lines JTPA Title Ill Serves Laid

011 Workers, INCOME IS NOT
AN ELIGIBILITY FACTOR.
11 You Have Specific Questions
About The Training Or Employ·

ment Opp ortunities Call Ed
Adams At Washington County
Career Center In Marietta, 1 8()().

"648·369!;.
Or For Ellglblllly Oue611ons Call
740 -446· 1018 Ext 88 Or 740992·2222 Ext 88 Or AI The Following GMCAA Fac1hlles

Gallla - Mo~s communlfy
Action Agency

'

Cheshire Ohto 4562().{)272

740·992-1!629
Fax 740-367-7510

740·367-~2

GMCAA Gallla One Stop
859 Third Avenue

Gallipolis
740·446-1018
GMCAA Meigs One S1op
33t05 Hiland Road
Pomeroy

740-992·2222
Funding Provided By The United
States Department 01 Labor And
The Ohio Bureau Of Employment
Services

Equal Opponunlfy Emp&lt;oyer

Exam Info Call 1·800.813·3585,
Ext.8827 8AM·9PM . 7 Days
fds Inc

Flood Cleanup laborers: 40
Hours Per Week (Subject To
Weather Conditions) $8 Per Hour
Work Will Be In Meigs County
RemoVing Flood Debris From

Slreams And Adjecon1 Areas
Persons Hired Will Be Required

To Attend Cheln Saw And Safety
Training Requirement&amp;, Melga

County Resident. Ago 18 Ot Old·
er Laid Oft Or Long Term Uf\tm-

ployod Meeling JTPA T111e 1H Ell·
glblllty Guidelines (Income Nol A
Factor)
Laborers /Office Workers /Park
Maintenance Workers 40 Hours
Per Week, $5 15 Per Hour. Work
Will Be Performed At various
Government Agencies And Nonprofit Organizations In The Area .
Requ irements, Gallla Or ~alga
County Resident, Age 14 -21, Unemployed /Underemployed Meet-

Ing JTPA Title II Eligibility GuidO·

E &amp; S lawn Serv1ce Deslgn, Implementation, and Service
Available for Sprin g Clean up,
fertilizing and planting Free estimates Satisfaction guaranteed
Greg Milhoan 3041675....628.
Electric Maintenance Service
Wlrlng, Breaker Boxes, L.lght Fix·
lure, Healing Systems, and ReFurniture repair restoration &amp; re·
finishing, custom built reproduc·
Uons, Llz &amp; Bennetl Aoush, 740·
992-1100. Appalachian Wood·

wor1&lt;s
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just call
Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour in
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handicapped, 740-44,., 536
Housecleaning Dependable, Honest. Good References Years 01
Experience,
740·446- 7525,
Leave A Message
Interior &amp; EICierior Painting, Expenenced, References, Reuon·
able Rates For Free Estimate.

740-388-8041
Will do small cleaning,lpalnting
Jobs &amp; small lawn mowing and
hau l trash or junk away $25 a

load (304)675-4536

Will Mow lawns, Preferably Near
Gallipolis, Have Our Own Equipment, Free Estimates, Call After

6 30 PM 740-446-686 1

FINANCIAL

21 0

Bualneaa
Opportunity

INQnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated

1he ollerlng
AREA PEPSI /COKE ROUTE
Major Company Has 35 Mach ines With locallona Don't

Wattl HI00.811HI228
Avail VENDING R1e • Sell By 41
21 1o ·20 Loca11ons 12.500 •
1OK $4,000 +IMo Income
Finance Avail . Toll Fret t-888·
538-9508

International Company InterviewIng For Local Manar.r fOiatrlbu·
tor Booming Fire alety Field
Complete Training Provided Truly
A 8 Figure Income Potential! II
You Are Wanting To work For
YoUrself, But Nol By Yourself, Call

Mr ColwoH,1-240-7881

230

Profeulonal
Services

Signs· Large Portable Change·

able Lottar Sign $279·$369 Froo
Dellvery/lettars. Pla&amp;llc Letters

$55 Second Box Free AAA
Signs 1 800 533-3453 anytime
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless we Wlnl
1·888-582·334 ~

To Request A Preappt lcaUon Be
Mailed To You Call 740-446-1018

Ex1 911 Or 740-992·2222 Ex1 99

lla High School University 01 Rio

OfJICI, Hocl&lt;lng College JTPA Of·
flee. Tri·Counly JVS Adull Education canter
PreappllcaUon&amp; Can Also Be Ob·

GMCAA Gall~ One Slop
859 Third AYOOUo
Gallpolla
740--4-&lt;16-1018
I

GMCAA Meigs One SlOp
33106 Hllancl Rood

POmeroy
740-992·2222

AI\ real estate adventslng In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act

ol1968 which makes nIllegal
to ad\lenlse •any preference,
llm1tatlon or dlscrlm\natkm
based on race, color religion,
sex: fainillal status or national
origin, or
intention to
make any SUCh preference,
limitation or discrimination:
This new paper will not
knowingly accept
adYenlsements for reaJ estate
wh~h

Fax' 7~367-7510

InfOrmed 1hat all dwellings
edVertlled In 1!11s - p e r
are avdable on an equal
opportunitY bUll

HEAl ES fATE'

310 H - for Sale
3 Bedroom Home, 2908 MeadOw·

brook Drive Cell (304)675-4380,
4PM
3 811, 2BA. 2 Cor Gorlgt 1 Acft
A Mu11 Su. Lo1art. (304)182·

a""'

~16

I

Is In vlola11on of lho

taw Our readers are hartby

• OBCS
44611uc:Myo Hilla Road
Rio GIII1CIO
740-245-116011 .

Galla ·Molgo Comlunlty
Ac1lon Agency
so1o Nor1h s~ Route 1
~0 Box272
Cholhlre. Ohio 4e&amp;20-0272
740-367-7342 740-1112-86211

Orlvo 3BR, LR, Den w/FP 1BA
Newly

remodeled

In

1998/

(Rool.-o.lkllng ,rJoor,N
b,Carpet) Nice landscaping,
Privacy
Fence • $74,500.

Call (304)875·5143,
530PM

Af1er

2 Acrea + Beautiful Woo ded
Home Site Own Your Own Boat
Dock, Mobile Homes Accepted,

$500 Oown $191 .63/Mo. Oirtc·
tiona: Rt 7, 6 M1les Below Gelllpolis To Bear Run Road , Follow
Sign&amp; To Big Foo1 Par1&lt;

Big Foot Park, $7 ,500, 740-3880121

By Owl)er. 33 Smithers Street,

Gallipolis, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Largo
Outbullclinga One With Basement,
Fenced In Yard , Central Air,
Walking Distance, Of Wai-Mart,

$45 ooo.

254·5074, 8·30 Am To 3 30 Pm,
Monday Thru Frida\&lt;

2 Lots. Camper And Building, At

eon 740.992·7572

Area (740)"Hl818

Excellent start-up ho-me. Owner
pay c losing cost. 3BR w/Baae ment, Electric Heat/C A $32,000
Luxurious country Brick set In 13
Acres Like New, In Ground Pool
Shop &amp; Lots 01 Storage, You
Must Drive By &amp; Take A Look

see A1 ·Big Fool Park' At. 7
South, 6 Miles Below Gallipolis,
To Bear Run Road &amp; Follow
Mason City· 5 rooma , lull basement, lennox heat pump wfth air,
Anderson double windows, excel·
tent lot 62-1f2JC1·H. own cheaper

lhan rant. 740 ·992·3041, 740·
992·3557
Ranch S1ylo House on 75 Acres.
3BR. 2BA. garage, hay field, big
barn (304)895·3130
Restored Victorian hOme sl1uat8d
on 12 acres , Village Mldd!tport,
secluded and private, appointmen~

cal740-992·5696.

Road

Frontage

$38 ,500

(304)675-&lt;1679
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake View, Gallla County,
S32,000 More Acreage Available,

740-388·8678
Apple Grove Memorial Garden Is
now offering a llmhed time ape·
clal on Cemetery Lots, from Aptll

Living Room, Dining Room, EaHn
Kitchen lg Family Room 740-

Grave Mortcers 1304)576-2n9
Bteutlful Home Slt11 1Acre, 5
Acres. and 6 Acres 10 mll ea
from PI Rl., Public water, PrJ vole, (304)675-591 11 456· 1542

BRUNER LAND
7-1-1492
Galfla Co.: Hunters 88 + Wood·
ed On Williams Hollow $40,000
Cash Price, Just Oft SA 218,
Friendly Ridge Ad , 15 Acres

$14,000 , Public Water, Clly
Schools! Teens Aun Ad 10 Acres

$10,000 -$1,000 Down+ $132 A
Month.
Mtlga Co.: Danville Briar Ridge

Rd., ·5 Acres $12.000 Or 7 Aaes
$13.000. On SR 325. Nice 5 Acr·

es

$16,000, Public Water. Au ·
tland, Whites Hill Ad , 11 Acres
Public Water
Call NOW For Free Mapa +
Owner Financing Into. Take 10%

Off Ust Pr~o On Cash Buysl

Three bedroom home with lata of
closet space, close to school, on
corner lot, storage building, one
bedroom rental home Included,

lota For Slle 112 Shaded cain,r
altes, water, road, boating to Ohio

Rlwr, ole (3041576-2894
Pay Attention To Thlsl We Have

Nice. Pretty, Roslden11al Building
lois Localed About 20 Minutes

320 Mobile Homes

North Gatupolla Bast Of All, l!'lexpenslve, Sold On land Contract

for Sale

Year loaM, 740-446-2957
1st Clau Convenient, One Bedroom Apt Central Air &amp; Heat ,
Washer/Dryer, Dishwasher. Private entra nce, $350 (3 04)875-

5733

7806
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Campus, 740-24!5-5858

S350/Mo . Includes All Utllltlea,

Ooposlt Required, 1·888·840·
0521 .
2bdrm apt&amp; , total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
fadllties , dose to school in town.
Appllcationa available at: Village
Green Apts. t49 or call 740.992-

3711 EOH

100 Me mortal Drive East

Pomerov. OH
limits have changed . 1

Income
person- $15. 100, 2 persons-

$17,300 And 14t limns have
changed also U you are 50. years
old or handicapped, you may
qualify for The Maples. Openings
are oow available Rents are computed according to your Income
Refrigerator and stove provided
and all primary utihtlaa paid Must
be 50 years ol age (effective

1hrough February 29. 2000) or
handicapped Must meet HUO
202 Section B eligibility requirements For furlhtr detalla, call

(740) 992·7022. EHO
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES
JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weslwood Drive
lrom $279 to $358 Walk to shop

A'

&amp; movlea Call 740·448-2588

Equal Housing Opportunity
Beautiful Modern 1 BedroOm
Apartment Rent &amp; Utilities, Interview, References, No Pets, Lease,
Deposit, Non Smokers, Available, '

411 51991n Clly. 740-446-3884
Christy's Family Llvlng , apartments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740 992-4514. apartments available, furnished &amp; unfurnished
.Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Across From Park AC, No Pets,
References , Deposit $325/Mo,

740.446-8235, 740-446-0577

Prime building slits outatdt of

mo·

Mason Clly Llmlls . $15 ,000 per
acra (304)882-3772

posH Requlrod, Ulllffioe Paid,
446-1519

$2000, caii740-992-3MO.
1976 Atlantic 1•x10, 3 Bedrooma,

1 1/2 Ba1ht, All Electric, Now Furnaco. Now Rool, CIA. 740·245·
5671, 740&gt;2~5492
1979llberly 14x56 2 Bedroom
Mobile Home With Furniture.

111VER LDT Impossible To Find •
-Until Now. Approx. 3 Acres Located 5 Milas From The City Out
Ot Flood Plain To Build That
Dream Home On, Call 740·446-

2510

360

Washer &amp; Dryer, Underpinning,
Porch, Morolll740-446-0643

7~

GraciOus Uvlng 1 and 2 tfedroom
apartments at Vlllage Manor and
Riverside Apar.tmtnts In Middt•·

pori From 1249·$373 Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Housing Opportunities.
Newly Remodeled 1 BR Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis location No Pets $300 + Ulilltlea
Reference Required 7.40·446·

Real Estate
Wanted

0008
North 3rd Ave , Middleport, 2
beQroom, unfurnished aparbntnt,
deposit &amp; referancaa. 740-992·

1980 Klngoloy 14Ft x70 Ft Wllh
314 Acre lo1 Localed 2 Miles On

1124 E. Main Slreot. on R1 124,

oo

Pomeroy Hours: M T.W 10
am to 600pm ,Suneley100to

6 00 p m. 740·992 ·2528, Ruu
Moore owner.

540 Ml-llaneoue
Merchandise
$69 00 co mes with three month

he programming llmltod time off·
w, call 1-800·779-8194
1985 JD 54108 Skldder, excellent
rondiUon, wl1h chalna, 197 4 Mad!.
300 /8 1pd with rear mount, G
model, Prentice Knuckle Boom ,
CBI740-992-7421 alter 5prn.

0165

AMAZING

ples Col1740-441·1982.

_

Central Alr Condltlonlng Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed

$1 ,500, 2 112 Ton $1 ,3.!50, 2 Ton
$1.250: Tho AboVe Includes Normal Installation If You Don't Call
Us We Both L0$81740·4-46-6308

Or 1·800·291 ·0096
Diamond, Back Accent EX 24
Speecl Mountain Bike W1th Hel·
met Also Palntball Gun, Tracer
Pump Action And Other Equip ment , 740·446-9182, For More
Information

For Sale: 5' DISC, 14' Plows, 3 PT
Hitch 9X7 Garage Ooor $50 00

8FI ladder Rack, $300 00 Now
Aluminum Tool Box $250. Triple
Track Windows. $25 oo aa 2

so·xes

1/2" 1 Way Windows .
New, $350 ea S-1 0 Truck Beds
Driver Side Door, 12 HP Econo·
my with 48" Mower, $ t ,000 Used
15" tires. $20 00 ea Electric water Heater, $50 Gravely Tractor,

$450 (304)675-4004
Grubb a Piano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 740·446-4525

AERATION MOI'ORS
Ropalrod, Now &amp; Rebuilt In Slock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528
King Size Wa1erbad, Canopy
With Mirrors $500, Coffee Table,
$50, 740-!88 0400

Nice New &amp; Used Furnllura And
Appllan~os, 740·448-1004, 740·
446-4039 Anytime

Pampered Chef, call 740·949·

ty Room. Eloclric Heal Pump. Refrigerator And Stove Included,

eon Aner 4 ~M

740-245-1302

199!5 14JC76' 3 Bedrooms 2 VInyl
Bath Dishwasher, Garbage Dla·
posal. New Carpet, Central Air,

largo Dock, 74D-446-7860

1995 Clayton Ooublowlde,
28X80, 3BR . Fireplace/Don, fully
upgraded Must move $35,000

(304)458-2549
1995 Dutch Mobile Homo, 14170

122 112 VIne S1roo1, Gallipolis,

FlOOrs, CA, 1 112 Balh,

Ful~

Car·

poled, Pallo, No Pe1e, Llaso Plus

2 Bedroom/2 Bath, Ail Electric,
House tor Flent $550 month +

446-3481.

dopoall and references (304)675·
3424.
2 BR Houao a1 1008 Main Slrttt
Depoat t Like to have referenc-

fS Cell (304)675·51 12
Beautiful River VIew: Nice Two
Bedroom, 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street. Stove &amp;
Refrigerator, Basement, One Car
Garage, Washer /Dryer Hook·Up,
Deposit &amp; References Required,
No Pets, Rent Discount Call 740·

Security Deposit Required. 740·
74~0101

Twin Alvers Tower now BC(ceptlng

appllcallons lor 1BR. HUD subsidized apt

ror elderly and hand·

lcapptd EOH 304-675-8679

Two bedroom apartment In Po·
meroy, no pets, 740-992-5858 •
Two bedroom, ona bath apartm•nt one bedroom, one bath

aparlmen1, bo1h In Middleport, lm·
mediate occupancy, 740 -992·

9133

992-5502

460 Space for Rent

Windows, Dock, $19,800, 740·
256·6860

House Far Rent All Utilities Paid,
Lcoated In · Mason, $300/Mo,

Mobile homa sltt available betwean Alhena end Pomeroy, call

740·2!16-1469

740-385-4367.

Doublowldo On lol, 800·383·
6862.

Clean, Efficient 2BR Referenc-

Trailer Spac• for Aflnt: Georges

Vinyl Siding, Shingle Roof, Steel
Doora, 2x6 Walls , Thilirmopayne

$3995 Oulck delivery Call 740·
365·9621
Single Parent Program 8Q0.383-6882

eo, Oopoall, No Pats (304j675·
5182.

Crook Rood, 740-446-1 1~

MERCHANDISE

One bedroom furnished house 1

._, Gallpola, utill110s paid,
992·9f91

510

Houaehold
Goods

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryer1, Ranges, Relrigrators 90 Day Guarantee!

420 Mobile Homea
for Rent

Used Pentium Clan computers,

PRIMESTAR
FIH Dl- Special
Free Installation 3 months free
prognomlng, cal1686-265-21 23
pRO I I llJPP'-Y
We Are Prpfeuional Installation

bug dtllector. bod liner, tallga1t

protector, lull size bed mat, 8' fiberglass ca"' flush topper, fit full
alze General Motors, 740·892·

11171tavt meeea{ll.
Sony Playatation &amp; 7 Games,

$100,740-448-0350
Waterline Speclal

Ohio Valley Bonk Will Offer For
Sate By Public Aucllon A 189&amp;
Sunohlno M/H On 4127/89 AI
10.00 A.M. AI Tho OVB Annex,
143 Thlrd Avo .. Gallipolis. OH
Tl1e A110Y1 Will 8e SOf&lt;l To HIGh·
tit Bidder •Aa Ia - Where la•

Wlthoul Expresud Or lmpllld
Worronty And May Be lien By
Calling Tho Colloc11on Dopor1·
mon1 AI 740·441·1038 ova AI·
serves The Right To Accept Or

Reject Any And All Bids, And
Wkhdrow p,_ty From Sale PM·
or To Solo. Tormo 01 Sale CASH
DR CIIITII'lED CHECK.
S &amp;edroomo. 2 Balhl, S1st/Mo.
1·304-735-721!1

2 Bedrooms,

In Porter Arh,

Ot·

posit &amp; Rololoncoa Roqulrtd. No
- · $28S/Mo. 740-381H1112
2 BR Mobile Home, Sondhlll
Road, No Pets, Atfertnct At·
qulrtd. (304)875-3834.
Now Mobile Homo, P,ark at Galli·
polio Forry Now aceeptlng applications tor Iota on aile (30')675·

8908
Nice 3 bedroom mobile home, Jn

M-..,n, On, no pets, 740-1112·

5151.

HotptMnt Full .Stu WasHer 4 yra

old, 180 Almoqd Color Konmoto
Dryer, $80 (304)e75-M83.
Washer Si!!i; Dryer 815 1 l!leclrlc

Rango $85, Frool FrM Rolrlgero·
tor $180, Chell' Uprllfht ""•·
or. Oryor $208: Woohlr $205, 1
Yoar Warranty; """ Amona ,lllr
Condltlonor, 5,000 BTU 5 Ynr

&amp; Dryer 1200, ~more Wuhlr

185: Call Aftlr 5, 7~10ee

Troller For Rent. 740-ol&lt;lll-f218

''j

Percharon Filly For Sale, Halter

BrofiO, 740.258-1258

ot Ex1ras $:l500 OBO (304)875·
2014

'

Block brlck.f88Wer pipes, windows, llntela~,.~i _Claude Winters ,
Rio Grande , OH Call 740·245·

5121
pOLE BUIL.D!NG8

Horse Barns, Garages, Any Sryte,
Any Size. Free Estimates, 740-

Peta for Sale

4 Monlhs Old $200 , 304·6752134
AKC Registered Golden Retriever
2 Years Old, For Stud s,Hvlce,
Paptra Available, Contact Mike

Brower ~~ 304·773·5011 Or
LHva MoeiiQj!
•

I.V.IIoutheldo Aq,./iurn
2006Com&lt;lenAve,...
_ _ rg_ wv 28101

271h Annual Benlley Pig Sale Fri

Ben11ey, 937·584- 2398 : Leroy
3 Year Old. Chi-Angus Bull 740448-8858 740-446-7421
4-H Pigs &amp; Feeder Calla Rea·

Prirlod (304)982·2886

Fair Pigs lor Satel Excelltn1 Blood
Lines! For mort Information Call

Hogo 200 Pdo., 1 Boor, A-1 Bred,
Dairy BuHs, 740.245-9657
Flar Pigs For Selo, 740-258-6102
Fuii·Bioaded Charta• Bulls 9

Hay &amp; Grain

wllh tow package, badllner &amp; lop·
par, $5400. 740.949-2490.

-

..,..,, Blut Eyes, Sto. 740-441·

,•

cttalrs and banch seat 11600
OBO/trade Call alter 5PM

•

THE BORN LOSER

.

""'

~T N*'-lt'1. 1Wf\'-.1 "- W"'~ 11\1':&gt;
GlC.. T~D OJT \0 e£..1(-::::---t

Motorcycles

~.

Aoufld bales of nay, 740·742-

2302

Ro~d Bales Been covered with
~~~ $10 (304)882·2886

1150 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Dekelb Stod Corn &amp; Soy Beans
For Slle. (304)675· t 1108.

$1,000, 740-448-27114

Two Motorcycles Hond, CB iOO

F and XR 200 R. 1900.00 each.
(304)882-3166.

... BIG NATE

750 Boats &amp; Moto111
for Sale
1997 Kawaaak1 Jel Ski 1100 cc 3

7.o&gt;24s-aen.

porto D &amp;
R Au1o, Rlploy, WV (304)372·
3933 or 1-800-273-9329

Now goa 1anks &amp; body

- PEANUTS

Campel'l &amp;
MotorHomea

good condition, $3500 OBO. 740·
742·2230

away, Runs Good. Call (740)258·
1102. Ask lor Jr.
1960·1HOCAR8 FROM$500
Pollee Impounds, And Till
Repo's. For Listings Call 1-800·
319-3323 Ex1 4420

1985 Buick Skylark S1arts easy
Runs good Needs rear brakes

1988 Lincoln Town Car 156,000

740-448-3232
1989 Ford Tempo, runs- good ,
looks good , little rust, new tlres,
needs wlndahleld , $700 See at

Balow Loan Value, 740-448-1127,
740-379-9061

1988 34' Travel Trailer, New

1992 Sunblrd V-8, Au1o, AIC,
Clean $3,695; 1992 Cavalier, 2
Doors, A/C, $2,595, Cook Molars,
74Q-44Mf03
1993 Grand Am GT While, Lold·
ad, PoweJ Everything! Runs
Great! Great Graduation Present,
Must Stet $5,000; 740·682-

1324
1995 Ford Taurus Gl Stationwagon, 46,000 Miles. Top Condl·

lion, $9,500, 740-446-7355
1995 Neon Hlghllne, 4 Doors, Automitic, AIC, Till, Cassette, Blue,

~wnlng. like Now. Slortd lnolde
In Wln11tr $5,200. (304)n3-9182.;

SJ=RV IC ES

Home
Improvements
IA-ENT
WATEIIPIIOOFINQ

C&amp;C General Home Maintenance - Painting, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors, wlndow1. bathe,

mot&gt;le home

ropa~

and more Fo&lt;

free e1Umate call Chet, 7•0·982·

6323

1998 Pontiac Trana · Am, Navy

3491.

720 Trucks for 5ale
1877 F-150 Ford Truck 351M
Motor, Good Shopo, $600, 740·
446-9492

l i vingston's e-aaem.,t Water
Proofing, an basement repatra
dona, free
lifetime
e~eparl·

840 Electrlcel and
Refrlgel'ltlon
Atlldenllal or commercial wiring,

new aorvlca ol ropll11. Millar
cansed electrician

l~

RJdanour

Eloclrlcal, WV000308, 304·875·
171141

t~o oomo
plac•: obbr.
2Yn-qunUon
3 Noel of
ph•nnts
4 Socrocl bird of
1ho Nile
5 laat loner

1 In

6 Ruhr Va11oy
c~y

7 Mocllclnat 1root
8 We1tern hemisphere as1n.

9 Do a

chore
~
10 Two wordl ·
of undtr·
atondlng :
11 Hawaiian

12

hOUMhold

19

21
22
23
24
25

,

.,.,.bird
Flrot place?
Couple
Camelot
figure
lll1
Lunchroom
Wild goll
lnvod&lt;lr of ,
Rome

Aim• box
- -clo-Well
Thateh fl'llm
"Stop - -L"
Decora1e •
anew
37 Evening

26
28
29
30
31

38 r.::::bulldlng
org.
41 Rocllalel

•2 Long herole
43

~•mol

"The Dolly ·
Planet"
44 Neceoolly ·
45 Small quarrel
•r om....nt
48 " Mo011 -" '
49 Bit of newa'
50 Morayo
52 Addition to a
house
'
54 Cerell grain

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

by Lula Campos

CeMtbrily Cipher C'VJ)Iog rama are created from quotaloos by famous people pa s1 al"'d presern
Each Ieite• n the cipher ttands for ano!her Today's clue p equ,t/s U

.uv
MGF

NMOVMZV

X

NBLYV
GPLZTZ

J XW W
V T M L Z

JKXWT

XZ

YKMY

F B

YKXZ

MGf
J T

l BET L
N B L

J T ' W W

FB

K MIT

Y K T

ZKBJ.'
ETGT
ZXZHTW
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Sailing the fino art of getting wei and becomrng 111
while slowly go1ng nowhere at great expense " - Henry Beard/Roy McK1e

I

T I p 0 AE

I

•

versa

Oon'1get stunr by high prl(ot r
Shop th&lt; dosSlflrd socfron.

1998 Dutchman Pop·Up, Air,
Heat, Refrigerator, Blkt Rec,k,
Sctlln Room, Jack Standa,

French Cl1y Maylag, 740·446 :
7795

35 Lukewarm

DOWN

SCUM UTS ANSWUS

080.

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands OVer 25 Years Experle"nce Ali Work Guaranteed

predeceaaor

23 Prop lor
Groucho
27 Supremo Court
iutllco Sandro
Doya2 T111mtnato a
lounch
33 Perla ' rlll(lr
34 Commonll1o
40 Across

•

~ (740)992-8488, Ask tor Jodi&lt;.
Eve/(304)882·3851 . $10,500.

ceo.

93 Mercury Tracer1 auto, air,
looks &amp; runa good , 740·892 -

MEAN ANOTHER
STRAIGio!T ~ALL ...

WILL

Electronic Jack , 2011. Awnt~a.

Well Mtln1tlnod, Clroal Gao Mile·
egol an~ 1uoo.
740-367748t

co

VIC e

E~r­

446-0670, 1-800·287-0576. Rog.,. WilllrprooiXlg.

hnr me roar"
47 Author Wleul
51 TIMI Prince's
altar ego In a
Twain~~
53 Cryotalllne
gem
55 A1 rocluctd
price
56 Graduation cap
ornomont
57 Decld&lt;l
58 Cooko clomo

Pass

Awning, Water Heater, 8ak

Uncondlllonal lifetime guarantee
local rererencaa furnlah,d . E•!
te~llllld 1975. Coli 24 Hro. (740)

46 " - - w011'\11n,

7 Soawllld
product
13 Poye grlf11o
1• Took •
brelllhor
15 Wes1 16 Ancient Jewlah
IIC8IIc
17 Accompllehes
18 llot-&lt;Oncllng
obbr.
20 Spice Girls fon,
often
21 Muborak'o

TI-IEN IT
WON'T MATTER

11/C, TV An1onna/Boo11or Axloa.

810

charged

1 S.Como

AniWir to I'Nvlouo Puzzll

8'(

1993 29l Terry Camper with
Stove, Large RefdgerstoriFrMzer,
Mk:rowave, Gaslflectrlt Heater,

7~949-2046

$2500Neg (304)675-1130

ONE FIN6ER WILL MEAN A
STRAIGIIT ~ALL ..TWO FINGER5

Cablne1s. 2 AIC'o, $8,995, 740·
446-7106

eonnevJUe, u:ctllM!r eondl·
tlon, PB, 1&gt;£, 3 a engine, $3,700,
1992 Chevy Cava11ar, Automatkl,
Air, Cruise, AM/FM Caaaette

- and

1985 Alrttroam 31 Fl. Excolla
Purchased Now Garogo Kept,
Like ~ow lnolde &amp; 0111, EeUmalld
MHoe 30,000 740-446·2602

ace

Pass

Wes t conlmued wllh 1he heart
queen and h1s th1rd hearl What d1d
East do now' Knowmg Sou1h had to
have the club ace for h1s h1ddmg, East
led 1he 13th heart Th1s promoted
West 's spade queen as lhc fo urth
defe ns1 ve lrt c k
Perhaps yo~ thmk that was easy
However, lherc's no pOint s1g na lmg
tf partner 1sn' 1 walchmg your cards •

Auto Parte &amp;
Acceeaorlee

'79 Starcraft, self contained, air,
tandem wheels, awning , 24', very

'11 0 Auto a for Sale

3•
Pass

Sibl~

Budget Priced TransmlasiOf'!S
and Engines, All rypea, Access
To Over 10,000 Transmlnlons,

TRAN SPORTATION

Pass

Pass
Pass

s lam
Note also Wes l' s open1 ng lead
Agamst a sun conlract, a lead from a
Slrong shun sutt 1s usua!Jy preferred
10 one from a weak long sutt
Under West's heart kmg, East
s hould s1gnal w11h 1he nme. He wants
partner to contmue hearts, so he drops
h1s h1ghcs1 spo1-card Less cxpe n enced playc1s play 1he siX. bu1 th ai
m1gh1 be dtsco uragmg h om the 109-6 Always Signa l as clc m ly as pos-

1998 Honda Foreman es 450 4x4
Windshield Rosr Rack Gear,
Slorago, Like Now, 400 Mllu,
$5,400 740·388·9416.

790

I •

2•
4•

to stop m game or to move toward a

1988 Honda XR600 , Excellent

760

Changer, FuMy loododl Will Taka
Pay Olf, 740 446 4548

Ftmalt Mlxtct Sfame1e De-

Converalon Van,

302FI, ral&amp;ed rool, TV, caplaln'a

740&gt;992·3537

Plqllol &amp; Kllltnt
Ftllllne "' pt1i oupplfot

Point Pleasant,

GOMPLt!f
IPIOT1•

Seat''· Aluminum Trailer, Life
Jacket, Excellent Shape! $5,500,

304-485-1 2t3

l't1 Shop, 2413

Allf YOV A

1988 Blazer 4WD, 8 cylinder au·

1oma11c, AC, PS, PB, groa1 Shape,
$3700, 740-992·7478 or 740.949-

740

East

Yeslerday, West led the c lub kmg
H1 s partner held J-7-6-3 Kn owmg
the lead showed the kmg a nd queen
(lead ace from acc-ktng! ), East
encouraged wnh the seve n, showm g
an equ1valent hono r 10 those
prom1sed by the ope n1n g lead, e nher
lhe ace or Jack
S1gnals are 1mponan1, makm g
defense less d1fhcult1han tl would be
" Hymg blmd"
In thts deal, South was m four
spades How should 1he l;le fe nse have
proceeded?
Note Sou1h's two-spade response
Tht s ts a mong JUmp sh tft. M a ny
players are tau ght that you need '19
pmnts for lhiS b1d That ts wrong' It
1s muc h beltcr to use the response
w11h only some 12- I5 htgh-card
po miS You desc rrbe your hand and
le a ve 1! 10 panne r to dCCide whelher

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

runs groa1 6 cyl $3,000. OBO
(304)675-8704

One Owner. 39,700 Mlloa Whllo,
All Op·
tlons Available, $13 ooo, 740446-0076

Not1b

aMiclrtcally

39 MuM of poetry
40 Name for a dog
•2 Shady ,,..

By Phillip Alder

Stall, Lg. Sola-llkt Dack seat.

Green Leathar Interior

Weal

36 Oeple1a

Trust your
partner's
signals ·

THVTTY YEARS II

1973 Ford truck, 4•4. price

rows, &amp; Gilts, Consignera Aoger

C H Soiling 200 Head, 01 Bor·

Blue Molalllc, 5 7 lllor. LS 1 Engine, Leather lnttriOr. 10 Speaker

Tarantulaa, mice

NEGK

$1200, anolher cab with II, phone
740&gt;367-7578.

For Sate 1993 Chevy Full Size
Hl·Top Explorer Convereoln van,

Monaoon Stereo, , 12 Olac

IN TH'

South

ACROSS

Opemng lead: • K

I'VE GOT YOU BEAT BY

ALL
WEEK
LONG

730 Vana &amp; 4-WDs

~ G~t

Building
Supplies

550

PAIN

For sale or trade· 1968 Ford F250 pick up, 740-985-3549

day April 23rd, 7 30 P:M Fayette
County Fairgrounds, Washington

1990 Lumina, Low Miles. LQadedl

2970

I'VE HAD THIS

(304)675-1407

XXX¥·X · - · 25 now rtlosaos.
Fob. 99, world's hOUIII. Thl~k

SaKI Slca9t1 Appllttnc11, 78 Vlnt
Slflll. Gaii&gt;OIIo, 740-448-7396

&amp; Dry«, $176; WI1WipOOI Wllller

1991 Dodge Dakota, Oitael, lots

Ford

5 4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

1258.

1991

2 Year Old Hall Belglum Hall

3027

Warranty, Wt Stfvlce Whal We

Yellow Admlrol Sld!l By Sldo
S150: Almond Konmoro Walllor

Livestock

104 81h St .. PI PI , (304)675·
7398

AKC Reglaterad BOMer Pup Male,

VIne Streol, Clll 740•4411-7388,
1·888-818.0128

price $475, 740.387-7576

Watkins Prod~cts call 740·949-

Thompson• Appliance. 3407
Jackson Aver&gt;Ja (304)675-7388.

2 Bodroom Trailer, t2501Mo , &amp;
Oopooll, Call Alter 8, 740·448·
4316

... AQ

1988 Ford F150 Cuatom Ford
4x4 300 six cylinder, • speed,

Mile&amp;, RUI'll Great! 740·441·0335,

Nice Homo Sal Up On loi.-Makt

~7311-3409

Sou Ill
• AK9762
9 J I0 8

( 304)8~3859

Rototlller Yardman, 5 hp , dual
dlsection, new triple care system

$21 95 Per 100. 1' 200
$37.00 Per 1oo, All Bress Com·
pression Flftlngs In Stocli
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son, Ohio, 1·800-537·9528

vou've seen _,verythlng? Best
pnces To order call 304· 752·

4 96542

$900

$1200, caii740.36H576

1800 (304)875·5669
314 200

8 3

1985 Dodge p ickup, ruf'1 1 good,

2045

1966 Pontiac Grand PriM Orlve

Fleeae receiver &amp; Pinnal hitch,
aluminum running bOards, tu• size

560

WV, $999 Down 7.9 Financing,

Arlens garden tractor, 3 point
hitch, all hydraulk: mowing deck

RCA CamCorder. Brand New

1300. (304)675-201 4.

384-4587

wasnera, dryera. refrigerators .
ranges Skaggs Appllancu, 76

Oay, Or 304·525--5359"Evonings

Pike, 740-446·6308, 800·291 0096.

For Sale. f'e¢pndltloned w. .h.
era, drytrs •n~ refrlgeralore

Oak Wood Homes, Barboursville.

1995 Terramlte Good Condition
Call Huntington , 304· 736-9131

Con Furi'ISh A Uel Of Daalaro To
Ina tall For You II You Don't Call
Us , We Both lost! 5!53 Jackson

• Q 10

•

AM/FM Cassette Stereo System
AC, new tires, Reese hltctt, elec·
trlc brake hook·up. Looks sharp,

740-446·8044.

• A 9 6 2
8

J 97632

pen111 hl1ch , $3,500.00 Firm

1976 lnt Model 1$00 Tracto r,
Wllh Model 50 Rogers Lowboy,

631)

• 5

KQ3

ment Trailer, Trl-A:dt, new Urea,

miSSI{il

$200 74 per month wllh $1150
dOWn Call 1-1100-837-32311

GOOD US!D APPLIAIICIS

East

Q4

$12,000 00 Firm Hooper Equip-

1988 Ford Customized Conver·
elon Van . loaded, 4 Captain

complete oots. $500. call 740 ·
992·8700. II no answer leave

Cherry Baby Sleigh Bed. Like
Now $250 (304)6711-1879

74~9669

4 K J 10 7

1986 International 4ee 0111el
Oumptruck Engine-Low mileage,
new bedilnar.
new
tires ,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740.448·2412 Or
l-IICI00-594· 11 " .

640

French Clly Maylag, 740-448·
n95

2 Bedroom Mobne Home At t&lt;err,

15 ·20 Used Tractors 1n Stock
8 99% Financing, Used Hay
Equipment Financing As Low Ai
3 9% Used Planters 5%, New
John Deere Tractor Financing
7 99% Carmlchaet'l Farm &amp; lawn
Your local John Deere Dealer,

Plfllltrtd Cholllhow

New 1~9 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 month1 FREE tot rent
Include&amp; washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluJCI SIIPI and setup . Only

2 Paymentl, Move In, 4 Yeara
le11 On Loan (304)722-7140

610 Farm Equipment

Monlhllnd Up (304)675-6912

On• Bedroom For Rent In Quiet

740-446-()670

Oldi/Good Condition , $1 ,ooo

1888 Ford Ronger 2WD. Bedlln·
ar, Tonneau Cover, CO, Air, S
Spd, 14,500 miles, $12,500. Call
Tracy. (304)882·3560 or (304)882·
2051

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

3027 to place order or to book a

Porches, Very Good Condition .•

1994 16x80 Sunshine Mobllt
Home, Three. Bedrooms. Two
Bathrooms, Walk·ln Closets, Utili·

Car

Falr Pigs, $65 Each, 18 Butcher

448-0008.

0 R,

Trade Have 1300 CC Yamaha
Venture, full dress touring bike

MPG

• 7 5 4
+A K

ShoriBed . $1500 os Is 1tl3

1988 Ford F-250 300 8 Cylinder,
Good Shape. $2.500, 740·256·

Guage Shotgun with shells
$1 00 (7 40)44 1-oe53.

1982 Fairmont 14FI X 70FI, 2
Bdrmo, 2 Balhs, CIA, All Elect , 2

$12,000. 740-245·9120

For 5ale
or Trade

(740)·245-5672 or (7401 367 ·
0583

Srock Janitrol Heating And CoolIng Equipment, Duct Work, Reg·
lstera, And Related Materials For'
You To Install Your Own Or We

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spaclous , 2 Bedrooms , 2

Call740·593-7871

Naw England Arms 36• Barret 10

Sewage Trash, 1315/Mo., 740·

2 Bedroom Kl1chen, L 'R Sm

Wanted to buy- electric steal guitar, Hawaiian Lap steel, consolea
or pedal steel&amp;, write to 17 BlD·
ley Drive in Athena, Oh 4S701,

Trade lor h lgh
(304)675-4516

(&gt;JI 98J

200 mllea Automat ic 1/2 ton

1980 GMC Good Serloa, 18 Ft
Flat Bad. s11oo (304)576-30n

740-992·7200

sona~y

And Service Supply. We Sell
Wholeulo To The Public. we

410 Houses for Rent

Musical
Instruments

Lowrey "Cotllllan• organ, $1200,

590

Ford(wreckedlrlght

(304)882-2042

Larrldt 937-760-48021

JET

Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water

New Gas Furnace /Heat Pump, 2
Porches, Many Extraal Asking·

570

METABOLISM

Breakthrough!!! Lose 10·200
Pounds Easy, Oulek , Faat
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended' Free Sam-

Olelrlc1, Deyllme 740·446-3278,
Evonlnga 740-446-3099

Neighborhood! Deposit &amp; Re1orence Raqulrodii250 .00 (304)·
675-1550

pies, best oiler, 740·992·1363

$550 Firm Must Take Downl 740-

Now Taking Appllcallons- 35

RENTALS

side)F1s0. 302 Now Ja!lllr Motor

368-8099. Anytime

State Route 218, In City School

740--4-&lt;16-6157 Aftlr4·00 Pm

1171

24 F1 4 Fl Deep Swimming Pool,

CQOLQQWN

12Ft x85 Ft 1974 Spnng Manor
2 Bedrooms. To1el Eltr:1rlc, Good
Condmon. $3.500, 740-367-o632.

1974 two bedroom mobile home,

Buy or aell. Rlverlnt Ant1que a,

5443

Accopllng applications II
THE MAPLES

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References, &amp; De-

bile home. 740-992·5039.

Antlquea

S.anla Babies For Sale, 740·245·

Wllh Only 5% Down Call 1-800·
213-8365

1973 Hiltcreat two bedroom

530

For Sale · Show and Pel llmba

.ioMpl A Peachey, In TNT Area
Moving- 5 Bo~~:ers, two adult famal", one adult male, two pup·

11" DINCTV S.lllll1e llyltlftll·

2 bedroom apartment In Mlddil·
pon, we pay water, sewer 6 traah,
you pay gat &amp; eleclric, $200 par
month, $100 doposl1, 740·992·

lots, get the 4th free Special
Sale Companion and Individual

245-9337

740-992·6154.

1 Bedroom NII!Sr HOlzer's Cleanest In The Area , $279/Mo , Plus
Utllltlea, Flflt Month Free With 1

1, 1999. 10 July 1, 1999 Buy 3

$14,000 Or 9 Acres $12,000,

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home 4 Bedroom, 2 112 Baths,

nlshed and unfurnished, security
depoSit required, no pets 740·

-----.,.,-----··1
2 Bedroom Apartment, Rio
3 Acres on Sandhill Road 425ft
Grande Area. Close To College,

Sogns, $175K

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Stanlng at

anv

lillntd At

By Own er 291 0 Meadowbrook

ua As ssoo oown. 7~742-o510

demy High School Meigs High

Grande, Crossroads Office And
Financial Aid Office, Buckeye
Hills Career Center· Adult Education Offk:e And Student Serv1ces

2704, 740.992-5696

Bank F\opo Mobllo Homeo, Single
Wide &amp; Stcllonala Financing, l11·

Preappllcatlons May Be Picked
Up AI The Following Educational
Facilities
Eastern High School, Ga.llia AcaScttool. River Valley Hlgtl SchOol
Southam High School, South Gal·

By owner, 725 Page Street, Middleport, hoUse &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, w.ll Htl house Mitt.
out lots far Sat,ooo. 740-992-

1991 14x70 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath.

RARE $)PPORTUNITY

hnes
L:aborers /Outce Workers 24
Hours Per Week $5 15 Per Hour ,
Work Will Be Performed At Vari·
ous Government Agencies And
Nonprofit Organizations In The
Area Requirements Gallla Or
Meigs County Residents Age 55
Or -01-e.r U nAmp lo~ecl /Unclerem·
played Meeting JTPA T1tle II Ell·
gib1llty Gu1cle!lnes

t 7.83 Acres For Sale Or Trade
For 4 To 6 Bedroom House On
One To Two Acres Been Oozed
F.or A Double Wkla And Garage,
Sf4lreher Road, Ca~ CMa AI 740-

(304)675·6759,

1 and 2 bedroom IP8rtments, fur·

992·2218

C Garage
$75,000

(304)882·3n2

180 Wanted To Do

42.000 (304)5782270

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

Wlldlllo Jobs 10 $21 60/Hr. Inc
BenAflls Game Wardens Secur·
ity, Maintenance, Park Rangers
No Exp Needed For App and

35 Acres 8 Poles Farm with/Bam,
some tlmbtr/bottom land Athlon, WV Appomtments only.

breakfast room . Basement: new
carpet and Unolaum , gat heat, AJ

By Owner 3BR/2BA/Acre-lo1,

HELP WANTED
GMCAA Is Currently Accepting
Applications For The Following
Temporary Poslllons Positions
Are E~~:pacted To Have Various
Start Oates From Uld · April To
June And Continue Through
Most Of The Summer lntereated
Individuals Should Apply Immediately To Be Considered For All
Potential Openings

4 Br • 2 BA, LA, DR, Kt, and

Brick, Basement. Large Brick
Workshop. Lots of Ex,traa Pt PI

~675- 1957

/ Conoal Office
8010 Nor1h Sla1e Rou1e 7

HaYen (304)675-5881 .

Equal Opportun•ty Emp&amp;oyer

modeling (304)674.0126

To Obtain A JTPA Preappflcallon

3BR, 1 1/2BA, Family Room ,
Fireplace, Central Air, 2 Car Ga·
rage, Great Nelghbortlood Naw

•

ASTRO·ORAPH
Wednesday, April 14, 1999
• Doon ~ould open for you in the
year ahead throusb your own intelli·
aence, skills and friendships you've
successfully cultivated In the put
Proper preparation always pays offl
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) In
areu that take consideration, stUdy
and reftection, you'll do better th111
your peen today, because you'll
place yourself m the other IllY 'a
oboe~ befon you make any decisions.
Arieo,troalyOUISelfto a binhd.y Jlft.
Send for your Astro-Onph predictlfllll for the Ytl!l' ahead by 11111Una $2
and SASB to Astro-Onph, c/o thia

newapaper, PO. Box 17!18, Murray
Hill Station, New York, NY IOIS6.
Be sure to state your ZodiiiC sip.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Pocut on the bottom llno ins1cad of
beina overly concerned with minor
Htb.:b or delayo today. In the lona
run, it's only the final tally tltM
counts I

OBMINI (t.f.ty 21-Jome 20) Bxpoltlrtl to people fmm oil walks of life
could prove beqeflclal fCK you today,

so don't iJOOR! or tum down any
chances you aetto ~ to uy plherinas. be they laqe or 1111111.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) "(ou
could have a bit of an edp o - your
competition today in situatiou that
call fCK diiCipline 111d hard work,
especially In conteau ia the wort
pii!Ce
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) Thouaht·
fulness towanll othen wiD not only
chalk up many points for you today,
but it will be IQillelhina you Cllt draw
Oh well in1o the future;
1 VJROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22) Moat
of the time, we can only depend on a
harvest that we haw seeded our·
ttelves, but today othan may share
their yield with you in 1ft effort to
repay you for put kindneu.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) l'elilapl
It's wise you waited until today to.
make I rather delicote dec:iaion
you've been so oklllfully avoiclinJ.
because your judpnent Ia exceptionaiiy keen llltltia time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) This
can he an extremely nwanlin1 day
'

for you if you devote your time and
ene&lt;Jies 10 endeavon that are con·
structive and meaninaful. Apply
younelf ac&lt;:ordmaly.
SAOmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Take at face value any comments
you act from friends 1oday You
oould feel more admired by them
than y&lt;!u miaht have reali~. They
are sin~. and you deserve their
IICC:olades.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19)
You miJht sense 111d bellove that
your fin-Ial trendo we encouraalna
loday. Have faith thd put your
emphasis on situations thll could
make or save you money.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Leadership roleo needed for today 's
involwments will be perfectly tailored to your qualificadona 1 ao d011'1
nllllq!lish cOntrol to anyoae who is

Ja1 adept.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Luek
will be tied into your own initiative

todi), so if you' re prepared to dilipntly work for what you hope to pl.
the pouabiht~a for Join . . ua~llent

Fabnc- Hiker · .Da f sy · Nmety · IN the BANK
One dummy to another, "Lots of people worry about '
nothing, especially when it's IN the BANK •

�Wednesday

Tuesday, Aprll13, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~age 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Prosecutors to decide if they will retry Susan McDougal .
retry the case. The jury deadlocked 75 in favor of acquittal on the contempt counts. A sticking point apparently was the defense argument that
Mrs. McDougal feared Starr.
The judge instructed The jurors
that they · could co nsider whether
Mrs. McDouga! believed Starr wanted her to lie only i"' deciding the
obstruction charge. But hts instruc-

she could be held for a false statement."
After eight hours and 45 minutes
of deliberations, spread over three
days, the jurors sent out a note at midday Monday saying they were "hQpelessly deadlocked" on two counts,
Mrs. McDougal took the witness
stand in her own defense at one point
during the five-week trial~ answerina

some of the same que5lions sil(, prison because of a back problem
refused to address in front of the before·she finished serving her time
grand juries.
· on the felony convictions.
Mrs. McDougal already had
"I spent so many months in jail
served 18 months.in jail for civil con- thinking that someday I'll get to tell
.tempt based on her refusal to answer · the people the truth," Mrs. McDougrand jury questions. She also served gal said.
3 112 months of a two-year term on ·- - - - - - - - - - - four felony convictions in her 1996 Brynt : How do hens dance?
trial. ' Howard released her from Bloke: Chick to chick.

High: eos; Low: 40a
Tomorrow: Rain
High: 80s; Low: 40s

Sports
Texas' Rodriguez
records 9 RBIS In
15-6·victory
-Page4

r

Meigs Coupty's

.9Lnderson's.
fO:tlaAn

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volum e 49. Number 239

Single Copy- 35 Cents

.

Sale

We_'re cekbrating 10 years of business with tre~ridous savings throughout the store
•

'

APPLIANCE SALE

• Superior Quality • Ufetime Warranty
·Exceptional Fabrics

-

'

WHIRLPOOL AND ROPER .' . ·

GLIDER/ROCKERS

one basicall y be ing warned .'time and ·
again and sim;&gt;ly not answering questions," said Barrett. " I make no
apolog ies for bringing th iS .case."
Ti]e defen·se cri ticized Starr's tacti cs durin g the trial , and McDougal
lawyer Mark Geragos challenged
. prosecutors to try his cl-ie•tt again.
''They don 't have the guts to retry
thi s case again because now we
know where the bodies are buried,"
he said .
Barrett said if there is a retrial on
the two criminal contempt counts, it
is unlikely Mrs. McDougal would be
. allowed to.again inject her allegations
that Starr wanted her to lie. ,
Prosecutors planned to ask the
court for permission to speak 10 the
jurols before de~; iding whether to

.

.

.

"Thi s i s~ notorious case of some·

'

;Joi::,;;,;~· Reg. $249............ _ ... .., ~.A~•.;..$199

' nc• Range ......""~....... .
SALE
$30'9
30, Elect
Reg. $389................~ ... §.~~.....5309
~on Gas R~nge....
~ ~·•·•··~· 2~~...... s3 .19
SALE - $2.99
Bu1nl·1n• o·1shwa sher....." ......." ........... " ....." ..............
·
10 cu. ft. chest freezer __..............~....~••!!*-~•...•s399
IINVItv washer ........................,..........
SALE ~;•• '$369
Ex.• I~rge c.,...w.
1
Ex. large capadty dryer ..- ...- .......'--2!.~......s319
"--""~~
Side/Side refrigerator .........- ••~......;~.-.~.....s1189 ·
SeH·Oean Elec. Ra•ge....................- ..........~~•••}489
Reg. $309.._•.._,._........ ~.~~.}249

'.

u ..........." " " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ' '

t!.........

.......

.....

,

.

County Court
The following 'cases were concluded recently in the Meigs County
Coun of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Michael T. Hanning,
Albany, failure to control, $20 plus
costs; Tanya Lewis, Gallipolis, speed,
$45 plus costs; Mark A. Brown, ~yra­
cuse, ·seat belt, $25 plus costs; James
'Lanclanese, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
seat belt; $30 plus costs; Jeremy R.
Gatrell, Middleport, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Paul D. Evans, Ponland,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Aaron J.
Davis, Middl ~port, two counts passing bad checks, $25 plus costs, restitution; Ri sa L. Sayre, Pomeroy,
obstructing official business, $75
plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to
two days, one year probation; disorderly conduct, costs only; Todd D.
Eads, Langsville, dnving under the
influence, $850 plus costs, 30 days
jail suspended to 1.0 days, one year
operator's License suspension, 90day vehicle imm obilization, one year
probation ; drivi ng under suspension,
$150 plus costs, 30 qay,s jail suspended to I 0 days concurrent, one
year probation; failure to control,
costs only; hit/skip, $50 plus costs ,
thtee days jail concurrent;
Melissa A. Holley, Racine. seat
b.clt, $15 plus costs; Roger W. Hayman, Long Bottom, DUI, $850 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended to three
day s, 90-day OL suspension, one
year probation, three days jail and
$550 suspended upon completion of
residential treatment program; Curtis
L. Ward. Rutland, seat belt, $15 plus
costs; Crystal L. Pridemore, Racine,
speed, $22 plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; William D. Stewart, Rutland, reckless operation, $100 plus •
costs, toree days residential treatment
program;
Timothy K. Lisowski , Norton,
failure to maintain assured clear distance, $30 plus cGsts; Terry Day,
Pomeroy, DUI after underage consumption, costs, 30 days jail suspended to 15 days, probation until 21
years of age; no OL,' costs, six
months jail suspended to I5 days,
probation ; Matthew A. Eblen, Rutland, left of center, costs only; Jeffrey
R.. Martin, Camp LeJeune, N.C.,
unllerage consumpti'on, costs, tOdays jail 'suspended to three days,
probation; falsi lication, costs,. I 0
.days jail suspended to three days concurrent, probation;
, Walter Barrett, Racine, two counts
passing bad checks, $25 plus costs on
e'!Ch, restitution, 10 days jail suspended upon payment of restitution,
one year probation; James D. c;oop:er, Middleport, DUJ, $850 plus costs,
10 days jail suspended to three days,
one year OL suspension, one year
probati&lt;;m; driving under financial
r~sponsibility action suspension,
$100 plus' costs, 10 days jail sus- .
pended to three days concurrent, one
year probation; failure to display
valid registration, costs; .failure .to
control, coslSi Johnny Ward ,'
Pomeroy, domestic violence, costs,
3~ :days jail suspended to three days.
on~ year probation, restraining order
issued; Steve Gob, Knoxville, Tenn.,
criminal-mischief, $100 plus costs, 10 ·
days jail.suspended, one year proba,
ti6n, restitution, restraining order
issued.

tion on the contempt charges allowed.
them to consider whether Mrs .
McDougal "willfully" violated a
co'urt order by refusing to answer the
questions.
·
One of the jurors who wanted to
acqui t Mrs. McDougal on all three
counts. Michael Na.nce, said he
belie ved she refused to testify
because "She honestly believed that

.

Meigs-River Valley diamond action, Page 5
Sibling rivalry over an ex, Page 7
Dan .Quayle announces candidacy, Page 12

Tocl.y: P. Cloudy

o

I

By PEGGY HARRIS
AsiOCiated Press Writer
UTILE ROCK, Ark. - Prosecutors say they 'will decide soon
whether to retry Whitewater figure
Susan McDougal after a jury deadlocked on two criminal contempt
charges while acquitting her of
obstruction of j usti&lt;:e.
''I'm still a little numb," Mrs.
McDougal said after the verdicts
Monday. "I've beenindicted since
1993, and this is the first day ·I
haven 't been indicted in years."
President Clinton said he . was
"pleased to learn"that Mrs.·McDougal, his foriner friend and business
partner, had been acquitted of
obstruction of justice, said White
House spokesman Joe Lockhart. " He
wishes all the best for her and her
family."
'
,Mrs. McDougal. was indicted after
she refused twice to answ'er questions
before the grand jury about the Clintons business dealings. She said she
believed independent cqunsel Kenneth Starr was out to "get" the Cliotons and would charge her with perjury if he didn ' t like her an swers.
Prosecutor Mark Barrett said Starr
anticipated makin g a decision this'
week on whether to seek a retrial.

Aprll1&lt;1, 11100

Weather

Open Stock

GUN
CABINETS
.Reg:

SALE

$319 6.G ttl--'269
5369
$5296.....
5599

$849 1D-ga
~ :H11Y

10,...
w/plstalcaa'. _ _5629

DINING TABLES
Reg.

___,

389

5

$559 1o-g..
$141912....

&amp; CHAIRS
SALE

$369 Oval Table· 4 Chai's............................................~79 ·

1-

5989

-""

CHEST OF

""

DRAWERS

~

'

1-'

---

0

•

- · 4 Drawer chest...... ~........ $79
Reg. $99
Reg. $109 5- Drawer chest..............S89
Reg! $169 X·L4·Dta..erc~st ..... s129
Reg. $239 8 · Drclwer chest.........$189

Carpet Sale

S1299lg. Table·-·a chairs .............·.........................·.......SCJ79

$569 Hardwood Table ~ 4 'hairs....~........_ ....................5429
$599 Sq1are Tabl~ • 4 'hairs ......:.~............................... 5449
$~29 Farnt .talale • 4.~a.irs ....................- .......~............5699
$2109 Table· 4 'halrs...........~..............---.......- ....5999
$619 Round Table • 4 chairs .....................- -............5469

Berber Carpet on Sale • Trackless Carpet on Sale. ·
Plush Carpet on Sale•Sculptured Carpet on Sale
'

• Free No Obligation Quotes
• Furniture and Appliances moved at no charge
·• Free removal of old carpet &amp;pad.
'

·Berkline ~ecliner Special
Ha,ndle operated Rock·A·Lounger
Bea~ty, corilfort, quality-nothing beats a
~kline recUner. Reg. $409 to $469

U.S. reserves are likely to be ca_lled upon for Kosovo ~duty
By LAURA MYERS
.
prevail.
AHOCiated Pr- Wrltar . .
.
.
..
Clinton, the lawmakers said, urged patience and c;mphasized that the air
WASHINGTON (AP) .- . Pr~stdent Chnton ts ~xpected to call_ up mth~ry
.bombardment of Iraq during the Persian Gulf War in 1991 took 44 days. In
reserves ~ support a maJor butllilup of NATO au power as strikes aga~nst
that case, however, it also took ~ 100-hour ground war to end the fight.
Yugoslavia ll!t'get more Serb troops hunkered down tn Kosovo, U.S. oflictals
The Pentagon is preparing to add 300 warplanes to NATO's air forces at
say..
.
. .
. .
.
•
.
the request of the NATO commander, Army Gen. Wesley Oark. Now, near. Ute ChnlOn admmtstr~tton, pre~armg for an extended an campa~gn now
ly 500 U.S. aircraft and 200 allied planes arc involved. Cohen .is ••peeled
soon to approve deploying ~II or most of the 300 American aircraft, defense
• ~at three we~ks of bombmg has fatled to halt the Serb war on ethntc Albam~s, also wtll .seek emergency m&lt;mey from Congress for the NATO operofficials said.
ali on.
, .
. .
. . . .
.
The U.S. reinforcements, which could include A-10 "tank killers" as well
The Pentagon sat~ tt co~ld be $3 btlhon to $4 bllbon, but congresstonal
· as F-15 and F-16 jet-lighters, would boost NATO 's ability to attack ground
esh.~ates say $~ btBton. .
.
,
" .
.
troops, artillery and air defense sites. More refueling tankers will keep
We are lakin~ our alhed au campatgn to th~ next level, Omton satd
planes in the air longer.
.
~uesday after asking members of Congre~ to gtve the_NA~ attack m?re
Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said NATO aircraft are flying day
tame to smash Serb. forces mstead of pushmg for constderatlon of sendmg
and night now, but Clark "would like to ily more intensively .. : to basically
U.S. ground trogps mto Kosovo. .
.
_
. .
apply more pressure. A lot of what he 's asking forwill· be targeted against
M~t lawmakers appeared t_o hsteti, but they _also ~a~d N:'I;TO anstnkes
units operating in Kosovo."
hadn I damaged xugaslav P_restdent Slobod~ · Mtlosevtc s mdttary as much
NATO iS flying 450 to 500 sorties a day, as much as triple the number
as . h?ped, accordmg to . brtefings they receave,d !rom Defense _Secre~ary
over Yugo'slavia in the early days of the airstrikes, which began March 24,
Walham Cohen and Army Gen. Henry Shelton, chairman of the Jcmt Chaefs
with persistent rain and clouds hampering flights and interfering with laser-of Staff.
crewman Mark Shaw, of tha 81&lt;1 guided bombs. .
.
.
.
..
"We're disappointed there hasn't been more done," said Sen. Dick . squadron
baaed
onboard
the
aircraft
carrlar
HMS
Invincible,
Th
·
·
l'k
.
•.
1
looka out over tha aae Tuaeday while tha HMS Invincible atHm· 1
e extra atr power 1 e y would reqUire calling up mthtary
reservists, ·
Lugar, R-Ind. "General Shelton, Secretarv Cohen, they're all disappointed
Bacon sat'd altho· gh he d'dn't
k
h
ld
be
ded
h 't
1
'
below. lnvlncllbleln an routa to tha Adriatic SH to relnforca cur·
•
u
now ow many wou
nee
or. w en 1
about this too."
rent N•·:ro forces In tha area.
might happen.
Senate Majority
Several hund red Ai.r Nat'tona I Guard mem be rs· a1 rea dyare parttctpatmg
· · · as
. Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss., said, "The bombing itself
But "House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., said Milosevt'c must
has not had the tmpact I would have liked it to have."
volunteers in addition to about 22,000 active-duty U.S. forces involved in
contend with a new faetor: "He now has an Albanian guerrilla force in the NATO operations.
.
.
country, sometimes just over the border, that he didn't have before."
Many Air Force refueling aircraft are operated by members of the Air
· Interviewed today on ABC's "Good Morning America," Gephardt said, National Guard. Nine Air Guard refueling wings from nine states are now
"If we will stay unified and keep our resolve ... we can get this done with- participating in the NATO missions with KC- 13~ refueling units from five
out ground troops."
Air 'Force J!,eserve wings in five states.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a candidate for the presidency, who advoThe biggest recent mobilization of reserves was for the 1991 Gulf War,
cates preparing for a ground war against Milosevic, told ABC: "If we can't when about 230,000 from the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps
prevail here, then there will be very few places in the world where· we can were cillled to active duty.
·

to start r ng
tornado-wrecked houses ·M eigs Local considers possible building project;
By JOHN NOLAN
AHOCiated Prau Wrltar
MONTGOMERY, Ohio (AP)- Wrecking crews are bei!lg dispatched
to level what's left of houses that were all but destroyed l)y last week's
deadly tornado.
"That's about all they can'do," Pat Gardner, a volunteer helping clean
up debris Tuesday near a stretch of ruined homes, said as he surveyed the
wreckage. ''It's a smorgasbord of destruction."
Nine teams of investigators from the Federal Emergency Mana~.ement'
Agency assessed the damage to hom;s, businesses 'attd·public
Tuesday and today in Cincinnati's bedroom suburbs. Gov. Bob 0Taft,
requested the assessment, hoped to receive a preliminary report today that
he can use to ask Washington to make loans and grants available to help
owners of wrecked houses and businesses rebuild.
· Lt. Gov. Maureen O'Connor, who represented Taft during a·tour Tuesday with FEMA officials, was impressed with the work of a small army.of
volunteers who helped pick up debris and stack downed tree limbs for
cleanup crews. Homeowners sifting through the wreckage seemed to be
coping well, sajd Ms. O'Connor, who recalled damage from li 196:lstorm
that struck her hometown of Strongsville during her childhood.
"I think that the attitude is much more ~pbeat than I expected," Ms.
O'Connor, who doubles as Ohio's public safety director, told reporters.
"They're singing the praises of the volunteers."
..
Russell flolroyd, 48, a volunteer from the Montgomery Assembly of
God Church, was stationed in a neighborhood of ruined houses to distribute sandwiches, donated cleaning equipment and bottled water.
The native of Melbourne, Australia, said he had experience on cleanup
crews after Australian brush fires. But the tornado's devastation was different.
.
.
· "With a fire, it bums everything..But this displaces everything," Holroyd said. "It's a mess."
,
.
·
The tornado killed four people, damaged or destroyed dozens of busine!!Sfs and hundreds of homes. It also wiped out much of M~n~~~~·~~~~~
Johnson Nat~re Preserve, leaving behind acres of felled and
trunks.
. '
Throngs of volunteers worked in the sunshine Tuesday to help homeowners retrjeve belongings and place them in cardboard boxes- or to fill
trash bins.
·
·
.Volunteers raked shredded home insulatio11 from lawns, picked up
wood shards and piled tree limbs to be removed by crews from . Montgomery and dozens of other communities that lent employees and equipment. Clothing and insvlation flapped from ttie branches of some trees.
Lee and Jacquelyn Cook, who .died when they were flung out of their
Montgomery home by the torn~do, , were buried Tu.Sday. .
Damage is expected to run in the tens of millions of dQllars. The state ·
expects to compile that figure this week, Ms. O'Connor said.
Students went back to classes in the Sycal)iore school district Tuesday
for the first time since the tornado. Classes resumed in Sycamore High
School, even though it sustained $1 million in damage and is across the
street from it subdivision of rt~ined homes where cleanup crews worked.

Students want .guardrails put
up after teen dies in car crash

;your

Choice

UNIONTOWN (AP)- Oassmates off teen-ager who was killed in a car
accident last week are urging officials to install guardrails at the crash site.
·
Lini:lsey·Powell, 16, of LakeTownship, was fatally, injured when the car
in which she was riding went out of
control on a sharp curve April 6. Slle
died Monday at Mercy Medicall
Center in Canton.
1\vo other teens, )',fatthew Smart
and Michael Cirullo, both 18 and of

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elementaries, middle school eyed for replacement -·

By JIM FREEMAN
'
·
Sentinel-Newa Stiff
·
Voters residing within the Meigs Local School
District may soon decide on building three new
schools in the district.
Superintendent Bill Buckley said the district
has been approved by the Ohio School Facilities
Commission for a -$31 -million building project
with the. state recommending cdnstruction.of two
new elementary schools and a new middle school.
The local share of the funding will require a
bond issue of slightly less than three mills, Buckley said. The bond issue may be placed before
voters as soon as November. ·
Buckley said if the building issue is approved,
money from the district's live-mill permanents
improvement levy could likely be rolled over into
the building fund.
The project would replaced eight of nine buildings in the district: Meigs Middle School in Middlepor1, and Harrisonville, Rutland, Middleport.
Pomeroy, Salisbury, Bradbury and Salem Center
elementary schools.
Buckley said he would recommend the new

middle school be built on district-owned land
near Meigs High School, however he said the district would have to search for sites for the new
elementary schools.
The elementary schools will each house
approximately 450 students each, he said.
In addition, the high school would be the subject of e~tensive ren.o.vations including new fumi ,
Jure, electrical wiring, roofing and painting io ihe
total of approximately $7 million..
Buckley said the. district was moved up from
107 to 51 on the state's building list. ·
The Meigs Local Board ·of Education authorized advertising for the ·services of an architect to
assisl the district 'in meeting the requirements for
an Ohio School Facilities Commission building
project.
·
"My feeling is we need to proceed," Buckley
said.
· ·
Board members commented that, with lhe state
assistance, the district could have new buildings
for. less than what district residents are currently .
payi!l&amp;.for maintaini~g the old buildings. '
llir'followihg teachers were hired on one-year

!

Continued on page 3

Peoples Legislature to discuss school funding
A Peoples' Legislature, organized
"This is a chance for members of
to discuss school funding, will be the public to dig into the serious
convened on April 19 at Meigs High problems our schools faoe and to.
School.
help craft a solution that will really
The event has been planned to work," Smiddie said. "We hope that
give members of the P.Ublic an this can serve as a model and an
opportuni.ty to Jearn more. about the encouragement for Ohio's General
requirements of the recent Supreme Assembly to mov~ forward into dis·
Court decision about school funding cussing practical S!llutions."
in Ohio, and the different plans
"These issues have been dis·
which have been proposed to fix the cussed irt ways that are really consystem.
fusing to regular people," Smiddie
People. who attend the event will said. 'The basic idea shouldn't be
have an opportunity to act as "legis- that difficult. The system is now so
lators," to.discuss the issues involved complicated . that nobody really
in school .funding,, and to ultimately understands it. Judge Lewis of Perry
vote on a plan to fix school funding County and the Ohio Supreme Court
problems.
have said that the entire system
.According to Bob Smiddie of needs to be overhauled, · and all
Pomeroy, a member ofthe Applachi· we've seen are minor adjustments."
an Initiative for School Funding, the
Jim Shirey, a member of the
format will provide ·an opportunity Athens City SchQOI Board, who has
for COf11munity members to learn been activej n-the fight for adequate
more about the i$Sue and to consider and fair scliopl funding, ,said that the
rem ed'tes.
.
p ent shou Jd serve as a cata1 yst ~or

action in the legislature. ·
School Funding is a group of citizens
"It's been almost five years since from Athens, Meigs and Vinton
Judge Lewis originally ruled that the Counties who are working to prosystem needed to be fixed;"' Shirey mote a school funding remedy,
said. 'The state's response has been according to Smiddie.
to fight the decision, rathe[ than to do
. "Maybe that will encourage them
their job. l'd .like them to see tliat a . to get moving and work out some
bunch of people can sit down, wres- real solutions."
. tie. with the issues and come up with
The event is open to the public 'at
a plan that will wor~. that will pro- no cost, and will be held in the Meigs
vide enough money, and that will be High School gymansium beginning
fair to all of the children in Ohio."
at 7 p.m.
·
Guests who are expected to attend ro=h~,~A:;;-rt-=---::c..-------;-;,
;l
the event, in addition to Shirey, arc
1Cil
S OUnCI,
Dr. William Phillis, of the. Ohio ·
Cqalition for Equity and Adequacy ·
in School Funding; Randy Hayes of
Two local arts organizations,
Farmers Bank; Dr. James Witherell; along with the Meigs County
Fr. Walter Heinz; Carole Gilkey, Chamber of Commerce, have been
Treasurer of the Athens/Meigs ESC; awarded a total of $5 ,000 in Ohio
Steve Beha of Carleton School and Arts Council grants, Sen. Michael
Meigs Industries; and Debbie C. Shoemaker announced today.
Phillips of the Appalachian Peace
The Rivcrbend Arts Council in
and Justice Network.
Middleport will receive minority
Th e Appa1ac htan
· 1ntlla
" r
granttotaling
$3,600, while
the
tve ~or arts
Chester
Shade Historical
Associa-

grantS. awarded

a

Pipe organ concert to be held Sunday ~: g~~~.~;;: :!~ ~:~~~:~

BY C~ARJ,.ENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Nawa Staff ·
.
A public concert on the two manual tracker pipe
organ built and installed in the Saorcd Heart Catholic
Ch~rch balcony by the legendary Carl Buckhoff a
century ago, will be presented Sunday at 3 p.m.
The concert is a part of the observance of the
sesquicentennial of the fo.unding of the church by German immigrants in 1849 and the centennial of the ded"We feel there should be a light
ication of their impressive native stone church in
Lakea Township,
also were
injured.or
and
guardrail around
that comer,
1899.
maybe a speed sip.'' said Jon RidgGucst musician~ will be performing alqng with
way, 16.
John Anderson who is organist at Sacred Hea&lt;t, as well
as St. Paul and St. John Lutheran Churches.
not want
going done
away...l'm
until not
we
get"We're
what w~
They arc ·Maureen Schulticek of Immaculate Congoing to lose another friend."
ceptlon Church, .Fulda, and First Presbyterian Church,
Ridgway and about two dozen .Caldwell; Joann Robinson, Heath United Methodist
Lake High School students gathered
Churc~ •.Middleport, and Ralph H. Werry, Trinity ConTuesday to plant a flower garden
gregattonal Church, Pomeroy.
.
.
behind the utility pole where Powell
Schultice will present "A Song of. Thanksgiving"
was fatally injured.
by Edward Broughton, "Priere A Notre-Dame by L.
Township officials said they were
~llman, and "Praise God From Whom AU Blessings
doubtful that guardrails would ' have
Flow~ by Louis Bourgeois.
helped. But toWnship trustees said
Selections by Robinson will be "l.Q~, Here I Am"
the speed limit at the curve where the
by John Ness Beck."Our Savior, dur Shepherd:" a
car crashed should be lower th•••·th .• ·r M,editation" by Gordon Sikes, and "Crown Him with
posted 55 mph.
Many Crowns" an arrangements by·Anna Laur~ .Palle.

••

·Contracts: Michelle Anderson, Lisa Aver ion, Joe
Bailey, Lorri Baihes, Scott Brinker, Grace Chen, ··
Julie DeFelice, Pam Durst, Sharon Edmonds,
Larry Haley; Nathan Hansen, Robyn Hawk, Ron
Hill, Sandra Holcomb, Ami Holden, Kent Howell, Beverly Jones, Tiffany Jones, Shannon Kom,
Christi Lisle, Darin Logan, David Longsworth,
Lester Manuel, Nancy Morrissey, Stacie Scarberry, John Sharp, Tim SimJlSon, Pam \bgt, Tracy
Wigal, Donna Wolf and Ben Wright.
Teachers hired on three-year contracts were
Michelle Frazier; Beth Lawson and Carin Taylor.
· Teachers hired on five-year contracts were
Rick Ash, Mike Chancey, Paula .9 hancey, Deborah Davis, Davi.d Deem, Toney Dingess, Don
Dixon, Jo Dunn, Vicki Haley, Tim Lawscin; Susan
Metts, Jim Oliphant, Amy Perrin, Gloria Van
Reeth, Ann VanMatre, Betty Ann Moore.
Teachers receiving continuous contracts were
Janet Hollingsworth, Rita Simmons and Ralph
Werry. ·
Other employees receiving continuing con-

,.\.

•

Werry will present "Prelude" by Einar Lindblom,
and "Recessional . March from Athalia" by Felix
Mendelssohn, and Anderson's program will include
"Largo, New World Sympho~y'' by A,nton Duorak,
"Fantasia on America the Beautiful" by Rex Koury,
and "Call Me Irresponsible" by James Van Heusen.
The concert wi II conclude with an audience sing·
along of "Let Me Call You Sweetheart."
·
The church's pipe organ with casework in red oak
was built by the Barckhoff Church Organ Co. of
Latrohe, Pa. which relocated at the tum of the century
to Pomeroy and built a factory off Spring Avenue.
It operated in Pomeroy until the flood of 1913 wh.en
the buildings and all the equipment were damaged and
the accounts and records were destroyed. Barckhoff
then moved the operation .to Virginia. ·
.
In adQition to the Sacred Heart organ, another Barckhoff instrument is still in use a! Grace EpiScopal
Church. Three young men ftom Pomero.y who worked
with Barckhoff became leaders in the next "eneration
of American organ builders. They were Adolph c.
Reuter, founder of the Reuter Organ Co. firm that
bears his name, and Fred and Val Durst who established ihe Durst Organ Supply Corporation.
The concert will be followed by a social hour in the
newly renovated .fellowship hall and vespers in the
church sanctuary.
•

•.

ans grants approved totaling
$94,492. This program provides
long and short-term assistance
from .arts advisors to strengthen
African American, Appalachian,
Asian, l.,atino/Hispanic and Native
American arts organizations and
individual artists.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will recelv.e a $500 ·
grant through the Ohio Arts Coun· cil Regional Heritage Program.
Organi2;ations receiving Ohio
· Arts Council funds are required to
match the state tax dollars with ·
additional public and private funds ..
In general for every state,.,. dollar
invested, recipient organizations
raise $10 in l'l}&amp;tching funds, Shoemaker said.
·
The 01\ia .Arts 'Council, a state
agency established in 1965, builds
the.state through the arts. economically, educationally, and culturally
to preserve the past enhance the
. present and enrich .the future of
' Ohioans.
L-~----------~~

'•

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