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                  <text>Thursday
April

Weather

us, 19119

Sports

Local diamond action, Page 4
Woman sleeping with married ex, Page 7
GM, Ford first quarter earnings up, Page 12

Today: Shqwera
High: 808; Low: 50s

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: aoa; Low: 30a

The Reds drop a

close one to the
Cubs 5-4
-PageS

•
Meigs County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 240

.B&amp;Eounder investigation·

call the OCC at 1-877-PI&lt;;KOCC, she ~td.
The pr~~ was first tmpl~men~ 10 the Toledo area
and
htgh customer
· hmel wtth th
· · satiSfaction,
~h she
b'lls&amp;Jd.
• 1The gas
ts t •. same, e semce ts t..,. same, t c 1 ts ess, she
cxplamed..
.
.
l..ong-d~stan~ telepho~ . deregula~ton and. ~ated
problems mc!udrng slammmg (chan~ng seryt,ce .wtthout
~e customer~ know~ge) and exc:csst~e sohatat~on provtded a learmng expenen~, S!"'n• satd. To a~otd thas;e
problems, .sas customers wtll stgn a contract With supphers, she satd. .
.
.
The ~ IS cl~ly watchmg proposal_s for clectnc
deregulation, she sa1d.
Ch'll'ber President Steve Story u(l!lated members on
the Rally for the Roads held Friday in support of U.S. 33
Athens-to-Darwin and the Ravenswood Connector pro·
jects.
.
He encouraged chamber members to keep up the pres·
sure on their elected representatives to support the high·
ways.
Perry Varnadoe, county economic development director, reiterated his goal of 1,000 new job$ for Meigs Coun·
ty in the next four years and said a decision for concern·
ing the whereabouts of a new veterans home for south·
eastern Ohio would likely be made April 22.
Clyde Evans of the University of Rio ·
'f~~~ii~n:-lnieeitSSffQ'O;,oooocii~l~n~Dii'CiQei~ · Grande said URG applications fro111
~'
Meigs County high school seniors are
double what they were last year.

Over $5,000 worUl of cigarenes were among the to the department's incident report. ·
items stolen in a breaking and entering in~ident at a
Heater's report also indicated that a security camera
Tuppers Pla 1·ns convent' en~
e
'"
d sd
had
be en d'ts abl ed, a te1ep hone 1·me had been cu t and a
1
- s or on .-.e ne ay
morning.
restroom door had been damaged during the incident.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
The store 's security video tape had been removed
ment, 2,557 packages of cig!ifelles, valued at SS,S41, a by the burglars, but an employee of the store has given
box of cigars.and other miscellaneous items were taken investigators a description of a male and female who ·
from the Little John's Citgo station on State Route 7.
entered,the store earlier in the day, as well as a descripNo cash was reported missing.
tion of the duo 's car.
Deputy James Heater heard an alann and discovThe investigation of the incident will continue.
ered an unlocked door at the sta- r - - - - - - - , - - - - ' -·- - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - ,
lion during 1 routine security
check early yesterday according
·
'
CRIME SCENE - Uttll
John'• Cltgo In Tupper•
"l'lalne w11 the ICirtl of 1
· blfeaklng end entering ·on
Wedneedey.
Clgerettee
and other Item• were
etolen during the Incident,
Which Wll lnveetlgeted
ye1t1rd1y by thl · Melgl
County Sheriff'• Dlplrt·
ment end the Ohio BCI.
Over Q,OOO In clgerettel
were tllken during thl .
Wedneedey
morning . ;Y,;I'!!'"'
bl'llk·ln.

for trl-county scouting

c~=:rHAMM
GAWA, MASON, MEIGS COUNTIES· APRIL 14, 19119

'

~be

Jfron ~ate l\e!itaurant
"The Best Kept Secret in Town"

Luncheon &amp; 8anq{A?t r&lt;oom
NOW OPEN

601 Main Street
(

.J

(Next door to Ma'i n Restaurant)

Monday Thru Friday 11 a.m•...:2:30 p.m.J

Casual Dining r.( Lunch Specials
Take out orders welcomed

.

.

Call (304) 675-7030

Thosc'attcnding the Tri ·State Area Council Friends of
Srouting leadership Dinner at the Gallipolis Elks Club
Wednesday heard a mixture of scouting values and foot·
ball meinories, as J1e&amp;r)y 100 people turned out to raise
money for scouting.
They also heard Ohio State Univer.;ity wide receiver
. football coach Oiuck Stobart reminisce about his.early
coaching days in Gallipolis.
Nearly $10,000 wu raised to support scouting in both the .
MGM (Mason-Gallia- Meip) area, and as part of 1 campaign goal of
$207,000 for the Tri-State Area Council, which includes Cabell, Wayne and
Uncol
· 10
· Wes Vi · · and Carte Boyd, La
d
f
0
n
counties
t
lrglnta,
r,
wrence
an
Jllrl
Greenup c:Ounties in Kentucky. ·
The council offers staff SCTVice to over 10,000 youth member.; and 3,000 vol.
f
~tee~~i,::r 140 u:its 0 &lt;;:'b ~ling, Boy.Scouti'IJI ~nture Saluting
The evening, sponsored by Ohio Valley Bank and BOO'Evans Farms, fea·
lUred table host Bob Hennesy, and Dave Russell, Chris H9~11er, Jeff Fowler,
8'11
· k, M' h 1N0 rth G Jo and M8110
· Libe
1 Eachus, Dick Rodenc
IC ac
up. ary ncs
ra·
toreMGM Scout Ex=tive Keith Xirinachs, along,\Vith Friends of Srouting
OJairperson Dave Russell and District Chainnan Bob Hennesy, organized the
evming to also celebrate the milestones made by local scotitlng, The council
led the Central Region_ which includes 25 perceni of the entire U.S. _ with
a 14 percent unit groWth for 1998. .
Hennesy noted thai !Jecalisc Qf the MGM District's growth, the Tri·Silllc
, . Council qualified as a "Quality Council" for the third consecutive year.
The audience joined Cub Scout Pack 204 of the First l'resb)'terian O!uri:h,
in a color guard ceremony, and heard Eagle Seoul Kevin Walker of Troop 200,
also of First Presbyterian, talk about the values of scouting. Walker noted
lscc&gt;UtiriJ helped-him "build and shape·character by following the scouting
law."
.
Gallipolis attomcy Richard Roderick was recognized by RUSICII for
inviting "'halfthe room" to hear local
boy· turned-renOwned foOtball coach

Good Afternoon

.

,. ., 8anquet Room,...,

Stobarl.

Catered banquet facilities for 25 or more persons ·
Menu available by calling 675-2200
,.
--.!L~ - --- -

Lotteries

---·

' -·

mwl

.

tJnf(C!C! 's 9nclude!: Oelljood &amp; cpllSftls

.

·

.

,

Roderick wu a senior who played
football under~ at G~lia Acad·
emy High School in 1960.' Stobart's
single year of coaching at OAlfS saw
the. team winnina die Southeastern
Ohio l:.cague with a 7-0 SCII!IOII. Both
called the evening a long 'overdue
hoinccoming.
'
Stoball, whose childhood in Mcip
County wu filled with SCO'uting II the
Racine United Methodist O!urch,
called himself a "river rat" with
strong ties to the area.

Correction

&amp; ofetlks
&amp; Our opecla!ty.. . cprtme CAth
.·

~

i "

'

'

Kindergarten registration and screening_ for Eastern, Meip and Southern
local schools will be Wednesday.
·
Children who will be five years old on or before Sept. 30 are eligible to
attend kindergarten during the 1999·2000 school year. This year, registralion and screening for new kindergartners will,be held during April and
May in all three school districts.
Thc kindergarten reaistralion and screening schedule is as follows:
Meigs Local- Rutland Elementary, .April 21, 742-2666; Harrisonville
Elementary, May 3, 742-3000; ~alisbury Elemen~&amp;ry, May S, 992-3404;
Pomeroy Elementary, May 6 and 7, 992-2710; Middleport Elementary,
May 12 and 14, 992-3387; Sidem Cent~.r Elementary, May 13, '742-3113..
, Eastern Local, April22 and 23 at Eastern Elementary, 985·3304.
Southern Local, April 29 and 30 al Southern Kindergarten, ,949-2664.
Parents arc asked · to can · or visit one of the above-listed schools to
arrange for an appointment for ·kindergarten registration. Parents or

fine ·ctssortment.ofWines

Legall)ev~ages

~

~

..

Reservations (Jccepted .

guardians must bring their child who is enrolling to registralion.
Bring a copy of the child's birth certificate, Social Security card and
immunization record.
·
.
. Children should have had five OPT, four polio', two MMR, three .kepali· ·
tis Band one TB skin test within a year before entering schooi. ' SChool
nu(SCS will be present at registration to answer questions conc:crning imm~nization requirements.
' ·
School personnel will assess the he~ring, speech, physical and language
abilities of children who arc being enrolled. Information about each child's
performance will be provided to parents at a later date.
Information obtained dur,ing the registration and screening process
allows school staff members to plan activities that will make your child's,
fir.;t year of school successful and enjoyable. Please call your school as
scion as possible and make an appointment to register your child for kindergarten. ·
,

Buffington Island Battlefield subject of archeological grant

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NewiStd

~

615 MAIN STREET POINT PLEASANT, WV
-'Telephone (J04) 6. s-2200
.., ., , ,

Kindergarten sign up, screening slated for county schools

er 'force of Confederate raiders commanded by General John Hunt Morgan . .
The battlefield has been the focus of preservation efforts since a 1996
announcement by owners to mine gravel from the site. Richards and Sons
Inc. has applied for a penn it to construct, operate1lild maintain 1 proposed '
sand A'nd gravel loading facility necessary for operation of the mine.
The American Battle,lield Protection Program was established by Federal law to work for the protection of significant battle sites associated
with all war.; fought on American soli . The program provides assistanc:c to
state, local and tribal governments, as well as private organizations, so that
. many of the nation's significant battlefields can be effectively protected
and managed at the community level, without resort to costly federal inter.
vent ion to acquire and .maintain them .

.Meigs students circulate petition supporting U.S. 33 project

Cfppetit~s

Entertainment Wee~l~

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
'
· basis because of the expenses involved.
,
Sentinel N - Staff
Down!&lt;Jwn beautificaiion w.S discussed by Sarah Fisher who displayed
Visiting tour groups, amphitheater programs, and downtown beautifies, planter.; to be attached to Main Street 11arking meter.;, and bird houses to be
lion were among topics discussed at the Wednesday mc;eting of ihe Pomeroy placed in the 'tree are.S:. She also talked about large planters to be put at
Merchants Association held in the &lt;ionfcrcnce room of Peoples Ban~.
either end of the parking lots, along with planned stage improvements to
It was announced by Annie Chapman, president, that plans are coming included new benches.
together for the April 27 visit of senior citizens from Marietta. and for the
She said her husband, John, has volunteered to make 15 of the plal)ters
May 1 trip from Ohio University. The senior citizens .will tour downtown folthe upper block, and asked for help in making 17 others for the middle
and be served a luncheon while a more extensive program has been pl~ned and lower blockS. Fisher also reported that some of the pots used last year
for those on the OU tour.
.
had been salvaged and will be filled with flower.; and used on the side
John Musser asked for assistance in getting the downtown ready for the streets.
•
visitors and set Tuesday as a cleanup day. .He U""'d
residents
of
the
com·
Ali for the oosts of the beautification work, the Association voted to giye
·Dmunity to join nie~ts in the downtown work.
,
$750 with additional money to come from other sources. Musser reported
Activities planned for the May 1 visitors will inc! udc a craft show in the that last year it cost ~ 1, 700 for the pots, flowers and other improvements.
"!ini·park, a late afte':"oon perfonn~n~ b)l, !be ijig Bclld C:Omm~nily Band
Fisher aJ~ ~equeatcd that cffo_rt,i.be m~de to get .the villajiO erect signs ,
drrected by Toney Dingess, a prevrew 61' 'the'jllanned Metgs Htgh School downtown stahng that those wlr61lilcr wtll be prosecuted.
·
.variety show, and a quilt show at Peoples Bank.
Chapman reported that nearly a hundred people attended the reception
The visitors will be taken on visits to.several churches and the court· Saturday for the artist who will be painting the mural on the side of the City
house, and treated to a lunchc:on in the Bethany Building during which time National Bank building.' She said that work to prepare the surface is expecta fashion show will be presented.,The day will conclude with a visit to the ed to begin this week and that several local artists will be assisting in the
Holly Hill Inn where pl\nch and cookies will be served.
actual painting of the mural.
.
Promotion of the craft show was disc~, and Peoples Bank through
. Karin Johnson, tourisll) director, and Perry Varnadoe, economic developRollie Swart, business development director, a Quest at the meeting, and ment director, were guests at the meeting. Johnson noted that Pomeroy has
Joan Wolfe, Pomeroy Bank manager, volunteered to provide $250 for adver· been listed in Quinby's 1999 Cruising Guide and also reported that the route
tising events in The Daily .Sentinel.
,
'
along the river has been included as a part of the National Scenic Byway.
Bill Quickel reported on plans for a gospel concert by Squire Parsons on . She said this could be a source of funding for projects such as a bike path.
May 8 in the ampqitheater. He said thai there will be a charge to enter a The next IJieeling of the funding agency was announced for May 5 at Our
roped off area where some seating will be provided. The Mcip Band Boost· House in Gallipolis. ·
,
ers will have·a concession stand.
Members voted to make a donation to the Meigs Band for their support
Quickel noted that he is working on two more gospel sings to be held' in of Pomeroy events, and Peggy Ba,rton, treaSurer, reported a balance of
the summer and emphasized the need for getting the entertainment on a pay $2,623 in the treasury. ·
·

The Buffington Island Civil War Battlefield at Portland is the subjeCt of
·The following Meigs Local
an
archeological survey resulting from a $40,000' grant.
School District teachers were inadSoper Lotto: 12·19·24-34-39-44
The National Park Servio;e's American Battlefield Protection Program
vertently. omitted from a list of
Kicker: 4+5-1 + 7
awarded
the grant to Heidelberg College.to survey the baitlefield, consid·
teachers granted one-year contracts
w.y£
.
ered
Ohio's
only Civil War battlefield.
Tuesday nipl: Stacie ·Nign,
DillY 3: 4·S·2; Dilly 4: 5+6-4
This survey will be used to identify and resolve disputes about the 16ca·
o l'l9901rlo Yottey ""'llolllo1 eo.
Melanie Quillen, David Ramey and ·, tion and size of key aspects of the battle. "We were very. impressed with
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ Satterfield.
the collese's proposal. and we are pleased to be able to assist in this important project," said Bryan Mitchell, chief of the American Battlefie'ld Pro·
.tection Prog,iam. "Many of this nation's significant battlefields are at risk
and will be lost or badly compromised without the continuing .good work
of institutions like Heidelberg College."
On July 18, 1863, a force of about 8,000 Union soldiers routed a small·

·!All dinners served witli garden Salad &amp; clibice oftJ3ak.ed rpotato,
~ice or ve9etable of tlie day
(Ve9etarian upon request)
:9!

Spring
programs,
projects
reviewed
by
Pomeroy
merchants
BY

Pltk3: 3.0.0; Pkk 4: 4·3-4-9

rtnjoy iAn rtlegant tfvening of'Fine. ~ining!

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Utility topics subject of chamber m~eting
:!,;!lll FREEMAN ·
nel Newl Stll!f
.
.,
A spokeswoman wtth·
the
Ohto
Consumers
Counsel,
·h
· · ~- ·
f a
ked
~tate .aaen~ tas
w1t r~presc;ntmg t,.. mterests o res·
tdenttel.utihty consumers m Ohio, addressed mc!"bers ~f
the Me1gs County Cha.mber of Commerce dunng the.rr
monthly luncheon meetmg Tuesday at Carleton .Schoolm
Syracuse.
, .
.
.
Heather ~bric sat~ the OCC ts compnsed ?f about 70
. people and. IS based •.n Co.lum~. The OCC IS the l~g~l
~resentattvc for restdential utthi,Y consume111 of Ohto s
mvestor:owned natural gas, electric, telephone and water
compan1cs.
,
.
.. Most of the discus5ion focused on the Customer
PJOICE program which allows natural gas customers to
choose a natural gas supplier other than Columbia Gas.
Under the program, consumers can purchase gas from
a supplier other than Columbia Gas or .choose 10 remain
with Columbia Gas, she explained.
Choosing a gas supplier other than Columbia Gas
allows consumers to shop for the best price of gas.
Columbia Gas will continue to deliver the gas to your
home and provide customer service in the event of an
emergency.
Gas customers wanting a list of approved suppliers can ,
·

PAGE TWELVE • DINING EDmON

Hometown Newspaper

~=~=:~~~~=:·~:!=~~~
NEW CRUISE~- The Vlllalie
crurlll' Into lintel thll week. Maratlll
Jonee II
hel'l with lhl crulllt', purclullld from ltlltlaurplue. Jonn Cfld.

~

ltlld Melgl COUnty Sheriff Jlr)lll. II. Soullby ll1d I!M8 Dlr..IUt
Robert 8yer, lllong with EMS employe• .Jllmll Jonll, Jay
Bulldrk and ll'lnt Shuler, and Raotnl llevor loolt Hill and
Councilman Robert Belgll with l'!elplng lltl the ·Cir l!ltO IIMoe.

,.

· Meip High School students in the word processing, marketing and JOBS
programs solicited ~ignaturcs ori petitions supporting the Super Two high·
WI¥ between Darwm and Athens and"the Ravenswood connector Wcdncs·
day.
·
. The petition drive was the latest baUie in a war of public opinion both for
and apinst the project which calls for the relocation of U.S. 33 from Athens
io 08fWio. The P.rojloscd Athens·to-Darwin highway will cost an estimated
$56.1 million w1tl) construction on the 12•mile stretch slated to begin after
Jttne 30, 2000. The project is opposed by an Athens County group calling
itself the Coalition A&amp;ainst Superfluous Highways.
Students collected 52~ pelition signatures, accordinato Ohio Department
of Transportlllon District· 10 spokeswoman Nancy Pedigo who picked up
the petitions Wcdneaday afternoon. Pedigo said she also received an addi·
· ·rional 60 sipatures from Middl~port highwa~ advocate Bill Childs.
The students collected the stgnatures dunng i three-hour time period,
·concentrating their efforts at Pomeroy-Middleport businesses.
· Thoee siping were uked to wear a blue ribbon !IS a part of their messaae to llltc oftldels to "remember those on the river."
·
Today ~as to have been the deadline for public comment on the Athens·

--- -- __
_...,.

;

~

to-Darwin projcc~ however Pedigo said the deadline was extended to April
26.
.County Commissioner Jeff Thornton Friday eveni'ng presented petitions
containing abo~t 4,~ ~ign~tures and ap~roximat,ely 150 letteril of suppo~.
tPGeorge Colhns; tntenm dtrector of Ohto !)epartment of Transportations
District 10.
"
Clerk of Commission Gloria Kloes said thi~ morning that CQmmissioners
· have an additional 306 petition signatures and 159 letters of support for the
highway project, as well as resolutions from the Metgs County ~amber of
Commerce and Community lmprpvement Corporabon and therr members,
that w!ll be submitted to OOOT.
..
.
.
Pet1t1ons, letters and resolutions. of support and OpJX!Stllon wtll be_g1ve~
to O[)()T Director Gordon Proctor~~ Columbus·and wtUbe m_cludcd m ~rc·
sentations to th.• Tra~portatmn Revtew Advt~~ Counctl whtch wtll wetgh
the co~ments m makmg htghway fundm~ ~ec1s1~~s.
..
. , P~dtgo sa1d th~ stu!knts reported recetvmg a good response from the
pubhc durmg thetr petttton dnve..
..
.
"A lot of people had already .stgned th.e .pe1111ons," she satd.,.
. .
The students were under the superv1s1on of teachers . Becky Cotten II,
Carol Crow "and Becky Zuspan. The Meigs Local Board of Education also
endorsed the highway projects.

._....___

1..

'

�••

Thursday, April15, 1999

PageA2

Thurtclay, Aprll15, _
1000

The Daily Sentinel
'Lna6(t.s/Utl In 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.11Q2·215G • Fax: IXI2·2157

Community Newspaper Ho.ldlngs,

Inc~

ROBERT L WINGETI.
Publlahar

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ganat'lll M.nagar

DIANE HILL

Controller

n.. Sentinel "elconJN ,.,.,.. to tt.. .dltcw tram ,....,.. on • INoed,..,.,. ot fOfJ"'
IH. poll "' toN) hovo tho -t eire,_. of. f»lng p&lt;JbU,.,.

1)pM' ,_,.,..,. ptWr.nwd Md •H may H R/fM. E•ch ehould I~ • •1,.,.,,..,
MltllwN, •nd daytltM pltoM numbM. Spwlfy • det• ",,.,. •• • ,.tw.nc. 1o • , . Moue atffolfl or IMler. , . , to; t..tt.,. to 1M MltD!o Tht Sentinel, fft Courl: St.,

· Pomeroy, Olllo 4675; or, FAX to 1*1112.Ztf1.

'E ditorial-voices
Excerpts of recent editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio
newspapers:

The test may be a dud
The (Canton) Repository, AprilS
We are relieved to learn that many people are telling the State Department
of Education they are concerned about the number of students who have
failed the fourth-grade proficiency test. The test may be a dud.
.. , , We don't believe the proficiency testing system is a dud, however.
The goal should be to make the test a more accurate .measurement of the
: strengths and weaknesses of school' districts and their students. .
Proficiency tests and school district report cards are two of the most valuable tools districts have.

The cops aren't laughing
, The (YO..ngstown) Vindicator, April 7
Cyber "jokesters" should take note: The cops aren't laughing about the
Melissa. computer virus.
Melissa entered computers around the world by e-mail. It infected more
that 100,000 computers virtually o.vernight and overloaded several compa~y
and government systems.
David L. Smith, 30, of Aberdeen, N.J., now faces time in jail, huge fines
and potential civil suits that would put a dent in Bill Gates' wallet. It's
; enough to give the perpetrator of the next virus pause, and that's why it is
. not only prudent but necessary to treat Smith not as a prankster but as a peril,
·
The nation can no longer func.tion without computers and it must jeal. ously guard the sanctity of 'its machines.

·A tough .external .review process
The Columbus Dispatch, Aprilll
Two misguided bills that would give Ohioans the right to sue their health
· maintenance organizations are on their last legs in the Ohio House. But legislative leaders hope to replace them with one bill that provides a tough
external review process that should achieve the same worthwhile end:
patient protection.
Ohio doesn't need another category of lawsuit, which is what either one
. of 1\le House bills would create if enacted, making health insurers ·liable for
· damages caused by "failure to exercise ordinary care" in refusing coverage.
Patients need disputes over care resolved in a matter of hours or days.
And the HMOs that cover 2.8 million people in Ohio have said that using
•the courts for quality control would increase premiums in most cases.
Two things are essential for effective patient-protection legislation:
• tough requirements that fo.rce insurers t.o respond to appeals in a timely
manner.
. • rules callin'g for independen~ thorough review of treatment decisions.
Insurers and dien·ts should seek common ground in reaching appropriate
~elllth-care decisions without involving lawyers and the courts. ,

S14ccessjul campaigns to remove books
The (Toledo) Blade, April 7
When a book of acknowledged literary .merit is banned by a higher
authority, whether an agency of central government or law enforcement, it's
~ailed censorship. When books are banned from the classroom because of
pressure from parents or advocacy groups, it's called being sensitive to the
standards of the community.
·
. . The fact is that self-appoin,ted censors in tandem with parents who hav~
ryo faith in the judgment of teachers are mounting successful campaigns to
remove books from the curricula at schools around the state.
School boards must stand up io those who believe the only good book is
a bland book. They must oppose political correctness in the selection of
texts, and support teachers who want a well-rounded literature curriculum.

Plenty of reason for concern
' News Journal, Mansfield, April 7 ·
· While we're glad to see no area school officials panicking over statewide
district report cards, there is certainly plenty of reason for concern.
· Just as teachers hold students accountable for passing .proficiency tests,
building administrators must begin holding teachers accountable. Superintendents must hold principals accountable.
: And school boards must hold superintendents responsible for all of these
;Standards.
.
··~ The bottom Iine in the .work .world is the same as is in the classroom -·
Jl&lt;rformance.

.•

?.Today In History
:By The ANOCieted Prall .
·: Today is Thursday, April 15, t~e 105th day of 1999. There are 260 days
: left if\, the year.
•
·: In ihe early hours of April 15, 1912, the British luxury liner Titanic sank
;in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland, less than three hours after striking
,
.
:an iceberg. About I ,500 pcople4ied:
In 1817, the first American school for the deaf opene4. in Hartford, Conn.
•, In 1850, the cit~ of San Francisco was incorporated.
: In 1861, three days after the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, President
:'Lincoln declared a state:or insurrection and called out Union troops.
·
• In 1865, President Lincoln died, several hours after he was shot at Ford's
: Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth. Andrew Johnson became tht
· ~ nation's 17th president.
1~· 1945, duri.ng Wo~ld War II, British and Canadian troops liberatecrihe)
:
.. Nazt concentratton camp Bergen-Belsen.
:: In 1947, Jackie Robinson, baseball's first black major league player,
: made his offici.al debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers on opening day.
•
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington to begin a
: goodwill tour of the United States.
.
:
In 1986, t!te United States launched an air raid against Libya in response .
• to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April 5; Libya says 37 people,
: mostly civilians, were killed.
:
In 1980, existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre died in Paris at the
• age of 74.
.
·
In 1990, actresS G!Cta Garbo died in New York at age 84:
.
•
:
Ten years ago: StUdents. in Beijing launched a series of pro-democracy
:: protests upon the,death of former Communist Party leader Hu Yaobang; the
: pro!e$11 culminated in the Tiananmen Square massacre. Ninety-five people
•· died in a crush of soccer fans at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, llngland.
:
Five years ago: Ministers from 109 countries signed a 26,000-page world
• trade agreement known as the "Uruguay Round" accords in Marrakesh,
Morocco.
One year ago: Pol Po~ the notorious leader of the Khmer Rouae; died at
age 73.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 77. Country singer Roy
• (;lark is 66. Bluesman Frank Frost is 63. Actress Claudia Cardinale is 60.
Rock singer-guitarist Dave Edmunds fs 55.
·

.,

I

Microsoft), who outspent proponents many times
over.
Not long ago Conneely requested, and
received, an interview with Gov. Bush, ana was
treated civilly enough. But the governor's subsequent comments, not to mention those of other
leading Florida politicians, suggested that Connerly was about as welcome as a skunk in a submarine.. Bush commented that Conneely was
"about war," whereas he was "about love." ·
Gov. Bush, of course, is well aware that ••
thanks to "affirmative action" •• black ·Florida
businessmen are getting state contracts unjusti· fied by their bids, and black applicants are getting
state jobs and being admitted to state universities
at the expense of better-qualified whites .. And
what he is saying is that this is perfectly OK with
him. That is what he is bound to say, if he hope$
to maintain his new alliance with disaffected
black Democrats.
The trouble is that, according to a poll condueled on February 17-18 by the respected firm
Zogby International, 83 percent of likely Florida ,
voters would suppOrt a law to prohibit govern·
mental discrimination and preferential treatment
on the basis of race, color, gender, ethnicity or
national origin in public contracting, employment
and education. The poll ~ which was commis-

sioned by the ACRJ,' shows
remarkably consistent support among all voter categories: Democrats (82 percent), Republicans (84),
Independents · (84), . East ·
Florida (87), West Florida
(82), the Miami area (83),
Catholics (86), Protestants
(84), Jews (96), with similar
results among all education
levels and age and income
brackets. Even among blacks, 74 percent say race
should not be a factor in admission to a public
university or college, and 80 percent do not want
·race or sex to be a factor in 'government hiring.
These figures won't change the minds of Flori·
da's black establishment, but Connerly has indicated that he plans to back a Florida initiative
modeled on Proposition 209. And that presents
'Jeb Bush with an ggonizing choice. Docs he opt
for simple fairness, as Florida v6ters overwhelm·
ingly do, or hold out for black quoias? A lot of
conservatives are waiting to see. -

While his brother, Texas Gov. George W.
Bush, is gearing up for a run at the White House,
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush is trying 10 de&lt;;ide what to
do with a very hot potato that has recently landed
in his lap.
Conservatives h«ye generally regarded Jeb as,
from their standpoint, the more dependable of the
two brothers. In his losing race asainst the late
Lawton Chiles in 1994, and again in his winning
bid against Democrat Buddy MacKay. last
November, Jeb rang just about all the right
changes on the conservative carillon. In addition,
there are many who think his personality is mote
appealing than his elder brother's. And in a state
with a large Hispanic population, thanks 10 Castro, the fact that Jeb's wife is of•Mexican origin
certainly doesn't hurt. (There are those who think
it would even be .a plus at the national level.)
So things have been looking pretty rosy .for
Jeb, and not long ago they got even rosier when
two black factions in the Florida Democratic
party fell 'to fighting each other, and one of them
signaled that it was ready to do business with the
Copyrlght18ell NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Republican governor.
William A. Ruahar Ia a Dletlngulahed Fallow
The chance to make serious inroads into the
of
the Claremont lnatltuta for the Study of
black vote (which in Florida, as elsewhere, is norS~n1hlp and PoiHical Phlloaophy. ·
mally overwhelmingly Democratic) was an
almost unbelievable stroke of luck for .---------..:_---------:--::=:-------.,---------Bush, and he wasted no time seizing
D
1 CUI:£
the opportunity. The cement sealing
V1f'E~fto.J ·••
the new alliance was barely dry, however, before Ward Conneely paid a
visit to Florida.
Conneely, you will recall, is th~
courageous black California businessman who. spearheaded the drive
'to pass Proposition 209 in 1996 -- the
initiative that amended the California
constitution to prohibit race and gender preferences in public contracting.
employment and education. The initiative passed by a handsome majority, and has subsequently defeated all
attacks launched against it in the
courts.
Connerly thereupon formed the
American' Civil Rights Institute (not
to be confused with the American
Civil Rights Union, recently founded
to take .on the ACLU), and has been
encouraging the passage of similar
initiatives in other states. In 1998 he
scored a tremendous victory in Oregon, where voters approved a nearly
identical initiative over the . bitter
opposition of !he Democratic governor and the business establishment
(including both
Boeing and L---'------------------_:______________

• ••
el Columbuo

Advice from military experts abou.nds on Hill
where," said former Rep: Lee HamiliOpposed to sen~ing U.S. troops to pher DOdd, D-Conn. He said it's hard
ByTOMRAUM
Aaaocleted PreN Writer
ton, an Indiana DemOcrat who was . Bosnia. Skelton has forcefully urged · enough for NATO 's commander, .
WASHINGTON (AP)- Defense chairman of the House. International Clinton to consider using ground Army Gen. Wesley Oark, to deal with
Secretary WillianrCohen got a hearty, · Relations Committee before Republi- forces in Kosovo.
19 NATO nations -let along having
.
knowing laugh at a NATO dinner last cans gain~ control in 1994. He's now
to
worry about legislative generals.
Rep. John Murtha of PennsylvaAnd how did Dodd spend his
week in Brussels, Belgium, when he director of the Woodrow Wilson nia, ranking Democrat on the Appronoted that one of his guests, Sen. John International Center for Scholars.
priations national security subcom- spring break? He visited NATO in
McCain, had made a.great sacrifice 10
Sen. John Warner, R· Va, chairman mittee, won a Bronze Star. and two Brussels and a refugee camp in Macecome to Europe for briefings on the of the Armed Services Committee, Purple Hearts as a Marine in Vietnam donia -. and held a news conference
bombing
campaign
against was Navy secretary in the Nixon and has long-standing aild close ties on his return to outline his view qf
.next steps. ·
Yugoslavia.
.
· administration. He spends hours each to the Pentagon.
It was the first day in a long time day getting·private updates from genRep. Floyd Spence, R-S.C, chair·
Sen. BOb Kerrey, D-Neb., a memthe Arizona Republican hadn't been erals and is often seen at the Penta- ber of the Foreign Relations Commit- man of the House Armed Services
able to get on network television, gon.
tee, is a war hero who lost part of his Committee, led his own delegation to
Cohen said.
His predecessor, Sen. Strom Thur- leg in Vietnam. Sen: Max Oel111d, D- the Balkans and has criticized the
McCain, a GOP presidential hope- mond, R-S.C., is a retired general in Ga., an Armed Services Committee bombing campaign. .
.
"From the very beginning. I have
ful, is a former Navy pilot who spent the Army reserve who took part in the member, lost both legs in Vietnam as
5 1/2 years in a North Vietnamese D-Day invasion of Normandy as part a young Army captain and headed the been against this type of operation,"
prison camp. He's been ' before the · of the Army's 82nd Airborne Divi- Vetemns Administration in the Carter Spence said Tuesday. Still, he added,
"We are there now for better or worse
public constantly since the Kosolio sion.
administration.
·
crisis began, critiquing the operation · Rep. Ike Skelton of Missouri,
Rep. Randy Cunningham, R· · - and we have to support our mili· and insisting ·that ground forces senior Democrat on the Hoose Armed Calif.~ a member of the House Armed tary people."
should be considered.
"There are too many armchair
Services Committee, has tlown in the Services Committee, was a "top gun" .
But then, the I 06th Congress is cockpit of the B-2 stealth bomber. His flight instructor during a 20-year quarterbacks who call the game
before the coin is iossed," suggested
hardly short on military expertise.
district includes Whiteman Air Force Navy career.
1
More than usual, "a lot of the· cur- Base, home of the B-2 tleet He fre"I don't believe that we in Con· Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware,
rent members are close to military quently talks to pilots and crew mem- gress ought to be aafting specific senior Democrat on the Foreign Relapeople in ·the Pentagon and else- bers.
military solutions," said Sen. Cltristo- tions Committee.

Bush presses for trade .and China engagement
By MQrton Kondracke

AUSTIN, Texas -'- .Texas
Gov. George W. Bush may have
hesitated to declare himself on
Kosovo, but last week .he was out
front for free trade and engage·
ment with Cltina.
"I subscribe to :he theory that
frc;e markets can yield freedom,"
he intoned, adding, "I do not
subscribe Jo isolatigniS!Il or protectionism,"
which are gai~ing favor in the GOP.
In a press conference here after an appearance
with baseball great t'(olan Ryan to launch a "buy
Texan" advertising program, Bush aides said he
intended to sound to~gher on China than President Clinton and his father, but if he did, he was
only marginally so. ·
To be sure, he did not· adopt the Clintonism
that the United States and China are "strategic
partners" or "friends'~ -- an attitude that has led
GOP critics to brand Clinton policy as "appeasement;" much as former President.George Bush's
policy was criticized by Clinton in 1992.
On the other hand, neither did Gov. Bush adopt
the view of increasing numbers of Republicans
that the United States and China are "competitors" or even "strategic adversaries.~'
Bush made no reference whatsoever to new
revelations on Chin.ese nuclear spying or 1996
£ampaign donations, iluggeslina these shouldn't
bar Cltina's entry into the World Trade Organiza'tion ,ff it opehs its markets . .
"I coJJid support China's en.try," he· said, "if
Cliineae markets were truly opened to U.S. pro·
ducera. Under the right conditions, it would bene·
fit our allies in the Far East as wellu help China
develop a respect for the rule of law.
"We ought to be dealing with China on a firm
and consistent basis. We should make it clear that
we support human rights," and that Taiwan, South
Korea and Japan are "allies" and "friends."

Still, ·"we .ought to have fair .and free trade advocate a military invasion of Yugoslavia to topwith Cltina" for the benefii of American workers ple Milosevic, and he would link China trade to
and to "develop·an entrepreneurial CI!ISS in China. human rights and strategic considerations. ·
that stands in stark contrast to the military class." . · On Kosovo, several GOP presidential candi•
After three days of skull sessions with his for- dates and congressional leaders oppose any u.s.
eign policy and economic advisers -- and just as military action and most adamantly oppose intro.
the Democratic National Committee charged that duction of U.S. ground troops.
he "ducks and parries on issue after issue" -- the
Bush, hesitating until all other contenders had
GOP front-runner put himself squarely at odds spo.ken, finally sided with fellow inte'rnationalist
with "nationalists" in his party who want to . Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., in declaring that the
restrict imports, narrow immigration, get. tougher United States has to " win" in Kosovo and he
with Mexico and China -- and ignore the slaugh- · would not rule out the necessity of ground troops.
Neither has called for ground troops, either.
ter in Kosovo.
Across the board, Bush took the once-depend· Bush said that was "a military decision" that he
able GOP internationalist stance for NAFTA and was unprepared to make. .
.
"I am concerned that a thug like Milosevlc; If
fast-track trade authority, "friendship" with Mex. ico and "fe.r ocitf' toward Yugoslav ;"thug" slo· left unchecked, will set a bad example for other ...
people willing to commit ethnic genocide," he
bodl!fl Milosevic.
.
.
.
· ·
Instead of waiting until after the Texas lej~isla­ said.
tive session ends May 31, Bush o.bviously has .. , Asked if th~ United States should negotiate
decided to start making his views known "on my ' '#lth Miloaevic for the release of three U.S. pristimetable and no one else's." He's planning his oners of war or "demand unconditional sumnfirst campaign foray to Iowa in the second week .der," Bush respO'nded, "demand unconditional
of June.
surrender."
.
Even as he picks up endorsemenlll and piles up
Polillcal aides say Bush does not intend to
money ., possibly enough to forego federal cam· make Ointon an Issue on the campaisn trail -paign,limits and matc'lting-- he's opening himself "He's the past, this is about the'future," one said
up to criticjsm from presidential rivala •• and eyen - but there were • few zinga in his press confer·
.
·
some supportC'rs.
·
. ence.
"America-firster'·' Pat Buchanan ·will be
He said he worried whether Clinton's bombing
against him on every international issue •• though campaign it\..K.osovo "is done with ferocity" and
Bush sill'lificantly tefuse&lt;) to be ease&lt;) by local , he said, "I worry about a presidency that h.S conreporters into blasting Buchanan or characterizing ducted diplomacy by klieg light and press confer·
his views as "protectionist."
.cncc."
llven some fellow Texans want to decertify
. Still, B~h is ~ardly gearing up to be savage on
Mexico's anti-drug efforts and build fences to the·campatgn tratl, but rat~er upbeat. "II would be
control immigranll. "Walling texas · off from a pig mistake for America to retreat during this
Mexico would be an unmitigated disaster," he era when .we have got the chance to influence the
said.
world in a positive, constructive way," he said. ·
· On China. Bush is at odds with not only con(Morton Kondraclca 11 exacutlve edlloi' of
gressional leaders but also arch·internaiionali!lls Roll Call, tha nawapapar of CaDIIol Hill.)
like the editOI'$ of The Weekly Standard, who Copyrtgllt1 llell NEWSPAPER ENTI!RPRIIE ASSN.

'

1#•110' ]

•

Pau I W. 'l_iu rpel

KY.

Inc.

Showers stay in forecast
••

....

The Aasoclatacl Presa
·
Showers are in Ohio's forec&lt;15t for the next couple of days, and snow is
in the northem part of the state, th.e National Weather Service

.

Units of
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service J'CC9rded 17
calls for assistanee ·'J\tesday. Units
responding included: .
..
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:27 a.m. Tuesday, Johns Road
Racine, Clarence Adams, P.leaaani
Valley Hospital, Racine squad
.assisted;
S:2S p.m. TueS(!ay, West Main
Street, Pomeroy, Lucille Hendricks,
!feated at the scene; ·
• 8;42 p.m. Tuesday, Oliver Street,
Middleport, Christy Albright, Veterans Mem.orial Hospital;
11 p.m. Tuesday, South First
Avenue, Middleport, Glen Tucker,
treated at the scene;
· 1:44 a.m. Wednesday, Hyilell Run
Road, Rutland, Charles Hall, Holzer
Medical Center, Rutland squad
assisted;

1:52 p.m. Wednesday, ,First
Avenue, Middleport, Glenn Tucker
PVH.
.'
MIDDLEPORT
,
4:10 p.m. Wednesday, OBNC,
Dorothy Young, PVH, Central Dis.patch squad assisted.
POMEROY
2:07 p.m. Wednesday, volunteer
fire department and squad to U.S.
33, motor-vehicle collision, Gregory
McKnight, Children's Hospital ·via
helicopter ambulance, Bernice
Goble, St. Mary's Hospital, Mike
l..auderrnilt refused treatment, Middleport and Syracuse squadS assist-

By CURT ANDERSON

AP Tax Writer

.

~-••••••••••••••••
~ MoviE S 1o
-'

•

r·r

.

·.... ,, ..,.,...

The Daily Sentinel .

1;

BABY GENIUSES '""
fRIDAY THRU THURSDAY

,
Co~U~unit}' . NewttM~pcrHolcU .... Iac:.

Golf group sets play
The Meigs County Ladles Golf Association wilt meet at the golf
course, Tuesday, 9:30a.m.

MEL GilSON

The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. ''

Skin testing set

.C ounty clubs to meet

1-1-11-c- ___.,.

OUR CUSTOMERS

.

. is now' available at -

--~-

Holzer Meigs Clinic
on Fridays from
8:00AM to 4:00 PM.
',

'

QUJ\LilY OF ALL:

:M llleeu .................. ,.........1!13.82

'211/ceu ...........................Stll.l."
-OullldeMoiloC-7

'2 w..u .......................:.st09.n .

Reader Scrvtccs

One or Ohio's oldac. lorpoo ond
rapected monument companies

Correction Polley

...
••

Q)odjtiolung Programs ·
Deefaniog and Fitting of Sports'
'llrotective Devices to Prevent .

t

.

'lilJ\U'Y or Re~Injury

Newa Dapartmtnll
Tllo ............r •• 991-2155. Doptr1•
· •••• edea•lo• are:
GtHnl Moo...t .......................ExL 1101
Nowl .............................................ExL 110l
· or ExL 11116

.•

Minual Adjustment Of the
Spine ana &amp;tremities .
'l"hetap)'
Pet$0Dllized Strength and

'.'QUALITY THAT
ENDURES"

tlllleeu ..........................J29.~ ·
:M Woou ............ ~ ...............S$6.68

,•

··-

, I

..

f

•.•....,.••..

••
'

520 W. Main St . ..: Pomeroy, 0

.

ed to Pilarczyk's description of gays
as "objectively disordered. "
"I really questi~nif this is goi~g
to cause a reconciliation." Aon
Wilger, regional direcior of Parenls.
Families and Friends of Lesbians
and Gays, told the archbishop.
In recent years, ~oman Catholic
groups nationwide have started gay
ministries such as DIGNITY, New
Ways Ministry, and Parents. Friend&gt;
&amp; Family of Lesbians &amp; Gay~ .
Some conservative and tradition al Catholics have criticized the
groups, saying they undermine
church teaching on homosex uality:
Wilger said that while the
church's intentions seem to be goiid
on the surface, .it s'till seems to ~c
taking a hard line.
.
!
" I have ·a hard time believi~g
everyone is going to be beating
'down the dooi to join your club "
. she told Pilarczyk.
'

.APPJ,U:&lt;;:IATE THE RAREsT

MAILSUIISCRimON
.IJ!IIdo Mtlp C.U.cy
13 \\letki........................... .S27.Jo

Ctuelllod Ada .............................
.ExL 1100
.

·•

The spring ineeting of the Meigs County Association of Garden Clubs.
will be held at 7 p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy Library. The prl)gram win
be pre~ented by the Rutlan~ Friendly Gardeners, and Sliade Valley .mem'
bers wtll be hosts. Plans wtll be made for the Meigs County Fair flower
show, and a new county contract chairman will be elected.

·Dr. Kelly Rt•ll .

One Year............ - ..................... $104.00
SINGLE COpY PRICE'
Dail~ ....................................... ll c....
Sublcribers not dulrin11o pay liM canitr may
• remit in actvaaoe dltect to The O.lly S.ntiDII on
I lhr«, liX Of 12 inanth bull. Credit Will be
liven carrier cKh week. ..
No aubscripcion by mail pennittl:d in arras
wheN home carrier service ia available.
Publisher reserva tho ri&amp;hl to ~jult rl\eJ ~r· ·
ina the IUbsc:rlption period. Sublcdplioa dte
........ ...,. be .............. by, ......... ....
. durttlon ol the aubltripdon.

Clrnlo- ................................. .Exl. 110.1

.

Holzer Clinic Chiropractic .and Sports Injury Specialist,

One Montb ................................ $Jt.70

Othat Sarvlcea

.·

.A free skin testing c;linic will be conducted by Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
Meiga County tuberculosis nurse, at the Syracuse Fire Station, Mondjly,
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. All' individual in' food service are required to have a
yearly skin test, she noted.

WED. BARGAIN NIGHT
ALL
U8 0823

BJ'Cirrkr'or Motor Route
One \\feek .........: ••••.•••• ,.............$2.00

'Advor1liloa. ................................ .ExL 1104

•

Board of Elections meeting

PAYBACK•

. Published every atteroooi.. Montky tbrou&amp;h
friday, ll1 CoUrt Sl., Pomef9)', Olrlio, h)' the
• Oll.io Valley Publilbina Company. Se&lt;lOOd clau
pas1.1ae piid at rotneroy, Ohio.
,Mtmlwn The Associated Press and lhc Ohio
Newspaper Auociation.
ro.tmuter. Smd addms correalon1 10 The
Daily Senclnel, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769.
.
.
SUIISCRirnON'RATI!S

Oor IIIII COictl'll lo Ill JIOI'Iel lo ta k
acc1nte. U JOlt bow of an tiDr Ia 1
llory, clll tile .,..,,..., 11 (7411) .9911155. Wo will dtec:k J•r toro,.elloo
11111 111ke 1 comctloo II wtmoltd.

.

The Gabriel Quartet will be singing at the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene Sunday for both Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. and worship service at 10:30 a.m. The public is invited.

~A~N (AP) - . ~chbisbop
Dan tel Ptlarczyk got a chtlly receptio~ · followi~g a prayer service
destgned to maugurate the Roman
Catholic Church's new ministry for
homosexuals and th~ir families.
The service WJIS held Wednesday
night at St. Peter's Church in suburban H_uber Heights. Pilarczyk later
. met wtth gays and parents of gays to
answer ques!ions about the ministry.
Pil~rczrk said that while homosexualtty IS "not a good or healthy
or desirable tendency" and that gays
should abstain from sex, they should
not be discriminated against.
He said the church's ministry is .
not an effort to legitimatize homosexual behavior or an attempt to
water down church teachings.
" It's a means of proclaiming that
homosexual person.s are not some
kind of reject," Pilarczyk said.
But many in the audience object-

TONIGHT

(USPS 113-HO)

Quartet to sing

Archbishop gets cool
.
reception on gay ministry

•••••••••••••••••••············

:'COLONY THEATRE

~ retail display and store design workshop sponsored by the Small
Busmess Development Center of Southeast Ohio and the Meigs Count¥
Chamber of Commerce will be held Tuesday, 1-4 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Cost is $15. To register, call 992-5005 .
·
-

percent fee.
The IRS expects to receive 126 million individual income tax returns this
year, with total income taxes projected
at $828.6 billion: That'sjust undet half
the $1.7 trillion in overall {ederal tax
collections used to pay for everything
from cruise missiles to food stamps.
Working people pay more in U.S.
taxes than more than 40,000 foreigncontrolled corporations operating in
this country. The General Accounting
Office, the investigative arni of CongresS, reported Wednesday that · tax
loopholes allowed a majority of foreign-based companies to escape any
taxes in 1995- a loss to the government estimated at $35 billion a year.

Hospital news

1

A collision between a dump truck and a car on u.s. 33 near Pomeroi
Wednesday sent two people to regional hospitals for treatment of injurie!;,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
•
. Bernice. H. Goble, 57, and her passenger, ~-year-old Gregory S. Meld
mght, both of 218 Condor St., Pomeroy, were transported by the MedFi iglj
air ambulances from the scene of the 2:10p.m. crash, acrording to the patro~
Goble was taken to St. Mary 's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. tnfonnatiol
on her treatment was not immediately available today from the hospita~
McKnight was transponed to Cltildren's Hospital in Columbus, where he
was listed in critical condition today in the pediatrics intensive care uni'
according to a hospital spokesperson.
•
Troopers said Goble, who drove the car, was southbound and went lef~•
center, striking the northbound dump truck driven by Jennings C. Jeu,
43202 State Route 124, Racine. The collision forced the dump truck off th
right side of the road and into a grassy berm, while Goble's car spun arounS.
and came to rest sideways in the highway's southbound lane.
;
The crash severely damaged Goble's car, while moderate damage waf
listed to the truck, owned by Jeffers Coal Trucking &amp; Excavating. 41276
laurel OiffRoad, Pomeroy. Troopers said the accident remains under inve~
tigation.
••
man escapeS injUry (n aCCident
!
A Langsville man escaped serious injury after he was pinned beneath ltit
own pickup truck Wednesday. morning.
'
•
. James Snodgrass, 24, had .parked his truck on a slope and was taking
ttems from the truck when the parking brake apparently failed, according ttl
Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy Ben Davidson. Snodgrass attempted to stop
the truck which rolled over him, pinning him underneath .
·
Passers.by and a nearby neighbor used a hydritulic floor jack to lift the
truck off Snodgrass pending arrival by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service, Davidson said. Snodgrass was transported by helicopter ambulance to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntingron, W.Va. A hospital spokeswo ma~

Time to face the music ·tor
.income tax procrastinators

and

••

Car-dump truck collision injures two

Paui.W. Turpel, 42, Acushnet, Mass., died Monday, March I, 19.99 in St.
Luke's Hospital, Acushnet.
Born Dec. 29, 1956 in New Bedford, Mass., son of John W. and Shirley
J. Turpel of Apopka, Fla., he was employed as an environmetal specialist by
the Chamberlain Manufacturing Corp., and was a member of the First L_sa_ird=h=e:;:w;=as=tr=ea=ted=a=n=d=r=el::ease=::::d·=============:;~
Church of the Nazarene in New Bedford.
1,
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Sharon K. Roush Turpel
of New Haven, W.Va.; two stepsons, Dustin M. Roach of Cro5s Lanes,
.
.
- · , ,
· •
W.Va., .and Perry W. Roush of New Haven; a brother, Stephen D. Turpel of
'
Acushnet; and a sister, Rhonda J. Hunsinger of Melbourne, Fla.
Pomeroy Council to hold special sessioiJ
Graveside serv.ices will be I p.m. Saturday in the Broad Run Cemetery,
Pomeroy Vill~ge CDuncil will meet in an emergency special session
Letart, W.Va. There will be no visitation. Arrangements are by the Deal
tonight at 7 at village hall to discuss personnel mailers.
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Window display workshop slated

WASHINGTON (AP) - For the
millions of Americans rushing to meet
.tonight 's income tax deadline, consider this: Many middle-class people are
actually paying slightly less in federal
taxes than they did in 1995.
A\=COrdi!!g to the · Congressional
Budget Office, taxpayers with the
ed;
median family income -·. about
5:09 . p.m. Wednesday, Country $39,000 in 1999- will pay 18.9 perMobile Home Park, Trina Nolan, cent of their income in all federal taxes
VMH, , Central Dispatch squad
this year. That compares to 19.7 perassisted.
cent
four years ago, and is about $400
RACINE
.
less.
· 12 p.m. Tuesday, state Route 338,
That might provide some small
Charles Sarson, VMH;
4:30 a.m. Wednesday, VFD to comfort as people rush to one of the
state routes 338 and 124, structure hundreds of larger post·offices that will
· fire at Thomas Theiss property;
stay open late, many until midnight
4;30 p.m. Wednesday, Old Port- local time, to handle the crush of up to
land Road, Samantha Malone, treat- 40 million state and federal tax returns
ed at the scene.
to be dispatched today.
RUTLAND
.
A reminder: If you can 'I finish in
2 a.m. Wednesday, Overbrook time, file for an extension using Form
Nuraing Center, Middleport, Alice
4868 and pay the Internal Revenue ,
Swiderski, VMH;
.
7:3:1 a.m. Wednesday, VFD and Service as much of your estimated bill
. squad to state Route 124, James as possible to avoid interest and penal·
Snodgrass, St. Mary's Hospital via ties.
helicopter ambulance, Central DisYou can also pay by MastetCard,
patch squad aa5isted;
American ExpresS or Discover card by
2 p.m. Wednesday, Bradbury calling 1-888-2PAYI'AX- for a 25
Road, Oarence Boyer, HMC.
SYRACUSE
10:08 p.m. Tuesday, Tyree BouleVeterans MeJDorial
vard, Racine, .Phyllis Glasco, VMH,
Wednesday admissions - PhylCentral Dispatch squad assisted.
lis Glasco, Racine.
SCIPIO TWP VFD
4:56 p.m. Tuesday, state Route
Wednesday discharges - Timo143, truck fire, Wendy Ohlinger thy Wolfe.
owner, no injuries reported.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges April 14 - Westley
Crouse, Della Cox, Phyliss Slobart.
1
0
· Birth - ,Mr. and 1\olrs. Gregory
Wood, son, Gallipolis.
• • • • ' ......

•

'Announcements .

r area tllrough weekend
. Cold northwesterly winds will keep temperatures in the 30s 'at night and
40s during the day through the weekend. ·
·.
·.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station was 82 degrees in 1896 while the record low was 22 in 1935. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:09p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:53a.m.
.
Weather foncait:
' Tonight...Showers likely through this evening With the chance for a
thunderstorm. Remaining mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s. South
wind 10 to 15 mph, becoming southwest. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Friday... Breezy with a mix of clouds and sunshine and the chance for a
shower. Highs in the lower a~d mid 60s. Chance of rain 40 percent. .
Friday nighi ... Mostly cloudy, brisk and cooler with a chance of show.·
ers.
Lows 35 to 40.
.
.

Local briefs:

I

Rev. Duane Wilbur Sydenstricker, 76, Belpre, died Wednesday, April 14,
1999, at St. 'Joseph 's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born May 2, 1922, in Parkersburg, son of the late Elmer Ray and
Ruby Young Sydenstricker. He was retired from the Chevron CDrp. and
retired after 20 years a5 pastor of South Bethel New Testament Church. He
WaJWI member of the Full Gospel Businessmens' Association, the AFL-CIO
an~.
.
He was an Army veteran of World War II and recipient of the Purple
Heart.
He is survived by two sons, Duane W. "Bill" Sydenstricker and Mike L.
Sydenstricker, both of Belpre; a daughter, Cathy S. Sydenstricker of
Williamstown, W.Va.; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and a
brother, Robert Sydenstricker of Forrest Hills, M.D.
.
·
He was preceded in death by his wife, Elsie E. Wells Sydenstricker, and
by a brother, Ray Sydenstricker.
,
.
Services will be held at the Leavitt Funeral Home, Belpre, on Saturday,
2:30 p.m. with Rev. Robert Barber and Pastor Dave Carpenter officiating.
Burial will follow in the Decatur Cemetery. .
Friends may call Friday, 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home and on Saturday one hour prior to services.
In lieu of tlowers, donations may be made to the Alzheimers Association
in memory of Elsie E. Sydenstricker.
·

[iiiiiione~c~ 1•1'/H' 1 •

WAI' clfj
.

--

De~th Notices

Rev. Duane Syde.nstricker

Jeb Bush and the hot potato
By William A. Ruaher

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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AU.

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' Phone !19ll·i~
• Vinton- 388-8603
Gallipolis -: 448-0862

111111r .......Gillie •

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llltll•tnll ... ... •

(740) ••, . . . ..

.

-'
·.

�•

The Daily Sentin~

_Sports

.

'

Thursday, Aprll15, 1999

.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Indians hammer
·Kansas ·City 11-4

Thur8d•y, Aprll15, 1999

easeban ·Eagles-notch 10-0 mercy-rule win over Waterford
,r

.,

~Eastern pounded out eight timely
Ki'ts and freshman hurler Chris Lyons
pitched a two-hitter as Eastern posted a 10-0 mercy rule win over
Waterford Wednesday during .high
School baseball actiol1(
: : .Eas1ern (4-4) scored early after
I.yons set the Wildcats (0-10) down
iirorder, thanks to a Josh Will t.O Ben

Holter double play combination.
Lyons walked, Bradley Brannon
legged out an infield single and Brad
Willford tripled. Willford then
scored on a passed ball for a 3-0
Eastern lead. Both clubs were scoreless in the second inning, but Eastern
came back with a single run in the
third. Brad Willford reached on an

error, Eric Smith ripped a single to
advance the runners to second and
third, then Willford scored on a
pas.sed ball to score his second run of
the game to make the 'score 4-0.
Eastern plated three runs in the
fourth as Joe Dillon led off by getting
with a pitch and later scored on a
Josh · Will single. That came after

~ Th~ Southern Tornadoes scored a
l)og · 8-3 win over the Trimble
TOmcats Wednesday night in high
schooi baseball action.
• • Southern . se ni or Josh Ervin
~ilched a great game in hurling a
one-hitter. Ervin fanned eight and
walked three as Southern made four
(rrors. Cody McCoy got the start for

Trimble but lasted just two innings,
as Trent Patton and 'Rob Guinther
came on for relief stints. lbey combined for eight runs, nine hits. five
strike outs, and seven walks. Trimble
committed two errors.
Ervin also paced the Southern hitling attack with a triple and single.
· Adam Williams dpubled , Jamie

Baker doubled, and Benji Manuel,.
J.B Bose, Brandon Wolfe, Russell
Reiber and Kyle Norris &lt;~II singled.
Trimble only hitter wa5 Chad Denms
with a single.
Trimble went up 1-0 on an error,
walk, single by Dennis and bases
loaded walk to Phil fatres. Southern
ca111e back to take ~ 3-0 leac!.Jn the

Chris Lyons had doubled, then Eric
Smith followed with a run scoring
si ngle for a 7-0 EHS lead. Three
walks, an error, and two-run double
by Josh Will scored the nec~ssary
runs to mercy Waterford in the ifth
with two outs.
Chris Lyons was the winner and
Josh Wagner the loser, with relief

from Matt Huck. Lyons fanned four
and walked just one. Waterford
pitching gave up eight hits , walked
four, and struck out three.
Lyons had a double, Qrannon a
single, Josh Will a double and single,
Eric Smith two singles. and Brad
Willford a triple.
Eastern is scheduled to host South

Gallia today.

By TOM WITHERS
the inning. " Who led off that
The inning?"
CLEVELAND (AP) Alomars l}.adn't had this much fun
It was tough to remember every
together on a baseball diamond since detail of the l'ndians' sixth. At times,
their days playing sandlot ball in if was hard to watch as Cleveland
Puerto Rico.
held mid-game balling practice .
Now teammates,· Sandy and
"You're happy in the dugout , but
Roberto Alomar teamed
up you want to show respect for the
Wednesday night to help t.he other team and what they're trying to
Cleveland Indians rout the Kansas accomplish," Sexson said. " It's got
City Royals 11 -4 for their seventh to be tough for a pitcher, because
·.
· there 's really no letdown in our linestraight win.
ELTON BRAND
·
Sandy Alomar hit his first homer up."
since Aug. I, a two-run shot, during
Bertolo Colon (2-0) allowed three
Cleveland's nine-run sixth inning run s and seven hils in six innings to
and Roberto Alomar went 3.-for-4 improve to 3-0 against t.he Royals
with two doubles, three runs scored over the past two seasons. _He struck
and a steal as the Indians continued out seven .
tlieir early-season assault on AL
Sandy Alomar's homer off Don
pitching.
.
Wengert was his first since Aug. I
During the seven-game streak ·last season- a span of 135 at-bats ..
their longest since 1995 - the
''!' don ' t care," said Alomar
Indians have outscored the, opposi - whose. numbers dropped dramaticaltion 69-28 and have 35 doubles, ly during an injury-riddled '98 seaTHAT WAS GREAT, MAN!- As Cincinnati catch· mate Glenallen Hill alter Hill's homer in the
,three triples , 10 homers and are bat- son. " h's a new year." .
er Eddla Taubensee watchea In the background, t)le Inning of Wednesday's National· League game
ting .371 .
Ramirez's second homer thi s sea- . ChlcJ!Igo Cubs' Sammy Soaa congratulates team· Wrigley Field, where the Cubs won 5-4. (AP)
"If you ' re not having fun scoring son a shot to right-ccmer, capped the
all those runs , you have a problem, " outburst and ,gave him a league-leadSandy Alomar said. "I'm not sur- ing 14 RBis.
.
prised by our offense. I'm surprised
Febles ' firSI career homer - a
By DAVID DROSCHAK
that it's gone on f1&gt;r a week this way. two-run , inside-the-parker - in the
' DURHAM, N.t:::. (AP)- Duke 's We're very hot right now. It doesn't second inning gave the Royals a 3-0 By RICK GANO
the lineup every day.
cry. allowed three runs and eight hii~
first underclassman to head to the matter who is pitching. Of course, lead .
CHICAGO (AP) - Hi s locker
''I'm a player and I do wha1 the over eight innings in the 2-hour, 6NBA apparently couldn't pass up we don't expect to score, II runs off
Tim Spehr's RBI double put the was surrounded by TV cameras and manager asks. J' llleavc it al that. "
minute game . He struck out nine and
what his coach called a sure thing . . · a really good pitching team like the Royals ahead 1-0 lead in the second microph'ones as he emerged from a
And manager Jim Rig glemari had walked one. throwin g 71 of 98 pilcn"Elton Brand is not just an Yankees."
before Febles drove a 2-2 pitch from post-game workout sessiQn - star thi s to add: "Thin gs have a way of cs for strikes.
.
(NBA) lottery pick, he's ahigh lotYou 'd never know it from . the Colon to deep center that kicked off treatment for a guy who isn't even an working themselves out He's been a
Rod Beck pitched 1hc ninth for hi s
tery pick," Mike Krzyzewski said final scoro, but for three innings. it the wall past outfielder Kenny e~ryday player.
good pickup . for us since we got sC~.:o nd save. s urrct~dcring AarOn '
Wednesday during a news confer- looked like it was going to be Kansas Lofton and rolled toward right,
And Glenallen Hill was quick to him ."
Boone' s first homer of the s'easq n
ence in which the 6-foot-8, 270- City's night. Line drives · hit by the allowing .Febles to circle the bases.
put the hoopla in its place.
Hill , who hit eight of his 20 with .tw o outs.
"
pound center said he. would skip his Indians went right at Royals, and
" I never thought that would hap''I'm not a home run hiller," he . hom ers last y-ear for the Cubs after
'Hill homered leadin g oiT the secfinal IWO years of college eligibility when rookie Carlos Febles hit an pen," Febles said. "I almost tripped said firmly.
being claimed· off waivers from ond againSI Harni sch (1- 1). The
lo turn pro. "It was inevitable it was inside-the-park home mn - the first at 1hird base when the coac h said
He could have fooled everyone at Seaule in July, supplied the power Cu bs added a second run as J oi~
goin~ to happen in our program."
hom,er of his career- it looked like keep going. I got the ball, that's Wrigley Field on Wednesday.
Wednesday on a day when Sammy Hernandez sin gled. raced to thitd:
Brand, who helpc;d lead the Blue the Indians' streak was in danger.
nice ."
Hill, a pla10on player gelling Sosa appeared to snap out of a slump when Boo ne
missed BenilllDevils to a 37-2 record and NCAA
But then came · the sixth when
It was just the second instde-the- another start because of an injury to with two doubles and a walk.
Santiago's grounder to third for
runnerup finish this past season, Cleveland sent 14 bat.ters to the plate park homer in Jacobs Field history Heiny Rodriguez, hit hi s third and
"Sammy is not the Chicago Cubs. error and scored on Gary Gaeni;• .
showed little emotion at his n~ws and turned a 3-2 deficit into an 11-3· and came almost a year to the day fou~th homers as the Chicago Cubs We 've got 25 guys capable of doi ng sacrifice fly.
::
conference held in Cattltllfon Indoor lead.
after the other one. On April 15 last beat the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 to end a a job, ·and it 's our responsibility to
"It was a double play ball . and i!
Stadium attended by his mother,
"Cievelapd has a subtle intimida- season, Cleveland's David Bell hit four-game losing skid.
take some of the pressure .off of changed the co mplexion of the
Daisy. and a h~If1ozen tea~mates. · tion," Kansas City manager Tony an inside-the-park homer off
Hill normally would have been Qn Sammy, " Hill said .·
game." Boone saJ d of· hi&gt; error. '"I
Krzyzewskt, sull recovenng from Muser said.. "There is no breathing Seattle's Randy Johnson.
the bench against right-hander Pete
Sosa, now 5'for-28 - with one just didn't get down . It sours tbe.
hip· surgery at home, joined· in by room. You have to pay attention on
Notes: Indians . shortstop Omar Harnisch but started because homer, appreciates the help.
· day."
"
tel~~honc.
.
· every ~itc~; If not they can bury ¥OU Vizquel . 1,11issed his 'third straight · Rodriguez was still bothered by a
"The home runs are going to
Harnisch, who pitched a six'hit
· (The NBA) has been a hfelong real qutck.
, ·•
game with .a stramed th1gh muscle. strained side that has kept him QUI for come. I've gol to relax .and not try 10 shu10ut in hi s first start against St:
'dream of mine, and tl\is just makes
Manny Ramirez hit a tM:e-run Vizquel may play tonight in the three games.
carry the team oy myself and not try Lou1s, gave up a double to Sosa in
m~. on~· step closer to accomplishing shot i~ Cleveland'sbig iiming, ~.hich seri~s final~ ..... Cleveland left fielder
" It's no secret, I'm a nile player. I to get two hits in one at-bat," Sosa the third and Mark 'Gracc's RBI sin1t, .said Brand, who recetved an Robb1e Alomar got started wnh a Dav1d Justt.ce, s\deltned ~~nee the play " C&lt;;JUple of times a week and said. "Jon Lieber pitched quickly gle that made it 3-0.
.
ovatton from abou!, 50 fans .as he do~~le off Jeff Supp~? (0-2). . . season opener With a strruned calf give the manager some flexibility," and beautifully, and Glenallen is car"My stuff wasn' t as goOd. as last •
entered Cameron. I am gomg to
Thai was fun. satd R1ch~e muscle, IS ~!so ~xpected to return for Hill said, shrugging off questions rying the team right now."
lime ," Harnisc h said after giv in g up
m1ss my teammates and my fnends Sexson, who had a two-run double on Thursday mgbt s game.
about whether he would like to be in
Lieber (2-0),, using a rapid deliv- flverunsandsixhitsin51/3innings .
I've made, and the staff, but coach
felt i! was the right decision and the
right time."
Brand is the fourth player to come
.·
.
.
out early for the NBA draft, joining By ANDREW CARTER
struck out one and walked two.
WP:
Loomis
(8-6)
(3 IP. 0 R. 3 H. 2 {i;uM ~ : Inn in• totals
H.
OK.OBB
)
Ron Artest (St. John's), Steve OVP St•H Wrll•r
Rio Grande (6-11. AMC 4-8 ) K, 0 BB)
Rio
Grande
.........
01
0-00
1-0~2-12 -2
SB:
Weiner
(RIO), Adk.ins (RIO).'
francis (Maryland) and Albert White
A season of discontent continues pounded out 12 hits in the second
LP:
Sheppard
(5
IP,
5
R,
3
ER,
5
Marietta
...............
205-000-X=7-8-2
Cavince
tMAR)
. Sanders (MA R) ·
(Missouri). U ndcrclassmen have for the University of Rio Grande
game, but still .wound up on the short H, I K, 2 BB)
WP:
Rogers
(2-0)
(7
IP,
2
R,
2
ER
.
. until May 15 to declare. ,
·
softball team. The Redwomen end of a 7-2 scoreline . Marietta
SB : Drai~ (MAR)
12 H, 2 K, I BB)
Brand admitted 'being Duke's firsl dropped · a doubleheader to Marietta scored five times in the third 'inning
LP: Temple (i .l IP. 6· R. 6 ER, 6
player to guit school for the NBA College oo Wednesday in Marietta to to ice the game.
·
weighed on him some, but said run its losing skid to seven consecuPpulsey went 2-for-3 with two
Krzyzewski 's support made his deci- tive games.
RBI and scored two runs. Michelle
sion easier.
The Lady Pioneers (14-16) rallied Cavinee was 2-for-4 and scored
" It was a different situation for from a 4-0 deficit in game one to twice. Drain went 1-for-2 with an ·
the Grant Hills and the Christian · pick up a 6-4 victory, former Point RBI.
Laettners," Brand said. "(Going Pleasant High School standout
Ann Rogers (2-0) pitched a compro) wasn 't as much of an option as Tracie Drain went 1-for-2 and scored . plete game for the Lady Pioneers.
it is now. "
twice to pace Marietta. Amy Baker She recorded two strikeouts and
Brand will likely be picked in the was 1-for-4, scored a run and drove issued only one walk .
top five of the June 30 NBA drall in a run. Jacie Paulsey went 1-for-3
Ulmer was 2-for-3 with an RJll
and become an instant millionaire. with an RBI and also scored.
for the Red women .. Brenda 1&gt;6dy
Krzyzewski called Brand's decision
Nichole Loomis (8-6) pitched the went 2-for-4 as did Rheinfrank.
to leave the Blue Devils a "no-brain- final three innings to· earn the win.
Jessica Temple gave up six ru~s in
er."
She held Rio Grande scoreless on two and one-third innings to take the
"We talked to Elton when he first three hits and struck out two batters. loss. Rebecca. Evans pitched three
came to Duke that at the end of his
Shellie Weiner and Michele and two-third innings of relief. She
time here he would have decisions to Ulmer each went 2-for-4 and scored struck out four batters.
make. Going 10 Duke provides you a run. Shellt R,~infrank was 1-for.-3
Rio Grande 'plays at defending
wilh great decisions to make, and with an RBI. She also scored. Deb league champion Shawnee State
because o(bow well he has done. the Calloway was 2-for-3 and drove in today then hosts league -leading
.
.decision-making process has been two runs.
Walsh on Saturday at I p.in.
moved up," Krzyzewski said. "I'm
Jocelyn Sheppard pitched five !la.mll: Inning tl!lili
100 percent in support of it." ·
innings. surrendering . five runs on Rio Grande ........... 400-000-0=4-7-3
The consensus national college five hits and took the loss. Sheppard Marieua ......, ........ 012-021-X=6· 7-2
player of the year averaged 17.8
points and 9.8 rebounds this past
season and was the main cog in the
middle for the tale~ted Blue Devils.
But he fell short&lt;&gt;f his goal of leading the Blue · Devils to the national ·
title 2 112 weeks ago in a 77-74 loss
to Connecticut. ·
--Brand_was th\Uir.s.t so¢mmore to
Southern dropped a 5-2 decision . single, arid Spencer single in the firs1
win the John R. Wooden Award, pre- · to Trimble Wedne~da~ night in high for a 2-0 lead. The Tomcats picked
sented by the Los Angeles Athletic school softball aetton m GlousteJ:,
up another i'nfl 1n the second when
Club to college basketball's t.op play~
Amanda Dillon had- Sout.hern's Keit.~ reached on an error, followed
er. Brand also was honored this sea- number as she hurled a five-hiller on by Wahoo and Coey singles to make
son by The Associated Press, the nine strike outs, just. fou~ w.alks, and the score 3-0.
Atlanta Tipoff Club and the United '· gave up only two runs. D1llon had
SHS cut it to 3-1 in the fifth on a
States
Basketball
Writers great defense behmd her as well on Lyons single and Lawson single,
Association as national player of the picking. up the win. Southern's Kim then Trimble got the run back in the
. year.
Sayre .pitched a good game, but SHS bouorn half of the frame, 4-1.
Brand ·cited financial SI'Curity and made .three ~rrors as four unearned
Davis knocked in . Sayre in the
an oppo!lunity to improve his game ru.ns crossed the plate on the. 5-~ ·loss. sixth for a 4-2 tally, but SHS left !lln-.
at the next level 'as reasons for leav- Sayre fanned none, walked five, ~nd ners stranded as Trimble 'Scored
ing the Blue Devils.
.
. ·hit one.
,
·
..
another fun for the ~-2 finale .
The Tornadoes are idle until
"It's very import~nt to be able tO· . Southem h1tt.ers we~e Larame
.
.
tak.e care of my mom and iny family f:awson with a stngle, K~m Sa~ ~ Friday, when· they host Nelsonville·
·
and have them live comfortably. sma!e;He~llher Oatley a smgle, A~hh York.
That has always been a dream of qav1s a s1n1le, and .Stacy Lyons a lpplag llUia
mine," said Brand, who srew up in a smgle. nimble hillers were Koclc, Southern ................ 000-011 -0=2-5-3
Trimble ................. 210-01!-x=5·6-0
low-income area in Peekskill, N.Y.. D11lon, Sutton, Spencer, Walton.
· WP-Dillon and Weaver
without a father.
Coey.
.
·
Trimble scored on an error, Dillon
LP-Sayre and Dailey

lnp!ng tl!llla
Waterford ...................000-00=0-2-2
Easlern .................... .30!-33=10-8-0
WP-Lyons
and
Brannon,
Broderick 2nd
LP-Wagner, Huck (2nd) and Lang

~rvin's on.e-.hitter helps Southern defeat ·rival Tr. imble . a~a

~Waterfor~
The Waterford Wildcats blanked
the Eastern Ea les 6-0 Wednesday
ni hi in hi h sc~ool softball action to
cl:im 8 st!ong hold on I he Tri -Valley
Conference Hocki ng Division 10
spot Waterford is 9-1 and Eastern is
5:4 overall
. A grem ·pitc her' s duel developed
early, bul Waterford nexed its muscle
·in the third frame when Alicia Jones
dQubled , ,T Forshey reached on an
error. then Tonya Neill slammed a
two-r~n single. Alicia Huck.doubled
Home the third run of thdrame, and
that's all Waterford needed. WHS
a~ded two more runs in the fourth

second wh~n Jesse Little . walked,
J.B. Bose stngL!ed , and Jam1edBabker
drove home ttl1e With a ou . 1e.
Wuh runners on . second and ·thlfd,
Reiber h~d a sacnfice fly and Noms
an RBI smgle.
.
Southern came back wtth .three
m.ore 1D the thlfd on a Manuel smgle,
Ltttle walk, an RBI smgle ~y Re1ber,

and two-run do ubleTbr Wb illiam~ to
make ththe sc ore 6-!h. lfnmf he c.ut II to
6-3 '" e 00ttom a o t e mmng,
when a walk and two errors led to
scores.
SHS added insurance in the sxith
and seventh with a run each frame
for the 8-3 win. '
Southern
hosts . Wahama

1

Brand
to leave
Duke,
. enter
NBA draft

Thursday.
Inning tl!llli
·
Southern ............... 033-001-1=8-9-4 .

Tri~~~E~~i~ ·~~·d·d~~;:·0=3-I-2
Br;:~McCoy, Patton,
.

G . h
d
umt er an .

weat!Jers Evans' pitching; shackles Eas~ern 6-0

inning on an error, a Hall triJ,&gt;Ie and
Jones double to make the score 5-0.
Watcrofrd added a single run in 1he
fifth for the 6-0 finale.
· ·
Waterford hillers were Jones and
Huck with two doubles each, Hall a
triple and single, Forshey two smgles, Neill a single, and Hill a single.
· Eastern hitteFS were Juh Hayman
and Valerie Karr With smgles, and a
double by Suzie Milhoan.
.
·
S1ephanie Evans pitched well but
suffered the loss wilh seven strike
outs and no walks in a 10-hit effort.
C. Harra picked up th.e win with II
strikeouts against the 26 batters she

faced , while. walking just one. Chevalier re~ched base all four Urnes
waterford made two. errors and and ~ored three runs . .
Eastern made three.
.
Trtmble went up 1-0m the first,
Agamst Tnm~le the mght before th~n .Chevalter tnpled to open up the
Eastern posted Its fifth wm of the thlfd for Eastern. Hayman knocked
year, a· 10-1 VICIO'?' over a tough Chevaher h~me wtth a 4-3 ~roundleague foe. SuZJe M1lhoan paced the ~ out, then wuh two out Ang1 Wolfe
attack with three RB!s on a two-run reached on an error, H&lt;:&gt;llon walked,
smg!e. and sacrtfic~ fly. •
.
Evans walked, and Molhoan had a
Knsten Chevaher had two hilS, a two-run bases loaded smgle to make
triple and singl.e; Val Karr smgled, the score 3-1.
.
.
S1eph Evans smgled and M1lho~n
Eastern, added f1ve more m the
singled. Eastern had 10 walks m fourth .on four walks and ~m~les by
posting the Win as Juh Hay':""" , Chevalier and Evans. Evans h1t was .a
Chasatie Hollon, and. Ttffany t.wo-run slam, then Milhoan sacnSpencer each walked twJCe, wh1le heed home another for a 8-1 score.

Eastern plated two more m the ~nmna llltab
000-000' 0=0- _
33
fifth for the 10-1 WID.
.
.
aster~ .................. •
.
Tnmble hi tters were Weaver wtth Waterford ............003 210 0 6 10 2
l":o hils and smgles by Koch and
WP-Harra an1 ~111
D1llon.
•
LP-Evans an , arr

=. .

IOC to Introduce 'morals clause .

Q
•
· hi
t
for future . lympiC sponsors P pac. S
LONDON (AP) - The IOC plans to introduce a "morals clause" )n
future Olympic sponsorship contracts which would allow sponsors to walk
out in the event of ethics scandals. The change stems from the Salt Lake Ctty
marketing director Michael Payn~ .
. vote-buying scandal, according t.o
Sponsors, who pay up to $50 mtlhon for exclusive Olymptc adve.fiJStng
.rights, have expressed concern that. the scandal would tarntsh thelf mvestment.

loc

J.

Scoreboard
1), 8 : 0~ p.m.

Baseball

San Fnncisto (Gardner 0·1) at Arizona
(Stoukmyre 0-0). 10:05 p.m.
·
Los Angeles (Brown 1·0) al San Diego (Ashby J.
1), 10:0.5 p.m.

AL standings

Basketball

Eastun Di'"llion

:!Y L f&lt;L

Ium

New York .
..7
I .871
Ooston
.6
1 Bl7
ior'onto .. .. ............. , .. .5 . 4 .116
Tampa Bay .......................... .4 .5, .444.
Ballimore .. ....... :...... ............ 2 6 .2l0

Cenl ral Diwl5ion
CLEVELAND ...
.. ...... 7 1 .875
Kansru; CitY ... .'...
.. ...... J 5 .m
Mlnncsom.
. ... .J 5 J75
Chicago ........................ ,.. 2 5 .286
lklmil ..
. ............. 2 b 210 .

lil

-•.

NBA standings

3'~

l

4
.5
5
5

4\
I

"'''

x: Ul!lh ........ ,..........

San Antonio ............
Houston .....

Minnesota ..

Minncsow lSnmpson 0-0l ;u Del roil (Moc::hler I·

City (Harber 1-0l a1 CLEVELAND (Nagy
x-Ponland .

Tamp:\ Brty (Sant:1na 0-1) :11 Torom o (Carpemer

L.A. Lakers

U-11. 7·0.5 p.m
Baltimore ( Muss inn 2-0) m New York (ClemenS
1-Pt. 7 -~~p . m .

l'hoeniJt

Friday's games

; ra]npa lhy I Alvm·cz 0- 1) nl Bl,SIUn (Wakefield ].
OJ •f\ :0.5 p.m.
8al11morc (J-lunson 0- 1) ru foronto (Hem gen 0- 1).
7·o.• p.m.
.
Minnesota 1R,1dkc I-l l m CLEVELAND
IGooden 0-0). 7:05pm
.
New York ( nmm son 0-1 ) m Dclroil IHern:mdet ,
2·0). 7·05 p.m
.
, Chicngo (Sirorka 0-1J m Kansas City (Pituley I·
OJ. 8:05 p.m.
Seattle {Moyer 1-1l at ,,naheim (Belcher 0· 11.
10 :115 p rn
'reus &lt;Sc!e 2-0) 011 Oakland tCandiotti 0-2).
10 :\.~ p m.

Transactions
BasebaU
Natloi'Ull Lequt

. ·

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Optioned RHP
· Bobby Chouinard 10 Tucson ·of the Pacific Coast
League. Recalled RHPVIadimirNunet rromTucson.
ATLANTA BRAVES: Op1ioned RHP Joe
WinkelsM to Greenville of the Southern League.

Tonight's gam~
Pittsburgh at Boston, 7:30p.m
N.Y. Rangers ai Ottawa, 7:30p.m;

conti-~~Ct

or F Conrad McRae.

NEW JERSEY NETS : Signed F Mark
Hendrickson for the remaiMer of the R8iOB. •
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS : Placed F
Carlos Roae'n on the inJilrtd: list. Activab:d F

OREEN .BAY PACKERS: Signed DB Keith •
Williams.
·rNDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Si~d
~B . Oarick
Holme1.

.

si~d

· NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS:

S

a four·year contract . •
· SEA1TLE SEAHAWKS: Si"gned .WR Sean
Dawkins.
I

Larry .Whigham In

.

. Hockey

.

National Hockey Leque . .
.
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS: Ant8ned G
Pattick LaUme to Kansas City of the IHL.
. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: Signed G Jeff
Maund.

DALLAS STARS : Recalled G Marty Turco ,

fiom Micliigan or the IHL
VANCOUVER CA.NUCKS: Sent C Robb
Gordon io Syrmcuse of the: AHL.

·softball Redwomen lose twice to /lllarie.tta College

3h

lh

4

- ~26,

5'~

.486
.4'59
.2l6

7
8
16

12
.J

f&lt;L

li.ll

.784

8
12
13
18
21
27

.684

J'·:

.658

4'··

.538

9
17
18
J),

J24
J08
.179

)2

.. 29
15

8

.784

" "
......... 17

.625

S':
II '
II

20 &lt;87
19 486
l l .447
2 1 .432
.1 1 .!62

12',
I)

11'
'

23

Wednesday's stores
Phil::u:ldphi a 96. Toromo 78
\\(ashinglon 95, Nt'w York 89-0T ,
All:mm 77. Bosron 70
Charl olle 8J. ~troit 79
lndinna H Orltmdo 80
Houston 101. Vancou\'t'i 8~
San Amonio 95. Minnesota 79
Milwuukec ?8. Miami 86
ClEVElAND 89, Ch icago 81
Dtnver 120. New Jer.cy 97
Phocni~ 101 . Seonle 94

A SPECIAL .SECTION
.In The

Tonight's games

Portland a1 Houston, 8:30p.m.
Minnesota a1 Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Seaule ~~ Sacr~mento, IOJO p.m.
Denver at Golden Stale, !0:30p.m.
Ul:~h ~ti..A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m·.

Eastern Division .

:!Y L f&lt;L

Nel(l. York. .
.. .................. 7
Alh(ma ....
.. .................. ... 6
"Mot:itreal.. .... .
... 4
Philadelphia .. . ......... ,.... 4
Floridn ....
. ... ..... 2

2
.l
.5
5
6

Cen1ral D! v l~ion
Houjton ...
.. .................. 5 3
Sl. l,.ouis ..
. .... ,.. ~ .
r iur;bursh .. ..
· ChiQilgo ...................... ,......... .3 · .5

l

CINCINNATL ...................... l
Mll~aukee .............................. ]

•

l
.5

.718
.667

.444
.444

.250

1
)

J
4':

Friday's games

.621

.lOO

.J7l
. l7l

.m

t

2

2

2

-\\'ffiim Olddon

3 .667

l o1 Angeles .... :...................... 5
San Diego .............................4
Arizt~.na .............. ,............ ~ , ~ ... 4
Colorooo ...............................l

4 .ll6
4 .lOO
~
.444

'

.2M

I

t&gt;·

Hockey

2

-'

Wednesday's scores

NHL standings

Chi cago .5, CINCINNATI4
Monlre:al 15, Milwaukee I
!:""):w York -1 , Florida I
S~ Louis 9, Piusburgh .5
Adanta 10. Phlladelphia 4
San Diego at Colorado. ppd .. tnOw
Arizona 6. Lo! Angeles 2
Houuon 6, San Francisco. 3

Trimble softballers
down Southern 5-2

Chicago at Wuhinston , 7 p.m.
CLEVELAND at TOronto, 7 p.m.
Orlando at Atlanta. 7:30p.m.
llldiana at Philadelphia, S p.m ·
New York at DetrOit, 8 p.m.
Miami at Boston, 8 p.m.
V111couvcr at Minnesota. 8 p.m•
Charlotte at Mhwaukee, 8:30p .m.
Portland at San Antonio. 8:30p.m.
Dallas at Phoenlll, IOp.rn.
·
L,A. Clippm at Gol4.en Stile, 10:30 p.m.
New Jersey ~- Se:auk. 10:30 p.m.

.621

San tnmcisco ......................... 6

Atlantic Diwlslon
r

!Karl 0-0) al Montreal (Thurman 0-1 ).

IWn

:!Y L i: &amp;

y-NewJene)l .............. ...... 4.5 24
~-Philadelphia ....... ,.......... 36 2~
~- Pit"burat~ ..............., ..... .l7 28
•N.Y. Ran1ers ................... .33 37
N.Y. IIlanders ...... .............. 2.3 48

,

MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1999 .. 12 NOON

!if liA

II 101 241 193
19 91 2Ui 192
14 S8 236 213
10 76 214 223
10 ~6 187 242

INSERTION DATE:

I ..l 5 p m
St. Loui~ (Oliver 0-1) at Pittsburgh (Peters 0-0).

Northtalt Dl"lslon
y-Ouawa ........................... 44 2.1 13 101 236 176
l :.l~pm.
--Toronlo ........................ ..4529 7 97 266 228
CIN CINNATI (Tomko 0..0) at Chicago (Sanders ~·Buffalo . ........................ J6 27 17 89 203 173
&lt;HH
),o2u:s2tOonP·t");·raman 0-0)" San. Fr••·••-'(B~k . •; Boston .......................... J7 29 I~ 87 207 175
IK
.... ......
.......
Momrui. .... ,...._. ........,........H 39 II 73 181 11)7
1-0). 4:05 p.m.
Snn Di~go (Clement 0-1) al COlorado (Bohanon'
S.ulhtUI DIY~sion
1·0). S:OS p.m.
.
.
y-Carohna ........ .... ............34 )()Hi M 207 199
Atlanta (Giavine 0-l) at Philadelphia (Schilling 2- Florido .............................. 29 J4 18 . 76 204 226
OJ; H)S.p.m.
Washinaton ....................... 31 ~ ~ 68 200 215
Florida CMeadowJ 1·0) at New York (Yoshii J.O). .Tampa Bay ...................... .19 .53 8 46 17.5 284
7:10p.m
·
-•1.0!1 Angeles (Dreironi·OJ at Arlrona (John$011 I·
WESTERN CONFERENCE '
"0). I0;0.5 P 111 ·
Centl'll DltJsion
Chi~aso

Friday's comes .

CTrochsel 0..21 at Mllwouket (Pulsipher
I-OJ. 2.0.5 p.m.
.
F1orld.a !Sprmger0-1 J .nt Philndelphia (Ogen 1- 11.
7 · mp . ~
.
l'lrtsbur1h !Schm1dl 2·0) at GrNCINNATI I Sere
1·0). 7:05 p.m.
Moilrrc;rl &lt;Hermanson I-OJ 111 New York (leiter 01). 7 IO p.m ·
St. Louis (Jimenez 0-0) til Houston (Reynolds· 2·
0). 8 :0~ p.m.
,
·
·
A.tltlnta { Maddu~ 1·0) 011 Colorado (Thom son 0·

liul ,

:!Y L 1: &amp;

!if liA

y-Detroit.. .................. ,..... .4.l31 7
ll·St. LAuis....
.. ........ l"i 32 U

9.1 143 199

Oit:aso .. .
.. ...... 27 41 12
Nash\·lllt .................... 28 4~ 7

66 19.5
6;\ 187

' Nor1h"tst Dh·llktn
y-Colomdo.......... ·.......... 4.l 26 10
.II· Edmonlon ...................l l .17 12
CaiJnry ............. ·~··' ........19 .19 12
VMCOU\It'f ............ ,........... .lJ 47 12

96
74
70
.58

Paclftt Dh·islon

R] 228 20]
2J~
2S~

,.

at1

WEDNESDAY, APRIL .28, 1999

Pleasant Valley Hospital

·. Call
Dave Harris or Kathy Williamson
For More Information
992~2156

·Health line

.

2.15 19&lt;
222 tlJ '
104 130
192

m

(304).675-2828
.

'

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
.- .-·POMEROY DAIL¥-SENTINEL

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Todoy's games ·
Milwauk~e

. 12

Sel11tle ..
18
Sacramemo ....
Golden Stale ..
16
L.A. Clippers .....
.. ...... 6
~~c linched playoff berth

standings

I

.

....•

Basketball
NaUonll &amp;askttblll Assocladoil
BOSTON CELnCS: 'Signed G Damon Jones to
a 10-day conttact. Placcd'C Eric Riley on the injured
!itt, retrbacti"e to Aprill2.
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: PIIOCO&lt;I G Derek
Anderson on the injured list Activiled F'Ryan Statk.
DENVER NUGGETS: Terminlled the 10-day

Football
N11ional FOOib1ll Lape

Pudnr Division

1·0), 7.06 pIll.

t ·

.667
.l79
.lJl
.164

:!Y L

... 29
.26
.. 21
...... 21

Dallas.
Denver
Vaocouver. ....

1). 7:05p.m

•

11.'~

28 ' .26-3

3, Wrtilhingtoi1 0
·
New Jersey 2, Buffalo I
.
Toronto 3, N.Y. Jtlanden 2·0T
Floridll3. Montreal 2-0T
Detro!! 4, Nuhville 2
Dallas 4, Phoenil 2 .
C:algary .5, VancouYer 4
St. lOuis J, Anaheim I

Jmnaine O'Neal.

Mldwut Division

Ium

p.m .

fuit

18
23
24

-·-

Today's games

:

Carolina .at Tampa Day, 7:0S p.rri.
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 7:.l0 , .m.
Colorado at fAmooton , 9 p.m.
Los AnFie• at San Jose, 10:30 p.m,

Recalled RHP Justin Speier from Richmorxl o( the
International Lcaaue.
FLORIDA MARliNS: Signed RHP Erik
Hanson to a minor teaaue contn~ct . Purchased the
contract of RHP Archie Corbin fropt Calsary or the
PCL Recalled RHP Rartet Medina from Calg&amp;ry.
Desianated C GuillefmO Garcia for auian.mem.
MONTREAl EXPOS:.Sent RHP Mike Maddux
outright to Pn•w• of the lntemational Leaaut ..

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Anaheim IOliYares 1-0) at Onkland (Heredia 1-0).
4:05p.m.·
Chi cago ISnyder 0-1) a1Boston (P Martinu 2·0).
6:05 p,m.
Ten~ (He ll in@. 0-2) at SeaniC (Fassero 0-el), 6:3.5

N~

lll!

.718 .
.676
2
538
1
.526
7',
..\95
12\:
J68
13~

II
12
18

Cenlral Division
Indiana ................... ......... 26 13
Mi lwaukee ............ .. .. ., .... , " 22 1 16
Atlanta ............
......... 23 17
Detroit .... ···· '··· .......... .... 22 17
CLEVELAND .
.20 18
Toronto .......... .....
..... 18 19
Charlone .... ,....... .. ,.......... ....17 20
Olicogo .......... :..
.... . 10 29

'

Detroit 7, Minneso1n I
CLEVELAND 1L Konsas Ci ty 4
Tl'lronlo 7. Ta.mpa Roy 6 ( II)
New York 14, Baltimore 7 .
Oakland 6. An"ahcim S
Tc~:"l! 9 , Seaule 6

'~.

:!Y L f&lt;L

.. ..... 28
Miami ......
.. ........... 25
New York
21
PhiiOOelph1a . .. ............. 20
W~shinglof! .........
.. . I5
Boston .............
.. 14
New Jersey ...
. lO

4
4

Wednesday's scores

'Kan~as

. Allan•lc 01.-lslon

:rw.
Orlando.....

.ll6
.444
444
.444

C&lt;~rolina

EASTERN CONFERENCJ!:

Wrstem Division

Tcus. .....
.. ............ .5
AnEiheim .
.. ..... 4
Oakland ..
. .. ... 4
Sca.tth: ....................... . '.. 4

FridaY's games

Wednesday's scores

2',,

a.r:

Nll5hville at OJicago. 8:30p.m.
Co lorado at Calgary. 9g.m.
St. Louis at Photnill, I p.m.
·Anaheim at lus Ansetes. 10:30 p.m.

z-Dallas ........................ .511712 114 235 164
x-POOenix ........................ J8 30 12 . 88 199 191
x· Anaheim ........................ 3.5 JJ 12 82 209 199
•-SanJose ........................ 31 32 17 7919:4186
L01Angeles .. _.................. J044 5 65 181 216
~-cline~ playoff berth
y. cJinched diviiion tide
z-c linched conference title

Cubs outlast Cincinnati 5-4

-------··--

�•

~
&gt;:By
·- ···. . ... .

Thuraday, Aprll15, 1999

The Daily Sentinel.

The Bend

·

.

NOTIIING RUNS
LIKE A DEER.,.

Page&amp;

Thureday, Apr1115, 1999

·i'

riage back together again , he will
·have to give up his current wife.
• Make it plai n. Put the ball in Brent's
court , and tell him there will be no
comprom ises .

Dear Ann Landers: 1 recently
allended the fu neral or a seventh
grade boy who had been killed by a

sex.
· . Here's the real problem. Brent
remarri.cd aft er we divorced . I know
it 's wrong to keep seeing him, but
we can ' t ~cem to stay away from
each other. .
I have urged Brent to spend more
time with his W11'c , but ·hc wo n ' t li s·
ten. The tr uth is . I'm not sure I want

his marriage to work . I feel certain drunk dri ver.
Brent and I could make a life togcth ·
As heartbreaki ng as that was,
er again if we tried. In _fact, I sug- there was actually something more
gested he move in .with me, but that dist urbing about that day. One of the
scares him. He says he loves me but · child's fri ends came in as the se rvice
not the way he used to.
began and sat"next to me. I held this
Brent is a wonderful father to our little girl as sobs wracked her bod y. I
children, and they keep say ing they later asked if she needed a ride
want him to live with us again . Why home. She said her father would be
is he st ill sleeping with me if he isn't ·picking her up but that he didn't li ke
willi ng to commit? I need some to attend fun erals.
advice . - CONF USED IN NI'W
Ann , I know the parents of thi s
YORK
littl e ~ irl. They are good peo ple. But
DEAR N.Y. : Brent is just using I am appalled by their lack of sensiyou for sex. Stop sleep ing wi th him ti vity and that of the other parent s
at once. If he want s to put the mar- who did not accompany their chil -

was perfect, and he .ne_ver saw an
dren .·
optometrist,
let alone an ophthalPlease tell your readers that part
mologi
st.
He
staned having some
or the responsibility of parenthood
incl udes being there to give their problems reading , so ..he fi gured age
child emoti onal support , even if it · had finally caught up to hi m and
means attending funeral s and miss- made an appointment for an exam.
ing work .-- OUTRAGED IN Thank God he did.
It turn s out my husband has glauTEXAS
DEAR tEXAS: I fee l sad for coma, which had been slowly rob·
that child whose parents weren't bing him of his eyesight. He had no
·there to comfon her. However, any idea it was happening. Ellaucoma
pair of loving arms would have been
fine, and you were dear to have vol-

does not h~ppe n just to old people.'lt
· can happen at any age.
If detected early enough. it can be
treated and controlled so blindness
won' t occur. Urge your readers to
get their eyes checked regularly, no
mauer what -- WENDY JN · ERIE.
PA.
DEAR WENOY: You did -- and
!thank you.
·

By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs Cotmty Humane Society
We have it and lake i.t prclly seriously. But why is that when the old
dog in the house hold appears to be
in pain , arid the cause of the lamene ss is determined tO be arthritis,

that no one does anything for him ?
Arthriti s is o ne of the most commo n sources of chronic pain treated

by veterinanans. Often re sulting
from elbow or hip dysplasia (which
so often affects, for example, purebred German Shepherds); anhritis is
a painful, degenerative joint disease
that can also be the result of the normal aging process.
Basically, it is a joint' disease in
wh1ch the canilages (fibrous caps)
covering the anicular surfaces or the
bones, degenerate and bony prolifer. . ation (excess,bone growth ) occurs. It
can also be caused by accident or

• shoner stride s when walking
• obvious pain if the affec ted
joi nt is touched
· • occas ional whin i n ~ or whim pering
• 20 to 50 percent loss in ran ge of
motion
• sitting is preferred over standin g
• reluctance 10 climb steps or
jump up
• slow to rise from a resting pos iti on;
Signs of severe arth[.itis arc
• reluctance to rise or walk more
than four .or five. steps
• dogs will hot ,a! low the joint to
be touched at all
• frequent whining and/or whimpering
• more than· 50 percent loss in
range of motion
.
• noticeable behavioral changes
· • increased difficulty rising from

much as is listed? You guessed it,
tion of the label.
For example, if f our breakfast you have to tnple all the amounts on
.
had a percent daily value for total fat the label.
Now
let.
us
lao~ at the in forma of 10 percent, yo u would subtract
that 10 percent from the 100 percent tion between the two wide black
you are allowed , and that would lines.
The fi.rstthing you will. sec is the
leave you with 90 percent of lotal fat
left for the rest of 'the day 's food . words , Amount Per Serving, and
right under that are the words "caloYou arc trying to cat more sensi- consumption .
What if your cal ori c need is less ries and "calories from fat. "
hly ~nd 10 be a smarter shopper. In
To keep our calories from fat in
the grocery store, you read the · than 2000 calorie s, say you only
Nutriti on Fac ts labels and try to need 1800 calories a day ' Dna little balance we should not have more
understand how they apply to your math. Ei ghteen hundred calones is that thirty pcrccnt .of our total calowhat perce nt of 2000 c al o rie s ~ rics froOl. fat , and so me studies say it
persgnal health and nutrit ion.
If you have di ffi cult y doin g this, Divide the 1800 cal ories by the 2000 would be better if we co4ld lower
you arc not alone, c hances arc the cal ories an.d this will give you 90 this number to 25 pc!"cenl.
For example , based on the infor. shopper across the ai sle is JUSt as percent.
mation
at the liouom of the label. we
So, your percent daily values ·
· confused as you arc.
Although the Nutriti on Facts should add, up ,1&lt;1 90 percent for a can·see that a person on a 2000 cal o·
label s were introduced more than . days worth of each of the items list- . rie diet can have up t6 65 grams of
four years ago they are still ·very ed on the label under the Percent total fat.
This is the formula to change
confusing to some t:o nsumerS. Some Daily Value headin g.
those
grams of fat to calories, multiFor
reference,
using
the
break·: folks are not sure how all tho.sc perply
the
65 grams of fat by 9, this will
fast
from
above
,
·
you
would
now
: cen1agcs re late to their nutriti onal
have 80 perce nt of 101al fat left to give you 585 calories of rat that you
needs.
would be allowed in a days worth of
The an swer lies in taking th e time usc in the rest of the day 's food .
If you need 2200 calorie s you food. Of these 585 calories less than
to figure o.ut your · caloric needs
based on your health concerns, age would usc the sam e formula to come 10 percent or approximately I RO
and physical acti vity level. After you up with a percent daily value of 110 calories , or less if possible; should
have done this. it is time lo pick the percent. Which ~leans for ,each item come from saturated fat.
If your calorie intake is around
Nutrition Facts label apart and learn listed ·with percent daily values you
I 600 you could eat about 53 grams
would need to get I I0 percent.
h&lt;;Jw to personalize it to your needs.
Look now from the bottom of the uf total fat, with less than 10 percent
The percent dai ly value explanation, is shown on the bottom half of label back up to the top, look right coming from saturated fat, or if your
the label. It is based on a 2000 calo- under t.he words "nutrition. facts." caloric .need is around 2200 you
could have 73 grams of total fat ,
rie diet. A whole day's food con - Sec the words "serving size" ?.
This is where many people gel in with less than I 0 percent coming
sumption should add up to I00 per-cent for each item showing a per- trouble . All the percentage daily val- from saturated fat. ·
The· next two items on the label
centage under lhJ' headtng Percent ues are based on the serving size
Dail y Value located at the top and on amounts listed here. So, what do you are "cholesterol" and "sodi urn. ·
the right hand side of the center sec- have to do if you eat three times as "Unless you are on a cholesterol or

Community
·The Community Calendar is
publi shed as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run~ specific number of days .

URNPIKE

.. __-

8lm
-·

.11,...,. . .

:Dear Ann Landers : Please tell
your · readers the importance of get·

•n, Is

ting regular eye exam s. eve n if' they
don' t need gl asses.
My hu sband, age 41 , !le ver had a
problem with his eyes . His vision

TV ·

f:tf\

ltl!l ' l ;, Ill/

/: (/ I

f11 I ((

f I I (,

un.-...,_
8

I'

THURSDAY
CHESTE~

Shade River
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM spec ial meeting
Thursday, 8 p.m. at the lodge with
work m the F.C. Degree .
I
.
POMEROY . - Rock Springs
Beller Health Club will meet at I
p.m. Thursday ·at· the home. o f
Phylli s Skinner.

- l n l cltemplon:

..,

LONG BOTIOM -

3. (4) MerkM4. (II Dele len~
a.

(21 -.., t.abollte

I. (II lhlttJWe7. (71 Werd Burton
1. (10) Tonr ltawert
t. (II _ , Mo,iletd
10. (It T..., Labonte

.,

.;'\

-...
N
----. l , :c -..-- . a: 8. --.,.
,.,
---.. f:t-Na::i
,-

Fl&amp;hilni adversity to a draw .

or consistency

Almost stole a win
Everythln&amp; but a win
Bad Bristol luck .
Also tou&amp;h at Mar~nsvllle
Another top-10
Has the rllht stuff
Just a Dll off
Unlucky 13th

a.

~

.!

:::)'--

~

I

•

I.

"

•

_.._

&gt;

af lft!Wttjl wltlr IN ruks, rspa:ially
Ifpu /ODd Is """"'"""" w safely

l.f tt01 afac/Ot'. But lhey don 't Jn ir
oJflcia//y. attd IMSI tllffes It l.f ltlH art
Ww $lttet 1M cripplfti oor l.f goi"i
:w slow rhat IN l.f lucty to Sfll bocl:
10 the ptts.
7

17

\ &gt;

'

I

the!M GUYS roce ~m lop one to tap 300
0!' -over )oog tho roc:• lo. Voio hoar
obout 11VIft8tl,.. l hf'llft't found t~t.
· Elliott ~r tandlodtn thol'(l~otorr
'TillY reony ao !un:t&gt;o,. right 11oin tM
!!'IP-~~~~•tt tho
·
oge ol23,114!lllng hlo
ttar!. Wow. lhll,.llylmprnHd me. It
fl(l\ !&gt;II
niiY 1101 with • otruggllng
.-lty oponod rnx .,... 1 nHd to put on
• Iiiii! b'
Ill the WOOd BrothoO,.one of my,bliJ-t&gt;oy JeOlt .artier.•
the ~rl'lleatndiiY nornoo.
• · WIQT'I TOUGHIR, THI DIPPIR;
'' e.KIItr 0111 T!JitHIII racing on the
INCI1N :tJIIICAIJI FROII euac;H
~on l~kt of hlo ,.-tlve tll~nlo,' WI~OI!IINII liATIONA~. OR THE HlliJIER
, nlnill!l! ~tton IIICing loilio title 'et LIVIL OP COIIPifiTlON? 'll'o prubo·
S'oiillflloiton SiiNCIWiy In 1~. It woo bly·lllt 1118'* tavot of competition. With
II 8oUth lklttori lhtil' ho lllldl hla lkiiCh guy~, you Nelly MY. to otnltlule
Orand No- dtllut·lhlt lllrno ""'· Ho • to mako. ~- ~· TheM guys ora io
hal nve BON vtcloriH to nlo Cl'ldll,
, aooc1 ot k!IOWing wnauhoy noed. They .
fROM LAST WEEK
"''" Jn 1.,71/td two In ·ea.
•
~noli" whlltll\tY,nHd In hiRPY hour (tho
!IHolt'l oldw b'l'l~er Hermie It otill 1 flnol :proctlce) . Ttlat mek11 1 hig""' level
• WINITOIICUP.·
of compellllon bocouoethoiO guyoora
. Rutty wat- - ... lOIIII&gt;loce on NASCAR'o etl-ltme viCtOry . •i niCIUler In the BON ranko.
•
.
10 -.1. No Pf:ICtlco roundt, ovetylhlng
Hot Willi htl leventh 'MIOfy.ll Brii!Oi Molm Speectoay. Waltoce hoi
2S (2~ on APfll 59)
".
for IIOintt. lt'l lko playing the Clllcoao
·won 49 ttmoo, bo&amp;Jnnlrc 11 Bllolot oo Aorll 8. 1986. Tho vk:IDry
n MITOWIJ; l!Orn lnd ri!Hd In
Billft In your nrat gome ol bllkatblff,'
twoke •.lit wltllone cf the II)Ort'e early tecends. Heob Thomes·.
· DID YOU LIARN lOIII THINOI
lni
, '(a., l l - In MooNovllle, N.C.
l , IIAIIITAL ITATUI: lltngloo
WHILII ORIYING LATI IIODILI 'THAT
· IUICH IIIANO IIATIONAL .
"CAllt.NO.,ZI'Cttao
ford Teurilo, .
mLL HEtP YOU IN WI.NITON CUP?
GreerwiUe, S.C., nattve JMOn Keller was. ~PUCMCUiar in wtnnlna
• - llr .l llil Waoillruthert
'Sdme of the beot drfvtr~ I've • - been
for the 11r1t time olnCO 1995. l&lt;otlt.r poiMd Dale Eltnhlrdt Jr. with
RICOIIOi
htMt. O,Wi'll. 0 pol141, ~ l~nd weteln lall Modo! cort. l
·' 18 IIPIIO CO In the Moorit'o Snoc&gt;0 2!!0. Molter'o PY_..,
IODo!M nnt8het1 1 """'10.. "'ll'" the~
from Bol'ly Beggorly then
Motorlportt team ha won two races In a row, comlrC on the
uoo~ooa In OJMW ....m.-1 I
In racing. Some
Ill ... neVIr
heelt of teammate Jeff Green' a victory In Neahvllle, Tenn.
, PIIIITII&amp;Iartj~ 24, 1818, at
lb i "to get·tn 1111 right
to
CnarfOflel. IIOfe. lnontl, will (none!
move otong. I Jove.,... l come from . .
WHAT,WAI VOUR I!OOUliiiREve,Y wtek I'm oH, !go WlllCh o Late
CIIAFTtiWI TIIUCK \letlfan Rick C1relll emetllid trltMnpham after a torrid let&amp;tece
.I'RIIIIN THI WINa1'0N CUP IIIIIEif I,!O(!tl raco In Vlrglnlo or North
'
duel wllli tnree other drNellll Meoo Marin, 1M Baf&lt;erellttcf CaiW.,
· :Jllt,!!IGgtot eurpd.._,;o_o now herd
Carolina. •
. ·

·'

=rned -

v.ct&lt;,

I

.r.:r10na

I

1. Who Wll the flrtt woman to win a pole for
11 Husen Grand NatiOnal race ?
2. What driver used to wear 1 life jacket at Daytona
tor tear of wlndln&amp; up In the 6nflel&lt;l Jake?
3. Who was the first woman to lead a areen-na&amp; lap at
O~na?

101&gt;10 flnllllol.

8 - · Rielly Rudel, oUII
" " - tn the top 15.

no

. IOIJOSIIII(] I/P009996l Olfl U! 'NiS UYl4

.

••••••••••••

1110.1 '1: 'tli6llll ~---"'
IIIMINY

740-892-4233
'800-795-111 0
. 202 W. Second StrMt
Pomeroy,
.. Ohio 45789
•.

ADV~RTISERS!!
Advertise on this page

Call 992-2155

NEW YORK (AP) - The coy - Society, said Monday .
ote thai had its wily way in Cen . The name was suggested by '
tral Park is destined for a ·Jifc o f City Parks Commissioner Henry
luxury at a city zoo :
Stern because the coyote wa s hid'The 35-pound, 2-year-old male ing out across Fifth Avenue fmm
still doe sn't have a name, but the Hotel Pierre . Officials said
" Lucky, Pie rre is the fronl-run - · they still don ' t know how the
ner," Ri chard Lanis, vi c~ pre si· canny canine got into the park.
dent of the Wildlife Conservation

Dave Ext. 104
Kathy ·Ext. 105
For more information
D

•

· Winsion Cup dri~ to compe!e in
and dom inate the &amp;Kh Scrin as
· well. lfthC)' 'tW'II to own a eat. OK.
but Ice KIITIOOI"'e else do the drivil'lg,
.
llllcldy Upn
H...,..t~V..

opi"IDtr.

Byldtwcllullon
NASCARThhw.ct&lt;

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I 'Mlt.lld like to know how t hey
determine the number of liP' each
car maltes around the track.
[IMf ~n Wlnkl!
IIMI'Dti&amp;,Fia.

1'11e'seoriiCI .sy:rrem Is ~lilrly .
lktollf!d. bNt Jlf1!1a It tJ 1D.Y that o
I()(JfW l.r Pfl",fffUU/Iy aislptd ro ·
,IIOCh rur m: a memr.r of tw.'Oifil"g il.f

laps, T1rt sys~m also ltar o 11urrthfr
nf hodtup ~ Ia l'J!t w rd m

BRISTOL, Tenn. - Chevrolet
a new Monle Carlo u111il 2000.
Bapl1lnini the decillon,
Chnrolel m•rlillna aenml man·

tpr Kurt Ri«er luutld a wit~!· 1

"K), in whkb Stewart stancd on
the pole in 1996. will beain 11
until next .C...On."
noon EDT. siJ. hours Mrore the
Riner 11id Chevrolet omclals
Coca-Cola 600 11 Khtduled 10
hid been wortdna wtlh NASCAR · start at Lo'N'C's Molor Spccdwty
for 1 year wHhout IUCcetJ.
in Concord.
Larry Curry, the man who
X
ded Stewart) tea'm when he

ln1Mrlit ofbiUtlll NASC611r't

•w. 11 Chevrolet , .. dltiP-

poinlod 1ho1 NASCAR hoi no&lt; ye1

~tppnwtd· lhe •ll·new 2000 Monic
Cado for UJC fn Winston CI.IP ·

competition.• reid the rile•se
distributed Satu~ mornina.
"FoJiowlna recent dtscus1ions
with the ~tlon.h•l body and our
te1111. wt tlevi made ttle decis ion

THE STEWART DOIIIU1
Tqny sa...- ••~need plana to

'"" !loth lhe ln41~~~~poHo 100 ond

tho Coea-(:ola 600 on the 1111'11
day IIKHilhs qG, bul it Wll only
1111 week that ht •actually
announnd what thole plans were.
,Stewart will Mlkt'UH orhls
Wl ...on Cup aponsor, Home~
Depoe. 10 spo•sor a one·nce dt1l
rorthe soo.tht wqrtd'l most
ftlftOUIIUiomobllt 11ce. The Indy

~

ohe Indy Riel"' Leoaue ·

mpiouhip in 1997, will co.
tht Oldamobilt - ~ nr
·Stew.·n.
'

X

RICHMOND ~DDED : A
month or 10 back. ·unetrtlinty
o~r which version of the Monte
C~rlo would be used forced Dtlt
Earnhardt Inc, to drop the
Winscon 500 11 T1llldep from 1be

apedtlly buill car would bl: need·

ed for a restrk tor-plate track, and
· since NASCAR and Chevrolet
had not come to in ajrecment on
which model that would be for the
Oct 17 rsce, the team decided II) ·
drop ttiM rKe from the lb ird·aen eratio n drivcr'l schedule.
.00-llppcr a1 JUchmon4
01 Sept. II has officlally ~n
tabbed' u Tllladep't ~laccmenl.
Bamlmdt Jr. slill hopei tO debu'l
l)ft May 30 at Lowe 's Motor

n,

Speedway. followed by events on
July II at New Uampshire, AuiJ.
l l at Michlpn. Richmond and

total·web
Call Now And Sig~Upl

· ~LEVISION
COMMUNICATIONS
,.,.,
.
'

I

-olu:$11 , $15 .....,
IENIEfhi: Memberlhlp certfflcate

....... . 10-diOOOur&lt;flom

-~-. -ca-ds.

newsletters, c:atalafJH, etc.

AllfliiCIEMDIY: UrWI btet
(870) -

7422

• At the ~mire of ~he

season. ~ Aacln&amp;
South cr~lef ROOin
decided to ·

-ton

~ (lrtvef Rutty
Wallace wfth 1 complete
aet of 11ft car.. 'Molt o1
the old rnoctet1 were aold
off, end tho food CitY 500
mOiked the flrlt wtn tor
Benker. 1 car deltined to
e.COI on the hltiJl banks

""" •tinrc hOme tho
money.'

t ' .,

High Speed Internet
Access With Cable
Modems I

.

...... MNm111 FUll CWII '

N011. 2 I at Atlanta .

9f You Have 'l'he}Jeed. for Speed.•.•
we'Ve got ltlfl

675~3398 or 1·800-766-0553

Fan Tips

Fla. .... 72513 .

rt11e Winston Cup taUS· on Dale .
Eamhlrdl Jr.'I sc:hedule. Since a

...

...................... _,

mmt of "NIIW!'I ernx:. ·

.

to delay the motorspOrta debut of
tblt new Monte Carlo rtce car

Ul finally made the .ofl'iclal
a..ouncement that It will not nee

•

. . . . . .,.,.... BolSIJ, Ash

Chevrolet: No new Monte Carlo until 2000

&amp; 'l'rtl!lld
..

and limit tht mu.irnum entry to two
can only. The lin~ l")' .does" 't
stand a chlnce.
·
I think il\ .COIRPictcly unfair fur

_,..

A'lTENTION

I

t :-

AROUND THE GARAGE

.

Lu's Cruise

NASCAR needs.IO Mop the

&amp;rmf by some of the .ar owner1

• ••••••• • •••

'laolsJirle'l+e ..

• 110'11 Jeff Burton, SIX ..ralflt

Call us for all your
.travel needs ·

Dear NI\SCAR Thio Woe~

llrf!

••••••••••••
V.IIMHotVAo'aNot

Faith Full

Richard Childress.

1'1lut! l.f 110 MoGI\At'r o{tfte I'VIt.
l.lt pultapJ NASCAR f lm- a dri.w
wlwe ctU' Jwu nm out ofJUS u bit ,

!:

MONDAY
Racine Village
RACINE
Council, '7 p.m. Monday at .the
muni cipal building .

drove Chevroteu owned by

EdWhhltr
IAwhbcrry, Pl.

·=··

0

Dodge Is stilllooklni foo~~
flrst vtctor~ of the season, ...
Both Skinner and Sauter

a.u and the en~ne is dead?

...

••

Mike Skinner have also won·
races at Martinsvi lle . ...

Dear NASCAR Thit Wttt,
f know the dri- ~ermine
their !pC:al 01'1 pit ..cl b)l cherk ing
the rpms in a certain ceu. bul how
do they cheek their lpCCd when !hey
run out Of pt on the tnck and ue
coutine dowll pit row? I've seen
ttOmC JUY' OOUiinl on pit road, and
they seem like they are aoins faster
than the pil· f'Oid tpCtd limit, bul
they never Jet penalized. Is the rule
WliWid for cart that 1ft out or g.u?
1rntl. how do driven aeu how rast
they are eofnc ...men they are.out or

~

...•••
•

R... r -: Joe Rullm an ,
fo rd. 65.072 mph, Sept. 2S.
1995.
"
Notable: Rich BICkle and

Fast, Friendly
Semce
949-3099

Lttttn m. O.IJidJn

lOP TIN

Model

SR 124
Racine, Ohio

Y-..1Um

8 week~ renklnp by NMCAR Thla Week ...~er Monte Dutton.
Laat week'a.ranklfW 111n parentheses.

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

. Coyo~e finds new home at city zoo

•

.

. 1. (1) Mfr Gordon
2 ; (I) Jelf lilrten

•.c._,

••••••••••••

liott.
Sadler
.

Ridenour
-Supply

vices.

POMEROY - AA meeting .
noon at the Catholic Church, Mul ·

Trllck .......lnl ...onl:
Ted Mu111rave; ford, 94.129
mph, Sept. 23, 1994

PROFII f

Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Calendar~---'-------

POMEROY
Meigs County
Arthritis Suppon Group, Friday.
10 to II :30 a.m . Senior Cit izens
Center. Bonnie McFarland,: R.N.,
and Malt Hasseman , LPT, to talk
on we lln ess program and its se r-

Speedway,

Bobby Hamilton

resource in the area of nutrition.

SUNDAY
. TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053. celebra·
tion of Loyalty Day, I p.m. Sunday. Dinner for members, auxil iary members and spouses.

Martinsville (VI!.)
.S26-mlle traek,
263mlleo
' Wilen: S\Jnday, Avril 18

l'lllniOO
, 1 p.m. • Sunday • ESPN

See us for Your Stlh..

effects. The veterin'arian can also
prescribe other anti-inflammatory
drug·s, if aspirin is not sufficient.
· Whatever, you do, make sure that
the arthritic dog has a warm, dry,
quiet place , with lots of blankets and
be certain that the he or she does not
gain too much weight, which causes
extra strain on the dog's system.
As the dog ages, you should be
vigilant to auend )o the animal's
comfort .. You can .gauge your success by the dog's behavior.

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS .....: North
Be(hel C:hurch, revival , 7 p.m. Fri- · SATURI&gt;AY
day through Sunday. ·Dave Dailey
. roMEROY -' Meigs County
to be ~peakcr. .
Retired Teachers Ass oCiation. Saturday, noon , Trinity Church . John
POMEROY - Women 's AA, 7 Lentc s. · prosecuting auorncy;
p.m. Friday, 1607 Ny e Ave ., speaker.
Pomeroy . ..

COIIIlftc "''Goody's 500

Iii.......
I HI:.

because there are ·no major side

R... ....,.:Rusty
~-Wallace. ford, 81.410 mph ,
1\pfil 21, 1996
Comloltl up: NAPA 250
_ , HomlltDn won from
WIMire: Martinsville (Va .)
S~ay.. 526-mlletraco.
the pole 1851 "'ar.... Tlw!
263 miles
polesllters won I&gt;Otl1 """'" at
_ , Saturday, Avril 17
Brtstol. ... Richard Pelly Won
-InC chemPI&lt;!n: Jay ·
15 times at Martinsville, four · Souter
more lhao Darrell Wa~rlp's .
Qualllylnc Neord: liobiJy
current victory total Bl t11e
Hamilton. Ch..,rolet. 92.101
track.
mph, Seot. 20. 1996

~

_-

signifi cant pain.
Mild, inlcrmillent lameness, or
lameness th!ll is present only on ris- ·
ing, needs no treat111ent, Coated
aspirin·(the kind that won't hun the
stomach) is excellent for severe pain

Stiversville Community Church~
Musi c by l Delivered and Joe
McCloud.

Truck ....... NAPA 210

Jqqq POJNTIITANDINGI

symptomatic, directed at relieving

Citgo

ON THE SCHEDULE

~

2 p.m. • Saturday • ESPN2
• Wlnllton Cup . .riel, GooGy'8 ~

446-9800
l-800-272-5179
Gallipoli~, OH

a resting poSition.
.
Treatment for arthritis is usu'ally

Hills

Ill

N'IC''TIIIIWIIII

Mercuryi)

is love ly when some kind mom ,
such as you, comes to the rescue ..

e'

-L-_..,..

~

-~

both parents work, they can't alw ays
be present for such occ asions, and if

Gospel Church, · 7 p.m, Friday,
cantata with the Unity Singers
under the direction of Sue Mathe ny. Sod alhour will folow.

berry Ave ., Pomeroy. Af-Anon and
non-smoking groups also to meet .

992-2825
.
'
.

unteered yours. These days, when

sodium restricted diet, all adults are
given the same number of mgs. for
these two items.
For cholesterol we should con·
sume less than 300 mg s.. and for .
sodium, less than 2400 mgs per
daily food intakes. You will also
notice "total carbohydrates" listed
on the label.
Carbohydrates include sugar,
complex carbohydrates, starch and
fiber. During digestion all carbohydratcs except fiber break down into
sugars. Sugars and starches occur
natu1 ally in many foods thai also ·
supply other nutrient s. .
• The. amount of carbohydrates we
. should have arc based on the numher of calories we need as shown on
the bottom of the label.
Now we will look at the section
ri£ht under the second black line .
Here we find listed the vitamins and
mineral s that were found to be low
in American diets. We all need to get
I00 percent or more, if possible, of
each o( these nutrients from the
foods we eat.
.
There you have it, the Nutrition
Facts label. Hopefully, this article
has taken some or the mystery out of
label reading for you. ·
Need more help.? You can call the
Meigs County Health Dept. ·at 992·
6626 and ask for Jackie or Sharon,
at stop by and pick up a handout on
food labels. Also, you can call the
Meigs County Extension office at
992-6696. They are always a good

L

1 06 North SeCond Ave. • Middleport, OH

(7 40) 446·2412

Taking the mystery out of reading food labels _forshoppers
(This article Ia provided as a
service of the Meigs .county
Health Department, Preventive
Health Servicea Grant; Fun
Food Fitness, Jackie Starcher,
Coordinator
and
Sharoll
Smith, Assistant Coordinator.)

I .....- · .

f1Nin4l-1

868 Plilec:rtat Drive
Gllllpolll
Aam lr~~m Galla Alllo Sales on old Ill. 3S w.st

Arthritis: Dogs Don't Have to Just "Live with It''
injury. There is no c ~rc for thi s co nditi on but there arc wa ys to manage
it, 1ncl udmg" drugs.
If · you have a larger dog, that
dog's chances of gelli)lg arthritis are
much higher than a medium -s ized or
small .dog. The breed makes a differcncc al so, but even those · Heinz
Fifty-Seven Variety dogs, with all
their hybrid vig or, are not immune,
parti c.ularly if they have experienced
physical trauma.
What are the signs? Signs of mild
anhritis are:
• slight stiffne ss and lameness
when walking
• mild pain if the affected joint i.s
touched
·
. • abo.ut 10 to 20 percent loss in
normal range of motion
• licking of affected joint .
Signs of moderate arthritis are:
• increased stiffness and lameness
.j

'ftlu'WCIIt 0

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

Why is this reader still having sex with her newly married ex - husband?

Dear Ann Landers: I am dating
my ex-hu sband. I still Jove "Brent"
the same way I did when we married
15 years ago .
There were lots of reasons for the
divorce, but we managed to stay
friends and never stopped havin g

' 7
The Dally Sentlnef • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AITENTION

ADVERTISERS!!
Advertise on this pag..

Call
992•2155
.
.
Dave Ext. 104
Kathy Ext. 105
For more information
J
'

.

�P~~ge 8 • The D•lly Sentinel

'

Bob Hoefti.ch
Been there; done that. And it ,
lwoork1\CI for me·.
It will be two years ago nexr
mo·nth that I traveled to the Meigs
dog pound on the Rock
~p1rin1ss Fairground&gt; where I adopted
dog . "Lindy'', and I've never had
first regret.
Lindy. a cute Heinz 57 model. has
a perfect pet in our household.·
eager to please, full of vim,
~ff'ec t.iorta te and never has had that
"accident". Everybody says I got
in selecting her from the variety
animals on hand at the pound that
She has earned a very imponant
po!;ititm in our household-and I do

BHI Dye, the county dog
will Pe on hand to process licc,nst:~
and there will be a veterinarian
ahle to answer questions and talk
prospective owners. Volunteers
administer questionnaires, talk
prospective familie s, answer
tions and will hand out literature.
of the dogs adopted will be treatedj
with anti-flea and tick medication
will be brushed, ready 10 join
new owners.
Angela Sharp, a Meigs
Human Society vo lunteer, is CO&lt;)rdi-1
na11ng this two day event. There will ·
be an appearance by "Safety
anJ staff q~embe'rs from the Meig~
Veterinary Clinic will be available
brings about my men- . answer questions. The Pet
an· unusual event, a part of a Iathon will include treats for kids
~~~~;~a~ n:e:~flfon, heing staged at the rcfre_shments will he sold.
.SHERRY WILCOX
~·
on Saturday and Sunday. Columbus-based band, Porcelain,
The Meigs County Hea lth
I and 2.
which Paul Sharp a native ~~~~~ Department has initiated a "Make
Meigs County Humane Suet- Countian is a member, will o~
Yours a Fresh Start ·Fami ly"
working with the Nonh Shore on Saturday. May I. heginning at
geared
to reach the hi gh percent
!Animal League and with PETs MART You'' rc invited to take you r lawn
of
pregnant
women in Meigs.
•"nannes· will he holding a 1999 Pet and enjoy acti,ities both ·days.
Cou nt y who arc smokers.
1Adloptatl1on on the two dates in May.
Adopting i dog cannot be a
According 10 Sherry Wilcox ,
never known one of these to hC ' decision and it might he well il
R.N .. a part -tim e educa tor at the
'locall y 1llthough I could be n;i s- hold a family meeting belore 1
Healt h Departmen t, it has been
At any rate. it 's a "coor·· Adoptathon so that all members
·estima
ted, nationally, that about
~n&lt;lea·vor with a goa l 10 bring auenthe fami ly und~rs tand that with a
2-5
perce
nt of pregnant women are
to .thc plight of dogs in need of there docs come rcsponsibility .in
at any given time during :
smoking
hmncs in Meigs Count y; to make viding for tlie ca re and well beipg
their
pregnancy.
krumers aware of the imponance of the animal. Howeve r. ~s far as
Pre natal smoking co ntributes
concerned the benefo.ts far outwett2ti
~p11yit1g/t1cutcring , and to bring peato low birth weight babieso. misout to see
newly renovated the obligations. ·Adopt only if you
carriages,
premature births, sti ll -·
willing to give the animal the
pmmd on the fairgrounds.
babies,
and birth dCrects, she
·born
Adoptathon will be held from and care that it will·need.
sa
id
.
2 noon to 5 p.m., on both May I and
There wi ll be a variety of an itmail~
Wilcox said that the pregnant
The local humane society will be at the pound on the two Adloptathonj
clien
ts of the Meigs County
brcJvi·,dine pre-approved spay/neuter Days. I hope you fond one just
Health De~artment 's Prenatal
~oup•ons for a half price operation,
for you and your family. I
Clinic
and WIC Program comfood samples as well as addition- loving pet really does make it caste~
prise
more
than 5o percent of all
.
for usc to those who for you to keep smiling.
the pregnant women in the county
and that ree¢nt statistics indicate ·
that 45 % of those clients smoke.
, Since both programs are located within th e same faci lit'y,
Norma Torres, director of nurses,
wrote
a grant which was funded
CHICAGO (AP) - Sc hools, system.
by the March of Dimes.
recently
military bases and other publicly
The Boys Scouts of America also
With the funding the Hea lth
funded groups have no business said the lawsuit is without merit.
Department
now Wilcox, to pro-·
sponsoring Boy Scout troops so long
'" It is regrettable th at the ACLU
cost-effective,
empathi c,
vide
as Scouts are required to take a reli- wou ld seek to deny these boys
co
un
seli
ng
to cli ensupportive
gious oath, the American Civi l Lib- access to the scouti ng program simtele.
The
goal
is to
erties Union says.
ply because they promise to do their
.In a federal lawsui t filed Wednes- duty to God," national spokesman inc rease th ~ rate of smok in g cessation so fifty percent of women
day, the ACLU argues that public Gregg Shields said.
fundi ng of Boy Scouts of Amenca ·
. troops violates the constitutional .--":"~~---------------------.,
requirement of separation of church
and stale.
·
.. The suit , filed on behalf of five
taxpayers. names as defendants the
Chicago Public Sc hools and the
· United States Transportation Command, headquartered at Sco11 Air
Force Base in southern Ill inois:
" There is no allegat ion that any
indi vidual student or leader has suffered any kind of discriminatton
based on religion in connec tion with
any program sponsored by the
Chicago Public Schools," said
Ro()ert Hall , first assistant allorney
'--:ith the Chicago Public Schools

Health will be used. The_program
was originally written and
designed by the Fox Chase Cancer Center through a contract with the
Penn sy lvania Department of
Health and the American Cancer .
Society, The Pennsy lvania Amcdcan Academy of Pediatri'cs pilot
tested the training _program .
Wilcox, Connie Lillie, RN, BSN,

HOWAlD
IICAVAIIII6 CO.

'' =""'"
wrr•

prenatal director and Torres have
all completed the training pro- :
gram.
Incentives will be awarded to :
participant s . whose laboratory ·
analysis indicates a nicotine free ·
status. March of Dimes monies:
will fund'the educator, laboratory ,
fees and program incentives, · it·
was reported.
·

&amp; Baclchoe
Service•
Houoe &amp; Trailer Site•
land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•te'"' &amp;

.

.KI~Teletubbles theme was. car-

rled out and cake, ice cream,
Chips and pop were served.
Attending besides his mother
were his sister, Bobbie Anne, his
father, Dave Reeves, Pagevllle
hie paternal grandparents:
Eugane and Juanita Reeves of
Pegevllle Road ; his maternal
grandmother, Joan King, and
Jeff King, both of Harrisonville·
Randy, Angel, Rachel, Jodi:
Brandl, Jill and Randall Reeves,
all of Pomeroy.
Vince, Rose, Brittany, Sum·
mer end Aehley King of King
Ridge Roed; Rick and Teresa
Reeves, ~avey and Zack Young,
Patty, Rodney, Mluy, Jenny and
Billy Reeve~. Snowville; Jim ,
Darlene Travla, Jake, Mett and
Melania Older, Charlet, Mandy,
and Joeh Neutzllng·, all of
Pagevllle.
.
Shawn Ia alao the grandson
of the lete Jack King, ~r.

.

0

·
·
Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon , thru Fri. 8:00a.m. to 9;00 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Sunday 10;00 a,m. to 4:00p.m.
·
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2956
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, OH
Open Week
'Ill 9

Delivery s·tarts March .23 , 1999 .

269~D

.

O.utdOQr
Furniture

699 &amp;Up

Buy at
End of Seaton
Clo11out Price•

·Colonial
·Traditional
• Contemporary

April 30th-May 1st

DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Entitled To · Receive Your Dla·
belle Suppllta At No Cost To
Vou. For More lnformaUon. 1·88'8-

:740•992·2068

740·992·3470 .

D.UMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.

Agrlcuitural Lime,
: Umaatons • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

'.

Lam''• Lawn
.Care.
Free E.rlmtJ1e1
'ProfessiOnal Routine I.Jiwn
M&amp;Jntenance and Man~ring
'Ae~denbal 5 Commercl~

.

'Shrubbely Ma~ten~
'.Serving Meigs and Galia Counll10
In Oh~ alld Mason County in W-1

'

............... lw'-11: .....

,• 1·7411-742·2S03 or
1·740-448-3822

HORSES ·
Buy,

S~,

Train ,or Boord

......

AIIO Riding IAnonl

HooiHoUow.

Good Times Presents'

"Thunder"
Saturday, April 17th .
9pmto1am

Business
Services

NIW·REPA~It

REMOVAL

KEITH MYERS
INSURED QWN!R

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES
Longbottom, 01-oio
(740) 985-36]7

949-2168
4,2TFN

FR,EE Estimates
1740)992·5535 Of
992·2753

.

Racine, Ohio 45771

·Need a Jrlend ln_tbe baslneu .
•'

Call me at (7 40) 7 42-2842

Remember
"Done right the first time"
"Priced right all the time"

Dave's Garage

Thke the pain out .of

Fonner-"Velvet Harmner"
52954 State Rt. 124

'
painting, and let me
do it for you

INTERIOR ·
Before6 _pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

740·985·4180
Free Estimates

weeks

old .

8 Puppies. Part St . Bernard. Part
German Shepherd, 3 Weeks Old,
Wltl so Clood wa1eti Dogs. Roady
To Got740·245-5901 .

Racine , Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572
Ncar the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

- Complete Auto Seroice-

Now Open For
Spnns s.....on ·
Complete Une Of
Vegetable &amp; Beddlllg Plarp

'

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
$5.78&amp; Up

•Geraniums. Azaleas
•shrubs &amp; Treee
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9-5 Weekday ·sunday 1-5

Hauling
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
ReBBonable Rates

IUIIIID'I
IIIIIIHOUII

Sayre

"2·5776

3111/99 TFN

..

CRIDrr
Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

No Embarraeament ...
You're Treated with Reapectl

SUMoko MonoyiSU Work At
Home - Anemblt Products .
Easy Work, Exce11en1 Pay. Free
Oetallst Send S.A.S.E. to :· Nat'l
Homeowrker's Ai•oc latlon. P,O.
Bo• 67_5. Rlplty, WV 2527 1.

CenturiOn Management Group, A
Progflulve Long Term Care
COmpany to CurronUy Toking AI&gt;·
P.licaUona For An Administrator
The Southern Region Of Ohio.
We Are Seeking A Challenge
Dr1v1111n Individual With The Ability
To Lead· By E~~:ample And Ensure
The Hlghell Standard Of RIISIdent Care. The Applicant Mu&amp;t .
Have Expefle nce In Long Term
Cart, And Be A Licensed ' Nurs·
lng Home Admlnillrator In The
State 01 Ohio . Candidates For
T~ls Pos lllon Must Pouess The
Ability To Lead With A Focus On
Marketing . Financial Manage·
men t, And Eniplo~ee Re lallons.
Centurion Management Offers An
Exceptional Compensation Pack·
age . U Interested tn A C.hflleng·
lng Poalllon Send Your Resume
And Salary Requirements To Ter·
eu Dav is, MHA, LNHA . BSN ,
RNC. VIce Pres ident Of Opera·
!Ions At Centurion Management ·
Group, 3490 Far Hills Avenue.
Kenerlng, Ohio 454~ EOE.

tn

Agriculture

Mechanic

Diuel

Wanted. 740·286-6522.
Are You Energetic. Mot ivated .
And Caring? Scenic Hills Nurs ing
Center Is l ooking For Individuals

45614.

·TV.

·ooes

play.

;. Sears Kenmore Wash ing Ma-

chine &amp; Older Refrigerator, Both
1 Wort&lt;, 1~2sos .

60 Lost and Found

Black Furry Small Dog,
740

~~~~:~~ ~~~~;·. .~r-~';;.. •
Lost Dog': Whl1a1Tan · s~ilzu, Fe·
male, 91ba. In the Camp Co nley

304 67 1589

Area . 1 1 sLost Please He lp Us Find Our
Boy'&amp; Pol, Part Beagle. Bro"n &amp;
While , Blue Nylon Collar, 160
Area, Rowartll740-441·t&lt;t«&lt;.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALl. Yont Soln lluot
Be Pold In ACMnce.

QliAOL!fE: 2:00 p.m.
the cloy boro..lhe od

Ia to run. Sundly ·

edtaon · 2:00 p.m.

Frtctoy. llondoy ..hlon
-10:00 o.m. Sotunloy.
Apr1116th, 17th. 10 To 5, 5 Miles
South Of Gallipolis On Route 7,
Below Clipper Mill.

ria Garage Solo: Aprll .15th, 15th,
17th, Rio Granda. North 325 1 Tci
1035 Eagle Ro ad . Glanware 1
Books, Clothes, Furniture, What·
nots. Mqrol 8·5. Rain Or Sl1inel

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
"6" Mile Yellow Flag Vard Sale,
Pomoroy -'Middloport . April 30.
May 1. Register now $5.00 . Pick
up · flag. For more Information call

740-992-4197 . .
AU Yard Sale&amp; Mutt Be Paid In

AdYIInce. Deedllne: 1:OOpm the

dl)' before the 1d 11 to run,
Sundey &amp; llondl)' edition·
1 : 00pmF~.

Garage &amp;ale· Friday, April 16, two
miles out Flatwoods Rd. 9:0D-3:00.
Aaln or shine.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Maodlapaugh Auctioneering.

Complete Auctioneering Servlc·
es. &lt;;:onslgnment auction· Mill
Street. Middleport, Thursdays.
Ohio License 17693. 740 ·989·
2623.
Rick Pearson Aucuon Company.
lull lime auctionee r. compltlt
auction
service . licensed
•e&amp;.Ohlo &amp; We&amp;l VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304· 773-5447 .

90

Wanted to Buy

Aboolult Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins . Proofsela .
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc . Acqullltlons Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Awnue. Geilpollo. 7-2842.
Antlquia, top pr'1c111 peld, Alvei·
Ina Antlquea, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore owner . 740·99~·
2526 .

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, t990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Sulek Ponllac, 1900 E011·

orn Aventro. GalltrlOI~.
Wont To Soil Your Stuft? CaM Rlv·

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 5811 .
Shr~ Speers, 304-675-t'429.

Bates Bros . Amusement Co. Free
to travel. Must be t8yrs . or older.
Call 740·266·2950 M-F, 6:00 ·

4:30.

Bookkeeper/Receptionist, •-perl·
enced , full li me, duties Include ,
payroll . quarterly. comPuter skills,
Meigs County area . 7•0·992·

3954.

.

CNA'a, LPN'&amp;. Needed . Top Pay.
Capitol Nuralng Agency, 1·800·

576-6348.
Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hrs. I25K -S80K Nr. 1·800·
476-8653 X n77 , www.1cwp.com
Couple or .single person tO move
In and care for elderly person In
Meigs County. All living e~epens­
es, plus salary. List work history
and 2 relerences .. Sand name,
address and phone number' be·
fore May 1, 1999 to : MarQaret,
General Delivery. Pomeroy Post
ottice, f'Mieroy. OH &lt;45769.
Day position . 9am·7pm. Night po·
&amp;Ilion, 7pm ·9 am. Dullea Include
care 91 the elderly, coolcing and
cleaning, 740·992·5023 for Inter·
view.
·
'
Drivers needed lor 24' straigh l
truck, no COL required, dally trips
doM&lt;Ing tloworo. 7.40·247-2664 .
Drlvere wanlecl, requires COl and
medical card, 24 ' stra:lpht truck,
dally trips dellwrlng !lowers, 740·
247-2664.

Excellent-Opportu~ to join the
long ter11J health care field . Reg- .
lstered Nurse -position avalla~le
lor lntermediale care center. Must
have West Vii'g lnla license.
Point Pleasant Center. State Ro·.
ute 62, Route 1. Box 326, Point
Pleasant, WV, 25550. A Genesis
Eklercare' Network. EE&gt;E

Care· Taker Needed lor Eldet'1 r
Lad~ Aoom/Board, &amp; Wages' · ~
References Needed Mall T~· ••
P.O eo:. e. Galllpot•s onto. ·.

WentAd To Buy : trampoline Tarp
I Padding, 740·24~7 .

• . PIIOIII-740o"ll•241t 01 J04 415•1515

i

I

Career Opportunities Flap1dtyj
Growing H~me Appli1nc11 &amp; Fllr-.
ntture Flentat Company. Has IM··
medijlle Fuii·Tlml! Po1it10n. ~varl·j
able For Higtlty Motlvateel CareM'- ·
Minded Individual In Accounts
Management. We W1t1·Traln To A
Per son W1th Good Communlca· .
tlon Skills &amp; Good Onvtng Recore! .
We Olfer An Excellent Compe~.,
satlon &amp; Benefit Package , Appl 1·
catl0n8 Accepted ~n. Person On!(
No Phone Calls Pleasa . RENoT-:
WAV, 5 Ohio River Plaza. Ga~t·

potis.

'
HELP WANTED

GMCAA Is Currently AcceptinQ
Applications For The FolloWing''
Temporary Stalt Poaltlons . Tn&amp;se..
Pos itions Require ·Re tmbursed.
T'avel In The Gallla ·Meigs Area ·
AM May Be Based At Cheshir1 :'.
Ga111polis Dr Pom~roy. Position&amp;.;
Are Expected To Have Various ·
Start Oates From Late ·Ap nl To·
MIO -June A('ld Contmue Througtl '
Most Ot .The Summer
_;
JTPA Trainer II ·Program Spe· ·
ctall5t : Position Responsible For•:
ProvldlnQ Fie ld Supervision And '
Direction To Participants And /0~
Works lte Supervisors . Outt&amp;s.t
May include Enrolling Partic ip..
ants, Prepar ing Worksues. Re-:
viewing Compliancl!l And Safety ..
D irect ing Work , Ass isting W1tt)
Payroll Processu. Arrangln.g'
Other Activ ities. Anc! Perrorm1ng,
Other Req uired Dulles Post Hlgl't
School Training And !Or RellliaN
~~~perlence Preferred .
,•
JTPA Trainer 11 ·Education Spe"'
c lallst: Pos1\10n W1il Perlorm Ou -'
t1es 01 Program SpecialiSt Arrd
Also Be R'esponslble For Provltf •
lng Educational SerlliCI!IS To Pa; -'
ticipants In Classroom . Worksite;
And Other Pr ogram Locatlon8 ~
~ducau on a l Activ ities To Youttl,
Age 14 ·2 1 POs ition Requlres, A
Four Year College Degree And Jil
Va lid Ohio Teac.nlng Cert1lica1.
Or license.
~,

·•

App ilc'alions Mus! Be Received
By 4 P.M.: Wednesaay. April 2s :
1999 May Be Obtained At The
Following locations. Education:.!
Acllvitles Wlll Primanly Focus 0~
Pro~ ldlng Basic Skills Instruction
Anel Enrichment Activi ties
Youth Age 14 ·21 . Position Re·
Qu ires A Four Year College 0~
gree And A Valu:! Dh10 Teachlf'IQ
Certificate Or License.
. '1 \

T9

App licationS _Must Be Recei v~d
By 4 P.M.. Wednesday, April 28 .
1999 May Be Obtained At Tbe
FoRowing LocatiOns.

GMCAA Galik! One Slop
859 Third A~~enue
Gallipolis

GMCAA Meigs pne Stop ·
33105 Hiland Road
Pomeroy
·· •
OBES
445 Bucl!;eye Hills Road
Rio Granae
'
Gallia -Meigs Community
Action Agency
8010 Nor1h State Route 7
Cnesnire. OhiO 45620·6629

Equal Opportuni ty Employer . ·

HELP WANTED
GMCAA Is Currently Accept 1ng
Applicat ion s For The Follow1rig
Tempo rar y Posilions. Position's
· Are Expected To Have VariOIJS
Star!' Dates From Mtel ·April :ro
June And Cont1nue Through
Most Of The Summer. Interested
Individuals Should Apply lmme·
' Clial&amp;ly To Be Consielere,d For AJI ,
Potential Open1ngs.
·
·
Flood Cleanup Laoorers : 140
Hours Per W.eek (Subject l'Q
Weather Condillons). $8 Per Hour
Wo rk W1U Be In Meigs Coun\r
.Remov ing Flood Oebns From
Streams And Ad jacent Areas
Persons Hued Will Be Req une~
To Attend Cha in Saw AM Sal('r
Tra ining . Req ujremenl s. Me1ga
Councy Resident. Age 18 Or ~
er, La1d Off Or Long Term Un
played Me8Ung JTPA Title Ill
glblllty Gun1elmes {Income No'A
Fador)
rt

·'

liiOOrers tOiflce workers /P~
Maintenance Workers 40 Hot•
Pe r Week, $5 .15 Per Hour. W~
Wi ll Be Performed AI Varwi!J
_
Government Agencies AM Ndri
profit Organ1zations In The Are.
FREETRUCK
Requirements, Gal l•a Or MetOt
DRIVER TRAINING
County Resident, ~e t 4 ·21, ~
If Vou Qualify Gallia ·M8igs Com·
emp loyed tUMeremplo}led Mntl
munlty Actio n Agency Can Pay , ing JTPA T ltl~ II Ehg1billly Guidll
1
Vour Tuition And Related Fees
lines
-...
To Attend A 5 ·Week 120.0 Hour
Truck Driver ·Training Will Obtain' Labore rs /Office Workers· ~~
Their Ctass A COL And Have An
Hours Per Wee~ . $~ 15 Per HoM,
Excellent Opportunity To Obtain
Work Wil l Be Performed At Vari~
EIT)ployment in The Trucking In·
ous Government Agen c1es AQd
du&amp;Ul;.
Nonprofit Organ iZ&amp;ti on..s In Th~
Area . Aequ•rements; Gallia l)f
GMCAA Currently Has Available
·Meigs County ReSidents, Age s.5
Train ing And Relra ining Funds
Or Over. Unemployed /Undereifl•
For Unemployed And Underem·
ployeel Meeting JTPA Tille H elf~
ployed Elfglbte Residents Of Galgibllrty Guidelines.
" '
lla And Meigs Counties. Funds
.Are Llmlttd So If Vou Are Interest
To Re(luest A Preappllcallon !~
Yo u Sl1ould Apply Now. To OU.IIIy, . Mailed To Vou Call 740·446·1019
You Must Be A Gatlla Counry Or
EKI. 99 Or 740·992·2222 Ext. 99 '
M1 1gs Cqunty Res ide nt , Be 20
'
Years Old Or Older, And Meet
Pre appllcations May 's e Plckeel
JTPA Tille II 01 Tille Ill Guido ·
Up AI The Following Educationa l
lines. JTPA Tille Ill Serves LAiC!
Facilities:
Off Workers , INCOME IS NOT
Eas tern High SchoOl. G'allla Aca·
AN ELMliBILITY FACTOR.
demy High School, Me igs Hll'f11
School. Atver Valley H1gh Schobl.
' If You Have Specific Quesuons
Southern High School , South Ga1.
About The Train ing Or Employ·
lia Htgh SchoOl, University Of ~o
men! Opportunities Call Ed
Qrande: Crossroads Otllce 'AI\Q
Adams AI Washington County
Financial Aid Oltlce. BuckeYe
Carur Cflnrer In Marietta, 1·800·
HIHs Career Cenler : AdUlt Educa·
648·3695
tlon Office And Stuaent Servict!
.ornce. H()d(lng College. JTPA ~ ·
To Obtain A JTPA Preappllcation
tlce, Tri·Counly JVS Adult Edu~
Or For Eligibility Questions Cali
cation Center
~•
H0·'46·10t8 Ext. 88 Or 740·
992-2222 E•t. es Or At The Fol· ·Preappllcatlons Can Also Be
lowing GMCM Factlitoos.
!alned AI :

••

·

•

ob.

Ga!Wa ·Melgs Community
Action Agency
Control Oltlca
8010 Norlh Stale Route 7
Cheshire. Ohio 45620-0272

GMCAA GaH~ One Stop
859 Third Avenue
Gallipolis
740·446·1018

740-!387-7342 740·992-6629
Fox: 7-t0-367-7510

GMCM ~lgs One Slop
331 OS Hiland Road
Pomeroy

GMCAA Ga11ia One Stop
859 Thkd Avenue

740.9'92·2222

Galllpolis

OBES
445 Suet&lt;oya Hills Road

740-«&lt;1-1018

Rio Grande

GMCAA Meigs One Stop
33105 Hliantl Road
Pomeroy
740-992,2222
Funding Prowlded By The United

-·

traldl Auction A.nd Let us Sen It Statas Department Of Labor And
Tho Ohio SurHu 01 Employment
Rx'll&gt;u, 740-2~-

POIUlOY, OliO 41t"

TFN

TOLL

Portable

11304)675-3307.

Wedemeyer's Aucllon Service,
Clalli&gt;Otlo. Ohio 740-379-2720.

ifoiviYINGIII

CALL 1·118·808-UOO
FREE

FrH: 2 Catl. 1 Ktnen, Part Hlmal"'l"n, 7-·0580.

IIIYEIISIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Nlgh1 7 P.M..

2SOCOIDOISY.

SYIIACUSE

740·74.2·2138

.JUft IN TIME I"'K IPRING aEPAIIUI
AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A IPICIAl ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
•
IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FlRST
FILL OF GAS flff "W AN AGA IDENTIFIED
CAP "W THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CUTIING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A IAVIII
01 , 10 $ JOO.OO DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTACT
YOUR LOCAL AUT}IORIZED AGA DEALER FOR
DETAlLS . ALL SIZE'S ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL WI
END JUNE 21, 1999.
.
POMIIOY ltiCIIIIIIIIIDP

A Route In

Who Are Currently State Tested
Nursing Assistants To Work In
Our Comprehensive Care Facility.
Please Apply In Person To 311
Buckrldge Road , Bidwell, OH

Alggscrest above Eastern.
Thursday, Friday, 9·4 , C.heapt
Rain or shine. Microwave, A.!C.
yarn. glassware, typeWritflr.

Linda's Pcintlng
.

6

c""'" City, 740-25&amp;--6989

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Joe~.

70o Small
"Call Today''

tij

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

•

TREI! AND STUMP

• N...., CoiUimctioio
• Remodell"'f
• SiJi"'J
• :No Job 70o 'Big or

Buildings, Deck11, E1c.
· Free E•llmme•
~ Corponter

Hours
· 7:00AM· 8 PM

·Don•s
Heating &amp; Cooling

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTIOH

Haning's Home
Improvements

Puppies ,

(304)895·3q67, (304)675-7809.

' Olllo 4$4789

·SELF STORAGE

All Fl.., Sll.i50

ROOFING

31782- Road,

Carpentera Building MM!rlca

D.H.V.
Construction

To be a foster home
To adopt a Golden
To Surrender a Golden

Howard L. Writesel

FREe ESTIMATES

HILL'S

I ~ lit I '1'1 _' -_- 1.·, -,

William Sa&amp;anek, Attorney At Law
(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

~EM@EUREKANET.COM

740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 1o·
to 10' ic 30'

7

can relieve a

For Information Regarding Bonkruptcy co ntact:

EMAIL:

FREE ESTIMATES

Golden Endings:
Golden ~etrlever Rescue

MYERS TREE
SERVICE

PHONE: (740) 985-42t8

29870 Beahan Road

B wks.. old Part Cott le. Part Pit·
Bull . (304jn:l-5357.

Found: All

debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for hio or her pereonal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothes, ~nd
houo~h'l.!ll goods.

JEFI' STETHEM

740.742·8608

256-9123 .

40 742-8888

BANKRUPtCY

· Trueltt·lrlclor

(740) 691·1713

April 7th ·
May 31st

.·

992·5455

•

Grind Feed

'Mon- Frl8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra fXperlence

EqUIP"lff't ClfiMd "-Q-

25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

~

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
trUCk tarpS, C
,0fiVertible &amp; vinyltOpS,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
· ·
bOat COVers, Carpets, etC.

8 ton

·,

2 Doberman Pups, Also, 1 112
Lassie · Collie, 1·12 Border Collie,
To Country Homes Only ! .740·

Rutland, Ohio

Light Hauling up to

Parking Lots

eo.or

1 Female Great Cane, Fawn
and Grey Puppy, 2 112mo .. Great
Dane/Gorrrian Sheppard Mixed.

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • Plus, Inc

a

· Sidewalks, Patios

:-;.:=~G:-::Iv:-:e::-a:-:w-:a~y--:=

f""'::-::-'::"":"~-=-:-:----~':--~--.1 1 Fou~· Yellow lab on Carmel Rd .•
~~~~:r· , ••,. 4 by vel , 700·

&amp; Thpsoll

Trltltrt-hou...... mobllt
"----dtltoiWIY1

40

A

Call 985·383I

sEJMa•

•

1 Mala Small Dog, 740-«&lt;1·4314.

3/15 1 mo.

· Landscape Material

(Juality Drivewayo, ,

B. Haning

•Roofing
•Siding
•Windows

AG

DRIVEWAY STONE

TRI·STITE MOilLE
POWER WISH

~

SHADE RIVER .

Need A 8¥f One

CONCRETE
CONNICFION

ft

7-t0-592-1 842
Quality clothing and nousehold
Items. S1.00 bag sale avery
Thursday. Monday thru ·saturday

.

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

CaU A Ultle One

Siding, Soffit 1 Paint,
Metal, Lamination, Pole

30°/o OFF

PUBUC NOTICE

'

A

. 111!!1

SHADE RIVER AG
SERVICE

Set 1().4
Rt. 124 Minersville, Oh
9112-4559
Dort~

A
11.'!1

~~~~~t;:;r~Mft~~tic

Tuel-' Frldey 1CHI

Wood- Vinyl- Metal ·

74H9&amp;-329o .
Public Notice

t•

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
"S
• ll-' 1 L H
"
·
pet!l41.UIIJ6 n LA.JB Dmel
Commercial &amp; Residential
~ 28 yrs, exp. ·
Licensed &amp; Insured
A
Phone 740·992·3987
!1!oot
John Dean; Owner

C

· "THE COUMTRY
CANDLE SHOP"

Pomeroy Eagles ,
Club Bingo On
Thuredays
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Peylng $80.00
per gaina
$300.00 Coverell
$500.00 Starburet
Progreutve top llnt.
' Uc. II 00-50 11MIIfn

New To l'oo Thrift Shoppe

9:00.5:30.

~eserve

Your Area . Market Dla tr lbuUon
Sptdaliata, InC .

ADMINISTRATOR

6n·8561 .

f.;)et~~~~~~~ccc
C J.D. CONiftlftiON ~-

•New Homes
•Gartges
•Complete
Ramo&lt;fellng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
. 985-4473
7/22/lfn

Call Now To

30 Announcement•

Now $5.00-Pick up Flag
:u. -"T 19 7

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

:Joseph Ja~ks

7-t0-379-2928 .

9WIII Stlmton, Athens

ROIIRT IISSILL
CONSTRUCTION

Limestone,

45631.
Lookrng ·For Nice W/F Wllh A
Positive Anllude, Age 21 ·35.
Wllh A Positive Relationsh ip.

CANDLE· MAKERS

WICKS
'HAULING

I-

Maytag- Gibson Frigidaire

Bu .from ,the Classifieds!

H2-t21S ,
Pqmoi'O)I, Ohio

(Ume StoneLowRitll)

M5 4422
Cheater, Ohio

• Refrigerator
• Ranges
• Dishwashers .
• Laundry
Big Savings Now!

Shopst~l...

V.C. YOUNG III
22 .Y~'~· Local

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

NowIf

L.

Fm bt/nYIII

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Applic:Jnces

11m•.

....uo • Porch Dtclct

Free Estimates

3 Piece Living
$Room Suites

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $2,900. 00
Door Prize $700. 00
145 people or
more wiU play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
·regular game

•Eitctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing • Guttm
•VInyl Siding &amp; Plllnllng

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

.

Stllebury
Townthlp
TRIIIHI will hold I lpeCIII
mttllng Friday, April 23,
19ft II 6:30 p.m. 11 the
townahtp hill locoted on
Aac:koprlnga Ad., Pomoroy.
To open bldo for flood miUgatton projiCII and to conduct
athor butlnlll
come befort the

·Room tlddftlont &amp; Rt"'*llng
•New Cltrlgn

Jack's Roofing
:&amp; Construction

.. ·Catnapper ·

•

YOUIII'S
CIRPEIITEI SERVICE

,llhlp From Nloe Female For Talkl ,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Stnd Replle• To: S53 Second Avenue.
Apartment t403 , Gallipolis, OH

YELLOW FLAG
YfiRD SfiLE
POMEROY·I11DDLEP01ff
He~fiat•~r

Jeremy .L. Roush
949-1701

' f:.cltul•~ Be.UU., Cerardauttl

R. Ph.

...... Caulnlctlta

...

La·Z·Boy ·Ashley

$6 • .
Only

~

005

"6"

.llaJchlnl
................rlcll

,.......,

5 129

SO¢

D

...... ear. .......

Coolv/1,., OH 41723

99¢

Neon' Nail Hard .l'..eg. $2 •00
A - Nat"Is Color .a
· .nly $1. 29

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

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

: Equipment Parts
:Factory Authorized
• Case-IH Parts
•
Dealers.
1000 st. Rl. 7 South

Two Position · "

.. $
Reg. 9• 95
·
99

1.5 OZ.

Publlahlng Telephone Oirec:tones
In Tnt Ohio Valley Area . Must Be
AI lull 18 Years 01 Age , AM
Have Uae Of An· Insured Vehicle

ANN OUNCEMENTS

Joe WI110n
(740 992-4277

Pomeroy, Ohio 4571111

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Recliners

TURNS FOUR - ShawnDavid
Limit-12
Reeves celebrated his fourth' 1---....,-~-~--------...;;;.;;.;.;;.;;.;...;;;.;;;.._-1
birthday recently with a party at·
the home of liis mother, Julie

Stetson
Cologne Spray·

1H8 Martin StrHt

DIPOYIAI
PARft

Cassette T~es .Reg. $4.
Country &amp; Oldies only $3.

SHAWNDAVIDREEVES

To Deli11tr The New Champion

"Build Your Drea111"

614-992·7843

The Boss is STILL a little
·disoriented •••
So Our Loss is Your Cainfl
$afings Thro~ghout The Storer

Help Wanted

IS EARN EXTRA CASH IS

(No Sunda Calls

Price

55
3f$Loo,

SERVICES

lnde~ndent Contractors Need~d

FREE ESTIMATES

1/2

Reg.

Er.1PLOYr~ErH

•

Help Wanted •

45631

11 0

UtUitie•

99
39

an
y
·.
ars
C d B

dlt•on, 7i0·388·&amp;afi2, 7CO·U&amp;·

Remodeling

COMMERCIAL and RBIOEHTIAL

5

110

Wanted. Carl. Truckl Any Con ·

Bulldo~er

New Homes • Vinyl
• Siding ·N~ Garages
.., Replacement Windows
• • Room Additions
•
·• Roofing

.

Werited to Buy

Mil

n'l·

llS.SELL BUILDERS,
.
INC.

Ctgarettes

Complete Stock

piau~ an ad Call992·2156

90

Gentleman Seeking Companion·

29

1/2

Cuatom Homes

(7401 t..tHIII

ACLU sues public schools, military
over sponsorship of Boy Scouts

Greeting Cards R
For All Occasions eg.

To

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

p,t,RT

1

Amity
Men's &amp; Women's
New Selection

Pomer~y • Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Meigs H'ealth Department to ~tart a smoking
cessation class for pregnant women
who are cigarette smokers at the
inception of their pregnancy quit
within the first half of gestation
and maintain abstinence until
their due date .
Material s from the revi se d
behavi or modification program
"Make Yours A Fresh Start Fami ly" of the American Cancer Sodcty and ihe Ohio Department of

1999

Thursday, Aprll15,

Thursday, Aprll15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Equol Opportumty Ernot&lt;ryor

740.245·9509

,.•••
·I~,
•·.,
'-

·'
·~

Gallla ·MeiQS. Community
':
Acnon Agency
...
8010 North State Route 7
PO. Box 272
t"
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-0272 • '.

740.367-7342 740.992-1!$29 '
Fax: 740.367-7510
'
EQual Opportunity Employer , ,-.

'tr '
I' .

'

.,

�•

Pege10 • The Dally Sentinel

Thur•dey, Aprll15, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aprll15 , 1999

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11:

~ll~L~E~Y~O~OP~~~~--------------~----~----~~==============~~~==~~==========~====~~~
aRJDOI:
NEA Crossword Puzzle
:~
PHILLIP

ALDER
540
Friday 4/ t 6th Only 5 30 PM To
6 30 PM Must Be 18 Years Old
Or Older High School Graduate,

Interior &amp; Ederlor Pain ting Ex·
penenced, References Reason able Rates For Free Estimate,

Miss Paula s Dav Care Cenler

74().388 604 I

7-4
General Ofhce /Sales Expert ·
anced Preterred Full Time, lm

mediate Opening Apply Lllestyla
Furniture 856 Third A...anue Gat.

I!&gt;oils t 0.2 No Phone cans

Health Management Nursing
ServiCe$ IS Hiring A FuH Time Of.
lice Aa&amp;lstant In Our Gallipolis
Office Great Hour~ Seneltts &amp; Insurance, 740 446 3808 Or V Isit
The Offi ce AI 782 Second Ave

nue In Gallipolis Eo E

Home Improvement compafW (35
years in busln.aa} needs employees exper ienced In window

and siding instal lation some
knowledge of room additions
:aa ~d pay and hours 740 ~92

Ing Send Resume To CLA 470
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune 825
Third A-venue Gallipolis OH

45631
Job opening reliable perso n
hours 1a to 5 lrve days a week

Se nd rfl ~u me to PO Box 124

Rutland J et 45n5
Job opening- ) ! rd laborer 1lnd
experienced COL driver needed
Chester, Oh apply at Baum Lumber or call740-985 3301
Licensed Managed Cosmt~~l o to­
glst At The Hair Hut Rio Grande,

45640 Or Call1 740 286·1463
To Schedule An Interview

MAINTENANCE
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT • Sands Hill Coal
Company Is Seeking E~~:perlenced
Heavy Equipment Maintenance
Wo rker Needs To Have Servrce
Tru ck And Tools Experience In
Weld ing Electrical Troubleshoot
lng And Arr Conditioner Service
Make Applications AI 3870 1 SA
160 Hamden Ohio Monday Thru
Friday 8 A M To 4 30 PM Or
Call 740 384 4211 To Have Appli catio n Mailed To You EEOC
Employer
Need 7 Ladles To Sell Avon 740-

446 3356
Now acceptmg applications for
night shift El Dorado AduH Home
Basi c fi rst aid &amp; BCII required

740 992·5039
Now Hiring Ekperienced Cashiers
&amp; Dell Workers At Thfl Following
Little Johns Locations Centenary Third &amp; VIne Slreet, Gallipolis VInton Pomeroy, Apply In
Person At The Above locations..
Betwflen 8 A.M -4 PM
Part time walt staff needed for fine
dlnlno establishment Call 740-

698·2450 lor lnlerv""
Postal Jobs to $1B 35/HA Inc
benellta No Experience For
App and E1tam Info Call HlOO-

Lawn Care , Commercial &amp;
Residential Free Estimates! 740·

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS
Holzer Senior Care Center Is
Currently Taking Applications For
State Tested Nursing Assistants
E~~:cellent Working Environment
And Benefits No Phone Calls
Rtease Apply In Person At 330
Colpnlai Drive Bidwell Ohio

45614
The Herald D1spatch Hu Two
Motor Delivery Routes Available
In The Gallipolis Area Gallipolis
To Pomeroy New Haven Mason
Dally Delivery Time 3 Hours
Sunday 4 Hours Appr01limate
Monthly Profit $948 00 Trans ·
poratallon Required Gallipolis To
Crown City Dally Delivery Time 2
Hours Sunday 3 Hours Approx
'"'ale Monthly Profit $700 00
Transportation Required If Interested Please Call Gary Moritz At

304 526 2832 Or t BOO 955
6110 iOXt 832
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Wardens Secur
lty Maintenance Park Rpngers
No Ex~ Needed For App and

Exam Info Call 1·800·.813-3985
E•t -6827 8AM·9PM, 7 Days
fds inc

Business
Training

Golllpolll Cenoor College
(Careers Close To Home) Call
Toda~

740·446-4367 1·800Rag t90-05·1274B

~14-()452,

jobs &amp; small lawn mowing and
haul trash or junk away $25 a
Vard Work mowing , trimming
raking
Pt Pleasant Area

(30•)675 6512 If no onowor
leiMI massage wll rerum call

FINANCIAL

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acrea Village Middleport
se~luded and prlnte, appoint

210

Greg Milhoan

304187~8

Electric Maintenance Service

Wiring, Breaker Box... Llghl Fix·
lure, Heating Syatems, and Re-

modeling (304)674-0126
Furniture repair reatoratkm &amp; refinishing, cu•tom buill raproduc-

llona Liz &amp; Bennon Roush. 741).
992 1100. Appalachian wood
worka
Georgea Portable Sawmill, don t

haul your logs to lha mill just cllll
304-675-1957
Have t Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Hand I
capped 74().441·1536

Housecleaning Depend- Honest GoOd Aehuencea, Years Of
Experience,
740·448-7525,

Leave A Mfilago

12~~:65

Delivary/Leuers Plastic Letters
$55 SIJcond Box Free AAA

Sale

General 2 Bedroom Trailer,

1973 HillcreSt two bedroom mo

No.fee Unless We Win!
I -888-582·3345

blla home 740 992·5039
1974 two bedroom mobile home,

$2000, call 74().992-3560
314 Acre Lot Located 2 Mites On

State Route 218, In Clly School
District, Daytime 7•D·4•B 3278,
Evonlngo 740-448·3099

I982 Fleetwood 14Ft X 70Ft, 2
Bdrms 2 Baths C/A, All EIICt , 2

Atl real estate advertlslng In
this newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Falr Housing Act

Porches, Very Good Condition

740·446·6157 After4:00 Pm

o1 1968 which makes nIllegal
to advenl!le "any preference

1991 t 4x70 2 Bedrooms t Both,
1

New Gas Furnace /Heat Pump 2
Porches. Many Extras! Asking

$12,000

740-~45-9120

3 Bedroom Home 2906 Meadow-

brook Drive Call (304)675-4360
attar 4PM

LR, DR, Kitchen, Ullllty Room, CIA
$56 500 740 379-2666
• Br 2 BA LA OR Kl and
breakfast room Basement, new
carpet and linoleum gas heat AI

C Garage
$75 000

(304)675·6759

Beautiful Stone House Eat-In
Kitchen Island Range Trash
Compactor 2 In Wall Ovens,
Spice Cabinet All Appliances

Slay, 3 Or 4 Bedrooms 0 R L A
Fireplace 2 TYPes 01 Heat Lots
Of Closets 2 112 Baths, Hot Water &amp; Heal Pump 1 112 Acres M!
L A/C, Shown By Appo intment

740·446 4559
By owner 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleporl, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, will sell house with

out lots lor SB9 ooo 740 992
271)4 740 992 5696

By Owner 2910 Meadowbrook
Newly remodeled In 19981
(Rool wlnciOWS,aldlng,door,AI
C Carpel} Nice landacaping,
Privacy
Fenct
$74 SOO

Call (304)675·51•3
530PM

Allor

By Owner 33 Smithers Street,
Gallipolis, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Large

_.5,000, Cal740·992·7572
By Owner 3BR/2BA/Acre-Lot,
Brtek Basement Large Brick
Work&amp;hop lola ol Extras PI PI

Area (740)44 t-&lt;161 8

E1tce11ent start-up home Owner
pay cloaing coat 3BA w/Bill •

mont, El«:trk: Heat/C A $32,000
(304)882·3n2
For Salt By Ownor 3BR, 1 t/
2BA , largo family room &amp; olflce,
upstair• totally remodeled . new
root. guttering, water softnar &amp;
tots or extra• 291 :z Anniston

Drive. PI Plteotnt (304)878·

2808 Lta\l'e Meaaige on Ma·

chiM

HOUSE FOR BALE IV OWNER:
Located Near Downtown on 8th

Si 2 Slory with L R.. and DR
wllh Fireplaces, 3BR. 1 112
Bathl, Kitchen with Appliances,
Utility Am, Enclosed Front
Porch, Alum Sid , Gas Furnace
w/C:A , Carport AUach to hou&amp;e,

Real Estate
Wanted

20 Acres + needed In Maaon or
Jackson Cty With or Without

Homo
(3041B82·2405
or
(304)882·2221, Homeataad Bend,
Broker
We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acrn,
Wa Pay Cash I-800·213·B385,
Anthony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
$350/MQ • Must Have Refaronc·
•• Dopollit 740-446-1142
t 22 112 VIne Slreot, Gallipolis .
740-448-0870

a.. utlful Alver VIew

Nice Two
Bedroom 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp; '
Refr'Oerator, Basement, One Car
Garage, Washer /Dryer Hook-Up,
Deposit &amp; References Required,
No Pets, Rent 011count Call 7-40Glean Efficient 2BR Refertnc-

•• Deposit, No Pets (304)6755182
Your Home ta Just A Phone Call

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 a 3 bedroom mobile homea air

199!5 Dutch Mobile Home, 14x70

2 Bedroom Mobile Home out

KirkWOOd Mobile Home 14 R x70
Ft
1 Bath Excellent
Be Moved lrome-

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
include' 6 months FREE lot rent
lncluCel washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only

$200 74 par month wllh $1150

BroadRun RGad Rent tor S250

mo + doposiUutlllllea (304)773·
5911t
2 Bedroom Mobile Home At Kerr

74().446-9869

3030
Nice 3 bedroom mObile hama, In

MlddlapOrt, Oh • no pets, 740.992·
5856
1'talter For Rent 740-446-1279

1 and 2 bedroom apanmentl, fur·
nlshed and unfurnished aecurlty
deposit required no pets, 740
992 2216
1 Bedroom Apt tor Rent, Pt
Pleasant S300 month • Oepoall
.;(304
_;_)6_75-:..:.31.:00.:..._______ .
t Bedroom Near Holzer s. Claan-

est In The Area, $279/Mo Plus

Nlee Home Sol Up On Lol MaHe

Year urase 74().446-2957
1st Class Convenient One Bed
room Apl Central Air &amp; Heat

Roomy 2 Bedroom&amp; With AI·
tached Garage, Rodney Area,

$385/Mo , Dopoolt &amp; Good Rater
ancas 74().44-2801
Spaclou1 5 Room Unturnished
Apartment In Point Pleasant
Area, Reference &amp; Depoalt Ae-

Tara Townhou1e Apartments,

1 $200

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To University 01 Rio Grande
Campus 7-40-24~5858

2 Bedroom Apartment. Rio

or To Sale Terms Of sate ""''" ' 1 Grande Ar.ea, Close To College

3 Acres on Sandhill Road 42511
Road
Frontage
$38,500

(304)87~9

$350/Mo , lncludol All Utlllllto
Dopoalt Required, t ·888·840·
0521

---------2bdrm apta , total ateetrlc, ap
pllencta furnished, laundry room
tacllltlet close to school In town

Appllcallona avalleble at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740.992
3711 EOH
Accoptlng appl~atlono at
THEMAP~ES,

100 Memorial Drive East
Pomoroy, OH

Gravo Markoro (304)57e-2m
lotudful Horne lltoa !Aero, 5
Acre• and 1 Acre•

to

m1111

trom Pt PI , Public waltr, Prrveto, (304)675-891 11489-1~
BEAUTII'UL
Restricted Realdtntlat Lola Located A Comfortable Olatant:e
~rom

Galllpolla Double Wldas

Are PermUted "Leave All Your
Cartl In Town, Buy Your111f A

1-c Detached Garage, Sm Stor Plica Of Ground' LOll Slart At
Bldg with Eloo can only from I $8 750 5% Oown Land Contraot
to IIPII. (304)675·4608 or Now Avallablo Call For Frot
(304)675·31191
Mall$ 1-11()().213-8355

t 990 Nlaaan pickUp, runs &amp; lookJ •
good $1750 OllO 74().7·2·2574
•

Alum inum Tool Box $260 Triple

AUCTION Saturday, April 2•1h,
10 00 AM Over 30 Uaad Lawn

t9ll1 Dodge Dakota, Diose! Lola '
of Exuaa $3500 080 (304)675-

Tractors Over 30 Used Tractora,
15 Uaed Round Balers Used
Rake!, No TIU Planlerl Etc Over

~~·

Track Windows. $25 00 oa 2
5D'X88 i/2' 1 Way Windows,
New $350 ea ' S·10 Truck Bods,
Driver Sidt Door, 12 HP Economy With 48' Mower, $1 000 Usod

t5' tlru $20 00 •• Elootrlc
ter Heater, $50 Gravely Tractor,

$450 5 8'Xt0' Aluminum Col
umno, brand new (»1)675-4004
Grubb a Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Notd
Cell tho

lllntci?,

100 Plecos To Soli CAR·
MICHAEL'S FAAM I LAWN,
Gallipolis, Ohio 74().44H4t2

630

Livestock

27th Annual Bontloy Pig S.le Friday April 23rd 7 30 ~ '-' Fayana

112 000 oo Firm t'looper Equip· ',

..:,
1H-:-8-:F-o-rd-::R-on-go-r-2-:W-D-,:-Be-d-lin-- :
ar, Tonneau Cover, CO. Air, 5

1988 Ford Ft 50 Cuatom Ford

IBM Compulor Syatom Wllh
Windows 3 t Prlco Negotiable
7-·2902

3 Pure Bred Hampshire Boara &amp;

King Slzo Walorbod, Canopy
With Mirrors $500, Coffee Table

Mu"ay

t8/~2·

:npyBIIt high whMI

1111 propelled factory buill

woocltplittor 740-6h-2715 •

MemOrial Gardena- one orept(or

4·H &amp; FFA Club Pigs, And Round
Bale! Of Hay For Sale, 740·38119033
Alpine Goats 1 Nanny &amp; 2 Kidl ,
Reasonable 74().245-0485

Fair Pig&amp; tor Salll Excollent Blood

with low package, bedllnar &amp; lop· •
per, $5400 7.U·949-2490
-::

1991 FO.rd Conversion Van /
302FI, raised roof, TV, captaln'i

One Owner 38,700 Mllaa White.

Flar Pig&amp; For Silo 74o-25HII!2

640

Hay

11 Grein

1ooo lba ol good mixed hay !ltd
wllh plastic, $15 each, 740·898·

sE Loaded Full power with quad
aeatlng and rur bench Over·
head digital console 2·tone
Gretn &amp;. Driftwood 3 3VI.

programing, caiiBBII-265·2123

Oekalb Seed Corn &amp; Soy Beans

Fo&lt; SOlo (»1)675-tl506

TRAN SPORTATION

460 Space for Rant

Autos for Sale

1/2 Acre Prlv.ate Trailer lot, 1

Income llmlts have changed 1
peraon· $15 1&gt;00 2 personsit7 300 And 1Q1 limits
changed also If you are .50 yeara

menta For furthtr details, Clll

1740) HZ-7022. EHO

Furnlshod Upttalro 2 Room• &amp;
Bath. Clean, Rtftrancae, &amp; Deposit Aoqu~od uu- Peld, 74().

Motorcycle•

TI\E t.VI~ lf'l1\l£. CR£

Looklna tor 2 or 3 bedroom otnlal
In the Roosevelt Schoo\ Dlalrlcl
(304)695-3n4

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceaaorlea

New gas tanks &amp; body peril D &amp;·,
A Auto Ripley, WV (304)372·
3933"' t-8()().273·9329
•

Household
Goods

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

79 Staroratt self contained, air
tandem wheals awning 24' very
good condltiop, $3500 OBO. 7.U·

__________________ ,,•

742·2230

French City Maytag, 7•0·448·
7795

1985 Airstream 31 Ft Excella
Purchaud New Garage Kept

Below Holiday Inn Kanauga Stop
And s.. ua 740-446-4782
Washer $95, Dryer $95, Electric
Range $9!1, Roat Free Retrlgera

550

Block, brlok aewer pipes. wind
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245

1;121

'
POLE BUILDINGS

Horse Barna Garagfla. Arry Style
An~ Size, Free Eatlmatea, 740

384 4567

560 Pel• for Sale
6 AKC Roglstorod L1~ Pupplll
5 weeks old Aeady to go F~day
$300 .. (7401379·2835

AKC Lab Pupploa For Bale, Vol·
tor $ t 80, Chost &amp; Upright FretZ· low &amp; Chocolato, $300 7.U·379·
Dryor $205, Waohor $205, 1 2.835
Year Warranty Ntw Amana Alr
Conditioner. 5,000 BTU 5 Year AKC RagiiiOrU BoiCOr Pup Mali,
warranty, IV• liorvlco What we 4 Montho Old $200, 304·875·
S.lll Skllggs .\f&gt;pllances, 78 VIne 2t34
Stree\ Galllf)blll 740.448-7398
AKC Raglotorod Golden AolriiVOr
Yellow Admlr~l Side By Side 2 Years Old, For Stud Sorvlco,
$150, Almond Kenmore Washer Paparl Avallablo, Contacl Mlko
• Dryer, $175 Whirlpool Wa1her Brewer At 30•·773-501 t Or
&amp; Orytr S200, Kenmdre Washer La1M1Mo118go
$85 Call Aht&lt; 5, 740·446-9066
AKC Reglltered Yorkshire Terrier
Puppies, Roady 4115199 740.3711530
Antiques

•1.

Buy or sell 'Riverine Antiques ,

1124 E Main Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 1o oo
am to 600 ~m . Sunday 100 to
8 DO p m 740·992·2~28, Russ
Mooreowoar

540 Mlacelleneous
Mtirchandlu
1 TWin Bod YiJili Stollgo Drowro
Undorneath,t-40 080, 1 ~uo
-Lamp 1100, 740-:187-7041
1a• DlreoTV "talllto 1Yotoo11·
$89 00 colnoo with thro• monlh
19' Ttliovl.lon And Stand,
Draporloo, Tabla la'!lP. Modlelno
Ceblnet, Excorolse Bicycle, High
C~lr, &amp; School Doak, 7.U 4082782
•

AKC Slbtrlan Huaky Pups $150 •
$200, Aulomollva Paint $20 ·$25
Gallon Many Colors. 710·448·
8627
BV Bouthalde Aquarium
200fl Camdln A Palkoral&gt;urg wv 26101
304-465-1293

t890 Lumina, Low Milot Loatltdl
Below Loan Value 740...46·1127
74().3711-9061
flit Bonnevlil1, e~ellent condition, PB, 1\C, 3 8 angina. $3,700
74().949-2048
•
1992 Sunblrd V·G, Auto, A/C
Clean, $3 695 1992 Cavalier, 2
Doors, A/C $2,595, Cook Motora,
7~0 448 0103
1995 Ford Taurua GL Station·

wagon, 46,000 MillO, Top Condl·

don, $9,500 740-448-7355.

1995 N.on HlohiiM, 4 Door&amp;. Automatic, /tiC, fMt caoune Blue,
Well Malnlalned Groot Go• Milo·
agel Only $8 900 080, '74().9877481

1He Lincoln llerk VIII, Loeded,
Moon RoOf, CD, oct 38K mlltl
Factory warranly until 12/22189,
$23,000 1891 Chtv S·1 0 \&amp;hoe
2WD 4 3L, 5 opd Tilt, Cruise ,
Cassette. NC Lots of new parts,
camper ahell , 109K mllas ,

river

25 Look alter
26 Relellng to •

time
28 Auclaclty
29 Alloy of gold
and allver
30 Baaeball
learn
31 Gravel rldget
37 The California
Gold Ruoh
atarlad near
his 111111
3B Snow, In
Strathclyde
41 Metrical
strell
42 Author
Hunter
43 Unit of Italian
currency

44 Dllllculty
45 Rabbit tell
47 City In
Pennsylvonle
48 Overclue •
49 HebreW\'
month
50 Mlnua
52 Brltloh verb
ending
54 Profit on •
bank acct

WOR~D MI6HT

Si: IF
SEETJ.IOVEN J.IAD MARRIED
ANTONIE BRENTANO ..

by Lula Campos
~my

Cipher cryptograms are creatltdlrom qootallonl by famous people pasl cmd present
E&amp;ch letter 1n the cipher ltandl tor 1110ther TOO.yl rnu. R equals U
~

0

oc

"K T U 0

LFKKTA,

IT F K Y
KCOWFKV

XG 0 F K D P F KY

XWCO

GO

F X

Z R F 0 T

G K

GK

FKYCLT

GKA
G X

0 G U

MTDRKA.
D . S
MGPLCKA
11RI::VIOUS SOLUTION ' Art 1s seduc11on not rape "-- Susan Sonlag
'Bad a~ Is a great deal worse than no art at all " -- Oscar Wtlde

'::!:~:~' S~l'-4\r}A-~"E~s·
lrr C\AY I. POlLAN

- - - - - - 1411o4

....

WOII

h&lt;&gt;rrang• lettora ot ~
• tour
Krambled Warda .,..
low to form f011r -do,

D.R 0 0 F X

I

ERFUM

1'11 · 1~

~,5~~,::..: :·

.

M0 T p E

.

A colleague kept yawmng
and
stretching Smiling he ex·
6
.I .I .I 1
.
plalned, "lnsomma can be con·
r---:--:--:--:-:::-::~-, veyed to man from dogs-- the

:g~~:p;or~. t:: •

f---,0rAT.R~I_;_NrC-rl
:;-,-II
7
. I 1 I I .
t-...L-..L-.1.-...JL-...L-.J you

l

chuckle quoted
by filling In the mlwng '""'dl
dovolop from !lap No 3 bofow

SCJUIM LITS ANSWIIS
Weakly. Sworn • Mercy · Omghy · SWEARING

lNG

.

.

1980 Dutchman •op·Up, Air, ,'

Heat, Refrlgerator, 8ikl Rack, ~
Screen Aoom , Jack Stands, •
Awning Like New Stortd Inside ~

l n -, $8.200 (»&gt;)n:l-81112

•
SERVICb

__

--::--:-...:._....

'

...;. ~

8'10 "\. • Home
lmjk'ovements
'

IIABEIIEHT
WATI!RPROOFWO

uncondlllonal lfeume,:::antee Local references fur
d Ea·

,._n

8323

~CONU

1tin Chovy elan"r 4i4AutomatNew Edllbrook Perlorm11 Pkg

.... (304)895·38117

~., .

lc 314 Ton, 4 S8 Gtara 305 With

New 39 5 Super Swemporo New
Body Porta, Must s.. u 13 500
080 Po11lblo Trade For Harlay
74().~

1177 F•180 Ford Truck 351 M.
Motor, Good Shlljlo, $800 , 740·
448 9492

ITHURSDAY

Dey (740)992-5488, Ask tor Jacil ,
Evo/(304)882·385t $10 500 •
080

840 Electrical end
Refrigeration
Re&amp;lclantlel or commercii! wiring,

-

MMco or ropelra Motor Ll·

cehaed electrician

RIHnour

Electrical, WV0003Qt, 304·875·
t7IMI

ASTRO-ORAPH
Fnda~April

16,1999
Believe tn younelf and don't look
' back once you commtl yourself to
-your course of acuons m lhe year
·ahead Self-doubts are your et~emles.
· Self-'tonvacllon 11 your VICior
• 'ARIES (Man:h 21-April l~) The
:consequences can resull from
.belnJ e1ther 100 11ghtfisted or too
'looae wtth your money today In both
inatances, you'll gel poor value for
your dollars Oel a Jump on hfe by
understandm&amp; tho Influences that'll
,aovem you tn the year ahead. Send
the ~equlred refund form and for your
Allro-Graph pred~euon• by malllna
$2 to Asiro-Graph, clo this t~ewapa­
per, P.O Box 17,8, Murray Hill Sll·
lion, New York, NY 10156 Be sure
to atale your Zodiac stgn
TAURUS (Ap11l 20-May 20)
ltather than let others ae1 you
Involved with somcthtng that does
,not terve your host 1n1erest today, h's
fll" bcuer to say "no" nsht up front.
You don't wanllo nurse telletl
OBMINI (May 21-lune 20) Rude·
ne11 Ia a diiJiloy of alack of concem
for others and the quickest way to

tanite anaer Whalever you drsh oul
today, you can take bels on aetUna 11
rlaht back.
•
CANCilR (June 21-July 22) Pick
pals and places you know you can
afford today, becau•e you won't
enJOY yourself if you feel you're
spend1ng far be)'O!Id your means
LEO (luly 23-Aus 22) Withoul
dtrectlon 1n your life, you could end
up 11k1ng one step forward, but lwo
steps back Define your obJOCUYes
firsl 1oday so that you can moke
proaress
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
Should you hear some Juicy aoss1p,
lhe arealer portlon of which you hOn·
estly behove 11 clearly unfounded,
don 'I be templed to repeat It, even lhe
pans lhll may he true
LIBRA(Sept 23-0ct. 23)0e1Unl
1 cltance to dt~eharp en old soo:lal
obti1a1ton should he tll&lt;en advaniiiC
of today, because if you falltodo80,
II mllht prove harder to do later and
cau10 you some anplsh.
SCORPIO (Oct, 24-Nov. 22) A
-•·willed pert011 mipl unlulow·
in1ly Interfere with an Important
decision you're hopmg 10 make

loday Try 10 aatn hts or her cooper·
auon ihrough sharins facts so you can

proceed
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) If y11u overwhelni yourself With
menlll lhoU&amp;hts of what needs lo be
done as ovetpawerinf. chances are
lhe sreater poruon of lhe day could
slip by you without accomplishing 1
thmg
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan 19) ,
lnslead of beot1n1 ' your head up
agamsl a bnck wall today, use 11 10
thmk your way around obstaeles
Don' t wasle ttme tryins tel Iller
something you have no power of
changing
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
Where volatile domesuc issues are
concerned, lei slceptng dogs he Old
dlsaareemenls you can'! resolve
unaided should watt unul everyone 11
wllhng to cooperate
PISCES (Feb 20-Man:h 20) Suf·
fer tn srlence rather titan losma your
cool or
qaresslve over some·
thi•l you believe 11 another penon's
responaibihty. Don' t croa or lfllh lhe
bOundaries of oll&gt;ers

set""'

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

StO'III, Large Refrklarotor/ffeezor, •

Moving· 15 Boura, two adull tematll, one adult male, two pup·
pita, bOIIoflor 74().992·1383

AIIAZINO
IIETAIDLIIII
Br.. kthroughlll Lote t0·200. 570
Mualcel
Poundo Eot~ Quick, Fool
Instruments
Dromal\~ Reaultt, 100% NaNral,
Doctor
" -· ""' 81111- Lowr~ 'Cotillion' organ, fl200,
plls c.-74o-44t·11112
74().992-7200

22 Unlock again
23 Exucle
24 Stratlord't

HAVE
TOO MUCI-1 TIME
· TO T~INK .

Microwave. GaaiEtectrlc Heater, •
A/C. TV Antenna/Booster AxiN1
Electronic. Jack 2011 Awning

Llvlna•ton'l Buement Weier
Proofing, all baaemtnt repalre
done, free eatlmalel, lifetime
guarantee 12yra on Job exptrl·

Gracroua living 1 and 2 bedroom
aponmento a1 Vlllogt Milnor and
Rlverolde Aparllllantl In Middle·
port Fro111 $24t-1173 Call 740·
~-8064 Equal Houalng Opportunllln.

11 " - - o'clock
scholar"
12 Roman tyrant
19 Cry of aurpriH
21 Groom

CATC~ER5

l WAS .J05T THINKING

J.IOW DIFFERENT' THIS

-=-~~~~--~------:
! 993 29L Torry Camper with '

720 Tnlckstor Sele

Pelr of Gray Cockllllla, 9 monthl
old with cage $75 74().247-IMIOt

diHiculty In
breathing
3 SOuth-otorn
Indiana
4 Dot pluo uno
5 lmblber 'a
aylleble
6 Bloodhound'•
clue
1 Snicker
8 Cevler,
et1811tielly
9 Arm bone
tO Thin log

After a very b1tter pohttcal debate my fnend observed
lhat nghteous tnd1gnat10n IS betng angry wtthoutSWEAR·

$250, 74().742·7103

446-t5t9

By Phillip Alder
On the day by whtch we must
ha&gt;e ma1led our mcome-tax returns,
here 1s what I hope was mtended to
be an amustng commenl from Dtck
Sprmg. a leader of the lnsh Labour
Pany " We are lookmg for a weallh
tax that wtll bnng m suffictent revenue to JUStify havmg a wealth lax "
Well, thts deal would tax every
player, even a top expen If you thmk
you are up to the challenge , cover lhe
East and Soulh ltands Agamsl four
spades, you cash the two top clubs,
droppmg declarer 's queen-double·
ton What next•
Norlh had a lrtcky btd on the second round He wanted to suppon
spades wtth queen 1h1rd, but the mam
feature of hts hand was the dtamond
sun Soulh should have passed out
three dtamonds, but when he fimshed
descnbmg h1s 5·5, North fell compelled to JUmp to game
After takmg two club tnc ks, tf
West continues w1th the club Jack,
declarer ruffs, plays a dtamond 10 the
kmg, ruffs a d1amond (cslabltshmg
1he sun), and cQntmues w1th the ace
and anolher spade He l os~s three
black-sutt lncks.
The only chance ts to make dum
my ruff a 1nck Then , declarer cannot
draw trumps endmg 111 lhe dummy
and run 1he dtamonds So Wesl
must sw1tch to a heart Yet a low heart
1sn't good enough Declarer Will wm
East's kmg wtth htS ace and take a
ruffmg ftnes se agamst West's queen
To defeal the contract, West musl
swttch 10 the heart queen Then, when
m w1th lhe spade lcmg, he leads a low
heart, tappmg the dummy
That would be an Incredibly
Resourceful Swuch for someone to
find.

ace, Awning, Water Heater, Oak

ComplltoHAemodetlna, Sid·
lng, WlndOWI, Roofing, Room Additions, Fully Insured, Free Eat
74&lt;&gt;384-4987

Jack Aurlllll tenter pupptea.

1 PeUy quarrol
2 SOund ot

Cablnota, 2 /tiC's, $8 995 740
446-7106

e 52 In 1/Bih 18 500, Turn Koy
OBO, Trade On EVO Harley, Cell
Ran!ly 740·446-3008 , Altar a

304-675-2063

TJ.IINKIN6 GAME ..

1

$3,795 t 988 MontoCarlo SS, tablllhod 1975 Call 24'1h (7.U)
wrecked, btnt frame, 971&lt; ,mll118.1j 448-0870, 1·800·287·0576 Roo·
•
No Title Whole Car, no parts, oro WatOfPIIIOIIno.
$1,200. /30•)675·5244 or 111 at
11808
IMt, PI PI
Appllenoe Part1 And Bervlco AN
Name Branclt ovar 25 Yoaro Ex·
Uti Ponllac Trant·Am. Navy
Blue MelaNic, 5 7 Lller, LS t En· perrence All Work Guarante.d,
gino, Laathor Interior 10 Speaker French City Maylag, 740·U8· •
7795
Monsoon Stereo, 12 Disc CD
Chenger, Fully Loadedl Will Tako
C&amp;C Genarat Home MainPaye!l, 74&lt;&gt;448 4848
'
tenance· Painting, vinyl aldlnq,
cilrpontry, doore, -wo, bath&amp;,
93 Mercury Tracer, auto, air,
lookl &amp; runa good, 740·9,2·
mobllo - t and more. For
f!H oatimllto call C~t 7-10-992·
3481

Cl'lrly MonH TUbe Fremo, Drag
Pot ShOp, 24 I 3 Cor, 377, PG 5 t3 Dane, Boat Of
Point Pleaeant,

DOWN

1988 3ol Travel Troller New Fur· ,

Blrda. Iguanas, Tarantulas mict

Fllh Tank &amp;
Jackaon Ave

KNOW,CIIAIWE BROWN,
SA5ESALL IS A REAL

Llko Now Inside &amp; Out, Eotlmaled '
Mills 30,000 740-448-2602

Building '
Supplies

boundarlea

38 "- Gantry"
40 Arr11t
42 Large deer
46 Tic· - ·1oe ,
47 laraell airline

racacar

Eaal
Paaa
Pass
All pass

PEANUTS

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers. Dryers Flangn Refrlgr.atora 90 Day Guarantee!

New And used Fu,nuure Store

BIG NATE

1

760

Dryer $80 (304)675-6893

WITt-11::.~9

Windshield ~ear Rack Gear,"-'
Storage, Llkt New, 400 Mlte1, ..~
$54()() 74().388 9418

470 Wanted to Rant

Washers. dryers ratrlgeratora,
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78

F00£1 Tf\1&gt;.T Wf\1'.\ ~ f\la.D \0
fl tolD t:, ~ (')&gt;.Prn~l VE

1t96 Hondo fot1Jman ES 450 4J&lt;A : •

Jacket, Excellent Shapel $5 500 '
740·992 3537

ODDD USED APPLIANCES

...

WELL FOC'IQIJ,
(&gt;IZ:IWD\IE

1998 Honda 3DOEX • whoolor, •'
llko new, rlclclon vary IIHio $4000. ;
74().992•!1875
H

1997 Kawasaki Jet Ski 1100 cc 9
Seater Aluminum Trailer llflt

Trailer Space For Rent Georgea

For Sal• Reconditioned waahers. dryers and retrlgera1ora
Thompsons Appliance 3407

,..

~.I~C'fi~OO~DOC~ NO\ eooe:

alc Electra Glide. Loaded Lois Of
Extraal $18,500, 74().367-7755
•

Creek Road, 74().446-1 142

510

...

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Mobile home lite 1\l'~llable bet~
ween Athen1 and Pomeroy, call

Aluminum Tool Box For Small
Truct&lt;$80, 7411-446-0440

'l

BORN LOSER
,..

Value 74().245-0485

2 Acre Trailer Lot For Rani, 740.
441·1018

or coil t·81J0.119-8194

Ralorencea, Dopollt 1328/llo •
740-448-8235, 74().448-0677

1

Honda Helix Motor Scooter •
250cc Sttroo &amp; Trunw, All Orlgl· '
nat very Few Mace, Prefer To
Trade For 4 Wheeler Of Equal

Milo From GaiUpolla On S R 988,
$135/Mo, Plus UUII!Ioo 740-4483olt3

"'"' programming ~ 1lmt off

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Acrou From Park AC, NQ Ptll,

~

~304)678·3738.

1H5 Harley Oavldaon Uttra Clas-

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

•
•

tlon Great for lravetlvacallon -

ment one bedroom, one bath
apa~monl, both In Middleport lm·

0450

1

89,000mll•a Excollont Condl·

740

Freelnstalla11on 3 months free

1

•

Grass Hay At Delano Jackson
Form 1•0 448·111)4 Or 740-441·

PRIIIEITAR
Frw Dlrwct Bpoclol

HMO

For Salt 1983 C~vy Full Slz• '

HI·Top Explorer Converaoln Van,

2765 ..

mediate occupancy, H0·992·

:

446-0076
'
1995 Plymouth Grand voyager""}-

Full-Blooded Charlaa Bulla 9
Months and Up (304)675-6912

FJiANK &amp; EARNEST

(304)675-1407
==.;......;__..,.,.._.__
__ ,•

(740)·245·5872 or (740) 3B7·

0!583

areas

35 General
eaoembheo
38 WlthoUI

.--

... •

53 Angry oulburet r.:'r:::"'r:"T':'T'::'
55 Stir
56 Hall-ol.ferner
Johnny -57 Jabl&gt;lr ewey
58 Guldeo 1

Some deals
are too taxing

11

~:g,~r:~: been~~ •:f~!r S~8~~

1 V.ltlet
7 Jim Carrey role
13 01 rTllldlclne
14 Cryoiallllne gem
15 Jaoon'a quoot
11 More uf)llght
17 Actor Parker
18 "-- on 1 bell"
20 Element'a ID
21 Not tho oemo
23 AU111of Joyce
Cerol 27 Pluaherb
32 OUIIII the open
33 Cereven otop
34 Of certain

Opemng lead. • A

CHOP PIN'
WOOD tl

4x4 300 six cylinder, 4 speed, •

Green Leather Interior All Op~
tiona Avaliabl• $13,000 740·

Lines' For more InformatiOn Call ,

LUKEY

1988 Blazer 4WO, 6 cylinder au· 1'
tomatlc AC. PS, PB great ailapo, '

Bontloy, 937·88•-2398, Loroy
La"lcl&lt; 937·780-4802

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aepelrod Now &amp; Aabulll In Stock
Coli Ron Evene. 1·800-537 8528

Pass
Peas

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa

los Volume 4, $80 Firm, 74o-446-

Hampah[ro Fair Plgo, 7•0·3792605

HARNEY

Weal

2.

WHAT ARE YOU
, WATCH IN' ??

~~. t~~n::&amp;o' ~~Is:_);,~~-;

Anawer to Prevlol.la PUZZII

•mor"

Vulnerable· Neither
Dealer: South

.205t

$3700, 7•o-992·7478 or 74().9411- ,
2045

02tl

• 9

ACROSS

• Q%

t985 Dodge pk:kup, runa good, 41
1900 (304)895-3859
:

C H Selling 200 Head, 01 Bar·

2282

old or handicapped, you may
5 Acree Blacktop Frontage &amp; quality for The M.lploa Openlnga
Leko Vlow, Gallla County, are now 8YIIIabll Renta are com$32,000 ~oro Acruge Available, puted eccotdlng to your lncomt
Refrigerator and IIO\I'e provldt"'
74().388-6878
and ell prlmory uUiftlls
Apple Grove Momorlal Garden It be 50 years of
l!!f!~!lve
now olferlng a Umlted Ume apethrough February
clal on Comttot:Y LoiS, hom April handicapped Mull
t 1999, to July 1 t999 Buy 3 202 Section 8 eligibility requlro·
lots, ger the 4th rree Special
Salt Companion and Individual

Fat Salt 5 Disc. 14' Plows, 3 PT

Nice Now &amp; Used Furnuuro And
Applloncoa 740·U8·1004 740·
Two bedroom, one batti a...part· 448-4039 Anytime

Jackaon Avenue, (304)675-'1388

Washer/Dryer Dishwasher Prl·
vate entrance, $350 (304)875-

&amp; 1

Oumptruck Engine-Low mileage, ,
new tlr11,
new
btdllner, '

Two bedroom apartment In Po·
maroy, no pall, 74().992·5858

Upalalra Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second Avenue, Gallipo-

'

1988 lnttrnatlonal 468 Dlotol

•

Hitch 9X7 Garage Door $50 oo
8Ft Ladder Rack $300 oo New

Weal
• K 8 5
• Q6 3
• J 3
t QG4
•AKJ94
• 8 76
Soulh
•AJ972
• A J to 9 a

1980 GMC 8000 Sorlu, t8 Ft ,'
FtaiBOd · $t 100 (»1)57&amp;-30n

5 Ft 3 Polnl Hitch lntornatlonel
Plck·Up Disc Like Naw $300
(»1)675-&lt;\5117

aldlzed apt for elderly and. ~nd- lOt, opening and clollna Included,
!capped 60H 304-675-IMI79
$2500, (IIVO $500), 740·742•
::-'-'-:-~----..-..:.::-- 12574
•

9133

tAK1087 5%
• 10 53
Eaal
• 10 6
•K7542

ment Traile r: Tri-Axle , new Urea. •
pentel hitch, $3,500 00 Firm .. '

2~'

appllcatlona for 1BR HUO sub·

Ford(wreckedl rlght

1995 Torramlto Good Condlllon ,
Call Huntington 304·738-9131
Dey; Or 304-525-5359 EveningS

(304)675-t~

Ot-15 1111

• Q 4 3

lideiF150 302 New Jasper Moto"
200 milts Automatic 1/2 ton'"
ShortBod $t500 as II 1Uf
Qldt/Good Condition. 11.000
(304)882·2042

For Sale 5 Aquarluml, comp'ete
and with fish, sell c,.IIP New
Harley D Boots, size 98

Socurlty Doppllt Roqulro&lt;l. 740.
44&amp;-3481, 740-446-010t
TWin Rivjro To...r noW ....piing

tl71

....
Non

"

Or t·I00-2et-ocl88

Lawn mowers John Deere 212-

you pay gas a eclr c
per
~e:th $100 deposit, 740· 992

245-5074 Anytine

1978 tnt Mocet 1800 Tractor,
With Model !50 Rogers lowboy,

call these nours only:

740 446 8044

peted, Pelto, NO~. Laale PIU:&amp;

est Bidder • A&amp;, Is - Where •a•
Without Expressed Or Implied
Warranty And May Be Seen By
Calling The Collection Depart
ment At 740·441·1038 OVB Re&amp;ervea The Right To Accept Or

17 83 Acrea For Sale Or Trade
For 4 To 6 Bedroom House On
One To Two Acres Been Oozed
For A Double Wide And Garage
Starcher Roac, Call Chris At 740-

U1 We Bolli LOHI 74().448--6308,

Very SpiCIOUI 2 Bldrooma, 2 $SO, 74().381 04.00
FIOOfl, CA, 1 1/2 Both, Fully Cer·

Hotpolnt Full Site Washer 4 yra
old, $80 Almond Color Kenmore

350 Loll &amp; Acreage

$1 250: Tht AboVe Includes Nor·
mal lnltallallon " 'mu Don t Call

810 Farm Equipment

rows &amp; Glltl, C~:mslgnera Roger

2 bedroOm apartment in Mlddleport, we pay water, sewer &amp; trash,

736 3409

$1 500, 2 1/2 Ton $1.350, 2 Ton

Highlander VCR Tapes,.Tho Ser·

10 00 AM At The OVB Annex,
143 Third Ave Gallipolis OH

1989 Down Double Wldt, 304·

Central Air Conditioning Added
To Your Furnace 3 Ton Installed

Neighborhood! Depoo~ &amp; Roler·
once Roqulredl $250 00 (304)·
675·1550

_57_33_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

wv $•99 Down Single Wldo,

COQLDOWN

.

plano Dr 740 448 4525

Sunshlna M/H On 4/27/99 At

Oakwood Momea Barboursvlllt,

FARf,l SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOC K

One ~droom For Rent In Quilt

VIne Stroot, Call 740·44B-7398,
1·888-8tB-0128

DR CERTIRED CHECK

Blue Couch &amp; Loveaeat, $400,

(304)882 2728, 7·8PM , loevo
massage (30.)874·1«5 6·9PM

790

2 Payments Move In, 4 Years
LeftOn Loan (304)722 7140
Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For

Reject Any And All Bids. And
Withdraw Property From

ley Drlv-.Jn Aihans Oh 45701 ,
Cell 74().593-787 I

MER CHANDISE

Utllltias First Month Free With 1

The Abovo Will Be Sold To High

Wanted to buy- electric siMI guitar, Hawaiian Lap steel, conaotes
or pedll atetls, write to 17 Bur1&lt;·

County Fairgrounca, WaahlnQton

Apartments
for Rent

down Call 1 800-837 3238

Sala By Public Auct ion A 1995

1969 Chevy Truck Great Shape ~ ..

740·385-4387 '

Enclosed Porch 3BR , 1 112
Bath tn the Country 304·675·

440

-----------·-: .,

Call Ahor 5 ~M 74().367-o680

Plus Deposit, No Pets, Call Deb-

992·2t67

385-9821

Boanll Babies For Sale 7•().245·

5443

bit Or Judy Al740-446-7323

water and trash lncluded, 740·

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

388-80911 Anytime

lis. Next To Library, 1350/Mo ,

can After • ~M 74o-245-t302

tle AI $500 Down. 74().742-o510

2• Ft 4 Ft Deep Swimming Pool
$550 Firm Mutt Take Down! 7.&amp;0-

~~~

conditioned $280 $300 , aawar.

Wide &amp; Seetlonals Financing, Lit·

One Bedroom Apartment In Pt
Pleasant Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No PltiJ Phone

qulrod, Call 304·675-111 5 Attar 5

frigerator And Stove Included,

Bank Aepp MObile Homes Single

Sowago, Truh, S3t5/Mo , 740·
446 0008

(304)675-1:188

Bathrooms, Walk-In Closets, Utili·
ty Room Eltotrlc Heat Pump Re-

4 Bedroom Ranch 1 112 Baths,
Heat Pump Fenced Yard 2/3
Acre 15 Minutes From Gallipolis

25t0

1994 16x80 Sunshine Mobile
Home Three Bedrooms, Two

$3995 Quick delivery Call 740·

9667

-Until Now, Approx 3 Acrea Lo
cated 5 Miles From The City Oul
Of Flood Plain To Build That
Dream Home On, Cell 140·4«·

420

Windows Deck $19 BOO, 740·
256·6980

0165

Now Taking Appllcetlons- 38

lmposalbla To Find •

$12.500 740·742·2795

VInyl Siding, Shlngla Aool Staal

bedroom unfurnished apartment,
deposit a r.eferences , 740 992

West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmtnts, Includes Water

~DT

Away. 304·736-7295

Doors, 2118 Walls, Thermopayne

Middleport 2

RIVER

1992 14x70 Redwood mobile
home,
excellent condition,

B00·383-6882

3 Bedroom Home 1 Acre lot Rio

Nowly Romodolod 1 BR Apt
Prime Downtown Golllpolla Loca·
lion No Pell S300 + Utllltlot

acre (304)882·3772

992·6502

Low Interest Rates For 1st Time
Buyers Limited Time Available

Granda Area, $33 000 740·245-

Nice, Pretty, Residential Building

2 Bedroom Kitchen LA Sm O.R,

19BO Kingsley t4 Ft x70 Ft Wllh

{304)675 2533

Pay Alttntlon To Thill We 1-tave

Home on Rt 87 Price Reduced
Large front porch trae lot rent
(304)675-31 231(304)1195-3' 67.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue 3BR
1 1f2BA , Family Room, Garage
CantraiAir, Pallo Porch $77 000

Gallipolis To Bear Run Rei And
FollOW Signs To B~loot Part&lt;

14X70 2BA, Clayton Mobile

Signs 1 800-533·3453 anytime

31 o Homee for Sale

Month Route 7, 6 MUll Below

380

Gas Heat Asking S1 200 740
44Hl318

ablo Lanar Sign $279 $369 Froa

Fenced In Yare Cen1ral Air,
Walking Distance, Of war-Mart ,

E &amp; S lawn Service Design, lm
ptementatlon. and Service
Available for Spring Clean up
fertilizing and planting Free esll·
mat11 Satlafactlon guaranteed

for

Signs Large Portable Change·

REAL ESTATE

Hunting $500 00 Down, $144 00

ChrlltY a Family Living , apart·
menta. home &amp; trailer rentala,
740 i92 4514 apartmtnta avaU·
- · furrill10d &amp; unlurnlshld

Prime building silas outside at
Mason City Limits S15J.OOO per

12 Fl x65 Ft t974 SPfing Manor

opportunity basis

Own Your Own Summtt Plact
With Lola Ot Privacy 1 Acre
More Or Leu, Boating, Flahlng,

Oapoall Non Smoker&amp;, Available,
4115/ll91n Clly 740-448·-

Spring Valley 2 story fami ly

2 Bedrooms Total Electric, GoOd
ConditiOn, $3 500, 740·38Hl632.

This newspaper Wll1 not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch Is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
iflformed that aft dwellings
advertraed iri' lhis newspaper
are available on an equal

Alvor lie (304)576-2694

320 Mobile Homes

Professional
Services

limitation or discrimination
based on race color religion~
sex familial !ltatus or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dlscrtmlnatJon •

Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment ~tnt &amp; Utilities lntervtew Reterenctl, No Pets, LIUt,

altea, water road boating 1o Ohk&gt;

mont call 74().992 5696

740 992·6154

Ohio

230

Loll For Salt 112 shaded camp-

2222

North 3rd Ave

Three bedroom home with lots of
closet apace close to school on
corner tot, storage building, one
bedroom rental home Included,

For sate f5 year clothing and
shoe business Owner retiring
Inquire within· Dan a 290 North
Second A\l'enue, Middleport

lrom $279 10 $356 Walk to shop
&amp; movlu Call 740-446·2588
Equal Housing Qpporturily

With Only 5% Down Call t ·800
2t3-B365

245 9337

recomme nds that you do business with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall unt il you have tn.,-estlgaled
the offering

ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive

Asking $20,000, Flat, Water On
Land, Bidwell Rio Alea, 740 2•5·

Atference Required 740 44800011

home 4 Bedroom 2 112 Baths,
Living Room Dining Room Eat In
Kitchen Lg Family Aoom 740-

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

2 38 Acrea, All Road Frontege,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Lots Located About 20 Mlnutea
Nort!t Gallipolis Best Of All, lnelc
pensive Sold On Land Contract

-- - ..

Buslneaa
Opportunity

Appro\l'ed Master Licensed Elec-

(304)675-7927

Ranch Style Houst on 7!5 Acres

3BR, 2BA garage hay field big
barn (304)895-3130

Outbuildings One With Basement,

mates for Aesldenllal Services

than rent 740-992· 3041. 740
992-3557

load (304)675-4538

180 Wanted To Do
trician, WV025956 Free Estl·

Mason City 5 rooms full base
ment Lennox heat pump wl1h air,
Anderson dOuble windows, t:.«:ellent lot 82·1!2x147, own cheaper

Wil l do small cleaning/painting

Drive 3BR, LA Don w/FP 1BA

140

SlgnS, $1751&lt;

441..0318

RESUMES UNLIMITED Oilers

Sears Sliver Bridge Pla~a Galli·
polls Accep11ng Resumes For
Delivery Helper &amp; Assemcty Person Apply In Person No Phone
Cans Pleaser

South, I Mllel Below Galllpolla,
To Bear Run Road • Follow

~ &amp;S

Days fds,lnc .,

3800

Must Drlvo By &amp; Toke A Look
Sot At ' Big Fool Park' At 7

Pam tlng All Around Handy Man!

B13 3565, E&lt;l 8826 8AM·9PM 7

Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388

Acres like Ntw, In Ground Poet.
Shop &amp; lota Of Storage Vou

Call Bob, 74().669-1803

Ohio 740·245-9494
Local TruCking Company Seeking
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits Send Resume
To PO Box 109 Jackson Ohio

Luxurious Country Brldt SOt In t 3

J&amp;S Will Do Prtssure Washing &amp;
Etc can 14().446-6964

1

Immediate Openings Seek ing
Full Time Person For Bookkeep-

2 Loll Cemper And Building, AI
Big Foot Palk. $7 ,500, 740·38B0121

Miscellaneous
Merchandlu

--------------------------------------------------------:
••
51 "Omnle -

APRIL 151

•

�Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

II

:·credibiil.ty co unts. And if you
have any questi on abou t that, look at
the·U.N. weapons inspec1ions mess in

border stations for prisoners from

private ci tilen -

ror

th~

Kosovar

refugee camps in Macedoni a and
Albania to "let the refugees know
that we care antl hear their plea."
The not:quite candidate for the
Republican presidential nomination
is methodically answering q iticism
-that she 's taken no hard stands on
issues. In a speech in Cali forn ia, for
instance. sfie said she opposed abor·
tion, but that a constituti onal ban was
unreali stic.

.Wednesday night. in an address
tit fe d " Hawkish World View." Mrs.
D~le adopted a hard line - t~ some
4,000 midshipmen in · their summer

wh.ites -on why she should succeed
Clinton as their commander in chief.

Iraq, or today 's tragedy in Kosovo, " Serbian detention cam ps.
she sa id.
Mrs. Dole veered from her tex t to
. Mrs. Dole. whose. husband ..Bob, tell of visiting a Red Cross camp in
has 'served as Clinton's envoy .tothc Congo where· Rwandan orphans were
Balkans, .ae&lt; used Clinton ' of oeing too ill to be ~ l othed . " We had to just
wishy-washy in his ultimatums to keep washing them dow n, these poor
Mil osevic.
little children."
She tac kled head-on the politicalShe did not say what America
ly volatile question of sending U.S .
have done to 'prevent the
should
ground troops into Kosovo.
Rwandan
genocide.. .
.
" If the NATO commanders and
sa
id
Carl
·
Zeppegno
of
the
Still,
the Joint Chiefs rif Staff say that
ground troops are required to accom- academy 's Class of 2000. Mrs. Dole
pli sh our goalS, then my answer is knows from her Red Cross work and from her marriage to a severely
' yes, '" s he sa1'd..
The fir st midshipmen called upon· inj'ured World War II veteran - the
. by a moderator during the question- risks of military action.
"She 's seen firsthand what we' re
and-answer period asked:
"Are you willing to se nd your up against and she understands that
· own sons and daughters to bleed in we have a limited capabthly when
we're sent out with our hands tied ·
Kosovo, ma'am? "
While hi s classmates "ooooh'ed" behind our backs," said Zeppegno.
Min Chung, Class of '99, said he
· at his audacity, Mrs. Dole said yes with&lt;;&gt;ut menti oning that she has no liked what he heard from Mrs . Dole
children - then fumbled in repeat·. but was holding out for a candidate .
ing her line about approving troops if with "prior military service."
·
recommended by military brass.
Mrs. Dole 's speech came in
Mrs . .Dole's unnamed target, her · advance of a planned Washington
aides said , was Texas Gov. George W. fund-raiser later this month, the first
Bush, con~idered her strongest com· in a series. She has banked a disappetition for the 2000 GOP nom ina· pointing fraction of the $6 mtllion
tion.
that Bush raked in during the first
Bush has been criticized for what . three months 'of 1999.
'

Mayoral candidates focus
on keeping employment up
COLUMBUS (AP). - The area ·ty commissioner. said enhanced pub·
around · Columbus has one of the li e transportati on was a priority.
She said that although the county's
state 's lowes! unemployment rates ,
and the city 's. three mayoral candi- un employment rate is below 3 per·
dates say they have plans to keep cent, it exceeds 20 percent in some
areas of the city. She said many of the
things that way. .
Democrats Michael Coleman and new jobs in· the county are ne ar the
Ben Es py and Republican Dorothy Interstate 270 outerbelt, which is sevTeater took part in a public forum at eral miles from the central city.
"We have to get folks to those
wbich jobs were a major topic.
so they can work the different
jobs
Coleman was asked at Wednes·
and gel home for emergen·
shifts
day 's forum about a plan to decen·
lralize state offices by moving large cics," Teater said.
· Espy. minority leader of the Ohio
numbers of state jobs from Columbus
Senate, said that as mayor, he would
to smaller cities such as Toledo.
Coleman, who used , to . live in · make sure Columbus .got its · "fair
Toledo, ind ic ated a willingness to share" of state development dollars.
.He said he was tired of Columbus
support the plan last fall , when he
was the Democratic candidate for taking what he said was a back seat
to Cleveland and Cincinnati in state
lieutenant governor.
But he seemed to change his tune government aid.
Wedn e~day.
·
I
"Thbsc jobs will be right here,"
Espy also said city tax money .
saJd C 0 1ema~ , who is president of should be refunded to residents when '
City Counci l.
tax receipts are hi~her than anticiTeater, currentl y a Franklin Coun· pated llix recei'pts.
.

GM, Ford note increase ·
in first quarter earnings
DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp.'s earnings climbed 31 percent
in ·the first quarter, exceeding Wall Street expectations, on continued strong
profits in North America. Ford Motor Co. profit~ also were up.
.
GM reported today it earned a record $2.1 btlhon, or $3.04 a share, m the
first three months of the year co mpar~d with $1 .6 billipn, pr $2.27 a share,
during the year~ago period. ·
· . ·
. .·
'
A survey or analysts by First Call Corp. e.stimated GM ·would earn $.2.88
a share.
Sales at the world's largest automaker totaled $42.4 billion, up 6 percent
from $40 billion a year ago. Revenue figures exclude the sale of Delphi Automotive Systems, the big pails unit that GM is spinning off.
·Ford, the world's No. 2 autoiTi aker, said today it had a 20 percent increase
in operating earnings during the first quarter, earning $1.81 billion,or $1 .46
a share, compared with $1.51 billion, or $1.22 a share.,for the ftrstthree
months of 1998.
Sales totaled $38 billion at Ford, compared with $36.6 billion a year ago.
As with GM, Ford's earnings were higher than' Wall Street analysts' expec·
tations. The average estil)1ate of analysts surveyed by First Call was S l.J9
a share.
GM 's earnings including Delphi set a company record for any quarter, narrowly surpassing the $2.09 bil.lion it earned in the second quarter of 1997.
GM's North American operations earned .$).4 billion. up 67 ~ercent from
the $841 million it ea,rned in the first three months of 1998. Proftts also were
up in European operations.

1

t

.1 ,' J

.:

&lt;

1

il I! J~! :,

Still raising the money, Page 2
Meigs beats Vinton County, Page 5
Teenagers ~ren't all bad, Page 6

)

.Tomorrow: Cloudy
H!gh: 50s; Low:. 30s

NOW IS TH:E TIME!!

Discrepancy.leads

1999 CHM S·10 P/U

Sy JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A discrepancy between two motor vehicle acci dent reports resulted in a
. mistrial du ring an aggravated vehicular assault case ·in the Meigs' County
· CQ.urt of Common Pleas Thursday mornin g.
.
Herbert L. Grate II, 32, Reedsville, was charged with aggravated vehic·
· ular assault of Kenneth R. Rig gs, 32, Long Bottom, on April I, 1998. In that
incident, Grate and Rigg s had raced up and down State Route 7 near Tup·
. pers Plains; Grate driving an automobile and Riggs a motorcycle. Grate was
accused of striking Riggs' motorcycle, causing it to srash.
.
..

a•u·' "' VB, auto, locking Diff,
Indigo blue: cass, _chrome
chrome bumper, MSRP $111,730

5 18,549
Now
_,;;;.....;;;;.J"_.-,..........-t

Regional Briefs:

·1999 CHM SILVERADO
EXT CAB 4X4

1999 GMC YUKON

Taft requests more aid
·for victims of tornado

4x4, 4 Dr, VB, auto , air; leather,
tiH, cruise; alum wheels, CD
Cass, Black MSRP $38,720

32,964

.. MONTGOMERY (AP) -· · Gov. Bob Taft has asked for more federal
assistance for victims of the tornado that swept through several Cine in· .
n~ti suburbs last week, killing four people and causing more than $27 milli on in damage.
.
The Small Business Mministration announced Thursday it will make
low-interest loans available to help homeowners and businesses rebuild
and recover from 4ninsured losses caused by_the tornado. .
But Taft asked President Clinton on Tbursday to approve additional
assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for fami ·
lies, businesses and local governments 'in the iorn ado-damaged areas.
'"The situation is of,such severity that effective recovery is beyo nd vol· ·
untary agency, local and state capabilities," Taft wrote in hi s letter to the
president.
If Clinton approves the federal disaster declaration, the FEMA money could come in the form of loans and grants to help owners of damaged homes and businesses. and the communiti es which sustained public infnistrucnire damage. Communities co uld receive FEMA grants for
unin sured costs of temporary housi ng or for home repairs.
The hardest hii areas were Montgomery and Blue Ash. and wrec king
.crews have begun demolishin g some tornado-damaged businesses there.
The razing of some of the ruined homes was to begin today.
·Many families ha ve found rental apartments and signed &lt;;ontracts for
demolition and rebuilding of their houses. Businesses that were wiped out
h~ve rebpened to fill minor orders and t.ake phone calls.
.Scott Casuto, who·lost. only the roof and windows from his house, hopes
to bring his family home after repairs are finished in abo ut two to five
months. They have rented an apartment temporarily.
• " We were the lucky ories," Casuio said . "Every single home here .will
be bulldozed - everybody except me and the one next door.'.'
In nearby Loveland, peopl e were already rebuildin'g businesses. 01' 29·
companies in the L\)veland Commerce Par~ . 25 had storm damage and
fi ve were destroyed, 'putting nearly 80Q jobs in jeo'pardy.
By Wednesday aftemoon;about95 percent of the companies were at
least partially bac k in business. The ones hun worst moved their office
operations into temporary qu ~ ners within the industrial park campus.
"W,e are open for b~ s iness- we ' re just aski ng for patience arid understandin g," said Steve Brown, president 'of Self Adhesive Products Inc.,
one of five companies that lost their buildings. "We' ve had a series of
small victories and we're taking it one day m a time."

::; 5

1999 CHEVY TRACKER

1999 OLDS BRAVADA
tilt, cruise, towing pkg, gold
pkg, pewter MSRP $32,900

::; 5

1999 OLDS SILHOUETTE

Dr, Conv, 4 x4, auto, al·r, CD, · GLS, auto, air, Pleather,
...... loaded:
Blac:kls;iJver MSRP $18,155
V6, Sand MSR _.,,470

All wheel drive, V6, auto, air,

28,968
"'?'·

_,_._,

:&lt;~-

'TillUS:•
.. ' "· ': "- l:;;~,,. . .

. .

1998 GMC SIERRA SLE
EXT CAB

.

'

2 Dr, 4 WD, Ve, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM, WAS $19,800

-.

1998 FORD RANGER XLT
Ext cab, 4 Dr, VB, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, 4 WD, only 9,000 miles,
WAS$19,900

1997 NISSAN 4 WD P/U
4 cyl, 5 spd, AM/FM
WAS$13,999 .

Now 517 950

Marshall aims for $125M fund-raiser

S·10 P/U
V6, 5 spd, LS pkg,
27,000 miles, Black,
$10,900

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP{- Marshall University President J. Wade
Gilley has announced an amliitious fund-raising drive and a plan to
· increase faculty salaries.
In his spring report to faculty Thursday, Gilley outlined plans to launch
a campaign to raise $125 million in the next two years .
·
"The Huntington-Charleston metropolitan area can only go forward
with a: first-rate comprehensive university," Gilley said. "Marshall needs
to continue to move forward, not for the univers ity community, but for
West Virginaa."
·
·
The previous largest fund-raising campa1gn for the 16,000-student uni·
~ersity was $10 million by then-President Dale Nitzschke in 1990.
.
Gilley also said faculty salaries must be raised to I0 I percent of pay
by peer universities. And he called for establishing_a $2-million-a-year
Funds for Excellence Program to underwrite salary mcreases and course
and faculty development.

WAIBI VB, . auto, air, AM/FM, tiH,
cruise, WAS $1&amp;,991

Now$9960
Oni3J
,
.

·: ; 5

16,800

2 Dr, 4 WD, V6, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, White WAS $13,995

V6, auto, air, AM/FM, CD, tilt,
cruise, SAS $7950

Teen accused of biting friend's ear

0 Now51

::; 1 ,450

CHILLICOTHE (AP) - An 18-year-old has been charged with felonious assault for biting the ear of a friend during a fight over auto parts .
Dustin Rhoads of Chillicothe pleaded innocent Thursday in Ross County Common Pleas Court. A Ross County grand jury ihdicted him April 9.
James Tackett, 18, lost a chunk of his ear nearly 3 inches long and more
than I inch wide during the fight March 22.
.. ·
· .
Sheriff's deputies have said the students argued at Pickaway Ross JQtnl
Vocational School about swapping vehicle parts. They decided to meet
on nearby &lt;ountry road near this city about 50 miles south of Columbus to setile their dispute.
.
.
·
Rhoads is accused of reaching· through the driver's side window of
Tackett's car and hilling Tackeu in the face .

5

98 CHM SILVERADO LWI, 2 WD, V6, a~to, *• AM/FM cou, tit, cn11w, . . ..,,lilly 9500 ..... WAS $19;900'----- 17,850
97 FORD RANGERXLT, 414, V6, ssp, air, AM/FM, tit, cnllt, .WAS $15,900 .
~,·
SJ3,200
5

96 CHM 5-10 BlAZER, V6, AUTO,AIR,1'n.T, CRIISf, AM/FMWS, WAS $19,900
1~..:~~
91 CHEVY 1/2 TON LWI V6, nto, *• AM/FM WAS $5499'---------....------~
90 CHM ASTRO CONY VAN V6, auto, air, tit, miH, AM/FM WAS $5900
:::~~ ,
88 CHM 1/2 TON LWB VI, auto, air, AM/FM co11 WAS $6900 ~
- -.. '""""'"""--·---r--~-:':'
98 GMC SONOMA Ext Cab, 4 WD, V6, a~te, air, AM/FM, tilt, Gills•, WAS $19,900 .
_.J17,450
98 GMC SONOMA Ext Call2 WD, 3rd Door, 4 'YI, Ssp, tllr, AM/FM, tit, lnlht, WAS $13,995
'
&gt;12,600
98 GMC JIMMY 4 Dr, 4 WD, .V6, allo, air, 181, GIIIH, AM/FM, WAS $23,900
·s21 ,850 •
97 cHM.TAHOE 4Dr, 4 WD1 LT pkg, VI, nto,., AM/FM, CD, ltatMr ""'tit, cniH, WAS $29,900
- '27,800
522 500
.
'
'
98 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 4 Dr, AWD, V6, tl!llo, llr, tit, GIIIH, AM/FM 1111S. WAS $24,900
-·-·-~"·---- s96S0

a

Good Afternoon

Sentinel
l Sections • ll Pages
.

Today's
C.Jndar
Oeetifteds

9t CHM 1/2 TON LWB VI, nto, tlr, tit, cnlit, AM/FM, WAS $11,995
'"·-·
s9200
94 CHEVY 1/2LWI4x4, V6, .,o, *·WAS $10,9001_._..._,_~------~-----r.-:
5
93 CHEVY 1/2 TON Ell Calt, VI, auto, air, tit, GIIIH, AM/FM COli WAS $11,995·------""--·--·-- 10,600

POMEROY, OHIO

308 EAST MAIN

(740) 992•6614 • (800) 837•1094

Mon.·Frl. 9 am·8 pm; Sat. 9 am·4 pm; Sun. l pm•S pm
~
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L.A. Lakers
fire Rodman
Page4

•

~'"' - CONVtNmNT FINANCI.NG

air, cass, bench seat,
JM!;RP $14,155
lwhi9SIS.

Sports

Aprll16, 1999

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 50s; Low: 30s

I .

The Wall Street Journal's editorial
page called a " vague and tepid ...
almost Clintonian" statemen t on
Kosovo.
One senior Dole adviser said she
wanted to con trast hersJ:If with Bush
by emphasizing her advantage in for·
eign policy experience.
'
When one questioner pressed Mrs.
Dole to elaborate on her call for the
defense of Taiwan against China. she .
appeared flustered. . .
"I've been out of the Red Cross
now for three months and there's
·some issues where I want to take a
very careful and thoughtful approach
before going forward with the poSI·
lions." she said. " I am not yet an
announced candidate , much less the
elected nominee ofthe party." ·
Sounding like the Coid War-era
Ronald Reagan whose name she
invoked, Mrs. Dole spoke expansive ly about the immediate need for
a missile-defense sys tem.
But at the possible expense of edu·
cation funding?
"If indeed our country is vulner·
abje to ·rogue nations developing
nuclear weapons that can strike the
United States, then there's not going
to be much opportunity for education.
We have to protect ourse lves- that 's
first ," she said. .
She licked off her travels as Cabinet secretary and with the Red
Cross: to aviation talk s in Beijing :
labor talks with Poland 's Solidarity
union; and to the Croatian· Bosnian

Friday

Weather

Mrs. Dole talks
tough
during
chat
·
•
at Naval Academy
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Associated Press Writer
ANNAPOLIS, Md . - Elizabeth
Dole talked tough: Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic "ought to
be labeled a war criminal" and President cii nton tnust "use all the pow.er necesSa~Y ·• to win in Kosovo.
When a mi,dshipman•stood to ask
whether she would risk her own family's blood in that faraway region, she
stammered a yes.
Mrs. Dole went to the U.S. Naval
Academy on Wednesday. night to
· prove her mettle on foreign policy
and earn a more se rious look from
campaign donors.
Later' today. the fdrmer American
.Red Cross president departs -as a

Thursday, Aprll15 , 1999

Po!'l'eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Comics
Editorials

'

8·10
11
2
3

Soorta

4&amp;!

Weather

3

f

Lotteries
OHIO
Plck3: 3-2-4; Plck4: 7-6-4-7

Buckeye 5: 9·16-23-33-37
W,YA
Dally J: 4-1-2; Dally 4: 8·2-0-0
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publiahina Co.

During testimony by State Highway Patrol Sgt. Paul Pride , it was noted al discrepancy and di ~mi ssed the case . As ahernati vcs. he cuuld have al so
the report Pride was using differed from the one presented by the prosecu· gra nted a con tinuan ce or provided the other report w· Grate 's auumey.
.
· The question remains: Why were there two different wreck report&gt; ' Tc•
tion to the defense during the discovery process.
. The patrol report indi cated both men were cited on charges of reckless. answer that question, DeLay has sc heduled a !T'ecting with pro&gt;ecutor&gt; .
The case was origi nall y handl ed by the Me1gs County Prosecutor' s Office
operation and that Riggs was cited for ni:J motorcycle endorsement, whi le
Grate was cited for expired registration..
but was referred to special rroseetnor Ke vin Rings. a former Washmgton
The report possessed by Grate's auorney had a question mark written in · County proseeutor, after Assi stant Me~gs Coun ty Prosecuiing Attorney Chuck
the spaces reserved for citations, but was othe\'wise identical to the patrol Kni gh t, who presented the case 10 a grand jur)'. "' ked to be excused be ~au;c.
wreck report.

·

Visiting Judge Thomas DeLay of Jackson County noted·il was a materi•

he had rcprescnlcd Riggs in an unrelat ed L' l \ il matter.

Shell opts
to act on
retention
proposal

The sixth annual Racine Area
Community Organization's Flower
Festival will be Saturday,April24, 10
a. m. to 6 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
Racine.
··
The day will start with a parade at
10 a.m. and anyone •wanting .information about the parade can call Marilyn Powell at 949-2676. Entrants
should be at the old fire department
annex at9: 15 a. m. and line up willbe
at 9:30a. m.
·
The crowning of the festival queen
will be .at noon on the stage at the
park. A queen will be chosen from the
senior class at Southern High School.
Stage entertainment will he the
Midnight Cloggers at II a.m., Steve
and Beverly Pottmeyer at. I2:30p.m.,
the Backporch Swing Band at 2
p .m.. Mike Hemmelgarn at 3:30 ·
p.m .. followed by True Country at
4:30 p,m. Hemmelgarn will also do·
a balloon show for children after his
stage performance.
Flowers can be purchased from
area flower growers by the flat , pot
or ·basket. For booth information,
contact Lillian Weese at949-2401 or
Kri sta Smith at Home Nati onal Bank
at 949-2210.
··
There will be craft, games and

By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. Shell Chemical's Pom1 Pleasant Poly·
ester Plant will proceed with a $60
million reten tion project, after mem·
ber&gt; of the Mason County Commission signed an indllcernent resoluti on

. Thu rsday for the issuance of revenue
bonds .
The project will mclude updating
equipmen t that wi II all ow the plant to
compete globa ll y. Bob Bowen. Shell
plant manager. said thi s update is
"absolutely criuca l. "
Of Shell 's four worldwide plan Is
produc~g PET . the local plant has
the oldest equi pment and and &lt;is the
most ineffecti ve. Technology used at
the Poin t Pleasant plant was iOJiiated
and owned hy Goodyear whe10 Shell
took over at the plant.
P.E.T. is a grow ing business.
BowCn ~aid . hut more companieS
going into thC husiness a'c driving

the pmfit dow ~ . In 1995. P.E.T was
selli ng for 85 ce nts per poundc but
now sells for 38 ce nts. Wi th ·older ·
technology. Shell is paying 4 cents
per pound in add1lional

Mike Hemmelgarn
food boo th s starting at 10 a.m., and
during the day, the Carmel United
Methodist Church youth group will
have children's games. A kiddie trac-

&lt;:O ~ t s

that

would he eli minaicd with ·an equip·
' ment update.
·

Bowen said at the prcs~nt ·lime.
ior pull will be held on the basketball
the lo&lt;al Shell plant ca nn ot survive
court at 2:30 p.m.
In the event of rain. the festival against ils compet itors. The upgrade
will be held at Southern High Schoof. · would make it the strongest of Shell 's
four worldwide plants and secure its ·
ex istence in Mason County. Shell
now employ s 376 locally.

Voinovich pressing government to
make decision on road funding
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton administration offered 'no
hints about its intentions as a deadline loomed for deciding whether 10
appeal a court ruling that threate~ed
to disrupt planned .road construction
in several states.
The head of the Federal Highway
Administration told inquiring senators Thursday that debate between
several agencies was still going on as
officials tried to determine whether
fighting (he ruling or allowing it to
stand was the beuer course of action.
"We're trying to sort through all
that," Administrator Kenneth Wykle
· told a Senate subcommittee led by
Sen. George Voinovich, H. -Ohio.
The case, filed by t~. Environmental Defense Fund , struck d6wn a
rule allowing road projects to retain
federal funding even when .commu nities fall out 'o f com pliance with air
pollution standards before construction begins.

.

Th e case was dismis sed shortly after lunch foll owing a meeung betwee n
the judge and attorneys in chambers .

Racine's
Flower ·
Festival
set for
April24

Pentagon . t~
By ROBERT BURNS
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon
is preparing to ask President Clinton
for authority to activate as many .as
33,000 reserve forces in support of
the Kosovo conflict, and the president
is likely to approve the request, government officials said today.
"The request has not come to him
(Clintmi), but the Pentagon is making
plans for it," one offici.al said.
Defense Secretary WiUiam Cohen
is'likely to present the request to Clinton elll1y-next week , the officials said,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
It will include up to 25,000 Air
Nati onal Guard members in units that
fly aerial refueling missions both.
from the United States and from
Europe:
Some civil -affairs specialists from
the Army Reserve are likely to be

to·mistrial in assault case

Bowen added most of the engi·
neering work has been done, and' the
project will proceed within the next

,
.
· Members of the Senate's sub- Apri'l6 identified the 10 communit ies
two month s.
committee on tran spurt ation and on the initial-impact li st as Atlanta:
John Stump, anomeywith Steptoe
infrastructure pressed for an appeal. Monterey and Santa Barbara. Calif.;
and
·Johnso n of Charle~t(ln , said the
" If thi s cou rt decision stands, high- Ashland and Paducah, Ky.; Raleigh
. way projects will come to a stand· and Winston-Salem, N .C.: Kn oxvi ll e count y commi ss ion will serve as the
still." Voinovic h said. "Th~re are a and Memphi s, Tenn.; and Billings, "conduit' '· tu issue the tax-exempt.
lot of people in the country that are Mont., but the highway administra- private activity bonds for a portion of
preuy worried about it. "
ti on could not fully verify that on the $60 million. He :idded there will
Sen . James lnhote, R-Okla, said it Thursday. A spokeswoman said offi- be no obliga11on. cost or liabili ty to
is imperative that the Clinton ad min - cials famili ar with the issue thought the cou nty.
" It 's n w5n-win situatiOn for everyistration appeal the decision.
all but Billings may belong on the
one."
Stump sa id .
The Environmental Prote ct ion list.
Abo
anending with Bowen and
Agen cy said th ere would be an
·'Stum
p
were
Tom Way. Mason Counannouncement today. the deadlin e for
The Ohio Department of Transty EconomiC Development Authorideciding whether 10 appeal.
portatiOn sa id the state was . not in
The full impact of last month 's jeopardy of los ing any money ty cxccuti'T director. and Bob Crooks
ruling was not immediately clear. because its projects complied with of Shell.
Wykle said $100 million worth of the Clean Air Act without re lying on
Comm issio ner Phyllis Arthur
fundin g for I0 cities would be atrisk , the "grandfathering" provision struck
made
the motion to s1g n the induce with the possibility of endangering at down by the court .
ment reso!Uiion. with rhc vote· being
least $500 million more for 84 proun animo us.
jects.
A graup r.cpr.csenting ro.ad huildcrs ·
"We rcallv need Shell Chemicl l,"
However, hi s age ncy could not predic ted the decision could lead to said Cmnmiss10i1er Ri ck Handley.
immediately provide a list of those 84 160,000 lost jobs if it's allowed to "It 's one of the.biggest employer&gt; in
projects. An internal memo dated stap.d.
th e county."

ask for call-up of over ~0,000 reserve forces

included in the call: up, the official s
said.
The need for reserve forces is
linked to NATO 's decision to expand
the air war by addin g 300 or more
U.S. aircraft and two battalions of
Anny Apache heli copters .
Officials said the Pentagon also is
preparing to issue a "stop loss" order
that would prevent active,duty troops
from leavi ng th.e military during the
Kosovo crisis. This is meant to limit
the need for additional reservi sts.
A Defense Department official
said that while authority to call up as
many as 33,000 would be ·so ught , a
smaller number may actually be
ordered to active duty. He said Cohen
had not yet settled on a specific number.
If approved by Clinton as expected, the call -up would be the biggest
since more than 200,000 reservists

were activated during the Persian
· Gulf War.
•
The U.S. military relies heavily on
reservi sts, the citizen soldiers, . for
almost any large operation. Many of
the Air Foree refueling aircraft in the
Balk ans already are operated by
members of the Air National Guard
who volunteered for duty. Nine Air
Guard refueling wings from nine
states already are participating in the
NATO missions, as are K(,:- 135 refucling units from fiv e A.ir Force
Reserve wings in five states .
The call -up of additional forces
would follow a major buildup of t,J.S.
and other NATO aircraft in the elTon
to halt Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic's campaign against ethnic
Albani ans in Kosovo province.
At NATO headqu arters ioday,
offi cials were pressed for additional
informati on on a confusing series of

in cidents Wednesday in which four
In re•)mk. Thursday. Clinton said
Kosovo refugee convoys reportedl y NATO had no alternative hutto precame under attack: NATO ack nowl- vail in thi&lt; war. Ceding Kosovo to
edged that it was responsible for one M1loscvic. the president said. would
attack nort h of the tow n of Djakovi- mean "turning Kosovo into a li fe less
ca. and it apologized for the mi'stak e. wasteland" and would mark a historic
NATO spokesman Jatm e Shea . setback for democracy in Europe.
under questioning by repo rters. sa1d
Clinton also said the mistaken
he could add no new •nformat ion.
NATO attack Wednesday on a
Shea also said that NATO's homb- refugee convoy in Kosovo that killed
ing l11ursday night was one Df the . dozens of civilians was a .regrettable
most succ.ess ful of the campa1g n, 'error that shows thafmodcrn warfare
whkh began March 24. He said a :'is not a business of perfection."
wide array of military targets were
" It is also inevitable in a confl iet
struck throughout Yugoslavia. 1ndud- of thi; kind. with planes travchng in
.ing surface-to-air missile si tes, radars. high speeds . doing the best to fulfi ll
an ammuniti on bunker and air fields . · their mi ssion, .. Clinton said. "And if
The spokesman also reponed thai the requirement is that, nothing like
Yugoslav naval vessels in port in this can ever happen, then we're say- .
Mont"negro have been firing artillery ing it 's OJ&lt;. wllh us if Mr. Milosev ic
at NATO aircraft. But he sa id NAlD · displaces over a million Kosovars.
so far has not attacked any &lt;)f' the kills and rapes thousands upon thouships.
"'nd' of thc·m ...

\

,~

•

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