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Page 18 ~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll21, 1999

Thursday

Bradley highlights racial unity in race for nomination ..
By JOSEPH SCHUMAN
Alaoclatecl PI'MS Wrltar
WASHINGTON :- Declaring
racral umty "the definmg moral issue
of our time," former Sen. Bill

.Ex-Reagan
aide starts
long-shot
campaign
By RON FOURNIER
AP Political Writer
WASHINGTON - Gary Bauer is
betting that his hardscrabble background, boitom-up tax cuts and
morality-bound foreign policies will
set him apart from the crowded presidentiill field he enters today. "Vinue
is in free fall," the conservative
activists says, and cannot be
reclaimed for America without a
family-friendly national age11da.
"Reverence and respect are disappearing, and the question before us
is: Will the family, as weiJ?" the
Republican said, opening his longshot campaign in a speech prepared
for deli very to residents of Newport,
Ky:; bis hometown. "We ·clobber it
with taxes; we marginalize it with
judicial decrees; we undermine it
with hostile policies and -redefine it
· with trendy ideas."
The soh of a janitor, Bauer, 52,
returns to the blue-collar river town
across the Ohio from Cincinnati to
underscore empathy for J\mericans of
all classes and races . "God's light
shines for all," he said.
Little-known outside Washington,
the former Reagan White ·House
adviser made hi~ name in the nation··s
capital by running conservative polit·
ical organizations.
He has a wide fund-raising base ·
and deep roots in the social conservative ·community, but is still considered a long-odds ·candidate for the
2000 GOP nomination . He raised an
impressive $1.4 million in the' first
quaner of 1999, though the campaign
has already spent much of it.
"If Gary is given half a chance to
get his message across to the nation,
he will be a. formidable candidate,"
said longtime ally James Dobson, an
mnuential conservative broadcaster
who stopped short of endorsing
Bauer.

Bradley. Tuesday put the quest for
soctetal mtegrauon at the center of his
campaign to win the White House in
2000.
Bradley, the sole Democrat thus
far to challenge Vice President AI
Gore for the pany 's nomination, said
the problem of race is "central to our
American future."
''In running for president, I'm betting that far more than a majority of
people in America want to achieve a
deeper racial unity," he said in a
speech to 200 students and administralllrs at The Cooper Union for the
Advancement of Science and An in
New York City.
.
Bradley was speaking in a city
where the shooting death of. an

unarmed African immigralll b~ four
white pollee .officers has tgntted a
sto~ of protests and caused a major
pohllcal headache for Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani.
" When Ronald Reagan was president, _everyone knew that if you
wanted to please the. boss, you ~ut
taxes, mcreascd mtlnary spendmg
a~d fought communism," hes aid. "If
I m prestdent, I want one thmg to be
known: If you wa.nt to pl~asc the
boss, one of the thmgs you d better
show is how in your department or
agency you've funhered tolerance
·and racial understanding."
.
Bradley rectted a lttany of preJU·
dices and injustices: church bombmgs, mctdents of _e:ople beaten or

killed because they were of Chinese changed since the civil rights move~
descent or gay, the poltce practice of ment of past decades.
pulhng ~verdrivers because they are
"While legal barriers are down,
rae tal mmonttes. And he spoke about divisions still remain, but they are
own expenen~e Wtlh the preju· divisions of the heart more than of the
dtces dtrected at hts black teammates Jaw," he said. " If you're black, you
when he played professional .bas~et- know that being within the radar of
ball,. and how they drove htm mto white fear and suspicion can be danpohttcs.
gerous."
. "For me the qu7st for rac~al uni"This tragic event was in most
ty remams t.he definmg rnoraltssue of ways different from the church bum- .
our ttme,It s ~~e reas.on I first ran for ings of 1994 .... It was not an act of
pubhc office, he satd.
senseless hatred. It cannot be dts·
Bradley, pointing to the case of missed as an act of aberrant individ·
West African immigrant Amadou uals," he said, adding that the solu·
Diallo, who on Feb. 4 was hit by .19 tion is to eradicate "white indifferof 41 bullets fired by four white New e~ce and_black suspicion."
York City plainclothes officers, said
Bradley i.~ e.pe~ted to formally
the ftght for rac1al equahty has an~~~·- hts candtdacy later thts ·

"IS

year," Tate said.

Former · Vice President Dan
Quayle, political commentator Pat
Buchanan, radio broadcaster Alan
Keyes, New Hampshire Sen. Bob
Smith, millionaire businessman Steve
Forbes and Bauer are competing for
the same base.
·
While this is Bauer's first campaign, Quayle won the vice. presidency in 1988 and Buchanan won the
1996 New Hampshire primary.
Bauer 's strength is his knack for
communicating the values of grassroots conservatives, particularly on
abortion.
·" !stand, without apology, for the
right of the voiceless and defenseless
to take their first breath, and be welcomed inlll the world·," he said. He
pledged to introduce legislation mak·
ing unborn children protected by the
14th Amendment.
Like Quayle, who declared his
candidacy a week ago, Bauer made
values a centerpiece of his announcement speech. "We can build a powerful economy ... yet vinue is in free
fall. If nights are filled with drive-by
shootings and mornings bring new
stories of babies tossed in the garbage
like Styrofoam cups, can America be
truly richer or poorer?" Bauer said.

Such positions might gel him
·attention but will hurt Bauer in GOP
.primaries, said strategisi Grover
Norquist.
'

.
I

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

7-4 win over the
. ~..-.-·;"'"'·'New· York Meta
-Page4

'

•

l

Meigs County's.

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 246

DEW

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"The president wants to do .what's best for the local
community, ... We are especially sensitive to not causing
WASHINGTON (AP)- Half a continent away from any disruption . or distraction to the ongoing effons
the tragic scene, President Clinton and his Cabinet rnobi· there."
lized today tO assess what help they 'could offer grieving
Grief 1;0unselors, at Clinton's command, stood ready
.,_1 Unleton, Colo. - and to "hammer,home to all the chil· to make the trip when called.
drcn of America that violence is wrong."
"Perhaps the most important thing all of us can do
"All of us are struggling to understand exactly what right now is to reach out to each other and to families
happened and why,'' the president said.
and their youns children," Clinton said at the White
Clinton, who canceled a celebratory political trip to House, addressing the tragedy for the second time,
Texas today and moved up a Thursday meeting with
He said children all over America need to be reas·
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, weighed traveling to sured of their ufety. "We also have to take this moment
auburbari Denver to comfort victims of the rnaiii!ICI'e once again to hammer home to all the children of Amer·
inside Columbine·High School.
.
. .
. ica that violence is wrons.
, "For }low, when lite scbool. has apparently just been
"And parents should take this moment to ask what
killed with bombs and not all the children who were else they can do to shield our children from violent
slain have been carried out, I think it is important on this images and experiences that. warp young perceptions
dly that we 1;0ntinue to offer the people of Colorado, the and obscure the consequences of violence - to show
people of Litllcton, the families involved the sure 9ur children by the power of our own example how tO .
jmowledge that all of ·America cares for them and is resolve 1;0n0icts peacefully."
praying for them," Clinton said.
The president said nothing about guns or sun 1;0ntrol.
• Spokesman Joe Lockhan said no decision has been . Lockhart said' later that Clinton's support for tightly
lnade on travel. "There's -obviously time on the sched· restricting youth acccu to guns. is well known - but
there is paltry information on where the weapons used a!
.!&gt;'le," he said. ·

Spring clean up
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By TED ANTHONY
AP National Writer
LitTLETON, Colo. ( AP) -Atop one desk sat a cal· .
cu!us book; its pages propped wide by a half-finished
sheet of homework problems, Upon another, an open
history textbook disJ!Iayed a Civil War picture. Near the
entranee, a computer ran Windows 95.
Prosaic items all,. emblems of the type of quiet so
familiar to school libraries - but unsettlinsly ordinary
amid the silence · that followed the ' terror and death
imposed upon the Colu·m~ine High School library.
That was what greeted Dr. Otris Colwell when he
walked through the double. doors of lhe second-floor
library Tuesday aftenioon. He entered &amp;'field oh:arnage
unthinkable even for.thc trained eyes of an emergency·
room physician.
Before him: 12 youns men and women, aU dead, a
scene so disturbing that one SWAT team member
likened it to "somethins from Dante's 'Inferno."'_
"You walk in there with that·hope that there might ·
be somebody who's itill ali~e ~ still salvageable,"
Colwell; t!le associate medical director of the para:

$ 19

GENUINE # 1 .

10 pi(;

time to griey~.
He had been scheduled to celebrate the new AustinBergstrom International Airport in Texas today and to
star at political fund-raisers in Austin. and Houston. The
president felt it was "better and inore appropriate" to
remain in Washington, Lockhan said.
Six months ago, Clinton - · with Vice President AI
Gore, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and about 800
educators and law-enforcement officials - ·held a White
House conference on school violence.
. Tuesday night, after hours of no'lStOp television cov·
erage of the dramatic events in suburban Denver, Clin•
ton acknowledged the nation has made little progress,
And he was asked whether lie still believed his adrninis·
!ration's 1;0ntention last October that students are still
safer sitting in a classroom than they are walking down
the street
. "Statisticaliy, for all the whole 53 million· kids in our
schools, it's true," Ointon said.
.
. But at Columbine High, where the attackers were
apparently armed with hand grenades, explosives and
high-powered weapons, "it obviously wasn 't true there.
"That was obviously the most dangerous place in
Colorado today."

LIRLE.DEBBIE

. .

. I ers •••••••• .
Leg Quar

BEEF

.

Columbine, including two sawed-off shotguns, carne
from . "I think there's a premium on not jumping to conelusions, ' ~Lockhart said.
,
Officials from . the departments of Education, Treasuey, Justice and Health and Human Services and from .
the Federal Emergency Management Administration
held a conference call this morning on what aid they
could give Jefferson County, where Columbine High is
la«;ated.
·
Education Secretary Ric~ard Riley consulted the
local school superiptcndent by phone,
.
"From the posttion of the federal government, we
would acknowledge that there are limits to what we can
do,". Lockhan said. ~'But there certainly should be no
limits to what we try to do."
Clinton spoke to the nation Tuesday night after he
was assured the list of the · gunshots had been-fired
inside Columbine. He was somberly mindful of the ear- .
licr tragedies at schools in Springfield, Ore.; West Padu·
cah, Ky.; Edinboro, Pa.; Jonesboro, Ark.; and Pearl,
Miss.
Pressed by reponers to say what the government
might do to ~top such scliool violence, Clinton said the .
Colorado 1;0mrnunity was "an open wound" needing

'$ , 99 SNACK.CAKES
'

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By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
ABioclatecl Pr- Wrlar

SIO.EHOURS

He promised to diminate a tax
code that "poisons__tbe ri"er of good
w-iH and betrays the American
dream." He would ~phice it with a
16 percent nat tax that aides said
would include tax credits of S1,500
per person.
Forbes suppons a 17 percent· nat
tax, with individual exemptions,
Senior adviser Jeff Bell said Bauer's
plan is designed to offer more mid··
die- and lower-class relief than the
Forbes plan. ·
In another depanure from estab·
lishment
Republicans, Bauer .
denounced trade with China. He said
relations should be conditioned on
the country . making progress on
.human rights and democratic
reforms.
" It cannot be business as usual
. when we are aiming .cons11mer products at a for~ign power and ·they are
aiming nuclear missiles at us," he
said.

Indians beat /J\s in final at-bat, Page 5
Estrangement over long hair, Page 9
Businesses go green, Page 16

Today: Sunny
High: lOa; Low: 50s

Clinton on shooth1g:'An open wound,' needing time to grtev~

PEPSI &amp;

P0 WELl'S

,..,

'

Sports
Cincinnati posts a

I

·

Bauer must outpace several other
candidates competing for the same
·votes and convince increasingly pragmatic social conservatives that he
could win a general election.
"They want to see a candidate that
not only communicates their issues,
but also a candidate who can win,'·'
Christian Coalition executive director
Randy Tate said. As never before,
"they are looking at electability this

year and trails the better-known Gore
in fund raising.
.Bradley, who ~as tried to ponray
himself as a mqre traditional liheral
Democrat than the vice president, .
argued that in addition to moral con·
cerns, Americans ought to focus on ,:
improving racial relations out of :
economic self-interest.
'•
" By the year 2010 in America,
Jess than 60 percent of the people
entering the work force are going to
be native-born white Americans " he
said. "That means that the eco~orn·
ic future of the children of white
Americans will depend increasingly
on the talents of nonwhite Americans.
That's not ideology. That's demo·
graphics."

April 22, 1egg

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AKRON (AP)- A brother ind sister have been chat·~ted
with the kidnajlping a 4-ycar-old from her home last
Jl?li~ said.
Police on Wednesday ams~ Kok Kee Lee, 29,
his sastcr
Huns Lee, 32, bQth of Warren.
.
Kok Kee Le.e was charged with two a~~~nts of kidnlflllins.and one COII!ttl
.of robbery and his sister with obstructing offiQial business. )'alice said
Hung Lee gave pollee Incorrect information to try to proiel;!. her brolhcr.
Both suspects were expected to be arraigned this morning in ""':on 1
Municipal Court. ·
'
'
l'olice said tl!ey expc&lt;:ted to arrest a SCI;Onil ·illesed kidnapper,
The girt;·Jasmine Gao, and her 63-year-old grandmother, Jaio Mci
were sprayed with pepper
bound with duct tape Fridly dutiing I
a robbery at their Akron home,
police uid.
The kidnappers then .took
with the girl and an undisclosed
amount of money.

Good Afternoon

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Cleveland Iater that day after the
The airl was
foundget
unharmc(l
in
kidtlapppcis
didn't
their ran·
som demand for money, said
police Lt. Ron DiSplna,
·
"We're hii'I:'Y they have IIQme
suspects," satd Andy Gao,, Jas•
mine's . brother. The family
dcc:lined further ~ommcnt.
AI least one of the suspecta may
have once stayed as a guest in the
Oao home, DISpina said•
~y were ~nown by the (Oao)
family, but It ' may have been
bcc:auae they were employeea or
friends of employees" of restau:
rants owned by either Jasmine 'a
father,' Ylahal Oao, or hi a relatives
In the Akron area, he uid.

i

'

'

' -~

'

'.

medic division at Denver Health Medical Center, said
Wednesday. "It didn't take long lo see _that wasn't the
case,"
A library is typically one of a high school's more
popular refuges, a place to both Jearn.and quickly forget
the Dewey Decimal System, to socialize, to get told to
$hush. Part of the background scenery of adolescence.
Why the gunmen chose the library, no one can say
just yet Perhaps they .believed it would offer one-stop
target sh!lpping, which, sadly, it did; roughly 45 stu·
dents were inside during lunch hour. Perhaps they were
stalking adversaries they knew.would he there.
But clux&gt;se it tbey did. And· they died there, too.
Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris feU alongside their vic·
tims, apparently of self-inflicted head wounds from two
of the myriad guns that had just killed and wounded so
many. .
Some of the students, authorities and witnesses say,
were ~ol where they sat and.fell alongside backpacks
and 'friends. Others, fanher away, retreated under desks
and tables, Hiding, they could see only the gunmen's
shoes and long trench coats.
•

The first week of May was set aside
for sprins·clean up in the Village of
Racine.
Racine Village Council, meeting in
recessed session Monday evening,
advised residents to put eM items at the
curb for pick up. No tires, batterieS or
oil will be accepted, it was noted.
This is free to the residents of ~
village. Council also requested resi·
dents clean up their lots and yards. ·.
Council took rio action on a request
by Evelyn Miller, Lancaster, for a trailer perrhit variance. She is requesting
permission to puf a trailer in the Hood
plain area. Variance action can be
.taken only after it has laid Ova' fl/: least
15 days, it was_noted.
It was noted that.rehicles are being
driven and parked on the walking track
at Star Mill Park while people attend
baseball games. The ball association
will he contacted again this year and
advised that if parking on the track
continues the marshal will issue citations,
Complaints were also received con·
ceming dogs running IO&lt;Iie in the viJ..
Iage. The marshal will cite dog owneD ·
whd allow their dogs to_run Joooe, ~ ·
. was noted. ·
No action was taken on complaints
of residents burning rubbish and other
items in the village.
·
Council also approved the first
reading of an ordinance on rules II) he
followed before water is shut off on
water customers that dO not pay.
·
Council approved the sale by sealed
bids for the old 1991 Ford police cruis- .
cr. Council set the minimum bid at ·
$1,200 and bids will be received until
4 p.m. on May 3 .at the clerk's office.
Bids will be opened at the May 3
CXlUllcil meeting.
_
Attending were Mayor Scott Hill,
council members Roben Beegl~,
·Henry Bentz, John Dudding. Joe
Evans, Henry Lyons and Bobbie Roy.
Also present were Street Commis·
sioner John Holman, Jim Lucas and
Evelyn Miller,

As NATO
summit nears,
officials hint ground
tropp option may be explored.
.
.
'

By TOM RAUM
said the While House arranged the telephone inter· · cenainly something we'd suppon."
AAoclalld Jl.- W'lllllr
view with Solana from NATO headquarters in
Administration officials long have insisted that
WASHINGTON (AP)-Ciinton administnlion Brussels, Belgium.
only an air campaign is envisioned against
offidals are givlns the broldclll hints yet that a
The topic of ground troops was cenain to domi· Yugoslav troops. But 25 days of air bombardment
ground offensive mfib1 10011 be considered by nate the agenda of the NATO gathering here, w~ich . aflPI:ar notto have stemmed Milosevic's aggression ·
NATO 11 part of a wider lltlllldt on Yugoslavia.
begi~y and soes through the weekend. British
against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo, a province of
·~[I c;an happen very quic:kly,"•Defensc Secretary Prime Miiiister Tony Blair and Clinton discussed the dominant Yugoslav republic of Serbia.
Willi1111 Cohen said Wednesday about updating the ground force iSsue Wednesday night at the
Vice President AI Gore annolliKled Wednesday
plans that NATO has on the shelf for a ground . White Hcoc.
.
.
that · 20,000 Kosovar Albanian refugees would
ailack.
· ''Both leaders agreed that our commOn. position . reSettle temporarily in the United States. Gore saf4
· Spcakina on the eve of NATO's SOth anniver· has not ehansed," National Security Council the elTon would focus on·"those with close family ·
sary summit here, Cohen told. a House subc:ommil· apokesman David Leavy said iftcrwards. "There is ties 'in America and thoSe who are valnerablc, and
tee that wbi!e a ground assault was not heing COil· no intention to introduce ground troops _into a.non- we will have ihern here until they are able to return
aidered, such a campaign a~~~ld include 200,1Ul or .. permissible environment"
home safely."
·
more NATO troops for a full invasion ofYugoelavia
The Pentagon awarded a $41 million l:lQntract to
White House deputy chief of staff Maria
or 7S,IXXl troops for a limited ground operation in Boeing Co. to oonven 95 nuelcar~anned cruise mis· Echaveste said officials would try to match refugees
the province of K,asovo.
&amp;itCs to the -nonnuclear vcrsiolt that B-52 bombers with relatives or' spot1S01$ after the refugees arrived
A White HOUle official, spcakins on QOIIdition have been launching at Yugoslavia. The work is at two or three pons along the East Coast "We're
of anonymity, said NATO may 10011 seek to update scheduled _to be finished by Nov. 30. The Air Force· going to be focusing on family reunification," she
ill auessment- made in October - that the cam· inventory of QOIIventionJ!Jy armed cruise l1)i!ISiles said.
·
·
paip !lhould he limited to air powei,
.
has ,been depleted by the heavy usc against
The House · International Relations CommiUee
1\vo other offieilla, alao speaking on the condi· Yuaoalavia.
was to vote today on a resolution by Rep. Tom
tlon of anonymity, Slid NATO Scmtary-Gencral
· Before Dying to Washington. Blair ·told the Campbell, R-Calif., to invoke the War Powers Act
Javier Solllll&amp; has Jliven the ao-lhcad 10 U.S. Army House of Commons. that scndins ground troops and demand that U.S, !Ofi.'CS on duty in and around
Oen. Wesley Clark, aupeme commlnder of NATO ahead of a peace deal remained an option.-Milose- " the Balkans be brought horne.
·
foroes in Europe, for the new -.sment
vic would not be able to prevent ground troops from
The panel debated the measure Wednesday
Solanadn an interview published in today'• edi· beina dcploy,ed, Blair said, though he added that iin night, along with a related one under which th~
tiona of The Wlahlngton Post,,said he thouilt !lie invasion aaainst full-strength ·Yusoslav forces . United States would formally declare war on
c:wmtt ~ campelplpinat Ytiaoalav forces would would pose "formidable" difficulties,
YugoSlavia.
· •
auoc.d and that NATO w11 far trom mlkina 111y
White HOI* preas secrelary Joe Lockhart said
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, tcStifyin&amp;
decision on lllina ground 1ro0f11.
the United Slates had not 11ked for a reassessment earlier before the panel, opposed either a~~~rsc, "We
He said the "dn:lllllllancel" of the lttKb thus of the Birstrike lllt'ateiiY·
think declaration of war would have a number of
far on fon1el hcldcd bY Yugoelav ·l'ftaidetit SJobo.
He added, "We believe 11111 if the military corn, negative.effects, sllCh as NATO 1;0hesion, regional
dal) Ml'-"lc Rilde It JIIOitiWY to lhow the Serb rnand believes that this is the right way to go and stability' and our .felations with Russia," Albright
"Ill opdont we on the tlble." The PGa thll it would be prudent for them to update, then it's said.
·

leldell•

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Thur8day, April 22 , 1999

P-ea:-2

•

'

Congress should save teaching hospital~

The commission recommendation, turned into favored it - he means Thomas and Sen. f'!lll .
Bleeding financially, the
legislation sponsored by its co-chairmen, Sen. Gramm, R-Tcxas,- but he does not.
!;
nation's teaching hospitals fear
John Breaux, D-La., and Rep. Bill Thomas, R·
Frist says he also.could su~ a trust fund f~r
111 Court St, Pomeroy, OhiO·
they arc about to. be slashed
Calif., is neutral on whether aid to graduate med- GME suoh as Cardm and. Moymhan call fo! :lll
'740-M-215&amp; • FIX: 882·2157
further by, of all people, a heart
ioal edu&lt;ation (GME) should be a mandatory or their legislati.on, althougli Frist will not ~ommt~ 10
surgeon - Sen. Bill Fris~ Rdiscretionary appropriations item.
their aoul'l!e of fundmg: a lAX on health msuran~
Tenn.
Frist
says-'and
credi·
Frist,
a
heart
transplant
surgeon
by
profession,
premiums. Republioans usually hate "n~w
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
bly- that it isn't so and that
was chairman of the commission's task foi'I'C on taxes."
,:
he actually means to save the
GME, so he is getting the blame from medioal
Cardin, whose state includes Johns Hopki~s
ROBERT 1,.. WINGETT
hospitals fr.om the perils of
school deans, hospital administrators and univer- University, proposes a 1 peroent "fee" or "asse$S·
Publlaher
modem medical economios.
sity presidents for what they see as a potential ment," .raising $3.2 billion a year, some of whJ:cll
Congress
needs
to
seoure
U.S.
graduate
med&lt;alamity ahead.
would be used to help the Mediwe system sla)
·CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HIU.
ioal
edu&lt;ationwhether
by
Frist;s
means,
those
If
GME
becomes
just
another
domestic
discresolvent.
Total aid for GME would rise $4 billiiln
Controller
GaMniiMarn~V«
of Rep. Ben Cardin, D-Md., and Sen. Daniel tionary item, the medical schools fear their sup- per year.
.
.·
Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., or another.
port will be squeezed by budget oapo, might vary
Moynihan, with numerous teaching hospitals
· But aid to the hospitals is a sideshow in Con- year to year and might get slashed if appropriators in New York, favors a 1..~ percent tax and woul~
kiPn.Sentlntl ••-•,.,.,. to tile edltot"""'-.., •
(3011-..,
-)
,...,.,.
oll»&gt;ng , . , _ ,
gress'
epic Medicare political wars, so chan&lt;es become enamored of new priorities.
keep Medicare funding also, for a net $9 billipn
JK!ed _ _ , _ _ end•Hmoyl&gt;o -ed. &amp;cit MoUld,.._• olgMIJBO,
are
nothing
will
happen
this
year
and
the
bleeding
Moreover,
·
GME
would
get
thrown
into
the
annual
boost for GME. . ·
':
· •nd . , _ , . . , . . ..,,.,, Spodf)l•- It.,...•• vfocMiattlol• « ,.,.,. ,., to: ,_,.,.,. to rhfi -.dltw, nt. Sentin~l, 11t Co4Hf st.,
will go ori.
same appropriations bill as federally funded medThe Clinton administration, which is mulling
Awrwo,, Ohio 417ftl; Olj FAX to 7«1-tn-Zt•T.
Many of the nation's 1,250 academic m,:dical ical researoh, another sour&lt;e of funding for teach· its own Medi&lt;are reform proposals, hasn't decld'--------------~--------...11 &lt;enters- which trllin the nation's future doctors, ing hospitals, and they would be competing ed .what to do about GME, but an official sajcl,
ronduct reseal'l'h. and take care of sonic of the against themselves for money.
·
"You can be sure we'll see they 're safe." · , : .
poorest and sickest people in America - are
Frist says the hospitals misunderstand his posiAt Northwestern Medical Center in Chicago .
already in deep trouble.
tion. He says that relying on Medicare for funding this week, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton said
Georgetown University Medical
Center lost $62.4 million last year
and Wall Street has downgraded the
, ·.
university's .credit rating. Hospitals
..
·
associated with Harvard University
I believe that a recent Daily Sentinel editorial mischaracter- lost $100 million in t998, and one
)zed my stance on the Route 33 Athens to Darwin project (Rep. of them, Massa&lt;husetts General, is
Strickland should support highway project, April 14).
reported to be on the brink of being
· As you know, I strong! y support projects that seek to improve . closed.
. The hemorrhaging is national.
the economic conditions i.n southern .Ohio: I have fought for
Detroit· Medical Center last $100
,years to force the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) million last year and may have to
.,
to make the Ravehswood Con- dose one of its hospitals. UCSF
nectar a priority. When. State Stanford is running a $100 million
officials complained they did- deficit and may lay off 2,000 staff
n't have the money, I secured members. The .Chkago · Medical
Center is laying off 250 workers.
$ million in federal funding
The tea&lt;hing hospitals are getfor this important project.
ting hammered by a rombination of
..1
And I support the improve- ·federal t4ediwe outs enaoted in the
ments to the Athens toDarwin 1997 balanoed budget agreement
.I'
section of Route 33 as reflect· and pressure from managed Cafe
ed in the recent actions of .the agencies to reduoe oosts.
II costs roughly 30 per&lt;ent more
Meigs and Athens . County to run an a&lt;ademi&lt; medioal oenter
Commissioners. For some time than an ordinary hospital because
there has been confus!on about training residents takes time and the
the level of local support this .hospitals handle hard - and inter·
.
.
·
esting - &lt;ases · for research . and
: project enjoys. Now the County Commissioners in both Meigs training purposes. Also, they buy
and Athens Counties have taken actions that clear up any. ques- the most sophisticated and expen•tions about local support, and I will stand with the County sive equipment, tend to be located in
~mmissioners in the endorsement of this important project.
urban areas and treat a dispropor. · ; Let me share some of the reasons why I believe so strongly tionate number of poor people.
•hat. decisions affecting communities should be deeply rooted in .. In reoognition of lheir role, the federal govern- is a long-term loser for the teaching hospitals, it would be a "mistake" to make GME funding
•
"
ment subsidizes the teaching hospitals through which he &lt;ails "the bean and soul of our quality disoretionary.
jocal input, debate and agreement. First, the people most affect- the Mediwe systet:n. this year at a cost of $7.7 ,medical system," and that reform is necdsary.
The Senate Finanec Commince is set to hold
' Frist says that Medicare will be inorcasingly hearings on · the Breaux-Thomas bill, but any
l:d by highway decisions are the people .who are served (or not billion.
·~rved) by the eltisting infrastructure. Therefore, decisions that
The terror of the medical schools is that the 5queezed in the future by managed care. He action on Mediwe this year is highly unlikely.
·.p rimarily affect local citizens should be initiated locally.
majority rerominendation of the bipartisan • favors broadening the base of financial support It's .a· too-juicy 2000 campaign issue. So the
Medicare commission suggests that a large chunk for GME by making it a "mandatory,appropria- teai:hing hospitals will continije ·going broke.
.: Second, I believe that, especially· when it comes to highways -of the federal subsidy be transferred out of lion" or entitlem~nt like the Medioaid system. ·
(Morton . Ko!lllracka It axaartlva editor 'of
:and schools, the state and federal governments should seek to Medicare, where the funding level is guaranteed, · He says the task foroe report mentions GMEas Roll Call, the newapapar or Callltol Hill.)
:support the will of the community, not dictate it, As a federal · to the congressional appropriations process.
a discretionary item because other members Copyrlgld111111 NEWIII'APER Etm!RPRIII! AIIN.'
:legislator; it is my responsibility to support and carry out the
:collective decisions of the community.
.
·: · I commend the County Commissioners in both Meigs and ByTOMRAUM
defended NATO's role on Tuesday !ration has not requested them,
"That is not ... our go~ for this
:Athens Counties for their hard work on this project, and I look Auot:llllllll Pr- Writer
before the Senate Foreign Relations·
"When B· president threatens a conflict," she responded.
.•·
Jorward to working with them to improve the economic health
WASHINGTON
(AP) .
That goal, "as we have all said. js
Committee.
war he should plan for it," MeCain
NATO's oumbersome proce&lt;lures
She . 'strongly disagreed sai!llate Tuesday in satellite remarks to try to get the Serb for= out ,of
;~f t6is region by upgrading Route 33.
·
are
sharply
limiting
Arm¥
Gen.
Wesalthough
ron&lt;eded
NATO's
was
a
to the National Association of Kosovo, the refugees baok into
:· Having worked so ·hard for the past six years to bring better
ley· Clark's military options in litile rusty as a military machine,
Broadcasters convention in Las Kosovo anc1 have the protection pf
· :~ighways to southern Ohio and Meigs County, it was especiai- Yugoslavia, some lawmakers are
"NATO is the right instrument, Vegas. "President Clinton seems an international security foroe," s!u:.
:Jy disturbing to read The Daily Sentinel's misguided editorial. suggesting. "The NATO consulting and while it has never fought a war, neither to have,a pl,an A nor a plan added..
;J.et me be clear: I will work together with loea) officials in sup· process is slowing down the war," it is dojng a pretty dam gond job B."
. The bombing campaign is nol a
said
Sen.
Robert
Bennet~
R-Utah.
U.S.-only
operation, but is subject:to
doing it," she said. "We. need to
Other lawmakers have called for
:port of all highway projects in the Sixth Congressional District,
"And if you win it- what do hone it, but we are on the right even more direct action to try IQ review by the other 18 NATO coun·
:,ike Route 33, that improve the economic well-being and safe·
you win? First prize is SO years in track."
tries. And NATO may need Miloscoverthrow Milosevic.
:1y of our citizens. I appreciate the oppo,rtunity The Daily Sen- Kosovo. I'm not sure that's a prize I
But calls are increasing in the.
"I think we should put a Toma· vic one day to cnfor&lt;e_terms of; a
:line! has given me to clarify my position on this critical issue.
want to win," Bennett said.
Republican-led Senate for more hawk missile through Milosevic's pea&lt;e &amp;gl'!lemenL .
.: ·
Tad Strickland
Congressional frustration is · direct action to stop Yugoslav Presi- bedroom window," said Senate · The United States says its prefers
·:
U.S. Houn of RapreHntatlvea increasing over NATO's &lt;aution and ~ent' Slobodan Milosevio's aggres- Appropriations, Committee Chair- to have a democratic government hi
'•
its constant need for a oonsensus sion against Kosovo's ethnic AI bani- man Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska.
.
place in Belgride - but is sbort on
amounting to what many suggest is ans.
But removing Milosevic is not details on how that might be a&lt;comi
·a war by committee. ·
A bipartisan group of seven sena- part of NATO's strategy.
plished.
,
"But for NATO, we would not be ws led by 2000 GOP presidential
Albright made that clear earlier
NATO's 1:11utious position toward
in this fight, and beoause of NATO, hopeful John McCain of Arizona Tuesday at a White House briefing Milosevic was underscored Tuesday
.ily The Aaaoclat.d Pr•••
.: Today is Thursday, April 22, the 112th day of 1999. There. are 253 days we oan 't win this· fight," Sen. Gor- filed a resolution Tuesday that when asked if;l,be thought Milosevic when British Prime Minister Ton~
don Smith, R-Ore., told Secretary of would authorize ground trOOJ)Il in · should be removed - and how that Blair suJ!i,:sted allies will "carry bn
Jeft in the year.
·
State Madeleine Albright ' as she Kosovo- even though the admi nis· would be achievetl.
until he does step down."
;
• · Today's Highlight in History:
·
·
·
'
' '
: On April 22, 1864, Congress authorized the use of the phrase "ln'God We
;rrust" on U.S. min~.
·
• On this date:
: In 1889, the Oklahoma Land Rush began at noon as thousands of home.
.
)teaders staked claims.
By Joaaph Perkin•
make a positive differen&lt;e in
ed seven yem ago by millionaire Christophe~
. • In 1930, t,he United States, Britain and Japan signed the London Naval
Five years ago this week, the Santa .Monica the educatiOA arena.
Whittle, falls into that oategorJt. ·
.
.!rreaty, whi&lt;h regulated submarine warfare and limited shipbuilding.
Freeway reopened. The story provides a worth·
Like the Otildrcn's SeholEdison boasts 51 schools ·in 12 states. The Edi,
:: In 1944, during World War II, U.S. for&lt;es began invadiog Japanese-held while history lesson for advooates of eduoation arship Fund, co-founded by
son sohool day is three hours lollier than the averj
f'lew Guinea with amphibious landlngs near Hollandia.
re/Drm {that!s right!). '
John Walton, an heir to the
IIJie public sohool day .111!11 its school year is abo)lt
-; In 1952, an atomic test oonducted in Nevada be&lt;ame the first nuQ!eat
It may be recalled that two vital portions of the · Wii-MlitCfortune; and ven25 days longer.
·, :
·explosion shown on live network.television.
freeway collapsed in January 1994 during the North- · ture oapitalist Ted Forstmann.
And Edison sohools boast a rigorous curric;u~
: In 1954, the televised Senate Army-McCarthy hearings began.
ridge earthquake. California state officials reokoned The pair has underwritten
lum, concentrating on the classics in literatur.ei
that repairs would take as many as two yem.
their fund with $100 million
scien&lt;e and the humanities, and giving studentS
: In 1964, Pn:siaentJohnson.opened the New York World's Fair.
However, because closure of the world's of their own money, which is
. one hour'a day in art, music or physi&lt;al edu&lt;atlon;
· ' In 1970, , millions of Americans 'con&lt;erned about the environment
, 'observed the first "Earth Day."
· ·
·
busiest thoroughfare was oosting the Los Angeles to be matched by local partEdison students ·arc also instructed in "&lt;harac~
ter education," with emphasis on such virtues as
:· In 1993, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was dedicated in Wash- economy an estimated $1' million ,a day, · those ners throughout !he country. .
same state offici.als decided that they ought to
The fund provides scholmhips of $600 to honesty, respect and responsibility.
·
;
Ington, D.C., to honor the victims of Nazi extermination.
$1,600 to low-income parents in 43 oities
There are some factions in the public educa~
: In 1997, in Peru, government oommandos stormed the Japanese ambas- accelerate the repair.
So they set. a five-month deadline. And rather throughout the oountry. This enables the parents lion·establishment that are skepti&lt;al, if not down•
lador's residence, ending a 126-day hostage &lt;risis; all 14 Tupac Amaru
than
task pilblic employees with completing the to liberate their kids from bad public schools and right criti&lt;al, of the efforts made by private se&lt;tml
iebels were killed, 71 hostages were rescued.
repairs,
they turned the job over to the private sec- enroll them in better private or paro&lt;hial schools. ·philanthropies . like the Otildren's Scholarship
: Ten years ago: The Xinhua· News Agency reported the first outbreak of
That's not to say that the private sector is Fund and the Milken Family Foundation,. as wei~
;tiolence stemming from China's )'ro-democracy protests, in the provincial tor. And, lo and behold, not onlY. did a private
ronstruction firm meet the state's five-month unsupportive of publi&lt; schools. lndeed, one of the as private sector businesses like the Edison Pr6:taJlital of Xian.
•
·
· · ·
•:
;: Five years ago: Ri&lt;hard M. Nixon, the 37th president of the United deadline, but it actually finished 74 days ahead of biggest supporters of excellence In elementary ject. '
schedule,
and
secondary
edu&lt;ation
is
the
Milken
Family
These
skeptics,
these
critics,
believe
that
the:
;l~tes, died at a New York hOlipital four da~s after suffering a stroke. He was
.So here's the lesson: If. a private company Foundation, co-founded by Miohael Milken, the public education establishment alooe knows belt
could
su=asfully repair a major public freeway former junk bond financier, and his brother Low- how to edu&lt;ate ·America's schoolchildren. Anil;
;: One year ago: A young woman,charged along with her high school .sweetahead of sohedule (not to mention under budget), ell.
that the private sector ought to stick to lhings li
·~eart with murderi'ng their newborn at a Delaware .motel pleaded guilty to
why
are
government
officials
doubtful
that
the
In
198S,
the
Milken
Family
Foundation
began
.
knows best - like building freeways.
.:
;(lla"'laughter. ·
.
private·
se&lt;tor
&lt;an
be
similarly
.sucteasful
in
handing
out
awards
to
recognize
educators
This
kind
of
education
chauvinism
be;
;• Today's Birthdays: Actor .Eddie Albert is 91. Television producer Aaron
·Spelling is 76. Actot George Cole is 74. Actress Charlotte Rae is 73. Singer improving the a&lt;ademic performance of young- throughout the mlintry who distinguished them- ·tolerable - somewhat - If only a tiQy m·norit.y·
selves in either the classroom, at school or in the . of public school children were unduach vin$
:plen Campbell is 63. Actor Jack Nicholson is 62. Songwriter-musician Jack sters mired in the nation's wont public sohools?
Indeed,
the
public
sector
hu
been
"reform•
oommunity.
Most recently, the foundation a&lt;ademi&lt;ally. But when two-thirds of the na ion.'s:
:Nitz.IChe is 62. Actor-writer Jason Miller is 60: Singer Mel Carter is 56.
ing"
education
for
the
past
two
decades,
at
leas(.
announ&lt;ed
awards
to 160 educators in 38 states. fourth-graders oannot read up to grade level, alk!·
;l:ountry singer Cle.,re Franois is 54.·Movie direotor John Wat~rs is 53. Singer
J&gt;eter Frampton· is 49. Rock singer-musician Paul Carrack (Mike and the And elementary .and sec&lt;?ndary school students Each award was for $25,000. The~ awards give nearly three-fourths of the nation 'a eighth-graders:
:r.techanics; Squeeze) is 48. Aotor Joseph Bottoms is 45. Actor Ryan Stiles are no smarter In 1999 -as measured by soholas· real meaning to the ronoept of ment pay for 'edu- are soientifically illiterate, the performanoc-oritic achievement- than they were In 1979.
cators.
.
.
ented. private sector needs to beoome even more'
:f"The Drew Carey Show") is 40. Comedian Byron Allen is 38. Actor Chris
So it's high time that state .and looal govern·
Then there's the private sector psrtnership with involved·in edu&lt;ation.
·Makepeace is 35. Aotress Sheryl Lee is 32. ·
.
ments give the private sector a fair shot at eduoa- a public school system for the purpose of improv· Copyrlgh111tt NEWSPAPER I!NTE!IPRIIE MIN. :
·• Thought for Today! "Death is always and under all circumstances a tion reform. Indeed, private Individuals, oompa- ing education at a given school or sohools. The
.JoN~ Parklna Ia a columnlet lor The lentragedy, for ·if it is no~ then it means that life itself has beoome one."nics and foundations are already beginnins to . New York-based for-profit Edison Project, found- DI81J0 nlon-Tribuna.
.
Thcodore Roosevel~ American president (1858-1919). .

Roy

Phlo weather

--ofto.-

-: •.

I Mlneftelcf lwJW I •

.....·~ ·."·:.

':" ·

• 1eo~u-IM·ii4· J
•

"I will stand

:With the County
, Commts'.st'oner.s s
• th e enuOrSeln
. .t
men
OJ th lS.
. imp0rtantpr0.
J·ect. "

Congressional frustration grows over ·NATO

rol~

.

Today . 1n HistoA
ry

Going private with public education :
.

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KY.

\. ~··l~~~~J!!~EJ·. «@'(VA

~howers, storms

likely
. southern.Ohio Friday

The Anoclltld Preaa
Thundc111torms rum!lled a&lt;ro5s northern Ohio overnight. Heavy rain
ping-pong ball size hail were reported in some areas. The southern
of the state remained dry.
More s1ormy weather was forecast for tonight as low pressure pushes
tl!e state. The National Weather Servioe said the showers imd thunsJerstolrms will spread from the northwest to the southeast.
Lows tonight will be in the SOB.
·
More rain is likely on Friday, with highs 60-70.
.
The ·rccord·high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sla·
tion was 87 degrees in 1985 while the record low was 27 in 1978. Sunset
!'&gt;night will be at 8:16p.m. and sunrise Friday at 6:43a.m.

. ·

Weather forec:ut:

·

!· Tonight•..Partly cloudy. A chance of showers late. Lows in the mid and
!pper SOs. Chan&lt;e of rain 30 pei'I'Cnt.

·

.

.

·&gt; Priday.•.Showers and thundersiorms likely. Highs in the mid

Announcements:
•

Coin club meeting
The OH KAN Coin Club will hold its regular meeting on Monday at
7:40 p.m. at tbe Riverbend Arts Council building in Middleport. The
meeting is free and open to the public. The group plans an open auction
·and refreshments. Visitors and guests are wei rome. The group is current-.
ly conducting ils membership drive. Adult membership is $10, and membership for &lt;hildren under 16 is $5. New memberships are a&lt;:cepted.

RACO to ineet
The Racine Area Community Organization will meet Tuesday at Star
Mill Park, 6:30p.m. New members are welcome.

4-H Group to meet ..
The Feathers and Furs 4-H Club will have a bake sale booth at the
Racine Flower Festival Saturday.

Benefit planned

'
A. hymn sing to benefit Jeremy Rowe who was severely burned in an

accident at Meigs High SChool will be held Sunday. 2 to S p.m. at the
Carmel Oturch, Racine. Delivered will be among the singers.

Board to meet ·
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer Board will meet Monday, 7 p.m.
at the district ofti&lt;e building on State Route 681.

Times slated for team
EMS logs 8 calls·
WalkAmerica photos Meigs
Units of ihe Meigs County Einer- patch squad assisted.

Inc.

•:

s. Smalley

Roy S. Smalley, 74, South Zanesville, died Wednesday, April21 , 1999, at
Hospice of Genesis.
.He was born April 12, 1925, in Pomeroy, son of the late Elroy and Jennie
Batley Smalley Abbott. He had lived in the Zanesville area since 1948 and
was retired from Arm&lt;:o Steel after 47 years of servioe. He was an Army veteran of World War II where he served in the Pacific Theater receiving three
Bronze Stars.
·
He 'is survived by his wife of 52 yean, JoAnn Watson Smalley; two sons
and daughters-in-law, Charles S. and Diane Smalley of Columbu.s and Roy
David and:"Sylvia Smalley of Nashport; four grand&lt;hildren; three greatgrandchildren;·and one.sister, Nina Hawk of Guysville,
He was preceded in death by three brotheis, Allen, Gail and Franklin
Smalley.
Servi&lt;:es will be held Friday, I p.m. at William Thompson &amp; Son -Funeral Home in Zanesville with the Rev. Randy Tayhi offidating. Burial will follow in Zanesville Memorial Park.
Friends may call today, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of
flowers, memorial contribution• may be made to Hospice of Genesis.

Friday, Apr. 23

·
k
I
·
d
.
b
k
·
•
..St' r I c an . ac· s
·R0 U t e 33 roJ•eCt
P

•

Death NOtices

By Morton KondriCka

'£sta6fislid In 1948

It».--

Weather

Thurtdly, April 22, 1000

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

7~.

C:hance of rain 60 pei'I'Cnt.
; Friday nipt ...Mostly oloudy. Lows in the mid SOs.
. •
ElteDded forecast:
: s.lurday...Mostly clpudy with achAnce of showers and thunderstonns.
Highs in;the mid and upper 70s.
Sunday...Partly cloudy. LoWs in the lower SOs ahd highs in the mid 70s.
- Monday...Partly cloudy. Lows near 50 and· highs in the lower and mid
70s.
.

The Tri-County WalkAmerica for March of Dimes rommittee has
announced the photo sohedule for teams participsting in Sunday's event at
Harmon Park in Point Pleasant.
·
·
The 2.5 mile walk begins at 3 p.m. In order for team photos to run more
s·moothly and op time, teams arc asked to be at the designated bleacher
before· the time scheduled for their photo. .
·
If .your team is not on the sohedule for photos, call Terri Thomas at 6751612.
BleacherA: I p.m.- Arbors at Gallipolis; Cub Seoul Pack 258, and WaiMart; 1: 10 p.m.- Gallipolis Jl. Women's Club, VaughansSuJll'rmarket, and
Wahama High Sehool; 1:20 p.m.- Kroger 698, Kroger 711, and Holzer Hospi&lt;e; I :30 p.in,- Lakin Hospital, URG- social work, and Sears Tri-County;
1:40 p.m.- Shell Chemical, Western-Southern Gallipolis; I :50 p.m.· City
National Bank, New Haven Elementary and North Point Elementary.; 2 p.m.
- KMart, French City Child Care and Overbrook Center; 2:1S p.m.- AEP,
S,tudents for Free Enterprise, and Tudors Biscuit World; and 2:30 p.m.Holzer Clinic and Fruth Pharma&lt;y.
Bleaoher 8: I p.m.- Advest, Agriculture Services, and Gallro Workshop; 1: 10 p.m.· Marshall Mid-Ohio Valley Center, GFWC Poini Pleasani
Junior Women, and Mason County Health Department; 1 :20 p.m.- WB'YG
Big Count.ry 99, Board of Me~tal Health and Burlile Oil; I :30 p.m.- Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co., Gallia Chamber of Commer&lt;e, and Meigs Bd.
MRDD; I :40 p.m.- Guiding Hand Sehool, H&amp;l'ley Owners Group, and MediHome Health; I :5,0 p.m.- Ashton Elementary, Bidwell Porter Elementary,
and Hartford- Mason Elementary; 2 p.m.- Haer Bear 4-JI Club, Mason VFW
Post9926, and Moms Club of Gallipolis; 2:15 p.m.- Hogg and Zuspan, Ohio
River Rats·and Rio Grande One Stop; and 2:30p.m.- Pleasant Valley Hospital, Racine Youth Ringers and Staceys Hair Shop.

.East Cleveland averts .teacher strike
Union members will vote next
week
on the rontract between the
city school system ·averted a teacher
6,IJOO..&amp;uderit
district and the 450strike seheduled for today by reaching
membCr
East
CleYelanq Education
a three-year contmct agreement that
provides annUal pay raises of 4 per·
cent, 3.5 peJCCnt and 3 ~nt.
EAST CLEVELAND (AP)- ThC

gency Medkal Service recorded
eight c:alls for assistance Wednesday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:23 a.m., South Serond Avenue,
Middleport, Mary Rager, treated at
the scene;
2:58 p.m., General Hartinger
Parkway, Middleport, Kclli Davis,
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
6;15 p.m., Rooksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Anna
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORI'
12:29 p.m., Railroad Street,
Charles Geary, VMH, Central Dis-

·cae,

Bill proposes tax-free clothes shopping
AKRON (AP)- A state lawmaker wants to eliminate sales taxes Qn
clothing and shoes for two we~ks a
tear in an attempt to boost sales.
State Rep. John WiHamowski, RLima, has introdu&lt;ed a bill to elimi-nate the sales taxes on those pul'l'hases during the third week of January
and tllird week of August. Those
weeks are 'being targeted to boost ·
sales after Christmas and during the
late summer back-to-school rush.
"The bottom line is, we want to
give families a break," Matt Whitehead, WiHamowski's legislative

'Floor Covering Sale

: :' COLUMBUS (AP) -The openi. I08d and crushed his w. Buteher had
tor of a crane that fell on a car and minor injuries.
'killed the driver during IXIIIIInK:Iion·of
Defense attorney George Luther
.an Ohio Slate Univenity spodl arena said Bul'l'her moved the ClliJle to awet
WIS sentenced to one year in prison. .embankment at the dircdion of a flagthe maximum allowetl.
.
man. The embankment collapsed and
Mark Bureher, 40. of Westemlle, &lt;auscd the accident, he said.
Uio was fined $1,500 on Wednesday.·
"Hewasunabletocontrolthecrane
lfis driver's license was suspended for 00cc the ground gave way," Luther
three years.
said. "So there is some responsibility
· ' Franklin COunty Common Pleas on other persons' shoulders."
Judge David Fais said he would oon'sider putting Bureher on a work·
DwiDg sentencing, Bureher offered
·rtle.: prognun after six months.
a tearful apo)ogy. Kuhn's mother and a
'· Police said Burdler's blood-aloohol daughter said it would be hard to for'level was 0.17 pei'I'CIII three howa after give him.
tbe aa:idel)t. Ohio's legal limit for . Kuhn's family has filed a lawsuit
motorists is 0.10 percent. Bul'l!her against Bul'l'her ~d PJ. Diok, general
'pleaded no contest to vehiwlar homi· COJ1tractor for the Sehottenstein Center.
dde and drunken driving.
· Marvin Kuhn, 4S, of Columbus,
was driving by the oonslnlction site of
the SelioUenstein O:nter on July 21,
. .1997, when the ClliJ1C toppled onto the

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Friday, 111 Coun St., Pooneroy, Obio. by 111e
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aide, told the Akron Beacon Journal
for a story today.
But the proposal (;()Old faoe a battie from local. officials wary of a
break aimed squarely at a tax that
generates local money.
"In many munties, it's the single
biggest . soui'I'C of unrestrioted revenue for the county's general fund.
Naturally, the concern we have is the
state Legislature is giving an exemption not only from their tax, but also
our tax," said Larry Long, lobbyist
for the County Commissioners'
ASsociation of Ohio.

··Anderson's

Man sentenced for crane accident

C-ICJN_H..._Ioc.

RUTLAND
9:51 p.m., Red Hill Road, Travis
B11rnem, Pleasant Villley Hospital.
SYRACUSE
6:37 a.m., volunteer fire department . and squad to Sixth Street,
struoture fire, James and ' Donna
Bush, no injuries reported, Pomeroy
VFD assisted;
II :25 a.m., 'vFD and squad to
Sixth Street, rekindled stni&lt;lurc fire,
no injuries reported, Pomeroy VFD
assisted.
. TUPPERS PlAINS
3:55 p.m., state Route 7, Chiistian Devaney, Holzer Medical Center.
.

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Phone 992·liCI88
Vinton ... 3811-8603
Gallipolis - «a.oeell

Store Hours
Monday thru Saturday
1:30-5:00

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3671

..

�..
'

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page:~
Thursday, April 22, 199!

,

Padres beat Pirates 2-0, end
Pittsburgh's winning streak ·

Vaughn's bat awakens to help Reds b~at New York Mets ·7·4.
By TERRY KINNEY
...._,_ be able to hit him. He's a good pitchGreg er, but he 's got the kind of stuff we
CINCINNATI (AP). :Vaughn is ready to go back to basics: should be able to hit...
Masato Yoshii ( 1-2) faced just II
See the ball, hit the ball.
" I'm making it more difficult . batters in the first three innings. In
than it is," said Vaughn, who .has the fourth , Cincinnati· se.nt 10 to the
been struggling to figure out why he plate.
is ba!ling just . 191 with three
Mets manager Bobby Valentine
said he stayed with Yoshii because he
.homers.
He was hitless in his past II at- was still throw ing well, even while
bats before homering Wednesday walking three successive batters.
night in the Cincinnati Reds" 7-4 vic"I ·don't knQw how they didn 't
.tory over the New York Mets.
swing at th ose," Valentine said.
"It's still a baule,'' Vaughn said. "They were quality pitches, a lot of
"It's not smooth .... I've got to go up them."
.there and just let it happen."
The Reds' big inning let Denny
'Vaughn took e.lra batting prac- Neagle off the hook with a no-dccitice Wednesday, even had it video- sion.
•
taped.
Neagle, obtained in an offseason
"1 watch video all day long and trade witH Atlanta for second baseall night, " Vaughn said. "I think it's man 'Bret Boone, went on the dis.getting to the point I'm over-analyz- ablcd li st in sprin g train ing with
ing it."
weakness in. his left shoulder. His
Vaughn 's two-run homer and return was unimpressive .
Mike' Cameron's two-run double
"He was trying to ·cram three
keyed a six-run .fourth inning. Eddie starts 1nl o one. That 's human
Taubensee added a solo homer in the nature," · sa id pitChin g coach Don
.fifth for the Reds , who broke a three- Gullett.
·
.game losing streak and won for just
Neagle said he was "probably
,the ·second t1me in eight home pumped too much" earl y, but felt he
games.
was se ttling into a groove later.
"We didn 't quit when we had a
" I felt great physically," Neagle
chance," McKeon said. "The type of ·said. " I JUSt got a little bit too cxcit·.pitche; they had out there, we should cd. The guys pic ked me up, and

that's what it's all about. I've got his NL-leading average to .458. ... with a hit or li!alk in the Mets' first Neagle hit Edgardo Alfonzo and
nothing to hang my head about."
Olerud, who had reached base safely 14 games, added an HBPto his slats. Olerud in the third.
,
Neagle retired the first two batters
on groundballs but then walked John
Olcrud, and Bobby Bonilla followed
with his second home run in two
days. Bonilla has 34 career homers
agai nst the Reds, more than against
any other team.
Todd·Pratt homered in the second,
and Roger Cedeno led off the third
with a double. Neagle hi! the ne•t
two batters to load the bases, and
•
I
Cedeno scored on Robin ' Venlura 's
grpundout to make it 4-0.
Neagle got out of the inning with
a strikeout and twogroundballs, and
retired the side in the fourth on three
flyouts before leaving for a pinch hitter. •
" If I was coach, I would have
made the same move," Neagle said.
The Reds' bullpen. didn't allow a
hit ihe rest of the way. Scott Sullivan
(1 -0) pitched three scoreless innings
for the win , and Danny Graves
worked I 1/3 innings for his second
save.
'
Notes: The Reds, who bought th e
contract of right-hander Ricky
Green~ from ' Triple-A Indianapolis
on·Sunday, optioned Greene back to
Indy to make room on the roster for
Neagle .... Casey was 2-for-4 to raise

17

returning $2.80.

17 pieces of equipment.

Every racehorse has a number

NICE JOB, EDDIE! - l:he Clnclr1nall
Aaron Boone congratulates teammate
Taubeneell' after the latter's home run In the

Inning . of Wednesday night's National . League
gama against the visiting New York Meta, who lost
7-4. (AP)
.
.
•

Miami
Orlalldo.........
Phil odelphia .
rkw York
Boston ..
Washing10n . .
New Jersey ...

AL standings
Eastern Division

n:

"Ium

'Toron1o
New York
·Boston ......
' :rnmpn Ba&gt;
Bahimor«: ...

L 1'&lt;!.

... II

.733
.643
.571
.563
.214

4

..... 9
.........8
...... 9

5
6
7

... .. 3

II

Central Division
2 846
,CLEVELAND ... .. .. . ....... II
Chi cago .... ................. ....... 7 6 .538
.. .......7 8 .467·
Minnesota .: ...... ,......
..... :..6 8 .429
l:ktroit
. 5 9 .357
Kansas Ci,ly

Western Dillision
........ 7 8 0467
J'el'.as......... .
AnaMim ... .............
.. .6 9 .400
9 400
.. . .. ..
Oakl and ..
Seanle ........................... ........ 6 9 400

G.l!

...... 28

... . ........... 29
... .... :.. 2]

... ......... 21
.... 16
... .. . .. .... :16

.. ..... 13

.68.1

"

14 ,74
19 ,548
21 500
26 .381
26 J 81
29 .J 10

7',
12'l
12':
15';

Crntrai Dh·ision

i\
2\

t~

1'-1

lndi1,1na ...... . ... . ............ 28
... .. ......... 25
A.tlama ........
Detroit ..... ....... .. ... ........ -...... .23
Milwaukee .. . . . .. ... ......... D
Charlotte ...
.. ~ \

CLEVELAND ..
Toro'mo .......
Chi cngo ... .

'5

15
19
19
20·
.. ... 21 21
.... 21 21

.. .... . ...... q

11

)I

.651

.l9l
•.548
548
512
500
.500
.279

•

5'':

2~l

4'· 1

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwrst Dllllslon

n:
.. ......... 12

Ium

-

x-Utah ............
10
J:-San An1onio .. ............... 29 12
1-louston . ... .............
.. 27 ll
Minnesota ......... ................ . 22 21
Dallas......
.. 15 27
Denver ..........
......... 13 29
Vancouver .... ... ........ .......... 8 )l

1!&lt;1.

.762
.707
.643

.'512
.357
.J] 0

G.l!
2~

l
10 1h
17
19

186

24',~

........... .) ] 10 .156
17 614
21 5\l
............... ...... .. ..... 20 22 .476.

5\

4',

Paclnc Division

6'·•
1

li&gt;Ponland

16

Sentdc ...

6''.,

L

L.A. Laker~ ..
......... .'.27
POOen i :c .. . . •............ :.... 22

10

II \

·

Sacramento ......... .................. 20
Golden State ......................... IS
L.A. Clippen .............. ... - ....... 7
x-clinc h~d playoff berth

22 476
24 . .429
3l .166

II ~~
13 ~}
24 \
~

WednesdaY's scores
Philadelphia 80, Boston 78
:roromo 107, Washington 9.1
Charlotte 88. Detroit 8~
New Jersey 99, Chica~ 87
Miami 93, CLEVELA D 80
Indiana .lOS , MilwaUkee 100-0 T
Oallas.l09, Houston 9S
Phoenix. 91, Utah 82
VancotJver 97, L.A. aippers94

Ponland 88, L.A. Lakcn 82
Seanle-119. Mlnnesou

I~

Sacramento 103. Golden Stale 94

Tonight's ga10es
Miuni at Orlando. 7:30p.m.
Bos1on at Atlanta. 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Detroit, 7:30 p.111.
Dallas at San Antonio. 8:30p.m.

Friday's games.

Atbutta lit Washington , 7 p.m.
Toronto at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Oaarlotte .a1 New York. 8 p.m.
ClEVELAND at Milwaukee, 8: .\0 p.m .
Boston at Chicat'e 8:30p.m.
Golden Slate M nver, 9 p.m.
Ponland Ulah , 10:30 p.m.
Seattle at Vancouller, 10:30 P-Ill-

Minnesota at Saaamento, IQ:30 p.m.
Houston at L.A. Clippt;rs. 10:]0 p.m.

Hockey pl ayoff s
NHL first-round action
Wednesdoy's scores
Bllffalo 2, Ottawa I; Buffalo leads series I·0
Detroit~. Anaheim 3;·Detroit ~ads sertes 1-0
Dallas 2, Edmoftton I; Dallu leids.serles 1·0
Sa11 Jose at Comado-ppd., shooting ·
·

a'

5'·:
6' :

,

'

I

Wednesday's scores

Today's .games

,

Boslon (Ponuga12-0) at Deuoit (Thompson I-ll.
1:05 p.m.
'
Seanle (Garcia 2·0) nl Chica&amp;o {Sirotkn 0:2), 2:05
p.m.
.
Baltimore {Ponson Q.J) at Tampa Bay (Saunders
l- 1) , 7:05p.m. ·
Anaheim (Belcher 1-1) at Toronto (Hentgen 0- 1).
7·05 p.m.
Onkland (Cnndioui 1·2) at CLEVELAND (N11gy
2-0) , 7:05p.m
Teus (Sele 2- 1) a1 Minnesota (Milton 0·0). 8·0!'\

'981
MYSTIQUE IS .

Ullt ...., Ptth••· IIHfttetf,
lttt.er, foil pewer

Cl ••••I"•

'91 FORD EXPEDITION
E••l• ltttr puhee, lltHIMf,

,.u.,
WAI $t5,9SO

1lr, PW, Pl, tilt, ar•ln,

Cl IUIIII• lut.tr, fill ,_,

c..i.•

WAS $J9,9SO

• •• $17;951

p.m

Fri4ay's games
CLEVELAND (Wright 1-0) at Boston &lt;Rapp 0·
])_6:0.5 p.m.
Oakland (Hayn~s 1·2) a1 Oahimore (Gu1.man 021. 7:05p.m.
Seattle (Henry 1-01 at Tampo Boy jWitt2·0). 7:05
p.m,
.
Toron1o (Wells 3-0) at New York (Hern~~ndel. 2·
1). DSp.m
Oetruit {Blair O-I l at Chicago (Navarro 0-1) 8 0~

p.m.

'97 FORD CONTOUR
Altt, tlr,
fill,...,
WAI $tl,950

S.pmt., 414; ILT, tift,

fill •••.,
WAS $t7,9SO

.

Tc"as (C lark 0·2) a1 Minnesm:t [Lmcoln 0-2).
8:05p.m
Anahetm !Hi ll 0- IJ.at Ka nsas Ci1y (Rosado 0- 11.
8 : 0~pn\
.

"'" *9,950

NL standings
Eastrrn

Di~islon

n:

Ium

Atlanta ........................... .......9
· New York .....
.. .......... 9
Philadelphi a ................,j!.7
Montreal ... .
.. ..6
Florida ........
. ........ 4

L 1'&lt;!.

5 .643 .

6
8
8
II

.600
.467
.42q
.267

Crntr1l Ollllsion
St. Loui! ...
... 9 5 .643
..... .. .... 8 6 .571
Houston ....
Pittsburgh .... ............. .......... 8 6 m
Milw aukee ... ,.... ................... 6 9 .400
Chicago ........... ....:...... :.......... ! 8 .m
CINCINNATI ...
.. l 8 38!
Wutem Di\'lllon
San Francisco ....................... \0 6

M;zona

!ill

-

'
2'~
1

5':

.'99 FORD EIPLORER ILS
414
••,•• fill .....
WAI-$26,958

Alft, 1lr

563

I '

SOO
.467

2

Aell, elr

t~

WAI $7,950

Milwaukee 2, St. Louis I
Houston 10, Chicago 3
San Francisco 4, Aorida 0
Montreal at Colorado, ppd., sh001ing
CINCINNA117, ~w York ..4
Arizona 4, Phlladelphia 2.
· San Die&amp;o 2, Pitt1burg1J 1J
Atlanta 11, Los Angeles 4 (I)

'98 FQRD TAURUS

'•

Today's games

.Se4u IHIIIe, ltll.tt, fill

Houston (Bergman 0-1) at Chicago ('Jlrachsel Q.
2), 2:20p.m.
Colorado (Bohanon 2-0) at San Francisco '(Rueter

, ...,, ltW 111111
WAI $tt,9SO

·

New York (l.citer0-2) at CINCINNATI (Tomk o
0-0). 7:05p.m.

¥6, FUll POWER

. AUTO,
FUll POWER

WAI $7,950

• NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Adandc

Dlvl~on

~

that," said Sexson. "It's neat."
Cleveland's last at·bat win was its
second in nine home games this season and triggered a celebration inside
and around Jacobs Field that made it
feel more like October than April.
And with another dramatic win
already this year, the 1999 Indians
are drawing early comparisons to the
'95 Tribe which won I 7 times in its
last at-bat. It's a new year, but it sure
seems like old times to Indians fans.
'"95 was '95,'~ said Kenny
Lofton, who threw a runner out at the
plate in the sixtli. "This is '99."
So far this year, the Indians have
done little wrong.
"These guys continue to show
how good they are," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said.
.
Roberto Alomar and Manny
Ramirez hit back-to.back homers ·in
the eighth off Doug Jones after the
indians were blanked over the fir~t 6
213 innings by Gil Heredia.
;: Riverside Golf Club in Mason,
"Robbie's homer definitely fired
W.Va. began. its senior league play us up," Se&lt;son said. "11 let every·
~ril 6. The league is ·open to aU body know that there were still two
aolfers over the age of 50 as of April innings to play."
The league plays every Thesday,
In the ninth, David Justice singled
":&lt;ather l"'nnitting, through ihe last off Billy Taylor (0- 1) and Seuon folfuesday tn 'September. On that date lowed with his second homer, a 415tbe senior picnic and awards ceremo- foot shot to right-center that sent the ·
ily will take place. · ·
299th straight home sellout crowd
:. Sunday, April 25, is the date for into a frenzy.
·
the 1999 "Special Olympi~s Golf
"I )ust f~lt happy, very happy;
Scramble" sponsored by the Bend especoally because I was 0-for-3, and
j\rea C.A.R.E. Club. The outing is a DH can't make a great play in the
!et to begin at 8:30a.m. with a sh.ot- field to help his team," said Sexson.
gun start.
"So I''m mostly happy that we won
; There will be three types of spon- the·game, and I had a little to do with
sorships to allow individuals to par- it."
ficipate in the very worthwhile event.
Sandy Alomar singled . and was
]'he Gold Sponsor will be allowed replaced by Cabrera. Kenny Lofion
one player and his company sign on then laid down a bunt in front· of the
1-tee or green of his choice for $110. plate, but after pouncing on the ball,
The Silver sponsor will cost $85 and catcher AJ. Hinch threw wide of
:jvill entitle the sponsor to one player first and the ball rolled all the way
and his company sign in the picnic into the right-field corner.
ior~a. The Bronze sponsor will be for
By the 'time Cabrera rounded
~ player only and the cost will be $60 third, most of the Indians already
per play~r.
· were on their way to home plate to
: The sponsorship includes green meet him. Cleveland has now won
fees, riding cart, mulligans, skins 61 games in its final at-bat since The
game, prizes and refreshments dur-- Jake' opened in 1994. ,
,
•
(ltg play.
Steve Reed ( 1-0) pitched" orie
· A meet the team party will be held inning for the ·win .
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. .at the
Ben Grieve hit a three·-run homer
(\merican Legion Post 140 in New and Tony Phillips had a solo shot for
Haven, W.Va.
·
the A's, who have lost five of six on
: If you have any question s about the road.
{he Special Olympics Teurnament ,
" It's an empty feeling, :• said
please call 304-773-5354.
Hinch who rushed his throw with the
• The annual American Legion · speedy Lofton going down the line·.
tournament will be held on Saturday, "You feel like you've been punched
in the gilt."
.
..
· ~ay 8 with a 9 a.m. shotgun start.

Gy TOM WITHERS
, CLEVELAND (AP) - A few
hours after hitting a ball off the left. field scoreboard, Richie Sexson hit
qne that changed the scoreboard. ·
~·:Se&lt;Son ·hit a game-tying, two-run
· ~mer in the ninth inning and pinchrunner Jalbert Cabrera scored from
first on a throwing error Wednesday
.night, giving the Indians a 5-4 win
, over the Oakland Athletics.
:. · The Indians, who trailed 4-0
before getting back-to-back homers
in the eighth and three runs in the
ninth; have won II of 12 and at 11-2
matched their best start since 1988.
"You always sit in bed at night
and think of doing something !ike

· Riverside Golf
.Club starts ·play .
f-or
.. senior league

as

Bas ketball

;ram

~Indians

: The Southern re.serve baseball
team, coached by Ryan Lemley, is
~ urrently 6-2 after posting w'ins over
-~elpre,
Waterford, Fort Frye,
:wellston, and Meigs. The only loss$s .came to Fort Frye and
:Jtavenswood.
·
· Pitching leaders on the team arc
~ed by freshman Brice Hill at 2-1 on
the reserve level and 1-0 o.n the var·Sity after getting the call to move up
.for a game. Hi II ill so has one save
'and 22 strikeouts in 19 innings of
work. He also owns a 0.00 ERA.
Matt Ash, also a freshman, is 1-1 on
the season. Sophomore Matt Warner
ltas one save· and is 1-0 on the year
Y,.ith 22 Strikeouts in 17 innings of
..ark. Dall~ Hill is 1-0 pitching and
llrandon Htll is 1-0 pitching.
: J.P. Harmon is currently batting
:450 with 13 hits and 14 RBis,
fncluding live doubles, and a home
tun. Buster Penix is hitting .350 with
!en hits, 10 RB!s, and nine. walks.
Matt Neigler is batting :.467 with
hirie hits, and seven RBis.
• Southern rolled over Belpre 12-0
Brice Hill picked up the win.
Hannon was 3-4 with a home run
pnd four RBls. In the second aame of
the season, Ravenswood defeated
Southern 14-10. Matt Ash suffered
the loss despite a decent pitching
effort. Man Neigler was 2-3 with
f'?ur RBis in the game.

.1111 ....,

2\

Wednestlay's scores

·

.

Souther·n baseball reserves
Meigs, ·push record to 6-2
beat
•

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

.62j ·

8
8
6

1·01. 4:05p.m.

WAS $11,950

3'1

Los Anaelcs . .. ..................... 8
San Diego .............................. ~
Colorado ................................. j

I

ftll ,_,

WAS $11,950

3',
3',

7

,

ve, ..... lntlltr

flllpewtr

I
I

....... ............ 9

.4~j

'95 BU
ROAD MASTER

'96 FORt TAURUS

L 1'&lt;!.

G.l!

'

Pirates starter Jason Schmidt
struck out II in eight inri~ngs . But
Sanders homered off h1m in the fifth
inning and Tony G__:ynn hit an RBI ·
single in the eighth.
"Anytime you ' re pitching agai nst
a guy like Ashby: you on ly have
room tomake an erro r once or twice
a game," Schmidt sai'11. "I hung a
slider (against Sanders) . One .pitch
was all it took for me the way Ashby
was throwing."
In other NL games, Houslon beat
Chicago 10-3, Atlanta got past Los
Angeles 11-4 in 12 innings.
Milwaukee defeated St. Louis 2-1,
Arizona downed Ph1ladelph1a 4-2
"nd San Francisco stopped Florida 40.
Astros 10, Cubs 3 ·
Jeff Bagwell hll three home.rs.
passing Jimmy Wynn for the most in
(See NL on Page 7)

GETS SINGLE ·- The Cleveland Indians' lhe Infield single In the third Inning of Wednesday
Roberto Alomar gats down &amp;Ad slides ahead of the night's AmerTcan Leagua game In Cleveland,
throw to Oakland first baaaman Jason Giambl for where the Indians won
(AP)

6:

Tampa Bay 14. Ballimore 8
Toronto 3, An~im 2
•
CLEVELAND S. Oakland 4
Detroit 9, Boston 2
New York 4, Tnas 2
Chicago 2. Se.anle I
,
Kansas City J, Minn~so1a 2 (10}

1993 Philadelphia Phillies to go
through an entire regular season
without getting swept. Of course,
that meant little when the New York
Yankees beat them four straight in
the World Series.
Coming off a shutout against
Brown and the Los Angeles Dodgers,
Ashby (3d) e&lt;tended hi s scoreless
streak to 19 innings.
"The thing is to stay sharp on the
side and do the things.you have to do
to stay in a groove," he said. "The
main thing ii go out and give your
club a ·chance to win ."
Montreal and Colorado called off
their game at Coors Field for the second straight day because of the
shooting in suburban Denver.
Rockies players and coaches will
wear a Columbine High School
patch on .their right sleeves for the
rest of the season.

Clemens ties league record,
leads Yanks past Rangers 4-2
s-•.
League
rally to topple A's 5·4 · American
roundup

'

Scoreboard

Baseball

Baseball Writer
Kevin Brown, Greg Vaughn and
Ken Caminiti are gone. Yet the streak
is still going for the San Diego
Padres.
Andy Ashby pitched eight strong
innings and Reggie Sanders homered
as the Padres stopped Pittsburgh's
four-game winning string 2-0
Wednesday night.
By winning the wrapup (&gt;fa three. game set at San Diego, the Padres
avoided a· sweep. And that marked
the 71 st straight regular-season series
they have played without .getting
swept, a string that began in !997 .
. Last year, the Padres became the
fir~t ream i_
n the majors since the

t\~UflNE

The shortest-priced Kentucky
lt doesn ' t happen often but in .tattooed on its upP,er lip for identity.
Derby winners were Count Fleet in
horse racing a walkover is a o ne Harnc~s racehorses usually have 1943 . and Citation in 1948 , each
horse race.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

.'

69. Carl .Hubbell of the New York to si1 here and take it . I' ve got to fig CHants set the major league record of · ure out how to get out of it. which I
24 in )936-37.
will."
Mariano Rivera pitched the ninth
It was the mo st earn ed run s off
for his second save.
Muss ina (2-1) in 227 career starts.
Heredia limited Cleveland to ·nine By The Anoclated Pre••
Texas has lost 13 of 16 to New· and his shortest outing since a threehits- all singles- in 6 213 innings.
Roger Clemens not only tied the York over the past two years, includ- inning stint at New York on Sept. 2.
He struck out five and walked one.
American League record for consec- ing a three-game sweep in last year's 1997.
" H~redia was tough, " Se.son utive wins, he · did it .against his playoffs.
·
,
At Tropicana Field , Tampa Bay
said. "He was gelling ahead with home-slate team.
" It doesn't seem like we changed scored the most runs in its two-seasome tough sliders."
Clemens won his 17th straight a whole lot from last year," Helling son history and has won four straight
Grieve hit his first homer of the decision, allowing four hits in 7 1/3 said. "We play them· close, but lose. for the first time since a franchise.season off Dwight Gooden in the innings Wednesday night to lead the That's what happened last year."
best five"game winning streak last
sixth inning, and Phillips hit his New York Yankees 10 a 4-2 victory
In other AL games, Tampa Bay )uly. Bryan Rekar (2-0) allowed six
fourth in the third .
over the Te.as Rangers.
outlasted Baltimore 14-8. Toronto runs- three earned - and eight hits
Roberto Alomar went 3-for-4 . "It's not something I think about edged · Anaheim ~-2, Detroit beat in 6 2/3 mnings.
·
with his first homer, Ramirez hit his much,:' said Clemens, who neverthe- BQston 9-2, Chicago defeated Seattle
Blue Jays 3, Angels 2
fifth oftbe.season and Sandy Alomar less saved a ball from the game to 2-1 and Kansas City beat Minnesota
· Willie Greene hit a two-run homer
had three hits.
keep with other mementos from his 3-2 in 10 innings.
as Toronto won its seventh Slra&gt;ght
Gooden, the Indians' No.5 starter, · record-setting career. "But I'll bask
Devil Rays 14, Orioles 8
and improved to 11 -4. · ViSiting
was making his second start of. the in it in the winter when it is all comMike Mussina was pounded for Anaheim, which has nine men on the
season and first since April 10 in pleted."
10 runs and II- hits in 3 213 innings, disabled list, has lost four in a row.
~innesota. when he didn' t get out of
Derek Jeter hit a two-run homer and Jose Canseco homered twice to
Chris Carpenter (2-1) allowed two
the first. He limited the A's to three and Chili Davis added a soio shot off raise his total to a major league-lead- runs. four hits and five walks in live
hits in the first ·live innings, ~ut a · Rick Helling (0-3) at Yankee . ing eight, pulling the job of innings, and Robert Person pitche&lt;;l 1
couple pitches just off the corners · Stadium to help give Clemens (2·0) a Baltimore manager Ray Miller in 1/3 innings for his second save.
·
and one up cost him in the sixth . .
share of the record.
even bigger peril.
Omar Olivares (2-1) gave up three
Jason Giambi opened ,the si&lt;th
Clemens hasn't lost since last · Baltimore has lost five straight runs and eight hits in. six innings.
with a single off Gooden, w~o got • May 29 against Seattle, tying the AL and at· 3-11 is off to its worst start
Tigers 9, Red Sox 2
ahead of John Jaha 1-2 before walk- record set by Cleveland's Johnny since going 0-21 at the stan of 1988.
Dean Palmer broke out of a slump
ing him. Grieve, who entered the Allen in 1936-37 and matched by
"It's still early, but it ain't pretty with two home runs and five RBis .
game b.atting jt~st . 154 this season, Baltimore's Dave McNally in 1968- right now. I' m the manager. I've got
(See AL on Page 7)
then drove. a .2-2 curveball from
Gooden over the wall in center

Southern blasted Waterford 11 -5
with Brandon Hill picking up the win
on the mound. Brice Hill got the
save. Joe Cornell was 2-3 with two
walks, Brice Hill was 4-5, and Nate
Martin · was 2: 4 with one walk.
Southern split in a double header
against Fort J'rye, losing the first
game 3-6 and winning the nightc'ap .
8-3: Brice Hill suffered \lis only loss
in a close game with I0 strikeouts;
Although Hill had a great effort, the
SHS defense committed eight errors.
In the nightcap, Southern won
behind the pitching of Dally Hill
with Man Warner getting the save.
Warner had seven strikeouts. Buster
Pcni• was 2-3 with three runs scored,·
while Joe Manuel was 1-3 with one
run scored. Southern defeated
Welhton LO-O.bchind a seven strikeout effort from Man Wtlll)er. Chad
Hubbard was 2-3 with a walk.
Against Meigs, Southern claimed
an 8-7 win was Chris Yeauser scored
in the bottom of ihe seventh on a suicide squeeze bunt by Brandon Hill to
win Jhe same. J.P. Hlirmon was 3-4
'with two doubles, including a game
tying double in the seventh wben
SHS trailed. Hill went on to pick up .
the pitching victory. Southern defeated Trimble S-3 with Matt Ash pick.ing up the lvin. Matt .Warner scored
three of Southern's five runs .

�~-

P_
age 6 • The Dally Sentinel
NOTiiiNG RUNS
LIKE A DEERE"

.

•- • '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-Thursday, April 22 , 1999

}.L.
'

.

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive
GaiHpolla
Au~ from Gollia Auto Sales on old lie. 35 West

MIAMI (AP)- Jamal Mashburn
and Dan Majerle are in lop fonn just
in time for the Miami Heat to make a
strong bid for the top seed in the
Eastern Conference playoffs.
: Mashburn scored 19 points and
Majerle weiit 4-for-S on three-point. ers ip Wednesday night's 93-80 victory over Cleveland, Miami's second
win over the Cavs in 1hree nights.
. Majerle, who has made nine of
· his last I 2 three-pointers, scored 14
:llOints in . '.\'ednesday's victory. He
:gives.the Heat (28-13) another offen. ; slve weapon for tonight's first-place
· s~owdown with the Orlando Magic
. : (~9-14).
.
: : "We can't rely on the past , but

106 North.Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

(740) 446-2412

461 South Third MiddlepOrt, Ohio
/

992-2825

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•

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·• Bul&lt;&gt;h S,rloo, Touchat- 300
2:30p.m. • Saturday • ·ABC
• Wlnaton Cup S.~ao, DieHard 500
1 'p.m. • Sunday • ABC

·

_..,.

-

1999 POINTS STANDINGS

Ellon sewyer, 1,087
1. Jeff Burton, 1.239
Otll flmt*dt Jr., 1,011$
I. Dall J.n.tt. 1.1.54
· JHOfl ~lltr. 1,040
J M8!11 Martin. 1.115
Mb~ln.l,QW
4. Jeff Gordon, 1 ,110
Mitt KerlHth, IJ76
I. BOOby i..llf)O(CI, 1,055
I. Rultt WIIIICI, 1,047
Jeff GrHn. Me

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www.1ubluaa.com
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R.o• reoerd: Merk
Martin , Ford, 188.354
Comlnt up: DieHard 500 mph. May 10, 1997
Wh•r•: Talladeea CAia.)
Notob'": Dale Jarrett
Superspeedway, 2.66-mile won
tne most recent race
trl -~val, 188 laPS
here last fall .... Jeff
When: Sunday. April 25
·oordon has won only once
Delendlnl ~h•mplon:
at Talla~eea .... Dale
Bobby Labonte
Earnhardt has won seven
Quolllylnl record: Bill
Elliott ;Ford, 212.809
races at this track, three
mph, April 30, 1987
more than any other driver.
· WINITON CUP SERIES

. ToGO Bocllne, 899
PNI PiriOnl, 820
CHt'f Atwood, 812
Jtff Bwton, 808

7. Tttry Labonte . 1.028

&amp; MIN SlcMntf. ·w-4

t . Ward Burton. 97~
... ,.., ....... _1122

.

5teeY COt!¥JIIon, 836

Comlnl up: TouchstQne
300

Kem~.

Llllln -

Alndy Tollriil, &amp;4£

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IJ,M-Duttaoi .
NASCA!! Thlt WOek

C31
14)
(8)
15)
(7)
(8).
INR)
INR)

-...

·

Mark Mortln
Dale Jorrett
Ruoty Wallace
Bobby l,obonto
ward Burton
Tony Stowort
John Andrettl
Mike Sklnn.er

,..

· When Dale Earnhardt hit the
wall at Atlanta, cO'Uid he have
used a backup car, had the race
been po1tponed d~ ~o rain?
""
· Brltn Hlntprdntr
Elkbtrt, Ind.

Stretching his pclnt lead
His troubles are behind 'him
Fifth at a troublesome track
· Made the best of rough week
Faded late In the day
Ready for Tallade~a
Slumped to 27th
First career pcle
First ~ontlac win
Back In the top flva

'"'

.....
_..,.:10

•

~At&amp; ,."'

"Ptl 2&amp;

. fontlll'lt, Calif.

...,

R~,\tl.

Concord,

N.c.

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_...

,"""

·eonaoro.".c,

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OOI.'er, Del.

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........ CoW•

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No. Tit~ car that btgins th~
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IIJed ;, that ~vent. Tlte rule Is
diff~""' llf Formula One and .
CART. hoMvtr.
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..... ..

1q99 WINSTON CUP SCHEDULE

ocwer. Del.

26

... .,
0&lt;:!-3

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C&lt;lncofd. N.C.
lllllqlll. ""· '

Fir:tt of all, then has

~

WINSTON CUP IERip

cars ""'

.

•

..J
I I I I I 1 ,1 I I I • •

•1101'1 Date-Jarrett, seven
finishes In the top 10 In elit&gt;l

events.

1111 did rot come out. ~ -

a COOd thJrW Burton pulled Well
·- o f Andl'ettJ after !he apln. Ar)dretll hod,a - to c:olm
dowr1 jlnd 1101 hlo mind on llllllrC hla lap baclt'

,'if

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CWI
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MEI-dl
.. lc&gt;P- 5.000.
ADf WSIEMD IV: Vicky·Trldlle-

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• NOrr Oale Earnhardt. one
win In hie laal 100 races.

·

IIIIMIIIW

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MARTINSVILLE. Va. The season is well into its third
month and business is boOming,
yet fo}U' Winston Cup teams still
lack reliable, week-to-week
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...

On rhe radio, Spencer told his
dandeliODI pve 1heir lives.
crew i1 was "the most enjoyable
THE DARNDEST THINGS too," said Petty. "'It was just a
. moment" of the race, seein&amp; u
HAPPEN: Kyle l'&lt;lty, alr&lt;ldy
freak dell.
..
h""&lt; a tum-one pileup left
mired in a horrible slump, had a
"I'm not supersritiOU!. When Spencer'i car svanded briefly
freak KCidOIII wliile leorinJ 00
~·ve _. il all, !hero\ no ,... on the &lt;urbins lhal ~ the
Wednesday at Tallideai
· son to be IUp:rttitious, OWl.
inside of the trac;k.
Sopenpeedway.
Yollpt put the supenlilion
X
The lhrollle IIUCk u Pony
tta&amp;e."
· wu drivinJ down pit rood, and
OLP.TIME RACING:
the Ponrioc lun:hed violently our
"Martinsville it one of die ti:w
of conrrol and tluauJh I r~.
OOPS: Jimmy Spencer had·I ranoinina true ohort tll&lt;b we
eventually rocketina Into an
weird malflinc:tion ~urinJ. the
compete on." said Pord driver
· infield ·ftaJIPOie. Petty wu '
· 1991 Ooody~ SOO.
.
Ricky Craven. "You have to drive
fist In lho otnijht&amp;Wiyl, 111m .
·unhun, bUr.tb~ J:&amp;r wu pll&gt;'imll- • ' The .!lre &lt;&gt;~tlna•i!her in.hil
ly dentpiiJbed.
· , .
'
Ford ,..p.e...uy ilioch11J8d,. hard left, mull on die p ond
repoollt aboul 499 tlrnosll
"Iron tbr\&gt;uJhlho c:hain~lnk .coverin11ho driver~ coniponfeotce ond over I couple Of 1 . 1110111 wilh flame-ntardanl foam. enjoy rhatlype of rocina·"

x.
..OIW
· • The nevei-oar&lt;lle

lll!f!ude ot Rollllle
t.oomlo and the Petty
Ente~aes crew helped
JOlin Andrettl win the
Goott(s 500 tit l\lartl..
ville. foo twO-ilre pit otop,
· ~ rilost of~ other
contelldets went
chanCifllllil foil', eave '
Andrettl the trac~
" pcia~lon he needed •. ' '

.

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Call

;NL contests ...

for his beliefs. Ward ~ntly said he
is uncomfonable dressing in front of
female reponers.
Bul by far the biggest news W'IS
the reassigning of Grunfeld, whose
new role with the team .will be as a
special consultant. Checketts is
sending Grunfeld to Gennany this
weekend to scout the European Final
Four.
.
.
.
"ObviOusly 1' m d1sapp01nted
with today's news," Grunfeld said.
"But in sports, as in life, thlngs
change. Today it's my turn for
change. .
"I am very proud of the job l',ye
done over the last nine years 'in the
Knicks' front office: Over that time
we have accumulated the fourth-best
winning pertentage in the league,
five straight seltouJ seasons and
never once missed the playoffs. "
But this year, the team's 12-year
streak of making the postseason is in
serious jeopardy.
The ·shakeup comes with the
Knicks, with an NBA-high $63 million payroll, on a season-high fourgame losing .streak. At 21-21. }hey
are ninth in the Eastern Conference
and in danger of missing the playoffs
for the first time in more · Ihan a
decade.
. Checkeus ac~nowledged a major
rift between Grunfeld and Van
Gundy, .who have disagreed over
Grunfeld's \Urnover in player personnel- especially the widely criJic.ized deal. that sent Charles Oakley

'

•'

from EldenCampbell. Grant Hill had
28 points, nine rebounds and six
assists for Detroit, which has failed
to score more than 86 points in its
lasI six games- five of rhem losses. .
The slide has dropped Detroit into
a . tie with Philadelphia and
Milwaukee for fifth place in the East.
. " We've got a cushion and we're
just living off that damn c ushion, "
coach Alvin Genrry fumed. " We've
got to stan playing at some point. If
we don't play, we're not.going to
make1he playoffs. "
·
Trail Blazers 88, Lakers 82 .
At Ponland, Rasheed Wallace had
21 points and nine rebOunds as the
Trail Blazers improved to 2-0 againsl
ihe Lakers and moved with a halfgame of Utah for the best record
leaguewide,
. The Lakers rallied from 13 down,
but faltered in the final three minutes
to lose for the II th lime in 21 games.
"The key for us was just to try to
run them;'' Wallace said. "They had
an overtime game against Golden
State that they won , and this was
their third game in a row. We had the
idea that they didn't have all their

to Toronto for Marcus Camby. ·
But Checketts also declined to
bestow any kind o( reassurance on
Van Gundy, who is now in his fourth
season as head coach.
"The organization has not functioned well together," Checketts
said. "With what we've · spenl on
salaries and what we've done as an
.o~ganization, to be a .500 club and in
mnth place is unacceptable.
"There are no winners in today's
announcement, · there's no power
struggle won by anybody, and no,
it's not a show of confidence in anybody," Checketts said.
·
· "The problem is that all of the
steps that we have iaken as an organization were not paying off."
The announcement of Grunl'eld's
reassignmenr came after 1he team
held a 2 112-hour practice in
Purchase, N.Y. Afterward , the players were told by Checketts of 1he
decision .
"I thought sluff would happen
after the season, bui I' m not necessarily shocked," center Chris Dudley
said. "In this business, you never
know."
"The-timing of it is a little ironic," said Sprewell, who said ~e was
unaware thai his agent told the New
York Post that Sprewell would
demand to be lraded if the Knicks
planned to use him as a reserve again
next season.
The New York Daily News reported today that Gist claimed he was

grossly misquoted and misrepresented in the Post story.
·
.
. "To put me on the spot like this is
unfair to me and the ·organization.
It's . unacceptable," Sprewell said.
"I've accepted my role here and
what has happened . I don't see why
(Gist) should have a problem accepting the same Jhing."
.
Asked if there would be any
changes _to the stanlng lmeup Fnday

legs ."
Pacers 108, Bucks 100-0T
At Indianapolis , Ja.Jen Rose
scored 25 points. including four free
throws in the final 20 seconds of
ovenime, and Reggie Miller had 20
points in addition to a strong dcfensive effon against Ray Allen as the
Pacers defeated the Bucks for the
seventh consecutive time.
· SuperSonics 119
Timberwolves 105
At Seattle, forgonen forward 'Don
MacLean started in place .of the
injured Vin Baker and had seasonhighs of 21 points and I 0 rebounds
as Seattle stayed tied foteighth place
in the West. Baker, a fouhtime AllStar forward , will be out 2-4 weeks
because of a deep _bone contusion to
his right knee.
Warriors
Kings 94
At Sacramento,· Chris Webber
scored 25 points and Vlade Di vac
had 20 as Sacramento stayed tied
with Seattle. The Warriors dropped
two games behind them in the race
for the eighth and final Western
Conference postseason spot.
Raptors 107, ·Wizards 91

roo,

night against Charlotte, Van Gundy
said:· "I don't know. We'll see."
The acquisition of Sprewell was .
one of several major mBves made by
Grunfeld that have not panned out. .
The team's GM and president
since 1996 and a member of the front
office since 1990, Grunfeld was one
of the most aggressive executives in
the league -t;hen it came to making
trades .
\ .

\

87 loss 10 Miami, left the game early
in lhe third quarter with a sprained
lef! foot. He finished with 10 points
in 25 minutes, and .Kemp , who has
been bothered by a sore right elbow,
is definitely our against Milwaukee
on Friday.
Miami and Orlando have split

their lwo games lhis season, with
both teams protecting their home ·
coun.
• "''m looking forward to il , it
should be a fun game, an exciting
game, " Brown said. " Both teams
have got a lot to lose. We' ve got lo
give a full 48-minute effort."

At Washington , Dee Brown shot
6-for-6 on three-pointers in the
founh quaner and Doug Christie
scored a season-high 28 points . Of
rhe Raptors' eight remaining games,
none are against opponents currently
wirh a losing record , and five are on
the road .
76ers 80, Celtics 78
At Boston, Allen Iverson had 25
points and Theo Ratliff scored ihe
winning poinrs on a layup with 7 seconds left. It was Philadelpliia 1s
founh win in fjve games.

Neis· 99, Bulls 87
At East Rutherford, N.J ., Keith
Van Horn scored 28 points and the
Nets s~ot 23-for-23 at the foul line tQ
avoid tying Chicago for the worst
record in the Eastern Conference.
Grizzlies 97, Clippers 94.
At Vancouver. Shareef AbdurRahim scored 29 points and had a
career-high six blocks, including .a
key rejection with II seconds left, in
a meeting of the league's two worst
teams.

'

992~2155

Dave Ext. 104
·!i
Kathy Ext. 105 .
For more Information

gameS. .-.

- ·

•

~- e
This Mother's Day, a heartfelt'"thank you" could
be the best gift you ·could ever give your mother.
Don't miss .this opportunity to say it.
.

'

To Be .Published
Friday, May 7

1.1:11 11\1.1

\\\11'1.1- . ~ ...

1X3 Greetlllf!- '10.00

1XS

HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

Daily Sentinel

- fl3.00

· (PICTURE)

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

'HAPPY
MOTHER'S
DAY

LOVE, JOHN, JOE
AND SUSAN

LOVE, JOHN,
- JOEAND
SUSAN
I
,.

Deadline For Thu Special Mother'.
Tribwe Is Monday, May 3, 12 noon

·

•

· The ,pasl four .seasons have been
marked by substantial turnover on
the roster. Yel each year, the dub has
heen knocked out · in the seoond
round of the playoffs.
New York has played inconsistently all season, losing to teams it is
supposed to beat and suffering
numerous breakdowns in the founh
quarter.

lbur 1\fom

.

Nilsson homered · off Lance
Painter -as the host Brewers broke a
three-game losing streak.·
Giants 4, Marlins 0
Joe Nathan pit&lt;;hed seven scoreless innings in his major league
debut, and Annando Rios, subbing
for Barry Bonds, hil a home run as
San Francisco won at home.
.
Nathan, a converted shortstop
who had never played ·above DoubleA before facing Florida, gave up just
fouh hits and struck out four. His faslball was clocked at 97 mph .
Rios batted 'third an(! played left
field in place of Bonds, out for at
least 10 weeks following surgery on
his left elbow. Rios did a great imitation of the All-Star, hitting a solo
homer in the first inning ~nd throwing out a runner aj the plate in the ,
·seventh;
Ramon Martinez, playing because
of Charlie Hayes' four-game suspension, had a two-run double.
Diamoodbacks 4, Pblllies Z
l ~L
Matt Williams hit a· three-run
.~
(Continued from PageS)
homer off cun Schilling in the seviie hit a two-run homer in the sec- ond baseman David Bell, leading to a. enth inning as Arizona won it s founh
dnd, a two-run double · in the third, late 1hrow.
.
·
straight game.
i~en followed Tony Ciark's ~omet
John ~nyder. (2-_1) g~v~ up one
The Diamondbacks finished an 8)vith another home run rn a four-run run and SIX hns m eaght rnmngs, and 2 homestand and moved two games
· seventh at Tiger Stadium.
Bob Howry struck out the side in the over .500 for the first rime ever.
: · Frank Catalanotto also homered ninth for his founh ·save in four Arizona is now 9-7 - las! year. it ·
)Is the Tigers; who had·a seaso_n-high chan~es. lose Paniagua (1;2) was the took the expansion team 40 games to
•15 hits , won for the founh t1.me rn loser.
,
reach nine victories.
l'ive games,
. •
Royals 3, Twins 2
·
Schilling (3-1) walked Jay Bell
: Brian Moehler (2-2) allowed two
Rey Sanchez hit a leadoff triple w_ith two. outs in the sevcillh , Steve
runs and seven hits in 6 2/3 innings. offEddieGuardado(0-1) in the lOth Fmley s,rngled and Williams fol :nm Wakefield ( 1-2) gave up five at Kauffman Stadium and Carlos · lowed With his fifth homer for a 4-1
)'uns and eighl hits in 3 2/3 innings . Beltran followed with a sacrifice Hy. lead.
.
•.
White Sox l, Marlnen 1
Terry Mathews (1 -0), recalled R~n Gant. '" a 3-for-42 slump
! Frank Thomas drove in two runs from Triple-A Omaha earlier in the entenng the game, hn hr s 250th
:.Vith a . fielder'~ choice in the eighth day, pitched two hitless innings for . caTeer ho~er. J;le connect.ed '" the
at Comiskey Park, with Ray Durham his first major league .victQI')' ~ince Phrladelphra nrnth , c hasmg Todd
coming home after Mike Caruso's 1997, when he was with Baltimore. Stottlemyre (2-0) . .
r!!gressiv.e slid(\ knocked down sec-

•
'.

\ '" ncouver edged the Los Angeles
Clippers 97-94.
.
Suns 91, Jazz 82
At Phoenix. the Suns squandered
a 21-point lead before s1ag ing a late
rally. It came at a good time for the
Suns as they pulled into a tie for the
'sixth playoff spot in the Western
Conference with Minnesota . ·
"!have nol figured this team out
yet," Suns coach Danny Ainge said.
"I do not know what is going on ."
In addition to Kidd "s big nigh!,
Danny Manning scored 16 points
and Cliff Robinson , Tom Gugliotta
and Rex Chapman had 13 each for
the Suns.
Karl Malone had 28 points and 13
rebounds for · league-leading Utah,
whi.ch suffered its· second straight
loss , matching ils longest losing
streak of the season.
Hornets 88, Pistons 85
At. Charlotte, the Hornets ran their
winning streak to nine games and
moved into eighth place in the
Easlern Conference.
To do so, they overcame the
absence of Eddie Jones (hand laceration) and got a season-high 32 points

(Continued from PageS)

,,
•

nasty ready team ," Riley said. "We
have to be ready for a very physical
game and a very defensive game.
They're one . of the best in the
league."
Alonzo Mourning had 18 points
wilh II rebounds for the Heat. who
handed Cleveland its rhird straight
loss and temporarily knock the Cavs
out or a playoff spot - from eighth
place to a three-way lie for ninth
with Toronto and New York.
"We were able to cui the lead to a
respectable number, but that was out
of the kindness of their heans."
Cleveland coach Mike Fratello said:
Shawn Kemp. who scored a season-high 32 poin~ in Monday's 94-

~

,..,ly

.

"We've got to stop Bo Orlando,
Darrell Annstrong and their bench
players like Matt Harpring ," Brown
said. ''Darrell scored 25 against us
last time. That 's a killer."
Annstrong scored 19 of his 25
points in the founh quarter of
Orlando's 94-87 win over Miami on
Match 28.
"Let Penny get his ' 30," Tim
Hardaway said. " We can "t let the
bench gu~ get 18 and 15. or get
offensive rebounds and hu stle poinls
off of loose balls." ·
Heat coach Pal Riley, won't
underestimate Jbe Magic . who have
dropped four ~of tive."We're gorng to see a very angry,

)earn histqry, ·and drove in six runs as'
Chipper Jones hit a three-run
~ouston won at Wrigley Field.
homer off Kevin Brown early, and
· Bagwell hlt a solo shot in the first Lopez hit a solo shot off Jeff Shaw
jnning and three-run drive off for a 4-3 lead in the ninth. Los
Chicago staner Scott Sanders in the Angeles tied it on an odd play in the
ihird . He added a two-run homer off bottom half.
Rodney Myers in t~e seventh.
. Wilh the bl!Ses loaded and one
' Bagwell got one chance to tie the out, Devon White hit a fly ball to
major league record of four in a ' shallow left field. Otis Nixon made
game, but grounded out in the ·ninth. the ca!ch, but the dropped the ball as
( With 225 home runs, Bagwell has he tried to throw, and Gary Sheffield
two more than Wynn hit for the scored easily on the error.
iAstros from 1963•73.
Brewen 2; Cardinals 1
Dave Nilsson hit a solo home run
: Bagwell matched career highs for
orners and RBis in a game.
in the eighth inning and Milwaukee
Braves 11, Dodgen 4
beat a St. Louis team missing Mark
Javy Lopez hit his second homer McGwire and Eric Davis.
f the game during a seven-run burst
McGwire. slowed by .a tight ieft
ln the 12th inning that led Atlanta to hamstring, did not play for the first
1
time this season. His status is uncer!victory at Dodger1Stadium.
t The Braves used seven pitchers tain for tonight's gaflle at Los
pnd even had aces Greg Maddux and Angeles.
·
lohn Smoltz warming in the·bullpen.
Davis 'was out after being hit in
Mike Remlinger ( 1-0) wor~ed three · the left. hand by a pitch the previous
~illess innings,
night. He's day-to-day.

"' 17041732-8799.

••••••••••••

'.

azaleu, ond llhink a couple of

X

'

Slltlon. N.C .. 280110

Four team~ still lacking regular sponsorship
By M011te Ouuon
NASCAR ThiJ Week

.

. .............. 541!5
\lellMul Rmace Roed. Iron

AROUND THE GARAGE

Four owners - Junie ·

roct$ '"jGr back 111

FanTipe

OSOJOW ~ :l\81
""'"""-~
:·a·N 'or11'8111Vll886~ "'
I&amp;IJOS 1101(1 l,iiiX&gt;OIJ 0&lt;11 Ul UOOUICIOU IUMI\IS 'l

••••••••••••

Donlavey, Joe Falk, C.le
YarborouJh!Waynt Burdette
and Billy Jones - do not ~ve
a principal sponsor. Janet'
Pontiac, driven by hi,JIOO
Buckshot, carries Crown Fiber,
which is the elder Jones' own
company.

i11

···~········

1. Who was the first women to win a
NASCAR tourtnc·serl&lt;ls event? •
2. What two Busch Grand National cj1amplonsa;ot
their start In the Goody's Dash series?

V.llldsNot

I

IIAI!:ovl'lllll_'l_
---the
-·
Burtcn Clld rot dO ~ lnlentlonllly,
I'"'-alnce
)'IIIOW-

Leo's Cruist
&amp;'Ira'IJd

ncvO.

do 1101 lfavt any doors. Ford
merely decided io IIIQU Jls rtJce
wlricle the TaurW', and
· NASCAR approved it.

'ladnlda'lh.lll

VJho'sHot-

Jolln·AIItlilltl w; WMIBurtan
Gc&gt;ody;ai!OO, ~ Mdrotll ollp. He won.._, ~
wa AAdrlttl thlnldrw? 'I wa WOtidoriW wI could"""., OJ.
In front of 81.000 l'ana.'

"

set racllfg '" NJISCJIR tW:IIIi

FEUD OF THE WEEK

ilurron .,... OUt IllS fellOW i'llntllc _ , urly In !he

; NEW YORK (i\P) - Somebody
. had to pay for !he sorry state of the
: New York Knicks , and the axe .fell
;on team presidenr and general man-ager Ernie Qrunfeld.
: With just eight games left . in the
:regular season, coach Jeff Van
·Gundy must now find a way to get
:the team into' t~e IJiayoffs .•o have
;any hope of savmg h1s pwn JOb.
; _ "The organization was not on the
,same page in a . lot of categories," .
:said Madison Square Garden presi·:dent Dave Checketts, who w1ll take
.over· the day-to-day running of the
:club for the rest of the regular sea:son. "I was n.ot going 10 accept any
.more do VISIOns, people on different
;pages , people looking ·like they had
;d)fferent agendas. We .have . one
.aflenda- to make 1he playoffs."
: The sh*eup came on one of the
•most tumultuous days the organiza;tipn has ever had, with Checketts try~ng to put out brush fires involv"ing
~trell Sprewell, Larry Johnson and
;qtarlie Ward.
: · Checketts tined Sprewell $25,000
1'or comments made by his agent,
~t,bert Gist, that were highly critical
;o!· both Grunfeld and Van Gundy.
' . Johnson was qucsuoned by.
Checketts ·about a published repon
~hat he exposed himself to a female
"ublic rela1ions slaffer. Johnson
denied doing so. .
: Ward .was told that the ' locker
mom was not to
. be used as a pulpil

the 19JOJ. Seco11d, wlrett th
L,.m/1112 W4f i11trod~ctd, then
~ bDth two- a"d joiJr-door
verllo111. /11 199SI whe" the
lttW Monte Carlo WQJ ilftroJucrd, tltt Lu,lna became
strictly a fowr·door vdicle. Tire
jinGI poirrt iJ ont we havt
made be/DI't. Tlet cars tllbt you

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
Jimmy Hensley, who lives about four miles from Martlnsvtlle
"Speedway In Ridgeway, va;, gave OOdQe ItS first viCtOry of the
season (and fifth In the last three) with a win In the NAPA 250.
Another VIrginia Dodge·crtver, Stacy Compton, finiShed secor.d.

· Call us for all your
travel needs

:By CHRIS SHERIDAN

Men Q rwlt conctr11l11g how
·· litany door~ a race car should
· lta'lit. Occculotlally four-door

John Andrettl gave Petty Enterprises Its 20th vk:tory at
Martinsville, the oldest track on the circuit. Richard Petty won
15 races, his father, lee, had three, and Jimmy Hensley,won
Saturday's truck race In a Petty Dodge:
Andrett:llost a lap with an early spin, but caught leader Je~f
Burton with seven to go, ran skle-by-sk1e 1or several laps and took
the lead. for the last tour.
Burton stret&lt;:hed his point tead with a secord-Qiace flnlsh, and
Jeff GOrdon was third.

game."
Majerle, who on Wednesday
became the I Oth player in NBA history to make his I, tOOth thre~-point­
er. is relieved that his long-missing
stroke has returned in time for the
·stretch run.
" I've been getting a bir more arc
on my shots, and it has helped,"
Majerle said. · " The next one needs
no hype. We all know what's at
stake."
Brown and tim Hardaway, who
had 14 points and s~ven assists,
believe that the key to victory hinges
on holding down Orlando's. reserves
rather lhan Penny Hardaway and
Nick Anderson.

·!Checketts strips Grunfield of GM duties with New York Knicks

My question concerns the
body styles used in NASCAR.
In-the late 1980s, Chevrolet
introduced lbe'Lumina (replac-.
ins the Monte Carlo), which ·
came only in a four-door ver·
'" ·si'on. In order to alter the car to'
become a two-door, Chevralet
had to offer the two-door version to the Jeneral public the
followina year, which wu
done. Ford started uaina a two·
door"v.cnion of the Taurua in
1998, and I have failed to see a
1wo-door venion in their showrooms. Hu NASCAR waived
lhe rule concemina body
ityles, or have the rules .
chll\a:ed?
Gar, Kinney Sr.

· Troll Creek, lod.

FROM LAST WEEK

·

-

O..r .NASCAR This Week,

,

Oct. 10

0.111.1 rt

Dear NASCAR This Week,

• weeflty ranklnQ:s by NASCAR This Week. writer Monte Dutton:
last week's ranking Is In parentheses.

3.
4.
8.
e.
7.
e.
9.
10.

; . It doesn 't get much busier in the
. NBA than it was Wednesday night.
. In fact, the league won't have
;anolher like it until the final night of
;the season.
· : Of the 21 teams in contention for
;t)le postseason, 17 were in. action as
: 12 games were played . And on a
; ~ight of 'su rprises. the Houston
' f.ockets and Utah Jau had rhe most
·
.
: shocking losses .
: ; Michael Finley had 27 poinls and
' jl assists as the Daii'IS .Mavericks
: surprised ·their fourth playoff con'~nder in six games with a 109-95
i yictory over Houston , and Jason
: Kidd had 21 points and 12 assists as
·the Phoenix Suns· do.w ned the Jazz
:91 -82.
. "To get that kind of perfonnance
' is baffling," Rockets coach Rudy
' Tomj~novich said after his team
· allowed Dallas to win just its third
. road game of Jhe season. The

YourTum

AN:II.C..., 114 .
fll'llll Houlton. 85i
Jlminy HlniiiJ, @1
Gr11 811111, es

: A~ Basketball Writer

••••••••••••

MIN WIIIIOI, 493

TOP HN

1. 12) . Jolf Burton
2. 11) Jolf Gordon

R1ce r'ecord: Mark

Wh•re: Tailadeea (Aia.J
. Super$peedway, 2.66-mile
· trl-oval, 113Japa
When: Saturday, April 24 has won the pole three
years In a row .•.. In
D•lendl .. chomplon:
seven previous races, no
Joe Nemeche k
driver has won this rice
Quolltylnl reaord: Joe
twice.
Nemechek. Chevrolet.

PHOFIIf

100

Rockets were kept from clinching a
playoff spot.
·
The Mavericks led by as many as
26 against the Rockets, who neverrecovered after allowing an 11 -0 run
in the first quarter.
Gar'y Trent had 24 points and 10
rebounds and rookie Dirk Nowitzki
added 22 poinrs for his fifth doublefigure perfonnanee in the last six
games. The Mavericks shot 53 percent from the field (O 43 percent for
the Rockets. .
"They played well," Charles
Barkley said. "Give them credit.
Michael Finley was terrific and Trent
was terrific and Nowitzki was terrific . Every time we lose, you guys (the
media) Jhink the world is coming to
an end:" ·
Elsewhere, Charlotte defeated
Detroit 88-85, Ponland edged the
Los Angeles Lakers 88-82, Indiana
downed Milwaukee l 08-100 in overtime. Seattle defe.a ted Minnesota
119-105, Sacramento topped Golden
State · I 03-94,
Toronto
beat
Washington 107-91, Philadelphia
nipped Boston 80-78, New Jersey
.defeated Chicago 99-87 and'

NBA roundup

'949-3099

Martlp, Ford. 1611.937
mph, April 26. 1997
Notoblo: Nemechek

Ron Himldlf.l20

JICIC SQrtlut, 763

I

·

IUICH QftAND NATIONAL

193.5r7 mph, April 25,
1997

must deal with the present," said
Mashburn. who is averaging nearly
16 points in 14 games during this
injury-troubled season. "There' ll be
a lot of ·enthusiasm on both sides.
We have to come wilh a lot of energy and know that when they make
their run at us, we can't be rattled."
Miami , which has won nine of II
games and now has the conference's
best record, is prin•cd 'for what P.J .
Brown called; "the biggest game of
the season.~·
"We've had a lot of big games
lately, Indiana alid Cleveland, and
we still have a lot of big games left,"
Brown said. "This next one against
Orlando will be ljke a playoff

ifhiley, Trent lead Mavericks past Rockets; Suns shock Jazz

Fast, Friendly
Service

ON THE SCHEDULE

The Daii.Y Sentinel • Page 7

Heat down Cavs 93-80, bolster bid for top seed in EC playoffs

-(ij
.
~...."".
. JlD: .-;

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FlU out the form beklw aad drop ofhrith paymeat to
The DaUey Seallnel "Mother's Day"
lU Court St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I~---------------------~-----~---~----------,
CIRCLE ONE
A. 1X3 GREETING...$10.00
· B. 1XS GREETING W/PICfURE...$13.00 I
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(PLEAS~ PRINT or TYPE)
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MOntER'S NAME:-

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: Y.OUR ADDRESS:

lc'!", STATE•

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MAKE CHECK PAYABU: 10: mE DAlLY SENTINEL

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�.

'

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll22, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

, Polygamy practice goes on trial in Utah child abuse case
By HANNAH WOLFSON
Associated Press Writer
LOGAN, Utah - John Daniel
Kingston is accused of beating his
16-year-old daughter when she fled
an arranged marriage to his brother.
But is child abuse the issue, or is
bigamy?
Kingston's prosec utors say it's a
simple case of abuse. Other observers
say it's more: Kingston is a prominent member of one of Utah's bestknown polygamous clans, and it will '
be impossible to ignore his lifestyle.
Jury selection started today with
75 prospective panelists filling out
questionn aires. Panelists who made it
through an initial screening by lst
District Judge Ben Hadfield and

attorneys for both sides were told to Unhed Brethren.
return in the afternoon for individual
The girl, now living in foste r care,
interviews.
contends her 43-year-old father drove
The judge cautioned members of her to a family-owned farm near the
the pool not to discuss the case with Idaho border last May and whipped
anyone.
her fo r disobeying David Ortell
" I can tell you that the prosecutor Kingst,pn, who had made her his 15th
doesn't see ·it as a polygamy case, but wife.
the public does see it as a polygamy
The . wealthy South Salt Lake case," said Carmen Thompson, exec- based clan led by patriarch Merlin
utive director pf Tapestry of Kingston goes by the name of the
Polygamy, a group of former polyg- ''Latter-day Church of Christ" and
amous wives.
has about 1,000 members. The broth"They think all of us are guilty of ·ers are the sons of the clan's late
child marriages. That's so far from .,leader, who died in 1987.
the· truth," said Owen Allred, leader
Though polygainy is banned by
of the 5,000-member polygamous the state constitution and denounced
group called the Corporation of the by the predominant Mormon church,
Presiding Elder of the Apostolic the attorney general's office estimates

there are 25,000 practitioners in ·uta!)
alone.
No large-scale bi gamy cases have
been prosecuted since the 1950s,
when agents raided Short Creek, a
town · established by polygamous
famili es on the Utah-Arizona border.
The incident backfired and the state
bac ked off when the public became
enraged by images of families being
torn apart.
Anti -polygamy groups say prosecutors should strike once more,
adding bigamy 10 the existing cases
aga inst John Kingston and his brother, who is to 'be tried on an incest ·
charge in June.
"When you see crimes stemming
directly from the polygamy issue, the
polygamy, should be prosecuted,"

"To me, the underlying problem is
Thompson said.
Prosecutors have thrown up their the pol ygam ous relatio·nship that
hands, say ing it is difficult to prose- exists and they ought to be prosecutcute bi gamy, the onl y charge associ- ing that relationship, no\ just the child
ated with plural marriage. Marriages abuse," said De xter Anderson, a Mtl·
are often performed in secre t cere- lard County prosecutor.
monies, evidence can he skimpy or
Anderson filed a bigamy charge
no~x i stent, and prosecutors don't . last month against a man allegedly
want to gamble ti me and resources married to fi ve women for several
while more pressing crimes demand years. He said it is the sixth such case
attention.
he has opened since 1986.
" I think the jury will understand
"1 don't think (polygamy case&gt;)
this case has . very little to do with should be any more difficult than any
polygamy and everything ro do with other kind of case," he said. "To me,
child abuse," said Scott Wyatt, attor- it's a Jaw just like any other Jaw and
ney for Cache County, where the tri- it 's our sworn duty 10 prosec'ute viaal is being held.
. lati ons:,.
·
•

Online brokers deal with crush of investors ·
.

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Fed up with
online trading delays, Ed Ellks decided to change brokers.
. "It's not a question of 'if' I will be
closing my account," he said, "but
instead, when."
That was January.
Three months later, Ellks, 31, a
technology manager from Warren,
Ohio, is still buying and selling stock
with Amer;trade, . resigned to the
cyberspace Jog-Jams hobbling just
about every Internet stockbroker.
Between the cheap commi&gt;Sions
and the sheer simplicity of trading by
mouse click, investors like Ellks
Jove online trading so much that the ·
tledgiing industry can 't keep pace.
Periodic system crashes and frequent de.)ays have prompted govern·
ment investi gations and a handful of
lawsuits charging finarici'lllosses, but
with a seemingly unceasing bull
market 10 soothe the portfolio, the
bac klash has been modest.
Market experts wonder how long
patience will prevail.
"What happens when this market
takes a dramatic tum. when Internet
stocks come out of favor, and the
online systems can't handle the
orders?" asked Martin Unger, ·'an
attorney who has represented brokerages for 25 years. "The losses
could be out of sight. The risk to the
public is humongous." ·
·
Fearing a train wreck ahead, Web
brokers are upgrading their computer systems, of course, but they are
al so targeting the easy-money, free~heeling 'behavior of many online
investors.
. Some fifllls have \!!lpq~ ,trading

I

'

restrictio~s. while others are trying to
educate people and explain the risks
of online · investing - especially
when it Nmes to Internet stocks that
· ricochet around in bursts of five and
10 points .
It's unclear, however, whether
any of these approaches . will do
much good given the unrelenting
growth of online trarling.
·In the first three months of 1999,
online trades averaged roughly
450,000 per day, jumping more than
30 percent for the second consecutive
quarter, according to Credit Suisse
First Boston. At last count, one of
every seven trades was being made
over the Internet.
Nine firms process the vast majority of Internet trades. Like traditional discount brokers they offer low
commissions- $7 to $30 per trade.
They also offer online access to analyst reports and other stock research,
but they don't give investment advice
like the Merrill Lynches of the world,
which can charge S100 or $200 for a
typical small investor's trade.
On any typical day, the ·crush of
business flowing 'in'to the online trading houses leaves many investors in
limbo, waiting to place their orders or
wondering if those orders have been .
received and filled.
While Ellks used to buy or sell up ·
to eight times a day, so far this year
he has placed only about 40 orders,
fearful he'll get saddled with a bad
price on a fast-moving stock.
"I guess my level of expectation
for Ameritrdde has dropped ·significantly," said Ellks, who noted some
recent improvement in the speed of
Ameritrade 's system. "Initially, I
~xpected t~· be able tp pl~e a trade,

.

change an order. cancel an order, all
Schwab also has been .limiting
within about 30 seconds. Now I'm Web access to other stocks as needjust happy to be able to do it at aiL " ed, requiring customer~ to speak
Ameriirade, ·v:hich had a 56 per- with a Jive broker by phone to place
cent jump in order volume during the orders in volving those issues.
lirst quarter, hired two technology
Some of the smaller online brospecialists as top executives in March kerages, including National Discount
and plans to spend $100 million in Brokers and Muriel Siebert &amp; Co.,
the next 12 months to 18 months to say they' ve scaled back on advenisaddress its growing pains.
ing to prevent their business from
Charles · Schwab, the biggest growing too fast.
online brokerage, has already upgradSt!Jlarately; the National Associaed its computer system to handle tion of securities Dealers, a self-regI00,000 customers at a time. It plans . ulatory group is proposing that
to double that by year's end.
online brokers tum away aspiring
But with · Schwab's 2.5 million "day traders" - those who buy and
·online accounts, including 250,000 sell the same stock within minutes or
new ones in the first quarter alone, hours in hopes of a quick profit - if
simple arithmetic 'suggests that they lack the necessary finances or
upgrading computer capacity isn't know-how. .
·
enough. ·
However, some experts point out
So many brokers are also sug- that the industry can only go so far in
gesting that investors protect them- restraining investors.
selves with an old-fashioned strategy. ·
"The whole idea of a discount
By using "limit orders, " they can set 6roker is not to give advice. Then the
a specific share price as the most broker is not subject to lawsuits,, .
they're willing to pay when buying or said Bill Burnham, an industry anathe least they're willing to receive lyst at Credit Suisse First Boston.
when selling.
"Once you get in the way of a trade,
In addition many brokers are you 're providing advice. If someone
restrictmg the practice called "buy- wants to gamble all their money on
i~g on margin" when it comes to .fast-. the stock market, they c.an do it. I ·
moving stocks.
can 't see how you can stop ·that," he
· Margin buying involves purchas- said.
'
ing stock, then borrowing money
A more difficult challenge, then, is
.using those shares as collateral and making online investors Jess he~d­
buying even more stock.
str()ng with their new-found powers.
Schwab has raised its margin
"Some people are using the Interrequirements on I 06 volatile stocks, net inappropriately, trying to trade
capping the amount investors can like professionals on the cheap," said
borrow.
Burnham, " I see people complaining
That •way, should a stock drop t~at they couldn't do a irade in 10 .
sharply, the broker won't need to sell seconds, that they had to wait two or
an investor's holdings as fast to cov- five minutes. In 1987, that was a
er the Joan.
lightning trade."

.

Is the length of a man's hair worth a f~ther's wrath ·and estrangement?

Dear Ann Landers: Have you
ever heard of a father disowning his
only son for not cutting his hair? My
husband asked "Wally" politely to
. get a decent haircut, and my son's.
: reply was "I like it this way. I don' t
-live at home anymore, and I don ' t
· have to do what you tell me."
Ann, Wally is 41 years old,
divorced and raising two children on
his own. He has a good job and
doesn't arink or do drugs. His hair is
sho,ulder length, ·graying and wavy,
, liut cleari.
Hi's father thinks that after all
.
· we' ve done for him, helping finan -

a

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a batch of appl~ ·~9~~ie.s

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Varieties

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·day fresh from the Greenhouse includln8:
• MARlGOWS • BEGONIAS • IMB\TIENS

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',

TIPS ON RESEARCH - June Ashley, genealogist, gave tips on · .
how to . research family genealogy at a recent meeting ol Return ·
Jonathan Meig!l Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution.
served by the hoste sses, June Ash- County Public Library on May 8.
ley, Emma Ashley, Grace Warner Mrs. Mary K. Yost will present a
and Marjory Warner. .
program on" Li ves of Wi ves of Ohio
The next meeting will be held at Pre.s idc nts."
the Racine Branch of the Meigs

Come On Oller To Bo•'•··•
l

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BUYS!

50 Styles On Sale!
.•

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$11,665

Mot r's Day Rings
1 '

story plainly, with directness; write
· truthfully of uplifting, refined and
honorable occurrences and experiences, and remember that humor
helps to make for easier reading. If
you can give the whys of your deci,
sions and changes in .activities in
your life it may help others. Illustrate with as many pictures as possible, Ashley recommended, and then
advised copies of personal histories
be made and given to relatives.
Ashley concluded her prescnta..
tion with a sampling . of books from
he personal genealogy library in her
home and with an invitation to members of the. Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter to come '!lid view her collection.
·
. Regent Pauline Atkins, president,
.announced that the Return I onathan
,Meigs · Chapter received achievement awards at the State DAR Conference held in March. They included outstanding Constitption Week
observance, outstanding Constitution Week display,' promoting Bells
Across America, presentation of a
Constitution Minute at Chapter
meetings, and outstanding Constitution Week publicity.
·
T\le . nominating committee was
elected to select a slate of officers
for ihe. 1999-200 I Administration.
Members are ~leanor Smith, chairman, Patricia Holfer, Emma Ashley,
and Mary PowelL They will present
a slate at the May chapter meeting.
Anna Cleland gave a repon of the
Ohio Society Daughters of . the
American Revolution State Conference held in March at the Wyndham
Hotel Dublin.
The meeting closed with a brunch

4 en, AIR COND, STEREO
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

To A Fast

'

she allows them to run all over her. she make the I ,200- mile trip knowLe1 her know, too, that she could ing she might not get to see her
lose you if she re fuses to take con- brother after all ? lime is running
trol of the situation. Be. fi rm about out. Please advise.-- BILL IN
this, or you're sunk.
CINCINNATI
•
· Dear Ann Landers: Several
DEAR BILL: Bess should go
ye.ars ago, my mother-in-Jaw, anyway. If she doesn't, she' ll reg ret
"Bess, " took care of her mother . it.
when she was dyi og of cancer. Bess
Have trouble sleeping at ni ght .
has one brother, "Tommy," who and don't wan t to get invo lved in a.
lives far away and w •s unable to nove)? "A Collection of My Fav ori~
help. When the mother died , she left Gems of.the Day" is the perfect bed·
Bess her enti re estate. This caused a stand · mate. Send a self-addressed,
major blowout between Bess and ·Jong, business-size enve lope and a
Tomm y. and they haven't seen each check or money order for $5.25 (lhis
other in II years.
include• postage and handling) to;
Now, Tommy is dying of cancer. Collection, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. .
He called Bess to patch things up, Box 11562, Chi cago, Ill. 606 n ·
and they have made amends over the 0562 (in Canada, $6.25) . To find out
estate. She would like to vj sit him, more about Ann Lander&gt; and read
but Tommy's wife refu ses to settle her past column s, visil the Creators
their differences and has told Bess Syndicate web page at www. c rc ~
not to bother coming. Ann , shoul d ators.com ,

NE t999 ESCORT LX 4 DR

.·wereOff

.

'cially and taking care of the kids;
Wally could at least do this for him.
My husband has forbidden Wally
to come to our house. The only way
I can see him or my grandchildren is
to travel 20 miles. Christmas was a
heanbreaker. I had to deliver the
gifts to my son's house, and he
couldn't be here with the rest of the
family for the helidays.
Please don' t suggest counseling.
It 's out of ·the question: My daughters say · both men are stubborn
mules an~ this problem will resol ve
·
itself .in time..
Meanwhile, I'm brokenhearted

and torn between the two of them. I cannotlolerate the way she is ra ising
wo uld appreciate any advice· you her children. The kids berate her and
could offer. • HEARTBROKEN IN are in total control. Last Christmas,
MAINE
one of her sons made fun of her in a
DEAR MAINE: Wally and his very . dis respectful way, and she
father should each give a little to ignored it. He still received wonder·
keep peace in the famil y., Wally ful gifts.
should trim his hair so it is .noticeWe have had countl ess argument s
able. Your husband needs to mellow . about children and disc ipline, and it
out and realize that · Wally is no is obvious we di sagree. I have conlonger a kid who needs his. father's sillered leaving her over this but
·approval when it comes to tile length doubt I would ever find a woman as
of his hair They should rrieet each compatible. I know her kids won't
be around forever, but I'm not sure I
other halfway.
Dear Ann Landers: I have been can survive until tllen. What should
in a committed relationship for the . I do? --ANONYMou·s IN TH E
last four years with a woman who ·MIDWEST
has · children from a previous marDEAR MIDWEST: The woman
riage. Whe~ we are alone together, needs counseling to lear~ how to
we have a wonderful time. Our time . deal with these disr,espeetful chil with the children ; however, is dren , for their sake as well as hers.
'Urge her to do .so at once. She does
strained and disappointing.
We don't live together because I. her children ·a grave di sservice when

genealogy research methods at a
recent meeting of Return Jonathan
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
Associated Press Writer
American
Revolution, held at the
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) - Hoping to build a base of lifelong
Racine
Branch.
of the Meigs County
. orange ·juice drinkers,. the .Florida Department of Citrus is testing
Public
Library.
marketing campaign aimed at children and teen-agers.
Ashley, a member of the chapter,
During the first three months of this year, the .depanment spent
recommended
searching the ·Internet
$450,000 on television ads · and a ~eries of promotions in schools
and
joining
such
groups as the Ohio
focusing on children between the ages of 6 and 18 in Grand Rapids,
Genealogy
Society,
visiting the
Mich., and Nashville, Tenn.
,
National
Genealogy
Library
of the
. ·For years, the Department of Citrus has sponsored a program that
National
Society
Daughters
of
the
gets school cafeterias to serve orange juice. But the new campaign
American Revolution in Washingmarks the first time the department is appealing directly to children
ton,
D. C. and subscribing to various
and teen-agers to drink more orange juice. .
··
·newsletters. Researching
.genealogy
"This age group is .Jarge and is very important," Linda Hawbaker,
death
records
at county courthouses
the department's school marketing· director, told members of the
is
an
excellent
source of family
Florida Citrus Commission at a meeting Wednesday. · .
information, she said.
Ml!'ketin~ officials dusted off 1996 .television commercial.popuRecording living history from
lar wtth ch1ldren and young adults and also held promotions at
elderly family·and community memschools that promised a visit from an Apollo astronaut for the school
b~rs is also an excelhint source of
who.se stutjents drank the most orange juice.
:, ·
·
family histories, Ashley continued.
Citrus officials in the riear future also hope to have a~ Internet Web
The
Meigs County Historical Socisite attrlictive to cltildren and teens and ·a partnership with a sports
ety
library
is also a good resource for ·
event geared toward the age group.
genealogy records and books as well
With kids drinking an average of about: eight gallons each year,
as
the local libraries, Ashley noted.
'· · .children and teens already drink more oral)ge juice than the average
She also presented some suggesconsumption of Americans, about 5.5 gallons each year.
tions and items to consider when
writing personal history. Stan with
your binh, she said, and include
•where, •when, parents names, yotir
. brothers and sisters name.s, sur.By The Associated Press
(I whple medium-large apple, rounding ci'rcumstances and condi')be cereals and fruit in .these cored)
tions. She suggested making the hisWhqle Wheat Apple Cookies make
112 teaspoon vanilla extract
tory as interesting as possible by
them a healthful snack to satisfy a
112 teasJ?OOn sal.t
including' information about your
sweet tooth. The' CoOkies are ·Very
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
school days, teachers, school
qui~kly made and call for commonPreheat oven to !375 F. In a large• friends , activities such as vacations,
ly found ingredients.
bowl, with mixer at medium speed, church attended and fun and funny
Whole Wheat Apple Cookies
beat all ingredients until well mixed, situations.
112 cup butter or margarine, occasionally scraping the bowl.
Important events in your life
melted
. Drop by teaspoonfuls, I inch should include courtship, marriage,
1/4 cup sugar
apart. onto greased cookie sheet. . your nell.! home , your children, your
1/2 cup light brown sugar, Bake for 10 to 12 ·illinutes or until civic and political activities, posi.
packed
lightly browned. Immediately tions held. services rendered, clubs,
• 2 eggs
retnove cookies tO wire racks; cool. fraternities and lodges you joined,
• I cup uncooked, quick-cooking Makes 36 cookies,
Ashley said.
oats
Nutritional facts per cookie: 60
Never underes.timate the effect
3/4 cup wholewheat flour
cal., 1 g pro., 9 g carbo., l g fat, 1 · you may have on unborn generations
. 3/4 cup chop)ll'd unpeeled apple g fiber, 10 mg chol., 80 mg sod.ium. in helping them through the trials
and tribulations of life by the written .

. Driver cleared of charges in crash

..

Thursday, Aprll22, 1999

•.

By IAN JAMES
"Right now, things are looking' permits required i.n most cases, for east-west highway known as AlligaAssociated Press Writer
great," said John Fi'sh, a spokesman outdoor burning.
tor Alley, was closed as tltick snioke
MIAMI - After scorching the for the state Qivision of Forestry.
Qry weather is expected to persist · hung overhead and was expected to
Everglades for a week, fires that "Our efforts here have minimized the through tpe end of the month, said remain off-limits to traffic at least
burned 170,000 acres of sawgrass risk of the fire escaping ...
Jim Lushine, a meteorologist with the until today.
may finally be burning out.
The state banned outdoor burning National Weather Service in Miami.
The Florida Highway Patrol
State forestry officials said Wednesday. Fforida Agriculture
Florida has soaked up far Jess rain closed about 60 miles of the highway
• Wednesday the flames se~m to be Commissioner . Bob Crawford than usual during its December- Wednesday. The ro~d has been ·
.: turning in on themselves.
. ordered his agency to stop granting through-April dry ,season, prompting opened sporadically since the fire
state officials to fear a repeat of last staned April 15.
summer's wildfires, which scorched
Aided by swirling winds, the fire
nearly 500,000 acres and forced
•
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) - A man charged in a traffic accident that put 100,000 people from their homes.
•
quickly became the largest of at least
a State Highway Patrol trooper in a coma for three.weeks has been cleared.
Levees, canals and a four"Jane 2,568 wildfires that have burned
Delaware Municipal Court Judge Michael Hoague ruled Tuesday that highway helped firefight~rs hold the more than 230,000 acres in Florida
Richard c;oombs, 45, was innocent of.a minor misdemeanor charge of fail- flames inside a 24 miles-by- IS miles this year.
mg to mamtam assured clear d1stance.
section of the Everglades more than.
State emergency management
Trooper Jeffrey Collins was in the middle of U.S. 36, taking measurements 20 miles west of Fort Lauderdale. officials counted wildfires burning at
from an earlier unrelated accident Dec . 3, when he was hit. After a daylong, north of Everglades National Park. least 12 of Florida's 67 counties
nonjury trial Hoague concluded that Collins, dressed in a dark uniform, was ·
Interstate 75, South Florida's main Wednesday. ·
not "reasonably discernible" when he was struck by Coombs' car about6:02
p.m., about an hour after sunset.
· "This case presents a tragic set of circumstances of an officer out doing
his job, investigating by himself," Hoague said. " It underscores the inherent dangers associated with police work."
The patrol's crash report concluded that Coombs, of Delawar.e , reacted
to the situation as best as he,could by slowing his vehicle and D)oving to the
left.
Witnesses testified that glaring ,lights from a tow true!&lt; on the scene of
the original accident made it difficult to see.
Collins, 30, is recovering from ~ head injury.

,
•

Page9

Florida Department of Citrus ·Genealogy Research Methods Reviewed at DAR
June Ashley,' local geneal ogy word of advice you leave your chi1targets children and te~ns
researcher, presented a program on dren and grandchildren. Tell your

Burn ban helps fight against Everglades fire

.

The Daily .Sentinel

::~$21 ,S$0°0

taE.'l4 t999 RANGER
STEREO
lliUP TOTAL IE FORE DISCOUNTS

$11,195

. _.ONDAY·PIIDAY
9" AK • 7" PM .
SATuRDAY ·

177 EXIT 132 :
RIPLEY, V1V

· 9" lM • 5" P&amp;l
CLOSEl&gt;

372·3673:
9

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Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Thursday, Aprll22 ,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 11

·Thursday, Aprll22, 1999 ;

'Parade of State$·, judging held at Bradbury School

®Eastern .High School.com

Middlepon High School graduates living in the area are invited to attend
an alumni association meeting at 7 p.m. next Tuesday·at the home of Yvonne
Scally in Middlepon.
A few weeks ago the assoc iation was haying difficulty in getting its act
together ·fo r the .annual reuni on. 'However, all is under control and those ·
active in the organi zation are reaching out to others in the area asking them
to get involved.
The reunion has been set fo r~Saturday, May 29, at the former high sch"!ll
in.Middl eport. A social hour and registration will be held from 5:30 to 6:30
with dinner from 6:30 to 8: 30 and a dance from 8:30 to II p.m. The dinner
will be a buffet catered by the K. &amp; L. Caterin g Service. Vari Johnson will
be playing the recorded music for dancing. If you need an informational let- .
ter about the reunion contact Nancy Cale at 992-5438 or Dixie Pierce at 992If you' d .like to get in
meet5755.
.
. volved be sure to attend the Tuesday night
.

There's JUSt a little over a wee k left before the annual Six Mil e Yellow
THE WINNERS - First place winners receiving ·$1 00 S&amp;vingil
R ag Yard Sale is held in Pomeroy and Middleport so you' II wan,t to get reg- . bonds at for their Parade of States projects were left to right, David
istered in.
.
.
.
·
.
. Pole, Erri!Ml Kennedy, Autumn· Mclaughlin, Kylen King, and Alex
Registration is $5 and you can do thi s as the Middleport Department Sisson. Jamie Ellis, not pictured, was also a first place winner and
Store, Office Service and Supply and the Ohio River BearCo., all in Mid ~ took best of show ior the fifth ·grade. Alex Sisson· was the fourth · A MEMORIAL ....:. A ·display at Bradbury's ·open house for
"
dleport, and at Chapman 's Shoes and the· Ohio Valley Bulk Food St~re in grade ~est of s~ov.i'winner. Ellis .and Sisson were also presented "Parade of States" honored Barbara E. Logan, teacher at the
dleport Elementary School for 27 years. The display noted her wor_K:
trophies.
Pomeroy. ·
·
.
. ·
with many of the students participating In the history/language arta;
All registration fees are being used to adverti se the upcoming sale as well
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Lynch and Chalsie Manley, fourth projecta and featured a memorial plaque.
· •·
as prov ide for expenses invol ve&lt;! in preparing locator maps and other infor- Sentinel News Staff ·
.
graders, and Kayla Fetty and . Melia
mational material so that shoppers will know your location on sale days
More than 60 research projeps Whan, fifth graders.
,which are April 30 and May I.
·
.
integrating history and language arts ·• The savings bonds and commemParticipants may conduct their sales in yards, garages ·or inside of their . created by fourth and fifth graders at orative coins · were provided by
homes and merchants· are also ,being encouraged to hold sidewalk sales on the Bradbury Elementary School Farmers Bank, the sc hool's Partner
. both sale days.
·
·
. ·
were presented for judging thi s in Education, ·assisted by People's
The deadline for registering at any ofthe business establi shments is Mon- week in th·e second annual '"Parade Bank and the Home National Bank,
day, April 26 at 5 p.m.
·Racine.
of States.''
Taking the top honors were Alex
Judging the entries were R9bert
. Gayle Price,- a grad~ate 6f the '.'old school" was really .taken by surpri se , Sisson, fourth grade, a student of Leith, a professor of history at Ohio
when he vi sited a dentist a few days ago. As it tumc&lt;l out hiS'Iooth had to be Christi Lisle, and Jamie Ellis, a stu- University; Dr. Janis Schmoll, propulled. However, Gayle couldn 't believe that he had to sign a lengthy con· dent of Kenny Dewhurst, fifth fessor of education at the·University
sent form before the pr\}cedure could take place.
grade. They were each presented a of Rio Grande; and Roger Birch and
tr.ophy and a $1 00 savings bond, and JoAnn Corder, both ' former history
AnnBoso who IS chairing a fund drive for monies to help Jeremy Rowe, a given special recognition at an open teachers.
Meigs High School student who was ·burned during a welding class at the house to ·which the community was
The tri-folds and research papers
·
prepared by the students were disschoolrecently, has planned a public gospel sing this Sunday as a part of the invited.
drive.
Other winners by homeroom, played in the auditorium beneath
Ann repons that a number of gospel grotqJs including "Deliverance" have receiving $100 savings bonds, were state flags. Instructions to the stu- .
indicated they will be on hand for the sing which will be held from 2to 5 David Poole of . Debbie · Seiben's . dents were that the tri-folds contain
p.m. at the Carmel Church which is just off the Racine-Bashan Road. A free homeroom, Errine Kennedy of a timeline of at least seven iteins on
JUDGING PROJECT - JoAnn Corder, r.e tired .Meigs history
will offering will be taken.
. · · ··
·
· Lisle's
homeroom, . Autumn the history of the state selected, arid teacher, judged the ·"Parade of States" project of David Poole, a:
By the way_, Jeremy has made great progress with his second and third McLaughlin of Dewhurst's hoine ihat the history of the State be onthe fourth grader at tha Bradbury..Elementary School. Poole usecl Ohip
degree burns and was returned to his Midcilepon home Tuesday from the room, and Kylen King of Missy board in a pictorial form using peo- . and his tri-fold Information ranged from agricuHura to manufactur- .
Cabeii-Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W. Va., where he has been con- . Howard's homeroom.
pie, battles, battle sights, ·manu- ing, anct lnclucted facts on historical places and famo~s people.
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fined since the accident
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Second place winners· were· mcnts, famous people events.
The .event was dedicated to the tm:ium displayed her picture · and ll·
Jeremy underwent two surgedes at the hospital and whether any more Angcila Casci and Valerie Carpenter,
For the judging the students WFre
memory
of Barbara E. Logan, who -plaque noting the memoria) tp the
surgery will be required will depend upon his progress. He'll be. back at the fourth grade, and ·Kayla McCanhy called one at a time to explain their
taught
at
Middleport Elementary . teacher who taught many of the chi I-'
Huntington hospital Mqnday for his first check'IP.
· and Eric Van Meter, fifth grade.
projects to the judges and to review
School
for
27
years. A large display dren now .attending the Bradbury·
· Third place winners receiv.ing · the research they had done in prepa·
·
in the hall at \he entrance to the audi· school.
If I understand this properly, · the Schottenstein Center at Ohio State was commemorative· coins Were Joel ration for the ''Parade of States."
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completed just no time 'l.&amp;o and already th~re seems to be a parking· problem. .
Oh well, the best latd P'l"s.. do keep smtlmg. ·

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OVAL initiates multi-typ·e library system for member libraries,_.

.Community Calendar;.._
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The Community Calendar ·is
published as it free service to non- ·
profit 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
Jo run a .specific num()er of day s.

Oolf Association; spring meeting,
Saturday, noon, club house. Nine
hole scramble . .Nev; members
welcome.

SUNDAY
CHESHIRE - Gospel' sing ,
I :30 p.m . Sunday, Poplar Ridge
Free Will Baptist Church off State
· Route 554. The Brady Family .of
Parkersburg and . the · Builders
THURSDAY
HARRISONVILLE Har- Quartet of Ripley to ~e the
.,
risonville Senior Citi zens Club , smgers.
· meeting and luncheon, Thursday,
10:30 a.m. at the town house.
MIDDLEPORT ' - "Released"
southern gospel men 's quartet
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Tuppers from Gallia County, at the MidPlains VFW, Post 9053, Thursday, dleport Church of Christ Family
7:'30 p.m. Nomination and elec- Life Center, Sunday, 7 p.m. Pub•
tion of officers.
lie invited.

a

REEDSVILLE
. Riverview MONDAY .
Garden Club, ThurS&lt;.!ay, 8 p.m. ai
CHAUNCEY - Revival Moothe home of hnice Young . Mar- . day thro.ugh May I, Red town Free
garet Cauthorn to !lave the 'pro; Methodist Church, State Route 13
gram, "Backyard conservation." . · 'north of Chauncey, with TheMessengers, John Elswick. ·
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi . . POMEROY - Veterans Ser·
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday. vice Commission, 7:30p.m. Mo~ ­
Lutheran Church.
day, at new location , 117 Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - AA, AI-Anon,
tfon smoking group, noon ThursATHENS - Finance commit·
4ay Catholic Church, 161 Mulber· · tee, Athens-Meigs ·Educational
~Ave .
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Service' Center, Monday, 2 p.m.
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offices , 507 Richland Ave .,
. :: POMEROY - Caring and Athens.
, ~aring Support Group, Thursday,
~· p.m., Meigs Multi-Purpose
RUTLAND - Open door ses{fuilding . Kathy · Moos from sion with State Rep. John Carey,
Monday, 2:30 to 3;30 p.in. at the
'"-is ion Rehabilitation to speak.
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Rutland village hall in the Rut'land .Civic Center.
fRIDAY
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iijeeting,"'f'60'7 Nye 7\ve--:;- 7 p.m.
RACINE - ·Fre'e skin' te; ting.
IJriday.
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clinic, Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
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Meigs County tuberculosis nurse,
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•: POMEROY - Facilities com- . at the fire station , Monday, 4:30
.l}ittee of Athens-Meigs Educa-. to 6:30 p.m .. All individuals in
(io 0al Services Center, .Friday, 9 food service required annual skin
·at offices, 321 East Main , te sts .
· 11-pmeroy. ·
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TUESDAY
SATURDAY
POMER,OY - Meigs County
:: CLIFTON - Clifton Taberna- Publi c Library Board , Tuesday,
~le; Clifton, W. Va. special ser- 9:30 a.m. at· library. ··. ,
vlces, Saturday, 7 p :m: Rev. Bob
blall, guest speaker: · · • ·
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'• POMEROY - South Bethel
~ew Testament Church, . spiritual
r~newal continuing through Satur&lt;lay,
7 p.in. each evening.
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The new Ohio . Valley Area · service.
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reviewed the finances for the 'new work the OVAL st~ff will need to
Libraries' (OVAL) plan .of service
The ability of the members to ,.program and answered many q .Uesr undeJ;ia~ , to prep~.e . ~or l~e eve~\., r
· and the financial needs of the provide user items not in their col- tions from the group. The new pay- . ·Tiie .Board approved a joiJJ.L.
revamped · organization
were lections is referred to as "Resource ment formula has two elements. The · QVAUMOLO (Mid Ohio Libracy
reviewed at a recent meeting of the Sharing" and Jackie Shaw, Director . first,: a basic.' membership . fee Org~nization) "Digitization" LST~ ~
Board of Trustees 'h9d at the We! I· of the Sylvester Memorial Wellst9n assessed on a per capita basis. The · grant application.· to :the Sta~~· ·
stan· headquarters..
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Public Library; who revie~ed plan second is purchased services such as Library. If approved, it would pur- ·
Meigs County is a part of the elements of the program. OVAL will delivery, books by mail, and tech- · 'hase equipment, provide traini!Ul
OVAL program and Wanda Eblin ·continue with the web-based rtology with the assessment for these and 'e1(pedite the pf!1cess of creating;
presents the Meigs County District ., ~ccess Ohio" catalog, it was ba~ep OQ use.
digital copies of local history mate. Public Library on the board.
reported. .
HB 674, which changed OVAL rials in the member ' lib~aries . The
The meeting was a joint meeting
Margaret Cochran, 'director o( the from a "public. library" service orga7 State Library Board will act .on the ..
with the Librarians' Advisory Com- Jackson City Library, reviewed the nization to .an .organization able to proposals in September.
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mittee with the discussion dealing continuing education plans for next serve. libraries of all types, has also
OVAL is a cooperative regional, .
with provisions of HB674 which year. OVAL pl~ns to offer more than been pan of the planning process. library system chartered by the Stall'· . .
went into effect on March 30. The 30 workshops next yeai and a new On the motion of Mark Oakley, the of Ohio in 1973. I1s mission is to.:
QVAL Board is working towards the twist in the plan is to deliver tech- Board approved a school member- provide continuing education,, ,
resource sharing and innovative serevolutionary process of making nology training directly in the mem- ship fee of 0.25 per ADM.
OVAL a truly multi-type library sys- 'ber libraries.
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The Board approved moving the vices to and foster cooperative. .
tern, it was reported. ·
Basic operations were presented May 20 annual trustee meeting to efforts among libraries in the South- ·
Tom Adkins, Director of the Gar- by Katrina Conway, director of the the parish hall of Sts. Peter and Paul ern Ohio counties of Athens, Jack- .
net A. Wilson Public Library of Pike flerbert Wescoat Memorial Library Church in Wellston. The facility· is son , Lawrence, Meigs,· Pike, Ross,"·
County, provided an overview of in Vinton County. Jennifer Thomp- more su'ited for meals than the ·· scioto 'and Vinton.
.,; _
· technology services in the new pro- son, director of the Chillicothe and ·OVAL building, and will reduce the
. gram. OVAL will continue !o sup- · Ross County Public Library,
port the _web sites of the member apprised the group on plans for con. libraries, and for those members ·lractual ·services, including Books
. requesting the service, maintain By Mail and Reading and the Young
· local computer networks and' work- Child activities.
stations. In this instance, the new
Mark Oakley, . OVAL Trustee
pia~ .calls for the members to con- budget and finance ·committee chair
tribute additionlil fees to suppon this from the Nelsonville Public Library,
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Quality Prescription Service ·.
at Competitive.Prices.

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Bath &amp; Body Works' holiday sugarplum candle scent:
.
- Intimate Brands, a spinoff of Columbus-based spectal(y retatler The ·Limited Inc., wanted to let readers "experi~nce ,the power of the
brands firsthand ," iiiNestor relations cllief -Debbie Mitchell s.aid Tuesday.
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Intimate Brands. produced 80,000 copies of .,the report~ up I 0,000
from a year ago. It plansw send 56,000 to shareholders tht s week and
hang .on tO · the rest for prospective investors, employees · an~ cuslomers.
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Each copy cost $7 to produc: - $5 more than last year.

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Health·Line

;; HARTFORD - Gospel con-.
Saturday, 7 p.m. at Father's
Kotise Church, ·Hartford . Jo'e
Qster Family Builders Quarter
atd Glory land, Believers . to
C:~rt,

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Victoria' a Secret, Bath &amp; Body post
We honor- .most third party.;
financial reports with uri usual twi~ts
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _: Annual financial reports can. be pretty
presC,ription plans. . Your
b\)ring, unless the company has a secret ....:. as in Victoria's Secret. ·
Intimate Brands ' latest annual report· features the usual facts and
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacists,
figures, along with a CD-ROM of the Victoria's Secret fashion
that was broadcast on the Internet in F.ebruary.
.
· ·
· Intimate Brands, the company wltich owns Victoria's Secret and .·ChLJC~, Ken &amp; Roo ar,e ·her_, to· :
; BatH &amp; B.ody ·Works, also threw in samples of lip .gloss and coupons
for a candle and pant'y hose into its financial report.
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fill your prescription·need$~ . ·
There's even a scratch-and-sniff pict-ure of a snowman that gives off

PleasantValley Hosp~tal

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. . COUPON . · ·
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;; MASON ~ Rjverside Ladies

·!1 Ll•lt
Up · i,~ $S~QO .•~ any ~rescrl~tlon.' .:!.
per Custo111er p•r prescription 1

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for the track. When the constructioit
company paved the parking lot, they
.also paved the track . .Around the
beginning of December, Tom Pierson
began lining the track. We just recently finished all the painting.
Although we have a brand new
track , we also have many repairs to
make. We have to get the cage fixed
for the discus and we also have to fix
the long-jump pit and the runway . .
This year, many talented people
are going out for track. Already, over
U[:f.
After last year's flood, it was 40 people haye signed up. In the past,
doubtful that we would ever have · there have been a lot of people who
home track meets. But with the help · thought that track was not important,
of many volimteers and the $enerous but that is changing, and more peodonation of equipment from local ple are becoming interested:
Track is different from other
btlsinesses, such as Wesam ·Construction .and the .Tuppers Plains- sports in that it is an individual sport.
chesterWater District, who helped In track you work to better yourself,
dean up the mud, we had a good base and don't have to worry about letting
By AMBER BA.KER
.
: For the first time in over a decade,
Eastern High School able to host
track meets. Thanks to the Eastern
school board, we were able to con- ·
struct a new track .. The board also
purchased 50 new hurdles and other
equipment for our use. TJlisyear, we
w(ll have four borne .track meets set
up. We, are also having a junior high
track program tllis year. That program
already has two home track meets set

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your teammates down if you don't
fare well . Also, track isn'i just all
about running. You can also do other events, likejumping or throwing
.events. In tracli, you have lots of
pride in yourself if you achieve
something good, because you know
you did it all by yourself without the
help of a team . .
The track'team, coaches and community would also like to thank
everyone who helped make it possible fot us to have our own track program.
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'The new track is a great addition
to our school," Matt Boyles said .
"The track helps out all 'of our athletic
teams and improves the look of &lt;&gt;ur
school. The track gives our t~ack
team a great advantage because we
can.now practice on a good track and
add track meets of our own."

Students named winners
i'n Governor's Art _ShQw
'se~eral

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Vaugh~n's
408 Geaera.l
Hartln1tr Parkway
992·3471 .

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Starcher Jesalca Marcum, Melody Lawrence,
Heath P~ffltt, Aaron Will, Valerie Kan and Wesley Karr. The acholarahips can be used at any
college or university In the state, according to
Guidance Counselor John Redovian.

COOL$ POT
· CONVENIENCE STORE
Eyel • G[ocerlll .. Qe!!
· Family Bastayrant ·
Coolville Exit off Bt. 7
667,.6100 Store
667,.6101 Restaurant
Owner: Bryin White

Supporting all the area
achoola .&amp; youth.
• 1,000 POINT CAREERS - -~ Brannon and Valet'll Ka~r;

both -.nlors at Ea&amp;tel'n, a.,. the two Mliil&amp;t addltlona to Eaatem a

J,OOCI Poln~ ~1\lb, made up Of batle~ player• who .-ned 1,000 ,
polnta during 111* high achcioiiMieketbaH carwrs. They join .leesica
('96), Chlt'lle Bl11ell ('15) and Oennle Eichinger (~72)•
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333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740) 992·6472

·R&amp;G
Feed Supply
"Stuff". .for Pets
.
Farm Animals • Stable
Joe Evens, Owner
. 992·2164

Stop In and say "HI" ·
to D•ve or Herb. ·

742·2211

Ohio 1(jver
tBear

·HOME
NATIONAL .
·BANK
Racine 949·221 0
Syracuse 992-6333

Downing Childs
Mullen Musser
Insurance
111 E. 2nd, POmeroy
992-3381

Company
992-4055

OKlO UIUAltf IIIIP

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By MATTHEW BOYLES
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The Eastern High School Class of 2000 came mto the school year well•
short of the necessary funds to put on a good prom for the seniors, and to '
go on a senior trip next year.
The JUniors recognized the great task ahead, and pulled together and .
worked hard this year to raise the necessary funds . .
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The class sponsored a succossful variety show this spring, "The CountryJ
Folk Variety Show," which featured Roy Clark Jr., Blu~ Grass Country and· ·
Sabrina(stars of the Country Cavalcade), Crossroads wtth Nashvtlle record. ing artist Johnny Statts, Han Brothers, Surefire and the comedy of Uncle Doo-;'
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Local talent included Sheriff James Soulsby, t~e Big Bend Cloggers, BhndEntrance,' Swinging Seniors, Alison Rose, the Bissell Brothers, Jean.'
Trussell, Shame, Proclaimers, Veronica Grimm, Dylon Marcinko, and East-. ·
ban4 and choir.
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RECEIVE SCHOLARSHIPS- Theaa Eastam
High School seniors have racelved $500 schol·
arahips from the state of Ohio, based on thalr
paaalng all four aaCtlona of the 12th Grade Proficiency Tests. They are, .from left, Jennifer

RUTLAND.·
.BOTTLE·'GAS

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

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r~gional.

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an s;udents from .Eastern High School were narlted
winriers at the Ohio Governor's An Show re~ently. " .
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: .The highly competitive and.widely at~~ed sbo": IS a statewide _event held
i~ Columbus, judged by prof!'SSIOn~ an1sts. Ti;le.show, accordmg to An.
Instructor Mrs. Bobo, is htghly selecuve and d1fficult t~ enter.
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Tina DeLaCruz, Danielle Rucker, Kim Mw;cinko, Christy Riley, Jan~t
Ridenour, Zack Collins, Kim Godwin, Cinda Clifford ood Nancy Pic-ke&lt;~s
· - were all selected 115 regional winners from Eas!ern.
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"Being selected is a great honor, and I "':" extre~ely proud of all the EHS .
3rt students for their han! work and the htgh quality of anworks ,that they .·
produced&lt;" Mrs. Bobo &amp;aid.
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' Nine works of an were selected for state compeUiton of 77 pteces whtch
were entered. .

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Junior class pulls together .:'
to sponsor variety show ··

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NEW YORK.(AP)- More than donors from each city.
companies inducting Dr. Pepper, .
a million families applied for a
Fotstmann, who along with John · General Instruments and Gulfstream .
chance to receive one . of 40,000 Walton, heir to the Wai-Man f9rtune , Aerpspace, enlisted the help of basescholarships to help low-income chil- founded the funi:l in 1998 and helped · ball star Sammy Sosa, TV personaldren attend private school, Wall raise $170 million ·in scholarship ity Oprah Winfrey and poet Maya
Street financier Theodore f'orstmann monies, said the I,237,360 applicants Angelou to promote the pr0gram.
said Wednesday.
represented nearly one out of every
Critics, including Sandra Feld,The winners of the Children's 30 schoolchildren in ·America. He man, president of the American Fed- .
Scholarship Fund for students in . said it also showed how deeply dis- eratioh of Teachers, say the program
kihdergarten through eigi;lth grade . satisfied parents were with the current undermines the public school system
were announced at simultaneous educatiOn system. .
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and does little to help the poprest stunews conferences . here and in Lo! ,
The scholarships, ranging from · dents who cannot afford an·average
Angeles. .
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. . $600 to $1,600 a y~ar. for four years, of $1 ,000 a year to match the schol·
The winners, chosen by lottery were open to qualtfymg students m arship and cover the cost of private
from all 50 states, nearly 3,000 cities both pubiic and privat~ schoois, but tuition.
and 22,000 communities, incl~de · scholarsh~p offictals sa1d most came
3,750 studeius in Los Angeles ~nd from publtc schools. The scholarships
Barry Lynn, head' of Americans
2,500 each in New York and Chica- can ~!so be used to c_over cost~ J?r · United for Separatimi of Church and
go. Other citjes included Newark, pubhc sc~o~ls outside a chtld s State, called .the scholarship fund "a
Baltimore, Philadelphia am[ New asstgned d1stnct.
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bait-and-switch con game" whose
Orleans. The numbers reflect 'the
Forstman_n, known m the busmess real goal is to privatize the public
· amount of money given by private world for hts ,leveraged buyouts of school system. "Their much-ballyhooed 'schohirship' scheme is merely a step in that direction," Lynn said.

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and' the District of Columbi a a funding to the states, creating educa~ '
dem onstration program set up in . tion savi ngs accounts thJt widen
1994 that was limited to 12 states.
· school choice, setting "R vouchef ·
Debate on the •bill was somber, · program~ 'and opp &gt;Sing fe deral test·
with many lawmakers referring to the. · ing.
school shootings outside Den ver on
" We will ha"e to• gh fi ghts," said&lt;
Tuesday as'funher proof that s~hools Sen. Jim Jeffords, R-Vt:, chairman of
need to get a better grasp of their pro- the Senate Health, Education, Labor
and Pensions Committee. "There
grams.
' Clinton, in a statement, praised the arc very, ·very difficult philosophical
bipartisan work on the bill and said .distinctions. '' .
To win administration suppon of
that it is a good prelude as Congress
moves on "to the most imponant the Ed-Rex bill, Republicans had to'·
aspects of the nation's education give up O!le pri o.rity: a meas ~re ''
agenda" - completing his goal of inserted in. the bill by Senate Major-·'
hiring 100,000 hew. teachers to ity Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., that
reduce class size, building and inod· would hav~ allowed some of the $1 .2'·:
ernizing, 6,000 public schools and · billion in 'his year's budget for Clin~· '
making schools more accountable for ton's new teacher program to be used .
for special education needs.
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results.
Those goals are s~re to divide the
The White · House . threatened a
administration and. the GOP leader- · presidential veto if that was .(eft in . ll
ship, which backs a very different was removed at a House-Senate con- ·
agenda of block granting federal Ference .on the legislation.
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Financier
announces.scholarship . winners
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Board expenditure allows for
first trac.k meet ill a decade.

.I Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy I ..
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school's trick program; This is ·
year In
1o that Eastern !las been able to host track
meets.

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated .Praas Writer
. 'WASHINGTON - Supporters of
more local control over schools are
savoring a victory while awaiting
larger battles in Congress over education philosophy and funding: , ·
. Legislation giving states and local
school distric.ts more· freedom in
how they spend federal education
dollars · passed overwhelmingly in
both chambers Wednesday - 368-57
in the House and 98-1 iri' the Senate.
President Clinton said he would sign
it "without clelay."
. The "Ed-Fiex" bill was the first
substanti ~e legislation to emerge in
the post-impeachm ent Congress.
Republican s, · strong advocates of
giving school s more authority over
· educa!ion spending, trumpeted its
passage .
"This bill cuts the str,ings that
keeps our children from a better education," said Rep. William Goodling,
R-Pa., chairman of the House Edu·
cation and the Workforce Committee.
He said it would allow greater
nexibility to educators in crafting
education programs totaling nearly
$1.1 billion this fiscal year.
''There ·are innovative ideas ·wait·
ing to be released by our local edu·
· cators," said Sen. Bill' Frist," RTenn., the Senate co-sponsor with
Sen. ·Ron Wyden, D-Ore. .
The bill would enable states and
school diWicts to be released from
some rules thai ordinarily must be .
met to obtain federal funding . In
exchange, they would have to set up
their own programs under which
they would be acc9untable for better
educational .results.
It would expand io all 50 states

Supermarket

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(304) 675-282$

TRACK IMPROVEMENTS - Some of Eastem 'a track ani! flltld sen lora are pictured with
the new hurdlas purchased this .y ear for the

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Congress OKs education
bill, g·irds for •bigger battles

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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll22 , 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Thursday,
Aprll22,
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1999
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PHS Alumni Association reunion set for May 29
Plans are moving forward for the dancing.
Alumni who cannot attend ·this
annual Pomeroy High School Alumni Association's reunion to be held year are asked to send dues of $2 in
on Saturday, May 29, at Meigs High order to keep on the mailing list.
;rickets for the dinner and dance are
School.
Dinner will be served at 6:30 $12 each and may be purchased at
p.m, in the school cafeteria at Meigs Francis Florist or Swisher-Lohse
High School. A dance with George Pharmacy. Those alumni living out
Hall will follow in the same loca- of town may send for tickets by
ti on. Graduates will be seated mailing a self-addressed stam ped
according to their year of graduation envelope and money to the Pomeroy
and alumni are permitted to take Alumni Association, P.O. Box 202,
guests to the reunion. Photos of Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. The year of
reunion classes will be taken in the graduation is to be included in the
interval between the dinner ~nd information .

This year scholarships are offered
to students who are either a child or
gra ndchild of a Pomeroy High
School graduate. Donations are
being accepted.
Deadline for applying for scholarships is May 20. There are no offi"
cial applications. Those applying aro
to send a resume, transcript, letter o(
application, a current photo and· a
notation of their relationship to a
Pomeroy High graduate to the asso-ciation at the above address. Twq
$600 schola,rships will be awarded. :

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season.

-PROGRAM PRESENTED -These students in the winter session ballet classes of the Rlverbend Arts
Council presented a program at the Family life Center in Middleport recently. Performing were left to
right, front, Danlelle Cline, Emma Perrin, Jessica .Patterson, Kall Harris, Jorden Evans, a~d back, Alaine
Arnold, Mandy Roush, Alyssa Longstreth, Kylee Henry, Sarah Jane Hubbard, Chelsea Htcks, and Haley
·: Perdas. For Information about the spring. session, parents may contact the Instructors, Julianne
· Howard, 992-1044 or Susan Eaaon, 992-2708. ·

. Billy Graham named
inductee to Gospel
Music Hall of Fame
~ASHVILLE , Tenn . (AP) - He
· preaches instead of singing the
praises of God, but the Gospel
Music Association still wanted the

If it's too early for fresh peas in
your ' area,, substitute frozen. If you
don 't have a grill, roast the aspara·
gus in a '450 F oven.
Grilled
Asparagus
With
Morels, Spring Peas and Bowlie
Pasta
I pound asparagus, peeled and
·
trimmed
I ·teaspoon olive oil
I pound bowtie pasta
6 quarts water
I tablespoon salt
· I teaspoon butter
.

3 ounces fresh morels, halved

and rinsed
I tablespoon minced shall ots
I cup green peas
· I cup snow peas, trimmed
I cup sugar snap peas, trimmed
1/4 cup vegetable broth or water
I tablespoon fr esh marj oram,
chopped
1/4 teaspoon salt, or to taste
Freshly ground black pepper, to
taste
1/4 cup freshly grated Parme san
cheese
1/4 cup thinly sliced scallions
Toss asparagus in oil and grill or
roast until tender. If grilling, use a
narrow rack or. pin asparagus spears
together with wooden. skewers to
keep them from falling through the
grill rack. Slice into l-inch pieces
and set aside.

Cook pasta in boiling salte4
water until tender 10 the bite (begin
to test after about4 minutes). Mean:
while, heat butter in a large saul~
pan over medium heat until i! .
begins to turn brown. Add morels
and shallots; cook ju~t until shallots
•
are translucent. Add the three cups
of peas ." the broth and marjoram:
Season with salt and ·pepper. Cover
and cook until peas are barely tender. Uncover, add asparagus, and
cook until asparagus is hot and pea~
are tender. Drain pasta. Toss wit~
vegetables in a large serving bowl.
Sprinkle with cheese and scallions;
serve immediately.
Makes 4 servings.
Nutritional facts per serving:
590 cal., ·25 g pro., 7 g fat (2.4 g saturated fat) , 110 g c_arbo., 325 m~
sodium, 7.5 mg chol. , I 0 g fiber . . '

Rev.
Graham in its hall of r::::::;:::::=::::::::::::::-r=~~~=7:=::==:::T-==::=.:~7.:;::=::-r==~=7~7,=:::;::::::::;:
fame . Billy
··
Graham, 80, topped the list of
Public. Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice '
inductees Wed nesday evening. He
eubmlttad within 30 daye of .·or letter ol credit upon a wtt1 following Hid No&lt;l.h
NOTICE OF SALE
is the first non-musician of more
notice of -the · propoHd solvent bank In tha amount Llna of 11ld taction about
By
vlrllle
of
an
Order
of
than I00 hall of famers, and the Salt leeued out of the action. An adludlcttlon of not '"'" than 10% of tha Eighty rode to lht center ..,.f
first not to be ·an association mem- Common Pleat Court of· hHrlng may ba held on a ·bid. amount In favor of tha the public road; lhenc.e
Mtlge County, Ohio, In the propoaad 1ct1on If a hearing alore11ld. Malge County following tha center of tilt
ber.
ctot
of the Homt Natlanel requett or obJtctiiiD It Commt11lonaro. Bid band• public road South to '"
The award was accepted on his
Benk,
va. Unde received by tha OEPA within ahall be accompanied by South Une of Iandt d~
behalf by George Beverly Shea, Beaver PlelntiH,
till Unda D. Beaver, 30 daye of t•uanct of the PrQOI of Authority ol tha by John .F. Torrence ihd
who has sung during Graham's cru- et al., Deltndlntll, upon a Propoeed action. Written ontctat or agent algnlngtho Elizabeth Torrence cp
·
Gwent.lyan Jonee by da'Jd
Judgement therein ran- commentt, requael8 lor band.
sades for half a century.
public
maattnga,
and
'Blda
thtll
ba
ltllad
and
dated Novambar 18, 1av2;
.
dared,
baing
No.
119"! talked with (Graham) about it
·•dludlcatlon haarlnll' ·rt- marl&lt;ed I t Bid lor "Gilkey thence following the eouth
cv-a
In
nld
Court,
1
will
last wee k," Shea said. "He said, oner lor nla tl tha froni queala mull ba tent to: Rldga Road Water Lin a una of Hid lend• dftded by
'Don ' t those people know that' I door of the Caurthouot In Hearing Clark, Ohio Envl- ExtaneiOI) Bid" and. mailed Torrence to aald Jonll
.. T.A.G. TRIP DONATION- Middleport's Feeney-Bennett Post 1211 can't even sing a note?"' ·
' Protection or dallvarad to:
about ·~Eighty rode to the
Pi!maroy, Melga Coilnty, ronmentat
County eouthaaet corner thertof;
· of the American Legion, through the Ohio Educational Support
Shea satd Graham couldn't Ohio, on the 28th day of Agency, P.O. Box 1049, · Melgl
Group, donated $1,000 to the Meigs County Talented And Gifted attend because he was busy with Mey, 188ll, at 10.:00 a.m., tha Columbua, ·Ohio 43218-1048 C o m m 1 • • 1 o n • r • thence North parallel with
tha Waat Uno of llild
Program Tuesday for tl)e group's upcoming June trip to Washing- board meetings of the Billy Graham following Iande and tent- (Telephone: 8111,044-2129). Caurthou•
"Final
Action•"
era
actlona
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45788
Section
tho place cil
loca1ad
at
35261
mont.,
. ton D.C. The group plans to visit the Smithsonian museums, the Evange listic Association in Min- Dexter Road, Dexter, Ohio of lhe Dlractor which are Attention Of blddart Ia beginning,tocontaining
about
' !'latlonal Air and Space Museum, the Washington·D.C. Zoo, the U_.S. neapolis .
:
45728. A complete legal aftectlve upon IHuence or a called to all of tha requlrt- 43 acree, more or lila.
Naval Museum Arlington National Cemetery, the Vietnam Memortal,
alfiCilve
data. mente conlalna&lt;! In thla bid
Parcel No. 4: Tha
Shea said Graham was deeply deecrlptlon . of the r••l alated
Pul1iuant to Ohio Ravltad packet, particularly to tha following r.. l a a tala
the White Hou~e and more. The program includes students from honored by the award.
atteta It • followe:
Tha fallowing real etl81a Cada Btctlon 3745.04, • Federal Labar Sl8ndarde tllusted. In tha townehlp ell
· Eastern, Meigs and Southern local schools who have been .raising
" H'e has always stres sed the tltuatad In tha County of flnaf action may ba • .,. I Provlalona and Davia- Lebanon, County of Metga,
· money since February for the trip. About 20 -~tudents and many
of music in reaching · Mtlge, In tht Stilt of Ohio, pealed to tha Envlronmtnlal l Bacon Wagtl, varloue State of Ohio, bounded and
importance
l:haperones will make the threa day/two night trtp. Shown are, frbm
people
with
the gospel message, on tha Townahlp of Salem, Ravlaw Appeal• Commit- lneurance raqutreme.nte, deacrlbed •• followe:
left: Russ. Mozingo, Feaney-Bennett Post 128 commander, Ashton
(ERAC)
formetty varloue equal opportunity Sltueta In aactton 27, TO'MI .
and banded and dttcrlbed alon
Brown from Southern Local, Derek Baum from Eastern Local and . and recognizes the role music can •lollowa:
known •• tha Environ- provlalone, and tha requlrt- 3, Range 11, of the Ohio
play in softening the listeners ' heart Tha following . dHcrlbad
· ;Jason DeMoss of Meigs Local.
mant.l Bolrd of Review) by man'dn'!,~~r~:~:!":~tngba:'o~ Company'a Purchaea and
or opening the listeners' mind s," rtll eet.te eltueted In a peraon who hll a perty to
•·
baglnntng at tha eauthw_.t
of the contract prlca. corner of 1 12 ecre tract of
. Mertlntburg, and com- • practedlng btlore the 100%
Shea said .
No bidder · may withdrew
mencing et 1ha Southeltt director by flUng an appeal hla
bid within thirty 1301 land pra..ntly owned by
comer
of
Lot
No.
1
and
run·
within 30_daya of notlca of dayaaltarthaactualdatoal . Dayton Hayman, which 1?
.
.
nlng three hundred and the flnallicllon. Pureuant to ,the opening tharaol. Tha acre tract of land. It Parcel
eighty lltt to • pleca of Ohio RaviHd.Cada Sactton Malge
County . No. One tn 1 deed recorded
beginning, running Waat 374$.07, a final action Comml..lonore reaai'Vtt In Vol. 138, Page 351, Melp
ninety feet; thence South l'"ulng, denying, madlly· the right to waive any lnlor- Co. Dead Recorda; thence
one hundred and tan f•t; tng, revoking, or renewing a malltiH or to r.elact any or South 50 ft1t to a croaa elf! .
thence Eaet ninety feat; permit, llctnH, or variance all blda. .
In • rock; thence In 1
thence North ona hundred which It not preceded by-a Janet Howard, Preeldant
Northauterly courea;,
and tan , ... to the
of ptopoaad action, may ba Malge
County croeolng two croe... cut In
beginning, baing al ollole appealed to tha ERAC by Commlltlonaro
·
1 rock, ebaut 1345 IHI II •
No. Nine (9) and Ten (10) ae flUng an appeal within 30 (41
aTC
uniform dlatanca of 50 f~t
22
28
5
151
1
racordad In plat of daye ollttuanca of the final
'
from tha eoutharly line of
Mtrtlneburg.
action. ERAC eppealt mutt - - - - - - , . . . . - - - eald 12 acre tract. to a point
Rtltrenca Dead: Volume bt flied with: EnvironPublic Notice
·50 feet South of the
313, Page 159, Mala• ment.l Rwlaw Apptala
.. .
.
North•at corner of Hid 12
County RICOrdt.
Commleaton, 238 Eatt Town Shariff'• Sale of Real Eetala acra troct; thanca North 511 .
Audllor'e Parcel Noa.: 13, Slrttl,
Roam
300,
Tho Stille·or Ohio, · feet;
a.n d · thence
00403.000 end 13-00404.000 Columbua, Ohio 43215. A
Malga COunty.
Southweaterty along th'
PROPERTY ADDRESS: copy of the appeal must be
Tha Bank of Naw Vorl&lt;, I t aautherly Una of aald 12
35261 Dex1tr Road, O.x1er, aerved on the . cllroctor Truetao, undor tho Pooling acre tract to the place of
Ohlo45728
wHhln 3 daye aflor filing the and Sorvlclng Agrooment beginning, containing 1 11:!
REAL ESTATE .APPRAISED appaalwtththtERAC.
· datod at of May 31, 1998, acre,moreorloH.
AT: $5,000.00. Tlla real
EKclpttng and ratarvlnO
flnill approval of plana Sarlaa 1996-B ve. Gregory
.eelatt cannot ba told lor and apeclflcattone
A. Buth, aka Gregory Buth, to former grantore,' Chari•
late than two-thlrde the
L0 1 d 1n 11
. C re.t k aut., No. 98 CV 029.
H. 'St1lnakar and Orphe ~·
appratted value.
Coneervancy Dlatrlct,
In pureuance alan Order Statnekar, their halre and
TERMS OF SALE:
10% Rutland, OH. taeua Data of Sale In the above entitled ... lgna lorevo·r,
an
down day of Hit, balance 04/011188ll.
action, l will offor lor Hla 11 undivided ant-hall Inter•~
on dallvary of dHd. Sold . Thlt final action not public auction, In the above In ell the oil gaa end all
eubjact to HCond hall 1M preceded by · prapoaad named County, on tha 28th other mlnarela lying undo.r
and accrued 1889 raal action and le eppealablt to day of May, 1998, et '10&lt;00 end wtthln tha pramlaea
lalale laxtL
Dexter rura( o'clock A.M., tha following hereby convayod being
. ERAC.
Jam'" M. Soulaby
ax1enalon
along deecrlbtd real talate TO BE percela No. 1 to No. 4,
waterllna
;•
(4l 22, 2t (51 e
TR ,328, CR #4, TR f44, SOLD AS A UNIT; altullled lncluaiVe, above daacrlbad,
.I
3TC
and R 1441.
..In tha Townehlp of Lebanon, with the right to antor Hid
County of Melge and State premteee, to prot peel and
(4) 22 1TC
of Ohio to:.wlt: ·
'
drill for, davalop, produce
Public Notice "'
Parcel No. 1: Being • and remove tha aemo, wltl)
COUNTY: MEIGS
Public Notice
part of Btctlon 27, Town 3, 'lhe nece..ary machinery
'·
Range 11, of the · Ohio tharalora a!Iii' tha right .to
·- NOTICE TO
· ' PUBUC NOTICE
CoD)peny'a
Purchua: ueeeamucholtheaurfllc•
Tht fallowing appllcltlona
CONTRACTORS
and/or verified complalntll SHied propoula for tha . Beginning II tha Northaut . •• IIIIIY bt neeaHiry lor !lie
'
,..rc receiVed 1nd tha lnttetlttlon of W•ter Uno corner of a live ecra lot purpo... aloroHid.
current Dead Recordact
following clr~~lt, propo"!f, Exttn'elon; Gala V.tv.., formtrly owned by John
or noel acttooe ,..ro l..uad Water Mattra, and Flueh Morgan, later by David 11/23/IMin Volume 15, Paie
•
by the Ohio Envtronmtnt.l Hy(!rlnt, Gllkey Ridge Jonae; thence South to the ~ .
Property commonly
Protection Agency COEPA) · ROid M.t C -. Ohl 0 Southaaat corner of eald
8' ou...,,by the' five, acre lot; then~• we~t knowe ee: 33794 Long Run
1. -- wHk. "Actlane: Include will 'ba rocalved
the adoption, modlllcatlon, Melge
County four lilt to • llaka; thence Road, Long Bottom, OH
·
·.
or repeal ol ordare (other Commlealonero 11 their . South to Long Run; thenot 441743.
Parcel 1: 06-00052.ooo; ·
than · emergency ord.,.); oHice at the Courthoult, following the maandarlnga
tha
1..- . denlll, Pomeroy, Ohio 48709 unttt of aalcl run tc Ianda owned 08·00053.000 and Oil•
·
.
madlflcatlon. or rwoca11an 10:00 AM
.., M•Y 17, 1999 by .Jonae; thane• loll-Ing 00051.000.
· of lletnHa, permltl, !Matt, and then at 1:00 P.M., II the aald Una watt to the
Btld PremtHa Apprelud
v1;1-e, or aertlllcatitt; Hid olllaa opened 1nd r11d place of beginning, at tl17,DOO.OO and cannot lie
containing twelve acrae, aatd lor !HI than twoothlrdi
1nd the approve! or aloud lor tha lol~ng: .
of !hal amount.
diHppravel of plane and The lnatallttlon of 4800 moro or len.
Parcel· No. 2: Alao the
TERMS OF BALE: T~
epeclflcttlone. ·
"Draft Uneer r.at of 3" PVC CLAQIIane•: aro written alate- 200 Pipe, twa 3" 0111 following proml... alluttad percent (10%) down at tht
manta of tha Dt,_,. of V.IVM, e Wllar 11-. and In tha nmt Stctlon. ~log time the bid It acctpticl:
Envlronmtnlll Protec-tion'• on• Flueh Hydront to ba of • live acre lot eold by Balance to be paid wllhlii
(Diroctor'a) Intent With located at Gilkey Road, Mary Jana Battler and John thirty (30) daya. Aily 1\011
roepeat to the ltauanae, Btcllord Townthlp d. 2311, Sattler to Devld Jonae, and not paid within nld thl~
dental, ate. of e ' permit, Mtlge County, Ohio. Pltrfl, containing ona half acre, (30) daya thtll ballr lntllrest
llaenH, onltr, etc. Inter- 8pecllloatlone, and bid more or leta. Beginning 11 at the rata of 11.75% per
allad pe,_..e tMY eubmlt forma may ba -ured 11 the northHII corner al Hid aMum from cilltl of Hie . • :
written
oommantt
or the olllca of TrlplaH .flva aa" lot near • poplar .Jamee M. louleby, Shtr11f.
'·
,
request • pubic meatlng EnglnHrlng, 112 1/2 Court tree; . thence Watt lo the Melge County, OH
regarding droll ICilona. ltrest, Pomeroy, OhJo. A .road; thence following the Carllele, MoNtllle • Rlnl
Commente ' or
publlo payment of Seventy Flva read to where tha. lint co., L.P.A. IV: Herbert :.t.
•'
•
mNUng requ- must ba ($75.00) (Non·rstundable) cornea tb the road; thenoa Kramer
eubmii!IMI within 30 daya of dollaro
ba required for North to tha place of 28200 Chegrtn Blvd., su~
notice of tha dl'lft action. MGh eel of plana and apec- ballnnlng.
240
·
·
"PropOMCI Ailtlona" aro lflostla!lt, chaok mlda : · Parcel No. 3: The Cl-llnd, OH 44122
•
written 8181111ntnlll of the ~blt
to . Trlplatt following real ..tete Phone: (218) 310-7200 : Dlrootor'e
Intent
with
lnSII-'1111·
•·
altualtclln tha Townahlp of fax: (218) 310-7210.
f
Napea~ to the l...anoe,
118011 bid must ba aocom- Lebanon. County of Melga, (4) 22,29
danllll, modlflctllon, ITIO- pant.cl by althtr 1 bid bond and attta of Ohio: Being In (8) e 3TC
•
••'
cstlon, or rena Wit of 1 In an amount al1 00% allhe .Section No. 27, Town No. 3, 1..:;.;.;.-:~-----.;.
,
permit, llaenae, or variance. bid amount with 1 .aurtty and Range . tlo. 11:
Written oommente and Htlalllotory to tha efcreHid Beginning on tht North Hne
County of aald Btctlon at a point
· requ- lor 1 . Plf.bllc Melga ·
milling
regarding
• Commltllontro or by cartl- 1eo rode Eaet of the
. propoMd lotion mey ba fled check,.c~thl~re check, . Northwnt corner; thence

large Black Female Lab, was J
~r.

I&amp; DAuto ~pholstery • Plus, Inc

HEAL,.H

E

EDI,.IOI 'II

r'-

YARD SALE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

Mon· Frl 8:30 , 5:00
OVer 40 yre experl•nce ·

Regilter Now $5,00-Pick up Flas

In ormation on
Health Care
or,EverJone!

On FlatwoOOs Jl:d.,
Lab/Mix, Black, with
White markings on each
paw, tip offail, and
aP:oss che~
••-:;~[" Mar Return.

wt"

·992·2155

•

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

KEITH MYERS
INIUUP OWNER

HORSES
AIIO Rl~lng Ltuona

.Ienior DIHounta
Fne Eltlmatea.

HoofHoU0w

Loryrbotlom, Ohio

Flll'llll

(740) 985-3677

Buy, SeU. Train or Bounl

Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

PUBUC NOTICE
. • Pureuant to Section '
12t .22 of the Ohio Ravlaed
Coda, · tha Molgt County
Board of Revltlon will mHI
to dlecuaa meuere that
hava com• bator• the
B01rd. The mastlng will ba
l)old an April 21, 1m at
11 :00 a.m. In tha Audltor'a
Office of tha Malge County
CourlhouH.
14) 22 1TC

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES ·

. 949·2168
4/2 TFN

SAVE TIME AND
·· SHOP THE

CUSSIFIEDS!'
_In Memory ·

In :Memory o my Son,

Card of Tha"ks

Stepliui Smitli on liis
·. 'Birtliday.

Cart{ of 'l1ian.
'11ie J'aniily of Stella
!Mu 'Durst wisM! to
tfzan{nlt'!JOU w/UJ
liHpetf us in our time of
sorrow. 'lfian.R§ to
family, ftUntl.s, anti
uigli6ors. '11iose filM
calJ.etf or 'Visitei. '11iost
w/UJ sent Jfowirs, foot!,
ttum~y. cgnsofing wortf.s,
prayers anti acts of
R,jtitinus. Special tfuinR§
to Cmnuns J'untrtlf

. 4t'22l56 - 1f:6I71SI.

Saaly :Missed ·

Laue, :Mom

·.ao

Announcement•

forktdlun .
Sport•man

-Gun
ShOot
.
2 Winners

!J{omL, !Mt. !MorUzli
Cliurcn of (joti ruitf %V·

'B'!JU 'Utt.
(joti 'Bftss 1'ou .
'11ie 'Durst '.flllllify

Split a Hog
Frltlay, April 23rd

. 7PM

110

every Saturday
. night
6:30p.m.

American Legion .
Middleport
Post 128
.Starburst $.2,950. 00
Door Prize $800. 00
145 people or
more wiU play
$1000 cover all. ·
. Average $90 per
game

Help Wanted

Overbrook
Center,
333 Page Slreet,
Middleport,
has full time.
positions for .
RN Vent Nurses
available for .all
shifts and
weekends.
ptease s~op by
and fill put an ·
application.

EOE

DAVE HARRIS, EXT. 104 OR
KATHY WILLIAMSON, EXT. 105
BEFORE MAY 10, 1999 ·

'·

I

CONCRETE

COIINICTION
r.

Quality Driveways,
, Sidewalks, Patios
Parking Lots

.

25 yrs experience
Free Esftmotes
740-742-8608 .

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates

Joe N: Sayre ·
740·742·2138
3/11/WTFN

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSIRUCIION .
•NewHomas
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473·
7

. (UmeSton•
Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING
L.lmestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
740·992·3470

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

29670 'B81han Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

740·949·2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
GOOOTIMES
Fri. April 23
OJ Music 9 pm - 1 am
Sat. Aprll24
Music by Flashback
9pm-1am

WAYNE'S PLACE
Fri. Aprll23
·Music by Flashback
·
9pm-tam
Sat. April 24
OJ Music 9 pni - 1 am
Weddil,g reception for
John (Larty) and Pam Warner
Aprll25, 1999
2- 4pm
Pomeroy, Ubrary

to 10' x 30'
Houra
7:00AM -8 PM

_,,..,

Galllpolla
&amp; VJclnlty
&lt;4 Fam ilies! Boys .Girls Clothll
Sizes n-16, 2 Mens Ne"' Surtl,

Sizes 48 Jackltt, 40 Pants,

Log Home On Left. No Eafl'f

58\es. ~ . Aprll23. \999.

Don't Need" Big One
CaU A Lillie One.

Topsoil &amp; Mushroom
Compost
Light Hauling
up to 8 ton
.
.

Tral-houllt•moblll

992·5455

Homtt-dlclll-d"-11
Equlpmtnl Clltntd ll!tgreHtd

odiUon- 2:00p.m.
Monday odltlon
• 10:00 o.m. Sotunloy.

'Prol188lonal Rcullne Lavin
Maintenance and Mal1curing
'RIIIIdenllal &amp; Commord~ ·
'SI1rubbery Maintenance
'Serving Mllgs and Gallia Counties
in Ohio and Mason Coll1ly In WV

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

For Free
Prolf"am Guide
CaU 992~2727

GE dryer, Child's Rocking Ho~e .
:roys, Children and Adull Cloth ·
i ng , Dishes , Cookware, B&amp;d·
spreads . Linens . Fe nder Amp
(reverti) 460 Lariat Dr. Thurs. Fri.
9·4

Friday &amp; sat 9·6: Oulnl"'l lrames.
Sewing Machine, Exerci se Bike

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

• Old Cabinet. Tools, Ceramic Tl!e

and Supt&gt;les, C8mpl"'l Gears. 21
Brookside Or. take Bu l~llle Pike
turn right on Bittersweet Or.
Thu rsday And Frid a-;. 56 Sun
Valley Or., 3rd ~d . On Left ~ st
Cinema. 9:00Am· 5:00Pm.

1 Thursday, Friday, SaiUfday, 271l1
Neighborh ood Road , No Ea~y
Salesl 9:00.5:00 P.M. 3 Piece ~ .
O.R. Table Wllh 6 CllaiiS, Antlqoo
Singer Sewing Machi ne , .Oik
Mantle, Old, 1900's Freezer, Gt-.
T. V.'s, 1984 Van, Canning_ Jar.s.
Green Jars , Tools Mower,

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dlrt • Sand

Household Mlsceltaneous.

Cheater, Ohio

"6' Mile Yellow F.lag Yard Sa{e,
Pomeroy-Middleport . April $ .
May 1. Register now $5 .00 . P.~k
up flag . For more lnlorm alion cal l
740-992-4197.
.
•

ft J.D. COISftUC'I'ION . ft . PARft
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
ftj · All·Makes Tractor &amp;
S ·
1
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, iding
"Speciali•in§' Jn Los Homes"
-.,
Commercial&amp; Residential
II!!J
28 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp;. Insured
Phone 740·992--3987
John Dean· Owner · :
~-

..

•

. Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

. 985 4422

~~~~~~tt;Jftft)~~~ . DIPOYS Ali
1'1

Mull

F~doy.

1;740-742·2803 or
'
1-740-446-3622

Local
Television

Landscape Material,

•

Bl Pilei In Actv1n~.
QE&amp;QLINE: 2:00 p.m.
. ""' clly boloro lho ad
11 to run. Sundly

....... ,....... , .. a..MK .....

WJOS
TV 27

DRIVEWAY SlONE

~ YoniSoiH

Care

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

Betn-

ie Babies , Home, Interior. Toys.
1!80&lt;11"11. Rugs, 91 1 Cora MIH Ad.

Free E"in&amp;Gte•

lttmember

1\ucU-triC1or

31782- Rood, .

Don·s
Heating &amp; Cooling
.

Call me at (7 40) 7 42-284.2

IRI·RAJE MOBILE
P.OWERWISH

FREE ESTIMATES

Yard Sale

i.arry'a Lawa

Need a ·lrlead Ia the 'buldaea

7'7M500

JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (74o) 985-1218
E!IAIL:
SlETIIEM@EUREKANET.COM

70

:t/30 TF.

MuoaBowllq
Laaea

n.,

lost: Bu ick Car Keys at.. Ald l.
Ga llipolis. Ohio. (30')675· 3030/
675-3431 .

SYI«CVSE
..2-5776

Joseph Jacks

SummerLa•gue
Bqlna1at WHk
In M•v
1\Jesday • No 'lllp
Wednesday· Men's League
Thunclay • Mixed League
Stutl11
71JO P.M.

60 Lost and Found

HUII&amp;ID'S
IIIII HOUSE

740-698~290

Public Notice .

ReadyToGol7~7• .

Hanging Baskets
Blooming &amp; Foliage
$5.75 &amp; Up
•Gerant~ms, Azaleas
· •shrubs &amp; Trees
We Honor Golden
Buckeye Card
Open
9-5Weekday Sunday 1-5

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

Roofing • Repalra
•Co..lnga •
Sldlnga • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

740·992·2061

To Goocl Home: 112 tnlll s.ttor &amp;
112 Rortweier Pups, f! Weeki OtcS.

All Flate $8.50 '

call 992-4197

Free Estimates

wwr.

Une Of

l~telt,l•• 8~ Wnut'-u

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

lost Puppy

n

• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER .
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
• THE DAILY SENTINEL
IF YOUR BUSINESS IS INTERESTED
IN PARTICIPATING .IN THIS
SPECIAL SECTION CALL:

rm;~tlll n

Ouaan slza waterbel1 to gtvea·
7~5350
•

Vegetable &amp; l!eckling Plants

WORRYIIGIII

April30th-Mfly 1st

40 742·8888

WILL BE HERE WEDNESDAY,. MAY 19
..

YEUOWFUIG

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

~plele

Credn • Slow Crecln • Blnkruptcy
Repo • Divorced

old Jan. 3rd . All shqta , has

boon spayed. (304)e75·29011.

Not1J Open For
Sprilyf Sea1on

CREDit PIOBLIMI

Rutland, Ohio

c...

I

Giveaway

Gal cook 1tove, do. a not worlil .
you plci&lt;IO&gt;, 7-I0-992·78ol1.

Celebrate Earth Day with. spi-ing's bounty of fresh asparagus :
By The Associated Press
April 22 is Earth Day, the yearly
event launched in 1970 to promote
environmental education and
awareness. To celebrate the occasion and the health of Mother Earth,
savor the fresh vegetables of the

Page 13

The Dally Sentinel•

Ail Yard Salea Mutt Be Ptld In·
-"dvence. Deildllne: 1 :DOpm the
day before the ad I~ to ri.M ,
Sunday &amp; Mond1y edition·
t :OOpm.Frldoy.

'

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers.

April 24, 9am-? Beech Grove ~d.
Rut land. Baby / toddle r clothing ,
wate rb"ed , woodstove , misc .

100051. Rt. TSoulh
Coolville, OH ~723

Inside yard sale , new &amp; usid.
Thursday &amp; Friday, 22/23, 105

Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

BlS.$Ell
BUILPERS,
'

7 40-985-4180

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

Very, very large patio salt- ~rl·
day &amp; Saturday, ra in or shine.
Large variety of mlso. Items, guns.
· tcnlves, fans, microwave. dresses.
jewelry, and et c. Geo rge Anderson, 46123
R'. 124, .across. from
Bowman's Run Rd. 9am·Spm.

p,...,, tlltlo &gt;1547811

Unda's Painting C
'lllke lhe pain out of
PaJnting, and let me
do it for you
INTERIOR

, ft

fJJ

·

1~ ~

'

C~CCCCCC~tiliM~

CANDLE· MAKERS

COMMEROAL and RESIDEIITIAL

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

FREE ESTIMATES
814-.992·7643
(No Sunda Calls)

Tutl• Friday 1CI-8
Sat 10'4
Rt, 124 Mlntrtvllle, Oh
992-4559

YOUNG'S
CARPEIITEI SERVICE

·Room 111c1111ona a llemodallng

20 Yrs. ~P- • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

· RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGI.ON
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
· Matches

&gt;EIIctricfl a Plumbing

V.C. YOUNG Ill
tii2.Q15

· Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. Local

Pomeroy EaglBa
Club Bingo On
· Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying·$80:00
per game
·$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sta'rburat
Prograulve top line.
Uc. I oo-50 ~~~-

.nJft IN TIMB I'OBIPIUNG UP.UU ·
AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A SNCIAl ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
C)'LINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS fffl ""' AN AGA IDENTIFIE
CAP ftUI THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR
CUTTING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT ·THE
END OF THE PROMOTION. THIS IS A SI.JI
01 ,. 1
flO DEPENDING oii THE sizE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTAC
YOUR WCAL AUTHORIZEp AGA . DEALER FOR
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAILABLE FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. ,THIS SPRING SPECIAL WI
END JUNE 21, 1999.
JIOIIIIIY IIICIIIIIIOP
2HCOIHin. ·.

ro roo.

POIUIOY, 01110 41769
· PIOIII-740-tt2·2406 01 JOWIS·JSIS

s..

P1. Pleaunt
&amp;. VIcinity
~ FAMILY GARAGE SALE . 2402
Je1ierson Ave . Pt .PI. , WV, fte·
side Wendy 's. Fri. 8-6 ~/Sat. ~2 .

Adult, Petite &amp; Brand Name ~s
&amp; girls clothing , Unlforms·hoUie·
hold misc. Play Station Game( &amp;
Toys. Weights &amp; Bench . Old btlt·
ties $1.00ea . Kids b.ooks.

H o~ne

Int. Sports Illustrated. new &amp; fe·
tired Beanie Babies. muc h-mtJth

more!

oflewGngaa

•Roofing I Gutlarl
•VInyl Siding a Painting
•Pallo a Porch lllclta
FrH fit/maiN

'

ButtetnU1 Ave., Pomeroy, Oh, time
10-4,

.,. IU-all
INC.

Free Estimates

"'THE COUNTRY
CANDlE SHOP•

I'IOusehoKl Items.

.

Marty~

Power
Washing _
Homes, Declts
&amp; Mobile Homes
Painting, Drywall Repair
Interior &amp;· Exterior
15 Yn. EJ&lt;perience

742~1701

..................
.
.......
• Lawa CU. • D11lga

·l•'n'nl W.0 I Brlcll
Pallo CaaalraciiOII

•r..,..,

...•• c.ulled

...ndac;-

I II

.Jeremy .L. Ro..sh
949-1701

Dave's Garage.
Fonner- "Velve( Hammer"
52954 State Rt . 124
'Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572
Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

-Complete Auto Seroice..:.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
,,,,..

.

debtor of finilncial obligation• and arran!!" 1 fair
diotribution of aooeta. Debtoro in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" properiy for his or her personal
uoe. Thio may include a car, a house, clothes, and
houoehold goodo.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy. contact:

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athll!lll!l, Ohio

April 22, .23, 24 10Miies N. Rl2,

'I

Ac;ross lrom Thomas

Ridge

Road . Maternity, Baby
Furniture and Misc .

Items ~

·•

Mov ing Sale: 915 Mossman Qir·
cle , Satui day/ Ap rl l 24, 8 -2 P.M .

HeJJDnr ·

Brdldaur &amp; Backhoe
Se"'ice•
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading .
Seplic Sy11e1111 &amp;:
Utililie•

Keyboard , Microwave /Appliaftces. Toys , Stereo. SportsEQu!p ..
Ck&gt;lhes. AaJniShine.

·..

Movin g Sa le : All Types :ot
Household
Furniture.
Ce ll
(:104)882-2089. For More lnlorma-

tion.

80

(7401 992·JIJI

..

Auction
and Flea Market : ·

Bill MOodispaugh AucUoneerlQg .
Complete Auctioneering SerWces . Consignment au cllon-. MI!I
Street.. Mrddl~p o.rt , Thursdafs .
Ohio l icense 17693 . 740-9~·

ANN OUN CEMEN TS

2623:

005

Personals

Gentleman Seeking Companion·
ship From Nice Female. For Talks,

Welks &amp; Friendship. Sand A
plies To : 553 Second Avenue .
Aparlme~t f-403 , Gallipolis. OH
~5631.

Rick Pearson Auction CompaAy,
full time auctioneer. COm plete
auction
service: Llc ens"\ d
t66,0h io &amp; West Virginia, 3Q4·
773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.
•

RIVERSIDE AUCTION

BAR~

Every Saturday Night 7 P.fllll .,

Stan Oatlng Tonight! Ha11e tun
playing lhs Ohio Ooti"'l Gal!)o. t •
1100-AOW.NCE, eJC18nslon 968!.

30 Announcements

Crown City, 7-10-2-969

Now To '100 Thrm Shoppe

9 West Stimson, Athens
7-10-592· 1llol2
Quality clothing and household
Items. S1.00 bag sale tlltry
Thursday. Monday tttru saturday

a:oo-5:30.

La ...edl~. Individuals Will Be

Prooecutod.

' .
John E. LO&gt;ooday

Giveaway

3 CaHico Klhona. 7-10-256-6106,

3 Preny Whtta Kittens ,
Go. Call ~1to1 5:00PM.
338S

To

Blonde Puppy, 112 Cocker Span·
lol , Malo, t 0 Wk&amp; Old . 7•0·~~ 1·

Ohio 740-379-2720. •

Wanted to 'Buy :

Absolute Top· Dollar: All U.S. $11Coins , PJoofsels ,
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry. Gtld
Rings, Pre -1930 U.S. Cu rreney,
Sterling, Etc. AcqUisitiona·Je"Mi!ry
. M.T.S, Coin. Shop, 151 SecQlld

~er And Gold

Awnue, GsRipotis, 740-«6·2843oi
Antiejues, top prices paid . Rlvt r·
ine Anllques , Pome roy , Oh]o,
Russ Moore owner, 740-912 -

2526.
Clean

No. Trespaaslng On John E.

:

Wedemeyer's Au ction .Sent!Ce ,
~o!!Wis ,

90

DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Enlil!ad To Rece111e YOur Diebelle Sup_
plles At No Cost To
You, For More Information, 1-888·
677-6561.

.40

BAIKRUPrCY canrelieve .a

•"'•

..

Late

Mod e l Cars "Or

Tru cks, 1990 Models Or Ne~r.
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 E~t-

ern Avenue. Ganipob.

~

Want To Sell Your S11.in? Call Riverside AucHon And Let Us Se" It
For You, 7-40-258-6989.
:

WaniQd T~ Buy : Used Moii)ta
Hom as, Call 140·446-01 75,()r
304-675-5965.
'
Wanted: Cars , Truck1 Any C~n ·
dillon, 7~0 - 388 ·9062 , 7~0-4&lt;\e·

l'l\AT.

•

(~17 .

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE S

Engllsl\ ll)nngor sponlel, beautiful
two yea.r old male. thots. fam ily
pet. ta country ttom1 . 7ot0-992·

10150.
Golden fletrlavtr/Coctcer Spaniel
ml• puppies, to gOOd home, 7'&lt;40·

992· 5035 oltor ~Pill. Chrlatl or
Jolh.

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areaal To Buy or sftl.
Shlrlly SpJara. OOH7$- 142t.

�...

--~~~ ...

I

Thursday, Apr1122, 1999

Pige 14 • The Dally Sentinel

-·

----.
•

+'

•

•

Aprll22, 1999

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1 .~•

Ohio

OOP

BIUDOJ:

PHILLIP
ALDER
140
SSSMako Monoyl$$$ Work At
Home -· Aaaamb le Products.
Easy Work , Exctllant Pay. Free
Details! Send S.A S.E To : Nat'l
Homtowrklr's Auociatlon, P 0 .

Box 875, Ripley,

wv 25271

3 Bedroom Homo, 2908 Meadow.brook Drlva. Call (3Q.I)675-4380,

Ooltlpolla c.- Collogo
(Cor00n1 CIOM To Homo) tan
7~.

Today!

after .CPM

1·800-

214-0452. Reg f90-0!5-1274B

By own.r, 72S Page Street. Mid·
dteport, house &amp; 3 lots. must BH
to appraclate, wl)l sell hOuse with·

180 Wanted To Do

Acqu iaHiona Is taking appllca·
liOns lor part lime &amp; full lime posttiona. experience preferred , no
phOne call&amp;

Are Vo u Energetic, Motlvate.d,

And Caring? Scenic Hills Nursing

Canter 11 Looking For Individuals
WM Are Currently State Tested
Nursing Asalstants To Work In
Our Comprehensive Care Facility.
Please ~pply In Person To 311

Buckrldge Road, Bidwell, OH
45614.

Approved Master Llcen.sed Elec:·
trlclan, WV025956 , Free Estl·
mates for Residential Services

(304)675-7927.

Call 740· 266-2950 M-F, 8.00·
4:30.
Cosmetologist Needed, Business
Growing , Guaranteed Wages

Plus More, 740-446-7267
Couple or single person to move
In and care lor elderly person In
Me1gs County. All living expens·
es, plus salary List work history
and 2 references Send name,
address and phone number be·
lore May 1, ~ 999 to . Margaret,
.General Delivery, Pomeroy Post

ontce, Pomeroy. OH ~5769

Christian Woman Will Do Child·
care In My Home Only. $12.00
Da~

For 1 Child, $20.00 Day For
2. Ect. CPR Certltled, EMT Cart,
Pending. Refrencea . 740· 24S·

9582
E &amp; S Lawn SerVIce Design, Implementation, and Service.
•Ava ilable for Spnng Clean up,
tenlttzlng and planting. Free estimates. Sallslactlon guaranteed
Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring, Breaker Boxes, light Fix·
ture, Heating Systems, and Re·

.-11'1!1740)441-1401 .
Furniture repair restoration &amp; rt•
finishing , custom built reproduc·
tions, Liz &amp; Bennett Roush , 740992·1100, Appalachian wood·

works
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill just can

304-675-1957'

ClessAOTA.
Single Driver, Late Model Ken worth&amp; With Reelers . West Coast
Carrier

Class BOTR.
Team Straight Truck, Late Model
Frelghtl!ners Wlth Sleepers Must
Ha~e Air Brake Endorsements,
800 Mile Radius, Home Dellvir·

los.

Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 'Elderly Or Hand•·

Interior &amp; Ekterlor Painting, Experienced, References. Reasonable Rates For Free Estimate,

K&amp;G Cleaning. &amp; Painttng Servlc·
es Interior Exterior, For Free Estl·
mates, 740·441-1044, 740·441-

P459 .

lawn Mowing Service. Small
Garden TIMing, Clean Out Garage

Patnttng, All Around Handy Manl

GoodMVR
Weekly Pay

Call Bob, 740-669-1803

Health Insurance Available
Work Wet! With The Plbhc

S&amp;S Lawn Care, Commercial &amp;
Aesklentlal, Free Eatlmatesl 740·

General Office /Sales EJCperlenced Preferred Full-Time, Im-

mediate Opening Apply: Llleslyle
Furniture, 858 Third Avenue, Gal-

lipolis, 10·2, No Phone Calls

County, 740-446-2761

EQUIPMENT· Sands Hill Coal
Company Is Seeking Experienced
Heavy Equipment Maintenance
Worker Needs To Have Service
Truck And Tools E~~:penence In
Welding, Electrical Troubleshoot·
ing And Aif Conditioner Service.
Make Applications At 38701 S.R.
160, Hamden, Ohio, Manctay Thru
Friday, B AM To 4 ·30 PM , Or

Call 740·364·•211 To Have Application Malted To You EEOC

25-13.

Aalerences/Expertence.
(304)675-1898, alter 6PM.

15, 1999. GMHA Is An Equal OP;
portunlty EmplOyer
.
Need 7 Ladles To Sell Avon, 740-

446-3358.

Needing Cook and Barte.nder!

Call· (740) 367-ll219

Now accepting applications for
night shift, El DoradO Adult Home
Basic first aid &amp; BCII required,

740-992-5039
Now Hiring E.:perien&lt;.:ed Cashiers
&amp; Dell Workers At The Following
Little Johns Locations: Centenary, Third &amp; Vine Street, Galllpo.
lis, VInton, Pomeroy, Apply In
Person ~t The Above Locations,

Between 8 A.M ·4 P.M.

lipolis , OH 45631 NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE.
Phlebotomist· Immediate open·
lngj for e~~:perlenced phleboto·

mlot, lull or part time. AosponslbHItlea would Include collecting
specimens from nursing home
pa~ents In southeast Ohio. Send
resume : The Dally Sentinel, P.O.

Box 729·82, Pomeroy. Ohio
45769.
.
Postal Jobs to $18.35/HA. Inc .
benefits. No Experience For
App. and Exam Info, Call 1·800·

tron. Apply In Person At Holiday
Jnn. sn Stllie Route 7, Galllpoio.

Pt. Pieasant.(304)89!1-3062.

2 1!2BA, Den, LlvlngAoom wl
Fireplace, DlnlngRoom, Kitchen/
Fully Equip , Basement w/Pool·
Tabie, Deck w/27Ft ~bove·
ground Pool, 3 Car Attached Ga·
rage . In Good Neighborhood In
New Haven, WV. Call For Appt

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Baths,
Living Room, Dining Room, Eat-In
Kitchen . Lg Family Room. 740·

245-9337

Three bedroom home with Iota ol
closet apace, close to .achool, on
corner lot, storage building, one
bedroom rental home Included,

320 Mobile Homes
10x50 Trailer And 12xeo Trailer,
379-2835
12K65 General 2 Bedroom ltaller,
Gas Heat, Asking $1,200, 740·
12x65 Master Craft, two bedroom,
one bath, gas he&amp;t 1 $4500 nego~­

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business w!th people you know, and
NOT to send money' through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering.

230

$1 ,000. Tnls

pro~rty

woytd bo

suited for a huntilg retreat. OWner
reservea the right to reject bids
All bids mutt be received by

May 15, 1999. Send oealod bids
to Johnny Mayea, 3850 Muon
80 Rd., ....-. WI/ 25503.
17 .83 Acres For Sale Or Trade
For • To 6 Bedroom Houae On
One To Two Acres. Batn Doted
For A Ooubkl Wide And Garage,
Siarcnor Road, Call Chris AI 740·

24!5-5074, An)'tlmo.

e Acre1

1982 Fleetwood 14Ft K 70Ft,

$9,500.00, 2 Bdrms, 2 Ballls, CIA,
All Elact , 2 Porches. Very Good

Blacktop Frontage &amp;

Lake Vlow,

Gallla County,

132,000 More ~creage Available,

740-368-8878
Approximately 30 Acres, 5 Miles

From GalllpoKs; Beaulllul BuQdlng

Sites. Electrk: &amp; Water Available,

Call Aft« •:aoPm. 740-446-7565.
BEAUTIFUL.
Restricted Residential Lots Located A Comfortable Distance
From Gallipolis Double Wides
Are Permitted. "Leave All Your
Cares In Town, Buy Yourself A
Piece Of Ground" Lots Start At
$8,750 5% Down Land Contract
Now Available Call For Free

1-688-582-3345

1994 16x80 Sunshine Mobile

Call Alter 4 P.M. 741).245-1302.
Low Interest Rate1 For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time Available,

800-383-6662
I

ft

This newspaper w•ll not ·
knowmgly accept
advertisements for real estate
which is In violation 01 the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are avaJiable on an equal
opponum~ basis

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3BR 1 1/2BA., Family Room, Ga·
rage, CentraiAir, Pallo, Porch,

sn.ooo. l304)675-2533.
3 Bedroom Home 1 Acre Lol, Rio

Grande Area, $33,000, 740-245lli87.

3 Bedrooms. 2 Sa1h Ranch House

ESTATES , 52 Willwood Oriva

from $279 to $368 . Walk to shop
&amp; movloo Call 740-446-2568 .
Equal Houolng Opportunity.
'
Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; UtNitles; Inter·
view, References, No Pets, l.ealt,
Oeposll, Non Smokers, Available,

4/15199 tn CHy, 740-446·3664

4 Now TirOl, LT 245 X 16 AT, On
New a Hole H.D. GM wnuls,
$400.00 740-4o46-31109.

Evtrythlng For $130 , All Ntw

FOr

Sa~.

Dress. worn
Once, Sill 20. Completely unattared Decorated With Bllds, S.
qulno, lAce 740-ol48-7t 42
Beautiful Wedding

Christy's Family Living. apart ments, home
trailer rentals ,
740·992·4514, apartments avail·
able, furn~ned &amp; unlurnl&amp;hed.

a

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

Blue Couch &amp; Loveseat,

Call Alter 5 P.M. 740-387-(168().

posit Required. UUIItles Paid, 740446-1519.
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

Sf ,500; 2 1/2 Ton $1 ,350: .2 Ton
$1,250, The Abow lncludaa Nor-

cellent

1

Go od selection ol used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995. Quick delivery Call 740-

385-9621 .
Make 2 Payments No Payment

'After 4Years, 304·736-7295.
Must Sell ' 1995 14Ft. x72 Ft.
Fleetwood. 2 Bedrooms, 2 Batha,
With Gaurded Tub, Must Sea On
A Private Rented Lot, Will Take

PO'/OH, 740-256-9382.
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only

$200 1• per month with S1150
down. Galll-800-837·3238.1
Nice Home Set Up On Lot. Make

2 Payments, Move In, 4 Years
Left On Loan (304)722-7140.

Co. Fairgrounds, Washington
Court House, telling 200 head
barrows I gills, conalgnera: Rog·

360

or Bentley, t37·584-23g8, Leroy
Lerrlcl&lt; 837-781).4802, remember
the champion &amp; reaerve cham·
pion martctt glltl II tho Molgl Co
lair was purchased at last years

Real Eatate

.

Wanted

~

We Bu~ Land: 30 ·500 Acres,

We Pay Cash. 1·600-213-8365,
Anthony Lalid Co.
Roomy 2 Bedrooms With

RENTALS

tached Garage. Rodney Araa,

41 0 Houses for Rent
2 Bdrms, Water And Trash Paid,
No Pats. Bula~llle Pike 740~388·

1100

$3B5/Mo., Depoalt &amp; Good Aeleronces, 740-446-2801.
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
VeriJ Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Floors, CA, 1 f/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted, PatiO, ,NO Pets, Least Plua

Security Deposit Required, 740·

3 Bdrma, 1 112 BathS, Central Lo·
cation Of Gallpolis, Deposit, Re·
lronca, No Poll.. 740-446-1162.

448-3481,740-446-0101.

756 First Ave, 1 Bdrm,, 1 Bath,
Newly Renovated, Washer Dryer

lcapped. EOH 304-li7!5-BB79.

Hookup, $275 oo Rani Wltn De-

Two bedroom apartment In Po·

0101 Alter500PM

meroy, no ~to. 740-m-5858.

Lfuge White Colonial House At
rara Apts, 3 Bdrma , 2 Full

Two bedroom, one bath apart·
ment: one bedroom. one bath
Mldd~port

apartmem: bOth In

Clean, Elllclent, 2BA. Aeforencas. Doposl( No ~ets. (304)675·
5162.

Upstairs Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second A~enue, Gaii'PO·

lm·

mediate occupancy, 740 -992·
9133
•

Your Home Ia Just A Phone Call

Away, 304-736-7295.

740-385-4387.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

470 Wanted to Rent
House Within 15 Miles 01

1 Bedroom Trailer Secluded Lot,

Bldwoll !Porter Area, $375/Mo., All
Utilities Included, 740-441-Q720. ·
12x65 trAiler In Tuppers Plains,
Ohio, three bedroom, air, washer
&amp; dryer hook up, no pets. goOd
relerences, deposit &amp; month

e

Bor~

Warner, Fenced Yard , Nice
Kitchen, 513·85t·0100, Or 740-

441-3896.

490

Olllco building- Mlnorovlllo, 600
square loot, air conditioned. very

least required, 740·985·3522 alter 6:00pm.

nice, $350 per momh plus deposIt, 740-949-2093

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air

MER CH ANDI SE

99:1-2167

510

Houaehold

Goods

2 Bedroom Mobile Home out
BroadRun Aoad Rent lor $250

mo + depoalt/utltltiOB (304)773·
5881.

Harvest Gotd Side By Sldo·$100.;
Whirlpool Waehor-$85 .00: Almond Kenmore Washar·$75.;

2 bedroom mobile homo In Mid·

White Whirlpool Dryor-160.;AI·

dleport, Oh., no pets. 740·992·

mond Kenmore Oryer-$80;

15443.

After 5:00, 740-446-i088

can

New Mobile Home Park at Galli·
polls Ferry. Now accepting appll·
cations for lots on alta (304)575·

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Aefri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

6906.

French City May1ag, 740-4487795.

Nice 2 Bdrm C/A, Hwy 160, 4
Mlloa N Of Holzer $300.00 Momh

Beds, Full Size And Twin Com-

Plus Deposit, Refrences. Avail·

plata. COuCh &amp; Desk, Dryer, Elee-

able May 1st740-446-6189

trlc S1ovo, Recllnar &amp;Table. 740·
446-9742.

Nice

3 bedroom mobile

home, In
petS, 740-992·

Appliances, 740-446·1004, 740·
4o46-4039 An)'tlmo.
Owner Moving. New Queen Size
• Piece White Wicker Bedroom

Sat. seoo.oo 740-446-3664.

ftoO Direct lpoctat
Free Installation, 3 month• free
prograning, call 888-265-2123.
We Are Professional Installation
And Service Supply. We Sell

Us, We Both Losel 5S3 JackaOn

lslr, $40 all, 740-949-4000.

Wltarcllawn tractor. 18 hp., 44•

cut, $500: Kenmore 12,000 btu air
conditioner, $100:740-742-2323.
WoOden Wardrobe And Ort&amp;ser

For Chlldo Room, , $100.00 For
Botn But Will Separate. 740-4480322

550

Building

Suppllea
Block, brick, sewer plpe1, wind·
owa, ttnteta, etc. Claude Winters,

Alo Grandt, OH Call 7•0·245·
5121.

580

Pets for

Sale

or To Sale. Terms

or Sate: CASH

OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

2 Parakoota, 1 Yellow, t Blue, w/
Coga. $10 Cat1(304)875·1311 or
(304)937-2705

Brower At 304- 773·8011 Or
Llave Mellagl.

New And Uled Furnlture Store

AKC Shalt/eo, ublo/ whlto, tour
mate1, 1hota. champion bloodllnll, ~ monlhl &amp; 5 monlhl, 1200
each; AKC comaa, lhree malta,

AlidS..u;"f~~a.

530

Anti~

sable/ whlto, eyto IUWIIOI. $200
tach, chGtt, 6 months old; 740·

Oakwood Hom11 Barboursville,

rage On 2.5 Acres, $85,000, 741).
441-0132

1 Bdrm., Eldra Nice, First Month
Free With One Year Laue

Oak eurret Fainting · Couch,
Dc11atr, Etc. No Dealers Pleast,

3 Bedrooms, Set On 3 Aerts,

330 Farms for Sale

Beaulllul Stone Houle Eat·ln
Kitchen, Island Range, Trash
Compactor, 2 In Wall Ovens,

Sick, Mu81 Sell . 1 Plus ACYe , 2
Bdrm. Trailer, Well &amp; C Water, 2
Stor B. Applegrove, W. Va .30.C·

50 kre Farm, 3 Bed!oom House,
2 lull Bathl, 3211 . x 60ft. Barn,
Black T.op Driveway. Swimming

Pool , wao 1205,000.00 Now
$175,000.001 (740) 367-&lt;1219

340

Bualnen and
Buildings

Commercial Butldlng In Hendtr·
ton FOr Sate or LeBit. Call

(803)3116-Q4311.

350

Lots

&amp; Acreage

,$279.00 Per Month, Plus
740-446-2957.

Utll~les

•m

540 .Miscellaneous

2 Bdrml., CIA, Gas Heat, Washer

Dryer Hookup, 1 Mill From Town,
No Polo. Alter 5.00Pm 740-«8·

7456

Merchandln
II"· DINe TV lltalltt. lyato.,l·

see.oo, on'" -

m program-

ming. Llmltad oiler, rorplroo 41
24/99, cal 1·800-77i-811M.

2 bedroom apartmant In Middle·
pon, pay
.. gao
pay Wl1.,,
&amp; -per
·
you
&amp; tlectrlc,
$1!00
.5 Paraon Hot Tub Wltn ' Covar
monon, $100 dopoalt, 740·992· And Cabinet. 8 Montht Old,Ttal
7BOe.
Colortd. Aftar 5 OOPM 740·448·
2

Bed(oom Apartment, Rio
Grande Area, CIOII To College,

U50/Mo., lnctudoa All Utllltlu,
Oopoalt Roqulrod, 1·888-8400521.

Apple Grove Memorial Garden Ia
Sptce Cabinet, All Appliances
now offaring a limited time ape- 2bdrm. apts., total eleolric, apBenefits Game Wardens, Secur- Stay, 3 Or 4 Bedrooms. O.A , L.A.
cia! on Cemetery LOll, from AprH pllancll furnlsned, laundry room
Ity, Maintenance, Park Rangers. Fireplace, 2 l\'peo 01 Heat, Lots
1, 1999, to July 1, 1999. 11uy 3 facllltltl, CION to IChOOiin town.
Of
CloMIS,
2
112
Bathe,
HOI
Wa·
·
No Exp. Neodod For App. and 111 &amp; Heat Pump, 1 112 Acres Ml lots, got tho
lreo. Special Applications available at. VIllage
Exam lniQ, Call 1·800-813-3685,
Sale· Companion and Individual GrHn Apts, he or call 740-992Ext.8827, 8AM·9PM, 7 Days L, A/C, Shown By Appolntmonl, G3711.EOH. '
Marl&lt;ars. (304)57e-2778.
740-«e-.
ld~lnc.
Wildlife Jobo to $21 80/Hr. Inc.

740-448-:Jeeol.

1456. '

AKC Adorable Chocolate Mala
Lab, 4 Months: Hotpolnt, 20 Cu.
Ft. Fraozor, 740-448·2460 Altar
5.

AIIAZtNO
METAIOLISII
Breaktnrougnlll Lola 10·200
Pounds Eaoy, Oulck, Fall
Dramatic Resultt. 100% Natural,

Doctor Aocommondod Frao sam-

pill Cal740-441-1882.

Fair P

740-367-704

r Sale,

Born 112WG

Registered Ltmoualn Bulla: Red ,
Black, Polled, 9 Months To 2

Yeara, 740-367-7600.

1988 Blam 4WD, 8 cyMndor -~
loma11c, AC, PS. PB, groot ohalii,
$3700, 740-992-7478 or 740-9'19;'
2045.

.

1992 DOdge Caravan. 4 CyMiidpr,
Auto., AIC, t08,000 MI., $2,750.00
OBO. 1990 Oodgo Cargo va~
190Q.oo oeo, 740-258-1233.
I
t893 Chevy Conversion van,

840

Hay

&amp; Grain ,

Grass Hay ~~ Delano Jackson

WHO STOLE
MY CAN OF
WORMS??

v,

Good Condition. Lota 01 Extrie.'
740 ue 3909.
\. '

GLOIAL

::.

a.-.

wAttMIN6 GOT

IT'$ NOT

You I&gt;Oy/ft11•

. cellont condition, 2 _.., 8 ~
rodiO, windshield, oacldlo bogs••~
Included, muat Ml, 11200 019•

Tt¥ HfAT,
IT'6 THf

..

198:i Harley Davidson ~portstor,•
1000 CC, Rebuilt Englnt, t(to(·
Tranamilllon,

s. S.

ttVMANITY.

C1rburak:Jr,..

too many oxtra'o to 1111
(304)882-2218.

15.1500•
. • ••

1888 Suzuki 700 Intruder, 'AI[
Chrome, Llltlo Mileage, E&gt;colfin(
Conti. 11 ,800.00 080. Man To 1'11740-379-9232

BORN LOSER
,.THE
~C,U,\/C:~\TE, ~f!W t
.

1994 Hondo Four Whoolor, 2

WU:"''
01-! '(().)~&amp;JILT~ IM~...

Whlll Drive, Windshield, R~lll­
nlng-Boards, Gun Rack . Excel·

len1 Condltlon.(304)882·2o457.

,..{ ~'(()tJ ~'liCE Wll.l e£"'

,.

.

INll\1&gt;-.1~, I ~f:.E 'ltlU..,

~1/t:O!

I WILL N'ff:N..I

1995 Harley Davidson 1200
Spor111er. Excellent Condition.

$8.000. (304)87!5-3824.
elo Eloclra Glide, Loaded, Lots

ot

Errtrul$16,500, 740-367-nM.:, ·

Arlie Cat 454 Btarcat. Bought'
new in December '88. Excellent 1
oondttiOn (304)895-31115.
'
Honda Helix Motor Scooter
2SOcc Stereo &amp; Trunk, All Ortal. .
nat, Very Few Made, Preltr•1'o

750 Boata &amp; Motore •

for Salt
1881 Stratos wltn 120 hp. .E!/IR·,
lllklnQ sesoo. 740-742-2:1lt

..

1994 Four Wlnns Fling, 14', 1~
hp., $5500. Fun boat. sao at 399
TRAN SPO RTATION

11 Shl-.
nautle~~lly

7 Phyolclan
8 -of Goad

-urant

40A-

42 En.rv-

12 Dick Traey'a
wile
8 Almanac datum 19 Sollk up
10 Canyon aouncl 21 H'a Cllllln aun-

Foottngo

36

Pass

...

Pass

tlghl
22 Blackboard or ·
Captain Kldcl
23 Plumb toco
24 French I 01

-

25 Wordwllh
....-or rug
211 BIUcherll
part

21 - dlra Oury..lecllon
procedure)
29 In Mldllton
30 Klaa ancl31 Oonkloy,lrl

Dbl

Pass

Dliooel&lt;lorf

s•-•

41 NHI-bulldlng
malarial
42 Conalallatlon ·
conatltuent

1998 Yamaha Warrior, Voiy.

~.,.

6 ~.!,ng alley

Talk can be costly

t995 Dodge 112 Ton 4 X 4. 74o-'
256-8920
&gt;
.J

1978 Hondamatlc motorcycle,

I Back talk

2 .. _ It
Romantic?"
3 Grai(Gorman
warahlf)
4 FalheroO.y
gHta.5 Be human?

37 Ann.., •-1138 Onooflhl

• r

Motorcycles

DOWN

Opening lead: • 6

rude, loaded, axcelltnt condlilbn,

South Third Street, Middleport,
741).992-~727.

By Phillip Alder
We all dislike passing. We come to
play, not to sot silently like Trappist
monks. However, there are times
when descripttve bids are costly.
First, the lengthy auction may paint
a beautiful picture for the oppositton.
Second, the ex1ra space might allow
the oppQnents to find a good sacrifice. Third, a defender may be able to
throw tn a lead-directing dou~le.
Take this deal as an example. After
West's weak jump overcall (showong
a good six-card suit and some 6-10
high-card points), North cue-bid four
clubs . This showed a high-card raise
to four hearts. Yes, it is a slight overbid, but North was hoping all of his
partner's potnts would be outside
clubs . The major problem, though,
was that it gave East tho opportumty
to double to shQw a high club honor.
' Against four hearts, West led the
,spade sox . Some Easts would have
put in the nine, keeping a tenace over
dummy 's king. Thai is often the right
move, but it couldn 'i have been correct here. As South was known to
have at most .a singleton club, and
must have the dtamond ace for hts
opening bid, the defenders couldn't
collect more than two spades and one
club. Also, after a pre-emptor leads a
different suit, it ts (almost) always a
smgleton .
So, East won with the spade ace.
Then he returned 1he spade five, his
lowest card being a suit-preference
stgnal for clubs. Wes1 ruffed, underled hts club ·ace; and got a second
ruff.
If North .had jumped straight to
four hearts, this defense would have
been much harder to find.

43 "Aiaal"

44-+portor

11196 20 A. Gonerallon 3 Pontoorl
BlOat with 1997 40 h.p olllnftel:

(ready-to-

navigator
47 A--apple
48 Notaa much
48Sorel50 1111 dapoll
52Adclreafor
Lancetot
54 MlildeiHJame '
word

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis
·
._c_ _ .,._...
....Campos
_., __ ,.....,,._,
Each \illlli k't h . . . . ...-.lor lnOihlr Todly'l CU: L ~ Y

,

'T C N H

OAHMD'P

HOFHM.'

'C N

Z I J H

0 I J C0

ZAWXDHL

EAPPCWHTTC

PA 0 I L

Z H '0

EH

W T HI B

IT C J H

YHBH

YABXCDF

NAB

JAFSH.'
KHPHB
SMPCOAJ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Secretary: lin employee who Is expected to looi&lt; hke
a woman, think like a man, and work like a horae.• - - Evan £sar

WOlD
IAMI

I
I

DARFOF

I

WOLFN

I

1203~mt

·aso

1979 Camaro, Auto
Good
Engine!&amp; 'Body. Interior needs
work . Exterior need1 painted,

'

ed Mariner Tilt end Trim , Llva

Wall, Canopy, Boat Cover. ?0.
hra. Running Time, Garage Kept,
$7,500 OBO (304)882·3718.
•

760

PEANUTS

a

~-...,......,..,..,...----

'

have paint. S1eOO. (304)875-

New

3882.

3933 or 1-800-273-8329.

;

181CHt90CAR8 FROIIIIOO

790

Pollee

Impounds,

And

Tax

Rapo'l. For Llstlngo Celt 1·800·
31~3323 Ext. 4420
1985 Pontiac Trans-Am, 305 PS,

PB, New l1rea, N.., l!nlklo, Ileal
Nicol $2,800. (304)875-382•.
1987 Chovotto,' Noods A Llttlt
Work. 740-378-2482.

t99o GEO Prlom $2,500.00 (740)
446-4794
1990 01&lt;11 911 In very good COiidl·
tion, $3000, 7'*"2-2529 or 132
BuUemut. Pornoroy.
1H1 Bonn..lllt, oxcotlont condition, PB. AC. 3.8 onglno, $3.700,
740-949-20-45.

M'&lt; OLDEr{ BROTHEl{ ..
SUPPOSED TO SE
M'&lt; ROLE MODEL ..

Auto Parts
Acce11orl11

gao ltnka &amp; body ports D &amp; •
R Auto, fllploy, WV. (304)372· '
Camper~

.

&amp;

SO WHAT DO VOU
WANT ME TO DO?

•

ANSWER

Motor Hom11 • :07
• ••
1968 Pace Arrow Motor Homo, $: ·
11. Loadod, Like Now, S28,ogg..,'
(304)87!5-'3787.
' ' ':
1983 28L Torry Camper will( :
s ..... Large Aa~klollltor!F-.' •

.

Mo~, ~'T l.COI( l'f I.IE
11\E f'ciiCI&gt; ~ 'tal l'CI'IN .
'

1988 Dutchman Pop-Up, "1r: ,

''

Ft. Sloops 4, r
, Dlnoni, :

1994 Pontiac Sunblrd LE 87,000
Milas, $4,000, 740-441~132.

',EflVIC E S

;.;19;.;9;;:5.:B.:ul:.:ck;;:L.:o;.:8~ab~r~o:.:C:.:uo;;.t_om--4 1 810

Ooora, Bluo Loadod, 740·U2·
7512.

Home.
lmprov•me
. nta

IASEIIENT
11195 Chevy Camara, V-6, T
WATEIIPROOfiiHO
Tapa, All Power, Aulo., 55,000 uncondHional tllo11me guorsntH.
Millo, BIIICk, ElCtfltnl Condition. Locol 'rolorencos lurnlohad. Es·
$8,500, 740ool48·8172, 740·258' tabllhod 1975. oo 24 Hrs 1740)
62et.
«e-0870, 1-800o287-0578. Mg-

.,. Watoq&gt;rooflng.

Blchon Frlae AKC 1 Female, 1

Mall, Polllbfo DotiYtry, 740-379·
2899.740-379-9081.
Flth, Blrdo, Pond SuRpllll.
Sun.1-4PM, Mon.•Sat, 11 'AM·
6PM. Floh Tank/Pot Shop, 2413
JIICkiOn Awnuo/Polnt Pltaaant.
(304)875-2063.
Reglatered Pupplea: Pekenaae,

Black&amp;Whlte, S250oa. Snltzu,
Gold&amp;etack, $300oo Mlnlatura
Sneuzoro, Black&amp;SIIvar, Salt&amp;
Pepper; $250ea. Unrogloltrod:
Shelton. Black&amp;Whlte, Soble&amp;
White, $150ea. Peek·A·Poo,
Bloek&amp;Whlte,
Gold&amp;Whlta,
S200oa. (304)875-1073.
84 Monte Carlo 305·V8. 80,00
m1111. CaR tltor 5:30 (304) 875·
4784, $1200.00

II I II I

I I

Trough • Unity· Shawl· Bisque - HIT the HAY

Heat, Refrigerator, Bike Ractc, , 1
Screen Room, Jac:!k Stands,.._~
Awning, Llka Now. Stored Ina)do· •

1992 Pon11ao Grondo Prix, Coli
367·50551

5

The trouble with a husband who works like a horse,
is that all he wants to do in the evemng IS HIT the HAY

Doy (740)H2-6488, Aok for Jack.
Eva/(304)882·3851. $10,500.
080

In Wlntor. $5,200. (304)n3-8192.

I

r 1· 1 I' I' I' I

SCIAM-Lm ANSWIIS

Microwave, GaaJ~Itctrlc Heater,
AIC, TV Antanna/Booster. Axlel, ·
Electronic Jack, 20ft. Awnlng l,

---:--:-----::---

SQUARE~ I' I'

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR

;. : ,

""•
ASTRO·ORAPH
'

.

• Fridl)', April 23, 1999
• : Much can be accomplished in the
ahead to better your lot in life,
especially in matters that affect your
home and hearth. The ways and
means to accomplish tbis will
~orne obvious as time pro.,-esses.
• • TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
otder to expedite an imponant pcroonalendeavor today, bold and imagillllivc: measures may be required.
· AJthouah your tactics may not be a
~-all, they could help considerIIIIJy. Oet a jump on life by under·
studina the influences dtat'·ll1ovem
yqu in the yw ahead. Send the
qquired "'fund form and for your
A:tlro-Oraph predictions by rnaillna
$2'10 Astro-Oraph. c/o this newspaP.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
New York, 'NY 10156. Be sure .
111111 your Zodiac sian .
,
- OllMINI (May 21-June 20) If
fllends in the rlsh1 places can ~o
~ for you today than you'"' able
to' do for younelf, don't be afraid to
•k for their usioWK:e If you truly
' need it.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) Even

rs•

I '

thouch you mishl not be able to
aecomplish ell that's on your pllllo
today, at least you' II be a bit further
ahead than you'd be if you hedn't
push yourself.
LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22) Bxen:isc
your bestjudpnent at all times today,
because conditions in )eneral will be
only panially favorable today. Focus
on thins• who"' you feel lucky and
i1nore the rut.
VIROO (Aua. 23-S!'Jll. 22) Dome
Fortune may grant you some prolec·
tion in sltuations1hat ""' meaninaful
to you in material ways, but she
miaht not extend tha1 umbrella to
· cover yOW' social involvements.
You're on your own.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Two
people you feel comfortable wldi .
may bo the 1'91ons for aomethlns
exdtins to develop for you 10day. It'll
aive you cause to rille your•hopea
and expectatioltl.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The
biaaer the issue, especially in the
money depaotment, 1Jie luckier ·You
tbould bo 10day while ~ ambi- .
tioua intetellla c.-. ned. Cuh In
where you can.·

, SAOmARIUS. (Nov. 23-Dt:c.
· 21)B-people you meet for the first
time today wlto aren't in~- f10ld of
endeavor could later prove: to be
valuable to you, so don't tum down
any invitations to aet out aDd min&amp;le- •
CAPRICORN (Dt:c. 22·1111. 19)
Solqas youdon'tdo anythin1 rash
or huty tOdty, the aspects indicete
you could be successful In puohin&amp;
Cor a close with a financial or mone-·
11ry involvement. Wrap 'thinas up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
The welfare of thoM you love: should
be the most important consideration
for you today, so let your heart rule
your helld and merve toaic ror

anothet day.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) Handled pn~~~Crly, there's t COIUiderable
amount of financial opportunities
around you today that could lead to
impro-ts in both your eaminjo
and invei11Mnts.
ARIB;S (March 21 -April 19)
Someone you know socially milht
ofl'er to asisl you widt a busi11CII sitution today, but bop In mind lhml
.., no he ridea. 'I'IIIR eould bo
otrinss attached.

I THURSDAY

1

' ·

-•)
45 "Enmrprtae"

'

Pupplll &amp;Klttenl
FuK ino ol poll IIUI)I&gt;IIoo

Rtgllltrtd SharPol, White In
Color. Very playful. Muat Mil duo
lo allorglaa In nome (30.)576·
3343.

...

· Deale~

I•

6, Roar Air, $12,000. (304)875&lt;
3787.
'
1993 Jeep Wrangler 37,ooq
Millo, se.ooo. 740-44t~132
'

740

etc.

Vulnerable: North-South
South
South ·west North Eaot

I

Trodt For 4 wnoolor Of Equal
Voluo, 740-245-o465.

1848 Ford 2 Dooro, Bodan 305,
Chevy Englno, Standard Shllt,
Needs Workl $1,850, 740·258·

Belo

Stop

(740)·24e-5672 or (740) 387·

Tire•· 4 steel belted radlall,
P185/75A14, two quito good, two

Papera Available, Contact Mike

Reject Any And All Blda, And
Wlllldraw Property Ffom Sale Prl·

1978 ~ Bronco. 1•0 148 6588.

•AQ543
t A 10 3
• 3

38 F - . baing

·.

1H5 Hilley Davidson Ul1ra Cloro8food

71 0 Autos for Sale

ranges . Sklgga Appliance•. 78
Vine street , Call 740-.C"8·7398,

Ka

Eacol~nl

Price: $1,000, 740-258-t397.

country, $375 _per month_plus 11curlty deposit and relertncll,

Hoi'"- 1

Pigs ror Salol

Unesl For mort Information Call:

Swimming Pool For Sale: 18x33
Oval Willi So~r Cover, Rog. COv-

Two bedroom, all elaotrlc, .In

1987 Clayton Mobile Home 14Ft
X 70Ft. S10,500.00. Serious Inqulrles Only 740--4207.
440 Apartmimte
for Rent

Fa~

sorl momborahlp, $900, 740·98!53636.

AKC Reglatortd Golden RttriMr
2 Years Old, For Stud Service,

Very Nlcel Remodeled 3 Bdrms ,

Angus Bull lor Salol (740) 245·
5084

Royal Oak/ Coast To Coast Re·

OODD USID APPLIANCEI
Waahara, dryaro, relrlgorators,

Calling Tne·conecuon Depart-

Alpine Goato 1 Nanny &amp; 2 Kids.
Reasonable. 740-245--0485.

850 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Thompsons Appliance. • 3407
Ja~n AYOIIUII, (304)675-7318.

ment At 740·441·1038 OYB Re·
serves The Right To Accept Or

4-H/FFA Fair Lambs: OuaiHy and
reaoonaly Prlcodl Phone: (740)·
256-1330

Farm, 740-448·111).1 Or 74Q-441 ·
0450.

Trailer For Rent &amp; Lol For Rent,
740-446_ 1279 _,

_740-~m~-r.w~,~---------~·l _,·_888
__8_18_~_13
__
. _________

Bales 01 Hay For Sale, 740.3889033.

Pike, 740·•46·6308, 800·291·
0098.

Sunshine MJH On 4/24/99 At

For Sale. Reconditioned wash·

4-H &amp; FFA Club Plgo, And Round

~

pRO. 1.8 BUppLJ

Waterline Spaolal. 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
$37 .oo Per 1oo: All Brass Comprosolon•Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacklon, Ohio, 1-600-537-9528

conditioned , $260 ~ 1300. sewer.
water and trash Included , 740-

Bentley, 937·584-2398; ltroy
Lanfck 937·780-4802.

oak, naw price, 304-273-3301 .

er And Cover Real. Deck Com·
pletely Around All To Sa Moved.

ForLuae

rows, &amp; Gllla, Conalgnara Roger

Must sell· membership at Royal

Wholooale To Tho Public. Wo
Janltrol Heating And Coollis, Next To Library, $350/Mo , Stock
Ing Equipment, Duct work, A~g­
Plus Dopoel1, No Pets, Call Deb· istera,
And Related Materiels For
b~ Or Judy At 740-446-7323.
You To ln1lall Your Own Or We
C.n Furnish A List Of Doolera To
460 ·Space for Rent
lnotall' For You. II You Don't Call
Mobile home aile available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

C.H. Selling 200 Htad, Of Bar-

Like Now Spalding Pool Tabttl
$500 oo Phona (740) 441~886

, PRIMESTAR '·

Balho, A/C, Accoso To Pool. 740·
4•8-3481 Or 740-446-0101 Alter
5:00PM.

County Falrgrounda. Waahlngton

Call Ron Evans, 1_800- 537 _9528 _

Nice New &amp;,Used Furniture And

Twin Rivera Towr!U now accepting
applications 1for 1BR HUD subatdlzed apt. fOr elderly and hand·

posit. 740·446-3481 Or 740·446·

AERATION MOTORS
Aepalrad. Now &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.

trt, dryers and refrigerators.

Warranty And May Be Seen By

• Q8 4 3

D...,.·., Angta.

740--742...510.

27tn Annual Bentley Pig Sale: Frl·
day April 23rd, r :ao P.M. Fayottt

JET

5858.

Without Expressed· (lr Implied

Sotdh

2 yearling Charlalo bulla, 740·
7-42-1903.

Take over payments on 17 acres,
low down payment, call 740·992·
2529 and leave message.

32 Enlrywaya
33 Actor't 'I!IHII
34 UntMckled
35 u-·a mn ..u

glne, 40,000 CMr. ndo lor C/levy'
S·10 call 740·742·3705 aok lor

740-256-8251.

27111 annual Bentlty pig sale- Fri·
day, April 23rd, 7.30pm 'Fayette

• J. 5
4 K 8 8

vena"

27 Army rank

351nformat

able $13,900, cal1740-992-7727.

Lolo For Sale. 1/2 ohaded camp·

.. 8 7

t 9 I 7 2
6 A Q J 10 t 5

•

'84 Jeep Cherokee. rebuilt en•.

830

sites. water, road, boating to Ohio

Eut
4 A J 10 I 5

••

lion. $4,200.00. 740-446-8172, .0(

Llveltock

7 4 2

• 10.

Building lot In Syracuse· nice
neighborhood, all utilities avail·

Mlddtepon, Oh.1 no

est Bidder • As Ia - Where Ia"

$100.

Tobacco Setter In Good Condl·

Ohio Valley Bank Will Oiler For
Sale By Public Auction A 1995
10.00 AM . At The OVB Annex.
143 Third Ava .. Gallipolis, OH .
The Above Will Be Sold To High-

Condition.

(304)67!5-5373.

WV. $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wlda, 304736-3409.

Aural. 569,000.00. 740-379-2112.

For Sllo: IH/12' Disk, BriiNon/12'
Cvlllpacklr, BOih Excellent. Goh
I 920 Foraga Wagon. Tim-Rock
Farm.(304)87!5-4308.
Oak Con~ Aacl&lt;s Painted Black.
Fits '67/&amp; Older Chov 8' Bed. Ex-

m-2218.

Large Rooms , 3 Bay Garage,
Clol8 To School And Buckeye

Aaklo, No Till POinters, Etc. 0118&lt;
100 Plocos To Soli. CAR·
MICHAEL'S fAAII &amp; LAWN,
Gallpolo, Ohio 740-446-2412.

mal Installation. II Ybu Don't Call

576-2557 Make Appt.

3 Bedrooms. 2 BBths, 3 Car Ga-

15 Used Round eatera, Ulld

port From $249·$373. Call 740· . Us 1\'f Bolt! l.oMI 740-446-ll308,
992-5064 Equal Housing Oppor· Or 1-600-291-oo98.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

740-992-3537.

AUCTION: Saturday, April 241h,
10:00 A.M. Over 30 Usad Lawn
Tractors. Ovtr 30 uo•d Tractoro,

s.coo.

COOLQQWN
Central Air CondiUonlng Added
To Your Furnace. 3 Ton Installed

•

Wet&amp;

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDI
717 N.H. Sllago Cnop~r Wltn 2
Row Corn Hood, 11 ,eoo.oo Allo,
N.H. Sllago Blowar, $1 ,000 .00.
74Q.tl3-2285.

tndlng

20 Plgglft, In
rllyma
21 BenciQver
23 Mlinn'a "- ln

•

57 c - back
se
Smtn ' •'-hi
·
.. '

II Supe!latlvt

• KJ 9 2
tKQ4

810 Ferm Equipment

5443.

.,...,__

te " ' - atorn
17 Fr. holy women

Nerth
4 K 7 2

2051 .

740-24!5-

41Churd10MI
-~~~~vlouaPuzzlo
47 "Woe Ia mal "
1 Family"*"'* 51 Sougblld
7 o.13 a.. or beallt
13 Hllcll-'o
86 Avtetor . , _ '-'=-~~-:+:f.:to • llllr se Japoneoe
r:
14 o.fplll
'-1Ha
contMnpt

Tracy, (304)8112-3580 or (304)882·:

740-256-162!1.

ACROSS

'

I ttl fO«&lt; Ranger 2WD. BedUner, Tonne1u Cover, co, Air, 5·
Spd. 14,500 mllel, $12,500. Coli·

FARM SU"'f'LIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

------------------------~---------·•

1s Showt

1983 Ford Eatandod Cab 250 ·
Woanad, Tallo Docked. Aoklng ·Turbo Dlooet, $15,600, 740·4•8· '
$100.00 Each. 740-37~2568 .
9317.
.

Bern Aalolng Baskat With Everything For $210: largo Galherlng,
Bean~ Bibles

''

Terrier Puppies, 8 Wka, Wormed,

Bab,)l Bod, Dro11lng Tablo,
StroNor, HighChair, and Car SOot.
(304)675-41548.

Buy or toll . Riverine Anllquoo, 89!1-1oa5.
1124 E. Main StrHt,.on AI. 124,.
I .V.-Aqutflum
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
2006C.,_A....,.
a m lo 8:00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 to
ParktrlbUrg, wv :le1 01
8:00 p.m. 7•0·992·2526, Ru11
304-48!5-1299
MIOore Qlrner.

7 Years Old, 28K30 AHached Ga·
rage , 12.:24 Building, Barn &amp;
Tractor Shed, 69 112 Acres or
Will Sell House &amp; Loti Meigs co.

snttzu, Noulartd, (304)67-10.

1988 Dodgo Dakoto Pickup , 5 '
Spd , ·charcoel Gray With Rod
Stripe And Rod Toppar. Nicol
s1,800.00. 740-3711-2886.
.'

199.C 4X4 Gao Tracker. &lt;48 rOOO
MittS, 4 Wheel Dr, Great Condl ~

$3501Mo , • $300 Deposit, 740·
441 -1308.

Home, Three Bedrooms, Two
Bathrooms, Walk·ln Closets, Utili·
ty Room, Electric Heat Pump, Refrigerator And Stove Included,

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes II Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or dlscr1minat10n
based on race, color, religion ,
sex familial status or natlol')al
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discnmlnatlon

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR ICES AT JACKSON

AKC Roglatorod Dalmailon Pup·

pill. $100. (304)937·2929.

lion. $500.00. 740-258-1117.

1988 Pinecrest Skyline, 2BA,

1992 14x70 Oakwood 2 Bodrooms, 2 Full Baths, All Electric
With Heat Pump, 740-44 1-Q959:
740-379-2796

No Fee Unless we wtnl

Campu&amp;, 740-2.5-5858.

720 Truclll for Sale

Mlecellaneoua
Merchandise

Maps. l-800-213-8365.

One Bedroom House In Gallipolis,
References Required, No Pets,

(304)675-7045.

'TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?

2 Bedroom Aparlment, Adlacent
To Uni versity 01 Rio Grande

a

Condition. H0-446·6157 After
4·00Pm
mobile Home Movtng, Must Sell.

Profeaslonal
Services

. 540

Apartments
for Rent

River, otc. (304)576-2894.

bile home, 740-992-5039.

3 BA, 2BA, 2 Car Garage, 1 Acre.
813-3585, Ext.8826, 8AM-9PM, 7 A
Must See. Letart. (304)882Daya fds,lnc.
3516.
REBUIIEB UNLIMITED Oilers 4 Bedroom Home 1 112 Bathl, LR,
Personalized Reaumea And
0~. Kitchin, Utility Room, CIA,
Much Morel Interview Materials
Heat Pump, Fenced Yard, 2/3
To Get You Prepared, 740·388· Aero, 15 Minute• From Gallipolis,
3800
$e8,500 740-379-:zeee.
Wanted· Fuii-Timi Watters, Wal·

House For Sale: 2219 Oak Street.

Move! (740)-·3907
Business
Opportunity

2103 Mount Vernon Avenue .
Part Time Receptionist Wanted
For Busy Construction OUJce.
Mllst Work Well With Public ·Answer Phones. Scheduling , Etc
-EKperle,ce IN The Construction
Area A Plus Please Send Reaume To Christian's Construe lion, Inc. 1403 Ea&amp;tern Ave. , Gal-

to 11PM. (304)675-4808 or
(304)675-3991 .

1969 Schultz Mobile Home, 2
Bedrooma,Eiectrlc Heat, Must

FINANCIAL

Global Recruiters Now Taking
Applications For STNA's, LPN's,
AN's, PT, OT, ST. Restuarant
Managers And Asaistant Managers . Stop In At 995 Jackson

Pika, Sullo 201 , Or Call 740·446•168 . Monday To . Fr~day,
9:00AM To 3·00PM

Locared Near Downtown on Bth
St 2 Story with L A , and D R.
w1th Fireplaces, 3BA , 1 112
Baths, Kitchen w1th Appliances;
Utility Am.. Enclosed Front
Porch; Alum . Sid. ; Gas Furnace
w/C A.; Carport Allactf to house,
1-C Detached Garage, Sm. Star.
Bldg. with Elec. C•ll only from t

abte, 740·992-1042.

Maintenance Employee General
Maintenance Of Low -Income
Apartment Complex. Electrical 1
Refrigeration /Plumbing /Ca~pen·
try /Custodial /Groundskeeplng
Computer A Plus . Good Benefits
Applications A\lallable At Gallla
MHA, 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bid·
Applications Accepted Until May

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER:

441-(1316

Wil l s1ay with elderly person In
their home, nlghta only. Have

Employer

well, Ohio •5614 740·446-0251

.

Will Sail Both For S1.50o, 740-

Will sit with the elderly, by the
hour or weekly, reasonable rates,
, 0 years experience, 740- 949·

45640, Or Call 1-740-286-1463
HEAVY

$199,999 (803)368-9436

for Sale

Will Do Lawn Service In Gallla

To P.O. Box 109 Jackson, Ohio 210

MAINTENANCE

For Sale By Owner. 4BA , 3000
SQuare Foot House. • Car Ga·
rage, 5 Acres. Very Secluded

11 .75 Acres In Cabeill County on
Rt 2 North, acroa1 from Greenbottom Wildlife Renrve. The
buyer will be responsible lor all
coati. There IS a minimum bid ot

740-992-615-1.

441-Q318

Local Trucking Compan~ Seeking
Qualified Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits . Send Resume
To Schedule An Interview

china.

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private. appoint·
ment 1 call740-992-5696 .

Etc. CaH&lt;I0-446-6964

Atteast 25 Years Old
AUeast 2 Years Elq)erience

portrait party 600-426-6363.

upstairs total ly remode led, new
roof, guntrlng , water softner &amp;
lots ot &amp;Ktraa 2912 Ann iston
Drive, PI Pleasant, ( 304)675·
2608 Leave Message on Ma ·

J&amp;S Will Do Pressure Washing &amp;

3628

traits Invite your friends to your
home for a professional glamour

&amp; office,

740-368-8041.

and Other Odd Jobs . (304)675-

Earn S104-$200 plus lree por-

famil~ rqom

(304)882·3652

Bolh PosiUons:

For More lnlormatlon Call 800·
437-8764, Hr&amp; 8 30 A.M ·5 PM

For Solo By Ow.ner: 3BR, 1 11

Ranch House, 314 Acre Lot, 5BR.

capped. 740-441-1536

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:

out 101 0 lor $89,000, 740-992·
2704, 740-m-56911.
2BA , large

Greg M'lhoan. 3041675-ol628
Bates Bros. Amusement Co. Free
to travel Must be 18yrs or older

440

31 0 Homes for Sale

Bualnen
Training

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle

-

APRIL 221

�Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

White House looking
for new momentum
in ·helping out Japan
I

I
I'

9y MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHING1UN '--- While the 20month-old global currency crisis
seems less of a threat now than it did
last fall, the Clinton admini'stration
still believes there is an urgent need
for Japan to do more to jump-start its
ailing economy.
The administration is seek.ing to
i\loject new momentum into efforts to
manage the global economy to bolster growth overseas as a way of.deal - ·
ing with the soaring U.S. trade
deficit.
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin
on Wednesday unveiled a number of
proposals aimed at contin uing
reforms of the global financial systern, hoping lo win approval for tfte
ideas at meetings next week of
finance ministers of the world's seven wealthiest' industrial countries,
disc ussions th at will be held in
advance of the annual spring meeting
of the I 82-nation International Monetary Fund.
Rubin said while work on long-

Asked to comment on proposals
by Argentina and other countries to
adopt the dollar as their local currency, Rubin on Wednesday said
there was no way the United States
could stop a nation from making a
decision to take this step, given the
large amount. of u.s. currency that
circulates outside the United States.
.. But Rubin said the administration
would hope that no nation would take
that approach until it had consulted
fully with U.S. finance officials abou.t
the benefits and drawbacks.
While using the dollar as a local
currency would eliminate wild currency swings, it would also eliminate

term issue s was imponant , a critical

a nation's flexibility in monetary

need remained for Japanese authorities to do everything 'poss ible to pull
Japan out of its worst recession in 50
years. Rubin noted that the IMF in its
new eco nomic outlook had presented a stark forecast. that the Japanese
economy, the world 's second largest,
will shnnk by another 1.4 percent this
year after contracting 2.8 percent in
1998.
"lt is imperatively important for
its neighbors .and really very important ' for the rest of the world that
Japan get back on track," Rubin said.
· To drive that point home, an
administration team 'Jed by Undersecretary df State Stuan Eizenstat
held day long discussions \.11th Japanese officials on Wednesday seeking
breakthroughs in regula(ory reform in
Japan's financial markets and other
areas that can be announced when
Japanese Prime Ministe'r Keizo
Obuclii meets May 3 in Washington
with President Clinton.
"We felt the discussions were very
productive," a senior U.S. official
said late Wednesday.
. "Our Japanese counterparts
stressed that they fully understand the
country's fiscal problem. They told us
- Japan's economic future depends on
deregulation. They recognized the
need for change," said the official,
·who briefed reporters on condition of
anonymity.
•

affairs through decisions a nation 's
central bank carl make to raise or
lower interest rates by changing the
amount of money in circulation.
IMF Managing Director Michel
Camdessus. briefing reporters
Wednesday in advance of next
week's meetings, said he believed the
JMF was close to agreement on o.ne
key U.S. initiative. The administra. tion wants the IMF to make available
new preapproved lines of credit for
countries pursuing sound policies to
help them fend off financial turmoil.
While there had been speculation
Mexico might be the first nation to
receive such a credit line, Camdessus
said it was too early to say when .the
resource might be used. But he said
he believed questions about the proposal were close to being resolved.
Camdessus said pre-emptive use
of IMF resources could end up saving the agency money in the long run
by averting the need for huge bailout
progra{lls once a country's c·urrency
and economy are devastated by a loss
of investor confidence.
Camdessus called Russia " the
most difficult problem we must tackJe," but lie reported progress has been
made in reaching agreement "in the
next few days" on a new set of ceonomic reforms that would clear the
way for the IMF to resume lending to
Russia.

-

r.,
.

-

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 50s; Low: 40s .

( ~~ ) · , · ,~, ,,
\) .I ~1 \ 1 I ~~\ .,

On another front, Deputy Treasury
Secretary Lawrence Sum mers and
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan were scheduled to appear
before a Sen a~ Banking panel today
to explore one idea that a number of
countries in Latin America. incl uding
Argentina, are reviewing - theadoption of the U.S. dollar as a way to
reduce wide swi ngs in local curren-

Meigs County's

By KATHERINE VOGT

1999 CHEVY SILVERADO

1999 CHEVY S-10 P/U
air, cass, bench seat,
IMSI~P $14,155
lwh•llels,

alurnl VB, auto, . locking Diff, cruise,
Indigo blue, cass, chrome grill,
chrome bumper, MSRP $18,730

Now$18 549·

1999 CHEVY SILVERADO
EXT CAB 4X4 ·

1999'GMC
All NEW SIERRA 414

VB, alum wheels, air, skid plates, I
CD, cruise, PL, PW, tilt,
&lt;.;rUII5to.
remote, Black ft'SRP $29,157

!:: 527 054

Allocilltlld PI'MI Writer
UTILETON, Colo. (AP)- Eyeing a possibly broader conspiracy, investigators in the Columbine High
scltool massacre said two teen-agers who gunned down a
dozen cl-matcs and a teacher may have been aided in
their rampage by "conf'ederates" who ~lped booby-trap
the schooL ·
.
Sheriff's officials were due back on campos by dawn
loday to continue scouring for hidden explosives as studentutayed away, frightened 10d mourning.
A total of 15 people, includina aunmen Eric Harris and
Dylan Klebolcl, died in the Tuesday attaek. Fourteen Sludenll remained hospitalized, including eight in critical or
serious condition.
On Thur&amp;day, the discovery of a powerful bomb made
from a 20-pound propane tank heightened suspicions thai
Harris, 18, ·111d Kleblocl, 17, intended to destroy the
schOol, and could have had help in assembling their arse·
nal. · ·
"They may have had confederates," said sheriff's Sgt.
Jim Part.
Explosives expert Sid Woodcock said propane explosivcs of the type found are "fairly sophistica~ ." Jusl'one
bomb "probably would have destroyed a good part of the

sChool," he said.
school after 111 unattended backpack was found. Students who knew the gunmen. Two fellol" members of the'
"These subjects were' not only on a killing rampage," needed pirental permission to leave.
'
Trenchcoat Mafia apoloaized to mourners on Wednesday.
said Jefferson County Sheriff John Stone. "They were
" You can ' I even eo to the bathroom without permis"There was no sign they would dO this," sobbed
going to bum the school up."
sian, and then titey time you," lamented Holly Bemside, Nicole Makham. "We would j115t like to say that we're
Aside from the large bomb, searches have turned up IS.
. . · .
sorry for what they did."
.
more th10 30· homcm~ explosives, including pipe
Jefferson County school administrators began tryina to
On the Columbine grounds Thursday, there was some
bombs, crude hand grenades. More may still remain hid- return normalcy to Columbine students' lives by scouting hint of the crisis lifting. Teldlen; trickled in.to retrieve
.den, authoritieS said.
,
for alternative class sites and planning events like gradu- their cars; an investiplbr rmCued 30 baby chicks and a
1\vo sawed-off shotguns, one 9mm semi-automatic Ilion.
·
lizard from a science lab.
·
· rifle and one· semi-automatic h&amp;!KI&amp;un also have been
"The students are saying, 'We want to be back togethA mile away, Attorney General Janet Reno commiser- .
found.
.
'
.
cr. We want to be in school. We want to.be with pur teach· ated with relatives and ~mmunity leaders as family
lnvestiptors have also recovered; but have riot yet ers,"' said Superintendent Jane Hammond Hammond , members prepared for a weekert!l.of 11;1Cmorials.
. reviewed. a videotape from a school security aylllein that said students will return to the same school buildina next · "This is not something lhat is dealt witb in a day or a
covers the library where many of the victims were found, fall.
w~k or a month," Reno lllid. "This, as we have learned
The Denver Post reported today, citing sheriff's
'(be Jefferson County Co!art reports on Klebold and from Oklahoma Oty and Olhcr traaedies, is something
spokesman Steve Davis.
. ·
'
Harris, written less than three mo11ths aao, were oompiled that must be dealt with over time, and we are in litis for
Meanwhile, documents said court-ordered evaluations · by an officer assesaing'tbeir future after !bey were caulht the long haul."
of the suspects, compiled earlier this·year, cilled Harris . breaking into a van 1111 year.
·
In other shooting-related developments Thursday: ·
"a bright youna man who is likely to succeed in life" and
Klebold and Harris, members of the disaffected,
-Investigators confirmed they had found a note at one
found Klebold had "a great deal of potential."
brooding "Trenchcoat Mafia" at Columbine High. fin- suspect's home but refused to discuss its contents,
Columbine will be closed indefinitely. Other schools in ished a juvenile court program successfully in February,
-The sheriff's office said it planned to release tapes
the district reopened Thursday to tight security.
clearing their rewnls. The county district court released of some 911 calls today.
·
At rival Otatfield Hig!l School, jittery staff and stu- copies of the documents, but blacked out the offic:cr's ·
-Oassmates said Klebold and Harris made several.
dents walked past armed guards to enter as classes recon- niJTie,
, class-project videos last fall foreshadowing their spurn of
vened. At one poin~ two bomb squad trucks sped to the
Investigators were questioning classmates and others .·
Continued on pege 3

Church celebrates
website focuses on cancer risks
All wheel drive, V6, auto; air,
.tilt, cruise, towing pkg, gold
pkg, pewter MSRP $32,900

Now
Onl~

528
·

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A report issued on Tuesday, April 20 by tbe Environmental Dcfellle fund
mlkea the dail!l that most Americlns face air cancer risks 100 times higher
~ the Joals congrea IICt forth almost a decade 410.
,
The _
FDP lite, at www.edf.q links to 111 EI)F ~red site called
Sooieatid (www.scorecard.org). and features more detailed breakdowns
detcmlined by epunty. Accounll coiltaincd within .the silo on Gallia and
Meip Counties show lhat both counties fall within the "moderate" range of
air quality,
. The t111W. ranac are aoocl, belna ·lhe beat; to hazardous, whlch. is the
-.t.'J'btl ~- iinkilia Oallia and Meip rec:cived is next up 6oni aood
on the ICI[e; ,which means that ~· health etfcCll'are none to few J!! ~ ·
~lnlheuea.
•
·
- ·. ·
·
·,:"! ·
Dlepille Ibis, 'Ute Scot~ website n.- dietilicals faund In air sam1*' to~~~- for Wnc:ern.
. .
. .
.The cancer. risk from hazardou$ air pollutants per individual in Gallia
CoUnty cornea out to be 140 per 1,000,~. The chemical contributiJia 11101t
to lhia risk ill called carllon tetrachloride.
· Mcip cXltlnty rcsidenll run a highei rillk of cancer from hazardous air pollutants acx:ot!ling to the EDF taeareh. An lndividuaiJ added cancer riak in
Meip Co!lnty is 200 per 1,000,QOO.
The chemical found in Meip ooun. ty air acoording to · the findings is
acrylonitrile. Both chemicals In: listed as known' carcinogens, mcal)ing
they an; canc:er-QUSing ap~ts. ,
'l'be findiilp contained in the EDF
rqx&gt;rt are based on data collected in
1990, and represent the lint ever estimate of which toxic chemicals, in
what aniounts, are in local communities air. the data frOm the 1990 based
government. estimates come with
official .cautions about their use, and
IICveral accuracy checks shoW\na
close comparability with measurements as recent u 1997, according to
.the site.
Lotteries
According to a quote from Dr. Bill
Pease, Scorecard'S .creator and chief
QAJQ
designer, "For the first time since the
Pkltl: 2·3-6; Pkk 4: 7-1-2·9
Oean Air Act was pused 30 years
a.ckqt 5: 12·20-lS-35·36
aao. people can now Jearn lil9ut
WJ'A.
toxic chemk:alil in their own air, and
3: ~-6-3; o.uy 4: 8-9+3
can - how well the law hu or haS
o 1999 0111o Ytttey Pulllilllloa eo.
not beeii protecting them." .

Good Afternoon

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Corporations are going g~een this Earth Day.
The Albertson 's supermarket chain is handing out paP.,r bags that students
decorated With environmental messages . A Ford plant in Plymouth, Mich.,
is holding an energy fair. A group of companies in Sheboygan, Wis., is judging posters made by fifth graders.
It's all part of a plan for corporate America, tired of being on the defensive for Earth Day, to celebrate what spokesmen describe as$! trillion worth
of efforts to clean up air, water and land over JO·years.
Today is the 30th Earth Day.
.
"It 's time •to stop vilifying business," U.S. Chamber of Commerce
spokesman· Frank Coleman said. "The theme is: Thank business for clean-

1997 NISSAN 4 WD P/U
4 cyl, 5 spc;t, AM/FM
WAS$13,NII

Now

1996 DODGE EXT
WD SLT LARAMIE PIG

2 wo, vs, auto, air, cass,
cruise, bedllner, 9500 mr:n:1,1 VIi, auto, air, AMJ,FM, tilt,
WAS $18;800 .
cruise, WAS $18,985

N,_

5

17

::; $1.6 800

ing up the environment."

Environmentalists say no thanks.
"These.associations are distorting their anti-environmental record by celebrating Earth Day," said Deb Callahan, president of the League of Conservation Voters. " h.' s something we call green scamming. These associations have not been showing any environmental leadership except in the realm
of environmental rollbacks."
·
Business leaders say they have an environmental record to be proud of.
The Timken Co., a steel manufacturer in Canton, Ohio, installed a $17 million, stale-of-the-art facility to trea\ ahd reuse the ro billion gallons of water
the firm uses each yeiU'. Timken is included in a book published by 'the National Association of Manufacturers highlighting I6 companies that found environmentally friendly ways to do business.
"We need to tell people what we're doing," said Bill Fladung, the company 's general
. manager of environmental affairs..
.-

V6, auto, air, AM/FM, CD, 1111,
cruise, WAS $18,8!50

:..~ 5 17

-

While environmentillists fl oat t~rough wilderness on the Celorado Riv-·
er, protest loggmg .with a hike in West Virginia'·s Blackwater Canyon and
sponsor.numerous rallies and shoreline cleanups, corporations.have plans of
theor own.
At least 50 busi nesses are sponsoring Earth Day events in 35 cities, from
Springfield, Mass., to Fremont, Calif., according to NAM .
·
. Eli Lilly is preparing to hand out Frisbee-style toys made of recycled plasllc at a fesl!val m lndmnapohs. Anchor Glass Container Corp. of Henryetta, Okla .. IS offenng coupons for groceries in glass bottles and jars, which
can be recycled.
.
.The chamber ser t an opinion article to 1.000 newspapers and business
journals, faxed talking points to 8,000 business owners, urging them to speak
out locally, and.crowed about the corporate environmental record on a speThat record in cleaning up the environment gives corporate America credibility in opposing further rules, Coleman said.
. "llefore we ask .business to spend an additional
dol. trillion-and-a-half
.
Iars, business has a right to say, 'Wait a Second. What are we getting for our
money at this poini?"' Coleman.said.
Last fall, the manufacturers: group helped defeat an effon by Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., to allow lawmakers to demand a debate and a vote.on
any measure that' weakens environmental protections. NAM used the key
issue to help rank members in its annual congressional scorecard.
. The Cllamber of Commerce remains strongly opposed to new regulations,
such as the Kyoto global warming treaty, environmentalists noted.
·
"To the extent that the trade associations devote all of their resourc'es to
protecting the 'interests of the least environmentally responsible members and
· try to gut environmental laws, it's just more than,a little hypocritical," said
Denis Hayes, an environmental activist who was national coordinator of the
first Earth Day, in I970.
·
"We' ve happy to have anyone who refonns," he said, "but if you're
reformed, it would be good (O have some evidence." · ·

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Officials: Bomb, large arsenal hint of conspiracy in school massacre

'

cial Internet site.

-Page4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 247

cies,

•

.

by Mets 4-1

•

By JONATHAN D. SALANT

.

Eastern diamond results, Page 4
Discontent in breast exams, Page 6
'Ducktails and Bobbysox', Page 8

I

Business takes lead
on 30th Earth
Day
•
.

Aprll23, 1NII

High: 70.; Low: 40s

I

I

Friday

Thursday, Aprll22, 1919

,

50

2 Dr,~ 4 WD,' V6, IIUio. air, tilt,
WA:IJ I crulse; Whlte WAS $13,9115

4 WD, VB, auto, air, tilt, erul~tA.I
leather int, . LT pkg,
$22,800

Now

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel N - Staff
Health United Methodist Church in Middlepon
will begin a year of celebrations Sunday to mark
Its sesquicentennial, 1849-1999.
The day has been design~ted "Heritage Sunday".and will be a time for looking back, at 150
years of church history with the highlight tO come
in the afternoon at an open house from 2 to 4 p.ni.
Chwch members arid the community are Invited to
view the church history and artifacts on display. At
6 p.m. there will be a 1;8fry-in dinner with a short
program to follow and memben of 50 or more
years will he recogni2Jed.
.
At the 10:30 a.m. worship service, following
. Sunday. ~I 81 9:30 a.m., !At. Rev. ·Thomu
$lack of Colum~ ii!SO'ciate ·direCtor of Weat ·
Ohio' Conference Council on Ministers, ~jll
apeak. .
.
This will bC the first of IICveral events pl10ncd
for the year to maik the church's sesquicentennial .
A pictorial directory is being planned, a chuf!:h .
cookbook will be published, there will be quilt

wal~::::. '!r:~c~~~%~~~~~urcli spans, ·

the years from Methodism's humble beginning in ~
·
lion establish the church.
.
e first pastor, the Rev. Amos Wilson, arrived
a small frame house ·in O)alport (upper Middleport) to the present edifice located at the corner of
church charge in 1850 and wrote, "I found
Third and
·
congregation wmshiping in a little unfinished
Main.
. The Welsh members or the society left the
The first appearance of the work in Middleport church and organi2Jed a Wesleyan Methodist Sociwu rioted in 1849 when .Methodists in town deter• ·ely and took the building with them. We enclosCd .
mined to build a house of worship. Urialt Heath, our new' church building in Sheffield, laid the
for whom the church wu named, was presiding floor, put in the platform, plank seals on blocks
elder of the Maridta District and helped the con- ' aile! I preached the first sermon in this unfinished

The Eastern Local Board of Edu,
cation approved oontracts for personnel durina their regular meeting on
Wcdnclday.
The board approved the following
certified personnel: Jon Rothpb and
· Robin White, one year contracts;
Deborah Barber, Christine Cassidy,
Scon Christman, Kristin Devaney,
Bonnie Owens, Angela Ripby, Jared
Spcnw, Susan Parsons, John Rcdovian, Todd Trace, . Lone Oibome,
Catherine Simpson. and U~ Faulk, ··
two year contracts; Bryan Durst,
Angela Houck, Kirk Reed and Tina
Kelley, three year contracts; and Martje Baum, Gary Reed 10d Scott
Wolfe, five year contracts.
Supplemental contracts were
approved for Jim Hull,
IOd federal piogUmS coordinator; Marf
Price, special education LOC; Arch
Rose, transportation supervisor; Car·
olyn Rildlie, food service coordinator; and Cindy Unton, Drug Free
Schools coordinator.
florilla Baker was approved on a
two•year epntract as custodian,
Sheila Spencer, on a continuing con·
tract u cook, and Glen Easlerling. on
a continuing conttact IS a bus driver.
NIIIC)' Larkins was app'OYed ·as
EMIS/IWinology Coordinator. ·
Uncia Faulk, andy Unton and
Dixie Sayte wen1 approved IS sum·
mer inler\'Cntion teachers under the.
totms of Senate Bill 55, and Angela
Rigsby was approved as 111 in·horneinalnll:lllt for a homebound lltudent.
The board appco&gt;Od • job deacri!l':'
lion IIIII approved . poatina for ~
position of -itllant elemcntuy pnn..
cipal for the l'J!l?-2000 school yu/"'
a The next rcgul1r board mectin&amp;
will be Mid on May 17, betlnning
with a work ltllioo at 6 p.m., and
regul1r meeting at 7 p.m; The board
also set a special mectina on May 3 at
6 :30 p.m. at the administrative
offioes to review bids for the new
muldpwposc 10d bUS garage buildings.
·

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512 600 ·
98 GMC SONOMA Ext c.ll2 WD, 3nl Door, 4cyl, 5sp, *• AI/FI,IIt, cn1st, WAS $13,9t5
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521,850
98 GMC JIMMY 4Dr, 4WD, ¥6, ..o, *• lit, G'IIH, Al/fl, WAS $23,9110
527,800
97 otEVY TAHOE 4Dr; 4 WD, LT N VI, lito, li, AI/FM. CD, -...lit, lit, Cnlst, WAS $29,900
522,500
9f..OLDSMOIILE IRAVADA 4Dr, AWD, V6, atta, li, lit, G'IIH, Al/fl 111t, ¥lAS S24,910
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94 otM I/2 TON LWB va; ilto, air, til, cnlst, AM/FM, WAS $11,995
94 otM I/2 LWB 4x4, Y6,11to, li, WAS $10,900
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structure using a chair for my pulpit."
The present buildina wu constructed in I~
by the Georac Fenzel Co. of Athens. The pape
organ wu the project of the Young Lacljcs
Methodist · EpiscoP-1 Guild and the Epworth
League. The church bell was takell from one of the
river boats artd still calla in·the worshipers, 10d tl!e
Deagon Tower OtiJIICI were giveri by the late
Captain Tom Jones in memory of his wife, Alic.:
Evans Jones.

Eastern school board
approves staff actions

$19

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